<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="10628" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/10628?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-06-16T14:59:36+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="21072">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/c924271810a8040bbb527344a478a12a.pdf</src>
      <authentication>0c176f24ac5bb79530787e17ceb8ed07</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="33867">
                  <text>Plgl DB SUnday n~tlnel

Pomeroy-Middllport-GIIIIpolll, OH Point Pleaeant, wv

October 11, 1982

·Celebration, mourning mark Columbus Day
COLUMBUS (AP) -Tire 500th
amivenary of Christopher Colum·
bus'maidenvoyagetotheNewWorld
is being celebrated and mourned in
the tarsest city in the worl\1 named
for the explorer.
A four-day festival leading up to
Columbus Day, a national holiday,
began on Friday when a wreath was
laid at the feet of a bronze Slatue of
Columbus at City Hall.
Ev.ents scheduled through the
weekend inCluded a parade and fire·

wolks Saturday night, the Col urn bus
MarathononSunday,andaceremony
Monday aboard a 98-foot, full-scale
replicaoftheSanta Maria, which has
been docked along the Scioto River
downtown for a year.
The commemoration wi 11 end with
the closing of the botanical theme
parkAmeriFiora '92,the largest event
endorsed by the federnrgovern111ent' s
Sesquicentennial Jubliee· Commis·
sion.
The arrival of Columbus in 1492

also wiU be observed as the begin·
ning of SOO years of resistance and
survival by American Indians.
American Indian groups will hold
a memorial service Monday at I 0
a.m. at Bicentennial Park, about two
blocks from the Santa Maria.
Ken Irwin, executive director of
the Ohio Indian Movement and the
Ohio Council of Native American
Burial Rights, said he expected up to
300 poople to anend.

Ohio Lottery

.

Browns top
Steelers for
second win

GoY. George Voinovich will speak. ,
Americal) Indians also planned
and all-day festiVlil on Cleveland's
downtown Public Square on Mon,.
day with the tbeme oC'SOO years of
dignity and resisU!JICC." The program includes folk singers, ~
music and speeches from poliucal
leaders and environmental activists.
Spokesman David Ellison said
Columbus Day was chosen because
it was a convenient holiday, n01 out :
of anger over Western European ex·
pansion.
"Although Christopher Colum· .
bus is the one that is celebrated and .
Jlllid tribute to, he is not - and we
Southern California refinery a day would not make him - the scape·
after an explosion andfrre. Oil issues goat for the iUs of Western civiliza· :
declined afterthelraqi national guard lion," Ellison said.
More traditional celebrations in
seized an American worker near the
Cleveland
include a downtown pa· :
Kuwaitborder. Amocolost 3/4atSO
rade
sponsored
by the Federation of :
118; Chevron, down I 1/8 at 72 5/8; .
Italian-American
Societies ofNorth·
Exxon, down I 1/4 at 61 5/8: arid
east Ohio. The roUte of the noon :
Mobil, down I 318 at 61 SIB.
Other active issues on the )'lYSE parade takes it past Public Square,
"Columbus Day is a celebmtion .
includedthedebutofBrillia:ticeChina
of
unity,
not only for Italian-Ameri· ,
Automotive, unchanged ·at 20 1/8:
cans
but
for all people," federation .
Me;ck &amp; Co., down I US at 41 1/8:
Angela DIFranco Talbort .
President
and Advanced Mic~ Devices, down
.said.
1/2 at II 7/8.
The Pennsylvania-based Green_wichPharmaceuticals Inc. was down
2 3/lt at 5 in heavy over-the-counter
ttading after Syntex Phannaceuticals
International Inc. severed an agreeFRI. THRU THURS.
ment to develop a drug to treat arthri.
tis.
The Dow's early decline wasremi·
niscent of Monday, when the index
plunged 104 points in the first two
hours before recovering most of the
ImP• ....:_ __,,._,_~ -~!::"
loss. Analysts said continuing eco·
nomic tincenainty, combined with a
MON. THtU THURS.
SHOWTUIES
possible defeat of President Bush, is
7:30 ONLY
IlL , W. SUfi.
expected to make the markets vola·
ADMISSION $1.50
7:30 AND 9:30
tile in the coming weeks.
446-0923

" We're not going to celebrate · · end ce~mo~y on the boat. .
Columbus: we're going to be there to
. Irwm s;ud a de~onstratlon also
mourn," he said. " We want to .set mtght. be held ouiS•de the gates of
the wordoutaboutsomeoftheatroci· AmeriFiora dunng closmg ceremo·
tiescommiuedbyColumbus-gem&gt;· nies, which will be held ou!doors at
&lt;:ide, slavery ... and the taking of 5:30 .p.m. Groups ,opposed to eelwomen."
ebraung Col~mbus voyage demon. MllrkStansbery,oneoftheorga· strat~d du~mg t~e opening of
nizers, said participants might man:h AmeriFiora m Apnl.
.
to the site of the Santa Maria for a
The one-half boor closmg cerprayervigil. That would be about the emo~ies will be followed by a oresame timeasaColumbus Day Week· hour mdoor ceremony dunng whtch

Pick 3:

769

Pick 4:
3087

Super Lotto:

17-22-25-31-33·34
Kicker:
288566

PageS

Investor unease causes sharp drop in ·stock·market
NEW YORK (AP) -The stock 222.11, while the market value index lagging economy.
mark~ dropped sharply Friday and lost 2.16 points at 364.85.
The Treasury's 30-year issue was
closed at a new low for the year as
Big Board volume was moderate, off 7/8 point while its yield rose to
uneasy investorS unloaded shares in with 178.93 million shares changing 7.52 percent in late afternoon trad·
meiace of weak earnings estimates hands as of4 p.m., down from 203.83 ing.
and continued turmoil in the bond million in the previous session.
The government hood market is
Heavy selling in the bond market .closed Monday because of the Comarket.
The Dow Jones average of 30 led to a speedy 30-point fall in the JumbusDayobservance,butthestoek
industrials fell 39.45 points to Dow average just minutes after the exchange is open.
3, 136.58, the lowest level since Dec. opening belL
Adisappointingearningsoullook
· 27,1991.For the week, the index lost
An article in Friday's edition of made Ford·. Motor· the most active
the Financial Times of London said issue on the NYSE, with the
64.03 points.
•
Thesellingpenneatedthebroader an unnamed senior Fed official automaker closing down 2 3/4 at 34
market. Declining issues outnum· doesn't expect a rate cut before the 7/8. Ford disclosed in a registration
· bered advances by about 7 to 3 on the election. A rate cut was widely ex· statemeru for a new $1 billion stock
New . York Stoek Exchange. The pee ted this . week to shore up the offering that it lost money in the thitd
NYSE'scomposite index fell2.51 at

quarter and may report a loss for ihe
fourth quarter as well.
The selling spilled over to Gen·
eral Motors, off 1 at 29 1/8, and
Chrysler, doWn 318 at221/8. Con·
cems about Europe's economy and
its effect on multinational compa·
nies also hitlnternational Business
Machines, which fell 7/8 at 78 1/2,
iiS.Iowest level since 1982..
Caesars World was down I at 35
afterreportinganexpecteddeclinein
fu'st-quarter profit because of lower
gaming revenues,
Texaco dropped 2 at 60 3/8 after
reports that it was shutting down a

Farm vote plays crucial role in election
- WASHINGTON (AP) - Sud·
den! y, the farm vote is looking like a
crucial factor in this year's presidential campaign.
Farmers ·haven't always had so
much clout in this campaign; only
recentlywere farm issues discussed

in more than passing by President
Bush or Democrat Bill Clinton.
But both campaigns now agree
that growers could help decide the
race in someofthekt;y toss-upstates.
Some say farmers could even tip the
election.

''Both campaigns are just waking folks that could have a real impact in
up to the farm vote and farmers' theSe states."
needs," says Mike Dunn of the Na·
Clayton Yeutter, Bush's deputy
tiona! Farmers Union. "They:re look· · campaign ·manager, agreed.
ing for every vote they can, and the · · "The farm vote may decide this
.ruraj vote suddenly looms very im· election," Ycuuer predicted Tues·
portant. Here you've got a block o( dayinannouncingacoalitionofmore
than 300 farmers, agribusiness own·
ers and rural leaders who support the
president.
Goggans noted TexaS, some of
policy to create surpluses for give· the Rust Belt states,along with North
aways would wreck the entite food •e&amp;rolina, Louisiana, Georgia and
industry.
Oklahoma.
Besides, the official said, USDA
already is spending nearly $35 bil·
.
.
lion on domestic food aid through
food stamps, school lunches- and
breakfasts;summer meals and meals
on wheels. "It'S hard to imagine we
need that much more.''
IB9s
One in 10 Americans -or more
than 25 million- now receives food
sl3J!lps. But Wise noted that a USDA
report, based on 1988 daw, found
that only 59 percent of those eligible
SATURDAY, IOV. 7
were being served. Many Americans,
he said, must rely on food donations.
2:00P1
. WiseisthechainilanofthcHouse
Morrl• and Dorothy Huklna
GovemmentOperations subcom mit·
'Ariel Thllllll'll
tee on agriculture and investigated
426 2nd Ave., Galllpolla, Oh.
the situation with a series of hear·
C.II446-ARTS for !{!ore Info.
ing,,

Critics slam USDA export policy
' .

WASHINGTON (AP)- The wheat flour. USDA,asaresult,spends
AgricultllfC Deparunem is stepping less on storage and handling, and the
up export subsidies to promote sales cost of farm subsidies drops because
ofU.S. grain overseas as tile election growers earn more from the market
nears, while government donations when price-depressing surplusesdisdwindle for recession-battered food appear.
But the cut in donations has come
pantries and soup kitchens.
Critics say the beneficiaries of the at the same time a I in gering recession
Bush administration's aggressive ·has forced record numbers of Ameriexpo11 policies include grain traders, cans tci seek the government's help
oil-rich nations and countries with with their grocery bills.
questiooable human-rights records
Rep. Bob Wis~. D'W.Va., S3ys
that buy subsidized l,J.S. wheat at boosting expon subsidies also d.rives
cheaper prices than domestic mill- up the cost of food for consumers.
"Such a policy results in a doubleer.&gt;.
The losers, they say, are America's barreled blow against our low-in·
poor, elderly and school cafeterias come Americans because prices are
that have been stretc)1ing their meals higher at the market at the same time
with USDA's SW']&gt;lus commodities. domestic food programs arc shutting
Farm policies, including export down.''
\ ButaseniorUSDAofficial,ppeak·
subsidies, hav~ emptied gpvernmcpt
warehouses of commodities such as _.0j last week on condition of ano·
nymity, said rewritinl! federal farm

The Answers You Need

·;r~~ABUSHED
ArruEL '

Festival attracts hundreds
of people over the Weekend

.WHOOPI GOLDBERG

SISIER/Cf

A THEATER WITH A CHOICE!

UNDER ' ~
Sl EGE .:...

SOIMJI! LIKE IT: HOT • Sometimes, presen·
tation Is jil!it as important as tbe fmished prod·
· . uct. But sometimes, even that doesn't help. Just
ask Shermaa Mills, whose "Mason County
Beach Chiir' 'eveatually won kim third place in

THE LAST OFTHE
MOHICANS

.fi"TIQUE
·fiOCTIO"

I I

..

1 Section, 12 Pege• 25 cento
A Multimedia Inc. -paper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, October 12,1992

COLONY THEATRE

STlVlN
SEAGAL

.

Low tonight In mld-405.
Tuesday, sunny high In mld-601!1.

Saturday's cbili cook-Gif, staged as a part of the
Big Bend Sternwheel Festival. The sombrero
definitely helped draw interest, though! Also
piclll}'ed are Mills' 115Sistant, Belva Miller, and
Roger Wood. (Sentinel Plloto by Brian J, Reed)

By JUUE E. DILLON
Sentinel News Stall'
The Third Annual Big Bend
Stemwheel Festival attracted hoc·
dreds of people to Pomeroy over .
the weekend.
According to Larry Banks, president of the Sternwheel Festival
Committee, everyone seemed to
enjoy the event. Banks stated he
was particularly happy about the
turnout of poople all weekend and
that those most of the vendors and
· crafters are excited about ~uming
next year. In addition, Banks stated
operators of the P.A. Denny have
also asked to come ~k next year
as hj~ve the operators of Reserve
Transportation which provided the
entertainment barge.
"It's been a long time since
Pomeroy has seen that many people," stated Banks, He said it has
been reported by Mary Powell,
tourism director for the Meigs
County Chamber of Commerce,
that states were represented by out

Move underway·to prevent new
rental trailers zn village of Racine

AS CLOSE AS YOUR PHONE!

ops
first
place
C
nd
b
EHS
. . a. Cl C· h
t
·
o
u
.honors In . . ass ·s. ow a · ·

''

·

Performing before a panel of
The Eastern Marching Band
Ohio
Music Education Association
tniveled to Obio University Satur·
judges,
the Eastern Band put on its
day to compete in t!te Athens In vi- ·
best
show
of the season and cap·
tationai Marching Festival.

to the top five male and female
runners. All registered walkers
were eligible for a prize drawing.
Chili cookoff winners, in the
individual category, were: Jim
Warner, farst: Mitch Meadows and
Lisa Collins, second; and Sherman
Mills and Belva Miller, third. Cor·
porate winners were: Teaford Real·
ty, ftrst; Coolville Lions Club, sec·
ond; and Smitty's, third. Honorable
mention in the corporate category
was awarded to Story Law Office.
Plaques were awarded to business
winners and individual prizes
included a Coleman Gas Stove for
ftrst place, a 16-quart stainless steel ,
chili pl&gt;t for second place, and a 56quart ice cooler for third place.
Participating stemwheelers over
the weekend were -the Nora Jean,
Brenda J., Virginia, U.S.S. Mud·
sock, Rufus B II, Old Glory, J.F.
Englert, Lakie Marie, Katie H.,
Shiela D., P.A. Denny, Jenny B.,
Gambler, Henny Cook, Princess
Margy, Dirk Taylor, Ruddy Duck,
Hubba's Pride and the Hobby III.

Congressman Miller takes .
final bow at locks dedication

By JIM FREEMAN
OVP News Stair
Congressman Glarence Miller
from the now~defunct lOth. Ohio
Congressional District said "my
drealils have been realized and my
work has been done" at the opening
of the new Gallipolis Locks Satur·
day.
.
In what may be the long-time
congressman's final bow, Miller
boat or two, covered tile water, makiug for a
AFI'ER THE RACE ·The Ohio River was a
praised those who made the project
beautiful view from tbe shore, or from another
sight to IJehold on Saturday aftemoon following
a reality. Miller took office in
boat, as seea here. (Sentinel Photo by Br~an J,
the stenwheel races. Sternwheelers of all sizes,
1967.
Reed)
. as weD as houseboats and an outboard pleasure
Miller's congressional district
was eliminated by redistricting. He
then lost a bitter primary battle in
June against Congressman Bob
McEwen.
'' ...This is, for those who have
been closely tied to the fate and
future of (Ute Gallipolis Locks
Racine Village Council ~as Public Affairs to spend m01e than properties. He said that the work Replacement project) - truly a
started action on an ordinance pro- $1,000 required for .reJIBirs to the must be done before the end of the historic day," Miller said.
Miller continued:
hibiting new rental trailers in the piping in the 3e!1110r bUilding. Jef· year and that the material has ·
"More than 50 years ago, the
viUage.
.
fers ConstruCtion will do the work. alrelicly arrived in preparation for
.
At a recent meeting council
Mayor Franl&lt;; Cleland reported getting the job underway.
original Gallipolis Locks and Dam
The purchase of grating for the project was dedicated and put into
gave a ftrst reading to an ordinance that the· hold up on the water line
restricting rental trailers. The Ordi· work to _tie in Vine, Main and State drain at Third and State Route 124 service. At the time, it seemed suf·
nance must have two more read· · Route 124 lines, relates to ease- )'las approved. Council's hope is ficient to handle the commercial
ings and be adopted bef!&gt;re .going meniS. He saidthat there are a cou- that the larger grating will prevent barge traffic plying the Ohio River
into effecL
pie of propeny owners who have flooding in that area during heavy - heading north towards Pitts·
At:tion was taken during the not signed ~ents necessary to rains.
burgh's steel country or south
meeting to per!llit the Board of permit the village to cross thetr
Continued on page 3
toward the Gulf of Mexico. Barges
were smaller, then, and easier to
. manipulate along the water's surfacei'he 600-foot main locking

I

of state license · plates. Banks
expresses ·his sincere appreciation
to the staff and volunteers who .
assisted in any way with the week·
end.
The weekend was fiUed with a
variety of entenainment including
performances by Dee and Dallas,
the Meigs High School Marching
Band, Ultimatum, Dave Barrows
and the·Wheels, Denver Rice, the
Ohio Valley Two-Steppers, the
Shady River Shufflets and
Crossover Band.
Winners of Saturday's SK Run,
under the direction of Mike
Kenredy, were, women's. category,
top five: Trina Turner, Pomeroy;
Nancy Tapocsi, Howard; Becky
Cotterill, Pomeroy; Barbara Ros·
tad, Pomeroy; and Susan Grueser,
Shade. Top five finishers in the
men's category were P.J. Chadwell, Pomeroy; Nathan Baloy,
Pomeroy; Steve Zronek, Athens;
Bill Toundas, Pomeroy; and Gary,
McMahan,'Parkersburg, W.Va.
Plaques and prizes were presented

women who actually built the new
locks.
"There is another equally impor·

tant group of outstanding ,poople
we need to recognize today: I
Contipued on A·3
....'\.~·

.

,
·

·

a~nt~~w~:t!~~~h=·

chamber allowed barges primaril&amp;

tlon at ihe time."
.
.lured farst place in Class C with a
Miller then demonstrated how
total of 255.60 points out of a pos· the world has changed since the
sible 300. Eastern's percussion also 1938 dedication of the existing
won ftrSt place in their class.
locks and dam:
The band was also named ''Run·
"When (the Gallipolis Locks
ner-up Grand Champion" meaning and Dam) was completed... Joe
the band came in second overalf. DiMaggio was playing for the New
INTO THE MUSIC • Holly Williams, daughter of Allen and
The band was awarded the "High York Yankees, FDR was in the Marilyn WUiiams or Pomeroy and one of three field commanders ror
Music" trophy for the day. ·This is White House, Spencer Tracy won the Meigs High School Band, really "got into the music" during Point
unusual for il band of 26 members an Oscar, a liam burger cost 15 Pleasant's Battle or the Bands Saturday. Williams is pictured above as
to be able to .win any overall cap- cents, gasoline was less than a she directs the band during its competition show. The local band won
tion award. That honor usually. quarter a gallon and John KeM~y third place band award in Class A, first place color guard, and second,
goes to bands from large suburban was a freshman at Harvard. Things place field commanders. (OVP photo by Mindy Kearns.)
schools. .
·
have chan$ed ... barge ttaffic on the .
Eventual contest champion, nation's mland waterways has
RHnoldburg, 'from suburban · increased dramatically over the
Columbus, outpointed Eastern by past 25 years, Huge convoys of
1.1 point to capture the crown.
barges- vital to the operations of
Following the band's Athens American Industry and Business performance, Eastern traveled to now command the Ohio River and
•
Point Pleasant High School for the demand safe, ·swift and sound pas·
An
attempt
to
intimidate
wit·
Witnesses at the scene said the
annual BaUie of the Bands. It was sage through the series of locks lin·
•
nesseS
could
be
related
to
a
shoot·
shooting
may have stemmed from
the first time the Eutem Band had ing the river.
ing
in
Gallipolis
Friday
that
left
a
an
earlier
dispute at the River Val·
entered that contest and the first
"The economic health of this
man
dead
and
his
daughter
injured,
ley
and
Gallla
Academy High
time in four years to :comtiete in nation is ties to the movement of
the
Columbus
Dispatch
repon~d School footbaU game October 2.
West Virginia.
raw materials, and few facilities are
morning.
The youth, 17-year-old Jerry
Following the contest Eastern now as vital as the magnificent thisOlley
Angel,
48
1 Gallipolis, died Matney of Gallipolis; is in custody
was .named first ·place in Class C complex we're lledicating today., ·
over four .other bands, and !ilso . "With thal·l)aving been said, I Friday of a gunshot wound to the. awaiting arraignment Tuesday
won ftrst place percussion. East· believe it is most apPropriate... to chest after apparently ar$uing with . before a juvenile cow:t judge, Gal·
ern's field commander, Dawn express my personal thllnlcs 10 my a youth against whom etther he t&gt;r lia County Prosecutor Brent A.
Foley, won the third place [lrum friends in the u.S. Asmy Corps of his daughter were to testify· in a Saunders said Saturday.
court case, the DispatCh reported
Saunders said he intends to have
Major trophy· At Point Pleasant, Engineers, Huntington District
Angel's
dllu~bter, Paula, 23, Matney tried as an adult.
Eastern scored 85.25 out.of a possi· office, with whom we have worked also of Gallipolis, was treated at
According to Ohio Revised
ble IOO_points.
· · f malci
The next competetive outil)g for for years in the pursutt o
ng Holzer Medical Center for a buUet Code section 2929.04, purposefully
Eastern will be Oct. 24 when tl!e this projeCt a reality. I salute
of wound in her_right leg.
killing someone to prevent their
band will travel to Tri·valley High you, and your talent for takinf an
Police Detective Michael Tuck· testimony in criminal proeeedings
School near zanesville. The band tdea and turning it into one o the er said this momin~ that the inci· . or in retaliation for a witness' testi·
will also compete in the OMEA great civil works facilities in this dent is under invesltgation. He said mony is punishable by imposition
intimidation charges have not ~n of the death penalty.
Stale Finals at Cooper S\ldium in' country."
Columbus on Nov. 7 at 1 p.m.
Miller then credited the men and filed.

Slaying may be linked
to witness intimidation ·

-Holzer ·Health Hotline
1~80.0-462-5255 .

•.

\

EASTERN WINS FIJ{ST • The Easlen High School Baud woo
first place bud In Class C Saturday at tbe Point Pleasant Battle of the
Bands. One of six bands compellna in CIIISS C, Eastern also won third
place field commander, and Rrst pta~ percussion. Pictured above Is a
memker of the band receivlna a trophy from Dr. Danny
W~tmoreland, oue of the restival's co-spousors. (OVP photo by
Mindy Kearns.)
· . .
·.

I.

an

I

�Monday, October 12, 1992

Commentary

The Dally Sentinel

•

Page 2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomaroy-Uid~leport,

Ohio .
Monday, October 12, 1192

.

1 .~· The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

p.g.........,

••

Qllayle quer~ed FDA for drug firms

•

••

WASIDNGTON - On 1be sur.
advanced.ari aaenda in Congress, nications. "I think that's one of the
face, it doesn't seem like tbe .
as well as in the executive brand!, reasons he was re-elecled (as a sen·degree of redness in maraschino
J l
which has shown a clear tilt toward ator). He also had a reputation for
cherries in canned fruit cocktails
these industries and away from not liking it when bureaucrats
could vie for lbe auentioo of a U.S.
. consumers, according 10 his critics. · didn '! listen 10 the concerns of
senator.
11'1'
Meanwhile,inSOilleofQuayle's small businesses and qqite freBut in 1988, then-Sen. Dan
J.tdC
InS eln
most vitriolic auacts on the Clin- quently went to hat for them in that
ton/Gore ticket, he has accused regard."
Quayle was upset that cherries, ·
ROBERT L. WINGETI'
c.ate ~lings, cough clropl and the
Ironically, it was the FDA under them of toadyin~t 10 trial lawyers.
Outing the Keating Five hearlip suets of tomorrow might lose the Bush/Quayle administration who have often ballled in court ings, special counsel Robert BenPubllllter
their fue-engine red glow, if the that decided in January 1990 to against the drug and chemical
nett in 1990 warned the Senate that
food
and
Drug.
Administration
got
fmally
ban
the
use
of
Red
Dye
No.
·
d
.
·
"constituent service cannot be eleCHARLENE HOEFLICH
PAT WffiiEHEAD
ts
3 after nearI Y a decadeof .contro- m Quayle
ustnes. · collected more than
I way.
vated
to the status of li religion"
Genenl Man~~ger
Anlstant Publisher/Controller
Quayle ~rote the head of ~e v~.Y and tests. .
$54,000 in contributions from 'because many sins have been comFDA on April 29, 1988, &lt;!d'ending
Th.e actual nsk posed ~r R~ chemical interests during his ' 1980 mitted in the name of religion in
LETTERS OF OPINION ore welcome. They should be 1m thm 300
Red Dye N'o. 3. - .a colonng agent No. 3 ts extremely sm.all, satd ·s~nate campaign and about ' world history.
·
words. All letters ore aubjec:t lo editing IOd must be signed with IUUIIe,
for ~oods. cosmeucs and pharma- Heallh II!"' Hum~ Services ~'---$-iT,OOO in
frQm
some
In
a
con1roversy
over
a
second
iddmaond telephone number. No llllligned letten.will be published. l.en&lt;n
ceuuc~s that had been. linked to tary Louts W. Sullivan, at the biDe. pharmaceutical houses while in
suspected carcinogen, Quayle
shoulq be in good taste, odd!eaiiq ;.,.... not penooalities. .
.
c~r m laboratory Slu(!ies of 1111$. :'However, federsllaw in this area Congress. He made appearances at .wrote then-Environmental ProteCI am very concerned lhat a ban ts clear. There have been laboratory $2 000 a pop before PfiUC.· Merck
tion Agency Administrator Lee
on this importan~ coloring . ag~nt s~udies which sh.owed that very &amp; 'co., Bristol-Myers, Ind. and a Thomas in June 1987 when the
.could be economtcally damal!mg .htgh doses of Red No. 3, adminis- unit of G.D. Searle &amp; · Co.
agency was reviewing a key chemifor .the f~ and phar"!~euucal tered directly in the diet, caused Bush/Quayle and the Republican cal used in die ·dry-cleanmg pro•. '
.. busmesses m my stat~,. ~uayle · cancer in ratS."
.
National C0111mittee received more .cess. Quayle weighed in on per~ote. ~e noted that IllS . espeThoush no one accuses Quayle than $185,000 from lhe top-grosschloroethylene, or Perc, whether it
ctally tmportant to candy ' and of exerbng improper influence a ing us pl\armaceutical companies should be upgraded from a "possi!':!ked goods~~" because it ~eview of his corresponden(:e wh~e and ~eeutivcs (rom 1987 to 1991, ble carcinogen" to a "probable
By KATHERINE RIZZO
tmports a UOJQ.UC pink shade ihat m the U.S. Senate shows that this according to Public Citizen's · can:inogen " :
.
Associated Press Writer
.
,
wASHINGTON - Two years ago, parts of the Cincinnati subuib of cannot be achtev~~ wi,~ .other wasn't~ ftnt time~ went to bat &lt;;ongress Watch. .
"A reclas~ification of per·
a~ved color ~bves. .Quayle for the ~18 phannaceubc:al and drug
•'The bottom line is that Sen. chloroethylene as a 'probable car·
st: :Bernard reeked of ammonia t:oming from a chemical plant, and the
~rud ~~ w~ also crucial for ~g comparues ~. dot I~ - an.d Quayle did have .a well·deserved
cinogen' would almost certain!)
suite was fighting company over its pollution.
.· :roday, the president of Phthalcem Corp. brags about lhe smell going tdenbficallon ... often only mmor have been map contnbtltors to hiS reputation for looking out for his · lead to state and federal regulatol)
away. Marv Gallisdoffer sounds almost evangelistic ~hen he says indus- s.hade (!ifferences ~ used to ~is, sta_te and · nation~l political cam- constituents," says Jeff Nesbit. the efforts that would require dry
tmgulsh one drug from anolher.
patgns. Quayle, 10 tum, has long vice president's (!irector of commu- cleapers to install costly control
try ~ouldn 'I fight environmental laws.
·
·:'It's time to come into the 20th century and understand that if you're
technologies . I ·have received
gOing to be a good neighbor ... you can't concl.uct business lhe way we (lid
numerous leuers from dry cleaners
years ago," he said. ''You have responsibilities, and lhe ~nsibilities
from around my home state of.lndiana stating that their small busi- .
have to be faced."
Onl~ W11·Wl·
nesses would not survive such
· ;Jltis is from a factory boss wllo admits his plant cut its pollution only
under pressure from lhe Ohio Environmental ProteCtion Agency.
requirements."
Quayle warned that any action
. . Now, hC points out lhat even before signing a consent agreement with
"would have serious conseque~~Ces
thUtate, Phlhalcem installed three scrubbers and a carbon absorber unit
for so many small businesses
toJesuict ammonia going into the air.
•·
across the country," and not¢ thai
. ·Those investments put Phthalcem on· an environmental group's list of
an EPA science advisory board
companies lhat significandy reduced toltic emissions.in 1990.
thought that more research was
· •· Gallisdcrfer says he's glad they made the inveslments. And he doesn't
required.
Quayle had joined one of
mind giving the government an annual inventory of toltic chemicals the
the
most
intense lobbying efforts
factory puts
The company makes copper phlhalocyanine blue mtde, a
ever
on
Capitol
Hill Involving .a
chemical thjlt goes into pigments for printing mk and other )XOducts.
chemical
under
EPA
review.
Yet he is against • proposed law lhat would require factories 10 notify
However,
the
EPA
announced
their ncig~bors I.Wice a year if they have been exposed 10 unsare level~ .of
reducing
emissions
of
regulations
toxic chemicals.
)
·That requirements is part of the "label law'' baliQt issue that Ohio votPerc from large dry-cleaning facili:
ers will decide Nov. 3.
•
ties. Last summer, an Italian
· $uP)IOrt.Crs say voters should pass Issue S io give polluters a big dose
researcher found that people who ·
of.mouvation.
work in dry cleaners may be at risk
"Companies become good neighbors when they're forced to become
..
of kidney failure because of expogpod neiJihbors," said Ed H~ of the enviforunental and consumer
sure to the chemical.
grQUp Ohio Citizen Action, which put the issue on lhe balloL
Jack Anderson and Michael
. : "These factories would find ways to clean up their act fast," he said.
Binstein are syndicated writers
•''!bey would not want to notify lheir neighbors lhat they are putting their
for United Feature Syndicate,
he,;tlth at risk."
~
.
Inc.
·' Ohioans for Responsible Heallh Infonnation, an industry group that
o~ Issue 5, sars complying would be cumbersome and cosdy and do
nOthing for the envuoumenL
.. Companies may feel compelled to send notices routinely to shield
'. ~
themselves qainst lawsuits, said spokesman Bryan Haviland.
· "It'rliability proteCtion," he said.
.
·Haviland predicts industries would spend $2.29 1e, notice for a certiThe follOWing vignette probably reason is," the professor replied, ministry sev~ri or eight years ago. up on tile next.
fi«i-mail receipt proving each lcuer was delivered: 'Who's to rely on the
captures
as well as -"Ything can the "I know the psalm but he knows A widower now, he lives in a cotU.S. Mail semce to ensure legal protection?" he said.
St. Clair had a·lot of to say
secret
of
the great contribution the shepherd.''
tage .on the camp grounds where he about.verse 19 - "Let every man
'Hoplcins said the notices would have to go out only when a factory's
Inuoducing others to their friend arranges the Sunday morning and be swift to hear, slow to speak,
netghbcn are exposed to dangerous amounts of pollution '--- no dangerous 111adc by lhe unsung clergy of our
land.
the shepherd may be the most evening summer services. He had a slow to wralh." He said:
exposure, no nouce.
·
A speech professor read the important thing lhe unsung clergy serious bean operation a year and a
'Issue 5 would require companies to notify everyone who lives· or
"The gOod Lord has given us
23rd
Psalm, which begins "The do- more important than winning half ago, which forced htm to cur- two ears and one tongue. Therefore
worts within two miles of the openllion. Gallisdorfer wonders how a
Lord is my shepherd," at a church the annual prize for preaching, or tail his own preachins.
. we should listen twice as much as
company could be sure il reached everybody.
. He had no intenllon of preach- we speak.''
·,"If lhey would allow you to take an ad m the newspaper or something service one Sunday morning. He bein,g written up in lhe denominaheld the congregation spellbound tiona) magazine for having the ing on the Sunday I was there, but
of l)ult nature, it would be a different thing,'' he said.
"If you give everyone a piece of
'Almost every Ohio county has factories that could be subject to the wilh his perfect diction and dramat- largest Sunday school in the dis- at the last minute the scheduled your mind, you won't have any
ic rendiuon of the beloved psalm of tricL
toxic-release notices.
·
speaker had to cancel his appear- peace of mind for yourself."
'ln 1990, the most recent year for which statistics are available, Ohio David. His performance was a
Nominations for my Unsung ance. It was not wid10u1 some trep"
"We've all been to organ
work of art
p~ more lhan 13 million tons of toltic chemicals into the air, water and
Clergy Hall of Fame are coming ·m idation that St. Clair stepped into recitals where the sick insist on
. The following Sunday the from readers all over the country. the empfy pulpit. He had not telling us about the state of lheir
e~where.
·
'Ohio is third among all states in the amount of toxic chemicals church's elderly pastor read the You can send your own nomination preached smce lhe spring of 1991.
liver·, their kidneys and their bean.
released by its factories, according to reports the factories ftle with the same psalm. He stumbled several to: Unsung Clergy, Box 195 I,
"If 1 should go silent in the Still, we ought to listen to the sick.
times m his delivery and his voice Coltimbus, Ohio 43216-1951.
U.S. Environmental ProteCtion Agency.
middle of my sermon, pray for
"Be careful of your tongue. It's
With all of those chemicals and all of those factories, ''People in urban cracked. But when he came to lhe
My personal nomination is a me," he said.
in a wet pl11ce and it's easy to.
1 lhink we all prayed for him at slip."
areas in particular would be overwhelmed with warning letters to the end of his reading there wasn't a . United Methodist pastor, Rev.
·
dry eye in lhe church.
Robert B. SL Clair. He led lhe ser- that moment.
·
point where the warnings become meaningless," Haviland said.
Unung clergy like St. Clair
Someone eventually mentioned vice and preached one Sunday lhis
His.text was lhe ftrst chapter of touch hearts and win souls with
Citizen Action's breakdown· of lhe reports filed by U.S industries put
Ohio at No. S for 'releases of chemicals tllat could cause cancer and No.2 the contrast to· the professor- past summer at the historic the book of James. That makes a their 11entle humor and also wilh
wondering why it was lhat when he Methodist Camp Ground in Lan- · good teltt for a hot summer Sun- their smcerity and devotion - and
- ·behindTexas- for releases of chemicals that can cause birlh defects.
Behind the Issue 5 debate is a difference of beliefs about how lhe gov- read lhe psalm lhe congregation sat caster, Ohio, where Billy Sunday day, since the· congregation does their love for the shepherd.
in silent adiniration, but when the once preached. The great wooden not have to follow a complicated
emlilent should ~~ the heallh of its citizens. .
·
. George Plagenz ·is a syndicatline of thoughL Each verse has its
·Opponents of the initiative say Ohio and lhe federal government have pastor got up the next Sunday lhe tabernacle was built in 1895.
St. Clair retired from the active ow11 independent piece of advice. ed writer for Newspaper Enterplenty of pollution laws and regulatiens and the power to punish violators. people were moved to tears • ."The
Miss one admonilion, you can pick prise.Asociation.
"The laws on the boob are fme ... if lhey are enforced,'' said Havi- ·

By "ack Ander.'Son

and
hae1B' t •

.•'
•

honorarimn

'Label Law·' an issue
for factories, too

CJA~

.

out.

Wh~t

lruld.

.

"But Hopkihs said: ''The right way to approach lhe problem is to give
the'companies strong incentive to avoid pollution at the outset.''
·

Deadline for publication
of election letters Oct .28 ·
.•The Daily Sentinel welcomes letters regarding lhe Nov. 3 general elec·

tion. However, in the interest of fairness, no election letters will be
actepted after IZ noon Oil Wednesday, October 28.
•Individuals shoitld address issues and not personalilies.
.
·
:Letters purely endorsing can(!idates will not be used.
:r.etters should be 300 words or less, prefembly typed. All leuers are
subj\lCI to e(!iting and must be sigtie4 wilh name, address and telephone
nuinber. Telephone numbers will not be published. No unsigned letters
wiJI be publisfted. Leuers should be in good liSle.

today in history
•

By The Associated Press
· T~y is Monday, ~t. 12, lhe 286th .day of 1~. There are 80 days
lelt m the 1Je&amp;r. Thts ts Columbus Day m lhe Umted States, as well as
~gi~g~yin~
.
.
.
.
.
;Toclay's Highlight in History:
.five hundred years ago, on Oct. 12, 1492 (Old Style calendar; OcL 21
N~w Style), Christopher Columbus anived with his expedition in the pre~nt-day .Bahamas.

