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v...30,No.224

C.,trillnd1982

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enttne
2 Sectlona, 12 ""'" 15 C...tt
A Multimedia Inc. New:pap:

Pome"roy-Middleport, Ohio, March 2, 1982

Yillage clerk resigns

Pomeroy joins
concerted effort·
By BOB HOEIIUCH
SenUnel Staff Writer

to fill the unexpired term.
Mrs. Waltonflrstbecameclerkot
the vUlage 12 years ago and later
Pomeroy's village council Mon- became clerk -treasurer when the
day voted to join other
In a
two positions were combined.
five county area for group negotla'
Mrs. Walton left the meeting betlon or rates tor natural gas
fore her 1etter of resignation was
charged by Columbia Gas of Ohio.
read so council woman, Mrs. Betty
The consolidated effort was recom- Baronlck served as clerk for the remended by the Ohio Consumer
mainder of the session.
Councll and has been Under consld·
Council approved the report of
eratlon tor several weeks.
Mayor Clarence Andrews showing
Prior to this time, each commun- receipts of $4,440.50 for the month of
Ity negotiated Individually with the February along with the monthly
company for the rate residents report or Pollee Chief George Stitt.
would pay for natural gas provided
Darryl Danner, Pomeroy, who
lly the company.
bas completed his training was emIn a surprise action, Mrs. Jane ployed an an extra pollee officer.
Walton, Pomeroy Village ClerkMrs. Michael Neutzllng attendTreasurer, resigned from her post · Ing the session, presented a letter
when Pomeroy Council met In reg- with more than 60 nanies or resiular session.
dents who would like to see the
Midway In the meeting, the letter mllil-park on Mechanic St. cleaned
ot resignation submitted by Mrs. up and completed. She Indicated
Walton was Introduced. The letter · some residents have volunteered to
gave no reason tor giving up the help clean up the raclllty.
post. Her resignation Is effective
Hearing the encouraging report
AprU 1. Mr5. Walton has two years from Mrs. Neutzllng, councU voted
remaining on her term and village to ask Solicitor Fred Crow to draw
officials who accepted her resigna- up the necessaey papers for foundtion at last night's meeting will ap-' Ing a park commission for the town
point a resident of tile community as recommended earlier by coun·

towns

INSPECT- Sen. Tom VaaMeter, Mayor Clareuce enJBIOD that Is laking place on East Mala St In
Andrews and James Freeker, Pomeroy Chamber of · Pomeroy acrou from lbe Jiroger Store parking lot
Commerce president, I to r, IDBpect lbe dangerous

Cand.idate

mee~s

Sen. Tom VanMeter, Ashland, a
Republican candidate for Governor
of the Stale of Ohio, was in Pomeroy
Monday to confer with officials on
erosion of the village by the Ohio
River.
Sen. VanMeter, James Frecker,
president of the Pomeroy Chamber
of Commerce, and Pomeroy Mayor
Clarence Andrews visited a site of
the erosion on East Main St., where
the riyer had badly eroded the bank.
At tljat point there is only approximately six feet of bank between the water and E. Main St.

village officials ·

Some of the railroad tracks at the
location are practically suspende~
in air.

situation, it must be convinced that
it qualifies for funding under section
14 of the Flood Control Act of 1946,
which says that the corps has the
authority to stabilize a bank that, if
eroded, threatens public facilities.
Sen. VanMeter reported.
•

Sen. VanMeter reports he has contacted Ken Crisp, an operations
director for the U. S. Corps of
Engineers in Huntington. about the
problem and expects to find out thiS . "This is a situation that warrants
week the exact date that soil
immediate attention. I will do
engineers from the Huntington ofeverything I can in conj~.ction with
fice will come to inspect the Mayor Andrews to see that the
damaged site.
problem is addressed now instead of
In order to get the Corps of
waiting until after the damage is
Engineers to do anything about the
done," Sen. VanMeter commented.

...

cilman Dr. Harold Brown.
A report was given on the sewer
project and It was announced that
phase n Is scheduled to begin on
March 8. This phase will connect
New St., and NyeAve., Into the sewage disposal system.
Council agreed to ask solicitor
Crow to study contracts on the
phases or the project to determine
that engineering services are noi
overlapping and ·that contractors
are remaining within the limitations prescribed.
A request for the repair· of a
street department truck, estimated
at $1,00!, was turned down d~e to
the lack or funds to pay the repair
bill, Limestone was approvec) f01:
·•the Pleasant Ridge Road and It was
agreed to purehase concrete for the
repair of a sewer foundation collapse In the W. Main St. section
near Monkey Run. Stone wU1 also
be ·hauled In to help correct the
problem.
Attending the meeting were
Mayor Andrews, Clerk-Treasurer
Walton and councU members, Baronlck, WUllam YouJ\g, John Anderson, Dr. Brown, Larry Wehrung
and Bruce Reed.

Manhole cover
damages vehfcle

First widow checks put in mail
CHARLESTON, W.Va.- United Mine Workers President Sam
Church came here Monday to announce the malllng of the first
pension checks for widows of coal miners who died In the 1950s.
Church said 40,401 pension checks were maUed out to widows last
.Friday, and that another thousand or so would be malled In midMarch.
The checks, which were called for In the last contract the union
signed with the Bituminous Coal Operators Association, arefor$95a
· month.
•

Truckers accept wage concessions
WASHINGTON - Teamster union truckers and warehouse
workers voted to accept major wage concessions In ratifying a
freight contract that union president Roy Lee WU!Iams balled Monday as "a strong and promising settlement."
In contract ratification balloting that was completed over the
weekend, a tentative 37-month pact with the trucking Industry featuring a freeze on across-the-board pay raises- was ratlled by a
margin of 82,571 to 51,620.
The contract, which takes effect Immediately, will last untU
March 31, 1985.
Some 300,&lt;XXl Teamster drivers and freight handlers covered by
the new National Master Freight Agreement will see economic
gains Umlted to a once-a-year cost-of-living adjustment:

122 guerrill~ deaths reported
SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador - El Soalvador's defense minister
says government troops have trapped hundreds of leftist guerrillas
along the·slopes or a volcano during the past week am! have killed 122
ot them. •
The military strongman of the U.S.-backed junta government
claimed only nine soldiers have been killed and 23 wounded In the
continuing fighting on 4, 700-foot Mount Guazapa, 60 mUes north ot
San Salvador.
•
The offensive Is the army's ninth attempt to root out the guerrillas
from the tunnels and caves that make the slopes of the volcano a
natural fortress.

Winning Ohio lottery number

Heavy damage was Incurred to~
car driven by Sandra Kay Kovalchik, Mulberry Heights, Pomeroy,
In an accident on West Main Street, · .
Pomeroy, at 5:30p.m. Monday.
·
Pomeroy pollee reported that
Mrs. Kovalchik was traveling east
on East Main Street when a tractor·
traller r1g traveling west hit a manhole cover which nipped up and
struck the side of the Kovalchik
vehicle then went beneath the car
causing damage to the underside.

Extinguish brush fires
Three brush fires were reported
with the Rutland firemen going to
the Harrisonville area at 1: 15 p.m.,
and the Orange firemen going first
to the an area on Route 681 toward
Alfred, and then to Joppa Road towards ReedsvUle. Syracuse firemen answered a call at 12:42 on
Third Street to extlngulsh a gas
tank fire.

Jeffers files
for commission
John A. Jeffers, Minersville Route
1, (Eagle Ridge Road) Monday filed
with the Meigs County Board of
Elections his petition of candidacy
for the Republican nomination as a
county commissi'oner candidate in
the June elections. A 1953 graduate
of Pomeroy High School, Jeffers is a
son of the late Mr. and Mrs. John L.
Jeffers and is a lifelong resident of
Meigs County,
Employed in construction work,
he se.rved two years on the Salisbury
School Boatd before consolidation of
the Meigs District. He is married to
the former Roberta Hysell, daughter
of Mrs. Mary Hysell and the late Joe
Hysell, and they have a daughter,
Debbie K. Jeffers Duvall, Tuppers
Plains, and a granddaughter,
Patricia. Jeffers is a member of the
lzaak Walton League.

CLEVELAND- The winning number drawn Monday night In the
Ohio. Lottery's dally game "The Number" was 337.
The lottery reported earnings of $816,351.50 from the wagering on
Its dally game. The earnings came on sales of $1,227,984, while
holden ot winnlng tickets are entitled to share $411,632.50, lottery
otflclals !!ald.

Weather forecast
Rain c~ to snow tonight. Lows In the low~- Rain or rain

rnl*ed with snow likely Wednesday. Hlghs~ar40. Chance of precip-

Itation 90 percent tonight and '10 percent Wednesday. Winds northerly to northeasteriy 10-20 mph tonight.
Exh k1 Oblo FOI'eCIIIt
'lbunday tllroylh Saaurdq:
Cllaace crl rain o r - '111anday. a..noe cri.Dow --*II aad rain
or- 11011&amp;11 FrldaJ• .....,.._.,.......~Wardaf. IIIPIIDthe mid• to ll1ld4l. Overlll&amp;ll&amp; lowlllllllllly .. tile . . eariJ 'l1mlda7 and
8aaurdaJ and In &amp;he mid-. . to mid . . _., FrldaJ.
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'

. ...-{
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JOHN A. JEF'Ji ERS

•

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CONFEI( - Sen. Tom VaaMeter, Ashland, Ohio, left, aDd Middleport Mayor Fred Hoff~Dan were
president pro-tem.pore of the Ohio Senate a ad In conference Monday afternoon regarding community
Republican candidate for Governor of the Slate o1 · development programs .

Wastewater facilities update
set for Tuppers Plains area
A public meeting to announce an
update on the wastewater facUlties
plan for the Tuppers Plains area
has been set for 7 p.m. Monday,
March 8, at the Tuppers Plains Elementary School.
Meigs County, with the assistance of John David Jones and Associates, Inc., Is currently developing
a wasiewater facilities plan for the
unincorporated VUlage of Tuppers
Plains and adjacent areas of Meigs
County.
Purpose or the plan Is to Investigate wastewater dispoSal problems, to develop alternative
methods for resolving these problems and to select a final plan or
action based on economic and environmental considerations.
Seventy-five percent of the costs

of the facllltles plan Is being provided by a gr11nt from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.
On-lot septic tanks and aeration ·
units are the sole methods of sewage disposal within the Tuppers
Plains Facilities Planning Area.
Due to soU conditions, topography, and various man-made
factors, residents of the Tuppers
Plans area are subjected to Improperly treated septic tank efflllent In
backyards and In roadside and
drainage ditches. This produces an
odor problem and exposes residents In certain portions qf the area
to a potential public health hazard.
It Is known that an undetermined
number of home systems are discharging directly Into sewer systems and streams.
Identification of these problems .

was accompUslied by direct Input
from local officials and area res!·
dents, field, walk-over and windshield surveys, consultation with
the Meigs County Health Department, a home sewage disposal sur·
vey and a quality water sampling
program.
Specific alternative solutions to .
these problems are being developed and analyzed. The completed
facilities plan will recommend the
most cost-effective alternative solution to the prOblem.
Copies of the Information on the
racilltles plan can be viewed at the
office or the Meigs County Coll'irnlssioners at the courthouse. Information about the plan wUl also be
made avaUable 11t the March 8 public meeting.

Evidence indicates Qualls had gun
Evidence examined ~ Bureau of Cr1mlnal Investigation's
crime lab has determined Jane R.
Qualls wasn't holding a gun when
she died of a gunshot wound 1n a
shooting Incident In Gallipolis last
December.
•
However, the analysis of hand
swabs taken from Mrs. Qualls and
her ex-husband, Terry, Indicate
Terry Qualls had gunshot residue
on his right hand.
The determination was made
from an atomic absorption analysis
which was submitted to the BCI lab
In RJchfleld shortly after the deaths
ot Jane and Terry Qualls. Thelnformatlon was received by Ganlpolls
City Pollee Investigators handling
· the Incident last week, but. wasn't ,
publicly released untU the Victims'
famllles ·had been notified.
Thedeathsaroseoutofashootlng
inCident In front of the Galllpolls
city bulldlng shortly after 9 p.m.
Dec.l3,1n which officers found the

bodies or Jane and Terry QUalls on
the grounc:! near the bulldlna's entrance. Both had been shot.
Jane Qualls, 25, of 412~ Lincoln
St., Gallipolis, died shortly' afterward In Holzer Medical Center.
Terry Qualls, 24, ot 101 New St.,
Pomeroy, was first taken to HMC
and later transferred to St. Mary's
Hospl.tal, Huntington , W.Va .,
where he died at 6 p.m. Dec. 14.
Pollee called In Herman Henry, a
BCI Investigator, to help with the
Investigation of the shooting. The
atomic abosrption test was then ad··
ministered, which Is described In a
trade journal as "arellableandsensltlve method for the detectlon ot
. firearm discharge residue on the
skin or clothing or a 8\iSpect."
The results, submitted by Jeffrey
J. Lynn, an official with SCI's London headquarters, showed · that
atomic abSorption of bariurri and
antimony taken from Jane Qualls'
hand swabs ''werebelow thole considered conslatent with guDBhot
I

residue."
For Terry Qualls, the levels were
found to be "consistent with gunshot residue on the right Palm."
Investigators also noted that an
autopsy done on Terry Qualls bY
Dr. V.H. Kshirsagar for the West
Virginia medical examlller's office
on Dec. 15 showed he had died or a
gunshot wound to the head.
According to pollee reports ot the
Incident, dlspa teller Dorothy Hall
heard shots outside the city buUdlng shortly after Jane Qualls had
asked her about a municipal court
date concerning a non-support
charge against her ex-husband.
Jane, a fashion ~eslgn department'
manager at the Gallipolis K·Mart,
and Terry, a former Kaiser Aluminum Corp. employee, had been dl·
vorced since last October.
When officers arrived, a
caliber automatic handgun was
found near the bodies. Pollee lnltlally treated tile Investigation as a
murder-suicide.

,:zr;

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�March 2, 1982

Commentary
111 Court Strtd
PIHDeroy, Ohkl
114-ftt.!IM

Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
March 2, 1982

DEVIYrED TO n!E ll'n'EII!'ST Of ntE MEIGS-MASON AREA

A~

~m~ ,-~~-..,.......e=·~
~v

ROBERT L. WINGETT

..

Publl11htr

BOB HOEFLICH

PAT WHITEHEAD
~ll lll biUI

Geucral Mau1er

PubiiJber/CoatroUer

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
New• Edllor

.

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•

.-.
,.
.

A MEMBER of 11M! Au~ htW!d Preu, lllllllllll Dally Prt"MII Au otlaUua and tb~
Amteri('8D N"-Mplll)l!f Publl!lhten A11...dati~D.

I.E1TERSOF OPINION 11rt' wn:lC':omed. They abuul~ br ln11lhaD 3011 wunb lo... AU
lelkn •r.: 1ubjed to alltlaa aud mu1t bt •l~~:oed with ume, alldrt111 ..c1 klt:phtloe
uumber. No uul"oed letkn will be pubU.ht:d. Ldkn 11bould be Ia good tal\e, addra:al.ag
'' '""• aut pen~oulltl~.
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-.

Reagan or Rivlin?
··· Wbtch estimate of the 1983 budget deficit Is correct? The Reagan adminIstration's $91.5 billion, or tile Congressional Budget Office's figure of $121
. billlon? Who Is right: Reagan or Rlvlln?
To suggest that neither Is right might be correct, but verificatiOn awaits
the passage of time. Meanwhile, the disparity can be accounted for by an
old a perlstent theme: Differences In expectations.
Those differences, many so subjective they cannot be measured, d~mos­
trated or proven by any scientific technique, pervade today's economic
analyses, and In tact the direction of the economy Itself.
In ·the budget dispute, the president assumes that the econcimy will
Improve more sharply and provide more revenues than does Allee Rlvlin,
director of the budget office. On the spending side, he feels he can operate
more efficiently than Mrs. Rlvlln and staff assumes he can.
To say that the administration's view of things Includes a good deal of
hope might be close to the truth. It assumes, for example, that leases of
federal lands will be at maxlmum _rates, recession or not.
·
The budget office, however, Is no less guilty, assuming as It does that the
country will enjoy bumper crops, thus adding to the cost of price supports,
an assumption that no Iarmer would take tor granted.
Equally subjective expectations and assumptions are IOI!nd throughout
the economic world, even among those econometric model builders who
reduce economic activity to plies' of numbers and then seek to make the
numbers Interact In what they think Is a manne~ similar to the economy.
The result of lhelr activity Is, of course, more numbers, some drawn out
to hundredths of a unit of whatever It Is they are measuring or projecting,
giving the Impression of great accuracy and objectivity.
Some of this activity Is nonsense, Some of the numbers that go Into the
recipe are guesses. Many are rounded estimates. And some or the hardest
looking numbers used are, tor practical purposes, Inaccurate,
National _Income as provided by the Commerce Department, tor example, measures only domestic activity, though the U.S. economy operates
extensively overseas. Corporate profits as reported to the Internal Revenue Service differ from profits as reported to shareholders because of
accounting procedures. Still, they are sometimes Interchanged.
Inevitably, and especially when a forecaster has a choice between using
one or the oth!!r of two dlflerlng measures of the same economic activity,
his own subjectlve expectations are likely to Intrude.
Consider what expectations are currently doing to the economy.
Although they have now become more realistic, administration officials
had hoped that the private sector wou!d more quickly pick up economic
stack left by the alleged reduction In federal activity. Since expeclatlons
were overly optimistic, projections became skewed.
The private sector In recent months has held to Its own expectations,
which obviously have been different from those of the Reagan people. And
tor once these expectations can be measured with some objectivity.

TAMPA, Fla. (AP) - Pitcher
Jim Kern, who collected 83 saves In
his eight-year American League
career with the Cleveland Indians
and Texas Rangers, says he's regained his old form as he prepares
to start his National League career
with the Cincinnati Reds,
Despite two unproductive years,
which ended with Kern being
'traded twice since last ~a&amp;on, the
Reds think they got .a bargain In ·
Kern. And Kern says be's throwlllg
like he did In 1979, when he was the
best reliever In the American
League.
"I'm getting some pop back In
my throwing. It's the first time my
neck h~n·t bothered me In two years," Kern said. He pitched lOmlnutes of batting practice Sunday,
and was tar ahead or the Reds
batters.
After the 1!179 season With Texas,
In which he had 29 saves and a 1.57
earned run average, Kern's career
nose dived. He described a liDln·
jury as "three frozen vertebrae In
my upper neck."
"It kept me from even turning
my head to theleftslde," he said. "I
was totally Ineffective. I did try, but
I shouldn't have."
I
Last season, he pitched just 30
Innings, and spent three weeks with
Class AAA Wichita on a tehabllltatlve program. Then he was traded

Down 'the cutso._·_______-,----J_a_m_es_J._K_il_pa_t_ric_k
WASHINGTON - President
Reagan doubtless knew a mon,th
ago, when he sent his '83 budget to
Capitol Hill, that the budget would
run "into trouble. The dimensions of
that trouble didn't become fally
.evident until last week, when P.~te
Oomenici made a speech in New
York.
The senior senator from New
Mexico is chairman of the Senate
Budget Conunittee. As such, when
he addresses himself to the budget,
· it is like advice from E. F. Hutton :
When oomenici speaks, everybody
listens.
" Our situation is more than
serious/' said Domenici. "It is
frightening." The president ha.s
projected deficits of $91.5 billion in
1983, another $82.9 billion In 1~. yet
another $71.9 billion in 1985, all this
oil top of a deficit that almost cerlainly will top $100, sillion in the.
current fiscal year. Such deficits
cannot be swallowed "as though
they were aspirin lablets." Drastic
remedies must be adopted.
Domenici's blast is the heaviest
shot in a continuing barrage. The
salvos come from such venerable
Democrats as Sen. Fritz Hollings of
South Carolina, and from such freshman Republicans as Congressman
J)enny Smith of Oregon. 'The
president's own majority leader in
the Senate, Howard Baker of Ten. nessee, has voiced strong reser·
vatiOns. Last sununer a bipartisan
coalition in the House gave· Mr.
Reagan his stunning victories on
budget and tax bills. That coalition
has dissolved.
Legislatively speaking, the
prospective deficits can be reduced
in only two ways - by cutting
outlays, or by increasing revenues.
Domenid wants to do both. For starters, l1e would cut the president's
defense budget by $25 billion over
t~ · next three years. He would
fre~ze federal pay levels at present

Berry's World

rates through 1983 and grant only a
five percent ·increase in 1984. He
would hold other domestic outlays at
1982levels. he would impose new lids
on Medica're and Medicaid. On the
revenue side, he would urge tax increases of $18 billion, $49 billion and
$55 billion over .the next three years.
The net effect would be to reduce
the deficits by lin estiinated $80
billion through 1985. Excellent! But
the gross federal debt 1111 Sept. 30,
198:i, would still haver in Ute neighbOrhQQd of $1.5 trillion.
;to pUI'8ue the metaphor of the
aspirin tablets, it sl}ould be un·
derstood that these coogi'essional
doctors are prescribing bitter pills.
They are looking lulrd at selective
tax increases that would hit both in- 1
dividuals and corporations. The)"'
are studying further budget cuts
that would atfect powerful interest

groups across the board.

average annual subsidy of $400. The
Small example: Irrigation water program could be p~ out with no
ilow is sold to Western farmers at far great harm.
Large example : Tax credits for
below the cost of delivering it. A homeowners who install insulation
modest increase 'would produce an
- something most of ·them would do
additional $22 million next year.
anyhow _ could' be abOlished. ·The
Large examp;le, Twenty yeary af·
ter rural electrification cooperatives savings would come to $2.6 billion
ceased to have any excuse for being, over five years .
Scores, even hundreds, of other •
interest subsidies continue .
!WaUstic rates would save $7 billion cuts and bOOsts should be considered. Each of them involv~ some
over a five-year period.
Medium example: The 800 million social or economic consequence. To
visitors a year at national parks now · cut subsidies for 111UlSS transit is to
pay an average .admission fee of :w ·increase the cost of. a bus ride. To
cents. Nobody would be seriously reduce or to po--tpone cost-of-living
hurt if the average were boOsted to adjustments for retirees is to impose
60 cents_, and the budget would be certain hardships. To close a few
$320million better off.
veterans' hOspitals would cause
Small example: There's no longer grave inconvenience to some patienmuch sense in a,. subsidy. for ts. So it goes. There's no quick fix for
producers of wool and mohair. Only an addiction to deficits, but a responlll,OOO fanners benefit; each gets an sible program of withdrawal will
have to be imposed.

j~o

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lit~ ~I1~~JrTI©m11?&amp;~
FlND 1\\t. ACTOR.

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-Congressional floor action very sparse
WASHINGTON (AP) - Congresslonalleadersmay be busy bill·
tllng with th ~ Reagan
admlnstration behind the scenes on
the budget, but they're hard
pres,sed to find much else to do this
year.
.,
Floor action has been sparse,
leading a number of lawmakers to
voice concerns about a do-nothing
Congress.
"There's _very little legislation
around," House Speaker Thomas
P. O'Neill, D-Mass., conceded. "I
see no legislation of national Interest or newsworthiness."
While the House ' met all last
week, lis only vote was to authorize
a March 31 wreathlaytng ceremony
In the Capitol Rotunda at the statue
of Roger Williams, the 17th centruy
reh, us leader and founder of
Rhode Island.
"I think there are folks who are
beginning to ask: What are you people doing up there•" Rep. Trent
Lot!, R-Miss. , told a near-deserted
chamber.
But the tact Is that very few bills

Saving.El

are pending action In either
chamber. Le&lt;1ders clalnn the nation's aUlng ecc'nomy has been such
an overriding concern that there's
been llttle congressional energy to
expend on other ls!iues.
It's beeii adryspeU!or the Senate
too, although things will pick this
week as expulsion proceedings
begin against Sen, Harrison WWIams, D-N.J., sentenced to three years In prison on his Abscam
conviction.
One day recently, Majority .
Leader -Howard Baker, R-Tenn.,
asked Democratic Leader Robert
C. Byrd of West VIrginia It he had
any suggestions tor what to do.
Byrd didn't. The Senate stood In In·
formal recess.
The Senate spent much ollts time
this year wearing down a liberal
llllbuster against anti-busing legis·
lation led by Sen. Lowell Welcker,
R·Conn.

back Injury. senate Majority
Leader Howard Baker, R-Tenn.,
told the Senate: "Characteristic of
his vigor and extraordinary health,

he advises me that whUe doing callsthentlcs he pulled his back and
has a pinched.nerve. We should all
wish to be so healthy and so active
·at a similar age."

Status of legislation

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Here
Is the status of major legislation
pending In the 114th Ohio General
Assembly:
· REDl&lt;;TRICTING -Draws new
boundarY Unes tor Ohio's congressional districts, reduced from 23 to
21 this year due to population shifts.
Dlfterent versions passed-by House
and Senate; pending In joint confer. ence committee.
PRISONS - A $599 mllllon program for construction and renovation of prisons throughout the state.
Different versions passed by House
and Senate; pending In joint conference committee.
PUCO- Restructure the Publlc
Seventy-nine-year old Sen. Strom
Utilities Commission of Ohio, allowThurmond, R-Ga., has been resting
Ing lor five members 'Instead of
at home forthepastfewdayswitha

three and changing the process by
which they are appointed. Passed
by Senate; pending In House.
HIGH·SPEED RAIL - Proposed constitutional amendment
Increasing sales tax to finance construction of a multlbllllmi-doUar
rail system linking. Ohio's biggest
cities. Passed House; awaiting Senate vote.
ORGANIZED CRIME - Package ol bllls reinstating an
organized-crime statute struck
down by the Ohio Supreme Court,
expanding powers of attorney general to conduct Investigations and
authorizing court-&lt;lrdered wiretapping. Pending In Senate Judiciary
Committee.

Salvador-----~~Ar~tB~u~ch~waL!&lt;!Lld
I

.

"'PARAmilitary operation In Central America'
- 1 Ilk~ It! It sounds much NICER than just
plain 'Military'/"

Today in history
Today Is Tuesday, March 2, the6lstdayotl982. There are:»! days lett In
the year.
Today's highlight In hlsto..Y:
On March 2, 1776, American Marines fought their first battle, capturing
a British tort In the Bahamas during the Revolutionary War.
On this date:
In 18ll, the War of the Oranges between Spain and Portugal began.
In 1949, a U.S. B-50 bomber landed In Fort Worth, Texas, after completIng the first non-stop flight around world.
In 1956, France recognized the lndependece of Morocco.
In 1962, General Ne Win overthrew Premier U Nu In a Burmese military
coup.
~·
Ten years ago: In the biggest narcotics haul up to that time, French
customs agents seized nearly hall a ton of heroin from a shrimp boat In the '
Marseilles area.
'
Five years ago: In an effort to restore confidence In Congress, the House
adopted a strict code of ethics, Including a limitation on outside earned
Income.
One year ago: President Reagan called on the nation's mayors to help ·
win the approval of special Interest groups for his budget-cutting
proposals.
·
·
Today's birthdays: Television producer and actor Desl Arnaz Is tili.
Actress J;ennlfer Jones Is 63.
Thought lor today: Undoubtedly, the deslretortood has bej!n, and still Is,
one of the main causes of great political events. - Bertrand Russell,
~nglllh mathematlclail·phUosopher (1872·1970).

