<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="14038" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://66.213.69.5/items/show/14038?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-30T02:32:44+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="45138">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/cff35f26ed51b7c37108ede7586e37fc.pdf</src>
      <authentication>f369a9bd044f6e871773e17e2f91d742</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="43893">
                  <text>. BOLD-3 ~~

IRITE-IIWL

• "lVeNTS

i

WITH SEPARATORS AND
CHECK HOLDER ltlfSERT.

Bold-3 now costs
·
about the same n to use as other ~
popular brands. ·•"'

ooou

• SlOfiS
•~WITH

lliiiiY I'UIIH

59

~ NILSOifl

-

I

.110
USTEIIUIII

'1''

lUST

NIUON'S RIG,
$2,12

RIO.

"'

VIVA
PIPER TOWELS

IVORY

THUll SUCIIII
WHITE IIIII

'2''

LIQUID
. 32 Oa.

. ~iN/

NELSON'S RIG. $3,M

.'7''*'·" $
il.
~

FURE BillETS

69~

Mecl,

811110

n."

/

...,...

RIUID

NILION'I RIG.

canDIELLE

Small

., ••
'

Prom

1''

BillETS

,/.-::0....:~

&lt;

PUSTIC
ElSTER EllS
.To FILL

.tj-

t

,~ ' r

®

J?

{)?)

~

0&gt;
.

ROUGHNECK

wall. .,

•a~••

•St.. l·wl r •lotchllloc ~ lid '

•tOa.lal

to contaln•r .. , I.Hp odort
h~tlde .

3t~

•ltwrdr handle• lor lift ing
or corry t.,g .. hond-gr lp
fH.IIel In bole lc.r
el'llplylng.

M·~

•Commerclo l quolll'f
r1fu11 container It moldtd
In tpet lol hoo ... ydllty
p~a~thy'-no t 0911f.tm•r .
•Toko1 tlondord 30-gollon
poly llnor bogt .

NILSON' I
no. 4t' ·

1

Actress critical after stabbing
. . toS ANGE(ES -

311 Gclllon
Capacity

.

" '---:']:.
N~ , ,.

.....,

.,,.

~ ~/-' · ~0·
••

OELLOPIIIE
UITII WIIP
•H" xl'

•ANt. Colon

.

FILLED
ElSTER BASK.TS

490
From

~

~ 2 PIECE IUIIY BASKET

to

.

CHOCOLITECOYERED
IIISHIILLOW EllS

'449
99
'9

BRA CHS

12 por , .••,.

IIIT.IIID.otiEIEI

NILSON'S RIO. S1.1t

•11 EllS
I

MARSHMALLOW

89°

2/3

NILSON'S RIO, M' lA,

CHOCOLA Y1 COVIRID

PEANUT BUnER EGGS

NILSON'S RIG, Sl."

,,,.

20 Ct.

110.....

YOURCHOICI

.,59

EDWARDS AIR FORCE BASE, Calif. -Meteorologists forecast
more rain for the soaked Mojave Desert lakebed that ls the space
shuttle's primary landing slte, while NASA officials predicted "a lot
of headknocklng" over whether Columbia's third filght will be
delayed.
'
The thlrd-mlsslo11 schedule, so far virtually free of human or
mechanical problems, calls for Columbia to blast off from Cape
Canaveral, Fla., on Monday with astronauts Jack R. Lousma and C.
Gordon Fullerton aboard . The spacecraft 1s to land here seven days
Ia ter. on March 29.
But at the Dryden Flight Research Centeron thls sprawling desert
air base 100 miles north of Los Angeles, NASA spokesman ,Lee
Relnerston sald Monday the weather forecast called for Increasing
cloudiness with rain likely Wednesday and Thursday.

Two juvenUes--Roger L. Bush and Denver L. Johnson- who escaped from the Meigs County jail Monday morning wen: apprehended In Lawrence County about 8 p.m. Monday night and were
returned to Meigs County by the Lawrence County Sherllf's Department about midnight. They will be taken to GaWa County where
they face theft charges In addition to the charges filed against them
by Meigs County offlclals. The local charges will Include escape and
theft.

2'4 Oz.

COLUMBUS, Ohio - A Columbus man has been charged with
alt2mpted aggravated murder and aggravated arson after his
mother was beaten and set on tire, pollee say.
Officers sald Elijah Haynes was arrested Saturday. He was being
held at the Franklin County jaU.
Haynes' mother, Carrie Haynes, 51, was In satlsfactorycondltlon
at a Columbus hOspitaL Mrs. Haynes sutfered facial lacerations and
burns on her face, neck and right ann, a hospital spokesman said.
Pollee saki Haynes allegedly beat his mother, poured a fiammable liquid over her and her bed and started a flre after she refused to
give hlm money.

Ill lilliE
4Ya Oz.

lock

POlL WRAPPID
SOLID MILK CHOCOLATE
IAITIRIGGI

Rain could delay space blastoff

Charges filed in beating incident

NILSON'S RIG.
Sl.M

IOLO MII\IIATURIS

Actress ThereSa Saldana, crltiCfllY Injured !II
a stabbing attack outside her West Holly'fOOd apartment, may have
been stalked for days by a "fan" who kept track of her whereabouts
In a diary, autliorities said.
A truck driver on a delivery run stopped the attack on Ms. Saldana
on Monday by taking away he~ assailant's 4-lnch kitchen knife and
pinning him to the ground by,standlng "on his nf!!:'k" until authorities
arrived, officials said.
After 4~ hours of surgery to repair multiple knife wounds,lncludlng a punctured left lung, the 27-year-old brunelt2 was listed ln
critical condition In the Intensive care unit at Cedars-Sinal Hospital,
spokesman Lan-y Baum sald Monday night.

Juvenile escapees apprehended

0110111 UIIITS

NILSON'S RIG. S1.1t

LIIEnE

no. n.4t

NILSON'S

....... .

NILSON'S RIG. Jt•

lJ

MAUMEE FLOODING - Paris of Grand Rapids, Ohlo lie W)der
flood walel'll of the Maumee River Monday as flooding continued In thl1
city miles southweal of Toledo. About 50 famllles were evacuated and
moot of the bWIIness district Is sUll under water, (AP Laserpholo l.

ae

I pel( • •

~
~·

('

thape t111

•Non Plommo.. lo

bulldlngs, sewer systems-and other
publlc property,
"It (thesWwy) Is a slow process.
We expect the damage figures to go
higher," Ms. Mat~s said.
State officials were joined today
by a team from the Federal Emergency Management Agency, which
planned to conduct an aerial survey
of the flood-ravaged area.
New rains also were falling on
northwestern Ohio today, but local
ofllclals discounted the Immediate
posslbUty of additional severe flOOd·
lng In the region.
· \'1
"Even thOugh lt's ralliiJig, It's a
bright day," sale! Grand Rapids
tlreman Jlm Carter. &lt;"'The water
· level Is continuing to drop, and In
talking with the (NaUonal Weather
Service) people, they say we
shouldn't have any higher water anytime soon."
In Defiance, county disaster services director Don Beckler had a
similar report.
" We're getting some rain, but It
shouldn't bring. tl)e water levels In
the rivers up to where lt was. The
rivers are continuing to drop," he
said.
Both communities sutfered some
of the worst damage on Sunday and
Monday as spring thaws and lee
jams sent the Maumee, Auglalze
and Tiffin rivers spilling over their .
banks, soaking homes, blocking
roads and damaglna homes and
(Continued on page 12)

Council signs contract for
Phase II of sewer project

'\

REFUSE CONTAINE'R

I

~
~

•2Yt"
•11111'erlal

(~'~ .:iJ'iJ·~~ ~-. (~

.r;'/
f·

county region, kUllng two people.
She said preliminary reports
from WWlams, Fulton, Pulliam,
Paulding and Defiance counties revealed $5.29 rnllllon In damage to
private homes and businesses and
$4.65 rnllllon In damage to public

NILSON'S no.
- t1.Jt
WHIIniNG SOUND

99°
ElSTER IRISS

man for the Ohio Disaster Services
Agency, said Inspection teams
were maldng a county-by-eounty
SUIV!!YOf damage caused when the
Maumee, .Auglalze and other rivers
spilled aver their banks and flooded
cUtes and IUI"al areas In a six-

n.M

A~a.
An4~

,.

By ,&amp;•ool' 1oo Preis
The three days of flooding In
oorthwestem Ohio caused nearly
no rnllllon In damage - and that
llgUre Is expected to cllmb, state
ofllclals said today.
Davida Matthews, spokeswo-

NILSON'S RIG.

Rill IT
/,.---.. 11"Plox,lEIDY
l.. lo
Lega

2 Soctions, 12 .......
15 '"""
A Multlmodia Inc. Nowtpapor

Inspection team views
Ohio's flood damages

Willi UP Ell SnLE
BUllER CIR
"

en tine

.Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, March 16, 1982

J -2 E

NILSON'S RIG.

\

NILSON'S RIG.
$2.12

at y

e

21"11FUTIILE
Rill IT

• • 401G•

CHECK DRAWER

~

4t0a.

·-

.."'·:o

•

bock Is o durable
adhesive that makes Shelf
liner eaty to install and
remove . No backing to peel .
It's a dry adhe1lve ... timply
dampen your shelf and tack
holds tight . It's optional ... you choose whether
touselfornot .
·
Tough, long· jastlng , eo•y·
to·deon plastic . Won't tear ,
Colon won ' t wear off .
Economical ,.. compare price·
per -foot wltli other shelf
covering•.

•10"x12"

•5"

X

22"

back

YOUR CHOICI

69~

CLEVELAND- The winning number drawn Monday night In the
Ohio Loftery's dallY game "The Number" was 001
The lottery reported earnings of $837,005.50 from wagering on the
game. The eanilngs came on sales of n,l51,532, while holders of
winning tickets are entitled to shareS314,476.50,lolt2ryofflctals said.

s1n111 11 ~~TIIIIII
1110

290

YOUII CHOICI
1 Oz.

NILION'I RIG, n."

Winning Ohio lottery number

lUDIN'S

... no.

NILIOWS

.Weather forecast
.:=---:-::

Cloudy with a chalice of showers tonight. Lows near 50. Partly
cloudy Wednesday. Highs In the upper 50s. Chanceofraln40percent
tonlgbt and 20 peJanlt Wednesday. Winds southwesterly ~lli mph
tonlgbt.
' '

Exte•• 1 d Ohio FOftCUt

IIELSOII'S DRUG STORES
\

AliD
~~IIIIJ&amp;i

'l1lllnday lhrouP llalarday:
OwM" allbowen 'l'llanday. Fair f'r141AY. C1iaDce ol-IJur.

IAICARRIW'S

..... malitlb' mille-" atllalurdaJ. BJPallltlleMaThundar. .
from llle apper • ..a. to llle m'. . . ...U. Fltila)-..SSAI

t...,.

. _ mallily .. lbe . .~ , 7 ..Siallle . . Fitila)-111111~-

By BOB HOEFLICH
MeeUng In regular session Monday night, Pomeroy VWage Council entered' Into a contract with
Engineering Associates 01 Wooster
for phase n of the I(err's Run seWer
project.
The finn ·w111 receive a fee of 18
percent of the construction costs
whlch are estimated at $1.26,00&gt;
' plus a fee of $7,00&gt; for Inspection
fees on the project.
Councu also authorized Shelly
and Co., to reswface East Main St.,
which had been damaged In the
work Involved with phase I of the
Ken-s Run sew project.
The village will pay Shelly $13,500 for the
resurfacing job and It Is expected to
take place about the first of April.
Pollee Chief George Stitt dls-

llshment of such a commission.
cussed a complaint made by one
Council approved the purchase of
businessman of beer bottles and Utparldng meter part.l ao that Patrol,!er left on the atreeta ovemlaht.
Chtef Stltt'~ld
be. Is switching offlc- man Stl!ve \{artenbach can make
' .
necessary repairs and approved
ers to a sehedule whlch should help
the tepalr of a street department
curb the problem.
truck at an estimated cost of $500.
· PARK COMMISSION REPORT
James Schvlnsky was authorized
Councllman Dr. Harold Brown
reported he haS received Informa- to contact three contractors and setion from Solicitor Fred Crow con- . cure prices on materials and other
costs Involved In hooking up homes
cerning the formation of a park
In the Ken-s Run sector to the new
commission In the village. It would
sewer lines. Hookups are to be
be composed of five persons-two appointed by the board of edu- made at the most practical point of
caUon and three by the.mayor. The entry.
Bob Barton met With council
five would be required to be residents of Pomeroy. No compensa- seeking support for the annual
tion would be Involved for any summer little league program.
commlsslon member. Council will Council agreed to help with supplies for the league.
study the plan and decide later Ults
However, the extent of the help
wishes to proceed with the estab~

will be determined following a
meeting by members of the finance
committee and Clerk-Treallll'l!l'
·Jane~alton on March 22.
Mayor Clarence Andrews announced that Mrs. Ellen Rought,
Lincoln Hill, !las been appointed to
serve as clerk-treasurer replacing
Mrs. Walton who has resigned effective Aprll1. Mrs. Rought Is now
working some with Mrs. Walton tQ
become famll!ar with village records and procedures.
Councll moved Into execu Uve session at 8: 30 p.m .
Attending the session were
Mayor Andrews, Mrs. Walton and
Mrs . Rought , and council
members, Dr. Brown, Bruce .Reed,
Betty Baronlck, !..an-y Wehrung,
John Anderson, and Blll Young.

Motorist injured in one-vehicle accident
A motorist sutfered minor Injury
In a one-vehicle accident In Meigs
CountY Monday morning.
The GaWa-Melgs Post . of the
stale highway patrol said Edward
K. Brock, 25, Blue Rock, wasn't
treated for the Injury.
The patrol sald Brock was southbound on Ohio 7 at 8: 06 a.m. When
he was unable to stop ln time for a

stopped vehicle waiting to make a
turn . Brock swerved to the right to
avoid collision, drove Into mud and
overturned his vehlcle, which was
severely damaged.
The patrol cited Texeil J . Balser,
71, Millersport, for left of center after his auto, while eastbound on
Ohio 124 at 10:35 a .m. Monday,
went left of the center line alter app-

lying the brakes and struck two
westbound autos.
The other vehicles were driven
by Lan-y E . Hoffman, 30, Syracuse,
and Venita L. .Keams, 27, Mason,
and none of the three drivers were
Injured In the Incident. There was
moderate-10-severe ,damage to the
vehicles,
.
In another Meigs area accident

Monday night, Ronald R. Eakins,
25, Racine, attempted to pass a
southbound vehicle drive n by Charles H. Hoschar, 27, Racine, at 8
p.m . on Ohio 338· and struck Hoschar's vehicle ln the left front.
The patrol said Eakins continued
on without stopping, and the accident Is sliD under Investiga tion.

Von Bulow
found ·guilty
NEWPORT, R.I. (AP)- A jury
today found socialite Claus C. von
Bulow guilty of twice trying to
murder his heiress wUe by InjectIng her with Insulin.

The jury had \lellberated for 36
hours over six days, beginning
Thursday.
Von Bulow, free on $100,!n&gt; bond
since his arraignment last July, faces up to 40 years In prison on the
two counts of attempting to murder
Martha "Sunny" von Bulow.
Lawyers for the 55-year-old financial consultant were confident
that, U convicted, von Bulow, who
chose not to testify In his own defense, would remain free on bond
unW sentencing.

The trial. te~ In acconance
wlth ' Rhode Island law, provided
the public with a rare gllmpee Into
the private Uves of the very rich
who make Newport a bastion of
~ IIOCiety.
Nearly six weeks of testimony
from 62 wltnellelleft the Jury with
contrutlng portralll rl the aloof,
lwkllrta def.....,nt who IIIICe wu a
. top aide to the late oil bUllonalre J .
Paul Getty.

WINNERS -

T1tree

Melli RIP llelloel IIUdeata

.. me hi• 111 rep.~ c

: IIUDII tl tile v-u-~

Claltl"
A-ne. •tilled 111111e But!ud v-u-•
c..t., Colamhll. 1'1ley are, Iter, C. Grlftlth, wbo
w• flrlt plaee, a&amp;old medal, Ill occtqt~~u-1 work es·

pertence: competition aad abe wlll repruenl Melp In
die alate eveat; FruldiD MarUa, • third place bronu
medal 111 die field of COIIIIIIUIIIcallon electroalca aDd
Barb Ca~ter, a illlnl place brolue medal In die job akiQ
category of oecupatl-1 work uperlence.

�Ohio

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
liiCtoriP-...y,OIIIo
114otll-llll
DEVOJED 101'HE JNTEJmi'I'OP '11m MI!IG8oMA80N AREA

~~
~v
ROBERT L. WINGE'IT
PAT WHITEHEAD

BOB HOJ!:FUCH

' Alliltl•t Publbbtt/Cclatnilkr

Gelfi'IIMIBI&amp;tt

DALE R0'111GEB, JR.
NewsEcll"'
A MEMBER Gl 'I'M AI:Htia&amp;ed Pml1 1alnll Dally Pre. APetiiU.. lllld dae
, AmeriauiN.,..poper--loU.O.
.

•re • ...._ Dey liMIIld be leu U.•- wordl.laq. AU

LE1TERS OP OPINION
&amp;o e411UII aM

..-t ~ •aped wUII ume, lddteu ... wlepbclaf
aamber. N•aulclted leUrn wtU be ~~ebUIIIed . Le&amp;kn sbouldbt ill &amp;eod &amp;lste, Hdrelllltl
, ........... ..t~tln .
ltUen m •bieet

'What others say•••.
, Tile Toledo Blilde - "Almost
·anyone who had been buttonholed

:ey a person bent on getting his or

'her signature on a petition for a polItical cause wUl appreciate the Intent or legislation now going
through the Ohio General
Assembly.
: "The bW ... Is aimed at making
clearer to registered voters what
ihey are signing w!len they are
asked to support an Initiative or referendum petition ...
· "Assuming that the description Is
wiorded In understandable Engllsh
.:.; not a foregone conclusion when It
oomes to ballot Issues In Ohio -the
Idea Is a good one. Petition workers
tfylng, sometimes desperately, to
get signatures tertd to gloss over
what they want slgned with descriptions that are often not models of
clarity ...
"A couple o! caveats are In order
liere. A major flilw In the leglsliltlon
1$ the lack of any enforcement
mechanism or penalty lor non·
oompllance. Without these the Jaw
Would be virtually meaiungless ...
;, "For another lhlng, the wording
of a clarifying statement might
more logically be prepared by the
liecretary o! state, who Is responsible for ballot language, rather than
by the attorney general, who Is supPosedly.more Interested In strictly
criminal and legal matters ... "

•

::Geauga Times Leader- "While
&amp;orne Ohio lawmakers are busy beIng outraged and playing backstabblng games with political
redistricting our school otttclals are
desperately trying to find their way
out of a financial bind.
" ...State cuts have been proposed
to ease an estimated Ohio deficit of

$1 bllllon. As yet school officials are
uncerlaln how the proposals wUl affect their districts.
"Down the road, In some cases·
not lao far, many Ohio school districts see t1nanc1a1 ruin rather than
any hope of salvation.
" ... We believe school fimdlng
should become the priority Issue In
the Ohio General Assembly.
" ... Rather than expend their energies trying to Jdll o!f re-election
chances· o! a senator or two, our
legislators should study means of
!lnanclng schools, Ohio's tax structure for education or simply keepIng schools open ?or lhls year,"
Tile Lorain Journal - "Sen. Ron

Nabakowskl. D-Amherst, has Introduced a package of eight bWs ...
which wUl go !ar toward putting
Ohio In the road to permanent economic recovecy.
"Nabakowskl's program Is a $22
million, two-pronged effort to pump
up tourism and attract hightechnology Industry to the state and
retrain workers holding jobs which
could be eliminated by new
technology.
"While we're unable to guage the
total long range effects o! all the
Items In Nabakowskl's bWs, there
are several areas that have great
posslbWttes and need Immediate
and effective attention.... ·
"Ohio Is a heavy Industry state·'·
This ... makes us a "boom or bust"
ecOnomic society, which too often Is
..bust ... "

" ... (Nabakowskl's program~ Is
an ambitious plan, but we lhlnk It
lsthe path lhls state must foU.ow If It
Is to continue to provide the jobs
and high standard of living which
our citizens expect ... "

Berry's World

Upsets highlight regional s:

Page 2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio
Tuetday, March 16, 1982

Part of the newsQ·-=--_______Ja_m_es_J_.K_i_lpa_t_ric_k
have spared the country a President Reagsn had aul)lorized
the CIA to train a paramilitary force
disaster!'
The current circumslilnces are of 500 Latin Affiericans, the Post's
similar but not identical. In 1961 position iii far more defensible: This
word of the Bay of Pigs operation was news, and the du\)' of a newswas all over Miami. As events paper Is to report the news, not to
proved, Castro needed no warning suppress it.
I thought the Feb. 19 story of
from Tile New York Times, This
Halg's
private conversations was a
time around we are dealing with a
dirty
piece
of business unworthy of a
different· matter. We are dealing
great
newspaper.
The Post didn't
with the disclosure of confidential
report
the
real
~s.
II was mere
papers. having to do with private
gossip
that
in
private
Haig had
conversations and with truly covert
Lord
Carrington
a
called
Britain's
operations.
The Post's pious defense of its "duplicitous bastart\," The real
Feb. 19 story is that the people have news lay in the identity of the other
a right to know ,if Secretary Haig is . duplicitous bastard - the senior
saying one thing in private and State Department official who had
something else in public. In wlll!ully or negligenUy violated the
breaking the March 10 story that trust reposed in him. Why don't the

not

WASHINGTON - Twenty-o~
yean have passed, almost to the
day, since John F. Kennedy succeeded in killing news stories that
would have disclosed a covert CIA
operation in Latin America. The inciclent set off months of troubled
self-examination within the press.
Now some of the same questions
arise. Twice in recent weeks the
Washington Post has published
Page-One stories based upon leaks
at the highest levels of gO\Iernment.
On Feb. 19 the Poet published excerpts from notes taken by a serfior
State Department official at conferences with Secretary Haig. On
March 10 the post quoted from
highly clilssified documents dealing
with a covert CIA operation in
Nicaragua.
Was this responsible Journalism?

people have a right to know who !his
was?
The same hard question has to be

explored in the far more serious
matter of the CIA's operation in
Nicaragua. Who leaked to the Poet?
On the face of it, it seellUI evident
that persons at the highest levels of
the CIA or the National Security
COuncil have engaged in conduct
that approaches the traitorous.
These " officials" have acted
dishonorably once. We have to
assume that, left unidentified, they
will compromise other operations in
thefuture.
·
If the identity of these moles Is not
news, I have wasted 40 years in the
news buSiness.

