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\

Page B6 • The Daily Sentirel '

www.mydailysentinel.com

28th Annual DTW Championship
goes to Birkhofer
.
'

'

•

Wednesday, October 22, 2008
"

'

Bv ScOTT WoLFE

whale of a show. Clanton led became . casualties of the of the most impressive races
the parade through traffic as high-flying Birkhofer. More was the Jim Dunn Memorial
McCreadie and Colonel was still to come.
where Carl Short upped the
CHILLICOTHE - The Steve Francis, Ashland, KY
Turns three and four laid ante by paying the winner
Dirt
Track
World marched back into con- down heavy rubber, while $2 ,500 or offering him a
Championship
always tention . Lying in wait, turns one and two held a lit- spot in the DTWC. Driver
brings some type of magic to Birkhofer-at this point-was tie more moisture, making for the JDM were drawn out
it. Saturday's 28th annual mapping· his strategy for the the track a different kind of• of a hat prior to hot laps.
DTWC by gottarace.com finale .
fast
on
both · ends .
A pair of West V1rginia
before most likely its largest
McCreadie bid for the lead Birkhofer's hybrid mount drivers Joe . Loudin and
K-C crowd was no excep- a~ainst Clanton, nearly rub- . and half MARS-car seemed Corey Conley paced the Jim
lion. "Dominating!" That bmg . doors, but the to have the best handle on · Dunn Memorial star-studded
one word is an understate- Watertown, NY driver lost the high banks, stretching line-up to the green. Nick
· ment, . but the closest word the handle on ,lap 17, then his lead to a full 'straight by Bocook, however, brought
Webster had to offer in recovered to remain in the lap 68 .
•
things ' to a halt ·when his
describing Brian Birkhofer's top 10. McCreadie's miscue
McCreadie picked up a mount caught the end of the
most•prestigious career win. came just as Birkhofer had few of the positions he had wall and spiraled wildly
What started as a firefight in made it p. four-way race for lost early in the race , while back toward the infield as
Carl Short's premier event, number one. The front trio Bloomquist, · Rick Eckert the rear half the field took
quickly_turned into a cake- scattered as McCreadie and Jimmy Mars battled for evasive action.
~alk as Muscatine , Iowa shuffled to midpack with fourth. Francis regained the
Conley took the lead on
AP photo
driver Brian Birkhofer Clanton continuing his second spOt on lap 73, but the restart with a hard-chargpulled off the $50 ,000 victo- charge up front. Clanton Clanton did not go down ing Eddie Carrier, Jr. close in
ry in the late model portion shut the door hard on Birky without a fight. retaking the tow. With one lap in the
of the DTWC program at on the 23rd circuit, unknow- • runner-up slot two laps later. books, a caution waved for a
Jim Nier's K-C Raceway ingly sticking his finger · in If passing points counted in spinning Tim Dohm. Five
near Chillicothe.
the flood gate that was soon the outcome, that duo·would more action-packed cireuits
have topped the field in a passed before Freddy Smith
. It was indeed a magical about to burst.
perfonnance and Birky was
Clantori, Birkhofer and battle that K-C voice Bruce lost an oil line to bring out . SURRY Va . J:AP) - ly." .
the house magician . The vet- Francis S!JUnded more like a Hines called a pack _ of another yellow.
The plea deal, if approved,
Fonner ~FL quarterback
eran driver turned much law finn than a high-flying sharks looking for blood .
Carrier quickly ·made Michael Vick plans to plead also would satisfy the counmore than a hat-trick in tam- stock car trio, but the three The intense fighting , howev- quick business of Conley, guilty to state dogfighting ty 's need to hold him ·
ing the world's toughest dirt indeed laid.down the law as er, all the more took its toll opening the door for hot charges, a step that could accountable for the grisly
track stars before a packed the race's top performers. as Birkhofer stretched it out shoes Jeep VanWorme( and allow him to qualify for an crimes he bankrolled and
bouse at K-C Raceway. The Crown Jewels first cau- to a full half-lap.
Matt Miller. By this time early release from federal participated in : at a rural
~irkhofer's victory aboard tion came for a stalled
McCreadie worked his Donnie Moran had charged priso11 and into a halfway house he owned there.
his
Mars/Birkhofer Davey Johnson on the 24th way by Eckert in a great run from 16th to 6th while house , court papers show.
"I ' m not trying to make
Chassis/Pro-Power Engines, circuit sending him pit-side back to the top five just as Miller had gunned it from
suffer,"
In a motion filed Oct. 15 him
Chevrolet _Monte Carlo SS for repairs.
.
Birkhofer lapped the 12th 9th to third; shuffling in Surry County Circuit Commonwealth's Attorney
Now Scott Bloomquist· place car of Josh Richards ,Conley back · to fourth . Court, Vick 's attorneys Gerald Poindexter said in a
equaled his biggest career
Jf~~s~rt!J~ J Ste~isi~~~ was poised for a run to the on lap 85. Absolute domina- VanWonner had come ont of asked to have him enter his telephone interview. "I'm
Trucking entry outclassed ,.front. The race's big three, · tion in a landslide run , nowhere in a hurry as he to plea by video teleconfer' jusl · trying to make him .
the rest of the field in a huge however, outdistanced the Birkhofer blitzed the field , was in fast-forward in a ence. A ·hearing · on the account for what he's done."
h Tennessee -stalwart and lapping lOth place Jimmy 12th-to-second run.
motion is scheduled for Oct.
Vick pleaded guilty to fedfashion , lapping all but t e began the second long run of Owens with six laps to go. The .fast surface of the K- 30, Surry County Circuit eral conspiracy charges tied
top nine cars. Like an
Ohympian, Birkhofer paced the race. Additionally, the The distance of victory C high banks made for plen- Court administrator Sally to the dogfightin~ operation
Memorial winner translated into a seven sec- ty ofpassing throughout the Neblett said Tuesday.
last summer and 1s serving a
to the lead on lap 37, then Jim Dunn
.
flexed his muscle 10 take the Eddie Carrier; Jr. continued ond lead at the finish.
field, as announcer James
The court papers note that 23-month term. Three conGold , decimating the field to to charge, by competitors in
Clanton brought home Essex said "hang on", as allowing Vick to appear on victed co-defendants also
that of also-rans.
his effort to make his second ;U"ter claiming a per- excitement escalated to a two-way video would save face local charges. The U.S.
"''m kind of teared up DTWC/Arizona
Sports sonal victory over fe!l~w late race climax. Carrier's tile government the consid- ·Bureau of Prisons lists
right now," said the winner Shirts decision a profitable combatant Francis . with Rocket was set on "launch" erable expense of transport- Vick's projected release date
in victory lane. "I apJ?reciate one.
· Bloomquist and McCreadie as Miller tried to pull &lt;Iff the ing him from prison in as July 20, 2009 .
Leavenworth , Kan., to Surry
what . I've got. This race
The next several laps saw rounding out the top five.
hat trick.
Vick will have three years
means a lot, I've finished Birkhofer stalk his . prey. · Wi.th only two cautions,
The Buckeye Bandit County. His guilty plea of federal probation upon
second at the DTWC twice, Straight and fast, Birkhofer the race was run in only 37 Miller found the Salt Rock would also allow him to pur- his release from prison, and
and finally ...finally, we got watched Clanton's mount minutes with the checkered Flash Carrier in traffic near- sue a halfway house pro- the . deal offered by
it...$50,000 and the DTWC tail-off into the turns. Birky flag waving at 10:38, send- ly making the pass on lap 21. gram.
Poindexter would tack on an
Under federal rules , Vick unspecified jail sentence,
trophy. I'd like to thank Carl took the lead on lap 37 as ing a well-satisfied crowd Scrubbing off speed Miller
Short and everyone who Clanton went high and his back to· the ·camp sites for had to reset as a torrid side- is ineligible to be released to which would be suspended,
makes this race possible. foe do\'e evasively low to post
race
festivities.. by-side battle developed. A a Residential Re-entry aild an additional · year of
Keeping this race going and create a high speed sand- Birkhofer was joined by lap 23 caution may have Center in the federal system probation in the county, he
bringing it to K-C has been a wich around the soon-to-be family and friends in a wild been Carrier's savior as the until . any ·pending charges said.
Poindexter s~id he's n~t
great thing for racing, and a lapped car of .RJ . Conley. victory lane celebration, WV ace distanced himself against him are resolved. ·
In
a
statement,
Vick
attorsure
how quickly the judge
Francis and Dan Schlieper where he received the tower- from his nemesis on the
great thing for me personally.
. made contact ~n the 41~t go- ing
DTWC .
~Y restart and went on to the neys Billy Martin and would rule on the motion.
.Lawrence Woodward said
"The car was awesome ' round , sendmg Schlieper gottarace.com charnpmnsh1p win.
If )ll!nnitted by a judge, ·
tonight "
continued into a tail spin and to the taiL ·.tropi)y and Crown Jewel
"Matt (Miller) was a little their client "is committed 'to Vick s video parllc\Pation.ip
Birkhofer. "I could put it The laps clicked off q~i~kly champio~sh~p ring.
harder on the right rear than taking responsibility for his the plea hearing would not
anywhere on the track. A lot as Davey Johnson reJomed
Roundmg out the top ten I was, but mine was starting actions. He is hopeful that, be the .first time he has parelectronically.
of people have helped me - the field 17 laps down .
behind Birkhofer were ..to go (away) fast right through this motion , the trial ticipated
court
will
allow
him
to
finalPrison
officials
in Kansas
Tim
Nine shy of .the halfway Shane · Clanton, St~ve before the last yellow,"
Jimmy
Mars ,
ly.
resolve
these
matters
and
have allowed the former
McCreadie - my crew. mark,
Franc1s ba~ged F~c1s, Scott B_loomqu!st, exclaimed Carrier. "I was
We've worked hard at this Clanton for second. Dnvers Tim McCreadie, Rwk really glad to see the cau- put the charges behind him Atlanta Falcons star to listen
and we feel we put together jockeyed for position deep Eckert,)immy Mars, Darrell tion. I needed that to give so that he can begin to focus via telephone line to each of
some preny good race cars.· into the pack, using every ~anigan, Damn Miller and my tires a &lt;;}lance to ·cool on his future and to prepare his several bankruptcy hearto be reunited with h1s fami- ings in recent month~If I'm turning right out there, mch of the fast K-C turf. J1mmy Owens.
.
off."
I feel like I'm not going any- H1gh agamst the ~all,
Bear Lake, PA qnyer
Then came the big queswhere. Sometimes at some Jimmy Mars sent a tra1l of Chub Frank, the defendmg tion. would Carrier take the
tracks it hurts me , but it sparks, while some driver's DTWC champ, claimed the money and run? "Before we
(keeping the car straight) hugged the bottom and Dirtondirt.com $1,000 fast came out here , my boss
was fast here and usually is everywhere in between to time aw3!d with a . 14:674 (Carl Grover) told me what
pretty good to me ."
·
find the needed speed. As clockmg m the field of 106 we .were going to do . You
.. Shane Clanton , Locust Birkhofer widened his lead cars.
.
know where I'm going to be,
Grove , GA hooked np first at to half a straight, Clanton
The preliminary heats put that trophy (:Jim Dunn
ST. PETERSBURG ,' Fla. the top rung- "Go Dz-illa,"
the drop of the green over and Francis battled door-to- were like features and the B- Memorial hardware) away.
pole-sitter Tim McCreadie. door as if they were bolted mains like mega-features. We're gonna race. You never (AP) - Mat,t Stairs looked someone scribbled on a post.
Clanton quickly opened up a together as one.
Not only were \he competi- know what can happen. This toward the roof at Tropicana No dents up there, however,
The Muscatine, lA ace tors big-name racei:s, but the (the DTWC) is what we Field and took aim at a famil- because no one has hit a ball
five-car-length lead. Threeiar target.
that hioh. ·
wide, four-wide and scat- . was back in traffic at the action was major league as came for." .
The World Series has seen
"I try to hit those &lt;;atwalks
tered all across the fast 3/8 mid-point with a padded well. Tight, competitive raeMike · Marlar transferred
with
every
swin!l,"
·
the
all
sorts of bizarre backdrops
mile high banks, the field of lead over Clanton and .ing action highlighted the after winning the · first B- ·
lumbefJack
said
m
recent
years: a sw1rnmmg
Philadelphia
dirt racing's elite were Francis. Some of the best action, that set the stage for main and earlier posting a
Thesday,
a
day
before
the
pool,
a
Disney
pile of fake
aggressively putting on a names in the business Saturday's main event. One dismal 66th.fast time.
·
World
Series
opener. rocks and a center-field hill.
"Really, I want to hit one . Suffice to say, these four
over them. But that's a long concentric rings that start 59
way up."
feet overhead ·and support the
How high?
tilted roof will !let the most
The climb at the Tampa attention. Espec1ally because
Bay Rays' quirlj:y park starts a weird set of ground rules
Bv RACHEL Zou
1918.
manta ray ~ a fish with fins team's nickname.
behind Section 300, Row governs balls that clang off
ASSOCIATED PRESS
The Billy Goat curse still that look like horns on a
The thornier religious ques- DO , Seat 7. Go through the . them - some are home runs,
haunts the Chicago Cubs. In demon.
tion behind Tampa's nickblue double doors some are fouls, some are in
Devil ... be gone!
1945 , the Greek immigrant
Until this season, the Rays name is this: Does God care locked,
into
a
tight
shaft, then up a play.
For 10 years, they were a owner of · the Billy Goat hadn't even had a winning about the name or the fate of 13-rung ladder.
"Has there ever been so
a team?
lousy team with a fiendish Tav~rn damned the team season. .
.
puts you on the low- much .talk about catwalks
nickname: the Tampa Bay · when he was kept out of a "You take the 'Devil' out of
The NHL's New Jersey estThat
catwlilk,
the D ring. It's before?" Phillies outfielder
Devil Rays. Then the club World Series game because the Devil Rays," said Boston Devils haven't been cursed,
46
steep
steps
to the C level .. Geoff Jenkins asked.
exorcised the "Devil" from its he wanted to bring a goat to shortstop Alex Cora, pointing winning the Stanley Cup
52
more
to
Band
a final42 to
An(! the ·Phillies have
name, and suddenly Tampa Wrigley Field. Chicago, of to the s~. "and Jesus helps three times - although the
the
top
of
the
Trop,
where
the
ample
reason to be conBay is in the World Series.
course, hasn't been bilck to them out. ' ·
Buffalo Sabres lost the 1999
· the p1tc
· h- the series since.
Casual use of "dev1'l" ,·n finals with star Miroslav A ring -hovers a dizzying 194 cerned, because there's a
Was ·n the hi ttmg,
over home plate.
good chance they'll come
ing , the coaching - .or the
How
seriously
does team names and elsewhere Satan (pronounced shuh- feet
"I
wouldn
't
want
to
'
g
o
mto·pJay.
hand of God?
Chicago take it? Earlier this troubles Christians who liter- TAN) on their roster.
there,''
Stairs
said.
BJ. Upton and . Evan
And a team with a nick"! told my wife before the month, the Cubs had a Greek ally interpret Old Testament
of
stairs,
they're
Longoria
homered off them
Speaking
season started, 'Whoever is in Orthodox priest bless the passages against witchcraft name God might favor - the
· ·
d
home dugout and spread holy and the occult, said·- Larry Los Angeles Angels - lost to 3-foot-wide metal slats, giv- during the AL playoffs. All
th at orgamzallon
rna e, to water before their first-round Eskrid~e of the Institute. for the Red Sox iii the American ing anyone on them a daunt- told , 98 fair balls have
me, a very interesting deciing view Sttai)lht down. Oh, clan!led the catwalks in the
tudy of American League first-round series.
sion,''' said Les Steckel, a for- playoff series with the the
and
there's a b1t of graffiti at stadium's II seasons.
Christopher Evans, a promer NFL coach and head of Dodgers. Chicago got swept. Evangelieals at Wheaton
•
th F 11
h'
c
Still, when . the suffenng College iillllinois.
fessor of church his~ at
e e ows •P of hristian does end for some teams, fans
Yet there is little outcry for Colgate Rochester Cmzer
·
Athletes, an evangelical min- insist it's divine iiltervention chat_1ge.
Divmity School in Rochester,
istry. "Six months later, look lifting players beyond their
In college sports, Duke's N.Y., said most sports fans
"'hat ha(pens."
· ·
·
1muts.
. th dar
. teams have been called the mistake superstition for reliB.eI1e
at
k forces are
Think Boston's Cun Blue ~viis since the 1920s gion.
at work in all facets of life Schilling in 2004 and his - a monicker that seems to
A Red Solt fan, Evans said
runs throughout.many reli-· bloody sock, a miracle on the have originated with a heroic that in the 2004 World Series
gions. And even though the- mound.
French regiment in World he feared that if he watched
Fast-forwara to Tampa's War I, acconiing to school the game on TV, he'd jinx.
ologians universally will tell
you that God takes no rooting Game 7 American League archives . The name caused them. And he said he knows
mterest in sports, fans often Championship Series win remarkably little stir at the other' Boston fans who
OUr . . . .-.y " ' - ........... IN'.,.."."'-""'-"".., .... ..,.,., w.
h - a... ....... ...,. ttMI fW7n
throutlftovt Ohltl.
manage to fmd signs of Sunday night over the Red school, despite its Methodist believed that they had to
•
• ,.,_ ,.._ ... .,., 'PI1'
damnation and redemption Solt to advance to the World roots, and hasn't stopped watch every minute for the
everywhere - particularly in Series
against
the Duke froln winniilg ACC and team to win.
Reed &amp; Baur Insurance Agency
baseball.
.
Philadelphia Phillies.
national titles.
·
'The rational part of , our
220 East Main Street
Until their 2004 World
The Rays won the pennant
Eskridge says he occasion- brain sort of recognizes that a
Pomeroy, OH 4S769
Series win, the Red Sox were less than a year after they put ally hears a story of protests lot of the curse .sruff is silly,''
www.reedbaur.com
opeJ'IIling under the so-called the Devil behind them. Many by parents of young athletes. said Evans, CO&lt;author of "'The
jdi lion@reedbaur.com
. Curse ofthe Bambino, denied fans in Tampa Bay still call · Steckel says ministries like Faith of 50 Million: Baseball,
a Word Series win for trading the team by its old name, his still suppon players and Religion and American
Babe Ruth to New York in which refers to a kind . of coaches no matter what their Cull!Jre."
SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

·Recession fears,
weak earnings stoke
stock selling, A2_-

In this Aug:
27, 2007 file
photo, former NFL
quarterback
Michael Vick
makes a
statement
after pleading guilty to
a federal
dogfighting
charge in
Richmond,
Va. Vick ·
plans to
plead guilty
to state dogfighting
charges next
week.

Michael Vick ready to
plead guilty on Va. charges

'

•
~

Printed on 100%
Re-cycled Newspri~t ~"

·.• High school football
previews. See Page 81

BY BRIAN

In--~

-

J.

REED

BREEOOMYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

MEROY - A woman was in custody of th~ Meigs
County Sheriff. Wednesday afternoon after she allegedly
robbed the Peoples Bank branch in Rutland, dressed in a
Halloween costume.
·
The Federal Bureau of Investigation will take the lead
in prosecuting Billie Jo Sayre , 28, Middleport . Sheriff
· Robert Beegle said 'Sayre would be transported to the
Southeastern Ohio Regional Jail in Nel sonville to stay
overnight and will be turned over to federal authorities
on Thursday.
·
·
Beegle sa1d Sayre was arrested at a Middleport residence
after a tip that the vehicle used in the robbery was at that
location. Deputies Scott Trussell, Adam Smith and Rick
Smith took Sayre into custody whel] she arrived at the residence in another car.
Beegle said Sayre admitted to the robbery, and said she
had been consulting with a minister and had decided to
turn herself in wben deputies located her. She did not provide a motive . ·
·
·
• DAR plans
L Beegle said Sayre allegedly' entered the bank shortly after
~ a.m., artned with an automatic weapon , and threatened ,
100th annive~ry.
bank tellers. He said she then forced one teller to enter the
,See Page A3
vault and fill the bag with money.
• VMH employees
Beegle did not report how much money was taken, but
said
it was a "significant" amount. Deputie.s Randy Arnold,
gather for reunion.
Mark Griffin and Danny Leonard recovered the money,
·See Page A3'
Sayre's silver face mask and other evidence on Beech
• M$. Crites to
Grove Road yesterday afternoon . The gun believed to have
·been used in the robbery was also recovered from the
· speak at bean dinner.
·
Page . AS '. .. ,, ..;;it
... ,..1"- . Middleport residence.
Beegle said the suspect is believed to have driven the car ·
~tf;
to and from the bank, and said lhere a:re no other wspects
in the case at this time. .
·

Above: Sheriff's Deputy
Scott Trussell escorts Billie
Jo Sayre into the sheriff's
· department after she was
· apprehenc:fed yesteroay
afternoon.

INSIDE

Brian J. Reed/photo

Left: Sheriff Robert Beegle
is pictured with cash recov·
ered from the J:Obbery of
the Peoples Bank branch in
Rutland yesterday afternoon. The case will tje
picked up by the FBI and
prosecuted in federal court.

'see

Reactions
to bank
robl&gt;ery

Cr8zy catwalks at the
top of lropicana Field

A heavenly result for Devll•less Rays

'True Marauder,'~

.• Birthday observed.
·See Page AS

WEATHER

.

•

Delalta on Pllge A3.

·.

Classifieds
·•
Comics

B2-4

Bs

Editorials

A4

Places to go

A6

Sports
Weather

~- IJ!.

8 Section

A3

•

Phot~ cGUrtesy of
.

the Moijsji.;;-'
.

County Sheriff's Office

Testimony taken at AMP hearing
BY BETH SERGENT
BSEAGENtC MVOAILYSENTINEL COM

RACINE - In one of the briefest
public
hearings so far in the saga to
Bv BETH SERGENT
BSERGENTOM,YOAILYSENTINEL.COM
bring the $2.9 billion American
Municipal Power-Ohio power plant to
. RUTLAND_: When res- . Meigs County, last night the Ohio
idents in Rutland woke up PQwer Siting Board took formal testiyesterday morning the last mony both for and against the proposed
thing many were thinkiog transmission line route from the plant.
was their 'local bank would · Less than 10 people gave formal
be robbed but that is exactly testimony before the OPSB witly'
what happened.
regards to AMP-Ohio's pending
Soun, the quiet streets of application to obtain the transmission
Rutland were buzzing with: line · route and only one spoke
"Did you hear? Did the out with concerns al:\out the transmisb&amp;nk really get robbed?" · sion line route . Nachy Kanfer,
Jim Birchfield, owner of Columbus, of the Sierra Club's
Rutland Department Store, National Coal Campaign, raised sevsaid after it happened law eral concerns about the transmission
enforcement · were in his line routes including electromagnetic
store, asking to see his sur- field radiation which he said had been
veillan~e tapes.
proven in some studies to affect paceBrewce Martin, owner of makers and show an increase in childSkatopia outside of Rutland hood leukemia. Kanfer said AMPwho was shopping at the Ohio's plari to test the radiation
department store, said law seemed to rely on residents contactenforcement had visited his ing them first te determine dan~er&lt;:&gt;us
place, askin~ if he'd seen readings and he went on to ask 1f h1gh
the suspect s car. · Martin readings were found, how would they
said he had seen it in town ·be controlled?
but it hadn't been to his
Kanfer asked how AMP-Ohio would
place, adding: "Skaters · calculate stray voltage from the lines
don't rob banks."
and if there was some sort of alternative
Rutland
Postmaster if there were a leak? He said both the
Margaret Edwards said after preferred and alternate routes for the
it happened, she immediately lines were ¥essentially the same" in that
locked the door to the post . they impact ·wetlands and cut down.
office, reported it to her supe- trees. He asked if it was possible to use
riors iii Colun\tlus apd then a preexisting line i~stead of upgrades or
reoJ;lCned the branch. Many could burying the lines underground .be
Beth Sergentlphoto
busmesses in the county had ·an option? Kanfer also asked the OPSB Nachy Kanter (pictured) of the Sierra Club's National Coa,l Campaign gives tesa similar, fearful reaction, about
noise
pollution,
dust timony before the Ohiu Power Siting Board at. last mghts meetmg_d1scus~1ng
especially I&lt;X;ill banks .
emisslons and how the ecology/wildlife transmission line routes for the American Mumc1pal Power Generatmg Stat1on,
Roma Sayre, vice · presia coal-lirec:l power piant proposed for Letart Falls.
·
PleueMiiHMrl,a.A5 .
dent of Hpme National
Bank in Racine said the
rumor that any of their
branches had also been
robbed was false. Still,
Sayre said the bank hils
BY CHARLENIE HOEFUCH
currently on hand and t~at
As for the increase in ~ost . salt to the heavy use _1~1
preca!ltionary measures· _in HOEFliCHOMYDAILYSENnNELCOM the county will be buymg the engmecr s&amp;ys wh1le the year and the lack of ability
place for these types of Sit800 tons more soon to fill price is high. the county ca11 to increase the amount
uations and yesterday
POMEROY - While the the salt shed . As for the cost, handle it. Last year salt cost mined. "The inventories are
implemented a semi-lock- price of salt and apparent he acknowledges it's high the coun ty $52.22 a ton. down nationwide. and when
down. The bank. never shortages of suppl y are ere- - "twice as much as the "We 're going to have the inve ntories go down , the
closed to customers but the ating ·problems for many cost last year." The county enough salt. It's just expen- price goes up," commented
lobby remained locked for counties, Mei gs County will be paying $107 a ton sive," he added_. "Our coun- the count y engineer.
a time with employees let- Engineer Eugene Triplett for salt deli vered to the ty roads are gomg to be JUSt
Meanwhile the Ohio
tins customers in and out says Meigs C9unty will be shed. Triplett said about half fine this winter. We 'II h~ve Department ofTransportation
of the branch. · .
just fme and has .plenty of will be mixed with cinders enmtgh salt As for the pnce, (ODOT) is gearing up for the
The bank robbery iS just salt to take care of the coun- : so that the county will have "Everyone 1s hurt by. that."
2008-2009 winter season by.
the latest crime that has set · ty 'roads this.winter.
the right mixtu~ for differTn plett attnbuted the h1gh
Triplett said 250 tons is ent road conditions.
pnce and lack of access to
-PieiSe see Salt. A5
PI l i N - RNtlloiU. A5

County engineer sees no shortage of road salt

-~

·- -·

•

.

___ ......

...

�'

'

•

ACROSS THE NATION

.The·Daily Sentinel

Merval index dropped more
than 16 percent. after falling
II
percent
Tuesday.
NEW YORK - A late Argentina's'
president
afternoon barrage of selling announced plans to nationsent the Dow Jones industri- alize private pension funds
als tumbling almost 700 to protect retirees from the
points .as weak corporate global tinancial crisi ~.
earnings stoked fears that
World leaders will gather
the government's financial in Washington on Nov. 15 to
intervention won't keep disci1ss the meltdown . A
global er&lt;'nomies out of senior administration oftirecession.
cia! said Wednesday that the
Poor earnings from large forum wi II be the tirst in a
companies in disparate sec- series of i'ntemational meettors . - Wachovia Corp .. ings to discuss what e&lt;·onoBoeing and Merck &amp; Co . - · mists predict could be a
illustrated how wide the long and deep downturn.
downturn had spread. One
For many U.S. compabright spot was McDonald's . nies . the damage has
Corp. , where third-quarter already begun.
, profits rose thanks to the · Wachovia, which is being
strength of its low-priced bought ,by Wells Fargo for
meals .
about $14 billion in stock;
Even with the aggressive said it lost $23.89 billion in
steps the government · has the third quarter. down from
already taken, Treasury earnings of $1 .62 billion in
Secretary Henry Paulson the same quarter a year ago.
told interviewer · Charlie Airplane maker Boeing
its
earnings
Rose. Tuesday, "Clearly, reported
we're going to have a num- slumped 38 percent as a
ber of difficult months strike halted production of
ahead of us in terms of the commercial jets.
real economy."
Merck &amp; Co. said it will
Most major indexes fell 6 slash 7.200 jobs as part.of a
percent or more. The Dow. new restructuring program.
lost 7 .I. percen(. Oil prices The drugmaker' s thirdhit lows last seen In June quarter profit plunged 28
2007, trading below $6 7 a percent ~ partly due to flat
barrel on worries about · sales. Earnings also fell at
weakening demand.
paper company KimberlyAsian markets veered Clark
Corp .,
insurer
sharply lower Wednesday, WeliPoint liJC. and drug
with Tokyo's Nikkei index developer Wyeth.
tumbling 6.79 percent.
"We are going into what
Hong Kong's Hang Seng · is very clearly a recession
was down 6.2 percent , mode," Blake Jorgensen,
while South Korea's main Yahoo's chief financial offiindex shed 5.1 percent.
cer said in.a Tuesday interThe major · European view. Yahoo is slashing
indexes - Britain's FTSE 1,500 jobs while it braces
100 , Germany 's DAX and for a deep downturn likely
the CAC-40 in France - all to extend well into 2009.
slipped about 4 percent.
"Right now we have nine
In South America. Brazil's million Americans . out of
Bovespa dropped niore than work , that's up from six
10 percent and Argentina 's million this time last year,
BY ELLEN StMON
AP ECONOMICS WAITER

PageA2
_Thursday, October 23,2008

ea nus

ernment to make acquisitions of weaker banks.
Credit markets are showing some signs pf a thaw.
Yields on Treasury bills ·and
the interest rates banks
charge each other have both
fallen back to h ie-September
levels. Bank-to-bank ·lending
rates fell sharply overnight.
The London Interbank
Offered Rate. or Libor. on
three-month loans in dollarS
fell to 3.54 percent from 3.83
percent , dropping for an .
eighth strdi ght day. Libor is
important because many
mortgage and credit card
rates are pegged to it and it's
a good barometer of bankf
willingness to lend.
Despite declining rates.
the volume· of loans
;·· .
AP photo remained weak.
"We'
re
·
making
slow
In this Aug. 27 file photo, a Korean Air Lines Cargo Boeing 7471ifts off of runway 32 at Ted
Stevens Anchorage International Airport in Anchorage, Alaska. Boeing Co. , the world's No. . progress and confidence Is
returning but we're still nO!
2 commercial airplane maker, said Wednesday its third-quarter earnings plummeted 38
there
yet." said Christoph\lr
percent as a strike and supplier production problems hurt results. Its shares fell more than Cordaro
, chief investment
8 percent in morning trading.
·
officer at RegentAtlantic
and to every trader on the on a conference call , adding shon-tenv loans that are Capital LLC in C)latham, NJ.
Meanwhile. members of
floor. to every trader · that it is "operating from a critical for. keeping busi- Congress
are moving for.
upstairs. that's the most position of strength."
. nesses runnmg .
ward with effmts to overMoney market funds hold
· .
important number'' because
A week after Paulson
·consumer . spending makes announced the administra- about one-third of all com- haul the regulatory system.
tip two-thirds of the econo- tion would spend $250 bil- mercia! paper and Fed offi- The cbaMes could be the
sweeping since t~e
my. said Alan Valdes, vice lion to buy stakes in U.S. cials said that about $500 bil- most
1930s, when Congress
president of trading firm banks , .the Federal Reserve lion had flowed out of prime
d h w 1h f
. 'l
9 . e mancla
Hillard and Lyons.
stepped up Tuesday . with a money market funds since revampe
system was regulated ln
The official arbiter of new program to help money August as investors became response 10 the 1929 stock
recessions, the nonpartisan market mutual funds that increasingly worried about market crash and a wave of
Bureau
of have been squeezed by wor- their ability to redeem shares. bank failures.
National
Economic Research, has not ried investors demanding to Ori Sept. 18. the Treasury
Democrats in Congress
called the current downturn cash ou.t their holdings.
Department announced that are also pushing efforts to
The Fed said it would pro- it was tapping a $50 billion assemble a second econonia recession.
Third-quarter profits at vide up to $540 billion in Treasury fund to provide ·· ic stimulus program that
budget-friendly McDonald's tinancing though a program guarantees for the assets in could total $150 billion or
rose ll percent. Same-store run by JPM organ Chase &amp; the money market accounts. more . On Monday, Fed
sales, or sales at stores open Co. to purchase from mutual
The
Fed anno.unced Chairman Ben Bernanke
at least a year, were notably funds certificates of deposit, Wednesday. it will boost the said a "significant" stimulus
strong in the third quarter, bank notes and commercial interest rate paid to commer- package is appropriate. T~e
rising 7.1 percent glqbally paper. The program, to be cia! banks on excess reserves. Whit~ House has yet to
and 4.7 percent in the U.S. ·called the Money Market
Paulson said in his televi- endorse the idea. but has
McDonald's is "reces- Investor Funding Facility, is sion interview that banks said President Bush was at
sion-resistant,"
Chief designed to revive the mar- might use part of the money least willing to consider .a
Executive Jim Slcinner said ket for commercial paper, they receive from the gov- second stimulus measure .

Bv MALCOLM RITTER
AP sciENCE WAITER

NEW YORK - Just two
weeks after a Nobel Prize
into account the amount of from work - were picking highlighted theoretical work
Bv JOHN PORRETTO
AP BUSINESS WRITER
fuel used not only by dri- up . But weekend sales are on subatomic panicles,
vers and households but down I0 percent . from a physicists are announcing a
HOUSTON - It's almost also by businesses.
year ago, suggesting people startling discovery about a
like a surprise stimulus
''We already have the are driving only when they much more familiar form of
check: Gas prices have fall- equivalent of an invisible have to.
matter: Scotch tape.
en so fast that the nation has stimulus package going if
"Behavioral changes tend
It turns out that if you peel
found itself with an extra (oil) prices bottom out in to be sticky," said Paul the . popular adhesive tape
$125 billion to spend. But the $75 to $80 range," Dholakia. an associate pro- off Its roll in a vacullm
don't expect the freed-up Goldstein said. Oil prices fessor · of management · at chamber. it emits X-rays.
·cash to pump much life into . tumbled close to $66 a bar- Rice University who studies The researchers even made
· the.economy.
rei Wednesday as 'fear of the motivational psycholo- an X-ray image of one of
Filling up for less than an e_xtended global eco, gy of consumers.
their fingers .
$2.50 a gallon in some nom1c slowdown out- . ' "So for ·people who have
Who knew? Actually,
places hasn 't done much to weighed a likely OPEC · gotten in the habit ·of car- more than 50 years ago,
boost confidence - not crude production cut later pooling or driving to the some Russian scientists
when disappearing jobs, th1s wee .
.
grocery store less often, reported evidence of X-rays
sagging home prices and the
The , fference IS that the those things are likely to from peeling sticky tape off
financial meltdown are c . e of hundred- bucks persist," he said . "You glass. But the new work
every,day worries.
at 111 pn:vwus years m1ght won't see a significant, sud- demonstrates that you can
"Let's try six month s. have turned mto a hohday ~ den change in behavior just get .a lot of X-rays; a study
Let 's try a year. Then we splurge w1ll probably be because gas prices have co-author says. ·
can talk about how much tucke~ a:vay for safekeep- gone down b~ a ·certain
"We were very surit's saving · me," said Jacob mg th1s time.
.
amount."
prised ." said Juan Escobar.
Curtis of Columbus. Ohio .
"Because of the economAP Business Writers Mark "The power you could get
who paid $~.48 a gallon ic circumstances. a lot Williams in Co/umbu.1, from just peeling tape was
this week. "Right now, I'm more people are going_ to Ohio, and Sandy Shore in enormous."
just trying to make ends be caut1ous wtth that kmd Denver contribured the
Escobar; a graduate stumeet."
of money,'' said Joel report.
dent at the University of
One in three Americans Naroff, an economi st and
: fears losing a job, half are president
of
Naroff
: worried about keeping up Economic Advisors in
: with mongage and c·redlt Holland·, Pa. :'Consumers
. card payments and seven in are worried : They don ' t
10 are anxious about shrink- know what's going to haping stock and retirement pen to their jobs."
: portfolios, according to a
Jean Stewart knows the
. recent Associated Press- feeling. The 68-year-old,
, Yahoo News poll of likely . semiretired housekeeper.
who filled her Saturn sedan
: voters.
With worries 'like that , in suburban Denver on
· saving $20 or $30 on a tank Tuesday for $2.57 a gallon.
: of gas doesn't amount to said she struggled when
prices neared $4 a gallon .
: much of a silver lining.
"I've been very, very
. Make no mistake, the
, drop in gas prices has been careful." Stewart said .
·she's using the extra cash
. dramatic. A gallon of gas is
: 30 percent cheaper today these days to pay bills.
Price~ could tumble as
: than it was when prices
· peaked this summer. On low as $2 a gallon if oil
: July II , a gallon of regular falls to $50 a barrel, as
averaged
$4 . 11.
On some analysts· suspect it
· Wednesday;- it was $2.86. will.. One question is
: That's almost as 'cheap· as whether some of the
: the ~2 .82 reading flf a year changes Americans made to ,
Availa.b le in 3 Finishes
ago.
cope with the gas spike this
As lawmakers debate summer, such as carpooling
. whether to send a second or taking mass transit , not
FINANCING SPECIALS
· round of stimulus checks to mention driving smaller
AVAILABLE *
: to Americans to lift the cars, will hold as gas gets
: economy. the deciine in cheaper again :
: gasoline prices CI)U ld
Ben Brockwell , director
· amount to as much as a of data, pricing and infor: $125 billion stimulus all by mation services for the Oil
: itself, according to calculac Price Information Service in
: tions
by
Lawrence Wall , N.J .• said he spoke in
· Goldstein, the director of recent days to a major gaso: the
Energy
Policy line retailer in the southeast
: Research Foundation Inc ., U.S . who reponed that sales
: which studies energy eco- on wee~day s - when peo. nomics. That figure takes ple typtcally drive to and
.

California, Los . Angeles,
reports the work w1th UCLA
colleagues . in Thursday's
issue of the journal Nature.
He suggests that with.
some refinements, the
process might be harnessed
for making ·inexpensive Xray . machines for paramedics or for places where
electricity is expensive or
hard to get. After all , you
' could pe~l t~pe ot _do somethmg s1rn1lar 10 . such
machines with just human
power, like cranking.
The researchers and
UCLA have ap_Plied for a
patent c.ovenng
such
devices. .
In the new work, a
machine peeled . Qrdinary
· Scotch tap!! off a roll in a
vacuum chamber at about
, 1.2 inches per second.
Rapid pulses of X-rays ,
each about a billionth of a
. second long, emerged from
very close to where the tape
was coming off the roll.
, That's where electrons
jumped from the roll to ihe
sticky. underside of the tape
that was being pulled away,

a journey of about tw0thousandths of an inch,
Escobar said. When those
electrons struck the sticky
side they slowed down, and
that slowing made · them
emit X-rays .
So is this a health hazard
for .unsuspecting tape-peelers?
.
Escobar noted that no )\:rays are , produced in the
ll"e~en~e of air. You need io
work m a ·vacuum - not ·
e*actly an everyday situati~:

.

·'

·' 'If you're ·going to peel
tape in a vacuum, rou
sliould be 'extra careful,' he
said. But "I will continue io
use Scotch tape during my
daily life, and I think i(s
safe to do it in your office.
No guarantees."
James Hevezi, who chairs
the American Colle~e of
Radiology's Commtssion
on Medical Physics, said the
notion of developing an Xray machine from the new
finding was "a very interest·
ing idea, and I think jt
should be carried further in
research."

....

..

-~

2008 .

'True Marauder'

:Four marriages?
Something is_wrong
Bv KATHY MITCHELL
AND MARCY SUGAR

me before he left, so I could
Dr. Kelly Roush of Holzer
wipe him out financially. I'd
Clinic was declared a
hate to do that, but I am a
'1rue Marauder" in recog.. Dear Annie: My eldest w_oman sco_rned. What's my
nition of her work as a
· son , "B
· 44
. . en," 1s
. years old next move? - Army Wife
Meigs
High School team
and still a huge concern for
Dear Army Wife: Please
physician for the past 11
!llY husband and me.
don 't do anything vindicyears.
The recognition
, Ben recently broke up tive. You'll only hate yourcame at the football
. w1th hts fourth wife after self in the morning . It
game Friday night when
, only one year of marriage. would be best if you could
she was presented a
His relationship with his wait until your husband
plaque by CarlWolfe,
' three former wives lasted comes home to have this
athletic
director, on behalf
. , about the same· duration. conversation. It is counterof the Meigs Athletic
The truth is my son has productive to conduct a hitDepartment.
. dee_p-rooted
problems ter argument via e-mail
Submitted photo
. stetf\lning from early child- when you are so far away
hood. These include ex hi- from each other and he is in
b~ionism. sexual sadism a dan¥erous place, In the
and voyeLKism'. My hus- meant1me, we hope you
band and I took him to a will take advantage of the
psychoanalyst when he was counseling services offered
only II years old in an by the military. ·
effort to unravel the causes . Dear Annie: I'm writing
·of his behavior. After two m response . to "Scared
· years of intensive therapy. Mother," who found jewelBen refused to attend any ry in her daughter's bedmore sessions.
room and suspects shopliftshort stories. She left papers
POMEROY - Plans were the Chester Courihou~.
pile their records.
.. My son comes from a ing. I'm an 18-year-old made for a program in celeA report on the chapter's
Amy Abercombie was the and manuscripts which were
very loving and secure girl , and I. too, have bration of the IOOth anniver- . real daughter. Edith Zirkle, speaker at the meeting and not discovered until after the
home. He has never wanted amassed a collection of sary when Return Jonathan who is buried in Broad Run talked about daughters mem- death of Amy 's mother,
for anything in his life. His items my m.other did not Meigs Chapter, Daughters of Cemetery in West Virginia · aries of their mother. She Eleanor Hooper Eastman
· other siblings show no signs buy for me. They r~re from the American Revolution, met was given and plans were related that her grandmother, t\bercombie. Among the
of any unnatural behavior a romantic ,relationship recently at the home of Betty made to mark her grave. A Rebecca Lane Hooper papers were "The Other
whatsoever. His last wife with another girl. .
Milhoan. The observance w.ill meeting was · planned to Eastman. 1877-1937. wrote House" about family life in
confided in me that she was
Though I grew up in a be held at I pm on Nov. 8 at help future members com- arid published books and New Hamps!Jire in 1825.
sick and tired of his bizarre loving, supportive home, I
: proclivities. I don't think I did not feel comfortaqle
can tolerate any more. talking about this relationPlease help.- Sad Motherl shiP, with my parents. When
· Dear Sad: Ben needs pro- "-M'orh spotted new jewelry,!
fessional help, but unless·he don't think she suspected
loss runner-up with 12 mem- "Nutrition News." which
COOLVILLE
Dottie Fall Rally in Gallipolis.
is willing to admit it, there thievery, but it would have Bond was named weekly best
September monthly win- bers present. KOPS (Keep ini:luded suggestions on
· is nothing you can do for been an understandable weight-loss winner at the · ners were Pat Snedden, per- Off Pounds Sensibly) mem- how to add fall vegetables
him. If four marriages in as· reaction. Luckily, Mom has October 14 meeting of TOPS fect attendance; Bogardus, bers . Bogardus, Clelimd. to your diet with an open
· many years hasn't con ~ been very open and recep- (Take Off Pounds Sensibly) Bond , Burns, Connie Frost, Henderson . and discussion. Members will
vinced him something is tive to the truth.
Chapter #OH 2013 Coolville. Rankin and Snedden, exer- Richmond were in leeway. continue to collect non-perwron'g, we doubt he will lisI'm not.saying this is the
KOPS (Keep Off Pounds dse charts; Bogardus, Bond Co-Leader Bond achieved .ishable items for the food
ten to anyone's advice, but case with ·:scared," but she .Sensibly)
members and Richmond, food charts. KOPS status, which makes a pantry through November.
The group meets every
it certainly . can't hurt for should know there are rea- LaChresia Bogardus, Mary Leader . Snedden continued total of seven for the chapter.
Members may dress in Tuesday at Torch Baptist
yo!} to suggest' he would be sons. other than criminal' . Cleland, May Frost, Roberta an article entitled "50 Slim· more capable of finding a activity for both the new Henderson and Patricia . down Tips - Easy Strategies costume for the October 28 Church. Weigh-in is from
· lasting relationship if he jewelry and her daughter's Richmond were in leeway. for Weight Loss, followed meeting. There will be no 5:15 to 6:15 p.m. with a
meeting on November 4 due meeting at 6:30. For informaworked on it witll the help reticence to mention it. Dianne Burns was recog- . by an open discussion.
to Election Day. Bums pre- tion. call Pat Snedden at 662At
the
October
21
meet. of a good therapist. You, Whatever.the reason, I hope llized for being .selected
however, need to separate they resolve it. - Teenage Chapter Angel at the TOPS ing, Bond was best weight- sented a program on 2633 or attend a free meeting..
. yourself from Ben's · prob- Girl with Secrets
lems. We know how hard
Dear Teenage Girl:
this will be, but he is a Many girls wrote to say
grown man and resJ!f1nsible they had received such gifts
for his · own inesses. from boyfriends and girl Elizabeth Smith. Teresa ed by Sharon Stewart and a .
POMEROY - The third vases with blue candles.
Worrying will only make friends , as well as older men
Albums of photos and Collins. Scott Lucas, former large filled basket donated
· you miserable and stressed, looking to become sexually reunion of former Veterans
Memorial
Hospital
employother
memorabilia were dis- administrator, and Lorna by Sharon Pratt were given
and accomplish nothing . involved. We hope "Scared"
as door prizes. Mums were
.
played
for those attt;nding Seth .
. You cannot · fix this . will talk to her dau~hter and ees was held Sept. 21 at the
donated
by Mitch's Market .
Vance
gave
the
blessing
Mulberry
Community to enjoy. A smaller table
· Disengage. ·
find out what is gom11 on.
Dear Annie: I am devas- · Annie's Mailbox ts writ- Center with . about 50 with a long, stem yellow before the group enjoyed an of Middlepon and Bob's
tared . Afte~. 19 years , I ten by Kathy Mitchell and attending. The date marked rose and an m memory list array of finger foods. Market in Masori. Selma Cal
thought I had a good mar- Marcy Sugar, longtime edi- the month and day the hos- of those deceased were also desserts. and punch provid- won the crock and Barbara
ed by Rosemary Keller. The Fry. the basket. A history
on display.
riage , but recently discov- tors of the Arm Landers pital opened in I962.
Rosemary Vance was planni11g committee fur- trivia on VMH was played.
The hospital colors of blue
· ered that my husband has column. Please e-mail your
Suggestions for next
emcee
for a program of nished sandwiches and bev~nd
white
were
featured
in
' been e-mailing Internet questions to anniesmail·
year's
reunion were offered
erages.
dating services arrd erotic . /Jox@comcast.net, or write the decorations. Tables were reflections of years spent
and
the
date of Sept. 19 was
A crock adorned with a
at
Veterans
chat rooms.
to: Annie's Mai//Jox, P.O. covered with blue and fea- workin~
' · My husband is serving in Box ll8190, Chicago, IL tured centerpieces of fluted Memonal by Marty Gress, picture of the hospital creal- selected.
' Iraq. I don't know what to ~0611. To find o.ut more · -~-~------------------,------------------­
. (lo or whom to tum to. He about Annie's Mailbox,
won't be coming home until and read features by oth~r
the end of the year. Should I Creators Syndicate writers .
· confront him now or wait? and cartoonists, visit the
· Oh, by the way, he signed Creators Syndicate Web ·
p.m .• Middleport Masonic Foster and Pat Neece. Marty meeting, 8 p.m.. high school
. over power of attorney to page at www.creators.com.
Temple, for work in Entered Short, Joe
McCloud . media room .
POMEROY - Veterans
Apprentice degree. All Charlie and Ellen Rife and
s ~rvice Commission , 9
Master Masons invited.
Mike Puckett.
at office. 117
a.m.,
Tuesday,
Oct.
28
Thursday, Oct. 23
Memorial
Dr.
POMEROY - OH-KAN
REEDSVILLE
Tuesday,
Oct. 28
Riverview Garden Club Coin Club , 7 p.m., Pomeroy
POMEROY
- Local
. Thursday...Sunny. Highs upper 50s. Chance of rain annual dinner out. 6:30 Public Library. Open to
Monday,
OCt.
27
Emergency
Planning
p.m., .. DaVinei!s
in public.
.
· in the lower 60s. Northeast 70 percent.
RACINE
- Southern Committee, 11:30 a.m ..
. winds
5
to
I 0 . . Saturday night and Williamstown, W.Va.
Local School Board, regulur Senior Center.
Saturday, Oct. 25
mph ... Beco111ing southeast Sunday ...Mostly cloudy
J
with a 30 percent chance of
POMEROY
Delta
in the afternoon.
Friday, Oct. 24
• : Thursday night ...Mostly showers. Lows in the mid Kappa Gamma Teacher's
GUYSVILLE
- Fall
: s;lear. Lows in the mid 3.0s. 40s. Highs in the upper 50s. Society, 10:45 a.m.• Wild
Sunday
night
and Horse Cafe, bring interna- revival, 7 p.m .' Friday and
: Southeast winds around 5
Monday ...Mostly cloudy tional food recipe. paper Saturday, Carthage Gap
• inph.
Church. U.S. 50. Guysville .
: ; · Friday ... Mostly sunny with a 40 percent chance of products, school supplies.
Sunday, Oct. 26
· ::With a 50 percent chance of showers . Lows around 40.
POMEROY
- Meigs
Highs
in
the
upper
40s.
CARPENTER
Mt.
:rain. Highs in the lower 60s.
County Republican Women,
• WeU-woman exams
nlght
...
Mostly
Monday
Union
Baptist
Church
will
· Southeast · winds 5 to 10
9 a.m.. Republican head• Birth Control Jncludin~
cloudy with a chance of rain quarters. Call Karen York. · present Jim Eden in concert at
: )nph.
: · Friday
night ...Rain. showers. Lows in the mid 696-1042. or Darlene 6:30 p.m ..The churah is locat• Implanon (First &amp; Only
·
30s.
Chance
of
rain
40
pered
at
·
39091
Carpenter
Hill
·
: Lows in the mid 40s. East
Newell, 985-3537 .
3·year implantable
Road, Pomeroy. For more
· winds . around 5 mph. cent.
Monday, Oct. 27
birth control
Thesday ·
through
: Chance of rain near 100
POMEROY - Board information call 742-2832.
Wednesday...Parily cloudy. . meeting of the Meigs
: percent.
•Gardasil Vaccine
; Saturday...Cioudy with Highs in the upper 40s. County Garden Clubs
• STD detection &amp; treatment
: rain likely. · Highs in the · Lows in the upper 20s.
Association, 6 to 8 p.m. ,·
• Minimally·inmive
Pomeroy Library. Plans disSaturday, Oct. 25
gynecologic surgical care
cussed for annual Christmas
MIDDLEPORT - Hymn
Si[\g Along the River, 4 p.m.
flower show.
• Pregnancy Care
until dark, Dave Diles Park.
MIDDLEPORT
• Essure (Scarless Permanent
lawn
chair.
Special
meeting
of Bring
•
Jane D. Broecker, M'o Birth Control Sterilization\
Ohio Vllllay Bane Corp. (NA5• AEP (NYSE) - 29.76
Middleport Lodge #363. 7 Performers include Bet
.
I)AQ)20
: .AkZO (NASDAQ) - 38.16
BBT (NVSE) - 31.05
• Aehtand Inc. (NYSE) - 22.73
113 East Memorial Drive
Peoplea (NASDAQ) - 18.41
: Big Lots (NYSE) - 21.36
Papaleo (NYSE) - 53.64
• Bob Ev11n1 (NASDAQ) - 21.02
Pomeroy, OH • 992-91$8
Premier (NASDAQ) - 8.20
: BorgWamer (NVSE) - 21.81
Rockwell (NYSE) - 25
• Century Aluminum (NASDAQ)
Castrop Center iS Hospital Dr
SYRACUSE - Travis
RockJ! Boots (NASDAQ) - 3.36
: - 11.28
.
:
Royal Dutch Shell - 46.89
and Trisha Gibson of
. Champion (NASDAQ) - 3.58
Suite 260
Sear-. Holding (NASDAQ) • Channing Shopo (NASDAQ) Syracuse announce the binh
Athens, OH • 594-8819
53.42
: 1.38
of their son, Dalen ·James
- City Holding (NASDAQ) - 38.24 Wa~Mert (NYSE) - 52.27
Gibson . On Thursday. Se):lt.
Wendy'l (NYSE) - 3.11
; Collin• (NYSE) - 34.18
W11Benco (NVSE) - 25.41
18, at St. Joseph's Hospital
. DuPont (NYSE) - 31.5q
Worthlng1on (NYSE) - 11 .18
• US Bank (NYSE)- 28.11
in Parkersburg, W.Va.
Dally etoek report• 1111 the 4
: GaniNIIt JNVSE) - 9.31
He weighed eight pounds
.Ao .muatt ... ,..
~
p.m. ET clollng quotes of trana• Genenll Elactrlc (NYSE) six
ounces.
His
maternal
ICitona for Oct 22, 2008, pro: 18.96
O'BLENESS
'~
grandparents are Jim and
vided by Edward Jonn II nan·
HJA.LTH S\'SlfM
-Harlay·Devtdoon (NYSE) ClllldVIIOI'f IHIC Mltt&amp;.ln
: 12.35 . .
Patsy Warner of Syracuse .
GaUipoll• at (740) 441·9441 and His paternal grandparents are
• ;JP Morgan (NYS&amp;) - 37.17
Lilley Marrero In Paint
: Kroger (NYSE) - 28.83
,
Gary and Carolyn McCoy of
www.riverroseobgyn.com
• }.lmlted Brendo (NYSE) - 11.76 Pteaunt at (304) 874-G174.
Apple Grove , W.Va.
Dalen James Gibson
: NorfOlk Sou1hem (NVSE) ~ 54.54 'MemberSIPC.

DAR plans tooth anniversary

Weight losers honored

VMH employees gather for reunion

Community.Calendar
Clubs and
organizations

:Local Weather

Public meetings

Church events

Other events ·

~ Local Stocks

$778.00

LANE
· COMFORTKING

. $348.00

~

Thursday, October 23,

Available In Meigs County

DINING ROOM

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.PageA3

Gynecology Services

2 pq. L-SHAPED
SECTIONAL

--· .

BYTHEBEND

.ANN IE'S MAiLBOX

Cheaper gas doesn't mean Tape measure: X-rays detected from Scotch tape
anyone's spending ~eely ··

. -··

The Daily Sentinel--

$588.00

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lu

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•

Birth ·a nnounced

••

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ACROSS THE NATION

.The·Daily Sentinel

Merval index dropped more
than 16 percent. after falling
II
percent
Tuesday.
NEW YORK - A late Argentina's'
president
afternoon barrage of selling announced plans to nationsent the Dow Jones industri- alize private pension funds
als tumbling almost 700 to protect retirees from the
points .as weak corporate global tinancial crisi ~.
earnings stoked fears that
World leaders will gather
the government's financial in Washington on Nov. 15 to
intervention won't keep disci1ss the meltdown . A
global er&lt;'nomies out of senior administration oftirecession.
cia! said Wednesday that the
Poor earnings from large forum wi II be the tirst in a
companies in disparate sec- series of i'ntemational meettors . - Wachovia Corp .. ings to discuss what e&lt;·onoBoeing and Merck &amp; Co . - · mists predict could be a
illustrated how wide the long and deep downturn.
downturn had spread. One
For many U.S. compabright spot was McDonald's . nies . the damage has
Corp. , where third-quarter already begun.
, profits rose thanks to the · Wachovia, which is being
strength of its low-priced bought ,by Wells Fargo for
meals .
about $14 billion in stock;
Even with the aggressive said it lost $23.89 billion in
steps the government · has the third quarter. down from
already taken, Treasury earnings of $1 .62 billion in
Secretary Henry Paulson the same quarter a year ago.
told interviewer · Charlie Airplane maker Boeing
its
earnings
Rose. Tuesday, "Clearly, reported
we're going to have a num- slumped 38 percent as a
ber of difficult months strike halted production of
ahead of us in terms of the commercial jets.
real economy."
Merck &amp; Co. said it will
Most major indexes fell 6 slash 7.200 jobs as part.of a
percent or more. The Dow. new restructuring program.
lost 7 .I. percen(. Oil prices The drugmaker' s thirdhit lows last seen In June quarter profit plunged 28
2007, trading below $6 7 a percent ~ partly due to flat
barrel on worries about · sales. Earnings also fell at
weakening demand.
paper company KimberlyAsian markets veered Clark
Corp .,
insurer
sharply lower Wednesday, WeliPoint liJC. and drug
with Tokyo's Nikkei index developer Wyeth.
tumbling 6.79 percent.
"We are going into what
Hong Kong's Hang Seng · is very clearly a recession
was down 6.2 percent , mode," Blake Jorgensen,
while South Korea's main Yahoo's chief financial offiindex shed 5.1 percent.
cer said in.a Tuesday interThe major · European view. Yahoo is slashing
indexes - Britain's FTSE 1,500 jobs while it braces
100 , Germany 's DAX and for a deep downturn likely
the CAC-40 in France - all to extend well into 2009.
slipped about 4 percent.
"Right now we have nine
In South America. Brazil's million Americans . out of
Bovespa dropped niore than work , that's up from six
10 percent and Argentina 's million this time last year,
BY ELLEN StMON
AP ECONOMICS WAITER

PageA2
_Thursday, October 23,2008

ea nus

ernment to make acquisitions of weaker banks.
Credit markets are showing some signs pf a thaw.
Yields on Treasury bills ·and
the interest rates banks
charge each other have both
fallen back to h ie-September
levels. Bank-to-bank ·lending
rates fell sharply overnight.
The London Interbank
Offered Rate. or Libor. on
three-month loans in dollarS
fell to 3.54 percent from 3.83
percent , dropping for an .
eighth strdi ght day. Libor is
important because many
mortgage and credit card
rates are pegged to it and it's
a good barometer of bankf
willingness to lend.
Despite declining rates.
the volume· of loans
;·· .
AP photo remained weak.
"We'
re
·
making
slow
In this Aug. 27 file photo, a Korean Air Lines Cargo Boeing 7471ifts off of runway 32 at Ted
Stevens Anchorage International Airport in Anchorage, Alaska. Boeing Co. , the world's No. . progress and confidence Is
returning but we're still nO!
2 commercial airplane maker, said Wednesday its third-quarter earnings plummeted 38
there
yet." said Christoph\lr
percent as a strike and supplier production problems hurt results. Its shares fell more than Cordaro
, chief investment
8 percent in morning trading.
·
officer at RegentAtlantic
and to every trader on the on a conference call , adding shon-tenv loans that are Capital LLC in C)latham, NJ.
Meanwhile. members of
floor. to every trader · that it is "operating from a critical for. keeping busi- Congress
are moving for.
upstairs. that's the most position of strength."
. nesses runnmg .
ward with effmts to overMoney market funds hold
· .
important number'' because
A week after Paulson
·consumer . spending makes announced the administra- about one-third of all com- haul the regulatory system.
tip two-thirds of the econo- tion would spend $250 bil- mercia! paper and Fed offi- The cbaMes could be the
sweeping since t~e
my. said Alan Valdes, vice lion to buy stakes in U.S. cials said that about $500 bil- most
1930s, when Congress
president of trading firm banks , .the Federal Reserve lion had flowed out of prime
d h w 1h f
. 'l
9 . e mancla
Hillard and Lyons.
stepped up Tuesday . with a money market funds since revampe
system was regulated ln
The official arbiter of new program to help money August as investors became response 10 the 1929 stock
recessions, the nonpartisan market mutual funds that increasingly worried about market crash and a wave of
Bureau
of have been squeezed by wor- their ability to redeem shares. bank failures.
National
Economic Research, has not ried investors demanding to Ori Sept. 18. the Treasury
Democrats in Congress
called the current downturn cash ou.t their holdings.
Department announced that are also pushing efforts to
The Fed said it would pro- it was tapping a $50 billion assemble a second econonia recession.
Third-quarter profits at vide up to $540 billion in Treasury fund to provide ·· ic stimulus program that
budget-friendly McDonald's tinancing though a program guarantees for the assets in could total $150 billion or
rose ll percent. Same-store run by JPM organ Chase &amp; the money market accounts. more . On Monday, Fed
sales, or sales at stores open Co. to purchase from mutual
The
Fed anno.unced Chairman Ben Bernanke
at least a year, were notably funds certificates of deposit, Wednesday. it will boost the said a "significant" stimulus
strong in the third quarter, bank notes and commercial interest rate paid to commer- package is appropriate. T~e
rising 7.1 percent glqbally paper. The program, to be cia! banks on excess reserves. Whit~ House has yet to
and 4.7 percent in the U.S. ·called the Money Market
Paulson said in his televi- endorse the idea. but has
McDonald's is "reces- Investor Funding Facility, is sion interview that banks said President Bush was at
sion-resistant,"
Chief designed to revive the mar- might use part of the money least willing to consider .a
Executive Jim Slcinner said ket for commercial paper, they receive from the gov- second stimulus measure .