There were four of us at lunch, aU
American patriots who were very
disturbed about what was going on
In Central America.
"We've got to save El Salvador,"
George said.
"Here, here," we all said, raising
our glasses.
Then Joe, who isn't very bright,
said, "Who are we going to save in
El SalvadOr?" r
"The people," I replied.
"Of course," said Joe. "We have
to save the people. How do we do
it?"
"By giving anns to the El
Salvador military, so they can kill
the people who are fighting them,"
Hilary told Joe.
"How many people do they have to
kill to 8ave El Salvador?" Joe asked.
George said, "That's for them to
decide and not us. The more people
they kill now, the less they will have
to kill later."
We watched Joe turning that one
over In his mind,
"Why do the military have to kill

.

~

EXERCISE CONFERENCE I... Cloci11118U Reds'
manager John McNamara chatUng with first bueman
Dan Driessen (!2) Monday duriqg the exerclle Bellslon

at the •pring training camp at Tampa, Florida. The

Ri!d!i' full squad started training with the exercl!le
set~~~ Ion.

( AP Laserphoto) .

-Driessen -stiii ·wants traded

~

effect. The more people the military
so many people?"
kill, the more frightened the people
"Because the people are trying to
will becOme of supporting the
kill them," l told him. "El Salvador
guerrillas. That's why we have to
is teeming with guerrillas who are
supply the El Salvador government
being trained in Nicaragua, with arwith tanks and planes and napalm."
mS sent to them by Cuba from the
"It's a pity so many people have to
Soviet Unioo. It the El Salvador
be killed," .Ioe said.
military doesn't kill them, we could
George put his hand on J:oe's
lose the Panama Canal."
Joe Is so thick, he asked, "How shoulder. "I know how you feel, Joe.
I don't like to see El Salvadoran
does the miUtary know who . the
people killed any more than you do.
guerrillas are?"
"They don't, so they have to kill But war is a dirty business, and if we
anyone who looks like a guerrilla," don't stop them In El Salvador,
George said. •"It's better lor a we're going to have to fight them in
Alabama."
peasant to be dead then red."
"You don't have any relatives in
We thought we had gotten through
to him, but Joe can be very stubbOrn El SalvadOr, dO you, Joe?" I asked
when he doesn't understand him.
• "None that I know of."
something,
,
•
"It the military keeps killtng
"Then what are you sO upset
people who aren't guerrillas, won't abOut? lt's only a tiny Central
the other people be more sym- American country, and they've been
pathetic to the guerrilla! than they ' killing each other for years. They're
-are ta1tlemmn.-'ry!" -- · tlieitteita''
.. - -- -"Maybe so. But if we send in all
Hilary was getting elWperated.
· "No, it wW have exactly the opposite that military stuff,' the peasants are

going to say that we killed them.
Why do we have to get involved in
their revolution?"
"It was their revolution," Hilary
said, "until the conunies got into it,
and made it our revolution. if we
walk away now, no military junta in
this hemisphere will ever trust us
again.''
We thought we had Joe turned
around, when he suddenly said,
"Couldn'd we be getting ourselves
into another Vietnan?" '
George lost his temper. "Dammit,
Joe, El Salvador can't be compared
to Vietnam. We went into Vietnam
with our eyes closed. We're getting
involved in El Salvador with our
eyes wide open . .Besi~es. President
Reagan said he has no plans to send
any American boys there. It's their
war."
"I'm i!OITY I upset everyone," Joe
said. "It's just that I don't understand what's going on."
"That," said Hilary, "is because
you don't read the papers."

~

Kern believes old form back _:

P~2-The

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentir.el Pag•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

TAMPA, Fla. (AP) - Dan
Drtessen evidently has his first
base job back, but he still wants to
leave the Cincinnati Reds.
brlessen, who asked to be traded
last season when Johnny Bench became the starting first baseman,
reported to training camp Monday
and said he hadn't changed his
mind.
"When I say anything, I mean
It," Driessen said. ·
Driessen and the rest otthe Reds'
regulars joined pitchers and
catchers for the first lull-squad
workout Monday. Only shortstop
Dave Concepcion was missing.
Concepcion was expected to join
the club today.
Although Jt would appear that
Drtessen's starUng job Is sate with
Bench now playing third base, the
lOth-year veteran said he Isn't
counting on anything In 1982.
"One thing Is for sure. I'm certainly not going to take anything for
granted until! see what Is going to
happen," Driessen said. "I just
have to get as ready as I can. Mentally, I can take lt. I just must get
my body In shape."
Driessen struggled through one
of his least productive major
league seasons In 1981, hitting .236,
a personal low. He got pH to a slow
start, then was ~It _on the hand by a
pitch and missed nearly three
weeks.
In the meantime, Bench- trying
to win a job other than catcher took over andwentona hitting tear.
When Driessen was healthy enough
to play, he found himself relegated
to second-string status behind
Bench.
·
"I don't think It was the right way
of doing It," Driessen said of the
change. "But I've been hurt before,
so It's not the first time.
"I am concerned about the way It
happened lastyear,butljUsthope
It doesn't happen that way again.
Some situations don't always occur
the way you want. They're not always perfect lor you, so you must
be able to accept those things."
After he lost his starting role to
Bench last year, Driessen asked
Reds President Dick Wagner to
trade him. Wagner has said he has
no plans to deal away tl\e slick-·
fielding first baseman.
When Bench broke his ankle In
late May, Driessen regained hlsjob
but didn't change his inlnd about
wanting to leave the Reds. However, he said Monday that he'd accept his role with the Reds It he Isn't
traded.

.JotC~-~-':S:

Harris and catcher Alex. Trevino
tor outfielder George FO$ter,
"You can bet that some other
people (batters) are going to pay
this year for the ~ bad seasons I
jus~ went through," Kern said.
His pitching Sunday drew raves
from the Reds he faced.
Johnny Bench whistled at a fastball that sailed Inside, and Kern
asked It Bench wanted him to ease
oft a bit, '
"Just keep throwing like that; I
don't believe It's real," Bench said.
Kern said he wasn't worried
about overthrowing - working too
hard, too early.

Dodgers

"I'm In corx!ltion, and my arm Is
In great shape," Kern said. "I've
been on a weight program workJN.
on the muscles and making sure
that everything Is ready. Nothing IS
going to happen to stop me.
"I wasn't letting everything out
today - maybe 90 percent. Just
walt tor about 10 days, then It will
Oy."

.

.

Kern's fastball has been clocked
at more than 95 miles an hour, and
he has ii59 career strikeouts In 632
Innings. The Reds e&gt;qiect him and
Tom Hume· - who by computer
rating was the top reliever In the
National League last ~son- tci
give Clnctnna~ one of the strongest
. bullpen staffs In baseball.

renew Fernando's contract

LOS ANGELES (AP) -The Los
Angeles Dodgers announced Mon·
day night that they had unilaterally
renewed the contract of pitching
sensation Fernando Valenzuela after representatives of the 21-yearold left-bander 8nd the defending
world champions were unable to
reach a S&amp;lary agreement.,
Terms were not announced, but
Steve Brener, the Dodgers' publlclty director, said In a statement that
the contract calls for Valenzuela to

become the highest paid second·
year major leaguer In history.
Valenzuela, who earned a rei
ported $42,500 last season, becatne
the {Irst pitcher In big league his·
tory to win the Cy Young Award
B!ld theRookleoftheYearawantln
the same season. He helped the
Dodgers win their first World SerIes championship since 1965. ,
Brener Issued a stAtement QljOt·
lng both Dodgers' President Peter
O'Malley and club Vice President
AI Campanls.

•

I.
•

•

the 18-month rate in effect at the time
BANK ONE's IRA lets you set aside
they are deposited. (During March the
tax-deferred savings of up to $2,000, which
18-month rate is 15.75%.*) Or you can
can be subtracted from your income before
choose a variable rate plan.-(The variable
your taxes are figured each year. If you
rate in effect for March is 15.00%. *)
have a non-working spouse, you can
contribute up to $2,250. Of cburse, if you
Act·qulckly to get
and your spouse both work, you can each
the best tax advantage.
open an IRA and contribute up to a total of
Whether you sign up for a fixed rate plan
$4,000 to your plans. And you'll earn high
or the variable rate plan, you will be assured
money market interest rates for an
your money is earning inflation-proof interest
inflatipn-proof rate of return.
for your retirement. To maxirnize the tax- .
The chart below illustrates how quickly ·
deferred interest you earn, you should make
your financial future can grow.
your contributions ~s soon as possible after
the first of the year. You will receive monthly
You can choose one of two ways
statements on the status of the Account and
to earn your Interest at BANK ONE.
your funds are
You can choose an
interest rate which
AMOUNT insured by an
AGE
When lbu Open
You - Acc:umulllla
is set for '18 months.
agency of the
lburiRA ,
AI Age 115"
federal
Any new funds
•.
50
$ 83,506 government.
deposited will earn
$ 298,667
40
'

531

to the New York Mets, who dealt
him to the Reds with pitcher Greg

WEST

30
20

$ 966,
$3,042,435

· ·r n1s 11ssumes that you make a $2 .000 contr1but•on at the beg•nn.ng of each year at a I 2"o mterest ra t
and that vou Ieaiie funds •n yo4\ IRA through your 65th yf!cilr

•

Tltlere ''a substantial interest ~natty tor early IN tthdrawat

Stop by any
BANK ONE office
for details. ,

DOONESBURY

Whcneler you lhlnk
olsn""''IIIOMJ1 0Ur name
COIIICI up ftnt. .
.

Member' FDIC

BANK ONE,M ,..-BANK ONE OF POMEROY.

POMEAOV•RUTLANDaTUPPEAS PLAINS

j ''

'

/

'

�Mardi 2, 1982

Longhorns' losing streak continues ·

\

Ronnie Hensley, CIUf Griffith and Myron Koelng. Sta•
ding are Coach Arch ROlle, Paul CoiUns, Jay Car·
penter, Rob Malson, Mike Collins, Mark Gaddis, Jim
NeweU, Vanity Coach Dennis Elcblnger, and Krlsll
Gaddis.

EASTERN RESERVES - Memben ol tbe 1981-82
Eastern reserve team were, front - Daryl Roblnsoa,
Paul He11.1lev. mana~en: silting - Ray Maxson,
. manager; Troy Guthrie, Mike Jones, Tim Probert,

EAGLE FRESHMEN - Memben of tbe Eastern
fresbman basketball team were, front- Mall Hensley,
manager; Jim Walsoa, Karl Smith, John MIUer, Jim

Wo:ber, Ronnie Hensley, and Terry Sbarp, manager.
Back- JeH Bissell, Kevin Flck, Jay Carpenter, Keith
Stout, Paul Collins, Mike Putman, Kenny Riggs, and
Coach Don Eichinger.

Scoreboard...
Sidney 67, Vandalia BuUt!r 6.1

Boys scores

Solon 58, Menta" Lake CathoLic 54
Spring. S. 53, Sprir~~~ . N. 44

a .. A.Tounamenta

Ohlo HIJh School Bo)'ll BalltetbaU
Monday'• H.Malt.
CS.. MA TOUI'IIUnftl..
Anderson 90. Cln. Taft n

AJtron Elms

Clearvtew 53

Moeday'1 Collqe

~

Nicholls St. ~. Pan American 49
MUIWI&gt;IT

Wla..Creen Bay ~. Campbell !U
SOUTIIWEI!T

Own-·
..... -..

CUNVConfe~

Sta ten I sland 8.'1 , Baruch Tl
Eut Cout Confenonce

La Salle Kl, Boolmell 72

J8
No r1h we$tem 58, Bcilfont.alnc !6
Ridgewood M. W. Halma 46
Sprtna. Ken ton R!dgl&gt; 40, SpritlR .
Shawnee JB
Spring. NorlhWe!!lern ~. lk!llefon ta lll(l

""

..... -..

-·
-·.......

SemlftnaU
Franklin Plcf't'(' 82, 'Thomas Coil. ~

.,.

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......,.,

Cham-p
Pa1.1l Quinn lOl, TeJCas Wesleyan 96

MondaJ'I RMLIIIII

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

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Indiana

MJrttlgan
MJchlion

~

208

10616 9

Wl~mnstn

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.

313 6U!

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Ill C2a
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Gnuide

x-Nol cUgtble lor ddt.

·Cheshire student wins area spelling bee

AND DIET RITE COLA

MIDDLEPORT -- Melissa Fife,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Bill Fife,
Route I Cheshire, was winner of the
annua( Middieport Elementary
School spelling bee held Friday in
preparation for the county event.
Melissa Is a fourth grade student

8 Pack

16 Oz.
Returnable
Bottles

$} 09P!~s De~it
SAVE MORE
.279 W. Main St.

Pomeroy, OH •

1------------------------

OP
1169
1136
1059
1338
1361
1346

SALE!

COLOR COMPUTER·
PROGRAM PAKS
Hurtyl Dfm't Miss Your Chance
To Save on Fa11tlly furJ and Gamesl

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1

Ronald Hoffman, son of Perry F.
Hoffman of 963 Locust St., Mid·
dlej)Ort, has been promoted in the U.
S. Air Force to the rank of staff
sergeant.
Hoffman is a food service
specialist at Vandenberg Air For.ce
Base, Calif.
He is a 1974 graduate of Meigs
High School, POmeroy. His wife,
Donna, is the daughter of Donald
and Diana Taylor of Route I ,
Harrisonville.
Marine Staff Sgt. Daniel . R.
Midkiff, son of IU!y and Bernice
Midkiff of 27316 Montgomery Road,
Langsville, and whose wife, Cynthia,
is the daughter of Marie Domigan of
1637 Lincoln Heights, Pomeroy,
recently departed for an extensive
deployment to the

••
'tt
' ~ '\t

I I &gt;
be held at 7:30p.m. on March 9 at
the .Salisbury Elementary School.
Mrs. Suzanne Weaver, Tille I
reading teacher, pronounced the
words for contestants.

Heines birth
Mr. and Mrs. Larry L. Heines an. . nounce the birth of their third .
. daughter, Maureen Megan, Jan. 28
at the Holzer Medical Center. The in·
fant weighed six pounds 12 ounces
anu w•: ~ ·~ ~~cs long.

I

Western Pacific. ·
He is a member of Battalion Landing .Team 1/8, :Wih Marine Am·
phibious Unit (MAU ), Camp
Lejeune, N. C.
The 34th MAU is tasked With
providing quick reaction assault for·
ces, and the air support required for
,those forces .

•

The 1,800 Marines and sailors for·
ming the nucleus of the :Wth MA U
are embarked aboard ships
specially designed transj)Ort combat
personnel.
All are scheduled to participate in
various training exercises and make
port visits to several Mediterranean
cities.

TUESI?AY
SUTTON
TOWNSHIP
Trustees, 8 p.m. Tuesday at
Syracuse Municipal Building.

POMEROY LODGE363,F. and
A. M., regular meeting WedneSday 7:30p.m. at the Pomeroy
Masonic Temple. Refreslunents
will be served.

MIDDLEPORT LODGE 363, F.
and A. M., 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at
tbe Masonic Temple. All members are asked • to attend.
Refreslunents will be served.

BEND 0 ' THE RIVER Artists
Council, Thursday, 7:30 p.m. MeClure's Barn.

POMEROY CHAPTER186, Order of Eastern Star, 7:45. p.m.
Tuesday at the Pomeroy Masonic
Temple. Initiatory work will be
exemplified. Members are to

SHADE RIVER Lodge 453,
Chester, Thursday evening,

IIrr;:===========~~~~~~~~~~~~~=-l

Fund.
Practice Sunday
afternoon
take donations
for the
Heart

at~::~::esday:~:·

THE.SPOTLIOHT
IS 0 N

plan
development conunittee of Area
Six Health Systems Agency, Inc.,
will met Tuesday, March 2, at

R. ,GRANDE
10

6:45p.m.
Lafayette
Hotel,
Marietta . atThe
meeting
is
rescheduled from Feb. 9. The
topic will be the aMual im·
plementation plan (program for
perfonnance).

in the March issue of OHIO MAGAZINE.
Meet Bob Evans
on His Farm- He's ·
set his sight beyond
sausage.

The Uuil r Scnliucl
CUSPSJU.tiOi
A01\lhtloa ul Multimedia, lac.
Publi!ihtod t very afternoon, Monday th~ h

FridM y, 111 Court Stred, by the Ohio Valley
Publishing Company - Multimedia, Inc.,
Pomeroy, Ohio 6S78t, 992-2 1 ~ . Set"Dnc.l l'lass
~~ ~e paidal Potn~ roy, Ohi&lt;&gt;.

Meet Bevo Francis
30 Years AfterHe still remembers
his glory days
at the college.

Member: The ~o...'iated Prns, InlancJ Dai·
ly Prt!ss AstiOCiaLion and the American
Nt! wspaper Publh1hers AssOt.'IHtjon, National
A dverli s in ~

RepresentaU vr ,

Bntnl~m

NcwMpapi!r Salell , 733 ThiN Avenue, New
York . New York 10017.
Scnjint!l. Ill Court $1., Pomeroy, Ohit~45 769.

SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By C•rrh!r 1M' Mowr Roote
One week ........ ,, ................ 11.00
Ollt! Month .. . . . . . . . . . . .. . . .. . . ... IUO
Ont~ Vt!Br .
. ..... .. ... $52 .80
SINGLE alP~
PRICES
DHily ...... .. .. .
..... 15 Ct! nls

Timothy L. Colburn of" Pomeroy
was among the 233 January
graduates of the University of
Arkansas at Uttle Rock.
Colburn earned a bachelor's
.degree in political science.

·on Sale At Your Newsstand Now
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tnlly remit in ad v an t~ direct to The Daily

:

Sentinel on • 3, 8 or 12 month bl:t.sis. Credit
" 'ill be ~ iven C.llrrier t!&amp;Ch month.
N o su ~t.:ri ptl on.'l

Receives degree

BENJAMIN Sullavant, Haiti,
will conduct a special missionary
service at Pomeroy Wesleyan
Holiness Church, SIBle Route 143,
Harrisonville Road, Thursday at
7:30 p.m. Rev. Earl Fields,
pastor, invites the public. · ·
---.MISSIONARY Meeting of the
Hysell Run Holiitess Church wm
be held Thursday at 7:30 p.m.
with Okey Carl as the speaker.
The public is Invited to attend.

THURSDAY

POSTMASTER : Send address to The Daily

Mr. and Mrs Heines have lwo
daughters, Kristor., 11, and Traci,
three. Maternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Vemon Edwards,
Pomeroy, and the paternal grand·
mother is Mrs. Louise Heines,
Chester. Mrs. Clara Heines,
Hemlock Grove, is the ~~aternal
great-grandmother .

special session work In the
master mason degree. Refreshments.

WEDNESDAY

Ulooueo subscribers only I

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1111 Pflced ProQtam Po• car..OO numbefa: 2&amp;-3066, 21-3058, 26-3152, 20-3teo. 26-3154.

ftad1e lhaell
~DIVISION

'
of John Arnott. Runner-up was
SusaMe .Cassell, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. CMrles Casseli, Middlej)Ort, also a fourth grade student
of Arnott.
Miss Fife will represent the Middleport school at the county event to

Senlice news notes

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VAAV AT INDIVIDUAL STORES AND DEALERS

LB.

LK ••••••••••••••••·····~·········~··
VALLEY IELL BUTTERMILK•••..•.••••.••.•••••••• ~~~!'.~·. 99C
ROYAL CREST VITAMIN D MILK .......•....•.. ~!?~~·..99C
. .
.
ooiEN 'ate
JUMBO·
EGGS .•••••••••••••••••••..•••••.
••••••••••.•

PLY RATING

4
4

~:::·1 OAI:IO.POTATOES

4

$1.39

'

.

'

DIET RITE. RC100

B..PACK

s
'

29

• • • • • • • •• • • •

REASON #12: The changing tax laws.
I

The Economic Recovery Tax Act of 1981 affects every
taxpayer, regardless of·income. Your,H&amp;R Block tax preparer can show you !:low the new tax law helps you save
money on your 1981 taxes, and point out changes that
could affect your taxes in 1982.
·

lffiUCE CELERY

TRAILER TIRES -Tube Type
410xl AND 418x1~ ~~ '22.00 Plus .63 FET

49¢

MON1HOF
MARCH SPECIAIL
•

THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE ·

17 reasonS.One.smaitd8Cislon.
618 E. MAIN ST.
POMEROY, OH. 45769
PH~· 992-~795

. HOURS:

Mon.-Fri. 9 to 6
Sat.9to5

I

2ND &amp; BROWN STS.
MASON, W. VA. 25260
PH. 773-9128· . .
HOURS:
Tues. &amp; Thurs. 9 to 6
Sat.9 to 5 "

HEAD

' \

Fnat-e..

-

•U.nmeat

$}375

I.

POMEROY HOME &amp; AUTO

606£. Main

Ph. 992·2094
&lt;

All Amtrlc•n c•n inchiCit .CMYtttes illftll
with fr•nt w~Mel drlwe •ndler •
MacPttfrslfj IUIP"IIon .

FRONT END ALJGNMENT

comp~ch

Wt11 Ill ww. amiNr ud toe·in 10 man·
oifocbrm~on,lnat
No Clltn
charlo lor can with foctoty air br tonlon
bori.l'lrtl ntn, II needed. Call lor ,..,

BRAKE SERVICE

•oodfla-.

'
,,

'

I 14

llonov"'
TaylOr

Judy Williams, right, presented a trophy and certificate to Carolyn
McCoy In recognition of her outstanding sales ability In 19111.

Social Calendar

NYLON GORD- TU. TRACTOR

HCIOIII&amp;n-Buckeye Coni.
(n.al SWKI!Ip)

3

RC.COLA

FRONTTRA

I 12

0 13

·Oberlin

lnaurllnce

PRICES M~Y

400-19

fi!Ot l l~

!I ll

.,.,. Auto

Ga .Southwestem 98, F1a .Memor1al 'n

-,I H ntklt ~rq~; t f'l'

7 16 9
9 7 12 l:l

Nort h wt&gt;~tem

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

SIZE

~

~1 .

Semlftnals
Orchard Lake-St.Mary's 72, HUisdale 62
Saginaw Valley St . 116, Siena Heights 71i

1 krl·\ 1112 (\1m\ 17 l'l';l...,t.\ll'-1
4i
,, I" I I &amp; I\ B I~. )~_ -k
•
\lHll' (;\ \. L'"· "

12 " 20 ~

llllnob
Puntoe

Defiance :56. Wa.l!lh ~ 1

1

W L
~

-

COOarvtlle 9'2, Tiffin 75

Carolyn McCoy was recenUy
presented a \rophy and award certificate by Future . Director Judy
Williams for ber outstanding sales
abillly in 1981 in Mary Kay
Cosmetics, Ill&lt;:.
McCoy was named eleventh out of
approximately 600 women by
National Sales Director Sharon
Parris of Florida at the recent annual seminar in Dallas, Tex. In her
local unit, McCoy was named first
runner-up In sales by Wilma Smith
in Barboursville, W. Va: Williams is
currently completing qtialificatiom
for her unit of which McCoy will be a
member.
Mary Kay €osmelics, Inc. began
in 1963 with a sales force of 10
women. Today there are approximately 150,000 Women in the U.
S., Canada, Hawaii, Australia and
Argentina. Mary Kay's unique
marketing plan and unlimited opportunity for advancement for
women have been the major factors
• in the growth · of the company, ac·
cording to Williams.

,p:~-=-~

TUCSON, Ariz. (AP) - Out·
fielder Miguel DUone, the last
player on the Cleveland Indians' 4().
man roster to report to the Ameri·
can League team's sprlng tra1nlng
camp, na!TDWiy beat the team's
deadline.
DUane arrived on Monday, the
deadline tor reporting Without risk·
lng a penalty.

14

Ohio Collep BM.kett.IJ
standlnp naroup W~y Game.
Bllll Ttn c.nrere.ce
Cord. All OIUilel
4 20

_,.

Bethel, Ind . 59

Local rece1ves award for sales ,·

Lool&lt; to us tor quality Homeowners Insurance, including
Renters and Condominium Package Plans. We feature
very attractive rates, discounts, and valuable additional

eui'IUICe Servloea

Mardi 2. 1982

•

HOME ......,twr lila~ • • c•••

Southern Tech 46. N.Georgta 4~

Ok111 h:nTUt Chris. 73, Okla.Bapl!st 00

College I
standings''·

~.

.

Dhtlict %S

Cull.ol Charleston TO, Umestonc lil

a .. AM Tournament~~

11

'T'H·St.

N.uA

Ohto lfi111h SclklOI Glr!IJ BJWketbaU

"Ohio St.

..........

llo oover 6:1, Andtnon S8

~-Middleport, Ohio

Nobody can protect ydur

Dilone reports

QuinCy Ill. St .XaVif!r !14
Chk:ago St. 66, IU.Wl"lileyan fJ
Dlllrtct ..

1onn m, Army 53
r arrnrtd 61 . Ma nhattan 56

Girls scores.

ll

.........
.,.
.......

Metro Al..llarlk Conference

cary.Jtawson 7J. Liberty n.&gt;nron 4."i

Ltt Roche 50, Pltt·. Bradlord ~
Westminste r 4&lt;1, Point Park 37
DIJitrict It
Ltbc!ny Baptist 81 , Uncoln, Pa . 61
IIHmpton lnst. 91, C•brtnl 44

Hofstra n, Lafayette 64, ar
Drexel 49, Delaware 45

a .. A Tourwne-.

Iowa

DWrtet 18

TOUR.""~ AMENTS

Kenton Ridge 40, SprtnRflt&gt;ld ShAWl\('@

Hmrlerson Sl. 61, Ouachita 52

S.Arkan.sas 41 , Cent.Arkansas J9

1\rk.· Uitlt' Rot'k 8.1, Ga .Southem 67
N.Te xas St. 8.1, Alcorn St. i1

1\rnertcan U. 84. Lehigh 56

· MJnllCS(JIO

-17

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

SOIJ11I '

~

W L

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

Mo. Wesu~m Ill, Avtla 82
Hockh unt 12, Drury 66

"""" OT

Day . Dunba r lOl, Jk&gt;Ubrook 8.1

Ccu u ~~: a

ALL GAMES
TEAM ,
W L P
X-Soulhern •
21 1 1419
Kyger Creek
14 7 1234
Eastern
13 8 1097
Hannan Trace
11 11 1341
Southwestern
4 17 1215
North Gallia
4 18 1128
FINAL SVACONLY
Southern
10 0 710
Eastern
7 . 3 544
Kyger Creek
6 4 535
Hannan Trace
4 6 606
North Ga!!ia
2 8 513
Southwestern
2 8 550
X - Sec tional winner .

streak, and takes on Temple In tbe
next round. Eric Harvey contributed 23 points, .lnchUIIng seven In
overttme, .for Hofstra, :12-15, which
advanced to meet St. Joseph's, Pa.
And American, which next takes on
Rider, got 24 points from both Ferdie Aunon and Ed Sloane,

game.
Tom Plotrowsld had 23 points
and Steve Black added 21 for La
Salle,J5.12; wblchnext plays host to
w~t Chester State. Drexel, 11-10,
held Delaware star forward Ken
Luck to only foltf points. ending bJ.s
41-game double·flgure scoring

SV AC standings

Bria r Cliff 59, Dordt 57
Dlfltrld ••

8corel

N.•J. T ed \ nf. Drf'W 7:1,

Tol. Waite 9.l, DeVUblss 7()
Wa iTt'n Ha rding 72, ~llvl! r l.cca l ~
a .. AA Tuumament~~
Cari L,Ie 00, Vallcyview 59
Day . Chamlnade-..lullunrw Iii, Day . .Jcf.
!t.n on 53

Eutlal«l N. 59, W.