IT'S MINE- Purdue's Dan Palomblzlo (ZZJ takes a rebowld after It
sllJIII ibrougb lbe bamli of Rutgen' John Battle during oecood rtliUid
N.I.T. tourney action. (AP Laserpboto).
.,

Tlie 1961 incident, of course, had to
do with the Bay of Pigs invasion.
Karl Meyer of The New Republic .
prepared an article, "Our Men in
Miami." Gilbert Harrison; editor of
the magazine, sent an advance text
to the White House. President Kennedy asked that the piece he suppressed, and Harrison agreed to kill
it. At about the same t~, Tad SZulc.
flied a similar story to The New
York Times. The newspaper's senior
editors talked it over. According to
Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr., special
assistant to the president, James
Reston counseled against
publication. This was Schlesinger's
memoir:

By Associated Press
Although It didn't do much to as'
suage Dick Versace's feelings , the
Bradley coach exacted a measure
of revenge against the Big Eas{
Conference. ·
Bradley"s Braves, who were bypassed for the NCAA BasketbaU
Tournament after · winning · the
regular-season championship of
the Missouri Valley Conference,
look their frustrations .out on Big
East member Syracuse, trouncing
the Orangemen 95-81 Monday night
In a second-round National Invitation Tqurnament game.
.. Syracuse Coach Jim Boehelm
wasn't happy at all alter the Oran·
gemen were embarrassed on their
own court as David Thlrdklll
scored 23 pain Is for Br!ldley and
Mitchell Anderson added 20.
Bradley was outscored from the
floor 37 field goals to 30, but won the
game at the free throw line, connecting on 35 of 47, while Syracuse
was only 7 of 15. The Braves built
their lead to 13 points at halftime.
wque Scott hit two quick baskets .
alter the Intermission and live
points by Anderson In the first live
minutes built Bradley's lead to 62-

Tax revenue s~pply short, ideas aren't
would give legislators a choice In
the plan outlined by Rhodes. It calls
solving the money puzzle.
for spending cuts plus a temporary
One would deal with it solely
Increase o! at least one. percent In
through very sharp budget cuts.
the state's 5 percent sales tax.
"We don't think that's feasible .
Rhodes' proposal has been met
but we offer It to the people who
with what Howard Collier, his
don't have the courage to increase
budget director, characterized as
taxes," Corbin said.
"deafening silence."
•Their other plan would Impose (
Two Senate committees are hold·
spending reductions coupled with a
ing hearings on a package of bWs
50 percent surcharge on the perIntroduced by majority Republl·
sonal InCOme tax unm June30,1982.
cans. They would change the rate
Ii would levy a 35 percent surand base of the severance tax, step
charge for all o! fiscal year 1983,
up property tax payments by busiwhich begins July 1.
ness and bar the use of certain led·
"We have designed the program
era! tax breaks on state Income tax
to give the state some leeway,"
!armS.
Rose said. "If our solutions are not · GOP leaders said the proposals
adopted, at least we hope they will
were Introduced for consldera tlon
get this body off dead center."
with the understanding that not aU
Rose said It was Incumbent lor
might make It to the floor for a vote.
them to Introduce an alternative to
Rinehart's 1().polnt plan was .of·

fered last month when he was a
candidate lor the Republican nomination for governor. He has since
withdrawn from that race, decidIng Instead to seek the party's nod
lor state treMurer.
His program Included spending
cuts, streamllnlng property tax collections, reducing the number of
employees hired by boards and
commissions, and selling all nonessential state-owned land, buildIngs and equipment.
Pending In the HoUS4! Ways and
Means Comnilttee Is Bonanno's bW
to close tax loopholes, which he
says reduce the state's tax revenue.
It would eliminate abatements on
property taxeS, certain exemptions
!rom the sales,tax, and a corporate
franchise tax abatement given to
!Inns Investing In new machinery
and equipment.

38.

Syracuse and Rutgers were the
only eastern teams left In the NIT

lleld, but Rutgers was crushed by
Purdue 98-65 at West Lafayette,
Ind.

In other games, Georgia
trounced visiting Maryland 83-69,
Dayton shaded Illinois 61-58 at
Champaign, ill., VIrginia Tech
nipped MlsstsSipp161-59 at Oxford,
Miss., Oklahoma, playing at home,
turned back Cal-Irvine !11-7'1, Texas
A&amp;M won a road game at Washing·
ton 69-Qi and Tulilne won at
Nevada-Las Vegas 56-51.
The semifinals and finals will be
held in New York's Madison
Square Garden next week, First,
however, the third-round schedule
finds VIrginia Tech at Georgia, Tulane at Bradley and Dayton at Oklahoma on Thursday night and
Texas A&amp;M at Purdue on Friday
night
Keith Edmonson scored 29 points
for Purdue, which buUt a 14-point
hal!tlme lead on 62 perceut shootIng a.nd rolled over Rutgers.
Baskets by Mike Scearce and
Ricky Hall and a free throw by
Greg Eifert early In the second half
pushed the lead to 44-25 and
Rutgers never came closer than 15
points the rest of the way.
Edmonson, a 6-foot-5 guard who
led the Big Ten In scoring, had 17
points In the second half. Rutgers

Today Is Tuesday, March 16, the 75th day of 1!Rl. There are 290 days left
In the year.
Today's highlight In history:
In 1978, Italy's former Prime Mlnlster Aldo Mora was kidnapped In
Rome by lett-wing guerrillas, who kllJed his five bodyguards in a street
ambush.
On lhls date:
In 1521, Portuguese navigator Ferdinand Magellan reached the Philippine Islilnds.

In 1690, France's Louts XIV sent troops to Ireland to fight for James n.
In 1~. Gernnaliy repudiated the disarmament clauses of the Venallles
Treaty, whlcli ended World War I.
. In 19'19, the SovletUriloJ'! vetoed a U.N. Security Council draft reiOiutlon
aimed at ending China's Invasion of VIetnam and VIetnam's Invasion of
Cambodia.
Ten years lli!l: The United States asked for an Impartial Inspection of
priSOner of war camps In North VIetnam In return for an a,reemeat there
would be no new American raids to try to tree pdloners. .
years ago: President Carter held a "town meeting" In Clinton,
Milss., his first since taldng o!flce.
One year· ago: Ayatollah Khomelnl inet with squabbliJli politicians,
!of&amp;rnlng that lntemal discord oould milke Iran lose lb war with Iraq,
• Today's birthdays: Fonner llrlt'lady Pat Nixon II '10. Sen. Daniel Patttck Moynlhan, D-N.Y., Ia 511. Actar-a~rnedlan Jerry Lewis Ia 56.
:· Thought for today: VlctorybelonptothemostperseverlpiJ.-Napoleon
Bonaparte, French general-statesman (l'IE9-1821) .
'

The winners Friday night at St.
Louis wUl meet Sunday for the right
to represent the Midwest at tlie finals In New Orleans.
In the other three regions, all of
the lour seeded teams advanced. In
the East, which also wUl be played
Friday and Sunday, at Raleigh,
N.C., top.ranked North Carolina
takes on No. 13 Alabama, which
was seeded fourth, and No. 9 Memphis State, the second seed, faces
Villanova, rated third. The Tar
Heels, 28-2, escaped with a twopoint decision over unheralded
James Madison on Saturday and
the Crimson Tide, 24-6, ' sneaked
past St. John's, N.Y., by a point on
Sunday.
Villanova, 23·7, needed three
overtlmes to subdue Northeastern
and Memphis State, 24-4, edged
Wake Forest by one. The tour regional finalists won by a total of
eight points In their opening games .
The Mideast and West reglonals.

Nobody can protect your

AU I D anw . .tter tlllln we canI
Look to us lor quality Auto Insurance coverage, low
rates, attractive discounts. and last lair claims service.
Call us today.

Repres;IJ

termlsslon to pace the Sooners'
rally. Little was scoreless and
Overton had two points In the llrst
half, whiCh ended with Cal·lrvlne
on top 34-23.
Claude Riley scored 17polntsand
center Rudy Woods added 14 to lead
Texas A&amp;M past Washlnglon. RIley's rebound basket with 2:58 left
gave the Aggles the lead for good
62-61. Milton Woodley made lour
tree throws to keep the Aggtes on
top.
Paul Thompson scored 19 points
and Tulane rallied !rom a ninepoint second half deficit to defeat
Nevada-Las Vegas.

SfllteAuto

Insurance

SEE MR. GOODWRENCH FOR A

FRONT-END ALIGNMENT
WITH GENUINE G.M. PARTS
Including Tax
Parts Additional
Modern Electrical Equipmen.!/

Tickets go on sale
Tickets for the Southern High
School Tornado versus Buckeye
TraU at the regional tournament at
Ohio University Thursday night
have gone on sale. The tickets may
be purchased at the high school of·
flee, the New York Clolhlng House
in Pomeroy and the Middleport
Book Store. Southern's game will
be at 9 p.m. The !lrst game at 7
p.m. will he Ross Southeastern ver·
sus Lakeland.

SPRING SPECIAL
ENDS APRIL 15TH
GMQIIAUTV

· SERVICE PARIS
CDNIIW. _,.",_

SIMMONS OLDS~AD•.CHEVY ., INC.
PH, 992-6614

(10)

(13)

.
8 88

22 88

Our Reg ,
9 .67

FlltJMTIIJ~

Pit QIININAH/1.,
IIIOJitS
5I(YifP
llt(JM H
Cf1II!HJl/517()
HYPE liS UTl!STflf7f!IIIC,

IXJCI(I(,
l/llfffJ
lfUL41liiD'
ll

'Hitfllllflfii/III!Nft !bftPI6
51'10/IITH Z I!JIIIN15."

/

.·

1H6 1W1UiJW
MIITIM-70-16r
I

~§~~:I

CJt6ANic. Mi"C'S/JlllfrfN

(12)

Packaged Fruit
Trees

QIXA!lS,
/6fTIIIIt SNfJIAI)
71t6 IIR1N/NSfiltlc
W* IS'ltX/.
lfJ1H
IIIOUi1ff N10 IM/ITU'II..I16T

1N1D 7NIIWI/N-1JJ111f11.1611C
IT I'IU¥1

II/MC$ll
11€
/llliUII!I
III/J8YV

28.88

Broadcast Spreader
Heavy-gauge enameled
steel. Holds up to 40 lbs.

A perfect way to star1
your home orchard .
Many to choose from.

$888

Our Reg.
$927

11-H.P Tractor Lawn Mower

Our Reg. 3.87 . ... . .. , 3.17

B&amp;S electriC start eng ine: 36" cut ti ng deck. trans.-axle trans mission. 12 V battenes .

( 11)

GENUINE

Jl

UME
50 LBS.

rr==========l DOONESBURY
MP~

OurReg,

•

11

~44CKMJIAPFIN6UTH

..

NOW
CE TER- OPEN

OPEN DAILY 10-9
SUNDAYS 1·6

"She tells that to all the
hang up my coat.
Because of the stiff air com- to have dinner with me?"
Alice said bitterly.
passengers,"
"Sorry,l'm
happily
married,"
she
"You'ni
just
trying
to
start
a
con
.
petition these days, Eastem Airlines
At
that
moment
Eileen came up
retorted.
versation
with me," ! told her.
has asked Its flight attendants to
and
said,
"This
one
belongs
to me."
This got me sore and I said, "Then
"No, I'm not. It doesn't count if I
initiate conversations with
Not
wanting
to
cause
any
trouble I
ask a passenger if he or she wants
passengers before and after they get why did you start talking to me?"
said,
"
Couldn't
I
lillk
to
both
of you,
"I'm supposed to talk to two me to hang up a coat. it doesn't even
on the plane. Frank Borman has
and
then
you'll
each
get
credit
for
count when I ask you to fasten your
requested that flight crews start people in the terminal before we
initiating
a
conversationr"
seatbelt. Our orders are we have to
converstions with at least two take off, and three people in the air,
Alice said, "I don ~t knOw. I'll ask
or
I'll
lose
my
job."
initiate conversations that have
passengers in the terminal and three
.the
captain." She returned in a few
"You stewardesses are all alike,"
nothing to do with our jobs. I'll come
in the air, as a way of showing that
momenta
and said, "It's okay With
Eastern . is friendlier in the skies I complained bitterly, "You string a back and talk to you later."
him
as
long
as we don't make a habit
"Nancy already talked to me ill
than United. According to Rudy guy along so he'll fly Eastem
of
it."
the terminal,'' I warned her.
Maxa of the Washington Post, Airlines, and then when push comes
"Good,'' I told them. "Wouid
to
shove,
you
tell
him
you're
happily
"That's okay, as long as she didn't
Eastern inspectors are spoteither
one of you like to have dinner
talk to you in the air,'' Eileen said.
checking their employees to make married."
with
me
tonight?"
"It's not my fault," she said
I gave her my coat and went back
sure the directive is being carried
"I
have
a date," Eileen said.
almost in tea111. "But there could be to my bOOk.
out.
"I'm
going
to bed,'' Alice said.
An hour later a stewardess
I thought II was just a publicity an inspector watching me rigtt
"Are
you
enjoying
your book ?"
wearing the name Allee stopped by
gimmick until I took an Eastern now."
Ves,"
I
replied,
"I like to read in
"Okay, Nancy, no hard feelings.
my seat and said, "Would you like to
flight to Florids not long ago. I was
airplanes."
siWng in the terminal, reading It's just that no stewardess ever chat?"
That was it. Both Eileen and Allee
started
a
conversation
with
me
In
a
"I'd
love
to,
"
I
told
her.
"But
I
"Brideshead Revisited,'' when a
left
me. But a half hour later a
tenninal,
and
I
guess
I
got
overexpi'omised
Eileen
I
would
talk
to
her,
comely stewardess came up to me·
steward named Jack came up and
cited."
after
she
hung
up
my
coat."
and said, "Hi, I'm Nancy. You going
I went back to my book until they
"She's already talked to three said, "I hear you're looking for
to Miami?"
·
!look up In surprise. "Yes, and my announced we •.caukL -get -.,""·,-ibetiiC-PI[I!'(CI:IIJIIIlec.....aocLL.Ila~n·t talked to someone to have dinner with
tonight."
plilne. When I took my assigned anyone."
name's Art."
"Buzz off," I told him angrily.
"I don't know what to say,'' I said.
"Business or ·pleasure?" she seat, a stewardess, whoee name tag
"I'm
a happily married man."
said Eileen, asked me if !wanted to "She Indicated she needed me." •
,asked.
"Sort of business. Wclutd you like

~=;:=:==:::::::==1 ~14T'S~7.lM!!~fT~~~~ -r.=ON;:::::H::.==~==r=~==.=60=t

OH,

308 E. Main St.

WED. THRU SAT. SALE

The Saving Place•

( 14)

Tll/l:e71E
&amp;MY OFF.
511111
!ilJM6
CtASS.

99¢ . f~;

\

(15)

14 47

Reg,

'

!'.

.

.

1.lb. Bag

:ourReg.
18.47
•, -

5()

~

~ ...11P\

·'

•

'Campais ~reen' Grass Seed
.

Wind ·Rowers

five

..

was led by Clarence Tillman with
25 points and Roy Hinson with 22.
Georgia's El'lc Marbury equaled
his career high with 25 points and
Dominique Wilkins, who sat out
seven minutes of the second half
with four fouls, added 23 as Georgia
downed Maryland. Marbury 's
jump shot from the right corner put
the Bulldogs ahead to slay 10.8.
Mike Kanleskl's scored 14 of his
23 points in the second half to help
Dayton turn back several charges
by Illinois In the closing minutes.
The llllnl got wllhln one point with
three seconds to go, but Dayton's
Larry Schellenberg hit two free
throws.
VIrginia Tech's Reggie Steppe
hit a pa)r of free throws with 33 seconds remaining and the Hokles
held on when c:e Miss ' Carlos
Clark missed the last shot of the
game. Clark, who led all scorers
with 2;8 points, made a free throw
with 15 seconds left but missed his
second attempt. Ole Miss got the
rebound but Clark's last-gasp shot
bounced off the back of the rim. Jeff
Schneider's 15 points topped the
winners.
Oklahoma fell behind Cal-lrvlne
by 17 points early In the second half
before David Little and Bo Overton
combined for 35 points after the In-

c:=-

Chatting with Eastern..______A_rt_B_uc_hwa_l_d

Today in history

pressure.

go 011 Thursday night and Saturday. No. 3 VIrginia, which Is topseeded In the Mideast, plays No. 17
Alilbama-Blrrnlngham, the fourth
seed In the region. But the Blazers'
will be playing on their horne court.
UAB ousted defending champion
Indiana with ease Saturday, while
the Cavaliers struggled to beatTen·
nessee. Birmingham Coach Gene
Bartow Is looking ahead to VIrginia
without the slightest hint o! worry.
The other Mideast game pits the
second and third seeds, No. 7 Min·
nesota against No. ro LouisvWe.
The Big Ten champion Gophers, 2J.
5, nipped Tennessee-Chattanooga
by a point In their opening game.
LoulsvWe, 21-9, which won the
NCAA title two years ago, routed
Middle Tennessee to get to
Birmingham,
Out west, a visitor from the East,
Georgetown, and three western
schools will battle.

Frustrated Bradley bombards Syracuse

"Either the story would alert
Castro, in which case the Times
would be responsible for casualti811
on the beach, or else the expedition
would be canceled, in which case the
Times would be responsible for
grave interference with national
policy, (Killing the story) was a
patriotic act; but in retrospect, I
have wondered whether, if the press
had behaved irresponsibly, it would

COLUMBUS, Ohio (APl - Tax
revenue to grease the wheels o!
Ohio government may be in short
supply, but there Is no dearth of
plans to solve the state's budget
woes.
The latest proposals to deal with
the problem come from two House
Republicans, whose plans join a fiscal smorgasbord of others !rom
Gov. James A. Rhodes, Senate Republicans, Franklin County Treasurer Dana Rinehart and Rep.
Benny Bonanno, O.Cleveland.
The common goal of allis to help
offset a deficit of $1 bUHon that Is
projected for the state budget by
June 30, 1983.
Assistant House Minority Leader
Waldo Bennett Kose, R-Uma, and
Rep. Robert L. COrbin, R·Dayton,
are jointly backing two bWs that

In the Big Eight, lost In the
West Regional finals to North Carolina last year. The Wildcats are
no strangers to tournament

sourt

i

•

"Ironic, lsn 't It? Now thst big government hss
gottflfl off our bscks, we're going out of t
buslnetlll."

By Associated Press
While form has held up in three
reglonals of the NCAA basketball
tournament, upsets have been the
norm In the Midwest.
Thanks to teams such as Boston
College, Houston and Kansas State,
just one seeded team remains in the
Midwest - No. 5 Missouri, which
was tanked second hehlnd DePaul
in the region.
The Tigers take on Houston and
Boston College !aces Kansas State
In the Midwest Regional at St.
Louts Friday night. Missouri, Z7·3, ·
would seem to have a homecourt
advantage but that doesn't bother
Houston.
Boston College Is looking forward
to another glant-kllllng but they'll
face another master of the upset In
K·State. BC has knocked off San
Francisco. and DePaul, while the
Wlldcats beat Northern llUnols,
then surprised No. 12 Ar~s.
John Bagley, the superb BC
guard, who led the upset of DePaul
with 26 points, likes his team's
chances, especially II the players
. stick together.
Kansas State, runner-up to Mls·

oaisv type whirls· with 1
the wind . For your lawn.
.
' .. ·'
~

-

22

.'•· '

....

_r- ,.1:

,. ,

h '

~~ -- -.

lbs. Fastgrowlng, ,
'quick cover. Produces a ' · healthy lawn.
· ' ··

( 16)
Our Reg .

our Reo.

1.34

22.88

Lime

'

.Aoriculturallime.

'

.

•

Turf Builder Plus Halts
· r;;~·ats- - ·.s;ooo ·Sq.

5 27

·ft.

Prevents crabgrass. ·
·Kills dandelions.

(18)

Our Reg .
6.97

4 cu: tt. Peat Moss
I E~'ceiient for retaining
moisture . Shredded,
,. compressed.

1.97 r~~Reg,

(19)

Potting Soil
,20 qt. bag of ready -to·
use soil. Won't burn .

185 UPPER RIVER ROAD, GALLIPOLIS

-

'

�Tuesday, March 16, 1982

•

The Daily Sentinei-Page-5

Van Gorder faces dilemma
TAMPA, Fla. (AP) -This Isn't
the way things were supposed to
happen for Dave Van Gorder.
When the Cincinnati Reds made
the bulky catcher their No. 2 draft
choice out of college In 1978, there
. was 1alk that Van Gorder would be
groomed to follow In Johnny
Bench's footsteps .
Nearly four years later, Bench
has forsaken his mask and shin
guards tor third base. So where's
Van Gorder?
"I knowl'mdestlnedtogo tolndlanapo_lls again," he said, referring
to the Reds' Class AAA American
Association farm ·club. "It doesn't
really bother me as much as It
should, maybe.
"I'm dealing with It because I
know It's a matter of the numbers
game. That's why I'm going back
to Indianapolis, not because I can't
play."
Van Gorder Is one of five
calchers - not Including Bench MARAUDERETI'ES- The Meigs Glrlll Vanity Team members were, front row, kneeling, I tor, Paula
In the Reds' training camp. He and
Steve Christmas appear ticketed
basketball team completed the 1981-1982 season with a Swisher, Cindy Crooks, Pam Crooks,. Krill Snowden.
for another year In the minor
respectable 12-9 record. In the SEOAL lbe record was Second row, standing, I tor, Coach Ron Logan, Paula
leagues, while Aiel&lt; Trevino, Joe
J· 7. '('wo of the victories were over AAA Logan. Meigs Horton, Laura Smith, Kristin Anderson, Lynne OUver,
Jenny Meadows, Suzan Lightfoot, Melanie Dillard.
Nolan and Mike O'Berry fight for
;$l~o only lost to league champion Athellli by two points.
• the starting job.
..•
It's another disappointment for
, ~n Gorder, who has adjusted to
slipping from the status of Bench's
heir apparent to just another name
In
the crowd of catchers.
Also, the Detroit Tigers out·
:. By The Associated Press
Pat Putnam and Bobby Johnson
"It's
been a gradual process over
scored the Pittsburgh Pirates 5-2,
.While the Boston Red Sox know
belted homers and AI Oliver and
the
last
four years," he said. "When
thii main man In the ir lineup Is Jlm
the Baltimore Orioles bombed the
.Leon Roberts each knocked In two
I
came
Into the organization, I was
Philadelphia Phlllles 9-2, the ChiRtt:e. who has been tearing apart
runs for Texas. The other half of the
acclaimed
as the next catcher.
opposing pitchers In spring train·
cago Cubs blanked the Cleveland
Expos took Kansas City as Larry
Those
accolades
have dlmtnlshed
lng, they probably wish he would
Indians 4-0, and, In night action It
Parrlllh and Tim Blackwell hlt
over
the
years
to
where
I'm taking
save some of those offensive exwas the Chicago White Sox 12, the
three-run homers.
a
back
seat."
plot ts for the summer.
St. Louis Cardinals 4 In 11 Innings
Riehle Hebner drove In two runs
The 24-year-old catcher started
:The Red Sox lost a 9·1 decision to
and the Yucatan Lions of the Mexl·
and scored two and Dave Rozema
slowly
In the Reds organization,
till! Cinc inna ti Reds Monday, but can League over the Seattle Marin- pitched five Innings of four-hit shuthen
was
starting to hit stride when
Rice wasn't to blame. He stroked
ers 8-3.
tout ball lor the Tigers.
he tore knee ligaments In a 1980eol·
t~ base hits and has seven hits In
Three Arizona games were
llslon
at home plate while he was
Sammy
Stewart
went
Rozema
rained
out.
In
Casa
Grande,
Mila ~ow over the last three games.
with Indianapolis.
one Inning betler when he sCatRice has 10 hits In 23 at bats for a
waukee led California 2-1 after four
Van Gorder recovered to hit .250
tered
five
hits
and
struck
out
six
In
.4:15 average, with several of those Innings when heavy rains halted
with
15 home runs and 66 runs bat·
six
Innings
for
Baltimore.
Rookies
hits to the opposite lleld. the rtghtythe game. The Oakland-San Franted
In
last year, earning him Most
Jr.
and
Bobby
Bonner
Cal
Rlpken
swlnglng Rice long has been known
cisco contest In Scottsdale and San
Player honors at IndianaValuable
in
three
runs
apiece,
Rlpkln
drove
Diego's game againSt a split Seattle
a~ a pull hitter.
and
a spot on the American
polls
homer
and
contributing
a
two-run
squad in Tempe also were rained
In their first meeting since the
All-Star team.
Association
Bonner
a
two-run
triple.
19!!1 World Series, the Los Angeles
out.
Lloyd Moseby slammed two
Dodgers beat the New York YanBIU Buckner's four hits a nd Ryne .----------------4
Sandberg' s two-run double led the
kees again, this tlme 6-4.
borne runs off pitcher Jesse Orosco
Cubs.
Elsewhere, the Toronto Blue
as Toronto edged the Mets. Ellis
THe White Sox sent 12 batters to
Jays edged the New York Mets3-2,
Valentlne homered tor New York.
The Uail)' Sclllillcl
plate In the 11th Inning as the
the
I USPS 145-1101
till! Atlanta Braves downed Florida
Braves Manager Joe Torre
A Dlvhlioo of Multimedia, IDe.
CaRdinals made three oi their
State University 7-1, the Minnesota
named Bob Horner the team's first
eight errors for the game. Tlto LanPubll:shed every afltmoon, Monchiy through
captain since Hank Aaron In 1974.
Twins took the Houston Astros 3-2,
Friday, Ill Court Street, by the Ohio Valley
drum had four singles and two RBI
the Texas Rangers handed a split
Then Atlanta upped Its preseason
Pub!Jshinl( Compa ny • Multiml.'dia 1 1~ .,
for St. Louis.
Pomeroy. Ohio 45769, 992-2l:i6. Stt-ond class
squad of Montreal Expos an 8-1
record to 7·1 as rookies Gerald
flOSla~ e paid at Pomeroy, Ohio.
In Merida, Mexico, ·t he Mariners
bea ling, while the other portion of
Perry and Glen Bockhorn each
Membt:r : The AMociated Press, Inland Dai·
were beaten wheN the Lion~ scored
the Expos beat the Kansas City
knocked In two runs in a five-run
Jy Press Association and the American
seven runs in the fourth Inning.
Royals 11-5.
seventh.
Ncwspapt!r Publishers AssociaMn, National

·

Red Sox lose, Dodgers

Reprc:u~ ntali \'e,

Br~:~nham

Newspapt:r Sale:~. 733 Third A10t:11ue .
York , New York 10017 .