Bv MALCOLM RITTER
AP sciENCE WAITER

NEW YORK - Just two
weeks after a Nobel Prize
into account the amount of from work - were picking highlighted theoretical work
Bv JOHN PORRETTO
AP BUSINESS WRITER
fuel used not only by dri- up . But weekend sales are on subatomic panicles,
vers and households but down I0 percent . from a physicists are announcing a
HOUSTON - It's almost also by businesses.
year ago, suggesting people startling discovery about a
like a surprise stimulus
''We already have the are driving only when they much more familiar form of
check: Gas prices have fall- equivalent of an invisible have to.
matter: Scotch tape.
en so fast that the nation has stimulus package going if
"Behavioral changes tend
It turns out that if you peel
found itself with an extra (oil) prices bottom out in to be sticky," said Paul the . popular adhesive tape
$125 billion to spend. But the $75 to $80 range," Dholakia. an associate pro- off Its roll in a vacullm
don't expect the freed-up Goldstein said. Oil prices fessor · of management · at chamber. it emits X-rays.
·cash to pump much life into . tumbled close to $66 a bar- Rice University who studies The researchers even made
· the.economy.
rei Wednesday as 'fear of the motivational psycholo- an X-ray image of one of
Filling up for less than an e_xtended global eco, gy of consumers.
their fingers .
$2.50 a gallon in some nom1c slowdown out- . ' "So for ·people who have
Who knew? Actually,
places hasn 't done much to weighed a likely OPEC · gotten in the habit ·of car- more than 50 years ago,
boost confidence - not crude production cut later pooling or driving to the some Russian scientists
when disappearing jobs, th1s wee .
.
grocery store less often, reported evidence of X-rays
sagging home prices and the
The , fference IS that the those things are likely to from peeling sticky tape off
financial meltdown are c . e of hundred- bucks persist," he said . "You glass. But the new work
every,day worries.
at 111 pn:vwus years m1ght won't see a significant, sud- demonstrates that you can
"Let's try six month s. have turned mto a hohday ~ den change in behavior just get .a lot of X-rays; a study
Let 's try a year. Then we splurge w1ll probably be because gas prices have co-author says. ·
can talk about how much tucke~ a:vay for safekeep- gone down b~ a ·certain
"We were very surit's saving · me," said Jacob mg th1s time.
.
amount."
prised ." said Juan Escobar.
Curtis of Columbus. Ohio .
"Because of the economAP Business Writers Mark "The power you could get
who paid $~.48 a gallon ic circumstances. a lot Williams in Co/umbu.1, from just peeling tape was
this week. "Right now, I'm more people are going_ to Ohio, and Sandy Shore in enormous."
just trying to make ends be caut1ous wtth that kmd Denver contribured the
Escobar; a graduate stumeet."
of money,'' said Joel report.
dent at the University of
One in three Americans Naroff, an economi st and
: fears losing a job, half are president
of
Naroff
: worried about keeping up Economic Advisors in
: with mongage and c·redlt Holland·, Pa. :'Consumers
. card payments and seven in are worried : They don ' t
10 are anxious about shrink- know what's going to haping stock and retirement pen to their jobs."
: portfolios, according to a
Jean Stewart knows the
. recent Associated Press- feeling. The 68-year-old,
, Yahoo News poll of likely . semiretired housekeeper.
who filled her Saturn sedan
: voters.
With worries 'like that , in suburban Denver on
· saving $20 or $30 on a tank Tuesday for $2.57 a gallon.
: of gas doesn't amount to said she struggled when
prices neared $4 a gallon .
: much of a silver lining.
"I've been very, very
. Make no mistake, the
, drop in gas prices has been careful." Stewart said .
·she's using the extra cash
. dramatic. A gallon of gas is
: 30 percent cheaper today these days to pay bills.
Price~ could tumble as
: than it was when prices
· peaked this summer. On low as $2 a gallon if oil
: July II , a gallon of regular falls to $50 a barrel, as
averaged
$4 . 11.
On some analysts· suspect it
· Wednesday;- it was $2.86. will.. One question is
: That's almost as 'cheap· as whether some of the
: the ~2 .82 reading flf a year changes Americans made to ,
Availa.b le in 3 Finishes
ago.
cope with the gas spike this
As lawmakers debate summer, such as carpooling
. whether to send a second or taking mass transit , not
FINANCING SPECIALS
· round of stimulus checks to mention driving smaller
AVAILABLE *
: to Americans to lift the cars, will hold as gas gets
: economy. the deciine in cheaper again :
: gasoline prices CI)U ld
Ben Brockwell , director
· amount to as much as a of data, pricing and infor: $125 billion stimulus all by mation services for the Oil
: itself, according to calculac Price Information Service in
: tions
by
Lawrence Wall , N.J .• said he spoke in
· Goldstein, the director of recent days to a major gaso: the
Energy
Policy line retailer in the southeast
: Research Foundation Inc ., U.S . who reponed that sales
: which studies energy eco- on wee~day s - when peo. nomics. That figure takes ple typtcally drive to and
.

California, Los . Angeles,
reports the work w1th UCLA
colleagues . in Thursday's
issue of the journal Nature.
He suggests that with.
some refinements, the
process might be harnessed
for making ·inexpensive Xray . machines for paramedics or for places where
electricity is expensive or
hard to get. After all , you
' could pe~l t~pe ot _do somethmg s1rn1lar 10 . such
machines with just human
power, like cranking.
The researchers and
UCLA have ap_Plied for a
patent c.ovenng
such
devices. .
In the new work, a
machine peeled . Qrdinary
· Scotch tap!! off a roll in a
vacuum chamber at about
, 1.2 inches per second.
Rapid pulses of X-rays ,
each about a billionth of a
. second long, emerged from
very close to where the tape
was coming off the roll.
, That's where electrons
jumped from the roll to ihe
sticky. underside of the tape
that was being pulled away,

a journey of about tw0thousandths of an inch,
Escobar said. When those
electrons struck the sticky
side they slowed down, and
that slowing made · them
emit X-rays .
So is this a health hazard
for .unsuspecting tape-peelers?
.
Escobar noted that no )\:rays are , produced in the
ll"e~en~e of air. You need io
work m a ·vacuum - not ·
e*actly an everyday situati~:

.

·'

·' 'If you're ·going to peel
tape in a vacuum, rou
sliould be 'extra careful,' he
said. But "I will continue io
use Scotch tape during my
daily life, and I think i(s
safe to do it in your office.
No guarantees."
James Hevezi, who chairs
the American Colle~e of
Radiology's Commtssion
on Medical Physics, said the
notion of developing an Xray machine from the new
finding was "a very interest·
ing idea, and I think jt
should be carried further in
research."

....

..

-~

2008 .

'True Marauder'

:Four marriages?
Something is_wrong
Bv KATHY MITCHELL
AND MARCY SUGAR

me before he left, so I could
Dr. Kelly Roush of Holzer
wipe him out financially. I'd
Clinic was declared a
hate to do that, but I am a
'1rue Marauder" in recog.. Dear Annie: My eldest w_oman sco_rned. What's my
nition of her work as a
· son , "B
· 44
. . en," 1s
. years old next move? - Army Wife
Meigs
High School team
and still a huge concern for
Dear Army Wife: Please
physician for the past 11
!llY husband and me.
don 't do anything vindicyears.
The recognition
, Ben recently broke up tive. You'll only hate yourcame at the football
. w1th hts fourth wife after self in the morning . It
game Friday night when
, only one year of marriage. would be best if you could
she was presented a
His relationship with his wait until your husband
plaque by CarlWolfe,
' three former wives lasted comes home to have this
athletic
director, on behalf
. , about the same· duration. conversation. It is counterof the Meigs Athletic
The truth is my son has productive to conduct a hitDepartment.
. dee_p-rooted
problems ter argument via e-mail
Submitted photo
. stetf\lning from early child- when you are so far away
hood. These include ex hi- from each other and he is in
b~ionism. sexual sadism a dan¥erous place, In the
and voyeLKism'. My hus- meant1me, we hope you
band and I took him to a will take advantage of the
psychoanalyst when he was counseling services offered
only II years old in an by the military. ·
effort to unravel the causes . Dear Annie: I'm writing
·of his behavior. After two m response . to "Scared
· years of intensive therapy. Mother," who found jewelBen refused to attend any ry in her daughter's bedmore sessions.
room and suspects shopliftshort stories. She left papers
POMEROY - Plans were the Chester Courihou~.
pile their records.
.. My son comes from a ing. I'm an 18-year-old made for a program in celeA report on the chapter's
Amy Abercombie was the and manuscripts which were
very loving and secure girl , and I. too, have bration of the IOOth anniver- . real daughter. Edith Zirkle, speaker at the meeting and not discovered until after the
home. He has never wanted amassed a collection of sary when Return Jonathan who is buried in Broad Run talked about daughters mem- death of Amy 's mother,
for anything in his life. His items my m.other did not Meigs Chapter, Daughters of Cemetery in West Virginia · aries of their mother. She Eleanor Hooper Eastman
· other siblings show no signs buy for me. They r~re from the American Revolution, met was given and plans were related that her grandmother, t\bercombie. Among the
of any unnatural behavior a romantic ,relationship recently at the home of Betty made to mark her grave. A Rebecca Lane Hooper papers were "The Other
whatsoever. His last wife with another girl. .
Milhoan. The observance w.ill meeting was · planned to Eastman. 1877-1937. wrote House" about family life in
confided in me that she was
Though I grew up in a be held at I pm on Nov. 8 at help future members com- arid published books and New Hamps!Jire in 1825.
sick and tired of his bizarre loving, supportive home, I
: proclivities. I don't think I did not feel comfortaqle
can tolerate any more. talking about this relationPlease help.- Sad Motherl shiP, with my parents. When
· Dear Sad: Ben needs pro- "-M'orh spotted new jewelry,!
fessional help, but unless·he don't think she suspected
loss runner-up with 12 mem- "Nutrition News." which
COOLVILLE
Dottie Fall Rally in Gallipolis.
is willing to admit it, there thievery, but it would have Bond was named weekly best
September monthly win- bers present. KOPS (Keep ini:luded suggestions on
· is nothing you can do for been an understandable weight-loss winner at the · ners were Pat Snedden, per- Off Pounds Sensibly) mem- how to add fall vegetables
him. If four marriages in as· reaction. Luckily, Mom has October 14 meeting of TOPS fect attendance; Bogardus, bers . Bogardus, Clelimd. to your diet with an open
· many years hasn't con ~ been very open and recep- (Take Off Pounds Sensibly) Bond , Burns, Connie Frost, Henderson . and discussion. Members will
vinced him something is tive to the truth.
Chapter #OH 2013 Coolville. Rankin and Snedden, exer- Richmond were in leeway. continue to collect non-perwron'g, we doubt he will lisI'm not.saying this is the
KOPS (Keep Off Pounds dse charts; Bogardus, Bond Co-Leader Bond achieved .ishable items for the food
ten to anyone's advice, but case with ·:scared," but she .Sensibly)
members and Richmond, food charts. KOPS status, which makes a pantry through November.
The group meets every
it certainly . can't hurt for should know there are rea- LaChresia Bogardus, Mary Leader . Snedden continued total of seven for the chapter.
Members may dress in Tuesday at Torch Baptist
yo!} to suggest' he would be sons. other than criminal' . Cleland, May Frost, Roberta an article entitled "50 Slim· more capable of finding a activity for both the new Henderson and Patricia . down Tips - Easy Strategies costume for the October 28 Church. Weigh-in is from
· lasting relationship if he jewelry and her daughter's Richmond were in leeway. for Weight Loss, followed meeting. There will be no 5:15 to 6:15 p.m. with a
meeting on November 4 due meeting at 6:30. For informaworked on it witll the help reticence to mention it. Dianne Burns was recog- . by an open discussion.
to Election Day. Bums pre- tion. call Pat Snedden at 662At
the
October
21
meet. of a good therapist. You, Whatever.the reason, I hope llized for being .selected
however, need to separate they resolve it. - Teenage Chapter Angel at the TOPS ing, Bond was best weight- sented a program on 2633 or attend a free meeting..
. yourself from Ben's · prob- Girl with Secrets
lems. We know how hard
Dear Teenage Girl:
this will be, but he is a Many girls wrote to say
grown man and resJ!f1nsible they had received such gifts
for his · own inesses. from boyfriends and girl Elizabeth Smith. Teresa ed by Sharon Stewart and a .
POMEROY - The third vases with blue candles.
Worrying will only make friends , as well as older men
Albums of photos and Collins. Scott Lucas, former large filled basket donated
· you miserable and stressed, looking to become sexually reunion of former Veterans
Memorial
Hospital
employother
memorabilia were dis- administrator, and Lorna by Sharon Pratt were given
and accomplish nothing . involved. We hope "Scared"
as door prizes. Mums were
.
played
for those attt;nding Seth .
. You cannot · fix this . will talk to her dau~hter and ees was held Sept. 21 at the
donated
by Mitch's Market .
Vance
gave
the
blessing
Mulberry
Community to enjoy. A smaller table
· Disengage. ·
find out what is gom11 on.
Dear Annie: I am devas- · Annie's Mailbox ts writ- Center with . about 50 with a long, stem yellow before the group enjoyed an of Middlepon and Bob's
tared . Afte~. 19 years , I ten by Kathy Mitchell and attending. The date marked rose and an m memory list array of finger foods. Market in Masori. Selma Cal
thought I had a good mar- Marcy Sugar, longtime edi- the month and day the hos- of those deceased were also desserts. and punch provid- won the crock and Barbara
ed by Rosemary Keller. The Fry. the basket. A history
on display.
riage , but recently discov- tors of the Arm Landers pital opened in I962.
Rosemary Vance was planni11g committee fur- trivia on VMH was played.
The hospital colors of blue
· ered that my husband has column. Please e-mail your
Suggestions for next
emcee
for a program of nished sandwiches and bev~nd
white
were
featured
in
' been e-mailing Internet questions to anniesmail·
year's
reunion were offered
erages.
dating services arrd erotic . /Jox@comcast.net, or write the decorations. Tables were reflections of years spent
and
the
date of Sept. 19 was
A crock adorned with a
at
Veterans
chat rooms.
to: Annie's Mai//Jox, P.O. covered with blue and fea- workin~
' · My husband is serving in Box ll8190, Chicago, IL tured centerpieces of fluted Memonal by Marty Gress, picture of the hospital creal- selected.
' Iraq. I don't know what to ~0611. To find o.ut more · -~-~------------------,------------------­
. (lo or whom to tum to. He about Annie's Mailbox,
won't be coming home until and read features by oth~r
the end of the year. Should I Creators Syndicate writers .
· confront him now or wait? and cartoonists, visit the
· Oh, by the way, he signed Creators Syndicate Web ·
p.m .• Middleport Masonic Foster and Pat Neece. Marty meeting, 8 p.m.. high school
. over power of attorney to page at www.creators.com.
Temple, for work in Entered Short, Joe
McCloud . media room .
POMEROY - Veterans
Apprentice degree. All Charlie and Ellen Rife and
s ~rvice Commission , 9
Master Masons invited.
Mike Puckett.
at office. 117
a.m.,
Tuesday,
Oct.
28
Thursday, Oct. 23
Memorial
Dr.
POMEROY - OH-KAN
REEDSVILLE
Tuesday,
Oct. 28
Riverview Garden Club Coin Club , 7 p.m., Pomeroy
POMEROY
- Local
. Thursday...Sunny. Highs upper 50s. Chance of rain annual dinner out. 6:30 Public Library. Open to
Monday,
OCt.
27
Emergency
Planning
p.m., .. DaVinei!s
in public.
.
· in the lower 60s. Northeast 70 percent.
RACINE
- Southern Committee, 11:30 a.m ..
. winds
5
to
I 0 . . Saturday night and Williamstown, W.Va.
Local School Board, regulur Senior Center.
Saturday, Oct. 25
mph ... Beco111ing southeast Sunday ...Mostly cloudy
J
with a 30 percent chance of
POMEROY
Delta
in the afternoon.
Friday, Oct. 24
• : Thursday night ...Mostly showers. Lows in the mid Kappa Gamma Teacher's
GUYSVILLE
- Fall
: s;lear. Lows in the mid 3.0s. 40s. Highs in the upper 50s. Society, 10:45 a.m.• Wild
Sunday
night
and Horse Cafe, bring interna- revival, 7 p.m .' Friday and
: Southeast winds around 5
Monday ...Mostly cloudy tional food recipe. paper Saturday, Carthage Gap
• inph.
Church. U.S. 50. Guysville .
: ; · Friday ... Mostly sunny with a 40 percent chance of products, school supplies.
Sunday, Oct. 26
· ::With a 50 percent chance of showers . Lows around 40.
POMEROY
- Meigs
Highs
in
the
upper
40s.
CARPENTER
Mt.
:rain. Highs in the lower 60s.
County Republican Women,
• WeU-woman exams
nlght
...
Mostly
Monday
Union
Baptist
Church
will
· Southeast · winds 5 to 10
9 a.m.. Republican head• Birth Control Jncludin~
cloudy with a chance of rain quarters. Call Karen York. · present Jim Eden in concert at
: )nph.
: · Friday
night ...Rain. showers. Lows in the mid 696-1042. or Darlene 6:30 p.m ..The churah is locat• Implanon (First &amp; Only
·
30s.
Chance
of
rain
40
pered
at
·
39091
Carpenter
Hill
·
: Lows in the mid 40s. East
Newell, 985-3537 .
3·year implantable
Road, Pomeroy. For more
· winds . around 5 mph. cent.
Monday, Oct. 27
birth control
Thesday ·
through
: Chance of rain near 100
POMEROY - Board information call 742-2832.
Wednesday...Parily cloudy. . meeting of the Meigs
: percent.
•Gardasil Vaccine
; Saturday...Cioudy with Highs in the upper 40s. County Garden Clubs
• STD detection &amp; treatment
: rain likely. · Highs in the · Lows in the upper 20s.
Association, 6 to 8 p.m. ,·
• Minimally·inmive
Pomeroy Library. Plans disSaturday, Oct. 25
gynecologic surgical care
cussed for annual Christmas
MIDDLEPORT - Hymn
Si[\g Along the River, 4 p.m.
flower show.
• Pregnancy Care
until dark, Dave Diles Park.
MIDDLEPORT
• Essure (Scarless Permanent
lawn
chair.
Special
meeting
of Bring
•
Jane D. Broecker, M'o Birth Control Sterilization\
Ohio Vllllay Bane Corp. (NA5• AEP (NYSE) - 29.76
Middleport Lodge #363. 7 Performers include Bet
.
I)AQ)20
: .AkZO (NASDAQ) - 38.16
BBT (NVSE) - 31.05
• Aehtand Inc. (NYSE) - 22.73
113 East Memorial Drive
Peoplea (NASDAQ) - 18.41
: Big Lots (NYSE) - 21.36
Papaleo (NYSE) - 53.64
• Bob Ev11n1 (NASDAQ) - 21.02
Pomeroy, OH • 992-91$8
Premier (NASDAQ) - 8.20
: BorgWamer (NVSE) - 21.81
Rockwell (NYSE) - 25
• Century Aluminum (NASDAQ)
Castrop Center iS Hospital Dr
SYRACUSE - Travis
RockJ! Boots (NASDAQ) - 3.36
: - 11.28
.
:
Royal Dutch Shell - 46.89
and Trisha Gibson of
. Champion (NASDAQ) - 3.58
Suite 260
Sear-. Holding (NASDAQ) • Channing Shopo (NASDAQ) Syracuse announce the binh
Athens, OH • 594-8819
53.42
: 1.38
of their son, Dalen ·James
- City Holding (NASDAQ) - 38.24 Wa~Mert (NYSE) - 52.27
Gibson . On Thursday. Se):lt.
Wendy'l (NYSE) - 3.11
; Collin• (NYSE) - 34.18
W11Benco (NVSE) - 25.41
18, at St. Joseph's Hospital
. DuPont (NYSE) - 31.5q
Worthlng1on (NYSE) - 11 .18
• US Bank (NYSE)- 28.11
in Parkersburg, W.Va.
Dally etoek report• 1111 the 4
: GaniNIIt JNVSE) - 9.31
He weighed eight pounds
.Ao .muatt ... ,..
~
p.m. ET clollng quotes of trana• Genenll Elactrlc (NYSE) six
ounces.
His
maternal
ICitona for Oct 22, 2008, pro: 18.96
O'BLENESS
'~
grandparents are Jim and
vided by Edward Jonn II nan·
HJA.LTH S\'SlfM
-Harlay·Devtdoon (NYSE) ClllldVIIOI'f IHIC Mltt&amp;.ln
: 12.35 . .
Patsy Warner of Syracuse .
GaUipoll• at (740) 441·9441 and His paternal grandparents are
• ;JP Morgan (NYS&amp;) - 37.17
Lilley Marrero In Paint
: Kroger (NYSE) - 28.83
,
Gary and Carolyn McCoy of
www.riverroseobgyn.com
• }.lmlted Brendo (NYSE) - 11.76 Pteaunt at (304) 874-G174.
Apple Grove , W.Va.
Dalen James Gibson
: NorfOlk Sou1hem (NVSE) ~ 54.54 'MemberSIPC.

DAR plans tooth anniversary

Weight losers honored

VMH employees gather for reunion

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PageA4

OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

. The Daily Sentinel

Thursday,' October 23, 2008

OUR READERS'

How about

compassion?

Hunters

beware

.

IN HISTORY

'
Cougress,
both the Senatt
and
House
of
Represenlatives, are current·
ly run by rhe same politic~!
party that sponsors the anti·
gun presidential candidate.
Together, their goal is to
pass a law that will perma·
nentlv ban huge numbers of
guns~ One of their bills, if
passed, will ban 65 named
guns and hundreds of other
similar guns. Another would
even ban shotguns and
rifles. If Congress passes
such a law, your only hope
will be a president who
would velo it.
The liberal media will DOl
alert you and · many coun
judges no longer respect the
Constitution. The resulti
Less ability to protect your
family and no more hun1i9g
with guns.
•
The
Narional
Rifl~
Associalion has launch~
new ads to alert the publi~
about the anti-gun candi•
dare . but his campaign people are rhreatening legal
action against TV and radio
stations who air the NRA
ads. This candidate says he
is nul anti, gun, but his prov·
able past record .:-~!early
'shows he is.
"'
·:
Marge Bartee
Long Bottom

RSVP project

'

The Daily Sentinel • Page As
'

Mrs. Crites to speak at bean dinner
STAFF REPORT

NEWSOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Hog roast

more than $17 million in
illegal drug money and
assets; and collected more
than $125 million owed to
the United Stares.
Currenlly, he serves as
the law director/prosecutor
for Granville, Thornville,
Commercial Poinl . and
Orient. He has also served
as
acting
· Jaw
director/prosecutor for the
Hilliard,
cities . of
Pataskala and Harrisburg
as well as special counsel
and special prosecutor for
various Ohio municipali,
ties , school districts and
counties . ·
Crites is a retired captain
in the US Naval Reserve
where he served as the com,
manding officer of· nine
naval reserve units . He stud,

ied al !he Naval War
College . Narional War
College and lndu;trial
Colleges of the Armed
Forces . He also served as
deputy commander for
Mi ssion
Effectiveness.
Naval Reserve Readiness
Command Region Eight. At
his career peak he helped
manage more than 7,000
personnel.
Criles and his wife have
been married for 33 years.
They are parents of rhree
daughters, two 11re gradu- .
ares of the US Naval
Academy and are now serv"
ing as naval officers.
Another daughter is a graduare of The Ohio State uni,
versiry Moritz College of
Law and practic ing law in
Columbus .

Family Medicine

Stretching before bed and drinking water may prevent leg cramps

IS A M/IR'lC.IST-~OCfAL.IST

TAX·AAD·SP£/IIP Bl.:; .
GciERf.lMENT MUSLIM
1'ERRoRI~T...

Roberta Swisher

Birthday obsenred
RACINE- Roberta Swisher of New Haven, W.Va., celebrated her birthday on Ocr. 5 at the home of her daughter
and soncin-law, Ann and David Zirkle in Racine.
Following a dinner with birthday cake and ice cream,
Swisher was given cards and gifts from family members
incll!ding her son and great-nephew; Russell Maynard a(ld
Cody Maynard of Mason. W.Va.; granddaughters, Debbie and
her husband Joe Quivey of Pomeroy, Terri Hysell and son,
Travis of Nitro, W.Va., Brenda Seagraves and daughrer, Kyrie
Swann, of Middleport and great,granddaughter, Amber Dugan
her 'husblind and daughrer, Arnie and Lily of Zanesville. ·

Question: I get leg pregnancy, diabetes , and
cramps at night. I haven't the use ·or certain medica,
had any ji)r a long time, but tions.
·
now they're starting again.
·Though leg cramps are
They seem to be worse in usually nothing more than
the hot weather.! don't have · an annoyance, in some·
any · problems when I'm cases they crorbe·-:ni~n of
walking around, just during something more senous.
the night. The leg cramps · For instance, frequent leg
wake me up.
·
cramps; whethe~y occur
Answer: Muscle cramps during the day
-e night,
are a relatively common ·can be a sign Of an underJy,
event. A cramp is an invol- . in¥ problem like hypothy,
ut\1(11)' and pamful contrac, ro1dism, diabetes, anemia,
tion of a muscle. Ther can kidney problems or nerve
.happen in any muscle m the disorders.
.
body but are inore common
Other more serious causes
in the legs.
of leg cramps include
No one is quite sure why decreased blood flow to the
muscle cramps happen at · legs· and a ·compressed
night, but many common nerve in your back. due to a
associations have been narrowing of the spinal
made. Although more likely canal. These type of cramps
to occur in older people, • an! usually associated with
they can happen to anyone. activity and relieved by rest,
Nocturnal leg cramps are rather than coming on dur,
frequently associated with ing periods of rest.
muscle overuse and · musThere are . some . simple
cle fatigue. Mild dehydra- preventive steps you can
tion and electrolyle imbal- take. For nighttime cramps .
ance are also implicated in like you have, it can be
many . cases of muscle helpful to stretch your legs
cramps. Other risk. factors each ,night before you go to
for leg cramps include bed. If a cramp comes on

•

anyway, try rei stretch tl11i polassium. and' taking a
muscle slowly and t!te mullivitamin can help with
cramp will usually resolve. the magnesium. Dairy
It can also be beneficia~ to products are a good source
gently compress, massage. of calcium.
or stretch the affecled ritus- · Some people do need pre,
cle wirb your hand~
·scription medication
For people who gel such as muscle relaxants cramps during or after exer, for leg cramps. Check with
cise, it's important to do your doclor if your leg
plenty of stretching both cramps are frequent or per,
during a warm,up period sistent.
before exercis~ and a cool,
Family Medicine® is a ·
down period after your weekly column. To submit
workout is over. This will questions, write to Martha
help your muscles be Iter A. Simpson, D.(J., M.B.A.,
handle the strain of your Ohio University College of
exercise regime.
Osteopathic Medicine, P.O.
Also, avoid overtaxing Box 110, Athens, Ohio
your muscles and drink 45701, or via e-mail to
plenty of fluids - especial, readerqwestions@ family- ·
ly if you 're sweating heavi- medicinenews.org. Medical
ly.during your workout.
information in this column
There. are also some gen- is provided as an· educaera! dierary adjustmenls tional service only. It does
you can make to help pre· not replace the judgment of
vent leg cramps. Drink your personal physician,
plenty of fluid during the who should be relied on to
day, and ma)ce sure you are diagno.~e and recommend
getting enough potassium treatment for any medical
in your diet. Magnesium conditions. PtJst columns
and calcium are also impor, are available online at
tant. Eatingll banana every ww w.fam ilymedic ine:
other day can help with news.org.

'Torn between 21evers: some Ohio voters waffle

rifices McCain made as a . Hamilton said the bad
war vereran and POW.
economy came at a tough
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
Yet she's also not con, time: she was recently
Page At
vi need that's a reason by itself forced to retire after her
COLUMBUS - Whatdo to vole for McCain·. And she social work agency lost its
some local people on edge entering and ·theft, all you mean, you still haven't acknowledges that Obama fund in~ and shut down.
alon~ with a senes ofbreak- reponed this month .
Hamilton says she's both,
made up your mind?
has done a better job in the
"ins 111 the county in the
The department .recovered:
As many as one in 10 three presidential debares.
ered that Obama hasn't.
Rutland and Racine areas. guns, radio and · jewelry likely Ohio voters remain
A Christian, she has voted identified himself more as a
Last week Sheriff Robeit believed to have been stolen unsure which presidenrial based on her faith in the person of mixed race rather
Beegle announced. the arrest from a home on Lasher.Road, candidate they'll vote for past; particularly on topics than being ·black.
of a Langsville man and rools stolen from the Meigs Nov. 4. Some are waiting to such a~ abortion, which .usuObaina is the son of a
· :woman in relations to six Mine} I property, tools and a be wooed. Others are still ally meant Republican can, black. father from Kenya
'crimes reported. this month. four-wheeler stolen from a sifting through real and vir- dictates.
and a white mother. He has
· Last week, Beegle and home on Nease Road, a four- tual mounds of information.
'Today she's wondering if talked often of what it was
Deputy Scott . Trussell said . wheeler stolen from Ohio i43
"Both candidates are she needs to expand her per, like to grow up with such a
Jeremy Council, 29, and at Harrisonville, another four- . spimding a lot of time and sonal outlook to include diverse background.
'Brittany Brewer, 19, were wheeler from a Bradbury money in Ohio ·trying to topics like health care.
· Hamilton also says it's
arrested and jailed on Road home, and a Razor all, generate the · kind. of reac"Now, it's kind of like, clear McCain comes from a
&lt;:liarges relaling to six cases rerrain vehicle stolen from a tion they want ," 'said Lee 'Wow, Heather, are you vol· privileged upbringing and
oQf burglary, breaking and road at Kingsbury.
Miringoff, director of the ing as a Christian or are you she wonders how he could
Marist Poll at the Marist · voting as an American?"' . identify with the middle
class. McCain's father and
College Institute for Public Reese said. ·
Reese, an artist and molh· grandfather were Navy
Opinion.
Page At
"For some voters that er of three children , said the admirals.
"! want lo know more
sends a very mixed mes- reality of huge medical
-would be impacted during Meigs County. Sheets ·also sage, and they're not ready expenses hit home last year about each candidate's
:Construclion of the lines and said "clean burning coal is to choose sides."
when her husband, Stephen, background and .how they
.
if there had been any lax the answer for now" whe)l
suffered a collapsed lung got to where they are
Heather
Reese,
36,
of
:abatements offered along talking about becoming more suburban Columbus says and the family racked up tOday," said Hamilton.
independent in regards to she believes Republican thousands of dollars in med- · "I'm very frustrated," she
the route?
.
oil and 'energy John McCain · has more ical bills .
foreign
:' Rodney
Butcher,
said. 'This is the most undePomeroy, identified himse,lf sources, saying "this :is . a inlegrity but she prefers · Sandra Ha!Jlilton, 61, of Cided I've been in my life.''
as a union carpenter and said matter of national security."
The Ocr. 13 Manst Poll
says she wants lo
The hearing wrapped up Democrar Barack Oban\a's Cincinnati
the questions posed by
hear more specifics from found Obama leading
health care plan.
· Kanfer were "to get the line in just over a half-hour with
each candidate on positions McCain 48 percent to 40
She's
excited
about
Jltopped from bein~ buill and the adjUdicatory hearing set McCain's running mate, important to her, such as percent with II percent of
stop the project. ' He went for for 10 a.m., Monday at Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin, Social Security benefits and registered Ohio voters still
on to say: ''This is not !he the offices of the Ohio and appreciative of the sac, . health insurance.
undecided .
first time we've had to deal Public Urilities Commission
with ·overhead powerlines , in- Columbus. This hearing
The state of Ohio knows will be. more formal and
cross-examination will be
.Jiow to deal .with this:"
• G~g Sheets, Pomeroy, permitted. As for last night's
where the economy is such · rhe· $550 ,000 goal last holi6aid the Sierra Club and !Jearing, all questions will
BY I&lt;ANTELE FRANKO
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
·
a huge factor, we're all cau- day seaSon.
!Natural Resources Defense eventually be . answered in
Frank
Kirk:,
who
oversees
writing
when
·
the
OPSB
tiously
optimistic
about
Council · we.re "groupi
No change? No problem. · fundraising but we don't the charity's work in the
destroying our nation from reaches a decision.
A pilot program will really know what to Columbus area, said this
Earlier this yellr the OPSB
within" going on to call them
year's goal will be higher,
allow
Ohioans to donate to expect," she said.
permitted
the
construction
.-~ 'the minority" when it came
the
Salvation
Army's
Red
and
he's not sure donations
the
plant
which
is
currentAs
the
sour
economy
rais,
of
to those sQpporting the plant
Kettle Campaign this holi- es uncertainty, Salvation · will meet the expected
Md transrmssion line route in ly not under appeaL
day
season by sending a text Army officials are search, demand. But he's optlmisiic
•'
message t6 a number posred ing for new ways to boost about the text message tactic.
"I've been an officer now
near 80 k.enles in the donations and awareness.
in for 36 years, and what I've
Kettle don!ltions
Columbus area,. The profrom Page At
•
gram is aimed ar younger, Columbus and natiJnwide seen is the younger generareadying irs show,clearing for ODOT said. ODOT uses tech,savvy donors who are have increased during each lion now is as generous, if not
of the past five years, as has more generous, than previous
equipment, and fine tuning a an average of 700,000 tons · less likely to carry cash.
generations if you can get lo
When the campaign the need.
"smart salt strategy" for of salt each winter.
The keule campa:gn col· them the message of how to
keeping roadways safe by · While reniinding motorists begins in late November,
using the right amounts of that in "Ice and Snow, Take it ·people will be able to make lected $118 milhon in .the give , what they can do and
salt and manpower at the Slow;" ODOT's District 10 is a $5 donation , which is then U.S. las! year, just toppif\!l how their gifl will make a difpreparin~ for their annual
the $117 million raised in ference ," Kirk said.
posred to cell phone bills.
right times and locations.
The United Way and other
"dry
run
'
inspection
during
Army
officials
2006.
Material donations to
Salvation
ODOT is 11lso faced with
charities
have conducted
the
week
of
Nov.
17.
It
will
the
organizations
thrift
have talked about creating a
1l dramatic increase in the
similar
fundraising
efforts
price of rock salt , bur nor as occur ill Meigs County on texting program for about stores have decreased this
·much as most counties. "On Monday,Nov. l7,atnoon.Ar three years and hope ir will year, but financial giving through mobile markeling
average; the state will pay ihat time every plow, truck. be successful enough ro trends vary from those dona, services.
The text messaging pilol
about $62 per ton' come and spreader will be checked expand nationally, spokes, tion palterns , Tomme said.
is
not the Salvation Army's
Columbus kenle collec pared 16 laSt year ~s price of to be sure each one is road woman Melissa Tomme said.
"Particularly this year, tions fell $48,000 short of only attempt to reach a
.$42 a ton, a spokesperson ready .

ReactionS·rrom

solidify .the party's hold on
its electoral "base," the
party of Lincoln has
become the party of George
Wallace - envisioning the
country "divided between
.the
wholesome . Joe
Sixpacks in the heartland
and !he oversophisticated,
overeducated, overseculaiized denizens of the coasts."
By embraCing anti-inte[..
leclualism and cultural tri!J:.
alism, Brooks argues, the
GOP has alienated the most
populous and best,educated
pU11s of the country. The
Northeast and West Coast
are gone, along wilh major
cities and their . suburbs
nationwide. Enlire profes.
sions - lawyers, doctorJ,
high-lech executives, evetl
bankers :- lean strongly
Democratic, Espousing creationism, global-warming
denial,
and
KnowNorhingism generally hllll
lefl educated · Americans
nowhere else to go.
· Did you know there's a
YouTube video of Sarah
Palin accepting the blessing
of an African evangeliSI
against witches'?
·
Meanwhile , notice one
thing: Conservatives breaking rank tend lo be tho~
with independent careers'.
Recipients
of
whtU
Democrats derisively call
"w ingnut welfare," i.e,
employees of money,los&gt;in~. tycoon,financed outlets
ex1sting mainly to propagandize for billionaire tall
cuts, remain loyal. So does ·
lalk radio .
Should Republicans get
wiped out come November
lhings could get ugly.
;
(Arklmsas
Democrat·
Gazelle columnist Gene
is a National
Lyom
Maga zine Award winnrr
and co,aurhor of "Tht
lftmting of the President•
(St . Martin's Press, 2000J.
You can e-mail Lyons Qt
eugenelyons2@yahoo.com.J

1

Correction

BARACK OBAMA ·

class intellect and a first,
class temperament. That
· will likely be enough ro
make him president."
Buckley's way past unrepenlant. Respondmg to the
torrent of abuse coming his
way - he reports 12,000
outraged e,mails from GOP
loyalisls - he writes !hat
eight years of Bushism have
given us "a doubled nalion·
al debt, ruinous expansion .
of entitlement programs,
b .d
n ges to nowhere, poster
boy Jack Abramoff and an
ill,premised, ilJ,waged war
·
d
db
I' ·
f
con ucte y po Itic~ans o
breathtaking arro~ance."
De.•en d'mg h'1m "m h er own
. syn d'1ca ted
co Iumn,
Buckley's friend and colleague, Kathleen Parker,
takes it a step bevond:
"Republicans are not· short
on brainpower ·- or pride
- but they have strayed off
course. They do not, in fact,
deserve to win this time ,
and someone had to remind
· !hem why."
For her part, Noonan realizes .that the conservative
inovement's vaunted message discipline has become
a crippling weakness. In
purging Buckley, the "conservative intelligentsia are
doing what they have done
for five years. They bitterly
atlacked !hose who came to
sland against the Bush
administration. This was·
destructive . If !hey had
stood for conservative prin,
ciple and !he full expression
of views , instead of ·
attempting ro silence rhose
who opposed mere party.
their movement, and the
party, would be in a better
and heahhier position::
.Although McCain and
Palin are laking much.ofthc
abuse, it's really Bushism
(or Rove, ism. if you like),
that's discredited .principled
conservatism and rhrealens
to tear the Republican Party
apart. Brooks notices that to ·

· ·1.com·
www.mydn
a ysentine

Crites is a d,ecorated US
Navy Captain and veteran
of the Vietnam War with a a
C P01&gt;:fEROY ~ The RSVP volunteers of the Meigs County
POMEROY - Maureen 21-year record of ppblic
ouncll on Agmg Will be collecting non,perishable food
'paper products, personal hygiene items or monetary donatio~· Crites, wife of Mike Crites, service as a federal, state
at the Mulberry Communiry Center and the Rejoicing Life republican candidate for and local prosecutor. He
..Cent~r for 1he1r food banks Saturday from IO.a.m. to 2 p.m. . atlorney gen~ral , will be the was nominaled in 1986 by
"!'~e first · 110 people to donate ar each location will featured speaker at tonight's President Ronald Reagan
·.receive a personal first,:id kit provided by ~he Meigs Meigs County Republican to be the US Auorney for
Party's Annual
Bean the Southern District of
~ounry Emergency _PlannmgCommirtee.
Dinner.
Ohio. He served in the
The anrlual bean dinner position from 1986 to 1993
begins at 6:30 p.m. at the under both Reagan and
·•.
Mulberry
Community Presidenl George HW
•, HARRISONVILLE - Harrisonville Order ·of Eastern Cenrer. Donations are Bush.
S[llf Chapter 255 hosted the Meigs Couniy Farm Bureau at accepted but not required to
According to Crites, dur.t,he Middleport Lodge.
·
altend.
Bean
soul?,
veg,
ing
· his tenure : a US
.,
erable. soup and chih will be Atlorney, he and his staff
served.
successfully investigated,
Crites
is
a
former
U
~d
prosect~led and dismanlled
••
•' TUPPERS PLAINS - East~rn High School senior States Auorney and man~~ numerous local , national
dass WI!~ have a hog roast from 4, 7 p.m. ar the high ing partner with the and internalional drug orga'School pnor lo !he football game berween the Eagles and Columbus,based law firm nizations,
seized
and'
Sourhern Tornadoes .
Rich, Criles &amp; Dittmer. obtained the forfeiture of

.,

GOP backbiting starts early

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·tocal Briefs

VIEWS

book coming out featuring still had old-time compasObama, even though a press sion for one, another. Have
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio
Dear Editor:
release announced it on July you noticed in the last 20
(740) 992·2156 ·FAX (740) 992·2157
The Oct. 3 Associated 23. Judging from Ifill's soft years or so !hat God-given
questions and her refusal to emorion isn't wit~ us '1
www.mydallysentlnel.com
"'
Press arlicle on the vice rein Palin in , the intimida,
Get that dusty Bible our.
presidential debate states
that Palin made only one . tion tactic may have worked. dust ir .ofL and read for the
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
' '
obvious stumble. No: She Thanks a bucketful. Gwen. hidden mania. If you are a
She couldn't have done il true Christian, this mess is
Dan Goodrich
made a plethora of them. . · h
not a surprise. Keep your
including · confusing the wnout you. ·
·Publisher
Fruits of the Spirit intact.
•
commander of Afghan
SJeff F1elds
Don't
bear false wirness ,
forces with a Civil War genyrocuse
Charlene Hoeflich
even in an elecrion yea·r. You
era!, but my main beef is
can sit in a garage and call
General Manager-News Editor
wirn Gwen Ifill. She turned
yourself a car. you are not a
in the worst performance as
car.
You can warm a pew in
a debate moderator in my
church,
.Ihal doesn't mal).e
.
memory .
you a Chrislian. Be sure lo
Congress shall make no law respecting an
Dear Editor:
In addirion ro· allowing
thank
God for our V\!terans
With all the confusion
Palin to continually wink
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
of
all
wars
and illl the people
and mug ("Hi. .soccer moms, going on, not just in our
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of I'm one of you''), Ifill, to my country; this Is global, we who have made a difference.
Deloris Sayre
' speech, or of the press; or the ilght of the peo- utter disbelit)f, permitted are all tied together with !he Syracuse
Palin to take over the pro- other countries, like it or not.
. pie peaceably to assemble, and to petition the ceedings
and spew forth her
We must look to our Lord
Government
fo'a
redress
of
grievances.
programfor
answers , notjustthe gov, ·
heaviJy,coached
.
.
ming. Indeed, Palin actually emmenl, which took us to
- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution suited thai she wouldn 'I the brink of. destruction. It
answer the qLiestions thai may rurn around.
.
Biden or the moderalor
This was foretold in our
Dear Editor:
wanled her to answer, but Bible, so hang on it is going
One of our presidential
: ~'ODAY
would instead talk. to the to get ugly real fasl.
candidates and his political
God is in control. He w'ill party are deterntined to rob
· Today is Thursdi1y, Oct. 23, the 297th day of 2008. There people , and Ifill let her get
away
with
il.
I
was
aghusr.
prevail
and in the end, bank your readers of !heir consti,
are 69 days left in the year.
.
Above
all,
the
farce
proves
accounts, your social status tulional righr to keep and
Today's Highlight in History:
.
there
are
nor
any
low
roads
and your politics won't gel bear arms. This is a national
On Oct. 23, 1983, 241 U.S. service merribers , mostly
the Republi cans won'! rake. you a-place in heaven . Only issue that will affect llO mil,
Marines, were killed in a suicide lruck,bombing at Beirut They muddied up a tranquil
heart - and it had bet- lion American citizens who
international Airport ·in Lcban9n; a near,simultaneous pool wjth a remonstra110n . your
rer be pure: ·
own guns.
attack on French f")rces killed 58 paratroopers.
·
over the facr that Ifill has a
During the Depression, we
The
United
States
On this date :
·
In 1707. the first Parliament of Great Bri!ain, created by
the Acts of Union between England and Scotland, held its
firs! meeting.
In 1915. tens of thousands of women marched in New
. York City, demanding the right to vore .
· In 1942, during World War II, Britain launched ~ m;uor.
offensive againsl Axis forces at El Alamein in Egypt.
. In 1946. the United Nations General Assembly, convened
in New York for the first time, at au auditorium in Flushing
Meadow.
.
· In 1.956, a sjudcnl-sparkcd revolt against Hungary's
Communist rule IJegan; as the revolulion. spread, Soviet
.forces started entering the counlry, and the uprising was put
down within weeks.
In 1958, Boris Pasternak was named winner of the Nobel
Prize in lilerature. (However. Soviel authorities pressured
Pasternak inlo relinquishi'ng the award.)
· In 1973, President Nixon agreed to turn over White
. House tape recordings subpoenaed by !he Watergate spe, 1.
Cia! prosecutor to Judge John J. Sirica.
·
In 1987, the U.S. Senate rejected, 58,42, the Supreme
Court nominalion of Robert H. Bork.
In 1995, a jury in Houston con vic led Yolanda Saldivar of
murdering Tejanq singing star Selena.
· Ten years ago: Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu and Palesli1iian leader Yasser Ar&lt;1f&lt;1t signed a
breakthrough land,for,peace agreemenl at the White
House . Barnell Slepian, a doctor who performed abortions,
was shot a_nd killed at his home in suburban Butfalo, N.Y.
(Jamc ~, Kopp , a militant aborlion opponenl, was later con,
victed of murdering Slepian.J typhoon Babs pummeled the
northern Philippines, killing at least 189 people.
. Five years ago: As thousands of anti,war demonslrators
:protested outside, President Bush thanked Australia for
sending troops to Iraq and Afghanistan as he spoke to the
country's Parliament. Later in the day, the president con,
eluded his Pacific trip with a visit lo Hawaii, where he
With fewer than lwo
dropped flowers into the water at the sunken battleship
weeks
until the presidential
USS Arizona. Madame Chiang Kai,shek, widow of the
election
, there's plenty of
Chinese nationalist leader, died in New York al age 105. In
lime tor surprises. Virtually
Game 5 of the World Series, the Florida Marlins beat the
anything could still happen.
New York Yankees (),4, bringing the team wirhin one game But you'd never. know it
of winning the baseball championship.
from rhe behavior of .many
Gene
· Thought for Today: "Life is easier to lake than you'd Republican pundils and
Lyons
think: all that is necessary is to accept rhe impossible, do thinkers .
·.without the indispensable and bear the intolerable.'' Among GOP savants, the
Kathleen Norris, American author ( 1880, 1960).
bitterness, recrimination
•
~tnd finger,pointing have to President Nixon, ·seems
already begun - a hearten. melodramatic.
Cancer?
ing sign, actually. After M
J"k
· ·
LETTERS TO THE
ore 1 e acne or psonas1s,
eight yean;..of lock-step con,
f
·
one would have thought.
EDITOR
orm1ty and near-total fealty Embarrassing, perhaps , bur
lo the Bush administration's h dl n1 h
Leuers to the ,•ditor are welcome, They should be less every
destructive whim,onc
ar Y e,t reatening .
So the Republicans have
than 300 word1·. All/etters are subject /u editing, must be
signed, and include address and telephone number. No wouldn 't1.have though! they nominated a smug ignora,
·
mus. After ei~ht years of
unsigned tellers will be pu!Jii,hed. Lel/ers should be in had it in them .
Needless
wars?
George W. Bus , we're sup'good taste , addressing issues, not personalities. Letters of
corruption? posed to be shocked? "No
thilnks to or!irllliwtions and individuals will not be accept, Staggering
Illegal
wiretaps? news
conferences?
ed j(Jr puhlicatirm.
Kidnapping? Secrel pris, Interviews now only wilh
ons? Torrure? · So,called friendly journalisls?" wriles
"conservatives" have ratio, the Wall Street Journal's
nalized them all.' Sarah Peggy Noonan. "You can't
Palin, however, many can, be president or vice presi213·960)
not abide. Alaska's winking. dent and govern in that
Reader Services Ohio(USPS
Valley Publishing
governor, who goes around style, as a sequestered figCo.
complaining !hat CBS's ure. This has been Mr.
Correction Polley
Published every anernoon, Monday
Our main concern In all stories is 10
Katie Co uric asked her· Bush's style the past few
through -Friday, 111 Court Street,
be accurate . If you know of an error Pomeroy, Ohio. Second--class postage
"gotcha" questions like, years , and see where it got
ln a story, call the newsroom at (740) paid at Pomeroy.
"What magazines and us."
992,2156.
Member: The Associated Press and
newspapcrs do you read?"
Other GOP-leaning puntl'1e Ohio Newspaper Association . .
has become a flashpoint.
dits argue that rhe sheer
Poatmesler: Send address correc·
Our main number Is .
Christopher
Buckley, opportunism of picking
lions to The Da!ly sentinel. It t Court
sacked
from
the
National Palin showed McCain te 111,
(740) 992·21.56.
Street. Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Review,
a
magazine
found- ·peraritentally unsuited for
Deparjment extensions are:
cd
by
his
lale
father
William
the presidency. "Under rhe
Subscription Rates
By carrier or motor route
F. Buckley, after endorsing pressure of the financial cri,
News
One month
'10.27
Barack Obama on Tina sis, one presidential candi,
Editor: Charlene Hoeflich , Ext. 12
'f15.84
One year
Web sit~, The date is behaving lik.e a flus,
Brown's
Dally
50'
Reporter: Brian Reed, Ext 14
Daily Beas~. explam~ that . tered rookie playing in a
Senior Citizen rates
Reponot : Belh Sergenl, Ext 13
he was Inttially capttvared league too high," added per,
One month
'10.27
One year
'103.90
by Palin's backwoods snickety Washington Post
&amp;bsat&gt;oos ..t1cttl ...m 11 ocMiroe
Advertising
chari]J. "But it's kind of like columnisl George WilL "It
- No aub- · d~ting a supermodel.'~ he is nor Barack Obama."
Oulolde Saleo: DaiiB Harris. Ext 15 dinlct b lho Dailv scriplion by maN permitted In areas
OutaJde Sa... : Brenda Davis , Ext 1e where t-croe carrier servk:e ls,awif..
says . "There comes a
Will's neoconservative
CIMo.IClrc.: Judy Clarl&lt;, Ext. 10
moment,
unfortunately, co!Jeague
Charles
obOe.
where they start talking,"
Krauth am mer went further.
Mall Subecrtptlon
Allegedly cerebral New For all his personal and ide,
General, Manager
In- Melg~ COUnty
York
Times columnist ological misgivings abour
·Charlene Hoeflich , Ext 12
13 Weeu
'32 .26
David
Brooks
goes even Obama, he wrote, "Oliver
26 w
..,.,
'64.20
further, designating Palin "a Wendell Holmes Jr. famous,
52 Woeks
' 127 11
E""all:
fatal
cancer
lo
the ly said
of Franklin
newsOmydallysentinel.com
Outside Melg1 County
Republican Party." This. Roosevelt that he had a
13 Weeks
'53.55
ponentous phrase, with its 'second,class intellect, but a
Web:
25 Weeks
'107.10
10 John Dean 's first-class temperament ...
allusion
www.mydallysenHnel.com
52 Weeks
'21 4.21
famous Watergate warning (Obama's) got both a first,

. Thursday, October 23, 2oo8

BY ANDREW
WELSH-HUGGINS

Hearing rro~

to

Undecided voters drop to
5 percent when ·respondents
are asked which candidate
they're leaning toward.
Given the amount of
advertising and campaign
stops in Ohio. it would seem
eas~ for voters to make ur.
their mind. But this type of
attention may also have rh'e
opposite effect.
A new national study sug,
gests .the campaign 's air,
waves war may actually
make voters in battleground
states ambivalent over
which candidate to vote for.
The study found that as
campaign ad buys increase ,
so does the number of
things people fi nd they like
about each candidate.
,
"Some people just get con,
. fused, others wrestle with it
and say, 'This is a hard
choice;·· said Luke Keele,
an Ohio Slate University
political ~cientist and co,
author of the study published
in this month 's issue of
"Political Psychology."
The study )Vas based on
responses from the 2000
edition of the Americarr
Narional Election Study, a
nationally representalive
survey of volers that looked
at 2000 presidential anct
congressional races .

S~vation Army tries text donations in Ohio

Salt

.

.

'

.

.

.

more tech-savvy audience .
The online kettle network, .
which enables people to
collect donations v1a ted
bucket icons on Internet
pages, is in its third year.
At least half a dozen
Salvation Army divi siohs
offer updates through the
microblogging site Twitter,
· hoping to reach out beyond
the people who donate in
response to traditional mai(,
ings and phone calls.
"We're just trying lo find
people who are online who
are willing lo do the same,:•
•Said Kathy Lovin . the
Salvation Army 's Denverbased public affairs direclor.
who sent her first Twitter
about the kettle campaign
Tuesday.
The charity is also ex peri·
menting !his year wilh
pages mid inleractive tools
on the Facebook network;ing Web site.

�.

'

PageA4

OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

. The Daily Sentinel

Thursday,' October 23, 2008

OUR READERS'

How about

compassion?

Hunters

beware

.

IN HISTORY

'
Cougress,
both the Senatt
and
House
of
Represenlatives, are current·
ly run by rhe same politic~!
party that sponsors the anti·
gun presidential candidate.
Together, their goal is to
pass a law that will perma·
nentlv ban huge numbers of
guns~ One of their bills, if
passed, will ban 65 named
guns and hundreds of other
similar guns. Another would
even ban shotguns and
rifles. If Congress passes
such a law, your only hope
will be a president who
would velo it.
The liberal media will DOl
alert you and · many coun
judges no longer respect the
Constitution. The resulti
Less ability to protect your
family and no more hun1i9g
with guns.
•
The
Narional
Rifl~
Associalion has launch~
new ads to alert the publi~
about the anti-gun candi•
dare . but his campaign people are rhreatening legal
action against TV and radio
stations who air the NRA
ads. This candidate says he
is nul anti, gun, but his prov·
able past record .:-~!early
'shows he is.
"'
·:
Marge Bartee
Long Bottom

RSVP project

'

The Daily Sentinel • Page As
'

Mrs. Crites to speak at bean dinner
STAFF REPORT

NEWSOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Hog roast

more than $17 million in
illegal drug money and
assets; and collected more
than $125 million owed to
the United Stares.
Currenlly, he serves as
the law director/prosecutor
for Granville, Thornville,
Commercial Poinl . and
Orient. He has also served
as
acting
· Jaw
director/prosecutor for the
Hilliard,
cities . of
Pataskala and Harrisburg
as well as special counsel
and special prosecutor for
various Ohio municipali,
ties , school districts and
counties . ·
Crites is a retired captain
in the US Naval Reserve
where he served as the com,
manding officer of· nine
naval reserve units . He stud,

ied al !he Naval War
College . Narional War
College and lndu;trial
Colleges of the Armed
Forces . He also served as
deputy commander for
Mi ssion
Effectiveness.
Naval Reserve Readiness
Command Region Eight. At
his career peak he helped
manage more than 7,000
personnel.
Criles and his wife have
been married for 33 years.
They are parents of rhree
daughters, two 11re gradu- .
ares of the US Naval
Academy and are now serv"
ing as naval officers.
Another daughter is a graduare of The Ohio State uni,
versiry Moritz College of
Law and practic ing law in
Columbus .

Family Medicine

Stretching before bed and drinking water may prevent leg cramps

IS A M/IR'lC.IST-~OCfAL.IST

TAX·AAD·SP£/IIP Bl.:; .
GciERf.lMENT MUSLIM
1'ERRoRI~T...

Roberta Swisher

Birthday obsenred
RACINE- Roberta Swisher of New Haven, W.Va., celebrated her birthday on Ocr. 5 at the home of her daughter
and soncin-law, Ann and David Zirkle in Racine.
Following a dinner with birthday cake and ice cream,
Swisher was given cards and gifts from family members
incll!ding her son and great-nephew; Russell Maynard a(ld
Cody Maynard of Mason. W.Va.; granddaughters, Debbie and
her husband Joe Quivey of Pomeroy, Terri Hysell and son,
Travis of Nitro, W.Va., Brenda Seagraves and daughrer, Kyrie
Swann, of Middleport and great,granddaughter, Amber Dugan
her 'husblind and daughrer, Arnie and Lily of Zanesville. ·

Question: I get leg pregnancy, diabetes , and
cramps at night. I haven't the use ·or certain medica,
had any ji)r a long time, but tions.
·
now they're starting again.
·Though leg cramps are
They seem to be worse in usually nothing more than
the hot weather.! don't have · an annoyance, in some·
any · problems when I'm cases they crorbe·-:ni~n of
walking around, just during something more senous.
the night. The leg cramps · For instance, frequent leg
wake me up.
·
cramps; whethe~y occur
Answer: Muscle cramps during the day
-e night,
are a relatively common ·can be a sign Of an underJy,
event. A cramp is an invol- . in¥ problem like hypothy,
ut\1(11)' and pamful contrac, ro1dism, diabetes, anemia,
tion of a muscle. Ther can kidney problems or nerve
.happen in any muscle m the disorders.
.
body but are inore common
Other more serious causes
in the legs.
of leg cramps include
No one is quite sure why decreased blood flow to the
muscle cramps happen at · legs· and a ·compressed
night, but many common nerve in your back. due to a
associations have been narrowing of the spinal
made. Although more likely canal. These type of cramps
to occur in older people, • an! usually associated with
they can happen to anyone. activity and relieved by rest,
Nocturnal leg cramps are rather than coming on dur,
frequently associated with ing periods of rest.
muscle overuse and · musThere are . some . simple
cle fatigue. Mild dehydra- preventive steps you can
tion and electrolyle imbal- take. For nighttime cramps .
ance are also implicated in like you have, it can be
many . cases of muscle helpful to stretch your legs
cramps. Other risk. factors each ,night before you go to
for leg cramps include bed. If a cramp comes on

•

anyway, try rei stretch tl11i polassium. and' taking a
muscle slowly and t!te mullivitamin can help with
cramp will usually resolve. the magnesium. Dairy
It can also be beneficia~ to products are a good source
gently compress, massage. of calcium.
or stretch the affecled ritus- · Some people do need pre,
cle wirb your hand~
·scription medication
For people who gel such as muscle relaxants cramps during or after exer, for leg cramps. Check with
cise, it's important to do your doclor if your leg
plenty of stretching both cramps are frequent or per,
during a warm,up period sistent.
before exercis~ and a cool,
Family Medicine® is a ·
down period after your weekly column. To submit
workout is over. This will questions, write to Martha
help your muscles be Iter A. Simpson, D.(J., M.B.A.,
handle the strain of your Ohio University College of
exercise regime.
Osteopathic Medicine, P.O.
Also, avoid overtaxing Box 110, Athens, Ohio
your muscles and drink 45701, or via e-mail to
plenty of fluids - especial, readerqwestions@ family- ·
ly if you 're sweating heavi- medicinenews.org. Medical
ly.during your workout.
information in this column
There. are also some gen- is provided as an· educaera! dierary adjustmenls tional service only. It does
you can make to help pre· not replace the judgment of
vent leg cramps. Drink your personal physician,
plenty of fluid during the who should be relied on to
day, and ma)ce sure you are diagno.~e and recommend
getting enough potassium treatment for any medical
in your diet. Magnesium conditions. PtJst columns
and calcium are also impor, are available online at
tant. Eatingll banana every ww w.fam ilymedic ine:
other day can help with news.org.