.
.On thiS date:
.
.In 1861, the' Confederate ironclad Manassas attacked the northern ship
Richmond bn the Mississ· i River.
:In 1870, Gen. Roben~ Lee, the Confederate military commander
(!i~ in~ VL, at 81C 63.
.'.
'
. In 1892, 1.00 years ~o. ~ original version of the Pledge of ~le­
·. gillnCC was tint recited m public schools to celebrate lhe 400th anmverofColumbus' lan(!ing.
.
.
~ 1915, English iwne Edith Cavell was executed by the Germans in
occ:upied Belgium during World war 1.
.
.
-In 191.5, in a speech ill New York, former.President theodore !Wo, sev~lt criticized U.S. citizens who identified lhemselves by dual nationalitie$, saying. "There is no room in lhis country for 'hyphenated Americanism."'
'

'

I•

'

our· unsung clergy do best

George R. .Plagenz

'

Clean Congress through ·ballot box
What you have here is a man on
the verge of changing his mind. Fot
years, I have said.lhat term limits is •
the wrong remedy for a real disease. Now, with yet another sistently ·demonstrate the kind of
Congress having limJ&gt;C!I home to independence we claim 10 love, and
try to justify its chrontc inability to nine times out of 10, he or she is
function, the weight of evidence in soon an ex-member. What we realfavor of drastic change is begin- ly want. of course, is someone who
ning .to break down my defenses. 'speaks OUf mind, not her own.
The doubts still stand, but lhey are
At least part of the problem with
bent back as far as they can go Congress at the end of the 20th
without cracking.
century is that we, the people, have
First, a restatement of my old a fundamental problem. We want
arguments against term limits. The to have it two ways at once. We
main one is that we, the people, are believe in incompatible things and
not really serious about what we · demand that politicians square the
say we wanL If Congress actually circle for us. We want services
measured up to the· standards we without taxes, benefits for ourclaim to endorse, we would be hor- selves ·and spartan stringency for
rified. Bashing COIIgress is a spec- others. We clfim in polls to believe
tator s~rt as old as the republic. in limited gov~ment; we demand
An electorate lhat chooses and con- on a daily basis what only an
tinues to support congressmen who expensive government can provide.
speak an.d vote as independent
Last but not least, we ·want to be
actors is as rare as a Democrat in able 10 cherry-jlick our elected repthe White House.
resentatives without reprd to politWe pick diem, lhen we pick at ical ideolog:~: . and governmental
them, discovering to our alleged consequences. We say we vote
horror lhat they c0111promise, tem- · "for the man ·and not the. party,"
porize, waffle and renege on their and for 24 years (barring only the
pl'llllliaes. What we clairit to expect four Carter years) that has translatfrom our elected representatives is ed into a Democratic Con.sress and
what we rarely IDCtice in our daily a Republican president. Then we
lives or encounter very often in , claim to be baffled by the political
others: candor, steadfastness, a fit gridlock we have guaranteed.
In. otber words, a case can be
between P,teachment and practice,
and an ability to stand alone against made that the fault lies less with
a strong-running tide of popular Washington than with ourselves. If
opinion.
·
we really &gt;Manted an efficient gov,Let a member of Congress con- ernment and responsive representa-

Hodding Carter III

lives, we have adequate means at
our disposal tochoosebom.
But that, I'm now increasingly
inclined to believe, ignores the corruption that lies at the heart of
Washington's political culture.
Congress and the president have,
over time, conspired to create a
system lhat reinforces incumbency
and minimizes the possibilities of
successful challenge.
It is also a system lhat by open
seduction and tmplicit thrc:at coopts all btlt the most slrong-willed
of outsi«~crs. Think of the capital
·and those who live and work here
for very long as the Mafia and its
members. Whatever the standards
of the outside world may be, the
ones that matter are lhe ones.operative along the Pennsylvania
Avenue uis.
One of my best friends; a man
who has worked for Congress manand-boy for about three decades,
s11id something in considerable
anguish recently that I have been
unable to forget:
.
"I have absolutely no desire to
stay in lhis instibltion any longer. 1
have totally lost failh in it. It's a
· hard lhing to accept, but almost all
of them "-ve feet of clay. They're
all looking at polls and worrying
allout contributors. They stand by
each other more lhan lhey stand for
anylhing. &lt;m the tough issues, their
usual reply 15, 'Not me, baby."'
So what's to be done?
. "The only cUn: I can think ()f is
term limits," he said, surprising .&lt;

••

.himself wilh his own reply.
There is another remedy that
should be uied ftrst, I think. It's to
turn out as many incumbents as
posSible this year, a process already
well advanced. It is also to match
president and Congress, which is
not necessarily compatible )Yith.lhe
fust proposition. If ihe new brooms ·
do not sweep clean, beginning wilh
lhe way we finance congressional
elections, and if government controlled by one party is no more
responsive than divided government, then my last argument
against the logic of term limits will
... fall.
Mind you, turning the rasc•ls
out every 12 years may do RQthing
more than rotate the rascals. Further, Congress as the home of
short-term amateurs will mean lhat
the balance of power will tilt
inevitably toward the Washington
of long-term bureaucrats iii the
executive wing.
·But those are the arguments
against term limits. Watching
Congress perform, year-in and
·year-out, ts the overwhelming
argument in their favor.
· Hoddlag Carter HI, former
State Department spokesman
llid award-winning reporter, editor and publisher, Is president or
MalnStreet, 11 Wuhlngton, D.C.basecl television production company and I syiullcated writer for
Newspaper Enterprise Association.. ·
~

WINNING COOKS ~ Pictured are the winners or the chili cook-orr, held In conjunction
with tbe Big·Bend Sternwheel Festival. Front, 1.
r, are Jay Warner, organizer; Sherry Warner,
representing Smitty's, third place corporate;
and Rob Morgan or Rlepenhorr Distributing,
event sponsor. Back, 1-r, are Steven L. Story,
who presented prizes aad was awarded Honorable Mention in the corporate division; St11te

WINNING CAPTAINS -These captains
were·among the winners in tbe sternwheel races
held In conjunction wltb Saturday's Big Bend
Sternwheel Festival: They are, in no particular
order, Mike Enalert, second; Dave Schlosser,

Representative M.ark Malone, who presented
awards; Jim Waraer, first place Individual wll·
ner; Mitch Meadows and Lisa Collins, secolld
place .individual; Sherman Mills and Beha
Miller, third place Individual; Chris Wny and
Aagie.Tearord ol Tellford Realty, first place CGI'·
porate; and 'John Breedlove aad Jesse Davis or
Coolville Lions Club, second place corporate.

Judge O'Brien processes 43 court cases

Meigs · County Court. Judge
Patrick H. O'Brien processed 43
cases last week.
Fined were: Amy Brothers, Rut·
land, seat belt violation, costs only;
Leah S. Daniels, Rutland, speed,
,--o-$25 and costs; George Caner, Gal·
ohn
Chase
lipolis, DWI, $450 and costs, 30
J
· days in jail, suspended to io days,
John (Jack) Lochary Chase, 70, one year license suspension and
Meigs County was one of 15 counties in Ohio with -unemployof
6380 Springboro Pike, Dayton, two years probation, driving under
ment rates of over 10 percent for (\ugusL
'
died
I;:riday, Oct. 9, 1992 as.the suspension, 30 days in jail, sus·
A.~cording , to the report from the Ohio Bureau of Employment
result
of injuries' suffered in a hit pended to 10 days and costs,
Servtces, Metgs County had a 11.3 unemployment rate, a slight
and
run
accident on Springboro assault, silt monlhs mjail, suspend·
decrease froni the July rate but a sizable increase from August, 1991
Pike.
ed 10 30 days, with credit for time
wben the rate was 8.9 percenL · ·
Born
in
Pomeroy
on
Sept.
20,
served, two years probation, and
The report listed 1,000 of the 8.400 labor force in the county as
1922,
he
spent
his
early
years
in
continue counseling; Dennis L.
unemployed.
Huntington, W. Va. where his Hart, Pomeroy, seat belt violation,
father, the late Glenn E. Cbase, costs only; .James L. Parker,
founded and was chief engineer of Pomeroy, seat belt violation, $20
the WSAZ ra(!io station.
and costs ; Donald G. Monroe, Jr.,
Meigs Emergency Services units answet:ed 12 calls for assistance
He
served
with
the
American
Vienna, W.Va., seat belt violation,
over the wcelcend.
Occupational
Services
in
the
Eurocosts
only; Clarinda S. Theiss,
At 10;12 a:m. on Saturday, Middlepon unit went to Hartford,
pean
Theater
as
a
member
of
the
Racine,
speed, $22 and costs; Ran·
W.Va., and 1901:: Son)'ll Bush to Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Quarter
Master
Salvage
Collecting
dall
A.
Sigman,
Gallipolis, speed,
At 12:09 p.m., Racine unit. went to State Route 338 for Henry
Services
Co.,
15th
Infantry
Re~i$20
and
costs.
.
Bush, who WB;S taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital. At 3:12p.m.,
ment.
from
1944-1946.
He
was
disNellie
M.
Young,
Mason,
William Moms was taken from the Racine station to Veterans. At
charged
in
1946
as
a
staff
sergeanl
W.Va.,
seat
bell
violation,
costs
6:59 p.m., Racine unit went to Vine Street. Vera Beegle was taken
Mr.
Chase
was
a
retired
employonly;
Timothy
S.
Compson,
Rut·
to Veterans. At 9:32 p.m., Middleport squad went to Page StreeL
ee
of
the
2750th
.Air
Base
Wing
land,
seat
belt
violation,
costs
only;
Marilyn Bishop was taken to Pleasant Valley. At 11:42 p.m., MidClothing Sales Store at Wright Pat- Donald L. Hysell, Rutland, seat
dleport squad went to Overbrook Center and took I ames Spencer to ·
terson Air Force Base. He stUdied belt violation, costs only; Howard
Veterans.
art
at the Dayton Art Institute and L. Lockhart, Coolville, speed, $25
On Sunday atl2:28 a.m., Pomeroy squad too1c Edna Henry from
was
a self-taught musician and and costs; Richard D. Buzzard,
· Pomeroy Nursing and Rehabilitation Center to Velerans. At 2:27 ·
photographer.
As a photographer, Racine, seat belt violation, costs
a.m., Middlepon unit took James Spencer to Veterans from Overhe
won
many
ribbons
at bolh coun- · only; George B. Fields, Pomeroy,
brook Center. At 9:25 a.m., Middleport unit went to State Route
ty
and
state
fairs.
He
was
a member seat belt violation, costs only;
554 in Cheshire for Com Rupe, who was taken to Holzer Me(!ical
of
Christ
Church
Episcopal.
·
Steven P. Ervin, Pomeroy, seat belt
Center. At 1:55 p.m., Middleport squad responded to Railroad
Besides
his
father,
he
was
previolation,
costs only; William C.
StreeL Hazel MeHaffey was tnmsported to Veterans.
ceded
in
dealh
by
his
mother,
Mary
Hannon,
Jackson,
expired me(!ical
At 1:35 a.m. today, Pomeroy sqpad was sent to PNiC. Thomas
Elizabeth
Lochary
Chase.
He
is
card,
$50
and
costs;
George R. Sis· Haynes was transported to Veterans. At 7:52 a.m.; Middleport
survived
by
James
Lochary
of
Censon,
Pomeroy,
failure
to control,
squad took Stanley Rousl) to Pleasant Valley from Overbroolc Centerville,
Ohio,
and
Charles
Lochary
$20
and
costs;
Melvin
R.
Thornton,
ter.
of Bartlett, Ill., and distant cousins, Racine, seat bell violation. costs
Robert Waters of Parkersburg, W.
Va., and Phyllis Ann Thomas of
Gallipolis.
A Representative from Congressman Clarence Miller's office
Funeral services will be held at
will conduct an open door session on Wednesday from I I a.m. to 1
1
p.m.
Tuesday at the Ewing
Services planned
p.m. at the Meigs County Courthouse.
Funeral
Home.
The
Rev.
Fr.
Albert
Hickory Hills Church of Christ
Any Q.uestions concerning the Federal government may be
will
present a series of sermons,
MacKenzie
will
officiate
and
burial
addressed to lhe representative.
. .
will be in lhe family plot at Beech "Growing Together Wilh God," on
Grove Cemetery. Friends may call Friday and Saturday at 7 p.m. and
at the funeral home 6 to 9 p.m. on Sunday at 9 a.m. and 7 p.m.
Monday (tonight).
The speaker Friday and Saturday will be Steve Fuchs of the Little Hocking Church of Christ. John
Beulah Hess
King
the Blackburn Hills
Beulah Vennari Hess, 77, Lum- Churchof
of Christ in Alhens will be
berport, W.Va., died Sunday, Oct. speaking Sunday morning and
4, 1992 at lhe United Hospital Cen- evening.
At 2 p.m. Sunday there
says the record high for lhis date ter in Clarksburg, W.Va.
By The Associated Press
will be congregational singing.
She was born Dec. 18, 1914 at There will also be an open house
A cold fron! will move into was 84 in I 928. The record low
Lumberport,
W.Va., the daughter all day Sunday . The church is
Ohio late today and bring a sligbt was 27 in 1964.
of
the
late
Joseph
and Rachela located approximately one mile
Sunset tonight will be 6:56 p.m.
chance of showers. Skies will be
Mazza
Vennari.
partly to mosdy sunny ho\]lever, as Sunrise Tuesday at6:55 p.m.
soulh of Tuppers Plains on Roule
Surviving are her husband, 7. There will be a potluck (!iMer at
Arouad the natloa
lhis frontal system is ralher weak.
Foggy, chilly weather settled · Henry C. Hess, I r ., two brothers, !2:30p.m.
Breezy southwest winds will devel.op and tum to lhe nonhwesttoward over the Great Lakes reJiion today • James Vennari and wife, Martha,
evening . Temperatures will rise and showers and fog hngered in Pomeroy, Paul Vennari and wife,
American Legion to meet
parts of ihe East
Mildred, Beckley, W.Va., five
into lhe 60s.
The Racine American Legion
Temperatures earl{ today were nieces and two nephews.
Cold Canadian air will invade·
Post 602 will meet Thursday at
Besides her parents, she was 7:30p.m. at lhe post home.
the state tonighL Temperatures will in the 4Qs in parts of the Great
plwnmet into the 30s in lhe north- Lakes region and as far soulh as preceded 'ih death by two sisters,
west quarter and central portions of Chattanooga, Tenn: Fog covered Mary Vennari and Kathryn Byers,
Granges to meet ·
and three brothers, Frank, Alexanthe state while lower 40s will occur Delroit, Cleveland and PiiiSburgh.
Star Grange and Star Junior .
·
Showers were forecast today der and Vance.
elsewhere. Scattered frost will
Grange will hold a Halloween
. She was co-o\Vner and operator Party and potluck supper Saturday
develop over northwest and central across the Great Lalc:es, with mostly
of the Mannington Dairy Queen, at 6:30p.m. at the grange hall. Cosdry weather elsewhere.
Ohio.
,High tempemtures were only in Mannington, W.Va., for 13 years tume judging will follow the dinThe latest wealher map showed
a low pressure system that will the 50s Sunday from the Great and managed an apartment com- ner. Presentation of a SO•year
move into the easteln Great ~es Lalc:es region and the nonhero half plex in Hanover, Md., for silt years. Golden Sheaf Cerlificate and a tallc
Services were held at Harmer by Norma Torres, Meigs County
and Ohio Valley this llfternoon, of lhe Ohio Valley to northern New
reaching the east coast tuesday England. But highs of 91 degrees Funeral Home in Shinnston, Health Depar1ment at 7:30 p.m. All
'
morning. High pressure will build set a record at Wesr Palm Beach, W.Va., on Oct. 7.
members and guests invited.
Fla.,
and
tied
a
record
at
Miami.
into the Ohio ,Valley tonight and
Sacramento, Calif., tied its
early Tuesday.
Homecoming
record
high Sunday of 96, and San
The Columbus weather station
Homecoming at HyseHRun
Francisco hit 83, the record-tying
Holiness Church, off Route 124 on
eighlh consecutive day with a high
Country Road IS, will be Sunday.
Continued from page 1
of 80 or above.
Sunday ·school is at9:30 a.m., worship at 10:45 a.m. and basket dinSouth·Central Ohio
The
I.
7
mill
renewal
levy
10
be
ner at 12:30 p.m. Rev. Cecil Wise
Tonight, clear with the low 40
on
the
November
ballot
was
diswiU speak at 2 p.m. and tbere wUI
to 45. Light northwest winds. Tuescussed
and
the
importance
of
voter
be
an evening service at 7:30 p.m.
day, mostly sunny wilh lhe high 60
approval
stressed.
The
J!IODey
will
Am
Ele
Power
....................
32
1/4
Pastor Robert Manley invites lhe
to65.
.
Ashland Oil... .....................26 3/8
go into the general fund for operat- public.
Extended forecast:
AT&amp;T.................................42
ing expenses including insurance,
Wednesday through Friday:
street
lights, gas, electricity and
Bank
One
.....................
,
.....
44
1/4
CCL to meet
Wednesday, a chance of showpolice
protection.
Bob
Evans
........................
.
18
112
The Middleport Child Conserers. Lows upper 30s to lower 40s.
Trick or treat night was set for vation League will hold its annual
Charming Shop................;.34 1{1.
Highs upper 50s to mid 60s. ThursOcL 30 from 6 to 7 p.m. Residents Halloween Party Thursday at 6
City Holding .................... .. l8 3/4
day, fair and warmer. Lows in the
who wish to participate are asked
Federal
Mogul..
.................
.16
1/4
40s. Highs 65 to 15. Friday, fair
I/4GoodyearT&amp;R
.............
615/8
to turn on their porch lights.
and warm . Lows upper 40~ to
. Council authorized Mayor CleKey
CenturioiJ
............
.......
19
3/4
lower 50s. Highs in the 70s. ·
land to attend an in-service meeting
Lands End .......................... 27 1/4
relating to mayor:s court.
.
Limited Inc........,.............. 21 318
FRI. THRU THURS.
Multime(!ia Inc.................. 24 3/4 . In an earlier meeting this month,
Rax RestawanL.:................3/16 · Council approved the purchase of a
Reliance Elecuic................ 16 10. · used compactor truck and took lhe
Veterans ·Memorial
necessary action to provide the
Robbins&amp;Myers ................ 13 1{1.
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS ~
fundin~ thro'ugh an amended
Shoney's
lnc
.....................
.l7
318
None.
appropnations
or(!inance. The comStar Bank ...................... ..... 29 3/4
SATURDAY DISCHARGESpactor
has
already
arrived. It
Wendy Int'l...... ................. .12 1/4
None.
mP~ -~ ~·-==--.~·~ ~ ~1::
'replaces
lhe
1975
c0111pactor
truck
Worthington Ind ........... .... .19'318
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS MOll. IHAU THURS.
SHOW lliiiS
which was in need of costly
Stock reports are th.e ·l0:30
Edna Henry, Pomeroy, and Ray7:30
OILY
·.
FRI.,
W. SUN.
repairs.
It
was
noted
that
the
village
a.m. quotes provided by Blunt,
mond Ginther, Portland.
ADMISSION
$1.50
7:30
AND 9:30
did
not
have
to
borrow
money
to
SUNDAY DISCHARGES - · Ellis and Loewl GaUl polis.
446·0923
make
the
purchase.
·
: None.

.
hS
Local briefs----, Area de at

Meigs jobless: rate down

Meigs units have 12 calls

Miller Representative to visit ·

Move...

Stocks

Congressman...
··

Livestock report

O~io Newapaper Auociation, National
Advertiain1 Representative, Branham
Newspaper Salu, 733 Third Avenue.

A THEATER
WITH A CHOICE!

NewYork, NnYork 10017.

()ne Week. ................ .............. ............. 1.80
()ne Month .... ......... .. :............ ...... .......$6.86
Ol&gt;e'Vear.......... .. .................... ....- .....$113.20
.
IINGLB COPY .
PRJCB
O..fly.. ....................................... ~·~ -25 Centl
sut..:mbeft not d,.lrill( to pay the carr!· ,
et maY nmil in advance dind t.o The
Daily Sentinel on. a tli.Tee., six oT 12
month.bull. Cred.il-will be civen .c anjer
U£:h w.ee.k.
•
·

NO aubeeriptiona by mail permitted iq
areaa when home carriiiT eenice is
available.
MaU aa..ort,t:ioM
liiotdo . .,., c .....~r

WHOOPI GOLDBERG

SISIER/Cf
..

1s

w..u ................. ,.......................$2).84 · ,

26W..U .......................................... US.16
62 Weeb .... " .............. .......... ............ l84.76
O.lolde-pCouiJ .

ts.w..u.....,....................................$2uo

26 w.u........................................... Mii.GO

or

•

. ·

8UB8CIIlPTJON llA'i'U
Br Canier or Motor Ro•ta

Hospital news

'·

'
·

POSTMASTER: Send addreu chaftiOO to .T he Daily Sentinel, 111 Cou.rt St.,
l'omonl&gt;; OHio 45769.

COLONY THEATRE

•

•

only; Terry L. Ottman, Sr., Port· speed, $21 and costs; Albert E.:
land, seat belt violation, costs only; Gupp, Pomeroy, disorderly while
Lori A. Hoffer, Pomero.y. seat belt intoxicated, $35 and costs; Carolyn
violation, costs only; )ames Griff- Atkins, Racine, driving under susing, Proctorville, sel)t belt viola- pension, $100 and costs. 30 days in
lion, $15 and costs.
jail, suspended to three, one year ·
Shannon Pierce, Racine, seat probluion; Donald Casto, Long·
belt violation, costs only; Todd J. Bottom, DUI, $450 and costs, 30
Napora, Gallipolis, seat belt viola· days in jail, suspended to 10, oper•
lion, costs only; Bryan R. Marcum, ator' s hcense suspende!l for one·
ParkerSburg, W.Va.; seat belt viola- year, two years probation; I.ee M.
tion, $15 and costs; DouglasS. Bing, Rutland, DUI, $350 and.Livingston, Lancaster, seat belt costs, three days in jail, operator ~s
violatioo, $17 and costs; Charles T. license suspended for 90 days·, ·
Stewart, Jr., Mason, W.Va., seat upon enrollment and completion of
belt violation, costs only; Melvin RTP school, $150 of fmc and jail··
L. McCafferty, Thornville, speed, 'will be suspended, failure to coit$20 and costs; Edward A. Walker, lrol, $25 and costs; Don M. Rose,' ·
Mentor, speed, $21 and costs; Eliz- Portland, failure to comply with ·.
abeth A. Pierce, Middlepon, speed. orders of a police officer, $350 and
, $10 and costs; seat bell violation, costs, $500 forfeiture to Law ·,
costs only; Ray S. Fowler, Char- Enforcement Trust Fund, 10 days
louesville , Va., speed, $28 and ' in jail, suspended to three, two ·
costs; Charles E. Williamson, Rut- years probation.
• .
land, failure to yield,$ 10 and costs;
Forfeiting bond was Jack Oakes,
Olivia Zivney, Gallipolis, seat belt JaclcsonviDe, Fla., speed, $85.
violation, $5 and costs; Tammy
Watkins, Pomero~.J?UI. 4500 and
costs, SIX months m jail, suspended
to 30 days, five years probation ,
Continued from A-1
operator's license suspended fori would like for any worker- conone year, plateS and registration to tractor, construction worker, heavy·
coun; Charles Barnhart, Coolville, equipment operator, carpenter,
DUI, $450 and costs, 30 days in trucker, pipefitter or anyone who
jail, s.uspended to 10, two years has had a shovel in their hands
probation, operator's license sus- since groundbreaking - to stand
pended for one year, failure to con- and allow us to applaud you. . , .
lrol, $30 and costs.
''True, Congress had to approve
Jay A. Holsinger, Tuppers the legislation making this project 11
Plains,leftofcenter,$25 and costs: reality ... the Corps of Engineers ·.
Giles L. Hysell, Racine, expjred had to put it into effect and ttie'
registration, $5 and costs; Charles barge industry had to make a sis-.
· M. Yates, Akron, speed. $24 and 'niftcant investment in success, but
costs; Gail P. Hart, Middleport, it was you who made it happen," he
emphasized. "For so long as you ,
and your family look upon the·
(Gallipolis Replacement Los:ks), '
will see a monument to your
P.m. at the Rock Springs .Oniled you
hard work."
·
Melhodist Church.
"I am very proud to have been a.
part of the Gallipolis story. There
Posl 9053 to meet
were times- more lhan I care to.'
Tuppers Plains VFW and Ladies count - in Congress when l ·
Auxiliary No. 9053 will meet in thought legislation pushing Galjoint session Thursday at 6:30 p.m. lipolis toward completion would '
wilh a dinner. Mark Malone will be stumble or be held hostage to .
the guest speaker. All members another issue or legislative item:·
attend.
But with the collective support and
united efforts of lhe congressional&gt;
Dance planned
delegations on both sides of the· ·
Tuppers Plains VFW Post No. river, lhe project prevailed. We've .
9053 and Ladies Auxiliary will been blessed 10 gather here today,
sponsor a round and square dance to mark and end and a beginning. ·
Friday from 8-11:30 p. m. with
"I thank you for allowillg me 10
music by C. J. and the Country comment on (the Gallipolis Locks '
Gentlemen. Public invited.
Replacement project). With this
being my final year in the house .
1lnd.the first year of this impressive ·
project, I can truly say that my
dreams have been realized and mY.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) work has been done," Miller con- ·
Direct livestock prices at selected eluded.
buying points Monday by lhe ProMiller, along with Congressman·
ducers LivestoCk Association:
Bob Wise (D-W.Va.) and Senator
Robert C. Byrd (0-W.Va.) were '
Cattle: uneven, 1.00 lower to · critical in passing legislation allow2.00 higher.
ing construction of the project.
' '
Slaughter steers: choice 68.00Legislation, expected to be
77.75; select 63.00-73.00.
signed by President Bush·, was:
Slaughter heifers: choice 66.00- recently introduced naming the·
75 .50; select57.00·70.00.
locks the Robert C. Byrd Locks
Cows: uneven, .50 lower to 2.00 and Clarence Miller Lockhouse. '·
higher; all cows 58.75 and down.
Bulls: uneven, 3.50 lower to
The Daily Sentinel
2.50 higher; all bulls 65.00 and
(liSPS Jll-1110)
down,
Veal calves:Publi1hed every afternoon, Monday
throuoh Friday, 111 Court St .• Pornervy,
Sheep and lambs: .50 to 5.00
Ohio by the Ohio Valley Publiahin1
lower; choice wools 45.00-63.00;
Compan)'IMuiUmedia Inc: ., Pomeroy,
choice clips 45.00-59.50; feeder
Ohio 45769, Ph. 993· 31156. Seeond claoo
poot.p poid at Pomotu)', Ohio.
lambs 21.00-59.00; aged slaughter
sheep 8.00-29.50.
Memberl n.~ Aaoc:iated.·Pteu, and the ,

- -Me•·gs announcements

Cold front moving into
Ohio; showers forecast

Weather

second; Gary Morton, first; Sean Bailey, fJTSt;
Lou Wendell, lint; Wally Venable, second; Jar·
rod Burdea, first; Rna Grady, second• Rich
Burden,fii'SI; Carl Wright, second; and Tommy
Cook, second.

52 Weelu! ..........................................$88•..0'

'"

\.

I

�&gt;

Paae--4-The Dally Sentinel

.•

Monday, October 12, 1092

Monday, October 12, 199~

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

YIONAL.'QUESTION; IIAL1DT LANGUA0E. ARGUMENTS, AND THE FULL TEXT
C)F AMENDMENTS TO THE OHIO CONSTITUTION PROPOSED BY INITIATIVE
PEl IliON; AND BALLOT LANGUAGE, ARGUMENTS, AND THE FUU TEXT OF
A STATUTE PROPOSED BY INITIATIVE PETITION, ALL TO BE SUBMITTED
: TO THE VOTERS AT THE GENERAL ELECTION, NOVEMBER 3, 1192.

·PROPOSED CONSTITUTIONAL.
:
· .CONVENTION
,·

PROPOSED AMENDMENT
TO THE OHI.O CONSTITUTION

Myth of Citizen Legislator

3

To amend Article II . .Se&lt;1ion 2 of the Ohio
following paragraphs:

1

A question proposed in Anicle i6. Section 3 of the Constitution of the ·
State of Ohio. to be submined to the electors in the genernl election of November
3. 1992.

\

Article 16, Section 3 of the Constitution of the State of Ohio, reads as foliOIOS:
"At the general elrction to he held in the year one thousand !line hundred
and thirty-two and in each twentieth year thereafter, the question: "Shall
there be a convention to revise, alter, or amend the co,..tiMion," shall
be submitted to'the elrctors of the state; and in case a majority of the elec. tors, voting for and agai...t the calling of a convention, shall decide in favor
of a convention, the general assembly. at its next session, shall provide,
by Jaw, for the election of de!egates, and the assembling of such con-:ention, as is provided in the preceding srction; but no amendment of this
constitution, agrfed upon by any convention assembled. in pursuance of
this article, shall take effect until the same shall have ~n subm'itted to
the electors of the state, and adopted by a majority of those voting thereon.''

•

Con~litutio~

by the addition of tbe

·

No person shall hold the ollke of State Senator for a period of longer than two SI!Ccesslve terins or rour yean. No persoa shall hold the olfk'e of State Represea·
talive for a period longer than four successive terms of lwo years. Terms shaU
be considered successive unless separated by a period of four or more years.
Only terms beginning on or after January I, 1993 shall be considered in determining an ·individual's eligibility to hold office.
In ·determining the eligibility of an individual io hold an office in accordance
with this article, (A) li~ spent In an ofrtce in fulfillment of a term to which
another person was nnt elecled shall not be considered provided that a period
of' at least four yeats passed between the li.me. if any•. in which the individual
prmously held thai office, and the time th~ individual is elected or appointed
to fulfill the unexpired term; and (B) a person who is elected to an ofrJCe in a
regularly scheduled genen1l eJection and resigns prior to lhe completion of the
term for which .he or she was elected, shall be considered to have served the
fullterm in that office.

A shon·term legislature will tend 10
adopt short -term solutions to long·lerm
problems.
· The goal of a citizen leg!slalure com·

prised of idealistic people interested .in
public serv ice won't be achieved
through term limits. The same sons of
people who "re in the legislature now
are most likely to run and win-those
who can afford to take a· break from
their lives and jobs and who arc
motivated enough 10 campaign. raise
money from friends and strangers, and
withstand intense scrutiny of their per·
sonal lives.

If adopted by a majority of electors. voting on this amendment, each provision
a provision is invalid shall not affect the other provisions.

A majority yes vote is necessary for passage.
A majority yes ·vote is
SHALL THERE BE A CONVENTION TO
REVISE, ALTER, OR AMEND THE
CONSI'ITUTION OF THE STATE OF OHIO?

Yes

necessar~

for passage.

SHALL THE PROPOSED
AMENDMENT BE ADOPTED?

J&gt;Jy -to-play pol it ics

No

.•

EXPLANATION OF QUESTION I
(AS PREPARED BY THE OHIO BALLOT BOARD)

•

• Article 1(\, Section 3 of the Ohio Constitution requires thai every twenty yca~s the clec·
-tors of the State of Ohio be given the opportunity to decide if there should b): a co nvention
10 change the Constitution of the Stale of Ohio. If the calling of a convention is "pproved
,by a majority vole. then the next session of the General Assembly mu st provide for the.
·election of delegates and the assembling of the convention. If the convention agrees 10 amend
the Constitution . those amendments must be submi.ncd to the electors and approved by
" majority vote before
effeci.

PROPOSED·AMENDMENT
TO THE OHIO CONSTITUTION
PROPOSED CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENT

2

To amend Article V of the Ohio
8 and 9 as follows:

Conslilu~ion

by the "dd1tion ol new sections

two-year terms. ·since 1951 the terms of the
President has been limited . Ohioans have
limited the Governor\ terms since 1954 .

EXPLANATION AND ARGUMENT
FOR PROPOsED AMENDMENT 3
Issue 3 will limit the terms of the Ohio
Senate II' two consecutive four-year terms.
Members of the Ohio House of Represen·
talives will ·be li·mired to four consecutive

No current incumbents will be immediate·
ly· thrown nul of office as the result of this
amendment. The terms that count toward
limitation will begin with this election.
Th!S amendment docs not prohibit an 1n·
cu mbent state legislator from runnin£ lor
other offices. II simply prohibits members
of the Ohio House of Representatives and
Ohio Senate from making a career our of
holdmg the same office for a liretimc. If the
v..otcrs choo~ 10 return an incumbent ro a
position previously l!eld for eight con·
sccutive years. they may do so after the m·
•·umbent has s~l out .of office for a four-year
··rest period .··

EXPLANATION AND ARGUMENT
AGAINSI' PROPOSED AMENDMENT 2
Term Limits will damage our representative
democracy.
- The· people. already control who stays
in office through their right to vote.
. Term Limits would force out qualified
·legislato" and deny chOice In the
voters .

. Section 8: No person shall hold the office of United States Senator from Ohio
for a period longer than two successive terms of six years. l'io person shall hold
·lhe office of United States Representative from Ohio for a period longer than
four successive terms of two years. Terms shall be considered successi•·e unless
separated by a· j»eriod of four or more years. Only turns beginning on or after
January I, 1993 shall be considered in determining an individual's eligibility
to hold office.
·
Section 9: In determining the eligibility of an individual to hold an office in ac·
cordance wi~h this article. (A) time spent in an office in fulfillment of a term
to which another person was first elected shall not be considered IJrnvided that
a period oht least four years passed between the lime, if any, in which the individual previously held that ofrJCe, and the lime the individual is elected or appointed to fulfill the unexpired term; and (B) a person who is elected to an .ofIke in a regularly scheduled general e)ection and resigns prior lo the comple'
tion of the term for which he or she was elrcted, shall be considered to have
served the full ter111 in that office.
If adopted by a majority of electors •·oting on I his amendment. each provision
of this amendment shall be deemed severable from the others, and a finding

thai a provision is invalid shall not aiTrct the other provisions.
A majority yes vote is necessary for passage.

· Term Limits would decrease the power
of Congr""· the most directly represe ntative

bran c h

of

This "mcndment. as well "s Issues 2 and
4. are designed to promote rotation in office

federal

and give more Ohioans an opponunily to
serve in public office. By limiting fcrms.
open-seat elections will .occur more fre·
qucntly. These elections provide more opponunitics for new people 10 run for office
without having 10 challenge wcll-linanced
veteran legislators.

government .

· Term Limits will deny cit izens their
right.and responsibility to make dcci·
\Ions abnul a candidate's values and
ideas. Democracy is based on citizen
panicipalion .

Term Limits won't guarani~e competitive e lections; they simply
guarnntee turnover. Turnover. however:
. is not the real problem . In that last 10
years. 70% of our stale Senators have
' ~~ least once. as have·
been replaced
68% of our state Representatives.
· Term Limits wont guarantee responsi·
ble legislation. They only guarantee
that our legislature will have limited ex·
perience and" limited memory of suc·
cessful and failed pOiicie," of the past.

of this amendment shall be deemed severable from the others, and finding that

No

- Term Lim!L' will Ioree dependency upon
staff. bureaucrats. and lobbyists who
wilL in turn . be the ones deciding
public policy rather than our elected
officials.
Legislators may not be effective or
~csponsivc 10 the electorate in their la.,l
allowable terms.
· Lame duck legislators could be temp·
ted with offers of future jobs or other
benefiL,.
Power of elections

- Rc-ciCction prcs.~urc is a necessary
con..
ponent of our democratic system . Fac·
ing the voters at elect.ion time forces
accounlllbil ity.
~

- Term Limits will di scour~gc competi·
lion . Incumbents will still have extruor·
dinary advantages in elections like free
mailings. name recognition. and media
when you can wail and run for an open

scat?
Prepared by Ohio League of Women Voters.
· Marilyn Sheard. President

r----------------,

Cnmmi!lee For the Amendment
Congre-sional Term Limits would hun Ohio
. Ohio's clout in Wa&gt;hington would be
greatly reduced if Ohio adopL' congres·
sional Term Limits independently of
the other states or adopts limits that arc
more

re~trictive.

John J. Jazwa
Suzanne Robbins
Kenneth M. Lahn

1-----------------'---------------.1

- Term L1mi1s would raise the C.:O O!lliiU ·rional que..,tion of whether a state has
the power to limit terms of a lcdcral of·
ficcholdcr and involve Ohio in costly

' HALL THE PROPOSED
MlENDME!'iT BE ADOPTED?

PROPOSED AMENDMENT
TO THE OHIO CONSTITUTION .

No
EXPLANATION AND ARGUMENT FOR
PROPOSED AMENDMENT 2

r umbcnt hi.l .., sat out nl office for a tOur-year

Since 1951 the Prc"dcm's !erms hJie been
·li mited . The terms of Oh!o·s governor h"vc
been limited since 1954 . The&gt;.e proposed
Congrcssion:.JI limits arc dc~1gncd 10 work
in much lhe ·s" mc way.

member. the l'hanccs of gai nmg any signi ti ra n1 commlllcc c hai r~ m the next -len year..
i:-. extremel y remote .

Cont inued resea rch ~how~ rhat mcumbcm
mcmbt;rs ol Congress outspend c halle~~ger&gt;
in elections by significant margins. This
Issue 1 docs not immediately throw any making "votm~ mcumbcnts out .. of oflice
(urrcnt incum·bems out nf oftit·e . The term~ very difficult because c!lcction~ .arc n01 com' with . petitive. By linutmg 1crml'l of CongrC:'I,.·
thai count toward lim !tal ion will begin
this election.
open - sc;,~t e lection~ . ~ill Ol't ·ur murc often .
These elecuons will give murc C!t!Zcns the
Thi&gt; amendment docs nut pruh!b!l "" in- chance tt:r run for C";ongrc~!'- withOUl havmg
'
.
~utnbent member of Congress from running
to challenge. well-financed incumbents.
other . offices: It simply proh1bi1s
I ; members of Congress from mak.ing "c"recr Commmcc For the Amendment
of holding the same office for a.Jilet,me.
. John J. Jazwa
r the voter&gt; chOOl&lt;e 10 return an incumbent
Sulannc Robbins ·
:1o a position previously held for eight con·
Kenneth
M. Luhn
' se&lt;u&lt;• •Cyears. they maf~o so after them-

f

•

. ·;

Term LimHs will ensure mor~ lame
duck legislators. Lcg1sla1ors m") not he
ctTcctivc or rcspon:-. ivc to the clcrwr&lt;~IC
1n their last allowable terms.

·rl'!&lt;ot pcrul&lt;J ." ·•

This amcn~ment wil l not afkct Ohio's
hsue 2 will limit the terms of members
nfthe U.S. Congre" from Ohio. Represe n- .. clout .. on Cap1tol H!ll Congressinnal &lt;:lou!
tatives will be limited to l&lt;&gt;ur consec iltl'e i~ defined as having members whn cha ir
two-year terms. U.S. Senato~ will be limited powerful rnngressamal co mm it t ee ~ . Thc~c
)0 'two consccu_1ivr..~ ~ix·yea r tcr~s . After ~·r ­ __com miucc c hai r~ Lire gramcd ha:-.~d lln.
vihg thei r limircu t~ rm s . members nlU ~I ~il se nioruy. The \\·ay th e current scniont)
out for ut lca~t tour yea rs bcthrC returning sy:-o l_cm works. and giwn the £?hio delega Ill the same office .
· tion ~ ~veragc :-.c•monty al 12 yea rs per '

•

·

Bu,h· in .. lame duck .. problem

· Re-election
pon~m

prc~s u rc 1:-.

a nccc:-.:-.ary com-

of our dcmncn.Hu..· ~y:-. tcm . Ar..··

countab!l !ty i&gt; ba&gt;ed on the tact thai
lcg i~ lamrs

have to tiu.:c the voccr"' at
election time

· L"mc duck legislators could be !emp·
ted with oftCrs of future

joh~

or othl"r

benefits.
Wor:-.cn~

cxisung problem!'!

· Term Limits will discourage compel!·
lion . Incumbents w!ll still have cxtraor·
dinary advantages in elecuon&gt; like free
mailings. name recognition. and media
"cccss. Why run against an incumbent
when you c"n wa!l and run for an open
~cat?

Term Lim11s wil·l tOrcc Cve n more
reliance on unelected staff and lob·
byists. bccaus~ new legislators ha'e
limued knowledge of the comple.xities
or gov:ernmen1 linanccs. services. and .
programs.
Prepared by Ohio League of Women Vorers.
Marilyn Shearer. President
t.''