N~w

Willard only poll champ remaining

POSTMASTER : ~nd adtlrell'i to The Daily
&amp;!nti nel, 111 Cou11 St., Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

Also In the regionals are No. 4 Newark, No. 6 Wintersville and No. 10
Alliance.
Joining Wlllard In the Sweet Sixteen, the field tor the original state
tournament, are No. 3 Coldwater,
No. 4 Warsaw River VIew, No. 6
Urbana, No. 8 Wheelersburg and
No. 10 Portsmouth In Class AA .
The ranked teams In contention·
from the Class A poll are secondranked Delphos St.John, No. 3 Old
Washington Buckeye Trail, No. 4
New Washington Buckeye Central
and No. 6 Racine Southern.
The regional fields lfV!Iude a triQ'
of former three-time state champlans, Newark and Hamilton
among the largest schools and
Portsmouth In Class AA. Newark
won In 1936, 1938 and 1943, Hamuton

One wt•ck . . . .. . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . U .OO
One Month ..
. $4.40
One Year . . . . . . . . . . . .
. $52.80
SINGLECOPV
PRICES
D&lt;lily . .
.............. 15 C~nts

AM

Astronauts will open season
CINCINNATI (AP ) -The Cincinnati Reds say the ball to be used
tn the ceremonial opening of the
1982 m ajor league baseball season
traveled Into space on the Colum·
bla space shuttle, and astronauts

Quarter final action
held Monday night
QuaJ;,ter final action In the Meigs
Elementary Basketball Tourney on
the fourth and fifth grade level took
place Monday night at the Meigs
Junior High School.
Bradbury Hood defeated Racine
24-16 with high scorers !or Brad·
bury being Chris Becker wtth 12,
Scott Nelgler with 4 and Shawn
Gibbs with 4. Brad Maynard with 7
and Mark Porter with 4 were high
for Racine.
Bradbury Baker defeated East·
ern II , 27-23 with Baker of Bradbury httlng for 19 and Melton for 8.
Martin was high tor Eastern with 14
and Sams hit for 5.
Quarter fina l action tonight w1ll
have Pomeroy Powell against
Eastern Ill at 5: 30 p.m. and Portland going against Pomeroy Bar·
ton 'at 7.
Also the semi-final action which
was scheduled for March 18 has
been moved to March 19in the sixth
grade·play. Syracuse w1ll play Rutland at 5: 30 and Eastern I will play
Racine at 7 p.m. In the rescheduled
games.

Joe Engle and Richard Truly will
throw out the first pitch of the traditional National League opener.
Engle, 49, an Air Force colonel,
and Truly, 44, a Navy captain, took
the ball with them on the second
flight or the Columbia last November, the Reds said. After the
April 5 season opener, the ball will
be given to the Baseball Hall of
Fame In Cooperstown, N.Y.
The Reds , the oldest all·
professional team In baseball, traditionally play the first game of
each major league season. This year's opener Is with the Chicago
Cubs.

spring tralnlng this year. Van
Gorder wasn't encouraged.

Blackwell birthday

"I never got out of the conversation that they have great plans for
me," he said. "If I'm going to do
something, It'll have to be this
Van Gorder said he's accepted
his predicament.
"When I'm Introduced today,
maybe lQ or 20 people w1ll clap," he
said before one recent Reds spring
training game. "People have heard
ol me, b~t I don't have anything to
show. I don't have the credentials.
If I was a lao, I'd be the same way."

SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By Carrl~r ur Moklr Route

in 1937, 1949 and 1954 and Taft, a
splinter school ol Hamilton, prevailed In 1962. Portsmouth's championships came In 1931, 1961 and
1978.
Two of the 1981 titleholders, Napoleon In Class AA and Kalida In
Class A, are out. Dayton Roth, the
Class AAA winner a year ago, has
dropped Into Class AA this time and
Is part or the Dayton Regional field.
Of last year's state semifinal
cast, only Newark In Class AAA
and Kinsman Badger and Rich·
mood Dale Southeastern In Class A
and Roth are stlU In contention.
Scott (18-6) tries to shatter a 60ahex
.winner
of the state
title trophy.
for Toledo's
big schools,
never
Cleveland Kennedy (19-4) wUI face

Subscrillers not cle11iring to pay tilt! ea rri~ r
may r~m i t in ad\'8nct direct to The Daily
Sen tinel M a J, 6 or IZ month basis. Credit
will be J.li\'Cil L'arriercaeh month.

No s u~ripiionS by mail pcnnlltet.l in town:-1
whert· home l"&amp;rricr ttc rviee i:i av.~~il.llble.
MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
Ohkl•od Wt1t Vlrgln.l.w
J M1111th . . . . . . . . . ........ .' .... . . $12.30
S1x month . . . . . . ......... .
. $20.1111
l Yea r .................. . .. .
. $..19.00
Raleti OultddeOhlo
and Weal Virglnill
3 M011th . . . . . . . .
. . $13.00 .
6 Mouth .
. ..... . ...... . . $23.40
1 Year . . . . . .
$44.20

SAVE 504
With Coupon

254

With Coupon

SAVE 254
With Coupon

50 lb. bog
Omolene• •1oon~

50 lb. bog

50 lb. bog

HJgh Protein Ph.11fltl

Bron&lt;!Fud

B•ondDotl-1

Rabbit Chow•
P•rionnance Blend
Brand Feed

GET 'EM NOW AT

~

MODERN
SUPPLY

•••••••••••••••••••••••
:
STORE COUPON
:

:

25¢

:
•

·On Next'
•
Purchase
:
of 5o Lbs . of •

••

•

::
o
:
:
:
:
•
•

:

•

Omolene
N100
BRAND
FEED
· At :
MODERNSUPPLY
Pomeroy, 0. ~
Exp· ires
3-31-82
®

•

399 W. MAIN ST.

•

:
:
•
:
:
:

:
•

•
0

POMEROY, OH.

PH. 992-2164

:

: :

SAVE 50¢

: p::::::;::==';l
0
0

••
••
0

••
•••
••
•

SAVE 25¢

0

On Next
Purchase ol
50tbs.of
HIGH
PROTEIN
PLUS
DOG FOOD
·At:
:
Modern Supply:
Pomeroy, o. •

:
:

The baby weighed seven poundl!,
-one ounce. Grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. William Mason, Colwnbus,
and Mr. and Mrs. John F:. Fulll,
Middleport. Mrs. Bessie Fultz,
Columbus, and Mrs. Fay Cox,
·Columbus, are great-grandmothers. ·· ·

Calendar
_WEDNESDAY

TUESDAY

ROCK SPRINGS Better Health

SOUTHERN · LOCAL School
District Board of Education
meeting 7 p.in. Tuesday in
ca!eleria of high school.

Cl~~~ Wednesday, I: 15 p.m. home
Of Mrs. Harold Blackston with
Mrs. Hugh Bearhs to have the
program, and Mrs. Arlee Abbott, ·
the conies!.

ATHENS - " A Bill of Rights
Cor Parents," a workshop for
parents of talented and gifted
children, will be held at 7 p.m.
Tuesday at Athens High School
auditorium, The Plains. there is a
$5 registration fee per family .
Contact Southeastern Ohio Vol~n·
tary Education Cooperative Cor
more information at 594-4235.
SAlJSBURY PTO meeting 7::W
this evening with a speaker from
the department of menial health;
refreshments.

LONG BOTTOM Community

Assn. bake sale on St. Patrick's
Day, beginning 10 a.m. at Long
Bottom Community Building.

MEIGS AREA Volunteer Fire
and Emergency Assn. meeting,
7:30p.m. Wednesday at Syracuse
Fire Station.
MIDDLEPORT LITJ::RARY
CLUB, Wednesday, 2 p.m. at the
home of Mrs. Robert Fisher with
the book review to be given by
Mrs. Marvin Wilson.

REASON #5: If the IRS audits yeur return,
H&amp;A Block goes with you at no extra cost.
An IRS audit can be an anxious time for any taxpayer.
But, if you're audited. Block will go with you at no extra
cost. Not as a legal representative. but to explain how your
return was prepared. We're always ready to stand behind
you, year-round.
·

H&amp;R BLOCit

ANNOUNCING NEW OFFICE HOURS

..

FOR DR. EHLINGER

17 reasons. One smart decision.

EFFECTIVE MONDAY, MARCH 22nd

Monday thru Friday

OPEN:

THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE

9:00a.m. to 5:00p.m.

618 E. Main St.
Pomeroy, OH .

2nd &amp; Brown Sts.
Mason, W.va .

tt2-37.,

773-9121

Hours:
Mon,·Fri . 9 to 6
Sat. 9 to

Hours:
Tues. &amp; Thurs. 9 to 6
Sat.9tos

s

111:11 :
1.:.e :o

:

0

:
:

:

Pomeroy, 0.:

o

:
:
o

SMOKED

CALA HAMS

Expires
3·31-82

Expires

SAUSAGE •

0

79e
• • • •
LB. 99e
• • • •
LB. 99e
• • • •

• •
• •

SAUSAGE

LB. $139

• • • • • •

HOMEMADE

HAM SALAD

LB.'$179

• • • • •

-PIECE-

SLAB BACON

• • • •

99e

.

1

ROOT BEER-AND
GENERIC
BUnERMILK

•

REG. '174.95
NOW

$159

95

'

ORANGE CRUSH

/$}00
5

BISCUITS

CANS

I

'

8 PACK 16 OZ. BTLS.

99¢

VALLiY BBl.

v ALLiY BBl.

. u •••••

-

99¢
VIT. D. Ml LK ......... :~.~~~~~~.
JUMBO EGGS.•....~... ~.~~~~ ... 89¢
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

ROYAL CREST

CB.ERY

NOW$23395

Stihl"' Model

ST/HI:._
------------.-:-ltl'tlrWt......
~O.-

$ 79
2% Ml LK... 2~L~o~••• 99
BUTTERM ILK...
~.~~~~~~. ¢
BROUGHTON

STIHL AND POMEROY HOME &amp; AUTO IS MAK-I NG THE PRICE
RIGHT TO BUY A CHAIN SAW NOW AND START ON NEW
w ·INTER's FIREWOOD.
WITH A PRICE LIKE THIS ,.SHOULDN'T YOU

STIHL0

•

120%.

FRANKIES

HOMEMADE

LB.

POLISH

~=
3·31·82
~·
o
e"
o
•••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••

:
:

Model OllAV

,,

bus.

:

On Next
:
Purchase :
of so lbs. of •
RABBIT
:
CHOW
:
At:
o
MODERN .· :
SUPPLY :

.

·.

-POMEROY.HOME &amp;AUTO
606 E. MAIN

Mr. and Mrs. Michael Mason
(Anita Ful~) are announcing the
birth of a son, Jon Michael, born .
March 8 at Grant Hospital, Colum· :

•••••••••••••••••••••••
••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
:
STORE COUPON
: :
STOr.E COUPON
:

ST/HL'"

Failure of Ashland Oil to grant Jim and Bev lower
gas prices so we can compete with our competitors
and make a fair profit, we will not sell any gasoline
after the following date: March 17, 1982.
We will be open for all other phases of our
business from ·10:00 a.m. to 8:00 p.m. We are sorry
tor this inconvenience. we thank . you for your
patronage.
JIM&amp; BEVERLY BAILEY

Mason birth

For Pets - Stables · Large
and small Animals Lawns &amp; Gardens

REG. $259.95

In Tuppers Plains, Ohio

12. Son o! Mike Wheeler, West
Columbia, and Vicki Branham, Middleport, the party was held at the ·
home of his grandparents, Charles:
and Bertha Wheeler of West Columbia. Mickey Mouse cake, ice cream .
and drinks were served. Gifts wel'j! :
presented to the honored guest.

THE STORE WITH "ALL
KINDS OF STUFF"

WE'VE CUT THE PRICE SO
YOU CAN CUT THE W
. OOD.

TO GAS011Nf CUSTOMERS OF
8 &amp; J SERVICE STATION

Wheeler

March 17, 198%
ClarUy your goals Ibis coming year or yoo may waste tim~ on
achievements that will mean Uttle once they're woo. Focus on goals of
significance.
PISCES (Feb. %11-March 20) Sometimes challenging situations are
stimulating, but today, It may be wi~ to avoid competitive events. Your
ego won't be able to handle second place.
ARIES (March 21·Apr8 19) Select activities today that you find fun
and entertaining, but be mindful of your behavior. Keep your image intact.
TAURUS (April i!li-May 00) Be wary today if you are doing business
with people whose reputation Is suspect. Don't lake oral statements for
granted. Do have important coinmibnents put in writing.
GEMINI (May 21·June 00) There's a possibility today that you could
be influenced by someone who doesn't necessarily have your best interests at hear\. Make your own decisions.
· CANCER (June 21-July 22) Normally you're rather industrious, but
today you may look f!ll' excuses to take it easy. Postponing tasks will only
lead to harder work later.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) No one wants to stand in your way of ha~ing a
gOOd time, but be careful today that you don't overindulge. The piper will
demand payment tomorrow.
,
VIRGO (Aug. !}Sept. 22) In an important relationshiip today, both
you and the one you will be dealing with could be a little too sensitive.
Each must be careful not to hUrt the other's feellngs.
LmRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) If someone Is perfonning work or service
for you today and you are displeased, lei your !eelings be known. Don't
pretend otherwise.
SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov. %2) Going to expensive places today is not
necessarily an assurance you'll have a gOOd time. In fact, you're not apt
to receive value for what you spend .
SAGmARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21 ~ Avoid Individuals whom you know
from experience always try to tell you what to do and when to do it. Your
independence Is important to you today.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22)Jan. 19) An occasion might arise today where
you may be in a position to say something unfriendly about one who put
you down in the past. Resist the temptation.
AQUARIUS IJa~ 2&amp;-Feb.19) The company you keep today will affect
your prudence. If your chwns are high rollers, there's a chance you'll
spend as much as or more than they do.
·

cuT up 5 ALE!

NOTICE

Ill SheUy Rae Blakeman, also of Jolmstown. Pictured
In front ill Amber Roe Blakeman, daughter of SheUy
Rae Blakeman.

Astrograph

r;~~~~~~~~~~;;;~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;~~~~

In a Kent
Regional semifinal
Scott
Wednesday
night.
Barberton (19-5) , preparing to
face Warren Western Reserve (231). In a Canton Regional semifinal
Wednesday night, Is the only other
htg school ex-champion still alive.
The Magics won the 1976 crown.
Akron st.vlncent-St.Mary (19-4),
another Class AA regional team
thtsume, grabbed the 1929 t1t1e as
St.Mary. The Akron school faces
WarrenKennedy (17-7) at Canton
Wednesday night.
Only one Class A school stu! playlng has won a state crown. Delphos
St.John triumphed In 1949. The
Blue Jays (22·2) draw Elmore
Woodmore (18-6) at Bowling Green
Thursday night.
The regional cbamplonshlps will .
be decided Friday a nd Saturday
night, settling the semlllnal berths
In the 60th annual state
tournament.

-Jobn Prl!'e of JolmllowD holding Joey Blakeman, son
.

FIVE GENERATIONS - Thill picture wu lakeD
at a recent gatheriDg of the family of Mrs. Eata Roub,
Portland. Plctared, left to right, they are Mrs. Rowoh,
her daughter, Kathryn-Price, Portland, her ~on.

BUY NOW! SAVE NOWI UMntD nM£ ONLY1

Wheeler birthday

A surprise party was held ~
John Michael Wheeler Jr. obcently In . observance ol the 21st
served his third birthday on Mareh
blrtllday of Shari B~ckwell. HostIng the celebration was her husband, Steve, at the famUy's home
on Uncoln Heights.
Cake, Ice cream and pop were
served to the couple's daughter,
Amber, Mr. and Mrs. Jerry
Colmer, Bill and Tim, Mr. and Mrs.
DaVid JOhnson and Jeremy, Mr.
and Mrs. Roy Bareswtlt and Ryan,
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Whttfekli\d,
Shawn and Daniel, Anita Van Cooney, Lonnie and Tom, Randy and
Jim Snider, Mr. and Mrs. Bennie •
Wrtght and Jessica.
Before the party, Mrs. Blackwell
was hOnored with a steak dinner at
the home of her parents.

year."

•
WID

Advl!rtl :~ in~

By GEORGE STRODE
WlUard Is the only Associated
Pfel;s poll champion still In contention for a state boys basketball tournament crown, with an original
field of 800 schools dwindling to 48
regional entries this week.
Of course, the biggest casualties
. In district playoffs were Columbus
Northland, No. lin the AP's Class
ratings, and Sidney Lehman,
top ra nked among the Class A
powers.
Both were upset In district championship games. Columbus Mifflin
stuimed the VIkings In Columbus
whOe Lehman fell to Ripley at
Dayton.
Only four of the Class AAA top
ten are still alive, led by secondranked Warren Western Reserve.

It wasn't el!OUgh to win an Inside
track on Bench's job: The Reds a_c·
qulred Alex Trevino tram the New
York Mets as part of the George
Foster trade last month and gave
him first crack at the ca,tchtng job.
Van Gorder was stunned by the
acquisition of Trevino.
"Even when It (the trade) was
consummated, I couldn't believe
It," Van Gorder sald. " When something like that happens, you look at
yourself and say, 'What's wrong
with me?' You ask yourself questions like that."
Reds President Dick Wagner In·
vited Van Gorder lor a chat before

Area births and birthdays

POMEORY

59¢

REGULAR

JAR '
4.DOZEN

�Page 6

The Daily Sentinel

Tuodc

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Tho Daily Sentinel Pag• 7

,.,.,.... Midillport, Ohio

y. Mardi 16, 1982

Present Access Li ne Rates-M idd lef i eld

NOTICI: OP APPLICATION ,O.INCIIAiliAND AO.IUSTMaNTS
IN RATEIANO CHA.o"I!IAND POl CHANGIIIM
aEeULATIONS AND PRACTic•s

.. stdlftct S.n iu

IndividUal l1ne T-o-,ar£y Fovr ~hr£y llii lt l-Pu t:t itS Trun k
• . !5
7. 10

lue Rate Aru

eigs Local Teachers AssoCiation

Zoot

~

12)

3.00

5 .00

quarter •tit (Z)

diana home Snnday night and weren't disappointed as
more than 20 of the birds make their traditional return
onscbedule. (AP Laserpboto) .

Helen Help Us
Helping self-esteem
ByHELENANDSUEBOTTEL
DEAR HELEN ANDSUE:
My girlfriend, Leigh, and I have
been seeing each other three months. I'm 17, she's 16. She's perfect if
only she would stop putting herself
down.
She loves to paint. I've talked to
her art teacher who says she has
real talent. The problem is, her
lather keeps insulting her work and
saying she should stop wasting her
time and his money.
Her lack or confidence makes her
feel worthless in other ways. Each
time I pay her a compliment, she
disagrees and argues that she looks
terrible, or does terrible work, or
whatever.
How ~;an I get it across that !like
the way she is? - WORRIED
BOYFRIEND

DEARW.B. :
You g.f. should learn the power or
positive thinking, and you can give
her a start by explaining that a simple appreciative "Thank you!" wlll
do wonders for her self-esteem and yours.

Perhaps she doesn't realize that
when she disagrees with your compliments, she's implying you're a
liar - or at least too dumb to see
straight. A natural reaction is to stop
complimenting. Ask her if this is
what she wants.
Next, tell her that accepting
praise gracefully is a first step
toward believing it.
Third, get it across that one
parent's opinion isn't the world's.
And enlist the help or her art teacher
her. -HELEN

present, so we've decided that I will
take the "mother's" leave of absence rather than she.
Luckily, my company is a forward-thinking ouUit that will allow
me six months orr to give our baby a
good start.
Our friends think we are crazy.
What do you think? - PROUD
FATHER
DEAR FATHER :
We think you're great. Enjoy! HELEN AND SUE

HELEN AND SUE :
I met "Tommy," a wonderful guy,
DEARB.F.:
Reinforce your arguments by at camp. We talked and laughed for
pointing out that her self-put.&lt;Jowns . three days, but I forgot to write
down his last name. All I know Is
have two other bad effects:
what town he lives in. (It's not very
I. Either people believe them and
start seeing her as the sees herself, large, he said.)
or ...
2. They assume she's fishing for
How can I possibly gel in touch? I
compliments and clam up. - SUE
didn't give him my address either,
stupidly. - WISHING
RAP:
DEAR WISHING :
My wife and I will soon be new
All we can suggest is a "Personal"
parents. We both work and later on
to Tomy in his local newspaper. ·
will continue working to make ends
Let's hope he reads. -HELEN AND
meet. She earns more than I do at SUE

Duo will perform at Rio tonight
RIO GRANDE - A husband-wife charge for admission and the show is
musical duo from Pennsylvania will open to the public.
perfonn in coffeehouse in the
The duo have been perfonning
student center at Rio Grande together lor six years - the last
College and Community College three as husband and wife. Both
Tuesday, March 16 al8 p.m.
have been in the enlertnment
Kim and Reggie Harris, both · business since early childhood.
natives of Philadelphia, will enThey have composed and recorded
tertain the Rio Grande gathering in for nationally distributed greeting
a show sponsored by. the Student cards and for local radio and
Progranuning Board. There is no television commercials. In addition,

they have also performed on many
radio and television shows
throughout the Philadelphia, New
Jersey, Delliware and Maryland
areas. Recently they were featured
with several other groups on a
Philadelphia area entertainment
television show "Channel 29 Presents.
For further infonnalion, contact
Rio Grande College at (614 l 24ii-5353.
It

Alfred church observes prayer
day
.