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

Moorhead St. it, St.John's, Mlnri. ~
Conoordl.a·Moor. 83, Mlnn .·Duluth 1J

College scores

Tol. E!owl her 7K, Tol. Woodwa rd 5."1

"

~.

Dlfltrtd 15

. ' Baki&gt;r 56, Greenvllk&gt; ~
, Col. BeechO:'oft GO
Salem
oung. Wilson ~
Sa~u,ky
• Shelby n
Spring. North 74., Day. Wnyn.r TI
Sylvania SouUIV1ew Iii. T ol. Central !12
'ftltln Columbian 43, MunA'lekJ MalatJur

Tol. Ubbcy 70, Bowllng Grum

~.

Marymount

............
SW Kansas 42
DIMrld U

McDonald 52, Cuy&amp;ho!ila Hr.s. 31

Cln. Moell~r I'll. Cln. Sl. Xa vier 00
Col. Eut 89, Walkl.M Memorlal 62
. Meadowda le S2, Vandalia Bu ller

..

Dbltrtc&amp; II

By A"N'tated ~
The Texas Longhorns' basketbaU
season began to crumble at Heart:
0' Texas Coliseum Jan. 26. And It
ended there five weeks later.
The Longhorns, unbeaten and
ranked ll!th In !be Jl!ltiQn, were
upset by the Baylor Bears In Waco
that Tuesday night In late January.
They also lost star forward Mike
Wacker that everilng with an In·
jured knee.
Texas then proceeded to lose 11 of
Its last 13 games.
The latest defeat, a 4846 decision
In the rtrst round or the Southwest
Conference tournament, came
wl!en Jay Shakir canned a 25-fool
Jutnp shot at the buzzer for Baylor,
17·8. The Bears, who were outsh\lt
52 percent to 40 percent from !be
field and outrebounded 30-25, ad·
vanced to a quarterfinal meeting
with Texas A&amp;M.
"The coaches just told p1e to get
It and go with It," said Shakir,
whose team traDed bY nine points
atone junNure and needed a patrol
missed tree throws by Texas fresh·
man Jack Worthlngton to stay
close.
Tile Bears had enough to edge
Abe Lemons' Longhorns.
Tn other rtrst·round SWC con·
tests, It was Texas Tech 00, Rice 46,
and Texas Christian 54, Southern
Methodist 46. The winners play
each other In the conference quar·
terflnals Thursday In Dallas.
Tech held Rice's Ricky Pierce,
the No.2 scorer In the country, to14
points and gotl8 from Steve Smith.
"They played veey good defense ," Pierce admitted. "They
reaDy played some baD tonight.
They put t)le pressure on and con·
troDed the tempo and denied us the
ball.,
TCU's Doug Harold poured In 19
points to subdue SMU.
In other tournament action, aU In
the East, .It was lana 69, Anny 53,
an&lt;! Fairfield 61, Manliattan 55 In
theflrstround of the Metro Atlantic
Conference, and, In the opening or
the East Coast Conference tourney,
It was La SaUe 81, BuckneR 72; Hot·
stra n, Lafayette 64 In overtime;
Drexel49, Delaware 45, and Ameri·
can 84, Lehigh 56.
lana's Steve Burtt scored 27
points as the Gaels, 22.S: advanced
to the MAAC semifinals against
Fordham Thursday night. Fall'·
field, 11-16, was led by Hank Foster
with 25 points and wUI take on St.
Peter's, l'j'.J., In the other sem1flnal

The Daily Sentinel Page 5

''

Pomeroy

59¢
BUNCH

iaEG. PEPSi, SUGAR PRIE 'P EPSI, REG. 7-UP,
SUGAR PRIE J .up and MT. DEW

~OTATOES

$

6 PACk

CANS

'a

�The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middle

,Ohio

March 2, 1982

NOTIC E OF APPLICATION FOR INCRUSESANDADJUSTM I NTS
IN RATES AND CHA.GE S AND FOR ( HANGIEJ I N
R I!GULATIONS AND PU, CTICI!"I

Present Access Line Rates- Midd l efield
lesfdtnc1

•

THE WESTERNRESER.VI TELEPHONE COMP"ANY
Punuant to tiM 'ftiUirtmt l'lts Of ltcli01t ~. It tf ftle Olllt RtYIMCt Cock, TIM Wntfra RtMn•t Tt..thont CO.. PII'IY {t~ " CtM!MfiY ")
htroln t i¥H rtofict IUt on Janu•rv 21, lft2, If flied wlttl fttt fl'u,llc UHIItlll Commlttlen of Ohio ( tilt " Commission" I •• Apt~~ll~tlon
( PUC:O Docket No. 11•117.. TP·AIItl for autftollty te lntrt tM tnd Niutl 111 ram ai'ICII dlar'" fer tt'ftphene ttnk" te tht IM'Ittk llt,...fl
lfl ftrfV·Mt ltltphOnt ..cha.,... ,kK•tH at and llnown AS Aahtabule, Auror-. AUSfll'lltirt, ltlniH'IGtt, lkltml......,., Ctnfervll!t,
dotl, CIIHIH, Coollflllt, CumNrltiWI, Dorset, .iatl Cltrlcton, '•lnMiw, G... ova, Hlnct .. y, Hi ra m, HtjNdllllt, Mut!Mn, Hlfltftlture,
k lntt~Uit, Llfftt H~llll'lf. MadiUft, M~t4U!'IIt , Mlckhtltld, Mon t"&lt;'lll.r, Morr!tto....-;, HcrwiM. . y, ..,D, ttltltlll , O'd Wl,ll l~. Pirkmlft,
Pntlnsula, P•rrv, Pl•rponr, PowJt.atln Point, Ou1hr City, Richfield, Roell CrM, RWJMII, 'rhomPMrt. Tn•mllllll, •nd T~1•11Mfrt, aiMI te
chantt ctr1aln of ih r.vutatlaM lftlf·Pf'ICticts nlatlnt to 1uct. serYkt ancl to fli t .,,...,..lato tariff,,...,, r•n•c:t•ne Nd1lncr"'" and
ch•~•·
·
Thll notice conta ins 1M ~t~blfln&lt;e and ,-aytr of tt1r Application. How••oer, any ,,....._,_. INrtv iHirlftt com,...._ "'•IIIHI hi·
'orm1 tlot~ wlttl rUJKt to lllaH.clfll rate•, char"', ' ""lations end pnctlcn stlellld lftl,.ct • c-.y tf tt1t A..,.leat*l eM eltatt•chH
l chNUIII If the OfiiU of tiMI CotnmiiiiOn, J7S SOllrt, Hlth StrHf, Columltus, Oh .. 4l21S, or durlflll INII"mtl butl ....l Mutt It ft1t ltUitiiC
butlneu olflcn of ttle ComiMny lOUtH at 2.(1 North Mt hl SlrHt, Hvcbon, 0hio442U I .. 16 PIA Annw, Al llftbule, OtNa . . . .1 2M Hambden Strllf, ChlnSon, Ohlo+112e1 eNI U North Fourth !ltrMI, Newark, Olllo4JOSS. In adcUHen, ..._ l'f'OPOifll ttrrlltwert maiiMI ._October
S, Itil , 11 ,.r t tlltlt (:omNnY'I 110tiflutilan of IU Ulltflt to flit to tha mayMs 11141 '-gillafln IUtftorltln tf 111 municJtNifflft ~t tt.
ft rrltctry In wtllch the Com,.ny operat••·
·
.
•
Thll ApttllcatlonaffKit flfH and chlrtet lor ftlt pftone Nrvicn to all custoft'llf'l et tN com..-ny, eutpt ffiOH HrY'iceltovtrNd Dy
concurrlftc" Wlrtl omer ftlapftoM coft'lpulos ottdafftth tttt Com""'' ' GtMral eactw"" Tarrlf anll ib Local
TariH,
Anr penan, firm , CWP,Orat~ or aueclltiOfl mov tilt, P'""''"' to Secflon-4m.lt of Hilt Oh6olttvl ..d CGcta. . . IHtlom
proposod
ln creaHt .nd lllliu1tmenb In rotes one! cftarttft , aftd to the proposiHI ci!JitfH In repletions and prldlcn afttcthtt the s.me . TIM!..,_
itdlons moy oltqe tl\at IIICh Apt~llcatlon contains pro,outsltlat are unjust ortd dlsc:rlmlftatof'y or vnraa~M~bft . R.ctmmendottows which
dllttr from tttt A,llcatlon may be modi tw 1M staff of tno Public UtlliiiK com m inion ot Oh./o or by lntervtl'lll'lt partlfliMI may N~optMbyttiiCommlulon.
,
·
Till company' s Application statu tNt talstlnt r a tes ond charen .,, kladet~uote and cannot prolluct 1111 ravenun requlrtd to mHt
UN Mtel"f cont o1 provl4tlnt Mrvlca 11Mt do not provldt a lust •net rttsonablt return on ttw Ylh•• of Hit Cam,.ny' s uHCt aiMI u~etui
property n of Nne;nber JO, 1111 . Tftt AHIIcotlon furltttr stat•• t~t ltttwttn DtumNr Jl , 197-4 ond November 10. ltll. tlw Company his
lnvtstld SIIJ, IM.f2•.oo for alltcllllon• and Improvements 10 lt1 ttlt;Mnt pi'"'· while Its •• ,.,. .., havtlncreoHCI at a mart [I Pill rate'"-'
Its rtvtnu... Ttlt Company stat" thlt It ne.cls the priJIICIItd '""''. . In rtvtnuH to etYbftlt to ·moiAIIIII qua lit,' servlcao~N to ~ltl• It to
maintain credit o,ct attract capital tor flit t &amp;Nntlon tncllmllr"OYtmutot liS plant In accoranu with jMibllc detntn4. AI lit forttfht tht
Appllctlon, t,.a '-Oit!Ptnv ontlclpatts IMI tht rat11 aM ch~rtt propositi In flit illppftcotlon wllllncrttu tolololtnual rtvtnup by Sf,H7,ot7
and that •uch a~111ona1 rtvtnut,wi ii!H'OVI•• a mlnlm11m rlfurn anel will not (IH'Ovlde mort thlln 1 fair and ret...-.ablt ,.,. 04 rtturn on tht
Yalut
Company' s tH"ItPirtv.
,
Ntw rquletlons propos tel In tilt Appllcallon lnctudt tilt following :
- A jH"tvisltn thlt custemtn w~Mt dltc:Otm~t or ramov• ••ll'lct mu1t rtlurlt all tllglblt c om.-ny.provleltd telephent lnstnufttnt1 to 1
specltiH Company l~tlon, vnlns othtr lpecltlc ~rrtnttmtnb hen bMn madt tor racavtry of tfta lnllrul'j'lanb. Should customers tiKI
not to rtfl"" Hltlt lnstrum,nts, thtcustomer will bt bllleclan aptH""ogrl•t• charge f•r tn1trumenh not rtturnteloftd upon Pl't'l'ftltllt, .... 11'1·
strum1111h will btcome"" property of thl customer.
st111011 tpp,aratusand mla.cel,.nooustqulpmtnt ts " llmlftct avolltbiUty·~ whertbV
• - RifUIIIions ltt.lt cia1111y muy lttms
IUCh ""lpmtnlll IH"OYidlld only If avalia.la Irom Ullfinq Wl,tiCIUIO StGCII.
' ~ • . •.
- A cl1artt ptr outltf localloo for pr .. ln:;tallatlon ot canctlled Interior wire Within 1 tMflldllll,,du rlnt tt1t Initial conlfrucuon or durlbg
rtmodtllnt of tt.. bulkllnt.
- A ltrYICI cluir9• for cl'lecks rtetlvfll from • cuslomtr In INrmtnllor nrviet rtndtrlld, or for any Ofhlr nason o1 tnclellttdnHs,
whiCh .lrtluiDiaquenfly rtrumld from fhl bank dut tolnsulflelt nt funds CH" for any other rtJs on.
- A chorte for calls mtdt to Directory Au lstance. TM ch.,ge w ill Itt lilt ltd on • per call basi' tor ttch call mode oHtr tilt monthly
aiiDWtnct of livtcalfs per line or trunll .
·
- Th11N1itol ctltrttl lor cablt Pt ln will blo changed from 11 . ) b1.111nt ICir _ane tMir from customer klettiOfl to customer location to (b. I
blllin1 lor 11111 INir from cwtomtr IOCitiOfl to centro I oltlct plu• ontr " ' ' trorn untr(ll offict to cunomtr location.
- A provision whtraby C1.11tomtn oreltrlnt slnllt-l lnt ftltptlone Mb and othtr anctUorr devices furnlslltd lly 1M Com,.ny on a ,• .,,.basis
may roquHf ltlt comp1ny tosl'llptM ~ulpmenl to tho customor' s tocot/Of1 Yil post•t or dtllvtry ttrvlct for fht cos• lncurrect .
- Speclalarran.. m•nts lor strYICH not specllltd below will bt ·ctu1r9tcl on 1 basis of costs i"currtcllly lht Compeny In proYidlng such
servkt. COfltrocfl lor billing of such 1trvlc11 may be lllabllllttd ror a porlod Of up to elahtv·fOYr (14• rnonths In le n.tt..
TM sclttdut• ot prtstnluct propo11d " ' " ret~utsltd 1" lht comp.any"i Appllcttlon isllsNtl btlow .

4. 25

Alte Are•
!one A ( Z)

Bne

.cn.r-

w•

M .

4.00

7. 50

••~~ qu1r~er •tle(Z)
Two- P1rt)' Access
, Lt ne Mt ltt91, ttch
Qulrter •llt ( Z)

.60

M

z..,o

_.. 1r

4. ZS
8.65

Bue R1te Artl

A ( Z)

,_.

(O· lOOO •In
"\ltltiCMI)

z- I

.... II
( lCIOI -1000

11!1'"

ltsa In• Ar11
•zone A

8. 8~

10. 60

8. 10

•z..,. •

Sllttans)

lD .~

ll . SO
10. IJO
l l ' IJO

1' 45
9.
10 . 95

9. )0
ll.lO
]l . JO

1. H
1) .50
II ' 2!

9. 7S
11 . 15

...,

6. 45

zo

1.25
8. 00

18. 90
20. 40

IJ . 4 ~

21. 90

9. 8S
11.8S
ll.8S

19 .70
l U i!
22.10

lUI htl Artl
•z0111 A

(ICIJI · ll,OOO
.. 1111 IUUons)

•ZOIIf I

111111 IV
( 12,001 - l4 ,IX)9
•1111 Ut&amp;IOI'Isl

1

lilt lilt ......
•Z1111 A

..... v

TottI hchtnge

1. "'

8. 25

8 . 15

10. JO

(Z4,00I..q 000

6. 75

10.25
IZ . 25
14,25

20.50

lndtv l dull
Tn,mk Line Mtluge,
e1c h qu1.rrter •tle(Z)
Two - Party Acc!ss ~ '"'
M11t19f) uch q"u lrt-tr

1.05

1.80
1.!0

8.60

2S . 40

I LlS

12. 50

•11e (2

Tot1l hchugt

IMd VII

Toul flc~~~~~tt

10. 80

9.05

lt . lO

I•• OCII · IU,OOO

1. 85

9. 4S

11.1S

I

y

Aestdlnce
w - It" y

ne

9. 00

Jndhtdijil Ac;cess/
Tn.mk lIne Mlluge,
t!lctl quut.er •11• (2)
T~o-P1rty Access Line
III1Jt19t, tlch quarter

8. 20

12. 25

24.50

11. 80

9.10

8. 00

12. /S

• uo

~

ne

12. 40

9.0&lt;

10. 40

•

lise R•te -'ret

Zme A

11.80

11 .00

13 . 80

9. 95

12' 75

10 . 70

PAl Trunk

12. 110
14. 80

Bue

Rite

5.05

Area

1?. 40
42 . 40

lone A (Z)

lUiS

45 . 40

19.2S
21.25
2J . 2S

XUS
32 . 75
34.15

4l.OIJ"
44 . 00
., .oo

Inatvtdull Access/
Trunk Line Ntle1ge,

20 . IS
ll , IS

32. 10
).( . 10

42 .80
45 .80

zs

4. 35

5.05

ooch line (1)
Two -Party AcciSI

JS.25

10 . 15
IZ . I5

hse R1tt Area
Zone A

9.35
11. 10 ... .

8 . ]0

Pli

38.25

1 1. IS
13 , IS

9 .0&lt;

•D. 05

To t al Exch.~tnge

8.95

Individual

7.Z5

Line

Residence Service

Bue

4.ZS

R1te Are.

UJO

8. 50

lono A (21

3. 50

s.oo

8.00

11. 2S
II. IS

3.00

lJ . IJ()

u1

. 60

. 60

mile (2J

1.as

.so

. 50

Restdence Senlcl!!!
or Y our~ ar

1.65

y

y

ar

er

3;oo

5. 75

un

n

v

11. 25

ua

run

Ul

\'

n

v

9.65

ua

runt

I I.ZS

8ustrtess Servtce
rte
run

12. 75

••

I9.Z5

Servtce

run

·run

10.20

n v ua

30 . 45

Bus I ness

••

39.15

61. 90

Service

run

run

50,65

81nd J

16 . 00

17 . 50

18 . 00

19 . 50

l24,00 H6,000
H1ln St1tl on 1)
hnd 4

26. 25
29 . 25

l Jtt,OOI -64,000
M1 !n St1t1ons I
lland 5
]64, 90 1- 128 ,000
Jill in Stlt Ions)

Business Service
Line
US Trunk

PIX

Z9. 70

!runt

Z9. 70

Business Slrvtce
lndtvlduli Lint

kfS trunk PBX

S. Z5
10 .25

11 . 25
II.Z5

Trunk

8 . Z5
12 . 75

. 60

. 60

. 60

.ao

'~
16. 00

1~ • .?0

Bu • R1t e Are•
Zone 11•
Zon• s•

IJ . 75
17.20
. 10 . 60

10. 90
14 . 10
11. JO

9. 6{)

5.]0

12. 60
16 .00

11 .50

11' 70
IS . 15
18. 60

10. JO
l l.lS
17' zo

25.60

20. 60
24 . OS
l7 . ~

if'S

2S. W

S!rYI Ce
Trunk .Pii !ru n'

J2. 00

28. 110

l8. 4D
.... 60

l Z. OO

•• • 00

51. 20
54 . 40
51 . 60

lJ. SO

u. so

41.
4.(.10

zs

ss.oo

48. 10

61 . 90

28. 80

JO . 95
)4 .4 0

10. 9S
] 4 , 10

'

58 .4&amp;

In• R1te Ar e•
Zon• A•
l one s•

II . J5
11. !15
2 1. 50

12.20
.15.90

But hte Art4
l one A•
lone

14 . 60

12. 40

18 . 2S

10·. 95

14 . 60
18 . l S

2 1.90
2S, 55 '
29. 20

29 .20
J2 .85
16.50

29.2D

.(], 00

l1 . 8S
Jli . so

58.40

ll. 90

16 .05
19 . 70

47 . 45
51.10

62 .01

Total h c h1nge

IS .15

IJ. tO

II . 80

23. 60

J I. SO

)1. so

47.25

63.00

s•

81nd fi
t 12t!, UUI· 2S6 , 000
M11n St1t1on s]

fo t 1l h c hange

Bi nd 1
( 25 6 .OO I·S ll , 000
HI tn SUtions )

Tou 1 Exch1nge

16 .8 5

11.2S

!and 8
Tot• I hthln!Je
( S 12 .001 · 1,02~ ,000
H4ln Sltt IOfl ' l

17 . 60

10. 75
14 ' 35

19 . ~0

17 ' ~5

1430

14 . 155

l8.10
d2 .JO
JS.90

2S.l0

12. g5

•• • 95

21.50
25' 10

28.10

12. 65

25.90

IJ . 20

Z6. 40

Jl. 70

H.W
JS.ZO

28 . 70
l2 . ]0
JS . 90

4l.OS
45.65

so.zo

JJ. 10

34.50

35.20

50 .55

51.15

sz. ao

57 . 40

' 1.00

64 .60

65 . 10

61. 10

fi51 .00

70 . 4D

Total h c harrge

18 .75

15.95

14 . 05

2!L to

J7. so

l7.W

56 .25

75 .00

If the proposed rate increases : are granted. i n full, a representative residentia l
customer and a representative business customer, each with an individual l ine and
one standard telephone, would experience the percentage changes shown below for
the appropriate exchange area in which the cu~tomer res i de s .

,.
Sc lltl:lule or Prue nt and Pr opose1J Acceu Lint Rat•s h
h chanqe

Prtsl!n t
Rat eiJBend

~rODQSI!CI

Compu tson
Ouc r !pt ion

~

I

Chester
Chl r don
Little ~oc~ln9

"'

~rrl~town

OlCI IIH h lng tbn
PowhaUn Point
See Above

Acceu Llne
One h lephone
One O~ t le t
Tou 1 Nb R1te
Old RUt
¥ lnc: r t u e

Fslr~ l tw

Ac:ctu Lint
Ont Tt l t phona
Ont Outl tt
Tot1l Mew Rett
Old h t t
I Incrust

Hi r ill
Quakt r Cit y

Cool vl ll •
C ~~nbt r 1and

Eut Cl ar idal'l

Ac:CIU L1nt
Ont T4 h Ph01'1 1
Ont Ou t l tt
Tot• I Mew AIU
Old htt
I l ncrun
Ste Abo vt

Ac eu s Lin•
Ont Tt 14J'h Ont
Ont 011t l tt
Tot• I Mew R1te
Old AUt
I I"Crt U I

~uopo t • h

14iddllf11 1d

Acc u s Lint
Ont Ttl t phon•
Ont Outlet
h t t l lie• ll1te
Old Rete
C Incrust
Hun h burg

Sit Above
1

Oorst t

Ill:
C!l!!!l!arh.on

See Abo..,e

Set Abo ve

s .. AbOYI

Aecus L1nt
Ont Telep hone
Ont Out let
Tou l ~ttw R•t•
QICI htt
I lhc ruse

"

··~~~~.Lint

0nt T4ltpllont

I Jnt rtUI

20.50

"-111

.80
.41

Tlr.S!

I=

. 80

·"

19.70

-.r.n

,IS

~

18 .1)0

onr

-m:7l

...

Ste Above

•cceu Li ne
514 .35
One Tell!phont
.80
One Outlet
,4 5
To t1l lll!w Rate -rr:ttl
Old ~ I t t
. 7, 45
ll 1ncru u
TO"J:"1I

12~ . 6 0

SI Z.60

.80

.80

.IS
'1o.1!

~

5.2 5

6, 2S

wr.n

llrn

Sl Z. SO

125.60

Hudso n ( "651 " 1

•ccl!n Line
\14 .60
One Telephone
. 80
One Outl!t
.4 5
To tal ~l!w Ra te """T5":"B!
Old ~ Itt
11 .25
1 Increase
tf.1l

...

.80
.45

.80

~
IUS

'"Tr.1l'!
5.75

11r.3l

6

l'IT.1II

SI Z. BO

S25 . 60
.80 ..

:F.

·"

~

~

9. 65

10. 65

I&gt;.U

""11":11

.IICCU $ Lint
S14 .J5
One TeltpMne
.80
One OUtl et
.as
Toll 1 lttw Rate 1I:1D
Old htf
11.25
J lncreue
""1r.7l

.eo

~
9 .45

Penlns.o ll

Tlnl

a...-

6

Sl5 . 60

.80

·"

'1o.1!

Aur ort
81 ! nbr idge
Hinckl ey
Northfield
Ai chf lt1d
Ru utl l
Twin sburg

1.85

.m:-or
.

...

S25. 60 "

.80

-,n;
11. so

'lr.ll'

m.eo
.80

;

!I

HI SCElLANEOJS SEfi:V ICE MO EQU IPJIIEJIT RA.TE 5
Stlfld~r4 Outhh

II
COII!S!arho"

8

Accn' Cine
~111,85
Ont Ttlephon t
.eo
Ont OUt l et
.u
Tot1l Mtw ll ltl! lf:l1J
Ohl Rst4
lD. ZO
I Jnt re ue
ntr:'ll l
-'ct•n Li nt
SHi.ll5
One Te lephone
.80
One OUtlet
.•5
Total Mtw R4t• -,r,lU
Old R1te
12, 75
llncru i e
~
Ac: Ct U l iM
Orlt Teltpllone
llfl4 OUtlet

Totti i11t11 R4tl
011:1 R1t1
I l!'tCrtUI :

517.60
.10
. 45

il':"n
I),JS

,.-:-x

sv .so

.80

.15

"18:75
21 .40

"!r.ll

Relldtnct
JltlldtfiCI•
Atsldtnct••
Aestatnu (+IOptGilt ,

S21. 50
.80

·"

.......

"18:75

ro.so

"11r.ll

.80

.IS

~

l2.5ll :

'"lJ:ll

1.00..

1.25
1.00

BloD~~~tngallt ]

.15

·".so•
.sou

·"·"
·"

.•o

.IS

...·"..

.15
1. 75•
1.25

·"

1.00
10.00!3)
s.oo 3)
10.00 J)
10.00 J)

!J .OO(l)
9. 0013 )
9.00 J )

s.OOI31

9.00131

. 3o'

i .OOill
9.00( J

.30"

HC

( l) Ont · tllllt c llargt for nn l l'l stal lttionl onl1, no PIIDIIt ll l)' ,.te app l ies .

s ~ a .ro

.80

Tt ltpllone Sets

·"

~

Gong (Roc~ Cruk)
Gong (Hopedale, 8100111t ngd•le )
Go ng•
liong.,.
lklrn cr Ho ~o~ IH
Loud hor n
Loud Horn Uotk Creek)
Re lt)'
Spec h i Gong
Spec hI Gong (Rock Cr.uk)
L!g ilt s
··•
Lig ht s {Ki ngutlle , Oor se.\)
Vltul l Slgn1l
Tr ans f or'llll!r
lfU t~ e rpr oo~ lell ..

1.00
1.25
1. 50•

l. 55
I. 5S
1. 55

J.oo-•

·"'.as

·"

l .OO

) .00
l.OO

1.~

·"·"
·"
·"

. 50
. 75•

·".w
"
HC

1] . 55

NC

Zl. IS
16 . 60

1.00
]6. 50

15 , JO

' .00

' • 01)

...

s. 65

v•~h ~ le

Armr~er i n

Pty Stn 1011 C1lls

.IS

.45

·"

1.10

.80

Scr ,tce Connection Ch 1rsu If)

.25•
1.1 5

.50

Rock Cr tt

.~

·"·"

~

.S!i

7.!0
1.35
l.35
3.10
Z.60
z.60·

·"'

I. 15
1.00

·".so
"

h

·".so

1.00

"

anc Record ln Devt cu

Zl. 50
Z6.00
2Z. 25

21.50
21.50

19.00

22' 2S
22.25

1.00
!.00

. so

9. 50

g_ 50

Len q t~)

4 '00
4.00

5 . 00
~ . 00

"'

s 00

s. "'
00

5. 00

6.00

5.00

Monthly Rete

Propoud ltonth lr Rile

.~

Kon• Publ hhed Kumber•
Mon· Lh ted !fulfiller •
i'lon· Publ hhed MUIIIber (Hopedale,

.so
.so

NC• ·

NC•

"

B lo?"'~"~!ld•le,

NC

.50

1.00

'.00
1.00

·"

NC..

. 50*

.2s u

..;o

.40
.40
. 40

.25 "

.(5••

.so••

u ll to directory
ush t1nce, per ull

{4)

Monthly al lo~o~ a n ce of dl r Kt dialed
c1 lh per uctss lit or t runk.