'Torn between 21evers: some Ohio voters waffle

rifices McCain made as a . Hamilton said the bad
war vereran and POW.
economy came at a tough
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
Yet she's also not con, time: she was recently
Page At
vi need that's a reason by itself forced to retire after her
COLUMBUS - Whatdo to vole for McCain·. And she social work agency lost its
some local people on edge entering and ·theft, all you mean, you still haven't acknowledges that Obama fund in~ and shut down.
alon~ with a senes ofbreak- reponed this month .
Hamilton says she's both,
made up your mind?
has done a better job in the
"ins 111 the county in the
The department .recovered:
As many as one in 10 three presidential debares.
ered that Obama hasn't.
Rutland and Racine areas. guns, radio and · jewelry likely Ohio voters remain
A Christian, she has voted identified himself more as a
Last week Sheriff Robeit believed to have been stolen unsure which presidenrial based on her faith in the person of mixed race rather
Beegle announced. the arrest from a home on Lasher.Road, candidate they'll vote for past; particularly on topics than being ·black.
of a Langsville man and rools stolen from the Meigs Nov. 4. Some are waiting to such a~ abortion, which .usuObaina is the son of a
· :woman in relations to six Mine} I property, tools and a be wooed. Others are still ally meant Republican can, black. father from Kenya
'crimes reported. this month. four-wheeler stolen from a sifting through real and vir- dictates.
and a white mother. He has
· Last week, Beegle and home on Nease Road, a four- tual mounds of information.
'Today she's wondering if talked often of what it was
Deputy Scott . Trussell said . wheeler stolen from Ohio i43
"Both candidates are she needs to expand her per, like to grow up with such a
Jeremy Council, 29, and at Harrisonville, another four- . spimding a lot of time and sonal outlook to include diverse background.
'Brittany Brewer, 19, were wheeler from a Bradbury money in Ohio ·trying to topics like health care.
· Hamilton also says it's
arrested and jailed on Road home, and a Razor all, generate the · kind. of reac"Now, it's kind of like, clear McCain comes from a
&lt;:liarges relaling to six cases rerrain vehicle stolen from a tion they want ," 'said Lee 'Wow, Heather, are you vol· privileged upbringing and
oQf burglary, breaking and road at Kingsbury.
Miringoff, director of the ing as a Christian or are you she wonders how he could
Marist Poll at the Marist · voting as an American?"' . identify with the middle
class. McCain's father and
College Institute for Public Reese said. ·
Reese, an artist and molh· grandfather were Navy
Opinion.
Page At
"For some voters that er of three children , said the admirals.
"! want lo know more
sends a very mixed mes- reality of huge medical
-would be impacted during Meigs County. Sheets ·also sage, and they're not ready expenses hit home last year about each candidate's
:Construclion of the lines and said "clean burning coal is to choose sides."
when her husband, Stephen, background and .how they
.
if there had been any lax the answer for now" whe)l
suffered a collapsed lung got to where they are
Heather
Reese,
36,
of
:abatements offered along talking about becoming more suburban Columbus says and the family racked up tOday," said Hamilton.
independent in regards to she believes Republican thousands of dollars in med- · "I'm very frustrated," she
the route?
.
oil and 'energy John McCain · has more ical bills .
foreign
:' Rodney
Butcher,
said. 'This is the most undePomeroy, identified himse,lf sources, saying "this :is . a inlegrity but she prefers · Sandra Ha!Jlilton, 61, of Cided I've been in my life.''
as a union carpenter and said matter of national security."
The Ocr. 13 Manst Poll
says she wants lo
The hearing wrapped up Democrar Barack Oban\a's Cincinnati
the questions posed by
hear more specifics from found Obama leading
health care plan.
· Kanfer were "to get the line in just over a half-hour with
each candidate on positions McCain 48 percent to 40
She's
excited
about
Jltopped from bein~ buill and the adjUdicatory hearing set McCain's running mate, important to her, such as percent with II percent of
stop the project. ' He went for for 10 a.m., Monday at Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin, Social Security benefits and registered Ohio voters still
on to say: ''This is not !he the offices of the Ohio and appreciative of the sac, . health insurance.
undecided .
first time we've had to deal Public Urilities Commission
with ·overhead powerlines , in- Columbus. This hearing
The state of Ohio knows will be. more formal and
cross-examination will be
.Jiow to deal .with this:"
• G~g Sheets, Pomeroy, permitted. As for last night's
where the economy is such · rhe· $550 ,000 goal last holi6aid the Sierra Club and !Jearing, all questions will
BY I&lt;ANTELE FRANKO
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
·
a huge factor, we're all cau- day seaSon.
!Natural Resources Defense eventually be . answered in
Frank
Kirk:,
who
oversees
writing
when
·
the
OPSB
tiously
optimistic
about
Council · we.re "groupi
No change? No problem. · fundraising but we don't the charity's work in the
destroying our nation from reaches a decision.
A pilot program will really know what to Columbus area, said this
Earlier this yellr the OPSB
within" going on to call them
year's goal will be higher,
allow
Ohioans to donate to expect," she said.
permitted
the
construction
.-~ 'the minority" when it came
the
Salvation
Army's
Red
and
he's not sure donations
the
plant
which
is
currentAs
the
sour
economy
rais,
of
to those sQpporting the plant
Kettle Campaign this holi- es uncertainty, Salvation · will meet the expected
Md transrmssion line route in ly not under appeaL
day
season by sending a text Army officials are search, demand. But he's optlmisiic
•'
message t6 a number posred ing for new ways to boost about the text message tactic.
"I've been an officer now
near 80 k.enles in the donations and awareness.
in for 36 years, and what I've
Kettle don!ltions
Columbus area,. The profrom Page At
•
gram is aimed ar younger, Columbus and natiJnwide seen is the younger generareadying irs show,clearing for ODOT said. ODOT uses tech,savvy donors who are have increased during each lion now is as generous, if not
of the past five years, as has more generous, than previous
equipment, and fine tuning a an average of 700,000 tons · less likely to carry cash.
generations if you can get lo
When the campaign the need.
"smart salt strategy" for of salt each winter.
The keule campa:gn col· them the message of how to
keeping roadways safe by · While reniinding motorists begins in late November,
using the right amounts of that in "Ice and Snow, Take it ·people will be able to make lected $118 milhon in .the give , what they can do and
salt and manpower at the Slow;" ODOT's District 10 is a $5 donation , which is then U.S. las! year, just toppif\!l how their gifl will make a difpreparin~ for their annual
the $117 million raised in ference ," Kirk said.
posred to cell phone bills.
right times and locations.
The United Way and other
"dry
run
'
inspection
during
Army
officials
2006.
Material donations to
Salvation
ODOT is 11lso faced with
charities
have conducted
the
week
of
Nov.
17.
It
will
the
organizations
thrift
have talked about creating a
1l dramatic increase in the
similar
fundraising
efforts
price of rock salt , bur nor as occur ill Meigs County on texting program for about stores have decreased this
·much as most counties. "On Monday,Nov. l7,atnoon.Ar three years and hope ir will year, but financial giving through mobile markeling
average; the state will pay ihat time every plow, truck. be successful enough ro trends vary from those dona, services.
The text messaging pilol
about $62 per ton' come and spreader will be checked expand nationally, spokes, tion palterns , Tomme said.
is
not the Salvation Army's
Columbus kenle collec pared 16 laSt year ~s price of to be sure each one is road woman Melissa Tomme said.
"Particularly this year, tions fell $48,000 short of only attempt to reach a
.$42 a ton, a spokesperson ready .

ReactionS·rrom

solidify .the party's hold on
its electoral "base," the
party of Lincoln has
become the party of George
Wallace - envisioning the
country "divided between
.the
wholesome . Joe
Sixpacks in the heartland
and !he oversophisticated,
overeducated, overseculaiized denizens of the coasts."
By embraCing anti-inte[..
leclualism and cultural tri!J:.
alism, Brooks argues, the
GOP has alienated the most
populous and best,educated
pU11s of the country. The
Northeast and West Coast
are gone, along wilh major
cities and their . suburbs
nationwide. Enlire profes.
sions - lawyers, doctorJ,
high-lech executives, evetl
bankers :- lean strongly
Democratic, Espousing creationism, global-warming
denial,
and
KnowNorhingism generally hllll
lefl educated · Americans
nowhere else to go.
· Did you know there's a
YouTube video of Sarah
Palin accepting the blessing
of an African evangeliSI
against witches'?
·
Meanwhile , notice one
thing: Conservatives breaking rank tend lo be tho~
with independent careers'.
Recipients
of
whtU
Democrats derisively call
"w ingnut welfare," i.e,
employees of money,los&gt;in~. tycoon,financed outlets
ex1sting mainly to propagandize for billionaire tall
cuts, remain loyal. So does ·
lalk radio .
Should Republicans get
wiped out come November
lhings could get ugly.
;
(Arklmsas
Democrat·
Gazelle columnist Gene
is a National
Lyom
Maga zine Award winnrr
and co,aurhor of "Tht
lftmting of the President•
(St . Martin's Press, 2000J.
You can e-mail Lyons Qt
eugenelyons2@yahoo.com.J

1

Correction

BARACK OBAMA ·

class intellect and a first,
class temperament. That
· will likely be enough ro
make him president."
Buckley's way past unrepenlant. Respondmg to the
torrent of abuse coming his
way - he reports 12,000
outraged e,mails from GOP
loyalisls - he writes !hat
eight years of Bushism have
given us "a doubled nalion·
al debt, ruinous expansion .
of entitlement programs,
b .d
n ges to nowhere, poster
boy Jack Abramoff and an
ill,premised, ilJ,waged war
·
d
db
I' ·
f
con ucte y po Itic~ans o
breathtaking arro~ance."
De.•en d'mg h'1m "m h er own
. syn d'1ca ted
co Iumn,
Buckley's friend and colleague, Kathleen Parker,
takes it a step bevond:
"Republicans are not· short
on brainpower ·- or pride
- but they have strayed off
course. They do not, in fact,
deserve to win this time ,
and someone had to remind
· !hem why."
For her part, Noonan realizes .that the conservative
inovement's vaunted message discipline has become
a crippling weakness. In
purging Buckley, the "conservative intelligentsia are
doing what they have done
for five years. They bitterly
atlacked !hose who came to
sland against the Bush
administration. This was·
destructive . If !hey had
stood for conservative prin,
ciple and !he full expression
of views , instead of ·
attempting ro silence rhose
who opposed mere party.
their movement, and the
party, would be in a better
and heahhier position::
.Although McCain and
Palin are laking much.ofthc
abuse, it's really Bushism
(or Rove, ism. if you like),
that's discredited .principled
conservatism and rhrealens
to tear the Republican Party
apart. Brooks notices that to ·

· ·1.com·
www.mydn
a ysentine

Crites is a d,ecorated US
Navy Captain and veteran
of the Vietnam War with a a
C P01&gt;:fEROY ~ The RSVP volunteers of the Meigs County
POMEROY - Maureen 21-year record of ppblic
ouncll on Agmg Will be collecting non,perishable food
'paper products, personal hygiene items or monetary donatio~· Crites, wife of Mike Crites, service as a federal, state
at the Mulberry Communiry Center and the Rejoicing Life republican candidate for and local prosecutor. He
..Cent~r for 1he1r food banks Saturday from IO.a.m. to 2 p.m. . atlorney gen~ral , will be the was nominaled in 1986 by
"!'~e first · 110 people to donate ar each location will featured speaker at tonight's President Ronald Reagan
·.receive a personal first,:id kit provided by ~he Meigs Meigs County Republican to be the US Auorney for
Party's Annual
Bean the Southern District of
~ounry Emergency _PlannmgCommirtee.
Dinner.
Ohio. He served in the
The anrlual bean dinner position from 1986 to 1993
begins at 6:30 p.m. at the under both Reagan and
·•.
Mulberry
Community Presidenl George HW
•, HARRISONVILLE - Harrisonville Order ·of Eastern Cenrer. Donations are Bush.
S[llf Chapter 255 hosted the Meigs Couniy Farm Bureau at accepted but not required to
According to Crites, dur.t,he Middleport Lodge.
·
altend.
Bean
soul?,
veg,
ing
· his tenure : a US
.,
erable. soup and chih will be Atlorney, he and his staff
served.
successfully investigated,
Crites
is
a
former
U
~d
prosect~led and dismanlled
••
•' TUPPERS PLAINS - East~rn High School senior States Auorney and man~~ numerous local , national
dass WI!~ have a hog roast from 4, 7 p.m. ar the high ing partner with the and internalional drug orga'School pnor lo !he football game berween the Eagles and Columbus,based law firm nizations,
seized
and'
Sourhern Tornadoes .
Rich, Criles &amp; Dittmer. obtained the forfeiture of

.,

GOP backbiting starts early

The Daily Sentinel '

·tocal Briefs

VIEWS

book coming out featuring still had old-time compasObama, even though a press sion for one, another. Have
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio
Dear Editor:
release announced it on July you noticed in the last 20
(740) 992·2156 ·FAX (740) 992·2157
The Oct. 3 Associated 23. Judging from Ifill's soft years or so !hat God-given
questions and her refusal to emorion isn't wit~ us '1
www.mydallysentlnel.com
"'
Press arlicle on the vice rein Palin in , the intimida,
Get that dusty Bible our.
presidential debate states
that Palin made only one . tion tactic may have worked. dust ir .ofL and read for the
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
' '
obvious stumble. No: She Thanks a bucketful. Gwen. hidden mania. If you are a
She couldn't have done il true Christian, this mess is
Dan Goodrich
made a plethora of them. . · h
not a surprise. Keep your
including · confusing the wnout you. ·
·Publisher
Fruits of the Spirit intact.
•
commander of Afghan
SJeff F1elds
Don't
bear false wirness ,
forces with a Civil War genyrocuse
Charlene Hoeflich
even in an elecrion yea·r. You
era!, but my main beef is
can sit in a garage and call
General Manager-News Editor
wirn Gwen Ifill. She turned
yourself a car. you are not a
in the worst performance as
car.
You can warm a pew in
a debate moderator in my
church,
.Ihal doesn't mal).e
.
memory .
you a Chrislian. Be sure lo
Congress shall make no law respecting an
Dear Editor:
In addirion ro· allowing
thank
God for our V\!terans
With all the confusion
Palin to continually wink
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
of
all
wars
and illl the people
and mug ("Hi. .soccer moms, going on, not just in our
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of I'm one of you''), Ifill, to my country; this Is global, we who have made a difference.
Deloris Sayre
' speech, or of the press; or the ilght of the peo- utter disbelit)f, permitted are all tied together with !he Syracuse
Palin to take over the pro- other countries, like it or not.
. pie peaceably to assemble, and to petition the ceedings
and spew forth her
We must look to our Lord
Government
fo'a
redress
of
grievances.
programfor
answers , notjustthe gov, ·
heaviJy,coached
.
.
ming. Indeed, Palin actually emmenl, which took us to
- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution suited thai she wouldn 'I the brink of. destruction. It
answer the qLiestions thai may rurn around.
.
Biden or the moderalor
This was foretold in our
Dear Editor:
wanled her to answer, but Bible, so hang on it is going
One of our presidential
: ~'ODAY
would instead talk. to the to get ugly real fasl.
candidates and his political
God is in control. He w'ill party are deterntined to rob
· Today is Thursdi1y, Oct. 23, the 297th day of 2008. There people , and Ifill let her get
away
with
il.
I
was
aghusr.
prevail
and in the end, bank your readers of !heir consti,
are 69 days left in the year.
.
Above
all,
the
farce
proves
accounts, your social status tulional righr to keep and
Today's Highlight in History:
.
there
are
nor
any
low
roads
and your politics won't gel bear arms. This is a national
On Oct. 23, 1983, 241 U.S. service merribers , mostly
the Republi cans won'! rake. you a-place in heaven . Only issue that will affect llO mil,
Marines, were killed in a suicide lruck,bombing at Beirut They muddied up a tranquil
heart - and it had bet- lion American citizens who
international Airport ·in Lcban9n; a near,simultaneous pool wjth a remonstra110n . your
rer be pure: ·
own guns.
attack on French f")rces killed 58 paratroopers.
·
over the facr that Ifill has a
During the Depression, we
The
United
States
On this date :
·
In 1707. the first Parliament of Great Bri!ain, created by
the Acts of Union between England and Scotland, held its
firs! meeting.
In 1915. tens of thousands of women marched in New
. York City, demanding the right to vore .
· In 1942, during World War II, Britain launched ~ m;uor.
offensive againsl Axis forces at El Alamein in Egypt.
. In 1946. the United Nations General Assembly, convened
in New York for the first time, at au auditorium in Flushing
Meadow.
.
· In 1.956, a sjudcnl-sparkcd revolt against Hungary's
Communist rule IJegan; as the revolulion. spread, Soviet
.forces started entering the counlry, and the uprising was put
down within weeks.
In 1958, Boris Pasternak was named winner of the Nobel
Prize in lilerature. (However. Soviel authorities pressured
Pasternak inlo relinquishi'ng the award.)
· In 1973, President Nixon agreed to turn over White
. House tape recordings subpoenaed by !he Watergate spe, 1.
Cia! prosecutor to Judge John J. Sirica.
·
In 1987, the U.S. Senate rejected, 58,42, the Supreme
Court nominalion of Robert H. Bork.
In 1995, a jury in Houston con vic led Yolanda Saldivar of
murdering Tejanq singing star Selena.
· Ten years ago: Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu and Palesli1iian leader Yasser Ar&lt;1f&lt;1t signed a
breakthrough land,for,peace agreemenl at the White
House . Barnell Slepian, a doctor who performed abortions,
was shot a_nd killed at his home in suburban Butfalo, N.Y.
(Jamc ~, Kopp , a militant aborlion opponenl, was later con,
victed of murdering Slepian.J typhoon Babs pummeled the
northern Philippines, killing at least 189 people.
. Five years ago: As thousands of anti,war demonslrators
:protested outside, President Bush thanked Australia for
sending troops to Iraq and Afghanistan as he spoke to the
country's Parliament. Later in the day, the president con,
eluded his Pacific trip with a visit lo Hawaii, where he
With fewer than lwo
dropped flowers into the water at the sunken battleship
weeks
until the presidential
USS Arizona. Madame Chiang Kai,shek, widow of the
election
, there's plenty of
Chinese nationalist leader, died in New York al age 105. In
lime tor surprises. Virtually
Game 5 of the World Series, the Florida Marlins beat the
anything could still happen.
New York Yankees (),4, bringing the team wirhin one game But you'd never. know it
of winning the baseball championship.
from rhe behavior of .many
Gene
· Thought for Today: "Life is easier to lake than you'd Republican pundils and
Lyons
think: all that is necessary is to accept rhe impossible, do thinkers .
·.without the indispensable and bear the intolerable.'' Among GOP savants, the
Kathleen Norris, American author ( 1880, 1960).
bitterness, recrimination
•
~tnd finger,pointing have to President Nixon, ·seems
already begun - a hearten. melodramatic.
Cancer?
ing sign, actually. After M
J"k
· ·
LETTERS TO THE
ore 1 e acne or psonas1s,
eight yean;..of lock-step con,
f
·
one would have thought.
EDITOR
orm1ty and near-total fealty Embarrassing, perhaps , bur
lo the Bush administration's h dl n1 h
Leuers to the ,•ditor are welcome, They should be less every
destructive whim,onc
ar Y e,t reatening .
So the Republicans have
than 300 word1·. All/etters are subject /u editing, must be
signed, and include address and telephone number. No wouldn 't1.have though! they nominated a smug ignora,
·
mus. After ei~ht years of
unsigned tellers will be pu!Jii,hed. Lel/ers should be in had it in them .
Needless
wars?
George W. Bus , we're sup'good taste , addressing issues, not personalities. Letters of
corruption? posed to be shocked? "No
thilnks to or!irllliwtions and individuals will not be accept, Staggering
Illegal
wiretaps? news
conferences?
ed j(Jr puhlicatirm.
Kidnapping? Secrel pris, Interviews now only wilh
ons? Torrure? · So,called friendly journalisls?" wriles
"conservatives" have ratio, the Wall Street Journal's
nalized them all.' Sarah Peggy Noonan. "You can't
Palin, however, many can, be president or vice presi213·960)
not abide. Alaska's winking. dent and govern in that
Reader Services Ohio(USPS
Valley Publishing
governor, who goes around style, as a sequestered figCo.
complaining !hat CBS's ure. This has been Mr.
Correction Polley
Published every anernoon, Monday
Our main concern In all stories is 10
Katie Co uric asked her· Bush's style the past few
through -Friday, 111 Court Street,
be accurate . If you know of an error Pomeroy, Ohio. Second--class postage
"gotcha" questions like, years , and see where it got
ln a story, call the newsroom at (740) paid at Pomeroy.
"What magazines and us."
992,2156.
Member: The Associated Press and
newspapcrs do you read?"
Other GOP-leaning puntl'1e Ohio Newspaper Association . .
has become a flashpoint.
dits argue that rhe sheer
Poatmesler: Send address correc·
Our main number Is .
Christopher
Buckley, opportunism of picking
lions to The Da!ly sentinel. It t Court
sacked
from
the
National Palin showed McCain te 111,
(740) 992·21.56.
Street. Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Review,
a
magazine
found- ·peraritentally unsuited for
Deparjment extensions are:
cd
by
his
lale
father
William
the presidency. "Under rhe
Subscription Rates
By carrier or motor route
F. Buckley, after endorsing pressure of the financial cri,
News
One month
'10.27
Barack Obama on Tina sis, one presidential candi,
Editor: Charlene Hoeflich , Ext. 12
'f15.84
One year
Web sit~, The date is behaving lik.e a flus,
Brown's
Dally
50'
Reporter: Brian Reed, Ext 14
Daily Beas~. explam~ that . tered rookie playing in a
Senior Citizen rates
Reponot : Belh Sergenl, Ext 13
he was Inttially capttvared league too high," added per,
One month
'10.27
One year
'103.90
by Palin's backwoods snickety Washington Post
&amp;bsat&gt;oos ..t1cttl ...m 11 ocMiroe
Advertising
chari]J. "But it's kind of like columnisl George WilL "It
- No aub- · d~ting a supermodel.'~ he is nor Barack Obama."
Oulolde Saleo: DaiiB Harris. Ext 15 dinlct b lho Dailv scriplion by maN permitted In areas
OutaJde Sa... : Brenda Davis , Ext 1e where t-croe carrier servk:e ls,awif..
says . "There comes a
Will's neoconservative
CIMo.IClrc.: Judy Clarl&lt;, Ext. 10
moment,
unfortunately, co!Jeague
Charles
obOe.
where they start talking,"
Krauth am mer went further.
Mall Subecrtptlon
Allegedly cerebral New For all his personal and ide,
General, Manager
In- Melg~ COUnty
York
Times columnist ological misgivings abour
·Charlene Hoeflich , Ext 12
13 Weeu
'32 .26
David
Brooks
goes even Obama, he wrote, "Oliver
26 w
..,.,
'64.20
further, designating Palin "a Wendell Holmes Jr. famous,
52 Woeks
' 127 11
E""all:
fatal
cancer
lo
the ly said
of Franklin
newsOmydallysentinel.com
Outside Melg1 County
Republican Party." This. Roosevelt that he had a
13 Weeks
'53.55
ponentous phrase, with its 'second,class intellect, but a
Web:
25 Weeks
'107.10
10 John Dean 's first-class temperament ...
allusion
www.mydallysenHnel.com
52 Weeks
'21 4.21
famous Watergate warning (Obama's) got both a first,

. Thursday, October 23, 2oo8

BY ANDREW
WELSH-HUGGINS

Hearing rro~

to

Undecided voters drop to
5 percent when ·respondents
are asked which candidate
they're leaning toward.
Given the amount of
advertising and campaign
stops in Ohio. it would seem
eas~ for voters to make ur.
their mind. But this type of
attention may also have rh'e
opposite effect.
A new national study sug,
gests .the campaign 's air,
waves war may actually
make voters in battleground
states ambivalent over
which candidate to vote for.
The study found that as
campaign ad buys increase ,
so does the number of
things people fi nd they like
about each candidate.
,
"Some people just get con,
. fused, others wrestle with it
and say, 'This is a hard
choice;·· said Luke Keele,
an Ohio Slate University
political ~cientist and co,
author of the study published
in this month 's issue of
"Political Psychology."
The study )Vas based on
responses from the 2000
edition of the Americarr
Narional Election Study, a
nationally representalive
survey of volers that looked
at 2000 presidential anct
congressional races .

S~vation Army tries text donations in Ohio

Salt

.

.

'

.

.

.

more tech-savvy audience .
The online kettle network, .
which enables people to
collect donations v1a ted
bucket icons on Internet
pages, is in its third year.
At least half a dozen
Salvation Army divi siohs
offer updates through the
microblogging site Twitter,
· hoping to reach out beyond
the people who donate in
response to traditional mai(,
ings and phone calls.
"We're just trying lo find
people who are online who
are willing lo do the same,:•
•Said Kathy Lovin . the
Salvation Army 's Denverbased public affairs direclor.
who sent her first Twitter
about the kettle campaign
Tuesday.
The charity is also ex peri·
menting !his year wilh
pages mid inleractive tools
on the Facebook network;ing Web site.

�•

Bl

The Daily Sentinel
Extra Point, Page B2

.• .~

__ _

. · Page A6 ·The Daily Sentinel

"'

'.
!

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. - Visitors will be able to
travel back in time to an I 8th century fall harvest and
Halloween celebration with Fort Randolph's Harvest Fest.
The event, slated for Friday through Sunday, boasts a
variety of events, including seminars, a cast 1ron cookmg
contest, feast, auction, tavern and entertamment. In add!·
tion, the event will feature several re-enactors .
Saturday's activities also will feature an 18th century AllHollows Eye event. According to Fort Randolph
Committee President Craig Hesson, this is the first 11me the
fort has hosted All-Hollows Eve.
"We wantedJo do something a little different this year,"
Hesson said.
He added that the fort will be lit ur during the event.
Storytelling and fortune telling also wil take place. Hesson
described the e.vent as a way to experience an 18th century
Halloween.ln addition, people in attendance can choose to
hear any story they want as they make their way through
the fort, Hesson said .
Presentations also are scheduled throughout the weekend
and will include those on 18th century travel on the Ohio
River as well as native white relations on the frontier.
In addition, the cast iron cooking contest will certainly tum back the clocks, as all participants must be
dressed in 18th.century clothing as well as prepare p'eri.od food. Participants must provide their own cooking
utensils, and recipes must be from the 18th century.
Prizes will be awarded to first, second and third place
. winners.
·
·
: Admission.to the event' will be donations of dog food, cat
food, treats, cat litter or cleaning supplies. All items will be
donated to the Mason County Animal Shelter.
Hesson encouraged everyone to take part in the weekend's festivities.
.
.
"Come and join us at the Harvest Fest and take part with
re-enactors," he said.
" ' ·
.

,•

Oeari Armstrong and
Paul BroWn of
·'
JaCksofl County,
•·
Ohio, are 'the

-ctlw!»Y Po9!S Who

will. tie in perfor· · ,
mance Saturday,at 6 .
p.m. a~ !hi! Lillian
·
Jones MU$eum In
Jackson.

Sublilltled photo

' .
l.

.

1~wboy .

,. ·at·area

-- -

, Thursday, October 23,2008

Fort Randolph
·hosts Harvest Fest

\

.

•

Thursday, October 23, 2008 ·

www.mydailysentinel.com
_,.

,·.'

'

,, ·

. •'· .

For more information, call Hesson at (304) 675-7933.

Meigs, ~th a victory, becomes a .playoff contender··
.

friMy Odglw24

F-11

at Gallia Academy, 7:30 p.m.
Meigs, 7:30p.m.
at River.Valley, 7:30p.m.
at Symmes yalley, 7:30

Sllurda¥ Octctber 25
F-11

at Eastern, 7:30p.m .
Crou Courrtry
11·111 Regional meets at
, 10a.m.
-ACSitou~

I TBA

'

.

to·GAMFB
'. '
'

'

.

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.- "Curse of the Werewolf,"·
by Tim K.elly, will debllt at the
State Theater m Point Pleasant on Friday, Oct. 31 at 8 p.m.•
with a pre-show at 7:_30.
.
· A production of the Mason County Actors €ommunity
'Theater (McAct), the play will also be performed
Saturday, Nov. I at 8 p.m. (pre-show at 7:30) and Sunday,

.a comedy/suspense play

Entertainment Briefs
Halloween parade set .
BIDWELL - Bidwell-Porter area's
15th annual Halloween/Fall Parade, in
conjunction with the Springfield
. Township Volunteer Fire Department
hog roast and auction , is Saturday.
The hog roast is from noon to 4 p.m.
The parade is at 4 p.m. and the auction
is at 5 p.m.
The parade will line up at 3:30 p.m.
at River Valley Middle School. For
infonnation , call (740) 388-8547 or
3M8-82 14.

Dinner fund-raiser
GALLIPOLIS - Grace United
Methodist Church. 600 Second Ave.,
will host a smoked pork loin dinner at
noon on Sunday to help fund mission
projects.
·
The menu consists of smoked pork
loin, potatq salad. green or baked
beans. roll , drink and dessert .
Carryout will be available starting at
9:30a.m. The cost is $10 for adults
and $5 for children. All are welcome.

have costume judging and lots of fun.··
Admission 'to the event will 'be .$5·
for each child and there will be games,
food. projects for the children and lots
of fun. There will be awards for the
funniest costume, scariest costume,
best overall costume, and a "Cavity
Award" for the child with t)le heaviest
bag of candy.
.
This year, before trick-or-treat. artists
Gerry Enrico and Jan Haddox, and
FAC Director Carrie Napora will be at
the FAC for face'painting to go with the
children'slrostumes. As some costumes
' don't come with masks. or are not good
for smaller children, face painting will
be offered as ·a fuh alternative.
Come to the French Art Colony at 3
p.m. Thursday, before trick-or-treat,
for a design of your choice. Prices
range from $2 to $20, depending on
· the detail of your design.

·;~g a dirfurerli;'ln" ;h;~~mmunity· i~ · N~~~~e~! ~-6n· sale now ~t Point Pleasant River Museum,
'thefuture:
· '·"·· '·· f ···
r··P'oitlt
PI easant Har dware, Harns
· steak House, p mnt
·
,
.,. T~t;.fe .wiJI.,..,l&gt;.\1. fret.~ liP.f.,JiC!g~ ,lll)d
drinks courtesy OfT.:ife ·~mbularice.
The Mark Wood Fun Show has been
set for 10:30 a.m., with Chris Chase
.and Lazer Jam following from II a.m.
until I p.m. The Pathway Puppet
Show will also be performing.
. Those planning to attend are. asked
to bring a non-perishable item or pair
of children's gloves/mittens to support
Gallia County Outreach Center. '·

The event is sponsored by the
Gallia-Jackson-Vinton RSVP and
Vulun/~er Network Center, COAD and
other partners. For information, . call
RSVP. at (740) 286-4918,
·

Book signing
set for Friday.· ..
'

All-American
KidsFest set

GALLIPOLIS - Gallia County will
obserye "Make a Difference Day" on
Saturday with an All-American
KidsFest from 10 a.m. until I p.m. at
the First Church of the Nazarene '
GALLIPOLIS - The French Art Family Life Cente~ on First Avenue.
Colony .will again host its annual
The event will feature infonnation
:'Boofest" on Thursday, Oct. 30 at on positive activities for children and
6:30 p.m. Chi ldren are encouraged to . families and about places where indicome after Trick-or-Treat, ready to . viduals can volunteer to continue mak-

FAC plans 'Boofest' ·

·~

.

· GALLIPOLIS - Robbin Evans
Chiunberl&lt;iin of Worthington will be.on
1\and Friday from I to 3 p.m. lit the
Gallia County . Historical . and
Genealogical Society, 412 Second Ave.,
to autograph copies of her booli., A
Bountiful Hearl: The Life of Bob Evans.

Proceeds from the book's sales go to
support the Ohio Appalachian Centet
for Higher Education, which the late
Bob Evans helped establish.
The book. was recently . published
and it was unveiled for sale at the Bob
Evans Farm Festival Oct. 10-12.

'Dragonslayer's Sword' author corning to Shawnee State
PORTSMOUTH - Resa . Oct: 28 in the Flohr Lecture States and the United
Nelson , · author of Tire Hall at Clark Memorial Kingdom .
Dragonslayer 's
Sword. Lil\rary.
Her main character in the
based ·on a short story first
Nelson also sells short book is a female blackpublished in the premiere stories to magazines and she .smith, Astrid, who makes
issue of Science Fiction is the TV /movie columnist swords for dragon slayers
Age magazine , ranking for Realms of Fantasy mag- and who reluctantly is
second in the First Readers azine, a contributor to SCI drawn to dangerous situaTop Ten Poll, wi II be at · Fl magazine , and has sold tions herself when one of
Shawnee State University more than 200 articles to them, her best friend, disapat 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday. magazines in the United pears.
·

In order to write about
blacks!llithing, Nelson took
a course witli John Stevens
at Old Sturbridge Village in
Massachusetts .
The lecture is free and
open to the public. For
more inf9rmation, call
l)onna Thbmpsonar (740)
351-3323 or e-mail dthompson@shawnee.edu.

Pleasant Tourism and from cast members.
Members of the cast include Suzie Caldwell (Mrs.
Grimm), Samantha Fooce (Joan Tarbuckle), Emily Kuhn
(Little Messalina), Rmr Siders (Algernon Snipes and
Colonel Snipes), Dane Black (Humphrey)., Nancy Mayes
(Hushabye), Elizabeth Butcher . (Connie Pi~:~eon), Eric
.Farley (Buzz Halliburton), Sierra Holt (Veromca Snipes),
:Vaugh Shelby · Smittle (Boris Halliburton), Lauren
.Caldwell (Olga), Jessica H. Donahue (Sheriff Birdsong)
and Dallas Homer (Werewolf).
For information, contact Kevin or Samantha, MeAct
presidents, after 5 p.m. at (304) 675-6687.

·H aunted fields event
set for New Haven
.,. NEW HAVEN, W.Va. - Visitors at the Haunted Fields
eve.nt likely will be scared to the core this .weekend.
. But the fear is for a ~ood cause.
The annual event 1s sponsored by the New Haven
Youth League and is just another way to raise funds for
the 12 teams and nearly 130 members of the league. All
pri?Ceeds will be used to purchase .new equipment and
umforms for the k1ds, 'Who range m .age from 4 to 15
years old.
According to Chastity Young, who serves as treasurer for
the league, she and other members were trying to think of
fund-raising events that would be appropriate for the area
and also help raise a significarit amount 'o f money. That's
when the idea of a haunted house came up.
Currently in its third year, the.event features an expanded schedule, and organizers are hoping for a good turnout.
Young said approximately 300 people visited the haunted
house in its inaugural year in. 2006 when it was at the Bend
Area Community Center in New Haven, with approximate.ly the same number attending last year.
· This year, organizers life hoping for an even bigger
turnout. The event will take place at the New Haven Ball
fields, located just off Layne Street in the north end of
town . Guides wtlllell.d guests through a building and along
Utrail in the neat"Qy W!JodS;before entering the dugouts and
picnic shelter at the baseball fields.
.
, ,Hours of operation'-111~1 pi: 8 tp II p.m. Saturday; &amp;'to 10
p.m. Sunday, q&lt;:LZ6 through Thursday, Oct. 30; and 8 to
II p.m. Friday, Oct, 31'. Hot chocolate will be available.

And with that, this is how
DIVISION IV, REGION 15
things line up for thr&gt;se
PLAYOFF RA11Nos
final four spots in Region
15.
20.8451
· Win or lose, Westfall will 1, Martins Ferry {8·1)
likely stay ahead of Meigs 2. NeW Le)(lngton (9-0)
20.6887
in the playoff ratings as the 3. Belmont Unk&gt;n L&lt;:l (8·1) 18.8688
Mustangs are playing win18.2247
less Unioto at home. 4, Ironton (6-3)
Hartley and St. Clairsville 5, Westfall (7·2)
15.1333
could move ahead of
14.10!10
Westfall with wins , drop" s. cot•. Hartley (6-2)
ping Meigs to eighth.
7, Pomeroy Meigs (7-2)
13.1505
Bishop Hartley and St.
12.6041
Clairsville, however, both ' 8, St Clairsville (6-3)
play teams this weekend 9, Utica (6·3)
12.5888
that are still in playoff contention themselves. Hartley 10, Ucking Heights (7~ 2) 11 .7166
hosts Bishop Ready, which 11 . Gallia Academy .(S-4) 10.9875
Pluse see Playoffs, B&amp;
14. Bellaire (4-5}
7.3617

loita~ al Chtllicolhe ,

Martello ·al Gollla Academy
·

Warten at Ironton

ZaneSville at Jack•on
Walof.lo rd al Federal HockiOfl .
Trimble at Mll18r .. · ·
AloMand•O( it Welr.oton
at Molgo r• ,

~~~=;~i~!~~~at VInton County
at j'ortomouth ·
(WV) ill Alhe.no
Rock Hill at River Valley
Coal QrpW at Falrla!1d ,
Ohtaapeako al South Point
Gallla at-'Symines Valley '
Wahomo at Alhtnt

Matew•n ·at Hannan

.

~eo·bertr f'IOO'O•or ~~ Roane County

.."""'1:"' wayne

. .

Shi:dy $prlng at Siaaoi'lvllle
,

•

.

11-.

'

~·.~. ·&amp;AnJBpM QCJ;. 21· . •

'Curse ofWerewolf
.
set for State Theater

,.,.
.
Bv BRYAN WALTERS
each region advancing on
. spot in a
BWALTERSOMYDAlLYTAIBUNE.COM to the playoffs next weekWeek
II
end.
contest:
Never has one game
The Maroon and Gold
Those are
meant so much for Meigs must defeat tbe reigning
also . the
football . .
Tri- Valley
Conference
top-four
Friday
night,
the Ohio Division champions
teams curMarauders - with a victo- this Friday night at Bob
rently in
ry against visiting Belpre Roberts Field to even stay Region 15.
- can become a fegitimat.e in consideration for the
Westfall currently sits
contender in the race for school's first postseason fifth and Columbus Bishop
the final four playoff spots berth. But if that happens, Hartley is sixth, with
available in the Division MH$ will be in a real good Meigs and St. Clairsville
IV, Region 15 . football position to finish in the currently hol~ing the final
bracket.
top-eight spots.
two playoff positions.
The Marauders - who
New Lexington and Utica
(9th),
Licking
have neVer made the post- Martins Ferry have already Heights (lOth); Gallia
season since consolidating clinched home games in Academy
(II th)
and
in 1967 - currently sit this region, while both Bellaire (14th) are also still
seventh in Regiol} 15, with Belmont Union Local and . alive - but most will need
the top eight teams from Ironton have also secured a serious help to make it.

'. '•'''&gt;.': ,',;';'I:.,

.,

•, , ' ,··

Soutll•rn ~~.. Eal!orn ,

SPORTS BRIEFS ·

Football stats
needed for AP
district, OVP .
nominations
GA.LLIPOLIS - With
the end of the football regular season coming this
weekend, it is time to start
compiling ·stats for the
upcoming AP district .selec. tion · meeting and also ·the
Ohio Valley Publishing
Super 25 team. . ·
All head varsity football
coaches are r-equested to
sey~d individual nominations
fzpm their r~spective teams
· .;.. along With regular sea. !!On slats - to · Bryan
W,alters of the sports departrh_ent in Gallipolis.
' ;.&lt;;tats may be faxed to
446-3008 or emailed to
bwalt~rs@mydailytribune.c

om .
Don't forget to include
offensive and defensive
stats, as well as special
teams for any individual
nominated.
All nominations must be
received · by Monday,
November I, to be eligible
for representation at the AP
district meeting. .
.
· Any questions, call the
line at 446-2342 ext.

Eagles host Southern on Senior Night this Saturday
Bv BRYAN WALTERS
BWALTEASOMYOAILYTRIBUNE.COM
TUPPERS PLAINS No playoff hopes. No title
contentions. Absolutely
nothing to play for, except
a little county pride.
That is usually enough
of a reason for Meigs
County rivals Eastern and
Southern to get pumped
up about their annual Tri- ·
Valley
· .c onfetence
Hocking Division football
c()niest, which will happen on Saturday night
during the Week I 0 regular season finale at East
Shade River Stadium at
EHS.
.
Both the host Eagles
·and visiting Tornadoes
enter Saturday's affair
with matching records of
3-6 overall and 1-3 in
TVC Hocking play. Both
schools have eclipsed last
year's win totals of two ,
so the winner 'of this coiltest will double its win
. total from a year ago .
Both squads have also
been
mathematically
eliminated from playoff
contention in the 'Division
VI, Region 23 bracket and
the victor will capture
sole possession of fourth
in
the TVC
p.lace
Hocking.
Eastern will celebrating
Senior Night at East
Shade River Stadium,
where the Eagles are 2-2
at home this season. A win
would give the Green and
White their fitst winning
home ·campaign since the
2004 season~
The Eagles are averaging 22 points per game
,
Bryan Waltera/photo
offensively ,and allowing
31 ~ 6 as a defensive unit Members of the Eastern football team ring the victory bell at East Shade River Stadium.
overall. In league play, during this Week 8 file photo of theEagles after they defeated Miller. The' Eagles will look
to capture their first winning record at home since 2004 this Saturday when they host
Ple•se see Rlv•lry, B6
Meigs County rival Southern.
·

Lady Eagles open distrid play tonight

For more infomlillivn or admission prices, call Young at
(304) 593-0;472.
. ..

AtHolzerCfinic,You
Can Always Counton ...
.

HOLZER
CLINIC
740-446-5381
'

•

.

,.

Medical Excellence.
Local Caring:
www.holzerclinic.com

Bryan Walteralllla photo

Membars of the Eastern volleyball team pose for a picture after winning its 13th consecutive Division IV sectional cham·
pionship last Thursday against ,Miller at EHS in Tuppers Plains. !he second-seeded Lady Eagles will begin their hunt for
a seventh straight district final berth tonight at Wellston High School when they ta~e on thjrd-seeded Pike West~rn in a
Division IV district samlflnal. The Lady Eagles will play 30 minutes after the conclusion of the Portsmouth Clay-Pike
Eastern contest that begins at 6 p.m.
·
·
·

STAFF REPORT
SPORTS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
POMEROY - Meigs
County is buzzing with
excitement this week as the
Marauders get re11dy tq
take on Belpre (3-6, 2-3
TVCOhio).
The current · eniors at
Meigs were in seventh
grade. the last time a
Marauder team lost to
Belpre in fyotball.
MHS will try to continue
the offensive success they
have had the past three
weeks when they scored at
least 40 points or more in
each of their games.
The Marauders used
their powerful running
game along with a very
good defensive effort last
week in their 42-20 win
over the Wellston Rockets .
Meigs (7-2 , 4: 1) will be
looking for. their fourth win .
in a .row and a possible trip
to the Division 4 Region
15 playoffs.
On Senior . night the
Marauders will look for the
strong running ot Jeremy
Smith who. rushed for 229
yar~s ancj five touchdowns
agamst Wellston the previous week.
Jacob Well can add to his
season passing record o(
1,593 yards after throwing
117 yards in the last win.
· Seven Marauder seniors
playing in their last game
are Clay Bolin, Gabe Hill,
Brandon Hanning, Cory
Hutton, Mason Metts;
Crockett Crow and Ernie
WelSh.
The MHS offense is
averaging 33 points per .
game, while their defense
has allowed only 19.8
points per game on the season .
Meigs has wins this season against DawronBryant ( 18-7), Fairland
(26-23), River Valley (5320). Athe'ns (26-13).
Vinton County (41- 7).
Alexander (41-28) and
Wellston (42-20) while its
losses came to NelsonvilleYork (30-28) and Warren
(42-20).
.
The Golden Eagles are
coming off a 33-18 loss to
Athens last week.
Belpre was able to accu•
mulate 155 yards through
the air, while being held t(l
only 42 yards rushing. ·
Clay Ullman threw one
touchdown pass of ten
yards to Markie Tate and
Todd Packard connected
with Wes Hatfield for a 16
yard scoring pass.
The BHS offense has
averaged 16.3 · points per
game while the defense has
been giving up 23 points
per game.
Belpre has wins this season against Fort Frye (17·
6), Alexander (26-14) apd
Vinton County (33-21),
with losses to Warren ( 1710), Trimble (26-1 0);
Wellston
(28-13),
Nelsonville- York (43-7),
Bishop Rosecrans (19-13)
and Athens (33-18) .

•
•

�•

Bl

The Daily Sentinel
Extra Point, Page B2

.• .~

__ _

. · Page A6 ·The Daily Sentinel

"'

'.
!

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. - Visitors will be able to
travel back in time to an I 8th century fall harvest and
Halloween celebration with Fort Randolph's Harvest Fest.
The event, slated for Friday through Sunday, boasts a
variety of events, including seminars, a cast 1ron cookmg
contest, feast, auction, tavern and entertamment. In add!·
tion, the event will feature several re-enactors .
Saturday's activities also will feature an 18th century AllHollows Eye event. According to Fort Randolph
Committee President Craig Hesson, this is the first 11me the
fort has hosted All-Hollows Eve.
"We wantedJo do something a little different this year,"
Hesson said.
He added that the fort will be lit ur during the event.
Storytelling and fortune telling also wil take place. Hesson
described the e.vent as a way to experience an 18th century
Halloween.ln addition, people in attendance can choose to
hear any story they want as they make their way through
the fort, Hesson said .
Presentations also are scheduled throughout the weekend
and will include those on 18th century travel on the Ohio
River as well as native white relations on the frontier.
In addition, the cast iron cooking contest will certainly tum back the clocks, as all participants must be
dressed in 18th.century clothing as well as prepare p'eri.od food. Participants must provide their own cooking
utensils, and recipes must be from the 18th century.
Prizes will be awarded to first, second and third place
. winners.
·
·
: Admission.to the event' will be donations of dog food, cat
food, treats, cat litter or cleaning supplies. All items will be
donated to the Mason County Animal Shelter.
Hesson encouraged everyone to take part in the weekend's festivities.
.
.
"Come and join us at the Harvest Fest and take part with
re-enactors," he said.
" ' ·
.

,•

Oeari Armstrong and
Paul BroWn of
·'
JaCksofl County,
•·
Ohio, are 'the

-ctlw!»Y Po9!S Who

will. tie in perfor· · ,
mance Saturday,at 6 .
p.m. a~ !hi! Lillian
·
Jones MU$eum In
Jackson.

Sublilltled photo

' .
l.

.

1~wboy .

,. ·at·area

-- -

, Thursday, October 23,2008

Fort Randolph
·hosts Harvest Fest

\

.

•

Thursday, October 23, 2008 ·

www.mydailysentinel.com
_,.

,·.'

'

,, ·

. •'· .

For more information, call Hesson at (304) 675-7933.

Meigs, ~th a victory, becomes a .playoff contender··
.

friMy Odglw24

F-11

at Gallia Academy, 7:30 p.m.
Meigs, 7:30p.m.
at River.Valley, 7:30p.m.
at Symmes yalley, 7:30

Sllurda¥ Octctber 25
F-11

at Eastern, 7:30p.m .
Crou Courrtry
11·111 Regional meets at
, 10a.m.
-ACSitou~

I TBA

'

.

to·GAMFB
'. '
'

'

.

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.- "Curse of the Werewolf,"·
by Tim K.elly, will debllt at the
State Theater m Point Pleasant on Friday, Oct. 31 at 8 p.m.•
with a pre-show at 7:_30.
.
· A production of the Mason County Actors €ommunity
'Theater (McAct), the play will also be performed
Saturday, Nov. I at 8 p.m. (pre-show at 7:30) and Sunday,

.a comedy/suspense play

Entertainment Briefs
Halloween parade set .
BIDWELL - Bidwell-Porter area's
15th annual Halloween/Fall Parade, in
conjunction with the Springfield
. Township Volunteer Fire Department
hog roast and auction , is Saturday.
The hog roast is from noon to 4 p.m.
The parade is at 4 p.m. and the auction
is at 5 p.m.
The parade will line up at 3:30 p.m.
at River Valley Middle School. For
infonnation , call (740) 388-8547 or
3M8-82 14.

Dinner fund-raiser
GALLIPOLIS - Grace United
Methodist Church. 600 Second Ave.,
will host a smoked pork loin dinner at
noon on Sunday to help fund mission
projects.
·
The menu consists of smoked pork
loin, potatq salad. green or baked
beans. roll , drink and dessert .
Carryout will be available starting at
9:30a.m. The cost is $10 for adults
and $5 for children. All are welcome.

have costume judging and lots of fun.··
Admission 'to the event will 'be .$5·
for each child and there will be games,
food. projects for the children and lots
of fun. There will be awards for the
funniest costume, scariest costume,
best overall costume, and a "Cavity
Award" for the child with t)le heaviest
bag of candy.
.
This year, before trick-or-treat. artists
Gerry Enrico and Jan Haddox, and
FAC Director Carrie Napora will be at
the FAC for face'painting to go with the
children'slrostumes. As some costumes
' don't come with masks. or are not good
for smaller children, face painting will
be offered as ·a fuh alternative.
Come to the French Art Colony at 3
p.m. Thursday, before trick-or-treat,
for a design of your choice. Prices
range from $2 to $20, depending on
· the detail of your design.

·;~g a dirfurerli;'ln" ;h;~~mmunity· i~ · N~~~~e~! ~-6n· sale now ~t Point Pleasant River Museum,
'thefuture:
· '·"·· '·· f ···
r··P'oitlt
PI easant Har dware, Harns
· steak House, p mnt
·
,
.,. T~t;.fe .wiJI.,..,l&gt;.\1. fret.~ liP.f.,JiC!g~ ,lll)d
drinks courtesy OfT.:ife ·~mbularice.
The Mark Wood Fun Show has been
set for 10:30 a.m., with Chris Chase
.and Lazer Jam following from II a.m.
until I p.m. The Pathway Puppet
Show will also be performing.
. Those planning to attend are. asked
to bring a non-perishable item or pair
of children's gloves/mittens to support
Gallia County Outreach Center. '·

The event is sponsored by the
Gallia-Jackson-Vinton RSVP and
Vulun/~er Network Center, COAD and
other partners. For information, . call
RSVP. at (740) 286-4918,
·

Book signing
set for Friday.· ..
'

All-American
KidsFest set

GALLIPOLIS - Gallia County will
obserye "Make a Difference Day" on
Saturday with an All-American
KidsFest from 10 a.m. until I p.m. at
the First Church of the Nazarene '
GALLIPOLIS - The French Art Family Life Cente~ on First Avenue.
Colony .will again host its annual
The event will feature infonnation
:'Boofest" on Thursday, Oct. 30 at on positive activities for children and
6:30 p.m. Chi ldren are encouraged to . families and about places where indicome after Trick-or-Treat, ready to . viduals can volunteer to continue mak-

FAC plans 'Boofest' ·

·~

.

· GALLIPOLIS - Robbin Evans
Chiunberl&lt;iin of Worthington will be.on
1\and Friday from I to 3 p.m. lit the
Gallia County . Historical . and
Genealogical Society, 412 Second Ave.,
to autograph copies of her booli., A
Bountiful Hearl: The Life of Bob Evans.

Proceeds from the book's sales go to
support the Ohio Appalachian Centet
for Higher Education, which the late
Bob Evans helped establish.
The book. was recently . published
and it was unveiled for sale at the Bob
Evans Farm Festival Oct. 10-12.

'Dragonslayer's Sword' author corning to Shawnee State
PORTSMOUTH - Resa . Oct: 28 in the Flohr Lecture States and the United
Nelson , · author of Tire Hall at Clark Memorial Kingdom .
Dragonslayer 's
Sword. Lil\rary.
Her main character in the
based ·on a short story first
Nelson also sells short book is a female blackpublished in the premiere stories to magazines and she .smith, Astrid, who makes
issue of Science Fiction is the TV /movie columnist swords for dragon slayers
Age magazine , ranking for Realms of Fantasy mag- and who reluctantly is
second in the First Readers azine, a contributor to SCI drawn to dangerous situaTop Ten Poll, wi II be at · Fl magazine , and has sold tions herself when one of
Shawnee State University more than 200 articles to them, her best friend, disapat 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday. magazines in the United pears.
·

In order to write about
blacks!llithing, Nelson took
a course witli John Stevens
at Old Sturbridge Village in
Massachusetts .
The lecture is free and
open to the public. For
more inf9rmation, call
l)onna Thbmpsonar (740)
351-3323 or e-mail dthompson@shawnee.edu.

Pleasant Tourism and from cast members.
Members of the cast include Suzie Caldwell (Mrs.
Grimm), Samantha Fooce (Joan Tarbuckle), Emily Kuhn
(Little Messalina), Rmr Siders (Algernon Snipes and
Colonel Snipes), Dane Black (Humphrey)., Nancy Mayes
(Hushabye), Elizabeth Butcher . (Connie Pi~:~eon), Eric
.Farley (Buzz Halliburton), Sierra Holt (Veromca Snipes),
:Vaugh Shelby · Smittle (Boris Halliburton), Lauren
.Caldwell (Olga), Jessica H. Donahue (Sheriff Birdsong)
and Dallas Homer (Werewolf).
For information, contact Kevin or Samantha, MeAct
presidents, after 5 p.m. at (304) 675-6687.

·H aunted fields event
set for New Haven
.,. NEW HAVEN, W.Va. - Visitors at the Haunted Fields
eve.nt likely will be scared to the core this .weekend.
. But the fear is for a ~ood cause.
The annual event 1s sponsored by the New Haven
Youth League and is just another way to raise funds for
the 12 teams and nearly 130 members of the league. All
pri?Ceeds will be used to purchase .new equipment and
umforms for the k1ds, 'Who range m .age from 4 to 15
years old.
According to Chastity Young, who serves as treasurer for
the league, she and other members were trying to think of
fund-raising events that would be appropriate for the area
and also help raise a significarit amount 'o f money. That's
when the idea of a haunted house came up.
Currently in its third year, the.event features an expanded schedule, and organizers are hoping for a good turnout.
Young said approximately 300 people visited the haunted
house in its inaugural year in. 2006 when it was at the Bend
Area Community Center in New Haven, with approximate.ly the same number attending last year.
· This year, organizers life hoping for an even bigger
turnout. The event will take place at the New Haven Ball
fields, located just off Layne Street in the north end of
town . Guides wtlllell.d guests through a building and along
Utrail in the neat"Qy W!JodS;before entering the dugouts and
picnic shelter at the baseball fields.
.
, ,Hours of operation'-111~1 pi: 8 tp II p.m. Saturday; &amp;'to 10
p.m. Sunday, q&lt;:LZ6 through Thursday, Oct. 30; and 8 to
II p.m. Friday, Oct, 31'. Hot chocolate will be available.

And with that, this is how
DIVISION IV, REGION 15
things line up for thr&gt;se
PLAYOFF RA11Nos
final four spots in Region
15.
20.8451
· Win or lose, Westfall will 1, Martins Ferry {8·1)
likely stay ahead of Meigs 2. NeW Le)(lngton (9-0)
20.6887
in the playoff ratings as the 3. Belmont Unk&gt;n L&lt;:l (8·1) 18.8688
Mustangs are playing win18.2247
less Unioto at home. 4, Ironton (6-3)
Hartley and St. Clairsville 5, Westfall (7·2)
15.1333
could move ahead of
14.10!10
Westfall with wins , drop" s. cot•. Hartley (6-2)
ping Meigs to eighth.
7, Pomeroy Meigs (7-2)
13.1505
Bishop Hartley and St.
12.6041
Clairsville, however, both ' 8, St Clairsville (6-3)
play teams this weekend 9, Utica (6·3)
12.5888
that are still in playoff contention themselves. Hartley 10, Ucking Heights (7~ 2) 11 .7166
hosts Bishop Ready, which 11 . Gallia Academy .(S-4) 10.9875
Pluse see Playoffs, B&amp;
14. Bellaire (4-5}
7.3617

loita~ al Chtllicolhe ,

Martello ·al Gollla Academy
·

Warten at Ironton

ZaneSville at Jack•on
Walof.lo rd al Federal HockiOfl .
Trimble at Mll18r .. · ·
AloMand•O( it Welr.oton
at Molgo r• ,

~~~=;~i~!~~~at VInton County
at j'ortomouth ·
(WV) ill Alhe.no
Rock Hill at River Valley
Coal QrpW at Falrla!1d ,
Ohtaapeako al South Point
Gallla at-'Symines Valley '
Wahomo at Alhtnt

Matew•n ·at Hannan

.

~eo·bertr f'IOO'O•or ~~ Roane County

.."""'1:"' wayne

. .

Shi:dy $prlng at Siaaoi'lvllle
,

•

.

11-.

'

~·.~. ·&amp;AnJBpM QCJ;. 21· . •

'Curse ofWerewolf
.
set for State Theater

,.,.
.
Bv BRYAN WALTERS
each region advancing on
. spot in a
BWALTERSOMYDAlLYTAIBUNE.COM to the playoffs next weekWeek
II
end.
contest:
Never has one game
The Maroon and Gold
Those are
meant so much for Meigs must defeat tbe reigning
also . the
football . .
Tri- Valley
Conference
top-four
Friday
night,
the Ohio Division champions
teams curMarauders - with a victo- this Friday night at Bob
rently in
ry against visiting Belpre Roberts Field to even stay Region 15.
- can become a fegitimat.e in consideration for the
Westfall currently sits
contender in the race for school's first postseason fifth and Columbus Bishop
the final four playoff spots berth. But if that happens, Hartley is sixth, with
available in the Division MH$ will be in a real good Meigs and St. Clairsville
IV, Region 15 . football position to finish in the currently hol~ing the final
bracket.
top-eight spots.
two playoff positions.
The Marauders - who
New Lexington and Utica
(9th),
Licking
have neVer made the post- Martins Ferry have already Heights (lOth); Gallia
season since consolidating clinched home games in Academy
(II th)
and
in 1967 - currently sit this region, while both Bellaire (14th) are also still
seventh in Regiol} 15, with Belmont Union Local and . alive - but most will need
the top eight teams from Ironton have also secured a serious help to make it.

'. '•'''&gt;.': ,',;';'I:.,

.,

•, , ' ,··

Soutll•rn ~~.. Eal!orn ,

SPORTS BRIEFS ·

Football stats
needed for AP
district, OVP .
nominations
GA.LLIPOLIS - With
the end of the football regular season coming this
weekend, it is time to start
compiling ·stats for the
upcoming AP district .selec. tion · meeting and also ·the
Ohio Valley Publishing
Super 25 team. . ·
All head varsity football
coaches are r-equested to
sey~d individual nominations
fzpm their r~spective teams
· .;.. along With regular sea. !!On slats - to · Bryan
W,alters of the sports departrh_ent in Gallipolis.
' ;.&lt;;tats may be faxed to
446-3008 or emailed to
bwalt~rs@mydailytribune.c

om .
Don't forget to include
offensive and defensive
stats, as well as special
teams for any individual
nominated.
All nominations must be
received · by Monday,
November I, to be eligible
for representation at the AP
district meeting. .
.
· Any questions, call the
line at 446-2342 ext.

Eagles host Southern on Senior Night this Saturday
Bv BRYAN WALTERS
BWALTEASOMYOAILYTRIBUNE.COM
TUPPERS PLAINS No playoff hopes. No title
contentions. Absolutely
nothing to play for, except
a little county pride.
That is usually enough
of a reason for Meigs
County rivals Eastern and
Southern to get pumped
up about their annual Tri- ·
Valley
· .c onfetence
Hocking Division football
c()niest, which will happen on Saturday night
during the Week I 0 regular season finale at East
Shade River Stadium at
EHS.
.
Both the host Eagles
·and visiting Tornadoes
enter Saturday's affair
with matching records of
3-6 overall and 1-3 in
TVC Hocking play. Both
schools have eclipsed last
year's win totals of two ,
so the winner 'of this coiltest will double its win
. total from a year ago .
Both squads have also
been
mathematically
eliminated from playoff
contention in the 'Division
VI, Region 23 bracket and
the victor will capture
sole possession of fourth
in
the TVC
p.lace
Hocking.
Eastern will celebrating
Senior Night at East
Shade River Stadium,
where the Eagles are 2-2
at home this season. A win
would give the Green and
White their fitst winning
home ·campaign since the
2004 season~
The Eagles are averaging 22 points per game
,
Bryan Waltera/photo
offensively ,and allowing
31 ~ 6 as a defensive unit Members of the Eastern football team ring the victory bell at East Shade River Stadium.
overall. In league play, during this Week 8 file photo of theEagles after they defeated Miller. The' Eagles will look
to capture their first winning record at home since 2004 this Saturday when they host
Ple•se see Rlv•lry, B6
Meigs County rival Southern.
·

Lady Eagles open distrid play tonight

For more infomlillivn or admission prices, call Young at
(304) 593-0;472.
. ..

AtHolzerCfinic,You
Can Always Counton ...
.

HOLZER
CLINIC
740-446-5381
'

•

.

,.

Medical Excellence.
Local Caring:
www.holzerclinic.com

Bryan Walteralllla photo

Membars of the Eastern volleyball team pose for a picture after winning its 13th consecutive Division IV sectional cham·
pionship last Thursday against ,Miller at EHS in Tuppers Plains. !he second-seeded Lady Eagles will begin their hunt for
a seventh straight district final berth tonight at Wellston High School when they ta~e on thjrd-seeded Pike West~rn in a
Division IV district samlflnal. The Lady Eagles will play 30 minutes after the conclusion of the Portsmouth Clay-Pike
Eastern contest that begins at 6 p.m.
·
·
·

STAFF REPORT
SPORTS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
POMEROY - Meigs
County is buzzing with
excitement this week as the
Marauders get re11dy tq
take on Belpre (3-6, 2-3
TVCOhio).
The current · eniors at
Meigs were in seventh
grade. the last time a
Marauder team lost to
Belpre in fyotball.
MHS will try to continue
the offensive success they
have had the past three
weeks when they scored at
least 40 points or more in
each of their games.
The Marauders used
their powerful running
game along with a very
good defensive effort last
week in their 42-20 win
over the Wellston Rockets .
Meigs (7-2 , 4: 1) will be
looking for. their fourth win .
in a .row and a possible trip
to the Division 4 Region
15 playoffs.
On Senior . night the
Marauders will look for the
strong running ot Jeremy
Smith who. rushed for 229
yar~s ancj five touchdowns
agamst Wellston the previous week.
Jacob Well can add to his
season passing record o(
1,593 yards after throwing
117 yards in the last win.
· Seven Marauder seniors
playing in their last game
are Clay Bolin, Gabe Hill,
Brandon Hanning, Cory
Hutton, Mason Metts;
Crockett Crow and Ernie
WelSh.
The MHS offense is
averaging 33 points per .
game, while their defense
has allowed only 19.8
points per game on the season .
Meigs has wins this season against DawronBryant ( 18-7), Fairland
(26-23), River Valley (5320). Athe'ns (26-13).
Vinton County (41- 7).
Alexander (41-28) and
Wellston (42-20) while its
losses came to NelsonvilleYork (30-28) and Warren
(42-20).
.
The Golden Eagles are
coming off a 33-18 loss to
Athens last week.
Belpre was able to accu•
mulate 155 yards through
the air, while being held t(l
only 42 yards rushing. ·
Clay Ullman threw one
touchdown pass of ten
yards to Markie Tate and
Todd Packard connected
with Wes Hatfield for a 16
yard scoring pass.
The BHS offense has
averaged 16.3 · points per
game while the defense has
been giving up 23 points
per game.
Belpre has wins this season against Fort Frye (17·
6), Alexander (26-14) apd
Vinton County (33-21),
with losses to Warren ( 1710), Trimble (26-1 0);
Wellston
(28-13),
Nelsonville- York (43-7),
Bishop Rosecrans (19-13)
and Athens (33-18) .

•
•

�&gt;
t;(.

· Page B:z • The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, October 23, ~oo8

· www.mydailysentinel.com

··Thursday, October 23, 200B

,.

www.mydallysentlnel.com

I

m:rthune .- Sentinel - l\.egtster
C L A.S S IF IE D

·,
·( ..