Alfred United Methodist Church
observed "World Day of Prayer"
with a service March 5 at the church.
Rev. Richard Thomas shared the
meaning and origins of World Day of
Prayer. This year's theme - from
the women of Ireland - is "The
People of God, Gathered for Worship, Scattered for Service. "

!'Iorence Spencer was pianist. The
offering prayer was given by Dan
Moore. Thomas sang to provide
music. Scripture readin~ was from
Luke 11 .
Guest speaker was Rev. Carl
Hicks, retired United Methodist
pastor from near Racine.
The service closed with "Sweet
Hour of Prayer" and the group

gathered at the altar for prayer and
meditation.
Following the service, refreshments were served by the church
ladies.
Others attending were Thelma
Henderson, Nina Robinson, Mr. and
Mrs. Hobart Swartz, Genevieve
Guthrie, Martha Elliott, Nellie
Parker and Mrs. Carl Hicks.

D of A gives Good Citizen Awards
The aMual Charter Day luncheon
of Return Jonathan Meigs Chapter
of the Daughters of the American
Revolution was highlighted by "the
presentation of the Good Citizens
Awards to three Meigs seniors.

I

Mrs. Arthur Skinner, chainnan of
the Good Citizen Award committee,
introduced Tammy 'Spencer of
Eastern, Lynne Oliver of Meigs, and
Melinda Sahnons of Southern with

Announcements

The next Preparation for Breastfeeding Class offered by Holzer
Clinic Ltd. to their expectant
mothers will be held on March 25,
from 7-9 p.m. in the classroom on the
first floor or the clinic. The class will
provide infonnation on exercises to
prepare the breasts for nUI'lling,
proper nursing techniques ,
nutrition, problems that might arise
and suggestions to solve those
problems, how to continue working
and breastfeed, and ideas to aid the
mother who has had a C-section birth and wants .to breasUeed. The fee
iB JT. For further information contact Karen Wamsley at 446-5278 or
Becky Sanders, R.N., at 4&lt;16-2509.

A meeting or the Big Bend Buying
Club which deals in IIBtural foods,

I

will be held March 22 at 7:30p.m. at
the home of Lynn Perkins, Union
Terrace, Pomeroy. Infonnation on
membership on the C().Op may be obtained by calling 992-M82, 698-2781,
or 742-2368.
.

This Easter season deacons oi the
Middleport First United
Presbyterian Church are taking orders for potted lilies to be placed in
the church for Easljlr SWiday by
families or as memorials.
Cost is $5.75 per Illy and the board
of deacons is to know by Palm Sun·
day. Persons can pick up the lilies
used in the church after the Easter
Sunday service. Residents wishing
to participate are asked to contact
Jim Buchanan, 992-'1393 or Judy
Crooks, 992-2704.

each one speaking briefly about
th e ir
school
activitie
sand their plans lor the future.
Mothers of the girls who were also
guests at the luncheon assisted by
Mrs. Skinner pinned their daughters
with the DAR award pin. Each one
also received a certificate and the
bQok, "American Women or the
Ainerican Revolution." ·
Mrs. Clyde Ingels, regent,
presided at the business meeting
and reported on the state convention
which she had attended recently.
The. report on national defense was
given by M1'5 . Gene Yost.
Plans were · beghn lor the
celebration or the local chapter's
Diamond Jubilee which wlll occur on
Feb. 8, 1983. The committee named
for the event was Mrs. Ronald
Reynolds, chainnan, Mrs. Robert D.
Ashley, and Mrs. Gentl Yost. Mrs.
Pearl Mora presented a program on
black inventors.
Mrs. Clotine Blackwood was
welcomed as a new member or the
chapter.
The committee in charge or
arranging the luncheOn ~ting was
composed ol Mrs. Paul Etch and
Mr.:. Thereon Johnson.

Now that Right to Read Week is
over, emphasis on reading in the
Meigs schools will not stop. Parents,
too, can encourage reading at home.
Read aloud to younger chil~n.
Tum the television set off and 'observe a family reading thne. Let
children see their parents enjoying
books, newspapers, and magazines.
Encourage library visits. Remember, reading is a lifetime skill for
learning and lor enjoyment in
leisure time.

Organizations' meeting notes

lndlw1dul1 Access/
Trunk L1ne Mtleage~
etc~ qutrter •11e(2)
T.a-Party Access Line
Mllte,e. uch Qutrter

.n.

Preceptor Beta

Middleport Alumni

Riverview PTO

Laurel Cliff
Health Club

TOPS

Laurel Cliff Fellowship

3.50
!. 75

l . OO

7. 65

Line kTS Trunk Pli trunk
11.15
11.25

12. 75

.60

. 60

.60

. 60
. I!

Present Access Line Rates-Parkman

lndh ldMal

us

• . 00
5. 00

• •50

8.50

9.00

) . 2'5

Bus iness Senlce
tndlvlduti l ine Ker Trunk PBl Trunk

11.25
11.25

U !

11 . lS

8.7!.

10 . 75

11.25

13 . 7S

.60

.60

.60

.60

ACCISS/

Tntnk LIM Mileage,

etch quartlr •tle (2)
T~- Part)' Acctts L tne
Mt lt•9•) tldl qverter

.60
. 1~

•lie (2:

Present Acces s Li ne Rates-Kingsville
Bus lneu Sen lee
ind 1v1dual lint Two- ptrfy Five ~Par { y Key Trunk

Restdenct Strvtct
lndhldua1 l1ne lwo- P1r£y F1~e- Par£y

z...

~

s.•s

{2)

lnd1Y1~11

e1ch ltno {Z)
Two-PerU Acceu L1M
Mtleave.
tiCh CUit~r {2,

Aesidei'Kt

IMII

local LaiH!!I ha

last

. . . II
(lOOI--

•z..

•z..

•tll 1Ut 1011S)

lete

hla Aru
A
1

0. 01
10. !JO
12 . 90

7. U
1.20
10 . 95

7. 25
0.00

Ana

'·"'

1. 7S

6. 75

9. 50
11 . 25

a.2s

lUI

.... ,

I . B~

ll.lD
ll . 30

11.15

hct~Mfe

IO. lO

0. 60

10 .80

'·"

Total

1. 65

6 . 4~

1.10

....

••t.c """
•Zone A

20. 40

l2 . lS

19. 10

18 .45
l0 .45
12 .45

29 . 55
l l.SS
]]. 55

]9. 40
42 . 40
as. 110

lt .2S
l i . 2S

10. 75
)2 . 75
34 . 75

ai.OO
a4 . 00
41 .00

l2 ; 10
34 . 10

42 .80
45 .80

9. 85
11.85

21.20

1] . 85

22.10

lO. lS

20 . 10

12. 25

22 . 00
2J.SO

n2s
zo. IS

21.110

IIJ./Q

JD. JS

~1. 65

12. 70

25 .40

2l . IS

...,

11.15

l2 .5a

21 . ZS

ll. 7S

u.oo

'.85

11 . 1S

ll.SO

Zl . lS

lS.2!i

U .«XX

.. 111 SUUGIIS)

2J. ZS

)6 . 75

.,.«XX

taM 1111

eusfntss Servi ce
fwo-Parh fhe•Partx Rn Trunk P8X frun'

• . 60

6.35
6. 31

uo

5.65

7. 8S

7.85

I.BS

.10

. 60

Access Ltne

Mf lttge,
ttch custOMer (2)

. 30

. 30

Present Access Line Rates-Huntsburg
8uslneu Strv ice

Residence Strvtct
lnillvtdUti Ltne Two-Ptrh . four- Party lillti-Partl Rex Trunk
Toul

Ex change

5.75

7. 65

8.65

II. 21

3.00

PBk lrunll

lridividu1l ' tne key trunk
11.25

9.65

12.15

Present Access Line Rates-Hudson (650/655 Numbers)
Rtstdenct S.rvlce
lndlvidu•l lint kfS lrunk

Total h,..,.

l l.lO

9.4S

a. 20

12 . 25

Total h ciiMif•

l l.BO

'."'

O. W

1 1 .1~

z~ .

so

2a . zs

)8 . 25

51.00

Totti h Cft6111)1

12.40

1(1 . 4(1

'·"

l l. 35

Z6 . 10

zs.as

40.05

U.t(}

!M,OIU~lR,ODD

PBX

luslntss Serw 1ce
lndtvldual Line kTS Trun'

Trunk

PBI

Trunk

•Ill statt011sl
1.0 UJI

.

( 192 ,001 - ll4,001t
•hi sUtl0111i
IMII U
(JM,OI)I . . til
stat la~s MWI

-.

Total hchange

Po.ttatlft 'oint

11.80

But llltt Aru
ZCMe A

ll. BO

11.00

~.~5

11 .80

12.7 5

10.70

14. 80

P81 Trunk
2P.J5
23 .35

l0Ci'T"'1il 11~

Pll Trunk

zo .•o'

IB . IKJ

8u t Ratt
Zon t A•

..nd 1

(D- 12,001.1 "• In

30. !10

Stat I on\ l

Jl. 90

22 . 40

10. !10

ZOI\t

( 12' , 00 1·2',000
• al n Stlt i on t)

ltnd l

Serv ice
Jndlwiduili une h10-Par t y four-Party kTS Trunk PSi Trunk
Base Rate Aret
Zone A

8.,.,

9. 35
11. 10

10. 15
11 . 15

11. IS
l l . 15

9.05

(t.t,OOI-16 ,000
"'ain Stlt 1on ' )

Busi ness Service
lndhldu1l line ilS Trunk PBI Trunk
16. 00
18. 00

17 .85

20 .85

17 .so

16. 25

19 . 50

2'9 . 25

hnOa
l l ti,lXH-bi ,OOO
Main Stlt llln l )

Present Access Line Rates-Rock Creek
Ae1ldence Service
lndlvldutl line
four -Party
7. 25

8.95

f otll Exchange

lnd1~1dual

BustneSs Service
Line kT$ Trunk

PBI Trunk

Present Access Line Rates-Mesopotamia
Restdenct Ser"tce
tndf"1dual line f.a- Ptrty Four-fartx NUi£1 - P•r{y KTS Trunk
•. 25
8.50

Base ltlte Area
Zon• ~121

lndt"1dutl ~cess/
Trunk Line Mileage
eech quarter •ile{2)
Two~Ptrty Access Line
Mileage) each quarter
•11e ( Z

l . OO

3.50

8.00

5.00

11.25
11.25

3.00

. 60

.60

Business Service
ln&lt;ilvidua·l Line (TS lrunk

Pill Trun'

39 . IS
JO.•s
Proposed .Access Line Rate Bands

a•

2 1. SO

Bnc lilt

14.60

14 , ]5

Aret

]2.00

21.50

27. 50

J0.9S

J() . 9!§

J• .au

H . 10

59. 45

I 7. 20

21 . 0~
77 . ~

• 1.25

J4. 40

48, 10

&amp;1 . 90

12.20
15 .80
19 . • 0

10. 75
14 . J5

? 1 . ~0
?~ . 10

2H.l0

Jl . JO

2H. 10
l2 . JD

n os

I 7. 95

18. 10

Js.oo

35 . 90

Sl . 40
111 .00
61 .60

12'. 40
16. 05
19 .10

10 .95
14 .60

1 1.90

29. 10

1~ . 5~

]? . 85

41.00
4 7, 4S

18 .25

111 . 10

36. 50

l 9.10
32.85
J6 . 50

51.1D

58 . 40
62.06
6S . 70

J l. so

) I , 50

41.25

6] .00

' ll .15
17

17. 95

lone A'

18. 25

l one I*

Z\.90

U .70

Acuu

8uslrten Service
lndtwtdual line tTS Trunk PBI Trunk
8.25

5. 25
10.25

11".25
11.25

12'.15

. 60

. 60

.60

Llttl e Hock i ng
f't)nt vlll t
lllorrl,town
Ol d WIJShl ng ton
PowllaUn Po 1nl
Cnar(lon
('ldCl evehnd
Ca lling )

(l)l!lplrl~on
Otscr1 pt 1on

Tott I Mlw A1te
Old h t e
I l~cr e ut

Set Above
One Te ltphone
One Ou t l et
Tot1l ~~" Rt U
(l ld Aa tt

'.

Fa ln1 tw

Hlrtlll
O..•ktr C1t)'

Set

Abo~ •

525. 60

·"

~

.80

~

10.25

""

·"
·"

10. 50

-n:M

lti . 65
50 . 20

rot • I h c h1nge

15. 15

1.1 40

I 1.80

81n&lt;1 6
I 128 ,01,J I· H6, 000

r ou I hc hange

16.85

14 . JO

12 .65

75 . JO

J] ,

70

]] . 70

50 ..55

6/ ' 4(1

llnfl 1
( 256 ,OOl · ,S I2,000
Mt ln Stt ti OII f)

Tot • l £•c t1an9e

11 . 75

11 . 65

17. 9S

lS . 90

14. 50

) 4. 50

51. 15

69 .00

Bind 8
Tot• ! hc lo•niJt
1s 12 ,oOI - 1 , 02~ ,ooo
"• In StatiOft ')

I 1. 60

14 . 95

I ) .?0

l O. 40

lS. 20

)5.20

~2

10 . 40

Tottl h cungll!'

ll! .lS

IS . 95

14 , OS

?8. 10

37.~

Jl.~

14nd 9
( I ,0 24 ,001 -up
Mt !n StttiOII \)

.80

15 .00

• ! ~~nee! rUI\ 1pp 11 to 810011 1ntdt lt, Cententll e, Chts t er , Coolv ill e , Cumbtri Jnd, Oonet, [ Ht Chrl don, f 4 1 r ~ l tw, ~ rlll t , K t ng~ ~lll l!, Ll tll t
ltO(t1"9 , ~~tu opou•ta , Mlddhflt ld , MorrhtOtiO . Old Wutlington , P,rh•tn , Powh1 t 1n Point, llld Qt~J ter Cit y u&lt;. llln(jet. on l y.

)S. XI

·".41

.80

20-20

125.60

ln, rust

Ltne

.eo

~

~

19 . 70

-.r.JI

s12.80

$2 S. 60

.01

.eo

~

~

t . a5

18 .9(1

"1101

'Tr.11

Acceu Ltnl
twit Tt lephcln.
Ont Outl tt
Tota l lk• Ril tt
Old lltt

su .eo

S2S .60

.•s
~

.•1

11 lncruu
Acctu L1 n1
OM Ttlephone
Ont tNt lit

Total

Mew Rite
Old ll1tt
I lncru~
ollr:Citl Ll l'll

On• Teleonone
On• Out ht
Toul lit• Ra te

01 13 lltte
I lnCrtiH

.l.cCIU LI M
0r1e T•lephont
Ollt !Ait let
Tott i 11th RUt
Ol d line
i !ncrusa ,

Accn1 ltne

One T•l•phone

Ont O..tllt

Total fill• ll:ttt
Old Rate

I Incrust
Acc.u L.hw
One

Tel.,trorlt

5. 25

m:ll

I lncnue

~t

let

Set Abowt

Alnt 1nbur g
Perry
Nellllury

S.75
TtT.ll

Accu1 Lt ne

m:1'l

One Te l tflh0'\1
One Ou t l et

SIZ . &amp;O

SZ5. 60

9. 65

. 811

.•s

-x:1l

112.80

SZS . 60

;m;

-a-:n

...
.80

~

S12 . 80

125.60

eo

. .
.45

"'""Tl:"tJS"

11.15
'"'2r.tll
S12 .80

...80

t .IO
"11.11

•

.eo

.0!
-x:1l
17. SO

&gt;1:1'1
$25 .50

.eo

·"

-w:a

Alolrora

l• lnbr' ld9t
Hinckley
lortttrt•ld
t1thf teld

l uuell

e

·"
....4!

·"

I . 15•

\".25
1.00

·''

10 .001"
5. 00 )j

10.001'
10.00 )1
5 . 00{ 1 )

·'""

001'1

9.
9.00
l
9.00 ))
9 . 00 ])

9.00(1)
IJ .OO( 1)

"" .

. lO•

·'"'
·"

.80

"

NC
NC

IS.I S

$14.60

' 29.~

lO

·''

.!0

~

"!r.ll

sn.as

...•••
...·"

1.

.·"'.

l~

1.

•o

1.

)(J

1. •o
1. 40

'1U:TI

.,.,.,.so

1. JO
1, )O

22.

......

I. 10

Ul . 70

?. . 60

Total 'M'w Rtu lT.TD
Old Rltt
ZO.ZO
I tncrtut
TlO:lll

"'lr.Jl

~ - S~
l . b~

Attns Li nt
0rtt Te le~on t

$16. 85
•~

U J. 70

.01

](], S(}

10 . !10

Oftt awtltt

Tole 1 ""' Jl t lt
Old JIAtt
lllltrtlst

.811

.ts

m:x

6.0S

8

10.15

m:lt

22.50

TaJ:1J

Tot1 I Pie• R1te '"1""r.1!
11 . 25

OU t ltt -IIIOntttly ~ . u•
Pl~ · fikWi thly Ratt•

~

H8 . 10

.45

(Hopedtle/ 81 oc.1 n¢•l el

. 45

.t.cuu Lint
$14.15
Ont T1 lephone
.80
One O.. tlet
.•s
Tot al. Ntw R.att ~
Ol d ~ I tt
7. 45

.ac

lton -Flush ( \iopeh 11/I IOOIIIl n~ d a le)
Ou u oor ln t •"IY Furr~hll ld lc•
•
Fluiii/ Outdoor In Cu tt01111r fu rnllhed &amp;o•
Flulh/ OYtcklOr' I " Cutt~r fu rnhMd eo~

.80

-rr:ll

Une

Out ltt l
Non ·Flush

20.40

"'lB':7l

-x:1l

~

11.25

PU (Hooedaii / 1 100Mi ngdi 1t)

. 00

S2B. 70

.•s.
"'l5":ltt

PU•

...

.•s
.•s

us

.~ o -­

l loQIIIIngd alt )

'"PBX (Roc' Crtell;)

on~

1 14. ]5
. 80

On!! re teghone
On1 Outlet

6. 75

20 . so

Ac:tus li ne
l)n @ Te l t phont

12. 80

Rat ld•nCe ( Moptol l t,

An•

.•s

•••
.so·

Alsldencr• •

•• 5

~

·'"'

~

. 8(1

. as

1.00

Anldlrtct •

.811

on:!'~

Old Rill
I h cr u st

.811
.4!

Sll.a

1.00••

Bu1 i ntu IAock Crttll; l
lullnUI Kop.Oilt/ 1 100111f'9dt l t )

~ntr1 ly

.• 1

"

. 10'

lullntu•
BullfMst••
RuldtnCI

121. 50

-m:7l

Acctn

...

11 , 4(1

-rr.1l

To tt i lile• Rttt "Tr.!Rl

.80

. •1

.·'".'

Ol d Aatt
I lncruu

$25. 6(1

~

,as

Propoua

llutlntn

'"/P5

su. ~

1 lft crust

t "6~J·)

£OUIPI'I£JIIl j!ATES

INtliU
Statton Out Itt• {Auoc lattd with
Ttltphon• S.t )

su .so

Acceu l lne

I 1ncrene

11udwn

.80

CO!!I!trhon

'"lP!

Ont ~tltt
roh 1 Mew A• t e
Old Aatt

l(lngsvlllt

IJ J,75

~ tllldard

18

l ou l ftlw A1te '""T)."tR)
Old h te
10. 25
I lncrtut
-.o.1l

Ont TeltphOf\t
One Out let

~

m:R

Jt lepttone

OntOu t ltt

.811

6. 2!

. ~ !1

Tot• I New Aatt -rr.trl
Ol d Rt ll
10 .10
l ln( rtne
~

SU .Ml

OM ~t'•'
.ts
toul Mew tllatel'l:ll!:
tlld .. te

Ont

P lerpont
1 r.....Cu II

.•!

I lnc r u ..

.811

COIIIOtrhon
lR
Ducrlpt I on CO!!!ptrhon
Accru Line
$13 .15
One Ttl tVtone
.90

2

•• 5

'1T.1I

..

~

Mtdlso~

40.

.110

t .S5

R1tas/ h nd1

Cent rr~ lll t

·"ao

S12.80

•• 5

Prooosed

Alhtt bu l t

:Jr.f!

AcCUI Llnt
Ont lllt,nMI

Ont Oli tllt
Tou 1 Nil• Rate
Ol d Ratt

Pnunt

S ER~IC£ ~0

bclltnll !C011t ln11tfl

AcCI U lint!

17 .60

Tnl

Prtll'ftt and Prooostd Acceu ~ ~ ,.. htu h

one

(niT

l)ne Tt 119hOM
One Ou t l1t
Tott i fllw Rate
Ol d R•t•

c ~ r laft(l

.eo

lr.lfl

~c u1

Coohlll e

' 12

1.1 '

11
COI!IIllrhon

I Increue

I

hst Cl aridon
Mesopot•la
Middlef i eld

lA
C01!t11rhon

One Te l t pt-rone
Ont Out It t

Cllt r don

SChldu lt

Lint hte\ 81 Etc h•nge

Accen line

Chester

55. 00

Bam! 5
(64 ,001 · 1l8, 000
M1ln Stat i ons)

JIIISClLLAN£riJS

9ropoud

51 .6(1

if the proposed rate increase s are granted in full, a representative r es idential
cu stomer and a representative business customer, each with an indiv idual line and
one standard telephone, would experi~nce the percentage changes shown below for
the appropriate exchange area in which the customer resides .

Schedule of Present 1nd Pl"opoud

Present

51.20
54 . 40

12 .00

10 . JO
IJ . }~

BIU RtU An i
l ont A•
l ont 1•

]0. 410

28 . 80

?0.60

16 . 00

11. 10
IS. 15
18 .60

20. 60

2S . 60

z u~o

11.30

l OI\t I•

l!utln!'!
Scu~k
1il
kf runk

tint

41.60
44 . 00

19 . l0

.zo

Individual

1). 60

.75

htu/llnd ~

60. 90

50 .65

Jlla in St &amp;l ion 1 l

29 . 70

29. 70

18 . 05

~rea

lau Jilt lru
ZOI\t .ti•

hnd 2

Presen t Access Line Rates • Hopedale
Re 1 idenc a

62.90

Sl.!JS

~!!!J!E!I!!~B!:=!!Jffi''1R@'~
' I~''ParEy
~"Ei"ISe~"iij'
'}'-Parlr
!!!'!T'YTIOI§t'~:::U:~
lndhol&amp;u&amp; i l1nt iwo-Pa r ly Four.
14Jit1
tiS irunk PB* lrunk
., ,zo 2'5 . 5-0
t .60
8.30
10.110
12. 80
n .•o 2s.ao
12'. 00
I UO
U . IO
16 .00

Rate hncl

'TiiiTV'Tduai liM kTS fr\tllk

J9 . 15

20 . 20

19.25

Present Access Li ne Rates -Bloomingdale
Bu11neu Service

Jl..t S

Present Access Line Rates -Chardon (with Cleveland Calling)

.... I

Tndhlduai Une two-Party Four-Ptrt)' kfS t .. unt

20 . 10

Residence Service
Individual Line kfS Trunk

*loniMJ c...-')es IDIIIIJ only to Ctntendlle , Cht's ttl", Co"o lvl lle, C....Wr h nd, ftlrv l ~. Llttlt HOCl 1f19 , lbrrlstOWI,. Did lltiM"'Jlllll ,
..a l)utllft' Ctt 7 •

Aesldenu Service

19 . 25

~un

una

Ollt Tllll'f\OIIe
OM ~tltt

. 80

, 45

.•s

I. ~ ~
1. ' ~
1. 75

...