(

4

PROPOSED CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENT

To Amend Aniclc Ill . Section
the foll(&gt;wing paragraphs :

~

'7

Issue 4 wiillimit the balance of Ohio's executive branch.to 'the same limits that are
placed upon the Governor. Since 19SI the
term ofthe President has been limited. Since
1954 Ohio's GiJvernor has served under a
limit of two consecutive fo~r-year terms.
The offices to be include are: · Lieutenant
GOYernor. Secretary of State, Treasurer, AI·
torney General. and Auditor. None of the ·
current incumbents will be jmmediately
thrown our of office due to the passage of
this amendment. The terms to be limited
begin with this election.
After reaching a limiied term , incumbents
holding these offices may run for any othe.r
office. They may ·aJso return to a previously
held limited office after silting out tor a four
year "rest period .~" This pravision secures
the voters" right to choose to return a
previous incumbent, but prohibitS an incum·
bent from making a career out of holding the
same political office perpetually.
The above term limits issues have all been
forwarded by a citizen-based initiative ·
designed to bring elected offiCeholders cl~r
in touch with the electorate they serve. None
of these measures is designed to prohibit
voter choice, nor diminish the power of
regular elections. They are designed·to create
more balanced elections which .will enable
more Ohioans to serve in publi~ office.
Committee For tbe Amendment
John J. Jazwa
Suzanne Robbin~
Kenneth M. Lahn

EXPLANATION AND ARGUMENT
. AGAINSI' PROPOSED AMENDMENT 4
•

Executive officeholders don't make laws.
They implement the laws made by the
legislature. Mandatory turnover every eight
years will not guarantee more eflicienl or ef·
rective performance. In fact, it will lessen
the effectiveness of the offices by. having new
officeholders spend years mastering these
complex jobs. This is time that could be us·
ed to better serve Ohioans.
The concept of 'Tcrni Limits is not a good
idea. II will not, achieve more competitive
eleciions or better public policy.
. Term Limits will not guarantee more
competitive elections; elections will
becpme even less competitive.

access. Why run against an incumbent

law ~uit:-. .

Yes

EXPLANATION AND ARGUMENT
FOR PROPOSED AMENDMENT 4

EXPLANATION AND ARGUMENT
AGAIN.S l' PROPOSED AMENDMENT 3

PROPOSED CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENT

of the Ohio Constitution by the addition of
'

No person shall hold an~· one of I he offices of lieutenant povernor, secretary of
stale,trea,surer of stale, attorney general, or auditor of ~tate for a period longer
than two successive terms of four years. Terms shall be considered successive
unless separated by a period of four or more years. Only terms beginning on
or after January I, 1995 shall ·be · considered in determining an individual's
eligibility to hold the office of lieutenant governor, secretary of state, treasurer
of state, attorney general ; or auditor of Stale.
In determining the eligibility of an individual to hold an office in accordance
with this ariicle, !AJ time spent in an office in fulfillment of a term to which
anotber person was first elected shall nol ·be considei-ed provided thai a period
oht least four years passed between th~ time, if any, in which the individual
previously held that office, and the lime the individual is elected or aiJpointed
to fulfill the unexpired term; and (Bl a person who Is elected to an office in a
regularly scheduled grneral elrction and resigns prior to the completion of lhe
term for which he or she was elected, shall be considered to have served the
full term in that office . .
If adopted b~ a majorii~ o.f •.lectors voting on this amendmerit; each 11rovision
of this .amendment shall he deemed sev~rablc from the others, and a flnding
that a provision is invalid shall OQI affect the other provisions,
A mi.,;orily yes vote. is nrcessary for passage.

· Term Limits will not change the factors
that make for cumbersome, disj9in1ed
public policy, because they don't
change lh~· fact that politicians do nQI
receive clear. unambiguous instructions
from the public about what the pubtics
IJriorities are and what they are will.- .
ing to pay to achieve these pr_iorities.
Term Limits will not lead to more in· ·
formed and active citizen participation
in government . By adopting Term
Limits. we are giving in to the idea that
citizens can't be trusted 10 make
responsible choices and vote against the
politicians they are no longer satisfied
with. and we are giving up our power
10 make politicians accountable.
I

Term -Limits will guarantee that the
system is shaken up. not just now, but
constantly and permanently. With this
constant turmoil, government will not
work any mnre cflcctively or elficient·
ly. Complex issues like health care and
education finance- reform take ma~y
years to adequately address. Shon-term
officeholders will lend to adopt shon·
term solutions to long·lerm problems.
- Prepared by Oh oo League of Women Voters.
Marilyn Shearer, President

FULL TEXT OF THE
PETITION PROPOSING
ISSUES 2, 3 AND 4
Be it reiol .... by the _ . . of the -

of Ohio:

I) Ankle V of the Ohio Conlti- il IIII01Ided by
the ....jtjon of I Section 8 !II 11101:
No penoa 11!111 bold ihe allloo of Unilod S..
fJom Ohio for I period ...... tbaft two MIC·
o(li!l ~· No pa-. llilll hold the of.
r.,. ot uabod Sli!P Ro; .,,..
Ohio i&gt;r a
. period
ofl'¥0 ,_n.

-ne-

r.-

IoQprtbaD,.....-..-

Termlllilllbe&lt;' H ltd_I,..UIIIollll I 1!11!11
by 1 porlad rlblr or .... ,..,._ Only-~
U. 0. or a11or !_.,. I, 1993 lholl be
H od ill

-..umaa an individull's ellllbiiJIY 10 hold ollkc.

n. Sootioa 2 ot lbe&lt;OilioCoaMifiiiiM ·11
.., WI by the .,...jtjon tl.a- ........,.. 10 11101:

No

SHALL THE PROPOSED
AMENDMENT BE ADOPTED?

_

..-

.

..

.

.... ~ of. -

.......... b e . . - . . . . . . - - -

So.llool9 io read:

wpni,.P shall 1110 identify the penon .._;ble for
&amp;i... in&amp;lhc wamina and me k;gtjQn of the penon 's
...,.. ..... _ _,tl9lsbelbe
•
la .......... lhe.upililyofMIJidividuaiiOhold
•
premiles from which the toxic chm!i&lt;:a1 ~ have
1
wflll.lll1idoo o, m.... v ~
ia
• iadividllll'l • '$' I"IJ ID ldd dee. • aftLoe ....... t
be&lt;:n reteu.d .
.
1llit C Ill !doe (A) -l!jiOIIIIIIII ollkc ia lldfill(C) Wilhin one hundred eighly days aft&lt;r the effec:·
-ofalltlDIOwllicll . . . . . _ _ llnt .....
ll Article m, 2_of. t11o 0111o
tive dale of this section. the dim:tor ahall adopt rules
lballlllll be
I ... pn!'rillod . . I poriod
I'" led by .... of tbe . . . . .,
to funher administer, implement and enfort."C this
A diverse coalition of Ohioans - from
•
,...
pllllll
tbe - . if..,., .. wllicll
section.
No _ _ _ _,_., ....... . , _
the iadloidoll piwlouiiJ betd tbli ollll:e, _.thelabor to agriculture to business - opposes
Sec . 37,2.0!5 . Section 37,2.03 of the Rovised Code
dleiudhi*.,.il._.or,, · 1 tDfulftlldlew...,~-.b
Issue 5. So should you .
lhall ... apply 10 any of the followU. :
pnd linD; 1co1 (8) a penaa wbo II~ 10 11 of·
lonley _ . ( , or at!dilor ol ·far a porW loQpr
(1\) An expoour&lt; lor 111hich r..krllll!w JOVe~ war·
--· .--~
olloU Ike ilta....-tr I I dod ................ !aipl Commi.nec Against the Law
nina in a riwtner 1ha1 preempu staac authOrity;
be mMH od
~llld by a period
prior !lithe CiN!. .Iioa oft!~&lt; !Ot'lll i&gt;r whicli he &lt;&gt;r she
(8)(1) For su1&gt;s10nces li~ in division (A) of se&lt;·
ofb!r«- ,..,._ Ooly _ . , . ,
or allor wu eleolod. shall be ............. - ........... full
John Hodges
lion 37,2 .2 I of the Revi..O (;ode, on expoourt thai oc-; '
J - t. I9'H 111111 be II r.col ill Jet lllilllla II . ...... ill tbli oltlce.
Mary Schell
curs less than twelve months ~uent 10 the cffec- ·
i8dl.-a dipO!ily !o hold the allloo ~ un tt
tive date of thai section;
'·
'
William Swank
If llloplod by • ~t)' of ele&lt;ton W!lina .. tbil
(2)
For
substances
listed
in
rules
adopted
punuanl
- - · ...-ry r l - . Norma Vermeer
2
I
....
~ af'lhillltMI!. .. ...... be
........ orat!dilorof-.
IDdivisi'on (B) of SOCiion37,2 .21 of the Revised Code,
decmod ....11ble fJom the-.. acol aliDfliDc tbli
FULL TEXT OF THE PETITION.
an uposure that occurs less than twelve mmths subse·
4) Article V rllhe 011io C •Jwlnn IIIIIIOIIded by
I pm!liaian is iiMJid -llllllllocl the- pmilPROPOSING ISSUE 5
quent 10 the efrccdve date of the rule.
(C) An exposure fCM" which the person responsible
can
demonstrate the followin&amp;:
Section I : Tha! Sccti01137'2 of the Revi!&lt;d Code be,
(I}
That the exposure poses RO !ignificant risk for
enacted to !'Ad u rollowa:
any individual; and
, Sec. 37,2.01 The - l e of Ohio find (t) lha! ••·
(2) That the exposure will have no observable effect
posure to tolic chemital substances endangers public
assuming exposure at one thousant!l (1000) limes the
heallh uid safety .by inc:reasins the risk ·of cancer,
levCI in question for substancc.s knoWn to cause
genetic mulltion, binh defects and other diseases, and
· reproductive toJticit)'. or for which the persori can '
improperly infringes upon ibe public's ri&amp;ht to a u.fe,
•
PROPOSED LAW
dcrrionstrate thai an alternative margin of safely, which
clean and healthy environment; and (2) thai bluineSses
sllatl !101 be less lhan one hur&lt;lml (100) timeo the level .
and Slale and fcdcrol I&amp;On&lt;ies have !101 provided ade·
in question. will protect the exposed population; or •
quate infomulion about exiN)SUrt · to to xi~: dttmical
(l) Thai the exposure~ to a subolance thai i5 an essen·
•
To enact Sections 375201 through 3752.99 of the Revised Code.
substances. The people therefore declare their right to
tlil human nutrienl or an essenlial medication or pro-'
know about their exposure to loll.ic chemical substances
cedure prescribed by a licensed physician.
known ID Cll!se cancer, binh defecls or other rq&gt;ro&lt;b:·
The demonslrations required by this division
The proposed law would:
live harm.
be based upon evidence and standards of comparable:
Sec. 37,2.02 As used in Ibis chap1er:
scientifiC llalidity to the evidence and standards which~
(I)
Require businesses to IJrovide labels and/or other warnings in conjunc(A) "Ambient air" meails lhat ponion of the atform the scientific basis for the lisling of any such··
tion with the use in consumer products or the environmental release
mosphere' outside of buildings and other enclosures,
substance pum11111 !o div~ion (B~2) of Section 37,2.21:
-.· or chemical subslances determined on the basis of lests or other evidence
stacb, or ducts that surrounds human , plant or animal
of the Revised Code . In any acti~ brought to enforce;, :· ·
life, or property.
Section 37S2.03 of 1~ Revised Code, other lhan one~
to increase the normal risk of cancer or reproductive defects in animals
(B)
..
Boanl
of
heallh"
means
the
board
ofheallh
of
brough1 pursuant to ~tion 37S2.99 of the Re.vised ·
or burna....
a ~ity or general health district or the authority having
Code, the burden of demonflrat!n&amp; thai an e11posure "
the: duties of a board of health in any t'ity as authorized
meets tht criteria of this division shall be on the. ,•
Create a new tax on businesses that release or transfer toxic chemicals
•
(2)
by Section 3709.0' of lhe Revi!&lt;d Code.
defendant .
••
of one cent P.r potlnd per year on their emissions to be paid into a special
(C) ··consumer product e11.posure" means any ex(D) An exposure 10 a toxic' chemical substance con•
tained in water or drinking warer to the e!ltent lhallhe.
. posure dW resulb from an individual's acquisition. purfund. That tax and civU fines
pay fqr implementation, administm•
person responsible can demonstrate that the to11.ic
chase, slOI'Ige, consump:ion, or Olher foreseeable use
lion and enforcement of the law and would award grants lo groups
of a consumer product or an exposure that foreseeably
chemical wbstance was contained in drinking waier
demonstrating a need to study environmental exposures to chemical
•
· results from ·receivina a ser~ice.
whiCh was received from:
$Ubslances. State and local government oftlcials administer lhe program •
(I) A public water system, as defined in Section
(0} ''Environmental exposure '' means an tx.posurt
' state and local governments and priyate businesses with nine or fewer
,
6109.01
or the Revised Code:
that may foresceably occur as a result of contacl with
(2)
A
commercial supplier of drinking water; or
an environmental medium, including but PO( limited to
employees are exempt from the law:
(3)
A
source
of drillk.ing water in compliance with
ambient air, indoor air, drink..ing watt:r, surface water,
all
applicable
primary
drinking water standards for all
groundwater. soil, vegetation, or natural or humanProvide for criminal penallies and civil lines for violations of the law.
(3)
listed
toxic
chemical
substances,
and the 10P.ic chemical '
made substances.
Civil penalties of up to $2,500 a day per e~~:posure, and criminal penalties
substance
in
queStion
is
the
result
of treatment of the
(E) '' E,;pose" means to cause an exposure.
of 2-4 years in jail and up to a $25,000 line may be imposed. Attorneys
water
in
order
10
achieve
compliance
wi'th primary ·
(f) "Exposu·re" ~to ingest, inhale, conlaet via
drinking water s1andatds.
body surfaces or otherwise come into contact wilh a
fees may be awarded. Persons subject to the law must conduct invenWher~ the source of !,he toxic chemical substance is
toxic
.chemical
substance.
torieS of chemicals and detailed area assessments under specirled
in pan from the sources llsled in subdivision! (1) , (2)
(0) ''Health district" means a city or general district
circumstances.
I
and (3) and in part from Olhe~;, sources, the exemption
crealed b) or under the aulhorily of Chapter 3709 of
only applies to the ponion of the toJtic chemical
lhe Revised Code.
substance from the. soorces lisled in subdivisions (I),
If adopted, Ibis law would be effective on December 2, 1992.
(H) ''No signiftcant risk" means for 1 substance or
(2) and (3) .
combinalion of subslances known to cause cancer. a
(E) An exposure to a to11ic chemical subsWK:e con-:
level
which
is
calculated
to
result
in
no
more
than
risk
A majority ye_s vote is necessary for passage.
1ained in air to the e,;tent that the penon responsible
one excess case of cancer in an exposed populalion of
can demonstrate that the substance was contained in air
one million, baled on !he most conservative generally
which the person received from the ambient air .
acoepted risk assessment method, assuming lifetime exYes
SHALL THE PROPOSED
Where the ~rcc of the toxic chemical substances
posure 11 the level in question.
is in part from the ambient air and in part fonn other
(I) ''Person' ' means me siate, any political subdiviLAW BE ADOPTED?
sources. the e,;emplion only applies 10 ~~ portion of
sion. interstate body created by compact, the United
No
the toxic chemical subs18.nce in that the person did n01 :
States and any agency or instrumentality thereof. and
lobe emitted into the ambienl air.
cause
any legal entity defined as a pci"son under Section I.S9
(f)
An
e,~~;posure to a lo,;ic chemical substance con·· ~ I
neighbors. and wont have IO warn of the Revised Code .
tained in food to the extent that the person responsible :
J) ''PErson in the course of doing business '' does not
anyone .
ARGUMENT FOR
can demonstrate thanhc substance is narurally occurr- "
include
any person employing fewer lhan rm employees
THE PROPOSED LAW
ing in the food. A toxic chemical subslance is natural·
in lbe business. the state. any political subdivision, inI)' occurring only to the eJttenl that the substmce did
We"" choose 10 take some risks - that's terstak body created by compact, or any entiry in its
nOI resull from any known human activiry .
pan
of
life
but
no
one
should
expose
u.
&lt;
Issue 5, the chemical labeling law. would
operation of i public water system as defined in Sec·
Sec. 3752.06 (A) Any mdivMiual who resides or is
. guarantee consumers the right to know wher~ 10 risks Withoul warning u~ .
lion 6109 .01 of lhe Revised Code.
employed at a location thai is within a two mi"lce; : : : ~:I
(K) ''Reproduclive toxicily'' means e~bryoto,;ici·
they are exposed 10 dangerous amounts of
of a premises lhal may cause an envirorrnenlal eJ
ty , fetOColliicity , teratogenicity, or adverse effec1s. on
for which a wamingis required under Section
Comminee
For
the
Law
chenicals thai cause cancer or binh defects.
male or female reproductive performance .
,
of~ Revised Code, but fur which no warning is
Kathleen M . Fagan
(L) ''ToO: chemical substance" means any subs&amp;ance
ing provided. may flle a complaint, in writing and ~
Ed Hopkins known lo c.ause cancer or reproductive toxicity that is
The label law. supponed by Ralph N"der.
verified by the affidavit of the complainant, his or her
Cynthia M. Starr liSied in div~ion (A) of Section 3752.21 of the Revisagent or anomey, with the director of envirorunernal
is the best cpnsumer protection because well·
protect-on , alleging lhal: such person is causin&amp; an en- •
James L. Sweeney ed Code, or 1hat ·may be listed in rules adopced under
informed consumers can choose to buy safer
vironmcnt.al
exposure for which a warning is required."
that
M:Ction.
Noreen L. Warnock
- products .
Se&lt;l. 3752.03 No person in the course of doing
The affidavit ven!yina a complaint may be IN!de before
business shall recklessly upose any lnWviduaiiO a toxic
any person' authorized by law to administer oaths, and
Here's an example of a warning label :
chemical substance without first giving clear and
must be signed by the person who makes it.
(8) Upon receipt of a complainl aulhorizcd by lhis
reasonable warning 10 such individual.
ARGUMENT AGAINST
"WARNING: This product contains one or
Sec.
37,2.04(A)
The
warnings
r&lt;qu)red
to
be
Biven
section,
the diredoroshall issue an order in accordance
THE
PROPOSED
LAW
more toxic chemical substances known to
under Sec!ion 3752.03 or the Revi!&lt;d Code shall be
wilh Chapter 374' of .he Revised Code ~irins the
cau~ cancer. specifically benzene and for·
person named in the complaint to submit to the direcdisplayed prominendy will! bold lettering, uoderlining,
Issue 5 creates a.new tax and gove rnment or other special presentations of equal effcctiyeness in
maldehyde:·
tor within thil'l)' days of the issuance of the order a list
program 10 establish and enforce new pro· drawins anention to the presence of the warning and
containing the amoum of each toxic chemic:al substance
prnducod, u!&lt;d, processed, stored or handled on the
In addiliOt\ to the product labeling require - duct labeling and chemical notific"lion rc · shall identify every tolliic chemical substance.
(8)
The
method
employed
to
transmit
the
wamiqg
premises during the preceding calendar year. Upon
ment . Issue 5 requires polluters that expose quirements. Based on extreme criteria . it
recr:ipc of the list. the directOr shall send 1 copy of il
shall be designed to make the wamiog message known
neighbors 10 dangerous chemicals to ·warn identities 458 chemicals and requires that all
10 the individual who submillcld the complainl.
to the individual prior to exposure.
produCts con~ining ~ven trace amounts of
them .
(I) For consumer product exposures. the warning
Sec . 37,2.07 (A) tr. upon the bosis of the infonno·
these chemicals be labeled with a "one-size· shall, if feasible. appear on a .label that is affixed to
!ion conlainod .in !he list pres&lt;ribed by Section 37,2 .06 ·
of the Revised Code, or otherwise 1 , the: director fincli:
30 Million Californians have had a label fits-all" warning. II also requires many Ohio or accompanies a product or its container or wrapper.
that the tota.l amount of any to,;ic chemical substance~
If
labelin&amp;
is
noc
.feasible
.
warninss
shall
be
provided
law for live years. While some companies businesses thai use or sto re any of these
that is i.Jso an ~.ttremely hazardous substance or hazarlhrough shelf labeling, signs, menus, or other com•
there have put warnings on dangerous pro· chemicals to mail warnings t[\ every munications a1 the retail outiet ..lf neilher of the foregodous substance listed in rules adoplCd under Division
residence
and
business
in
a
two-mile
radiu:-.
duels. others have avoided .warnings by
(B)f i)(A), (C), or (C)(5) of Section 37SO.Ol of the
ing warning methc:Jdi m feasible, warnings shall be
removing toxic chemicals from products. of their premises semi-an nually.
given by a system of siJns, p.1blic advertising, or ocher
Revised Code, as appropriale, was present on the
•
premises
durin&amp; . the preceding calendar year in an
sys&amp;c:m
tJw
provkks
dear
and
reasonable
warruns.
For
Gillene .removed trichloroethylene from Li·
amount greater lhan ten times the reponabJe· quantity
As expens note, thi s costly proposal is &gt;O producu or services that contain toxic chemical
quid Paper and Dow removed per·
substances known to ~use cancer, the w.,ning shall
applicable ID the subs&lt;l!occ under lhooe !Uies, the dim:·
chloroethylene from K2r Spot·lifte!, tor ex - flawed it achieves none of its purpone.I include the following language: "Warning: This orotor, in accordance ~ith Chapter 3745 of the Revised
"mple - without price increases. And Old goals. II provides regulatory overkill with n&lt; du~t contains one or more toJtie chemical subpnces
Code. shill iss~ an order dim:tin1 the person to sub- ·
El Paso Foods stopped making food c"ns environmental or health benefits. Riddled known to-cause cancer.·· For produciS or serYices
mil an e.tposurr: assessment to lhr: director . An ordel' '·
with loopholes. it exempts local and slate that contain 1oxic chemical subSWICtS known to cau5C · issued uncle~ lhis division shall rcquin: chc eipo~~.~re
with lead solder.
•
asstssmenlto be submitted within one hundred eiJhty
governments from its exrreme requirements. reproductive toxicity, the wanung shall include the
days after issuonce or lhe order. For iood.c:ause shown,
In Ohio. the chemical and pesticide in· lt ·would put Ohio clearly out of step with folloWing language: "WaminR: This product contains
the djrcc1or may e.ttend the time for submission of an
one or more to!ljc chemical su~s known to CIWSC
dustries have inv~nted a group called more uniform existing federal laws on the
eJtposure assessment by no1 more than one hundred
birth ddects or other rmmd!!f1ive hann. '' For produc;ts
eighty addiliunaJ ·days.
"Ohioans for Responsibi[ Heahh In forma· same issues. Issue 5 also ignores the many or servtces thai: 'Contain tox.ic chemical substances known
(B) Wilhin filieen days of rteeipt or the exposur&lt;
existing
stale
and
federal
laws
that
already
tioh"" and are spending a lonune to scare
to cause cancer and n:produclive toxici()', bodl' warnassessment,
the director shall mail a copy of it to the
•
·voters with outrageous lies - that thousand&gt; protect Ohioans and supply ample consumer ings shall be &amp;iVen .
individual who filed tbc: co,.laial under Section
information
.
To the extem pi'Cticable, regulations implemtnting
'
of sate products would be labeled, prices and
3752.06 of the Revised Code and to the publio tibmy
•
this
subdivision
shall
place
the
obligation
to
provide
•
taxes would skyrocket. and Ohio's economy
located nearest to the prenuses , and shall cause notict
any warning materials, such as labels. on the producer
Puning
the
same
label
on
everything
and
of
the
asscssmenl
to
be
publ~
in
a
n.wspaper
of
,would collapse.
or j!ICkJ&amp;er rather lhan on the l&lt;lailoetler, excep&lt; wher&lt;
flooding Ohioans mailboxes with "warn·
serileraJ circul1tion in ~ counry where the premiaes
lhc mail seller Is respon!ible for introducing a toxic
are.
located.
ings" are not real solutions for improving chemical substanCe into the ccmumer product
In fact (C)
The director of environmental protection shall
Ohioans health and environment. So many
(2) For environmental eXposures, warnings shall be
no1 issue any order or take other action approvlna,
~
products would require these labels that any
• Aboui 0.5% of all chemicals used in
m1iled or otherwise delivered to eac:h residence and
disapproving or othctwise making any determination
plac:e or busincu located. v-:ithiri ~ area where the ex.. warning" would lose its impact .
commerce cause cancer or binh detects.
on the ~iCy or crnnpletcness or any es.posure
.,.
poour&lt; occurs, and sllatl be provided semi·olfl!ually for
and warnings would only go on products
as!iCssment.
...
solt!l!l u the expooure .,.,...._. For _..ID.toxic
!it&lt;:. 3752.08 No penoo shall bt! ~i!M to perform
•
Economic analyses show. that Issue 5 has
with d~rigerous amounts of these
chenUcalaubstaoces known 10 cause caftcer, the warn·
an
uposure
usasment
for
a
toxk
chemM:alsubatance
:
red potential -espec ially in this fragile
chemicals.
ing shall include the following lan&amp;uiac::''Wamjng:
during lht twelve mondu immedialel)' followina tht
:
economy- 10 raise prices dnd threaten fur- This arg contains one or mOl! toxic cbcmjcal sub• It costs almost nothing 10 add words to
lislins of such subelanc:e purstllltl to Section 3752 .21
'
a label ; companies already change
ther job loss. The new taxes in Issue 5 cover
stances known ID cause cancer.'' For exposure to lOX·
of the Re¥ ised Code.
:
ic chemlcalsubanc:cs known toca&amp;~e reproductive toxonly a fraction if its real costs. The remain·
. Sec. 3752.09Eachpenon~ir.coltosubmiunea.:
labels all the time .
ioily, lhe waminj shall include the followin&amp; 1anpge:
pooure IS tel ta&lt; W¥Lcr Section 3732.!77 of the llivilod
•
ing millions :needed would come from
• Voters won't have 10 pay more taxes. A
•,
•'Warninc: This , area conytns 1one or . more
Cede
shall
include
lhe
followiJI&amp;
11 a minimum:
penny-per·pouod fee on polluters covers ' Ohioans· pocketbooks. paycl!ecks and
(A)Achanct&lt;rizllionofdoephysiool!ellinaofthe ' •
toxic clJemjcal sub!ances !mown 10 rr·r birth defects
...,...:by ......... ., ..... - - Ooly-

c •"•'"a ;.

"'li-

I

- ..........

Issue 5 invites scores of new lawsuits and
even creates a fund of tax dollars to pay the
expenses or aCtivist groups auacking
businesses under this law.

•cf-.•-

.. -d.,...., .....
-not.._
I•'"'

"'-.IIIOnlO)t

. '&gt;

'*"

PROPOSED STATUTE

5

would

.,

2&gt; Article

Yes

.

.

'

1-ANGUAG£ AND EXPLANATION FOR A MANDATORY CONSTITU-

The Dally Senti~

Election polls will ·open at 6:30a.m. on November 3..........

The 1992 General Election ·is sclleduled Thesday, Nov. 3
8ALLD1'

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

No penlia 11!111 bold die olllcC o f - - i&gt;r
lporW.ioaF _ _ __... ~-,...:
Nope.- lliiU bold d,le ollke o f - 1;p
h~&amp;
b I poriad looW"f . . 1m
- o f two

.

· the costs of enforcing the law.
• Most Ohio factories don't endanger

payrolls. Issue 5 also would discourage new
businesses and jobs from coming into Ohio.

•

J
soils,· oes&amp;:;:.:inc=lud=i=na~the=lo-~C•ition~:,·:c:linwe=~'='~i=lal=ionl;.,
·
~..:pre::nu.
aco1

..

' , ·~

�.·

,.

•

'

·.
·'
:

,7
• 1

"., SpOrt~

~y. OCtober 12, 1112

POmeroy Mlctdleport, Ohio

• .,.. 6 Tlle Dally senunel

Polls for General Election will close at 7:30 p·. m·.Nov. ··3
~ brouaht pallllllllto dliJ ~ .....y owonl-.
o f - - · atid ._,.....,.,;
(B) A clw&amp;.,izllioo• oftbc popilation lbal ma~ be or lltiplion (in&lt;llldinl ..,!"""1* IIIOnle)' IIIII ..pert
upoaod, ineludinc illlocMioc teladvc to the premiaeo. ....._ f...) to I plaintiff Who prevlils Of l!lbotantial·
·
activity ~ma. IIIII the lliiUre and ,preoencc of ocn- ly prevails in .the action.
(0) Nothin&amp; in !his section ohllt rtllrict any riaht
aitive iUb-pnp11Minn1; ·
which any penon (or class of penon&amp;) 11!1)' have under
• (C) An idcnlifiallioo of octiviti&lt;t conducted on lhe
premiaes .......... or may """"" lhe releooe of toxic uy staMe or common lJw to aeet. enforcemeftt of any
diOmidtl ond of lhe ....,., in which they -on of lhis chapoor or rule adQptDd or QRJor iasued
uDder it, or to sed: any &lt;Jtht!r relief.
are or 11!1)' be releucd;
Sec. ~7S2 . 16 NochinJ in lhls chapter ohlll ahor or
(D) An idenlificotim iNI quantifteation or lhe toxic
chemicoiiUbotawa bein&amp; releaaod. The cnvironmen· diminiah any lepl obliplion odl&lt;rwilo IOCplirod in """"
111 media iNo wii!&lt;JI they are roleaaod, .IIIII lhe moo law or by swuto or roJULition.lllll nolhini in lhil
tilt:lhoclolop, . . .mplioos and unccrtainliea Involved cbapoor ohlll create or enll11e any defeoae in any actim to enforoo sueh lepl obliplion. ~ ond sane·
in making 111Ch dclcrminationa;
(E) An identiftcation of lhe upoauno polhways, in·
ti001 imposed under this chapter shall be.in lddition
w any penalties or sanctions othetwise preSCribed by
cludin&amp;lhe Rlll1ftCf in ~h roxie diOmidtl are transponod through various cnviratmenlll media. Jaw.
An identiftcotion or lhe mantiCr by which individual•
Sec. 37S2.17 There IS hereby crukd in lhe lllte
would come into COIUtt wilh ·lhe toxi&lt; chemicai tre1111ry lhe Toxic CbomK:al Right-40-Know Fund. The
fuOO thall consist of the monies credited co"it under S«substance&gt; relcaaocl at lhe premiaoa, and informotion
u to whether die route of exposure rOr e.ch toxic tioo 37S2.t9 and Division (B) of Section 37S2.t4 of
chemicai oubouncr: roleaaod 11 lhe premises Is lhrough • the Revlsed Code. The: direcror of environmen.tal proinballtioo, injlalion, dennal&lt;X11111ct, or orher mcaru; rection shall use one-half of the monitS credited io the
(F) A quanlilication of the lt)ll!litude, frequency and
fund for lhe ~""~""" of implemottling, adminllterinJ,
duration or upooure lor each toxi&lt; diOmidtlaubotance and onlorcinti this cbap!Or and lhe rules adopled IIIII
and exposure p&amp;lhway to de1ennine lhe maxiftlm
orders iiiOOCI under it. The d i - aball uao lhe remainder of lhe moniei credited to lhe fund to make
exposure;
~"
(G) A~ of lhe rial&lt; of"""'"' or tq1r'Oduo·
graniS under Section 37S2.18 of lhe Reviled Code.
tive toxi&lt;ity to lhe exposed populatioo cauoed by their
Sec . 37S2.t8(A) The director of envii'OIItlletlllll proexpoauro to lhe toxic chemical substance of c:ombina- toction may make 8f1111$ available to·any poup of in·
tion of roxie chemicai substances rdtaJcd from lhe
divi&lt;Uis who n:side or are anpi!Jycd II localionl wilhin
premises;
a two-mile radius of premiaoa that ""' lhe subject of
(II) An identification of the uncertainties and IWI!mpan order iiSued under Section 37S2 01 of lhe Rcviaod
tiono in making lhe dctorminotionS ~by Ibis IICC· , Code. Grant monies PJVVidcd under lhio oOotion ohlll
tioR, IDd or the manner in which each of these ~ncer­
be used exclusively tO obtain technical uaUianoe rqartainties And assumption~ was addressed; and
ding lhe hazards to human heallh poecd by upooure
(I) SUch orher information as the director may, by
to toxic chemical substances that may be releued into
ruk:, deec:rmine is nccwary or appropriate.
the environment from those premia. No such arant
(J) Wilhin one year after the effective dale of this
shallexcud $50,000. The dl~ohlll make only one
-oc. lhe diroctof shall adopt and may amend and grant roaonlina any .oUch pmniJea unlaa ht; or she finds
rescind rules to funher administer'and Implement this
that renewal of a.grant is necessary to ach1eve the: pur~
.ection.
poses of the section ..
Sec. 3752.10 The diroctor'of environrncnlll protcc·
(B) Wilhin one year after lhe effective date of lhis
tion, in accordance wilh Oiapter 119 o(the Revised
sectim. lhe director oball adopt und II!IY amend ind
Code, may adopt, lllllOI1d and roscind rule&amp; to implereocind rules eotabliohina proccdu,.. for applying for
menl. administer, and enforce rhis chapler.
graniJ to be provided under this ~. criteria for
Sec. 37S2.11 The director of environmenlll protcc·. dCI&lt;nnining eligibility for lhoae gron11, and ouch orher
lion may issue, modify, or revoke orders ill accordance
requirernenu as the director conaidcn .....,.ry or apwith Chapter 374S of lhe Rcviaod Code to enloroe any
propriate for implementing and administering Ibis
sedion of this chapler or a ru~ idopted under it. Not!.. ICCtion.
wilhatanding Section 119.06 of lhe Rcviaod Cnde, all
Sec . 3752.19 (A) For the P\lrpoiC ofprovidinl fun o~ iuued under this section, or any other section
ding forlhe ~. adnaniJullion andonfom:·
of lhio cbapoor, ohlll be 11SUed w1thoul holding an ad·
ment of Chapter 3752 of lhe RcviiCd Code and funjudicalion hearing in connection with the order and
ding 1'1ftb'uoder Sectim 3752.t8 oflhe Reviled Code,
withOut first iuuing a p1oposed action under Section
each owner or operotor of a facility ""'ired io file one
3745.07 of lhe Revised Code .
or ITIOI'e toxic chemical release forms under Section
Sec. 3752. t2 (A) No person shall violate or fail to
315.1.03 of the Revised Code oball poy fee of
perform lilY d!ll)' impoood by any IIOCUon of lhiJ clupter
per pound of toxic chemicais llhown oc any ouch fonn
of the Revised Code or a'rule adopted or order iuued
to have - . rolwed or uanifemtl to on off·aite toea·
under it.
tim in lhe caiendor year to wlticlllhe form applito. Each
(8) No penon shall knowinaly submit false mforowner or operakir shall ,remit the unount of the fee due
rnllion or records Or fail 10 submil information or
under this division to the director ot environmental p~
records required by this chap!Or of the Reviaod Code
tection with the toxic chemical release forms ao filed .
or a rule adopted or order issued under it.
. (B) H payment or I r.e uoder division (A) ofthio sec(C) For violllions of Section 3752.03 of lhe Revis·
tion is late, the owner or operator shall pay an ackh~
eel Code, eadJ expoou10 COCIIituta a_... violalioO.
tiOI\II ten percent of the amoum oflhe fee due for each
(D) For v.,._ofall olher IICC!ionioflhisChap!Or
monlh that lhe payment is late.
of lhe Revioed Code, or rules ~or orden i55ued
(C) lllhe director detennines that lhe fees levied by
!hereunder, each day of violati&lt;lt COCIIihltos IICfiOral&lt;
this
will 5Ubslantially exceed $3,000,000 anoffenae.
'
nually ,he or !be shall adopt and may amend and resSec. 37S2. 13 The lltDntt)' aenerat or the prosecuting
cind rules reducing the ·amount of the fee to be pa1d
' auomey of the OOunty, city,diredor of law of the cit),,
uoder division (A). such !hat the lees levied by this Sec·
or vil14&amp;e solicitor of !he villaae whero a violation has
tioo ohllt equil $3,000,000.
occurred or 11 occurring nuy. and upon lhe wrinen rc·
Sec. 37S2.20. 11 any provision of this chapter or lhe
..... or lhe director of environmental protection or lhe
application thereof is held invalid, that innhdity shall
boon! of heall!l of lhe heallh distnct havma territorial
not affect orher provisions or applications or lhe chapoot
juriadiclioi1, as oppr;opriato, ohlll Pf~!RCUIO !OtomW·
which can be g1ven effect Without the invalid provi~
lion or bring an action for Injunction against uy per·
sion Of application and to this end the provisions of this
aon who bas violaled or is violatin&amp;any aection of Ibis
chapter arc severible.
cbaJUr, or a rule~ or order 1ssued undt:r it. The
· Sec. 3752.2 1. (A) Beginning on lhe effective date
Coun of Common Pleas in which an action for injuncof lhis section, the 1nit1al hst of tox1c chemJcal
tHIII is til.ed · has jurisdiction to and shall Jrant
subslariceS known 10 cause t:ancer or reproductive toxpn:liminary and permanen' injunctive relief upon a
icity shall 1nclude the followmg·
thawing that: the penon against whom the action 'is
· (IJTOXIC CHEMICAL SUBSTANCES KNOWN TO CAUSE
CANCER
brought has violated or is violating any section of this
SUBSTANCES_ - ' - - - - - -•CAS NUMBER
cblpler 1 or 1 nde adopted or order iaaued under it.
A·ALPHA.C Cl·AMrNO·lJH·PYRID01 2.3- B]INOOLEl
26 1411685
Sec. 37S2. t4 (A) Any person who violotcs any oec·
ACETALDEHYDE
1l010
tion of this chapter or a rule adopted or order issued
ACFTAMIDE
. , 60155
under it shall pay a civil penalty of not more than
ACETOCHLOR
342~1
2·ACETYLAMINOFLUORENE
51963
twenl)'·fiV~ hundred dollars. The anomey aenerat Or
ACIFLUORFEN .
62476.599
....-utin&amp; atrorney of lhe county, city director of law
ACRYUMIDE
of the city, "' villqe solicitor of tile villaae where a
ACRYLONITRILE
107131
ACTINOMYCIN 0
violation hu occurred or is occurring may , ,and upon
ADRIAMYCIN(DOitORUBICIN
lhe writlon retJtal of the diroctcr of environrnenlll proHYOROCHLORIDEJ .
21214928
tection or the bOinl olheal!h oflhe health district havAf.2 .12-(2· FllRYl)·J.fS.NITR.0.2·FURYUACR'VLA,_IIDE 3688537
ing u:rritorial juriodiction, as appropriate. shall bring
AFLATOXINS
AL\CHLOR
. 1597260&amp;
an iCtion under this section a....lt any ~who has
ALCOHOLIC: BEVERA&lt;JES.WHEN ASSOCIATED WITH
violatod or is vtolatina any section of this chapcer or
ALCOHOL ABUSE
a rule adopted or order iasucd onder it. /Vty actim onder
ALDRIN ..
10'l002
ALLYL CHLORIDE
101051
dtiJ IOCtim iJ a civU - · ....,....t by th!: 01Uo Rules
1-.t.t.IINOANTHRAQUINONE
, 111791
of Civil Procedure and other rules of practice a~ pro·
P·AMINOAZ08ENZENE ,
60093
cedure .applicable to civil actions.
OltTHO·AMINOAZOTOLUENE
91S63
(1$) Monies collected as clvil penalties under D1vi·
4·AMINOBIPHENYL(4-AMINODIPHENYLl
92671
lion (A) of Ibis oection shall he credited to lhe follow ·
)·AMIN0.9·ETH'I'U:ARBAZOLE HYDROCHLORIDE . 0109913
1ng funds 1n· the following prioriry:
I·AMIN0·2·METHYLANTHRAQUINONE ,
m80
2·AMINO· .H S·I'IITR0-2· FUR YU· I. l.4 lltiADIAZOLE
71268!1
(I) To reimbunc the anom:y general. -ting IIIOmcy
AMITROLE
.61125
of die coonty. ctty dlrtctor of law, village solicitor,
ANALGESIC MI)ITURES CONTAINING PHENACETIN .
director of environmental proteCtion. and board of
ANILINE
.. u.m
OltTH'o·ANISIDINE
health, as apprcfJnlle ,· for the reasonable cosu incurORTHO·ANISIDINE HYDROCHLORIDE
134292
red in invescigating. preparina and litigating the case;
ANTIMONY OXIDE (AIIITIMONY TRIOXIDE)
{2) To ~he Toxic Chemical Right-to-Koow Fund
AltAMITE .
140~71
·created in Section 3752. 17 of the Revioed Code.
ARSENIC IINQR(I.I,NIC ARSENIC COMPOUNDS)

a

C'HORA.MPH!NICOL ..........