OUR 'EXPERTS' BREAK DOW'N THIS WEEK'S HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL GAM ES

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
S YOUR' .AD N
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classified@ mydailytribune.com
.
Bryan Walten

Larry Crum

Charlie Shepherd

Sports Writt'r

Spo rb Wrner
Rel'cm l: (J5- ::!5

l)a~matOr

Record: 75-15
Last Wt:t'k . ~-2
(wmner~ in

.h.Qld)

La H Wel'k: 1J- I
(winrlt'T'I 11l

h2W)

Spun~

Ren1rd : 64- 20
L t•r Wt•t·k· f)_ J
(\\'inn ers J,n

h2ld)

Gary Clark

Dave Harris

~r on• Cutrl"~r,mJcnt

Ad R errest•ntarive
R t"con.J: (•li- 22

Scott Wolfe
( urrnpvnJcnl

RL" cmd : SlJ -J l
Lht Wn·k : (,- 4

fl.. l'Clml: 5~- "\ I
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(winlll'T' 111 ~

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Mam.·tt.t at
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GalliJ .4..cJdl'tllY

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Hop·e R oush

Stacey Walters

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To Place
m:rthune
Sentinel
_l\egtster
Your Ad, (740) 446-2342 - (7 40) 992-2156 (304)' 675-1333
Call TOday... · or Fax to (740) 446-3008 • or Fax To (740) 992-2157

I ,l\t Wt·l'k : 8-2
(\\"l11llt'f" Ill

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R2&amp;ILUill

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1

Bdprt· .u'
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.B..s!dLtlill .11

Diane Puttorff
Reporrt&gt;r
Record: 57-.D
L a~t Wet:k: ·s-s

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~illkl:

Rod,; H1ll ,11

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s.. ,tth C,tlli ,, .11

ltiLswi.Asla
Dally In-Column: 9:00 a;m.

~.uu

.wabi.ma .tt

.wah.iwa .tr

Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.

Ath l'm

Atht·u.,

l&amp;un -••

HOW 10 W§Ijli.

Chtnirotho=-

l&amp;i:;m
'"
cl;!IT.
~-. &gt;rhc

Coal Grqye
. a t F.tirlm,l

Coal Groyc
,tt F.ml.md

C oal Groye

at Fairland
"Shady Sprinr
at Sissonville

Sh;1dy Sprm~
.n Siuonyme

Shady Sprjng

Sh ~ dy S 1 1rin~

.lt s,~".)llv ilk

.1r Sjumwme

fieelrnh~ ;t l

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Wbeelersburli .11

Port~UhHttlt wc~t

PorhllH\Urh \\'l''&gt;l

•1t

Af:t AQ

5Uc:ceu401 ds

.

Should Include These Items
· To Help Get Response,, •

F.mlaml

r

W~t

·

Shady Sprina
at Sisso nville ·

Shady Sprjol
Jt Siswnvillc
Whulersb~ at

P1J r~ntoutll

Portsmouth ~st

Cst

Wheelenburg

· In Next Day' s Paper
Sunday In-column: 9:00a. m .
For Sundays Paper

Publication
Sunday Display: 1:00 p.m.
Thunday for Sundays

• All ads must be prepaid•

• Include Phone Number And Addral When Needed

• Ads Should Run 7 Dlyl

Purl~lltuuth \Vcq

Ohio Vallsy
Publishing rei8MS
lhs rtghllo edll,
"'""I or cancel any
ad alany time.

Previous Champions - 200 I: Butch Cooper, 2002: Butch Cooper. 2003 : Brad ~herman, 2004: Brad Sherman, 2005 : Bryan Walters, 2006: Brad Sherman. 2007: Dave Harris .
.
'
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Get back into action with
Dr. Kelly Roush, Certified Chiropractic Spo~s Physician ..

Errors

Must

Ao1X&gt;rted on lhs

'

""rvet

POLICIES: Ohio Valley Publllhlng
the right to edit, rtJ-ct, or ClOt* any ad at any 11me. Errora mutt bt reported on ttlellrtt day Of publlcetlon and the
Trlbune-Sintinei·Aeglatar wHI be ttlpOfltlblt for no mort then tht coat ot lht apact occupttd by the error and only the rlrtl lnaertlon. We shill not be liable ror
any 1011 ot txplnM that ruultt hom tht publlcldcm or ornl11ktn of an advertitenMint. COrrection wm bel made In the flr1t available edition. ·· Box numbtr ·~•
art tlwaya conlldenUal . ·Current rate card applies . ·All real aatltte advertlnmenta are aubject to tha Federal Fair Houlling Act of 1t68. • Thta newt paper
acceptt onlv help wanted ada mHIIng EOE thtndltrds. We will not knowingly acc'ept any advttrtlllng In violation of the law. Will not bt rttpo_n tlblt

600

-

·

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

Townhou-

kitncarlyletmcomcast.net

Will do House Cleaning

3 Bed, 2 Bath HUD "'"""'""'"'""""""';;;;;;~
Homes! Only $19,900 tor 2 BA Apartment &amp; 2 BA
listings 800·620·:4946 ex House on Sttl St. Pt
A019
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304·8 12· 4350
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SOCIAL SECURITY SSI
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1-868-582·3345

NOTICE OHIO VAI,LEY
PUBLISHING CO. roc·
ommends that you c:to.
business with people you
know, and NOT to send '!~"!""~;;;;;;;;;;;;~~
money through the mail ~
until you have investigat-

.
N

Gas fired heating boller.S
·yr.old ···wtih · 9.n' controls
must see.740-992·2974

.

.

AnnoL r ements

Noticoo

"SoJurday M,oniing Sport~ Clinics" .
9:00am

.

200

Other Sorvicoo

Now you can have borders and graphics
~
addedtoyourclassiftedads
J,~
Jr'!"r
Borders $3.00/per ad
1!
Graphics 50¢ for small
S1.00 fcir large

All Display: 12 Noon 2
Business Days PriOr To

Monday-Friday for Insertion

• Start Your Ads With A Keyword • Include CDmplete
Description • Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviations

Jl

•

~

trro1111n an ad taken over the phone.

Shady Sprina
~t Stmmvillc

~
www.mydailytribune.com
www.mydailysenlinel.com
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beand· ~,-reby Is 2008 al 10:00. a.m., a eaot of ·the VIllage of

[-Oh~o!:!s&gt;~r~e~_L!S.t[2~:~()!1~-~

.
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..._

HUDSOO&amp;

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Call

tor w/

;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.=;;;;;;;;
Ga!llpolle Ctreer
Colllge

(Careers Close To Home I
lnstruc· · Call Tod•yl 741)--4367
HlOI)-214-0452
Bachelor Degree
gall~leclreeJCOII&amp;Qe.edU

in
music/guitar.
A.ccrediled Member Accredlt·
740·446·0947
Please · ing Council lor lpd&amp;~nd&amp;nt .
leave msg.
Colleges and Schoo~ 12740.

rn
wrlllng to Ohio EPA·
DSW, PermHs Procosslng Unit, P.O. Box1049,
Colum~o, Olllo43216·
1049 by the close ol
bualness on December
2, 2008. Commonls ra·
celvod alter this date
lnay not be cons idered
as .part of the official
record oflhls hearing.
Copies of the pending
NPDES
appllcatlon,
draft permlland lechnl·
liAS
cal support lnlorirlallon
SOMfTIIING
may · be
re.vlewed
and/or copies made at
FOR. YOU!!
Ohio EPA's Soulheast
District Office, 2195
Fronl Strset, , Logan,
Ohio 43138, by first
calling (740)385-850110
make an appointment.
(10) 23 .
-------Auction
Auction
·;;;;;;;;;;;;;..;:;;;;;~~;;;

Tho rrevoca- public ~r. will be held Racine, aouth of Town·
· shell be af(ectlvo. at 211 W. ,Second St., ahlp R011d 100, Sutton
November 14 ,.2~.
·Pomarqy, ,. OH. The Township,
Meigs
KNAPP, JAN A DOB: Farmerolltonk•nd Sov· County, Ohio. "Draft
0110711946 PO BOX'6f lngo Comp8ny Ia sell· Actions' are written
LANGSVILLE,
OH IQg lor calh In hand or statements of lho Dl•
45741
cartlllod 'Check the fol· rector'a lntenl wllh reSANDERS, ASHLE'I N lowing colloteral: ~2 epectlo the Issuance.
DOB: 0711411982
• CHEVROLET I!IPALA denial, ale. of a permit,
51145 ST RT 681 40,
Vlnl llconoe, order, ate. In·
REEDSVILLE,
OH 2G1WF52EB29339251 tarestod peroono may
45n2
The Farmaro' Bank and oubmll written com·
A copy .o l thla Order Savings
Company. menls regarding draft
may be obtained !rom Pomeroy, Ohio, re· actlona.
·
Stephen C. Hombach, aerves the rlghlto bid The discharges from
Ohio Department of In· allhlo sale, and to wllh· the facility, II approved,
surance, 50 West Town draw the above colla!· would roaull In degraStrset, 3rd Floor, Suite erol prior to sale. dation lo. or lowering
300, Columbus, OH Further, The Farmers of, lhe water quality ol
43215.
Bank and Savings Yallowbrush Crsek and
As set forth In O.R.C. Company reserves the Jennie Walla Run;
119.12, an appeal of rlghtto reJectany ora II However, the chemical·
this Order may be blda aubmlttod.
sj,ecHic water quality
taken by filing a notice The above described c;rllarla developed lo
of appaal wllh the De· collateral will be sold proteclaquatlc Ulland
partment of Insurance. ••as Is · where Is", with human hllllth, HI forth
A copy of the notice. of no axpreallod or lm· . In DAC ·3745·1-117, will
appeal shall also be · piled warranty given.
not be.ox.-tcl,
Iliad with the appraprl· -For turthorlilfo110atlon, In sc:cordanco with ·
att court ol common or for an appol!llmant OAC 3745-1-o&amp;, Ohio
pleas. Such notlc4a ol to lnapecl collalaral, EPA wiH provide an CIP-.
opr&gt;~~al shall be !lied prior to 1111 dati con· portunlly · tor public ,
wltl\ln fifteen (151 days teet Cyndle,
comment concerning
ollha third dala of pub- or Kan ot74CHI92•2138. lhla, project. Commlnta •
llcatlon of lhll nollco (10) ~. 23, 24, 2008:
received lhlll be con- .
and Order. Each lndl·
aldered by lha Director ,
vldualllotod above may
before lhl dr.rt 'octlon .;
appeal to tho court of
Public Notice
1~ luutd . ao final. A'·
Thle homa selling vii " BID NOW ONLINE
common plea~ of the
public hearing h81
Ill www.HudsonAndMirshall.com
count)' In which hla or Dolo of Public Notice: 'been ochedulld for
Call
Local Agenl: &amp;obbill Jo Ro"
her bualnHIIalocatod October 26, 2008
8:30P.M. on,Novomblr ,
-ders
Really speeiai\Kis, 30.0~ 16·2818
or the county In which Mllga County.
21,2001 111 1M Southern ·
he or ohelo a realdanl PUBLIC NOTICE ·
Elemeniary lchool, 820
If he or ohelo nola rea· ISSUANCE OF DRAFT Elm 81184!1, floclne.
ldont ol and hao no PERMIT TO INSTALL Ohio 45771. The public
ploeo ol buelnell In AND NPDES PERMit hlllrlng will end when
Ohio, he orahe moy ap, AND PUBLIC HEARING everyone In lllt.ndinca
Get All The Details At
pe•l to the Co11rt ol Nollcola hereby glvln· hal had en Oj)portunlty
Common. Pleao ol !hat on October 27, to provide tla11mony
Franklin County, The 2008, the DINCtor ol rellllad to 1M pro!Kt.
notice of oppM! ehall tha EnvironrMntal Pro- All ln!INIIIII poraono
'
'
:
'lilt forth lhe order op· ~lion Agency will ._.. anlltlld to llllend or
pooled !rom end lhl IIIUI ~droit Permit to be reprllllllod 'and
grounili'D(tha appeal. lnallll (PTI) 15M525) give written or oral
Thlo Ordef&lt; 11 hereby end a drllfl N.llonol oommanta on lite proJentered In lhe Journal Pollullnl
Dlochlrgl j iCI. Tha purpoae ril 1M
ol lha Ohio Departmenl Ellmlrtltlon
Sywttm ""'Inti' II to Dblllrl ICf.
ol lnturance:
(NPDQ)
permit dllfonol · lnlormltlon
!IARVJOHUDBON
(OIL0014a) to Ollllng .that wlll .bloonllderld
Superlnlondant ol In· Ohio, LLC, ~0 Harper by the Dl~ of Ohio
OPEf.l HOUSE;
ouranco
·
· Ptrk Drive, BICkley, EJIAprtortoanylurthlr ,
(10) 18, 23, 30
Wool VIrginia 25801 . action on tho droll per·
SAT &amp;SUN.
The draft perm Ita are mila.
NOV. 1 &amp; 2;
for the conotructlon ol, Poraona wlahlng to 1)
1 lo 3 PM.
Public Notice
and dlochargelrom the be on Ohio EPA'alnter·
. conotructlon of waate- estod partlea mailing
PUBLIC NOTICE
waler disposal syotem llot for thle prolac~ or
NOTICE: lo haraby oervlng the Yellowbuoh 2) aubmlt commontl
given lhat on Salurday, Mine located off Slate lor Ohio EPA'• conald·

Cremations.

Sdlool

741)-446·3745 .

..P~.,Ilc Notice~ 1 ... N'"~vvsp-per~S.
»Cno~ .. I&gt;ellve.-~d F1:.18ht a..:. YCJ ... r
I&gt;..::.... .-.-.

lha~1011~1c~er~;~:~~~:ofm•~ac~h~l~nd~lv~l~du.a~l ~l 1ed§ns~a~tu~ ~Y~·~o~c~lo~be~r~25~·1R~o~ut~a~1~2!:4~,~o~.e~m~n~e~a!e~r~at~ro~n:~mu~st~d~o~so

NOTICE
TO PUBLIC IM·
oF Record(s)
Envrronmen1ar
Review
or Title Gonzales
11 ol Na· valopment
NO SIGNIFIC~NT
(ERR)
lor Cronslon
.PACT ON THE ENVI· each ol the Prolect(s) tiona! Affordable Hous· P.O. Box 1001; ColumRONMENT (FONSI)
listed above have been lng Act (NAHA), ao bus, Ohio 43266-0101 .
COMBINED NOTICE
. conducted by the VII· amended; and/or Tille Objecllona to the Re·
Data: OCtober 23 , 2008 lege of Syracuse . The IV ol the Stewart B. · loose ol Fundo on baals
Village of Syracuse.P.O. ERR(s) documents the McKinney Homeless other than thooe slated
Box · 266 Syracuse, environmental reviews Asalslance Act, es above will not be conOhio 45779 (740) 992· ol the prolact(o) and amended; to be used sldered by tho Slate of
77T1
more fully oats forth for the proloct(s) de· Ohio. No oblectlono reTO ALL INTERESTED the reasons why such scribed above.
calved altar, December
PERSONS, AGENCIES, statement Is not re· ThoVIIIagao!Syracuoe 1,2008(whlchloatloast
AND GROUPS:
qui red. Tho ERR(s) are Is certifying to the State. ,15 daysaftor Ills antic·
The VIllage ol Syracuse on file and available for of Ohio, thatlhe Village ipatad that the Stale
proposes to request tho public's exam ina· of Syracuse and Erie will receive a request
lhe State ol Ohio tore- tlon and copying, uf)on Cunnlnghem, In his/her lor relaase ol lunda),
leoao Federal funds requelt, between tho official capacity as will be co.nsldered by
under Section 104 (g) hours ol 9:00 a.m. to Mayor of the Village ol the State of Ohio.
· of Title I of the Housing 4:00 P.M. Monday thru Syracuse, consents to The address ol the
and Community Dovel- Friday (except holl· accept the jurisdiction chief executive officer
opment Act of 1974, as days) at the office ol ol Federal courts If an Is:
amended; Section 268 the Syracuse VIllage action Is broughlto en· Eric
Cunningham,
of Tille II ol tho Clerk. P.O. Bo• 266, St. Ioree responsibilities in Mayor
Cranston Gonzales Na- Rt. 124, Syracusa, Ohio relation to onvlronmen- VIllage of Syracuse
tal reviews, decision· P.O. Box 266
llonal Affordable Hous· 45779
lng Act (NAHA), as No further envlronmen- making, and action; Syracuse, Ohio 45n9
amended ; and I or Title tal review of such pro!· and that these respon· (1D) 23
IV of the Stewart B. eel is proposed to be slbllllles have been satMcKinney Homeless conducted, prior to the lslled.
-------Assistance Act, .cas request lor release ol The legal affect of tho
Public Notlce
amanded; to be used Federal Iunde.
.certification Is that - - - - - - - lor the followlng'';\&gt;roj· The Vlllag!' of Syracuse upon Its approval, the FINDINGS AND ORDER
act(a):
·
plans ·lo ~ndertakethe VIllage of Syracuse, OF REVOCATION
2007 Governor's Office prolect(s) described may use tho Federal The Superintendent ol
of Appalachia Grant wllh the Federal lunda funds, and lho State of Insurance lsaued a NoProgram .(ARC) Water cited above. Any per· Ohio will have aallsllod lice of Opportunity lor
Improvement Project
son, agencies, end/or Its
responslbllllllll Hearing to aach altha
Source ol Funds : Ap· groups, who have any under the National En· lndlvlduala
11110&lt;1
palachla
Regional commonla regarding vlronme'ntal Polley Act below. The Notice was
Commission
tho envlronmanl or ol f969, n amended.
served on each lndlvld2008 Meigs County who disagree with lhlo Tho Stale of Ohio will ual pursuant to section
CDBG Formula / Neigh· finding of No Slgnlfi· accept an obloctlbn to 119.07 of the Revlaod
borhood Program, VII· ·cant Impact declelon, Ita approval of the re- Coda. More thon thirty
loge of Syracuse Local are Invited lo eubmlt leaoa ollundo and ac· (30) daya hove olapHd
funds
written comments for ceptance
of
the from the date of llfVIce
consldsrallon to lho certlllcatlon only If It lo or lrom the last dale of
Single Year Prolsct
VIllage of Syrecuae, St. on one ollho two lol· publication end - h of
Syracuse Vllloga
Eotlmated tolal coal of Rt. 124, P.O. Box 266, lowing beoea: (a) lhl the lndlvlduale llalod
Syracuao, Ohio 45779 cortlflcollon woe not, In below hao not r..
lha Proloct
1~,000 Federal CDBO by 4:00 f'.M. on Novem· fact, executed by lho qutaltd 1 hlllrlng.
ber I D, 2008, Which 1111 Village ol Syracu11 Alttr revltwlng the
Fundi
lfH,IOO ·Appelachlen loaat 15 daya elttr the , chlol executive officer recordoin th111 caaoa,
publlcollon of thla com· or other. officer o!Syra· the
Superintendent
Regional Funda
17,40Qo Village Syra· blned notice.
cull Village, approved flndelhat: .
DUM locallundo
NOTICE OF INTENT TO by ihe Slall of C. 1io; or 1. llch ollholndlvlduTolll U37,000
REQUEST RELEASE (b) IIIII tho environ· ola llaled below lo II·
H hie been determlnod OF FUNDS (NOVRROF) mental rovlaw record cenHdlrllhla 11110 11
Ihat'iluch a Requoot lor TO ALL INTERESTEO lor tho pro!Kt lndlcotea on lnauronoe ogent.
RtiHH ol Fundo will PERSONS, AGENCIES, omlulon of 1 required 2. Elich Of tholndlvldunot coni!Hute·•n acllon AND/OR GROUPS:
declalon, finding, or ala llaled 'bllow filled
algnltlcandy ellactlng On or about, but not otep appllcablolo the tocomplywlthlhoconlht · quality ol lhe before, Novomber 12, proloct In the environ· ""ulng educetlon rehuman environment 2008 the VIllage ol menlalrevlowproceao, cfulromenta o!Hctlon
and IICCOnflngly lhl VII- Syracuoe, wl_ll requeat Written
ob]tellona 3905.481 o1 tho RoviHtl
lage ol SyracuH haa the Stale of Ohio to ro· muot bl prepared and Code lor lho 200!12006
diCidld not to prepare leaae Federal lunda submitted In accor· compllonce period.
an Environmental lm· under Soctlon 104(g) ol dance with the required IT IS THEREFORE OR·
pact Statement under Tille I of lhe Houalng procedure (24 CFR.Part DE RED that purauant
tha National Environ- and Community Dovel· •58), and must ba ad· to llctl~n 3905.482 ol
mental Polley Act ol opment Act of 1974, as dresatd lo: State ol the Revloed Coda, lhe
1961, •• amended.
amended ; Section 288 Ohio ; Environmental Oh lolnsurancollcanso

Bwinou &amp; Tradt

Other S.. oict&amp;

Minlb.lre
Dachshund
CKC registered, shots,

wormed. . Males &amp; Fe· Yorkie Puppies tor Bale .
males.
longhair
&amp; $350 &amp; S450. Ve1 .eeom· ~-=-~~~~:::" :;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;

shonhair, rod &amp; blacl&lt;ltan mended. 8 wks old.
$200 304-593-3820
:74:0:
·4:4:1·:95:1:0::::
~--,.---,.:-~
Pomeranian pups. 8 .wks
old, 1st &amp; 2nd shots
wormed. 2 (M) lett. $150.
10321 s~ 141 , Gallipolis

CLASSIFIED INDEX

Vehlclet.:~· -··········: ............... 1000

Legale ............................................... ............ tOO

AecNatlonal

Blrthdoy/Annlvoraary..................................205
Happy Ada ......................................:............. 210
Loot &amp; Found ............................................... 215
Memory/Thank Vou ..................................... 220
Notlcea ..................................:...................... 2l!5
Pereonalo .....................................................230

lllcycleo ...................................................... 101 D
Boato/ACCOIIOI'Iel .................................... 1015
Cemper/RV• a Trollero ............................. 1020
Motorcyclel ...·...............................-;.,·· ·~1: ....;1025
Other ............................... ~.; ..............~ ..:...... 1030
Wont to buy ............................................... 1035

Announcernenta .......................................... 200

wan~

........................................................ 235

ATV ............................................................. 1005

Automotive ................................................ 2000

serv!Cea ....................................................... 300

Auto Rentai/Lallu ...... .-.............................. 2005

Appliance Service .. .,.,,,.............................. ,302
Automotive :...................,. ... ,.......................: 304

Autos .........................................,. .............,. 201 0
Claaolc/Antlqu81 ................. ~ ..................... 20f 5

Bu•lne•• ................................................ ;..... 308

Commerc:falllnduatrlal .............................. 2020
Pert• &amp; Acce••orl81 .................................. 2025

~;tulldlng Materlala ....................................... 308

catering .................................................:...... 31 D
Chlld/Eidariy Coro ....................................... 312
Computerl ................................................... 314
Contractora .................................................. 318
OOonootico/Janltorlei.,................................. 318
Electrlcal ........, ............................................. 320
Flnanclol....................................................... 32l!
Heallh ........ ,.................................., ............... 326
~!eating &amp; Coollng ........................................ 3118
Home lmproyemento 330
tnaurance ................................................ .".... 332

Sporta Uti11ty ....................................,....... .. 203 0
Trucko ....................................... - .............. 203 5
Lit lilly Trallero ............................................ 2040

H0u1e1 for $ttle ......................................... 3025

•· uwn Servlce .............................................. 334
·, Mullc/Dence/Drllmo .................................... 336
: Other Servl................................................ 336
• Plumblnfi/EI-1 ..................... ,............... 340

Lind (Acreogo) ., ....,.......,........................... 3030
Loll ................:...........................................3035
Wont to buy ................................................304D
RHI E11110 Rtntalo ...............................,,,.35QO

.; Profenlonal Servlcee ................................. 342

Apartmenti/Townhou. . .......................... . 350&amp;

' Repalro ........,....:........................................... 344 .
Roofing ......................................................... 348
Socurlty ........................... " .......................... 340
T.,./Accountlng ............... ,........................... 350
Travel/Entertainment ........................: ......... 362

Commoi'Ciol..............................,.................3510
Condominiums ..........................................3515
Hou- for Ront ........................................ 3520
lend (Acreage) ...................... :................... 351!5

Stor~~ge............ ................................. _..,.:... 3535,

Ffnonctal ....................................................400

Went to Ront .............................................. 35'10

Flnllncla!'S.rvlces ............................... :....... 405
1naur11nce ............................................ ........ 410

Manufltctured Houslng ................... .......... 4000
Lole .............................................................~

MoMV to Lend ............................................. 415
Educllllon ......................................c............. 500
Bualnllll &amp; Trade School ......,......:............. 505
ln81ructlon &amp; Trolnlng ................................. 51D

Movera............................................- ..........40 0
Rentalo .............................,......................... 4015
SOIIa ...........................................................4020
Supplloa.....................................................4025

Le1110ns ................ ...... .................................. 515

Want to Buy ............................................... ol030

Personol .......,............................................... 526
Anlmala ........................................................ 500
Animal suppl!lll .......................................... 805
Horsoa.......................................................... l10

Raoort Property...... , ......,......................... 5000
Rooort,Property for ule ........................... 5025
Rotort Property fl&gt;r rent .............:............. soso
Employment ...............................................5000

Llveatock......................................................815

Ac:c::ountlng/Financlal ................................. 6002

Pllo., •• ,. .........................................................e:IO
want to buy ..................................................l25
' ·Agrtcutture, ..,...............................................700

Admlnlatratlve/Prot.oalonal .....................8004
Ceohler/Cierk ............................................. 8006
Chlld/Eidorly Cere ..................................... ~

:

1

a.-

F•rm Equ!prnent .......1.................................. 705

a Produco.......................................710
Hoy fMd. Sood Groin .. ,,,........................ 715
Hu.;Ung a Lind: .............·........, ................... 726
wont to buy.,...... ,.................................,.......725
Merei&gt;Ondloo ................................................ 1100
Antlquoo ..........................:............................905
Appllonc:e .....................................................810
Auellono .,........:............................................815
Barg•ln BaHrnent.......................;...............l20

C011octlbloo ......................................,...........925
computore ................................................... 830
Equlpmtnt1Supplleo.......... ,~........................835
F1.. Morkota ................................................ 1l40
Fuol Oil eo.t!Wood/GH ............................. 945
Furnlture ......................... ............................. 950

=
=

Help 1nted- Gener1! .................................. 6028

Low Enforcoment .......... :........................... 11030
M.rntonance/DOmeltlc .............................
__.,.nt/Supervtoory ....................... .
Moch.onlco..................................................8036
-leal ................................,......................

Muatcal ........................................................

...

AUtoa

stock.

Gall

L&lt;01d (Acreago)
--=~.;;,;;;;;;;;;;;...,.
payments Trade· 1995 Chevy Con·

Ron Evans. 2001 Pontia.c Gralld AM

:-1 ·~8~00~·53-.7·~9~
52~8;.."':"''"":~ take

over

version
Van,
excellent
condition, easy on gas
also
wltrailer
"76"x16,
2-3500# m11es, 2 wheel
brakes w/ramp for 5 Beautiful Apts. at Jack·
acres 1n Meigs County, son Estates. 52 West·
wood Dr., from $365 to
(740)992·0174

'STOCK
TRAILERS, NEW AND USED STEEL • d~ion. . 109,000 . miles, l:,;;::l::::.;::,;.;.;;.....,...,.,., $560
740·446-2568.
Real Estate Equal Housing Opportu·
LOAD
MAX
EQUIP· Steel Beams. Pipe Rebar $4500 OBO. 256·9031 o&lt; 3500
Re 1tals nity. This mstitution is an
MENT
TRAILERS, lo&lt;
Concre1e
Angle. "256
:;;·1~2;33~-~-~
CARGO

EXPRESS

HOMESTEADER

=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

&amp; Channel, Flat Bar, Steel 2'006 Durango 4 wheel
Grating for Drains, Drive·
.
~
ways &amp; . watkwavs. l&amp;l drive, leather, sun roof, &amp;

CARGO/CONCESSION
TRAILERS.
B+W
GOOSENECK FLATB~O
$3999. "lEW OUR EN·
"
TIRE TRAILER INVEN·
TORY AT

Se&lt;ap Me1als Open Mon, DVD player, $10,000.
256·1618 .
Tue.
Wed
&amp;
Fri. ""~"'""""'""'""'""'"'
Bam-4:30pm.
' C)osod
Trvcb

WWW.CAAMtcHAEL·
TRAIU:RS.COM
740·446·3825

Travel
trunk
14'
)(
14"11 5"hlgh
tooled
leather • .Stenciled S A
Couch, Pt ~asant Va

Thurs.

· Sun. -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;....~;;;;;;;~~

&amp;

Sal

740·446-7300

d1d May 1858-phone 304
Deere lately? You'll be zero

mower.
surprised! Check out our Gravely. 60 Inch deck .
used
· Inventory
at 27 HP. Moving, must

www.CAREQ.com.
michael

tum

Ca&lt;· selL 367·7129

Equipment ..,,.,...,,......,""""""""

WGnt To Buy

740-446·2412

Buying tools ~II or trade
·mechanic-carpenter lawn
Free
Black Walnuts. &amp; garden power tools.
Easy Accossibl!~l Call Call 740·381!-1515 •• celj
140-4413·6541 atter 5pm 740·208..0320
I
· Absolute
~~~~~
Top Dollar • sil·
ver/gokl
colns.
•any
10KI14KI1BK go~ jewelry, &lt;len1a1 gold, . P"'
1935

US

• prootlrnint

cunency.

dia·
monlls, MTS Coin Shop.

Firewood · for

wood spl~
256·911 5

Clip thi S AD and take It
with you when you visit
miles, 7.0 engine gas, 5 . our community to get
speed tra ns, 24 H bed,
this special discount.
GVW 25950 lbs, Don1
Move·in in Oct and get
need
COL,
$8,500
5100.00
your 2BR
304·773-5343
Apt. in Nov. Currently
renting 1 &amp; 2 BR units .
For Sale or Best Offer:
Spacious floor plans.
1985
Ford
F-250,
ranch &amp; townhome style
4·wt1eel drive. flel·bed
living. playground &amp;
truck.,
'• mechanically
basketball court, on-site
sound, 2000. miles on 4
laundry facility, 24 hr
yr. old 302 engine. call
emergency mainle·
after
8pm
nance , qu_
iet country IO·
.304;; ;,;-451l; ; ;,1,;,72
;· ;,;7;,.""'""""""' ca tion close to ma,or
8
medical
facilities,
;;;;;=W~ant~Ti;jo;;ii;uy=-;;o-.;;
pharTTlacies, grocery
Ca&lt;S, Trucks, and GMC.'
store...just miriutes
Satum , BuiCk SUV's wilt1
away from other major
shopping in the area.
warranty. Visit us at
~oneysuc:kle Hlltl·
(gocdookmOtors.com)
Apartment•
Cook Mo10fs 328 Jack··
266 Colonial Drive ~t113
son Pike. 740-4,16.()103
Bidwell, Ohio45614
want to buy Junk CarS,
740-446-3344
call740-388-0884
Office Hours M, W, F

"
1998

Have you priced a John 592-1547 in evening.

sels,

GMC

98439.0

on

9AM · 5PM

151 2nd Avenue, Galli·

sa!iive~ ;;pol;;~;;;-.;446!!!!!·2;;;84;,;;;,2"""""""""'
tt-For$alo

Seasoned

2 Fam. Oct. 25-26 from
Firewood 8-5? Old Gallia School
186 North Pari!: Dr. call

Hardwood. 446·9204

A1 233 a1 304-675-SMO

Fire

Seasoned Firewood CAA
HEAP
eccep1ed.
645·5946 or 441 .()9.41

or

Station. 304·593-1204 will seH on
Land Contract or Out
Right. Also a Wellington
Piano call for appoint·
ment to see them both.

Equal Opportunity
vider and Employer.

Pro-

·

Gracious Uvlng 1 and 2
Bedroom Apts. at Village
Manor and RiversiQe
Apts . in Middleport, lro'!"'

$327
to
740·992-5064.

$592
Eq"al

Housing Opportunity.
Nice
Clean
Ground
Floor, 2br, WfD hookup,
AeferencesJDeposiVNo

PelS 304·675·5162
Tara
Townhouse
Apartments - 2BA. 1.5
bath, back patio. pool.
playground, {trash. sew·
age,
water
pd .)
$425/rent,
$425/sec.

dep. Call 740-367.()547

Comrnerciol
2 bay service station
Jackson
Pike.
Lease
req!Ji red. Call 446·3644
tor more info.

H..101ForRont
SH&amp;'rho' 4 lxd , 2 bath.
Bank Rrpo' .(5!f dowJ1. IS
yea~. S'i APRi for h ~lln£~
S00-620-4'M6 "X R027

S400Jmo + deposit. 1BR.
Ag&amp;Aef.
tum,
W&amp;D
hoOkup, No steps, Very '
clean, 114 State St,

Yard $ale

Clerlcal .......................................................60

Conotructlon ..................., ............ ,.............8012
Drlvora &amp; Dollvery ..................................... 8014
Educatlon ...................................................8016
l!loctrlcll Ptumblng ...................................8018
Employment Agoncllo .............................. fl020
Entwtalnmont ............................................ 80~:
Food ..:......................................:.,80
ao--nmont a F-.ol Jo!M .................... 8026

=

paired. new &amp; rebull1 In ~~"!""--~~":"~

Mollohan
Carpet
Fall 304-675 -31 68
Special. 20 oz. CammerFarm Equipment
Clal Carpet $6.95/yard. 03 Stralus Automatic 4
Several
Colors. cylinder
$2800
080.
EBY.
INTEGRITY, 740·446-7444 . Quality at 256- 1652 or 256-1233.
KIEFER BUILT,
Low Prices!
02 Dodge • 4)(4 truck,
VALLEY
HORSEJLIVE·
cruise. 1111, air, good con·

V.n• ............................................................ 204&amp; ·

Want to buy ............................................... 2050
- 1 Eotatl Seleo ...................................... ~
Cemetery Ploto .......................................... 300
Commerolal ....................................., ..........301 0
Condomlnluma .......................................... 3D15
'For SOle by Owner .....................................3026

Jel Aeration Motors re·

740-441.()596

L-------------.J

2

~mom Hou~ $~

month, Plus Utility, Ref &amp;

1BR . Apl, W/0 hookups, Deposit

No
Pets
sa!elltte TV ~1. w/rent. 304-675-4874
close to hospital. Call
2BR house located in
740·339-0362
town,
Gailipolis,
OH .
5500/mo plus utilities. No
Pets. 740-441..0110 or
740-591·5174
2br on the Allier In Ma·

son. HUO Approved Re1·
erences 304·882·3512 or

304--7946 '

Hobby!Hunl a Spgrt....................................955

Port·Timo-Temporarleo ............................. 804.,
RMtaurlntll ......... ;..................................... 6044

2BA, 1 1&gt;&amp;111 In GallipOliS

Mlocollonoouo..............................................tl65
· · wont toliuy ...................................~..............970
Yard SOle ,....................................................875

So!oa...........................................................80411
TechnlceiTredOI ....................................... 8050
Tt1Ctliii/FICiory .. ,...................................... 8052

StoVO/Irldge

Kld'l corner .................................................. 960

smoke..&amp;po1s.

1um.
No
Ref&amp;dep

5-450/mo W/1/1. 256-9190

�&gt;
t;(.

· Page B:z • The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, October 23, ~oo8

· www.mydailysentinel.com

··Thursday, October 23, 200B

,.

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Spo rb Wrner
Rel'cm l: (J5- ::!5

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Record: 75-15
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m:rthune
Sentinel
_l\egtster
Your Ad, (740) 446-2342 - (7 40) 992-2156 (304)' 675-1333
Call TOday... · or Fax to (740) 446-3008 • or Fax To (740) 992-2157

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Should Include These Items
· To Help Get Response,, •

F.mlaml

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Shady Sprina
at Sisso nville ·

Shady Sprjol
Jt Siswnvillc
Whulersb~ at

P1J r~ntoutll

Portsmouth ~st

Cst

Wheelenburg

· In Next Day' s Paper
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For Sundays Paper

Publication
Sunday Display: 1:00 p.m.
Thunday for Sundays

• All ads must be prepaid•

• Include Phone Number And Addral When Needed

• Ads Should Run 7 Dlyl

Purl~lltuuth \Vcq

Ohio Vallsy
Publishing rei8MS
lhs rtghllo edll,
"'""I or cancel any
ad alany time.

Previous Champions - 200 I: Butch Cooper, 2002: Butch Cooper. 2003 : Brad ~herman, 2004: Brad Sherman, 2005 : Bryan Walters, 2006: Brad Sherman. 2007: Dave Harris .
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POLICIES: Ohio Valley Publllhlng
the right to edit, rtJ-ct, or ClOt* any ad at any 11me. Errora mutt bt reported on ttlellrtt day Of publlcetlon and the
Trlbune-Sintinei·Aeglatar wHI be ttlpOfltlblt for no mort then tht coat ot lht apact occupttd by the error and only the rlrtl lnaertlon. We shill not be liable ror
any 1011 ot txplnM that ruultt hom tht publlcldcm or ornl11ktn of an advertitenMint. COrrection wm bel made In the flr1t available edition. ·· Box numbtr ·~•
art tlwaya conlldenUal . ·Current rate card applies . ·All real aatltte advertlnmenta are aubject to tha Federal Fair Houlling Act of 1t68. • Thta newt paper
acceptt onlv help wanted ada mHIIng EOE thtndltrds. We will not knowingly acc'ept any advttrtlllng In violation of the law. Will not bt rttpo_n tlblt

600

-

·

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

Townhou-

kitncarlyletmcomcast.net

Will do House Cleaning

3 Bed, 2 Bath HUD "'"""'""'"'""""""';;;;;;~
Homes! Only $19,900 tor 2 BA Apartment &amp; 2 BA
listings 800·620·:4946 ex House on Sttl St. Pt
A019
Pleasant
304·8 12· 4350
ask lor Den

e1c. Call 3.04·675·1 870
Faund near
Gallipolis.
Shepherd.

Holier in
Australian

Call

740-577-3008

Prolusional ~
DN
SOCIAL SECURITY SSI
No Fee Unless We Win!

Apartmonfl/

Hou101 For Sale

At tm,th

2 kittens house broken 4
months old free to a
good homo .

446·2273 0&lt; 709-951 3

1-868-582·3345

NOTICE OHIO VAI,LEY
PUBLISHING CO. roc·
ommends that you c:to.
business with people you
know, and NOT to send '!~"!""~;;;;;;;;;;;;~~
money through the mail ~
until you have investigat-

.
N

Gas fired heating boller.S
·yr.old ···wtih · 9.n' controls
must see.740-992·2974

.

.

AnnoL r ements

Noticoo

"SoJurday M,oniing Sport~ Clinics" .
9:00am

.

200

Other Sorvicoo

Now you can have borders and graphics
~
addedtoyourclassiftedads
J,~
Jr'!"r
Borders $3.00/per ad
1!
Graphics 50¢ for small
S1.00 fcir large

All Display: 12 Noon 2
Business Days PriOr To

Monday-Friday for Insertion

• Start Your Ads With A Keyword • Include CDmplete
Description • Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviations

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•

~

trro1111n an ad taken over the phone.

Shady Sprina
~t Stmmvillc

~
www.mydailytribune.com
www.mydailysenlinel.com
www.mydailyregisler.com

.

Baument

Waterproofing
Unconditional lifetime

All

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!

Real

guarantee. Local rater·
ences furnished . Established 1975. CaR 24 Hrs. .
740-446.{)870, Rogers

Basement Waterproofing•

•
Pet

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Y&lt;a&lt;-r R.lyht.

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beand· ~,-reby Is 2008 al 10:00. a.m., a eaot of ·the VIllage of

[-Oh~o!:!s&gt;~r~e~_L!S.t[2~:~()!1~-~

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866-539-4165

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HUDSOO&amp;

M-\RSHALL

Call

tor w/

;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.=;;;;;;;;
Ga!llpolle Ctreer
Colllge

(Careers Close To Home I
lnstruc· · Call Tod•yl 741)--4367
HlOI)-214-0452
Bachelor Degree
gall~leclreeJCOII&amp;Qe.edU

in
music/guitar.
A.ccrediled Member Accredlt·
740·446·0947
Please · ing Council lor lpd&amp;~nd&amp;nt .
leave msg.
Colleges and Schoo~ 12740.

rn
wrlllng to Ohio EPA·
DSW, PermHs Procosslng Unit, P.O. Box1049,
Colum~o, Olllo43216·
1049 by the close ol
bualness on December
2, 2008. Commonls ra·
celvod alter this date
lnay not be cons idered
as .part of the official
record oflhls hearing.
Copies of the pending
NPDES
appllcatlon,
draft permlland lechnl·
liAS
cal support lnlorirlallon
SOMfTIIING
may · be
re.vlewed
and/or copies made at
FOR. YOU!!
Ohio EPA's Soulheast
District Office, 2195
Fronl Strset, , Logan,
Ohio 43138, by first
calling (740)385-850110
make an appointment.
(10) 23 .
-------Auction
Auction
·;;;;;;;;;;;;;..;:;;;;;~~;;;

Tho rrevoca- public ~r. will be held Racine, aouth of Town·
· shell be af(ectlvo. at 211 W. ,Second St., ahlp R011d 100, Sutton
November 14 ,.2~.
·Pomarqy, ,. OH. The Township,
Meigs
KNAPP, JAN A DOB: Farmerolltonk•nd Sov· County, Ohio. "Draft
0110711946 PO BOX'6f lngo Comp8ny Ia sell· Actions' are written
LANGSVILLE,
OH IQg lor calh In hand or statements of lho Dl•
45741
cartlllod 'Check the fol· rector'a lntenl wllh reSANDERS, ASHLE'I N lowing colloteral: ~2 epectlo the Issuance.
DOB: 0711411982
• CHEVROLET I!IPALA denial, ale. of a permit,
51145 ST RT 681 40,
Vlnl llconoe, order, ate. In·
REEDSVILLE,
OH 2G1WF52EB29339251 tarestod peroono may
45n2
The Farmaro' Bank and oubmll written com·
A copy .o l thla Order Savings
Company. menls regarding draft
may be obtained !rom Pomeroy, Ohio, re· actlona.
·
Stephen C. Hombach, aerves the rlghlto bid The discharges from
Ohio Department of In· allhlo sale, and to wllh· the facility, II approved,
surance, 50 West Town draw the above colla!· would roaull In degraStrset, 3rd Floor, Suite erol prior to sale. dation lo. or lowering
300, Columbus, OH Further, The Farmers of, lhe water quality ol
43215.
Bank and Savings Yallowbrush Crsek and
As set forth In O.R.C. Company reserves the Jennie Walla Run;
119.12, an appeal of rlghtto reJectany ora II However, the chemical·
this Order may be blda aubmlttod.
sj,ecHic water quality
taken by filing a notice The above described c;rllarla developed lo
of appaal wllh the De· collateral will be sold proteclaquatlc Ulland
partment of Insurance. ••as Is · where Is", with human hllllth, HI forth
A copy of the notice. of no axpreallod or lm· . In DAC ·3745·1-117, will
appeal shall also be · piled warranty given.
not be.ox.-tcl,
Iliad with the appraprl· -For turthorlilfo110atlon, In sc:cordanco with ·
att court ol common or for an appol!llmant OAC 3745-1-o&amp;, Ohio
pleas. Such notlc4a ol to lnapecl collalaral, EPA wiH provide an CIP-.
opr&gt;~~al shall be !lied prior to 1111 dati con· portunlly · tor public ,
wltl\ln fifteen (151 days teet Cyndle,
comment concerning
ollha third dala of pub- or Kan ot74CHI92•2138. lhla, project. Commlnta •
llcatlon of lhll nollco (10) ~. 23, 24, 2008:
received lhlll be con- .
and Order. Each lndl·
aldered by lha Director ,
vldualllotod above may
before lhl dr.rt 'octlon .;
appeal to tho court of
Public Notice
1~ luutd . ao final. A'·
Thle homa selling vii " BID NOW ONLINE
common plea~ of the
public hearing h81
Ill www.HudsonAndMirshall.com
count)' In which hla or Dolo of Public Notice: 'been ochedulld for
Call
Local Agenl: &amp;obbill Jo Ro"
her bualnHIIalocatod October 26, 2008
8:30P.M. on,Novomblr ,
-ders
Really speeiai\Kis, 30.0~ 16·2818
or the county In which Mllga County.
21,2001 111 1M Southern ·
he or ohelo a realdanl PUBLIC NOTICE ·
Elemeniary lchool, 820
If he or ohelo nola rea· ISSUANCE OF DRAFT Elm 81184!1, floclne.
ldont ol and hao no PERMIT TO INSTALL Ohio 45771. The public
ploeo ol buelnell In AND NPDES PERMit hlllrlng will end when
Ohio, he orahe moy ap, AND PUBLIC HEARING everyone In lllt.ndinca
Get All The Details At
pe•l to the Co11rt ol Nollcola hereby glvln· hal had en Oj)portunlty
Common. Pleao ol !hat on October 27, to provide tla11mony
Franklin County, The 2008, the DINCtor ol rellllad to 1M pro!Kt.
notice of oppM! ehall tha EnvironrMntal Pro- All ln!INIIIII poraono
'
'
:
'lilt forth lhe order op· ~lion Agency will ._.. anlltlld to llllend or
pooled !rom end lhl IIIUI ~droit Permit to be reprllllllod 'and
grounili'D(tha appeal. lnallll (PTI) 15M525) give written or oral
Thlo Ordef&lt; 11 hereby end a drllfl N.llonol oommanta on lite proJentered In lhe Journal Pollullnl
Dlochlrgl j iCI. Tha purpoae ril 1M
ol lha Ohio Departmenl Ellmlrtltlon
Sywttm ""'Inti' II to Dblllrl ICf.
ol lnturance:
(NPDQ)
permit dllfonol · lnlormltlon
!IARVJOHUDBON
(OIL0014a) to Ollllng .that wlll .bloonllderld
Superlnlondant ol In· Ohio, LLC, ~0 Harper by the Dl~ of Ohio
OPEf.l HOUSE;
ouranco
·
· Ptrk Drive, BICkley, EJIAprtortoanylurthlr ,
(10) 18, 23, 30
Wool VIrginia 25801 . action on tho droll per·
SAT &amp;SUN.
The draft perm Ita are mila.
NOV. 1 &amp; 2;
for the conotructlon ol, Poraona wlahlng to 1)
1 lo 3 PM.
Public Notice
and dlochargelrom the be on Ohio EPA'alnter·
. conotructlon of waate- estod partlea mailing
PUBLIC NOTICE
waler disposal syotem llot for thle prolac~ or
NOTICE: lo haraby oervlng the Yellowbuoh 2) aubmlt commontl
given lhat on Salurday, Mine located off Slate lor Ohio EPA'• conald·

Cremations.

Sdlool

741)-446·3745 .

..P~.,Ilc Notice~ 1 ... N'"~vvsp-per~S.
»Cno~ .. I&gt;ellve.-~d F1:.18ht a..:. YCJ ... r
I&gt;..::.... .-.-.

lha~1011~1c~er~;~:~~~:ofm•~ac~h~l~nd~lv~l~du.a~l ~l 1ed§ns~a~tu~ ~Y~·~o~c~lo~be~r~25~·1R~o~ut~a~1~2!:4~,~o~.e~m~n~e~a!e~r~at~ro~n:~mu~st~d~o~so

NOTICE
TO PUBLIC IM·
oF Record(s)
Envrronmen1ar
Review
or Title Gonzales
11 ol Na· valopment
NO SIGNIFIC~NT
(ERR)
lor Cronslon
.PACT ON THE ENVI· each ol the Prolect(s) tiona! Affordable Hous· P.O. Box 1001; ColumRONMENT (FONSI)
listed above have been lng Act (NAHA), ao bus, Ohio 43266-0101 .
COMBINED NOTICE
. conducted by the VII· amended; and/or Tille Objecllona to the Re·
Data: OCtober 23 , 2008 lege of Syracuse . The IV ol the Stewart B. · loose ol Fundo on baals
Village of Syracuse.P.O. ERR(s) documents the McKinney Homeless other than thooe slated
Box · 266 Syracuse, environmental reviews Asalslance Act, es above will not be conOhio 45779 (740) 992· ol the prolact(o) and amended; to be used sldered by tho Slate of
77T1
more fully oats forth for the proloct(s) de· Ohio. No oblectlono reTO ALL INTERESTED the reasons why such scribed above.
calved altar, December
PERSONS, AGENCIES, statement Is not re· ThoVIIIagao!Syracuoe 1,2008(whlchloatloast
AND GROUPS:
qui red. Tho ERR(s) are Is certifying to the State. ,15 daysaftor Ills antic·
The VIllage ol Syracuse on file and available for of Ohio, thatlhe Village ipatad that the Stale
proposes to request tho public's exam ina· of Syracuse and Erie will receive a request
lhe State ol Ohio tore- tlon and copying, uf)on Cunnlnghem, In his/her lor relaase ol lunda),
leoao Federal funds requelt, between tho official capacity as will be co.nsldered by
under Section 104 (g) hours ol 9:00 a.m. to Mayor of the Village ol the State of Ohio.
· of Title I of the Housing 4:00 P.M. Monday thru Syracuse, consents to The address ol the
and Community Dovel- Friday (except holl· accept the jurisdiction chief executive officer
opment Act of 1974, as days) at the office ol ol Federal courts If an Is:
amended; Section 268 the Syracuse VIllage action Is broughlto en· Eric
Cunningham,
of Tille II ol tho Clerk. P.O. Bo• 266, St. Ioree responsibilities in Mayor
Cranston Gonzales Na- Rt. 124, Syracusa, Ohio relation to onvlronmen- VIllage of Syracuse
tal reviews, decision· P.O. Box 266
llonal Affordable Hous· 45779
lng Act (NAHA), as No further envlronmen- making, and action; Syracuse, Ohio 45n9
amended ; and I or Title tal review of such pro!· and that these respon· (1D) 23
IV of the Stewart B. eel is proposed to be slbllllles have been satMcKinney Homeless conducted, prior to the lslled.
-------Assistance Act, .cas request lor release ol The legal affect of tho
Public Notlce
amanded; to be used Federal Iunde.
.certification Is that - - - - - - - lor the followlng'';\&gt;roj· The Vlllag!' of Syracuse upon Its approval, the FINDINGS AND ORDER
act(a):
·
plans ·lo ~ndertakethe VIllage of Syracuse, OF REVOCATION
2007 Governor's Office prolect(s) described may use tho Federal The Superintendent ol
of Appalachia Grant wllh the Federal lunda funds, and lho State of Insurance lsaued a NoProgram .(ARC) Water cited above. Any per· Ohio will have aallsllod lice of Opportunity lor
Improvement Project
son, agencies, end/or Its
responslbllllllll Hearing to aach altha
Source ol Funds : Ap· groups, who have any under the National En· lndlvlduala
11110&lt;1
palachla
Regional commonla regarding vlronme'ntal Polley Act below. The Notice was
Commission
tho envlronmanl or ol f969, n amended.
served on each lndlvld2008 Meigs County who disagree with lhlo Tho Stale of Ohio will ual pursuant to section
CDBG Formula / Neigh· finding of No Slgnlfi· accept an obloctlbn to 119.07 of the Revlaod
borhood Program, VII· ·cant Impact declelon, Ita approval of the re- Coda. More thon thirty
loge of Syracuse Local are Invited lo eubmlt leaoa ollundo and ac· (30) daya hove olapHd
funds
written comments for ceptance
of
the from the date of llfVIce
consldsrallon to lho certlllcatlon only If It lo or lrom the last dale of
Single Year Prolsct
VIllage of Syrecuae, St. on one ollho two lol· publication end - h of
Syracuse Vllloga
Eotlmated tolal coal of Rt. 124, P.O. Box 266, lowing beoea: (a) lhl the lndlvlduale llalod
Syracuao, Ohio 45779 cortlflcollon woe not, In below hao not r..
lha Proloct
1~,000 Federal CDBO by 4:00 f'.M. on Novem· fact, executed by lho qutaltd 1 hlllrlng.
ber I D, 2008, Which 1111 Village ol Syracu11 Alttr revltwlng the
Fundi
lfH,IOO ·Appelachlen loaat 15 daya elttr the , chlol executive officer recordoin th111 caaoa,
publlcollon of thla com· or other. officer o!Syra· the
Superintendent
Regional Funda
17,40Qo Village Syra· blned notice.
cull Village, approved flndelhat: .
DUM locallundo
NOTICE OF INTENT TO by ihe Slall of C. 1io; or 1. llch ollholndlvlduTolll U37,000
REQUEST RELEASE (b) IIIII tho environ· ola llaled below lo II·
H hie been determlnod OF FUNDS (NOVRROF) mental rovlaw record cenHdlrllhla 11110 11
Ihat'iluch a Requoot lor TO ALL INTERESTEO lor tho pro!Kt lndlcotea on lnauronoe ogent.
RtiHH ol Fundo will PERSONS, AGENCIES, omlulon of 1 required 2. Elich Of tholndlvldunot coni!Hute·•n acllon AND/OR GROUPS:
declalon, finding, or ala llaled 'bllow filled
algnltlcandy ellactlng On or about, but not otep appllcablolo the tocomplywlthlhoconlht · quality ol lhe before, Novomber 12, proloct In the environ· ""ulng educetlon rehuman environment 2008 the VIllage ol menlalrevlowproceao, cfulromenta o!Hctlon
and IICCOnflngly lhl VII- Syracuoe, wl_ll requeat Written
ob]tellona 3905.481 o1 tho RoviHtl
lage ol SyracuH haa the Stale of Ohio to ro· muot bl prepared and Code lor lho 200!12006
diCidld not to prepare leaae Federal lunda submitted In accor· compllonce period.
an Environmental lm· under Soctlon 104(g) ol dance with the required IT IS THEREFORE OR·
pact Statement under Tille I of lhe Houalng procedure (24 CFR.Part DE RED that purauant
tha National Environ- and Community Dovel· •58), and must ba ad· to llctl~n 3905.482 ol
mental Polley Act ol opment Act of 1974, as dresatd lo: State ol the Revloed Coda, lhe
1961, •• amended.
amended ; Section 288 Ohio ; Environmental Oh lolnsurancollcanso

Bwinou &amp; Tradt

Other S.. oict&amp;

Minlb.lre
Dachshund
CKC registered, shots,

wormed. . Males &amp; Fe· Yorkie Puppies tor Bale .
males.
longhair
&amp; $350 &amp; S450. Ve1 .eeom· ~-=-~~~~:::" :;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;

shonhair, rod &amp; blacl&lt;ltan mended. 8 wks old.
$200 304-593-3820
:74:0:
·4:4:1·:95:1:0::::
~--,.---,.:-~
Pomeranian pups. 8 .wks
old, 1st &amp; 2nd shots
wormed. 2 (M) lett. $150.
10321 s~ 141 , Gallipolis

CLASSIFIED INDEX

Vehlclet.:~· -··········: ............... 1000

Legale ............................................... ............ tOO

AecNatlonal

Blrthdoy/Annlvoraary..................................205
Happy Ada ......................................:............. 210
Loot &amp; Found ............................................... 215
Memory/Thank Vou ..................................... 220
Notlcea ..................................:...................... 2l!5
Pereonalo .....................................................230

lllcycleo ...................................................... 101 D
Boato/ACCOIIOI'Iel .................................... 1015
Cemper/RV• a Trollero ............................. 1020
Motorcyclel ...·...............................-;.,·· ·~1: ....;1025
Other ............................... ~.; ..............~ ..:...... 1030
Wont to buy ............................................... 1035

Announcernenta .......................................... 200

wan~

........................................................ 235

ATV ............................................................. 1005

Automotive ................................................ 2000

serv!Cea ....................................................... 300

Auto Rentai/Lallu ...... .-.............................. 2005

Appliance Service .. .,.,,,.............................. ,302
Automotive :...................,. ... ,.......................: 304

Autos .........................................,. .............,. 201 0
Claaolc/Antlqu81 ................. ~ ..................... 20f 5

Bu•lne•• ................................................ ;..... 308

Commerc:falllnduatrlal .............................. 2020
Pert• &amp; Acce••orl81 .................................. 2025

~;tulldlng Materlala ....................................... 308

catering .................................................:...... 31 D
Chlld/Eidariy Coro ....................................... 312
Computerl ................................................... 314
Contractora .................................................. 318
OOonootico/Janltorlei.,................................. 318
Electrlcal ........, ............................................. 320
Flnanclol....................................................... 32l!
Heallh ........ ,.................................., ............... 326
~!eating &amp; Coollng ........................................ 3118
Home lmproyemento 330
tnaurance ................................................ .".... 332

Sporta Uti11ty ....................................,....... .. 203 0
Trucko ....................................... - .............. 203 5
Lit lilly Trallero ............................................ 2040

H0u1e1 for $ttle ......................................... 3025

•· uwn Servlce .............................................. 334
·, Mullc/Dence/Drllmo .................................... 336
: Other Servl................................................ 336
• Plumblnfi/EI-1 ..................... ,............... 340

Lind (Acreogo) ., ....,.......,........................... 3030
Loll ................:...........................................3035
Wont to buy ................................................304D
RHI E11110 Rtntalo ...............................,,,.35QO

.; Profenlonal Servlcee ................................. 342

Apartmenti/Townhou. . .......................... . 350&amp;

' Repalro ........,....:........................................... 344 .
Roofing ......................................................... 348
Socurlty ........................... " .......................... 340
T.,./Accountlng ............... ,........................... 350
Travel/Entertainment ........................: ......... 362

Commoi'Ciol..............................,.................3510
Condominiums ..........................................3515
Hou- for Ront ........................................ 3520
lend (Acreage) ...................... :................... 351!5

Stor~~ge............ ................................. _..,.:... 3535,

Ffnonctal ....................................................400

Went to Ront .............................................. 35'10

Flnllncla!'S.rvlces ............................... :....... 405
1naur11nce ............................................ ........ 410

Manufltctured Houslng ................... .......... 4000
Lole .............................................................~

MoMV to Lend ............................................. 415
Educllllon ......................................c............. 500
Bualnllll &amp; Trade School ......,......:............. 505
ln81ructlon &amp; Trolnlng ................................. 51D

Movera............................................- ..........40 0
Rentalo .............................,......................... 4015
SOIIa ...........................................................4020
Supplloa.....................................................4025

Le1110ns ................ ...... .................................. 515

Want to Buy ............................................... ol030

Personol .......,............................................... 526
Anlmala ........................................................ 500
Animal suppl!lll .......................................... 805
Horsoa.......................................................... l10

Raoort Property...... , ......,......................... 5000
Rooort,Property for ule ........................... 5025
Rotort Property fl&gt;r rent .............:............. soso
Employment ...............................................5000

Llveatock......................................................815

Ac:c::ountlng/Financlal ................................. 6002

Pllo., •• ,. .........................................................e:IO
want to buy ..................................................l25
' ·Agrtcutture, ..,...............................................700

Admlnlatratlve/Prot.oalonal .....................8004
Ceohler/Cierk ............................................. 8006
Chlld/Eidorly Cere ..................................... ~

:

1

a.-

F•rm Equ!prnent .......1.................................. 705

a Produco.......................................710
Hoy fMd. Sood Groin .. ,,,........................ 715
Hu.;Ung a Lind: .............·........, ................... 726
wont to buy.,...... ,.................................,.......725
Merei&gt;Ondloo ................................................ 1100
Antlquoo ..........................:............................905
Appllonc:e .....................................................810
Auellono .,........:............................................815
Barg•ln BaHrnent.......................;...............l20

C011octlbloo ......................................,...........925
computore ................................................... 830
Equlpmtnt1Supplleo.......... ,~........................835
F1.. Morkota ................................................ 1l40
Fuol Oil eo.t!Wood/GH ............................. 945
Furnlture ......................... ............................. 950

=
=

Help 1nted- Gener1! .................................. 6028

Low Enforcoment .......... :........................... 11030
M.rntonance/DOmeltlc .............................
__.,.nt/Supervtoory ....................... .
Moch.onlco..................................................8036
-leal ................................,......................

Muatcal ........................................................

...

AUtoa

stock.

Gall

L&lt;01d (Acreago)
--=~.;;,;;;;;;;;;;;...,.
payments Trade· 1995 Chevy Con·

Ron Evans. 2001 Pontia.c Gralld AM

:-1 ·~8~00~·53-.7·~9~
52~8;.."':"''"":~ take

over

version
Van,
excellent
condition, easy on gas
also
wltrailer
"76"x16,
2-3500# m11es, 2 wheel
brakes w/ramp for 5 Beautiful Apts. at Jack·
acres 1n Meigs County, son Estates. 52 West·
wood Dr., from $365 to
(740)992·0174

'STOCK
TRAILERS, NEW AND USED STEEL • d~ion. . 109,000 . miles, l:,;;::l::::.;::,;.;.;;.....,...,.,., $560
740·446-2568.
Real Estate Equal Housing Opportu·
LOAD
MAX
EQUIP· Steel Beams. Pipe Rebar $4500 OBO. 256·9031 o&lt; 3500
Re 1tals nity. This mstitution is an
MENT
TRAILERS, lo&lt;
Concre1e
Angle. "256
:;;·1~2;33~-~-~
CARGO

EXPRESS

HOMESTEADER

=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

&amp; Channel, Flat Bar, Steel 2'006 Durango 4 wheel
Grating for Drains, Drive·
.
~
ways &amp; . watkwavs. l&amp;l drive, leather, sun roof, &amp;

CARGO/CONCESSION
TRAILERS.
B+W
GOOSENECK FLATB~O
$3999. "lEW OUR EN·
"
TIRE TRAILER INVEN·
TORY AT

Se&lt;ap Me1als Open Mon, DVD player, $10,000.
256·1618 .
Tue.
Wed
&amp;
Fri. ""~"'""""'""'""'""'"'
Bam-4:30pm.
' C)osod
Trvcb

WWW.CAAMtcHAEL·
TRAIU:RS.COM
740·446·3825

Travel
trunk
14'
)(
14"11 5"hlgh
tooled
leather • .Stenciled S A
Couch, Pt ~asant Va

Thurs.

· Sun. -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;....~;;;;;;;~~

&amp;

Sal

740·446-7300

d1d May 1858-phone 304
Deere lately? You'll be zero

mower.
surprised! Check out our Gravely. 60 Inch deck .
used
· Inventory
at 27 HP. Moving, must

www.CAREQ.com.
michael

tum

Ca&lt;· selL 367·7129

Equipment ..,,.,...,,......,""""""""

WGnt To Buy

740-446·2412

Buying tools ~II or trade
·mechanic-carpenter lawn
Free
Black Walnuts. &amp; garden power tools.
Easy Accossibl!~l Call Call 740·381!-1515 •• celj
140-4413·6541 atter 5pm 740·208..0320
I
· Absolute
~~~~~
Top Dollar • sil·
ver/gokl
colns.
•any
10KI14KI1BK go~ jewelry, &lt;len1a1 gold, . P"'
1935

US

• prootlrnint

cunency.

dia·
monlls, MTS Coin Shop.