'"18":1"0"
'"""lT.UI

"1T.1C

l 17 . 60
.80

U5 .Xl

.45
lOU I ... Ratt ""1"J":1!
01~ Rna
13 .35
1 lncren•
,-r,JI

l .""

m;ll)

"Jn5

12.75

·"'

410.40

2 ~. 50

.811

.•5

"!P!
26. 70

"lnl

Tw l ~sbur9

( I ) ALL• "1!0'1( PAES£/H A110 PROPOS£0 IA.l£5 All£ rOit ACCESS UN£ $ Ofll l • SEE 11Al(5
LISTED uu;w, WHICK AR£ 1111 ADOlTtON TO ACCU S LINE RATtS .
(2 ) Mileage char9fl appl)' tn lddttlon to the prutnt tccns l lrtt ch.rga,. TMy
will bt t ll.. lnatld on tht propDit"d ratn .

, , 1 S ta t1 ~ (Aurora, Alltt lnbur9, ll111t&gt;r l d1JI ,
Hhcll;lly, MudiOI\, !MtltiU''• lklr t hfllld ,
Per~t n 1v l a Perry, l icnt'ttld, l uu1 ll ,

PtJ ~ta ti OII

..

,,,,.,

,)

(Aihttbuh , etnu rr \11 1, Mldhon ,
Pierpont, T r~11 )
hJ sutlon 1Chardon, Cllutar. h,..,a, Litt le
~ocki"Q, l'bnt wtlla, MorrhtOWII, Old
IIUIItrigton . PO'IItlatal'l h l11t o Tll~ton )
h)' Statton {fllrvl,.. Hl rtll, Qut ktr CH.y, Roc •

Cnek)

SUtton ~Cooht11e, C.-rltl'ld )
Pt)' Statton ~e11 , Bl~ l f19da1t l
Pay sutton 10ntn111e 0 Oorut)
ttll /l"U L1nt ~p.. rii'\CI
PI)'

14 , S5

' · 1\

S.IS

14 . 55

!L U

14. S5

s.as

14 .55

14. !5

$,2S

li .M

...

4. 30

1.2s••

11 . 5S

1.25

-H
••

'

1.85

.so

.50

'lith lint (2)
T~Ptrty

lndlviduil Line

3.60
3.60

•. 35
• . 35

5. 05
! . 05

lndtvtdutl Access/
TNnk L1ne Hfleage.

•t11 stat~sl

(41,001·•,000

50

.50

Bnt Rite •re•
l ... ~ {21

. j24,CDI-48,0CIO
..... 'fl

. 75

.15"

.7!

Restdtnct Serwtce
lnclfvidutl Ltnt ·f.o-Ptrfy flvt Party

11.80
40.10
4).80

2 1.90

15 . 45

1!.05

Present Access Line Rates-Dors et

Pil ffiiili

:!l. lS

11 .65
19.65

18. !JO

.t . 6S

.15

S.ntn

illd h !UI lllii KIS lfiiii

PBI irunl

14.25

'·"
'·'"'

8. 15

9. 75

lase

•hilstatiiM)

luslMU

•

1. tS
ll . aS
IJ. U

6. 15

10. 60

•ZIIM A

oz.ocn-z4.000

....

1. 10

1. 10
IO .S&lt;l
JZ , SO

. •ZIIItl I

..... n

S.nice

lridhiiulli Line l.o·hrt r Four-Par\)' liS lr11111i

11. 50
II.SO

13.95
13. 95

• •65

!.55

PBI Trunk
1s.•s

Access/

Trunk Lint Mtl••V••

lale

5. 55

S.&amp;5

81St Rite Area

,·

8.2'i

9. 65

5.2'5

11.25
11.25

3.00

.60

(2)

But Rate Area
lone ~ IZ)

G-&lt;tmma

Pomeroy UM Church

.60

Rtstdenct Service
lndlvidUti Line l.a-Parti four -Per tx AU l\I · Par(y ktx Trunk

Syracuse Parish UMM

The Syracuse Parish United
Methodist Men met at the Minersville church SWiday evening. Prayer
was offered by the Rev. Stanley
Merrifield and there were several
Founder's Day to be observed in songs led by Kenny Wiggins.
April was discussed and plans made. . Program for the next meeting to
for the program book and a skit be held on April4 was discussed. The
when the Preceptor Beta Bela Cha~ meeting will be held at the Syracuse
ter or Beta Sigma Phi Sorority met Church at 7 p.m. and wlii be mostly
recently in the Riverview Boat musical with members,•youth, and
Room of the Diamond Sayings and friends or the three churches invited
Loan Co.
to attend.
Donna Jones will write the skit
Membership was discussed. The
which will be given at the Founder's dues were set at $5 a year, Men or
Day observance by June Van the church are invited to join and it
Vranken. It was noted that at the was noted that the charter will be
March 25 meeting, a country store open until May 25.
will be held and each member was
A program for the summer is to be
asked to lake something to be sold.
drawn up by the executive corn- _
Officers' reports were given. It mittee on March 28.
was reported that the Senior Citizens
. Refreshments were served by
need help with the Meigs Food Cl)..()p Wiggins.
program and Clarice Krautter and
Nonna Custer volunteered to help
next week. Also discussed was the
bloodmobile. Buckeye Boys State
At a recent meeting or the Midwas discussed with Betty Ohlinger to dleport Alumni Association, it was
check into the possibility or spon- decided that this year letters wlii be
soring a student.
sent to only graduates residing out Of
Mrs. Millard Van Meter who had county. Local graduates will be
been scheduled to present the asked to purchase their tickets and
program was WIBble to attend due to make their reservations locally with
illness. Maida Mora talked on roses the treasurer, Carolyn Grueser.
noting that if they are cut too early,
Date for the annual banquet and
they will not bloom. She also said dance has not as yet been set. The ofthey should be cut early ,in the mor- ficers are Ann Johnson, president;
ning ao that they will last longer. She Cyilda Harris, first vice president;
noted that the rose is the national Celesta Coates, second vice
flower of England.
president; Kathy Hood, secretary;·
Refreshments were served by . and Carolyn Grueser, treasurer.
Rose Sisson with Janet Theiss contributing. In her absence, Vera Crow Xi
and Theresa Swatzel assisted. Mrs.
Open house was observed at the Mora and Ullian Moore will be
Plans for a couple's potluck dinner
recent meeting of the Riverview hostesses for the next meeting.
and dance to be held on March 27 at
PTO.
the Senior Citizens Center were
Parents visited the classrooms
made at a recent meeting of Xi
and met with the teachers. Marlene
Ganuna Mu Chapter ol Beta Sigma
Putman presided at the meeting
Phi Sorority held at the Middleport
Mrs. Bertha Parker hosted a Fire Department.
using a reading, "Sunshine in a
Smile" by Cathy Spencer and the recent meeting or the Laurel Cliff
A recipe auction was held arid
pledge to the flag led by Letitia . Better Health Club.
Carol Jean Adams presented the
The meeting opened with the cultural program on the topic, "A
Holsinger. Mrs. Well's first grade
group
singing "Happy Birthday" to Woman Chooees."
had the highest percentage of parenMrs.
Parker. The birthdays of
ts in attendance.
New officers will be elected at the
Genevieve
Ward and Ann Maah next meeting.
Auditing and nomiiiBting comwere also aclmowledged.
mittees were named. ,
Several readings .jwere given iJI.
Mrs. Grace Weber announced the
eluding
"Symptoms of Depression"
school spelling champion, Maralyn
by
Donna
Gilmore; "March Winds"
Barton, with Abigail Cauthorn, as
New officers were elected at the
by
Iva
Powell;
"Spring's Arrival"
alternate. She also credited Right to
recent meeting ol the TOPS OH 570
Read Week as being successful in by Marge Fetty; am "GQd Sends Club held at the Rock Springs
Spring" by Eva Rob8on.
the school.
Grange Hall.
Members paid dues and Iva
Refreshments were served.
Elected were Delo~ Long,
Powell gave a report on hospital leader; Unnie Aleshire, ~leader;
equipment ol the club. Grures were Virginia Dean, treasurer; and Donplayed with prizes going to Mrs. na Jean Smith, secretary.
.
Tbe losing attendance team of
Robson
and Mash. Donna GUmore
Mrs. Allen Eichinger at Pomeroy
Shirley Wolfe waa the weekly
had the clOIIIng prayer, and Mrs. queen with Ann Mattox ani! Donna
United Methodist Church entertained with a dinner 8qd pa: · a~ Parker served refresl)ments. Robin Smith aa runnenrup. A fl!M)' money
the church SWiday evellinl! for mem- Campbell wu a guest:
auction was plllnned for the· next
meeting. Those attending ·re tO take
bers or the winning team. - '
Approximately 70 : persons ata gift. The Miss Springtime ctintest
"Color .Your Ufe with Caring"
tended the affatr with Kennlt
was dlacualed and It was noted that
Walton serving as master or was the topic ~the JII'OIP'&amp;I11 presen~must loee at leaat 20 pounceremonies. Ther. wu an exchailge ted by Mrs. Brenda Hagy at the dll to qualify. The contest began in
ol comments on the contest between recent meeting ol the Laurel Cliff
January and wlii conclude In May.

tZI

l ooe ~

IMd Ill
(6001-ll,OOD
.. Ill IUttiMI)

Women's Missionary Fellowship International held at the home of Mrs.
Janilee Johnson.
Several members participated
with readings in the program.
Sharon Folmer had the devotions
reading "Finding God's Work in
Darkness," and "Development ol
Patience." Donna Gilmore had the
prayer. Refreshments were served
by the hostess, and others attending
besides those named were Shirley
Frazier, Mary Miller, Genevieve
Ward, Eva Robson, Unda Foster,
Janice Haggy, Iva Powell, and Jean
Wrtght.

• . 25
8.65

lue Rate Ar-e•

certain number of ()o(b during the
month ol March. In the high sChool
library the blue bookmarks were
distributed, and a large poster
created by a student declares that
reading prevents brai!l rot. Book
sales and swaps organized at Bradbury and the junior high have made.
it possible for students and teachers
to add to their own libraries. Parents
have volunteered to help in these
events, and, in fact, many or the activities could not'have been carried
out without their very welcome
assistance.

SllliQIISj

Sunshine boxes for shullns, visits
to the Pomeroy Health Care Cen·
ter, and dinners for bereaved !ami·
lies of the church are among the
projects to be carried out this year
by the United Methodist Women of
the Pomeroy United Methodist
Church.
Betty Baronick presided at the
meeting during which time it was
noted that 243 visits to shullns and
those Ill were made durtng the past
.three months. Plans for continuing
the shutin box project, as well as
the weekly visits to the Health Care
Center. A thank you note was received from the Center thanking
the group for a Christmas donation
and asking for participation in
church servlcess there on Frtday.
The group voted to continue the
dinners for familles of deceased
persons and Faye Wildermuth was
named chairman with others on the
committee to consist of Dorothy
DOwnie, Lincoln Hlll area; Alice
Struble, West Main Street area;
Polly Eichinger, Mulberry Ave.
area; Theima DUI, East Main St.
area, and VIrginia Edwards, Cen·
· tral Pomeroy area.
Easter lilies will be purchased for
the all!lr by the group. Arrangements were made to serve cookies
and sandwiches after the Lenten
church services Thursday.
Officer reports were read and
Mrs. Ada Warner took the collection of the least ccln which was or·
ganized by an International group
who went to Asia and decided on the
token of prayer for a common fund.
Plans were announced for the at·
tendance contest dinner held Sunday night.
Polly Eichinger presented the
program for the meeting which
dealt with the struggle against racism. Readings were given by JanIce McGee, Dorothy Downie, Grace
Campbell, and Gertrude Mitchell.
Grace Campbell was at the plano
for group singing and Gertrude Mitchell read the scrtpture in which
Jesus commanded "Feed My
Sheep." A desser.t course was
served by the hostesses, Miss
Parker, Evelyn Clark, and Norma
Parker.

. 60

I US IMSS Strwl ce

(o-lOOO •tn

Pomeroy UMW

. 60

JndlvldUtl

... I

Mrs. Eichinger and Mrs. Gerald
Wildermuth, captain of the winning
.team.
Mrs. Wendell Hoover had charge
ol the program with Allen and
Elizabeth Downie singing "I. Don't
Need Anything But You" and June
Van Vranken conducting games
with prizes going to the winners.
Martha Hoover sang " Irish
Lullaby," and then was joined for a
duet by her husband, "Ivory
Palace."
Walton presented flowers to Mrs.
Eddie Smith, the oldest woman on
the winning team, Mrs. W. 0. Barnitz, the oldest on the losing team.
Lester Hart was recognized lor
bringing in the most people during
the contest, and Jane Brown was
recognized for bringing the most
guests. Tbe Rev. Robert McGee had
the benediction.

. 60

Line R.ates-East Clar i don

School! feature · reading week .activities

SCANNING THE SKIES - Esther RO&amp;t, left, and
Norma Delghtoo, both of Terre Haute, ludlana, scan
the aides near Hinckley, Ohio for bllZZBnfB early Monday mlll'lllllg. Tbe two ladles drove over from their In-

8. 25
1Z.75

•-="

Ltne Mtle.tte.

This week-long .observance, first
held state-wide in 1978, demonstrated the commitment or Ohio's
schools and teachers to improving
the reading skills or aU citizens.
Among other things, Right to Read
Week is designed to emphasize the
importance of effective reading instruction and to promote positive
reading activities lor students in
schools all over Ohio. In many
schools, parents and other community members take part in the
week's activities with their children.

11.25
II . 25

.60

Heh quuttr •11e(2)
flll)o-Party Access

In the Meigs schools, Right to
Read activities serve to accent
teachers' year-long commlbnent to
quality reading instruction. In the
third grade at Midilleport Ele111entary, students have drawn a large
mural depicting .stories they have
read. At Bradbury, a sl!ldent's winDing reading slogan is being made
into bumper stickers at a local print
shop. Hall displays in several
schools give students the opportunity to post their names and the
titles or ()o(b they are readilig. The
green feet at the junior high, a
reading train chugging down the hall
at Salem Center, and a reading tree
at Pomeroy give recognition t''
students. •At Salisbury, Pomeroy,
and Harrisonville, students designed
and made bookmarks for themselves. Also in the fifth grade at
Harrisonville, students took. part in
flannel board dramatizations of
favorite stories. Other fifth graders
at Pomeroy dramatized stories they
had read. At Rutland Elementary,
fourth graders entered into contracts with their teacher to read a

5.21
9.00

lndtvlli.J•1 Accent
Trunk l 1M "ilttge.

At Bradbury School last week, a
pint-sized Count Dracula and a
small-scale astronaut walked the
halls. Ai the junior high, films of
prize-winning novels for teenagers
were shown to the students. In every
school in the district, scores or blue
bookmarks, supplied by the Ohio
Education Association and MLTA,
marked places in students' favorite
books. These activities and many
others in every school were planned
hy teachers in observance or Ohio
Right to Read Week.

11.21

11.25

3. 10

l . OO

6. 00

ll.l1tness SH'Ylct
IRdh tdutl line kfS lrvnii Pll Tniill

•

�8-The Den

Tuesda

Pomeroy-Middleport, Oh1o

Sentinel

~petktrpi!OI'II (Htndsfrtt)

'100
!0
!0

suruJua KtlOIIt utrt
COIIIll fllt 1on HMOUt(ltaldtlt
Llgllt'lll 11t1t Op.rator HuGill
Ll gnt• Ql'lt Optrttor HuGill (H~tlt
SI.!Ptnho

1 51

300

151

100
I !I

155

IIOOIIIngdtlt)

140
151
151
151

I !0'
3 ....
!0

.

Ctntt 11\nt Trens.111t ttr

lloht Canctlllng Tr tnP!ltttr (HQJ~edtlt
11001111ngdalt)
O~tdGOr Houslfl!l
Dutdoor lloullnll ( Hopeda e I 00111i"9da le)
S 111ltc~ Key

"

"

3 00
3 00

300

so

1

"1SIS•

Swltctl uy•
Cuto" l: t )'

""
""

!0•

Ct.~loff

Key•
Ply Stlt \Oft looth
Ht l f looth IWtll

ltOpeCII e

,.10!..

13 S5
2 IS

"",,

~nt)

Htlf tooth Ptelutll
Full lootn
Toll llutrletor
PUsn To Tl t
Ctll Dlvtrttr

NO~nt

Wa latl 1
I 00

40

so

16

~ntnly RIU

Prtstnt

'"'
'"'
110
""

I 15

"'00
"80
"15
I S
"15•
60

"''

Gong (Rock Cree ~)
'Gong (Hopeda le I 00111 1'19d1 e )
Gong•
Gongu
Ko rn or Howle
Lowd Horn
Lowd Horn (Rock C uk)
P,e ay
Spec t Gong
Spec t Gong illoclt Crull
Lights
9ht1 (ltngswllle [)onet)

""91
"95

$ ~ I'll\

J

11•11••

Puent Mcntllly hte

~L.IlOII&amp;t c AllsWirlng an ~ Recording Dewlcu

Cod!! A Pllont UO
.Code A Phone 440 (Hoped• e Bloomi ngda le)
Code A Phone 56()
Cudt~ A Pnone 560 (Ho pda e Blcomi119dale)
foot
t tc h
Foot 5,.1 ell ~Hopedale Bl o0111 ngdal e)
Hemo y ~none
Meii\Ory Pnone Rock Cr~k)

21
21

so

1

1600
22 25

' 50

P oposell Ho thly Rate

BOO

800

I IS

&amp;b e

va

Concurrenu
Concwrrence

I 50 ..

to do the

P esent One r me Cha qe

enq n )

9 Fogt Cord
9 f oo t Cor d (K n9 H
2 f oot
2 Foo t
4 root
b root
IS root

t1

Cord
Cord ( ~u c k Creek
Cor d
Cor d
Cor d ( AoCk Crnk

oa u

5 00
1 so

HQpeda e

Bloom n9d1h

4 00

8 ooolngda e

5 00
bOO

ltooed• e

P esent Cha qe

5 00

Olrec orr Asshtam::e St v ct

owance of d ~ct d a ed ca
I! o t run~

"50

,
"so•

so

00

AII

1 00
40

25 ..

"'15•

Ot~er

40

25 ..

hc~anges

40
40

on

5

"

!2 Assoc. a a

Se r~I CI

Sf! r Ice

Present RUt /Cal

P oposel! Aatt/C•Il

",,

20

"'

100

! 25
l

so

24 10
29 55
•I 85

25

33

J 25

\t ance sha

•o

J

50

100
15

Ttl£

Residence per
ne•
ne••
Residence per
Busl ne u per
Busine ss per
ne ..
Bus ntH per
ne (Aocl Creet.
ns Trunlc per ne•
lt.TS Tnmlt per
I'll! ..
KTS Trun k
nl! (Rock C eek
PB~ Trunk
nr
PBJ Trunk
ne •
PBI Trunk per
ne
Of,U S Accen (ll u ~ ne n) ge I ne
wU S Access (P!Xl per 1 ne**
WA 5 ACCI!U (lo:: TSl pe line••
Tl' Tuuch Te l e pllo~e Set~

300
3 00

{ 10)
(10)
I 01

10 00

I OJ

1!0

I 0I

1 00

101

lOO

soo
s 00
1 so
1 so
1 so

so•

6

100
50'
1 00'·
100

so

01

' ocu
1 oc••
1 oo••

""'

000

~~

0:
P apoH!d Monthly Rtte

•b c•

3 00

so
so
soo

300

500

soo

190

I 50
Varhb e "

"

soo

Ker TflluMnt System5
lA Type uy Teleohone Sn ttl'l
A Type Key eleptlone S,sttl'l
lA Type Kty i!l ephone S r Het~ •
~ our line Key h lepttone Sys ll!fl
AI!CIIttonal CO/ n / WAT S Li ne Card
II ne Stat on nterccrn E' p~n s llf1
Kine Station )ntercCJn hpans on
0111 lnterc011 St atton
Mtnull Int ercom
Mtnual Intercom
Tel Touch l nte COli
Te l Touch lnterc011
D al C11l Pi ck wp
Key 5JStt111 Sl n9le l ne Telephone
S • !Iutton Key Te l ep~one
S • Button Key Te ephonet
S • B~o~tton Key Te ephoneu
Ten B~o~tton Key Te ephone
Ten Button Key Ttlephone•
fen Butt on Key Te epnone ..
Twe he B~o~tton Key 1 tphorw!
Elthteen Iutton l(ey Te ~~hone
Twenty B~o~tton Key Te ep,onl!
Twenty Button Key re epnone
Thir ty Button Kty h epnont
Bwu Nwlllber Ohplay
8~o~ 5y Numbl!r Ohphy
H1nds f ree Unit
CM~Pan I on ltandsf r tl! lin t
T~o~rre u
s ngle or dou b I! 1 ded ..
T I! Trunk to PBX 511\lchbotrd "
Eac h un t of Cable (lD or fr~ct on thereof)

1800

100

,

5 00

50

I

200

1 00
00
00

1 11

15

800
10 00
~ar ab e

1SO
300

' 60

680
l "
185
I 5

I S

350
115

100
l 50'
I 25•

600

,00
600

I

5

'

0

' 10

'6050

II 6S

II 75
11 75

900
!00
6 00

s

10

1 45
145

60

6 IS

100

J

,.

24SO

1 00

1 00
1 00
4

.

24 50

18 QOII
6 DO"*
va •b le

oo••

25 ...

S60
6 10

...

."

15

7!0

5 00

S8 15

"'

10 iO

11 50
10 00'
PrtHnt Monthly Rate

Between Cont 91.10us Centr t l Off en
Airli ne Ols ttnce 5 1111\u or en
8~o~slnen l ine
Res idence line

I 61
1

IS

11' 61
50

1100
11 50
~nthlr

Propoltd

325
3 25

0 • I t~

15 50

1550
1 OOI• Ile (6 )

13 DO •

Ius neu Ltnt

1 00/•lle (6 }
ID 50 •

1 001•11• (6)

hte

13 25 +

1 DO! 1!4 •tlt (5)
l l 25 +
1 oot 14 .ne (5l
13 25 +
TOO l / 4111tlt(5)
IJ 25 •
1 00/ l/4 1111\t (5)
13 25 •
1 00/ 1/~ 111tle (5)
13 25 •
1 00/ ,, ~ r.tlt (5)

5) Applies to diJUIIctl over 5 •lle1
(6 ) App11" to dht.,.cet o~r 10

•f1"

Ctble Pltrs tnd "tlugt
Speehl lttcorf ~ Tr~ll
Centrt1 Office
Ter'llllntt 10ft
Alngdown Clrcu t
Ttr'llllntt ion
Ctble Ptlr
Jn treofftce

s•

1 15
10 so
1150

29 55

24 10
~~

85

JJ 40

s so

'1 95"
2050

8 "

1 .,

860
090

!100

210 00
230 00

8200

110 00

50 00

!0 00
2000

1500
1!00

1000
10 00

2500

265 00

8100

265 00

2500

70 00

NC
00

15

n

25

23 25

1000

iOOO

1000

190 00

500

40 00

00

4000

500
1000

30 00
30 00

10 00

40 00

lO DO

3000

"
1000

za

20

1000
20 00
1000
20 00
NC

t5
1000

1 ] 0 00

3000
llO 00

..