.40

.so ..

.40
.40

112 AU\)Clated

"

5 .OQ
1/2 AUOC11t•JO

Str~lce

~ r 11Ct

Tt l -To~c l'l

C1llln9 g r vlce

~11•11

Hult !-Li ne Tl! l epllone Service

z.oo

.so•
..

1.00

. so•
6.50" "

5.00
5.00

s.oo

1.00

.so•
7 '00"*
1 .oo

7. 50
1' 50
7. 50
lD.OO
10.00
10.00
5.00
1().00
7.50

. 50'
Ct.~st"*

10.00
1. 00••

'.oo••

'.00••

oo•

Preser&gt;t Ko rrlhlz R1te

1110-L lne telepllone
Tif(!·l1ne Telep hone ••
Tliret Li ne·Tt!hp~one
Thr ee·L lne releP~on e "
h tenslon ch1rge fer each 1 ine used"
Tllr ee · Lil'le rel epflone • •
Tllr et·Line Powe r Sypp ly

"'

Propo~ed - Mon t h

I X ~ate

1. 50
1.50
5.00

1.00
Varl•b le ..

l .OO
3.00•

s.oo

1.
Yar fablt • •
5.00

5.00
2.00

so•

-vr.1tl

S29.2tl

...

·"'

~

1. 25
1. 25
1. 50
1'50•
1. 25

0 l11 - 1n~H1nd14t ( ~oped1 leJB loCIIIIil'l!ldl lt 1
1. so
Dtal · l"- lllndttt•
1 '50 "
Dial · ln- HIIIdttt"
2.50 ..
P1ntl
1.~
StltiOI'II/htiii iiOf'IS fr 0111 Guest Robfllsu
'75...
ClndltU iCk
!.00
Cl'llst .
l .OO
CriCilt
l.OO
Erh:oton
.80
Er ic ofon (Roc k CrHk, ltopedllt/I IOOII tngGi lt) .85
Ertcoton•
.85 •
bploslon·PrOG f ftltpllont
10.50
bploslon·PrOGt Ttltphont (Rock Crut,
lfoptdl 1t/11oc.invds l e )
·

Ill. 70
.80

·"

..:w
40. 40

nr.JII
Ul. 70

·"'
·"
zs.

~

iO

8."'

"1r.TI"

PI)' SUt iOII (Aurora, Auntnburt, lllnbrt~tg•,
· Hlnck1tJ' , lll.ldson, ltlwllury, Mortl'lf'ltlll,
Ptrttnsultl Perry, llt " llf itld , RYntll,
TWfnlllwrg
P1y Stltlon (._lhtthlh, ttnterwtllt, Jlltd1son.

...·"'

Sl5.ZO

'1W:1&gt;

lUi

Pierpont, TI'"UIIk11 I

Pty StatiOfl (CIItr-don, · tNitlro jltfll¥1 1 Ltttlt
Hoclltrtt, "'"hlllt, ,ftorrlltOW!o Old
Wllhtntton, PC*t!atan Po int, Th~son)
P1,1 Stt11on (Pstrwhtw, Mtr•, ~lk., Ctt.y, Rock

,_,

,., sutt011 ~oat,me, c...... t~~~&lt;~l
Ply StltlOI
l l 0011flldalt )
P1! Statta~
,,.,.,n 1, DOrsot)
PI /k.TS LIM: A~tP~aranct

'-"'lll

"!~:!!

.

HC

'7S •

Ott!~ tn~111nd1tt

22.50

"

.so ..

Cbntii!Prl IIIQtledale/ B1~KRingd1l t)
Conti"'Pr••

-.nt

.80

1.oo•

Cont~r1

.110

1,11 Type Ke 1 Telepnone SyHI!III
1.. Type I:!)' hl ephOr!l! SystM"
lA Type Key Tl!l ephont SyHI!fll.,.
Foor -11 ne Ke)' Te l ephonE' Sy,ll!lll
ACid It ion 1l CO/fK/WATS Li ne C~rd
~ lne•St~tlon Intercom EA panslon
Pl i nt ~S t at l bn Interc om Ex pansion• •
Oh l Jnterc OII St1tion
H1nual l l'l t t rc m
Manual Int ertOIII
Te l - To u c~ Inter com
T el·To u c~ lnttr ctlll
Ota l Cal l Plc ~ -up
Kl! y Synet~ Si ngl e Line Tt! ltphone
Sh ·Butun t:l!y Tel ephon!'
Sh-8uttcm Kty Te l ephone•
Sh Button t:ey Telephone "
len·Br.rtton t:ey Telephone
len-Button Key Te lephone •
Ten- Button Kty Tel ephone ••
Twehe - BYtton ICey Tt l ep ~ne
Elghtten-8utlon Key Te l t!pllone
Twenty-Sutton Key Te ltpllone
TWI!nty- B..,tton ICtJ Tel ep ~nt
l ll lr t.r·BYtton Uy Telepllone
8U1)' Nt.lllb!r Ohphy
llus)' NuiiiOer 01splly
Hand1fr ee Unit
COIIIPIIl !on Handsfr ee On ll
Ty r rets . 1l ng le or dou ble sided'"*
Tie Trunk t o PU S• Hchbolrd••
, Eoch Unit of Ctbl c {20' or frtctlon t ht r eof)

"

l mpr o ~ed fi4o~ l1 e

Te l ephone Sen let

No~1 1 s.r ~ lce Are•
P10r111al Strvlc e Ar'l!l•
Si ng I• r. n.nne l St1Mtrd \et
Sing le C111nne l St andard Set"
Single Ch1nnel Ore l u•e Set
Aclditlon •l Ch1nne l
Add it ions ! Ch1nne T•
Nob il e h t en1 ion Te lephone
Non -Cont1nwoul At l ty Ct~~~trol
IIOti ·Contlnou' Aehj' Contr ol :
Con tinuous Rth)' Control
Ay • ll I try l Mp
A.o•ill 1ry Morn
11t4therp roof Equ1 p!lllllt C Jb l ~ t t

l.ZS
1. 40
1. 40
I. 40
I. ] 0
I.JO
1. 30
1. ] 0

2. 60

.80
2' 55

l.U

l . .,

1.15

us

1.15
10.50
10.50

a.

8et w t n C(ltlttguor.r~ Cent r 1l Off1cu ·
Ai r l ine Ohtuc:e 5 rti1es or l eu :
PU Trunl:
flus lneu Llne
Ru l!kl!nct Llne
Atr11ne Oht •nce 1110r e
leu t hin 10 111!1es:
PU Trun~

14. 55

5. B5

1.(. 55

·5.15

1-4.55

5. 45

1••• ,

4. 10

l . l5 ..
1.25

••• 15

1e . s5
.14 . 55

.80

14.50

18 .00""
6.00..
YHhble

24.50
2(. 50
s .00
I . 50
1.00
1.00
1.00
1.00
1.00
6.50

.oo··

.IS

1.25
4.25

s.oo

9.00
6 .00
9.00

6 . .,
J . 50
1.55
l. 15
1. IS
1. 15
6. 10
a. 10
8.·10
8.65
11.65
ll. JS
11 . 15

1~.00

15~10

6.00

1.45
1.45
15 .60

10.00
Urlltlle
7. so

3.00
3.50•
1,25..

).00
3.50•

1.25••
6 .00

1.60
6)5
1.00

..
"

6. 10

J.OO..
1.2S..
.25,

~r tunt

Monthly Ra te

Prppodd Mcn thl y R• te

70.00
25.00"'
40 . 00

24. 0C

s.oo
1.00

. 75

Kt y

"

Prutn l Montl!ly R1U

Propo5ed Monthly htt

1.65
15.00*
IO . OQII'

1...65
7. 65

10.!10
11.50
10.00"
Present lton thh R1te

1.65
11.50
11.00
11.50
!ropostd litonthh l1tt

12 . so

1] . 25

10 . 00
1. so

1].25
1).25

I A Typt ~ty Syuttrr
four· lint Key Sy1 ltlll
•dd ltlcn11 COIFUIIAl S Line Card
~ey SJitMI SIJ\9 It·llnt h lt,.,one
__,
Sh·flu tton ~:ey Tt lepnone
}
Ten -Bu tton Uy Tel 1phon1 p
T111 h t · Button 1t11 T• l•pnone
Elglltttn• flutton t:e! Tel ephone
r.ent y·81.rtton ' ' ' t leohone
fll lrt)'-lutton l ey Telephone
8us y Ni.llbt:r Dl sph)'
H1nd 1frte Ul'll t
C011111n jon Ttlt'pllone Hlnlh fr tt Unit

!!conr~~c t

11 . 25 ..

llui de"ce L!nt

10.50

1.00/ ' 1/ 4 11 H e ( 5)
IJ .2S +
1.00/ 1/ 4 111111 (5 )

15 . 50 +
1.00/1 114 (IS)
ll.OO +
I. OOJrt llt {IS )

1).15 •
1.00/ 1{4 • II• (5]
1) .25 +
1. 001 IJ~ e lle (5 )

~ t ln :

10.50

ll .25

+

1. 00/rtlle (S )

+

1.001 1/4 rt Ht (SI

..

( 51 Aclp lle s to d h h nu s oyer 5 s lles.
(61 AJ~pllt s t o d!shnus over 10 • O tt.

'

Sysu... , (Ill

lnluff lc l t nt f 1tnd CIIICk Charge, ptr Chid

5 1t1les,

Auldence l lne

h l 1 ~ one

l nlu f f!Ci tnt Fund Clltck Ch trpt

H .Z5 +

1.00

Clb lt Ptlrs 11'1C1 N11•ase
.' Spec hi Record ing Trunk, s. .
c.ntnl CH"rt u
T•n1 i n1t I on
Rifl9do.n Ci r cuit

3. so
).(5
1.25

..

10.80

l8. IS

9.25 (8)

·"

1. 00

9.Z&gt;

•

•

.t.ppl1utlon (General h c hange hriH, P. U. C.O No . 8 and Loc al [lC IIangt

Mly bec011e effect he,

~Yrsu a n t

revl~lons

.!'•

thereof u

to orders of yoyr COIIIII1ulon,e duri ng
•~d

t ile date upon

1.00
2.25
J.SO
1.00

. 75

Ch1r gts

hconnect fr011 Hon·Pa)'lltn t
Rtconntct f r011 Norr·P1,..n t . (Rock Cred,
l l 0011i ft9dl lt , Hopedllf)
Rtc:Oflntct 'r0111 llon · P•~t {Pirk111n )
RK onnttt fr OII llof\ -PI~l (Hunt sbllrg,
h it Cl lr ldOtl, Mldd l t f1t lcl, "u opohrtrl l )
RIC OMIU fr• IIOfi·PI)IIltllt (lUig iYI 1l t, Oorut )
h&lt; onnt ~ t fro. YUit1DII htt

Pl•u• nt of prew l rt to out l e t
St1nd1rd Interior it1t ion •lrt (non•kty ) ,
w ou tl tt
luslntu
Ru lftnc:t
Multi -li ne or cllll t,

G r •~t l~t h ot her •nd furt lltr rtltef to ~ 1ch Appllunt 1111y lH! ent1 111d

.

1~

for uiCI p_roposM l(llldwitt; 1n e1

t he prenhes.

Ohio.

THE 11£STEAN

~ES ER ~£

fEl £PIIOHf

C (MIA~Y

Legionnaires honor past members
l.OO
3.00

j 101
PO)

l .OO

jl O)

10.00

Post everlasting. services for 12
deceased members were held at the
Wednesday night meeting of
Feeney·Bennett Post 128, American
Legion, and the Auxiliary Of the
poot.
The service followed a roast beef
dinner by business sessions of both
the Legion and the Auxiliary were
then held.
At the Auxiliary meeting, Poppy
Days were tentatively set for May 23
and 24. A report was given on the Arcadia Nursing. Home held Feb. 22
with Gerry Parsons, Enna Hell"
dricks, Etta WIU, Carol Triplett,
Jean Gilmore, Sonya Wayland,
Ethel Hawk, and Nettie Hayes going
to Coolville for the party. Cake, sandwiches, and punch were s•" "&lt;I to
the residents. Six puzzle·

PO)

~.50 "

liD)

1. so

POl

l.OO

!10)

(!D)
( 10)
HA

m1"'
(10)
( 10)
( 10)

1101
110
j!O)

22.45

5. 75
3. 00

Microwave ovens for use In the
Meigs County Extension S!lrvlce
classes to be held March 4 and March 11 at St. Paul's Lutheran Church
will be provided by Elberfelds and
Ridenour Supply, Mrs. Dale Stoll,
economist, announced today. The
cla88es are -2 a session payable at
the door.

16. 1S

J . 7S

7. 95

J.OO
5. 50

20.50
18. 60
l) . U
10. iO

A. 75

1 . 00
1.00

uo.oo

so.oo

B~ . oo

230.00

8l ' 00

110.00

1~ .00

!0.00

25 . 00

70.00

A hymn sing will be held at the
carleton Clrurch, Kingsbury Road,
Pomeroy, Sunday at . 1:30 p.m.
Special singers will be Dan Hayman
and the Country HyllUltlmers and
Roscoe Fife and the Soul Finders of
Cheshire. Jim Evans,,pastor, Invites
the public to attend.

'70.00
70.00

15.00
2S.OO

25.00

265.00

8.2.00

265.00

2S .00

10.00

"

Zl.Z5

2~' 00

Zl.Z5

~0 . 00

go .oo

20 . 00

190 .00

20.00

s.oo

4D.OO
40.00

5.00

130.00

zo. 00
20.00

,,

Harrisonville Lodge 411, F. and A.
M. will meet Saturday at 7:30 p.m.
aI the Masonic Temple. Work will be·
in the master mason degree.
POMEROY··In observance o!
World Day of Prayer, the Alfred
United Methodist Church, loCated
on S. R. 681 between Datwln and
Tuppers Plains, will hold a special
service of worship. There will be
special music with the RA!v. Cart
Hicks as the guest speaker.
CHESTER- The men o!theChes·
ter United Methodist Church will
host a soup supper March 1.'1 !rom 5

130.00
40. 00

~0.00

130 . 00
7. 95

20.00
20 .00

28.45
70.00
IJO.OO
130.00

zo.oo

20 .00
20.00

"
20.00
10. 00

Prnen t Ch1rqe

l.OO
l.OO

10.00
fll(

Prt~l!flt

Charge

18 .00
18 .00

l.OO

"
3.00
per work t ng
but tOll

"
NC
NC

Prtsent Cll1ru

NC
Pr esent Cll1r11

taken.
It was noted that the Buckeye
Girla Slate cards have been received
and the co-sponsors will be contacted as soon as namea are
received from Meigs High School.
The third Wednesday of each month was set up as craft day at the hall,
10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Each month some
different craft itema w!U be made
and taken to nursing · homes and
veterans hospitals.
At the April fllel!ting, delegatu
and alternates to the swmner conventioo will be elected. At the May.
meeting unit officers wiU be elected . .
Get-well cards were sent to Mrs.
Ernest v,n Inwagen, sympathy
card to Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence
Boyd, and an anniversary card to
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Swisher.

Announcements

2'1 . "10
29 .S!
4 I .85
33. 40

7 . 7S
10. so
II. 50
4 .50

..

eo.oo

17. so
Pro pou1:1

C ~arqe

1.25
10.00

2.00
2.00
Propoll!d Ch1r ge
15.00

18.00
HC
1.25

10.00

12.00
12.00
lUXJ
14.00
16.00
10.00
12.00

l .OO
~ropos ed

Charge

1.~

! roeo_st&lt;l Cll arae

". ""'f

28.4S

1.00

2t1 . 45
28.45

2.00

28. 45

!.SO..
5.00

2s .•s
28.•5
Propostd

10.00
30 . 00

30.00

20 . 00

30.00

""
"

41.85

to 8 p.m. l'loceeds will go toward
the outdoor bulletin board. The pulllie Is Invited to attend.
CHESTER..A spaghetti ~upper
will be held at the Che!lter Grade
school on Saturday trom 4: Jl p.m~
to 6: 30 p.m. Spaghetti with holl"'l!made sauce, garden salad with choIce ol dressing, and wann roll with
!Iutter wW COlli $2.50. AU pies,
cakes, colfee, tea and pop wW be
cost extra. PROCEEDS WU..L GO
TO THE Chester sixth grade safety
patrol PI'Oil'arn to help send chUd·
ren to Washington. n.c.

The Meigs High School Io,
strunienlal Music Department will
present. "An Evening of MIISic" at
7:30 p.m. Thursday In the Larry R.
Morrison Gymnaslwn of Meigs High
School.
Featured on the program wiU be
the Meigs Symphonic Band con.
du(:ted by Douglas M. HIU ancl the
guest band, Jackson High School
Symphonic Band with Jack Delaney
conducting.
Both bands are completing an exchange program ~atabliahed by the
directors in 1981. Works by 811Ch
compoaers as Holat, Ives, Gnmdman and Os~rllng will be preaented. ·
Admission will be $2 per. famiy and
$1 per single adult.

Astrograph

110.00

10.00

"• lnttnll'lct ~ f Strf fct Charpe
Tttt Chtr tt
Pr • lst VIs it Cll1(ie r
Prtllht Wls lt Cllargt (Rock Crtt~, l lc.lOIIIint;~dl lt,
Hop.tlfllt )

(H , blish an effe&lt;tlve dau

D.

!he f orm of t~h not !c:e has been appr oved oy Tht Public Ut t11l1n CD~W~~Iuton of

t 6, IS
1' 95
20.50
18. 60
I J .4S
10.90

1.50

C.

to

41.8!
H.40

Cll t r~

10.00

Prtstnt Montftly Rite. Propostd ltlnthlr R1 te

IIC
Ylrlsbll: ( 7)
IIC

and Ch1r gu a~d th11 reg ulations 111d

Apprcve t~t rtl l ng of the Uhf!l:lu lts cont·l rneo In SCIIII:Iule ,f - 1 of tilt

B.

7.95
2 ~ . 10
29 .55

Pr tw 1rl ( htrqe I l l )

C4b le Pti r - !ntrtoffict

'

i ntlrtOII f or tokllti ·I IN UiiPhOntS ,
pe r two s tlt lonti
Por.e.r S..ppl y

T~r ee· line

1.20
1. 70

l.SO
1.50

,f.;lprOYI! t he Proposed r1 tu

pru llu&amp; • ffec t lng thl s.-.:

u .•s

I. 75

2.2S

b~tton

.75
. 75
.75

I.OOo

IS, 50

10

(It}

NC

1. 75

A.

'ropouo Ch1rqe

j)(!r wcrk lng
biJttOn

1.001 1/A •li t lSI

o~e r

~rnent Ch1rqe

per work i ng

11.00

Airline OlsllfiCe
P8K Tr..,nt

[st •b t htwnent of strY1te c h,.ge

Tllrte•lln• t•ltphont

"
S8. 75

1.!0
s.00"

II.CII:fl t lonal c ~an n t l, aCided on separat e
vh1t, tiC ~ :
En t Clari don h changa
~d son, "~&gt; It lnburg E ~c llange
For rertelvl l fr OM one ~t11 1c l e and r e1nst l l ·
ht lon In 1 d ifferent Yf~ltle at t ilt unw
tIme :
•
11tr4n uttsr•ctor )' full c•~ li ng Is
pr utnt
Wilen utrH nl) ' ' not prelent or not
nttl flctor y
Ch1nqe fr 0111 one il4n lhl rd C()lo r tontrol head
to another s t and 1rd color
Act h at ing St:rYitt •Cillr!je , for the l'!etnury
I CijustMnts t o connect an 1lrUdJ installed
c~storM:r·o....,ed unit, which Is of 1 suitab le
trot , 1nd 111ah It rudy h r 1110bllt service
to t ilt No~ 1 l Se r.,iu Ar e• :
Eut Ch rldon hc h&amp;nge
lludson , Austinburg hcll•nge
"'oblle htenston Tele phOne, ll'lsulll!d at tht
sa.one tl flt u In i t ial 1nsullat lon. each
MObile [IUnslon Tele phone, 1dded on ~epar1 t t
visit, uct1
Au• 11 hry hor n 1nd I'IO n ·conllnuo u ~ relay contr ~!
equJprrrent , in1to lled at s6'11e tl rtt u inllitl
inst oll •t lon u ch
Eu t Clari don h c ~ a nge
lludson , A11 s t lnbyr9 E•ch1ng1
Auxiliary horn 1nd noi'I ·C ont lnuoul rtlly control
equ!JN~~~ n t, 1n1 t1lltd on Sf!plr&amp;u ~tslt, uc..h
Eu t Cl ar 1don h cllangl!
HuCISon , Aust lnbur9 fx ch1nge
Au•11tlrJ I MDJI 1ncl continuOus rtla:J con tro l
, equipmeut. lns t1llerJ •t tilfflt tll!ll n lnHIII
ln1t1lht lon, uch
Aw • llltrr 141'!P and contlnuOYS rela7 control
tQu l prnent, l n~t•lle~ on up1r1tt ~hit ,
uch
[ttlblhll add l \101111 al pllabtt1u l l lltlng, u ch
Rutorll c1t1r9~ f or restoring ur ylu whi Ch hu
~ten dl'\ltd ro r non·P • 7"11!nt
Ch•nge color Of dial control hf:ltt
ln,1dt 1110-• of d1al control ned
1n11 1:1e 11:1 ~ e or r adio control hud
Ins 1dt 'IIDVI of antennt
RMDul of senlu and I!Qu lpnen l
lnltall l llOn of wuther,roof equ ipment
ceb1net for 1110untlng r td io equt~nt

Two · lint t eltphone

iiJ.SO
9J .so
111.50

82.00

the f o llo.lng :

hr lff, P.u. c .o. No . 9] IIOdified to rtflKI tucn

Residence

Multl· l lnt Ttl tp!lonu

24.00

20 .00*

~o

.10
. 10

Pierso n• I Sl !ilnll ln g Se r vice

l uslntll Line

Ter~~ l n1t l on

'

t~ ln

llnlneu Line
5.1 5

s.zs
'

II(

Bu tc. Stnt u
lu ic Strvl ct (Tone
HIJ U9t )""
lute St rvl u (Tone Onl y] •
Pocktt Rlee h tr • Tone On ly
Pocktt Atethtr - VIbrator /Tone
POCir:tt R4Cth4r•
rore lon cent ra l Office Serylce.

16.00

J.OO
3. 00
2

~ l'ld

Sl 11gl 4 Clllnn tl SUnGird Sit, provtCIId
and insttlhd ~Y t ht COIIPi n)':
E1n Cllrldon bcll4ngt
HYdlon, Ant lnburg h cllangll
Sin g!• Ch1nnol Dt lw•e St t. Pf OYi lltO
ancl Instil ltd ~)' 'tht COIIIP'" '
Addltion1 1 Chll'lnt l , lnJtt l ll d I t tl'rt liM
tl !ll u i nltl l l t nsu l ht ions or Qtlltr
add It t cn1l chlllf,el, uc h:
£u t Cl 1r ldon C•c~ 1n 9 t
Hvdsol\, Austinburg [lc~ anve

Presel'lt "'nth I) II ate

1.

.0~

.10

Mobl lt Ttl•phont »rvtn

be five (5)

~.so

to

Proposed Cll1r;e

and Dorse t hch1n9et

ln l thl Stn lu Ordtr Charge
SubJtquent Strvict Order Char tt
Ct ntrtl Offlu Ch1r ge
~ h lttt 1o n Chtrga
Pr1111i11 Wi ri ng Ch1r g1 , ptr o~tltt
Stlt i on ~1nd H n9 C~ &amp;rfl , ptr Itt

.10

t o directo r.i' assistance

Rn ldence , per lfne •
Rnldtllce , per li ne ..
Buslhen. per 1 ine "
Bu1 lness, pl!r I ine••
BYsi nen , pe r 1 ine {Rock Creek )
IllS Trun k, pe r li ne •
IITS Trur~ k, per l ine ..
IllS Trur~ k , per I tne (Rock Creek)
PBX Trunk, per l ine •
PB X Trul'lk, ~ ., l ine ..
PBX Trun ~ , ptr l ine
w.n s Acc!u { ~ usl n us), per line ..
WATS Access (PU1, per 111'11! "
IIATS Accen (KTSJ. per I ine ••
Ttl·Tuuch Tel ephone Sets•

Ct11rge

Auidtnct 110)

.40
C 4 11~

1.~

lhe Pf"4yer ol tM App llutlon requesh the POO l it Ut1llt1e~ Camri ss lon of Cil lO

ln1th l St nice..,·dt r C~1r g e
SubiiCi"t nt StrY itt u.•&lt;Jt r Char9e
Ctntr ll OffiCI C ~1r91
Vl s itttlon Ctlar91
Prtlllht ll1rln9 Chtrgt , ptr out 1tt
Shtlon Hand l ing Cll&amp;rgl, ptr U t

1.00

"

~ erator ~ 1n ls t ed

"DiriOlts rpte for custOfltrs of lite ParkMon, ~ntsb\lrg, ~ldd!efield, fillltopot•il,
•nd. East Cluldon ucflangn .
' "DeiiOtes ratt for cust01111rs of tilt Kl"9sv11if a"d Dor set e•tlunge~ .

!ru.!J!ll (1oI

1.00

1.00

l

l.oo

10 . 00
10 .00
10 . 00
10 .00
18 . 00

t"'

All Other E•c 111nges

1.00

1101
iO
10)
101
101
11 01
1101
11 01

{9) 1trvlce con nection Chlr9ts '"*billed 0t1 1 ptr occurrence ~u rs.
lHil PrOPOsed c hi'1!H for str~lct conntc t iQfl w ill~ applll(l tll\.0 on
•chi I .or~
done. Tht prepolfd Chlr!ltl ltlollln .f or tlusilttn or ruldi!IICI 1nn1al ser- lct"'OI"O.r
cllargt , ub~t11utnt sen Ice ordtr cfltr!ll. Ctntrt l off let t h4rge. vi 11 [ u 101'1 Clltr9f,
prer~ise wir!ng ch1r9e ~st a tion hllld1!~ cll1rge v \ 11 tPDIJII In other tul\tngtl .
( 11) CIIII"IJtl 1pp \.)' tn addit ion t o regu lu epplictb le "r•lct t hlrQts .

1.85

Ins ta llat i on of new or 1dd!tiona1 ~e r~lce :
) . so
lnd hldual l1 nt-Bus 1neu
2. 50
Ind iv idual l ! ne-R e~l 11 en c@
Par ty Li ne -Bus i neu
] ' 50
2. so
Pe rt)' l:.lne· RUi dence
1.00
.+.dl:l ltional T tle~hone Set
I. 50
Add lt looal Tel ephOne Set
Recon nect ion of uhtln; hcillt 1es " I t ~ 110
ch1nge In loution , type or 1tyle of
!.00
eqwi pdlent
l. 50
Tr ansfer of service
1.00
""~e of tt lepllone ut wit h in Ulfll r0011
3.00
Move of telephone set to dl l fere nt r()l)lll
I. so
Cll1nge !n type or \ty l• Gf teltpnonf.
Cost
All ot lltr changes

"

(! OJ

&gt;.00
' .00

wrrlrh saiCI pr oposecl scMdultl bK081t effect he;

Susl neu

s.oo
1 so

Mor~~ Pub II 1hed Pl~ r

1.00..
1.00••

Jnu a ll tt ion of new ur ~lce
Tr an s fi r of urvict
lnst 4111t lon of color tele phone nt
Jntt a ll l tion or u r~1C4 ~In drop •ire
11 burt t a
""v • of tt l tpllon • ut wtt~ln 1111'11! ~re~r~ l u
Ch 1ngt In typ1 or style of tl lt pnont sf t
Cht ngt of non· lhtal:l or no n -putll1s~ed
ttl tphont nUiftblr

.so

i. 50
12 .00

~res en t

1. ~

1.85

.50••

!n ltt 1l Str ~ l ct Or ~1 r Charg e
5u bsl qutnt Strvlc1 Order Cllugt
Cen t rll Dfr1 ~ 1 Cllargt
~htU t iO!I Char ;t
~r e111h 1 1111"1"1) Clllrgt, 111 r Ootl et
Sut i0t1 Handl hg Cllargt , per ttt
Hvntl~ ur
P1r k1111n ltriO otamll ' ltlddltfltlCI ,
n
1r on • c 11!1!!.
'Ytl ntu l OCI Ru id tnct

.10

l.OO..