Firewood · for

wood spl~
256·911 5

Clip thi S AD and take It
with you when you visit
miles, 7.0 engine gas, 5 . our community to get
speed tra ns, 24 H bed,
this special discount.
GVW 25950 lbs, Don1
Move·in in Oct and get
need
COL,
$8,500
5100.00
your 2BR
304·773-5343
Apt. in Nov. Currently
renting 1 &amp; 2 BR units .
For Sale or Best Offer:
Spacious floor plans.
1985
Ford
F-250,
ranch &amp; townhome style
4·wt1eel drive. flel·bed
living. playground &amp;
truck.,
'• mechanically
basketball court, on-site
sound, 2000. miles on 4
laundry facility, 24 hr
yr. old 302 engine. call
emergency mainle·
after
8pm
nance , qu_
iet country IO·
.304;; ;,;-451l; ; ;,1,;,72
;· ;,;7;,.""'""""""' ca tion close to ma,or
8
medical
facilities,
;;;;;=W~ant~Ti;jo;;ii;uy=-;;o-.;;
pharTTlacies, grocery
Ca&lt;S, Trucks, and GMC.'
store...just miriutes
Satum , BuiCk SUV's wilt1
away from other major
shopping in the area.
warranty. Visit us at
~oneysuc:kle Hlltl·
(gocdookmOtors.com)
Apartment•
Cook Mo10fs 328 Jack··
266 Colonial Drive ~t113
son Pike. 740-4,16.()103
Bidwell, Ohio45614
want to buy Junk CarS,
740-446-3344
call740-388-0884
Office Hours M, W, F

"
1998

Have you priced a John 592-1547 in evening.

sels,

GMC

98439.0

on

9AM · 5PM

151 2nd Avenue, Galli·

sa!iive~ ;;pol;;~;;;-.;446!!!!!·2;;;84;,;;;,2"""""""""'
tt-For$alo

Seasoned

2 Fam. Oct. 25-26 from
Firewood 8-5? Old Gallia School
186 North Pari!: Dr. call

Hardwood. 446·9204

A1 233 a1 304-675-SMO

Fire

Seasoned Firewood CAA
HEAP
eccep1ed.
645·5946 or 441 .()9.41

or

Station. 304·593-1204 will seH on
Land Contract or Out
Right. Also a Wellington
Piano call for appoint·
ment to see them both.

Equal Opportunity
vider and Employer.

Pro-

·

Gracious Uvlng 1 and 2
Bedroom Apts. at Village
Manor and RiversiQe
Apts . in Middleport, lro'!"'

$327
to
740·992-5064.

$592
Eq"al

Housing Opportunity.
Nice
Clean
Ground
Floor, 2br, WfD hookup,
AeferencesJDeposiVNo

PelS 304·675·5162
Tara
Townhouse
Apartments - 2BA. 1.5
bath, back patio. pool.
playground, {trash. sew·
age,
water
pd .)
$425/rent,
$425/sec.

dep. Call 740-367.()547

Comrnerciol
2 bay service station
Jackson
Pike.
Lease
req!Ji red. Call 446·3644
tor more info.

H..101ForRont
SH&amp;'rho' 4 lxd , 2 bath.
Bank Rrpo' .(5!f dowJ1. IS
yea~. S'i APRi for h ~lln£~
S00-620-4'M6 "X R027

S400Jmo + deposit. 1BR.
Ag&amp;Aef.
tum,
W&amp;D
hoOkup, No steps, Very '
clean, 114 State St,

Yard $ale

Clerlcal .......................................................60

Conotructlon ..................., ............ ,.............8012
Drlvora &amp; Dollvery ..................................... 8014
Educatlon ...................................................8016
l!loctrlcll Ptumblng ...................................8018
Employment Agoncllo .............................. fl020
Entwtalnmont ............................................ 80~:
Food ..:......................................:.,80
ao--nmont a F-.ol Jo!M .................... 8026

=

paired. new &amp; rebull1 In ~~"!""--~~":"~

Mollohan
Carpet
Fall 304-675 -31 68
Special. 20 oz. CammerFarm Equipment
Clal Carpet $6.95/yard. 03 Stralus Automatic 4
Several
Colors. cylinder
$2800
080.
EBY.
INTEGRITY, 740·446-7444 . Quality at 256- 1652 or 256-1233.
KIEFER BUILT,
Low Prices!
02 Dodge • 4)(4 truck,
VALLEY
HORSEJLIVE·
cruise. 1111, air, good con·

V.n• ............................................................ 204&amp; ·

Want to buy ............................................... 2050
- 1 Eotatl Seleo ...................................... ~
Cemetery Ploto .......................................... 300
Commerolal ....................................., ..........301 0
Condomlnluma .......................................... 3D15
'For SOle by Owner .....................................3026

Jel Aeration Motors re·

740-441.()596

L-------------.J

2

~mom Hou~ $~

month, Plus Utility, Ref &amp;

1BR . Apl, W/0 hookups, Deposit

No
Pets
sa!elltte TV ~1. w/rent. 304-675-4874
close to hospital. Call
2BR house located in
740·339-0362
town,
Gailipolis,
OH .
5500/mo plus utilities. No
Pets. 740-441..0110 or
740-591·5174
2br on the Allier In Ma·

son. HUO Approved Re1·
erences 304·882·3512 or

304--7946 '

Hobby!Hunl a Spgrt....................................955

Port·Timo-Temporarleo ............................. 804.,
RMtaurlntll ......... ;..................................... 6044

2BA, 1 1&gt;&amp;111 In GallipOliS

Mlocollonoouo..............................................tl65
· · wont toliuy ...................................~..............970
Yard SOle ,....................................................875

So!oa...........................................................80411
TechnlceiTredOI ....................................... 8050
Tt1Ctliii/FICiory .. ,...................................... 8052

StoVO/Irldge

Kld'l corner .................................................. 960

smoke..&amp;po1s.

1um.
No
Ref&amp;dep

5-450/mo W/1/1. 256-9190

�)

'I

VEHICLEs FOR SALE

CAUWITH
NOTHING TO HIDE!

Fill re~lcle
.,lfory report

,....

. .. ,.., ctl
JrnfltlftMiftcka.-.rto
42355
""" ..,..,..,......., """" .,t,.

.·
-!8WT... C.~t~t~lll• ....
9'1 hid leS&lt;D1 Clllloo IG611'1311l il...,
19 GloiC Siom!Al&lt;A at Cob 111119ll ....... ·" ·'"
00 Clitvy . . I 110171. 111... .. . .. .
00 I~ I" 41WD 1711161£ ""- ~~•
01 H,v.b A""'' GS 106l!MD ~c
01 Chrysler lOOM lliOl.IID "'"" ..
02 iiyundai A«enl GS IGI!IIl( hollol

Ad

fighting cancer by
paced, challenging
making calls asking for
office looking tor moti·
volunteer support
valed worker for pan
lime position. Must type 1250 Sign on lonuo
and
have·
eKoellent
phone/customer
service
; No Experience
skills. Please submit reRequired
sume and references by
Weekly Pay &amp;
1
November 5, 2008. Send
aorw-.
resumes to CLA Bmc
i set Schedules
101 , PO Box 46$, Gal!i·
; Medical, Dental and
:;po!!li!!s.,;;O;;;hkl;;,;;4563;;;;;,1;,!!!!!~
VIsion
=
i Paid
Drive10 &amp;.O.IIvll)'
traininl1holidaylvacatlon
i Onsile Doctor
light duty tow truck op-

house &amp; 2 br. cabin on
200
acres close to
Pomero~. available im·
mediatetv.
(740)992-4590
or
740-416·7538--,..,...--

info

Medical office position
opening. Salary and pey
will be discussed upon
inle!View. Please send
resume 10 CLA Box 103
C/0 Gallipolis Daily Tribune P.O. Bmc 469, Gallipolis, OH .45631

Home Health Care of
Soulheast Ohio lrrc. ,. is
currently
hiring · home
health aides, Certified or
eKperience.
Bonuses
Available.
Call
i B66-36S-1100.

New training CIIIHI
starting right now I

;;;;;;,;;;;;:,:;;;;;;;,.,.,.,.=

for

ACROSS

Phillip
Alder

Modical

Fast

~~----- erator. Clean driving re·
Well ' maintained · 4 br. cord. 388·9880

Call

388-0080

Help Children and adults

~

Food s.vicu

HIll s Sr;lf
Storage

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE
· Room Addltlona 6
RemodeUng

--~

· VInyl STdlng &amp; Painting
• .,atio and Porch Deck•

WV036725

V.C. YOU NG Ill
992-G21 j

Ntrth

4Sn1

-5'(10'

• Complete
Remodeling

#

- ·to. 1"~'t1dl'
.
&lt;.

•m-1m

,j

r

· '07 ll1 lilt IX

IH61121AI ~•.1C'~ •b 111,101.

98 a.,.ltr rm.~t~tl1111h&lt; Ill. .. . . $5,9'19 ·$104
00 ta IWna 1211121J.Iio,.... . .... ..$5,490 119

01 MIR.gollSil!OIIIJA,,..,~ • .: .... .$6,9'19
01 iW .1o1a ~~~~~n~ .......................$6,
01lonlix Goind Pri• GT lllllllll.l,-, ...... .$8, 9'19
02 a.,.ltr FICniMr16lll!l~ ..... ....... ..$6,9'19
03 w Ml'll6111l .
... .... ..$7,9'19
OHiyundai Ibn Gl&gt;fll6116221 o111• .. .$8,200

m

199
130

131

130
156
113

IUChewyMontoc.loltlliiOll"."'" ·. $9,581 $137
Qj Honda (itt~ IH6191llJ.goll .. ... .$9,9'/9 $159

IU il&gt;nlo&lt;ilrO'd AM IHilllllllUo,171M . $11,919 $197
05 a-..y tmpolo 12'101611.1. ,~~
.... $10, m $179
05ChevyCoboltH611111.1,"".~''"'' . .$10,99'1 $179
07 Hyv"*i k011 lllllll.l,..dt• ... .$9,885 $143
07 Kio Spooag!lX IIIIIIVWA .._lhlo .... $14,99'/ 219 .
01 Hyl!1cXi Am IIIIIIIIUU. olo,li • ... $14,99'/ 219
01 Hyl!1cXi Sma 00 lllll0711b,311• $15,9'19 247
01 H);,wlai Aln IIII~M, ..... ll• ...... .$17,950 214
07liyl!wl!i Sma Gl.S ntllliiJ...._a• . .$17,9'19

II Hpncbl-111tl77111.a-..,. ... .. .$15,001 $233

~m.:e~

R"'" 1Ml711. . .. .. . ..
01Niuoo Xlon. XI 1161116!1. ,.;. ,,, .
02 Oodgo DOoolo SXI IMllllll. ,.

03 Jootlllierly ,.llllR"-

03 fard U0w V~ -J2lJil . ............. ,;IIUT7
04 l'olliac s.fi1 IMllllll . ... . .. .. .
04 0.., T- ~ M ntl""" "''""'" 'II&gt;.
0511Joodi Sino fo ,.IIIII. ""- Ill .. M .
115 fard f150 i11 ltlllllii,ICIII,Io;i&lt;M . .
06S.Mi.lrii .. .IIIU,l11• .... .. ..... .... ,~'•''"
06Scilwl!oaRJM, .. ..... .. , .. T·•:::
07 Chewy lllllblat.ll 1Ftll7ilu,h( lll ... .
IJl M&lt;mlo lS ,.,~"' 16"" .

07 M&lt;mlofl&lt;l6 IT "''IWIA ~Ill• .
07 Kio lpo&lt;togt lX IF6llllolll. ....Ill ... .
. 07 Chewy Mdi.lS 1FtliOIMAod6 ll•

071\mtioc G61Ftli!05.1l ....
07 F..df00&lt;1 1XA SIFtlmiU, .... 111"" .
07 Fool ra.,.
ill• . . "'· m
08
M&lt;riw,..,
08
..,.,..

Scen.c location, conven· ,H~olp~W;;;;;cw;;;tle;;;d;;;·;;;G.n;;;;;;;;orali;i;;
ient to town an~ afford· -::
able, 2 &amp; 3 bedrooms Ohio
valley
Home
available
call Health, Inc. hiring Home
Health
Aides.
STNA,
(740)992·5639
CNA, ·CHHA, PCA may
Sal•
apply at 1480n Jackson
Pike., Gallipolis, Ohio or
phone 740 _441 _1393 . for
2004 Doublewide In new
condition. 4 bedroom. ' 2 mere into. Competitive
mileage
reim·
bath , all appliances in- wages,
cluded, $37,000 located bursement and• benefits
Including heahh insur·
at 176 Zuspan Lane Ma~
ance &amp; much more.
son City 304-675-2117
~~--~--- Gallipolis CareBf College
Brand new 3bed 2bath Is seeking part·tlnie in·
on + -haU acre In pt, . structors who possess a
Pleasant OWNER Fl- mastefs degree In gen•
NANCE
AVAILABLE, era! educatll'" subject .ar·
(7~0) 446·3570
eas such "" English,
~~~------- Math, and Social Sci·
3BA12BA, C/A,
16K32 ences. -E-mail resumes
Deck, 1/2 acre . Jerry's to · jdanlckl @galllpoliscaRun
Rd.
$46,500 reercoHege.ectu or call
304-576-311 1
600-214-0452
New 3 Bedroom homes
from $214.36 per month,
includes many upgrades,
delivery
&amp;
set-up.
740-385-2434
Prices Reduced 2 2006
16x80 2 bed 2 bath, 1
2000 16x70 2 · bed· 1
batll, 1 1999 16xBO 2
bed 2 balh gas, 1 1997
14x70 2 bed 2 bath gas,
~ 2002 t6xBO 3 bed 2
bath. Priced delivered
blocked, leveled and anchored .
Day
Ph.
740-388·0000
&amp;
740..388-85 13
&amp;
•
74Q..245-92b
Evenings
&amp;
weekends
Ph .
740-388·0017
&amp;
0.: _
&amp;
74 245 9215
-o460
7 794

.w_

Help Wanted

60-hr. EMT Miner Class
&amp; Refreshers 4o-hr. Sur·
lace App(entice so~hr.
Under[Jround
Apprentice
16·hr.
Trea
Claanng
Mine Underground Forman Class. Minor Safety
Equipment Slofe.
For
more information
call
Whit-Co
Training
·30H72·8346

An EKcellent way to earn
money. The New AVon ,
Call
Marilyn
304-8ll2-2&amp;45

Owner OperatOI' Oppor·
tuhlties R&amp;J Trucking •
Marlena, Ohio has opportunities available tor
Owner Opera!Ofs within
the region. We · feature
weekly settlements. In·
eluding fuel surcharge &amp;
trailer rental. Operators

Hours

7:00AM • 8:00PM

Auctioneer:
IIIIV I. Soble Jr.
740-416·1184

~ J&gt;ON'T ~NOW W~O

E-mail: captblll65@yahoo.com
www.auctlonzlp.com

TtiiS "SIMON SAYS" IS,
tf~ COULl&gt;
MA~f A ~ILLING

BUT

15548

IN PflOI&gt;VCT
tNI&gt;OflS~M~NTf!

Rcle11st:: April 25 . 2009

A IcC of $20.00 will , he
charged for eo rly nrrivul.

late arrival. early removal,
late re mov&lt;~l, or anvtime
ac~;es~
is W!lll\l'ti to
fairgrnund~
u1her th11n
stmctl tl:ucd
Building
spucc is first L'Ome .first
serve.
Inside Storage $4 .00/lf
Open Span: $2.00nf
Inside Fence: $1 .1'10/lf

Wanted
Weldor,
Iron
workers, Pipe · Fitters. &amp;

crane
opefators.
Top
r:Pa;~v;,;.30!i;4;;,·7;,;;63;g;·~26:;::94;,!!!!!!!!!!!
~
Managomonl /
Suporvi"")'

~~..;i;ii;ioi;i;;i;;;;;;;;i;;
S$A/Servlce

Oci. 25, 2008
IJ:OQ, a.m ,- 11:00 a.m.

www.~kta1obMirr-

Admlnistra-

a
to obtain approprl·
ate
certification.
The
SSA will determine eligibility for services within
1he Gallia Counly Board
Qf
MR/t)O
programs.
Must hold a valid drivers
license. Experience In
the MRIDD field Is pre·
ferred. Position Is twelve
months. Apply to: Gallia
County Board of MR/00,
n Mill Creek Road, Gallipolls, Ohio 45631 or call
740-44!1-6902. The Gallla County · Board of
MRIDO Is an Equal Opportunity Employer.

Racine, Ohio 740.247·2019
. Owners:
Jon Van Meter 6
Pput Rowe

Cell: 740-4111-5047

' Ctl'l.\ft'l'\£. &amp;.CA.Use. Of I'\'I.
. COMUK\CATlO~ :;r(\U.:~.

,.-OCCAU!£'IOU ~1' TI&gt;.LK
TO 1-\&amp; ""? · r---.. r-

email:

North
3t

Eul
Pass

3•

PIL!ls

4

Pass

t

Pass

4•

Pass

Pass

Partner, you like,
but I do not

20

3 Subside

4 RondR
Mile. In

25 -sana

Thunnan

heroine

46-.,_,.,..
47 With, to

Maurice
·
49 Mr. Onauls

51 Lood,
contused

or Tonne

Barcelona

26 Skeptical

noise

fig . .

29 Quirk
34 Contoor

53 Sault-

town

36 SkyDomt
anthem
(2 wds.l .
39 .A&lt;&gt;IIed n,
so to speak

27 Adventure 52 Environ6 FttiHka
mental .
tale
7 Dow Jones
8 All CQ!ony

!allure ·

9 Poop out
37 Triumphed I 0 Dell salad
14 Glasgow
38Smart

40 Crib ftller

founder

Welles or

Bean
22 Make lea
24 Gibson

2 Mo.

Joey or Klkl 5

31 Kiddie's
ammo
. 32 Arrogance
· 33 Devotee's
IIUffil
35 Consistent

44 Tolstoy

chlzan

prefix
Marie

Galvin Coolidge said, 'If you don't say
any:thing, you won't be called on to

ra~at it~

In yesterday's column. t~e dealer
opened lw&lt;l no-lrump, and rasponder bid
three diamonds,·a transfer showing five
or more rearts and any point-count. The
opener had five hearts and a super hand
lor play in that suH. He conveyed !hello
his partl1i!r by rebidding lour clubs, an
adVanced control-bid (cue·bid), which
said; "Partner, I love hearts, I have the
~ub ace. bl/1 I do no1 have lhe spade
ace." In thai dsal. responder leaptlo six
hearts. Bul whal would he have done H
he had no slam interest?
He would have repeated the transfer at
t~e lour-level. rebidding lour ciamonds
- as Norlh does in lhis deaL
NOrth transferred with three diamonds,
planning to continue with three no-trump
It partner rebid three hearts. When
South rebid ihree spades, shoWing that
ace and a super hand lor hearts, Norlh
repeated the transfer with lour diii·
mends, so that the stronger hand could
be the declarer.
After WeSlled lha diamond jacl&lt; against
lour hearts. how did Sou1h play?
Nolo that if lour hearls ~ declared by
North . Easl would lead ihe otub quaen,
and the de1en.. would take lliree club$
and one heart. Now, though, South
' Immediately cashas his three tap dia·
monds, discarding two clubs from - the
board. Then he dr ~os outlhe hoa~ ace, ·
losing one heart and two clubs.
As President Coolidge might have
added, unyou always pass, you wonl be
called on to repeat a transfer."

CELEBRITY CIPHER
.

by Luis Campos

.

Celtbnly Gij11er cryp!OOrams aremal&amp;:l !rom QliOtalions Dy !amoll!l ~~ pa91ar.:l presenr
Each lettet 1nltle Cl~tr SlaMs lor allOt~

Today's dw:Dequals H

"EZC WEZ GDJ

GEZHY HJ

R'L

AKLYNBLZH NY

LNHDLK

LOJWEZNEP JK

PKEVC." • BGNODH

B.

EZ

LNYLZDJGLK

..

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "Tru1h is lhe glue thai ho~s governmenl1ogelher
Compromise is the oil that makes governments go: · Gerald R. Ford

~Astro-

r=~~~~' S@"\\4\"\lJ
.. !]; "E~s· tAMt
fjUod lly CLAY· !. POUAN _;,__ _ __
0 li.arronge lettin · of the
WOlD

love scromblod Words b..
form lovr simple wore•-

low to

Friday, Ot:t. 24, '2008

By Bemlce Bide Oeal
In the year ahead, your endeavors wMI
contain ferUle seetls of success. II you:
find rich soil of!_.Which they can teed, they
will grow into something not norffially
seen and yield a harvest of \188t proPor, lion.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) - Gil out
and mingle because a social encounter
Could produce some kind ol hiddtn dlvl•
dends lor you. A close pal who 'valua&amp;
........,.~....,..,.,....,.....,'"
your friendship Is apt to open a big dool'
~
of opportunity for you.
SAGITIAAIUS {Nov. .23-Dec. 211 - . II
N
vou are feeling a bit luckier than ueualln . ·
~
· One elderly woman to another,
malorlal· ways, don"llhlnk your ln&amp;tlncts
I......L.....L-.L...J......I~
are sending false signals. Act oullhe pat· ·
hfjps ,compensate
torn !hoy are dictating, and capitaliZe on
p'
p
those i..llngs.
_,.
1.-,.::P.~;....r~,..:...,.- the law of--·--"
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) -You
r
7
Co&lt;nlllete tho chuckle que~
~~~~e~sa ~:onc~~~epr~':t~r:C.Ios~o=
.
•
_
.
_
by filling in th11 missing words
about where you stand on certain Issues
you develop from Slep No. 3 below.

I

lnswed&amp;' Bond«&lt;

74().653-9657

C H A MT , ...

PEANUTS
Quali1y Seamless
Gutters
Maintenance Plus
Comm~rci11f &amp; ReJidtnridf

Vinyl
Siding/ReplaCement
Winduws/Rcm1Mlcling

BomJed &amp; Insured
740·992·1493 Office
740-416-8339 Cell

Help Wanted

Rocksprin~ Rehabilitation Center
U.1ing your skills, compatl·ion a11d caring to ·
make a diffemTC&lt;' every day.

Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; Removal

RERl!N, 't'OU 1'/E 60T '(OUR. .

SJ.IOES.ON THE WRON6 FEET..

"Humor

'

.

I M TEACI-IIN6 THEM
A LESSON •.

11M TRVIN6 TO SIIOW
THEM TilE'( CAN'T ALWA'&lt;S
HAVE Tt.IEIR OWN WA'l ..

*Insured
*Experienced
References Availabt~!
Call Gary' Stanley @
740-591·8044

Joh"Wjg;t""

__
-.....

Cum:ni Employment Opponunities

COm~TrooCoro

.. ·F-......._

lniWIIII

7..,...14117

Nuring· RNs
• fT and PT 12 hr shifts available

'"""""-

Nursing· STNAs
• All shifts available
Apply at3759 Rocksprings Rrnul ,
Pomeroy, OH 45769
www .extendicare.com
EOE

Construction
• VInyl Skiing
• Replacement .
Win-•
· Roofing
· Decks
•Gerages
• Polo Buildings
• Room AddHiana
Owner:
Jamn Keesee II
742·2332

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION
Roofing, Siding,
Soffit, D6cks,

Doors, Windows.
Electric, Plumbing,
Drywall,
Remodeling, R
Additions
Local Controctor

740..387.-o544
Free Eolllllll•

740..367.()538

For Remodeling and New House Bulldl"'

Call: MARCUM CONSTRUCTION
• Room Additions • Garages-•Ninyl
.

'·" WJth so·.many
choices, it's easy to .
get carried away
•'

with our
Merchandise listings
,. ·in the· chtssifiedsJ

and Wood Siding • Roofing • Pole

Barns • Patio's, Porches and Decks

IIIER . .CI• •U
47239 Riebel Road. Long Bottom, OH

740-985-4141
Cell: 740-416-1834

15+ yrars txptrience

,.~ree

Esrimales

Advertise
in this space for
$64 per month

l!INING
THE SPACE
CIIZCIJS1'

~

CXJESftON, WHAT
HAS TWO THUMBS
AICl THE 111GHT
STUFF? THIS aJ ...

for

1 GE N I I
I: I .1·I I 0

that they h8'1e been wrong abOut yoo. All

*Prompt and Quality
Work
*Reasonable Rates

Please leave messa e

'

West
P8:ss

·~!r!,

Seamless Gutter$

desired,
good wages, eKe. benefit
package 304-675-4545.

Door prizes; T-shin contest.
Also come and vote for your
favorite employee in costume.
'

rflo,'{ ·WIFE 1:'&gt;11-\IZ.U..Tffill% TO-,

Rooting, Siding, Gutters

experiece

COSTUME CONTEST:
$200 for first·prtze and more
cash prizes; Drink Specials;

. ,·.

LOSER

H&amp;H
Guttering

~0~
.n~se
~1 ~M:'!""~h
~
.--~
ec an"'
, tow

HALLOWEEN PARTY
Saturday. October 25, ·2008
9:00 till?? OJ Charlie

THEM
UNREGISTERE1l
VOTERS
LOVE ME!!

10~1e· Bachelor Degre8 and

AVON! All Areas!
To
Buy or Sell
Shir1ey
Spears 304-6751429

Upper level

'f'OU DIDN'T WIN TH' ELECTION,
SNUFF'Y, 8UT 'YOU WUZ TH'
HANDS -DOWN
FAV'RITE !!

.

-::::=-::~~-.-~

boat

Halftood Cablneil'f .And hrni. .·
2459 St. Rt. t60 • GaiUpolls

Meigs Co . Fuirgrounds

South
2 NT

Opening lead: • J

~

Retirement plans avail able. Please send resume
to
LLCOC A
A EO.COM
or
fax to 740-446-9104
.,.._,...,
_ _ _ __

28 Fl1 the
clock
~

AUCTIONS/ANTIQUES

otuptdl'.

calhodral
town

17 Don't give

19 "Haata -! " 45 Hoe

I "Like,

25 Famous

43 Sierra Ciub

mea--!

porll'l)'tr

23 Garnish

15 Naol

on o crog

DOWN

22Maoon

Vulnerable: Both

740.446~9200

WINTER STORAGE

freshener
· opolcaa
18 Put In
57 Tr1111porl
otitchtl
for
19 Dol&gt;blcla.rl
Ill-tho
·21 Thole IIIIer

Deale~ South

111&amp;/1 mo pd

decNe
56 Wheel

ut

. 16 Dra-

It K ~ 2

Slop &amp; Compare

hould llave newer equipmant. For more informs·
lion • contact Dennis at
~800;;;..,·4;;;62;.·;;;93:;65;...._ __
Service Manager &amp; Serv·
ice Technician positions
available. t-leallh care &amp;

15 L.onthi'Jid 55 Roy.r

• Q 92
.. 5 2
.. A
t J 1 0985
• 7 6 3 2
4 A8 3
• Q J 10
South
• A J
•KJ643
0 A K Q

• Garages

740.949-2217

;-

-54--

-...kg I ol 50 Hem• and
13 Regular
hews

UH3.ol

• 9 76 4
Eul
.10 8653

Weal

GP group
42 ACVMo
- -lgon

y....,·.

• 4

•New Hames

41

I Ooter
ohoct-outa . 43 G6 Powor unlto 46
11 Brown
monlller
pi;pnonl .
46 Creepy
12'rob
loollng

• K 74
•QI 09B7

29670 Bashan R&lt;&gt;ad
Racine, Ohio

• EIKtrletl I Ph.tmblng

· Roonnaaaubooo

p,,mrtllj 01'"'
~~~----~~
1-UI-IMC..PAYU
McDonald's
ot
Rio
Ext. 1931
Now Hiring Experienced, .'-. Y'lt~ t Ololl •l'l'tll'•lcr
Grande now hiring mom·
http:f~.lnfodaion.oom
waitstaft , cooks, dish·
ing ~hift. flexible hours, ~-..,..._,,...,_,_ washers &amp; delivery driv· r - - - - - - - ,
~
paid Holidays and Vaca- Direct Care Staff in resi- 'ers
apply ' in person
L&amp; L Tire Barn
tion. Apply within.
dential youth program. Harry's
Famous
Hot
44087 Wipple Rd.
Mus! be 21 years ol age. Dog,s New Haven
Pomeroy, 011
Admin, approx 30 hrs per Pay based on expertweek. Computer skills rE!· ence.
Can
SaJu
(5 Points)
quired. Apply in person· (740)379-9083
Mon-Frl :'."'~;;;;;;;=;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
New &amp; Used Tires.
bath at
Bu· at SOdexo Food Services ;9;;;am;;.·;;:3p;;.m;;.._ _ _....., Part-Time
retail
sales
We buy uscJ tires.
2BA 1
3675
A' G d u ·
1
12-15 1 hrSiwk.
Starting
I
MUS
Iaviiie Pk. Musl Seel No a 10 ran e mvers ty.
pay S7/hr. Send resumes ..
computer · w h~cl
Pets. 740-446 -4234 or · On CalVPart llme caterCOORDINATOR
to Box 102. CIO PO BoK
aJignments.light
740-208-7861
lng, food service woriters
Edgewood Manor
469.
Gallipolis,
Ohio
mechanic W(lfk .
- of Wtllston
4563 1
~.:omplete servkl' oi l
- , , . . . , - - - - - - &amp; eKperienced · cook. Ap.,.
ply In N:lorson at Sodexo
50 skilled bed Facility
chapgl.!s. small engine
2BR, Bidwell area. $375
,..~
'\
'AN
9000
51"1 .~~" Bu~
renVdeposit. NO PETS. Food Services at Rio
Dnr~·.,r~
repair.
Grande University.
'2 yrs MDS
386·9880
,;;,;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;,;;;;,;!!!!!""""'
E11.perience
We servirl.! and
Gov.mmonl &amp; Federal
'fxcep)ional
winterize boats and
2BA_ 1 bath on farm
Job.
com.munica!ion &amp;
RV '&lt;
$500 per month Includes •"""!:::!~~!"!"";;;;;;;;
people skills
(740) 992-5344
All types Masonry, brick.
utilities. 540-752-0826 or
•Jnlerpersonal &amp;
Mon-Fri .
block, ston9, Free Esti·
540·729·1331
POSTAL JOBS
organizailonal skills ·
mate,
740-4 t6-7305.
~:00 am - 4:30 pm
To apply, visit:
304·593·6421
$17.89-$28 .27/HR., now
www.consulatemgtcaSai. 8:00am· 12
Federal Funds jus! released lo'r Land Owners.' hirln[J. For
application
reers .com
No · closing cos! and and free government job
405 North Park AV9
ZERO OOW"!I Will do Info, c~U American As·
Wellston·, OH 45692
soc.
of
. Labor
740-384-5611
land
Improvements. 1-913-599-8226,
24/hrs.
EOEJSFIDF
Bankruptcy &amp; Bad Credit emp. serv.
L.._.;;;;;;,;;;.;;.~-..1
OK. 2,1 3, 4 and 5 bed· ~~~~~-~
. oms
available .. ::
•I ro
-4 •
POST . OFFICE
NOW
740 46 3384
HIRING avg. Pay $20/hr
or
$57Kiyr,
inctudes
For Rent
Fod.Ben, QT. Place by
Mobile homes &amp; lots , adSource, not affiliated
(no pets) in Ashton WV wllh USPS who hires.
304-576-2942.
.;.1·,.,866-...,4,.,03;;·2;;56o;;2;,!!!!!~
-:-

I ~~~~:~

sn,.,.,...,
_,Ill • .

"ii;;;;;;;;;;a..;;;~icai~~--

BRIDGE

Aukl Tech experienc;e re·
qulred.

FEDERAL

OJ!Iid C.n1n1y 106197!11.,_ ..... ·.
01 Sol;m Vut AWO II!IIIIID,Uo .
OHu&lt;~ Ceo~y!Gil mo.l rr.llolo . . .
IU Poni« G~ PriiiGIIIIIID.,.,.ll ... ..
IU Volr.ogen Ntw !oolt 11911211.1. .·
115 Cho7sler f0111 &amp;Coolty 106111111, , .'·'· •~ ,,.;
115 a..y lilwfodo 1500 ITIIMIIQ r...~. .~ IJ;m
11511id !Gaouo IG"IIIDI.IIot Ill • .. .
05 '""" Cny XlE 1711111611A-, . . .. .
05 GMC &gt;tr~ 2500 IG6111711A ~~ot»• ..
Ol loyt'io Tocomo lliOOIIlM ""'· ~'~• .......I'!·'"!!
07 Ch"Y
lS IGIIIIOMU•.li • .

07

House For Rem in Point
Pieasant : 2-story house,
Main St. Point Pleasant.
2
br.,2
· ba.
2
lr.,dr.,kltchen wlstove, re·
fngeraiOr, 112 basement,
large· yard, no pets.
$550.00,dep. &amp; ref. req.
call 304·675·2319.

The Daily Sentinel • Page BS

www.mydaiJysentlnel.com

NEA Crossword Puzzle

Chonge the world
one cell ala Umel

Church ,parsonage. 38A,
2 bath , full basemenl. 2 ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;::;;;;;
car
garage.
lt'ICI~s
W/0, new fridge and
range . Sits on nearly 2
I
ac:res . $700 . pus
sec.
dep. For Info or inspecuoo ·can 245..()031

Thursday, October 23, 2008
OOP

H~ Wanlod · General

Hou... For Ront

USED

Thursday, October 23, 2008

www.mydllllysentlnel.com

Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

A PRINT NUMBERED lETTERS 1
~ IN THESE SQU"E.S

will rlghtltsall once again.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20o-Feb. 19) Sam&amp;one WhO Is obligated to yOu and
who has Ignored ci1ancoo lo reciprocate
lnthepastwlllbelhefirettocometoyour
assistance. His or her timing couldn't be
baHer.
PISCES '(Feb. 20-Merch 20),- Because
you see the good In everyone, your genuine warmth and , congeniality wiH be
capable ol penetrating eyen the hardest
ol hearts. Others can't help but see the
kindness in you.
·
ARIES (March 21-Aprll 19)- Handle
compelitive sltuatibns in w~ya !hat
enhance your reputation . ll you're a winner. handle It with Qrace; but if you ahouk:l
lOse out, treat the loss as m9fely temporary and trivial:
TAURUS (April 20·May 20)- Your abilt-

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

f) UNSC~AMBlE lEnE~S
GET ANSWER

ct.n MYe 1 MgJtfw effect on you; 10 db
your bnt lo hang out with thoM WhO
have cartfi'H outlooks, beca&amp;lH they
Will product the ~Itt errtct.
UBAA (SOI)I, 23-0c1. 23)- An u..,IH ..
ani s1tu111on wilt rMOiw IIHif In 1 manner thai wHt prove to bt Cl'llf• rew~~rdlng
and eng~glng. ~'I l1!l nHd to frtt

_OYer the~.

SOUPTONUn

I I j' I I. I I I
.

.

•

•

.

•

•

.

SCRAMLETS ANSWERS 10122108
Ending - Favor ~ Ennui- Jacket - NO END
"Many times," granny lectured, "there are tWo sides to each
· lirgument but sometimes there's NO END."
ARLO&amp;JANIS

ty to handle something that has proven
too lOugh lor ol!1ef8 to control wiU boost

your reputiltlon; but mote importint. it
will enhance your self-est98m.
GEMINI (May 21 -June 20)- There is no
need to get dlscoumged or to be lntimi·
dated if you should have to contend with
some difficult clrcumstancei. You have
enormous resolve. and resoorcelulness
upon whiCh to draw.
CANCER (.lmc 21-July 22)- Youi'char1
Indicates mat you could meet someone
quite extraorcllnary, so make It • point to
par11clpate In soc::!al aclivltlea where you
can mlnglt wtttt all typet of people.
LEO {Ju~ 23·Aug. 22) - .,hough you
m!Qht not dellberate!y plan to do ao,
much or )'OUr ettons wm bA devoted to
helping others. You could eoc1 up mlklng
pef'8011al gains that will tie directly linked
to tflelra.
VIRGO (AulJ. 23-SOI)t. 22) - Poople
wno take thifrHivu or life too serlouety

TO

~,

�)

'I

VEHICLEs FOR SALE

CAUWITH
NOTHING TO HIDE!

Fill re~lcle
.,lfory report

,....

. .. ,.., ctl
JrnfltlftMiftcka.-.rto
42355
""" ..,..,..,......., """" .,t,.

.·
-!8WT... C.~t~t~lll• ....
9'1 hid leS&lt;D1 Clllloo IG611'1311l il...,
19 GloiC Siom!Al&lt;A at Cob 111119ll ....... ·" ·'"
00 Clitvy . . I 110171. 111... .. . .. .
00 I~ I" 41WD 1711161£ ""- ~~•
01 H,v.b A""'' GS 106l!MD ~c
01 Chrysler lOOM lliOl.IID "'"" ..
02 iiyundai A«enl GS IGI!IIl( hollol

Ad

fighting cancer by
paced, challenging
making calls asking for
office looking tor moti·
volunteer support
valed worker for pan
lime position. Must type 1250 Sign on lonuo
and
have·
eKoellent
phone/customer
service
; No Experience
skills. Please submit reRequired
sume and references by
Weekly Pay &amp;
1
November 5, 2008. Send
aorw-.
resumes to CLA Bmc
i set Schedules
101 , PO Box 46$, Gal!i·
; Medical, Dental and
:;po!!li!!s.,;;O;;;hkl;;,;;4563;;;;;,1;,!!!!!~
VIsion
=
i Paid
Drive10 &amp;.O.IIvll)'
traininl1holidaylvacatlon
i Onsile Doctor
light duty tow truck op-

house &amp; 2 br. cabin on
200
acres close to
Pomero~. available im·
mediatetv.
(740)992-4590
or
740-416·7538--,..,...--

info

Medical office position
opening. Salary and pey
will be discussed upon
inle!View. Please send
resume 10 CLA Box 103
C/0 Gallipolis Daily Tribune P.O. Bmc 469, Gallipolis, OH .45631

Home Health Care of
Soulheast Ohio lrrc. ,. is
currently
hiring · home
health aides, Certified or
eKperience.
Bonuses
Available.
Call
i B66-36S-1100.

New training CIIIHI
starting right now I

;;;;;;,;;;;;:,:;;;;;;;,.,.,.,.=

for

ACROSS

Phillip
Alder

Modical

Fast

~~----- erator. Clean driving re·
Well ' maintained · 4 br. cord. 388·9880

Call

388-0080

Help Children and adults

~

Food s.vicu

HIll s Sr;lf
Storage

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE
· Room Addltlona 6
RemodeUng

--~

· VInyl STdlng &amp; Painting
• .,atio and Porch Deck•

WV036725

V.C. YOU NG Ill
992-G21 j

Ntrth

4Sn1

-5'(10'

• Complete
Remodeling

#

- ·to. 1"~'t1dl'
.
&lt;.

•m-1m

,j

r

· '07 ll1 lilt IX

IH61121AI ~•.1C'~ •b 111,101.

98 a.,.ltr rm.~t~tl1111h&lt; Ill. .. . . $5,9'19 ·$104
00 ta IWna 1211121J.Iio,.... . .... ..$5,490 119

01 MIR.gollSil!OIIIJA,,..,~ • .: .... .$6,9'19
01 iW .1o1a ~~~~~n~ .......................$6,
01lonlix Goind Pri• GT lllllllll.l,-, ...... .$8, 9'19
02 a.,.ltr FICniMr16lll!l~ ..... ....... ..$6,9'19
03 w Ml'll6111l .
... .... ..$7,9'19
OHiyundai Ibn Gl&gt;fll6116221 o111• .. .$8,200

m

199
130

131

130
156
113

IUChewyMontoc.loltlliiOll"."'" ·. $9,581 $137
Qj Honda (itt~ IH6191llJ.goll .. ... .$9,9'/9 $159

IU il&gt;nlo&lt;ilrO'd AM IHilllllllUo,171M . $11,919 $197
05 a-..y tmpolo 12'101611.1. ,~~
.... $10, m $179
05ChevyCoboltH611111.1,"".~''"'' . .$10,99'1 $179
07 Hyv"*i k011 lllllll.l,..dt• ... .$9,885 $143
07 Kio Spooag!lX IIIIIIVWA .._lhlo .... $14,99'/ 219 .
01 Hyl!1cXi Am IIIIIIIIUU. olo,li • ... $14,99'/ 219
01 Hyl!1cXi Sma 00 lllll0711b,311• $15,9'19 247
01 H);,wlai Aln IIII~M, ..... ll• ...... .$17,950 214
07liyl!wl!i Sma Gl.S ntllliiJ...._a• . .$17,9'19

II Hpncbl-111tl77111.a-..,. ... .. .$15,001 $233

~m.:e~

R"'" 1Ml711. . .. .. . ..
01Niuoo Xlon. XI 1161116!1. ,.;. ,,, .
02 Oodgo DOoolo SXI IMllllll. ,.

03 Jootlllierly ,.llllR"-

03 fard U0w V~ -J2lJil . ............. ,;IIUT7
04 l'olliac s.fi1 IMllllll . ... . .. .. .
04 0.., T- ~ M ntl""" "''""'" 'II&gt;.
0511Joodi Sino fo ,.IIIII. ""- Ill .. M .
115 fard f150 i11 ltlllllii,ICIII,Io;i&lt;M . .
06S.Mi.lrii .. .IIIU,l11• .... .. ..... .... ,~'•''"
06Scilwl!oaRJM, .. ..... .. , .. T·•:::
07 Chewy lllllblat.ll 1Ftll7ilu,h( lll ... .
IJl M&lt;mlo lS ,.,~"' 16"" .

07 M&lt;mlofl&lt;l6 IT "''IWIA ~Ill• .
07 Kio lpo&lt;togt lX IF6llllolll. ....Ill ... .
. 07 Chewy Mdi.lS 1FtliOIMAod6 ll•

071\mtioc G61Ftli!05.1l ....
07 F..df00&lt;1 1XA SIFtlmiU, .... 111"" .
07 Fool ra.,.
ill• . . "'· m
08
M&lt;riw,..,
08
..,.,..

Scen.c location, conven· ,H~olp~W;;;;;cw;;;tle;;;d;;;·;;;G.n;;;;;;;;orali;i;;
ient to town an~ afford· -::
able, 2 &amp; 3 bedrooms Ohio
valley
Home
available
call Health, Inc. hiring Home
Health
Aides.
STNA,
(740)992·5639
CNA, ·CHHA, PCA may
Sal•
apply at 1480n Jackson
Pike., Gallipolis, Ohio or
phone 740 _441 _1393 . for
2004 Doublewide In new
condition. 4 bedroom. ' 2 mere into. Competitive
mileage
reim·
bath , all appliances in- wages,
cluded, $37,000 located bursement and• benefits
Including heahh insur·
at 176 Zuspan Lane Ma~
ance &amp; much more.
son City 304-675-2117
~~--~--- Gallipolis CareBf College
Brand new 3bed 2bath Is seeking part·tlnie in·
on + -haU acre In pt, . structors who possess a
Pleasant OWNER Fl- mastefs degree In gen•
NANCE
AVAILABLE, era! educatll'" subject .ar·
(7~0) 446·3570
eas such "" English,
~~~------- Math, and Social Sci·
3BA12BA, C/A,
16K32 ences. -E-mail resumes
Deck, 1/2 acre . Jerry's to · jdanlckl @galllpoliscaRun
Rd.
$46,500 reercoHege.ectu or call
304-576-311 1
600-214-0452
New 3 Bedroom homes
from $214.36 per month,
includes many upgrades,
delivery
&amp;
set-up.
740-385-2434
Prices Reduced 2 2006
16x80 2 bed 2 bath, 1
2000 16x70 2 · bed· 1
batll, 1 1999 16xBO 2
bed 2 balh gas, 1 1997
14x70 2 bed 2 bath gas,
~ 2002 t6xBO 3 bed 2
bath. Priced delivered
blocked, leveled and anchored .
Day
Ph.
740-388·0000
&amp;
740..388-85 13
&amp;
•
74Q..245-92b
Evenings
&amp;
weekends
Ph .
740-388·0017
&amp;
0.: _
&amp;
74 245 9215
-o460
7 794

.w_

Help Wanted

60-hr. EMT Miner Class
&amp; Refreshers 4o-hr. Sur·
lace App(entice so~hr.
Under[Jround
Apprentice
16·hr.
Trea
Claanng
Mine Underground Forman Class. Minor Safety
Equipment Slofe.
For
more information
call
Whit-Co
Training
·30H72·8346

An EKcellent way to earn
money. The New AVon ,
Call
Marilyn
304-8ll2-2&amp;45

Owner OperatOI' Oppor·
tuhlties R&amp;J Trucking •
Marlena, Ohio has opportunities available tor
Owner Opera!Ofs within
the region. We · feature
weekly settlements. In·
eluding fuel surcharge &amp;
trailer rental. Operators

Hours

7:00AM • 8:00PM

Auctioneer:
IIIIV I. Soble Jr.
740-416·1184

~ J&gt;ON'T ~NOW W~O

E-mail: captblll65@yahoo.com
www.auctlonzlp.com

TtiiS "SIMON SAYS" IS,
tf~ COULl&gt;
MA~f A ~ILLING

BUT

15548

IN PflOI&gt;VCT
tNI&gt;OflS~M~NTf!

Rcle11st:: April 25 . 2009

A IcC of $20.00 will , he
charged for eo rly nrrivul.

late arrival. early removal,
late re mov&lt;~l, or anvtime
ac~;es~
is W!lll\l'ti to
fairgrnund~
u1her th11n
stmctl tl:ucd
Building
spucc is first L'Ome .first
serve.
Inside Storage $4 .00/lf
Open Span: $2.00nf
Inside Fence: $1 .1'10/lf

Wanted
Weldor,
Iron
workers, Pipe · Fitters. &amp;

crane
opefators.
Top
r:Pa;~v;,;.30!i;4;;,·7;,;;63;g;·~26:;::94;,!!!!!!!!!!!
~
Managomonl /
Suporvi"")'

~~..;i;ii;ioi;i;;i;;;;;;;;i;;
S$A/Servlce

Oci. 25, 2008
IJ:OQ, a.m ,- 11:00 a.m.

www.~kta1obMirr-

Admlnistra-

a
to obtain approprl·
ate
certification.
The
SSA will determine eligibility for services within
1he Gallia Counly Board
Qf
MR/t)O
programs.
Must hold a valid drivers
license. Experience In
the MRIDD field Is pre·
ferred. Position Is twelve
months. Apply to: Gallia
County Board of MR/00,
n Mill Creek Road, Gallipolls, Ohio 45631 or call
740-44!1-6902. The Gallla County · Board of
MRIDO Is an Equal Opportunity Employer.

Racine, Ohio 740.247·2019
. Owners:
Jon Van Meter 6
Pput Rowe

Cell: 740-4111-5047

' Ctl'l.\ft'l'\£. &amp;.CA.Use. Of I'\'I.
. COMUK\CATlO~ :;r(\U.:~.

,.-OCCAU!£'IOU ~1' TI&gt;.LK
TO 1-\&amp; ""? · r---.. r-

email:

North
3t

Eul
Pass

3•

PIL!ls

4

Pass

t

Pass

4•

Pass

Pass

Partner, you like,
but I do not

20

3 Subside

4 RondR
Mile. In

25 -sana

Thunnan

heroine

46-.,_,.,..
47 With, to

Maurice
·
49 Mr. Onauls

51 Lood,
contused

or Tonne

Barcelona

26 Skeptical

noise

fig . .

29 Quirk
34 Contoor

53 Sault-

town

36 SkyDomt
anthem
(2 wds.l .
39 .A&lt;&gt;IIed n,
so to speak

27 Adventure 52 Environ6 FttiHka
mental .
tale
7 Dow Jones
8 All CQ!ony

!allure ·

9 Poop out
37 Triumphed I 0 Dell salad
14 Glasgow
38Smart

40 Crib ftller

founder

Welles or

Bean
22 Make lea
24 Gibson

2 Mo.

Joey or Klkl 5

31 Kiddie's
ammo
. 32 Arrogance
· 33 Devotee's
IIUffil
35 Consistent

44 Tolstoy

chlzan

prefix
Marie

Galvin Coolidge said, 'If you don't say
any:thing, you won't be called on to

ra~at it~

In yesterday's column. t~e dealer
opened lw&lt;l no-lrump, and rasponder bid
three diamonds,·a transfer showing five
or more rearts and any point-count. The
opener had five hearts and a super hand
lor play in that suH. He conveyed !hello
his partl1i!r by rebidding lour clubs, an
adVanced control-bid (cue·bid), which
said; "Partner, I love hearts, I have the
~ub ace. bl/1 I do no1 have lhe spade
ace." In thai dsal. responder leaptlo six
hearts. Bul whal would he have done H
he had no slam interest?
He would have repeated the transfer at
t~e lour-level. rebidding lour ciamonds
- as Norlh does in lhis deaL
NOrth transferred with three diamonds,
planning to continue with three no-trump
It partner rebid three hearts. When
South rebid ihree spades, shoWing that
ace and a super hand lor hearts, Norlh
repeated the transfer with lour diii·
mends, so that the stronger hand could
be the declarer.
After WeSlled lha diamond jacl&lt; against
lour hearts. how did Sou1h play?
Nolo that if lour hearls ~ declared by
North . Easl would lead ihe otub quaen,
and the de1en.. would take lliree club$
and one heart. Now, though, South
' Immediately cashas his three tap dia·
monds, discarding two clubs from - the
board. Then he dr ~os outlhe hoa~ ace, ·
losing one heart and two clubs.
As President Coolidge might have
added, unyou always pass, you wonl be
called on to repeat a transfer."

CELEBRITY CIPHER
.

by Luis Campos

.

Celtbnly Gij11er cryp!OOrams aremal&amp;:l !rom QliOtalions Dy !amoll!l ~~ pa91ar.:l presenr
Each lettet 1nltle Cl~tr SlaMs lor allOt~

Today's dw:Dequals H

"EZC WEZ GDJ

GEZHY HJ

R'L

AKLYNBLZH NY

LNHDLK

LOJWEZNEP JK

PKEVC." • BGNODH

B.

EZ

LNYLZDJGLK

..

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "Tru1h is lhe glue thai ho~s governmenl1ogelher
Compromise is the oil that makes governments go: · Gerald R. Ford

~Astro-

r=~~~~' S@"\\4\"\lJ
.. !]; "E~s· tAMt
fjUod lly CLAY· !. POUAN _;,__ _ __
0 li.arronge lettin · of the
WOlD

love scromblod Words b..
form lovr simple wore•-

low to

Friday, Ot:t. 24, '2008

By Bemlce Bide Oeal
In the year ahead, your endeavors wMI
contain ferUle seetls of success. II you:
find rich soil of!_.Which they can teed, they
will grow into something not norffially
seen and yield a harvest of \188t proPor, lion.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) - Gil out
and mingle because a social encounter
Could produce some kind ol hiddtn dlvl•
dends lor you. A close pal who 'valua&amp;
........,.~....,..,.,....,.....,'"
your friendship Is apt to open a big dool'
~
of opportunity for you.
SAGITIAAIUS {Nov. .23-Dec. 211 - . II
N
vou are feeling a bit luckier than ueualln . ·
~
· One elderly woman to another,
malorlal· ways, don"llhlnk your ln&amp;tlncts
I......L.....L-.L...J......I~
are sending false signals. Act oullhe pat· ·
hfjps ,compensate
torn !hoy are dictating, and capitaliZe on
p'
p
those i..llngs.
_,.
1.-,.::P.~;....r~,..:...,.- the law of--·--"
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) -You
r
7
Co&lt;nlllete tho chuckle que~
~~~~e~sa ~:onc~~~epr~':t~r:C.Ios~o=
.
•
_
.
_
by filling in th11 missing words
about where you stand on certain Issues
you develop from Slep No. 3 below.

I

lnswed&amp;' Bond«&lt;

74().653-9657

C H A MT , ...

PEANUTS
Quali1y Seamless
Gutters
Maintenance Plus
Comm~rci11f &amp; ReJidtnridf

Vinyl
Siding/ReplaCement
Winduws/Rcm1Mlcling

BomJed &amp; Insured
740·992·1493 Office
740-416-8339 Cell

Help Wanted

Rocksprin~ Rehabilitation Center
U.1ing your skills, compatl·ion a11d caring to ·
make a diffemTC&lt;' every day.

Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; Removal

RERl!N, 't'OU 1'/E 60T '(OUR. .

SJ.IOES.ON THE WRON6 FEET..

"Humor

'

.

I M TEACI-IIN6 THEM
A LESSON •.

11M TRVIN6 TO SIIOW
THEM TilE'( CAN'T ALWA'&lt;S
HAVE Tt.IEIR OWN WA'l ..

*Insured
*Experienced
References Availabt~!
Call Gary' Stanley @
740-591·8044

Joh"Wjg;t""

__
-.....

Cum:ni Employment Opponunities

COm~TrooCoro

.. ·F-......._

lniWIIII

7..,...14117

Nuring· RNs
• fT and PT 12 hr shifts available

'"""""-

Nursing· STNAs
• All shifts available
Apply at3759 Rocksprings Rrnul ,
Pomeroy, OH 45769
www .extendicare.com
EOE

Construction
• VInyl Skiing
• Replacement .
Win-•
· Roofing
· Decks
•Gerages
• Polo Buildings
• Room AddHiana
Owner:
Jamn Keesee II
742·2332

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION
Roofing, Siding,
Soffit, D6cks,

Doors, Windows.
Electric, Plumbing,
Drywall,
Remodeling, R
Additions
Local Controctor

740..387.-o544
Free Eolllllll•

740..367.()538

For Remodeling and New House Bulldl"'

Call: MARCUM CONSTRUCTION
• Room Additions • Garages-•Ninyl
.

'·" WJth so·.many
choices, it's easy to .
get carried away
•'

with our
Merchandise listings
,. ·in the· chtssifiedsJ

and Wood Siding • Roofing • Pole

Barns • Patio's, Porches and Decks

IIIER . .CI• •U
47239 Riebel Road. Long Bottom, OH

740-985-4141
Cell: 740-416-1834

15+ yrars txptrience

,.~ree

Esrimales

Advertise
in this space for
$64 per month

l!INING
THE SPACE
CIIZCIJS1'

~

CXJESftON, WHAT
HAS TWO THUMBS
AICl THE 111GHT
STUFF? THIS aJ ...

for

1 GE N I I
I: I .1·I I 0

that they h8'1e been wrong abOut yoo. All

*Prompt and Quality
Work
*Reasonable Rates

Please leave messa e

'

West
P8:ss

·~!r!,

Seamless Gutter$

desired,
good wages, eKe. benefit
package 304-675-4545.

Door prizes; T-shin contest.
Also come and vote for your
favorite employee in costume.
'

rflo,'{ ·WIFE 1:'&gt;11-\IZ.U..Tffill% TO-,

Rooting, Siding, Gutters

experiece

COSTUME CONTEST:
$200 for first·prtze and more
cash prizes; Drink Specials;

. ,·.

LOSER

H&amp;H
Guttering

~0~
.n~se
~1 ~M:'!""~h
~
.--~
ec an"'
, tow

HALLOWEEN PARTY
Saturday. October 25, ·2008
9:00 till?? OJ Charlie

THEM
UNREGISTERE1l
VOTERS
LOVE ME!!

10~1e· Bachelor Degre8 and

AVON! All Areas!
To
Buy or Sell
Shir1ey
Spears 304-6751429

Upper level

'f'OU DIDN'T WIN TH' ELECTION,
SNUFF'Y, 8UT 'YOU WUZ TH'
HANDS -DOWN
FAV'RITE !!

.

-::::=-::~~-.-~

boat

Halftood Cablneil'f .And hrni. .·
2459 St. Rt. t60 • GaiUpolls

Meigs Co . Fuirgrounds

South
2 NT

Opening lead: • J

~

Retirement plans avail able. Please send resume
to
LLCOC A
A EO.COM
or
fax to 740-446-9104
.,.._,...,
_ _ _ __

28 Fl1 the
clock
~

AUCTIONS/ANTIQUES

otuptdl'.

calhodral
town

17 Don't give

19 "Haata -! " 45 Hoe

I "Like,

25 Famous

43 Sierra Ciub

mea--!

porll'l)'tr

23 Garnish

15 Naol

on o crog

DOWN

22Maoon

Vulnerable: Both

740.446~9200

WINTER STORAGE

freshener
· opolcaa
18 Put In
57 Tr1111porl
otitchtl
for
19 Dol&gt;blcla.rl
Ill-tho
·21 Thole IIIIer

Deale~ South

111&amp;/1 mo pd

decNe
56 Wheel

ut

. 16 Dra-

It K ~ 2

Slop &amp; Compare

hould llave newer equipmant. For more informs·
lion • contact Dennis at
~800;;;..,·4;;;62;.·;;;93:;65;...._ __
Service Manager &amp; Serv·
ice Technician positions
available. t-leallh care &amp;

15 L.onthi'Jid 55 Roy.r

• Q 92
.. 5 2
.. A
t J 1 0985
• 7 6 3 2
4 A8 3
• Q J 10
South
• A J
•KJ643
0 A K Q

• Garages

740.949-2217

;-

-54--

-...kg I ol 50 Hem• and
13 Regular
hews

UH3.ol

• 9 76 4
Eul
.10 8653

Weal

GP group
42 ACVMo
- -lgon

y....,·.

• 4

•New Hames

41

I Ooter
ohoct-outa . 43 G6 Powor unlto 46
11 Brown
monlller
pi;pnonl .
46 Creepy
12'rob
loollng

• K 74
•QI 09B7

29670 Bashan R&lt;&gt;ad
Racine, Ohio

• EIKtrletl I Ph.tmblng

· Roonnaaaubooo

p,,mrtllj 01'"'
~~~----~~
1-UI-IMC..PAYU
McDonald's
ot
Rio
Ext. 1931
Now Hiring Experienced, .'-. Y'lt~ t Ololl •l'l'tll'•lcr
Grande now hiring mom·
http:f~.lnfodaion.oom
waitstaft , cooks, dish·
ing ~hift. flexible hours, ~-..,..._,,...,_,_ washers &amp; delivery driv· r - - - - - - - ,
~
paid Holidays and Vaca- Direct Care Staff in resi- 'ers
apply ' in person
L&amp; L Tire Barn
tion. Apply within.
dential youth program. Harry's
Famous
Hot
44087 Wipple Rd.
Mus! be 21 years ol age. Dog,s New Haven
Pomeroy, 011
Admin, approx 30 hrs per Pay based on expertweek. Computer skills rE!· ence.
Can
SaJu
(5 Points)
quired. Apply in person· (740)379-9083
Mon-Frl :'."'~;;;;;;;=;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
New &amp; Used Tires.
bath at
Bu· at SOdexo Food Services ;9;;;am;;.·;;:3p;;.m;;.._ _ _....., Part-Time
retail
sales
We buy uscJ tires.
2BA 1
3675
A' G d u ·
1
12-15 1 hrSiwk.
Starting
I
MUS
Iaviiie Pk. Musl Seel No a 10 ran e mvers ty.
pay S7/hr. Send resumes ..
computer · w h~cl
Pets. 740-446 -4234 or · On CalVPart llme caterCOORDINATOR
to Box 102. CIO PO BoK
aJignments.light
740-208-7861
lng, food service woriters
Edgewood Manor
469.
Gallipolis,
Ohio
mechanic W(lfk .
- of Wtllston
4563 1
~.:omplete servkl' oi l
- , , . . . , - - - - - - &amp; eKperienced · cook. Ap.,.
ply In N:lorson at Sodexo
50 skilled bed Facility
chapgl.!s. small engine
2BR, Bidwell area. $375
,..~
'\
'AN
9000
51"1 .~~" Bu~
renVdeposit. NO PETS. Food Services at Rio
Dnr~·.,r~
repair.
Grande University.
'2 yrs MDS
386·9880
,;;,;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;,;;;;,;!!!!!""""'
E11.perience
We servirl.! and
Gov.mmonl &amp; Federal
'fxcep)ional
winterize boats and
2BA_ 1 bath on farm
Job.
com.munica!ion &amp;
RV '&lt;
$500 per month Includes •"""!:::!~~!"!"";;;;;;;;
people skills
(740) 992-5344
All types Masonry, brick.
utilities. 540-752-0826 or
•Jnlerpersonal &amp;
Mon-Fri .
block, ston9, Free Esti·
540·729·1331
POSTAL JOBS
organizailonal skills ·
mate,
740-4 t6-7305.
~:00 am - 4:30 pm
To apply, visit:
304·593·6421
$17.89-$28 .27/HR., now
www.consulatemgtcaSai. 8:00am· 12
Federal Funds jus! released lo'r Land Owners.' hirln[J. For
application
reers .com
No · closing cos! and and free government job
405 North Park AV9
ZERO OOW"!I Will do Info, c~U American As·
Wellston·, OH 45692
soc.
of
. Labor
740-384-5611
land
Improvements. 1-913-599-8226,
24/hrs.
EOEJSFIDF
Bankruptcy &amp; Bad Credit emp. serv.
L.._.;;;;;;,;;;.;;.~-..1
OK. 2,1 3, 4 and 5 bed· ~~~~~-~
. oms
available .. ::
•I ro
-4 •
POST . OFFICE
NOW
740 46 3384
HIRING avg. Pay $20/hr
or
$57Kiyr,
inctudes
For Rent
Fod.Ben, QT. Place by
Mobile homes &amp; lots , adSource, not affiliated
(no pets) in Ashton WV wllh USPS who hires.
304-576-2942.
.;.1·,.,866-...,4,.,03;;·2;;56o;;2;,!!!!!~
-:-

I ~~~~:~

sn,.,.,...,
_,Ill • .