8000

Propcstd Ch a qe

1150
~reposed C ~a'lt

I

2~

l 00
work ng
button
100
per work lng
button

1000

000

1 00
1 00

1600
1600
300
NC

300
pe r work ln'l
button

NC
HC

•c

ln1ufflctent Fund Chtck Cht'"it
Insufficient Fwnd Check Char;t

Prutnt Chtrge

HC

per chetk

Present Charu

~econnect

fr011 Mon Pl]'lllnt
frOM Men Pa)Mn t (AOC:It Crtek
ll oOI'IIIngd•l t l+ol"dtle)
RKOMtCt fr0111 'ton Pt)'lllnt {Ptrkllltn )
Rltonntct fr0111 ~n h~t (Huntsbur 9
Eut Cltridon 1Udd lef1tld Ntsopot•ttl
hconntct fr011 Jilon Pa,..nt (Ktntnl e Dorset)
~•connect fi'OII 'ltettlon Rite

1100

Proposed ChtrQ!

1500
1600

"

115
10 00

1200
1200

1400
14 00

16 00
10 00

1200
3 00
Proposed Clltrt e

7 !0
Proposed Chtrlt
28 45

~tcOMtCt

Mtlnuntnce of

Ser~lce

curge

Ttst Clllrgt
PriM se 'ltstt Chtrge
Pr Mhe '11t1t Chtrta (Roc• Creek
Hopedtla)

10 00

100

200
1

so ..

' 00
Prnent Cnartt

Proposed Ch•r!!

1000
3000

3000

10 00

30 00

lloMtngdtle

10 00

Prtw lrt Chtrgt (ll J

. ..,
IIC

V.rllltle (7)

IIC
700

za 1s

"

t II (8)

45
911

•

.---CC-----~~--------------------------------------------- -----

RIO GRANDE - Nmety-e1ght
students have been named to the
acaderruc honor roll for the wml\!r
quarter at RIO Grande College and
Community College
In order to qualify for the honor a
student must eam a 3 ~ 75 grade
pomt average on a 4 0 scale for all
work taken dunng the previOUS
tenn A student must have been
enrolled for a rrunimwn of 12 hours
for consuleration and must complete
all courses
Students from Meigs County are
James L Bahr, Long Bottom,
Julia A B1ron, Middleport Peggy S
Bush Racme Rebecca K Edwards,
Uing Bottom, Vicky D Gennan,
Langsville Jenell Kelly, Mid
dleport, Cheryl A Roush, Ml!l·
dleport, AmyL Souder Portland
11lll Pomeroy Elementary School bonor roll fiT
Lhe thtrd sax weeks grading periOd hu been an~n~l'ot'td Thole m~kllltl a grade f1 B or abOve In
all t.hc:ar aubjeda to be Ntmed to the roll are
Grade me - Kevin Limbert Ancela Abbott
Debbie Alk.lre Chrlltl.n Buaard, Lealll'lll C.....
dill M11y110rd1.......,... Price Tammy
Qooeot1 Brai1CIM R""" Kalrina Turner SereNi
Dovill l.rnell&lt; Noece Ruly Tripltll Vlcltl Wa~
rrr J~er B.lrnhart, Mepo Bartels Anna
Chapman Lee Hendenon Oeruse Hy.:ll
Olriatopher KniCht Both R..... Buddy R.....
A111&lt;la Sqer Stanley WaiiOn
'
Groch two - Barbie Ando_, J•lle BliCk
Micah Bwach Jeremy Dean Jeremy Heck
Rlchlel ROUih JtQ!lhln S.Jl!ent, April Tannehill Jolin 11arNGo Joey McElroy Kim Bill'
ton. SlleDy Cu~1 Janue Chapman Jenny
Ekllc:h. Mindy FOW&amp;ml SCepllon!ellaur. Tarn"'1' Klein, Mlcholle l.ft Lolu Neace Mellaaa
=~~llhalfer Kellh Smith Andy Sial

EMR Primary - Miry G1rnes Brian Ra~
doU lArry D o Grode throe - S.OU Prlt*er Kim Ewlno. Uaa
Piefft Seth Wetwnl. Jeml Wtll')' Sfi81T1!11
SIGnt J.- WJ1ill~ J(eUy Smllh Nlklll'ronya Sllei!On, Brian Kovalchik, Racllol IWich
Roo.. EbiiA
; _.
Groch • - - Cbrla Alllre Jolwi Nancy aau.. Jennifer lludl Karen IMnbort.

KeU)' Lee. Jtntllftr Htwmln Tl1'11 Wolfe HI ..
Cleland PM.-. Gnla Rlllle JWj

PltceMnt of prew l • t o out let
St and1rd Interi or 1htlon wire (non k'e1l
per ovtltt
luslnt n
Rts ldtnct
fllult1 !tnt or Clble

,,"
NC

I

• 1 as

Publ1c Nottce

!'~~~ ~~o_!!ce

NOTICE TO
BITUMINOUS
VENDORS
Sealed bids Will be
rece1ved by the Board of
Me19 s
County
Com
miSStoners at the Com
mJSS!oners Off1c~ located
n th e Court House 1n the
Vtllage Of Pomeroy Ohto
unt1112 noon on the 30th day
of March 1982 and the bids
w ill be opened at l 30 PM
on the JOtii day of March
t982 for tile furniShing of
b1tummous mater1a1s for
the Me1gs County H ghwav
Department
Estimated
quanttttes of hqutd asP.ha!t
r~utred
approx l matelv
500 000 9a lions
SPECIFICATIONS FOR
THE BIDS AS FOLLOWS
I - B d pnce per gaHon
fob vendors plant and
the prt ce per gallon
delivered to the vendors
portable tank to any
locatton w1thm the county
des•9nated by the County
Engmeer tor the var1ous
grades of bttum1nous
matertals whtch mt!v be
requtred by the ~e gs
Counly Highway Der.art
ment wh1cfl sha ll con orm
to the pertinent State of
Oh o Department of the
Htghway Construction and
Materi~"tl Spec1f cat tons
2 - W1th respect to the
aforementtoned est mated
quanttttes the vendors
shall understand that no
guarantee IS g1ven to the
actual
quant t ttes of
b tum1nous matertals to be
furnt s hed but each sue
cessful vendor shall be
requ red to furn sh all or
any part of the Metgs Coun
ty H 1ghway Department
actual reqUirements as or
dered dunng the btd year
3 - Prices on th1s shall
be ftrm and n effect from
Apr 11 1982 to Apr. II 1983
4 All bidders must
a9.ree
to furmsh any
b 1tummous matenals as
requested m Item l( at the
same prtces to al town
shtps of Me.gs County
dunng the btd year
S - On the envelope con
ta1n1ng each b d the name
and address of the vendor
must be pia nlv marked
Bttummous B ds
6 - Proposals are to be
returned on btd forms sup
plied by the Me1gs County
Commlsstoners
wh ch
may be obta1ned through
the off1ce of the Me1gs
County Engmeer or Board
of Me1gs County Com
mtsstoners and wtll be
opened on the date and
place spec1f1ed above
7 - The Me gs County
CommiSSIOners reserve the
nght to accept or r e1ecf
any or a ll b ds or any part
ther eof

NOTICE TO
AGGREGATE
VENDORS
Sealed bidS will be
received by the Board o!
Me1gs
County
Com
mlss•oners al the County
CommiSSIOners Offtce
located tn the Court House
tn the Vtllage of Pomeroy
Ohio unt1l 12 noon on the
30th day of March 1982
and the b1ds W1ll be ()()ened
at l 45 PM on the 30th day
of March 1982 lor the fur
ntshlng of all kinds and
sizes of aggregate that may
be requ~red by the Me gs
County H1ghway Depart
ment
Esftmated quantities of
all aggregate requ~red ap
proxemately ..0 .000 tons
SPECfFfCA
CATIONS FOR THE
BIDS AS FOLLOWS
1 - Bid pnces per ton
f o b loaded at the ven
dor s plant for the vanous
k1nds
and sizes of
aggregates that may be
requ.red wh1ch Will con
form to the pertinent State
of Oh10 Department of
Htghways Construct1on
and
Matertals
Spec1ficattons
except ng
pea or shot gravel which es
an ungraded material
2 - W1lh respect to the
aforesa1d esttmated quan
t t1es the vendors shall un
derstand that no guarantee
IS ~r11en to the actual quan
t t1es of aggregates to be
furn shed but each vendor
shall be required to furmsh
any part of the actual
requ~rements
as ordered
dunng the b1d year
3 - Pnces on the btd
shall be f~rm and 1n effect
from Apr 11 1982 to Apr.ll
1983
4 All bidders must
agree to furn1sh any
aggregate matenals as
requested n Item 1 at the
same pnce to all townshtps
of Me1gs County during the
btd year
5 - On the envelope con
tam1ng the b1d the name
and address of the vendor
most be shown and pia l niX
marked Aggregate B1ds
6 - Proposals are to be
returned on btd forms sup
plied by the vendor and
w II be opened on the date
and place spec tffed ~bove
7 - The Me1gs County
CommiSSIOners reserve the
nght to accept or re)ect
any or all bidS and/or any
part thereof

IN THE
COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS
MEIGS COUNTY OHIO
Jon M Grueser et al
Plaintiffs
VS
E R Hollman aka E Ira R
Hoffman et al
Defendants
C•seNo 18014
NOTICE BY
PUBLICATION
To E P. Hoffman aka
Ella R Hoffman Rosa
Hoffman R 0 H;uper
Neva Dresher aka Mrs
Walter Dresher Raymond
S Hoffman Mar onE Hot
fman
Doris Hoffman
Ra chel Sm th aka Mrs
Herbert A Sm tth Ray Hot
fma n Charles Cltfford Hof
fman
Edna Hoffman
Charles
L
Hoffman
Robert Hoffman Zelma
Hoffman Jerry Hoffman
Kay Sar'lds Edtth Harper
and the unknown hetrs
ne&gt;&lt;t of ktn
dev1sees
legatees
e)(ecutors
ad
m ntstrators
guardians
successors
asstgns and
spouses tf any of E R
Hoffman aka Elza R Hoff
man Rosa Hoffman R D
Harper Neva Dresher aka
Mrs
Walt er Dresher
Raymond S
Hoffman
Marton E Hoffman Dorts
Hoffman
Ra chel Sm1th
aka Mrs Herbert A Smtfh
Herbert A Sm 1t11 Roy Hof
fman
Charles Cl tfford
Hoffman Edna_ Hoffman
Charles
L
Ho ffm an
Robert Hoffman
Zelma
HoHman Jerry Hoffman
Kay Sands and Ed th Har
per addresses unk nown
you are hereby nottf ed
that you have been nam ed
defendants n a legal actton
entijled Jon M Grueser et
al
pla1nftffs
vs E R
Hoffman aka E lza R Hoff
man et a l defendants
Th s act on has be en
asstgned Case Number
18 084 and s pendtn_g tn the
Court of Common Pleas of
MetCIS County Pomeroy
Oh o 45769
The obtect of the Com
pla1nt 1S a partt t on actt on
concern n g the Otl gas and
a ll other
m neral s un
d erlyt ng th e follow ng
descr bed r ea l estate
Sttuat ed n the Townshtp
of Orange County of M etgS
and Stafe of Ohto
FIRST TRACT In Frac
ton 6 Tow n 4 Range 12
Ohto Company s Purchase
Begmn ng at the southwest
corner of sa1d Fractton 6
thenc e nor th 113 rods and
10 links thence east 169'h
rods thence sou th 113 rod s
and 10 l tnks thence wes t
169 /2 rods to the place of
beg •nn ng Sad tract ot
land as desc r bed conta ns
110 ac r s and 21 03 r ods
more or less Th e tract of
land to be conveyed by Th s
deed ts 10 acres 01 f th e 10r
thwest corner of the above
descr bed l and Beg1nn ng
at the northwest corner Of
the above desc r bed land
thenc e south 61 7/ 13 rods
thence east 26 rods th ence
north 61 7/ 13 rods th ence
to the place of beg nn ng
co nta1n ng 10 acres

'

Darnel O'Dell, Tunothy K O'Dell
to Delta Resources, Ltd 1981 and
Kramer Exploration Company
Meter s1te agree , Bedford
Nonga F Roberts, Robert D
Roberts Dec Aff1dav1t, Pomeroy
James P Roberts, lAlla D Roberts to Royal Petrolewn Properties
Inc (pipeline ease and meter s1te
agree ), Salisbury
Adrian R Roberts Sr , Ruletta A
Roberts to Royal Petrolewn Proper
lies Inc (pipeline ease meter s1te
agree ) Salisbury

3

-

13 45
hpenn incurrtd

lloluh.

ID- llnlce Ycaaud.

Grodeftve - ll&lt;oltllariDn Penn!Jdkra,Jelf
McE...., Rodd """"U Laurie Wavlansi

•

c;tB\

~

Announcements

:========~:t:========:::;~ S•tuated
SEC 0 Ntn0 Fractton
TRACT
36
T own 4 Range 12 Ohto

r

NOTICE TO SYRACUSE
RESIDENTS &amp; PROPERTY OWNERS
Syracuse Village Counc1l urges pe•
sons havmg knowledge of uncompleted or
unsatosfactory repa1rs, that resulted
from mstallat1on of sewage lines m the
town, to f1Ie the1r comments m wntmg by
Apnl 8 1982, w1th Clerk Jan1ce Lawson,
Syracuse Mun1c1pal Buildmg, Thord Sf
Syracuse, Ohio
I

,---------------------~I

Company s
Purcha se
comm enc1ng tn the ce nter
of u e road tead tng from
Sumner to K eno on the
east line of sa d Fractt on
36 then ce south on sa d
fra ctt on line .t6 rod s and 3111
fee t thence west 1 r od
th ence north to center of
sa 1d road thence follow ing
center of sa d road to pl ace
of begtnntng conta n1ng
46 115 square r ods more or
less
THIRD TRACT Sotuated
tn F raction 6 Town 4
Range 12 Ohio Company s
Purchase
Beg nntng 33
rods and l6 /2 I nks south of
th e northwest corner of
sa1d Fractton 6
t hence
east 47 rOds and 13 l 1nks
thence sou th 105 rods and
8'12 I nks thence west 47
roas and 13 ltnks t hence
north lOS rods and 8 h ltnks
to the place of begtnntng
con ta ntng 31 acres and 213
rods more or ess
Satd th ree parcels of r ea l
esta te are sub1ect to all
ease ments and h ghways of
r ecord
Deed Reference Volume
236 Page S1 Volume 277
Page 55 and volume 2e1
Page 689 Metgs County
Deed Records

Curb Inflation II
Pay Cash for
I
I
Classlfleds and 1
1
I
Savell I
I

Write your own aa and order by mall with this
coupon Cancel your ad by phone when you get
results Money not refundable

Nam•~~---------------

M~l ssa WOOds Lesley CatT She~ n Blau Nn:ole
BLlfX'h Beth Ew ng Monica Turner
G ad~ stx - Usa Newman K1m Cal\lel1

I
I
I
I

~

I
Addre111----~---- I
I

Shelly Slobat1 Teresa Johnson Tosha 0 Nell
Dt eama Benl.z DeeaiUll henderson
EMR Jnt - Wendy CBney T na Kauff Toni
Rultet

Phon•------------------1

Print one word 1n each
space below Each In
tltlat or group of ligures
counts 8S 8 word Count
name and address or
phone number 1f used
You II get better results ---+--4.::.:..=-=j.......:~-..;_t
If you descr be fully
g ve pr.ce The Sentinel
reserves the right to
claSSifY ed1t or re1ect ~~~~~~~~~~~
any ad Your ad wiU be put
•n the proper
classification if you 11 ___,..._ _._ _,. __....1.--1
check the proper bo x
These cash rates
below
tnclude dtscount

RIO GRANDE - Eight MtiWJ students have
been named to the honor rull for the w1nterquar
t.er at R10 Grande College and Community
Collet~e

In order to qualify for the honor a studerttmust

earn a 3 7$ t~rade polnl11Yel11J(I! Ion a 4 0 ~M:alel

he previous t.enn A
student nust have been enrolled fGr a tn nunum
o( 12 hours for constderatlon and rnw;t complete
all courses
n.e Mludents nan ed to the hsl are
l..ortllll J Dobbins Portland Sandy L Gar
nes Dexter JQtnes B Pattenon Racine Jean
Rit.chhlrt Syracuse Gena R Snowden
for all work taken c:luri"M

----+--+--4--1-'-i

Pomeroy Robtn M Snowden Pomeroy Tan~
nu~ L Sliln:htr Mmersvtlle Rebecc-11 K Wtn·
don Pomeruy

I

(3! 16 23 2tc

13! 16 23 2tc

Srruth Associates Inc to Ohio
Power Company Right of Way Sui·
ton
Harry Krautler Leona Krautter
to Harry Krautter Leona Krautter
Parcels, Chester
Dame! O'Dell Tunothy K O'Dell
to Delta Resources, Ltd 1981 and
Kramer ExploratiOn Company,
Meter s1te agree , Bedford
Nonga F Roberts Robert D
Roberts Dec , Aff1dav1t Pomeroy
James P Roberts lAlla D Rober
ts to Royal Petrolewn Properties,
Inc (pipeline ease and meter s1te
agree ), Salisbury
Adnan R Roberts, Sr Ruletta A
Roberts to Royal Petroleum Proper
lies, Inc (pipeline ease meter s1te
agree ), Salisbury

Market report

Mary Hobstetter
Clerk
Me1gs county
Board of
Comm1sstoners

Mary Hobstetter
Clerk
M etg s Count y Board
of Comm ss oners

Honor roll

795

1000

Present Chargf

A TJPt Key Syste•
Four llna Key Systl!lll
Acl(llt tontl CO/f l/WAT S Line Card
lie.)' Systl!ll Si ng 1 T ne Ttlephont
S • Button Key Tl! tpMnt
}
Ttn Button hy Te ephone
Twhe lluttoo Ke)' Telepl!one
E !ihtten Sutton hy Ttll!phone
Twenty Button Key Telephone
Th rt)' Button le.)' Telephone
!u SJ !Mtler [)]Splay
Hands free Unt t
C011p1nlon Telephone Mandsfree Un t

WAN! ADS

Clyde E Hampton Jaruce HaffiP'
ton to Herald 011 and Gas CO , R1ght
of Way, Salem
Charles Lathey, Donna J Lathey
to Herald 011 and Gas Co Rlght of
Way,Salem
Annie Flerrung to Bruce Flemmg
Debra Flemmg 2 38 acres
Lebanon
J W Suttle, Greta M Suttle to
Blauser Well ServiCe Inc , Rlght of
Way Lebanon
Edna Edwards, Ella E Williams,
W E W1Uiams, Jr to Ohio Power
Company,RlghtofWay Sutton
David E Marcwn, Margaret K
Marcwn to Ohio Power Company,
Right of Way, Salem
Harry E Thompson Dec by Atty
Donald E FaMm AffulaVlt Salem
MannlngD Webster, Aff1dsv1gfor
not1ce of preservation of mterest in
land, Salisbury
Manning D Webster, Affulav1t,
Saltsbury
MaMIDg D Webster, Affidavit
Salisbury
MaMing D Webster, Aff1dav1t
Salisbury
Srruth Associates Inc to Ohio
Power Company, R1ght of Way, Sutton
Harry Krautter Leona Krautter
to Harry Krautter, Leona Krautter,
Parcels Ch~ster

1 95

NC

Rtc onnact Clla1'1!u

10 50

Tr~n-

22 45

P uent Ch"ie

Uy Telephone Syste111s (11)

Proposed Monthly Ret e

10 00

1l 00

Auldtnet Llne

s 15

1500

for ~Itt line t e lepnonu
per t100 st• t Ofl!
hru Tl~e Power Sy pply

Robert E Buck

B~~ .,.

Property transfers

lr~terc011

u

line

o

( 10

s 00

Three line te Je ph one

"

315

7!0

Atrltnt Dht.nce mort tMtn S 111
less than 0 111llts
PBl T'r unt

I

'!00
00

W,l!n uthftctory f u
caol niJ s
present
w~en ct bliMIJ s 110t present o not
utlshctory
C h1~9t fr OIII one st tndard co or cont o head
to tnother standard co or
"'
Act at ng Serw lce Chi ljl! f or the ~octnt r)'
adjustments to connec.t an •!ready tnlta led
cu1tomer own e(l unit wh ich s of 1 swltab e
l'J!II tnd make 1t r eady fo r mobile It ~ u
to the Mor1111l Serwice .t. e•
Ent C t r I!On Exchan ~e
ltudson Aun ln bur~ E~ han9e
Mob e E te n' on Tl!lepttone
nstal ltd tl the
u me tllle 1\ nitta\ ns ta •t lon each
MOb le Eltens on lell!phOfll! added on sepa ate
v 1 t ucn
Atu llary norn 1nd non cont\n ~ous e la)' cont o
t qulpmenl ln~t1l ed at s ame t lilt u nit a
nttallat ion uch
East Cia don hchan11e
Hudson 1\uit t nbur11 hchange
~u J
ary horn and non contl nuo ~o~s 1 ty control
I!CIIi pl'lltnt
lnst tlled on separate ¥ s t each
{ut Clar idon E•clltn9e
ltudton Austinburg hchange
Aua lll ary lamp and cent nuous rela~ control
tQ~o~lpr!lf t tnst a lled at Ullll tt1111 u n tlal
nsta 1tl on each
Au• 1\try l1111p 1nd conti nuous rt a)' CC!n ro
eqy \pme" t
nstalled on uparatt ~11 t
each
Esttb llsh add tiona alphabet cal
st ln9 uch
Rutoral charge f or restor ng str~ ce ~thl c h nn
betn den ed f or non pa)ll"'en t
Change co l or of (l a contrcl nul!
lnsldt: 1110~e of d • control nead
n! lde lfiO~t o f rtd o control head
nsld• lfiO~t or &amp;ntenu
llfi'O~tl of urv ce and equ tPG~e nt
lnstalhtl on or wutntrproof ~u Pf'ltnt
Clb lnet for 1110unt ng rad to !QU l)l'llnt

wl!l be offered for
public sale to the highest
btdder on the prem1ses of
Bank one of Pomerov NA
Tuppers Plams Oh1o on the
23rd day of March 1982 at
lOam
1980 Volkswagen
T~rms of sale cash
Sellers reserve the r ght
to bid and re!ect any and
all btds
(3) 15 16 17
ttem(s)

0

3 00

..