Corel
•Cor cl (Ki nqs~lllc , Dor set]
COrel
Corel [Rock Cr eek, ~oPed41e , SloOI'Ilngdale)
Cer ci
Cor el
Cord (Rock Creek , ~optd61e, Bloollllnqdlle)

.60•

1.85

10. 00

t ile lnt ert11 Mtwen the fll !ng of tile .\4)p llutlon

K1nqs~ 11 1t

Foot
Foot
Foo t
r oot
root
Foo t
root

!.SO

.45

Card Olaler
Log ic . Dialer

9
9
12
12
14
15
15

"

.as

I. 50

·""

lnltill Str YiCI 01"fllr Cll1r9t
Su bsl()utnt Stry1cl Orcltr Cllargt
Ce nt r1 l Offi c t Clllrg•
Vh tht ton Ch •rw•
Pr tm i U Wi ring Cherqt, oer 011tl t l
Sutton H1rrd lhg C h a rt;~t, per 5et
Ruldenu

.95

·"'

1

~

.15

l.OO

• Color TtltDIIOnl
f_,tct Set w/ Oisl Li ght
lltarlng IIIPilrtd 1t1n1hel
lnd1ettor l !tilt
Tt i - Toucp., Ruldenc.t Line
le t - Touch, But lneu Line
Ttl - Touch, tach n9t Trunk line
Ttl-Touch, IIATS Atceu ll ,..
SMI-Publl c T 1lepll ~ Servlct

ll . 15

·"
·"

~restnt

1.00

J.15

Prut~~t C ~ntf

.4S

1.00
1.00

R1tt oer C11l (l(l~svllle. Donet)
Ratt oer cell (All other uchan;n )

1.10

.so

...

3.00• •
Concurrenc~
1. so•·
Concu r re nt~
(7) ~r of Clble palrt billed bntd on pre,nt r.etiiOI:I e f c t1argi~j ont c1tl lt pai r
r r&lt;l"i t~e custtw~tr '' l.outlon dlrettl1 t.o the t Y H~r'5 Other ocat·lon.
(81 ~er of .Cible p41rt billed bu~d on proposed Mthod cf cherglng one cab I.e p1 ir
fr011 t~t cus t OIIII!r's loc ation to th.e central office •nd 1noth~ r . c1~le p•1r fr0111
t he cen t r11 office to tM custOMer 's otlltr locll 1cn.

1.110
I.BO

1.25•
l .oo-"•

""'

7

Proposed 'bltll lx A1tt
9.15

70.00

.n,

:·65

.IS

Ptnonal 51p1'1 1 1!ng StrY1tt

Sttrtd1rd Tt l tphont
Color Tt ltp~•
.Color Tt l.epii Of\t•• ·
wall TtlepiiOflt• ·
COIIplCt Stt w/0111 ll gllt

IU S

..

-H

.......I&gt;
...

.so•

Outlets
Non-F lwsll
Non-F I wsll ( Hope&lt;11l e/ l lo0111lng11s l t l
OUUOOI" In COIIIIP•nr hrnhhed ~o ~
Fluiii/Outdoor tn Cu1t01111r F.orl'll shed l o•
Flulh/ Out door In Cust01111r Furni shed IO•
(Hoped1 l eJfll0011t ngdl lt)
Outltt•Montlll.r Rltt•
Plug•fiton t hl J Rite•

na .10

Pr opoud Montll lr R1t1

.15

PIK jRCKk Crttk)
PfiK lfopedll4/ lllo011lngl:l41t )

(I l All ABOVE PR(SENT AND PROPOSED RATrS ARE FOR ACCESS LINES, OfiLY . SEE RAH S
li STED BEL OII , WHICH ARE IPI ADOITI O!I TO ACCESS LINE RATES .
(2] Nt le19e c ll~rgu IPPI1 In lddltlon ¥h tht present ICCtll ·I ine cl'l•rgu . They
will be e ll• lnttld on the proposed rat1s.
,

.45

Pru•"t fiiOIItlllr R1t1

Uttlon Out lt \,1 (AJioc l at t d •Hh
Ttltphone Set )
8ustnts•
lushttu•
eus t nen••
8uthtn !Roell Crtt k)
lui lntU Hopecl114/ ll OOIIIIngdllt )

Ac~;.en Line
l1l .75
Ont hI ephone
, 60
One Gut let
. 45
Total Mew A1te -rr,oa
Old h te
12 .80
I Incrust
IT":il

N~wbu r y

125 .60

.80
. 45

9. 90

Abo ~e

Auu i ntlurg
Pur)'

'T.X

\1 2.80

.80
. 45

See

.80

9.65

~

61oOIII II'Igda l e

.15
'1o.1!

~

m.eo

Acce u Li ne
Sll .J5
One Te le plloni!
.eo
On• Ou tlet
. 45
Total 11t11 Ratt IS':1XI
Old ~U t
10 .2 5
I lncrt u e
-.r:1l

~~5 . 50

s12. eo

ll. I S

Gu ev 1
TIIOII' PIOM

40.40

lr.71T

"1T.""tf5"

\ 11.75
Accn\ line
One Te lephone
.BO
One Qut le t
. ~5
Tot 1l Ke" Rote "1"r.t!O
Old Ri te
10 . 10
l lnc.ruse
~

lnl'

20 . 20

Ont Out Itt
Total New A1tt """"Tr."01
Old hte

~

.BO
.45

112 . 80
. 80
. 4S

A,h tllbul•
Centery llll'
Mtd hon
Pierpont
Tr ufllbul l

.80
. 41

J5. 20

=

COIIIPU hon
IR
Otlcr i ption . COI!If)lrhon

SlS.60

17.60

"-:cus Line ,
S1 Z.80
0n4' Tt le phont
.80
Ont O.. t ltt
.45
Tota 1 New II I tt ~
Old R1tt
' 6 . 05
l lncreut
Accnt Lln1
One Tt lephOU
One Out let
Toh 1 New Ra te
Ol dA 1te
I lnC rtl st

ScMtd~ l t c f Prutnt tnd Pr opoud Acuu Li n• Altu b helllnil (Continued)

Conpar t son

Acceu Line
Sl2. 60
One Teleph"ne
. BO
One Ou t l et
.45
Tou l Nt~o Rue ~
Old Rate
10.25
t lncreue
~

~nty ! l lt

Ch orCion
( w/C Ililt l end
Cal lin~)

Eltchange

1.10
1. 5S

Ke f Ttltpltone Systems

"Zoned r ate s appl, to I!OOfllngdale, Ctntenllle , Chl:st1r, Ccolvlll e , CU11btrl1nd, Dor , t, [nt Clar idon , fa t r v i. e~o~, KOpel:llle , King sville , little
Hocking, i'le1opct.wnh, M!ddlefleld . ltorrhtOllll'l , 01d Wnh.lngton, P1r k• 1n , Powt11t.an Poin t, and ~tke r Cit y uchlngu on ly .

. 75

I.SS

I . 25

...

01rect d ill ca ll t o di r ec t Ory
anh tonce , per c a ll (4]

19 . 20
l2. 40
2S. 60

14 . 70

J .OO

"

12 .oo

•11•

Ol r ectbry Assistance Se rv lc~

60. !10

~n l nen

BUI R•te l'.rtl
loo t ••
lon a s•

),45
I. S5

.80

Kon· Putl l hhtd Humber ..
A6d lt lon11 lls t l ng~au sl l'ltU
Add it lonll l ht lng~Bu st neB "
Addlt ton1l L.ls t lng~Bu si ne ,~· ·
Add itiona l Lls t i r~g~AII! s ld enu
Adl:llt1onll L/ st lng -.Rn ldenu •
Add 1tlonll i.ls t ing· Resld!nce ..
for e lqn L htl ng•!us lne n
Fo rei gn Li sti ng Bu s iness••
f oreign Lhtl ng-Ruidt11Ct
f oreign Li st ing -Re sidence ••
Spech l Opera to r lnterctpt
Jo i nt User Sen lee

· run

zo.zo
31.45
39. 15
51.65
Present Access Line Rates-Chardon (with Cleveland Call ing)
Ul

·"'

The Dal Sentinel

Prt5tnt , f'lunthh Rut

lon

C1bh hlr ~ J"ttroff tct - CG!It1 9110UI
hl'lllnttlon
Interoffice Circuit
C•blt ' ' ' ' • lnteroff tn • Hon•contiguo~n
Off-~rMht "lleave :
rjrst l/4
i\dd\tiOfll l 1/. Milt
Off ~r8:1se "llttliJ !Rock Cl"'ftk, Hoptdalt,
ll0011ingdale ):
Firn 1/4 1111t
MdH tona l lit el lt
Off·Prtt~he i'tllu,. : •
Flr1t 1/4 •lit
Add ition• ! l/4
Off.,rah• fiUieage : • •
In d1/f.,-tnt bu11111flljls, Slllt or connected
orMhn ;
£1cll l / 10 1irline •He or friCtion
Different butldlnu, different 11111 n.r·
conntcted prahts in u~~t loc1l e•clbn!lt or
lin let aru :
First 11• •lie
Add1t1onll 11 4 11111e
In di ff er ent bul1 d ift9s, dlflerel'lt 1nd
I'IOfi•ConnK.t!d W"Mh•s '" d if ferent but
Cl)llt1guous loc1l u ch11191 uu
f irH 112 1lrllne 1111le or f r utlon
Add ltion11 114 tl r 1lne 11!11 or fr1tt ion

], 4S

l .OO
! .00

R oc~ Cree~ I

19.25

v

·"'

1.00

1.00

Directory ancl Li st i ng Sery lc es

Business Servi c e
ne
ey run

Present Access Line Rates-Hudsqn (650/655 Numbers)

Bind 9
{ 1 ,0~4, 00 1-up
1'11 In St1 t Ion s l

tne

5". 65

7 . 8~

. )0

wo-

ne

8.65

Bind l
j l l, OO I-2 4,000
l'la ln Sttt lon1)

lndlvtdul l Accen/'
Trunk Ltne Mileage
· e1ch qu1rter llllle(2 )
Two~Party Access l
Ml iuget each qu1rter

4.60

7.85
1.as

Individual Line

lO. tJO

20 . • 0
22 ...0

18.05

Two-P1rh Four·P1rfr Rtllti·Party KTS Trunt

4.60

. )()

y

1. 00

AutOIIIatlc. Ohllng {quhment

Present Acces s Line Rates-Huntsbt~rg

81nd I
!0 - 12,000 ,..In
St a tl on 11

Present Access Line Rates-Mesopotamia
lndhtdu1l line

ne~~

Rile land
lO"CiTT.l! in.l....!!.!!

Present Access Line Rates-Rock Creek
Rtsldence Ser~lce
lndlvldu1l Line
Four - Party

3. 60

Ter~~lnu

6 . to
1.10

.so

Code ·A~Phon e 440
Co de· A ~Phone 440 {Hopedale, Bloomt ngdele)
Cod e -A-Phone 560
Codt·A-Phone 560 (llopedalt, BIComl ngdale]
foo t Swi t ch
Foo t Switch ( Hopedlle , 8 100111ngOal• )
Mew~ r y Phone
Memo ry Phonl! {Rock Cr l!ek )

. so

Mt 1tl9t,
etctl custOMr (2)

5) . 40

Business Service
lndlvlduli lint KfS Trunk PBX f r un'

zo.as

. 75

Proposed Access Line Rate Bands

18. !10
zo. !10

17.85

u1

s.~

1.60
2.25

lo'i

Aulc.1t ic

51 . 00

Business Stnoice
TriCITY'Tclu1i line kfS Trunk PIX Trunk

Trunk

15 . 45

13. 05

Busy L.-np
BUS)' L~ (Rock Cr l!l!lr:)
B.uuer
,
8uuer (Ho~ d • l e, 8100111"9d•le )
CIIIM
Chilli! (Ho9tCiale , 8100fllin!ldalt )
C01111011 Aud i ~It
Stlflcllrcl Bell
Sht~d ii'·O 81! 11 °

Cords {Edra

.(9 .00

Present Access Line Rates- Hopedale
Rtsldence Ser v ice
Two - Party four ~ Par"ty KTS Tr unk

15 . 45
15 . 45

. 75

6 . 35
6 . 35

. 50

41 . 00

36 . 75

v

3.60

4.35

45 . 00

JJ.75

2S . 45

20.35
Z3 . 35

15 . 45

Bustness Servtce
n

Bloomingdale

Trunk

.60

.so

Ul

Total hch1nge

kT S

IZ . 50
11.SO

Restdence Service

•tOt&lt; ing ctttr9111119IJ only to Centerville , Chester , Cool vill e, CIMII!Ier tand . f •lrvl t w, Li ttl e lloc klfNJ , Morristown, Old wull irogton . Po.t~atMt Point
11H1 Outk t r C!t) .

Tndhldu11 l i ne

·13. 95
13. 95

.7S

Restdence

Res ldence ServIce
Two~ Parb Feur · PartJ

13 . 75

.60

.60

.so

n

,

4. 6S
4.65

. 75

toch lint (2)
Two· P•rty _Access Lint
Mtlt19f:o

'"'r l

Presen t Acc es s Line Rates

10.75

lnd1v1dua1 ~cess/
Trunk lfnt Mtlttge,

)1.55

24 .25

26.10

a. 75

II.Z5
11.25

~1I~~!J~!'~~f!8~·~·rl~nr··~·~s.~r~
.!
n v ua
ne ~
ve- ar·~~'f
ye~!l~~~1!~~
~
runt

!.!..!.!.:.!.!!

5.55
5 . 5S

Total hchangl!!!

IIIII II
!114 , 001 .....
lt4t '"'~ lad

ne~

5. 75

II.Z5
11 .25

J.Z S

Sir~ice

Residence

n

4) . 80

29 . 55

Zl. 25

2S. SD

4.00
5. 00

nvu1

~

.60

ft

( ltl ,OOI - l84,000
• _Ill ltlthiiU )

ary

Present .Access . Line Rates-Kingsville

•Ill ltttiCMI)

1tM VIII

Bustness Strvl e e

1r y

our ~

.75

ro . 45
l2 . 4S

ll .

Pu~h·To~hlk

Rates-Parkm~n

. 60

•lie 12)

Clble Pain &amp;nd Mileage ICont.)

S,.lktrpllont (Han dsfrn )
Stll'ldtr.cl Ht:ICI Itt, e.atra
C*!nltton Handut/Htsdset
Llflltwttght 0ptr1tor HuciStt
Llf ii Uo~tlgl'lt Opera t or Ht lclstt (Hoptcllle,
Bloo.tngd•le )
lithtllltght Superv11or Headut
ll ghh~t:lght Super.lsor HttCiset !lloped.lh,
llloc.lngCIIlt )
Ht•ll stt J1ck
Htu t ng ltiJIIired Handset
Keering 1-..trtd Ht l'14set 1ttopedlle, 8100111inqd•le)
11tadn9 IJSJ~•ired Handse t•
Ht•rlng I111P1 lrtd H•ndset••
IIOISt Canullt nq Trll'lS.Itter
Nolst C1ncelltng lranyttttr (Hoptd•lt,
BIOOIItngdllt )
0\ltdoor Housing
O...tdoor Houslrlq l tioot.dlle, &amp;loa.1nga1le)
S•itch Kit)'
5•1 tch It)'*
Cu toff Kt)'
c... toff ICey•
~•1 Station hotll
H•H-Booth tWill Mount)
H411-Booth (Pt dUtll i'lount)
rul1·8ooth
Tol l Rutr lctor

~

Strvtct

4. 50
8. 50

4. 75

Base Rttf: Aret
Zone A IZI

11 . 80
40 . 80

&lt;'l. l S
JO .J5
ll . J5

2/ .ZS

2) . 50

.60

.60

.60

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Additional Tt lt!lftOIII h!parnus

C1l l Ohtrter
E•clut1(ltl (llopedale, BIOQI!ingd•le )

Present Access Line

n

._. tl
(&amp;I,OCtl·•.m:u
•1111 Ullii!IMI

IZ. 75

. 75

sht~sl

•'"

li . ZS

9.65

.60

"

1 8 .4~

21. 4(1

3.00

Present Access Line Rate s-Dorset

11 . 65
19. 65
21.65

zuo

10. 10
12. 10

II. IS
II.Z5

. 60

e1ch custo.tr (2)

~ 2 .00

!~~~!J~~~u~s]t!
..!']'~Sor~v~l~co~~~
n Y 1
M
runt
a.zs
5. Z5
1 t.25

runk

).50
5. 75

7. 65

lone A (2)

'

IMill Ill

1

our-

4.00

Base Rtt e Are1

'

.60

.60

•
Accessl

Present Access Line Rates - Banded Exchanges

9. 45
II ,45

IZ .75

. 75

MONTHL.Y ACCESS LINE RATES fH

6 . ~~
6 . "'
1. 65

a.2s

11.25
1 1.25

9. 00

v 1
y
1r
!!!.!.!!.:!..!!
!~~~[J~!:~lo~s~t~~fo~So~r~v~lc~o~~~[r~~~~J:~~

For" tht purpOitl o~ deter mining txchanae st vlu montlliy acctu lint rafH, IICha.nges aro ctusifltcf in ratt 1rov,s acordlnt to lhil
total mtln ttlephones In a local co/lint area . Thtloctl calling orea 11 the •re• within wtllcll cunomtrs m1k1 catts WIUICM/t ltMI INYmtnlf · 1.
of m•n•t• toll chart•• t nd mt~ lncludt ont or morttllchannore•s.

7. 10

5. ZS

11.25
I I.ZS

3.00

r\01

Present Access Li ne Rates-East Clar i don

SCHEDUL.E OF PRESENT AND PROPOSED RATESAHDCHARGES

8. 50

..

Trunk Line lttl,agt,

of'"''"

n Y 111

run

3. 50
5. 00

6 . 00

of'""

..... h t l #lrtl

Strrfct
our- 1r 1

lrrdtvfdu1 l Access/

E•CN• te""

.... I

1r 1

March 2, 1982

13. 4 ~

[xpenn Incurred

March3,118Z
Listen carefully to propositions brought to you thla coming year by
relatives or friends of the family. You could be put on the track ·to
something good.
·
.•
PISCES I Feb. zt.Marcb ZO) If there are domestic concerns requiring
your attention; give them priority over your ootslde Interests. It will put
yo6r mi!ld at ease.
'ARIES (Marcb Zl·Aprll 18) Others may dodge making dlffiCII!t
decisions today, but thla is not likely to be tnae In your instance. Yoo'll
face life realistically and weigh alternatives.
TAURUS (April zt.May ZO) Your possibilities for personal gain are
good today provided yoo're willing to put forth the necessary effort. Don't
shirk action where your security Is Involved.
•
GEMINI (May 21-JIUie !8) Yoo'll make a welcome addition to any
social gathering today. Because friends will be vying for your attention,
take care not to slight anyone or play favorites.
CANCER (JaDe Zl·July 2!) Thla is a good day to attend to matters
which up until now you've had difficulties In finalizing. Tackle the hardest
first and work your way down the Une.
LEO (July 28-A11g. 2!) Even thoogh yoo may not be totally In bar·
mony with a posltioo a friend takea today, at leBBt try to be supportive. He
or she will appreciate your backup.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sep,\- 2!) There's a chance yolir tendencies to cout
today could predorniilate unless your ambitions are aroused by some
material motivation.
·
• LIE-'A (Sept~&amp;. 211 You may have some minor fnastratlona to
contend ,with today, but H yoo treat them philosophically yoo'U lake
things In atride.lt could always be worse.
SCORPIO (Oct. u.Nov. 2!) Conditions could suddenly change today,
and offer yoo opportunities where ooly Umitationa existed prevlpusly. Be
ready to move.
I!AGnTARIUS (Nov. ~. Zl) New facta could surface today to
help yOII arrive at a better undeJ:Standing with Someone with whom yoo
have not been seeing eye-to-eye. Make a fresh start.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 2Waa. U) Thla could be a very productive and
rewarding day, so get an early start. Your enthusiasm will Increase wltll
your efforts.
1
AQUARIUS (JIIIL :!t-Feb. lt) Should y011 be Involved in some type of
sport activity today, don't let your opponent's reputation oVerwhelm yoo.
· Yw'll give a good aCCOIIIIt of yourself.

.

•.

\

�,_

Paga 8 The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport,

,...

________________

_.· , . - - .......

- ...-MarCh 2, 1982

Ohio

Ohio

•

Heart diseases le~ng death cause In '81

·,
··-

.

The

The Daily

PHONE 992-2156

I

:; Heart-related diseases were the
li!adlng causes of death In Meigs
County In 1981, according to Meigs
·eourity Health Department records
which Ust 118 deaths due to heart
4tsorders.
' Twenty 1981 deaths In the county
'·
were
caused by cancer, six by
pneumonia , five by emphysema or
respiratory arrest, three by ace!-

dents, two by severe dehydration,
one each by suicide, renal failure,
toxemia, gangrene, cirrhosis and
ulcer, and 17 by circulatory ranure
and other causes, the organization's annual report states.
Certificates and permits Issued
by the department Included 1,452
birth and death certificates, 212
burial-transit permits and one dis-

PAJI)I THROUGH TAXES- These Melr County Health Department
employes are paid through Meigs Count
· •enues. they are front, I to
r, Pearl Scott, N~ncy Acke~an; back,,., . t'etrle, Norma Torres.

enterment. 'l'here were ntne births,
167 deaths and 19 certltlcates of service recorded.
..
.
on;o water samples taken by the
department, 54 were deemed Safe
and six unsafe. Twenty-five private
samples ·were taken, with :15 recorded as safe and 10 l!nsafe.
Permits Issued Included 63 sewage permits, 102 for food service
operations and 192 lnspecUons of
food service Qperatlons, six vendIng locations with 12 Inspections of
sucb locations, seven traller parks
licensed, 14_ Inspections, seven
CliJllps Ucensed, 14 InspectiOns, 31
school Inspections, two pCbllc
swtmmlng pools Ucensed and four
Inspected, two other bathing places
Inspected with the same number licensed d-u ring the year.
Nuslance complaints received by
the department totaled 124 with 188
consultations and 135 Inspections
made.
Concerning rabies control, 68
dogs and cats were Immunized at a
public clinic held 1n June. Fortyeight animal bites were reported to
the department and each was Investigated. F11teen animal heads
. were transported to the Ohio Department of Health Laboratory, Including eight wild animals, four
d6gs, two bats and one cat. The two
bats tested positive and ·e ach bit one
· person, It was reported. The persons received a human deplold
anti-rabies vaccine.
Under nursing statistics In thereport, 23 persons from zero to 14 years old with allergic and metabolic
diseases were screened, evaluated
and referred to speclallsts.
Twenty-four persons aged zero io
14 years with mental retardation
were screened, evaluated and referred to speclallsts.
Five persons aged one to 14 years
with epilepsy were screened, evaluated and referred.
Eighteen persons aged one to 14
years ol!l with ear and hearing related problems were evaluated and

referred. Forty-two persons aged
one to 12 years wre evalualed and
referred for speech and speec)lrelated Problems.
Thirteen ~ from one to 19
years were evaluated and referred
for cardiac-related problems.
Thlrty-tw(\persons from ~ni to,
19 years ol(j with retplra)oryrelated problems were evaluated
and referred. Twenty-five persons
from 0 to 14 years old were evaluated and referred for genitourinary problems, and 70- people
aged zero to 21 years were evvaluated and referred forbone. and organ movement disorders. Seve"
persoris from one to 14 yeers were
evaluated and referred for congenital mal1ormatlon.
Ninety-seven persons 45 to 65 years of age, with various symptoms,
were evaluated and referred for senlllty and ill-defined condl(lons.
There were 2,218 tndlvtduals
reached through various classes
and group conferences held
throughout the county. Of thOse, 651
were given WIC services, 1,004 dental screening, lM Denver Developmental Screening Tests for
detection of gross learning dlsabUItles, 5Q9 blood pressures checks
during several · hypertension
~reenlng clinics.
Of ~lood screenings, 630 anemia
blood tests were drawn and calculated. Twelve genetic tests, two Pb
screenings and six sickle cell preparations wen! made.
There were 379 persons served In
Well ChUd Ctlnlcs. 'S ervice Included
complete physicals, Immunizations, blood and · urine screenings
and referrals wheri appropriate.
Head Uce SCfe!!nlngS totaled 102
to persons three months to 14 years.
There were 119 chUdren examIned, screened and referred dur·- ~
hearing ctlnlcs as a part of a pedla,
ric ethological diagnostic program.
Fourteen persons one month to 19
years of age attended cardiac
clinic, were examined with electroc:&gt;rdlograms ;~nd referred.
Sixty-eight Individuals aged six
months to 19 years were given vision screenings and follow ups and
referrals were mad&lt;;! during Qlag-·
nostlc Optholmology Pediatric
CUnlc.
Eighty-two Head Start physical
examtnanons were provided as a
prerequisite for enrollment.
There were 500 Influenza ImmunIzations administered and 1,6821mmunlzatloils given to Individuals
aged two rhonths to 52 years.
Family planning education was
directed to ~ persons and 381
cllents ·w ere given Information regarding drug a·buse and Its ·
treatment.
A total of l'i2 Individualized assessments were performed during
the twelve month period.
There were 419 chUdren were
provided with services under tlie
auspices of the Bureau -o f Crippled
Children Services.
The county's health department
received more than 20,000 phone
calls regarding health. and environmental Issues In 1981.

·or Write Dally Sentinel Classi,ied Dept.
111 Courtst., Pomeory, Ohlo45769

Public NQtlce
IN THE
COURT OF
COMMON PlEAS,
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
Jon M . Grucoser, et. al.,
Plaintiffs,

-VS·

E. R. Hoffman aka Elza R.

Hoffman, et aL,

Oefend~nts .
·
. Cas~

STAFF - The stall of the Meigs Counly Health
Department. Front, I to r, Pearl Scott, Nita Wlsnlskl,

Debbie LaValley, Nancy Ackerman; back, I tor, Mary
Cleek, Carol Tannehill, Frank Petrie, Annie Moon,
Norma Torres.

Meigs County release~ annual
• • •
health department activities
.

Then take better care of yoursel1
and reduce the need for mediCal
care In the first plate, according to
the aclvlce of a coalltlon of bospltal,
Insurance, business · and other
groups which make up the Ohio Voluntary Effort on Health Care
Costs.
It Is making plans to distribute
625,000 pamphlets which tell people
to avoid smoking, watch their
weight, use seat belts and learn to
handle stress.