"ii;;;;;;;;;;a..;;;~icai~~--

BRIDGE

Aukl Tech experienc;e re·
qulred.

FEDERAL

OJ!Iid C.n1n1y 106197!11.,_ ..... ·.
01 Sol;m Vut AWO II!IIIIID,Uo .
OHu&lt;~ Ceo~y!Gil mo.l rr.llolo . . .
IU Poni« G~ PriiiGIIIIIID.,.,.ll ... ..
IU Volr.ogen Ntw !oolt 11911211.1. .·
115 Cho7sler f0111 &amp;Coolty 106111111, , .'·'· •~ ,,.;
115 a..y lilwfodo 1500 ITIIMIIQ r...~. .~ IJ;m
11511id !Gaouo IG"IIIDI.IIot Ill • .. .
05 '""" Cny XlE 1711111611A-, . . .. .
05 GMC &gt;tr~ 2500 IG6111711A ~~ot»• ..
Ol loyt'io Tocomo lliOOIIlM ""'· ~'~• .......I'!·'"!!
07 Ch"Y
lS IGIIIIOMU•.li • .

07

House For Rem in Point
Pieasant : 2-story house,
Main St. Point Pleasant.
2
br.,2
· ba.
2
lr.,dr.,kltchen wlstove, re·
fngeraiOr, 112 basement,
large· yard, no pets.
$550.00,dep. &amp; ref. req.
call 304·675·2319.

The Daily Sentinel • Page BS

www.mydaiJysentlnel.com

NEA Crossword Puzzle

Chonge the world
one cell ala Umel

Church ,parsonage. 38A,
2 bath , full basemenl. 2 ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;::;;;;;
car
garage.
lt'ICI~s
W/0, new fridge and
range . Sits on nearly 2
I
ac:res . $700 . pus
sec.
dep. For Info or inspecuoo ·can 245..()031

Thursday, October 23, 2008
OOP

H~ Wanlod · General

Hou... For Ront

USED

Thursday, October 23, 2008

www.mydllllysentlnel.com

Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

A PRINT NUMBERED lETTERS 1
~ IN THESE SQU"E.S

will rlghtltsall once again.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20o-Feb. 19) Sam&amp;one WhO Is obligated to yOu and
who has Ignored ci1ancoo lo reciprocate
lnthepastwlllbelhefirettocometoyour
assistance. His or her timing couldn't be
baHer.
PISCES '(Feb. 20-Merch 20),- Because
you see the good In everyone, your genuine warmth and , congeniality wiH be
capable ol penetrating eyen the hardest
ol hearts. Others can't help but see the
kindness in you.
·
ARIES (March 21-Aprll 19)- Handle
compelitive sltuatibns in w~ya !hat
enhance your reputation . ll you're a winner. handle It with Qrace; but if you ahouk:l
lOse out, treat the loss as m9fely temporary and trivial:
TAURUS (April 20·May 20)- Your abilt-

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

f) UNSC~AMBlE lEnE~S
GET ANSWER

ct.n MYe 1 MgJtfw effect on you; 10 db
your bnt lo hang out with thoM WhO
have cartfi'H outlooks, beca&amp;lH they
Will product the ~Itt errtct.
UBAA (SOI)I, 23-0c1. 23)- An u..,IH ..
ani s1tu111on wilt rMOiw IIHif In 1 manner thai wHt prove to bt Cl'llf• rew~~rdlng
and eng~glng. ~'I l1!l nHd to frtt

_OYer the~.

SOUPTONUn

I I j' I I. I I I
.

.

•

•

.

•

•

.

SCRAMLETS ANSWERS 10122108
Ending - Favor ~ Ennui- Jacket - NO END
"Many times," granny lectured, "there are tWo sides to each
· lirgument but sometimes there's NO END."
ARLO&amp;JANIS

ty to handle something that has proven
too lOugh lor ol!1ef8 to control wiU boost

your reputiltlon; but mote importint. it
will enhance your self-est98m.
GEMINI (May 21 -June 20)- There is no
need to get dlscoumged or to be lntimi·
dated if you should have to contend with
some difficult clrcumstancei. You have
enormous resolve. and resoorcelulness
upon whiCh to draw.
CANCER (.lmc 21-July 22)- Youi'char1
Indicates mat you could meet someone
quite extraorcllnary, so make It • point to
par11clpate In soc::!al aclivltlea where you
can mlnglt wtttt all typet of people.
LEO {Ju~ 23·Aug. 22) - .,hough you
m!Qht not dellberate!y plan to do ao,
much or )'OUr ettons wm bA devoted to
helping others. You could eoc1 up mlklng
pef'8011al gains that will tie directly linked
to tflelra.
VIRGO (AulJ. 23-SOI)t. 22) - Poople
wno take thifrHivu or life too serlouety

TO

~,

�. ~- Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

Playoffs

who won this weekend
would benefit eithetLC or
Meigs - pending on who
played who.
fromPageBl
For exJmple, Meigs has
seven
wins· this season.
elm clinch a Division V,
The
Marauders
have victo~cgion 19 berth with a
ries
over
Coal
Grove.
win. St. Clairsville travels
to Harrison Central, which Fairland. River Valley.
currently sits lOth in Athens. Vinton County.
Alexander and Well ston
Oivision Ill, Region II .
If both Hartley and this fall. so MHS needs .as
SCHS win, then Licking many of those teams to
win as possible to reach a
Heights - which is cur- maximum number of comtently lOth - is the only puter points.
bther threat to Meigs this
Good news, too. Things
~eekend.
If
Licking look favorable for Meigs
Heights defeats We st . there.
Jefferson who can
Wellston and Alexander .
clinch a playoff spot in play one another this
Division V, Region 20 weekend.
So
does
with a W - then both Fairland and Coal Grove.
LCHS and Meigs would There are two. wins autobasically be in a computer matically .
Athens
1s
hosting
points rac.e for the final
Ri ver
Wahama
.
whi1e
playoff berth.
· Th~t points race would ' Valley will host winless
come down to ,.teams that Rock Hill . Vinton County
also
hosting
both the Marauders and is
Licking Heights had wins Ne lsonville -York . Two
)lgainst this season. The out of three are possible .
!DOTe of those losing teams but a VC win would help

'

'

.

r----~

--...

'

,i

'

.

',

Meigs' cause the most.
If either St. Clairsville
or Licking Heights loses,
then Meigs will all but
secure .a spot in the playoffs - as long as the
Marauders win.
Utica - which currently sits ninth - needs a
lo s~ by either Meigs or St.
Clairsville and a loss by
Lil:king
Heights
to
advance to Week II after
a win .
As for Galli a Academy.
there is very little hope of
making the 'playoffs. But
there is a slight chance
also.
The Blue Devils would
h av~ to beat Marietta,
then would need help in
the form of losses by St.
Clairsville, Utica and
Licking Heights even to
have a chance. GAHS
would also need Jackson
to
beat
Zanesville,
.Wellston
to
beat
Alexander . Athens to beat
Wahama and Portsmouth
to
defeat
unbeaten
Western · Brown . Point

against Trimble (71-28).
Pleasant - the Devils'
Eastern currently has a
.other "j_in this year - is
one-game slide and is
currentl'y on a bye.
coming off its lowest
So basically. the scefromPageBl
· point output of the year nario . is simple. Both
Meigs
and
Gallia EHS is allowjng 39 points outside of two shutouts Academy have shots at per game defensively and du(ing a 34-6 setback at
making the playoffs, but scoring 20.3 points as an Waterford.
Southern is 1-3 on the
only the Marauders are offense .
realistic contenders for
·The Purple and Gold , on road this season and also
the top-e ight . If Meigs the other hand, are aver- won the last time (2006)
beats Belpre and either
these two teams took the
St . Clairsville or Licking aging 18.6 points per field at East Shade River
Heights loses . then the gaine offensively and Stadium. Eastern has won
Maroon and Gold are def- . allowing 30.9 points as a four of.the .last five coninitely headed to the post- defense through nine tests overall.
games . In league, the
season .
It will be the final home
Tornadoes
are scoring 19
If both St. Clairsville
game
for EHS seniors
and Licking Heights win, points and surrendering Action Facemyer. Jordan
then MHS and LCHS will 39 points per game.
Kimes, Josh Hupp , Zach
be in a race to see who , Both · teams are also Hendrix , Zach Moore,
has
more
computer coming in on a down note. 'Ben Buckley and James
points. Meigs could also Southern currently has a Russell. Kickoff is schedleap past Hartley· if two-game losing streak · uled for Saturday at 7':30
Bishop Ready wi ns, but and suffered its worst loss
that
like Licking .AJf the year last week p.m .
·Heights - would also
come down to a close race
in computer points .
Of co1trse , .none of this
scenario matters
for
Meigs if it doesn't win on
Senior Night.

:

A Free Lunch!
En~er Here ForA

: $30 Gift Certificate 1
·1 To One OfT/lese Great Restaurani$'1·
.

Rivalry

.

1 There "IS" Such A Thing As 11
-I

Thursday, October 23, 2008

www.mydailyiientinel.com

I
I
I

Name: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

I1

Phone#·- ----------------------

i t

There "IS" Such A Thing As
A FreeLunch!
Enter Here For A
ff f
.Th zs' UlneeksU!'
nznner...

ERICA
BLACK
CONGRATS!

$30 Gift Certificate ·
•

To One Of These Great Restaurants
N a m e = - - - - - - - . , - - - - - -.
Phone#·--~-----------~-Mall to:.Free Limch
Gallipolis bally 1iibuno
P.O. Box 469. Gallipolis, OH 4!!631

Enter To Win A
FREE LUNCH!

Elplanation
. I

•

. ISSUE #I

PROPOSED. CONSTITUTIONALAMEND.MENT
TO PROVIDE FOR EARLIER FILING D.EADLINES FOR STATEWIDE BALLOT ISSUES
(Proposed by Joint Resolution ofthe General Assembly of Ohio)

There "IS" Such A Thing As
A Free Lunch!

To amend Sections 1•, lb, lc, ..d lg of Article II of the Constitution oftbe State of Ohio
To aiMM Sections Ja, lb, le, 111111 Jg of
A~ of the &lt;Ansdtutloo oldie Stale

n

Enter Here For A

or

Oldo

$30 Gift Certificate

Thunk·You
to Our Many
Customers
10 Years in
Gallipplis

To One Of These Great Restaurants

The~ amendment

would:

I. · Require that a citizen-initiated litatewide

bello! issue be considefed 81 the next
gelieral election if petitions are'filed 125
days before the election.

Name: ____.:________..:.___
2.

Elstablish deadlines for boards of
validity of
citizen-initiated petilions.
el~'tionsto de«:nnine

Phone#·-·--------------~----------

me

3. Standardize the process f.X legal
challenges to citizen-initialed petitions
by giving the Ohio Supreme Court
jurisdiction to consider these cases and
esiablishing expedited deadlines for the
Court to make decisions. ·

Mail to: Free Lunch
Gallipolis Dally Tribune .
P.O. Box 469 Gallipolis, OH 45631

.

•

I·

A, "YES" vote means approval of the
·amendment.
•
,.
.A."ko" vote me&amp;lll d,htpproval the
Dndmem.~

llnd much more,

Our brun~h bourure
11 a.m. to J p.m.
Brln11 yoar family 111d Join !IL
$1.95 tor lld!llt3 and we offer

dlacouated rat. for children.

\1

of

••
majority YES VOle is requited for the
' -.endment 10,be adopted.

Sodexo Dtntng
Services

lot'oted on The Unlver.dty of
Rio Grande'8 campu1ln Evm
and Ellmbtth Davis Unlvenlty
Center In vita yoq wour
Sunday brunch. buffet. We
have many Items to fhUOIIe from
lnci1Jdln11; millie to order .
omeletll, p111trles, t~~~lad bar,
breakfiL•t and lunch; de!lllert,
Ire c~m bill', soup, pl1111,

.

~

iSIIALL THE PROJ!OSBD AMENDMEN'Il

DAfl.Y SPECIAI.S

IJE APPROVED?

SUND!\Y • Bl.T $3.25
MONDAY· Meatball Sub $3.99
. TU&amp;SDAY ·Wings 49t

Ot
Q :
:

Thoo-in·•·bac $4.49
1WllDNESDAY

2 Hot Dogs, saU&lt;t &amp; ilaw $2.99
After 4pm Pasta Night· all }OI t&amp;!lell $8.99
12-Under $5.99
S-Under FREE
THURSDAY· Kt~ $5.49 or.two for $9.75
FRIDAY· Soup &amp; Sm. Glrden Salld $5.49
SATIJRDAY • 7 !l(b Pepperoni plua $3.99

wltll 1/)Ur
Holtdo1 IJ11kl11g .
N•1d1/

/,,( 111 h1lp

COMING SOON· BEAN BOULEVARD

BUC:KE1~E

' f

R11111111&amp;1r, W• Do Cmrl111f

· MIUie• ·
Re1tauraat

;
''

,.

Yet
No

Piupose: The Ohio ConstitUtion and corresponding state laws describe the processes that electors
themselves can undertake to propose amendments to lhe constitution to eslllblish state laws and
'
'
to submit to the voters for their approval or rejection laws recently enacted by the Ohio General
Assembly. People who seek to initiate these processes must abide by constitutional and statutory
deadlines. The pwpose of Amended House Joint Resolution Number 3 (UJR 3) is to change the
filing deadlines for statewide ballot initiatives and referendums (sometimc:S called "statewide .
issues").
·
·
·
HJR 3 Would Qbange Statewide Issue Petition Eilin&amp; Deadlines: Most statewide issues are submined
to the electors to vote upon at a regulm: or general election. I~ order for an issue to be placed on
the ballot, it must be filed with the secrelaly of state's office as a·petition signed by a substantial
amount of supporters. Currently, petitions for proposed constitutional amendments and state laws
must be filed at least 90.days before the election at which the issue is to be submitted to the electors.
Referellllum petitions must be filed at least 60 days before the election 3t which the issue is to be
submitted.
HJR 3 would require that petitions for all statewide issues brought by electors be filed 125 days
before the election at which the issue is to be submitted to 1he electors. This means that people who
seek to file a petitioo proposing a constitutionaiiUIIendment or a state law or n referendum petition
must do so ewlier ihan they currently are required. Passing HJR 3 also would mean that people who
seek a referendum on any law that passes between 215 and 125 days before an upcoming regular or
general election will ha~e 90 days or less to undertake the entire referendum process ifthey want to
ensure the placement of lhe iuue on the ballot for the upcoming el~ion. Any referendum petition
filed Iller the 12S-day·deadline must be placed on the bel101 at the regular or gell&lt;!nll election that
occurs over • .,_ later.

.

.

HJR 3 Would Cbanif' flredlioes for Yeriftjng and Cha!leru!inl !he Peribon: Statewide

issue
petiti1111.'1 must be signed by many olectors. ·The secretary of Slate's office and the county boards of
elmions cbeclt those signatures to make sure they are valid and sufficiont. HJR 3 would req~ the
,se&lt;:retal)' of Slate to ddcrmine if there are enous.h valid signatures on the petition to qualifY it for
plal:ement on the ballot by the 105tb day before the election.

.

Somdimes, however, J!eOI'!e challenge the statewide petition and sisnlltllreS on the petition. HJR
3 giv~ the Supreme Court of Ohio the sole authority to hear these challenges. HJR 3 also requires
.all challenges to be filed oot later tl)an 95 days before the elec:tiOn and that the Coon must ru 1e on
any challenges not later than .as days before the election. In addition, under the new amendmenl
if no 111ling is made stat ins ·that the petition or signatures are insufficient by the 8~-day deadline.
the 'signatures are presumed to be sufficient in all respects. If there is a rulin&amp; that the petition or
signatures are insufficient and additional signatures are provided, HJR 3 would require the secretary
'()( sutc to detennine whether those additional signatures arc sufficient not later than 65 days befon:
the election.
Cballenga CGJ be made on thOse additional signatures, but such challenge must be filed not
latet· than SS days before the day of the el~ion. The Coun must mllku ruling on thC: additional
slgnlllures not later than 45 days before the elec;tion, Otherwise, the petilion and the signatures will
be presumed to be sufficient in all respects.
·

TAILGATING • EVERY SATURDAY

If approved, tills proposed •meiHlmeat will be offedlv,e immediately.

•

'

i

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                <elementText elementTextId="14421">
                  <text>. ~- Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

Playoffs

who won this weekend
would benefit eithetLC or
Meigs - pending on who
played who.
fromPageBl
For exJmple, Meigs has
seven
wins· this season.
elm clinch a Division V,
The
Marauders
have victo~cgion 19 berth with a
ries
over
Coal
Grove.
win. St. Clairsville travels
to Harrison Central, which Fairland. River Valley.
currently sits lOth in Athens. Vinton County.
Alexander and Well ston
Oivision Ill, Region II .
If both Hartley and this fall. so MHS needs .as
SCHS win, then Licking many of those teams to
win as possible to reach a
Heights - which is cur- maximum number of comtently lOth - is the only puter points.
bther threat to Meigs this
Good news, too. Things
~eekend.
If
Licking look favorable for Meigs
Heights defeats We st . there.
Jefferson who can
Wellston and Alexander .
clinch a playoff spot in play one another this
Division V, Region 20 weekend.
So
does
with a W - then both Fairland and Coal Grove.
LCHS and Meigs would There are two. wins autobasically be in a computer matically .
Athens
1s
hosting
points rac.e for the final
Ri ver
Wahama
.
whi1e
playoff berth.
· Th~t points race would ' Valley will host winless
come down to ,.teams that Rock Hill . Vinton County
also
hosting
both the Marauders and is
Licking Heights had wins Ne lsonville -York . Two
)lgainst this season. The out of three are possible .
!DOTe of those losing teams but a VC win would help

'

'

.

r----~

--...

'

,i

'

.

',

Meigs' cause the most.
If either St. Clairsville
or Licking Heights loses,
then Meigs will all but
secure .a spot in the playoffs - as long as the
Marauders win.
Utica - which currently sits ninth - needs a
lo s~ by either Meigs or St.
Clairsville and a loss by
Lil:king
Heights
to
advance to Week II after
a win .
As for Galli a Academy.
there is very little hope of
making the 'playoffs. But
there is a slight chance
also.
The Blue Devils would
h av~ to beat Marietta,
then would need help in
the form of losses by St.
Clairsville, Utica and
Licking Heights even to
have a chance. GAHS
would also need Jackson
to
beat
Zanesville,
.Wellston
to
beat
Alexander . Athens to beat
Wahama and Portsmouth
to
defeat
unbeaten
Western · Brown . Point

against Trimble (71-28).
Pleasant - the Devils'
Eastern currently has a
.other "j_in this year - is
one-game slide and is
currentl'y on a bye.
coming off its lowest
So basically. the scefromPageBl
· point output of the year nario . is simple. Both
Meigs
and
Gallia EHS is allowjng 39 points outside of two shutouts Academy have shots at per game defensively and du(ing a 34-6 setback at
making the playoffs, but scoring 20.3 points as an Waterford.
Southern is 1-3 on the
only the Marauders are offense .
realistic contenders for
·The Purple and Gold , on road this season and also
the top-e ight . If Meigs the other hand, are aver- won the last time (2006)
beats Belpre and either
these two teams took the
St . Clairsville or Licking aging 18.6 points per field at East Shade River
Heights loses . then the gaine offensively and Stadium. Eastern has won
Maroon and Gold are def- . allowing 30.9 points as a four of.the .last five coninitely headed to the post- defense through nine tests overall.
games . In league, the
season .
It will be the final home
Tornadoes
are scoring 19
If both St. Clairsville
game
for EHS seniors
and Licking Heights win, points and surrendering Action Facemyer. Jordan
then MHS and LCHS will 39 points per game.
Kimes, Josh Hupp , Zach
be in a race to see who , Both · teams are also Hendrix , Zach Moore,
has
more
computer coming in on a down note. 'Ben Buckley and James
points. Meigs could also Southern currently has a Russell. Kickoff is schedleap past Hartley· if two-game losing streak · uled for Saturday at 7':30
Bishop Ready wi ns, but and suffered its worst loss
that
like Licking .AJf the year last week p.m .
·Heights - would also
come down to a close race
in computer points .
Of co1trse , .none of this
scenario matters
for
Meigs if it doesn't win on
Senior Night.

:

A Free Lunch!
En~er Here ForA

: $30 Gift Certificate 1
·1 To One OfT/lese Great Restaurani$'1·
.

Rivalry

.

1 There "IS" Such A Thing As 11
-I

Thursday, October 23, 2008

www.mydailyiientinel.com

I
I
I

Name: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

I1

Phone#·- ----------------------

i t

There "IS" Such A Thing As
A FreeLunch!
Enter Here For A
ff f
.Th zs' UlneeksU!'
nznner...

ERICA
BLACK
CONGRATS!

$30 Gift Certificate ·
•

To One Of These Great Restaurants
N a m e = - - - - - - - . , - - - - - -.
Phone#·--~-----------~-Mall to:.Free Limch
Gallipolis bally 1iibuno
P.O. Box 469. Gallipolis, OH 4!!631

Enter To Win A
FREE LUNCH!

Elplanation
. I

•

. ISSUE #I

PROPOSED. CONSTITUTIONALAMEND.MENT
TO PROVIDE FOR EARLIER FILING D.EADLINES FOR STATEWIDE BALLOT ISSUES
(Proposed by Joint Resolution ofthe General Assembly of Ohio)

There "IS" Such A Thing As
A Free Lunch!

To amend Sections 1•, lb, lc, ..d lg of Article II of the Constitution oftbe State of Ohio
To aiMM Sections Ja, lb, le, 111111 Jg of
A~ of the &lt;Ansdtutloo oldie Stale

n

Enter Here For A

or

Oldo

$30 Gift Certificate

Thunk·You
to Our Many
Customers
10 Years in
Gallipplis

To One Of These Great Restaurants

The~ amendment

would:

I. · Require that a citizen-initiated litatewide

bello! issue be considefed 81 the next
gelieral election if petitions are'filed 125
days before the election.

Name: ____.:________..:.___
2.

Elstablish deadlines for boards of
validity of
citizen-initiated petilions.
el~'tionsto de«:nnine

Phone#·-·--------------~----------

me

3. Standardize the process f.X legal
challenges to citizen-initialed petitions
by giving the Ohio Supreme Court
jurisdiction to consider these cases and
esiablishing expedited deadlines for the
Court to make decisions. ·

Mail to: Free Lunch
Gallipolis Dally Tribune .
P.O. Box 469 Gallipolis, OH 45631

.

•

I·

A, "YES" vote means approval of the
·amendment.
•
,.
.A."ko" vote me&amp;lll d,htpproval the
Dndmem.~

llnd much more,

Our brun~h bourure
11 a.m. to J p.m.
Brln11 yoar family 111d Join !IL
$1.95 tor lld!llt3 and we offer

dlacouated rat. for children.

\1

of

••
majority YES VOle is requited for the
' -.endment 10,be adopted.

Sodexo Dtntng
Services

lot'oted on The Unlver.dty of
Rio Grande'8 campu1ln Evm
and Ellmbtth Davis Unlvenlty
Center In vita yoq wour
Sunday brunch. buffet. We
have many Items to fhUOIIe from
lnci1Jdln11; millie to order .
omeletll, p111trles, t~~~lad bar,
breakfiL•t and lunch; de!lllert,
Ire c~m bill', soup, pl1111,

.

~

iSIIALL THE PROJ!OSBD AMENDMEN'Il

DAfl.Y SPECIAI.S

IJE APPROVED?

SUND!\Y • Bl.T $3.25
MONDAY· Meatball Sub $3.99
. TU&amp;SDAY ·Wings 49t

Ot
Q :
:

Thoo-in·•·bac $4.49
1WllDNESDAY

2 Hot Dogs, saU&lt;t &amp; ilaw $2.99
After 4pm Pasta Night· all }OI t&amp;!lell $8.99
12-Under $5.99
S-Under FREE
THURSDAY· Kt~ $5.49 or.two for $9.75
FRIDAY· Soup &amp; Sm. Glrden Salld $5.49
SATIJRDAY • 7 !l(b Pepperoni plua $3.99

wltll 1/)Ur
Holtdo1 IJ11kl11g .
N•1d1/

/,,( 111 h1lp

COMING SOON· BEAN BOULEVARD

BUC:KE1~E

' f

R11111111&amp;1r, W• Do Cmrl111f

· MIUie• ·
Re1tauraat

;
''

,.

Yet
No

Piupose: The Ohio ConstitUtion and corresponding state laws describe the processes that electors
themselves can undertake to propose amendments to lhe constitution to eslllblish state laws and
'
'
to submit to the voters for their approval or rejection laws recently enacted by the Ohio General
Assembly. People who seek to initiate these processes must abide by constitutional and statutory
deadlines. The pwpose of Amended House Joint Resolution Number 3 (UJR 3) is to change the
filing deadlines for statewide ballot initiatives and referendums (sometimc:S called "statewide .
issues").
·
·
·
HJR 3 Would Qbange Statewide Issue Petition Eilin&amp; Deadlines: Most statewide issues are submined
to the electors to vote upon at a regulm: or general election. I~ order for an issue to be placed on
the ballot, it must be filed with the secrelaly of state's office as a·petition signed by a substantial
amount of supporters. Currently, petitions for proposed constitutional amendments and state laws
must be filed at least 90.days before the election at which the issue is to be submitted to the electors.
Referellllum petitions must be filed at least 60 days before the election 3t which the issue is to be
submitted.
HJR 3 would require that petitions for all statewide issues brought by electors be filed 125 days
before the election at which the issue is to be submitted to 1he electors. This means that people who
seek to file a petitioo proposing a constitutionaiiUIIendment or a state law or n referendum petition
must do so ewlier ihan they currently are required. Passing HJR 3 also would mean that people who
seek a referendum on any law that passes between 215 and 125 days before an upcoming regular or
general election will ha~e 90 days or less to undertake the entire referendum process ifthey want to
ensure the placement of lhe iuue on the ballot for the upcoming el~ion. Any referendum petition
filed Iller the 12S-day·deadline must be placed on the bel101 at the regular or gell&lt;!nll election that
occurs over • .,_ later.

.

.

HJR 3 Would Cbanif' flredlioes for Yeriftjng and Cha!leru!inl !he Peribon: Statewide

issue
petiti1111.'1 must be signed by many olectors. ·The secretary of Slate's office and the county boards of
elmions cbeclt those signatures to make sure they are valid and sufficiont. HJR 3 would req~ the
,se&lt;:retal)' of Slate to ddcrmine if there are enous.h valid signatures on the petition to qualifY it for
plal:ement on the ballot by the 105tb day before the election.

.

Somdimes, however, J!eOI'!e challenge the statewide petition and sisnlltllreS on the petition. HJR
3 giv~ the Supreme Court of Ohio the sole authority to hear these challenges. HJR 3 also requires
.all challenges to be filed oot later tl)an 95 days before the elec:tiOn and that the Coon must ru 1e on
any challenges not later than .as days before the election. In addition, under the new amendmenl
if no 111ling is made stat ins ·that the petition or signatures are insufficient by the 8~-day deadline.
the 'signatures are presumed to be sufficient in all respects. If there is a rulin&amp; that the petition or
signatures are insufficient and additional signatures are provided, HJR 3 would require the secretary
'()( sutc to detennine whether those additional signatures arc sufficient not later than 65 days befon:
the election.
Cballenga CGJ be made on thOse additional signatures, but such challenge must be filed not
latet· than SS days before the day of the el~ion. The Coun must mllku ruling on thC: additional
slgnlllures not later than 45 days before the elec;tion, Otherwise, the petilion and the signatures will
be presumed to be sufficient in all respects.
·

TAILGATING • EVERY SATURDAY

If approved, tills proposed •meiHlmeat will be offedlv,e immediately.

•

'

i

�,Pro.posed ·coAstitutional Amendment·

.Proposed·ConstitutiOf'ai .AQlendment
Argument In Favor of Issue 1

Argument Against Issue 1

Support State Issue l

Vote NO o.n Issue ##1

· A YES vote \)n Issue I saves taxpayer dollars, helps build voter confidence in
elections, and eases elections administration. .·
Issue I makes necessary, cost-saving improvements to elections ~lines for
statewide ballot issues and should be approved for.the-following reasons:
.1'

.1'

.1'

ISSUE I PREVENTS WASTE Of TAXPAYER OOLLARS.ln 2007,
taxpayers paid more than $300,000 to advertise infonnation about a
ballot issue that uhimately did not qualify for the ballot. Additional
expenditures were incUITed by local boards of elections ro verify
signatures. Issue .I helps prevent this wastetill spending of taxpayer
dollars from occurring in the future by establishing finn deadlines for the
adminis.tration of state ballot issues and resolving legal challenges.
ISSUE I HELPS MAINTAIN VOTER CONFIDENCE IN
ELECTIONS. '
Only statewide issues that qualify for voter consideration should be
printed on the ballot. During the last two general elections, h&lt;!wever,
litigation had not concluded at the time ballots had to be printed so
voters considered issues that were ultimately not counted. Issue I 's new
deadlines helps maintain voter confidence in elections by preventing this
waste from occurring.
ISSUE I PROMOTES Ef'fiCIEbiT AND EFFECTIVE ELECTIONS.
Issue I establishes clear timelines for filing and reviewing statewide
issues petitions, and for filing legal challenges to lhose petitions. This
helps ~ smoother and more efficient elections.

By imprffl- ing li ling ~hll ~ Jill' it"- aiDd wamlining the legal
JlflltC.'-'· •~- I w fll hel"' pr~VItl!lf voter wnf~ion and promoce more efficient
election~. Voce YL~ n!'l lswe L
· ·
Submitted by: Ohio State Reprnentatives Jon Peterson and Dan Stewart, the
group appointed by the Ohio Gcner.al Assembly to prepare the argument for
Issue I.

Full text of the
proposed
ameadment to the

Constitution
(ll7tlt Gmeral Assembly)

(Amended llouseJolnl

Reolelutlon Number 3)
JOINT RESOI, VTION

Pr ClpOIIinato amend
Sfttioos Ia, Ib, le, and
II of ArUde II ot tbe
Constitution of Ohio to
require an lnitllltln or
mereodum to be plal:ed
en the ballot at tbe fil'8t
~r or ,meral dection
aJIIduded IIICIR tb8n

eaeluuldted lweoly.fiye

days after the' petition Is
flied and to reviR other
deadlines relative to the
flliq of !bose petitions.
Be it rewl "ed by the
General Assemhly of the
State of Ohio, three-fifths of
the members elected to each
house concurring he~ein ,
thut there shall be submitted
to the eleciOrs of the stale.
in !be manne( prescribed by
law at the general elet."'ion
to be held on November
4. 2008. a proposal to
amend Sections Ia. Ih. lc.
and Ig of Article II of the
Consti!UI.ion of Otlio to read
as follows:

ARTICLE II;

Section Ia. The fust
aforestated power reserved
by the people is designated
the initiative. and ~
signatures of ten per ~ntum
of the eleclors shall be
required upon a petition
10 propose an amendment
to tbe constilution. Wheo
a petition signed by the
aforesaid required number
of electon. shall have been
filed with the secretary
of state.' and veriflCd as '•
herein·provided, proposing
an a•'lCndment to the
con~uturion. the fulltcxt
of which shall have been
forth In

no

lasue #I creates delays Ia new
. laws.fald•&amp; effect.
.

.

.

The Constitution reserves ,to the People the pow~ to.propose laws,
amendments to the constitution, and to ~ve or reject laws passed by
the legisl.pure. Issue #1 creates earlier filing deadlines which can cause a
referendum petiti.o n to effectively delay for lilonths the effective date of a law
j.ssed by the legislature. This iS because the deadline .for filing a referendum
petition dqiends on when the law being referred to the voters was passed by
the legislature. If Jhe deadline to file the petition is aftel: the new proposed
deallline in the Constitution, the Ia~ refemd by the pditi~n won't be able to
be on the ballot.until the next election, which·could be over a year away. ·

a.'

The immediate effect of the filing of a referendum ~tition is to stop the
law from going into effect until voters dec.ide the issue at the ballot. State
Issue #I giv~ people with the money to 'circulate petitions for hundreds of
thousands of sisnatures increased power over Jhe state legislature to delay
laws passed from going into effect for months or even more than a year. .
Issue #I mea111 ·More Expensive State Issue Campalans.
'.
The delays caused by Issue #I can be expensive. Putting the issues off so
long may mean that large amounts of mou.:y will have to be spent to get the
attention of vote~. Millions of dollars are already being spent for issues that
are fresh in the voters' minds. More money is likely to be spent to inform
voters when the issue is stale. With these powers J:CSCrved to the People, this
proposed amendment makes it even more expensive and difficult for ordinary '
citizens to undertake the efforts to speak through the state initiative and
referendum process.
Vote NO on lnue Ill.

""*

Prepared by the Ohio Ballot Board in the absence of any submission in.
opposition. as .required by Ohio Revised Code Section 3~05.063(8). ,
1 ,
; 1

' I

t

J

the -'l'etar)' of state shall
time, not ltss tlwl te'n days
subject to,the refe~Cndum.
submit 1br the·approvslllf
prioi' to the cornmencenlent , If itshall not be passed, .•
rejection uf the clectoH.
of any session of the general · or if It shall be passed in
the proposed amendment.
'OSsembfy, the~e'shall have
an amended form, or if no
in the manner ~nafter
bmlllled with the secretary D£tion shall be IU:en ~
provided, 111 the Relll
of stale a petition sigl:led '
within four montbs from
succeeding ~egular or.
by tliree per centum of the 1 lhe.timc it is received by the
gene111l election in any ~ear
electors 'and verilled•as
·gcnen~l assem\lly, it 11\all be
occurring subsequent to
herein provided, Jli'Oix&gt;sing
submitted by the sec~Ctary
ninety one hundn:dlwcnl)'·
a law. the full tellt of which
of stale to the electors for
days after the filing oT
shall ha,ve been set forth in
!heir approval Or rejection It
such petition. The initiative
suc.'h petition; the sec....Tetary
the next reculat Ot ICJlC!Ial
petitions. above described
of scue shall transmit
eiellidrl. if sue]\ subiniss
shall have printed ucmls the the same to the -gt~
shall be demanded by ·
top thereof; •· Amendrilent to assembly as soon as it
supplementary petition
the Constltu.tion Proposed
convenes. If said proposed
verified as brrein provided
by Initiative Petit.ion10 be
law shall be ~by the
and signed by not less. thall
Submitted Directly to the
t!et)C!rll assembly, tither
three per centum of the
Elec10f3.··
as petitioned for or in an
dccton in addilioo to ~
ScctiOI) I b. Whcq ar aoy
. lll'leodcd form. it shall be
A·ofllinutd on ll®i page ·
'

m

· lund I b. if appioved by
manner herein provided, at
Uf)Oil such petitions u!lder
the rejection of any law
a
Jlllliority
of
thee~
the next succeeding ~egular
Jbj• seqjoo, Any cballcDae
'iial~in! the original petition,
submined by ~eferendum
voting thmon, shall take
or general election in any
10 a petition or sjparon;
supplementary
petition be held invalid for
effect
lhirty
days
after
the
year
~uning
subsequent
on
a pctitjoo sbnll be filed
petition must be signed aod
such insufficiency. Upon all
election ar which it was
to si1lt)' ooe bunc!R:d twenty· . not later than ninety·liye
with the secretary of
initiative, supple~ ,
~ Pnd shall be
·1m days after the .filing of
days before the 4lY of
wilbln ninety 4aya ·
and referendum pelitions
· such petition, and such
·!be election, The ooun
~the jxOposed ll!w'Shall · published lly tbe secrttary
provided.for in any of the
of Illite. If 4'011ft~ng .
law, sedion or item shall go _ shall bear gOd rule on anY
been rejected by the
secti(J!I$ of this.article, it
proposed laws or conftictlng into effect until and unless
challenacs mac!e 1D JIC!itloo$ shall he nccessarx to file
·pnerat usemhly or·d er
~amenllmebls
approved by a mlli&lt;Jrity of
and sjanatun:s not later
die' ex~ of sud! term
from each of one-half of
10 tile ~ltUtlon shall
those voting upon the same.
than dah!Y-five dan before the oountie~ of the stare,
if no action
be approved althe Hl1lC
Ir, bowe~r. a refe~endum
the clcctjon, lfnorulina
petitions bearing the
~!Ken~.
eteetton
by
a
JJII,jorlty
of
de
petition
Is
filed
l$ainst
any
.
dc)emj!nlll&amp;
die petition 0£
sig~tu~es of not less than
after-the law pi.$cd
~nu~of~c~ .
suc:b 8ection or item.· the
si&amp;mluw to be jnsu[u:jent one-half of the desi~!lllted
the·pDenJ assembly
ror
8nd
aalilnst
tbe
same,
'the
remiindcr
of
the
law
shall
js isS!ICd a&amp; lcast1liahiY:.five
halve been. filed by percentage of the electors
oae
Rleeiving
the
highest
not ihereby be prevented
din before the e!cctjon.
gomt!Of in tilt Office
ofsuch county. A true copy
IIWIIber of llflirmatl¥e
or delayed from goin&amp; into · · lkpetitjoo and sigmuures
the sea daly of ~~~Me.
of all laws or proposeillaws
votes
shall
be
the
lliw,
or
effect.
r
•
upon
such
petitions
shall
, proposcdlawshall
or proposed amendments
in tbe case Of amendments
Section lg. Any initiative,
be presumed 10 be in all ·
submitted
to the L'OilstitUtion, together
to the Constitution shall'
supplementary, or 1
·~ ~fficient; IBIIess
.
with 1111 argument or
be the imendment.to ,
~efe.~endum petition may
1111t lllet thin fo! I) da)s
explanation, or bolh. for,
the 4'011Stitution. No law
· be presented in sep1ra1c1
bebe the elecliot~ it shall
and also an argument or
· propOsed by inltiibve
ptlltJ buteachpllt shall .
bC othe•wise po1ed and in ellplanation, or both, against
petition and~ by the contain a full and~maect
ltteh e;ent&amp;.
the
the same. shall he prepared.
electors
·shall
be
lli;:d.
l
D
1111
·copy of the Iitle, and text
If the petjliom or sianlll!m
by sUd.
The penon or penons who
veto or the governor.
of the law, section or
ga; d!:tmnincd to be
,i{IJllfllementary petition, .
• pn:pan: the art~ument or
Sel.11on
I
c.
The
--ond
item ~r sought to be
jDII!fficicnL ten additi&lt;mal
foim shaD be eit)Jer ,
explanation, or both, against
afoo:st.cr power merved
first petitioned tOt or '
~eferred, or.the proposed
days shall he allowed for
any 'law, section, or item,
by the people is 4eslgnateci
law or proposed amendment the filing of additional
'!rith any llllcndmmt or
. submitted to the electors
the ~efereudum, and the
ro the ~im. Each
signatUJCs to such petition. . by refe~endum petition,
110e11dmiints which i'llay ,
signatures of six per centum signer of any initiative, ·
No If gddjJjonahiJP!!!I!!m
· may he named in such
llave been incorporaled
supplementary,
or
are
filed,
)he
secn:lal)'
of
the
electors
shall
be
petition and the persons
lbc~ein by either branch
requinld
upon
•
pditio!i
!Cfe~endum peti.tion muit be
of 11a)c WI! detmni!l!l
..-by both branches, of
who p!CJIIIIC the qumcnt
to
order
the
MlbmiAion
to
an
elector
of
the
state
and
!be
sufficieJK."Y
of
Jhosc
or
explanation. or both.
~n,erat asicmbly.
the
electcn
of
the
stale
for
·
shall
place
on
Such
petition
J8!djlional
siJP!IIll!res
not
•
for
any proposed law or
.If a JII'OPc*d law so ·
their app:oval or ~ejection,
after hisl'ime the date of.
later dum ajxl)'-fiye days
•bmitted is approved by
proposed amendment 10 the
of any law, lleclion of any
slgrung and his place. of
before the election, Any ·
majority of the electeD
constitution may
....., be natlled
law
or
any
item
in
any
law
residence.
A
signer
residing
cba!lenge
to
!he:
wlt!j!jonaJ
in the petition propo5ing Jbe
yocin&amp; thereon, it shall he
lpploptilling l1lOIIe)' passed outside of a municipality
siJina&amp;yn:s shall be filed
the law and shall go into
same. The person or persons
by
the
Ff~Ctalllllelllbly.
No
shall
st111e
the
couilty
and
!M!IIaJcr
)han
fifty-five
who
prepare the argument
ttr~.as ~n provided
or
explanation,
or·both, for
tile flll'!l
number, post days l!efore die day of
~ lieu 4lf any IIIJiel!ded ' . ltllf )lUted b)' lhe genei.J
!be; el4!!.1ioo. 1be mnrt
the law, S«tion. .or item.
ISIICmbly Jhall JO ifliO effect oflic!l addreA, or townsbip
form of Slid. law Wllich
until ainec,y cJa,ys after it
submitted 10 the electors
of hil residence. A reslcll'nt
shall bear and rule on Ill\)'
nlay have beeD PISsed by
cbllllepp mw'e to the •
shall have been filed by tile . of a municipality shall stale
by ~efe~endum petition. or
d!lc genel'll auemblY· and
governor
In
the
office
of
the
the
11reet
and
number,
if
IMk'iljooal
siJIIlii!UlCs
nqt
against any proposed law
IIICh. amended law puled
any, o( his residence and the laJcr !han fony-liye days
secmary of state, exc:ept
submilled·"Y supplementary
by the general assembly
as hmltn provided. ·When
name of the municipality
l:!efore the dectjo!L If no
petition, shall be named by
tllall not go itVO etreci
a
petition,
s~ned
by
six
or po.u office address. The
ru!jna determining !he
the ge~lassembly, if in
anchlnlels .the law
per ceOtum of theclecwn JIIIIJeS ol all ~igners to such pM;tionaJ sjJP!@Iures 10
scssioo, and if not in session
~bY supPlementary
petitions shall be written in
be jnsuffident i3 js~ucd
then by the governor. The
of the sta~ and verilied 88·
petition shall have been
herein
provided,
liblll
have
ira;~ signer for himself. u)eas) Cony-five days
law, or PJoposed law, or
'.ftjeaed by the eleclon. All
been filed with the 3«-mary To each part of such
be(ore the eleclio!L the
propose;! amendment to
petitions,
of
stale
within
nioety
days
the
constitution. together
petition
shall
be
llttacbedthe
netitionaml_-sba!l
'-' llbo-ve described. shill
starementofthet.imdator. ~~~L
.with the arguments and
have printed acrou the top . after any law shall have
been liled by the gomnor
IS
be required by
RSJICC!s sufficient
. e11planations. not exceeding
thereof, iri case of proposed
In the office of the sccmary law, that he witnessed the
11 total of three hundred
laws: "Law Proposed by
ND law or amendment to
of
stale,
oolering
that
IIIM:h
affixing
of
every
signature.
words for each. and
lf!liative Petition First
the constitution submitted
The xgmry or;,... shall
·Jaw, section of such law
alw
the arguments and
to he Submitted 10 the
to the elea.1ors by initiative
or
any
item
in
such
Jaw
dercnni!l!l
the
sufficiency
e~tplanations,
not excec:ding
General Assembly." Ballots
and supplementary petition
of
!he:
s!gDIJ!m
ogt
Iacer
appropriating liiOIIe)' be
~I be so printecl as to
and' m:eiving an Kffinnativc: a total of three hundred
tbao O!!C bamdn;d five d;iys
·submitted to the electors of
· an affirmative OJ
· words against each, shall
majority of the votes ~'liSt
bcfsv
w
·
elet.Wp,
the
state
for
lhciir
lflll""'al
be published once a week
"Qeglltive-vote ujiOR each
thereon. shalllle held
or ~ejection, the secretary
for three ctmsecutive weeks
measure submitted 10 the
The Objo SUJ!n:IDe coun
unconstitutional or void on
of Slale shall ~'llbmit to the
pra'ediilg
the election.
·el«:ton. Any Jli'OPosed
shall have oririna•
oc~"OUnt of lhe
electors
of
the
stale
for
their
in
at
least
one
newsrapcr
law or amendment to the
gchWye jurisdit'tion over
of the petitions bvf1Nhi•·h
approval or rejection ~uch
of lleneral drculat100 in
constitution submitted to
sucl] sub1mi!&gt;s1ot~f the
all cbalk!J410 mpdc )o
law, section or Item, in the
each oounty of the state,
the eleclori as provided in

may

where 11 newspaper is
published. The secretary
of state shall cause to be
placed upon the ballots.
the ballot language for any
suchlaw.or~law .

or proposed amendment
10 the constitution. 10 be
submitted The ballot
language shall be prescribed
by the Ohio ballot board
. in the same manner. and
subject io the same terms
and conditions, as apply
to issues submitted by the
general assembly pursuant
to Section I of Anicle XVI
of this constitution. The
ballot language shall be so ·
prescribed and the secretary
of stote shall cause the ·
ballots 50 to be printed as .
to permit an affirmative or
negative vote upon each
law, section of law. or,
item in o law appropriating
money, or proposed law.
or proposed amendment to
the constitution. The style
of all laws submitted hy
initiative and supplementary
· petition shall be: ··se it
Enacted by the People of the
State of Ohio." and of all
constitutional amendments:
..Be it.Resolved by t.he
People of the State of
Ohio." The basis upon
. which the roquired number
of petitioners in any case
. shall be determined shall
be the total number of
votes east for the oflk.C
of governor at tbe last
preceding election therefor.
. The foregoing provision.~
of thi~ section shall be selfexecuting. except as herein
otherwise provided. Laws
may be passed to facilitate
their operation, but in no
way limiting or restricting
either sud1 provisions or ihc
powers herein reserved.
EFFECTIVE DATE AND
REPEAL
If adopted by a majority·
of the electors voting on
this proposal, Sections Ia.
lh, lc.and lgofArtidell
amended by this proposal
shall take immediate efl'el't.•
and existing Sections Ia. lb.
k :md Ig of Article II of
the Con5titutioo of Oh1o are
re~aled from that effc•tive
dale. •

�,Pro.posed ·coAstitutional Amendment·

.Proposed·ConstitutiOf'ai .AQlendment
Argument In Favor of Issue 1

Argument Against Issue 1

Support State Issue l

Vote NO o.n Issue ##1

· A YES vote \)n Issue I saves taxpayer dollars, helps build voter confidence in
elections, and eases elections administration. .·
Issue I makes necessary, cost-saving improvements to elections ~lines for
statewide ballot issues and should be approved for.the-following reasons:
.1'

.1'

.1'

ISSUE I PREVENTS WASTE Of TAXPAYER OOLLARS.ln 2007,
taxpayers paid more than $300,000 to advertise infonnation about a
ballot issue that uhimately did not qualify for the ballot. Additional
expenditures were incUITed by local boards of elections ro verify
signatures. Issue .I helps prevent this wastetill spending of taxpayer
dollars from occurring in the future by establishing finn deadlines for the
adminis.tration of state ballot issues and resolving legal challenges.
ISSUE I HELPS MAINTAIN VOTER CONFIDENCE IN
ELECTIONS. '
Only statewide issues that qualify for voter consideration should be
printed on the ballot. During the last two general elections, h&lt;!wever,
litigation had not concluded at the time ballots had to be printed so
voters considered issues that were ultimately not counted. Issue I 's new
deadlines helps maintain voter confidence in elections by preventing this
waste from occurring.
ISSUE I PROMOTES Ef'fiCIEbiT AND EFFECTIVE ELECTIONS.
Issue I establishes clear timelines for filing and reviewing statewide
issues petitions, and for filing legal challenges to lhose petitions. This
helps ~ smoother and more efficient elections.

By imprffl- ing li ling ~hll ~ Jill' it"- aiDd wamlining the legal
JlflltC.'-'· •~- I w fll hel"' pr~VItl!lf voter wnf~ion and promoce more efficient
election~. Voce YL~ n!'l lswe L
· ·
Submitted by: Ohio State Reprnentatives Jon Peterson and Dan Stewart, the
group appointed by the Ohio Gcner.al Assembly to prepare the argument for
Issue I.

Full text of the
proposed
ameadment to the

Constitution
(ll7tlt Gmeral Assembly)

(Amended llouseJolnl

Reolelutlon Number 3)
JOINT RESOI, VTION

Pr ClpOIIinato amend
Sfttioos Ia, Ib, le, and
II of ArUde II ot tbe
Constitution of Ohio to
require an lnitllltln or
mereodum to be plal:ed
en the ballot at tbe fil'8t
~r or ,meral dection
aJIIduded IIICIR tb8n

eaeluuldted lweoly.fiye

days after the' petition Is
flied and to reviR other
deadlines relative to the
flliq of !bose petitions.
Be it rewl "ed by the
General Assemhly of the
State of Ohio, three-fifths of
the members elected to each
house concurring he~ein ,
thut there shall be submitted
to the eleciOrs of the stale.
in !be manne( prescribed by
law at the general elet."'ion
to be held on November
4. 2008. a proposal to
amend Sections Ia. Ih. lc.
and Ig of Article II of the
Consti!UI.ion of Otlio to read
as follows:

ARTICLE II;

Section Ia. The fust
aforestated power reserved
by the people is designated
the initiative. and ~
signatures of ten per ~ntum
of the eleclors shall be
required upon a petition
10 propose an amendment
to tbe constilution. Wheo
a petition signed by the
aforesaid required number
of electon. shall have been
filed with the secretary
of state.' and veriflCd as '•
herein·provided, proposing
an a•'lCndment to the
con~uturion. the fulltcxt
of which shall have been
forth In

no

lasue #I creates delays Ia new
. laws.fald•&amp; effect.
.

.

.

The Constitution reserves ,to the People the pow~ to.propose laws,
amendments to the constitution, and to ~ve or reject laws passed by
the legisl.pure. Issue #1 creates earlier filing deadlines which can cause a
referendum petiti.o n to effectively delay for lilonths the effective date of a law
j.ssed by the legislature. This iS because the deadline .for filing a referendum
petition dqiends on when the law being referred to the voters was passed by
the legislature. If Jhe deadline to file the petition is aftel: the new proposed
deallline in the Constitution, the Ia~ refemd by the pditi~n won't be able to
be on the ballot.until the next election, which·could be over a year away. ·

a.'

The immediate effect of the filing of a referendum ~tition is to stop the
law from going into effect until voters dec.ide the issue at the ballot. State
Issue #I giv~ people with the money to 'circulate petitions for hundreds of
thousands of sisnatures increased power over Jhe state legislature to delay
laws passed from going into effect for months or even more than a year. .
Issue #I mea111 ·More Expensive State Issue Campalans.
'.
The delays caused by Issue #I can be expensive. Putting the issues off so
long may mean that large amounts of mou.:y will have to be spent to get the
attention of vote~. Millions of dollars are already being spent for issues that
are fresh in the voters' minds. More money is likely to be spent to inform
voters when the issue is stale. With these powers J:CSCrved to the People, this
proposed amendment makes it even more expensive and difficult for ordinary '
citizens to undertake the efforts to speak through the state initiative and
referendum process.
Vote NO on lnue Ill.

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Prepared by the Ohio Ballot Board in the absence of any submission in.
opposition. as .required by Ohio Revised Code Section 3~05.063(8). ,
1 ,
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' I

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J

the -'l'etar)' of state shall
time, not ltss tlwl te'n days
subject to,the refe~Cndum.
submit 1br the·approvslllf
prioi' to the cornmencenlent , If itshall not be passed, .•
rejection uf the clectoH.
of any session of the general · or if It shall be passed in
the proposed amendment.
'OSsembfy, the~e'shall have
an amended form, or if no
in the manner ~nafter
bmlllled with the secretary D£tion shall be IU:en ~
provided, 111 the Relll
of stale a petition sigl:led '
within four montbs from
succeeding ~egular or.
by tliree per centum of the 1 lhe.timc it is received by the
gene111l election in any ~ear
electors 'and verilled•as
·gcnen~l assem\lly, it 11\all be
occurring subsequent to
herein provided, Jli'Oix&gt;sing
submitted by the sec~Ctary
ninety one hundn:dlwcnl)'·
a law. the full tellt of which
of stale to the electors for
days after the filing oT
shall ha,ve been set forth in
!heir approval Or rejection It
such petition. The initiative
suc.'h petition; the sec....Tetary
the next reculat Ot ICJlC!Ial
petitions. above described
of scue shall transmit
eiellidrl. if sue]\ subiniss
shall have printed ucmls the the same to the -gt~
shall be demanded by ·
top thereof; •· Amendrilent to assembly as soon as it
supplementary petition
the Constltu.tion Proposed
convenes. If said proposed
verified as brrein provided
by Initiative Petit.ion10 be
law shall be ~by the
and signed by not less. thall
Submitted Directly to the
t!et)C!rll assembly, tither
three per centum of the
Elec10f3.··
as petitioned for or in an
dccton in addilioo to ~
ScctiOI) I b. Whcq ar aoy
. lll'leodcd form. it shall be
A·ofllinutd on ll®i page ·
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m

· lund I b. if appioved by
manner herein provided, at
Uf)Oil such petitions u!lder
the rejection of any law
a
Jlllliority
of
thee~
the next succeeding ~egular
Jbj• seqjoo, Any cballcDae
'iial~in! the original petition,
submined by ~eferendum
voting thmon, shall take
or general election in any
10 a petition or sjparon;
supplementary
petition be held invalid for
effect
lhirty
days
after
the
year
~uning
subsequent
on
a pctitjoo sbnll be filed
petition must be signed aod
such insufficiency. Upon all
election ar which it was
to si1lt)' ooe bunc!R:d twenty· . not later than ninety·liye
with the secretary of
initiative, supple~ ,
~ Pnd shall be
·1m days after the .filing of
days before the 4lY of
wilbln ninety 4aya ·
and referendum pelitions
· such petition, and such
·!be election, The ooun
~the jxOposed ll!w'Shall · published lly tbe secrttary
provided.for in any of the
of Illite. If 4'011ft~ng .
law, sedion or item shall go _ shall bear gOd rule on anY
been rejected by the
secti(J!I$ of this.article, it
proposed laws or conftictlng into effect until and unless
challenacs mac!e 1D JIC!itloo$ shall he nccessarx to file
·pnerat usemhly or·d er
~amenllmebls
approved by a mlli&lt;Jrity of
and sjanatun:s not later
die' ex~ of sud! term
from each of one-half of
10 tile ~ltUtlon shall
those voting upon the same.
than dah!Y-five dan before the oountie~ of the stare,
if no action
be approved althe Hl1lC
Ir, bowe~r. a refe~endum
the clcctjon, lfnorulina
petitions bearing the
~!Ken~.
eteetton
by
a
JJII,jorlty
of
de
petition
Is
filed
l$ainst
any
.
dc)emj!nlll&amp;
die petition 0£
sig~tu~es of not less than
after-the law pi.$cd
~nu~of~c~ .
suc:b 8ection or item.· the
si&amp;mluw to be jnsu[u:jent one-half of the desi~!lllted
the·pDenJ assembly
ror
8nd
aalilnst
tbe
same,
'the
remiindcr
of
the
law
shall
js isS!ICd a&amp; lcast1liahiY:.five
halve been. filed by percentage of the electors
oae
Rleeiving
the
highest
not ihereby be prevented
din before the e!cctjon.
gomt!Of in tilt Office
ofsuch county. A true copy
IIWIIber of llflirmatl¥e
or delayed from goin&amp; into · · lkpetitjoo and sigmuures
the sea daly of ~~~Me.
of all laws or proposeillaws
votes
shall
be
the
lliw,
or
effect.
r
•
upon
such
petitions
shall
, proposcdlawshall
or proposed amendments
in tbe case Of amendments
Section lg. Any initiative,
be presumed 10 be in all ·
submitted
to the L'OilstitUtion, together
to the Constitution shall'
supplementary, or 1
·~ ~fficient; IBIIess
.
with 1111 argument or
be the imendment.to ,
~efe.~endum petition may
1111t lllet thin fo! I) da)s
explanation, or bolh. for,
the 4'011Stitution. No law
· be presented in sep1ra1c1
bebe the elecliot~ it shall
and also an argument or
· propOsed by inltiibve
ptlltJ buteachpllt shall .
bC othe•wise po1ed and in ellplanation, or both, against
petition and~ by the contain a full and~maect
ltteh e;ent&amp;.
the
the same. shall he prepared.
electors
·shall
be
lli;:d.
l
D
1111
·copy of the Iitle, and text
If the petjliom or sianlll!m
by sUd.
The penon or penons who
veto or the governor.
of the law, section or
ga; d!:tmnincd to be
,i{IJllfllementary petition, .
• pn:pan: the art~ument or
Sel.11on
I
c.
The
--ond
item ~r sought to be
jDII!fficicnL ten additi&lt;mal
foim shaD be eit)Jer ,
explanation, or both, against
afoo:st.cr power merved
first petitioned tOt or '
~eferred, or.the proposed
days shall he allowed for
any 'law, section, or item,
by the people is 4eslgnateci
law or proposed amendment the filing of additional
'!rith any llllcndmmt or
. submitted to the electors
the ~efereudum, and the
ro the ~im. Each
signatUJCs to such petition. . by refe~endum petition,
110e11dmiints which i'llay ,
signatures of six per centum signer of any initiative, ·
No If gddjJjonahiJP!!!I!!m
· may he named in such
llave been incorporaled
supplementary,
or
are
filed,
)he
secn:lal)'
of
the
electors
shall
be
petition and the persons
lbc~ein by either branch
requinld
upon
•
pditio!i
!Cfe~endum peti.tion muit be
of 11a)c WI! detmni!l!l
..-by both branches, of
who p!CJIIIIC the qumcnt
to
order
the
MlbmiAion
to
an
elector
of
the
state
and
!be
sufficieJK."Y
of
Jhosc
or
explanation. or both.
~n,erat asicmbly.
the
electcn
of
the
stale
for
·
shall
place
on
Such
petition
J8!djlional
siJP!IIll!res
not
•
for
any proposed law or
.If a JII'OPc*d law so ·
their app:oval or ~ejection,
after hisl'ime the date of.
later dum ajxl)'-fiye days
•bmitted is approved by
proposed amendment 10 the
of any law, lleclion of any
slgrung and his place. of
before the election, Any ·
majority of the electeD
constitution may
....., be natlled
law
or
any
item
in
any
law
residence.
A
signer
residing
cba!lenge
to
!he:
wlt!j!jonaJ
in the petition propo5ing Jbe
yocin&amp; thereon, it shall he
lpploptilling l1lOIIe)' passed outside of a municipality
siJina&amp;yn:s shall be filed
the law and shall go into
same. The person or persons
by
the
Ff~Ctalllllelllbly.
No
shall
st111e
the
couilty
and
!M!IIaJcr
)han
fifty-five
who
prepare the argument
ttr~.as ~n provided
or
explanation,
or·both, for
tile flll'!l
number, post days l!efore die day of
~ lieu 4lf any IIIJiel!ded ' . ltllf )lUted b)' lhe genei.J
!be; el4!!.1ioo. 1be mnrt
the law, S«tion. .or item.
ISIICmbly Jhall JO ifliO effect oflic!l addreA, or townsbip
form of Slid. law Wllich
until ainec,y cJa,ys after it
submitted 10 the electors
of hil residence. A reslcll'nt
shall bear and rule on Ill\)'
nlay have beeD PISsed by
cbllllepp mw'e to the •
shall have been filed by tile . of a municipality shall stale
by ~efe~endum petition. or
d!lc genel'll auemblY· and
governor
In
the
office
of
the
the
11reet
and
number,
if
IMk'iljooal
siJIIlii!UlCs
nqt
against any proposed law
IIICh. amended law puled
any, o( his residence and the laJcr !han fony-liye days
secmary of state, exc:ept
submilled·"Y supplementary
by the general assembly
as hmltn provided. ·When
name of the municipality
l:!efore the dectjo!L If no
petition, shall be named by
tllall not go itVO etreci
a
petition,
s~ned
by
six
or po.u office address. The
ru!jna determining !he
the ge~lassembly, if in
anchlnlels .the law
per ceOtum of theclecwn JIIIIJeS ol all ~igners to such pM;tionaJ sjJP!@Iures 10
scssioo, and if not in session
~bY supPlementary
petitions shall be written in
be jnsuffident i3 js~ucd
then by the governor. The
of the sta~ and verilied 88·
petition shall have been
herein
provided,
liblll
have
ira;~ signer for himself. u)eas) Cony-five days
law, or PJoposed law, or
'.ftjeaed by the eleclon. All
been filed with the 3«-mary To each part of such
be(ore the eleclio!L the
propose;! amendment to
petitions,
of
stale
within
nioety
days
the
constitution. together
petition
shall
be
llttacbedthe
netitionaml_-sba!l
'-' llbo-ve described. shill
starementofthet.imdator. ~~~L
.with the arguments and
have printed acrou the top . after any law shall have
been liled by the gomnor
IS
be required by
RSJICC!s sufficient
. e11planations. not exceeding
thereof, iri case of proposed
In the office of the sccmary law, that he witnessed the
11 total of three hundred
laws: "Law Proposed by
ND law or amendment to
of
stale,
oolering
that
IIIM:h
affixing
of
every
signature.
words for each. and
lf!liative Petition First
the constitution submitted
The xgmry or;,... shall
·Jaw, section of such law
alw
the arguments and
to he Submitted 10 the
to the elea.1ors by initiative
or
any
item
in
such
Jaw
dercnni!l!l
the
sufficiency
e~tplanations,
not excec:ding
General Assembly." Ballots
and supplementary petition
of
!he:
s!gDIJ!m
ogt
Iacer
appropriating liiOIIe)' be
~I be so printecl as to
and' m:eiving an Kffinnativc: a total of three hundred
tbao O!!C bamdn;d five d;iys
·submitted to the electors of
· an affirmative OJ
· words against each, shall
majority of the votes ~'liSt
bcfsv
w
·
elet.Wp,
the
state
for
lhciir
lflll""'al
be published once a week
"Qeglltive-vote ujiOR each
thereon. shalllle held
or ~ejection, the secretary
for three ctmsecutive weeks
measure submitted 10 the
The Objo SUJ!n:IDe coun
unconstitutional or void on
of Slale shall ~'llbmit to the
pra'ediilg
the election.
·el«:ton. Any Jli'OPosed
shall have oririna•
oc~"OUnt of lhe
electors
of
the
stale
for
their
in
at
least
one
newsrapcr
law or amendment to the
gchWye jurisdit'tion over
of the petitions bvf1Nhi•·h
approval or rejection ~uch
of lleneral drculat100 in
constitution submitted to
sucl] sub1mi!&gt;s1ot~f the
all cbalk!J410 mpdc )o
law, section or Item, in the
each oounty of the state,
the eleclori as provided in

may

where 11 newspaper is
published. The secretary
of state shall cause to be
placed upon the ballots.
the ballot language for any
suchlaw.or~law .

or proposed amendment
10 the constitution. 10 be
submitted The ballot
language shall be prescribed
by the Ohio ballot board
. in the same manner. and
subject io the same terms
and conditions, as apply
to issues submitted by the
general assembly pursuant
to Section I of Anicle XVI
of this constitution. The
ballot language shall be so ·
prescribed and the secretary
of stote shall cause the ·
ballots 50 to be printed as .
to permit an affirmative or
negative vote upon each
law, section of law. or,
item in o law appropriating
money, or proposed law.
or proposed amendment to
the constitution. The style
of all laws submitted hy
initiative and supplementary
· petition shall be: ··se it
Enacted by the People of the
State of Ohio." and of all
constitutional amendments:
..Be it.Resolved by t.he
People of the State of
Ohio." The basis upon
. which the roquired number
of petitioners in any case
. shall be determined shall
be the total number of
votes east for the oflk.C
of governor at tbe last
preceding election therefor.
. The foregoing provision.~
of thi~ section shall be selfexecuting. except as herein
otherwise provided. Laws
may be passed to facilitate
their operation, but in no
way limiting or restricting
either sud1 provisions or ihc
powers herein reserved.
EFFECTIVE DATE AND
REPEAL
If adopted by a majority·
of the electors voting on
this proposal, Sections Ia.
lh, lc.and lgofArtidell
amended by this proposal
shall take immediate efl'el't.•
and existing Sections Ia. lb.
k :md Ig of Article II of
the Con5titutioo of Oh1o are
re~aled from that effc•tive
dale. •

�Proposed Con$titUtionai·Amendment

•

..Prbpos~d· eon_
stitutionaf Amendment

Expla.tioa
...
PROPOSED CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENT
. TO AUTHORIZE THE Sf~TE TO ISSpE BONDS TO CON'fiNUE THE
CLEAN OHIO PROGRAM FOR ENVIRONMENTAL REV~ALJ'ZATION
,
AND CONSERVATION

Argument Again.,t Issue 2

. Ceatiaue &lt;;lean Obio
VOTE.YES fer ISSUE 2

-Vote No on Issue #1.

v.a.r, Jb Jot lSSIIe 2/o C011111111e Ct~·Oitltl prolects

luue #2 Would Autllorize the Govera•eat .to
Spead More Ia Bond Moaey.
.
The economy is in bad condition. When times are
hard, this is wben we must Jighten our belts and
spend only what is necessar'y and only what we e~m
cover with Incoming revenues. Issue #2 authorizes
the government to take out more debts to pay for
environmental revitalization and conservation. .While
th\s may be worthwhile, the State of Ohio should not
be going into 1\utber debt. ·

.