HEXYL~ I -NITitOSOURBAiMBTJIYL;-(.'CNU)

l-CHLOI0.2:·METHYLPROPENE . . . • .
. ... 56l471
4-CHLORO-ORTHO-PHENYLEN!DLUUNE .. . ..... . . . •95130
P-CHL.OftO.O.TOLUIDINE ......... ,
.95691
CHLDROTitAWNIL . .. .. , .. .. .. . .. . . ..
CHROMIUM (HEXAVALENT COMPOUNDS) ..
CHRYSENE .. . ...... , . . . .. . .... . •
. 211019
C.J . BASIC lED 9 MON()i1YDROCHLORIDE .. . ... . 569619
CINNAMVl ANTHRANILATE , .
17296
CISPLATIN ... " \ '' ....
.. .. 15663271
CITRUS ltED NO 2
COKE OVEN SMISSIONS ..
CONJUGATED I!STROOENS
CREOSOTES . .
PARA-CRESIDINE .. .
' .. ' 120711
CU Pf:EJlRON
" .. ' 13,2:06
CYCASIN . .. . .. .. . ,.
149010117
CYCLOPHOSPHAMIDE (ANHYDROUS)
.... 50180
CYa.QMiOSPHAMIDE (HYDRATED)
. ~5192
D&amp;C ORANGE NO I 7
,]4616]1
DAC lED NO. 8 ..... .
DI.C lED NO 9 .
'. ' . . $160021
DACREONO 19 ..
11819
DACARBAZINE ...
. 4)42034
DAMINOZIDE
1~5
DAUNOMYCIN
.,..
208J0BIJ
DOD (DICHLORODIPHENYLDICHLORO ETHANI!.)
nStt
ODE tDICHLORODIPHENYLDICHLDRO-EfHYLENEI . . 72$.59
DDT (DICHLORODIPHENVLTRICHLORO.ETH.-.NE)
. 50293
DDVPIDICHLORVOS) . . . . . . . . .
62737
N.N ·-DIACETYLBENZIDINE ..
613)54
615005
2.4-DIAMINOANISOLE . · •
2.4-DIAMINOANISOLE SULFATE .
.3915641'7
4,4'DIAMINODJPHENYL !THER(4,4'.0XYDIANILINE) 101804
2.4--DIAMINOTOLUENE . .
. 95807
OIAMINOTOLUENE (MIXED)
DIBENZ(A,H)ACRfDINE . ,
2:26168
DIBENZ(A,J)ACIUDINE .
DIBENZ(A.H)ANTHRACENE
53103
7H ·DIBENZOIC.O)CARBAZOLE .
'.' '19S492
OIBENZO(A,E)PYRENE ..
. 192654
DIBENZO(A ,H)PYRENE .
DIBENZO(A,I)PYRENE . .
. '119,59
DIBI!NZO(A,L)PYRENE
' 191300
1.2-DIBKOM0·3.CHLDROPROPANE(DBCPI .
.96128
P-DICHLOlOIIENZENE
~. J · ·DICHLOROBENZJDINE
• 91941
1.4 · ·DICHLOR0-2·1UTENE
. 764410
3 1'·DICHLOR().4 .4'· DIAMINODTPHEN'YL ETHER
. . 75)43
1. 1-DICHWROETHANE
DICHLOROMETHANE(METMYLENE CHLORIDEJ
' 788?j
I 2 DICHLOROPROPANE
I ).Df('HLOitOPROPENE
542756
DIELDRIN
T
.60571
DIEN£STROL . .
.. . 14173
DIEPOXVBUTANE
1&lt;664535
DIESEL ENGINE EXHAVST .
117817
D I(2· ETHVLHEXYWPHTHALATE
1.2-DIETHYLHYDA.AZINE
16151Kll
DIETHVL SULFATE .. . ,
M'75
DIETHYLSTILBESTRdUDESI
56531
DIOLYCIDYL RESORCINOL ETHER (OOREJ
101906
DIHYDROSAFROLE
94586
) .3' ·DIMETHOXYBEN2JOINE(ORTHO.DIANISIDINE) . I IIJ9I:W
l 3'.b iMETHOXYBEN1JtiiNE OIHYDROCHLORIDE
tORTHO
' .2032$400
OIANISIDINE DIHYDIOCHLORIDEI
DIMETHYL SULfATE .
n781
4·DIMETHYLAMINOAZOBENZENE .
60117
TRANS·2-(DIMETHYLAM INOIMETHYUMIN0)·5·(2(5·N ITR0-2 FURYLJVINYLI· I .J.4-0XADIAZOLE
. 5'7)8,.0
1. 12·DIMETHYLBENZ(AiANTHRACENE
5'7976
3 3'·DIMETHYLBENZIOINE(ORTHO·TOLIDINEJ
.. 119937
DIMETHYLCAR84MOYL CHLOI. IDE
'19647
. . : . . 57147
I I·DIMfrl1tYLHYDRA~NE ...
. 5«)7]8
I 2 DIMETHYLHYDRAZJNE
Slll7 1
DJMETHYLVINYLCHLCaiDE
.42391648
I Ct·DINITROPYRENE ..
4239?659
I I ·DINITROPVRENE
' 2 4·DINITROTOLUENE
' 121 142
I 4·DIOXANE
12391 1
DJPHENYLHYDA]'(f0JNIPHENYTOINI
57410
DIPHENYLHYDANTOIN!PHYENYTOINJ.SOOIUM SALT 630933
DIRECT BLAC!' 3S(TEOtNICAL GRADE)
193"1)77
DIRECT BLUE 6(TECHNICAL GRADEl
. 260'2462
DIRECT BROWN 95(TECHNICAL GRADEl
1~1866
DISPERSE ILUE I
247.54511

""""""

,,...,

,.....

,....,

"',....

"""

1

EPICHLORODHYDitiN
ERIONITE
ESTRADIOL 11BETA
ESTRONE .
ETHINYLESTRADIOL
ETHYL ACRYLATE
ElltYL METHANESULFUNATE
ETHYL-4.4 -DICHLOROBENZILATE .
ETHYLENE DmROMIDE
ETHYLENE OICHLOR I[)E(I.2-DICHLOROETHANE)
ETHYLENE OXIDE
ETHYLENE THIOUREA .
ETHYLENEIMINE

,..,.,

,.,..

FOLPET
FORMALDEHY0E(0AS)

tionnybel)rou)htonlyintheCounofc-Piels

11IINIIC,!l&lt;OU~nty in which che allqed ~iolldon hu oa:ur~

11~26

,,._

..,...,,,.,

COMPQtJNDS
:: :::

:

: ':::;

c'AUON TETR.;CHLOfiiD£ , , , , , , , ..•.....•. , . 5621~
CARION·BLAc'l EXTRACTS.. , , , . • . . , . , . , . , , . • , . ,
Cl!lAMIC PTIIU IAII.IOtiNI! Mtmei..EI OF
4

niiiJ. The 'IOUn &amp;hall tW;oye jurisdiction
the provilibnl of this chlpler or 1 rule
8llopCed or an order iauat under it. and to•y ari~··· , ;:.:1~~~:~·Qt~W~ ·,oa ····· •• ••
red

or il
UJ eftforce

eppruprUic civil
(F) The

..

penaJciea.J
court, ill iuuinJ W

' '

final

order in

-'Y

at~

•• :

.

•

•

LVMII'JIC)WAS ...
• . , , .•.•.• , •. • ,, ,,,,,,,,, •.. , ,,,
CHLOIL\MIUCIL · · · · · · · · · · · · • . --, ... " r·:, . ... ·., . :10m3

--- -·-------~---

"""

1160111

GY ROMITRIN IACETA LDEH YOE
METHYLFOitMYLHYDfi."ZONE

......

· ·:

60S61050

GRISEOFUL~IN

,\lOBENZENE .
103)3)
BENZ(A(ANTHAACENE
~5jJ
BENZENE , .
.. . 71432
BENZIDINE (AND ITS SALTS] ,
' .92115
BENZotBJFLI)9RANTHENE .
''
.,
' .205992
BENZOIJIFLUOlANTHENE
'. 20582)
BENzotKJFLUORANTHENE
BENZOFURAN
. 271896
~)28
BI!NzotAJPYRENE
BENZOTRJCHl.ORIDE
. 100447
BENZYL CHLORIDE .
BENZYL VIOLET 40
BERYLUUr.t AND BERYLLIUM COMPOUNDS ...
BETEL QUID wmc TOBACCO
BIS(2-CHLOROETHYUETHER .
" 111444
N,N·815(2.CHOROBTHYL)·2· NAPHTHYLAMINI;;
.494011
(CHLORNAPAZIN£)
BISCtjLOROf.lliYL NITioSouREACBCNU)
1549)8
ICARMUmNEI . , . .
BIS(CHLOROME'THVL)eTHER . .
'. S42181
BITUMENS , BXTlACTS OF STEAM ·REFlN'ED
AND AlA REFINED .
BRACKEN FERN . ; • , .. ,
IROMODICHLOKOMETHANE . . . , ,
, , . 75214
'I,3·BUTADIENE .... " ........ " , . . . . " .,
. 106990
I,4-BUf-'NIDIOL DIMEmiANI!S\JLPOffATE (BUSULfAN)~ I
. . 2:,.,13165 '
BUTYUTED HYDIOXYANISOLE
. ..... 3CXi1110
lET A·BUTYIOLACTONE. , , , .. , . . . . . . . . . .

~~~:~ .

.)5"1075('
. 6'U58

GASOLINE EN&lt;JINE EXHAUST CCONDENSATESIEXTRACTSI .
GLASSWOOL FIBERS !AIRBORNE PARTICLES
OF RESPIRABLE SIZE! ,
GLU P· IC2·AMIN0-6-METHYLDIPYRIDO
' ..,.:;7)0114
0 .2·A l .2 ·DIIMIDAZOL£) .
GLU ·P·m ·AMINODI PYRIDOC l.l·A·3' .2' ·Dl
61730100
IMIDAZOl.El .
GLYCIDALDEHYDE
,,.,25
GLYCIDOL

...,.,,

CADMIOM ANP CADMIOM

j()212

.53167
57636
14011115
. 62500
510156
106934
. 107062
15218
96457
151j6t
lll01J
50000

I'· NTTR0·2·FURYL)THIAZOLE
FURAZOUOONE
FURMECYC:LOX

1]121 14

Al~THIOPRINE

1068911
125!04ll

2·C2 · FORM\'LHYDRAZINO~

"""'
. I.,_,

action on his or her own behalf:
(I) Apinouny person who is alleged 10 be in viola·
lion of any sect tan of this chapter or a rule adopted or
order iasued under it;
(2) AgaiMl the director of environmental protection
whcrclhero ia allcaed lailu1&lt; of the dire&lt;lor to perfonn
any act or dury under this chapter which is not discretionary with lhe directyr.
·(B) No action can be commc:rqd under Division (A)
of dW. KlCtion prior 10 sixt)' da.ys after the pJaintiff has
l)ven 80tice of the allesed violllion 10 the director of
environmeftlal proctction, the attorney general and the
alie&amp;e&lt;l violator.
(C) No octioo can be commenced u~r DivioiOR (A)
of this aectk.n ir the attorney general or prosecuting
_,.,. oflhecounty, city director of the city, « villqe
where the viol@tion has occurnd or is !fCUrrina. ha6
«mrnenced and is dilisemly prOAeCU.ting a civil or
crimiMI action to require compliant:e with the section
of lhio chapter or lhe rule or order in queation, hot in
any JUCh IClion, any ~1100 may iiuerveae ai 1 matter
of rilhl·
'
(D) Jllhc director II not a porty in any ICiion com·
,..,..1 Uader lhi1 IICtion, he 1111)' inlcrvene u a mat~
.... of rip!.
(E) An action aulhoriud by Divioion (A) of thilltcC·

. ..• 13§l0901Ji6

CHLOI.OPOI.M . , . . .. , . . . . .. ... , .
. . . 67663
•CHLOitOMETHYL MIITHYL E11tEit
(TECHNICAL OlAD!) .. .. . ..
..... .... , . .. . 107:J02

one"""'

ASBESTOS
AURAMINE
AZASERINE

•• ,.'13 1

1.;(2.oiLOiloeTHYL)-t-{~CLQ.

-on

Sec . 37~2 . 1S(A) Excepl as for provided in Division
. (8) of this sec:tiOJ'I, any pmoP nuY commence a civil

o.o . . . . . . . . . . . . , ••

CHI.Oili)Af'IIB .......................... , ......... 517119
CHL.O&amp;DiiCONE (UPON£) .
. . .1.0!00
CHLOI.DIMEPORM .. •. ...• •......•. . . , •..• . .••. 616M3
CHLOI.ENDIC ACID . .. . . . .. . .. .. .
IIJ216
CHI.AllpNATBD PAAAFFINS {AVE!MOii CHAIN LENOTH.
Cl2, APPROXIWATELY60' CH~ BYWEJOIIT)I.I71Z62
CHLOil0018lOMOME1HANI3 ...... .• ......••..• 124411
CHLOI.O!THANE .. .. .. .. .
.. .. 75001
I-(2-CHLOIQE111YL)- ].CYCI.OHEXYL· I·
NITROSOUIEACCCNU)(LOMUmN!)
. .. IJOUM74

16568021

271494)
HC BLUE I
' .76441
HEPTACHLOR
10l4S7l
HEPTACHLOR EXPOXIDE
HEXACHLOROBENZEJ'liE . ·1
118741
HEXACHLOROCYCLOHEXANE(TECHNICAL GRADEl
HEXACHLORODIBENZODIOXIN
:l&lt;W6S468
... , . '. 67721
HEXACHLOROETHANE
HEXAMETHYLPHOSPHORAMIDE .
. 6al]19
· HYDRAZINE .
. 302012:
HYDRAZINE SULFATE
.• 10034932
HYORAWBENZENECI .2·DIPHENYLHYDRAZINE) I
122:667

IN DENO( 1.2.3.CDlPYRENE . .

. .... .

. 193395

1Qc2 - ~M I N0· 3 · METHYUMIDAZ0C4 . 5 · F&gt;

QUINOLINE ..
.. , .• .... .
IRON DEXTRAN COMPLEX ., .
ISOS,\FROLE

. .. 61006837
.9004664
I ~81

LAC1'0FEN .
7"15016:W
LASIOCARPIN E
. lOJ'J.M
LEAD ACETATE
.. JOIOU
LEAD PHOSPHATE .
. 7&lt;64627"1
LEAD SUBACETATE
..... , . 1)3,JZ6
LINDANE AND OTHER HEXACHL.OIOCYCLOHEXANE
ISOMERS
. 1011017
MANCOZEB
MANED , . ,
.
.
''
'
'
' 12427)12
·-·
ME ·A·ALPHA Cc2·AMINO-J ·METHYL9H·PYRI00(:!,)-8)1N00LEJ , , ,
,
... 61006131
MEDROXYPWGESTEkONE ACETATE ... , ~ •. , .• . .... • .11519
MELPHALAN • •.. , .......... . . ,.•, . ~ .f ......... 14112)
MElPHALAN .
. . . .. .. . .. . .. , .. , , .. .. ... J)I7.0
. . . 72])]
MesTRANOL , , . .. .... . "
I·METHOXYPSOU!..EN WITH ULTRAVKlLET
ArHERAPY . .... . ... , .. ,, .. , .,,,, ..... , ..... 291117
5·METHOXYPSORALEN WITH ULTRAYtOLET
A THERAPY . . .' ......... , . .. , ........... ... .... 414201
2-METHYI.A.ZIRIDINE4f'IOP'YLEN!I~INEI . , . , .. , 75SSI
MBTHYL.dOXYM!THANOL • . "" ' '" ' "" . .... JQ()96$
M£THYLAZO~YMITHAHOL ACetATE ~: , .. ' . ... Jlmll
J-METHYi...atot.ANTHI!NB .. ....... , . , .. .. ...... . . H49$
' ·METHYLCHIYII!.NS ••• •• , ,,,.,.,,., . .. •• · ·., · · .369'7143
4.4'·MITHYI.,INE .ikl-CHLOIOA.NIUNE) . I • . ' . ' . ' . 101144

The Daily Sentinel
Monday, October 12, 1982

'

• ,4'·..-rtiYLIINE llllN.N-DMETHYL)
ALL-DANS IETINOIC AQIJ , ..................... ~
. ... 101611
IENZENAMIN! . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . , . . .
All'ltAZOUW :. .. ..
.. , ·~ .. .
.. .. 2t911m
4.4'-MBTHYLENI BIS(2-METHYLANIIJNE)
... ll&amp;lm AWIKACIN SULFATI! ...................... : ...... JIIIJI!IJ5
4,4'-¥1T11YLENEMAND.INE ........ , . , ...•.... , . 101179 , AMINOOLlJTETHIMIDE . . . . .
. .. , ... . .. 125111
4.•'·MI!THYLENlf)f~NftJNE DIHYDROCHLORJDE . 13UU41
AWINOPTEIIN .. , . . . . . . • . . •. • . . •..•....• • , . . . .•. SI626
MBTHYLIOOIDE ... , .....•.. ,, . . , •....•... .' .... 74114
ASI'IJUN !NOTE: IT IS UPICIAIJ.Y INPOIQ'AMT NOT 10
~I!THYL M!THAN!SULPONATE
.. 66113
USE AJPIIIN DUIJNO 1111! LAST 111U.£ ..wnts OF '
2·MBTHYL·I·NTTROAN111RAQUINONE
NEONANCY. UNLESS Sf'IICifiCAU.Y DIIECTiD TO DO
(OP UNCERTAIN PURITY) . . ............. ,. ... 1291"
SO BY PHYSIC1AN BECAUSE IT WAY CAUSE PROII..£MS IN
N·MEnn'L-r.;NJnO.N · NITR05C)(!UANDI~E . . .. ... 10157
THE llNIOIN CHILD 01 COMPUCATIONS DUIIHO
N·MITHYLOLACRYLAMIDE ......... , ..•....... 92.4425
DEUV!iiiY) .. .. .. . . . ~ • , ..
.. &lt;.. . ..
. JO'Jil
METHYLTHIOURACIL .
. J600_ . BENZPIU!TAMINE HYDROCHLOIUDE .. , ............ .5411223
MEftiAM .... ,
.... 90Drt422
IISCHLOR0£THYL HTT'IOSOOIEA(BCNU)
METIONIDAZOLE .
. ... .UMII
(CARMUSTINE)
. 154911
MM:HLER'S KETONE .. ... ,_ . . 1 •• • • •
• • • • to9a
BROMOXYMIL. ., ... , ....... ... '. .. :. :.· ...... ,.... . 161!1145
MIREX .... .. . .
. . . ,. .... ... .
. ..• 2Jtstli5
1,4-auTANEDIOL DINETHYLSULRlNATE
MITOMYCIN C .
. . . S007'l
(BUSULFAN) .... ~ . ................. ·............. J.MI
MONOCROTAUNE .. . . . • . .
. ... 315220
5--fMOI.PHOUNOMETHYL)·I!5-NITRO.PURFURVUDENE)
....... 751jQ
CARBOH DISULFIDE .
·AMIH0)·2.0XALOLIOINONE . , . . . .
. ... . .... I:J99U
CARM&gt;N MONOXIDE ..
MUSTARD OA.S
.... 5M602
CARIIOPLAnN
. . . . . . . , ........ .41$15944
CHENODIOL .. , .. . .. . .. . . .
.. 414259
NAFENOPIN
.37?119,
CHLOilCYCUZINE HYDROCHLORIDE . . . . . . . . . . • 1620219
I· NAPifTHYLAMINE ..
CHLORA.MIUCIL .. .. .. . .. . .. . .. .- '.. . • .. . .. . J050J]
2·N~PHTHYUMINE
.. 91598 ciu.OttDIICONI!. (KEPONE)
. . 143500
AND CEITAIN NICKEL COMPOUNDS .
1-(1-CIIt.OROETHYL)-l-CYCLOH£x.YL-I· NITROSOUREA
NICKEL CARBONYL
.... . .,.
13463)93
(CCNU)(i.OMUmNEI . .
. 1Jl1Gl74
NICKEL REFINER DUST FROM ntE
CLOMIPHENE CTfi.ATE . . . .. .. . .. . ... .......... Iii
P'YROMETALLUROICAL PROCESS ..... .
COCAINE • . . . • . . • . . . •. . . .
. . . .j0]62
Nl~l SUBSULFIDE .
120lSn2
CONJUOATI!D I!STROOENS .... . •... , ... .. , .... .... . .. .
NIRIPAZOL£ . .. . .. .. . .. .. .. . . .. ..
61514
CYANAZINE .. .. .. . " .. .. .. : ..
.. 2112JI62
NmiLOTRJA.CETIC ACID
. 119139
CYCLOHEXIMIDE ..
.. .. .. .. .. . .. . ...e6119
NITIULOTIUACETIC ACID. TRISODillM SALT
CYCLOPHOSPHAMlDE (ANHYDROUS) . . . . . . . . . .. .50110
MONOHYDRATE
.. S662531
CYCLOPHOS"'ANIDE (HYDRATED) ... .. .
. . ,6055112
5-NrrROACENAPHTIIENE .. . .
CYHEXA11N . . ....... . ..
.. . . . . . . . . . . . . 13121105
5-NrfRO.O-ANISIDINE . . . . . '
... 99592
CYTARA81NE .
. '
1419M
4-NITROBIPHENYL . . .
. .. 92:933
.1496021
6-NilltOCHRYSENE • .
DANAZOL .. .. .. .. . . ·
. . 2):5.419
NlTRbFEN(TECHNICAL ORADE)
lll6755
. . . ...
DAUNORUBICIN HYDROCHLORIDE ...
. .601S11
2-Nn'JtOFl.UORENE .
..... S6SJI
DIETHYL511LBESTIOL (DiS) . . . ..
NTfROF\JIAZONE .
DINOCAP
I-(5·NITROFURFURVLmENE)·AMINQ. '
... 11151
DINOSEB . . . .. .. .. .. .. . .. · .. ·
21MIDAZOUDINONE . , ..
. . 57410
DIPHENYLHYDANTOIN (PHENYTOIN)
,.. o(4-(S-NITR0-2·FUAYL)·2·THIAZOlYl)
OOXVCYCUNE ..
.. .. . . .......
' 3CI:4250
. 5]1128
ACETAMIQE ·
NITIOOI!N MUSTARD
. 319193
ER001'AMIN£ TARTIATE .....
(MECHLORETHAMINE!
.. "7'2
ETHYL ALCOHOL IN ALCOHOUC BEVEIAOES
P'fiTIOOEN MUSTARD HYDIOCHLOPJDE
ETHYLENE GLYCOl:. NONOimfYL rntER
.. , ... llom5
(MI!.CHLORETHAMINE HYDROCHLORIDE)
SSII67
ETHYf.ENE GLYCOL M.ONOMBTHYL ETHER .
. .. •10986f
NITIOOEN MVSTARD N-QXIDE
..... 126852 , ETOPOSIDE .
))1114&amp;20
NJnOOEN MVSTARD N.OXIDE HYDROOILORIDE .. )02:71)5
ETRETINATE .
.• .
S*J50410
2-NITROP1lOPANE ,
..... 19«19
1-NrTROPYRENE
, .. ,j$22430
'' .51211
FLUOROURACIL
51115924
4-NmOPYRENE
'' .76t37
FLUOXYM~ONE
•
N· NTTROSODI ~ N BIJTYLAMINE .
. '' .. 924163
1)311147
FLUTAMIDE ....
1116St7
N·NITROSODIETHANOLAMINE
N Nmt0SODIETHYLAMINE .
', , 115
23092171
HAI.AZEPAM
N-NrrROSODIMETHYLAMINE
.. "" . 111741
HEXACHLOROBENZENE ...
P·NI'I'ROSODIPHENYLAMINE
. ' 1561Qj
N-NITROSODIPHENYLAMINE .
• , 16)()6
IFOSFAMIDE
.. " J7717]2
N·NITitOSODI·N-PIDPYUMINE .... .
.621647
IODINE· Ill
242'7569
N· NTTRQSO..N·ETHYLUREA .
759719
ISOTREnNOIN
• 6015)49) ~
l-(N-NJTROSOM~YLAMINO)PROPIONITRILE .
4-(N·NITROSOMETHYLAMINQ)-1 ·
LEAD ..
•
O·P'VIUDYL)I ·IUTANONE
6«191914
LITHIUM CARBONATE
.. 5$4132
N·NITROSOMETHYLETHYLA.MINE .
lomt56
LITHIUM C11'1lATE .
91116&amp;
N·NITROSO.N-METHYLUREA
611933
LORAZEPAM ..
. '.146491
N· NITROSO-N·ME!THYLURETHANE
'. 615532
N-NITROSOMETHYL VINYLAMINE .
, WEDROXYPIOOESTER9NE ACPATE
'. 71589
N - NrTROSOMOR~UNE
MEOESTI.OL ACETATE .
. ... ....
. •,•
N· NITROSONORNICOT1NE .
16~un
MELPHALAN
N-NrrROSOPIPERIDINE '"
.
MENOTROPINS .
N·NITROSOPYRROUDINE .
.9lOS52
.6112:761
MERCAPTOPtJRINE
N· NITROSOSAitCOSJNE . .
ll2.56Z20
MERCURY AND MERCURY COMfOUNDS
.
.61114
NORETHIST£RONEtNORETHINDRONEl .
METHACYCUNE HYDROCHLORIDE ..
MentiMAZOLE .
....
OCHRATOXIN A
' 301479
METHOTREXATE .... ...... .
.2646175
Oil ORANC;;E SS
IS&amp;7w.6
METHOTREXATE SODIUM
ORAL CONTRACEPTIVES. CO~BINED
METHYL MERCURY '
ORAL CONTRACEPTIVES, SEQUENTIAL
.511\M
METHYLTEST'OSTEROHE .
OXYMETHOLONE
MIDAZOLAM HYDROCHLOftiD6
62(JJS)IJI
MISOPROSTOL . . . . . , .
'
.
PANFIJRAN S
. "
MrntOXANTRONE HYDROCHLORID13
'Q76123
. 8716S
PENTACHLOROPHENOL
PHENACETIN
NI!FAREUN ACETATE .
. 9411)
~ENAZOPYR I DINE
NETILMICIN SULFATE
. ''.' .S6J91572
PHENAZ09YRIDINE HYDROCHLORIDE
NICOTINE . ,
.54115
PHENESTEI IN .
' 3546109
NrrROGEN MUSTAID IMECIILORETHAMINEI .
. jm2
PHENOBARBITAL . . . ,
NmtOGEN MUSTARD HYDROCHLORIDE
PHENOXVBENZAMINE .
(MECHLORETHAMINE HYDROCHLORIDE) . . . . . . 55167
PHENOXYBENZAMINE HYDROCHLORIDE
.63921
N()R.ETHIST&amp;ItONE !NORETHfN~El • ..... . .... 61l24
1675.SO
PHENYL 0!-YCIDV.L ETHER .
NOitETHISTERONE (NORf:TiitNDRONI!J
0-PHEN't'LPHENATE. SODIUM
132274
ETHINYL esTRADIOL , .
. .. 612W576J6
POL YBROMINA TED BIPHENYLS ...
NORET1USTEJt0NE CNOitETHINDIONE)
POLYCHLORINATED BIPHENYlS
MESTRANOL . .
' 612241123))
POLYCHLORINATED BIPHENYLS
NOR.OESTREL , .
. .65D002
1CONTAININO 60 OR MORE PERCENT
CHLOIINE BY MOLECULAR WEJGHTI
OXYTETRACYCLINE
.. . 79572
519'1391 1
POLYOEENAN , ,
37615)3
PONCEAU MX
11$67}
PARAMETHADIONE
y
. ]$64098
PONCEAU lit .•
.
mam PENICILLAMINE
POTASSIUtol BROMATE
PENTOBARBrTAL SODIUM
573:10
6,1169
PROCARBAZINE
PHENACEMIDE .
.. .. 63919
PROCARBAZINE HYDROCHLORIDE
PIPOBROMAN .
. 57130
PROOESTERONE
PUCAMYCIN .. .. . .. . .. .
. 11318197
I IXI1414
l , J · PROP~NE SUUONE
POLYCHU:.INATED BIPHENYLS
sms
BETA-PRoPiou.cmNE
PROCARBAZINE HYDitOCHLORIDE . .
JMI701 '
PROPYLENE OXIDE . . .
PltOPYLTHIOURA(]l ..
.. , . .. . .. .SISZS
m2s
PROPYLTHIOURACIL

Page

7

·'

NICIWJ.

,..,,.

•
TOP F1VE- These men were tbe liest over·
: all finishers In Saturday's 5K run l'rom Pomeroy
•• . to Mason. Shown ..-e (L·R) P.J.. C_badwell and
•

'""""

......

,,..,..,

By RONALD BLUM
PITTSBURGH (AP) - Bob
, Walk isn't finished, and neither are
the Pirates. With Barry Bonds starting to hit, maybe Pittsburgh can
turn around the National League
playoffs. ·
The Pirates, one defeat from
• plummeting from the playoffs
, again, battered the Braves 7-1 Sunday night, closing to 3-2 in the
· series and sending everyone back
• 10 Atlanta.
·· "They didn't giv.e .up like we
; figured," said the Braves' Mr.
! October, Mark Lemke.

.,,,

.,....,

'

By WENDY E. LANE
OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) - ~n
: resisting the temptation 10 .telebrate ·
•. prernaturely,the Toronto Blue Jays
: need oitly consider the example of
• Dennis Eckersley.
:
~tet matching the biggest play: .off comeback in history, the Blue

,._
,.,,
"""'

.. .. .. ,...)9611

.

tion, and at least once per year thereafter, the dirtdor

.....
,.,

or cnvinlomOnt.it preloction, in aa:onlance wilh Cbapoor
tt9 of lhe Reviled Code, ohlll adOpt and may amend
lllllreocind rules identilyin&amp; or tilling as toxic chemical
subllux:a those substances thllt are knoWn to cauae
~r or reproductio.;e toxiciiy. A sublunce is known
10 CIIIIC CIIDI' or reproductive IOxicity within the meaning of Ibis chlplcr if:
(t)ln lhe opinion orlhe dirociOr, it hiS boon llhown
thnlup ~fi&lt;ally valid taling accottling to prally
aa:epled principles to cause or be a probable cause of
cancer or ~ve toxiciry in humans" or lllirrAls; or
(2)11 has boon formally identified 11 causing or being 1 probable cause of c~r or reproductiv~ toxici·
ty in humans or animals by the International Agency
for Rcaeorch on Cancer, lhe Natlooal lnllihlto lor Oc·
cupolional Safety' and Heallh, lhe National Toxicdogy
ProJnm, lhe Un[led StAi&amp; Envlroarnental ~ion
AJOIIC)I, or lhe Uniled States Fond and Drug Ad·
miaillration, unless lhe director determines that the
identif- of any oubotanc:e by such agencies is clearly erl'()ftt()U!.
~
(C)Thc rule&amp; adopted onder Ibis toction oball set forth

,.,

RAQIONUCLIDES
JfESERPINE .
RESIDUAL(HEAVY:)FVEL OILS

11072
SACCHARIN
0
128449
SACCHARIN. SODIUM ~
94597
SAFROLE
SELENIVM SULFIDE
SHALE.OILS
,.
68JJIJ49
SJUCA. CRYSTAWNE(AIRBORNE PAJmCLES OF RESPIRABLE
SIZE) . . .
SOOTS. TARS . AND CERTAIN MINERAL
OILSCMINERAL Oll.S MAY VARY IN
COMPOSITION PAI.nCULAALY IN IELATION
TO THEIR CONTENT OP 'CARCINOOEPOC
POLYCYCUC AIOMA.T1C HYDRACARBONS) .
STERIGMATOCYS'f!N
STR EPTOZOTOCIN
.. 96093
STYRENE OXIDE , .

'"'""

STREPTOMYCIN SULFATE

tor ohlllpablilh aliR of lhe aubtlant:co that, at lhe lime
of P\lblicotion of lhe lilt, are required by federal law
or lhe laws of thia o1att ro be teltcd lor lheir potential
to l;aUSC cant:er or reproduaive toJ.icity but that the
director finds hive not been adequately tested in ac~
cordance with the requirementa: with thole laws. '

Sec. 3752.99. Whoever recldc1aly violotco any 5«·
tton of this c . r or any rule adopted or order issued
under it iJ guilty or I felony IIIII oball be fined not less

58220

lhan $10,000 nor more lhan $2S,OOOor imprisoned not
less than 2 or more than 4 years, or both. For viola~

UROFOLl:JTROPIN
VALPROATE .
VINBLASTINE SUU'ATE .
VINC~STINE SULFATE
WARFARIN .

.q,.rl1e

.111112

. .:~·, :: ::: :.: .:: ~6

AWINOP'I'ERIN ..
A.NAaOLIC STEROIDS . .
ASPIRIN (NOTE· rr IS ESPECIAU.Y IMPORTANf. NOT TO
USE ASPIRIN DllRIHG THE LAST THREE MON11IS OF
PREONANCY. UNLESS Sr£c!FICAUY O.EC"fED: TO DO
SO BY A PHYSICIAN BECAUSE IT MAY CA\JS£ f"RR8LEMS
IN THE VNIORN CHILD OR COMPLICATIONS DUIINO
DELIV"'-~ 1 ... '"" ''" .......... . ..... ·SO'III2

.. .. 61161

(TRIAZIQUONE} , .. TRIS(I ·AZIRIDINYL)PHOSPHINE SULFIDE
ffHIO'IVA) .
Tai$(2,J.DJBROMo'PRDfYLlPHOSPHATE
TIP-P- I(fRY rJ'OPHA N·P· I)
TRP·P-2(TRYnof'HAN·P·ll ..
TRYPAN BLUE CCOMJII!IERCIAL QIADEI

!ions of-.. 3152.03 oflhe Reviled Code, each exposure constitulei a
offeaae fpr violations of
all orher IOC!ions of lhil chaprer of lhe Reviled Code,
or rules adopted or ordera i11ued lherounder, each clay
of violation is 111eparate offense .

(B) FEMALE REPRODUCTIVE TOJ&lt;ICI'n'
SUBSTANCESi- - - - - - - - - ' C A S NUMBER

TRIS(AZIRIDINYLI· PARA · ~ENZOQUINONE

•

~

CAI&amp;oN DISULFIDE ..
COCAINE .. .
.. ..... ~ · .. .•• ••
CYCLOftiOSPHAMIOE IANHYDIOUS)
CYCI.DPIIOSPHAMIDE (HYDRATED)

OFFICE OF THE SECRETARY
OF STATE OF STATE OF OHIO
I, Bob Taft, Secretary of State, do hereby
certify !hat the foregoing are the required
ballot lapguage concerning the mandatory
submission of a constitutional question and
expl8118tion thereof ·adopted by the Ohio'
Ballot Boanl; the full telll,of certain constitu·
tilllial ame..tments and a certain statute proposCd by initiative petitions flied in the office of the Secretary of State pursuant to Attide ll, Sections Ia and lb of the Conslitution of the State of Ohio, together with the
ballot language certified to me by the Ohio
Ballot Board and lll'gumeniS submitted to me
by the prilponcntll 1111! opponenlll of the
inues, as prescribed by law.

., .. nuo
•. ' •. 50362

ETHYLENE OXIDE .

' ' .,. 50180
60UI92:
U2:11

. ' .624500110
62450071

LEAD

"'"

UNLEADED cAsoUNE (WHOLLY 'V AI'ORIZEDJ
VRACIL MUSTARD . . . · · ·
VR£1HANE (ETHYL CARBAMATE) ..

....

6675 I
51796

'"""

IC} MACE REPRODUCTIVE TOXICITY
SUBSTANCES; _ _ _ _ _ _ __

ICAS

NUMBER

ANA80LICSTEROID$ .. , ...•. 1.......•..... . •.....

75014

· " " • • •••

4·VINYL· I-CYC1.0HEX~E D!EPOXIDE CVINYL
1 •

•••

2,6-XYUD£NE .
ZINEB ..... ..
C2) TOXIC CHEMICAL SUISTANC!S KNOWN
TO CAUSE IEPiobUCTIYE TOXICITY '
(A) DEVELOPMENTAL TOXJCnY
SUBSTANCES
CAS

ACf:I'OHfDROXA~ AC1D . . . . . . . . .

of !his-.. and II lout IAnlllllY lheroaftcr. the dire&lt;·

_.,,

'.

62m

CYa.oHBXENI!. .DIOXIDE!,: ·... , .. , •....
VINYL TRICHLORIDE
( l,l,l-TRICHLOAO£THANE) .

(D)NOI later !han two years after lhe effective elate

. . ' )1107-«1

....,.

17&lt;66016
79343
T.ETII.ACHL.OROETHYLSNBCP£RCHL.ORO~H'IILENE) . ll71114
P-ALPHA,AlPHA,AlPHA.TETAACHUW:OTOLUENE . ,j2J62!11
TETRANITROMETHANE
.5091U
THIOACETAMIDE
4,4'-TH IODIANILINE ,
. 1)9651
THIOUREA
. 6%~
THORIUM DIOXIDE
I ' ' 1)14201
TOBACCO, ORAL USE OF SMOKELESS PRODUCTS .
TOBACCO SMOKE
. . 264716J'
TOLUENE DIISOCYANATE .. .
ORTHO.TOLUIDINE . . .
95534
ORTHO.TOLUIDINE HYDROCHLORIDE . .
. tJ6m
PARA ·TOL.UIDINE : . . . . .
I~
TOXAPHENE(POLYCHLORINATED CAMPHENESJ . . .. IOOIJS2
TREOSllLFAN . .. ... .. . .. .. .
· 299'"2.
2,4,6&gt;TRICHLOROPHENOl .
· ADI2
TRIOILOIOETHYLENE . .
· · .79016

VINY:L BROMIDE . 1 •• •
VINYL CHLORIDE , . 1 ••

for each toxic: chemical substance whe~ ~t is known
to cause cancer or reproductive toxicity , or both.

TAMOXIPEN CITRATE
.,, ,.,241
TEMAZEPAM
TESTOSTERONE ENANTHATE
... .. JISJn
TE'TitACYaJNE HYDI:OCHLOI:IDE
6t7S5
THALIDOMIDE
. . .!IOJ51
THIOOUANINI!
. IS4427
TOBACCO SMOKE (PRIMARY I .
TOBilAMYCIN SULFATE
TOLU£ri!E .
. !DUll
THIAZOI.AM .•..
.. . " .......... 211111015
THILOSTANE
.. ' • . 1)647353
THIMETHADIONE
. . 1l74M&gt;

,..,...
'""'

TALC OONT.,.ININO ASBESTIFORM ABERS .
TESTOSTERONE AND rfS ESTERS
1.l .•7.II.·TETJ.A.CHLOROOfBENZO·
PARA ·DIOXIN{TCDDI . . . . . .
1, 1.2.2-ttftACHLOIOETHANE . .

'

RETINOUIETINYL ESTERS , WH£1'1111'11 DAILY DOSAGES IN
EXCESS OfUO.OOO IU ()1...3.000 RETINOL EQUIVALENTS.
(NOTE : RETINOLIREnNYL EsTERs ME JIBQUIRED AND
ESSENTIAL FOR ~ANCE OF NORMAL
REPR~VE f\INCTION . THE RIDlMMENDED DAILY
LEVEL DURING PReGNANCY IS 1.000 IVJ
RIIIAYIRIN .
36791015

"""

SULFALI.A.T£ ....

·'

"'"

,,.,

'. 10617

Jays ha.ve a 3-1 edge in their AL
series with Oakland and can clinch
their first World Series berth with a
victory today. All it took for
Toronto's 7.- 6 win Sunday was a
shockjng, game-tying homer and
11 innings.
Being so close to winning the

{B)Within one year of the effective date of this sec-

,,..,,

.,.,.,

In AL playoffs,

Walk, at 35 the oldest member 1992 season and just 14 in 231 reg- steal' of the playoffs, and made a
'
of the Pirates' pitching staff, was ular and postseason starts. It great catch, too. •
plucked from the bullpen by man- seemed so easy after a four-run
Leyland called it a father-son
ager Jim Leyland only. because fii'St inning, when four Pirate$ dou- chat, saying Bonds felt pressure
Danny Jackson was awful in Game bled, setting a playoff record.
from the uncertainty of his upcom2. And the old pro matched his
Bonds was anything ·but well ing free agency.
"It was a rap session," the mancareer best with a three-hiller, after Pittsburgh's 6-4 loss Saturday
blanking the Braves until the nighL He had dropped to I for 11 ager recalled. "It was best-friend
eighth, when Pittsburgh already led in the series aild 8 for 56 in the talking. It was a positive, emotional
by seven runs.
playoffs, including 28 hitless at- conversation. I told him to forget
the past, to go out and relax." ·
"I'd like to thank Jim for giving bats with runners on base.
me the opportunity to do this sort
That's what buddy Bobby
After Sarurday night's game, he
BoniUa,
signed by the New York
of thing," Walk said.
spent I 1/2 hours talking to Ley.
Mets
after
last. season, told him,
Walk, released by the Braves land, figuring a happier head was
too.
Bonds'
wife
Sun called BoniUa
during spring uaining in 1984, had the route to a better bat. He then
earlier
in
the
day
and Bonds' forjust one complete game during the went t for 5 with Pittsburgh's fii'St
mer teammate new in from Green-

Toronto on.verge of

""''
........
''""

'""''

C~N· DISULFI~ . . ............ .' ...,.... " '}. '., .. .'r1SI50.
CYCLOPtiOSPHAMipl! (ANHY~OU$) .• , .••. •..•..• ,JOIID _.,
CYCLDPIID5PHAMIDE (HY~AT£0) . , • , , ! .... . ~$.192

'. 79005
' 87627

1.2-DIBROMO-l.Qfl.OIOPIOPANE (DICP) ... , .. . ... 961 21
' OINITIOIBNZENE .' "" "." " ... .. .. "." .. 251S4545 I
DINO$EII .
. .. .'. ..••.. . , .....•..•. :.IU51

IN TESTIMONY )VHEREFORE, I have
hereunto subscribed my name and affixed
my official seal at' Columbus, Ohio this 4th
day of September, 1992.

.. )2122617

&amp;THYLENEOLYCOLMONOETHYLETHP ....... ,. IIOIIOS .,
• eniYLENE Cll YCOL MONOMETHYL ETH!I: .. ... •·. I~
t.I!AD ...

Bob Taft
SECRETARY OF STATE

NUMBI!.R
TOBACCO SJt10KE (PRIMARY) ,, .. , .. .., 1. , ,. , ., , .... . : . ,. ,
· .546111

WINNING RUNNERS- These women were
winners in the 5K run from Pomeroy to Mason
during Saturday's Big Bend Sternwheel Festi·
val. Pictured are (L·R)Trlna TUrner or

Pomeroy, Nancy Tapoc:si of HIIWilnl tllld Becky
Cotterill, Barbara Rostad and Susan Gnaer, .
all or Pomeroy. Walkers in the race were eligible
for prize drawings.

·Pirates shake off Game 4 d~fe~t to pound Braves 7-1 in NLCS

....

""""'
""'
"''"'

Nathan Baloy, both of Pomeroy; Steve Zronek
. or t\thens, Bill Toundas or Pomeroy and Gary
McMahan or Parkersburg, W.Va.
.

fir~t-ever

American Lea~ pennant after the
five-game failures of 1991 and
1989, it would seem easy for
Toronto to get comfortable, even
emotional.
Emotions are what started Eckersley's uoubles.
His fist-pumping display as he

Ohio schools
see pay-to-play
athletic programs
as growing trend
AKRON, Ohio (AP)- Pay the price.
.
Coaches once used that phrase to inspire studentathletes to push themselveS- try harder, run another
lap, do one more ~ncb press. .
.
.
This year, Oh1o coaches are mcreasmgly askm~
students to pay the price - only now they mean 1t
literally.
.
. "Pay-to-play" athletic programs have ~ cropping up across the state. As money ge~ Ughter m
school districts, many officials are sean:hmg for new
ways to pay for costly athletic programs.
At least 100 Ohio "hools have pay-to-play policies this year, with per-sport. fees_ranging from $10 ~
$300, accor!Ung to the Oh10 H1gh School Athleuc
Association.
"This is certainly a dis~ing trend," said ~u.ane
Warns. an assistant commissioner of the assocl3bon.
"Obviously, there are many lessons and values that
can be learned in competition. It's a sad day when we
can no ·longer afford to provide that opportunity to
young people."
· There is no easy way 10 measure how many students drop out bec_ause they can't pay, but:when
Northwest schools m Stark County dropped tiS fee
system this year after voters approved a new levy,
panicipation in all sports doubled.
Ai some schools, (ees are designed to offset a portion of the \X)St or athletics. For instance, in Medina
County's Brunswick schools, students pay $50 each
to cover transportation expenses.
At other schools, students are picking up the tab
for the sport's overall budget.
Some schools' charge any student who participates
in extracurricular activities.
Supporters of student fees say they offer a good
alternative to cuttin' programs or raising taxes.
'.'I don't think its fair that everybody should have
to pay because I want 10 play football," said Don
Harper, 17, a senior linebacker. at Crestwood, in
Portage Caunty.
Harper, who hopes to USC· liis playin~ experience
to earn a college scholarship, worked dunng the summer on his parents' farm and scraped together
enough to play on the team this year.
But he Sllld the fee has lowered the number of
players trying ou1, which has hurt the team by
.
decreasing competition for positions.
"Most- of the players now are the serious ones
who are trying to get into college," Harper said.
"~t's face it, this is an awful lot of mOJICY to pay
for people who just want something fun 'to do after
school."
·
Indeed, enrollment in every Crestwood sport has
slumped since the diStrict began a pay-to-play policy
two years ago. The football team's roster dropped
from 72 pl~yers it\ 1990-91, t1tc year before pay,-toplay began, Ill 44 last year, when the fee was $314.
This year, there are 49 fOOiball players. ·
Pa¥-to-_Piay fees have been criticized·b~ coaches,
athletiC dli'CCtors, parents and some admmistrators
who say the charges run counter to public educa·
lion's goals.
Most atea school officials in pay-to-play districts
said they offer some t)'Pl of fmancial assislance for
any student who c1111' t afford to pay. So why does
participation still drop when schools switch to pay·
to-play?
"Pride," said Bruce Howard, spokesman for t!Je
National Federation of State High School ASSOCI&amp;·
•
uons.

•·

-

·I '

-

AL flag

wich, Conn., for a pep tallc.
In the first innmg, Bonds got a
chance and came up big against
Game 2 winner Steve Avery, who
lasted just five batters.
Gary Redus doubled and Jay
Bell singled him home, only his
third hit in 17 at-bats. Andy Van
Slyke then bounced to third and
Bonds, af~ fouling off a pair of 3·
2 pitches, bashed the baU to right·
center for a 2-0 lead. Three Rivers
Stadium rocked with joy.
"Sometimes you get some negative feelings in your head and
can't und~rstand why you can be so
successful in 162 games and disappear in seven games," Bonds sailf
"Everyone was saying !he jinx has
got to be over. Then, when I hit the
baD, when I got to second base and
I just ... it was basically like I just
wanted to scream to the fans and

why something like t!Jat happens.':
!&gt;,.very's successors were only -a
slight improvement, and the Pillllis
wound up with 13 hits, raising their
batting average from .205 to .241 .
After Bonds singled leading off
the third, McClendoit hit a sacrifiCe
fly off Pete Smith. Redus doubled
in a run off Charlie Leibrandt an11
Don Slught sin~led in a run off
Marvin Freeman m the seventh. :
In between, Bonds stood out ill
the field, making a stretchin,,
backhanded grab of Ron Gant s
liner in the fourth .

PUBLIC IOftCE:
MEIGS COUNTY FARM
BUREAU ANNUAL
MEETING
OOOBER 13, 1992
7·11 P.M.
EASTERN HIGH SCHOOL
AUDITORIUM
STEAK DINNER

struck out pinch-hiner Ed Sprague
to end the eighth stirred the Blue say. 'You're right, il's. over.'''
Avery also was just about finJays. And the next inning, Robeno
Alomar's homer capped the rally ished. Jeff King and Lloyd
McClendon followed with RBI
that erased the A's five-run lead.
Toronto's players spilled out of doubles, making it 4-0 and giving
the dugout to congratulate Alomar, Piusburgh a playoff record four
even though the game was far from doubles in one inning. Avery exiled
.
after 30 pitches, retiring just one
won. They know lletter,lhough.
"It means a lot to the team," batter. It was the most abridged
left fielder Candy Maldonado said appeaf&lt;lllce by a starter in the NL
$5.00 Adults, $3.00 Child
of the victory. "But you have to playOffs since Pittsburgh's Bob
Entertainment
control. your emotions. We still Moose in 1972.
For
reservations
"I just didn't have good stuff,"
have a tough baUI~ in front of us.''
call 992·2403
Manager Cito Gaston knows, said Avery, who also ·had few
having witnessed the team's 1985 words. "There's no way to explain
collapse.
"We've been 3-1 before, so it's
not over with," Gas1011 said.
"This is a completely different
team, completely different circum·
stances," said reliever Tom Henke,
a member of the 1985 club who got
his third save Sunday.
Game 2's winner, David Cone,
can end it without going back to
the SkyDome. He faces A's ace ·
.
.
Dave Stewan, the Game I starter,
today.
.
Pat Borders' sacrifice fly in the
lith completed the Blue Jays'
stunning comeback after starter
Jack Morris was hit hard early.
A rejuvenated Rickey Henderson revitalized the A's as they
knocked out Morris after 3 1-3
innings and took a 6-1 lead after
seven.
Eckersley, who had 51 saves in
the regular season, was brought in
early and hit imme&lt;liately. John
Olerud and Maldonado smacked
RBI singles on Eckersley's first
two pitqles, rnalcing it 6-4.
Alomar had· four hits, including
the homer and a double that began
the rally in the eighth inning. He
also cut.down the potential winning
run at home plate in the ninth with
a throw from second base.
Devon White led off the ninth
with a single that skipped past Hen·
derson in left for a two-base error.
That brought up Alomar, and he
launched a drive high and deep to
right.
The A's had the potential win·
ning run thrown out at the plate in
the ninth. Harold Baines opened
with a single off reliever Duane
WarC! and p.inch-runner Eric Fox
from
stole second and took third on slug·
Norwich, Ohio
ger Mark McGwire's first sacrifice
bunt.of the season.
Bro. Edmunds had· pastored for over six years, wu
Terry Steinbach foUowed with a church music director for over three years and pregrounder to Alomar at second, and
sently ~s doing the work of a Missionary Evangellet,
Fox hesitated before breaking
home. The delay was costly as AIDhelping churches in the Great Appalachian Region, ,
mar's throw to Borders was m
Bro. Edmunds has written books and recorded singplenty of time for the tag.
"A play was on . It almost , Ing and preaching tapes, which are offered at the
worked," Oakland manager Tony
meetings.
La RtL'Isa said.

SPECIAL
MEETINGS
SUN., OCT. 11 THRU
FRI., OCT. 16

VICTORY BAPTIST

CHURCH

525 N. SECOND ST.
MIDDLEPORT, OH. 45760

7:00P.M. EACH EVENING
With
Missionary Evangelist

Bro. G. G. Edmunds
and Family

. In the lith, Derelc Bell drew a
leadoff walk from loser Kelly
Downs, took third on Candy Mal- .
dOnaldo's single II? right and scored .
easily on Borden fly ball 10 Henderson in lefL Ward was the winner
. and Henke pitched the lith for the

save.

' I

T.oronto seemed 'to have no
chance of coming back against
Athletics, who seemed to be cruising along behin'd starter Bob
Welch, who struck out seven and
scattered seven hits before leaving
in the eighth.

SPECIAl MUSIC;
SINGING EDMUNDS FAMILY
VICTORY BAPTIST CHOIR
VICTORY QUARTET
SOLOISTS: Ingle McClure,
_Don lilrkman, Julie Young,
Bola Barker and Therman Smith .

You Are Invited
•·

,,
·--- . ,~·-

..

•

-

'

'

.·

�- I

!P~IG!'~!a:!n.~~De~I~~~Se~n~tl~ne~I----------------~--~--------!P~om~·~~~Y~~~~I!dd~l~epo~rt:,~o~h~lo~----------------~~--~------_!M~o~n~da~~~·~Oc~m~be~r~12~,~1~~~ :·

Monday, October 12, 1992

.

'

By CHUCK MELVIN
CLEVELAND (AP)- As they
dressed for the lrip back home, the
Pittsburgh Steelers S1ill were ~~ing who should have been covenng
whom on the Cleveland Browns'
clinching IOUclldown.
This much was ciW. No Steeler
was anywhere il! the vicinity of
second-year rec~iver Michael Jack·
son when he caught a 47-yard pass
from Mike Tomczak in the 'fourth
quarter Sunday, finishing off the
Browns' 17·9 win.
·
. "We came in here after the
game and tried to figure out that
particular play," Pittsburgh ccxnerback D.J. Johnson said. "'Even
then, after the game, we were confused as 10 who should have taken
·

that man."
.
·
·
Cleveland (2-3) had 4one lhead·
for g~ 10-~ on Kev.m Mack's
one-yard run m. the thud quarter
and w.as p~tec:IIDg a 10-;9 ldvantage early m the fourth w'!M JI!Ck·
son managed to sneak behind PillS·
burgh's secondary unnoticed Eric
Metcalf ran a crossing route that
drew the defense's attentioo away
from Jaclcson, and Tomc.zak's
pump fate completed the deceplion.
·
The only remaining concern was
whether Tomczak a~d Jackson
could stand the pii)Spenty.
"I was so open, I was w1,1rried
about whether~~ not I was g~mg.~
catch the b~ll. Jackson sa~d. .I
was wondenng whether to calllh It

with ·my bOd:y, ca~b it with my.
hands, Catch 11 IJatDit my body.
A!l t~~~ was gomg t 'l!'ough my
m~. .
,
,
I t.old m~self, Don .t overthrow 11. Don I throw It mto '!!~
Dawg Pound (the bleachers),
Tomczak said.
.
.
Rod Woodson •.stlll smarun'
from sevMII flubs. m ~ Stcc~
loss at Gtec:n B~y 1ft thell' JliCVIOI!'
g.ame, was ass1gned to .Jackson s
Side o~ the field but seemed to be
expec110g help deep. No one was
th~. ; .
.
.
I m sure everybody knew 1t
was a J::s, but n?,bodl knew for
~.ure w . to take, Jo nson sa•d.
. It was a saange play for that~ucular defense. It was somethmg

we absolutely didn'li*tjliie for. It
was the perfect offeme for that par·
ticular ~mte;-. It WUD't nec-m-'
ly Rod s ~·
..
Now ~g by.eaght, the Steelers (3-~) went fcir ~on
I at their own 40 WJIII rune mmutes
left, but ·league-leading rusher
Bll!lY F!Jster was stopped for no
gam. Plttsburah, "!'b!ch liasn 't
scored a touchdown m us last two
PJ!!.es. never recovemt
. We knew ·'!Chid tog~ somethmg t~at scncs. offenstvely,"
coach Bill Cowher said. "I don't
have any .second thoughts .a bout
·that call." ·
.
. Th~ loss was. the SICelers' lOth
m th~ll' last 11 trips to Cleveland.
Pittsburgh dominated the first

.l'ourtl!-and·

.

~-

'

half but led only 6-3 after squandering several opportunities. Neil
O'Donnell's 17-yard touchdown
pass to Dwight Stone was nullified
by a holding penalty on Tunch
Ilkln, and Carnell Lake dropped a
potential Interception with a clear
path to the end zone.
O'Donnell completed all 11 of
his passes in the half and finished
25 of 32 foe 241 yards.
.
Gary Anderson, whose three
field goals accounted for all the
Stec:lers' points had a chance for
another from
yards out but
ban~ it off the left uprighL
• It definitely brings us back
down to reality," said Foster, who
gained 84 yards on 24 carries.
"Three and two is not that pretty. 1

3t

.

.

.

tent running and Moon •s accurate sole possession of f~rst place and
By JOE KAY
Everything worked in the Oil- ·
CINCINNATI (AP)- What shon-range passing added "'I to a their easy victory Sunday must ers' favor S11nday because they
would it take to draw attention 38-24 victory that was as good as . have thrown a chill mto their oppo- didn't have to rely on one weapon.
nents.
·
away from a five-t,ouchdown per' . the run-and-shoot gets.
Moon's five touchdown passes"If we keep doing tluit, we'D be
.Moon's bCen the nialn·aaraction . three to Haywood 1eff'll'es and two
formance by Warren Moon?
How abOut a 149-yard rushing all right," Houston coach Jack in the run-and-shoot, forcing teams to Ernest Givins - matched his .
Pardee said.
10 go to extta dllfensive backs and career high and White's careereffort by Lorenzo White?
If the Oilers (4-1) keep doing soft zone coverage. That strategy high 149 y8rds were the most by an
The Houston Oilers had them
both Sunday, fll8klng quiclc work that, nobody's going to catch them works if Moon gets impatient or Oiler since Earl Campbell hid 186
or an already reeling Cincinnati in the AFC Central Division. the Oilers can't compensate IJy run- yards in a 1981 game. .
.
Bengals defense. White's consi.s- They've won four suaight to take ning.
Moon loved to watch While run.
It made it easier for him to pass.
"He was unbelievable today,"
said Moon, who was.rather cxu.ordinary himself. "Our Drrcnsive line
·
did a great job of recognizing what
Clcnuon29,V' · · 21
Tbfs Saturday's games
Baseball playoffs ·
they were doin~ up front 111d han·
Delaware SL 21':'f'OWICil St. 13
Alapn u Ball St. . ·..
.
Duke45, But Carolinll4
'
dling
it and g1ving him gaping
Bowline Omen at Toledo
E. TennCNOC SL 62. ChuicwJo
National League
E.
Michipn
al
W.
Michi&amp;m
··.'
·'holes.
And when he gets Into the
Sauthcm 0
SaturdaJ 11JCOrw
K0111at Cent. Michiam
Fl&lt;&gt;ida
21,l.SU21
secondary,
he really punishes peoAtlanla 6. Piul~ 4
•
Miami. Ohio It Ohio
Flmda AIII:M 21, N. CIIOlina A&amp;T 7
SllndiJI~t
ple.
· .
Florida SL :16, North Carolina 13
Pin.boz&amp;h 7, Atlant&amp; I, Allanta leadl
&lt;Joorsia
34,
Gooqpa
Southem
7
Big
Ten
standings
•-* ~2

Scoreboard

.
,
=

Tuttcb)"a jame:

Pittsburgh (Wakefield 1·0) tt Atlanta

(Giavine ().]), 1:37 p.m
· Wednetdly'apme

Ho

·
·

Jacbcm SL 21. Allbmla St. 1
' l..ooili.wl Toch 21, SW LoWaiana 7
Loui.,illo21, VupuaTOch 17

PittabwJh at Atlanta, 8:26p.m., if noc"'"Y

Manlull48, Fumian 6

Mcmphia SL 34, Cincinntti 14
Middle Tent. 49, AUltiri Peay 10
MiNiAiooiSLI4, Atlbtlm7
N. Cuofinl SL .41,T~uToc:h 13
NE Louisima S2, McNcae SL 35
Nid!.oU. SL 19, Sun Hau~ton St.l9,

American League

Saturday'• aeon
Toroa10 7, o.llind S

Sunday'J ICOI'e
Toronto 7, Oakland 6, ll irinina•.
Tomntole.dt ICria 3·1
Toda7'1 a•me
Torooto (Cone 1-0) at Oak1md (Stt:w-

•• RichmMd lS, New Hamplhile 7

Oakland at Toromo. 3:07 p.m. or 8:26
11uan~J'a

pme
Oakland at Toraa10. 1:37 p.m .• if noc-

cauy

.

Eutem DMalon

. lndW.•polio ...... 3 2 0 .600 S4 78
N .Y.Je~~ ...,. ........ l 5 0 .1~1 14123
New Engl.ai'YL,.. 0 S 0 .000 46119

W.atrn DlvliJon

Don,................

4 I 0 .100 70 7S
Kanau City .. ...•. 4 2 0 .6El 140 14
L.A. Iwd"' ...... 2 4 0 .333 90109
Sut Dieao.......... 1 4 0 .200 46101

Scaalc................

Eulern Dlwlllon

Phocnil .............. l 4 0 .200 19140

Cftltral Dl•lllon
MinnoiOll ...... .,., 4 I 0 .100
Tampa Bay ........ 3 1 0 .600
ChicajO ... -......... 2 ] 0 .400
o....a.1.......... 2 3 o .400
DettoiL ... ,........... I 4 0 .200

129 91
115 83
) 011 ])
74104
95 97

Westfrn Dlvlalon
San FranciJco .... S 1 0 .833
, New Orleanl...... 4 2 0 .6fil
Atlanta .......,....... 2 4 0 ,333
L.A.!Uma ......... 2 4 0 .333

160Hl8
17 61
116123
83116

Sunday's scores
Miami 21, Atlanta 17
Kwu'City Z4,Philadclpbial7
New Yolk Gilnta 31, P'bOc:nU 21
C..d&gt;nd 17,l'laobu'l!lt 9
San Franci&amp;oo 2A. New EaiJand 12
llalW 27. S..ttle 0
LOI Anaelmlllidm 20, Buffalo 3
- ! I , CinCinnat!2A
lnditnapalia 6, New Y""'l"' 3, ar
New Orlt~na 13, Lot An,el01 Rams

OPEN DAlE: Oticago, Ddooi~ 0....
Bay, Minneaota, San.Di.eao, Tamp~ Bay.

To place an ad

.

tie

Tllf'IIL 21. UJbana 10 '

Wuhin2ton St. 35, Oretc.t St. 10

AP college
football poll
The Top Twenly Five tcarru: in tho 1\J·
. IOCi•IOd. Prcu 1992 coUe1c football poll,
with fint·place votu in puenlhe•e•,
rcc-orck Ltuouah Oct. 10. \01.11 poinll baaod
en lS .~in11 ?or 1 fint pltcc vOI.o Lhroulh
me pomt fot a lSih place vpce, 111d nO.·
ing in 1111 week'• poll:

.....

PU. Week
I. Wuhinoton (30.S)S. (&gt;OI,Sl~.S
I
W-L-T

7. Colondo.............. j.(&gt;O 1,142
I . Stanlonl:. .............. .S·I-0 1.101
9. Penn St. ................ ji.J-0 1,033

9
II

IO. Gr.orJil ................ ji-t-0 ' 9~8

12

ll.Ncbra~ki .............A· l.O

12. N.... o.mc ............ l· l

$.""". . . . . . . . .

905
852

14
13

13. Tcnnc:uee ............-5· 1-0

B!iO

4

1-0
'IS. . ' ' ' SL ........ I·O

623

IS
II

16. Geoi'Ji.l ld\ ........4-1-0

S98

17

17. Vif&amp;inii .............. ..S.l·O
11: Sout!tctn Ca1 ........2+1
19. Clanaon ...............3·:Z.O
20. Boltm c;ollego. ....4·0-J
21 . N. Canolinoo Sl .... .S.:!-0
22.
SL .... .S·(&gt;O
23. Fbidi ..................2-2-0'
74. w...
.3·0.2
25. Kanau ..................4·J.O

S41
497
377

10
20
2S

370

21

725

7

273
209

2S

180

23

112

,ss

OUttrl r tctlvlna Yottl : UCLA 82,
Okllhoou79, Tu:u 52, Arizon~40, C.li(omi.a 34, San Dieao Stale 29, Air Force
11 , Ohio State 11 , Miui111ippi 10, Wil-

comin 9, U~h '1,, Auburn 4, Hawaii 4,
NoM Carolina 4, Il1inoia 2, Kanu• Stitt:
2.

MAC standings
Team

Conr.

ovt/'111

WLT , Pr:LWLT .
BGSt/.........3 0 0 1.000 4 2 0
Ball St. .......3 I 0 .7SO 3 3 0
MiamL. .....l I 0 .667 3 2 1
Aklon .........3 2 Q .600 3 . 2 0
W. kidt. ....3 2 0 .600 3 2 I
c. Midi. .....2 2 0 .soo 3 3 0
K&lt;nt ..........2 2 0 .soo 2 4 0
Tolodo ...... .. l 2 o .333 3 2 0
Ohio ......... .! 4 . 0 . .700 I S 0 .
· E. Midt ......o 4 o .ooo o 6 o

Soutb .

Azbnlu lS, Tmn.-e ::M
Cit.lde13:J, Tn.-Chlttanooaa13

v

,

Saturday's scores
B.USL3l,E.-7 .
BowlinJ a.-, 3l,Oitio 14

Ktnl 20, Alqoo 16
Miami, Ohio 16, c.o• Midli&amp;ut 13

T..!odo21, W. Mldtipnl2

~.

. ..
•·.

"

·, 0

I

"-"'" 6, eo.;,sta~ o. ar
B1tavia 41, I...andrrilzt Otriatian 0
Beachwood 29, Brcx:iklyn 26
~
Bcllliro 3S, Stet.~ ben ville
21
1lelpao 33, w.u..... 8
BemOUnion 14,f'llherC.Ih. 13
CantM McKinle~ 17, Warren Hardina

c.m

14

C.. Aclanu 20, 0. Rhod,. 12

Ck Catholic 33, Garfield Hta. Trinily
13
.
Co. Eul27, Co. Lincoln-We~~ 14
-Cle. Hc:ilhll 20, Shaker Ht1. 0
a.. MuL..U 34, Cl• Kenned y 14
C.. Sl B&lt;lwan127, Clc. VAS! 0 .
a.. UoiYCIIily 2S,c....., C.th. 23
Conoaor!, Vall 46, Jewett..Scio 0
E. CleYeland Sh•w29, Panna 3

11

Edilm N. 26, &amp;llaii.SL Jobn1• 12

Fremont 'St. Ja&amp;eph 44, N. Bah.imorc 0
Gilmour :M. HOOaon Wa1em ROIOrt'c
20
.
.
lndiaaapoli. Ben DniJ 21, Cin. Eld"
21
lndianapoljl N. Ctntnl3S , Maaillon
20
.
.
Ketu:rina AlLer '17, CiA. McNicho1u
20
LabCath. 21, Walaltlotuit 3
Ludlcnn W. 1A, Cuyah(v Hta. 19
Mllw:m 22. Tt.~K~r~wu C.th. l

Mtdtuti&lt;:oburJ ·~ Nuioit C.th. 6
Norwalk St. P•ul 61 , Athland

Crmlview 12

·

Orel"" Strit&lt;h 33, E.,_ 14.
P11111a ""· Holy N1mc n, Chardon
NJ&gt;.CL 7
PCHUmouth .E. 18, Pvrta:mouth Notre
Dame 13
Ricltmaod Hta. 35, Colwnbia 6
Sanob!ty SL loluy'o 12, Paltino 0
Sonoca B. 20, FOIIOJi1 SL Wandolin 14
• Tol. Sllohn 18, To!. Scoa I
Weirton (W.V1.) Madorw 7, Buc:kefC
Trail3
YOWI&amp;o Mooney 7,AIIItint.ovm Fitch 6

-· ""•

·-

DECISION 92''
.,,.

1;\

.

t

I
~

' •;J
&gt;/ 1

h;

'0

··For More Information ·
992·2155

Transactions

"•

.

BuketbaU
Nolloui-IAioodollao
MIAMI HEAT - llpd llarold Min·
cr, ~ard, to a-~ coatnct, 1nd
l,ciU&gt; - . ponl.

..·

Footbau

_

. Nallonal JDGtbiH IAaJue

INDIANAPOUS COLTS - Waived
B&lt;l T-, rtlNilna bo&lt;t. AaivoiOCl TCily
Walker, linebaci•, from 11M pnotice

•

"!"'...
NEW ORLEANS _.. Plac:.d Lout.

•

0

•• 0

u.,.., ww, ...... Clio illJurell ftllll'"( ..

ACtlnled Marcua Dowdol1, wide 'reccivct,

from tho .,...UOO - ·

·'

.

'

NOTICE OF ELECTION ON
NOTicE TO BIDDERS
TAX LEVY IN EXCESS OF
Sealed propoaail' will be
11tE TEN MILL UIITATION received at the:
.
NOTICE Ia hweby given
Dlvlolon ol RaclaiUilon
that In pureuanoe ol a
Department ol
Reoolution ol the Vlll.ge
Naturol Reeourc..
Council of the Village ol
1855 Fountain Square
llyraoJMe, Syraauoo, Ohio,
(Second Floor)
paoed on the 7th day of
Columbue, Ohio 43224
July, tte2, thwe wjH be aub- until.Monday, November I,
milted to a votll ol lhlt peo· 11112· at 2:00 P.M. and
pte olaald aubdlvloion at a open 0d thereafter lor lurGenoral Election to be held nlohlng the moterlala and
In the VIII~~ge ol Syrn•a, perfo1mlng the labor lor the
Ohio, 0t tho regular plac• execution and conatructlon
ol voting therein, on the 3rd of:
day ol November, 111112, tho
NEESE RECLAMATION
quHiion ol levying a tu, In
PROJECT
axc•a of the len mlH llmlb&gt;o
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
lion, lor the benefit ol RECLAMATION PROJECT
Syracuoa Vlllaglt lor the
NUMBER MG-SB-31
purpoea of current In accordance with •the
lllpllnt•.
plano and apeclllcatlono
· Sllkl tax baing a renewal prepared by the Department
ol. an axleUng tax of 1 milia ol Natural Reaource~,
111 ·a rata not excHdlng 1 Dlvlalon ol RIIClamatlon,
mill for ...h one dollar of Columbua, Ohio. Bldll will
valuation, which -ntllto be opened In 1ha Third Floor
ten cantil ($0.1 O) lor ...h Conference Room ol 1155
one hundred doliaro ol val- (lla(lldlng H) ol the Fountain
ualion,lor live yeora.
Squora olficaa of the Ohio
The Poll• lor eald Department ol Natural
Election will open at 6:30 Reaourcao. The United
o'clock A.M. and remoln Stateo Office ol Surface
open until 7:3o o'clock P.M. . Mining Reclamation · and
olaald day. . ·
Enforcement Ia "'Upplylng.
By order of the Board ol 1oO% ol the lunda lor 1hlo
EIIICiiono of llelga County, projecL The eotimate lor
Ohio.
thlo project ~ delllrminad
Henry L Hunlllr, ChalrmM by the Dlvlaion ol ReclamaRlta D. Smith, Director tion Ia $58,720.00. · ·
Dilled Seplllmber 4, 111112
·A pre-bid mHIIng will be
(10) 5, t2, 111, 21, 4tc
held on Thureday, October
·22, 1982 al11:00 A.M. at the
site.
Public NotiCI!
Copt• oltha plana, opecillcatlono, and propooal
NOncE OF ELECTION ON forme will be forwarded
TAX lEVY ' IN !XCI!II"OI"" from- th·e Dlvlal'on of
'!HE TEN MILL UMITATION Recl-ation, Department of
NOllCE Ia hereby given Natural Raaourc•, upon
that In purauanae ol a receipt of a check In the
Reaoludon of the VII~ amount ol $13.00 made piiJ·
Council ol the VIUage of able to the Dapartment ol

and amended Executive
Order 84-8, February ·15,

11184, equal employment
opportunity condltlona are
oppllcable to thla bid. Wage
reiH Htabliahed In accor·
dance with Section 15t3.18
ond 1513.37 ol the reviaed
code are aloo applicable to
thla bid.
Bldo are oaaled and
addr..Md to; Deportment
ol Natural

Reaourcaa,

Dlviolon ol Reclamation,
1855 Fountain Square,
Building H, Collftbuo·, Ohio
43224. No blddon mr(wlth- ·
draw hlo bid within elxty
(60) days alteo the actual
dale of the opening thereof.
The Director ol Natural
Reaourcea reeervaa the
right to re}ect ..,y or all
blda, or to accept the bid
which embrac• ouch com·
binatlon alternate pro·

poaala u may promote the
beat In-t of the Stale.
Aa provided In· Saallon
123.151 oltha Ohio Fl.vloed
Code and AdminlalraUva
Rule 123:2·15·02 ol the
Department ol Admlnlalre·
live Sarvlcao, -the CON·
TRACTOR oholl make ovary
effort to enaure that

cer~

tilled mlnorlly buolnaoe

auboontractore and

.-.a~ter­

lolmon participate In the
contract. The total value ol
IUbcontracla awarded to

and matarlalo ..,d oaivlcao
purchaoed from minority
buolneuH ohall be ao oat
forth In the opeclficationa.
Contractor• requiring a•·
olatance In eecuring blda
from Certified MBE aub·
contractor• and ouppllera
may contactlha Stale Equal
Employment Coordinator by
clliilng (614) 466-11380 or the
Minority Buitn..o Devel·
Pom•oy, Pomeroy, Ohio, Natural Reaourcee. Theu opment
Dlvlolon by coiling
paooed on tho 3rd day ol may oloo be purchaoed with (614) .466-5700
or .Toll Free
Auguot, 11112, there will be c.. h In the ex..,t amounl on 1~282·1085.
eubmllllld 1o a votll ol the Plena and apecllicaUono
Approved lor publication
p110pte ol uld aubdlvlalon baoOftle the property ol the In The Dally Sentinel, 111
at a Genoral Election to be proopectlve bidden ..,d no Court Sireet, Pomeroy, Ohio.
held In Vlll.ge ol Pomwoy, relunda will be made. 45168, on Folday; October 5,
Ohio at the regular plac• Additional Inlonnetlon may 111112 and Monday Oclober
of voUng therein on !lie 3rd b• obtained from the 12, 111112..
day ol Novem...;., 1982, the · Dlvlalon ol Reclamation, RECOMI!IIENDED:
qu•Uon ol levying a tu, In Department ol Natural Giel! G. Kizer, Chief
111- 1 olthe len mUI Hmlb&gt;o R~oourcea, 1155 Fountain
Dlvlolon ol Reclamation
lion lor the benalll of Square, Building H, Date: llo2S.'i2
Po..:eroy Village for the Columloua, Ohio 43224 (T,.t· APPROVED: .
benefit ol Pomerol VIllage ephone Number: (814) 215- DoMid C. Anderoon lor
S. Buchholzer,
th:.:~rpoae 0 current 'o:'.l;h bid moat be accom· Franc•
Director
.
tax being 1 r-al ·ponied by a biD Dep11rtment ol Natural
ol an exlatlng tax ol 1.ll GUARANTY, meeting the
- mille at aralll nolexcesdlng oaquirltlllellte ol Sec1lon Delli:Reeourcee
llo30.'i2
1.11 mille lor each one dollar 153.54 ollhe Ohio Ravloed (10) 5, 12, 2te
of valu.Uon, which amounlo Code.
dvt--~
to nlnelllail cantil ($0.111) lor
Contractoro are a ....
HCh one hundred dollar• ol that, In accordance with the
valuation, lor Iva y....
provlolono of the January
The Polio lor eald
Election will open at .6:30
Real Estate General
o'clock A.M. anil remain
open until 7:30 o'clock P.M.
of aold day.
By order ol the Board ol
Elecliona of Malga County,
Ohio.
Henry L Hunter, Chairman
Rita 0. Smith, Director ·
'Dilled S.,.llllllbor 4, 111112
(10) 5, 12, It, 26,. 4tc

NOTICE OF ELECllON ON
TAX LEVY IN EXCESS OF
THE TEN MILL LIMiTATION
NOllCE Ia hereby given
that In purouanca of a
R•olution of the Board ol
Commloelona• ol 'the
County ol Melge, Pomeroy,
Ohio, paaaed on the 211111
day ol July, 1182, thele will
be aubmlttad to a volll ol
the peOple ol aald eubdlvl·
alon ala Gan•at Elec1lon ·to ·
be held In the County of
Melga, Ohio, at the regular
placH ol voUro therein, on
the ~rd claY of November,
1112, the 1u•lion or levy·
lng a tax, n • - • of the
llln mill Umltation, lor the
benefit of Melgo County
Haalth Department lor the
purpoea of , Current Ex·
PWIIM.
Said tax baing a replac•
mWII ol tax 1 miH Ill a ratio .
not exc
1 11'!111 for
....h of valuation,
whloll amoun · to tlfl.oenta
($0.10) lor aah on•
hundred dollar
aluaUon, lor llw 15) yaare.
Tha Polio lor , .. Id
EteoUon will op11n at 1:30
o'olook A.M. and remilln
open until 7:~ ' o'oloc:k P.M.
Of oald dlly.
By order ol the Board ol
Eleotlon• ol Molge County,
Ohio.
·
Henry L. Hunlllr, Choll'!lllll
Rllli D. lmlth, Dloector
Daled lop-bar 4, I !IN
. . (10) 5, 12, 11, 21, 41D

.,
(

27, 11172, Executive Order
by the Governor ol Ohio,

Public Notice

1

ADVERTISING DEADLINE
OCTOBER 16th
lns"ertion October
.
23
.
I
Call Dave or P. J.

\

Public Notice

POMIIOY1 OliO

3/23192Mri

SPE~IAL
UNLIMITED SESSIONS
Moa..s of Septe•r
and OCtober
·

s3soo

-CALIFORNIA
·. TANS
949·2823

NOTICE
OFINELEC110N
TAX LEYY
EXCE88 ON
OF
TIE TEN MILL LIMITATION
NOTICE Ia hereby given
that In purouance ol a
R..otuUon olthe Board of
Educlition ol the Eaatern
Loc•t " School Dlotrli:t,
Flaedovlll., Ohio, puud on
the 211111 day ol July, 111112,
there will .,. oubmtned to a
volll ol the people ol ..ld
oubdlvlalon at a General
ElacUon to be held In the
Eaa1ern Local School
Dla1rlct of llelge County at
the regular ptec• ol voUng
therein, on the 3rd day ol
Novembor, 111112; the qu•·
lion ol levying a tax, In
axe ... olthe 111n m• llmlb&gt;o
lion, lor the benefit of
·Eutarn Local School
DlatricL
Said tax being a renewal
ol an exlaUng tax ol 5 mlllo
.at a rate not excHdlng 5
mille lor each one dollar ol
volualion, which ~~~nounlllto
fl!JY centll ($0.50) lor each
one hundred dollare ol val·
uaUon, lor two (2) yaaro.
The Polio lor oald
Election will open at 6:30
o'clock A.M. and remain
op11n until 7:30 o'cloc!&lt; P.M.
olaaldday.
By order ol the Board ol
.Etecliou or Malgo County,
Ohio.
· HWiry L. Hunlllr, Cholrm..,
Rita D. Smith, Illrector
·Dated September 4, 111112
(10) 12, 19, 26, 3tc

FOREVER
BRONZE
INNI NG
.T

608 EAST MAIN

POMERO'(, OH.!O

POMEROY - Vacarit lot iuitable lor mobile homo site.
Has all utlliiMis available. lmmodiaiAI po-llionl S5,000.
RACINE - Gorgaoua 2 atory brick home with 3
bedrooms, carp&lt;~t &amp; hardwood flooring, 2 fireplac...
c:entJai air, SCI'Hned porch. Authentic alyting lnlide and
oud Como_, $411,900.
MIDDLEPORT - 2 unit apt. building. Greal ·raniAII
invootmenl Uve in one and rllllt th!l ot.har. ..you'd be living
lor free! Could be oppollunity knocldngl $13,000.
POMEROY -Affordable 1111 homil. Thio could be ifl I II
story homo with 3 bedroon\o on two loto ol SOx tOO each.
Vory cula and hpo been well rnalntairled. $18,110!3.

... .. .
WHALEY'S AUTO
PARTS

or TOll FREE

1·800·848·0070

DARWIN, OHIO
7/31f911tfn

~LINDA'S

\S%

HENRY E. CLELAND.......-.................... ,...........11112-6111
TRACY BAINAGER........................................... ~2431
JEAN TRU88ELL. .....................;.........,............. IM11o2180
OFF1CE.............. _,,;................:.......,_,.,,;.........Itll·2211
I'

co.

"Take Tire PIJin Ovl Of Printing
- Lot Ur Do II For r..•

INTERIOR &amp; EXTERIOR

FREE ESnMATES
HAVE REFlAENQS
Iofaro 6 p.m. L-• Monage
Allor .6 p.!L 614-985-4180

-Gutter Work

-l:leclrlcal ..d Plumbing

-floofing
-lntertor &amp; Extorlor
Painting
(FREE ESTIMATES)

Connie.

-

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215

•LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD

. BILL SLACK

992-2269

uno RAILROAD4-4-92-lln
TIES

614·949·2101. 949·2860
or 915·3139
'.(No S.ntlay CaUs)

2112192/tfn

ROOFING

WI DO
AND EVERYTHING UNDERNUTH
GARAGES.• ADDITIONS • SIDING·

(614) 992-2866
(9) 211-'92·1 mo.

DAVIDSON'S
PLUMBING

TROMM BUILDERS

numbing
••••
:;jll

. •j

011•lity Assurell Collfr•dor•

Call AI~· 614-742·2328

20 Yr. bp.

;:;;e.

811 1/lln

38904 l.aldlll
CrHk Road

MORRIS
GARAGE DOOR SERVICE
TRY OUR NEW l':'l!IR
STEEL INSULATED ll!lWlm

Middleport, Ohio

614·992·7144

. 10/l/92lfl

KEVIN'S LAWN
MAINTENANCE

RAISED PANEl GARAGE DOOR
INSTALlED PRICES
9I7-$275.00 16•7-$450.~
OPENERS INSTlllED-Y. HP-$200.00

949·2398 or
1·100·837-1460

- Lawn Mowing,
Fertilizing, Weeding,
and Seeding.
Shrub and Tree
Trimming &amp; Removal

With 2 Transmlttllrs

Wit• Purc•ase of
Receive FREE

Door Plus Ope1er

Seel TriM

R•ldM'IIill &amp;: Commiirclal

Free Estimate•

AREWOOD FOFI SALE
&amp;-26- ' 92~fn

P:;f"~
!~.!Jw ...(j';i.~

County Rd. 19. Peachfork Rd.
992-7093
Mon.-Sun. 11..,-t pm
S.. ua for ¥ow hunting
and back to echool

Size Available•

PRECISION POST FRAME
· BUILDERS . .

g Years
104 Beech Street
Experience
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
"Cell U• for All Your Building Need•"
COMMERCIAL • RESIDENTIAL
AGRICULTURAL
Livestock Buildings • Machine Sheds • Hey
Barns - Carports
Garages • Storage Buildings - Roofing •
Windows· Siding
wv Uc.
020343

needa . Aru'a l•rgeat

oelectlon ol military
ourplua ltemal
8117 pd.

6¥JAYJIUR
Quality
Stone Co.

•wv.

FREE ES7JMATES·

SIZED LIMESTONE
FOR SALE

Call

~Any

··Pole aulldlngs"

ROBERT BORING
. (614) 11112-3541

JEFF STAATS
(304) 773-1348

614·992~

6637

·

St. Rt. 7
Cheshire, OH.

\TTENTIO:\
\ l1

dnl.._ ,\ llonhlt \\lilt· lloiiH ( h\

1

.Ifw'TfllTifRM.

CELLUlAR

Ill

1-..

OIL, \W &amp; N.u.D.

.......~~~ •••r..t.tll

0

Glallty HI ~cy

••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••• •• ••••••••
•FREE INSTALLATION• With eny phOne purcltue
.
1hrough October 31
·
Service rlllea from 5111.115 per month.
lncludee 180 mlnutM of off-peek air time.
Leulng 11V8lleble.from S15.00 per month •
· FOR MORE INFORMATION..
CALL KEN RICCS AT
614 1185-4381 or 614 691·5000

Air c.•t~o.n, Heat
PlinpS, Fll'llti(IS &amp;

.

Now Water Heaten. ·

·,

•

z• ..,...

Bennetts Mobile Home
&amp; Cooling
1391Safftrd~ ...
ow.
·-Cal (6141446-9416• HOH72.-St67

'

.

..

liM. . Prtdlcta _ _·

llfTlfR 8'f DfSION

AulllortadAgllll
TOTALLY AUTOMOTIVE PERfORMANCE

I

•
\'

I

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

Contact Robert l Jacks

911 111'92/lln.

SHRUB&amp; TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL

..

742·2656

•Roofing •Siding
-Gutters
•Room Additions
-Interior Remodeling

SURPLUS

949-2168

'

'

New Homes • VInyl Slding
New Garages • Replacement Wfndows
Room Additions • Roofing

MAINHNANCE
and REPAIR

ROOFING

FREE ESTIMATES

.

BISSELl BUILDERS, INC.

Pomeroy, Ohio
9·1 0·92-tln

WILSON'S ARMY

Gutters
DQwnspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

52100 I. L Ill
..ciH,Oitlt
Herb Sloop Open Cor Foil
ATTN: Local Crall Shope
anciCraltere
Ellmlnalll the middle man
-buy whoiMate lrOftl

RUTLAND

CARPENTER SERVICE

Howard L Writesel

NEW-REPAIR

'

~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~.:.

-floom Addiliona

11111/

,.

WE BTl~ NEEO UBTINGSI IF YOU'RE THINKING OF
8ELUNG GIVE US A CALLI WE'LL DO OUR BEST TO
SERVE YOUR NE!'DSI

PAINTING
&amp;

101/12/tfn

and breezeway, central air and heat
pump, many extras.
On 2 acres of land.
Eastern School District.
Blacktop roads Co. Rd. 28 and 32.
949-2860, 949-2801 or 985-3839

9129/1 mo.

92/lln

992·7013 or
992·5553

6:30P.M.

.HOUSE FOR SALE
BY OWNER
12 Year old ranch type house. 3
bedrooms, 2 baths, 1Y. car garage

TOP TO BOnOM

992-3838

Factory Choke
12 Gauge Shot
Strictly Enforced

5·14-92-lln

1

t/16/tln

Frame Repair

GUll ClUB
Bash•• Building
EVERY SAT.

•• • .
.......

i

(6141992·3470 .

Factory Choke 12
Gauge Only
Starts Sept. 27

12-5-tfn

BULLDOZER,BACKHOE
and TRACKHOE WORK
AVAILABLE.
SEPTIC SYSTEMS,
· HOME SITES and
TRAILER SITES,
LANDCLEARING,
DRIVEWAYS INSTALLED
UMESTONE-TRUCKING
FREE ES'l'IMA:J'ES

GUN SHOOT
RACINE

ILl-._:....,...,...~-

YOUNG'S

EXCAVATING

10/1:1192

We Aloo Haul Cool, Hay,
Ume, Com, Gl'llln
and Wood

••

(!]

... N -

~

Pipe for Water, Sewage
and Gas
.
Rutland, OH.

HOWARD

POMEROY, OH. ·

i •

MINE SUPPLY

·

992·7553

•

GUN SHOOT
RACINE
GUN CLUB
SUNDAYS
1:00 P.M. ·

PH. 614·992·5591

SMIUDOZER
WORK
DRIVEWAY WORK
and LIMESTONE
DELIVERY SERVICE
SJ!all Dozer Work
25.00 Per Hour

614-949·2804

oSAND -GRAVEL •DIRT
•UMESTONE

£311614-667·3484
or 614-667·3109

•LICENSED and BONDED

CHARLIE'S

HAULING SERVKE .
36970 .........
,_ey,OW.

949•2826

PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER &amp; SEWER
LINES
BASEMENTS&amp;
HOME SITES
HAULING: Limestone,
Dirt, Gmvel and Coal

10/12182

PARTS &amp; SERVKE
Mowel'$ • Cllcml Saw,
·• Weedeaters

WICK'S

$2500

BULLDOZING

(614) 992·5449

bjlat)

2-1·92-tln

RIC EiCAVATING

delivered.

. R~ONE, OHIO .
(For-'f Ea;e IWp s..l

Rutland Twp.
25 acres,
Oiive Twp.
Timber on both
tracts.

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

$40.00 a load

P.O. lox 194-WIIlir Alty

985·4473
667·6179

Sped..lzlng Ia &lt;ustom

BALL RUN RD. - FARM - t il eiOry flame home with 4
bedroom a, 208.61+ acrea, 10ma}..tillable, eome fenced,
moot limber. FREE GAS with 8 oil &amp; gao wells. Large
bem and nice llhecl. 5125,000.
·
SR 33 - Romodeled 2 otory home Iorge front pon:h, 3
bedrooms, incluclea moll appliances, central air, deck,
dol garage, very Opllcldual $37,500.

ellewHomes
•Garages
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Com11are

L=====1:~:2:·'92:::

PACK
ABli PUNCH!

RACINE MOWER
. (LINIC

33 acres,

UNLIMITED TANNING

REASONABlE RATES

992-2259 .

BISSELl &amp; BURKE
COIISTRUCTIOII

LAND FOR
SALE

Bashan Rd., Racine
Oa,..tr I pHial

SMALL
WANT ADS

FIREWOOD
FOR SALE
All H~rdwood,
s........,

'

. FIIEE ESTIMA'I'ES

•-•
fre•
'"' It.
Office
217L
......

FREE SCREENING FOR
CATARACT AND GLAUCOMA
FOR INTERESTED SENIORS
CITIZENS . AT
RITE-AID IN POMEROY
•
TUESDAY, OCT. 13
BEGINNING AT 10:00 A.M.

:.rC

0

The Daily Sentinel
}Will Publish A
Special Supplement

Akron Buchtel 21, Akron Cenlra l-

HowcrO

B

Alabama 37, Ttt!ano 0
Alatm.St. -46, Tau Southern 36
ApptladU&amp;n Sl 27, J - Madiaon

I

Ohio ltigh school
football scores-Sat.

6. Florid. St. .............. S-1-0 1,252

Major college
football scores

,_ .

· •EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT •ALlERGY
•HEARING AIDS • HEAD &amp; NECK SURGERY

•

YQW\iJLown SL. 34, Dlinoia SL 10

. Wcbct S't. 24, Montana"'
'Wyomina3S, New Maico 21

vu.w-......

.'

ATTENTION
CANDIDATES

0

Mcrnphil SL 34, Cincinnlli 14
Ofiio Wealeyan 50, WibniJJston 14

Th•"""Y

MondaJ
Cincinnati It Pitttbwp, 9 p.m.

..

c.ie Weatcm R.CICMI 14, Kenyon 14,

Non·~onference

-r

w..,..,..

JOHN WADE, M.D., INC.

.~

FOOTBALL-Wellston at honie

Ccntnl St. 83, KCI'Itucky·St. 0
Daytoo 42, Mcocyhunt 14
Defiance 32. Mount St. J&lt;Woe:ph 3
Fondlay 21, Campbcllavillo 1

3

OPEN 'DATE: Buffalo and New Ycxk
Ida.

Ill S.ca1d St.., P•ny
YOUR IIDIPIIDENT
AIIIU SIDING
MillS COUNTY
SliCE 1161

Friday

Ocniaon 29, Earlhun 2A
WiUa&gt;baJll7, Allcibcny 12
Wooatcr4J Oberlilt 14

6
S

Ramo,4p.m.

INSUUICE

North Coast Conference

3. Michi&amp;lft ..............~ 4- 0-l 1,410

New orlean. at ~x, 4 p.m.
New York Oiina u Loi.Anaclca

DOWIINI CIILDS
MULUNMUSSER

Ohio Conferenee

Stanford 19, ucu
Utah 38, Haw1ii 17
Waahinpn 35, California 16

14.

Public Notice

Blldwin-WaU.ca31,0Ucrbcin tS
Hcidclbero 26, f:;apila!IO
Maricw ..~. Hinm 0
Mount Union 7A, JoM Carroll 14
Ohio Northcm &lt;41, Mlllkinpm 20

4. Al.obamo (I) .......... 6-()'0 1,315
S. T.... A&amp;M ...,...... 5·0.0 1,308

Sund.IJ
Green Bay" O~d. 1 p.m.
Kmau c~ at Dallu, 1 p.m.
Philadclphl.a 1t Wuhin&amp;wn, 1 p.m.
San Dieto at lndlanapciil, 1 p.m.
T~~r~p~Say at OW:aJO, 1 p.m.
Atlanta at San Fn.nNCO, 4 p.m.
New En &amp;)and at Miami. 4 p.ro.
HOUROn II Denver, -4 p.m.
l.ol AntclciiWden II Seattle, 4 pm.

.

Happy Ad.

Notice.) will abo appeAr in the Point Pleuant Regilte.r and
the Daily Sentinel, reachins over 18,000 home.

Midwest Intercollegiate

ldaho,.9, fdaho St. 18
·
New Mexico St.40, UNLV 10
S111 .be St. 49, Cal St.·Fullcnoo 3
Swlhan Cal32. 0MOft 10

Team

·

.

915·3561

HOSPITAL
COMMUNITY ROOM
Topic: Update on Diabetes
Speaker:
Frank Schwartz, M.D.
Endorineologist
(Diabetes Specialist)

In .Memoriam
Yard Sale. •
• A elauilicd adverU.Cmenl placed in the Gallipoli.a Daily
Tribune (u.cept Claa•lfied. Dilplay, BllliDel~ Cafd or Legal

S•&amp;Ww Valley St. 16, Alhland 7

Tool&amp;hl

Dcuoi.t I t MUuw:.cu, 7:30p.m.

Tbursdly

VOLLEYBALL-Nelsonville·
York at home
FRESHMAN FOOTBALL-at
Belpre
JUNIOR HIGH VOLLEY·
BALL-at Southern
.
EIGHTH · GRADE F.OOT·
BALL-at Fairland

"It helps you a lot because they
can't play the coverages that they
want to play. They have to bring an
extra person up to stop the run .
Once you do that, you're vulnera·
ble 10 the pass. So if we can run
against teams and not just run SUC·
cessfuUy but run fantastically like
he did today, I think that's just
going to .put a lot or pressure on the
defenses."
·
The Bengals ,(2-3) have ciacl&gt;ed
under pressure during a three-game
losing streak. The NFL' s worst
pass defense gave up' foin' ·touch·
' down passes to Rich Gannon In its
last game, a 42"'7 defeat against
Minnesota. and let the Oilers rush
for 202 yards and pass for 216 Sun·
day,
I
The Bengals thought they could
retool what was the league's worst
defense in 1991 by changing
philosophies and taking more
chances at rushing the passer.
They're realizing it's not that sim·
pie, but they aren't sure what to do.
"It hurts," safety David Fulcher
said. "We've j115t got to tmd some
way to get this team 10 where it
should be. You don't want to get

Card of Thanlu

AU.UIII
Ill .. It I• Or We

PLEASANT VALLEY

• 7 poiatJiN type only uaed
• Sentinel ia not retpoDiihle for error• after flnt day (check
for enor1 fll'at day ad r une in P.,per). CaU before 2:00 p.m.
day after publieation .to ~~~ correction
• A&amp; that mwt be paid bt adva.aco'aro l

Bowlina Green 31, Ohio u. 1_4
Kem a&gt;, Akron 16
Miami, Ohio t6, Ct111. Michipn 1 3
Toloclo 21, W. Michiaan 12

2

Denver at Wuhinatcn, 9 p.m.

JUNIOR HIGH .VOLLEY·
BALL-Gallipolis at home

.

CLOSED SUNDAY

• Ad1 ou.,ide tho co~mty your ad ruJlJ muat be prepaid
• Reeein dilcount for ad. paid in advance.
• Free Ad. : Ginaway and Found ada under 15 wonh will be
I'Wl3 day• at .!\O cbarge:
• Priee of ad for a U capilalleUen i• double price of ad co.l

.

MICROWAVE OVEI
alltl VCR REPAIR
Kill'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE
992·5335 or

DIABETES SUPPORT
GROUP MEETING
THURSDAY, OCT. 15 ·
AT7:00 P.M.

MoN. thru FRI. 8A.M.-5P.M.- SAT.8-12
POLICIES

'

PkkU~

· Call992-2156

Mld-Amerkan Conference

2. Miami (30J) ......... S·O.OLS16.S

future games

Wednesday

IllinoiJ 11, Ohio SL 16

Air Force 18, N1vy 16
Arizona St. 39, P1cific U.S
Boile St. 20. N. Arizona 14
Briaham Yowts: 36, F~ano Sl 24
Co10ndo St. 42, Tcxu-El Puo 24
E. Wuhi.aak1123, Montanl SL 17

N.Y. Oianta ........ 2 3 0 .400 110113

.600

Tuesday

Big Ten Conference

Far West

P!tiladclpiW .. ..... 4 I 0 JlOO 174 58
; Washinglon... :···· 2 2 0 .SOO 71 77

o

Ohio college
football scores

Te.~.u 34, Okllhc.na 24
TroySL41,A!kanwSt. 7
Tulia 11,SWMiuouriSt.l 4
W. Ten• St. 21, Puirie View IS

T..,.
WLTPcLPFPA
· D.Uu................ 4 i 0 .100 122 89'

3 2

Mic:hiam • lnd.iana
MichiJ.lft Sl.lte It MiMeaota
Northweaem at Ohio Stile
Purd_LMS •l Wilcc:wia

NW 14lililn• 31, Ncwth Texu 34
Rico 28, s.,uthem Mtth. 13
SW Tcxu St. 17. Stephen F.Austin

NATIONAL CONFERENCE

.ooo

low• at lllinoil .

Blylar41, Tcxu Ouiatian 20

14

l 4 0 .200

Tbfs Saturday's games

Southwest

I 5 0 .lfi7 43116

CROSS COUN11tY-TVC Meet
SEVENTH GRADE FOOT·
BALL-at Nelsonville
. EIGHTH GRADE FOOTBALL-Jackson at horne
· GOLF-District Tournaments at
Valley Veiw Golf Course in Lan·
caster

0 .600
0 .600

Illlnoia II, Ohio S1.1te 16
lnditna 28 , NcmltwOilCll\ 3
low• 23, WUconlin 22
1
Michiam 35, Michigan Sl.ltc 10
PurdLMS 24, 'Minnsw 20

Pludwo 2A, Minnotua 20
Tolodo 21, W. Midtipn 12
W. Dlinoil SO, S. Dlinoia42
You.np&amp;Own St. 34, Dlinois St. 10

Cleveland .......... 2 3 0 .400 71 78

0 .600

2 3 0 .400

1 .500

Ohio s..........o 2

Kent 20, Aboa. 16
Miami. Ohio 16, Coo• Micltiaanl3
Micltipn 3S, Micltiptt SL 10
N.lllUwU 23, Soulhom Miu. 10
N. Iowa 34, W. Kanw:ky 6
Nobra*a 5S, Oklahcm~ St. 0

Centnl Dl~laktll
HOUIIOn ............. 4 I 0 .100 132 &amp;3
PituJ&gt;urah ......... 3 2 0 .600 91 74
Cincinnoti .......... 2 3 0 AOO 9'/lll!

21

Minneaota ...... l

Midwest

Team
W L T Pet. PFPA
Miami ......... _,,,,. s 0 01.000 130 T1
BWI&lt;Io..... ,......... 4 2 0 .667 166102

Meigs sports calendar

Saturday's scores

Ball St. 31 , E. Michi&amp;m 7
Bowlin&amp; Clnoao 31, Ohio U. 14
B. lllinoia 31 , lndiana St. 21
lllinoi.a 11. Ohio St. Ui
Indiana 21, North-... 3
Jowa23, WaiCONin 22
Kanau 31, ~uSL 7

AMERICAN CONFJ;:RENCE

1 .500

Owrall
T Pc:L
I 1.000

Pluduo&gt;. ........... l I .500 2 3 0 .400
Iowa ............... ! I .SOil 2 4 0 .333
Michipn St .. .I I .500 I 4 0 .200

Wake-40, V..tabilt6

In the NFL. ..

1

Northwa&amp;an .1

Sculhem U. 47, WiniiM-Salem 14
Tcnn.·Mutin 1~. ML11J1y St. 7'
Tcnne11oo SL 24, Morehe~d $1. 1•
TcnneaiCG Tech 49, SE Miuouri 14
w.Carolinl 21, VMJ 25

p.m .. it ncccuary'

10

Conf.
TUIII ...........W L PeL W L
Midtipn ........2 0 ~.000 4 0
Dlinail........ ~ .. 1 1 .500 3 2
Indiana .......... .! I .SOO 3 2
Wl#Gnain ...... 1 I .SOO 3 2
l-1

S. Carolina Sl 31, Mtnpn Sl 14
Samlon146, B. Ktotlldty 14

atl 0..0), 3:07p.m.
Wed~y't pme

·

21, Maryland 26
SL 49, Miao. V.U.f_SL6
• 26, llcth-codtmut 7

.

BULLEnll IOIRD DEADLINE
. 4:30 P. M. DAY BEFORE
PUBLICAnON .

'IIIIIWIII~/JHIIHIIHHIHIH_HJIIIII#/HiflllfiNfiHIIA'

White's legs, Moon's arm-push Housto.n to 38-24 win over Cincy
. j

Bl'LLLTI:\ BO.\RD

.

Allilll!Je WAN!AD,}

really don't know what t!Je problem 11. We got ourselves mto a lot
ofthitd-lllld-long si~s.".
. Cleveland's only pomts I!' the
fusthalfcame on Matt Stovers 51·
yard field gopl.
But the Browns' offense, shut
out by Denver in its last game,
rmally woke up in the third quarter,
driving 90 yards for the go-ahead
score on Mack's phmge. Mack had
missed tbe fust fuur games because
of a calf injury. ·
The drive featured a 31-yard run
by Metcalf, his lonj~esl ~ce 19~9.
"We were saymg, Just dnve.
Just get ~ome points,'" Metcalf
said. "~ hm~ 10 the defense that I
was gomg nghl: They m_oved that
way and ·o ur linemen JUSt cave
them in, so I bounced it left.''

a

The Dally Sentinel P8ge

- - - -- - - - ------

Passing game, Mack crucial to Browns' 17-9 win.over S(eelers ·
'

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

'

..
•

'

�...
Mondly, oCtober
12, 1982 .
.

Pomeroy MiddlepOrt, Ohio

Pege .10-Thl Dally Sentinel

3

Announcament.s

Goods

John Dalton t•rm, violalors will :
be pron~tld.
;
· TALK TO CANDY LIVE
1-IIOO~ao.4495, $25 /Call
Crown Com. Boca FL, 18 •

ou . _ sao. an..

One ac1111ot 3 mil• from Pt . Ph.
· on Rl. 2 South, $9,500. 304·67511175.

304-17U513.

2 yrs old, male, . ·

ya'llow long k1lr, very gentle, to

good homo, 304·675-5110.

72

Smoll culo yellow maiO killon,lo 11
Help Wanted
good homo only, 304-e7S.5110.
.,.,.....,......~;._;.:..:.,.......,:,._,_,

18

41

wanted to Do

1:!10 Pm

5

a

o.-,.

_,.....ono

"'g

m

Pall,

t:ii·

w-

::;;::;;::;;::;;::;;::;;:;,;;:;,;;;.J

."..t

E::

CLRSSIFIED RDS

ttH 14170, 2 badroom, 2 balh,
gaa fur. 1nd 8fOVI, 6M-~..fi~ .
1990 Rodman, 3 BR, 2 balh,
porch, 1ppllancn, new cawtalno. $15JOOO. 304o67S-7627 0&lt;

COIIInllrClel two lllort' building,
dOwntown Pomeroy. For _.. or

~

-·
-......--.

rani, 114-1112·7314.

304-676~077.

15•12,
fumlahed,
cantril 1lr, skirting, will flfllnc.!r
$800, 11381 mon., 114·892.Z1or,
114·3815-8227.

WI

-

--

. . . .._ t
-

couch,

M r, MIU In · bu.

11 $&amp;40, oaldng $300.

3114-1'154841.

lunk .. •II; gltlo
&amp; boyo W bicycle w~ralnlng
LJnle l'flalalld&lt;i,
$1Q; ........ $60; Ejpt-lon
14!0n r-ut. $20; wlng..,.ck
dlel• upholotry, SIO; Cooh
Only{ -oy Clift Apto., 241
UniOn A,.~_.Apl.l4 alt11lpm. U·
W.f.Sal&amp;rtNY·

·..-, naoo.;

E~

-Homo Cont0r W l f - You

HoUHhold
Howl Yo•r Naw Single or 51
Double Wei, Septfc, FoundlGoodl
1ion &amp; Drtvawoy, Ali In One Loan
Packogo, Low Ro1n, Opon Lalo
With Ughlod Homoo. 1-814-772· T-171.1_,_, Collll
'1220.

,

..............
1300;
1' rtrd loliNIIer Mopping

-~··--

ext.n•lon, 1,25

.Pe.---.

I
I

Miscellaneous
MerchandiSe

'
opoorl~

56

fSl

"'®.I'
11-.g..

"'A-nt""lq-,uo..:....,U.:,p:..,ril.:,h_l_;P"'Ia-:-n.:,o.....,.l3"'5""o.
Can Be Sllin t 50 Oliva StrH1,
Gallipolis.

I KNOW t'M NOT T~E
ONLY PERSOr-.1 WHO NEVER
G;T5 ANY LOVE LETTERS ..

For Sala- Site medium ladles
winter coat, denim wl lettt'ler · Splnll
Wurlhzer
Organ
trlm, flannel lining, lib MW, ••· M1hoaany, With Bench. Excef.
king 1100, p1ld $150; also mise. lont COnclllonl 814~46~083.
ladfes clothing; c111 814·992·
2155, !l-6pm or 614·949-2204 •I·
ler Spm.

g~~~NASCAR

Ill•

Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock

_ _ _ _ _ _ _ . 74

Honda 4000 genen1or $850.
Thi'M M1rco Roto Rootera, exc
cond, $850. oach. 304·173·5452.

63 Oliver diesel, live powtr, high
&amp; low range. good rubba. r,
$3000. 304-576-2466.

Kenmore Portable ..Convenabll
Dlehwasher Whh Power Mi11r;
Todap Kids Outside Marry Go
Round $15. 114..46-0433, 814·
441-3513.

NaWf'lloUand 770 cut &amp; · throw
chopper 2 row nanow head,
$3,500. kHtera Strvlce Cltntar,
St. At. 11, .Polnl Ploaaonl Rlploy
Road, 304-8!16-381'1.

61

75

Now Holland Cosl Furnoc•cWllh
Will -Burt Stokor F"dar Hated
For 300,000 BTU. &amp;14·256-eo68
Atllr5P.M.

Old plecH of Iron &amp; ecrap met·
111; 16' Gibson chest · type
frMzer, I.IMd 1yr., $300, 614·9493014 anytlmo.
Plaotlc And llodol Cuivor1llnch
Thru 10 Inch - In Stock. Ron
Evans. Jackson, Ohio. 1.a00..
53H528.
Prom DresHI: 1 Floor length, 1
Too ~nfsh, Esch Wom Onco.
614·
!107.

Signa: Por1ab,• · lighted sign
1209. wllett1rs. Free d11ivery.
Plastic letters $47.~ box, 1·800·
533.:1453.
.
Supor Slnll' Watorbod, Ful~
Wave, $50, 14·388-8507.
SurpiU. Army Doslgn Heovy
Tr"bark, Woodland Clolhln9,
AccHIOrlel. S1m Somerville s
bosldo Sondyvlllo Post Dlllco,
Ea•• 1·77 Ravonswood. Only Frl,
Sal, Sun Noon.e:OOPU, olhor
dayo hou.w 304·273-5655.
Water Heeter Sale 52, 40, 30 Gal·
lon oloc:trlc and . 40 Gallion
Natural gas. Youra choica.
$159.15 Womeldortf &amp;: Thomts
Hardwuo. 614·446-0965

Live·stock

63

AKC Roglatll'od Ulnlalu18 Co~
llo, 3 - h o Did $251). 814-44621521AIIer I P.U.
AKC looltloh T....,, non-lhod·
dina, nr.t allot and wormlld,
hollih gusrontood 814-8114-4177.

441 3144 A~• 7:00 p.m•.

Floh Tank, 2413 Jackaon AvL

Point Ploooonl, 304-eJ'S.201S,
ful Uno Troplcol lloh1 blrdo,
- n on1mo1o ond oupp1110.

F01 Ball: I AKC ~tll'od Min·
,..... Schnluzet
.... S.h
&amp; Poi&gt;pw 'In Color,
ricod AI
NO Elioh. 114-441-4U3.

448~782.

-··

F!m AI"-! (0:30)
0 F..-h Ptince of

8:00 (2) II

Jonat Cllronlclel Indy joins

a group of inept spies in
Russian ballet troupe.

Motor Homes
1974 Model Ctmper 22Ft.

.

Glle MOVIE: Tl'8dlng
,._.(R) (2:30)

EEKAND MEEK ':

a

Croolt and Che..
1D NFL Monday Night

..
.

Serganta (2:30)

1:30 (2). 1!J IIDIIOIII Joey is
given lhe chance to become

a minor league baseball

C
IlliG I!Ze Htiilita Afll8
player. Stereo.

..'

'

John and Georgie Ann flee to
a hotel wlwl Elliot's ·s nake

escapes. Stereo. []
ID NFL Monday Nlilht
Magt~Zint Super Bowl XXII:
Washington Rltdikins vs.
Denver Broncos; Bronco
selety Steve AtWater; Vince
Lombardi's Redskins:
Redskins running back

MORTY MEEKLE ANDWIN'111ROP

Earnest Bynar.
li:UO (2) e 101 'Jackie Col?lnl'
Ulcly ao.. (PI 2 or 2)' NBC

'·
,.,·' .

~Nighl811ha . Movleil

;-:;

lii'ille
ABC - Y
Nlghl........,.l Denver

11 .

BASEMENT
.. ., -....,~ ..
WATERPROORNQ
- •
Unconditional lifetime
tH. Local refwencaa turnlshtd.:. """"
Fr11 estimates. can collet~t:1•" ·r1.
614·237·0488, day or nlgui;:Rogel'l Baseman1 Waterproo... ~
ling.
·

at Washi~
Redsk~~r.O. []

Broncos

guarer\r:~