The followmg descnbed

Ol

10

so

12

PBl Tru"-

t es Conn ss on of

13J29 163tc

I Ol

~er

15
10

2 50

1s oo•
10 oo•

c4nt m1y be ~nt tied

C t ~ rk

I 01

3 15

T100 line te lephone

""

100
IS
!0

Serwtce
Butc S.r¥1te1Tone I ~~~tsugt )
In t Serwitt Tone ()~\)')•
htktt Rec:etver
Tone Only
Poc:ktt Reutwtr
~ brltor/Tont
Pocket Recehtr•
foreign Ce t • Office Serv u

45760

( 10)

Mult i Line Tl! ep,ones (11}

""

oo•

Prnent Monthly hle

arld

PUBLIC NOTICE

Case No

Prob ate Judopt

TOOO

00

!100

1

au 11.:

I'll

2~

SJ 50
93 50

15

'enontl Slantllnt Str~lce

1Hrllne DhUnc' o~tr

lS DO+

0000

oo•
1 so
5 oo•

weatheroroor f qw pn~~nt Cttll ne t

a~,~slneu

!0 00

1&lt;00

10

A~11tlltry ~11'1!)
A~•llltry Mor n

""

Presen t Charg t

Jr~~oro~ed ""'bl e hlephone Se w te

llorNl Serwln Aret
11on11111 Senlu Are~"
Single rnanne l Stand1rd Set
Singh! Cllanne l Stand1 rd Se t
Si ngle Chan ne Oel1111e Set
Addlt\Dnel Channel
Addltlonel Channel"
Mobil• hten i on lelepnone
Non Contln~o~oul Rth)' Cunt r ol
Non CPntlnoul Rthy Control•
Continuous lte ay Cont rol

~c lled ules

Pubhc Nohce

Vanc e deceased late of R
D
1 Mtddleport
Oh o

(10)
{ 10)

4 50

prow !Jid
nsu11ell by the CQIII:ltny
Eu t Cl trl(lon h chtngt
Hud\on A~st lnbur.r, hct11n9ts
Stng l t Cn tnne llelu11e Sa t pro¥1ded
1nc1 tnsu ll ed b.)' thl Comoany
liddttlonal Channel ln1ttl ed 1t the sa~~t
t 1111 n n t 11 lnstall t t ons or otnt
14:1dlt tou l channe l each
Eut Clar don C~c han gl
M~dson Auil nburQ EAChlngt

,

so

7

100

Two
ne Telepho•e
T.,o L nt Te ephoneu
Thr ee
ne Tt lephone
Three LIne e epllone•
E11ten ~t an cnarl_lt for ucn
Ttlr!e L ne e tptione••
Ttlrl!'fl Line Power Sul)l:ll y

00

5

tlate for u (l prO!)!lstd

RESERVE TELWiOr.," CI»&gt;PANY

23682
Gene Vance and
Robert E Vanc e R D 1
M1ddl eport Oh o 45760 was
appo tn f ed Co Admtn strat
ors of the estate of G le nn G

10)
{TO)

3 00

chtnnel added o~ uptratl
~ hit uc il
Eut Cl &amp;r don b cnangt
Hudson Ault flbu rg [Kcnange
For remowa l f rom one vehlc e 1nd re nsttl
htlon In 1 d ifferent well cle u t~e same

000

000

"' I

WE STE~flt

Probate Cou r t

Addition~

10 00
000

50'
Cost ••

effect ve

PROBATE COURT
OF MEIGS
COUNTY OHIO
ES TATE OF GLENN G
VANCE DECEASED
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
On February 24th 1982
'" the M e t gs County

bl! f ve (5)

1 00
100
s 00

s so•
so•

on an(l the da e upon

Public Nottce

lnlt\tT Serv ce Or(ler Cht g1
Swbuquent Serw ce Order Ch•rgt
C antr~l Off\CI cnarge
Vhltetton Cht !'
Prlf"ISI Wir ing harge per outlet
Sutton Hlndllng Chtrge per it t

Proposl!d Hon t h x Rate

50'

dur nf.l

0 "'

5 ng e cnannel Stan ard Set
Prtunt MonthlL!!.!!!