This~

1.

lUR S Would A!!lborju,tbe swe to Raly Mqn~,for Conwyatjon Plp:pasoa: Under.
HJR s the stale can ralse not more than two lwndred million dollars (~00,000,000) , ,
of
altd obligations for conservation j,wposes. Cooservatibn purposes include! .

bonds

Authorize the state to is.'IJC up to two hundred million

3.

year.

A "YES" vote means approval of the amondment.

Not more than fifty million doll~~!' (SSP,OOO,OOO) principaL amount ofihose
,
' obligations, plus the principal .mount of those obliptions thll in any pri~ fiscal
year could have been but were not issued within the limit, may be i~ m any fiat
year.
.'

"NO" vote me8l15 disapproval of the amendment.

A majoriry YES voce is required for the amendment to

...

be adopted.

SHALL 'OlE PROPOSED ~MENT BE
APPROVED?

o
~

Refunding or Retirina D$bt: Elch state obllgation"issucd according to thiS f)loposed
amendment must mature not later than IJie} I st day ofiJeceviber of!Jle 25th calendar
year after its issuance, ~cept Chat obll~l'fl~ 'ss~ to refiuad or reti!l ~ ..
,
obligations shall mature not later !hap $be Jlst ~~ 9f.~ber of,' " ~Sth c:alqtdl!l;, o~
year after the year in wbicb tt\e original obligation to pay was issued or entered into. ·

Yes
No

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•
•
•
•
• •

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h

llrfi'.\)

•

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•• • •

,K~ O'-¥'_drinking w~ ~~~&amp;;safe,

r

oo,~ern,or Stricklanil, 8elllitor$1Vdift~ch' and Brown, 1 '

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1·, , .. , :, ..

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ARTICLEVIIL

Section 2q. CAl I! js determined !M!!1

. coOiirincd that the cnyjronmentaJ and
reletnl conseryation. preseryatjoo l!ld
reyillljzarjon DUQlOSCS referred jo
diyjsiOps IA)(l) and 12l of this KICijop.
and pmyjsjops for !hem, are 9"11"£
pUbtic pu!])OSCS of the stale and local

co

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and iiPJm;wriare means to improye
!he QllaliiY of life and the p:oera! and

I : ~

==::::fur·

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aoycmmental eOijtics and are nccc:wuy

·

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~ Atrdsi! tHe state,:tftlm Obio is'J)totectihg oor drinking
Wildlife hllitilt!'crtlitiJ\g'jObs and impnMDgtfl.e I "
I ~ CIOalii" oflife roi- OhiOI!rlsi.; WJDtovr·lb\JSlNG !
fJ

l

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:- '";ot. l

I

Sfnahe President Hatris, Ho~~Se Speaker Husted and · · '
" ellected officials and organizations across Ohio All wge a
Vf!e ~n ~~~e
v :, , ,

all

'

croJjomjc we!l·beina of tbe I!C'Illc 'of tbia
slate: w bell&lt;:r ensure the public bcahh,

ror Issue 2 hi$1received'bibld bi-partJsa.i !upport.

, '

•

Prepared by the Ohio Ballot &amp;ltd in 'the,$~ce Qf
any submission in opposition, as' required by Ohio
Revised Code Section 3505.063(8).

our

I;,·,

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Clean up fl\ld 'redevelop pollute&lt;~ abandoned
induStrial sias
Protect
lakes, rivers and streams
· Conserve wildlite habitat
Preserve working family farms
Expand oUti:tbor rec:i'eatl~nal'oppcx'tWtities I '
. Create ne\V]obS and ec:obom.ie dHekJPmt!nt · ' '
~ 'Ensilre tlllirdut chilcMlh and grandchildren 'c:8n t! '
enjoy Ohio's~lind, water, and nati.lra'l 'h.b.itab -: . '
now and for generat/9~10 ,-ome,
·•· '

i';;libtPr

the member; elected to e~eh house
coocurring herein. thai there shall be
submitted to the eleuors of die stare,
in lhe manner pmcribed byJaw at the
general election to be held on Novnnber
4, 2008. a proposal to enRrt Section 2q
of Anicle VIJJ of the Constinuion of the
Slaie of Ohio to 'read as follqws:

' ('"

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&gt;

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!lie ooilservaiion add presetygn of
ubpl and·open areas aocJ fwjnlpk
jnclw!jg~ by 'IJAkin&amp; w1lap art:M III!R .
dtsi!W!It or SUitable for dCvel'lJIDCD! ·
a~ o;vi!AI jzaljoo: to Cont.NI. preyepL

..

'
"
mjnjmjm. clean up,; or remewazc
g;rtaio
ton'wiubalion Qf pollution from lapda
in the ~au: and waJer cootamioa&amp;im .

ot

or III!IIU!iOn; !O prjlyjde fliT&gt; safe and
pnvh!('ljyc urban land use or reuse: 10
· , cnbewz !be avaHabiliry. public U!!C apd
CDjOlJICDJ :tf·lllllural areAS AQd JY:M!!ms;
a!ld to create and preserve jobs and
enbaqcr cmplgymc:nt oPllQJlunjtict.;
Thny: pu!l!QS!lS are:

0

Authority ofGoncral AssembLY uodl!r HJR S: The Ohio General Assembly may
enact laws for the issuance 0.
other obliptions of the state.for the purpose
of paying costs of projects iin lementing those purposes. The General ~bly ·
may also enact laws that ~ or restrict the granting or lending of proc:eeda
. of obligations issued rei revitjal.izltion purposes to perties to pay clean up ~ or ·
remediation of contamination for which they ll'e detennined to be mponstble.

fe!Jnd

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• Providing for and enabling the environmentally safe and productive development
and use or reuse of publicly and privately owried Ianda, including thOse withinurban areaa, by the remedi.WO or clean up or pla!ming;and ~nt for
remediation or clean up. of contamination or ~ina. by c:ICIIfiiiCC,IIIld
acquisition or 8S6CIIIbly, int'rtittw:ture, or otherwise, that or other ~Y
conditions or circumstances that may be hArmful- to the public ancleafety 8Dd the
environment and water and other natural resources, or that preclude or inhibit·
environmentally sound or economic u~ or reuie of the pr&lt;JpUty

If adopted. this ame!14ment shall take effect immediately.
A

"' 1

of bonds and obliptions for revitalization purpotes. Revital!zation J1Uf11011Cs include':

Limit the amount that could be borrowed in any ooc
liscal year for either CODiiervation or revitalizatiorl
purposes to no more than fifty million dollars
($50,000,000) plus the principal amount of those
obligations that in any priQr fiscal ~r could have
been bt!t were nor isliued.

l

of the State of Ohio, ~-fifths of

·Vote No o• fssue #l.

Notlna YES' for Issue 2 will...
·~

vm

Issue #2 authorizes 5400 MIUio• Dollan I• debt
't o be used .fur conservatio.n purposes. You and your
chiidren will h~tve to pay this money back. This
money oo~ld be retai~ed by\ taxpayers for their own
purposes or~~ for'other plans and directly helping
people In need.
·

.Clean Ohio is c~ing tenS.of.lhousaods of permanent
·Jobs and generating millioos in new revenues fQr .
· communities across·Ohio.

· HJR S Woo!d A!!lbgrjls tbe StJtp to R•jy Moo~ for Reyjlalimjm Puqpn~ Under
HJR 5 the state Clll raise 110(· more than two hundred million dollars (SlGO,OOO,OOO)

JOINT RESOLUTION
............ to ellld Sedion lq "'Article
~the Oadtaeioa "' . . Stale"'
oWo &amp;o Mttlloriu lite Issuance
"' ........... odaer oblipdoM"'
tile stale to .., tile Cllllb nlllifll
to ea•b OiiiiWiltal and , . . .
c' 1 ntion, preeenlldon, ud
rmtallzatloa JIIII'POii5.
Be it resolved by the ~.II Assembly

I

I

:.,and this is just 1v1~ example. Cl~an Ohio, ~!P. mtute !'
,difference In near y every ~ m Ohio.
. .

•

(127da Genenl Aaabl,y)
(BOUIIe Joipl KMullon Number 5)

. Puilaal!fS•e #2 Means nxpayen Will HIVe to
Pay Bac:k Tllese Boads. ;

..

,
I

'

:.f:;ed!Dane!':!:cw::!1=l==d .
cOmpleted.
.. ,
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.;
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2. Authorize tbe state to issue bonds up to two hundred
million dollm ($200,000.000)-for environmental
revitalization and re-development of publicly and
privately owned lands, including environmental
remediation, assessment Or clean up of contamination
or pollution.

'

Jl'otbrf YES for Issue 2 continues the 'good wort Clean
f~io is doing. EOt example. Cl~ Ohio has bCiped · ·
Cipcjpnat! clean ypcdaJK abaodoned. polluted inclustrial

• eon'servation and preservition of nacur8I ~open spices, and f'amtlands, and '
olhet lands devoted to apulture. includina by acquirina land or illtdrat&amp; in lllld. ·
•. Making provision&amp; for state and local 'part and reereation.fllciliti~, ~· .
underiaking other ICtivi~ Chat will permit and enhance the avallabihty, publ~e ·
use, and eqjoyment of ........ areas 8Dd open spaces in Ohio. .
.
• Conservation aild preservafion of land. forest. water, and other natural resource
.
j .
management projeCtS. . 1
1
Not more tllati fifty million '~Iars ($50,000,000) princlpaliiiiOWit of those
obligations, pluS the princ:ipal.mount of those obligations thlt in
prior fiscal
year could have been but~ ·noc issued within the limit; .lilly be lsiued in any fiat

dollars ($200,000,000) of bonds for conserVation
and preservation of natural areas, Open spaces and
fannlands and other lands devofed to agriculture.
including by acquiring land or in~ in land;
provision of state and local park and recreation
facilities, and other actions that permit and enhance the
. availability, public U8C and enjoyment of natural areas
in the state; and land, forest, water and other natural
.
'
resoun:e management projeCts.

; • i .

•

.

'
.
Puqme: House Joint Resol~on N11111bcr 5 (HJR 5) would be for the public-~ ·
of conservation and revitalization in.lhe naturaiii'CIS and agrlcu lturallands 111 Oh10• •.

amendment would:

•

, i clean wa1er. qea~~ Jobs, c~erves natural.habitat,
. 'Pfesf!I'VU /Qifli/yfarms and DOES fiJJI llA.ISE TAXES.
~
(
'
V;,ttaa YES for Issue 2·continuea the Clean.Ohio Fund
- a hlpty succesJfuJ conservati~. preserv~ioo and
: revitalimtion effOrt critical to Ohio's new job stimulus
· package. ISSUE l WILL.tmi RAISE TAX~S.

(PI"'ffiMd by Joint Raolation of the Genenl ~IJiy Clf~Jo)

10 1dopt Sedloalq of Artldf: VJU of tile COJUtltlltioa of tile Stille of Olllo

To adopt Section lq ol Article VIII of dae COD&amp;CitutloD ol
tile sa.ae·er Oblo

~

'
,I

·ana!t:IM: f! m: ro=tion

Argwiaeat In Favor of Issue 2

ISSUE#l

If approved, this propoeect •••d•eat will be effective lm•ediately.

CI l Cooscrvarjnp J)llQ)OSC&amp; WAD in&amp;
CO!IIitltyatjoo and preservation of pa!ura)

Keep this crJtlcal progr~m. Continue Clean Ohio.
• f ~ 'l'lln~y, tv,o vt~t 4111, JI'O!,E_ Y.E.Vf~t (MUE 1.
1

ll: For more infi1rttWtit;m visil www.CicanOhio.ORG '
~~~bmitted by; 6~ln,S~te.Re.w!~WiNe fWb~ ~~;
State Senators Mark Wagoner and Sue Morano,

I '

group appointettby rtlt!Ohio 'G~el-al W&amp;Sem6JY'to
~repan: the argument for ,ls~ue 2.

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areas ops:o spaces. and fannlaods and
other lands deyQICI! to aaricultUR:.

jnclt.tdina by aruujriog land or ioten:S(s
thcrejo: proyjsjoo of state and local part
and recreation fadlities, AQd Qther actiom
thai peonit and enbaocc d1c ayailability,
public ~c. and eojoymem of n;llur41

�Proposed Con$titUtionai·Amendment

•

..Prbpos~d· eon_
stitutionaf Amendment

Expla.tioa
...
PROPOSED CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENT
. TO AUTHORIZE THE Sf~TE TO ISSpE BONDS TO CON'fiNUE THE
CLEAN OHIO PROGRAM FOR ENVIRONMENTAL REV~ALJ'ZATION
,
AND CONSERVATION

Argument Again.,t Issue 2

. Ceatiaue &lt;;lean Obio
VOTE.YES fer ISSUE 2

-Vote No on Issue #1.

v.a.r, Jb Jot lSSIIe 2/o C011111111e Ct~·Oitltl prolects

luue #2 Would Autllorize the Govera•eat .to
Spead More Ia Bond Moaey.
.
The economy is in bad condition. When times are
hard, this is wben we must Jighten our belts and
spend only what is necessar'y and only what we e~m
cover with Incoming revenues. Issue #2 authorizes
the government to take out more debts to pay for
environmental revitalization and conservation. .While
th\s may be worthwhile, the State of Ohio should not
be going into 1\utber debt. ·

.

This~

1.

lUR S Would A!!lborju,tbe swe to Raly Mqn~,for Conwyatjon Plp:pasoa: Under.
HJR s the stale can ralse not more than two lwndred million dollars (~00,000,000) , ,
of
altd obligations for conservation j,wposes. Cooservatibn purposes include! .

bonds

Authorize the state to is.'IJC up to two hundred million

3.

year.

A "YES" vote means approval of the amondment.

Not more than fifty million doll~~!' (SSP,OOO,OOO) principaL amount ofihose
,
' obligations, plus the principal .mount of those obliptions thll in any pri~ fiscal
year could have been but were not issued within the limit, may be i~ m any fiat
year.
.'

"NO" vote me8l15 disapproval of the amendment.

A majoriry YES voce is required for the amendment to

...

be adopted.

SHALL 'OlE PROPOSED ~MENT BE
APPROVED?

o
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Refunding or Retirina D$bt: Elch state obllgation"issucd according to thiS f)loposed
amendment must mature not later than IJie} I st day ofiJeceviber of!Jle 25th calendar
year after its issuance, ~cept Chat obll~l'fl~ 'ss~ to refiuad or reti!l ~ ..
,
obligations shall mature not later !hap $be Jlst ~~ 9f.~ber of,' " ~Sth c:alqtdl!l;, o~
year after the year in wbicb tt\e original obligation to pay was issued or entered into. ·

Yes
No

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,K~ O'-¥'_drinking w~ ~~~&amp;;safe,

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oo,~ern,or Stricklanil, 8elllitor$1Vdift~ch' and Brown, 1 '

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ARTICLEVIIL

Section 2q. CAl I! js determined !M!!1

. coOiirincd that the cnyjronmentaJ and
reletnl conseryation. preseryatjoo l!ld
reyillljzarjon DUQlOSCS referred jo
diyjsiOps IA)(l) and 12l of this KICijop.
and pmyjsjops for !hem, are 9"11"£
pUbtic pu!])OSCS of the stale and local

co

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and iiPJm;wriare means to improye
!he QllaliiY of life and the p:oera! and

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aoycmmental eOijtics and are nccc:wuy

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~ Atrdsi! tHe state,:tftlm Obio is'J)totectihg oor drinking
Wildlife hllitilt!'crtlitiJ\g'jObs and impnMDgtfl.e I "
I ~ CIOalii" oflife roi- OhiOI!rlsi.; WJDtovr·lb\JSlNG !
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:- '";ot. l

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Sfnahe President Hatris, Ho~~Se Speaker Husted and · · '
" ellected officials and organizations across Ohio All wge a
Vf!e ~n ~~~e
v :, , ,

all

'

croJjomjc we!l·beina of tbe I!C'Illc 'of tbia
slate: w bell&lt;:r ensure the public bcahh,

ror Issue 2 hi$1received'bibld bi-partJsa.i !upport.

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Prepared by the Ohio Ballot &amp;ltd in 'the,$~ce Qf
any submission in opposition, as' required by Ohio
Revised Code Section 3505.063(8).

our

I;,·,

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.•

Clean up fl\ld 'redevelop pollute&lt;~ abandoned
induStrial sias
Protect
lakes, rivers and streams
· Conserve wildlite habitat
Preserve working family farms
Expand oUti:tbor rec:i'eatl~nal'oppcx'tWtities I '
. Create ne\V]obS and ec:obom.ie dHekJPmt!nt · ' '
~ 'Ensilre tlllirdut chilcMlh and grandchildren 'c:8n t! '
enjoy Ohio's~lind, water, and nati.lra'l 'h.b.itab -: . '
now and for generat/9~10 ,-ome,
·•· '

i';;libtPr

the member; elected to e~eh house
coocurring herein. thai there shall be
submitted to the eleuors of die stare,
in lhe manner pmcribed byJaw at the
general election to be held on Novnnber
4, 2008. a proposal to enRrt Section 2q
of Anicle VIJJ of the Constinuion of the
Slaie of Ohio to 'read as follqws:

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!lie ooilservaiion add presetygn of
ubpl and·open areas aocJ fwjnlpk
jnclw!jg~ by 'IJAkin&amp; w1lap art:M III!R .
dtsi!W!It or SUitable for dCvel'lJIDCD! ·
a~ o;vi!AI jzaljoo: to Cont.NI. preyepL

..

'
"
mjnjmjm. clean up,; or remewazc
g;rtaio
ton'wiubalion Qf pollution from lapda
in the ~au: and waJer cootamioa&amp;im .

ot

or III!IIU!iOn; !O prjlyjde fliT&gt; safe and
pnvh!('ljyc urban land use or reuse: 10
· , cnbewz !be avaHabiliry. public U!!C apd
CDjOlJICDJ :tf·lllllural areAS AQd JY:M!!ms;
a!ld to create and preserve jobs and
enbaqcr cmplgymc:nt oPllQJlunjtict.;
Thny: pu!l!QS!lS are:

0

Authority ofGoncral AssembLY uodl!r HJR S: The Ohio General Assembly may
enact laws for the issuance 0.
other obliptions of the state.for the purpose
of paying costs of projects iin lementing those purposes. The General ~bly ·
may also enact laws that ~ or restrict the granting or lending of proc:eeda
. of obligations issued rei revitjal.izltion purposes to perties to pay clean up ~ or ·
remediation of contamination for which they ll'e detennined to be mponstble.

fe!Jnd

-

,

• !

• Providing for and enabling the environmentally safe and productive development
and use or reuse of publicly and privately owried Ianda, including thOse withinurban areaa, by the remedi.WO or clean up or pla!ming;and ~nt for
remediation or clean up. of contamination or ~ina. by c:ICIIfiiiCC,IIIld
acquisition or 8S6CIIIbly, int'rtittw:ture, or otherwise, that or other ~Y
conditions or circumstances that may be hArmful- to the public ancleafety 8Dd the
environment and water and other natural resources, or that preclude or inhibit·
environmentally sound or economic u~ or reuie of the pr&lt;JpUty

If adopted. this ame!14ment shall take effect immediately.
A

"' 1

of bonds and obliptions for revitalization purpotes. Revital!zation J1Uf11011Cs include':

Limit the amount that could be borrowed in any ooc
liscal year for either CODiiervation or revitalizatiorl
purposes to no more than fifty million dollars
($50,000,000) plus the principal amount of those
obligations that in any priQr fiscal ~r could have
been bt!t were nor isliued.

l

of the State of Ohio, ~-fifths of

·Vote No o• fssue #l.

Notlna YES' for Issue 2 will...
·~

vm

Issue #2 authorizes 5400 MIUio• Dollan I• debt
't o be used .fur conservatio.n purposes. You and your
chiidren will h~tve to pay this money back. This
money oo~ld be retai~ed by\ taxpayers for their own
purposes or~~ for'other plans and directly helping
people In need.
·

.Clean Ohio is c~ing tenS.of.lhousaods of permanent
·Jobs and generating millioos in new revenues fQr .
· communities across·Ohio.

· HJR S Woo!d A!!lbgrjls tbe StJtp to R•jy Moo~ for Reyjlalimjm Puqpn~ Under
HJR 5 the state Clll raise 110(· more than two hundred million dollars (SlGO,OOO,OOO)

JOINT RESOLUTION
............ to ellld Sedion lq "'Article
~the Oadtaeioa "' . . Stale"'
oWo &amp;o Mttlloriu lite Issuance
"' ........... odaer oblipdoM"'
tile stale to .., tile Cllllb nlllifll
to ea•b OiiiiWiltal and , . . .
c' 1 ntion, preeenlldon, ud
rmtallzatloa JIIII'POii5.
Be it resolved by the ~.II Assembly

I

I

:.,and this is just 1v1~ example. Cl~an Ohio, ~!P. mtute !'
,difference In near y every ~ m Ohio.
. .

•

(127da Genenl Aaabl,y)
(BOUIIe Joipl KMullon Number 5)

. Puilaal!fS•e #2 Means nxpayen Will HIVe to
Pay Bac:k Tllese Boads. ;

..

,
I

'

:.f:;ed!Dane!':!:cw::!1=l==d .
cOmpleted.
.. ,
; ! I
.;
•. l
1
'

anr

2. Authorize tbe state to issue bonds up to two hundred
million dollm ($200,000.000)-for environmental
revitalization and re-development of publicly and
privately owned lands, including environmental
remediation, assessment Or clean up of contamination
or pollution.

'

Jl'otbrf YES for Issue 2 continues the 'good wort Clean
f~io is doing. EOt example. Cl~ Ohio has bCiped · ·
Cipcjpnat! clean ypcdaJK abaodoned. polluted inclustrial

• eon'servation and preservition of nacur8I ~open spices, and f'amtlands, and '
olhet lands devoted to apulture. includina by acquirina land or illtdrat&amp; in lllld. ·
•. Making provision&amp; for state and local 'part and reereation.fllciliti~, ~· .
underiaking other ICtivi~ Chat will permit and enhance the avallabihty, publ~e ·
use, and eqjoyment of ........ areas 8Dd open spaces in Ohio. .
.
• Conservation aild preservafion of land. forest. water, and other natural resource
.
j .
management projeCtS. . 1
1
Not more tllati fifty million '~Iars ($50,000,000) princlpaliiiiOWit of those
obligations, pluS the princ:ipal.mount of those obligations thlt in
prior fiscal
year could have been but~ ·noc issued within the limit; .lilly be lsiued in any fiat

dollars ($200,000,000) of bonds for conserVation
and preservation of natural areas, Open spaces and
fannlands and other lands devofed to agriculture.
including by acquiring land or in~ in land;
provision of state and local park and recreation
facilities, and other actions that permit and enhance the
. availability, public U8C and enjoyment of natural areas
in the state; and land, forest, water and other natural
.
'
resoun:e management projeCts.

; • i .

•

.

'
.
Puqme: House Joint Resol~on N11111bcr 5 (HJR 5) would be for the public-~ ·
of conservation and revitalization in.lhe naturaiii'CIS and agrlcu lturallands 111 Oh10• •.

amendment would:

•

, i clean wa1er. qea~~ Jobs, c~erves natural.habitat,
. 'Pfesf!I'VU /Qifli/yfarms and DOES fiJJI llA.ISE TAXES.
~
(
'
V;,ttaa YES for Issue 2·continuea the Clean.Ohio Fund
- a hlpty succesJfuJ conservati~. preserv~ioo and
: revitalimtion effOrt critical to Ohio's new job stimulus
· package. ISSUE l WILL.tmi RAISE TAX~S.

(PI"'ffiMd by Joint Raolation of the Genenl ~IJiy Clf~Jo)

10 1dopt Sedloalq of Artldf: VJU of tile COJUtltlltioa of tile Stille of Olllo

To adopt Section lq ol Article VIII of dae COD&amp;CitutloD ol
tile sa.ae·er Oblo

~

'
,I

·ana!t:IM: f! m: ro=tion

Argwiaeat In Favor of Issue 2

ISSUE#l

If approved, this propoeect •••d•eat will be effective lm•ediately.

CI l Cooscrvarjnp J)llQ)OSC&amp; WAD in&amp;
CO!IIitltyatjoo and preservation of pa!ura)

Keep this crJtlcal progr~m. Continue Clean Ohio.
• f ~ 'l'lln~y, tv,o vt~t 4111, JI'O!,E_ Y.E.Vf~t (MUE 1.
1

ll: For more infi1rttWtit;m visil www.CicanOhio.ORG '
~~~bmitted by; 6~ln,S~te.Re.w!~WiNe fWb~ ~~;
State Senators Mark Wagoner and Sue Morano,

I '

group appointettby rtlt!Ohio 'G~el-al W&amp;Sem6JY'to
~repan: the argument for ,ls~ue 2.

! ;

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11

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areas ops:o spaces. and fannlaods and
other lands deyQICI! to aaricultUR:.

jnclt.tdina by aruujriog land or ioten:S(s
thcrejo: proyjsjoo of state and local part
and recreation fadlities, AQd Qther actiom
thai peonit and enbaocc d1c ayailability,
public ~c. and eojoymem of n;llur41

�Proposed Constitutional Amendment
tJIII!IlllQ u~!llllll•~
w.Uiu.t.M:iUJ:J:JIUUIIl)'_II.OC

Ill' _UI;ui;r.illh•RmhiX-

turc~l.

IIJJK;..Nullnorc: UlllllJJiiY
IJIJJJJUn.lk/JJiiU.QIJJJJaD.lll
llllliiiiDL ul llllM .ool~iliiJl.lf.U,

tt:latiDW!JIIIllkliarutkll
J.&amp;!IJ:ll ur 4'&amp;I:UC.LJIIIJCr tli!ll; .
IJ: YJ:o.unbullUIIIIlla:l.
lll!W:tJblltUilllt.:.IIIIICILI!L

trullli!IWIIItlJI P!OJr~L&amp;;

pjua ltu: ..Drini:JNI..JI.OlWIIl u{
LIJUK.W!PUflb lbiiiJn IIOY

Ulali:L.JIIIJJ.llbltllm~.

(.21 K~vJt~li.ZllliOO DUflliJKt,

unurJl.ll;al...wu..W11hl.lllln:.

I:DIC(Jlfll!l: JII.1J.~l.liQ..AWII..

1'111/ II'XI t llllliiiUI'I/

IIIU&amp;.iUJd OI)Cn l i'JH.'CJ Ul

Ubtu; llllll JwJd.
WlllCJ, lllJU
llll~~:r ltliiUJIII t.llJWJ."-

IJ)I. Wllll¥JI(O V!II lUll

Wldun lb~:..lltl.Y.::unllwn.:.

for w,iil c:nllbliniii!Ji:
C.O~lfi!IIUI.\:IIlllJY )liJ~ UUII

1111111.u1J1YC IIi: VdUI'Qli:Jll
IIIJIIUM: ur rcur.c vi oubiJdy
111Hl 1)1 I Vllleb 1/WIM:il
llll&lt;b. JlliJ.wJ.i.nlllltuat:
WJIIWl w1J1111 JIIJ:.ill, by UN:
wr~tlltlll.llllt w ~·lcwt Ull.•ur

J)lwmrnllllllll wc.wor.:ul

fin' J~lltliiJIIU 1!1 dWJ

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lltli1 ~lll&amp;JUIIII Ill
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liUift.ll:lWJJC.IIJlll ur oU.ICI

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dekU?.HIUllll.lhc QU,blu;
brallb .llld aa/'ty lllld II&amp;
tmJtQfJIJJIUll al.lllwllkf 111lll
lAbel IJI/I.Utlllruuww•.

®JJIU,Ji.M:al YCilf 11IWWilliY
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for PYIP"C' n:Cqrcd

On lbem. apd lhc pUQ)'W:t

and YW to wbjcb lhc

Jut local

mvcmmcntaJ entitjcs or
by othcn, incltMtiaa, but
DOl limited II), pot- (or..
profit oraanlwion•. at lbc

ISSUE #3

from lllhct Jl!llirm arr U! be
or may be appljcd.
not
lubject ID Scs,1j0115 •hpd 6

an:

PROPOSED CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENT

of AnM;!c Ylll of lbc Ohio

TO AMEND THE CONSTITUTION TO PROTECT PRIVATE
PROPERTY RIGHTS IN GROUND WATER. LAKES AND OTHER
WATERCOURSES.

COQIIitu!j!!Q,
~· (f)

1bc powcm and

auJ.borjty IIAQICd Ill'

cmfirmc:d by l!ld under

Te ..... Sedloa U. of Arddt I flfdw Coaitibldon of the State of

this 5C!Cijm. agd the
dctJcrmjpaljgm apd

OM.

·cmfiQDMima in lhi•
'
·~
fiC£1JOO,M•...,.......,.

om (n dc;me•POO ot"

aovcmmcota' CillliliQL

arc Q9f. •ubim~t 1o Sccliqnli 6
and II of Mide XII ofJ.be
Qbjo CooJtitY'jon. Thpsc

Ahlilatigns. and obllpljom

of Joral aovcmrnmtaJ
enJi"c• '"ucd roc the gahllc

.PIIIJIOica n:feapd to ip ihil
¥Uioa. lftd JIPYIII$iJI for

payment of !lcbt ICO'iL'C

Mike explicit dlat a private property owner .who owllli land pn
lhe bonier of a lake or other waterto~UX has a right 10 make
RaJ rNible use of the water in such lake or watercourse located
oa or tlowina lbrouah the owner's land. althougb this right is
subonlinlle to tbe public welfare.

eoo.t;ruttoo incl•"i"l.

Wlll!n of the state.

PR:vallthe righcs confirmed under this proposed amendment
to the Ohio Constillltion from being impaired or limited by the ,,
. opendon of other sections of the Ohio' Constitution.
I
.'
If IPIJIOW~i. this amendment shall take effect December l, 2008.
4.

pn:¥!pusl~ cnl!j!Qd by J.bc:

As&amp;cmbly,

A ..YES" \'Ole means approval of the amendmenL . ..
A "NO" vote means disapproval of the unendmenL

Ul!!Ufcr. ""' J.bc: ip!CfCS!.
inJcml cqutyelcnt,; MJd

other incOme or acq&amp;d

.

ylc. cwhaoac. or gdacr
dil!ll"illiO!b shall 11•11 lime•

•

&lt;&gt;
&lt;&gt;

be rrcc fmm teletjgn withjp
the SMC

!

'

Y•

. ...

- BFFI!Cl'IVB DATE
If llllopted by a majority
of the eloctlll'l votios
on thi1 propor;al. die

N

tnt Qfthe IQ'QI\GI!d

•nlmiiiP'l"' fA the Cooetltptloo

amendment !!hall take effect

, U,)
' 'SJl ti!•SnMeW' 'atleiiN..._8)
(U7Ua c-.1 A

(A

JOINT RISOWTION

j

Pl' ; t a• _. Sertl- ltiJ eiArddt I of tle C1 llt1'41ou ol tile StMe ell Olio
.. . . . _ . ,. . . 1 1J hC
2 .,... •....,.tco ..... ftter...Sodaer..-oa
ai•IW+"S).._.'•a..t••to-1 'wtletUIIIUCytiOIIIo's

•••11&amp;...,

BC il raolved by 1be OcucraJ Asaetm!y or the Sl8le of Ohio: lbrc:e-fiRhs of the membcn

'

.

COIIC!IIIillc herein, dial there shill be submiaed to tbc electors of the
ill the - e r pn:ICribcd by law • the general elmion to be held on November 4,
1CIII. jlopoul to enct Section 19b of Article I of the Constitlllioo of the Stale of.Qbio to
t . . . . ID CICb house

1 II

,

•

n:fd •

a

fallows:

Pu!J)OSe: The purpose of Amended Substitute Senate Joint Resolution
Number 8 (SJR 8) is to protect the rights of Ohio's property owners. Ohio's
natural resotJICes, and the maintenance of the slability of Ohio's economy by
explleitly recognizing onder the constitution the property interests in ground
· water; lakes, and watercourses.

The Pnmenv Interests of Private Property Owners: SJR 8 would make
explleit the property right of a p,rivate property owner in the reasonable use
of the ground water underlying the property owner's land. SJR 8 would also
make explicit the property right of a private property owner who owns land
that borders a lake or watercourse in the reasonable use of the water in a lake
or watJercourse Joc:aled on or flowing through the owner's land.
An owner of land may voluntarily convey to a g()vemmental body the
owner's property interest held in ground water underlyi'!,g the land or
nonnavigable waters located on or flowing through the land.
Also, the state and a political ~ubdivision, to the extent authorized by state
law. may provide for the regulation of such waters.

'".·'

A majority YES voCe is required for the unendment 10 be adopted.
.
.
S11A,LL TIIBJ'ROPOSED
AMENDMENT BE APPROVED?
.

lhcm. jndwtj~~
apy prollt medc oo d!cjr
'·
IIIKM!O'S OQ

immediately. t
•

'

3. Not affect the public's use of Lake Erie and other navigable

XYIII, apd do oot hnpelr
UI.Y IRYi""'Y wJgptcd
· pmy!sloo of J.bc: Ohio
Cooali!Uiiop gr NlY law

101 Qblisacion' iuucc!
yadq tbi• ICI1'm thc;jr

the pyis.jons Cor gay~nc;nt .
gf""" acrvic;c QD &amp;born,
hx;lwiJRIJ IQy D')'IIM:Pl6 qy

2.

,

. witbgut limita&amp;jon. Sectioo
36 of Artjclc II. SWjii!S 2j.
21. 2m. 2o. ap4 13 of An!cle

local &amp;Ovemmc!!LBI entities,
Ob!lpjom of J.bc
iuucd uody thia SCif..1joo apd

Malle explicit lbat a priVIte popo1y owner has a right 10 make
JaiOIIIble use of the ground water that lies beneath the owner's
land. altflou&amp;h this right is tiUbordinate to the public welfare.

ay&amp;bgriLY. "*nn'D"km «
C!!Jfirtllllioot yoder IIWI.
ctwu;ra. mli""'CC' or
rciO)ytkm. or by g 11""rr
. olhq ptpyjajooa of lhc Ohio

Ocpcra!

''*

I.

a limil.MiPil m. ppwcn,

(Proposect by Joint Resolution oftbe General Assembly of Ohio)
To adopt Seetiow 19b or Artlele I of the Constitution of the State of Ohio

\

This poplMCI Amendment would:

of, in eddUjoo tg. rpl

din:ctign or authodptlop of

IQCMI

Explanation

£"DC"'ls of dJmc tila!c cir
JqcaJ obljp«jom. or rotm'

ym, aq4 Articln x ap4

to ig this 3Cdioo that;
am updatakcn

Proposed Constitutional Amendment

Property Rl&amp;ht js Subordinate t&lt;' Publjc Welfare: SJ '\ 8 makes clear lhal the
property rights described under the proposed amendment are subject to the
public welfilrc.

APJ!Iication of Public Trust Doctrine: This proposed amendment does not
affect the public's use of Lake Erie and other navigable waters of the state.
The public trust doctrine does not apply to ground water underlying privalely
owned land and nonnavigable waters located on ol' flowing through privately
'
owned land.
Prevents Ri&amp;h!S from bein&amp; Impaired: The rights conlinned onder this
proposed amendment cannot be impaired or limited by the operation of other
sections of the Ollio Constitution, including provisions governing home rule
powers of a county, township, or municipal corporation; Public Debt and
Public Wortts; conservation of natural resources: and the prohibition of the
use of"initiative" and "referendwn" on property taxes.

If approved, tllil propoled ametldmlillt will JJe effective
Decnllm' t,lOOIL

�Proposed Constitutional Amendment
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obl!Kfipo Ut DMY W itp:d
w cgtcmllnU!.

a.t.JiL lhl: CMM: of lbr:
iiMIQIJGC Q(

be Pikt from the: ii!IICCCJ

"'lborize4 Cor payment
·oftbc IJ!diculj!( bo!!ds
anudpaft!t, the amoum that
wwkl have bern ayffidcnt
-ro DMY the Qrincipal tblt
woold bavc boeo payable:
on lho¥ bgoda durinc thl,
period ;r boocla m•l!Khll

serially jn CIMih year oyer
the maximum period of
QMiyrity «fcrmd tg jn .

diyjajoo &lt;DK ll o( thjo

xru". Ull~

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lbu.lC lllt.llia&amp;btll J.hll&amp; J1UIIl):

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prindj)ul WK1 jnlgn:ai and
udJcr w;crc;ted armynta

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of\Cr 111 JuuaOGC caccpc

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wlllJII.lllilli..ln ~{,;(lcilluK;t:

IU!biiiJI&amp;llhy this M!!:li!ID.

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not be plc:d~cd or u$Cil for
the pqymcJ)I of dcbL »crvicc
l!ll !hose !!blip&amp;jons,
As llllcllln tbja acc:JiOJI,

ohlirrtJkm 'i""C'' 11"''1101

UlilllullJIII.UIIfur.lndvJil

tJJJ 'Jhe C.ic~J~etJII A»cl.ubli.

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U:l(llHIIJblc,

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bs;aJ golfdgatioo OOICL
proylaillfl•hall bp made
by
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ww

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thQ c•tMbUfumoJ. and

ll~~tlll8iniMIIIK'C durin•

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W~LtiJII!dlnl· .o~
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wi!hoot !he pril!r jnuance
of the ngra Tho¥ spcciil
fund!ll!!d inmiD¥)QI
jMmc 00 IHc:m lhoiJ be
}IICd IO!cly for lbc II'YQICOI

or miocipal of thptc OOICI

or pf tbc bgoda apt!cipetn!
liD In edc!itioo to prqjccu

urvlcn·e•cn by lhc 9 91£,
the !I "C mav partidpelc or
Jl11ltt, by .,.,., kwaa· kian
I!WIQICCS. or mp&amp;ribyllOQL
in the fiDIII!CiDI o( prg!c£t•.
for PYIP"C' n:Cqrcd

On lbem. apd lhc pUQ)'W:t

and YW to wbjcb lhc

Jut local

mvcmmcntaJ entitjcs or
by othcn, incltMtiaa, but
DOl limited II), pot- (or..
profit oraanlwion•. at lbc

ISSUE #3

from lllhct Jl!llirm arr U! be
or may be appljcd.
not
lubject ID Scs,1j0115 •hpd 6

an:

PROPOSED CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENT

of AnM;!c Ylll of lbc Ohio

TO AMEND THE CONSTITUTION TO PROTECT PRIVATE
PROPERTY RIGHTS IN GROUND WATER. LAKES AND OTHER
WATERCOURSES.

COQIIitu!j!!Q,
~· (f)

1bc powcm and

auJ.borjty IIAQICd Ill'

cmfirmc:d by l!ld under

Te ..... Sedloa U. of Arddt I flfdw Coaitibldon of the State of

this 5C!Cijm. agd the
dctJcrmjpaljgm apd

OM.

·cmfiQDMima in lhi•
'
·~
fiC£1JOO,M•...,.......,.

om (n dc;me•POO ot"

aovcmmcota' CillliliQL

arc Q9f. •ubim~t 1o Sccliqnli 6
and II of Mide XII ofJ.be
Qbjo CooJtitY'jon. Thpsc

Ahlilatigns. and obllpljom

of Joral aovcmrnmtaJ
enJi"c• '"ucd roc the gahllc

.PIIIJIOica n:feapd to ip ihil
¥Uioa. lftd JIPYIII$iJI for

payment of !lcbt ICO'iL'C

Mike explicit dlat a private property owner .who owllli land pn
lhe bonier of a lake or other waterto~UX has a right 10 make
RaJ rNible use of the water in such lake or watercourse located
oa or tlowina lbrouah the owner's land. althougb this right is
subonlinlle to tbe public welfare.

eoo.t;ruttoo incl•"i"l.

Wlll!n of the state.

PR:vallthe righcs confirmed under this proposed amendment
to the Ohio Constillltion from being impaired or limited by the ,,
. opendon of other sections of the Ohio' Constitution.
I
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If IPIJIOW~i. this amendment shall take effect December l, 2008.
4.

pn:¥!pusl~ cnl!j!Qd by J.bc:

As&amp;cmbly,

A ..YES" \'Ole means approval of the amendmenL . ..
A "NO" vote means disapproval of the unendmenL

Ul!!Ufcr. ""' J.bc: ip!CfCS!.
inJcml cqutyelcnt,; MJd

other incOme or acq&amp;d

.

ylc. cwhaoac. or gdacr
dil!ll"illiO!b shall 11•11 lime•

•

&lt;&gt;
&lt;&gt;

be rrcc fmm teletjgn withjp
the SMC

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- BFFI!Cl'IVB DATE
If llllopted by a majority
of the eloctlll'l votios
on thi1 propor;al. die

N

tnt Qfthe IQ'QI\GI!d

•nlmiiiP'l"' fA the Cooetltptloo

amendment !!hall take effect

, U,)
' 'SJl ti!•SnMeW' 'atleiiN..._8)
(U7Ua c-.1 A

(A

JOINT RISOWTION

j

Pl' ; t a• _. Sertl- ltiJ eiArddt I of tle C1 llt1'41ou ol tile StMe ell Olio
.. . . . _ . ,. . . 1 1J hC
2 .,... •....,.tco ..... ftter...Sodaer..-oa
ai•IW+"S).._.'•a..t••to-1 'wtletUIIIUCytiOIIIo's

•••11&amp;...,

BC il raolved by 1be OcucraJ Asaetm!y or the Sl8le of Ohio: lbrc:e-fiRhs of the membcn

'

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COIIC!IIIillc herein, dial there shill be submiaed to tbc electors of the
ill the - e r pn:ICribcd by law • the general elmion to be held on November 4,
1CIII. jlopoul to enct Section 19b of Article I of the Constitlllioo of the Stale of.Qbio to
t . . . . ID CICb house

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fallows:

Pu!J)OSe: The purpose of Amended Substitute Senate Joint Resolution
Number 8 (SJR 8) is to protect the rights of Ohio's property owners. Ohio's
natural resotJICes, and the maintenance of the slability of Ohio's economy by
explleitly recognizing onder the constitution the property interests in ground
· water; lakes, and watercourses.

The Pnmenv Interests of Private Property Owners: SJR 8 would make
explleit the property right of a p,rivate property owner in the reasonable use
of the ground water underlying the property owner's land. SJR 8 would also
make explicit the property right of a private property owner who owns land
that borders a lake or watercourse in the reasonable use of the water in a lake
or watJercourse Joc:aled on or flowing through the owner's land.
An owner of land may voluntarily convey to a g()vemmental body the
owner's property interest held in ground water underlyi'!,g the land or
nonnavigable waters located on or flowing through the land.
Also, the state and a political ~ubdivision, to the extent authorized by state
law. may provide for the regulation of such waters.

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A majority YES voCe is required for the unendment 10 be adopted.
.
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S11A,LL TIIBJ'ROPOSED
AMENDMENT BE APPROVED?
.

lhcm. jndwtj~~
apy prollt medc oo d!cjr
'·
IIIKM!O'S OQ

immediately. t
•

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3. Not affect the public's use of Lake Erie and other navigable

XYIII, apd do oot hnpelr
UI.Y IRYi""'Y wJgptcd
· pmy!sloo of J.bc: Ohio
Cooali!Uiiop gr NlY law

101 Qblisacion' iuucc!
yadq tbi• ICI1'm thc;jr

the pyis.jons Cor gay~nc;nt .
gf""" acrvic;c QD &amp;born,
hx;lwiJRIJ IQy D')'IIM:Pl6 qy

2.

,

. witbgut limita&amp;jon. Sectioo
36 of Artjclc II. SWjii!S 2j.
21. 2m. 2o. ap4 13 of An!cle

local &amp;Ovemmc!!LBI entities,
Ob!lpjom of J.bc
iuucd uody thia SCif..1joo apd

Malle explicit lbat a priVIte popo1y owner has a right 10 make
JaiOIIIble use of the ground water that lies beneath the owner's
land. altflou&amp;h this right is tiUbordinate to the public welfare.

ay&amp;bgriLY. "*nn'D"km «
C!!Jfirtllllioot yoder IIWI.
ctwu;ra. mli""'CC' or
rciO)ytkm. or by g 11""rr
. olhq ptpyjajooa of lhc Ohio

Ocpcra!

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a limil.MiPil m. ppwcn,

(Proposect by Joint Resolution oftbe General Assembly of Ohio)
To adopt Seetiow 19b or Artlele I of the Constitution of the State of Ohio

\

This poplMCI Amendment would:

of, in eddUjoo tg. rpl

din:ctign or authodptlop of

IQCMI

Explanation

£"DC"'ls of dJmc tila!c cir
JqcaJ obljp«jom. or rotm'

ym, aq4 Articln x ap4

to ig this 3Cdioo that;
am updatakcn

Proposed Constitutional Amendment

Property Rl&amp;ht js Subordinate t&lt;' Publjc Welfare: SJ '\ 8 makes clear lhal the
property rights described under the proposed amendment are subject to the
public welfilrc.

APJ!Iication of Public Trust Doctrine: This proposed amendment does not
affect the public's use of Lake Erie and other navigable waters of the state.
The public trust doctrine does not apply to ground water underlying privalely
owned land and nonnavigable waters located on ol' flowing through privately
'
owned land.
Prevents Ri&amp;h!S from bein&amp; Impaired: The rights conlinned onder this
proposed amendment cannot be impaired or limited by the operation of other
sections of the Ollio Constitution, including provisions governing home rule
powers of a county, township, or municipal corporation; Public Debt and
Public Wortts; conservation of natural resources: and the prohibition of the
use of"initiative" and "referendwn" on property taxes.

If approved, tllil propoled ametldmlillt will JJe effective
Decnllm' t,lOOIL

�ferendu.m-

Proposed Con·stltutional Amendment
Argument For State Issue 3

...

1.1·· .

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.Voting "Yes" will:
Affinn that' a property owner has a property interest in the
reasonable~ of ground water under the property owner's limd;
Atlinn that an owner of land along lakes lind watercourses has
a prOperty interest in the reasonable use of water in that lake or
watercourse lotattid on or flowing through that land:
Ensure that Ohio law continues to JJI'Oketthese water use rights for
all Ohio citizens.

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Issue 1!3 does nOt give an acclll'llll: picture ofa priV~fe p.,.,rty owner's
rights. Property owners do not ammlly own1he Wiler~ thei~. '!md.
They have a right k) a reasonable ae of1hll Willa', but the state always has
the power·t~ regulate how it, ~ used llld
it for just ~pensati~ .Issue
~3 gives private ptoperty ~wnqs tbe,falsc sense of~ty that their, land
~~betakenawayata!~diR. , , . .
. , :.

.e.

Submitted by: Ohio Slate Senators Timothy J. Grendel! and Capri Cafiut), the
~group appointed by the Ohio General Assembly to pr'epare the argument for
Issue 3.'

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VOTE .NO ON ISSUE t#J.
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~and has a rontt~ jn~erest

; ·

m !be rel!i0!!3b!e ll!!C of !be-

lhroysb wiYIWy owned

·

•

•

.._:-'zed' ....

ealC'.ot au!!!!!!!__' K.J.
1

·=-stafe 1
waw. mpy pmy·~

.

::W\:U!':N~:=(s: .~
·.·. ·~=a~~:t·

"IW'aD. land.

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1•'•!: {·1,

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., . Witbd~wn by Petitioners'
Committee
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Jn "~MtemtJek' ~'. *8:
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away.frorn borrowers. Payday
·
lOIIlS with 39t%AP1larcdefective
.~ tbat trap 'llon'&lt;!Wers, and the
has .,. C?bligation to keep
· defec1in proclueti off the market
·

. aovem...-

mea.

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1sa,..;, mean an end to 6,000 jobs.

&lt;&gt;

Ya
No

JfAppmyc

fw!•c 5 WMidj

·

. EHmlaate a valued credit c•oice for many
hardworking Ohioans who need temporary
financial help, and jeopardi~ thousands of
Ohio jobs.
Infringe on personal privacy and require
that everyone taking out short·tenn loans
be listed by ume in aaoverameat
database.

Limit consumers to folD' short-tenn loans
per year and deay consumers·access to
other affordable choices.

Hardworking families make difficult
financial choices everyday. 1'lllcing a ·
telitimate credit option from them,
especially when they have .an -emergency or
an unexpected need, will resuh in greater
financial hardship.
ohioans ~e the freedom to make .
their own fiMnc:ial decisions - it should ~
an individual's choice on which lending
option to use. not a politician's.
hyday advances are a sensible credit
option. They cost only SIS.OO per $100
~ed. By complrison. banks charge
$29.00 for oVerdrafts and $37.00 fotlate
fees on. credit cards. Other .fees can be as
high 81$57.00.

have applied.for new state licenses
.to offer 01t1er types of lOIIlS in.Ohio, ·
which sugests they plan to remain .in
Ohio• .

tenn Joan option that is simple, rehable,
and confidential - and often the cheapest
available.

Vote NO 01 lwc $. to ensure tbat 1hO!C

Reck.lCss lending liurts more than unsteady
bono~cn, Jt puJS a fu'l!ln 0!1 our charities,

who need short-tenn financial help will
have a cbllice.

unctertnines· families anJcoldntunitles.

vote NO oa lpc $. to guarantee your

: t-.1

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Vote Yes 011 liRe 5 aad &amp;Ill

Olllo't hyday ~fa&amp; Re~IWL

~

.&lt;&gt;

VOTE NO ON ISSUE 5

Vote NO oa lwc $.to pre&amp;erVF a.shon·

Ohio has one of the best payday lending
reform laws on the books!
' •

ISSUE 5 WILL REJECT SECTION 3
OF HOUSE BILL 545 ADOPTED BY
1HE OHIO GENERAL A.SSJ;:MBLY

Most of Ohio's payday lenders already

~11es ~~tor soclai iefVites fn.di

SHALL SECTION 3' lOF
II.B. $45 B&amp;~PftOV~
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A "NO" vote IDCIIIS you diJIAx'Ove of Section 3"0f .•
H.B. 545 and want to .Permit check cashing lenders to
continue robe able to offer short term loans as c:unently
permitted. . .
•
A majority~· vote is requiled for.~on 3 of ·
H.B. 545 to be approved.
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• It t1t1a ,., take a good credit choice

A "YES:' vote means you approve of Section 3 of H.B.
545; and want to limit the interest rate for ahon tabt
loani to 28._, APR IDd change s1x11 lam 'lenclia&amp; ~aws.

- t .. • ) l l ' l; l, ; ; ,

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Here's what a YES vote.does NOT do:

'

.'._.~ ;Ef$
·· . g··~
, land and oopnavipble
~~ ·
~ wucn I9CafHI on or Oowioe ~ i)
~
~
.• '

.aff'orclable a,maJIIoans:

The muimlllll'loan amount.would continue to
be $800; . '
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there would:~nue to be. no minimum ' ·· . ·
. r9ymeat period.~ and
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Chl:d cashinllenden could oominue to :
dJai'ge rues arid
l'CIIIItini in a total : '
cbarge for a loan that ~~y ex-- an
equivalent APR of28._,, ·
: .

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IE! Qn)IIJK!,priva~cly
WDICf. • OwnnJ
~• undcriyjnc

•

of

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:::;:;::::~: ~ :.
~

• · Keeps the 28._, interest rate cap.
• Forbids I~ from charging 391%
APR on a typical twO::Week loan.
• Helps breab the cycle of debt
· - Payday lenclers prosper by trapping
vulnerlble Ohioans into a cycle of
. repeat borJVwing. Their neon signs
of'fet the false hope of a quick fix
but llllleld bQrrowcrs typi~ly end
up with 12 otlll(ft loans each )'W.
• Gives borrOWcril more time to pay
back i6ans ~ helps create more

lfa JD¥xity Ohio votcn approve SCI_ctlott ~ of
H.B. 545. all &amp;bon term lenders. iDCiudlnJ checlc
cubinglendera, Would be lubject to the. followilij
limitations:
·
·
•· The inuimum loan amoont would be $500; ·
· • Borrowers ~ have at leaat 30 days to
.repay the loan; and
·
·
•
The maximum interest rate would be 28._,
II1IIUal ~ l'1ltC (APR) on alii~

lanj! shall 1101 be h!!ld jo
!rust by invcoyem!ll'n~

oL.

c wa&amp;cr. m. a Jake or

Here's what a YES vote on Issue S does:

· · '2. If a majoriey of.obk&gt; v9(CR reject Section 3 of ·
· · H.B. 545. check castringlenders would be altowed
to continue under previoiu.law as follows:

opposition, as required by Ohio Revised Code Section 350.S.063(B).
IJDI'nd wau;r lfJ*;rlyinc the
pmpeny owoof s ll!!d
ID! An OW!Mlf of riparian . .

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PrCpared by the Ohio Ballot Board in the abk"Ce of aily suJ;m isston in

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We do not know what the fiallft wiD hold. We should POt l,imit Ourse,l.ves by
I
passing.this amendmen~
·
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Substitute House BiD 545 (H.B. 545), which was
.
passed by the Ohio le&amp;islature and sianed into law ~y · .
the Governor. substantially chaDpcl tbc law replatina
how catain lenders in Oliio opel ate•.Under the
· '
htae.:.C,uui. voters must deCide whedler Section 3 o(
· 1H.B. 545 shouldao into effect. Section 3 of H..B. S4S
ldeletel tbc old provisions Or the law regulatina ~k ..
~C1$11Jna lenders. sometimes lmown u ':J-Yday ~
[in favor of~ new provisions.

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A YES vote fapl t•e •~'ul interat oa
a r-yday loaa at l8 %. Payday lenders
don't Jilte the interest rate cap. They want
to ctWge 391% APR on a typical twoweek loan. That's why the national payday
lending lobb)t spent millions on misleading
TV ads and petition cin:ulators to get ls~e
S on the ballOt.

.._,.1..,

Issue #3 makes manges to the Consaillllion so specific: that they mention
legal doctrines that are not contained in lbe Cclnstilution. What if those legal
. doctrines change by court rulings? Pms o( our Ccmti~n woul&lt;j IO!Jger
be relevant. Tluit is not aprirop iadc fm: our.~ whic:h is su~ to
. be the voice of the ~le.
. .

Argument and Esplaaation
. Apiast luue 5

Is 391% interes\ tooJJigh? YES.

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Jssue #3 is an ~ addition .to die Oldo CMilllcitlon. The Supreme
Court of Ohio alre.dy ~
(Aopaty owners have tights ro·
the grounil water underlying dleir lmdllld 10 tile 1NtCmiurse flowing on and.
through theif land. Votl' no on Issue #3.

This constitutional amendment was proposed by a bi-partisan supennajority .
of Ohio's legislators who recognized that the preservation of private property
interests is important to all Ohioans. These property rights are critical not
only to propeny owners, but also to the protections of natural resources and
the Ohio economy. Your "Yes".vote will ensure the protection of private
property rights, natural resources, and Ohio's jobs and economy.

-

Vote YES oa hsue 5 to eap the
U.terest 011 piYday Ions.

Vote No on Issue 1#3
Vote No on luue #3.

.

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Espla. .tioa and Araumeat Ia
Support of luue 5

A.-.umeat Api•t lssu 3

Voting "YES" on this issue proteds the private property rights of
Ohioans, sareguards Ohio's natunl moun:es, and malntaills the
stability oiOiaio's jobs aad economy by ncoenlziagand proteetlac ·
property interats ia &amp;nMind water, lakes and waten:ouna.