~~~~--~------~··
Curtis ' Home lmprovamantS: .. •
Yeare Exparlarice On Older &amp;
Newer Homn. Room Additions,
Foundation Work, Roofing, ,
Kitchens And Batha. Free Es•
tlmttlll Rtlerences, No Job
Too Big or Small I 614·367·0.516.

•

'
'

'

1

Davis Sewing Machine And . •:
V8cuum Cleaner Repalr1 Free •
Plck·Up And Delivery, Gaorgas ~·
Cr11k Road, 614-446-0294.
j

IZl

·I'M

SfTTIN'

. j

'A62
• Q4
+AQ6S3

1.

. ..

-

ACIIOI$

41-

4ZE-

1 lolo\IOd
5lloii-

-IT...
·~­

(lli11Jr.l

.44 TJPO of ftoll
.. Go ... _

-··--... ....
......... ·
-- -4-... _ 1-IZ ...I

Lotio

12 WOIIIft ot

41 TMft IS
- Faftl
53 3, RoMal

13--

54F-

15 Fa 111'11411
17 _ . , ....
t8ll'ftnA
19 Pqct ala;
cll,.-.t
11 Flolt IIIII
23-frlrlll

24 • • 15

-IIIo

M Uon'thofll
57-COWl

58 Coupd'Slllllllofworl.

foollhiM - ·· -Tiviii"iti

11Ac-

10 ut11o11Ralo- · -

3$ Caklllll•
.. _

DOWII

11
20 'llpo
22 -In play
24-ot ....l
25 Pert ofl

13 - ·

27 Rwth's '
ZIMclool

Lillo.......

t 114411twl'

32-- ,_
~-­
. . . . .t

:Mflot

plllll
21 Ablndlllll'll

Klntolor-

38F-

,_,

5

371pool

II pllol
21 Wowl

~OYI1ot1

31-Kiftof

!10
31 Cotlpanlon

• AII!CitnM
9-wllh

3t Oollll

10-51 Do•- 12 F l\lltlx

.,_
33-

IPoalo

~~-

41 olllcor
17.._ .
41 Ani I p 11

56

~pl.

Q

Four·Man Beach
VolleJbaH From Clearwaiar,
Fla. (T)
e Lany King u.a1
0 F - Dowling Myo-1

SUNSET

Stereo. Q
!1:30 . . . . ~ loVe &amp; w.
s-tereo. Q
10:00 (I) ..... []
1111e I!J • NNotOtrtlt1t181Jamm
Chris ralls lor a

E--

woman bul seems 10 have
bad luck wrth her pets.

lor .om...,. lnd ,_..- il. Tile,. Alia @7

ASTRO-ORAPH

a...,

u

'

74

I

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

Mllldw

• c:lo-

•

. P_O.

8a•ii1421.D *od.CI:I441DJ..3CIIl.
1101 L(Ooi.MM lllt.._lila
p
It 51 y JU11 11111i1gFo1
·- 1
1n- ._ ' 1 a ....... - , . . . .r ,_
. . . . . . . . . . . . . IW!Qisd ID I 7 J ID
.
in a
•
· pr~tty ..aawia. oan"t.
SAGIIT. . . . tr- 8 p
:tit In
¥bUr CAAIU-cill k 1 ' a ......

e:-:*',

!'!.

""'
·
s
T•••
...
:IDTiuf :II)
-a-..ctiwlpurpooe,butillra· l

llal 110 bor. .IS \0 olhlr. Say What
•tr:ustlng friend asks
J l l l l b - " * 1.
)If
ho
t~~~~·n-.~~~~~ea . you VII to
tiD h I ·- ., IndiVIdual
you filel
clli*l"' .JOU t.irty1 in yourTlaat en-

:·-

,,....,,__ h

bqllln-AI
JOU-I*OiioMiallililgl

·to jiiCige

a

?.ill

-...io

_._ -

-.. I

m-- _....
-'r....