·

THIRD TRACT: Situated

in Fraction 6. Town 4.
Rtmge 12. Ohio company 's
PurchaSe. Beginning 33
rods and 16112 I inks south of
the northWest corner of
s,aid Fraction 6; thence
east 47 rods and 13 links ;
tnente South lOS rOds and
9112 1inks; . thence west ,4,7
rods and 13 links; thence

No. 18,084 '
NOTICE !!Y
PUBLICATION
To E.P. . Hollman aka
Elza R. ~oilman, Rosa
Hoffman, R. D. Harper.

Neva Dresher !21ka Mrs.
Walter Dresher. Raymond

S. Hoffman. Mar ion E . Hof·
fman, Doris
Hoffman,
Rachel Sm ith aka Mrs.
Herbert A . Smith, ROy Hof·
fman , Charles Clifford Hof·
fman, Edna Hottman,
Charles
L.
Hoffman ,

Robert. Hollman,

6.

Zelma

rods; thence south 113 rods

and 10 links; thence west
169112 rods to the place of
be9inning . Said tract of
land as descr i b~d contains
120 - .a crs and 21.03 rods,
more or less. The tract of
land to be conveyec( by this
deed is lO acres oH. the nor thwest corner of the above
described land: Beginning
at the northwest corner of
the a.bove·described lafld;
thence south 61 -7/ 13 rods;
thence east 26 rods ; thence
north 61 ·7113 rods; thence
to the place of beginning,
contalrHng 10 acres

and the unknown he•rs,
next ot kin, devisees,

lega-tees,

executors,

ad·

ministra_tors, guardians,
successors, assigns· and

spouses, if any , of E.R.

Hoffman aka Elza R. Hoff·

man. Rosa Hoffm!)n, R.D.

Dr. Selim j. ,Blazewicz, M.D.
Meigs

J

-

Health Commissioner

to the place of beginning,
containmo 31 acres and 28
rods, more or less
Said' three parcel s of real
estate . are subject to all
easements and highways of
record .
Deed Reference : Volume

Harper. Neva Dre~her aka
Mrs . Walter D r esher,
Raymond S
Hoffman,
Marion E . HOffman , Doris
Hoffman , Rachel Si'rllth

aka Mrs. Herbert A. Sm ith,
Herbert A. Smith, Roy Hof
fm e) n, Charles Clifford
Hoffman, Edna Hoffman.
Charles
L.
H offman,
Robert Hoffman, Zelma
Hoffman, Jerry Hoffman,
Kay Sand:; and Edith Har per, addresses unknown;
you are hereby notified
that you hav~ been named
def endants in a leqal action

SECOND

236, Page 57 ; Volume 277,
Page SS and Volu1me 281,

Page 689, Meigs County
Deed Records.

swer

are required to an·
ComPla int within

twenty· ghl 1281 days af

ter the last pub I icat1on of
this no·tice which Will be
published one_e e.ach we_ek
for six (6) successive
weeks. The last publicatiOn
wili'be rnac,e ori March 30,

TRACT :

Situated in Fraction 36,
Town · 4, Range 12, Ohio
COmpany's
Purchase .
Commencing in the center
of the road leadii1g from
Sumner to Keno on the
east li11e of said Fraction
36; then ce south on .said

1982·. and the lweoty -eighl

J

r , __ _ _ _ _ _ __;:__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _

·t:.• d
h
( ,"l/ISIIIJW
/llll(l'lf'('fiVf!r I I'
1'. If
' t I h
h
1 o OWin!( I' ep rme I'Xf' llnl(e/1., •

(28J davs for answer will
commence on that date.
In case of your failure to
&lt;tnswer
otherwis
respond as or
required
by thee
Oh•o
Rules
of Civil

Procedure, judgment by

default will be rendered

aqaihstvou for the re lief

demcmded

pla'int.
DATE : 2/ 18182

Meigs !=o. Area Code

Gallia Co. Area Code
614
446-Gallipolis
367-Cheshlre
· 388-llinton
245-R io Grande
256-Guyan Dist.
643-Arabia.Dist.

in

414"

the

Com·

Larry E . Spencer
M e iQ s County
Common · Pleas Court

· 992-Middleport
Pomeroy

985-Chester
343-Portland
247-letart Falls

12 123 (3) 2. 9, 16. 23 , 30. 61c

Printed Pattern

949-Racine

742-Rutland

two

Coca-Cola and Pepsi-Cola.
The ad features TUg McGraw. relief pitcher for the Phiiadelphla
Phlllles, brushing aside cans of Dr.
Pepper, 'Sunkist orange soda,
Pepsi, Coke, Mountain Dew and.
Mello Yello and saying as he
reaches for Seven-Up, "I'm taking
no caffeine."
"Our commercial simply Is In·
forming the consumer that our product does not contain cafielne,"
Zuke said. "We are mfiklng this
known to the consumer because for
many people It Is Important
whether a drink contains cafietne."
Other soft-drink companies
claim the Seven-Up ad Sl!ggeSts
that sod/1. with caffeine Is dangerous to health - an Issue that has
been debated since the mid 1970s.
Block, PepsiCo Inc. vice presIdent of consumer afialrs and marketing, criticized the new Seven-Up
campaign as a "disservice to the
pubUc since It perpetuates unsubstantiated IMialth concerns bY the .
use of scare tactics."

Joe

"caffeine Is one of the most thoroughly tested and researched substances In our food supply," he said.
"PepsiCo Co. Is firmly convinced
that caffelile Is perfectly s;~fe, Imposes no hazard to the pubUc "" a
conVIction that Is fortified by extensive scientific ~arch."
The Wall Street Journal said
Monday that Pepsi sent milligrams
to Its bottlers threatening them
with violation of t!lelr exclusive
franchise agreements If they go
along with Seven-Up's ad campaign. Asked about the report,
· Block .would say only that "communications with the bottler Is privIleged Information and
confidential."
The federal Food ~d Drug Ad·
ministration last year advised
pregnant women to avoid consum"
lng products with cafielne alter
heavy doses of caftelne cause&lt;!
birth defects lrt rats. Other studies ·
have pinpointed caffeine as a stimulant for adults and tndlcated It
ntlght Impair the development of

children's nervous systems.
studies, ll!cludlng one
But
released by Harvard Medical
School month agq, concluded that
coffee consumption bas a mlnlmal
effect on theoutcomeof pregnancy.
The controversy has had Its Impact on sales·of cAtfelne drinks. Studies prepared ior.the lntemallooal
Coffee OrganizatiOn In London revealed ihat decafielnated cotfee accounted for 17.2 percent or all cups
of coffee consumed !luring a monthlong test period In early 1981 compared with 5.8 percenf during a
comparable period In 19'10.
Cola-COla Co.. would say only that
the eompany, which commands
37.5 percent . ol the soft-drink
market to No. 2 Pepsi's 24.5 percent, would not comment on
another cllmpany' s "competitive
activity."
· Spokesman ~arlton Curtis sald
Coke sent "lnfonnatlonal" Mallgrams to Its bottlers last week
about the ad Cartlllalln.
The parent co~, which

recent

a

Future Reference

Who
pet!osed
aw;.y
M.uch 2nd , S yc.ars .1go
today .
1
'Whtle you De.1r Dil d,
rest and' sl eep, your
loving memory we ' ll
alwityS keep.''

APPUANCE
SERVICE
ca II Ken ovng
For Fast S.e rvice
985·3561

THE FAMILY

PARTS .A NO SEAIJICE
ALL MAkES

ej:flin-.el
• Ohpoi•l~o
• Ohhwuhen
• Hot Water T11nh

PROBATE COURT
OF MEIGS
COUNTV, OHIO
ESTATE OF GlENN G.
VANCE, DECEASED
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIOlJCIARV

largest Radiator.
Radiator Specialist

NATHAN BIGGS
35 Yrs. EKperience

County

45769 .

Probate

.'

County Certified
Roush Larie
Cheshire, Oh.

Clerk

Ph. U7· 7560
H · l tfc

458-leOn

773-MaSon

882-"few Haven

//
jl

937-Buffalo

TO PlACE AN AD CAll
In Meigs County

In Gallia County

In Mason County

675-1333

But they also a4vtse consumers
to check fees In advance and avoid
using .a hospital emergency room
Instead of the services of a personal
physician.
The pamphlets are part of a national campaign started by hosvltals and 1doctors 1n 1978 after
President Carter trled to win pas. sage of a. mandatory program to
contain hospital costs.
. "We've been aiming our efforts
at doctors and hospitals to try to
slow down the cost of medical
care," John H. Ackennan, director
of the Ohio Department of Health,
said Monday.

.

make soft drink syrup and concentrate, pay for nationwide ad campalgns, bui they frequently enter
Into cooperative agreements with
their bottlers - which actuallY put
thesoftdrtnkln bottlesandselljtto run ads on local radio-and TV.

kitc hen-dining combo .
Situated em 2 acres .
Had lots of tender Iov ino care . Sell s for
$45,000.

RACINE . -

-1-fr/Q-s
Insets at each side point to a
waist-whittlin&amp; eflect- sprine's
suit news couldn't be better
news for your Iieure. Crisp, smart
collar, strin&amp; lies.
.
Printed Pattern 4894: M1sses
Sizes 8, 10, 12, 14, 16. 18. Size
12 {~ust 34) suit talles 2\\ yards
60-inch Iabrie.
$2.25 '"' oicll [llltlnt.... 511$

.......

[llllem far .,.._.

Plllora Dept.

' :t 1

-~en-Up'sZukesaldGenerliiCI-

nema Corp., of Chestnut Hill,
Mass,, whch makes Sunklst orange
sodjl, had contacted Seven-Up
about the ads. General Cinema
says that jillhough regular Sunklst
soda contains caffeine, diet Stmklst
does not and the cans could be confused In the TV ad.
Zuke decllned to say whether
Seven-Upwouldc~ltsTVadto

satisfy General Cinema.
:
Comparatlve advertising' Is nothlnghewtothesoft-drlnklndustry.
But previous ads compared taste or
smell, not the effect of Ingredients.
"ln tl)e past lt hasn't been: 'It's
nOt good lor your health:," sald
Emanuel-Goldman, an analyst who
followS the soft-drink Industry for
the securitles fltm of Sanford C.

243 Will 17 $l
10011. Pilot • •
ZIP, Sill, lid sm£

Thfse cash rates
include discount

.,

large 2

story, 4 bedroom home .
Nice modernized k it ·
chen . Good size yard
with g()rden space. You
must see th e insid e 01
th i s homet
Terms
availab l e .
Asking

$32.500.
MOBILE HOME- Ex ·
eel lent,• mint condition .
2 bedrooms. Liberty
home . 1A'xS2'. Buy this
and rent the lot. $9,500 .

MIDOLEPORT

-

fer . Call today. $35,000.

24.
25.
26.
27 .
28.

12.
13.
14.
I IS.
I 16

I
II
1

_ _

I
II

33 .

34.
35.

I
1.
I
.I

I'

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

'

·- -

Downing-Childs Insurance
and
Mullen Insurance

t

Mail This Coupon with RemiHance
·
The Daliy Sentinel
111 court_ St.
Pomeroy, Oh. 45769
-

'

Greg Rou.sh
Ph. 992-7583
or 992·2282

Trailer Roofs and
Underpinntng

PH . 9t2-3872
2·3-1 mo, pd.

OHIO VAU.EY
ROOFING
And Home Maintenance

• Roofing of all types

• _........
' . ' ....
.......................

eSiding

Free Estimate
James Keesee
Ph. 992·2772
1-11-1 mo.

HARRISON
TV SERVICE

NOW

Used Color TV Sets for

Sille.

SALE PHONE NO.

992-6259
176 Sycamore St.

Middleport, Ohio
9·21-lfc

Nice 3

bedroom frame home,
good carpeting, modern
kitchen &amp; bath, full

basement, hot

a~r ,

fur -

nace and large lot: Take
over loan with the
requif-ed 'down and ad justments.

18 ACRES - On State
7.

Some

.flowers, and food sent since
1 come home. I Love you
all.

Rose F . Shephard

TOM HOSKINS
Ph. 949-2160 or 94!·2482
7-S· tic

SOUTHEAST
CONSTRUCTION·

.,__,,

f -..=_

__ -----

In M!_'!'O~Lajl

OWNER FINANCING
- Remodeled 10 room
home and shop. Natural
gas furnace, cifV water,
carpeting, woodburning '

Seven room

water.

In memory of Bryan Lee
Davis who pasSed away ·

March 2. 1967. Although Its
been 15 years vou are nOt
forgotten . Missed by the
family .

:i- --..,.. A~~~ncemefit$ ~­
swEEPER

and

sewing

mac;hintt repair, parts,

supplies.

j

AGENTS:

WIWAitl D. CHILDS
1)011 L IIULUII

:::.:~~~ MICHAEL L CIIILOS

formal dining, hot water
h~a.t,

full basement, 2

rentals, garl!lge and cor-

ner lot . Now only
$65.000.
S9,00o.OO - 5 rooms,
bath, full basernent with
coal

furnace,

city

uti lilies: and 3 lots out of
all floods. OFFERS WELCOMED.
CALLm·:ll76

Hofl.\ ;ny
H 1.'. J( 1£fll• l l tt!T s

~nd

Pick up and

delivery,

Davis

Vacvum

•Vinyl Siding

•Carports I Pa1io
COllets

•Condrete Wort&lt;
•RoOm Additions
Insurance Work
Wind, Water, or Fire

CALL : 992· 6323
2·19·1 mo. pd,

Fishing License on sale.
come an(:l see our new ship·
ment of 1982 F Ising Rods.
Reels, &amp; lures. Spring

Valley Trading co., Spring
Valley Plaza, 4olcl·8025. :

·-·-- --------- ,

Turkey Hunters We have

Roger Hysell's
GARAG.E

51. 1!1. 124
f'omi!OIJ, Oh.
· 3mi. wnt 011
124 toward ~•tland

AUTO &amp; TRANS.
REPAIR
PH. 992-5612

calls,

slate
Qox
&amp; decoys

~~:~~~~~·~2~prlng

Valley
valrev

~------- - - .....

Easter Candy Prices, S1 .4C)
lb. Sl.SO lb. for full caS4t.
Di's Craft Supply, Sprlf1g
valley Plata. Call «6-2134.
-----.- - --~----

Snake,

. Hundred

years

of

orgr!lniled crime! Guestiort.
Makes government shift? ·· .

Generallabor
----~-

or992-7121

•·

------- -

Coolrol Smoking, Slop. No
nicotine cravings. Control
L-----....:..:.:...:...;;;.~1 weight. Free report tells
•----~-----+-----------1 teed
how products,
SI.OO postage.
Guran1"
P .D. Box
25,

Open HM.Io 5:10P.M.

2-11·1 mo.

Rio Grande, Oh .45674 .

BOGGS
SALES &amp;SE~VICE
u.s. Rt. 50 East
Guys viii~. Ohio

Authorized John Deer.

New Holland, Bush Hog
Farm Equipment
Oea ~er

Farm Equipment
Parts &amp; Service
1-3-ttc

Gerald Reuter

- '!. -·- - · - - - - · - - -

For bulk delivery of
gasoline, heating oil and
diesel .fuel, call Landmark,

INCOME

992·2181, Pomeroy, Oh.

SERVICE

Club. Every Sun . starling
at I p.m. Factory choice

TAX

Gun

Shoot

Racine

Gun

guns only .

PHONE
992-2490
FOR AN
APPOINTMENT

Racine Fire Dept . sponsors

a Gun Shoot, Sat. nights
6:30p.m., Bashon. Factory

2-2S-l mo. pd.

choke 12 gauge shotgun.

·

Income Tnx preparation .

~---------+------------1 Marlha Fry, 8 Coale St.,

Pomeroy, 992·3414 .

H. L WRITESEL
ROOFING
All types of roof work,
fleW or repair gufter,.and
downspouts,
gutter
cleaning ~nd painting.
All work guaranteed.

Free Estimates
Reasonable Prices

can Howard
9-49·2263
949·216t

_paneling,

PRICE REDUCED 1mmaculate 3 bedroom
home . NIce carpeting,

- --

Cleaner, one hall mile up
Georges Creek Rd . Call
446·0494 ..

level

water, 2 bedroom

,.

nuraea, anet:

all who cored for me durlnlf
my stay at tho Holzer. ·
Medical Center. Als.o ~
thank,s for the , cards~· .

-

e Free estim.ates

•Roofing &amp; Gutter

OPEN '

Card o!Thonka
To the Doctors,

a Remod,llng

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
. SIDING

BISSEll
SIDING CO.
"Beautiful, Custom
Built Garages"

Call for free Siding
estimates, 9C9-2801 or
949-2860 .
No Sunday Calls
3·11-tfc

2·24-lfc .

water in Pomeroy.

32.

'

El~ctrlcal,

Cement, Stone

carport, .a nd out of high

I .
•

level lot.
COUNTRY -

city

31.

.

I
I
I
I

reasonable 3 bedroom
hom e
newly
redecorated
inside·.
MOdern bath , automatic
heat.
7 rooms. 2
bedrooms down; one
large one up . 3 car
garage, carport &amp; porch
comb i nation .
Large

home, bath, natural gas,

30. ·_ _ __

11 .

• New Roofing

Ph . 614 -843 -2591
6·15-lfc

Phone
1-(614)·992-3325
JUST liSTED - Nice

st,eoo.oo -

211.

10.

Roofing,

Cisferns,

• 20 Y rs. e•perience

Racine, Oh.

VIRGil B.,SR.
216 E. 2nd St.

fireplace, basel'l\,l!nl and
large lot. $5,000.00 down,
$363.42 at 10% for ten
yrs., full price$32,_500.

23.

9.

Windows

Rt. 3, Bo• 54

Route

WE'RE TOGETHER TO
SERVE YOU BETTER

19, . - -- - - - 20.

8.

a R'eplacemenl

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

land fenced .

1-8. -----~

6.
7.

elnsulation
e Storm Doors
• Storm Windows

Insulated. Dog Houses

land, old farm Mouse,
~.nd
·ather buildings.

17. - - - - - -

~· --~--

VInyl &amp;
Aluminum Siding

wood buildings 24xU.

mobile home and some

22.

J&amp;LBLOWN
INSULATION

Sizes from 4 fo 6 and 111

.cr:P .

••
s.

I

3

bedroom home with gas
forced air furna ce. On
corner Itt. Close in to
stores and shopping.
Owner willing to· con·
sider a reasonable of ·

!Wanted
) For Sale

21.

•

UtiNty Buildings

e 1etri c,
3
bedrooms , 2 baths,

Mil hla4lltt&amp;- Soli~ II:

2, _ _ _ __

'•

Sizes start from l0x24"

To~-ota l

,. oicll

I . _ _ _ _ _,_

• Electrical work
•C~stom Pole BldAs.
• Rooting "WOrk
14 Years Experience

C•rpentrv,

All Home Repairs

BUILDINGS .

REDUCED T0$22,500.
RANCH HOME

Nam•-------------------- t.,-/1.._
Address--------

) For.Rent

tensive
lnq .

20 veal"$ E:..:perience.
Plumbing,

AU. STEEL

'

Solid brick , 2 story, 3
bedrooms, large dining
room and living room,
1V2 baths. Located in
Pomeroy .
Excellent
c o·nditiOn .
PR'ICE

4894

Phon•-----------------

8r o~ or

OWNER FINANCED -

SIZES 8-18

&gt;Announ'cement

8·20-tfc

mouth

" "' '"""

I·
I·

Dr. Herman I. Abramowitz, Dayton, chairman pro tern of the Ohio
Voluntary Effort, Said the national
program has saved $4 billion In
health care costs.
"We are unable to place an exact
dollar savings On costs In Ohio, " he
said.

Bernstein &amp; Co.
.
Seven-Up's new strategy Is pOs'
lng some difficult problems for the
bottlers, wtio often handle several
brands of soft· drinks. Of the 464
bottlers who handl!' Seven-Up products, for Instance, only eight are
owned wholly by the company,
Zuke said .
"Imagine yourself a bottler
where two-thlnts of earnings may
come from caffeine products,"
Goldman said. "Most of their products are being disparaged by
IJ)ference."
And, Gol!Jman said, Seven-Up's
campaign could backfire If consumers began to associate all soft
drinks with caffeine and health hazards and turned away from soda
all together.
',
Seven-Up cannot afford .to lose
, more custdmers. It posted a $7.1
· mUUon operating loss In 191li and
. $1.7mllllonlastyear.Goldnianestl·
mated Seven-Up's market share at
5.8 percent, down from 6.5 percent
three or four.years ago,
·

992-3382
Membership
'n.lo
Weekly Class
$2.50
- 2·3· r mo.

0

Pay Cash
for
lt
.
Classlfleds·
and I1
.
Savelll
I
~d
I

"We've had some success In that
- but not as "\uch as we'd like to
have. This Is a different approach,"
he said:
. "You can't avoid getting sick,"
Ackerman saki. "(But) you can
keep your weight down, exercise
and keep yourself In good shape."

Pomeroy,

walls, Chimney Repair. ,.

. Col 982·2726
2-1- 1 mo.

Church

TUesda~7:30p.m .
PomerO -Metr,Ddist
Church
.
Thursday 10:30 a.m .
Pomeroy- F i.ve Point
Call: JOAnn Newsome
' Lecturer

H~~!.Es~~.~...... "

II

Write your o..:n
and order by mall with this
coupon. Cancel your ad by phone when you get
results. Mone.Ynot refundable .

e. Main

1o

,-----------~----------1

Curb
Inflation
.

FREE
ESTIMATES
PH . 992-6011

como gear
~=A:u::;I;E;ot;ot;•;-:::O~o~n;o:ro:l::; ~--------~~----------~----------1 calls,
in stock. Spring

I

DEPARTMENT EMPLOYES~ These Meigs County Health Department employes are here hecause the department strives to further meet
tile net1• of county residents by obtaining special f\'dehll and stale granIll. They are, front, I to r, Nita Wlsniskl, Debbie LaValley; back, Ito r,
Mary Cleek, Annie Moon, Carol Tannehill.

Chester:: asontc Hall
Tuesdav 10:lo·a.m.
MasOW.Methodlst

PRaic"ioRIGHT
CALL TODAY!

992-2156

,./

SliNDEREL·lA
OIET/EXERCISE
ClASSES
Mgnda~7:30 p.m.

614·992·2182
For Farm and
Home Delivery of
Gas
Diesel

89S~ Lelart

308

electric, and

pl~mbln•,

healing.

SIMMON'S OLDS.·
CAD.·CHEV., INC.
Ph,99li-46lC

~----~----~~-----------4------------~

POME'ROY
LANDMARK

57.--Apple Grove

.

blthrooms, remodeling,

HOME MAINTENANCE
AND REPAIRS

For Longer Hair

Ml!kloPott

water-sewef-· E lectric
Gas Line-Ditches
Water line Hool1; ·ups
septic Tanks

Ro'&gt;erl E. Bush

CALL

Area Code 304
675-PI. Pleasant

kltcllens ancl
&amp;liPiiances,
custQm

ATOZ

Mon., Feb. 1
tbru
Sat., Feb. 27
Reg. szo Now S17.50
Reg. SZ5 Now S22.SO
Reg. SJO Now 527.50
S35 Wave Length

189 N. 2nd

TRENQUNG
SERVICE·

Pomeroy,

31c

CONSTRUCTION
c~stom

• free

Pomeroy, Oh.

PrOl.-te Judge/
2.

Modern Electrical
Equipment

for all ages.
• Repair: cleaning

Kqs Beeuty Salon

REESE~{

of the est~te of
F.
Robert.s ,
late of 105 W~he
Pomeroy.. Ohio

(21 16, 2313)

~ - ·

C. R.

l.....---------1--------,----l------------1

Ohio 45769 was appointed
Executrix
Robert
deceased,
Terrace,

•short game practl~e·
• Pro Golf lessons

Nownt.so

Ph . 9t2·217C
2-26-llc

&lt;;our!, Case No. . 23662,
Nanga F. · Roberts, 105
Wi;!he Terrece,

1-J.....
-~~--..;...~. -.- ......
...

Chester, Oh.

SMITH NELSON
NOTORS INC.

Public Notice

Meigs

$tout Camp

VALENTINE
PERM SALE

From the Smallest
Heater Core to the

(3) 7. 9, 16, Jl c

PROBATE COURT
OF MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
ESTATE OF ROBERT D.
ROBERTs, DECEASED
Case No. 23662
-NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY .
On Feb. 9, 1982, in the

• S Tic

COMPLETE
RADIATOR
SERVICE

On Febru·a ry 2-ttn , 1981.
in
the Meigs County
P{obate Court, Case No.
2J682 , G_
enc v_an ce and
Robert E. 'Vance . R. D. 1,
Middleport. Ohio 45760 wa s
appo inted Co-Adm i nt strat·
or s of the estrtte of Glenn.G.
Vetrl ce. df!ceased. late of R .
b~
l , Middleport , Ohio
45760.
Robe rt E Buc k
Proba 1c Ju dq p t
Clt rk

FRONT-END
ALIGNMI;:NT
..... Wl!h Genuine GM
~
Partst

refinishing,
new
J
change, weight
change.
*fast Servite
2-28· 1 mo .

•W•, hen
• Oryers 1

Public Notice

Mason Co., W. Va.

Soft-drink industry fizzes over Seven-up commericals
The soft. drtnk Industry Is fizzing over a new
advertising campaign by SevenUp, which alter two decades as the
"un-cola" Is trying to Increase Its
share of the market by attacking a
basic Ingredient of Its cola competl·
tors - caffeine.
Les Zuke, a spokesman for the
!;even-Up Co., said Monday that
Seven-Up, which Is owned by PhUip
Morris Inc., has been running two
of Its new television ads featuring o
!lie no-ca!felne theme for several
weeks Iii St. Louis and Los Angeles.
Zuke said ads proclaiming,
"Seve0-Up ... Crisp and C I e a n . ..
N o catfetne ... Feeltn' Se\(en-Up"
woUld be Introduced nationwide
Within several days.
One of the ads features Dallas
Cqwboys defensive lineman Randy
White with
chUdren. It's a typical ·Seven-Up COliiiJlerclal high·
lighting a well-known sports figure.
: But It's the other commercial
~t has upset the rest of the Industry, whlc)l Is now domlnl!ted by

Blaine Carter, Sr.

667-Coolville

The Daily Senlrlnel

NEW YORK (AP) -

Business Services

IN MEMORY
OF OUR DAD

north 105 rods and 8'(' links

: In Frac -

Range 12.

~.

io Company's Purchase .
-s ·e gi·nni.ng at the southwest
corner of said Fraction 6;
thence north 113 rods and
10 links; thence· east 169 1h

Hoffman ~ .JerrJ Hoffman.
Kay S~nds, E ith ·Harper

Better care can reduce soaring cost
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- Want
to help put a lld on soaring health
care costs?

fraction line 46 rods and 31/2
feet ; thenc.e West 1 rOd ;
thence north to center of
~aid road ; thence following
center of said road to place
of beginning , contain inq
46 115 square rods, more o-r
less.

·

Gl"v~a~way

4

ANY 'PERSON who has
anytl'ling to give away and '
does not offer or attempt to
offer any qther thing tor
sale mav place an ad in this
column . There will be no
charge to the advertiser.
.

·-

&lt;wk . old puppies. Call US·
5626.
1 w~ i te commode in
working o·r der . Call .C46~ ,

9317.