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conJinued on nut page

right to access practical credit.
By voting NQ • Wg $. you will
pmerve the jobs of thoUsand of employees
within the financial services sector. In
Ohio's difficult ~y. finther job losses
should be avoided, particularly good jobs with competitive salaries and benefits.
continued on nut pag''

�ferendu.m-

Proposed Con·stltutional Amendment
Argument For State Issue 3

...

1.1·· .

·.:re f

·..

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.Voting "Yes" will:
Affinn that' a property owner has a property interest in the
reasonable~ of ground water under the property owner's limd;
Atlinn that an owner of land along lakes lind watercourses has
a prOperty interest in the reasonable use of water in that lake or
watercourse lotattid on or flowing through that land:
Ensure that Ohio law continues to JJI'Oketthese water use rights for
all Ohio citizens.

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I •

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'

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I

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I'

.

Issue 1!3 does nOt give an acclll'llll: picture ofa priV~fe p.,.,rty owner's
rights. Property owners do not ammlly own1he Wiler~ thei~. '!md.
They have a right k) a reasonable ae of1hll Willa', but the state always has
the power·t~ regulate how it, ~ used llld
it for just ~pensati~ .Issue
~3 gives private ptoperty ~wnqs tbe,falsc sense of~ty that their, land
~~betakenawayata!~diR. , , . .
. , :.

.e.

Submitted by: Ohio Slate Senators Timothy J. Grendel! and Capri Cafiut), the
~group appointed by the Ohio General Assembly to pr'epare the argument for
Issue 3.'

.

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VOTE .NO ON ISSUE t#J.
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~and has a rontt~ jn~erest

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m !be rel!i0!!3b!e ll!!C of !be-

lhroysb wiYIWy owned

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.._:-'zed' ....

ealC'.ot au!!!!!!!__' K.J.
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·=-stafe 1
waw. mpy pmy·~

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::W\:U!':N~:=(s: .~
·.·. ·~=a~~:t·

"IW'aD. land.

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Committee
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away.frorn borrowers. Payday
·
lOIIlS with 39t%AP1larcdefective
.~ tbat trap 'llon'&lt;!Wers, and the
has .,. C?bligation to keep
· defec1in proclueti off the market
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1sa,..;, mean an end to 6,000 jobs.

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No

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fw!•c 5 WMidj

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. EHmlaate a valued credit c•oice for many
hardworking Ohioans who need temporary
financial help, and jeopardi~ thousands of
Ohio jobs.
Infringe on personal privacy and require
that everyone taking out short·tenn loans
be listed by ume in aaoverameat
database.

Limit consumers to folD' short-tenn loans
per year and deay consumers·access to
other affordable choices.

Hardworking families make difficult
financial choices everyday. 1'lllcing a ·
telitimate credit option from them,
especially when they have .an -emergency or
an unexpected need, will resuh in greater
financial hardship.
ohioans ~e the freedom to make .
their own fiMnc:ial decisions - it should ~
an individual's choice on which lending
option to use. not a politician's.
hyday advances are a sensible credit
option. They cost only SIS.OO per $100
~ed. By complrison. banks charge
$29.00 for oVerdrafts and $37.00 fotlate
fees on. credit cards. Other .fees can be as
high 81$57.00.

have applied.for new state licenses
.to offer 01t1er types of lOIIlS in.Ohio, ·
which sugests they plan to remain .in
Ohio• .

tenn Joan option that is simple, rehable,
and confidential - and often the cheapest
available.

Vote NO 01 lwc $. to ensure tbat 1hO!C

Reck.lCss lending liurts more than unsteady
bono~cn, Jt puJS a fu'l!ln 0!1 our charities,

who need short-tenn financial help will
have a cbllice.

unctertnines· families anJcoldntunitles.

vote NO oa lpc $. to guarantee your

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Vote Yes 011 liRe 5 aad &amp;Ill

Olllo't hyday ~fa&amp; Re~IWL

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VOTE NO ON ISSUE 5

Vote NO oa lwc $.to pre&amp;erVF a.shon·

Ohio has one of the best payday lending
reform laws on the books!
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ISSUE 5 WILL REJECT SECTION 3
OF HOUSE BILL 545 ADOPTED BY
1HE OHIO GENERAL A.SSJ;:MBLY

Most of Ohio's payday lenders already

~11es ~~tor soclai iefVites fn.di

SHALL SECTION 3' lOF
II.B. $45 B&amp;~PftOV~
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A "NO" vote IDCIIIS you diJIAx'Ove of Section 3"0f .•
H.B. 545 and want to .Permit check cashing lenders to
continue robe able to offer short term loans as c:unently
permitted. . .
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A majority~· vote is requiled for.~on 3 of ·
H.B. 545 to be approved.
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• It t1t1a ,., take a good credit choice

A "YES:' vote means you approve of Section 3 of H.B.
545; and want to limit the interest rate for ahon tabt
loani to 28._, APR IDd change s1x11 lam 'lenclia&amp; ~aws.

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Here's what a YES vote.does NOT do:

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·· . g··~
, land and oopnavipble
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~ wucn I9CafHI on or Oowioe ~ i)
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.aff'orclable a,maJIIoans:

The muimlllll'loan amount.would continue to
be $800; . '
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there would:~nue to be. no minimum ' ·· . ·
. r9ymeat period.~ and
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Chl:d cashinllenden could oominue to :
dJai'ge rues arid
l'CIIIItini in a total : '
cbarge for a loan that ~~y ex-- an
equivalent APR of28._,, ·
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IE! Qn)IIJK!,priva~cly
WDICf. • OwnnJ
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• · Keeps the 28._, interest rate cap.
• Forbids I~ from charging 391%
APR on a typical twO::Week loan.
• Helps breab the cycle of debt
· - Payday lenclers prosper by trapping
vulnerlble Ohioans into a cycle of
. repeat borJVwing. Their neon signs
of'fet the false hope of a quick fix
but llllleld bQrrowcrs typi~ly end
up with 12 otlll(ft loans each )'W.
• Gives borrOWcril more time to pay
back i6ans ~ helps create more

lfa JD¥xity Ohio votcn approve SCI_ctlott ~ of
H.B. 545. all &amp;bon term lenders. iDCiudlnJ checlc
cubinglendera, Would be lubject to the. followilij
limitations:
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•· The inuimum loan amoont would be $500; ·
· • Borrowers ~ have at leaat 30 days to
.repay the loan; and
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The maximum interest rate would be 28._,
II1IIUal ~ l'1ltC (APR) on alii~

lanj! shall 1101 be h!!ld jo
!rust by invcoyem!ll'n~

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c wa&amp;cr. m. a Jake or

Here's what a YES vote on Issue S does:

· · '2. If a majoriey of.obk&gt; v9(CR reject Section 3 of ·
· · H.B. 545. check castringlenders would be altowed
to continue under previoiu.law as follows:

opposition, as required by Ohio Revised Code Section 350.S.063(B).
IJDI'nd wau;r lfJ*;rlyinc the
pmpeny owoof s ll!!d
ID! An OW!Mlf of riparian . .

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PrCpared by the Ohio Ballot Board in the abk"Ce of aily suJ;m isston in

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We do not know what the fiallft wiD hold. We should POt l,imit Ourse,l.ves by
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passing.this amendmen~
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Substitute House BiD 545 (H.B. 545), which was
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passed by the Ohio le&amp;islature and sianed into law ~y · .
the Governor. substantially chaDpcl tbc law replatina
how catain lenders in Oliio opel ate•.Under the
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htae.:.C,uui. voters must deCide whedler Section 3 o(
· 1H.B. 545 shouldao into effect. Section 3 of H..B. S4S
ldeletel tbc old provisions Or the law regulatina ~k ..
~C1$11Jna lenders. sometimes lmown u ':J-Yday ~
[in favor of~ new provisions.

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A YES vote fapl t•e •~'ul interat oa
a r-yday loaa at l8 %. Payday lenders
don't Jilte the interest rate cap. They want
to ctWge 391% APR on a typical twoweek loan. That's why the national payday
lending lobb)t spent millions on misleading
TV ads and petition cin:ulators to get ls~e
S on the ballOt.

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Issue #3 makes manges to the Consaillllion so specific: that they mention
legal doctrines that are not contained in lbe Cclnstilution. What if those legal
. doctrines change by court rulings? Pms o( our Ccmti~n woul&lt;j IO!Jger
be relevant. Tluit is not aprirop iadc fm: our.~ whic:h is su~ to
. be the voice of the ~le.
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Argument and Esplaaation
. Apiast luue 5

Is 391% interes\ tooJJigh? YES.

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Jssue #3 is an ~ addition .to die Oldo CMilllcitlon. The Supreme
Court of Ohio alre.dy ~
(Aopaty owners have tights ro·
the grounil water underlying dleir lmdllld 10 tile 1NtCmiurse flowing on and.
through theif land. Votl' no on Issue #3.

This constitutional amendment was proposed by a bi-partisan supennajority .
of Ohio's legislators who recognized that the preservation of private property
interests is important to all Ohioans. These property rights are critical not
only to propeny owners, but also to the protections of natural resources and
the Ohio economy. Your "Yes".vote will ensure the protection of private
property rights, natural resources, and Ohio's jobs and economy.

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Vote YES oa hsue 5 to eap the
U.terest 011 piYday Ions.

Vote No on Issue 1#3
Vote No on luue #3.

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Espla. .tioa and Araumeat Ia
Support of luue 5

A.-.umeat Api•t lssu 3

Voting "YES" on this issue proteds the private property rights of
Ohioans, sareguards Ohio's natunl moun:es, and malntaills the
stability oiOiaio's jobs aad economy by ncoenlziagand proteetlac ·
property interats ia &amp;nMind water, lakes and waten:ouna.

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conJinued on nut page

right to access practical credit.
By voting NQ • Wg $. you will
pmerve the jobs of thoUsand of employees
within the financial services sector. In
Ohio's difficult ~y. finther job losses
should be avoided, particularly good jobs with competitive salaries and benefits.
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. P~oposed

Referendum ~

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r---------------------~Exp/nnatio11 anil Argunietlllll Support of Issue 5 co1Ui11ued

.V'Jk Nq oa laue 5. to ~rve financi8r c~; c~tialil)' and

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pnvac;y m personal borrowmg; and, the retention of up to 6 000 JOOs for Ohio
workers.
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Su~itted by~ ~ommhtee to Rejed HB·S45: S~ J. Schiller. Robert M.
Gre1ser and Bndgette C. Roman. ..
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of law to be referred
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Proposed Constitutional Amendme·nt
FuiHut of the pi"'JPM'd

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future. Days and houn; of
· operation would not be
subject to limits. '
6. Set aside the application
to the casino of all
local and state laws
and any constituti&lt;ll!&lt;l!
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pmVISI(IIIS that Would
prohibit the operation
of this privately owned
,::asino, including any
·local zoning law that
would prohibit ()r pl111.-e
restrictions on a casino
from operating on the
RJOperty in question,
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If approved, this proposed
amendment shall take effect
30 days after the election.
· A ':YES'' vote ntearui y()u
approve ()f amending the
Ohio Cunstitution to permit
one casino near W~lmlngton .
in southwest Ohio,

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.amendment to tbe Omsf#ution

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Be it resolved by the Peo~ of the Slalli of bhio thai Altic:Je XV of the
Ohio Constitution is amended by ado)iclng a new Section 6il•and adding J
Sdledule to Sect.ion 6a as follows;
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CA) Notwj!hgendjniiQY otbttiJPYisjm in d)is ComtjhyiQp. or 1QX . I
st,UUc;, riMIMif. I'CIOiytioo . muaJetjm pr ordc;[ CP'Ctcd ·qy. Ql' under
· Jhe '!''~'?li4Y of,- !he SWc~Obio.oranY ~· ofljq:r. myhgri~y. or
$U~I)f]3JOD thcmof, Q"C pnya&amp;cly=OWJICd fd§jM ml): lc&amp;I!Jx fliW!!t:
subject to rqu••m oyersi&amp;fit slescrihal jn
or any
~.or an aprmxjiDitcjly ·9 4aqc sjtc; 0CAr the; mabWCMfA!D«oftbc;
i~on of Sial!: RouJe 73 and m~ersa1e 71 in Cheater Township.
Chomp County, as moo; panjcularty "r1rri'rt' in the Sclwfuk 10 thj$

&gt;

Anernhly sba!J anthoril.!J.I tax of IIIIID lhi.Jly ~rec;Qi : ~
puss wioo rco,oojpla of !he casigo. In li;e evelllll; another '
wjpn js pcrmjttr;d jn Objn by ur ·g,. CcdcmJiaw to mn(lug pmina
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~~:(jyjties similar 10 that oondiK:!cd by Jhc Cll!ii!Q D!!d!oriwi.H;if;diyjsi!BI
&lt;~&gt;of tbj~ ~- the tax rllefop 11PM CJ3i00 receipts authorivd lty
(Q) The Gcncmf

(,30%) of the

abaJI Dgt mrftd dJc Jar Of twOyy-liyc IW!Mut QSCJ,)
.or the lowest pc;m:n1•1c llii!J Jlllvahk: b.v lillY other caaliiile."'a);;;,;
Dl!lhnrized. The wino D!!!horirql nOOn divisio!l CAl above sba!J be

one

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.millioo

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ISSUE 6 will genmlfe ........ ofDCW CCIIISiruCtioll
jobs required to develOp iad 01 t a:tlhe c:aslao, holel,
restaur'!lllts, golf course; 1M* 1 ..S odler .meollies
finds at a·first
NIOit
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ISSUE 6 .wnt annually pGei* 111 atinMtfed S200
ciqJ~ &amp;om a speciii1U ~·ODIY lhe casino
operator Will pay.'l,be vast majority of dais IIIX
will lie distributed to every Ohio wy gowm.ment
· based on the county's populalioa. Additioaally.
the casino'Operator will also .-y taxecltbllt other · '
businesses'I pay, including
~ ·a ~-taxts~
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ISSUE 6 will allow Ohio t0 coaq1 tee wjdllbe 38 olber
states tba~ currently alloW.casillo pmbJin&amp;. Not oaly
will it stop the flow of mcioey from Oltio to odlor states
(including our neighbor !wes.of IDdiiOa. Micbigan,
West Virginia, and Pennsylv.ia). it-will also be an .
economic S«ini.ulus'fot Obio asa mutt ofthC out of
state customers spending IIIOileY • thO casilio resOrt.
~~UE 61s about )obs.- c:»''IO JOBS.

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VOTED$ ON issU£6.

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.Submitted bjo: My Ohio Now ec.u.illee. Rick · · •
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Lertzman; Brad.Pressmm, l8d M"'bew Leitz111111~· ·
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A "NO" vOte mean$ Y0\1
disapprove of amending the
Ohio Constitution to permit
one cltsino near Wilmington
in southwest Ohio.
A majority "YES" vote is
required
t~e amendment
to be adopted.

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. ISSUE 6 will create up 1D S.OOO aew jobs Ia Obio with
aVerage projected sal.tes ofS34.000- Jolla 1hlt ClllllOt
be outsourced.
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SECTION 3. That sections 1315.35, 1315.36, 1315.37, 1315:38, 1315.39, 13JS.4(), 131S.-41. 1315.47, 1315.4l, and 1315.44 oflhc: ~vised Code are~ repealed.+

tall:es from the casillO,
then for funding of
gambling prevention .
and treatment programs,
and the remainder to be
distributed in the amount
of 10% to Clinton
County and 90% ttl the
remaining counties !)(~sed
on population -and to be
used at each county's
discretion.
· 3. Redu1.-e .the tax paid by
the casino authorized by
this amendment to the
lesser of the rate taxed on
To adopt Sedloa 6e to
another casino or 25%, in
Ardde XV oftbe Ohio
the event another casino
Coostltutioa
is permitted in Ohio in
This proposed amendment
the future.
to the Ohio Constitution
• 4. Require' that the casino
would;
be subject to aJ I other
l. Authorize one privately
applicable types of taxes
owned casino with a
that are currently in
required minimum initial
effect In Ohio.
investment of $600
5. Authorize the casino
million dollars on a 94to conduct any game
acre site located near the
permitted in the State
northwest corner of State
9f Nevada, or any
Route 73 and Interstate
state adjacent to Ohio,
71 in southwe~t Ohio in
including any type of
_Chester Township near
carl! or table games, slot
Wilmington. Clinton
machiriCs, and electronic
County. Ohio.
gaming devices, except
2. Req1.1ire the casin(i to
bets on ruces or sporting
·pay a tax of up to 30%
events. Only persons
on its grnss receipts for
age 21 and over would
gaming less payouts.
be permitted to place
The taxes are to be used
bets. Amounts of bets
first to pay expenses of
would nor be subject to
regulating and collecting
any limits now or in the

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1k.it e/IQCted by the ldMral A.umnbly ofthe .~tate of Ohio:

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SHALL THE PROPOSED
AMENQMENT BE
APPROVED? .
Yes
No

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Arg.i'ment and Explanation
Against Issue 6

ISSUE 6 will aUow a $600 millicm tint cia pmbling
and entertainment destinacion ~mort to be built.
in southwest Ohio at lolellllle 71 ..S S.. R.oule 73 ·
near Wilmington, Deytoll,
Columbus.
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Constitutional Amend-ment

Explaaatioa uc1 Arp)i.eat .
In Faverofta.e6

Argument arid Explanation Against lnue 5 comi11ued

Submi~ed ~: Michaei_B. Colemait, Mayor of Columbus; Philip E. Cole,
Executtve D~rector, 0~1o ASsociation of Community Action Agencies; Lisa
Uamler-Fugttt, Executtve Director, Ohio Association 6fSecond Harvest
Foodbanks; Bishop Bruce R. oUgh, Bishop, Ohio West Area United
Methodist Church; E.J. Thomas, Chairman, Uabitat for Humanity-Ohio. •

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Ohioans~

n;iccted casinos three times since 1990,

Issue 6 is the worst &amp;llfllblin&amp; p!'OJ)OS!ll Ohio voters have
.yet faced.
Plcue vote NO oallte Lakes Eatertalnmeiat
G. .biiJit Mtlld•nt -ISSUE 6.

Lakes Entertainment is' an out-of-state casino operator
trying to manipulate the Ohio Constitution to obtain a
privately owned casino monopoly in Ohio.
ISsue 6 will drain billions trom Obioans' wallets and ·
send that money to Lake's Entertainment owners1 wbo
don't live in.Obio or pay taxes in Ohio.
Democrats,' Republicans and independents are voting
NO on ISsue 6 because:

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Issue 6 )ViU drain billions from Ohio's economy
and cost jobs.
+ It creates a private monopoly ~or a single casino·
owner. ·
+ ·Issue 6 does not guarantee even a minimum ·
number of Ohio jobs or other amenities.
Devetoptn are not beld ~«Gun table..
·+ There Is no money for the State•s General
Jteveaue F•u•d. Ohio gets nothing.
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The laRguagc promising money to counties is filled
with loopholes. There is no guarantee that the
eott1tles will see any revenue and could end up
with nothing when another casino opens in Ohio.
+ RemeMber tile Lottery? It didn't save Ohio .
schools.' Casinos won't save COUDIY budgets either.
Passing Issue 6 could make levies for vital social
services to;lgher to pass.
+ Issue 6 will make Ohlo a Class In gambling state,
•aldag It~ fOr ladian 'c ataos to open,
which will tcduce ot eliminate proposed funds to
Obio 'counties.
I~ue 6 will create new gambllag addktl, ruining
thousands of lives.
Issue 6 wtu·aot stop Olllioans from traveling to
pMble.
This casino will hurt hoaest buslaesses in Clinton
County and the people of Wilmington who vOted
overwhelmingly again~t casinos in 2~. '

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Culaos cost jobt, tula lives aad destroy ramllies.
Pleue Vote NO on ISSUE 6.

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Submitted by: Vote No Casinos Committee CoChairs, U.S. Sen.-or George V. Voinovich, Franklin
Co. Commissioner Paula Brooks, Dr. Sterling Glover,
Rev. Kelly .Mcinerney. Rev. John Edgar, Rob Walgate,
Melanie Elsey.

Unless O!herwise provided by law. (he
ptUll!l!IJjon ofeijCb lVUJ!tY as reOectcd in )he
!IIQSI, recent decennial feden!l census shall be (he
basis for the per capjla allocation.
&lt;2&gt; "Gross Casino Receipts." os Used in this
division. !Jle!IDS the tolAI of all sums received
by !he casioo jn conduclill!! aamin&amp; actiyitiC3
permitted by this Section. jncludin&amp; Jmymems
for amguUis collccll:d' from pg&amp;rons !O whom the
casino bas ClUended cn:dit (Or &amp;WD8 p!!Q)OSCS
QDd any COQII!CDsa!ion received b,y !he casjno
for oonductina a l&amp;roe in which !he casino is Dot
a pgjty IQ the wal£r, Jess all cash or the value;

in IDO!JeY of all pmpeny paid or transferred
10 IJ!IIIPm by the casii!O in comh!ctinl such
pmill!! activities. god leg lhe amguo15 paid 10
fnryl perindjr wyn;pts )YOD by paCDlDJ,
&lt;Cl The wino QI!CJliiO!' shall be required to;
cI l make a minimum jnitial inycgmcpt of
S600 millioo for the clevc)qpment qf a casino
destlOM!iOO mmt to include Jhe casjpo. a hoJel

ADd o!ber reson·n:lllted amenities: and
(2) pay ap initial liRD¥ fee. uoon DPJ!CQvaf of
th!: jnj!iaJ casioo lkense. The General Assembly

qr !he Gaming Reaulatllt) Commission shall ·
establish !he inhia! caSinO license fee
based upon the esJjma!ed cost to the Slate
Of estnblishinalhe Gaming Rej1MiatQO'
Commission and for operating it until(be SJille
begins to collec!!he wino gross receipts tax.
bt!t in no event shall (he initial casino license
fee exec!."&lt;! fifteen million dol lao 1$15.()(!().()()()1.'
]l!e initial casioo license fee paid by the l'asjno
operator shall be trea(ed as an interest·frl"C
advance !XIYOJeD! on and shall be credi!ed
against the tax on Gross Casir!O Reccil!ls
described in division (81 o[ !his $CC!ion. !O he
ilj)l)ljed a(lainst the first paymcOI of :;uch IWI
ADd· the credjt excee!ls !he fiat oayment of
such tax, ap!nst subsquent paJIDCniS uQ!iltbe
cn:dil js exbausted No'fee shall be clu!Q!cd for
ll!lllvinl for or for renewin11 a cMioo Jkense.
&lt;PITh: Oeocral Assembly sbaiJ provide by law
for the estlblishmcnt of a Gamin&amp; Regul!llory '
Commission. whose meml!ers shall be

AQWlnted by the GottD!Qr with the adyK:e and .
cogsent of tbe Senate. The Gaming Regulil!OQ'
Como1jssiqn. by rules acJov!ed pursuant to
Jaw. shall O!ublisb procesJl!!es for grant ina.
and may adopt rules to insure the fairness and
jnlclriiY Qf !he

&amp;amine activjrjes Conducted atrbe ca.•irio.
$) Th: casinu gutlklrized to QJlCM legally

under this section may nM!duct those gaming
activities. jgcJudina any type of can! or Jab!e

eamesrsiQl macbinrs or elecnonic gamin~
lk:vices cwrcn!ly or bertaller penuincd a1 a ·
pmine cstabli$hment
QperntiAA urnfer (he Jaws of Neyada or of WJY
Slate aqiaceftl to Ohio. except that w~t:ers 011
C!I:Cli or Q!.her soortiog eyents sboll not he
permitll'&lt;l, No person shall be peUJ)illed to place
a wager al (he casioo who has no! uuaincd
n~llim~ 011

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. P~oposed

Referendum ~

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r---------------------~Exp/nnatio11 anil Argunietlllll Support of Issue 5 co1Ui11ued

.V'Jk Nq oa laue 5. to ~rve financi8r c~; c~tialil)' and

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pnvac;y m personal borrowmg; and, the retention of up to 6 000 JOOs for Ohio
workers.
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Su~itted by~ ~ommhtee to Rejed HB·S45: S~ J. Schiller. Robert M.
Gre1ser and Bndgette C. Roman. ..
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of law to be referred
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Proposed Constitutional Amendme·nt
FuiHut of the pi"'JPM'd

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future. Days and houn; of
· operation would not be
subject to limits. '
6. Set aside the application
to the casino of all
local and state laws
and any constituti&lt;ll!&lt;l!
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pmVISI(IIIS that Would
prohibit the operation
of this privately owned
,::asino, including any
·local zoning law that
would prohibit ()r pl111.-e
restrictions on a casino
from operating on the
RJOperty in question,
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If approved, this proposed
amendment shall take effect
30 days after the election.
· A ':YES'' vote ntearui y()u
approve ()f amending the
Ohio Cunstitution to permit
one casino near W~lmlngton .
in southwest Ohio,

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.amendment to tbe Omsf#ution

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Be it resolved by the Peo~ of the Slalli of bhio thai Altic:Je XV of the
Ohio Constitution is amended by ado)iclng a new Section 6il•and adding J
Sdledule to Sect.ion 6a as follows;
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CA) Notwj!hgendjniiQY otbttiJPYisjm in d)is ComtjhyiQp. or 1QX . I
st,UUc;, riMIMif. I'CIOiytioo . muaJetjm pr ordc;[ CP'Ctcd ·qy. Ql' under
· Jhe '!''~'?li4Y of,- !he SWc~Obio.oranY ~· ofljq:r. myhgri~y. or
$U~I)f]3JOD thcmof, Q"C pnya&amp;cly=OWJICd fd§jM ml): lc&amp;I!Jx fliW!!t:
subject to rqu••m oyersi&amp;fit slescrihal jn
or any
~.or an aprmxjiDitcjly ·9 4aqc sjtc; 0CAr the; mabWCMfA!D«oftbc;
i~on of Sial!: RouJe 73 and m~ersa1e 71 in Cheater Township.
Chomp County, as moo; panjcularty "r1rri'rt' in the Sclwfuk 10 thj$

&gt;

Anernhly sba!J anthoril.!J.I tax of IIIIID lhi.Jly ~rec;Qi : ~
puss wioo rco,oojpla of !he casigo. In li;e evelllll; another '
wjpn js pcrmjttr;d jn Objn by ur ·g,. CcdcmJiaw to mn(lug pmina
.
~~:(jyjties similar 10 that oondiK:!cd by Jhc Cll!ii!Q D!!d!oriwi.H;if;diyjsi!BI
&lt;~&gt;of tbj~ ~- the tax rllefop 11PM CJ3i00 receipts authorivd lty
(Q) The Gcncmf

(,30%) of the

abaJI Dgt mrftd dJc Jar Of twOyy-liyc IW!Mut QSCJ,)
.or the lowest pc;m:n1•1c llii!J Jlllvahk: b.v lillY other caaliiile."'a);;;,;
Dl!lhnrized. The wino D!!!horirql nOOn divisio!l CAl above sba!J be

one

c•.c:aiao

.millioo

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tbil ;;t; ;U

seclj!BL

ISSUE 6 will genmlfe ........ ofDCW CCIIISiruCtioll
jobs required to develOp iad 01 t a:tlhe c:aslao, holel,
restaur'!lllts, golf course; 1M* 1 ..S odler .meollies
finds at a·first
NIOit
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ISSUE 6 .wnt annually pGei* 111 atinMtfed S200
ciqJ~ &amp;om a speciii1U ~·ODIY lhe casino
operator Will pay.'l,be vast majority of dais IIIX
will lie distributed to every Ohio wy gowm.ment
· based on the county's populalioa. Additioaally.
the casino'Operator will also .-y taxecltbllt other · '
businesses'I pay, including
~ ·a ~-taxts~
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ISSUE 6 will allow Ohio t0 coaq1 tee wjdllbe 38 olber
states tba~ currently alloW.casillo pmbJin&amp;. Not oaly
will it stop the flow of mcioey from Oltio to odlor states
(including our neighbor !wes.of IDdiiOa. Micbigan,
West Virginia, and Pennsylv.ia). it-will also be an .
economic S«ini.ulus'fot Obio asa mutt ofthC out of
state customers spending IIIOileY • thO casilio resOrt.
~~UE 61s about )obs.- c:»''IO JOBS.

. !hjs wln«tjm

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VOTED$ ON issU£6.

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.Submitted bjo: My Ohio Now ec.u.illee. Rick · · •
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Lertzman; Brad.Pressmm, l8d M"'bew Leitz111111~· ·
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A "NO" vOte mean$ Y0\1
disapprove of amending the
Ohio Constitution to permit
one cltsino near Wilmington
in southwest Ohio.
A majority "YES" vote is
required
t~e amendment
to be adopted.

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. ISSUE 6 will create up 1D S.OOO aew jobs Ia Obio with
aVerage projected sal.tes ofS34.000- Jolla 1hlt ClllllOt
be outsourced.
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SECTION 3. That sections 1315.35, 1315.36, 1315.37, 1315:38, 1315.39, 13JS.4(), 131S.-41. 1315.47, 1315.4l, and 1315.44 oflhc: ~vised Code are~ repealed.+

tall:es from the casillO,
then for funding of
gambling prevention .
and treatment programs,
and the remainder to be
distributed in the amount
of 10% to Clinton
County and 90% ttl the
remaining counties !)(~sed
on population -and to be
used at each county's
discretion.
· 3. Redu1.-e .the tax paid by
the casino authorized by
this amendment to the
lesser of the rate taxed on
To adopt Sedloa 6e to
another casino or 25%, in
Ardde XV oftbe Ohio
the event another casino
Coostltutioa
is permitted in Ohio in
This proposed amendment
the future.
to the Ohio Constitution
• 4. Require' that the casino
would;
be subject to aJ I other
l. Authorize one privately
applicable types of taxes
owned casino with a
that are currently in
required minimum initial
effect In Ohio.
investment of $600
5. Authorize the casino
million dollars on a 94to conduct any game
acre site located near the
permitted in the State
northwest corner of State
9f Nevada, or any
Route 73 and Interstate
state adjacent to Ohio,
71 in southwe~t Ohio in
including any type of
_Chester Township near
carl! or table games, slot
Wilmington. Clinton
machiriCs, and electronic
County. Ohio.
gaming devices, except
2. Req1.1ire the casin(i to
bets on ruces or sporting
·pay a tax of up to 30%
events. Only persons
on its grnss receipts for
age 21 and over would
gaming less payouts.
be permitted to place
The taxes are to be used
bets. Amounts of bets
first to pay expenses of
would nor be subject to
regulating and collecting
any limits now or in the

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1k.it e/IQCted by the ldMral A.umnbly ofthe .~tate of Ohio:

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for

SHALL THE PROPOSED
AMENQMENT BE
APPROVED? .
Yes
No

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Arg.i'ment and Explanation
Against Issue 6

ISSUE 6 will aUow a $600 millicm tint cia pmbling
and entertainment destinacion ~mort to be built.
in southwest Ohio at lolellllle 71 ..S S.. R.oule 73 ·
near Wilmington, Deytoll,
Columbus.
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Constitutional Amend-ment

Explaaatioa uc1 Arp)i.eat .
In Faverofta.e6

Argument arid Explanation Against lnue 5 comi11ued

Submi~ed ~: Michaei_B. Colemait, Mayor of Columbus; Philip E. Cole,
Executtve D~rector, 0~1o ASsociation of Community Action Agencies; Lisa
Uamler-Fugttt, Executtve Director, Ohio Association 6fSecond Harvest
Foodbanks; Bishop Bruce R. oUgh, Bishop, Ohio West Area United
Methodist Church; E.J. Thomas, Chairman, Uabitat for Humanity-Ohio. •

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Ohioans~

n;iccted casinos three times since 1990,

Issue 6 is the worst &amp;llfllblin&amp; p!'OJ)OS!ll Ohio voters have
.yet faced.
Plcue vote NO oallte Lakes Eatertalnmeiat
G. .biiJit Mtlld•nt -ISSUE 6.

Lakes Entertainment is' an out-of-state casino operator
trying to manipulate the Ohio Constitution to obtain a
privately owned casino monopoly in Ohio.
ISsue 6 will drain billions trom Obioans' wallets and ·
send that money to Lake's Entertainment owners1 wbo
don't live in.Obio or pay taxes in Ohio.
Democrats,' Republicans and independents are voting
NO on ISsue 6 because:

+

Issue 6 )ViU drain billions from Ohio's economy
and cost jobs.
+ It creates a private monopoly ~or a single casino·
owner. ·
+ ·Issue 6 does not guarantee even a minimum ·
number of Ohio jobs or other amenities.
Devetoptn are not beld ~«Gun table..
·+ There Is no money for the State•s General
Jteveaue F•u•d. Ohio gets nothing.
·
The laRguagc promising money to counties is filled
with loopholes. There is no guarantee that the
eott1tles will see any revenue and could end up
with nothing when another casino opens in Ohio.
+ RemeMber tile Lottery? It didn't save Ohio .
schools.' Casinos won't save COUDIY budgets either.
Passing Issue 6 could make levies for vital social
services to;lgher to pass.
+ Issue 6 will make Ohlo a Class In gambling state,
•aldag It~ fOr ladian 'c ataos to open,
which will tcduce ot eliminate proposed funds to
Obio 'counties.
I~ue 6 will create new gambllag addktl, ruining
thousands of lives.
Issue 6 wtu·aot stop Olllioans from traveling to
pMble.
This casino will hurt hoaest buslaesses in Clinton
County and the people of Wilmington who vOted
overwhelmingly again~t casinos in 2~. '

+

Culaos cost jobt, tula lives aad destroy ramllies.
Pleue Vote NO on ISSUE 6.

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Submitted by: Vote No Casinos Committee CoChairs, U.S. Sen.-or George V. Voinovich, Franklin
Co. Commissioner Paula Brooks, Dr. Sterling Glover,
Rev. Kelly .Mcinerney. Rev. John Edgar, Rob Walgate,
Melanie Elsey.

Unless O!herwise provided by law. (he
ptUll!l!IJjon ofeijCb lVUJ!tY as reOectcd in )he
!IIQSI, recent decennial feden!l census shall be (he
basis for the per capjla allocation.
&lt;2&gt; "Gross Casino Receipts." os Used in this
division. !Jle!IDS the tolAI of all sums received
by !he casioo jn conduclill!! aamin&amp; actiyitiC3
permitted by this Section. jncludin&amp; Jmymems
for amguUis collccll:d' from pg&amp;rons !O whom the
casino bas ClUended cn:dit (Or &amp;WD8 p!!Q)OSCS
QDd any COQII!CDsa!ion received b,y !he casjno
for oonductina a l&amp;roe in which !he casino is Dot
a pgjty IQ the wal£r, Jess all cash or the value;

in IDO!JeY of all pmpeny paid or transferred
10 IJ!IIIPm by the casii!O in comh!ctinl such
pmill!! activities. god leg lhe amguo15 paid 10
fnryl perindjr wyn;pts )YOD by paCDlDJ,
&lt;Cl The wino QI!CJliiO!' shall be required to;
cI l make a minimum jnitial inycgmcpt of
S600 millioo for the clevc)qpment qf a casino
destlOM!iOO mmt to include Jhe casjpo. a hoJel

ADd o!ber reson·n:lllted amenities: and
(2) pay ap initial liRD¥ fee. uoon DPJ!CQvaf of
th!: jnj!iaJ casioo lkense. The General Assembly

qr !he Gaming Reaulatllt) Commission shall ·
establish !he inhia! caSinO license fee
based upon the esJjma!ed cost to the Slate
Of estnblishinalhe Gaming Rej1MiatQO'
Commission and for operating it until(be SJille
begins to collec!!he wino gross receipts tax.
bt!t in no event shall (he initial casino license
fee exec!."&lt;! fifteen million dol lao 1$15.()(!().()()()1.'
]l!e initial casioo license fee paid by the l'asjno
operator shall be trea(ed as an interest·frl"C
advance !XIYOJeD! on and shall be credi!ed
against the tax on Gross Casir!O Reccil!ls
described in division (81 o[ !his $CC!ion. !O he
ilj)l)ljed a(lainst the first paymcOI of :;uch IWI
ADd· the credjt excee!ls !he fiat oayment of
such tax, ap!nst subsquent paJIDCniS uQ!iltbe
cn:dil js exbausted No'fee shall be clu!Q!cd for
ll!lllvinl for or for renewin11 a cMioo Jkense.
&lt;PITh: Oeocral Assembly sbaiJ provide by law
for the estlblishmcnt of a Gamin&amp; Regul!llory '
Commission. whose meml!ers shall be

AQWlnted by the GottD!Qr with the adyK:e and .
cogsent of tbe Senate. The Gaming Regulil!OQ'
Como1jssiqn. by rules acJov!ed pursuant to
Jaw. shall O!ublisb procesJl!!es for grant ina.
and may adopt rules to insure the fairness and
jnlclriiY Qf !he

&amp;amine activjrjes Conducted atrbe ca.•irio.
$) Th: casinu gutlklrized to QJlCM legally

under this section may nM!duct those gaming
activities. jgcJudina any type of can! or Jab!e

eamesrsiQl macbinrs or elecnonic gamin~
lk:vices cwrcn!ly or bertaller penuincd a1 a ·
pmine cstabli$hment
QperntiAA urnfer (he Jaws of Neyada or of WJY
Slate aqiaceftl to Ohio. except that w~t:ers 011
C!I:Cli or Q!.her soortiog eyents sboll not he
permitll'&lt;l, No person shall be peUJ)illed to place
a wager al (he casioo who has no! uuaincd
n~llim~ 011

'""fl pag&lt;'

�Good Samaritan
fund-raiser draws oyer
30 participants, A7

Emergency Guide
inside today's Sentinel

Printed on 100%
Kecyded Ne-M·sprint

visR

SPORTS
Bv BRIAN

• Lady Eagles .
advance to district
·finals. See Page Bl

J. REED

marily a visit on behalf of
Phillips , who is making her
second run for the 94th
House District, but said it will
also be a rally to encourage
voters to support the
Democratic tickel in the presidenlial race and other races.
The event will begin al
Ted
Sherrod
4:30 p .m., at !he Pomeroy
Strickland
Brown
Parking Lot, just across
from
Democralic headquarPhillips , the party's candidate for the Ohio House of ters al Carpenters HaiL
Representatives .
. "The governor is commitHunter said the event is pri- ted to aiding victory for

·

BAEEDOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - Gov. Ted
Strickland will make a
second campaign-season
visit to Pomeroy Friday
afternoon.
Meigs
County
Democratic Party Chairman
Henry
Hunter ·
said
Strickland will be joined by
U.S.
Senator
Sherrod
Brown and Athens City
Councilwoman
Debbie

Democrats in this important
election year, and this second visit is strong evidence
of that ," Hunter said.
"In the past. Meigs
County has rarely seen the
state 's governor. That
(Strickland) has taken time
to visit here twice this se~­
son says a lot. to me , about
the importance of this community and this area to the
success of the Democrats.
. especially Debbie Phillips ,
on Election Day."
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EPA announces
sewer system grant
for Middleport

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BY BRIAN

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J. REED

BAEEDiiMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

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is a popular
candidate
in
Meigs
County. and while he was
a strong supporter of U.S.
Sen .· Hillary Clinton. DN.Y., during the primary~..-,.:
season , he has endorsed
U.S. Sen . Barack Obama
in the general election. He
has also strongly endorsed
Phillips as the party' s candidate for this house district, as the party works to
secure
a
Democratic
majority in the House.

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MIDDLEPORT - Middleport has
received a $140,169 low-interest loan
from the Ohio Environmental Protection
Agency to help plan long-tertn control
of combined sewer overflows.
Su.ch overflows are a major cause Of
water pollution and can have adverse
effect on human health, the EPA said.
The loan itself will come from the Ohio
Water Pollution Control Loan Fund.
The village has S\lbmitted a longtertn control plan for its combined sanitary and storm sewer system to the
EPA. It aims .to reduce ,overflow into
the river to··four or less per year. Th~
plan also calls for capturing 85 percent
Qf,,t4,1l.,.,¥cl.\\Jlle ,of tl)e qverflow dis"'charge~ ·through increased ..~ttveyance
and tr.eatment of combined flows.
Work will include review of existing
sewer and pumping system design, a
survey of manholes. an inspection of
sewers and a year-long monitoring of
flow at multiple locations , as well as
modeling of flow at the main interceptor and regulators in order to size a
relief ·sewer .and force main and
improve a pump station.
If the flow monitoring and modeling
indi.cates a need for improvements at
the wastewater treatment plant or a
need to increase flow capacity at the
plant, additional planning and funding
will be necessary.
According to the EPA, Middleport's
facilities plan is "appropria!e, complete
and approv.able." The village has contracted with URS of Columbus to prepare plans for the project. The EPA is'
now considering public comments a!)d
questions prior to approving the longterm control plan and issuing the per·
mit 'as final.
The. actual cost pf construction has
been estimated at over $1 million, and
could take up to two years to complete.
Preliminary work has already begun.
During the summer, a firtn specializing
in vi\leo inspection of sewerage system
filmed Middleport's entire system to
identify areas where work is needed.

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Proposed _· constitutional Amendment
under tbjs section shall
the a~e of twemy~onc years . . he ~r.mled and renewed
No statute m rcgulatitm
so Jon&amp; Withe ljL~&lt;msce
of the State or any uaency
I,'Omphes wi[h reasqnahle
or subdivision lhen.'Qf.
laws and rCGulations
including any n"Slridion
dcsi,ned to ensure that
such gaming actjvjJies
on or condition f()r the
are l'Onductcd fujrly and
~r40tim~ of any lk-ense
under thjs st;clion. shall
honestly and comply wj!h
all tax and Olhcr regulations
)imiL the amount l.bal PEY
be wagered no ¥3JDins
gc!!Crally applicable 10

acli\ljttcs oermiucd under
lhis

SL~ion

or lhl: days or
hours ofopcrution gfthc

casino.
(f) A .license to conduct

eamin¥ artjvitics f1l the_
casino
_ · - authorized
_____ under
___ •
this SL"CtiOn shall pre-erupt
any locJJI?.onioa resolution.
code. or ordjnance that
would otherwise preclude
a casino from operating on
the nropenv described jn the

res)aurams. h!»els. and
uthcr similar busjnt"is
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, cstabljsbmepts wilhin

lhe Slate. The Gaming
RegulatoO' CpmmjWon or
. Objo (,Qtkry Commi»ion.
a"'"' "nnlt
....
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... ~ ,•rw ti•'r•·
d 'lir
&amp;f'4Dt: deny or renew \he

!iq;nsc wilbin njnety (9(h
liays after tb¢ a~kation is
recejyed by lhe aoolicah(c
Commjs)ion. If tD:

. applicable Commjssjon dOG'

TRACf .•
Situated in Chester
Jownship. CJjntnn County.
Ohio. Vir&amp;inia MiJitarv
Suryey Number 1994. and
bcio: all of the rcmajnim:
oans of two liO.OO acre tracls
. rom'cial Record 46.
791 ); all of the remaininH
p1rt of a 30 00 acre tract

race

I'll"'
699&gt;. and all of a S.QQ2 acre

!Official Re.:ord 167.

tr.act qs gmyeyai by "rc9 to
Roger L. Plummer uocl Alma
J. Plummer as recou1cd jo

Volume

139.· PJwc 490 of
the Clinton County Official
JCQruS
R -·•· and •-·
usmg more
particularly descriMI 3$

£oUows:

Commencina f-or reference
11 arailmpd

spjtc foond"

the jntersedioo of Old Denny
Road and State Route 73·
tbeOl--c with the centerline
or St;ne Route 73 s

Schedule to this $ectjon or

not either ap;prove. deny or

that would rcqyirc an)'. Inca!
hearin~. vme, variaOI.'t,
license. or conditional

renew the license within
tliiS!&gt;-Tiod. n JemporaiJ
76"45' 17" E 2SO.Oil'lo
license shaH he granted until the WYtheastcrlf comer of

""' approval for !he
IUI;h time a$ \he Gmnjn~
establishment or a casjoo on Regu!aJON Commj§SjOn
that site.
either ""-PffYCS· renews
If lhc Gam jog
Re.-:ulatOI)' Commission
Lo bC C:ttablished under
division (Q) is 001
oneratjnnal and fUDCiioojpg
within
six. months
--- -·- - -of·
\be -effective
dare of this
----- --- "C'ioo il&amp; rqulawy apd
licensjng dutiett shall be
(G)

nerform&lt;d hy

the Ohio

Midwest Land S1111ply.lnc · 5
~

ltrontl70. Paae 2nl ami
~ denie$ the anpliC3Jjon
also bejos lhc True '!oint
~r the iniligllicensc or
of Beainnin&amp; for tfti5 tmct
liS tell(Wal . A denjal or .
herein described·
rcvoouion of a liCense
thence with the 'eas~.erly line
may be ;wpealed 10 disqkl of yid 4.464 aa;;re tract N
court ,·n ••0" •
u11:: $iUDCj rnaoncriJ'34
... w lpusipg a Ja
u nntv'lUlU
.,., h YIW
1 10
· •rsfQQ
•• 1 mnqnM
· r.
ar J9.80'l
f'f' or an anN from an
&amp;oo.oo· to a 518" iron pin
order of the Liquor Conlml · IszwM1;_
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Commiyjoo. If the Gaming thence conlinujna with lhe

LotteN Commission until
such ljmc as the Gamjog

RcwlmoO' Commissioo .
denies a license reMwa).

northerly hoe of Wd 4 ¥4
acre tJJK.1 N 76°44' 1r• w

ftewbdOQ' Commjujon
i• estJih!jshcd and ahlco to
Nfoan its dutjg OrM..,;

OJ n;vnkeJ an c;sjstirw

250.00' to a 518"' jrpq Din
foood in the lim of IJamel L
PMIIJ!XJD'' 102.933 am; IIJCI

license. the liceox Wall
renwjn in dlf&amp;lgntillbe

licenm
sum:ll!krs• )be
&lt;Official Record 610. "-=e
ur-.
.
I acense IU'i'PrS to the
.mt,
aiid able 1:0 ncrfonn Us
. denial or rcyocatjoo. or WJlil tbcmq: with the line of Sflid
PMJrcgn N (l'IS'.J J ~ W
du&amp;ics. or jn the allcmaJ.ivc all righg ofaprnl baye
been cxhausJn1 unh:s:s a
441.64' 10 a 511,. jmg pip ,
OTM::e the Objo tooca
cn"rt with juricdirtjcm oyct found in lhc ljg: of yMS NoCummission has aswmed
the dutica o( the Gamjng
the anpral dctcnnjpn that 1994 t 4297;
Rei"IHf?Q' Ovnmjgjpn
lhm; is a oompelliQs ooblic thcna; qmtjnu.jqg with the
IL5 provide' hmjoahnyr.
rea:;oo Cw the ljccpsc pot to line of yjd Npng and
~n jn effect during lhe
the gUiiWY $uryey Jjpc N
the QWOCI' or Iosee of the

the Gaming Rcgulalory
Commjssjon is eytaNisbcd

O:al!o"W"rt)' described in
tbQ Sdrdi•lc to lbjs·sccQon
may apply to the Gaming
Rcgulwwy Cmmjgjon w

Objo I nttccy Commission
" appljcable, for a license
l!l condud gamin&amp; !!Wvities
N the CiSi00 'J'bnrjzerl
under this Kdjon. A ljcenx

timcoflhe •l!ll"'N,

z:;"33'29~E

1441.82'

U&gt;a

nnsJ found at tbg corner of
William P, Thoml"i!!!!'' 50
acre tr.tel fDct.&gt;d Rnnj 216,

12Q;()Q feet. So an ima spjk jn the
mNer of pMI S'alr RpJ't D ig
lhe M!''h Jjnc of'" l..ol No.3. ' ..
Page 322):
an: 518" diameter s!n:l and
P in the pJIIt line of""+ of .
tbeoor wjtb the line of sajd
Jg· jn length wjlh a vdlow wbicq owner. thc.tq, wjlh lhc
Tho!JUW!!"s 50 8cre 100
cap stamped ''CLINCO &amp; . SOJJib lioc ofyid I Q No 3 pM . ·
and becoming the line o(
S\JTION":
!he south tine of IIDik ofil"'iN' ·
QWQC(. plggg lhc mil§ of cpjd ;
ThoilJMS A. Collett. Trustee• s 8epriDJ ;m; tu.gd upm
remajninumn ofao oriCinal NAP 83 099M!hi0 sw• Stwr ''"'t n. Wb 76• S6' 06"'
fm m 00 fen. tg the pin of .
82 85 acre tmct·CQfficial
PJnne Coordjn•n &lt;S?rJb
begimjpc.
·
Rccoo!·292, Page 127\S
Zo!lt!l asdcrivcd frorilGPS
3o'4lf58.. e 306 ss· roan
t'll!!crv•; 991 DistjiOCCS
C9'Jiajp'• S 9232 wm, qgr
iron
nin
.....
:
__
.
.
"-I
Ground
or len
~- Jl'l-::!!:..!::
YMfU jVe Pi!Ki! PJ)OO
tbeOL"e cgntiouiQI wjlh. the Di:uang;s.
. Pau;d Ne•mhrr mogucm.t
wtstedy line of cpjd Collett
TRACT II ·
S 6°li.3J"Wl395.99' to
Situe ip lbe Qprqty of
Olllco of the
a 5/S.. iron pin found at
Cljnton S•e!e of Obio..
Sca-iofS.ofOIIio
1bc Jlprtbcpitedy oomc;rpf ToWDJbioofChcstcr jn
I,J--.Sca-y
Aannao l,LC's ~.923 acre
Militao' Survey
!994.
of
certify rbtrtl
tract IO!!jcial ReOOn! 3Jil being a Plllt or IJ!I No.3. u
the
r...,;,.
•...,
r.u ...,of
flee 328!:
dcsipetn' on Pial Beron!
drteaJD!Ii-•
I
•
1)rmcc with lhc IMIJbcdy . Bgo' No, 7. PascJ 385-386,
I"UfX&gt;i"d by joDO ......in. by
line or said 5,923 acre !tad SIII'Ytym Rcm:ds of C1intoQ !he 1271h o.....u
!IJt:r ...
·N 76° 45'59"\Y SOQ 34• to • CpnMy Objp bpenyW eOO
ft!od ia the oftke of !ltlt
518" iron pin fourul:
&lt;kwribcd as foUgws:
of!itM... ttiOAilidoXVI,
thence coorjouine wjrh the Qe£innjog 11 ap jmg mike
SeWoo I of IM.C&lt;ef'l . .,. of !lot
W(Sterly line of said 5.923
jo the CC*' of Sfale Rp•tr
SlMo(Obio, .............
ocre ttact S 66 ()9' 57" W . 73 !llvyeysb!Jrund
. Wlol' z 3 _.apl · • •
oenified .. _by ... Ohio Blllot
IJli!S•ing a\?'' iron pin fOUD!I Wjtminaum Pike!. Dllllrin&amp;
lkwd:..aagaw.u ... ·w
pl689 sJ•) 719
tg a OWl the :K!UJhca:il·qwncroflegk
loiD&lt;by._...
. ~..,. •
•
nail set jn the ccnledine of ofSubjmownq. P"IM'"Wl
·GeaaaJA
'tl)
..tlbc&lt;ltio
swc Route 73;
to lands of MPi• 1)ws...,\f'
BIIJot llolrd. • ....,..;bet~..,
lhc:nct" with the centerline
&amp; Laverne Tqchhcn cyo1.
The fuoCJ.Ui&gt;i .......... ...
of said mpd N 76°
192 P,p 66&gt; bejpg in the
full lalof'!Mu-· r ...
45' 17..W70J 23" to the
spgh line of efm:yjd I pt
smttbeooredy comer of.
No. 3 br.ariO¥ Nqnb 76° st.• .,.,,.,.,. '"''" ,..,. iatioiriw
petitioe...
10 .....
Robert L. &amp; Ceymtd'._
06" We!!. 200,00 rm · from Sectioo
l(ll)ol' ... 0
. ....
BajJey'1 1 syaqel«Mjt
tbcP''t ·oorrc:rofy¥1 uf!MSlreof""'-" I ,.;e,
._ c
(Otljrizjl BrsmJ701. rtwe
·I gt No.3: tbri:!!fr fmm ,
~.
7Q]n&lt;J6l·
.
PPilloflpimjtw lmi•
1110 by . . Oltlo lllllot ..... ...
theru With the han of said the soulb Hoe of yid 1n«
............ CII'.
081
Bailey' 1 I 588 PL!C lt!Q
Ng J Jmjns nitf 5'*
. OJbrailediO- by . . I* •
a)nnr the £ollowin&amp; WI!'X'S RQ!'r 73,aM mooinr wjlbjp
oftk
N 13jJ4'25.. E (nenjqr
yid Lu No 3 pjtb legk of
u p!a&lt;litd
bylaw.
.'
.
a 518" jm pin found at
:ejd Toehbcn Nodh os•
-,,1,' .....
. -...
29.5:;·&gt; 461 27' rp I W"
Jf'f ,,, ·p 00 feel rp . . ~ ............ istkftl!l
iroo pin·fouM; lheDR
i'!K\ pjo;_ttm;c. Smdb 76•
.... olik
. . Sectioo
lol!W •
-Hill4!1
.
. N76•45'1TW"15Q(K)1tga Sj'O['f•• moofiyr rp
..:led
by0
1111
...,,
W" imo pin fnygd· lhmcc an imQ &amp;in in tbc =• Ugr
lied iiiiMaftice . . . . ...
s .aJ"tf-z·r w &lt;•w
of
1,4· No,l; ,._..,
olSireJ*
toAdidtO,
a Ml" illll pjn fpynd at
Jc:avial dJc lph p(pjd.
4302t
Jolbc=='=ot
~~- __ ,
Secliaa
!($)
l!flk
Cc(): : : :
- - - --~- · A~ungmj•1ritb
uflkS...oi'OW..•t
willi
$We Rpfr 73;
lhc . ljpe ct 'Iii' I('* No 3
~- ..... , I i ceniWIO I
Thrnrc
widl the ~~- elbc
.....
---~7 1ir•••qf
•bylk(l ............. . .
ol aejd mtd N 76°4'.1M/ ,.._.. 0W1CJ. Ncitb QS•
d'W

rw

'

ud"

sa·.

,w

••y

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.

w~

sa· 14.. rw moo rca ro

Ntfgf

IW!MJD!mnllfQ!Df88.~17

,..,.,.ae .. •:a

. . . . .

. ,

I

.....

I

aoimopiniulbcwatliw
o( l;ph 0( 1 WO A fglk't
'~»raP. &amp;eayin1 the ert line
gf , . , 1pt No, 3 end lbe
hi!Mb o( pjd Cnlktt .,.,

- ' ••
*olS I . BIU545.•JN
1 dbylow.

rfVJtlngturykr lbs

mmj•qUrcly 'w jtNp pjd
I.!!! No.3 · aryl eotiRb' within
M;b of ¥tics' OWII!I' NQm

diR&lt;tioo oCR, l)!lull"
SulUXL ~ Profnsjgrel

fs:ct

-..-

casjno a!!lborizcd by ·

~

.

Nsbnn,

unnn a fjeld syryey

S!trveJor No, 7t24 bY

76" S6' O!S"Wcs!. SOOOQ
ttrnq:
s.efb .S' ~· 34~ WCIL
tg

Ill imp qjn;

IN 'l1iSl1MONY WIIEIII!R!ItB,
lloowCGiuiiDr. Oltio !Iris 19111 ""&gt;' ol
Sepc;nbei~2001.
.
7

fi)

J'

,..,._•

_,;;_

SI!CRBTAKY 01' STATE

•

..'
'
,.

,.

·' • Hayman-Hobson
:engagement.
: See Page A2
· • Report: Kids le.ss
likely to graduate than
parents: See Page A3
, • Activists see
: 6pening lor poverty
: issue, See Page A6

,..

'.

..

.~

'

~

1&lt;.

(

... ,

'
'

I

'

•

'· What !t:l you gat when

. · you take over 1()() ,

·· ~ted pumpkins, ·
throVI-In about that
' 'many kids.and supply .
. . tt,lem with pain)?
. ~ Besides some painted
lingers and clothing,
. · ·you get a lotpf flln. Just
,
ask theSfl 'kids who
,. showed up yesterday
evening at the Pomeroy. ·
Ubrary to receive a free
•1

;

'.

WEATHER

pu(IIP~In .to paiiit and

(·'"~:~~~~:~~~be
I 'as
as possible: ·
.Not ~

';

Worry, all ~he

. ' palnt$ were "waShable"

·. llithough ·some.Pu"1Jlkin

' ' · Picfts9s may have

on.' .

, requireq more than
· "washing" after the
1
' : •• Pain~rlg ~as .ail said
.
,l
and done.

.

,j
''

'!· "•

f'
'

~

i

·. ~e,~~~~~

Detallo on Page A2

, ............ .

...

!Officjol

Jhm;e oontinuin• wi!b !l!c
may be Joc•cd on all or any mjJitary H1l)'C)' lipc apd
pan of the two l!&amp;'l:i of real !IO!!Ibedy linc of said 179.21
property more particularly
~ bJcl N 7M5' 44"
dL"5LTibed.as follows:
E 999.22• to a 10"' wood

'

INSIDE

u.

The ooe mivi!Civ1rmoo

Sc!;tioo 6a of AJticlc XV

•""

.....

rqgjcrjqnfi of rrmr(
'Ibisdcscri•ion
ha:;:.!
- - ..
-. -i1516

Rcg&gt;rd 2; PJu

-

.PageA3 .
• Homer L. Proffitt. 76
• James 'Bob' Queen, 76

sr

~ gf lrgd IDDil; ~ 'n'
mNa! to Ill ~cp~
C"CP'CDIJ., fwsti!jgm pi

a

s-.""......,.

Sea_,

SIS" jmp oin frpqrl. the
SCHEQULE TO Sf.CTJQN C!l!!!eT of J!admll aay et
a1 Trua'• 179,21 acg ~rw;t
•

CUNCO &amp;. SUJTON
S!JRVEYORS in JulY 2007,
hun pjos refermf to u SCI

..

•

•.

,,. .
-'· 1 a SECrloNS -

~

-.

I

•

1

'

t

,

16 PAGES

l\imie's Mailbox
Buckeye edition

A2

Meigs County and 'The New Yorker'

AS

· from Athens, into Meigs County
and a town called Pomeroy. which
IISERGENTOMYDAILYSENTINELCOM
once had been a loading dock for
Classifieds
·POMEROY ,.;_Meigs County is coal barges and now lay prostrate
Comics •
currently mentioned on the website · .and blighted along the Ohio River."
· Editorials
of "The New Yorker" magazine in
P(\cker then quotes Price as sayan article titled "The Hardest Vote" ing: "Meigs County is one of the
Faith • Values
and subtitled "The disaffection of worst. We're going to a racist
Ohio's working class."
area." Price then goes on to
Movies
ln
·the
article
writer
George
describe previous visits to the
B8
NASCAR
('acker describes meeting Latisha county, according to Packer; how
Price who runs· the Service she'd allegedly been cursed at durA3
Obituaries
Employees lntemational Union's ing canvassing for Obama . and
.,B Section Obama
Sports
campaign office in Athens · quotes a derogatory tertn some
,..
A2 and is a member of SEIU Ilx:al residents allegedly used to
Weather
1199. Price is described in thearti- describe Obama as a reason why
· cle as working at a nursing home they would not vote for the senator
as a cook and nursing a8sislant.
from lllinois.
'·
·
In excerpts displayed on ' 'The
Packer 'described walking door
New Yorker's" websile, Packer !o door with Price, writing: "Some
writes: "I drove down Route 33 of the residences were boarded

~\endars

BY BETH SERGENT

.

'

!I

shut , some were trailers with
·appliances lying out front One_or
two were large, lavishly decaymg
houses with overgrown gardens. A
front porch was sealed off by .fall en branches ."
Packer and Price found at least
two people mentioned in the article
who said they were voting for
Obama. Meigs County was just a
small part of the article· which also
says even if Obama wins, "he will
stili have to overcome the deep skepticism of struggling Americans."
As for that day of canvassing in
Pomeroy, Pack~r quotes Price as
saying: "Tl)is job is a challenge
and I ijke ttlat, but it's also sad and
all ih
depressmg. ou see
ese poor
.
see Melp. AJ

::!

.

~

Three arrested for
·possession of heroin
' BY DIANE POTIORFF
DPOTIOAFFOMYOAILYAEGISTEA .COM

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. - Law
enforcement officers with three agencies made another round of arrests and ·
removed more than $15,000 of drugs
from the streets Thursday.
After receiving a tip about more heroin in the city, officers with the Point
Pleasant Police Department. Mason
County Sheriff's Department and West
, Virginia State Police arrested Jarron
Tabor, 30, and Twyshawn Justice, 23,
both of Dayton , Ohio, and Moneka
Minnis, 24, of Point Pleasant. on at least
three counts of possession of a controlled substance with intent to deliver.
The arrests came after a search warrant was executed at Mi.rinis ' residence,
where officers found approximately
17.7 grams of heroin, 47 .4 grams of
crack cocaine . 7.1 grams of marijuana
and $1,068 in cash and three handguns,
Point Pleasant Police Chief Ernie
Watterson announced in a news release.
The crack cocaine has an estimated
value of $9,500, with $5.300 estimated
for the heroin.
The arrests were made at 3 a.m .
All three were taken to the Western
Regional 'Jail in Barboursville for holding

Plean-~AJ

...

•

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