. - ........

thi*INiilllll 71dilgaiiltg10_,_

IIChlol;-a

't;... a

r•

11 whll you're trying lo
In the , : ; . : .
111 - year lhead II nol ICCC!"'Ptll tad~ - . --~your Initial ellortt, doni 1M H
: _.., 8
""" -s-.u,..tiD
1'011· Adveralty llrengl- your CIIW•
E¥W,_..IIIic..
·
act• and will avenlueliY
.
,
wlltliUCQMI , .
.... _
_.... 1
L

-

-- · your_,,_.,

mlgM Pill your hlltll In
lla WIUIO- today. Somau!ll
Mi401110tlkac.eOIM
nol futftlltbl
~hi! I
CWftllilrftiY

......,_ a , 1

could-,.. 1D t 7 I

J

IllS ' -

&amp;ao..,., :a •• :a) nyou do a , . _
bW-"*Y~ don'tgobroadCM1·
~,...t-lnhnloi~IOoklnG

. . . -. . . . You could mUB
llai 51' ' you llalped w1111 hOihlttQ
-

LIMA
(lepl. za.oat. . , tlllnlttllfUI . t * .. :~ ... :R~.::!.S: -~•• II''JIIAnac:qulint·
ob}ectl- c:an ba ach-..c!IOday, ~ . . . , . . , _ ............, Dmo"77Joll · tar IIW\IpUIIttlnD ~

do not tat Nlf-diiUbt - - ......,,.,.,,
• ...,_,;,;..
wlwllm you. You hiYB mat lila .,..,• . -~~ • I l oe. IV ;
,.ury, and It Ia you. Know where to -

.. vlded rou

•

I

7

Rollarllon
10:30 Gll• To Ia A . . -

1310nllaga
10:35 (I) MOVIE: lilly JR1t (PG)
(2:15)

itqrlly

1111..1I - -- *ta:::•••.:....-~~:i~~
sor-4&gt;!1_
could s n a ·
...- .
.....,_
c· c 1:.,_ • ._ 1llli1J- c· a c=a 2'WIIIr 211 There's •

1.-

Stereo.[]
ID. E•~ dllun E•rth
IIIJWOildNawt
11!1 700 Cllib With Pat

ciiJ 21-April1t) This can be

i1 I o1y . Ill ~t -,;.;:=ts, pro5 7&gt;.-- ·:::"~ -It ~
1r
lheproc.h
.l ·
feel lor-. II7IJll S2.,... a Fang. 111111- Jllll st••••• .,. om .
p,
acklt
,'
us gt+ ID p
wwava
what • you

·II'O-Griliplll

_.. orli!c?l..,. -•=

Water Service). 1,000 &amp; 2,000 Qtl
d•llvery. Claterne, poole, wtOs,
any nuda. Aeaaoneble retes,
d•p•~ble Hrvlce, 304-675·
7123.

Mowrey's Uphol1t1rlng etrYIC•'~ _,l
Jng trl county area 27 years. ·The ·,.
b11t In h.imlture uphollterl ... ,. i
Clll ' 304-e75-4154 for tr.. ' ''
tlmatH,
.. ·

SOUTH

·+AKS

ID

85 Gem!ral Hauling : : ••
=E~con-o'"m-y..,W"""at_or_,S;_o;_rv""lco_.::I~R"a..;R ;

' ',"

cabaret singer. Stereo.
0 WWF PTinle ~
Wratllng
Qlt Nalhvllle Now

OUT HERE TO
~ - SEf TH'

i

U h I

(2:00) Stereo.
·
Muflllly Brawn '
Jim's wlla decides to change
her Nfe and become a

•

BARNEY

Houae and trailer repa&amp;r, electrl· I
cel, plum~ng, hilling, c.,. :
pentry, painting, Inside and ou~ 1
614·992·5658.
• ·1
·
JET
·•• ~·: 1
Aeration Motors, repaired. New _
I re-built motors In aloelc, RON ~...:
EVANS, JACKSON, OH. 1..00. •
537-9528.

::::=~P:-:-::0-;;S;:;ta:;.ry!....:.....,.:' • •

Caklri1buo

(!)

lllle ae

I

Wo Do· Hauling Anytlmi, "
Anyplac,, No Job Too Big Or .:"
Too UUit. BaHment CleenlnU, ,. •
General Work, Any Kind! 614· ..1 "
379-2278 Anytlm•.
.
. t'~

+

. In this column, I have often recom. menlhltsearching diligently lor an ex·•1 Vulnerable: East· West
Dealer: South
tra ch'lnce. If you are in a contract
that looks sure to succeed, always try
West
North
East
to spot a potential snag. Then consider Soutb
Pass
Pass
bow you might be able to overcome, 1 +
Pass
3 NT
All pass
say, a bad split in your key suit. To- 2 NT
day's deal fits nicely into this mold,
Opening lead: " Q
but the extra edge is lor some reason ,
difficult to detect.
West leads the heart queen against'L------------....l
your contract of three .no-trump. Do
you perceive.any danger?
When the dummy came down, South Soulh overlookoo the key point that
wondered if they might have missed a if the diamonds were running at trick
slam, maybe even a grand. Conse- two, they would still be running a moquently, he was lulled into a false ment later. Yet if they were breaking
sense of security. Alter winning the badly, there were two chances to gen·
lirnl trick with dummy's heart king, erate a ninth Irick, not one. Rather
declarer immediately played on dia· than rely solely on ~he club fiJ:esse,
monds. West's spade discard on the South should ommoo:ately play three
S!'COIEd roW!d was a jolt. Declarer rounds of spades. If they split 3-3 or
cashed dummy's last diamond winner ~t has two. honors doubleton, dum·
anallnessed ihe club queen. However, my s sp~de !'me becomes established
West won with the king and drove out as South s ~nth tr1ck. If, tbouglc, the
the heart ace. South could take only spades, don t cooperflte. declarer still
the eighMop tricks with which he had has. t.he d1amondspllt and club fiJ:esse
started.
.
·
. waztong 1n the wmgs.

Q_

0 Young AldeN Q

•.g
I
--~m~p~ro~ve~m~en~t~s--;
::~

87

P•••••••w•

1:05 (I) MOVIE: No Tin. for

'

• 8 7 54
tJ.l097
10 9?

Match-lip

e

'~

Avt~n- .':

Home

.