•

1 Long h8ired mother c11t
and S kittens. 446·9604 .

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING
+backhoe
* 'e xcavating
• septic systems

CARPENTER
SERVICE

-='"j·=~
-c.a.tt-:...,.._,
. , -·

*&amp;weter,
•eWer
gas lines

,,.. [Jtlnlllllj

•limestone

· l.iciMM &amp;llliiiH,_
1111; 992-7201
2-14-1 mo.

--

THREE month Old puppies, call before 2:00 week·
days. JOA-576'2979.

oloctrlul ...

·• dtimp truck

2 part Beegle pups. Call
367-0576.
-·· - - . - - ~-· .
Sma II mixed breed pufpy 8
mo. old, female . Cal 256·
1989.

V. C. YOUNG Ill
"H21S or "2-7314 ·
Pomeroy, Ohio

9-30-tfe

ONE female half German
Shepherd, part St. Ber·
nard, Part Colli~ , phone
304-895·3585.
~ ·.-

-

-- - -··- .

�Sentinel

10--The
6

Ohio

•

Losl;ind Found

L os t·

Sable

and

41

They'll Do It Every Time

white

collie. Lost in Bald Knob
area . Reward Lf found. 949·
2J24 after 6 P.M. 9'12·7894
up to5pm .

«

· Houses for Rent

fully c arpeted homes miles

from town. No pets, Call
466· 1158.

.c

Furnished house,

rooms,

Fred Pearson675·4004.
Person who picked up pur·
se Glenwood. between 3·

5 room house, porch ,
bas eme nt, $150 mo. Call
675·5104.

3 : 30, Saturday afte rnoon,
Please return, no qu est ions
asked . Clar ence Cr ist , 576·
2672.

2 bdr., First Ave., historic
home, just r edorated. Call

446·2570.

1980 Chevy Scottsdale 3/4
ton, 4-wheel drive. 4 speed,
A-M· FM, regula r gas, 30,000
miles, good shape . 773-5150.

bedroom

apt .

in

74

Pomeroy, Ohio. 9'12·5621 .

2 be droom hous e . Call 675 ·
3431.
'

B ir Yard Sale Wednesday 1
&amp; ·, hursday (3rd . &amp; 41h) . 9·

at

Centenary

Town

42

House. Lots of things . ...

9

wanted to

WANT TO BUY Old fur ·
niture and Antiques of ,;)I I
kinds, call Kenneth Swain,
446·3159 and 256· 1967 in the
evenings.

CASH PAID lor clean, late
model used cars. Smith
Buick-Pontiac ,

Gallipolis,

Oh iO. Call"-46·2282 .
Buy i ng

Silver,

Platinum, old coins, scrap
r ings &amp; silverware. Daily
quotes available . A lso
cOins &amp; coin supplies for
sale .
Spring
Vallev
Trading, Spring
Vall ev

Plaza, 44.1-8025 or 446-8026.
We pay cash tor late mOdel
clean used cars.
Frenchtown Car co.

Bill Gene Johnson,
446·0069.

Wanted : Person to share 2

bdr . apt. Call245-5220.
Tr e e
Trimming
&amp;
Removal. Free estimate.

949·2129 or 742 ·2573.

auto bOdies, and cars. Bat·
teries, alumium, brass &amp;
copper. Gallip~li s Block
co., 123 112 Pine St., 4-46·

2783.
Wanted to buy junk cars or
wrecked cars. Phone 388·

9303.
----'--·----

sfanding timber . Any
amount, any kind . Call 61.4·

289-4912 or 614·289· 2634.

I~

surance Co. has offered
services for fire insurance
coverage in Gallia Courity
for
almost a century .
Farm, home and personal
property coverages are
availab le to meet i ndividua l needs . Confact
Foste r Lewis, agent. Phone
379 ~ 3318 .

Karate fh.e ultimate in se lf
defence all private lessons,
Men, wom.en, &amp; children.

Instruction lhru black bell .
Also aVailable Karate
uniforms puching and
kicking bags, and protec·
five equip,ment . Jerry
L ow e ry &amp;
Associate s
Kcirate Studjo,
143
Burlington Rd., Jackson,
,:;==~;:::=.;===

17

Hauling
limestone
grave l. Will spread

Miscellaneous

Call675· 1553.

&amp;
on

driveways. Call379·2642.
Want e d Housework &amp;
house clean ing . Reteren ·

ces. Phone 675·6377.

Busines~

Opportunity

OLD FURNITURE, beds,

Iron, brass, or wood . Kit- Cigarett e
Vending
chen cubbards of all ty~s . Business. Caii304·77J·5651 .
Tables, round or square.
Wood ice boxes. Old de!)ks
Money to Loan
and bookcases. Wi II buy 22
c omplete household . Gold, REFINANCE or purchase
si lvei", old money, pocket your home. 30 year fixed
watches, chains, rings, and rate. WVa. &amp; Ohio. Leade r
etc . Indian Artifa c t s of all
77 E . Slate St.,

types. Also buying basebal l

592·3051.

j,'!==~~~~F=

Services
JUNKED car s, g l ass,
baseball cards, scrap
metals, alu minum cans,
transmissions, motors, batteries, radiators, . oil well
drilling bits, tungsten ca r· ·
bide, ·high speed steel,
&amp; L Bookkee~ing. Com·
waste paper, cardboard,
bookkeepi~g and tax
raW furs. hides, 'ginsing I ~or.;ir~ for business and in·
and yellow root . Harper·
viduals.

Halstead Salvage Co. 300

Carol Neal"-46·3862

Eleventh St. , Pt. P leasant,
market

open

Ilea

Mond.ay

through Friday, 1·5 p . m .

with tilt out. 3500. Browns
Trail er Court. 992·3324

USED MOBILE
576·2711 .

For sale 2 &amp; 3 bedroom
trail ers, furn ished, with
air.. Call 304· 773-.1651 .

LOT CLEARANCE SALE
$1,000 to $3,000 off on a ll
homes. New .12ft. wide, all
electric, 2 bdr ., $7,995 . New

1411. wide, 2 bdr ., $9,995.
12x55 2bdr., $4,995. Also in·
traducing
the highest
energy efficient home ever

ceiling, 20 ln wall 21 in
floor. Check anywher no
other home is insu lated this
good. 10%down and low
bank financ ing. Al l State
Modular Homes. Half way
between Huntington and

Pl. Pleasant on St. Rl. 2.
304·576·2711 .
THREE
bath

bedroom

and

14x70,

h, • fireplace,

1

mus t se ll , $13,500, total
electri c, May be seen at the
corner of Third and Adams

Street. Mason , WV .
NEW

Moon

12x55,

2

bedroom, furnished , gas
heat, air conditioned, un·
derpenning, carPet. North

Pl. Pleasant, $5500.00 304·
675·2195.
79 MANSION mobile home,
2 bedroom , all elec tric , 30..-t-

&gt;·"-

Ma son

County ,

Business Buildin9S -

35

Help Wanted

Part
time
li c ensed
cosmetologist
position
a&gt;Jailable. Hours may be
adapted
to
fit
your
schedule .
Cpntact
Pinecrest Care Center. Call

«6·7112.

4 bedr~m house for sale .
Rt. 325 toward Rio Grande .

Ca II 386·9676.
earn

between

$9,000

to

515,000. a year. you may be

Babysitter in my home for

1 child, 5 day~ a week, light
references

·

Why settle tor less. Sell the
best. Sell Avon . For rJIOre

Information cal1446·3358 ,
GET VALUABLE training

Lofs &amp; Acreage

89.8 acre farm , 8 room
house, basement, metal
barn, 2 car garage, orcha r d
(variety fruit) , farm pond,

tobacco base, Clay Twp.,
city school dist. Call 446·

9434 .
Rd . Close ro · HMC. Call 1.
1614·592-5639.

2 story house in M id·
dlep6r-t . Corner lot. Close to
stores and school. Needs a
some

furniture

and

ap·

pllances $.16,900. Phone 992·
5548.

some great gills as a Sen,

~

Space for Rent

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33, North 01
Pomeroy , Large lots. Call
992 -7479 .
LARGE • lot

For rent 3 bedroom trailer
with 2 car garage, kitchen
furnished, $250 per mo.

home

in

Pincresf care center, for

male patient, 304·675·5941
or 614·446·9727.

FIVE room

ho~se ,

8WU,

baths, nice lot, Clifton, 304·

773·5860.

WORKING parents need'
ileped~able bab~· sitter, .
some ·late hours, referen· .
5215.
ces reqylred, 304-675-7551.

&lt;

304-773-

57

Harley parts &amp; accessories
now at Cusfllm Cycles,
LTD.
Rt . _7 North,
Gallipolis. Open evenings,

51
44

LAYNE'S Fl)RNITURE

Apartmemt

Sofa,

lor Rent
kitchen furn, utilities par-

tially pd., excellent
location . Call 675-5104 or
675·7284.
Apartment lor _rent, Call
446·0390.
2nd. floor elliency apt.
Adults only , no pels. Brad·
bury AparlmenlsJ 446·0957 .
Furnished aPt. 3 rooms

with private bath. Referen·
845

Ave .,· Gallipolis.
·2215.
Small

chair,

rocker,

furn ished

2nd .

C~ll

446·

apart-

ment, central air &amp; heat,
parking, 1 or 2 adults only .

Call446·0338.
3 room unfurnished apart·
ment. adu lts only, no pets,
utilities paid . Call446·3437.
1

2 bedroom unfurnished
apartment in Crown Cify .

Furnished effiency $135,
utilities paid , one person.

For Sale Beautiful iiodr
mOdel coosole stero, AM·
FM 8-track &amp; record
player,
Call 3792314.

maple or pine finish .
Bedroom sulfes · Bassett
Oak, !1675., Bassett Cherr.y ,
$795 . Bunk bed complete

with mattresses, $250. and
up to $350, Captain's beds,
$275. complete. Baby beds,
$99. Mattresses or box
springs, full or twin, SSR .,
firm, $68. and $78. Queen

sets, $195. 5 dr. chests, S4W.
4 dr. chests, $42. Bed
frames, S20.and $25., 10 gun
· Gun cabinets, $350., dlnel·
te chairs $20. and $25. Gas
or electric ranges, $295. Or·
thopedic super firm, $95,
baby matresses, $25 &amp; $35,
bed frames $20 $25, &amp; 130. ·
Electric fireplace, gun
cabinet, Living room suite,
wood table .&amp; 4 chairs.
Used -

ranges,

refrigerators, and TV's. 3
miles out Bulavllle Rd.
Open 9am to 7pm, Mon.
thru Fri., 9am to 5pm, Sat.
446·0322 •