. A~ Evening s-. Stereo.
0 Murder, Sha Wrole Q

~~~.Equipped, 12,500. 6~~~, .;

81

Dlocover Ameriflora·

'92 (0:30)

~~::t

Services

(!) space Ate Slereo.

ife

White .t/Mrgltsa topper, fils
shan wide Dad Chev_r, $200.
ltdder styletrH: lt!nd 16ft $75.
304-875-2773.
' ••:
campers&amp;

a

Stereo. []

\ZI,

. g:~~';;..~:."~lu ~~!:!

1118 Eocon"· II 000 mlloo.
$1,1111. 1111 o;n.;;;/w Fifth Avo
$2,111. 1111 s.i4f-Pickup sharp
For Sale: dog hou-. Sovoror $3,11111. 11111 Corolco 4 d001
2 mho out AI, 141. Phono 14 295. 11118 Barotta $3,11115.
114 441 0113,
W•rn• 1iii Codllloc plnll 13,11115. 1987
Uozdo 321 $21191. 11183 Ranger
4•• $2,491. 1ilii Nlooan Pulsar.
$1l600. 1NI IT Dick-up 4fi::
m ill $3,895. llooHya
VIol..- pot bolllod olgo, Cora, Now ·Ha-. WV 30._.
. old, _...., $10iliit.; 3782.
·' llllntmooo pot bolllod brlodoa tm Dodgo Chorgor 440 hlopo
- . $260· PoMocka- I horw, t
lillie, 3 l.ibiM, ...,.. whitt, sloltod mago, body •IIJ gOC!d
condhlan, 54,000 lnv.aed take
$171; 614·1'12·2050.
$2,SOO tlrm. 114:317-7045.

7:35 CD Columbuo: The World'•

NEA. ~-

whHII, radators, floor mats,
ate. D &amp; R Auto, Ripley, WV. 304·
372·3933 or 1-aoo-2'13·9329.

79

Ctoullre

e

Ron's TV Service, specializing
In Zenith also servicing most
other brands. House calls, al!ib ..
some appllinca r1pair1. wv
1888 . . rttt1 GT allver. auto y. .304·576·2398 Ohio 614-446-24~.1
1. cruiM, tin, alr, 64,000 miles,
Sopllc Tank Pumolnf 190, Go ilia~
304-882·2359.
Co. RON EVANS EN ERPRISE$,
1188 Nltun, red, IUI'Iroof, 4 Jackson, OH 1·800·537·9528. , ,
opood, llood condlllon, $2700,
814-1192-11111.
84 Electrical &amp;
11t0 Chovy Corslco LT, 814·!185Refrigeration
3g,7.
'.
Rnldtntllil
or
commerc'-1 ; ...
11110
L...,lno
Ewosport wiring, ntw Hrvlce or repalra.
Mtllaf Ucensed electrician.
Ridenour Electrlcil, WV000308,
· F&lt;&gt;&lt; 110111,. 84-87 Plck.Up.
304-875·1786.

SPEQAL.S

OeFomllyFOic:hupTalk

Stereo. []

1987 Reliant K 4dr, Auto Trana,
Air Condtllon1r: Cheap On ~as.
Excellent Conc!ltlon $2,500. 614·
448·1383, 614-256-1682.

1100 Lumina Ewosport, lollded,
1- mlloo1 • oupw cloa~ will
trodo tor 111111 olza 1114-1111 pick
up. 304-875-Bm.
•

by

,

(!) .MOVI!: How to lruk Up
a HIPPr ~ (2:00)
lliD (I) Young lndlallll

&amp;

niW, 614-992·5181 .

Transportation

Block, brick, sewer pipes, win· 1980 CMde CuUase; 4 Door . Us•
dowa, llntel1, etc .. Claude Win·. No Oil, Coli Aftor 6:00 P.M. 61+
lets1 Ala Grende, OH Cell 514· 448-3714.
245-512t
1ila0 Oldomobllo Cullin. Good
condftlon. $1250. 304-e75o2563
Pets
for
Sale
56
oftw5pm.
Groom and Supply . Shop-POl 1881 C1mero 1uto. awaroot,
Grooming. All biNds, sty .. s. AC, will ooll lor s'iiill, 6.14·9!12·
'
lams Pet Food Diller. Julif 3181.
Webb. C1ll 614-446..0231.
1t82 Ford Escort, auto., 4dr.,
AKC Dolmollon r,upplao, $250; 40MPCI, cona., $850 OBO,
1yr. old lama 1 Oelmatlon, 814-892~0.
shots, worm.cl &amp; sp1d1, $125;
1917 Oldo DoHa 88, VInyl Top!
814-8111-2716.
loldlld! Ezeellent Condhlon
AKC llaiO Cockar Sponlo_!, Buff, 814-446-4125,.Aftor lp.m.
1 112 Ysa.w Old. $75.00 •omolo
Cockor Sponlol, a mo~tho, 175. 1187 PtymoUih . Suncllnc• Auto,
Air, $3,199; 1987 Ford Pinto,
61+146-2120.
Auto Air, 13~19: 1987 . Dodgi
AKC Molo Cockor Sponlol, Buff, Shad-, 5 Spd, Air $2,799; 1989
1 112 YNrw Old. $7&amp;.00 F1m1lt PontiiC L.eMena, 5 Spd, $3,191;
Cocker Sp&amp;~nltl, 8 months, $75. John'• Auto 9eiH, Btlow
HolldiY .Inn In Kanaug1. 114614-446-2820.

,,..,...vfs
ID IIG

onlght

e You Bet Your Lilt '
all'e WIIHI of Fortuna Q

e

EAST

+QJ

Finding
·the ·extra edge

(I)

IO -1'2..

WEST
+10872
.QJ 1093

+KJ 8

7:30 (2) • 1!11 JaoperdJ~
(I) Tha Jallertonl
.

.. .

PHILLIP
ALDER

+5

7:05 (5) Be...ty HIUtllllet

••

4 C1dll1ac aluminum 14" rims,

+AK8632
+4 2

Tonlglct

Ill•
Stereo.
Q -

11·11·11

. .K

0 0\Utnlllm l.ellp Q
e=~
Monaytlna
..
0 Llll Goal On Q

. ••

2263.
New g1s tenlcl:, one 1on truck .

55

AKC "-.wniln Puppy, Cromo
Female $150; AKC Dachshund
Black l Tan".!al• 1 112 Yro,
$121.114-311·-·

·Auto Parts

NORTH
+9643

Bel-Air Carlton's old
glr1lrlend shows up with a
baby and says he Is tha dad.

Accessories

Hay &amp; Grain
_;_,:,:..:..;,.:...;:.....:.:..:..,__
Hay for ule, aq_u1r1 ~ ..~ $2. &amp;
$2.50. Round bllu $20. each.
304-175-31110.
.

1m lml)lla, 305, PS, PI, Air,
1rrtnm aterwo, 88,000MI, good
cond., $750, ·614-9411-2115, 61+
941-2585.

Supplies

·,

64
:.._:_

1m Chovrolot llollbu, $600.
gciod cond, 304-e75-!1072.

• Tt4E wOfl Ll&gt; IJ'
JtOUNI&gt;' ]
YOV fY-PECT · A
fEDfllAL- G,ANi
fOfl TtfAi 11

,

Budget Tranamlsalorts, Used .&amp;
,.bulb, ell types, atartlng at $99;
owner 614-245-5677, 614·379·

71 Autos for 5ale
;_;._::.;::.:.:.:;.:..:::.:....:::.:.:.:....__
1i77 Uusttng · Cobr1 II, fresh
• - VB C4Al: ow Ureo 1
·
'J .
• n
'
•front
• •
wonl ond
allnmont,
houot,
brokn, olhor now ports, body
orlmod &amp; riJII ptOO! good inlor·
lor, $1.750. 304-518·2598 after
1:00 PM.
·
1m Buick LaSab.w $600 or
oftor, caii814-H'2·3tl3 aftor
lpm.

e

4

l!tlnleture pot bellied pig, breed·
lng oow, rog. vii paporo, oxc..
biOodllnoo, S200 OBO, 614-8435453.

Wolght banch wnly·&amp; logs, vinyl
weights, over 300 lbs, 1'60. 304·
676'1889.
. .
Building

76

John Detra 18 HP Hydro 42" Cut
Gerd•n Tractor $3,~. 614-4468064.

·

BRIDGE

E=n..f.:Nm

--------

..,., ·&amp;14·742·27TJ.

blessings instead of your BIRTHDAYS."
-·-- . ·-

MtrrlaCI - With

1121
E
Stereo. Q

\o~ -~·

25 Whltl Rock chickens tor

•• · •

~~

~winterizing
• ....
2&amp;3 cy, outbolrds $25
· · ':....
4&amp;6 cyl. outboord.s 135
1-0 &amp; stam drives $50
. ....
WtvarUnnera $25
~ . "-.
15 yrw. ellp. Jeff Slone, owner" "-:
J .S. MARINE SERVICE
~ •.
. 614·256-e160.
•' :

:304::.·::273:;:_~::21:::5::..- - - - - -

PRINT NUMBERED ,
lETTERS IN SQUARES

SCRAM..t,ETS ANSWERS

Ster~lngW­
Illa-li.~ Edition c
IZl (!) MacNetl/lahNi
Nawattu.Q

-------8-0A--J~E-R-S----~-~~:

Molal root and siding, ba~od Now Holland. 9ft hay bind. Gehl
enamel1nd gelv. 304·372·2091 &amp; 15 grinder mixer. AC 10ft
372·9842..
· trar-sporl diac. All good eond.

.'h• chuckle quoted
by fdlmg m the missing words
yov develop from step No. 3 beiQW .

Broach • Shrug • Abide • Oddity • BIRTHDAYS
"The secret of happiness, • the old woman told her
grandson, who had just turned 30, "is to counl your

7:00 ~ e 0 ~ or FCifi!lln•

·: ~~

for Sale

no

ANSWER

Up Clota
NeWZOILII
1:35 CD ApdY Glltlltll

e

the bar. "So why do they
spend money as if there's

~ UNSCRAMBLE FOR

0
0

(I)

~~::::;:;=~~lit

e

Q

CJ ..... OnaTVQ
1111• a• cas ....,. a
Gll• R-nna Stereo. Q

Motorcycles

&amp; Motors

ABC Naw1

2

an-

L.-J..--.J.-.J.L-..J.._.1..-J.

~ S.ndtago? Steri!O.

•:

Boats

e

1 I

THREMI
I?"
7,.:.:. .rl:...;:.;1....:..,1"'•~ "e·~~mplelo
t-,lr-.:..r.l

IZJ - . In lila World lo

1975 Honda 360, VGC,' ·~
wind•hield, new tires &amp; battery, · ,
gorago kopl, 10,000 milts, $45p . . ·
304-875-1869.
.
~·

Fann Equipment

(I)

"The future belonQs to our
children," one feiTow
nounced to the other fellows

t;5,....,r-~:...r...:,.~
~..•
6

rl

1:05 (I) . , _•• Co-ptny
1:301)). ONBCNawaQ
W.Ed McMa?ton't Stat'

.._

II

H 0 W EL

IIIJWarldT-y
.
0 Aln Tin Tin, K,l Cap

18:87 Plymouth Voyager LE, ,
loaded, low miles, IXCIIIent
- · · $6850. 614-446·9958.
'·
1988 lull size Chevy van. con· .,.
veralon, ralnd top, front &amp; ,.., "'
hMt &amp; tlr. Exc cond, 46,000
miiH, $10,000. 304-675-6030. , _ •

Gennle Nutrition Produc::ls
lao1urlng Amii]O Acid Body
Bulldi"gj w1lght loss and tal
burner rormufas. Available •x·
cluolvoly al Rita Aid Pharmacy.
Tho •f• way 1o dill.
·

RainboW Stereo.

HouuQ

l'IIERE MUST BE Mll.I.OIS
OF PEOPLE All OllER 'TilE
LI!ORLP W!-10 N~ 6ET

'

1tf87 .biro Van, 1uto., AC, cur·
talns, good cond., $TTT7.77, 614949-2526.

I
I

IZJ ..... OnaTVQ

PEANUTS

!\toll'( LOII'E LETTERS...

1986 F-150 -Ford Wl,-.dow fan
Looko &amp; Runs . Go"'/ 1 13,000.
814-256-6068 Aftor 5 P.M.

• Musical
Instruments

•

111e w • ae
oe
o-.
"'Il loved ..,. .... Ball

•

Fi,_ood F« Saio._All Oak, In·
tormalion: 814·317·!1'1'1.
.
Firewood, $20. plck.up load,
304-17WIOI aftor 1:00 PU.

Rearrange
lour
wordo
low 10 form lour ~mplo

1:00 ()) •

1!192 Rangor, 5 opood V-8, bik
wlrod imorlor, loildid $10,500.
614-446-4782.
304- .
·
•·
83 Bronco, eutomallc, PS, PB, ,
n.w tim, 73000ml., 13500 oao. '

Pets for Sale

........

EVE NINO

1..11 .AK.C B1111tt Hound, 5 mo
old, Ill ahots &amp; l'OUSI Included
3 mo o1c1 couch &amp; ,.._,, oxc $150. Bofo.w 1:00 Pit 304·875- :61::4-~11112::::,·.:.:m:.:;3·:_..,....,.......;-,-,.___. _ _.a--~~ ft
5 00 3911.
·--. - ' 7 ' - a er :
Chovrolot,.Ford, Dodg• pickup &lt;
PM.
Poodlea: pup_
p lu 1nd · edults, Hell. Short or long. No rust. ,
411 llumlnum ettenalon lldder, AKC, champion bloodlln•, 614- ' 304-875-6286.
-::l..:·34::.:.o•::.·_ _ _ _ _ __
1....94._2521, 8 6
70,000 BTU Oaa Roor Furntce ANdy To Gol Black !Tan 73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's
• 1- · ;
Complolo 1100, Ed Wrighl 114· L.abrOdo&lt; Pupo 125 Ploco. 114441·1201.·
·
:.24:.:5:.:-6:.:8::.78:.:·----~-~ 1980 Ford 314 ton ven, a~ .."'
8eyl., Nn• good, $875080; 1..~4 " :
Anllq• library tablo, .very old Roglotorod
copptr.
nosod Ford ton truck. 12ft. bed, ne.cts l
coins, 11bum1, 45 recorda, co., Be1gle pups. 3 months old.· $65. ~b mounts, $475; walk-behind ,
all 114-992·2837 anytime.
u.cti. 304-576-2363. ·
Otlvely, $475; 14H. Low-boy, , •)
$550i Gould sh1llow will pulnp, . '
Vlotnomooo pol 1&gt;ig, roglslorod, $100; 614-992-3479.
• :
COalwood Aroplac:o Insert 1300; born April :!e, 1992. $75. will
Grovaly Wood SpiHtor $400; nogollat~, 304-773.5504, 5:00PM 1984 Jeep Cherokee PS, PB 5 ··~
Spd, 4 Cyilndor, Runs, Bul •
Tapp8n Microwave .$75; Floral lo 7:00PM.
Noodo Work,$1)00. 614-256-1501 •
couch 1200. 814-367·7512.
Whb Cream Point Himalayan
_
COm feet beef or · lamb for Kl1t1ns, $150. &amp;M-446-2510 After 1985 F-150, 414 302 Auto Runs ••
Good, Now Polnl, Asking $4,200.
freuer, cUI, wrapped &amp; 4P.M.
614-388-8744.
doll.,.rod, ~04-773.s&amp;96.

Dnlgoo.wYncl CoftiiJ: CFA P. .
..... • . . . . . . Killona. ,,...

tlque

1c::rn of ltnd, locllitd In nice
nllg-hood, good cond., 814892-2111

54

21" RCA DOlor o....- Lv. I

Anllque monlle clock, $250; ...

For Sal• 1978 Floolwood mobllo

Dov-.

'

_ru_,._~:'_L:_.'_S:.:..:...:CQ!~c~\-:{t£~S·
0 ICJ'Qmblod
Jetters ' of ,.;;·.--

C11a TV Li1Me Inc:. Ft Wontl. TX.

..

1988 Ford F-150 AUio, Air, 2 Fuel
T1nk1, $5,499; 1988 Nltun 4
Sod, $3,119!1; 1987 Toyota, 5 Spd,
Alr1 $3,650t John"• Auto ·Silas,
Below Holiday Inn In Kanauga~

(A~'i
it~f, - w~CJWT
o '"2 ttv NEA. ~ne.

loxw pupo- ch4mplon AKC
='!~~ft:. 1 town, 1 whHa;

oond.IIL

Looking For A Oosl? Conoldoi A
Pr..OWned Mobile Home, Llrge
S.*Uon Low Money Down,
F - Sat·Up And DoNvory. 1 581-6710.
.
.

Land /Homo

w

1

1987 Chovy 5:10, 4WD, I
red, very sherp, 61wt2-58H.

Choice o.w-• WHh
Vouna. AI Olllo Valley llomory
GardMa, In 01Uiopll8. ,,......_

fiiO MCh 080.
~-·-·
Llko -114-·
441-77211.

----------~----------13bdrm.,

home wl room

448-8093,

MON., OCT. 12

~==========:r=========:i S'~~;~~t:~r:&amp;"~~.'"'"·
=~~·:..:;: ~.m~~~~~·

:..__.:..:...:..:...:..:.....,...,__,,......:-,'7 !

Read the

,

'

SIZ8 Walorbod, WHh
DaUloo O&lt;a- -otll And
Csoo Hoodboanl. 614-4468692.

. .- - LAYNE'S FURNIT\JRE
G1lllpolls
Ferry
,flcros•
trom
.6
Lost &amp; Found
Hurricane, Roconsllucllon And Aneratlona: SIWing &amp; llandlng,
Bule School, $200. deposit,
Cleanup, · Mlny Noodad. Both 614-441-4934.
·1250. mo. 304-e75-H60 after
Lost : gray end whhe Cockailaf, Skilled &amp; Unskilled, Men &amp; Drummonds Auto Body I
0322, 3 mil• out Bulavllle Ad.
5:00PM.
,f,.. Dellvt~ry.
Mlddlaport vicinity. 1n. s~ars to ~;."~~~~~so~·~:.·H ~g~nto. Uochonle Work. FrM Eotlmarao.
"Pretty Boy", 614·992·2352.
N o l a h - ~d. w ..8'14-4* 42 Mobile Homes
Living , _ oulto, - " · - .
I'm looking lor 8 'l ntarn1td J)er·
2 waad1n end ·tablea, coffM
tost-: Ladlas ..Angela Stewart" son1 to ..11 c::o•metlca. N1tiOnal 370{
for Rent
1abll,
$1p. 114-367-0122 Iller
designer glasses,
reddish· skin · care divisiOn. S.rio~ E&amp;R TREE SERVICE. Topping,
5pm.
brown, 614·985-4227.
money: $25 to $50 hour. Trimming, Tr" R-.nov11, Hedge
bedfoom fumlshtd, mobil•
Rnpectabte company. FrM Trimming. F,.. &amp;tlmate1J 614· holM, 6M-446-0S08 eler 6:00 Now oak turnlt...: tabloo l
7
Yard Sale
PU.
chairs,
thin~
ClbiMta,
training. 61+388-8000.
367-7957 Aftar 4p.m.
Wuhltlnde, drnlnka,
etc.
Immediate ()peJninga Available. Espo-d Houaok"plng Will 2 Bodroomo, CA, WID On Ron· Whoillalo &amp; lltalf. RWar Valloy
For Certified Nurs1 Akls. Start:. Clun Hornee ·Or OHICH By The 1ed Lot. Rudy To Move In Sale 0ok FurnHure. 114-441-4311.
lng $4.80 Per Hour. Sign On Job Or Hous Raasonab• Rttes. On Land Contract. 1 Block From
GallipoliS
BonuaAvaliabl,. Contoci Jacklo 614-441-tmo.
PICKENS FURNITURE
. Big Bur.I14-44S:14011.
·
Williams, ADON, Plnecrest·Cire
NewiUMd
I
&amp; VI I.,-n.,-t;..:Y:-:~-:---=~C.:,·
I Contor, 170 Plnocroot Drivo, Gal· Tree Trimming and Removel. Fwnlahed, 2 or 3bdnn., tor rwnt HotwoNo.,holdold fumlahlng. 112 mL
Light hoUIIng pluo odd joba. In c-.lry Mobile Park. W..horl Jorrlcho Rd. Pt. PI-nt, WV,
ALL Yard Salta Must Bo Paid In II polio, OH 45631 · 614.. 46-7112·
304-eJ5.4338
.......~1-$2351 mon., 61+9112· caii304-6J'5.1450.
Advonoo. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.
IMMEDIATE OPENINGS
2M7. ~t1'1NCI5-8227.
.
the day be fora the ad Is _to run. Du1 To Expansion A Lo-;al C~. Woutd llko to do babysitting In
Portsbto wuhorlllryot 110.
Sunday edition • 2:00 p.m. Has ()pei'llngs For 11 Pea 1 my hom•. $2 per hour, &amp;14-742~ Nlco . mobile hom• Comp Con· bo!IL Worka gOOd. 814-441-21120
Friday. Monday edition • 2:00 $1,000 ~er Month. 'J;o Sttrt II ou 2573.
ley, 3 bedroom•, 11 el.t:trlc, alrp.m. Saturday.
Ouallfv, Ught UftlOg ' Rtqulred.
cond, no pets. references, 304- R. S. FumKura. Now, uaad, on175-2133.
tlq•o. fumlohlngs.
' Call Tu11cfay Between 10 &amp; 4,
Financ1al
Moving Solo: King Slzo Woler- · 614..46-4 5S3.
Moson, WV. :J04.773o5341.
bod 1150; Exorclo Bike 120j_ 4Pc. 1 ::.:.;~.:...;.=:..._--,--­
Two bodroom1 all oloclric, portly
. Wood L.A. Suite $125; urun · Lhtt in housekeeper, tree room
lumlahod &lt;&gt;&lt; Nmlohod, 11+1'12· Retrigerl1o,., FI'HIIIra. W11Mr, ·
Dryo'!r. VCR'a,. Slovoa, Color
CoucK, Chair 150. 614·379·2599. &amp; board pluo oman salary, 21
2014.
Business
T.V.'a "''· 614-2oo-1238.
refer•nces reqL!Ired, 304-675·
Public Sale
1485.
8
Opportunity
44
Apartment
Retrigentora $75 lo $150;
·Patient Servlc81 A'u lstlnl, Ap&amp; Auctlori
f or Rent
INOliCEi
•ut-Ile wuhorl .. -lrlc
proxlmt11ay 20 ·25 Houra PWr OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
Rick P111"1011 Auction Com'pany, Week· MUst Be Energetic And rtcommends that you do busJ. 1 Badroom Gltago Apartmonl, dryara $75 to $150; new gn
full time aucllonur, complete Ab,le to Work Aelllble "'Schedule ·nns with peopla you 1Cnow and lnoludoo
Goargoo dryar $95, gao rongn $75 lo
1
auction · 11rvlce.
Licensed Including D1y, Evening And NOT to aand money througn
the Craak Rood, $2501010. DooOalt $150, oleclrlc rangoo $75 IG
168,0hlo • West Vlrglnli, 304· Saturday Hours. Madlcar Office m•ll until you have lnvntlgated R-ulred. 814-441-4212 Oava:, $125; 2 IICirlablo dlohwuhoro
~
•- $10 oo. We otod&lt; new ond
773-5785.
.ew:perllnc• Helpful; Will Trtln th1 otterlng.
614-446-211'1,
uood oppllarlcl PI~IL Dolbort
Mature, R..ponslble Person
•- · total -lrlc:,apo Swlohor'o Usod A~loncn:
~•,..-.,
Whc Is Sensltlvo To Birth Con- l.oooi Poy Phono Rout a. 1 K To 2 •
9 wanted to Buy
.reh St.,
trol And Reproductlva · Huhh 10K Eernlng Potential 1-800..749- plllnc:H fun')llhed, IYiillb.. Conw of Rand· l
lmmodllloly upon oppllcatlon Konouga, Ohio. 6,_11173.
Don't Junk h! Sell ·u s YOUr Non ~ Nnds Of Clients. Mutt Bt Well 2600.
Working Major Applltncas, Organized:
Accurate
With
approval. Contlct 614.i92-3711. Rehiger•t_,rs: w..tlnghowe 16
Color
TV's,
Aafrlgarators, Figuras And Record KHplng; New 0.111 ·Don't C.ll Unlea• You EOH. VIllage G-n Apts.
cu ft iohlle $1B5. Soot~ Cotdopo1
Wlnt
To
Make
S..-to1.1s
Money
FrHztrt. VCR's, Mlcrowtvas, Have Superior Communication
2 -oom apt, $175. mo pluo 13 cu ft Horvat Gold $175.
Bolna
Your
Own
BOaal
Coil
1·
Air Condillonel"8, Guitar Amps, Skills. Must Be Able To Work
utllklao, ref 18qulrod, 304-eJ'S. Fllaldalni f1 cu ft
800·1ih-«41.
E':::'::·6::•4-::2::5::6-:::12::38:::.,
• ..,:- - - : - I Undar Guidelines \VIIh Minimal
2122.
$1l'S. All !root lrH, cilon,
::
Supervision. Requlrn ReUtble VENDING ROU~ : Got Rich
gusrontood, lloo local dollv.y,
Good used fual .oll)umace. 614· TransporttUon. Ability To Wor. k Quick? No Wayl But Wo Hova A 2 BR remodolld '"'fum'od 304-171-25Moftw1:00PU.
:379:,:
. :::·26::7!
:.::.,
• .,-. , - - , --:-.,..,.:-:- I In Molgs, Gallla, Lawronco Good, Stsady, AHOidablo, Bull· garogo apl. wl reiila. &amp; stovo.
And Other Sit• II
-. Won't Last. 1-800.284· Walor lum'od. $260 rilonth. Dop. . Sale On All VInyl In Sloe!&lt; $3.119
In Hom• Nur~lng Care. 61 4-4 46- Countlaa
Needed. Tlme And Out Of n
req'od. ~46-3717.
Corpol SS.OO Up. Mollohan Fur•
Yond.
:_776:::2.:..__ __,.,-----,.-=:-:- 1 County Travel Paid. Start $5.50.
nil...;
114-446-11144.
Used Mobile Homes, Call 614· 1 S.nd
Rasuma
And Two Vending Route: loc1l. We Have 2bdrm. apta., total -trlc, apo
446.0175.
•. Employment
Referer\CH To Tho N-o1 Mochlnoo, Uoklng A plli.nc.a fumlahed, laundry SellinG: Good Khchln Clblneta,
Planned
Parenthood
Of Nlc• Study CUh Income. 1· room flcllftift, c,_ to school lnciUdM Almond Bulft~n Gao
Wanted standing limber, top SoiJthea~ Ohio, 396 Richland IOO.V55-0354.
In town. APPilcotlona IQIIoble a- !Colla, Dlohwsohor, Sink,
prfc•• paid, free esllinatas, : Avenue, Athen•, Ohio 45701 .By
it: Vlllalll
Alllo.
or C:O...IOrTopo.I14-245-59M.
llconsod logging compony, 304· j Oclobor 14, 11192, EOE /ESP.
calll144~1. EOH.
SWAIN
Real Estate
8115-305.1.
TRUCK DRIVERS
2br, CA~ Wallhar, llryorii Hook- AUCTION I FURNITURE. 62
.Wanted To Buy; Junk Autos Llmllod Oponlngs Wllh Jackoon
Up. 1ot •loor, No Pill, olaren· Olivo St., Galllpolll. Now &amp; Uood
With Or Without Motors. Cell County Trucking Company. No
::c":::,·1::14-4=;*::1:0:;.11:·:..__ _ _ _ tumth.n, heattf'l, w.tem I
1
Larry Uvoly. 614·388-9303.
Ovemlght Tr1v81. An Excellent 31 . Homes for Sale
3 room tUm•ed., cenlral h..v Work bootL 114-4414158.
Oppo~unlly
For Long·Torm
Top PrlcH Paid: All Old U.S : Employment
Fer a..alltlod
Koller o.., Golllpoli8, 0111o ·tlr, 111 utiiHiee tum'ed except u..c1 Appl.lance Bargain• This
Coins, Gold Rings, Sliver Coins, Drivers. Benahll A.vtlleble. 45e31, Tolophono: 114 441 3385, olectrlc, oft porltlng. 614- Wook· Many To Choooo From,
Gold Coins. M.T.S. Ccln Shop, Sand Rooumo To: DRIVEf!.~ Price: $52,000.00. Uvlng Room. 446.2602.
Esarnpll: 30 IMh Ellclrlc Rllll!l
1
151 second Avenue, Gallipolis.
P.O. Box 108, Jackson, ut1 3 BodiOOIIII!. . Family Room, 1 5 Room Aportmont Dawnotalro, - . . W.. $95 Cut To $75;
45640.
And 112 Bathroom• 1 Car R-.,,.. &amp; Dopoaft, No POlo. _.....,. llryor $115 CUI To $75;
Garogo, Brick Front Wllh Ceder Aloo, Small Troller .11+848-1158. O.E. Waohoi PI Cui To Slli
Employment Services Wanlod: Cock1oll Wallro!IO Siding.
.
·
Ralrlaoo ator F - $1!10 O.lfl
/Walter And B.anender, Apply:
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT To Si25; Rafrlaorotor Lllal Now,
Holldly Inn, Galllpolla. No 3 bedroom houN. Store &amp; 2 bay BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON Hamal Gold. 'Wu $285 Cui To
garogo. I 100111 houoo &amp; 52 ESTA~S. 138 Jackoon Pike $225; Color 'f.v. ~ .Wos
Phone Cilia Ace:apted.
11 Help Wanted
1
acrn. Traillll' &amp; 1 tcr•. 304-675- fnlm $1921mo. Walk to ohcl&gt; &amp; $150 Clot To $111; All wnh A
1558.
14
Business
movloo. CoU 114-441-25118. EOH. O - , , lkap Appllonooa,
•AVON' ALL AREASI Shiro your
71 Vlno 111-; llaiiiiiOIIo. 114BEAUTIFUL HOUSE FOR SALE Fum~od. 3 rooma a both 441-7:1911, Dr 1-8CJCI.489.348t.
time w•h us. You'll .love the
Training
Hlotorlcal A- Cornor LOt • 816 Upot.lro. Wotor, IIIah pold. Opon 8 To I Monday Thru
compony. 1-800.1192-6356.
Retrain ,
Now!I!Southeastern Moln St. Pt. Plouant, W. VL
Frldoy; Till 2 P.ll. Saturday.
AVON I All Areas I Sl'lirlty Business Collage. ·Spring Valley Coonplllllly Ronovalod: 2 Ful CloarL 114-31111-IIN3.
Spooro, 304-675-1429.
Balho,
3
~
BodrooJN,
Now
Fumlahod 1 BR apartment. VI'RA FURNITURE AND AP·
Ploza. Call Today, l14-446~317fl
.HVAC, Now Corpot. Avalloblo DopoaH. 304-87U!12, It no
PUANCES
Rog.f90.05o12748.
EA~N MONEY Roodlng Bookol
lmmodlally. 6~-2205.
•nsww, l•ve ~~~~a~ge on ml·
8'14-441-4428
$30,000/Yr. Income Polentitl.
chins.
814-446-3158
Detalio.111 aos-962-aooo, EX1. y.1.a;:__w:.:..:a:.:nt:.:e:..:d::.·t:..:o:...::.D:..o_ _ CMy 01 Golllpollo. Excolilnl
AENT·2.0WN
10'189.
Conclltlonl Garago FI,.,.,.CJ!, Fumlohod Apo~mont, Utllltln No a._. .. C,RAND OPENING
G-geo Po~able Sawmill don'l B-niont, 1 .112 lralha. Posalblo Paid, 1 Bedroom, Upatalra, Nalhlng P.-nod Or Uood,
EARNUPT0$7.00HOUR
houl your logs to tho mill ·jusl Flananclnn 0&lt; Trodo. 614-251- Sacond Avonuo, Galllpollo, No E
Joln Amtrlea'a Newnt Home call304..fi75-1957.
•
Pllo1 Escollenl Condition, 614·
VII,
,
.
Clunlng Comp~~ny. Opponunlty
5855.
Bunk Bodo Comploto $5.88
For Advancement Into Man1p-- Hanydmtn Sarvlcn: 24 hours. FORECLOSED 1 REPO Homea. 441 .. 523.
ment Loctlly. Fl•xlbl• D1yUma_ Hay• rolertncet. 10 )'rl. ••· Below Market Velue. Fantaltic Fumlohod, 3 Roomo &amp; Both, ·Wook; Sola And Chair $10.113
Houri Mondey Th~ Frldty. · If · perli~CI. ~14·2~47.
S.vings. Your ANI. 1-80!5-962· Cloon, No
Roleronco &amp; · ::~'.;..Lam'2 J!~i. D=~;
You Hovo Good Worlt Habill!. ·
1000 Ext. H-10181 For CurJonl Dopoalt Requlrod. 114-446-151!1.
With 4 Chalra 17.25 wool!; Or
Referencn, And Own Tral)a:por•, lnte.rlor nterlor painting also Uat
1allon, Cell WORKENDERS liW. wash dOWn ' lnobllo homos · &amp;
•
Groclouo living. 1 ond 2 bod- Toblo BOlich And 4 Cholro
388-8108.
housts1 12 · Y" experlanc::e, Forecloeed &amp;. Repo Homes. 100111 apon'"'"ta ot VII- W-.hlng Hutc:h $20.1!1 Wook;
Hfow marklt value. F1ntes\,lc Monor
ratarances, 304..e75~933.
and
Rlvlralao Rofrlgorator
$11.22
Wook;
Apo~monlo In lllddleiiCirl. From Wallill &amp; Drysr Sot $11.85
~!~t~~~,~~~~·~~n~~!
Miss Paula's D1y C.re Center 1 =:,n~ ~~3JJ:c!-:=.· $11111. Coi1614-IIIIH78t EOH.
Wook; EleCtriC Rango Wllh
Toll Froe, 1·800.. 67-5566, EX1. Block Wool ot HMC On Jackson
Gl- Door $11.22 W"k.
313.
Plk.o III·F 6 A.U. ·~:30 P.M. If Homo FO&lt; Sale In Choohl18 VI~ In Middleport N. Third Avo, ono
QUality And Experience Is The ltgo 9 Rooms l bath L.w flit ......_ lumlahod apt, dip &amp; CASH AHii CARRY • Solo And
First Five Lldles To Call To Sell 11 Concern For .Your Child's LDI ' By Owner,
'
• •· P.ll. ref, ~-2561.
11-3:30
Choir $189; Lampo Starting AI ·
Avon Will Receive $15 Worth Of Care. Call Us For A Vltlt. lnfl!'lt Phon1: 614-446-6878 After 3:30
~L Fumlshod Smoll $11.115 Eac.~; Table Wfth 4 Ctiolrs
Merchandise FrH, Call 614~46- IToddMI'I 614-446·62:27. Pres·
Com,...
$129 Sat;
&amp; Dryer SSII9
3358.
choolors ISchool Ago 614 .. 46· P.M. 814~41.()425.
Houae, • Olmo. • Utllllln. No ~li Rolrtgo.wtor $399; Eleelrlc
Pora. Coli Bolonl 7 P.U. 114-446- ..,.. Gao Aangoo Avallablo.
----------+.;;8;;22;;4;;.
Newly conitructed rench home
Locolod • U'ppw Rlvor Aosd
w/3 bedrooms, 1 112 ba1h, halt 0338.
pump,
And1rson
windows Complotly Fumlshocl moblio su- Bridal Plaza o. 4
genge on one •ere lot, locetid home, 1 mile below tow.!' over- Mllee 01a '141 In Centen~ry On
1
on 'Bredbury Rd:, cloH to
achoola, town, &amp; hosphll. Call -~rivar. No Pota, ...._ 614- .:LI:;;n;;:"::ln;,;l'll;..:;;;•;;.·- - - - - Milo Hutchinaon It· 614·742·2306,
:.0
two
bodloom · 52 Sponlng Goods
614-742-2404.
apartments for r..a. 304-e~ Model 31 Remington 12 gu1ge,
Two Bedroom Home For Sale: 2053 &lt;&gt;&lt; 175~100.
Skill g - . I ft Brunswfck
~lea Fenced In Double Lot. Gal·
One Hdroom apartrMnts, fur·
ll'hll, 304-675-5593 ,,..,
llpQIII. Csll 614·37V-2H2.
ni&amp;Mcl,
ulhlt!H
Included. :::.::7-PU==-.-::--:--.,.--:.,.WATSON
Sacurly dopooft raqulrld, no PSE Fo- Ctooabow, Now
REALTY
polo; 114-9V2-2211.
Limbo And Coblo Oulvw I At·
304-8'15·3433
Ono bodr- apl tor rent, 304· _,. $175. I A.ll. 'nil 2 P.M. 114175-2218.
=44;.:1_;1.:,13:,::5:-.-:--:--:--...,..,-Siugo Wlnchoolor 5 count boxn
32 Mobile Homes
Thnoo 1 --~~ aplo localod "'· thot wo hove yow ol·
for 5ale
7th I t - ; lrlr turthor lnlonn.o· tontlon . horn how, buy 2 boxs
tlon 304-675-5440 aok fclr'l.oo.
$1.89 &amp; got $2.00 bock
$213 Per Month Including lot
fnlm Wlncholto_!; limH ono pot
n.ni. NIIW 14" wide mobile homa, 45
Furnished
1am11y - ..... 111 County Spool
lncludn delivery, complete HI·
Rooms
SjloP.JOW~.
up, skir11ng &amp; steps. 1-800-8:17·
6625.
Aritlques
Rooms tor rent • WHit or month. 53
1211:60 Mobile Home 1976 Model, Sta~lng II $120/mo. GoU'- Holol.
11,800. 614·446·~528.
Buy or - · Rlvarlno Anllquos,
81~11580.
1124 E. Main Stroot, on Rt.·124,
1974 carriage House 2 Bid· Siooplng wkh cooking. -oy. Hou.w: U.T.W. 10:00
rooma, 2 Belht, t2x551 All ..... trollll-. A l l - - a.m. to 1:00 p.m., Sundoy 1:00
Elec::trlc,
,Good
Conaltlo~, Call ••• 2:00 p.m., 304·7n- ,to 1:00 p.m. 114-812-2520.
15,500. 614..46-1511.
5UI, u..on 'fN.
54 Miscellaneous
1980 Pa~. 3 bedroom•. 314
46 Space for Rent
1cra, 304:-175-4506.
Merchandise

Read the Best 5eller,

•

1917 Chov. Stop Sldo 4GO Sm.
Block 3 Spd, $2,500 0 .8.0. 114-

1979 Chovy 1 112 Ton Truck, 1:1; •;
Ft., Gr1ln Bed, 4 SPMCI, Exc81· .
lent Condilion, 614-:1:45-5624.
•

Kina

Houses for Rent

·a-

•

'

Hatdwlck Goo ltovo
$125; Wallhll &amp; Dryo.w $100
Esch' And Up. Wsllhar
Dryer
Shoppe. 51t 441 2144;

Rentals

the minors . Well, I'm a stand-up comedian. •

'

The Daily Sentl_nei-Page-11

Television
Viewing

WlkHAIHELL I£ ,
~J.JI.:. lollY WE CEI EI!!Wt
cot I iN!Ih lll.'f?

1P Chevrolet Pick-Up 314 Ton •
Dump. $1,100· ¥(111 Trade For ~
Open Bowel ioat; Small Short ,
Topptr $55. 614-62U434.
• -

a

"In baseball, lousy players get sent back to

,

,'

Trucks for Sale

.

1m Ford truck, e•cllllent corj:· .•'
" , ..
dillon. 304-675-1898.

o-.

614-446-3758 .

'

Loaded, 1 owrw, 11,100. •""". ,
·~

1m short bed Dodge ·truck.
(New bed, new Pllnt) Sharp:._
$2100. 304-882·3320.
.

Needa
Frame.

Pan B01der Collie, P111 Debarmen, F•m•l•, 4 Months , Must
Bo Spado. 614·256-1061.

i

.

SEVERAL 7· ACRE PARCELS:
llolao County, Salom Twf.·•
$85&amp; acra._ Remote, beau'l ut
land; woods, Pltlure and hills.
Coil I&lt;&gt;&lt; good map. H1Ht3·
8545, Athons.

Giveaway

..._u.,,

448-8084.

.

BORN LOSER

Autos tor Sale

111g, Hondo Cl~ic LX

on-·C.--.
-

No hunting 01 trespt~plng on :

Couc:h
&amp;
Chair,
Reupholstered, Good

71

151 Sac.- ocroo llooon Co All Lllw Solo, .._ (An ... ola). Usrltod &amp; mapped,
Cwtalno.
Brawn
oc-, groal huntilll!. 114-446-1443. . AppiiL 141W.
blcll to boi oponod tD:otl
AM, OCt. 21. Ownw I'8HI'Vfti the
COUNTRY FURNITURE
right to rojoct any &amp; all bids. • Op11h
Ooon.r 1, 1t1.1, 2231
(:ill 1o&gt;r ln-atlon 304-e75- stile
ROute 'M'I, Oalll~. IM2711ovl!llnga -~07.
441-1412. Wo loy And loll Good
4 Acre Loll For Sail lri Patriol , Uood F!omlt... ~ Ploii.IJp
118.000 .Ja.ooo. 200' Road F.ton- And Dollwry. - . . Tllril
Sa-y. N P.U. We W Aloo
loga, Coli Kay l14-137-8f64.
·Ba Rontlng Floo . . _ Spooo.
Lot tor .... In New H.vtn, for , SI.OO For friday And Saturdn.
Coli Today To AIHIH A Spaool
morw Into call 304·882•2187.

HEYGUYSIII
Th- Olrlo Wont lP Talk To.
Youll •·-.0771' Ext 4392
$U9 Pt&lt; llln. Uuot Bo 18 Yro.
Unlotar Co. eo2-e31.0615.

" Ptt" 111bblt

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wrlghl

Household

14 mil, with
· "· Jllllllc
.,.._
811,000.
3114-815-3421.

F- lingle bullolln pt........
1H1L Wrlto to O.P. P. 0. BOK 184
Moulllon~OIIIo 44841.

4

51

35 . Lots &amp; Al:reage

AI' 110 J ne ernents

Ohio
. -

Pomerrcroyv-.IIIIIJidefleport,

.

,.

---11.

bpawwl....,..mighlllirgetyoyu ·

a~ ltldiW. Don'llallhlt lndlvld..-1

•

11:00

we
IZl a•
Nawa

a21• a21

~:r;'..c::.'..qteroo. Q

••

(o) 1992 lly NEA, inc.
Releaaa In Papers of Monday,

Oct. 12, 1992 .

CELEBRITY CIPHER

OM~Q
lit Club Denca

~ Clpt.tf!!ft:ll . . . . . . cr.ted trMiqiiCMIIIII u by lll'nOUa
~- Md - - - "· ~ tattar In 1b8-- ltlftdttor
lftOthlt. Todlit"fc::U:S ..... W.

B

T

Oo...t~n!E­

IIIJ lporll Tonight
ICFFKIOIII end ....... King

11::11(1)~£.
IZJE
~
Ananto Hltll Stereo.

A•
il• ......... 8ulllltl'

aA"",. . . ..

..Cr"..

s-.

0

Inial

IIIJMol•flll•
11:35 (2)

I

.

U7HGEMDGMF

FOTF

F t

GMIW .UO

Z I W

YIIU

Ill

TVV

URHG

Z I W

STMF

GMIWUO

liS

YRU

F I

FTAG

..

e.._Stereo.
11J Tonight 8ltow With
C

u:rr . ·•
Jey

12:00lll. ~-.....
. 0 Tha Equeb81'

. . . . . . &amp;Ccrplny
IIIJNea-'IIQht

T S T

.

.'

·z . '

UIVNITFGE

RF

TVV

,Y TEE Z

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: ; ,1 ~nder why socltily somehow ...8ms to want to
· conotrict childhood more and more.'' - Mr. Rogers.
·
')

�By The Bend

.

.

'

The Daily Sentinel

'

Oakland
s.tays alive in
AL -playoffs ·

Monday, October 12,1992
Page 12-

.

Ohio Lott~ry

Reader: Should youngs.ters know
w~at it's like to. be pregnant?

Pick 3:

136
Pick 4:
8228'

· Page 5

Dear Ann Landers: My sister
at the office. Thank you on behalf
who Jives in Indiana sent me a·
of all of them.
clipping d!at made me furioll$. If
By strange coincidence, in the
we Jet the money-hungry manufacsame day's mail, I received the
tureis and merchants have their way.
following leiter from the other coast:
they wiU destroy the innoeence of .
ANNLANDUS
Dear Ann LaDders: Our heautiour youth.
fu(, 46-year-old mother was killed ·
According to The New York
in a car crash last week. My sister
Times, there will soon be available
and I went through her clothes at
a toy that will give linle girls (beDad's request and were told 10 take
tween 6 and 9 yean of age) an idea period. Five years ago, "RClt" had whatever we wantedof what it feels like to be pregnant. iln affair with a co-wodcer 2S yean
In Mom's lingerie drawer, we
It is a soft 10-inch baby doiJ in a his junior. At my insistence, she left found several photos of her in
padded pouch that can be worn the fl1111. I
,
loving embrace with a much
around a child's belly. By pressing
A few days aftec my husband was younger man at three different
a button, the child can feel the buried, I was asked if I wanted 10 locations. Thank God Dad didn't
baby inside kick an~ hear its pack up tbe personal belongings fmd these pictures. It would have .
heartbeat.
.
in his office. I said.
co~,~rse."
been a devastating blow.
The Alan Guttmacher Institute What a stab of pain I felt when I
Please print this Jetter as a
estimates that over 800,000 unmar- discovered an envelope containin
warning to others. -· DEVASried teen-age girls get pregnant photographs of Rex and his mis
TATED MOURNERS ·
every year. Do we n:a]ly need a toy taken during their !Dany s
DEAR FRIENDS: Your Jetter,
10 let 6- and 7-year-old youngsterJ&gt; outings.
coupled with the one that preceded
know what it's like to be pregnant?
Those pictures tore my heart apart _ it, is su~e to have an enormous
Add d!at 10 wbat they see on TV My beautifu\ memories and regained impact I'm grateful that you found
these days, and you have a: perfect trust were totally shattered. Now I the,courage to write.
blueprint for adolescent sex.
have no idea if my husband actually
Gem of the Day: We Jearn from
I'd like to see this letter in print, ended his affair with this woman or · experience that people seldom learn
Ann, with a comment from you. ·-- if he was still lying 10 me.
from experience.
·
.·.
DISGUSTED WITH MONEY Please ask your male readers to
Drugs are everywhere. They're
HUNGRY MERCHANTS
commit their exttamarital activities easy to get, easy to JL&lt;t and even
DEAR DISGUSTED: Here's your to memory and, out of respect 10 easier to get lrQoked on. If you have
letter. I agree with -you that this toy their wives and children, refrain from questions about drugs, you need Ann
is awfully far out I cannot imagine taking pictures thai widows might Landers' booklet, 'The Lowdown on
any sensible mother buying such a discover. Thank you for allowing me Dope." Send a self-addressed, long,
doD for her pre-teen daughter.
to unburden myself. - HEARTSICK business-size envelope and a check
Dear Ann Landers:·My husband IN OAKLAND, CALIF.
or money order for $3.65 (this
of 34 years died suddenly of a heart
DEAR OAKLAND: Your letter includes postage and luuulliitg) lb:
attack. I am Still in a state of shOck. is sure to hi~ a raw nerve in every Lowdown. c/o Ann Lllnders, P.O.
Our rnarriage·had survived a rocky person who has such photos stashed Box JJ562, Chicago, Ill. 606JJ-

Ann

•

•

a1

Landers

vat. a, Na.120
. Capyrtght.d 1H2

Middleport Coun·cil OKs

water, sewer rate·hikes.
ENJOYING THE DAY· Ann Lambert,
right, is pictured as she enjoys a rew or the many
items available at .the herbal ba"est and country fair in the mini-park In Pomeroy on Satur-

caIendar

PARIS (AP)- Madonna says it that was wrong," he said to
isn't titillation but self-expression applause from the .studio audience.
she is trying to achieve by posing "So I asked somebody to paste it
for a spate of nude ,PhOtoi!f3phs.
back together. I think that's a lot
The pop star, tn Pans to pro- better."
mote her latest album; "Erotica,"
The stubble-headed singer has
and the racy photo bool: "Sex," said she wanted to protest what she
was asked on a talk show Sunday perceives as religious oppression in
why she appears nude on a new overwhelmingly Roman Catholic
Elle magazine cover.
Ireland.
·
"I consider myself an artist..,...
"Sbe was very lucky it wasn't
ask any arust'why he does what he my show. Because it if1was my
does," she said. "I don't look 10 shllw,I would have gave her such a
shock people. It's how I want to smacl: " Pesci who won an Oscar
express myself."
for his'role as~ hoi-headed mobster
Spor~ng a gold-capped tooth in ·"Goodfellas," said to laughter
and bratds, the 34-year-old also . from the audience. "I would have
touched on politics, saying she isn't grabbed her by her ~ her eyeinterested in hearing about Demo- brows.··
·
crat Bill Clinton's pot-smoking as a
youth.
RADNOR, Pa . (AP) - Delta
"So he experimented with mari- Burke's new blond hairdo has landjuana Who cares?" she said. "I'd ed her at the top or Mr. Blackwell's
rather know the truth about Clinton ~uallist of worst'-dressed celebrithan the lies GCQfge Bush says."
ues.
Burke, who went from brunette
NEW YORK (AP) - Actor Joe to blo'nde for her new series,
Pesi:i patched things up with the "Dell&amp;," is "a truck-stop tragedy
pope, sorta, for Sinead O'COnnor.
in country-western kitsch," BlackA week after the Irish singer well wrote in the latest issue of TV
· tore up a photo of John Paul II on Guide.
"Saturday Night Live," Pesci
Among men on the list, rapper
a,ppeared on the same show, hold- Will Smith of "The Fresh Prince of
ing up a patche4-10gether 8-by-10 Bel-Air" was called a "hip-hop
of the pope during his opening horror ill an ersatz denim disaster."
monologue.
The dress designer, better
"Sinead O'Connor tore up a known for dressing down those
picture of the pope and I thought whose wardrobes he fmds wantinji. ·
said he has seen improvement m
two celebrities who have made his
worst-dressed list in the past.

Community Calendar Items
appear two days bdore an event
and the day or that event. Items
must be receiv~ weD Ia advance
to assure publlcatloa In the cal·
endar.
1

LONG BOTTOM --Revival,
Long Bottom United Methodist
Church, through Friday, 7:30 p.m.
Norman .Butler, evangelist. Special
music. Pastor Seldon Johnson
invites the Jlublic.
· POMEROY • .Revival at Flatwoods.United Methodist Church
wiU be Sunday lhtough Saiurday at
7 J!.m. nightly. Rev. Charles Eaton
will preach Sunday and Monday.
Special singing S11nday night.
River Valley Boy5, Lancaster, will
perform Wednesday. Special
singing other nights. Rev. Keith
Rader and membeJS invite the public.

~I

J

1

...cT l

POMEROY - Meigs Band
Boosters meet Monday at 7 p.m. at
the high school.

l

HERBAL HARVEST • The herbal harvest
and country fair held Saturday in tbe mini-park
in Pomeroy alTered a pleasant and cozy setting
tor those partaking or the crafts and other items ·

there. durlna the Big Bend Sternwheet Festival
Bobb1e Karr, Dianna Lawson and Donna Nease
with assistance from the Pomeroy Merc:ban~
Association, organized the affair.

•

Your Social Security

POMEROY- Women Alive
wiU meet Monday at 7 p.m. at the
· Carpenter's Hall in Pomeroy on
Main Street. Jeanine Fiala will be
the cjevotional speaker. Wanda
Faulk will be the craft demonsttator. Soup bar refreshments.

Second birthday

,.,

meet

•

.

'

,.

-'

"

'

~ufus B.II
bas an able captain In Lou Wendell, and an
equally able crew. They are, 1-r, Danny Goebel,
Barbara Thaxton, Captain Lou Wendell and his
wife, Linda (tlrst mate), Linda imd Bob Rowe,

Nancy Hillen and Jim Dodd. These crew members made· Sentinel reporter Brian Reed feel
welcome during the races on Saturday. (Sentinel
Photo by Brian J. Reed)
.

:Aboard the Rufus B II: a
reporter lives ·to tell the story
By BRIAN J, REED ·
Sentinel News Staft
"Landlubber ·turns crew member." That could very well be the
headline on this account of my trip
on Saturday, as I served as an Hon- .
orary Crew Member aboard a beautiful sternwheeler. . · ·
Don't the captains and their
crews .seem like they're having a .
good time durin~ the Big Bend
Stern wheel Fesuval? They are
happy people who enjoy traveling
the Ohio River aboard -their
beloved boats. ·
Bill behind the scenes, crewing
a sternwheeler requires li lot of
hard work, plaMing and dedication. Team spirit and a family
aunosphere on board ma:kes the
days (and the evenings) fun.
! .know this, because on Satur-

Middleport woman
on grand
larceny charge

8

By JULIE E. DILLON
Sentinel News Staft
The dog is often times referred
to as man's best friend - and for
good reason. For many the dog is
not just a pet. 'It is • nccessery link
between darkness and having the
ability to function ill a bustle-bustle. always.on-IIJe.go w
. •ona.

"Gibbons, once a fashion disas"
ter, grabs the pest dressed gold
with glamorous gusto," he wrote.
As for Leno: "Once his wardrobe
had the apPeal of a soggy com chip
- today, he's the cream-of-thecaviar-crop in late-night winners."

·

·

. . ·
.
That link is provided with the
assistance of a guide dog and one
Meigs County 4-H member - Billee
Renae Pooler • has undertaken the
job of providing the first year's
training for such a dog.
Pooler, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs; William Pooler Jr.,'Chester
area, received her dog, Jacob, an

ASHLEE TEAFORD

·

·Th,1fd b'•1fthday-

Ashlee Teaford, daughter of
Leslee Teaford, celebrated her third
birthday recently at the home of her .
grandparents, Bob and Hazel Dudding.
.
A "Barbie" party.theme was car'ried out with a cake decorated by
her grandmother, Hazel Dudding.
Guests were Edna, Velessa Hunnell and Jordim Pickens; her great. grandmother, Velma Winland; Sue
· R.ice; gnmdpilrcnts, Bob and Hazel
Dudding,· and ....
~ stein
. .
.._,
Gifts were sent by Diane and
Kyle Wolfe and Heath Hill.

-CREMEANS
94th District
State Representative
Paid lor by tho Commitloe to Eloct
Frank A. Cremeant, St.-.on B.
Chapman, Traaa.

· Middleport Department Store

I

'

Wll Be Observing New Hour~ Beginning
Monday, O~t. 12, 1992
. Mon. thru Thurs.
and Sat~

BU.LEE AND JACOB·· BUiee Re111e Pooler, tlaqbter otMr.
aad Mn. WUU.m Pooler, Jr., Cheater area, Is partlctpall•aln
trlllnlnl her PDot Dot P!IPPY• Jacob, dorlat his lint year before
aolnt oa to further plde doa tralalll with Pilot Dop,-Iac., In
Colnmbu. Altlloqh lle ldllllts It wUI be bard lo say tood·bye to
Jacob, she reaURS her elforllln trafnlng Jacob Ia bls earl7 staaes
wiD help IOID-e else.
·

10:00 AM-6:00PM'

Friday

10:00 AM•8:00 PM
'

'

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staft
Middleport residents will face
increases in water and sewer rates
effective with the December
billing.
.
At Monday night's meeting
Middleport Village Council adopted ordinances providing for
increase~ of 12 perce11t on both
water and sewer rates.
For the third readings and adoption$ of the two ordinances, Councilman Paul Gerard voted "no". He
has consistently opposed tile
increases contending that additional cost-aaving steps should be taken
within the department prior to passing an increase in rates to consumers.
·.
The increase will generate
about $36,000 for operation of the
water and .sewer departments.
The combined water and sewer
rate increases, accordillg to Mayor
Fred Hoffman, on minimum usage
of QP to 2,000 gallons of water,
wiD total $1.55 a month. For senior
citizens which have a redoced rate,
the combined increase for minimum usage will be $1.40. The last
rate increase'took place in 1989.
At the meeting Council passed
necessary legislation to dcfme the
Betsy Ross housing project as an
Urban Renewal Project
Mayor Hoffman reported that
the Ohio Environmental Protection
Agency has granted a year's extension on water well improvements.
. The deadline is now Oct. 1,' 1993.
It was granted op the basis of Middleport and Pomeroy entering into
a joint agreement for a study of the
water systems serving the two

day, I was aJJowed to be a part of \ r the stemwheeler is in. "tip-top"
the crew aboard the Rufus 8 II dur- ~hape. New electrical boxes were
ing th!}.Sternwheel races.
added, as well as new wiring and
It's a beautiful boat, built in new gauges in the pilot house.
Iowa in 1926. Its original name
The new 671 Detroit Diesel
was the Fre~ Boy. Through the en·g.ine was ta~en from a I 961
years, it went !ftrough several own- Wh1~ tractor l!IIJier, and ·replaced a
ers, and claamed the name of 471 diesel engme.
WilliamS. before being, nilnled the
The exterior of the ~t wasn't
· Rufus B II.
neglected m the meanume. New
Captain LQu WendeD pwchased enamel paint was applied from top
the boat in March, 1991, and since to bottom, and a roomy "Texas
then has made some major Deck" near the sternwheel was reo- towns.
improvements. A new paddlewheel ovated, including glass-like Lexan
was constructed, replacing the 0!1 the rear waJJ, allowing a lighted
wo~den spokes with steel and v1ew of f!!e ~dlewheel:
.
adding new oak paddles.
The mtenor of thts boat as arreste~
A new belt drive system ~uall&gt;: impre~iye. Mahogany~­
replaced a chain system, and makes eling lines a bVJng area that nvals
the boat one of the few (perhaps most Jan~ locked homes, and a
the only) on the river which is' driv- fully-equtpped galley makes
MASON - A Middleport woman
en in that manner. The engine room
Continued on page 3
was charged with grand larceny af.
tcr being arrested early Monday

Chester gi.rl trains seeing eye
, t.0if 4 H Club prorec
•
t
dog . as par,
'J

He named Leeza Gibbons ·or
"Entertainment Tonig~t'' and Jay
Leno of "The Tonight Sflow" the
best-dressed stars on television.

POMEROY • Hunter education
course at the Pomeroy Municipal
Building, Monday, Tuesday and
Friday, 6-9 p.m. and Saturday 9
a.m. to noon. Limitation of 35 participants. Pre-register by calling
992-6311.

· completed the fibless portion of the
program, and took no sick time
during the six-month (juration of
MIDDLEPORT - Meigs J.unior
the program, received a free WellHigh
Academic Booste.rs meet
Many people may be familiar ness Day-eight hours off with
Monday,
7 p.m., jurtior high cafete.
with the acronym "SSI." The Sup- pay.
ria.
Public
invited.
They were Dwight Adkins of
plemental Security Income (SSI)
· program has been around since Point Pleasant. BiiJ BB!ker of Point
DARWIN- Bedford Townsl\ip
1974. But many people may not Pleasant, Carol Barr of Leon,
Trustees
will meet Monday at 7
know that a person Can simultane- Kathy Co;~~: of Gallipolis, Amy
p.m.
at
the
townhall.
ously get both Social Security and Cran1l: of Point Pleasant, Lori Fox
SSI benefits. Recently, I worked on of Gallipolis, Dawn Goodwin of
POMEROY - Disabled Ameria case thaf illustrates how the two Point Pleasant, Judy Hennessey of
can Velerans and the Ladies Auxilprograms are supposed to work Bidwell, Kathy Ingels of Patriot,
iary wiU met Monday at 7 p.m. at
together. I'll change the name of Debbie Irvin of Point Pleasant,
the hall, 124 Butternut Avenue in
CHELSEA PAPE
the person involved but use her Marissa Marchi of GallillOlis: Sue
·
Pomeroy.
Persinger of GallipohS Ferry,
ease to explain the programs.
Mary Smith , a 65 year-old Robin Roht of Ravenswood, Pam
RUTLAND • The Leading
domestic worker who had never Snyder of Gallipolis Ferry and
Creek
Conservancy District will be
been married, came in to file for Carol White of Point PleasanL
'
closed
Monday ,in obsel'Yance or
In addition, employees who sucThC second birthday &lt;if Chelsea Columbus
her Social Security retirement benDay. Water billS due on
efits. Although she worked regular- cessfully completed the fitness por- Pape, daughter of Allen and Carol Saturday will be considered on
ly for the past 40 years, she never tion of the program received a t· Pape, was observed with a party time, therefore:, payments received
earned much money and sometimes shirt. They were Lisa Arbogast of · recently. .
Tuesday will be Oli time payments.
· A teddy bear theme was carried
her employers failed to withhold Point Pleasant, Connie Carte of
an!l pay Social Security taxes for Point Pleasant, Louise Early of out with a cake and other refreshTUESDAY
her. Those two factors coupled to Point Pleasant, Cindy Hess of Gal- ments.
.
.
make her Social Security benefit lipolis, Gina Jordan or Point PleasRUTLAND- Rutland Village
ant and Joe Whittington of Gallipolow-only $342 per month.
Attending were her brother, Council meets T~y. 7 p.m., at
(Let me ma:ke a plug for domes- lis Ferry.
Josh~a; ~ra~dparents, Larry and
For more infonnation about the Phyllis 0 Bnen and John IMid PattY · the Rutland Civic Center.
tic workers: if you hire someone to
clean your house, work in your ~ar­ Pleasant Valley.Hospital Employee · Pape; great-grandparents, Bob and
den, etc., you are legally requrred Fitness Program, call the PVH Pub- Florence .Adams and Nial and VirHARRISONVILLE - Har10 ,pay Social Security taxes for the lic Relations Department at (304) ginmS~.
risonville
Senior Gitizens, blood
.
perso!l. Otherwise, that person will 675-4340, ext. 326.
preuure
clinic,
Tuesday, 10 a.m. to
Others attending wore Jim
)l'i&gt;hahly face .the same situation in
noon
at·
the
·IOWIIhoiiSC.
Members
O'Brien, Raymond~. Linda,
A &amp;lobalfeat
which Mary Smith now finds her.
brlni
a
'
c
oveml
dish
for
the
dinner
Dare, Derek, Darin and L'indaay
..
self- years of hard work and'linle
with
meeting
following.
All
memTeaford, Shirley Sayre and girls,
Five hundred yeant aco.ln t4t2, the Kelly Rizer, Diane and Kyle Wolfe bersaaend.
Social Security compensation.).
In Mary's case, the Social Secu- year Christopher Columbus dlacov- and Lisa Pape.
the New World, Martln Behalin
n!Y claims representative lalked to ered
a ~nnan traveler and eo~rnocra:
POMEROY - Ohio Eta Phi
her about the SSI 2rogram. The pher, constructed the flntt.terrestrlal
·Sending
carda
and
gifts
were
Cbapter,
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority,
representative explamed that SSI slobe for his native city of Nuremwill
Tueallay at 7 .p.m. ll the
Chelsea's
other
pea~-pMidplr~.
p~ys people who are age 65 or
burg. Influenced by the ancleot &amp;eOI·
Rex
and
Mary
O'Bneil
and
Hersenior
cilizens
center in PomeroY.
older or people under age 65 wtth rapher Ptolemy, It iilo attempted to
schel
and
Eileen
Roush,
Kenda
Come
cbesled
for
Halloween. Sher·
disabilities. In addition, to qualify include 10111e CODtemporary ftMwl·
T'f
Chapman
and
Tammy
Bacluler
Campbell,
Misay
and
Macy
Rees
for SSI, a tJ6rson must have limited edge of seovaphy, but It showed 110
and _Rod and Marjorie Grimm.
details of lands beyond the Atlantic.
are hostesses.
~
By ED PETERSON
Social Security
Manager in Athens

day. Also pictured Is Amy Carmin. A ~ariety of
herbal and other crafts were featured as well as
antiques by Russ and Hope Moore and· beans .
and corn bread by Bank One.
·

Community -Names in the news-..

MONDAY
RUTLAND - Revival, Rutland
Community Chtirch, Oct. 18, 7
p.m. Elbert B!IJ'I'OW, speaker. Rev.
Dewey King invites ille public.

..

'*'"'

·1 Section. 10 . . . 25
A llulttmedUI Inc. "--poper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, TUesday, OctQber 13, 1992

·or

0562. (In Canada, send $4.45.)

Low tonight In upper 40s.
Partly cloudy. Wednesday, partly cloudy. High In mid·70s.

~c:~~g~~~uc~un~~~~IT

Effective Oct. 5, Middleport
will now obtain building permits
through the Department of Industrial Relations, Columbus. The village for the past several yean has
been workin$ with the MB{ietta
office. All butlding plans. ·specification approvals, and inspections
will now be handled through the
Columbus office.
·
The mayor reported that Lowell
Anderson, the village's health
insurance representative, has
advised that rates will increase five
percent in 1993.
Reports Presented
Clerk-Treasurer Terri Hockman's financial report for September showed a balance of
$42,972.61 in all village funds.
Total receipts for the month were
$109,664.97 while disbursements
were $135,956.78.
Funds with balances were as
foDows:
-Fire equipmen!, $1,921.28,
with no receapts and disbursements
of$178.55 ..
transportation,
-Public

$15 .231.17 ; w'ith receipts of
$7,505 .40 and disbursements of
$13,396.13.
..
-Water system improvements,
$2,209.55 , with no receipts or disbursements.
-Water $3,748.03, with
· receipts of $14,334.92 and disbursements of ~17,891.20.
-Water
meter
trusts,
$23,550.43 with receipts of $3go
and no disbursement:;.
:
-Ohio ·Department of Natural
Resources Waterways, $92;564.70,
no receipts, no disbursements.
-Revolving loan fund,
$10,032 .82 , with receipts of
$917.45 and no disbursements.'
-R'efuse fund, $4,557 .54, with
receipts of $9.297.20 and ~burse­
ments of $9,059.
-Litter control, $4,274.65, with
no receip.ts or disbursements.
-Betsy Ross Housing Project,
$35,046.24, with receipts of
$35,140. and disbursements of
$270.50.
Funds showing derocits were as
Continued on page 3

Eastern will observe annual
homecoming Saturday night
By BRIAN J, REED
Sentinel News StaiT
The corridors of Eastern High
School will ring with the sou!lds of
school ~pirit this week as ~ornecoining activities get underway.
Festivities will peak on Saturday
night, as the Eagles ho~t their rival,
the Southern Tornadoes.
According to Nancy Larkins,
student council advisor, a host of
activities are being planned, many
of which are being revived at the
school after several years. .
As always, a homecoming
queen will be crowned. Senior candidates for the title are Tracy Murphy, daughter of Robert and Sina
Murphy of Tuppers Plains, escort'
ed by Chad Griffith, grandson of
Mr. and Mrs. Ken Griffith of Tujlpers Plains; Stephanie Otto, daughter of Joyce Otto, Pomeroy. escorted by Chris Carleton, son of Mike
and. Candy · Carleton, .Tuppers
Plains; and Heather Farley, daughter of Larry and Louise Farley,
Long Bottom, escorted by David
Woolard, son of Wayne and Jan
Woolard, Chester.
Underclassmen y;ho will serve
as attendants are: Amber Well and
Phillip Marcinko, eleventh grade;
Susan Brewer and Vic VanMeter,
tenth grade; JeMifer Mora and Eric
Hollon, ninth grade; Patsy Aeiker
and Patrick Aeiker, eighth grade; ·
Kellie Bailey and .Brandon Buckley, seventh grade. Flower girls
will be Jessica Kehl, daughter of

Ernie Watterson.
.
Watterson arrested Leona Kay
Johnson,30,ofMiddleport,at8:45
a.m. at Fast 4-U. Watterson was ob.
~ serving the office area of the store,
11-week old ·Labrador Retnever, · after a request from store owner
from Pilot. Dogs •. lnc., in Colum- Frank Herald. Herald told Watterbus. She will proVIde a foster home son money was coming up missing
for. ~e puppy as well .as care and from the office.
traamng unul Jacob .as about 12
Using a camera, Watterson obmonth~ old. Pooler 1s a seventh served Johnson allegedly taking an
grader m the Eastern Local School undisclosed amount of money from
District
..
·
thcofficeqesk.
Ptl!-!t J?ogs, Inc., ts a nonprofit
Johnson was arraigned before
organ\zauon chartered by. me State Magistrate Jdhn S. Reynolds and
of Ohio m 1950 for the smgle pur- released on $1 000 bond
pose of training guide dogs and
'
·
their blind masters in•the satisfactory use of such guide dogs. These
animals are presented to the sight-.
less of any and every age, race and
religion, whQ come from all'over
the country to receive the training.
·Pilot Dogs, Inc.• gives its ttained
animals at absolutely no cost to
tl!ose qualified blind persons. The
blind person, his family or friend&amp;,
are not required to pay for this service. The trained dog, equipment,
room and board for four weeks of
in-residence training, and transportation are provided.
.
l&gt;ilot Dogs. Inc., is supported
entirely by public contributions . .
There is no Federal, State, County
. or City aid. The organizatioJt is a
taX deductible charity. Lions Clubs
support this service to the si'htless
and readily assist the~ m rendering financial sl!Pport and indi·
vidual help'to the blind in their specific areas.
The guide dog is. obtained '
through donation. Four breeds are
being used for this work: German
Shepherd, Doberman Pinscher,
Boxer and Labrador Retriever· •
trained between the ages of one and
two and one-half years. MaleS and
females are used, bowevcr, females
are preferred.
rn addition to the use of adult
dogs donated to the orgailizaiion,
Pilot Dogs also conducts a breeding project and puPPY raising pro· EASTERN HOMECOMING . CANDI·
gram. The dogs m this program are
DATES ·One or tllese younaladles 'wlll be
raised in private homes until they
erownecl HomecomiDI Queen at Eastern Hlah
Continued o.ii page 3
School on Saturday qlabt. They are, 1-r, Heather

Gary and Rita Kehl, Reedsville;
and Chelsea Young, daughter of
Randy and ~ia Young, Racine.
Crown bearers will be Tyler Winebr~nner, son of Gr~g an~ Paige
Wmebrenner, Tuppers Plams and
Kenneth Amsbary, son of James
and Merry Amsbary, Pomeroy.
Homecoming queens from yean
past will be honored during the
half-time show Saturday, and those
who have not been contacted b}:
letter ar.e asked to contact the
school as soon as possible if they
are able to partacipate . Also,
Larkins reported that the school's
first queen, from the 1957 prom,
wiD be honored.
Grades nine through.12 are bard
at work on floats for Saturday
night's game, and' those floats will
. be on display and shown at halftime. A spirit train will be displayed on the·front lawn. Students
will participate. in daily Spirit
Week activities this weel:, including Blackout Tornadoes Day,
where students dress in black clothing; Costume Day; Golden Oldies
Day, which involves wearing costumes from the SO's, 60's and 70's;
Go Bananas Day, for which stu·dents ate encouragl)d to wear funny
hair and clothing styles; and Green
and White Spirit Day.
A reception 10 honor EHS alumni will be held in the cafeteria after
the game until midnight. Refreshments will be served and a tour of
the building will be available.

v..-.

Farley, Stephanie Otto and Tracy Murphy.
ious activities !Ire planned lhroqboat tile week at EHS in c:onju'nctlon with hoaieromilla. (Sen·
tinel Photo by"Brian J, Reed)
·

. I

'

. .&gt;

I"

•

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="328">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9622">
                <text>10. October</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="33869">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="33868">
              <text>October 12, 1992</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="2133">
      <name>chase</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1443">
      <name>hess</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="3314">
      <name>vennari</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