500 bales Of hay and 3,oo0fl.
of lumber. No checks. Call
388·8483 or Hll-1472 .

~~~a:~6·0161 even. and

at farm. Bud Hatfield $5.00
100 count. Ca116i'5·3308.

..........
-......"
........
, ..•.....
- ~

71

1978 Toyota Corolla sports
coupe. 4 cyl., automatic,
AM· FM. Cal1245·9162.

Excelsior 011 . Co., 636 E·.
Main St., Pomeroy, Ohio.
992-2205.

1981 DOdge 024 PS, PB, AM··
FM cossette, while &amp; red,
sharp, $.ol,900. Ph. 256·6862
or256·1142.

Used tires. Honohaws Tires
on Lucas Lane. Call 675·

7360.

1967 Plymouth Fury. Runs
good. $350. 992·3702.
1977 Cutlass Supreme
Salon, p.s., power windows,
p.b., reclining buckets, T·
Top, velour interior. Like

PLE hutch, table &amp;
chairs, $300. phOne 304-675·

8:30

new. ~.800. or best offer.
1
992·6362 .

For sale . Galavanlzed
culvert. 20 fl. long, 24'
wide. Calll04·773·5770 after
5PM.
Dak firewOOd . Coll675-2757.

dition. For information call

MLj classes
are limited!

I'm sure

And mLl household
consists onl4 o.f

992-5771 after 5 p .m .

40u'l.l
find m4

mljseiL

is cast in the tdual role of
namnor and as Carl . Sand-

from school!

documentary-drama on the
life 11nd times of one of
America· s all-time favcrtte

just com\nq home

WINNIE

1/

Excavating

SUR·
AND
sold

backhoe

work.

Special

farm rates. Cal l us for free

to purchase. Open 2~ hours.
1976 PINTO, 304·675·5995 or
675·:1247.
'

WINTER YACHT
~RTIES,

OK"'

10:00

THEN .. . I SHALL
PAAT WITH A WISH
-- TO MEET A6AJN
ON 17/?Y ~ANP/

gravel

limestone

by

tons

the Harts ' help in his defection. {60 min .f [CiosadCaptionodl
liD Newewetch
10:30 £1) Sing out America
liD Top of the World
11 :00 D (I) ()) ClJ Ill Cll ® It
(jJ Newa
()) Naohvllle RFD
(I) All In the Family
(I) Pick Cavett Guests To

ONE_FAVOR ,,.

or

for

driveway, or mise, hauling,

George Woodyard. Call446·
9~28.

Frlgi.d aire

dryer

exc .

DRAGONWY N D
CAT ·
TERY · KENNEL . AKC

Sofa ex,tra nice vel-Jet. Can ChOw

puppies,

CFA

be seen 11632nd. Ave.

Himalayan, Persian and
=========:.l::::::::~====.!S(amese
3844 offer kittens.
4 p.m. Call 446·

II"

HILLCRI;iST KENNEL
Boarding all breeds; clean
indoor-outdoor facilities .
Also AKC Reg. DOber·
mans. Coli ~7795.

1977 Monte Carlo, low
mileage, nice . Contact
. Mike at 28th St. Amoco .
675-9768.
72 ..

Truck's for Sale

SEWING .·Machine repairs,
service . Authorized ·Singer
Sales &amp; Service Sharpen
Scissors . Fabric Shop,

Pomeroy . 992· 2274 .

1977 Ford F ·100 with 1976
811. coachman camper or 'JACKS REFRIGERATIO:
trade lor 79, 80, or 81 mini N Air condition service,
commerc ial, industrial.
motor home. 6U·256·62«.
Phone 882·207y.
1968 Ford F100. Standard .
304-773·5013.
, 1979 Ford Ranger XL T
F150. 3100 mlles. A.C.
Power steering,
br'akes.
auto ..

smlsslon,aux.
992·5875.

fuel

power
tran-

tank.

15 ,

TOWN
uh ·

~1\EN

QIPN'T

W_.,NT 'T"O
COME OUT:
I . . . lftti OII

Be Announced

BARNEY

I'LL iJUSTTAKE
ME A LITTLE .
NAP, MAW

WALLER IN
BED TOO LON6. PAW ··
SUPPER'S ALMOST
READY

·

liD Hitchcock
11 :30 D CD ClJ Tonight Show
(J)A~rUfe

(I) MOVIE: 'The Gorgon'
Cl&gt; s.nnv Hill &amp;how
(I) Allee The tax collector informs Allee she
owes a fortun·e in back
taxes left over by her late
husband.
Cll Ceptloned ABC Newa
I)D MOVIE: 'By Lolle

S-2-U

+2
.KJ9743
t AQ94
+AS
WEsT·
EAST '
+QJ 10'81
.AU65

.

.2

•e

t76SS2
+J7

_,'

+QIOIIIII

SOUTH
• 73
.AQI06S
• K J 10 a
+KB
Vulllerable: North-South
Dealer: South

,.••

Wtit

North

Eaol

South .

4.
Pau
Pass

&amp;•

INT

Pass
Dbl.

st .

,. s• 3•

Pass

Pass

Opening lead:

t7

It is worthy of note here
that Lightner was sure that
hla aide would collect a
spade trick since North had
li8ed Blackwood on his way
to the heart slam .
.
&lt;

~~-~by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
1 Stigmatize

3 Loosen
C AlkalJ

5 Rose

5 Made

derivative

10 Business
pursuit

11 Fan
13 RUMing
·

smoothly

of silver

aType of cake
7 Ukewlse
8 Reduce
to a spray
· 9 New "old"

15 Parson ~ird

stage

11 Qmvened

productiOn

n Wire measure 1% Show pity

,-

Yesterday'• Auwer .

24 Sluggish·

30 Specter ·
31 Measuring

ness

25 Drinking
It Correct
vessel
2t - been had! 19 Whirl
21 Within
22 cartridges, 21 Oregon city
(comb. form)
shells, etC. 28 Oldfashioned
2% Muslim
23 Cezanne
type of shoe
prayer call
was one
23Quoted
28 Fillh

11 Tranquil

device
32 Pupil (Fr,)

36 Dry
36 Unfavorable
39 Altar

wear

%7 Single'
28 School
of whales
%9Johnlon
or Jonson
30 Strausa opera
33 Exasperate

34 Ha.lten
35 Old note

3'H..atln
church hymn
CO Screed
n Author Carlo
4%Snake
43 Eltl!endered

DOWN
1 Cut
! ~ ~Peanuts"
character

3· 2

a

j

General Hauling

JONES BOYS WATER
SERVICE . Coli 367·7471 or
367-0591 '

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how

to work

It:

4-XYDLB. AAXa

Ia

LONGFELLOW

roa-Hd'
•

(jJ Nlghtllne ·

12:00 ()) Burna a. Allen

(]) MOVIE: 'Eyewttn..a '
(I) Nlghlllne
(J)
WKRP
In
Cincinnati Leo doesn't like
sharing tha eirwevea with
Bailey when ·~·· prom-

NOW HAULING house coal

a .

&amp; ,limestone for driveways.,

Call lor estimates 367-7101.

1980 Et cami"'1 super 1~7_ _ -!!U.I!P!!ho!'!l~st!!e!:rYL__
·sport, Black With factory ·
TRI S,TATE
mags. Excellent condition.
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
ISSOOO, 7CZ·27fl.l.
1163 Sec, Ave ,. Gallipolis.
446·7833 or 446· 1833.
nle 1978 chevrolet 3/.
truck, 4-Wheel drive, MOWREYS .Upholslery Rt.
, ,,, _..,., mJiel, A· I condition. 1 Box 124, Pt, P.leasant, 30~675-:1625.
675-•154.

Comfort Muriel sees red
when a pretty artist paints
Henry intO a corner.
II (l) ClJ Flamingo Road
Michael
Tyrone
uses
Constance and Sande to
get Field's power on his

Soviet ballet star asks fer

Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration

Hauling

lography, natural historian
David Attonboro~gh ox·
ploros the varied uses ilnd
advantages of tho light end
flexible feather. (60 min .)
[Closed Captioned(
Cll II 1D Too Cloae for

NORTH

In US9 Ted Lightner won
tbe Splngold wltb Oswald
Jacoby, Bob Macpherran,
tbe late Howard Schenken
and Jimmy Maier. He
played throughout with
Jacoby.
.
· Tbe Llehtner slam double
had been In use for a few
yean by thla time. Today's
band shows It at ,Its most
effective use,
Ted sat. East and doubled
six hearts to ask Jacoby to
·lead one of tbe 'unbid sultl,
The double would bave been
dlsutrous If Otale had led a
club, but Ted knew that hla
!Nirlner would be trying· to
lind Ted's · void suit and
would almost surely hold
many more diamonds than
clubs.
Sure enou&amp;b, Ollie had no
problem. He led a diamond.
Ted r.!tffed and returned a
spade for a one-trick set.
Schenken and . Maier bid
the beart slam at the other
table1 btlt East and West
saveo at six I!Nide&amp; down
two, so the Llglitner double
had gained only 500 points
for Its inventor.

lhis

side. (60 min.(
(])MOVIE: 'Raging Bun'
(I) TB&amp; Evening Newa
(I) II il! Hart to Hart A

TIME. JUST

estimates. 446·4f40.
84

triOR!=

WE'LL liE !lUMPING
INTO EACH OTHER
~OM TIME TO

st. Co. ~Custom dozer &amp;

GOVERNMENT
P;LUS
CARS
TRUCKS many

NO

·TilE COMfANY
NOW. I'M Sutr£ '

HARTS Used Cars, New
Gallipolis Diversified Con·

wdHZAF1'1&lt;:

AT WORK fOR

Phone 446·3888 or 446·«77-

stock.

In

poets. (2 hrs.( [Closed
Captioned[
·
·
(Ill Ute on Earth 'Lords of
the Air .' Using the latest

9:30

83

himself

techniques in nature pho-

Cor. Fourth and Pine

for your directory on how

cond ., $95. Phone 367-0560.

burg

school
no bother!

Plumbing

Haven West Virginia. Over
20 less expensive cars in

By Otwald Jacoby

aad Alaa Soala1 ·

(I) MOVIE: 'Evel Knlevel'
(jJ Happy Daya
Chechi scrambles for success bv becoming a !JBiesman. [Closed-Captioned( '
8 ()) ® Simon S. Simon
A&lt;..J . and Rick. are hired by"
a jealous wHo tQ follow her
husband bur he Is kid·
nappad before their vary
ayes . {60 min.(
(J) Ute on Elrth 'Lords of
.the Air.' Using the latest
tocMiques in nature photography, natural hi!ltorian
Devld Attenborough ex plqres the .varied u&amp;es and
advantages of the light and
flexible foether . (60 min .)
[Ciosad Captioned!
(() II ID Laverne ond
Shirley Lanny and Squiggy' s · friendship is on tho
brink of collopaa. (Closed·

... and mlj son, Pank,

car ·

CA-RTER ' S PLUMBING
AND HEATING

The slim double

when he poses as a doc-

&amp; Heating

1977 Mustang II. Good con-

JOCKEY

BRIDGE

tor . [Ciosod-Caplionodl
Ill (J) (lJ MOVIE:
'Innocent Lolle'
(I) American Playhoule
·carl Sandburg: Echoes
And Silences.' John Cullum

675·2440.

4210.

(Answers tomorrow)

LA,l iGH. lt,lBIBE

he waa this most of the'umeBLACK &amp; BLUE

A 'dime' novelist locking

penter available tor home
or business r,emodeling or
new structures . Free
estimates, references, 304·

82 ,

I X)

)ON THE[

Answer : They c•lled him a colorful fighter becau9e

for a plot for his next book
hires sbc gunmen to go after Maverick . (60 min .(
(1)700 Club
(I)
II ID Three's
Com!NinY Panic grips Jack

remOdeling . Phone 304·675·
2088 or 675 ·4560.

EXPERIENCED

(I I I
1

C~ptioned)

perienced mason, roofer,
carpenter,
electrician,
general repairs and

Service .

1~.

No~ arrange the circled letters tG ·
tonn the surprise answer, aa auggeated by lht ebove cartoon.

Yeslerday'al Jumblea: KNEEL

9 :00 II CD ffi Bra&amp; Movarlck

through local sales, under

HOUses for Rent

furnished , 3 rm. house.
Suitable lor singl~ person
or retired couple . Garden
space, deposit &amp; r-eferences
required. · call -446-0450 or
446· 1291.

~~:....__j,..'

RINGLES'SSERVICE ex·

Residential, automotive.
Emergency service. Call

Answerht)re:

(() II

Tree Trimming,

JIMS Water Service. Call
Jim Lanier, 304-675-7397 .
Camp Conley.

dec&lt;Orated

/11/!CH/HERY-

- AN' AS FOK
HEAVY ¥«JAA IN
€rENEIUIL, I'VE
WHOl-E PlACE fS
THAT OlD &amp;QTTE!l- €rOT ATENANT
FAAMEit 1'/HO
CHUteH OVE~
THERE •• r-~~ HANDLES THAT ••

slump removal. 675-1331 .

882·2079.
3 piece bedroom suit. 992·
7610

SJOO.OO. Call -1-714·569-0241

615·6429 . .

New.ly

I C'N HAHIX.E STUFF
LUGE THAT ALL RIGiiT,
BUT IF IT COMES T'

HECK, TH' HEAVIEGT
MACHINERY ON TH'

RON'S Television Service .
Specia'lizing in Zen·ith and
Motorola , ~buaz8r, and

LOCKSMITH

UI!!&gt;UALL"i

J I I

•

Cleaning. Scotch Gaurd.
Fr-ee estimate. 992 ·6309

304·895-3802 .

WHAi A~P'OP'E~A

tBRUBUS:I

a

Special March and April
only, Gene's Deep Steam

Water wells . Commercial
and Domestic. Test holes.
Pumps Sales and Service .

....

a

CAPTAIN STEEMER Car·
pet Cleaning, .featured by
Hoffelt Brosthers Custom
·Cci'rpets. Free estimates.
Call446· 2107.

F &amp; K

Auto for Sale

II I

a

house calls. Phone 576-2398
or 446·2454.

For sale 1967, 10x43 mobile
home, one bdr ., with gas
lurnance. /llso truck cam·
Per sleeps 5 wfth furnance.
Also cOffee table and 2 end 19U For-d Torino r-uns good,
tables with woOden frame $400, 71,000 miles. Call 367·
&amp; glass top. Call446·7525 at· ' 7887.
fer 5,

pets . $145 plus deposit. 446·
2143 .

&amp; telrigeralor . Call Earl
Tope, 446·0690 business

Ground corn No. 1 quality

78 Ford Fiesta 45,000M,
exc. cond ., 52,800, 536
Jackson Pike, Apt. 85B.

Call 446·4416 alter 7PM.

Nice Apt., unful-n., con·
venient, quiet, -4 rms. and
bath, carpeted, has range

245·5693.

g&lt;Xld working cQn·

dillon, $30. Call446·48fi.S.

chair ant1 lovesf]at, $275.

SOfas and chairs priced
from $285, to $795. Tables,
$311 and up to $109. Hlde·a·
beds,$340., queen size, $380,
Recliners, $175. to $29~. ,
Lamps from $18. to $65. 5
pc . dllettes, from $79., to
$385. 7 pc., $189. and up.
WoOd table with 4 chairs,
$219 up to $495. Desk $110.
Hutches, $300. and $375 .,

Mixed hay for sale. Call

Hoover upright vaccumn
cleaner with attachments,

ct-. very

loman, 3 tables, S500. SOla,

2 bdr . apt. HUD excepted,

ces · preferred ,

Household Goods

LOT tor sale, Gallipolis
Ferry, 144 'x105', $7500. 304·

DOWN

·'

1978 Suzuki Jr. 50. Call 675-

__
........ .
.. ...............

I TYMINE
(J I

a

5-8PM. Ph . 446·7346.
1972 Su~uki 750 Road bike"
$500. and 1980 80 X. R. dirt
bike. Good condition S«XX.
992 ·5556.

7476 .

Plastic Septic Tanks. Stale
and county approved . 1,000 63
Livestock
gal. tan,k , price $340. Other
sizes in -stock, haul In your ~anted to buy Horses &amp;
pickup truck. Call 6, 4. 286 . ponies. Call379~ 2761.
5930, Jackson, Oh. RON
EVANS ENTERPRISES
64
Hay &amp; Grain

uoo:oo.

plus deposll. Cal l 304·576·
2708 .

party at 12 percent. 992· 11-...,.....~
571!6.
•
=-~,--,-,r---

RIGHT

L'M PRJ:PARJN6 FOR
AN ART' PROJECT IIJ
Ci,A!&gt;S., PO YOU Ho!'IVE:
.SOME; OLD PAPER~
'' WE CAN U~!! FO;:t
PAP!!R-MACHE;

• Musical
Instruments
i..O WREY organ, very good
condition, recently . ser· .
1981 PM 125 Suzyki, $900.
viced. Cost $2000., asking 304·675·6367.
$600. phone 304·675·5304.

refrlgere1ors, 2 new frost

mobile
Heights

area, 304·675-2524.

Dead ends on Peacock Ave.
Has wate r and sewage.
Will finance to responsible

41
f inancing, full basement, 2

lor

Sandy

tlnel route carrier. Phone House Meadowbrook Ad·
us right away and get on ditiOn 3 _bedroom , family
the eligibility list at 992&lt; room with fireplace, cen·
2156 or 992·2157.
Ira I air, basement, 304-675·
1542. .
'

PRIVATE duty Nu,rsing,.al

CAPI' AIN EASY

~

able to buy a 3 bedroom
Trai ler sites. 10 percent
house I not a mobile home J
down . 992-2571 or 992·3830.
for as· little as S135. mo. No
down payment. Call 992. LARGE TRACT of land .
7034.

little work. $16,500. With
as 8 young business person
and earn good money plus

plus deposit . Jean Stout

992·5511.

2 Bedrm . unturn . apt.,
laundry room . Stove fur ·
nishett . Adults only . No

1 acr e lot K e mper Hollow
New Income Limits. If you

Camp Conley, 304·675·2195.

Call 256·6520.

992 ·5049 or 992 3289.

12x65. Cal l 446·7015 alte r
:30p. m .

FOR
rent, 2 bedroom
trailer, furniShed, $200.00
plus utilities and deposit,

bath . Call 446-3733 or 446·
0171 .

Busi.ness For Sa le. The
K idd ie Shoppe in Pomeroy .
Inventory and equipment.

1972 concord Mobile Home,

MOBILE home, 12x65, 2 C's
Park, 614·446·8221 .

jl-=Fi~~~~==

34

5 : 30, 304·675-2760 .

r.~~~~~~;:~;::~;::;;;;~~~e-~";""';..~

(I) Andy Griffith
(I) ABC Newa
(I) 3-2· 1, Coiltllct
(HlOvOJ Eaoy
6:30 II CD Cil NBC Newa
Cil $&amp;0.000 Pyramid
(I] Bomer Pyle
(I) MuiiP"t Show
D CIJ llD CBS Newa
(() Pr. Who
(Ill Ullu, Yoga and You
D (jJ ABC Newe
7:00
CD P.M. Magazine
Cil John jWt~rg
(I) Carol Burnett and
Friend a
(() Entertainment Tonlght
ClJ Happy Pays
(J) TIC Toe Pough
CIJ liD MacNeil-Lehrer
Report
®Newa
1D Famliy Feud •,
7:30 D CD You Alked For It
Cil Another Ute
(I) Sanford and Son
(I)
(I) Family Feud
ClJ Laveme and Shirley
(I) Bualneaa Rapon
® Rlc()ard Simmon•
liD MOVIE: 'A Study In
SCarlet'
II ID Face the Mualc
9 :00 D CD ClJ Father Murphy
Father Joe Parj&lt;or says that
he is quitting the priesthood because he has loot'
his faith . (60 min.l [Closed
Captioned! ·
Cil National Geographic
S
lei
MOVIE : 'The Longeat

"'----'==="-"==-

Furnished 3 rooms &amp;

Phone 304·937 ·2375.

'h to J;_. acre of land near
city (within 5 ~o 10 miles),
city water. Phone after

i/Jm{

~I

a &lt;lJ

I.Dst'

Betz Honda, check with us

furnished with utilities
paid. 507 Mills St. Mid·

m®

Newa
.
(]) MOVIE: 'Uttle Boy

IrE!&lt;! relrig. at $275.00, 3
, .... .
pice living room suites
$199 .00; 2 piece living room
Apartments. 675-5548.
suites $140.00, love seats
77
Auto Repair
61
Farm Equipment
APARTMENTS , mobile $70.00, wood dlnet set with 4
captain
chairs
·
(newJ
JIVIDEN'S
FARM Quality AutobOdY &amp; Paint
2 bdr . trailer furnished , homes,
houses, ' Pt .
work. Professional custom
adults onl y, Brown Trailer
Pleasant and. Gallipolis. 275.00, linoleum rugs 9&gt;&lt;12 EQUIPMENT
paint work on motorcyc _
l "s.
446· 1675
Park , 992·3324.
614·446·8221 or 614-245·9484. SIO, large owl lamps $25.00,
padded maple rockers Special Sale on NEW Auto Trim Center, 446· 1966.
$34.00, new &amp; used wood
N ice 1 bedroom furnished TWIN Rivers Tower Apart· burners from $60.00 to · LONG TRACTOR!
Model
HP
Price
mobile home . 9 m ile from ments for the elderly, 200 $275 .00, several chest and
24
$4924.00
Pomeroy on Rt. 33 . Phone Second St. Pt. Pleasant, An dressers, variety of silver 260'31o28 5594.00
for appointment 992·7479 .
Equal Opportunity Housing stone cook ware, .c ufility 31Q-4xol-28 StF"IESS
7072.00
304-675-6679 .
kitchen cabinets, TV's, 360--1
35 6555.00
dlnet sets, beds, desks, and .j6()2 bedroom mobj le home
41.9- 7353.00
cOmpletely
furnished . TWO bedroom apartment, lots more, Open lOam to 460-4xol-41.99619.00
81
Home
Utilities paid . Deposit and e?tcellent condition, $250. 5pfl'\, 446·3159.
51Q48.5-- 7778.00
1mprovements
references
required . plus utilities, References
51Q-4x._48.5-- 9886.00
Adultso~ly. $250. 992·3647 .
, STUCCO PLASTERING
and deposit. 304-675· 1962.
48.5-- 8450.00
GOOD
USE,D
AP · 51Qtextured , cei .l ings com·
64 9314.00
PLIANCES · washers, 61Qmercia!
and residential,
61Q-4x,._64
.
-11,304.00
dryerS,
'
re~rigerators,
3 Bedroom
furn ished APARTMENTS, first Ave .
free estimates. Call 2.56·
"PIUS Freight
Skaggs Ap ·
Mobile hori1e with washer 1 &amp; 2 bedrooms, ·614·446· ranges.
1182.
pllances, Upper River Rd. ,
and dryer on private lot. 6221.
beside Stone Crest Motel . Sale Dale March 13, 1982
Deposit required . No pets.
CALL NOW!
446·7398.
949·2253.
PAINTING · interior and
For rent furnished 3 room
exterior,
plumbing,
apartment . Adults, 7th St.
While youth bed and chest TROYBILT ROTOTILLE· roofing, some remodeling.
4 bedroom, centra l air and Call675-381 I.
of drawers. Excellenf con· RS All models, big discoun· 20 yrs. exp. C.all386·9652 .
heat, city water, fireplace,
-==:?=-=.:::=~===
dillon . $125. Call 992·5752 ts. Can ship. Avoid April
unfurnished e)(cept kit· 45
Furnished Rooms
facto.ry price increase and Marcum
after 5.
Roofing
&amp;
chen . $300 month plus
end Of discount. · 703·942- Spouting. 30 years exutilities. Reference and SLEEPING ROOMS and
3871 Hickory Hill Nursery, penence, specializing in
requir ed.
1'\ light housekeeping apt.,
deposif
Rt. 1 Box 390 A, Fisher· buill up roof. Call388·9857 .
Rp cine. 949·2293 .
Park Central Hotel .
SVilfe, VA 22939.
54
Misc. Merchandlce

576-2010.

FARM·122 acres, Tribble

EXERC ISE bike, 304-6755162.

please. Call"-46· 1423.

HOME .

304-576·2711 .

Road,

housework ,

trai ler lOxSO

buill, 14x70, 3 bdr., 1 · 112
bath, with _2x6 s idewalls,
fully insulated, R·laclor 23,
21

Also

2 Bedroom

Wanted to Do

3476.

304·675· 5668 .

$2,500. 985-3385, alter 5 949·
2754 .

Licensed &amp; insured. Call

ber Shop, Middleport 992·

63
_ 7o_. _ _ _ _ _ _ ____

1964 Troy MObile Home.
10x50 furn ished. Priced at

MOBILE HOMES MOVED

18•

car-ds. Osby Martin 992·

1971 Hillcrest mobile !1otne.

Asking $4,000 . 992·3724 or

CHIP WOOD . Poles max.

Gold, silver, sterling,
jewelry, rings, old coins &amp;
currency . Ed Burkett Bar·

1 acre _w ith mobile home,
wafer, cellar house, wash
house, utility building , Will
se ll with or without mobile
hom e or visa versa . Call

out Rt. 143, four miles, set·
t ing alond r-oad .

diameter 14" on . largest

R"d . ,

1294.

stitc h headquarters, ALL
colors OMC. Free •ssons .

Cake
De c ora tin g .
Spec i aliZil'_lg in Weddings,
Anni&gt;Jersity, all occassions .

Deliverd to Ohio Pal let Co.,

Buddy

Di's Craft Supply, Spring
Valle y Plaza, 446·2134. X·

furniture, _gold, silver
dollars, wood ice bOKes,
stone jars, antiques, etc .,
Complete
households.
Write: M.D . Miller, Rt. 4,
Pomeroy, Oh . Or 992 -7760.

end. s'12.50 per ton . Bundled
sla_b . l $10 .50 per ton .

12x60 2 bedroom

mobile home . Set up with 2
or 4 lots, gas heat, ru r al
water, close to town, · inancing available. Phone 446 ·

367-0218.

Schools Instruction

Oh . Call266·3074.

BEDS-IRON, BRASS, Old

CLEAN USED MOB ILE
HOMES
KESSEL' S
QUA L ITY
MOBILE 2 bdr ., adults only, no pets,
HOME SALES , 4 MI. furnished, 322 3rd. Ave.
WEST, GALLI POLIS, RT Gallipolis. Call 446-3748 or
256· 1903.
35. PHONE 446·3866 .

Insurance

SANDY AND BEAVER

15

TOP PRICE Scrap Meta l,

Rock Springs
Pomeroy. 992-2669 .

1 Bedroom basement Apt.

before YOU pay to much.
Call446·2240 .

required. 992·2937,
3 room furnished Apt.
Utilities p_a id. No drunks or 5,_,1_-.!!H~ou!!:s!.!e!!!h!'!ot~d..!G~ooci!!!!!!.S_
dope, no pets. John Sheets.
3&amp; miles' South 01 M'1d·
SWAIN
dlepori.SR .7.
AUCTION FURNITURE &amp;
PAWN SHOP 62 Olive 51,
Two· 2 bdt. mobile homes .
GaiiJpolls. 3 nice bedroom
Dep . &amp; ref. required. Call · 3 bedroom furnished upper suites, gas &amp; electric
256~ 1922.
ir&gt; Syracuse. $150 month ranges,
5
used

Situations Wanted

12

13

Gold.

All used bikes reduced at

Sroomandbathlurnished
Apt. No pets. Deposit

~uy

. 6:oo 11 CD rn a

Motorcycles

2566.

dleport,Oh. 992-7515

Mobile Homes

3/2/82

'78 750 Honda K· mOdel, low
miles. Coli 446·2518.

room house with bath . · 1 bedroom furnished apt,
Large lot near Racine. m - 992-5434. 992~ 5914 or 304·862·

5658.

TUESDAY
•
·

EVENING

S

' Something for everyone.

11

BY.

3 bedroom unfurnished
apartment. 992·5434 or 9925914 or 304·882·2566.
2

Television
•
•
VIewmg

HIYA;BLOWTOP.

GLAD YOU COUI..D

For sale 79 Ram Charger 4·
wheel dr ive. Call 388·9991
or 388·8623.

1

The Daily Sentinei-Pa -11

Pomenrt Middleport, Ohio .

Vans &amp; 4 W. D. ·

anytime. ~

sec. depOsit. Call446·0«.i.
APARTMENTS :

73

1975 DODGE 4 WD, o/4 ton
PU. 318 auio., PS, PB,' E xc .
cond.
Call
446 · 0515

Furnished apartment .c rm .
&amp; bath. Adults onl.y, ref, &amp;

YardSale

Bid Yard Sale March 3rd ..
4th, 5th, &amp; .61h . 9 to ? 38
Sm ithers A~J e . , Gallipolis.

s

by Larry Wright

KIT 'N' CARLYLE "'

near HMC, $200, water bedr9Qm, r-ent start$ at
paid, one child acceptable .' $152 . Special rates for
Senior Cil i~ens . Call 446·
Cal l 446·&lt;4416 alter 7PM.
2745.

&amp; Pood le mi xed. Name Jot.

7

Ap.rtmemt
for Renf

For rent or sale 3 bedroom

LOST Black, male, Terri er

1982

PEANUTS

I'VE NEVEl(

WORKED SO
HARDIN Au.
MY LIFE ...

'. I

WONDER IF

trs

ALL Rl6f.IT TO REST
ON Tl-115 JOB ...

NO RESTING

t WONDER
' Wf.IY I

. ,..,...~.,

...

~-

One letter limply 1tondl for another, In thla .. mple A il
used for tho three L'a, X for the two O'o, ete. Slhale letters
apo~trophea, the lencth and formation of the wordl are ali
hlnta. Each day the cede lettera are dllf~renl
'•

•

a

1D Fontaey leland A ,
centerfold mOdel withal to

treat m9r1 n

aex objects

and a man desires to lead
a commando raid. (A) (60
min .)
'
12:30 D CD ClJ Late Nlghf lwlth
David Lettennen
()) Jack Benny Show
()) F_., llllnd A canterfold model wlohea to
treat men as HX , objectl
ond a man dellires to feed
a commando raid

T .Y M

0

ANHRI
SG

' .

CIIYPTOQUOTBS

oted to newscuter.
(I) PBS Late Night

OH

GRKNQOKJX

HL

CMJANX,

OYX

G HK N

SG

OH

M

XBKRMOSHV

M B !:J S G H V ' ':

.,
YtltenlaJ'I CJ'yploqaole: AN UPPISH CLASS SOMETIMES
. MISTAKES rt'SELF FOR AN UPPER ":LASS.-UNKNOWN
AIJI'HOR
.
,.,

\

�'•

Page

12-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

I Rhodes staffers push sal~s tax increase

Area deaths
Mlli'Y j. Dean
Mary· J. Dean, 84, Bidwell, died
Tuesday morning at her ~ldence.
Born June 8, 1B97, Ill Jackson
'County, W.Va. , daughterofthelate
James and Maggie Donahue
Thornton, she had been a Bidwell
resident since 1~.
She was also preceded Ill death
by her husband, William R. Dean,
In December 1950. She attended
Hope WW Methodist Church In
· Mount Alto, and was a member or
the Bidwell United Methodist
·women.
Surviving are a son, WWiam of
Rutlfnd; two daughters, Mrs. Lu·
eWe McDermitt of Cottageville,
W.Va., and Mrs. David (Helen )
Wickline of Bidwell; five grand·
·children and 11 great •
grandchlldren.
She was also preceded In death
by two brothers and two sisters.
Funeral arrangements wW be
announced later by the McCoyMoore Funeral Home, Vinton.

Terry

r.ee Russell

Terry Lee Russell, 23, formerly
Coolville, died unexpectedly
Monday at his home In Houston,
Tex.
He was born at Parkersburg, W.
Va., a sonofn:twardB. and Wllma
Knapp Russell of Hockingport. He
. was a 1976 graduate of Federal
Hocking High School and a 1981
graduate of Salem College where
he was on the dean's list. He was a
.member of the Uttle Hocking Jay,cees, the Coolville Lions Club and
attended the Orange Christian
Church. Mr. Russell was employed
as an accountant with the Houston
Shell and Concrete Co. In Houston.
Surviving In addition to his parents are a brother, David E , Russell, Hockingport; his
grandmother, Gladys Russell,
Coolville, and several cousins.
Services wW be held at 1 p.m.
Thrusday at the White F11neral
Home In Coolville with the Rev.
Roy Deeter oU!clatlng. Burial will
be In the CoolvDie Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home anytime alter 2 p .m.
Wednesc!ay.

ot

Bernard D. Phillips
Funeral services tor Bernard
Doyle PhU!Ips, 85, Belington, W.
va. and Bradenton, Fla., were held
Sunday at the Cr1m Memorial Unl·
ted Mehtoldst Church II) PhWppl
with burial In the Crossroad
Cemetery.
Mr. PhWips, a former Meigs
County resident, died Wednesday
at Bradenton. Attending the fun·
eral services were Mrs, A. R.
Knight, Vincent Knight, and Mr.
and Mrs. But Klllght.
Mr. PhU!Ips was twice married,
flr~t to Rose Marie Boughman who
preceded him In death on Sept. 7:7,

March 2, 1982

1974. He later married Mary
Gainer Baughman who survives.
Also surviving Is a daughter, Mrs.
Rose Mary Leasburg, Sherr, W.
Va.. three stepdaughters, Mrs.
J:ohn (Frances) Stiles, Tallahasee,
Fla.; Mi-s. Fred (Sarah) Durst,
Maryland; Mrs. )ames (Allee) Hovey, Mantua; two sisters, Mrs.
Ruth Wagner, PhWppl, W. Va, and
Mrs. Fred (Alpha} Hansord, Parsons, W. Va.; two grandchildren,
Libby Weiss, Morgantown, and Joe
Leasburg, Jr., Barryville, Va.; live
great-grandchlldren, eight stepgrandchUdren, and twQ step-greatgrandchlldren. He was preceded In
death by ,three sisters and a
brother.
· Mr. PhiWps was
"
a retired post ·
master of the PhWppl Post Office, a
World War I veteran, having
served with the U. s. Army, a
member and past master of and
had been serving as a trustee of the
Bigelow Lodge 52, AF and AM, a
member and past patron of PhWppl
Chapter 41, Order of the Eastern
Star, a past high priest Ill the Ty·
gard Valley 39, Royal Areh Masons, the Belington Klwanas,
Barber Post 44, American Legion,
the Retired Teachers Association
and the National Association of Retired Federal Employees.

Belva Mae Farley
Mrs. Belva Mae Farley, of New
Haven and formerly of Point Plea·
sant, died early Tuesday morning
In the Holzer Medical Center.
She was born In Mason on Feb.
16, 19(1! and was the daughter of the
late Joseph and Margaret M. Elias.
She Is survived by her husband,
Jehu H. Farley, at home; one
daughter, Mrs. BUJ (Lona) 1foward, New Haven; two grandchlldren, Barbara LeMasters and
Michael Howard, both of Columbus, Ohio; and two great
grandchildren.
Also surviving are three two step-

daughters, Patricia Banks, Columbus, Ohio and Ruth GUkey, of
Florida; three sisters, Mrs. Clara
Burris and Mrs. Maxine Gr1mm,
both of New Haven and Mrs. Emogene Crow of Milson; and several
step-grandchUdren.

generate a total of $50.3 mllllon, he
said.
Education, because of the size of
Its appropriation In relation to the
rest of the budget, wW bear the
brunt of the latest cut.
Tax revenue reports for Febru-

COLUMaUS, Oh!o (AP) -Gov.
James A. Rhodes' administration,
which has slaahed $100 miiiJon In
state spending, plans to cut another
$40 m::Jion and says a sales tal'hlke
Is needed to keep state 11,0vemment
running.
Budget Director Howard Collier
says even sharper cuts are In stnre
unless legislators OK a temporary
tax Increase io help erase a projected $1 bUllon In red Ink.
"The luxury of being for 0r
against a tax lncl'ea~ Is past," Collier said. "The Issue today Is the
avoidance of Collapse of essential
state services."
CoWer told the ControWng Board
on Monday that a 1 percent spendIng reduction wW'be ordered etfec·
live March 16.
In' addition, temporary Increases
In the corporate franchise and public utility taxes wW be·lmposed to

ary
change
original
projec·
lionsdid
of JV?t
a deficit
ranging
from
$'150
mllllon to as much as $1.25 b!Won.
Total tax ~nues for the periQd
from July to February were $145.4
million below estimates made
when the c~ni budget was
drafted last November.
.
Revenue from the sales tax on
automobiles was .off by 12.3 percent. The non-auto tax was down 7
percent 8nd personal Income tax
was ott 4 percent.
The OnlY brtght spot was revenue
from the Ohio Lottery, up by 110
mllllon, or 12.5 percent, over
projecUons.

CoWer said he and Gov. James A. taxes ... (but) the silence of support
Rhodes are united In their 'recom- has been deafening," Collier said.
llll!l)ded adoptlop of a temporary 1
He told controllers the 1 percent
percent Increase In the state Sales . spending cut. retroac~ to July 1,
tax, but CQM!ded II has little would carTy an ~ve rate of 3.4
support.
·
·
pen:ent over remainder of the cur"We are stllllnfavorof Increased rent fiBcal year.

r-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

Meigs Happenlngs••••

IIEQ. MTAJI. 11. II

I.

Emergency runs

In the Meigs County Common Pleas
, Court asking that their marriage be
Kimberly Lauderrnllt and Steve
dissolved.
Qulllen, students at the Rutland
Community service
Elementary School, were taken to
the Holzer Medical Center for treatA Pomeroy communltyecumeiument of Injuries received at the
school at 12:45 p.m. Monday by !he
cal service wW be held at 7::llp.m.
Rutland unit of the Meigs County
Thursday at the First Southern
Emergency Medical Service.
Baptist Cl!urch, Mulberry Ave.
The Rev. Robert McGee, pastor of
The EMS also reported that
the Pomeroy United Methodist
Henry Davis was transported from
Church, wUI deUver the message.
his reslderiee In Cheshire to the
Holzer Medical Center at 6:26a.m.
by the Middleport unit, whlleat9: 40
Meets Wednesday
a.m. John Morrison was taken by
the Rutland unit from Meigs Mine 1
The executive committee of the
to O'meness Hospital in At,hens.
Gallla-Jackson-Melgs Mental
Health Board wW meet at 6: ao p.m.
Ask to wed
Wednesday In the board offices, 595
Jackson
Pike, GaiUpotls.
Edwin S. Cozart, 69, Racine, and
Laura Hazel Brown, 59, Vinton
Veterans Memorial
have applied for a marriage license
In Meigs County Probate Court.
Admitted: Oscar Imboden, MInersville; James Elselsteln, PomeT
d
·
roy; Jamie Terzopplous, Racine,
O en
mlliTUlge
and Patricia Cleland, Langsville.
Discharged: Edith Fultz, JesThomas Dwight Durst and Susan
sica Roush, Ollie Tb&lt;&gt;mas, George
Renee Durst, both of S~te. Route
Folmer, and Della Roseberry.
143, Pomeroy, have flied a petition

STOP
SHOPPING

TOWILS

2.99c

STOP
.SHOPPJNG

ZHI

I a .ALI

49c

CARESS

liEd. IIETAIL W

IVORY
D·ISHWASHI
. "LIOUib

BODY BAR

LYSOL-

4.75 oz. Bath Size

TOILETBOWL
CLEANER

2

~.~ ' 149

32 oz.
5199
Reg.

FOR ·$ 1

'
IALANCID,
IXTRA -y

CLAIIOL

·-

$143

, .... ~

· ~L

PHOT
COUPON

Funeral services wW be held on
Thursday, at 1: 30p.m. bt the Foglesong Funeral Home with the Rev.
George Weirick officiating. Burial,
will follow In the Kirkland MemorIal 'Gardens.
Friends may call at the funeral
home ·on Wednesday from 2 p.m.
untU 4 p.m . and from 7 p.m . until 9
p.m.

IT'S TAX
TIME AGAINI

Prices
In Ehect .
March 2nd

•oo

TIDE
DETERGENT
.

Thru
March ,14th

We Reserve The
HANO.. Q IAII&lt;IT ~OTTING lOlL

WBIRRY ,

PLANT

First round tournament results
In first round plaY,, sixth grade
Joey Loving with 7:7 whlle Hupp
level, Monday night, Pomeroy
with 22 and Evans with 14 led
McCoy defeated Bradbury Cassell, · Letart.
39-23 at the junior high In
In the flnlll game, Porlland deMiddleport.
feated HarrlsonvDie, 7:7-24 with
High scorers !or McCoy were McMUian with 21 high scorer for
Barry McCoy with 17 points and Portland and HarrlsonvUie's high
James Norman, 14 points. High scorers were Scott Wllson with 11
scorers for Bradbury Cassell were and Jason Rupe with 11.
Scott Hanning with 15 and Steve
Tonight first round action reCassell with 8.
sumes ·at 5: 30 with .t he Pomeroy
In the second game Letart de- Kloes team against Sall~bury and
feated · Bradbury Melton. High Salem Center against Racine at 7.
scorer for Bradbury Melton was

ONE

~TED

r.;;;;,;;;,;;;;;;~;~~~;!!!;;;~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;~

She was preceded In death by a
sister, Anna Elias, and two brothers, Joseph and Henry Elias.
She was a member of the Point
Pleasant Presbyterian Church and
attended the St. Paul Lutheran
Church of New Haven. ·
·

FRUTH &lt; ~188)
PHAR CY

, ·ON.E

~E~r:;-a ·~~·

.

ident1f1Cal1on. All of thiS plus 7 cred1t card pockets. protected b) Rolfs tllciUSivt Credit Guard.

easywnter. Rolls Lad1es' Secretariat.

"

·

ROLFS .. . it shows you care.

.

XEROX

10 lb. 11 oz.

COPIER

Family Size
Reg. 17c'

Available
All Stores But

.Wellston, Ohio

~~:..·~r.6:~~------~~f.I;QU~LAU~~~~~~~:.~-~y

Most checkbook clutches sew in lhe1r c~eckbooks. 8111 Rolfs ladles' Secretariat lets you remove
~hat checkbook to make checkwritine easier. And the 12-view w1ndows are perfect lo,r showin&amp;
15 well as pen and outside coin purse. So wherever yotJ 're headed. be sure to take alon~ the

Right To
Limit Quantities.
Not Responsible
For Printing Errors.

.

MAKE COPIES OF
YOUR IMPORTANT
DOCUMENTS

.. ......

-

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-~

LADIES ACCESSORIES-2nd FLOOR

KUIIII.X
FACIAL
TISSUES

~,

J

l"l

~11 1/~

IILKIINCI
SHAMPOo OR

'· ' ...· · i $

49

CODITIONEII

59,~ .~J\~ '~i~.l••w

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

•

One Gallon
.
Reg. 148

SINARBT
SINUS TABLETS

;;.

~~179

CHARMIN
BATHROOM
TISSUE

FINAL TOUCH
FABRIC
SOFTENER

. $379

'

6 Roll
. Family Pack

Reg.

$169

$199

"EO. M'TAIC. 11.11

REOULM Oti ·.. Nt ,

TO THE

MEIGS.JR. HIGH SCHOOL
.
7th ·&amp; 8th Grade.Basketball Teams
.

. .

I8-

....... ·~~.......

.

lobo

,

ON THEIR OUTSTANDING SEASON

~---.·

7th GRADE
8th GRADE

FINAL SEASON RECORD-15 WINS &amp;1 LOSS
WINNERS OF SOUTHERN INVITATIONAL TOURN.
.
FINAL SEASON RECORD-13 WINS &amp;4 LOSStS
WINNERS Of FEDERAL HOCKING INVIlATJONAL lOUIN.

Farn1ers

'

·Bank
Member FDIC

Your Community Owned Bank
\

111e.

"·"

MLODOII

••••••
t
•u•••••
I:. ~ 98
10'0·3·

I.Ain

REG. RETAIC.t1.71

couro•

OUR
BUSlNESS
"
.
BEGINS WITH·
FILLING Y.OUR

FRUTH P

" THE EVEHYTHIN(; STOUES"

PRESCRIPTIO.NS
'---------

101 SlxtiiA..nue

. , .lfllat........,W.Ya.•

2.H1 Jack- A v -

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..........,....llf, w. Ya •

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l6t J.ock- Pike

'· O.lllpolll, o.

CY·
12tW. :rndSI.
Wei....,, Ohio

.

'

'

All STORES
OPEN 7 DAYS/
A WEEK!
FREE PARKING

'·

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