ss on

50

1 15

[AchanQes

~~~ idenc t

ICCIU

Touch Cll llnq Strv ce

( 011111

The form of th s notice hH bf!en aoo owed by lhe Publ c U

'195"
20
'3 "45

1 50
100

tnd

Te

~~

DeeC~~r~e

£1c~ange

nlslons t~freot n

!I) 1110dlf ef t o ref ect suc h

pursuant to ordtrs of your

of the

oc a

8 afld

Grant suc h otlltr ano furUier relief to wlll cn Apo

Mobllt Ttlepnont Strvtce
\ to dlrecur1 n

No

htatl Ish an effect

22 45

1 15

Inlt 1 Strvlce Order cnuge
Swtuequent Serv tee 0 ~tr cnarge
Ctntrtl Off u Charge
Vlsltttlon Chtr!'
Premise 'II r ng harge ptr o~ tlet
Station Htnd l ng Ch arg e per ut

00
00

ICC

2 Anoclated

P UC0

n Schl!du e E

P lJ C 0 No

t~l! lnte '" betwen the f ling of t~e Aopllca

~ (0)

4U

sou
40
sou

Mesopotllll a

Ullll!

ng of the schedu es conta ne&lt;l

m41 becll'll! effectt~e

00

00

(}per ttor U!lsted cal to dlrKtory
au Hance per call
Mont h y ,
calls per

so
so

HC
HC•

[)\ ect dltl ca l l to d rectory
an stance per ca I f4)

(-' \

Propo1ed ~nth :t Ratt

so

Pub 1t shed 1\ulllbtr
Publlslltd Number•
L hted N_.llltltr•
Pub \shed filumber ( ~opl!ldal e II 00111 r&gt;gllal e
Rock Crl!ek)
Non Pub\ shed N_.mur ..
Add tlone Lll tln9 Bu s iness
Add tlont l L1st1n9 8 ~\lnen•
Add t onl Lhtln9 Busl nen**
Add t ona Lil t ing Rl!sll!tnce
Add t onal Lis ting Rnldence•
Add t onal Listi ng Ru tdence**
fo rt 9n Lh tlng Bus nu s
ort gn Lhtlng llws nen ..
Fort 9" L sting AI!~ dt ce
Fore gn L sting Au denuu
Spec aI Operator In t ercept
Jo nt User Serwt ce

(10)

Approwe t he prop0$11!d r ates •n d cha ges and tht reguTat ons and

Tar ff

P opo!ed Cha qe

so

"00
s"
soo

Non
Mon
Non
Non

(101

000

1600

niJ

Appro~e tile f

10
10

10

lnsta It on of new or odd t QnG serw ce
l
[nclhldut L fll! Bustneu
2 sa
lndhtdul L ne Res idence
Party Line llus Inns
13 "50
Party lnt: Re s (lence
100
.,t,c~rJ\ttonal Tt ep~ one Set
50
Additional Te ephcne Set
Reconnect\ on of u stin'.l h cl t e~ with no
ChiJI'lgt In lccat on typl! or ~tyle of
I 00
eq u lpnent
50
TrAn sfer of ~e v tl!
00
\'love of telep~one set within same roOIII
300
Mowe of telephone ie l to d ffe ent r oC~~~
50
Ch 1nge n type o sty e of te ep ~on«
Cost
~
othe chanf.ltS

4 00

, eunt ltlnt h y Rt te

Di rectory and Lhtl nq Serwlcu

coo

,l,ppllc•tlon (General t.change Ttr ff

Bw slneu tnd Rn\(le nce

400

"

(10)
(10)

1000

p..-actlcts tffectlng t he

Proposed Charge

~

00 ut
ot , er t:xt ll lfl9t~)

ln~tl
It ton of new nrv ca
Transhr of urvlet
lnsta at on of co or u ep~ o ne ut
lnstt at on of u ~ ce whtn drop w 1
s burled
Hove of tt ltphOnl ut "' t h ~ umt ~ em u
Change n type or Hy e of ulephont ~~
Ch1n;e of non 111ted c non puol tsned
te lephone n~blr

P oposed One T rr.e Ch• qe

s 00

fall~»~

A

K nq sw II le lfld Dorse t Excnanqn

Cor ch (htra

(I D)

1000

hi! Park111an Hu~tsburg Midd lefield
and Eut Chrloon uc flange s
uoenotes ratt for cuUOIIItrs of the K ngsw ! lie 111d Dorset uchangu

8w stneu 1nd Rn1denct

950
950

ll 00

101

Thl! pra'Jff of the Appllctt lon equUt $ the Public Ut 1 t es COI!ftllu on of Cillo

Cen tr al Offi ce Charge
Vhltatlon Cnar!'
Pr t~~~ " Wlrln; h&amp;rge per ov tht
Stat on Htndllng Charge per stt
Huntst~w ,
Par kman . 14es o potM~~h, M1d~ltflt d
Eut Elar 1don hc~l'!i!!

"'so

00
100

1101

•oenott~ rau for cust(llll!r s of

J 00"

In It tl SerY Ice Order Charge

22 25
25

900

s..

300

SilO

"so

S ubu ~u en t Ser• ce Order Char;e

50
50

zz

{10 )
I 01

( 9 ) Ser~ ce connect on cha"91!S are II lll!d on a per occu rrl!f!Ct oash
( 0 ) Proposed chtr!Jts for serwlct conuctlon •ill oe app ltd !used on the 1ctu1l 100rk
done
TM propoltd charges ~!town fer tluSIFW!U or resldl!nce In t 1 st:rwlce order
charje s~b~e q~ent s•rwlct order cnarje centrl l office charge w s tatlon charqe
pri!M se wiring char glil or st1tlon nand ing cnarge w 11 aoply u In otller e~changts
) Charges 11111 y jn aOI!Hion to r@gu u appi !cable itr~lce c ho~fgts

so •

ngs~lllt

Creek. IIOpeat e) Bloomi ngdale

500

~

""5020
"'

00

60'

n t ill Str~lct Order Chtrge
Subseq uent Str¥1te Orcler Cht ;e
Centrt l Office Charge
Vhltatton Ch 1r!'
Prrm !I! Wir ing htr'.le per owtlet
StH on litndl tng Ch arge per set

3 10
160
160

15

I 10

~

95

"'
"'s
50
,,
oo••

'"
'"
ISO

60'

10 00

w11 c h utd proposed scllf:do u

1 35
1 35

00

Trtn\fOriW!r

~ock

150

1 IS

II
IS

Serv!u connect on Charges (9)

so

100

"so

00
100

Pomeroy-Middleport, Oh10

Pubhc Not•ce
Prnent Chtrge

Dor"set )

Color Teltpilone
C~c t ~t w/Oitl llgMt
Hurln&lt;jl hiiP• red Handset
lnd lett or l 9ht
Tel To..ch ltntdence lll'll!
Tel Tou~;,h lus i Mu Lint
Te\ .&gt;TOI.IC~ (xclltn9e Tr~o~nk Lhe
Tel Touch WATS Access line
Sell Public Te l ephone Ser¥lce

l "

1000

Prtnnt Cha ge

~

Rtte per Ct t 1.:
Rau per ca
A

80

I 00**

1

Pty Shtlon Ctl

1 10

00

925

cuHOI'IIer s locJtlon d ractl y to t hl! cust omer s ot ner 1ocatlon
uble pairs billed baud on ~ropoud 1111tllod of c harg ng one cabll! p1 r
cuUOIHr s location to tilt: cen t 1 off ce and anothl!r Ub\11! pair f rtJIII
• off ce to ti'H! cust0111r s ot he
ocat on

frOIII tMe
( 8 ) fltunlber of
fr0111 the
the cent

Prof!(IUd IIIOnthlr htt

00

Buiy LIIIIIP
BuiY lt(fll) Aoc• Creek )
lluuer
Buu:er (liOptda e Bloom ngda e
&lt;nlme
Cnt~~~e (Hoped• e 8 oQI'III ngda e
COIIIIICln Aotdlb e
sunderd Bel
5tJMJrd 8!1\t

"
""'

1100

Sfirwtce Chtr!u for
\ltiSUIIMiidU 1Qu"11!!nt (ll119nllle

( 7 M~111ber of c.b le pairs bl led bued on ~ruent ttethod of , ,.,.9 119 one caole p1 r

'1 00
lO

00

8\0DIII II'ICJCI I e )

Signal Eqw prwnt

~atnerproof

3 41

II!

Hurlnt IIIIJit1rfl Htndut•
Hurl"' l~~pa lred Htnd5tt•

~ S UI

HI

300

II 00111 ngdt l t )
Hurlnt lllllltlred Htndset
Hearlnq IIICltlred Ht ndstt (HOC)edtle

[lclus Ofl

JO

lOO

lftt d1tl
Kt6dset (Hooedtlt

Hudut J1ck

lie~ he

1 10

100

IIDQI!IIngda l t )

Sup~rrwhor

Ll ghtw 9ht
LloiJht• 9ht

Te,..lut !Ofl
Ctble Pt r
lnttroH ce
COI'Itlguoul
Ter-11\llft on
l~teroHICt: Circuit
Cab It Pt r
Jnuroff u
lion cent ig11ous
Off Prt111 ~e Mtl11ge
Flrlt /( 11tle
1\ddlt on•l 1/4 111ile
Off Pr• u PUIRt~e (ltock Crll!lll ltJpedalr
I IOO!t ingdale)
Fl it / 4 Mil e
Mdltlonal l/4 11lle
Ott P 1111\se Mllet;e •
Fl st /4 ra11e
"'-!dlt ontll/4m1lt
Off Pr" u M1Teage
In different bulldlngi UIIM! or connec t ed
prmt " '
flcll 1 10 airline 1111\e or fact ion
Ol fhrent buildings different tnd non
connected premhes I~ '1111! oul 1!11Cha119~ or
serwi ce 1 u
Flnt 14 l'!lile
Additional l/4 111lle
In dHfereflt buildings dlffertnt tncl
non COflnected pr1111hes In d fferl!nt tl~o~t
contiQ~Oul oul e~ch1nge uu
First t2 1l r llne mile or frutlon
Additlont 1/4 alrllnl! ml t or frac tion

610

Tuesday, Morch 16, 1982

Sfirwfct Conntct 011 Ct..rgts (Cont )

..
.

(ltllt: Pa t r~ an~ MlletOI {COflt )

Morch 16, 1982

I

)Wanted
) For Sale
)Announcement
JFor Rent

'

12!13 (3! 2 9 16 13 30 6tr

20

2
3
4

21
22
23

5

r

7
8

9

25
26
27
28
29
30
31

10
ll
12
13

32

u

33

15
16

Gerald Reuter

SKATE-A-WAY

INCOME

TAX

SERVICE
PHONE
9922490
FOR AN
APPOINTMENT
2 25-1 me pel

DABBLE SHOP
POMEROY
OHIO
PH
992 2063
STOP and look at our
fine selecteon of plaster
and ceramecs
- banks
- planters
- statues
- paint
- mtrrors
- spray
-plaques
- brushes
FREEA Sl 00 detatl bru sh
wtth the purchase of a
pamt ktt
3 s I mo pd

Play M1llion
Dollar Skat1ng
Game
Stop In For card
Wed , Fri. &amp; Sat
7 30to10 00
Sun 2 00 to4 30
Ava1lable for
Pnvate Parhes
PH 985-3929 or
985 9996

Mail Thts Coupon with RemiHance
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court St.

CONTRACTIN~
seoul Camp
Chester Oh
• shorl game practice
• Pro Golf lessons
for all ages
• Repair cleanmg
refints hlng,
new
grips
length change, weight

REESETREWCHING
SERVICE·
Water Sewer&amp;Eier:tnr:
Gas Line 01tches
Water ltne Hook ups
Septic Tanks
County Certified
Roush Lane
Cheshtre Oh
Ph 367 7560
I7Jtfc

¥ UNG'S

C. R. MASH
CONSTRUCTION

CARPENTER
SERVICE

Custom kitchens and
appliances
custom
bathrooms remodeling
plumbing, electric and
heattng

-Addonland rtmodtl1n1

.:.auot101 nd pHor 11011
-toocolleworl
-l'llmblnJIIId
tltcl1lcllworl
Wrtt&amp;llmoltsl

V. t. YOUNG Ill

FREE
ESTIMATES

992 621Sor992 7314
Pomeroy Oh10

PH. 992-6011

9 30 lfc

8 10 tfc

Shops th•
'lll 'UT AD W.'•V
w..lUll
A&amp;

54

MISe Merchandlce

CALL

POMEROY
LANDMARK

GAR AGE

TOM HOSKINS

PH 9927201

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

6

_

Insurance Work
Wind Water or Fire

CALL 992 6323
2 19 I mo pd

AU. STEEL
BUILDINGS
Sizes start lrom )Ox24

(Formerly Bare Mel~ I)
278W 'Maon Pomeroy

RICk &amp; Bill Cogar
Owners
BRAKES TUNE UPS
OVERHAULS
DIESEL ElCHAUST
Open Mon Sot 9 5
3 51 mo

614 99~ 2182

I Wtsh to express my
sincere gratitude to my
ne1ghbors who contributed
so generously food &amp; the
lov ely basket of flower tn
the recent death of our
brother Paul Shalo May
God bl ess each &amp; every one
of you
Ethel ~oush
In Memoriiiji

In lovtng m emory of Helen
Farley who passed IJWay 5
years ago March 14 Sadly
mtssed by her nusband
daughters
son
sister s
brothers and fr1ends
3_

Sizes from 4 toe and all
wood buildings 24x36
Insulated Dog Houses

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

Announceme~o"'
ts,__

SWEEPER and sew ng
machine rep~sr parts and
Pic k yp and
supp11es
delivery Oavts Va cuum
Cleaner one half mil e up
Georges Creek Rd
Ca ll
446 0294

Rl 3 BOk 54
Racine Oh
Ph 614 843 2591
License o~ sale
L- - - - ' - - - . . :6:...:.:15:,..t:;.f:.c..J .1 F1shmg
Come "nd see our new ship
ment ol 1982 FISing ~ods
Reels &amp; Lures Spr ng
Valley Trading Co Spr ing
Valley Plaza 446 8025
Mon March I
thru
Wed March 31
Reg UO
Now$17 SO
Reg US
Now Sll 50
Reg SJO
NQW$27 50
S35 Wave Lenth
For longer Hair
NowU9 so
Kay s BtauiJ Sll011

169 N 2nd
M1ddlej)Oft

C.ll992 2725
3 3 I mo

Turkey Hunt ers We have
mouth calls
slate box
ca lis came gear &amp; decoys
In stock Spnng Valley
Trad ing Co Spring Vall ey
Plaza 446 8025
Easter Candy Prices Sl 60
lb Sl SO lb for full case
01 s Craft Supply Spring
Valley Plaza Coll446 2134
Gun Repa ir &amp; Hot Bluing
We stock modern rifles
shotguns &amp; hand guns All

muzzle loading
&amp; acIn
cessones
Best guns
pnces
t;:::=;;::~~~~~====:-t==========:J
Keep This Ad For
MILLER
the area Rtvers1de Gun
Future Reference
SI'OP Rt 7 Athalia Oh
APPUANCE
614 886 5194
PRICEDRIGHT
SERVICE
ELECTRIC
For bulk delivery of
Call Ken oung
SERVICE
gasoline hea ttng Otl and
CALL TODAY!
For Fast Servoce
For all your wonng d1ese1 fuel call Landmark

985 3561
PARTS AND Sf lt'JICE

ALL MUtES
e~UIII!ri

• Drytrs

TEAFOR

• R.-ntas
e Dhpo•• s
• Dltnwashen
• Hot W11ter T 11nk1

VIRGIL B SR
216 E 2nd St

needs, furnaces
repa1r serv1ce and
mstaUat1on
Resident1a I
&amp; Commerc1a1
Call742 3195
3 7 tic

9 i fie

992 2181 Pom eroy Oh

Gun Shoot Ra cme Gun
Club Every Sun startmg
at 1 p m Factory choke
guns only
Racme F~re Dept sponsors
a Gun Shoot Sat mghts
6 30 p m Bashan Factory

r-------------~----~--------------------~ choke l2 ga uges hotgun

Phone
1 (614) 992 3325

•
th s

WILL TALK - On
edge of town property
Has 3 bedrooms bath
woodburner basement
furnace
stove a nd
refrtgerator on level lot
Low30 s
REDUCED - Th s n• ce
property s now below
market pr ce f or a qut ck
sa le J large bedrooms
attiC for storage wr ap
around l arge porcn full
basement and gas f r ed
not water heat M1d 30 s
ON TIME - What have
you for a down paym ent
on fht s one Small gar
den spac e v ew of the
r ver 6 rooms modern
bath a nd kttchen pat1 0
and porch Low 30 s
REDUCED - Excellent
bu It 3200 sq ft of living
space
J bedrooms
br c k
2 111
baths
ceram1c t tte
tamjJy
room 3 car garage Cat
tachedl disposal d1.Sh
1 asher etc Mtd 60s
HANDYMAN - 4 room
house that needs lots of
work but has over J
acres of wood s SS 000
WE HAVE PLANS FOR
NEW HOMES DROP
IN ANO GET YOURS
TELE
992 3176 FOR
DETAILS

Vmyl &amp; Alum mum
SIDING

BISSELl
SIDING CO.
Beautiful Custom
Bu1lt Garages
Call for free stdtng
est1mates 94' 2101 or
949 2860
No Sunday Calls
3 II lfc

BOGGS
SALES &amp; SERVICE
US Rl 50EaSI
Guysville Ohio
Authorized John Deer
New Holland Bush Hog
Farm Equ1pment
Dealer

Farm Equ1pment
Parts

&amp; ServiCe
1 3 lfc

~--GIV!~~L
ANY PERSON who has
anyth1ng to give away and
does not offer or attempt to
offer ony other thing for
sale may place an ad In th is
column There will be no
charge to the advert1ser
1 cat and 3 kittens to g1ve
awey Call446 4243

&amp;

elnsul•tton
• Storm Doors
• Storm Windows
• Replacement
Windows
•New Roofing

Free Estimate
James Keesee
Ph 992 2772
11&gt;1 mo

• Dozers
• Backhoes
• Dump Trucks
e Lo-Boy
eTrencher
eWater
• Sewer
eGas Lines
• Septic Systems
Large or Small Jobs
PH 992 2478
llllmopd

COMPLETE
RADIATOR
SERVICE
From the Small es t
Heater Core to the
Largest R adliftor

Housiny

He. J(/lftlilf tt:rs

•Mobile Homo Slln
•Water &amp; Gas lines
•Spring Developments
' Small Jobs A
Specialty

C&amp;M

35tfn

EXCAVATING
MD

CONSTRUCTION
Th1s be•iullf'ul "nllt-1-.••1
bedrooms 2
kttchen 1,. )(20 fam1ly room has a stone fireplace
14 xiS muter bedroom has private bath and large
walk 1n closet The 5 year old home has oppro• 1680
sq ft of living area gas furnace central vacuum
and Intercom All mllleral r ghts goes w•th the
47 6011 acres a 50 x75 three story barn. and a three
tractor shed Ntce proerty for horses or cattle

REDUCE excess ftu1ds
With F luldex tablets now
available at Towne Pha r
m acy

~=========:....~=========~ M•
xed pupp1es Call 245
5616
J&amp;L BLOWN
PULLINS
2 standtng trees Locust
Map le Call675 5495
INSULATION
EXCAVATING
Vinyl &amp;
4 baby haM st ers Ready on
Alum mum S1dong

Dour I blckhoe ter
vece, water, sewer
ponds,
found1tlons,
reclam.1tlon
Licensed &amp; Bonded
Phone 949 lH3
or 949 2417
3 3 lin

LOST Reg Coli e named
Ang1 e disappeared from
Spru ce St ext Call 446
3561
Lost Doberman Ptncher
mal e black and rust un
clipped ears scar on rear
leg
lost nea r Rutland
Responds to name G
Reward for retur n or In
form at1on 742 2316 Week
days after 8 p m
Los I black and white collie
type male dog In Flat
woods and 5 Potnts area
Reward 992 7382 or 992
3439

~

Utility Buildings

For Farm and
Home Delivery of
Gas
D1esel

Rool Eatoto - Oanorol

Losland Found
FOUND Male Sheepdog
Call to Identify and pay ad
Cal l388 9306

Card of Thanks

•Roof ing &amp; Gutter
•VInyl Siding
•Carports I Pafto
Covers
•Concrete Work
•Room Additions

Ph 949 2160 or 949 2322
7 5 lie

1 14 1 mo

SOUTHEAST
CONSTRUCTION

PERM SALE

PH 742 2753

S68 000 DO

UceJWII l ll.o!ldld.

-----,..-.....;.-----+-----------+-----------'
'
EVERYBODY
MARCH
MAIN STREET

II
I

~-----:::~:~~-~~-------1

&amp; gas hnes

1 mo

Radiator Spec1allst
NATHAN BIGGS
35 Yrs E xper.ence

the 21st 992 6598 after 5
p m 9'12 6598 Must be good
home

1 ma le 8 week old brown
pup 992 3379

___ _,___

Free horse manure
2455

949

TWO standmg trees tor
wood m front of 64 Bur
delle Add lt•on Locust &amp;
Maple 304 675 5495
TWO full blooded Beagles
make good pets but gun
shy 304 675 2075

SMITH NELSON
NOTORS INC.

3 pupp1es Collie Shepherd
Ca ll 304 458 1763

Pomeroy Oh
Ph 992 2174
2 26 tic

I
I

I
I

And Hom e M;untenance
• Rooftng of an types
e S1dtng
• Remod eling
• Free eshma t es
•20 Yrs cxpcrtence

•dump truck
wllmestone

2

tI

I,~

wbltckhoe
•e•cavating
• sept1c systems
• water, sewer

3 12 I mo

JIM LUCAS

'

9

P

OHIO VALLEY
ROOFING

J&amp;F

Chester, Oh.

HOBSTETTER REALTY

I

Senflnei-

Business Services

l7
18
19

1

6

and the prayer s that the
above descnbed estate be
part tt oned
that the n
terests be set off or ordered
sold f tt c annot be p&lt;Jr
t 1t1oned for an allowance
of attorney fees heretn and
costs
You are reqUired to an
swer the Compla nt wtfhtn
twenty etgh t (28) days af
ter The last publ ca f tan of
th s notice wh ch w II be
published once each week
for SI X ~61 succes stve
weeks The last Publicat.on
Will be mac.e on March 30
1982 and the twenty e1ght
C28) days for answer wtll
commence on tl1at date
In case of your fa lure to
answer
or
ot he rwtse
respond as r equ r ed by the
Oh10
Rule s of
Ctv!l
Procedure ludgme nt by
defau ll will be rendered
aqamsf you for the r eltef
demanded tn the Com
pia nl
DATE 2/ 18181
Larry E Spencer
Metgs Co un1y
Comm on
Pleas Cour t

The Dally

H. L WHITESEL
ROOFING
All lypn ot roof work
new or r~tM~Ir eutter and
downspouts,
gutter
cleaning and pointing
All work guoronteld
FrH Estimates
RIIIOftlble Prices
Call H-ard
" ' 226)
,.,
21.0
2 24 ttc

,,

6

Lost ond Found

LOST S1berlan Huskey
(male) mostly d ark gray
with White markings one
brown eye &amp; one blue eye
answers to KeeGee sale to
opproach REWARD Call
446 A9'18 or 4.46 3172
LOST pair of prescription
glasses In black cose
s lver nms with dark gray
tint L0$1 near Wamsley s
at Add1son or at Gino s
Call'-16-9704
FOUND Large male Cot lie
dog tan &amp; while Flotwoods
Rd Call992 3439 to IdentifY
ondpoy od

Found r ed bone hound
mal e 1 year or younger
Hemlock Grove arel! 992
5014

--

-------..

LO ST bl ock &amp; white pup 4
6 weeks old 304 675 6128.
LOST Black &amp; tan mele
Foxhound Last seen on
Red Mud Ridge If seen
please call H 0
Wine
Mill er Ripley wva 304
312 6232
Yard

7

sale___ _

FLEA M a rket Open air
fl ea
m o rket
at th e
Chillicothe Mall Shopping
Center Chillicothe Oh1o
Buyers
and
sellers
welcom e Low rates Satur
day M arc h 20 8 to 8
Gorage Sale 1071 2nd Ave
Gall polls Thurs &amp; Frl
Porch ca rpet
shades
clothin g curtains
more
Items
B g carport sal e Wed
Thurs
and Fn On In
tersecfton of 143 snd 7
Variety Deep fre eze elsa
992 7453

o::-:r

8

-

---

Public S
ilii!" &amp;Auction

- --------

L E Neal Auctioneer Ser
v1 ce
Es tat e Farm
Household M• sc We sell It I
L tcensed &amp; bonded Ohto &amp;
WVa 367 7101

Rick
P e arson
Ex
per enced AUCTIONEER
Estates antiques farm
hou sehold Li censed Ohio
WV Buying antiques 304
773 5785 773 9185

- ---·--=--

wailted_!o_B.li
~:..Y__

WANT TO BUY Old fur
n1ture and A,nt lques of all
kinds ca ll Kenneth Swain
446 3159 and 256 1967 In the
evenings
CASH PAID lor c lean late
model used ca rs Smith
BuiCk Pontl.ac Gallipolis
Ohio Call446 2282
Buy i ng
Go ld
Si l ver
Platinum old cotns scrap
r ngs &amp; silverware Dally
quotes avel labl e
Also
coms &amp; com suppltes tor
sale
Spr!ng
Vall ey
Tradm g
Sprlnli Valley
Plaza 446 8015 or 446 8026
We pay cash for late model
clean used c ars
Frenchtown Car Co
8111 Ge ne Johnson
446 0069
w anted t o buv tunk c~ rs or
wre ck ed cus Phone 388
9303

------ ....

Antique furn1ture old cup
boMds stone 1a rs w1th blue
Wrlt!Mg &amp; old egq baskel s
Ca ll 367 0138
BEDS I RO N BRASS old
tu rn tur e
gold
silver
dolll'lrs wood Ice bo)t'es
stone j ar' s an t1ques etc
Compl ete
househo l ds
Wr ite MD M1 ller Rl 4
Pomeroy Oh Or 992 7711J
Gold
Silv er
st erling
jewel ry rin'gs old co1ns &amp;
currenc y Ed Bvr kett Bar
ber Shop MidOiepOrl 9'12
3476
OLD F URNI T UR E beds
~ron br ass or wood Kit
chen cubbards of all types
Tabl es round or square
Wood 1Ce bo)(es. Old desks
and bookcases Will buy
comp let e household Gold
sliver old money pocket
watches chatns nngs and
etc lnd• an Artlfacls of all
lypes Also buy1n g baseball
card s Osby Martm 9'12
6370
Oouble bottom 12 n plow
6ft pick up d•St l or 2 row
cultivator &amp; 11me spreader
9'12 7275
r

--

Wanted to buy good used
consol e pla no Ca ll 992 3546
or 9'12 2049

______

__,_

Small cement mixer 949
2t63

�10-The

Sentinel

--=-=---· __.___

11

Help

you

Do

~anted

enjoy

__

42

They'll Do It Every Time

fashion ,

'

makeup, jewelry? Then
you ' re a natural for sell ing

2 bdr. trailer furnished,
adults ontv. Brown Trailer
Park, 992·3324.

Avon.Call446·3358.
SA LES PERSONELL
Do to

new

pr og ram

Audio-Visual

rapidly

Mobi"ie'Homes
for RenJ

Mobile home. No pets or
drunks. John Sheets, J 1!2
m ile south of Middleport on
SRI.
.

ex -

panding , firm has several
openings in its outside sales
dept . If you are amb itious
and w ell groomed, we may
have a jOb for you . We ot·
fer :
1. Paid vacation .
2. Prof it shari ng .
3. Pay hospitalization .
4. Flexible hours .
Car
&amp;
hi g h
schoo l
education required . Op·
pOrtunities of $1,000 per
mo. and up . For interview

TWO bedroom trailer,
Ash ton· Upland Road, $150.
plus deposit &amp; utilities .
Phone 304·675 ·4088 .
·
TWO
bedroom , un furnished . One bedroom ef·
liciency . 304·675·2722.
MOBILE home. l/• mi le out
Sandhil l Rd . 304·675·3834.

call between 1PM -7PM
only . 614·446·2096 .
Beauti cians for the Hair
Happen ing . Taking appl ications 9AM till 5PM
MOn . thru Sat

Apartment tor re nt . Cal l

-146-0390.

Sl

Household Goods

SWA IN
AUCTION FURNITURE &amp;
PAWN SHOP 62 Olive St.,
Gallipolis. Recliners $80,
bunk beds SlQO, bu,nkie
mattresses $40. maple
rockers $49, maple dinett
sets from S125 to Sl75,
bedroom suites $1.50, 3 pc.
living room suites $199, 2
pc . liv ing room suites $1.40,
love seats $70, owl lamps
$25, ringer washer s S7S,
dryers ,
Se'Ver"'l
refrigerators,
utility
cabinets, mechanic's toots.
beds. silver stone, TV,s,
woodburners, stero's and
Jots more. Open lOam to
5pm, 446·3159.

reasonalbe . Ca ll-446-3937 .

3 room unfurni shed apart ·
ment, adults only, no pets,
utilities paid . Call446-3437 .

GET VALUABLE trai ning
as a young business person

and ea r n good money plus

some great gift s as a Sen·
finel rou te carrier . Phone
us righ t away and get on
tn e el igibility li st at 992·
2156 or 992·2157 .

Experie n ced
Auto .
Mechanic . E)(perience d in
engine tune-up. Air con·
dition i ng and hea tin g.
Write Box 7.43, Pomeroy,
Oh. 45769 .
Labora t o r y .
Ja c kson
Genera l Hosp ital. Riple y
W.V.A. has an immedia te
()pening tor a ful l time lab .
Tech . Will accept ap·
plica ti on from Certified
CLA, MLT , or MT . Ex·
cellent ben ef its. Contact
personnel assis tan t a t 1·
304·372·2731 Mon . thru Fri.
E .O.E . M · F·H.
Someone to play p iano or
guitar for Gospel Sip ger s.
Ca ll675·5123.
12 --Sitii~liiOnSwin~~=Have room, board, and
la undry tor el der ly person.
992·6748 .

-- ----------·
- - - -Insurance
--- --

SA ND Y A ND StAVER In·
su r ance Co. has offer ed
services for fire in surance
cover age in Ga ll ia County
tor a lmost a century .
Farm. home and persona l
pro perty cover ages are
avai labl e to m ee t individ ua l needs. Contact
Foster Lewis, agent . Phone
379·33 18.
..
15

-·

_ .........

_____

Schools Instruction

Karate the ultim at e in se lf
defence a ll private lessons,
Men, women, B. children.
Instruction thru black belt.
Also avai lab le Karate
uniform s puching and
ki cki ng bags, and protec·
f ive eq uipm ent . J erry
L owe r y
B.
Associates
Karate
Studio ,
143
Burlington Rd., Jackson,
Oh. Ca l1 286·3074.

---·- Wanted
--------to Do

Will do babysitting in m y
home in Porter area . Man·
Fri ., 8·5. Inexperi enced .
Cal l 388·9367 .

21

Bu!iiness
__ Op ~~!:l_nit_y_ _ _

C i gare tt e
Vending
Business. Ca l l304·773·5651.

-----------23 _
Mo!!_e_t!o Loan
REF I NA NCE or purchase
your home . 30 year fi xed
rate. WVa. &amp; Oh io. Leader
M ort gage, 77 E . State St..
Athens, Oh . 592 ·3051.
23

- PrOtessiO.la 1~ - Services

----------

Plano
Tuning
&amp;
Repair .Ca ll Bill Ward for
appoi n tme nt.
Ward's
Keyboard, 446·4372.
C &amp; L Bookkeeping. In·
come tax returns tor in·
dividuals&amp; businesses.
Car ol Nea l446·3862
STA RK S Tree &amp; l awn Ser ·
vice. all types trimm ing &amp;
removaL insured, 304·576·
2010.
and
second
F I RST
morgages, land contracts,
and recei vable s purc hased.
614·446·4113 .

Real Estate==
31

For sale by owner. In Rod ·
ney II , new ca rpe t, large
ki tchen &amp; LR, J bdr .• 1 car
garage, assumable loan 8
1/ 4%
Fa r mers Home
Fi nancing ava ilable, Interest cr ed it subsidy may
r educe payments. Call 256·
1254 after 5:00.
6 rm . house attached
ga rage, good cond ition . 3.45
East Broadway. ( Rt . 35),
Ja c k so n . Pri ce only
$12,000. 286·6305 .
Ni ce 3 bedroom home on .65
acre, easy to heat, With fu el
oil , wood or coal fu rnanc e.
FHA &amp; VA approved .
$26,500 or tak e over
payments at 13% interest .
would consider mobile
home on trade. Phone 3888370.

---·----~--

'13

18

Beauti ful br ick &amp; frame, J
bedroom home w/scenic
view , wood - burn i ng
fireplace, form al dining,
centr al air w / heat pump .
Lanscaped, I acre lot
w/fenced in back yard,
$45.900 . 11% f inanci ng,
sma ll down payment. Call
446·3766 .

Hom es for Sale

4 bedroom house by owner .

71 10 mile from Shad le
bridge. Rt . 35. $37,500. Ca l l
675 ·1325 .
TW0 -3 room apa rtments,
block construction, 304·6755638 alte s.

··-------··--PR ICE reduced, sa le by
owner. 2 Stor y house, 13
r oom s. Idea l for large
fam ily or rental property ,
Needs some repairs. In the
20's as is . Phone 304·675·
7353 alter 5 p.m .
ONE yea r old, new sUb·
division, B1h % assu mable
loan, S68,500. 304·675-1529
alter 5:30 .
ONE owner house, · 1211
Main St. 6 rooms, 2 story
br ick, custom buill. JOH75·
2381 .

NICE well kept horrye with
full basement on 1.2 acres
in r ural setting. 5 min .
fro m Gal lipoli s. Includes 2stor y garage . Ca ll446·8285.

.

1973 :2 bed r oom mobile
home on 2 acres, Jerry's
Run
Rd .,
2 storag e
buildings, 304·576·2637 .
1972 BU.DDY , $3500.
bedroom , 304·895·3562.

2

19811NOEPENDENCE , by
Detroit. Ux70, 2 bedroom , 2
bath, a ll el ectri c, lived in 2
months, $14,900. phone 30.4·
458·1825.
1972 Schultz trai ler, 14x68, 3
bedroom. Ca 11675·3868.
ll

Farms tor Sole

Farm 76 ac r es. Good
house, barn, work shop,
small chicken house. 1 mile
west of Langsville on Sr .
124 . 742·2860 after 4 p.m .
Farm . 27 acres, ~bedroom
hOuse, total electric, heat
pump, ,:entral air, all car peted, new 12 X J6 metal out
building, pond, al l new f en ces, all mineral rights. City
water and spring water.
Wood, good hunting . Close
to new M eg i s mines
opening up . Bea utiful
location for fami ly. Asking
35,500. Must sell, will
negotia t e. Immedia te oc ·
cupancy . 614·9•9·2793 .

j5 - - -i.Ois&amp;Acreige 3 bedroom, l arge garage. 2
bedroom rental. 2 acres
ground . Ma so n. John
Sheets, Jlh south of M id ·
d lepor t on SR I .
Vi ctorian sty le house,
beautiful oak carved wood work, 4 bedrooms. Must
see to apprecia te . 992 ·7723 .
5-room house on l ·acre-lot .
Garden space, gas heat,
Pomeroy . $6,000. 593·3269.
32

Mobile Homes
foi" Sa le

MOBILE
T R I · STATE
HOME S. Gallipolis . Price
r ed uce d, u sed mobil e
homes. CALL446·7l72.
CLEA N USED MOBILE
HOME S
KESSEL'S
QUALITY
MOBILE
HOM E SALES, 4 MI .
WEST , GAL LIPOLI S, RT
35 . PHONE 446·3868.

Farm for Sa le by owner . 40
acres on St . Rl. 218, Only 7
1/2 miles tram town . Call
245-9222 after 6.
1979 3 bed room, 14x70
mobile home with 7)(24 ex·
panda. Also with 22x8 front
porch. rur al water and
FREE · GAS on 6/10 of an
acre . Wil l tak e 12 x60
mobile home a~ trade ln.
$26.900. 367 0576.
One hundred acres with
frontage on SR35 west of
Jackson .
Beau tiful l y
wooded and adjacent to
fully
dev e lop ed
r ecreational f ac il it ies (i.e.
swimming , Canoe in g,
hi king,
much · mor e) .
Several exc iting financing
plans avai lable to meet in·
dividua l needs. A r are opportunity . Ca ll us tod ay at
992·6696 or 614·286-2177'.
Evenings ca ii6H·286·4058 .

12x60 2 bedroom Buddy
m obile home . Set up w ith 2
or 4 lots. gas heat, rural
water, close to town, finan ci ng ava ilabl e. Phone 446· 41 _ .....:.H,_,o,u::o
se"'s'-'l"o,_
' r_.,Rc&lt;e_.,n_,_
t_
1294.
5 room house . 2 bdr., $200.
One chi ld acceptable .
1970 mobi lc home E leona Redecorated, r ang e &amp;
with expa ndo. Large lot in refrig er ator turn. 4.46-4416
M er cervill e. Call .446-0827 after 7PM .
alter 5.

5 room

house, porch,
For Sa le : 1981 Mobile basem ent , $150 mo . Call
Home, 2 bdr ., all electri c, 675·5104.
$9,800 . Cai i446·930J.
For sale 2 bdr . t r ail er . For
more inform at ion call 446·
4316.

2 bdr ., First Ave .• histori c
home, just redora ted . Ca ll
446·2570.

A PAR 'I&lt;ME NT S :
bed room, rent st art s at
S152 per mo. &amp; 2 bedroom
starts at $188 per. mo.
Special rates for Senior
Citi zens. Ca li 446·27.45.
3 bedroom unfurn ished
apart ment . $2 15.00 month,
plus utilit ies. $100 depos it .
Three credit references
requ ired. CQurt Street . Ca ll
4.46·0088 for appointment to
54;1e apartment .
Young professional man
owns mobile home, wou ld
like to share trail er , low
rent, free run of t railer &amp;
own r oom . Call 245-532.4 or
446·7065 alter 4PM, ask tor
Steve.
2 bdr . apt . HUD excepted ,
kitch en turn , utilities partial'l y pd . , excel l ent
loca tion . Cal l 675-5104 or
675·7284 . .

--- ----- · - -

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sofa, chair, rocker, ot·
toman, 3 tables, S500. Sola ,
chai r an d loveseat , $275.
Sofas ~nd chairs priced
from $285. to $795. T abies,
$38 and up to 5109. Hide·a·
beds,$340., queen size, $380.
Recli ners, $175. to $295.,
Lamps from SIB. to S65. 5
pc . dinettes fro m $79., to
$385 . .7 pc ., S189. and up.
Wood table with 4 chai r s",
S2 19 up t o $495. Desk S110.
Hutches, $300. and $375..
maple or pine finish .
Bedroom sui tes · Bassett
Cherr y, $795.
Bunk bed
complet e with mattresses.
$250. and up to $350. Cap·
tain's beds, $275, complete.
Babv beds, $99. Mattresses
or box springs, fu ll or twin,
$58 ., firm, $68. and S78.
Queen se ts, $195. 5 dr .
ches ts, $49 . .4 dr . chests,
$42. Bed fr ames, S20 .and
$25 ., 10 gun · Gun cabinets,
$350.. d inett e chairs $20 .
and S25 . Gas or electric
ranges, $295. Orthopedic
super
firm, $95, baby
matresses, $25 &amp; $35, bed
frames $2(), $25, &amp; S30 . Used
F urniture- bookcase, 5 pc.
dinett set, Living room
suite. Used· ranges and
TV 's. 3 miles out Bulaville
Rd . Open 9am to 7pm , Mon .
thru Fri. , 9am to 5pm, Sat.
446·0322

2 apartments on M a in St .•
Vinton, Oh. 2 bdr .. clean,
large yard &amp; ga rden spot ,
sec. dep. Ca ll 245·5818 .

5 pc . white twin si ze
bedroom suite with 2 beds,
$300. Ca II 446·0696 alterS.

3 bedroom
unfurnished
apartment. 992·5.434 or 9925914 or 304·882-2566.

E lectr ic stove, white, ex .
cond . Call .4.46·39.45 after
5PM.

1 bed room furnished apt .
992'5434. 992·5914 or 304-882·
2566.

54-

Misc. Merchandice

APARTMENTS. mo bile
split
and
ho me s,
hou ses,
P t . Firewood
Pleasant and Ga ll ipoli s. delivered, S35 pickup load.
614·446·8221 or614-245-9484 . A lso taking ord ers for next
year. Call 388·9823 .
2 bedroom furn ished apt..
Ferguson
efficiency apt . Ca ll 675-3000 Massey
bulldozer diese l, 7ft. b lade,
10·5PM, after 5 446·0682 .
wench, good cond., $14,000 .
Ca ll 446·2522 after 5.
4_!__Fur ~~ooms
_

SLEE PING ROOMS and Suba t ank Olmypic 400
li ght housekee pi ng apt., regu l ator , complete suba
Park Central Hotel.
out gear and 18 ft . Gator
boat tr a iler . Call 446 - 16~ 2.
4,-- - SpaCe tOrRent --=._ ext . 332 or 367·7292 .
COUNTRY MOBI LE Home 2 PU LL IN G Ponies, .446·
Park, Route 33 , North of 9604 .
Pomeroy . Large lots. Call
992·7479.
1978 Jeep Renegade, good
cond . 1980 Harl ey Dav ison
47
Wanted to Rent
SL T. fully dressed, ex.
WANTED to rent or rent cond. Ca ll 675·6545.
with option t o buy . 5 Acres
or more with li vable house, Excelsior Oil Co ., 636 E.
will fi x up, will sign lease. Main St.. Pomeroy, Oh io.
Reply to K .E .M . 3301 992-2205.
Robinson St . Pt Pleasant,
wv 25550 .
Reduce safe B. fast with

51

Household Goods

Frig idaire no vent , dry er,
565. Kenmore wahser r ea l
nice, 5110 . Call446·8181.

4 bedroom , centr al air and
l arge
hea t. city water, fireplac e, G . E . washer
unfurni shed except
kit- ca pacitY . G.E . dryer 3 t ern·
chen . SJOO month plus perature's, c lea n, nice.
guaranteed. $100 each. Ca ll
1970 Grego ry · 12x65 . 2 utilit ies. Reference and
256·1207.
bedroom , equip. k itchen. depo si t
r equ i red .
In
Gas heat . Also 10 acres in Raci ne. 949-2293 .
th e country for rent. Has
good water well·free gas. 2 bedr oom house . Ca ll 675· 19 cu . ft . Kenmore, gol d,
automatic ice maker, frost
In the Pomerov ar ea. 3431 .
free, extended warranty,
Financing term s ava·nable.
SJ50 . firm . Less th an :2
991-6093 ..
FOUR
bedroo m,
2618
r s=
ol:d:.
M adison Ave.• large gar - ly:e:;:a:;
1971 Cameron tr aile r .
den &amp; yard, $275. per mon·
12 x 60. S5500 . 3 bedroom,
underpinning, awning, fuel th. First &amp; last months rent
in advance plus S200 .
oil heat. 992·2735 .
deposit, lease &amp; refer ences.
304 ·863·5995. No collect
12X 60 trailer . exce llent ca ll s.
condition. Call 446· 1552 .
Furnished, air cond itionett, 42
Mobile Homes
u nderpin ni1fQ , set up on lot
for Rent
in Mi ddleport.
Centenary, 2bdr ., private
USED MOBILE HOME . lot, ref . &amp; dep., S160 m o.,
adults. Caii614·U3 ·26...
576·2711 .

GoBese Tablets or Cap·
sul es &amp; E-Vap •water pHi s•
Nelson Drug.
2 pr. Sea r s jeans. Worn and
washed once, 33 x 30. SlO
each. 949·2163.
DAN
Wesson 38
357
magnum , 2 barrel s &amp;
carrying case, SJ75 . 16
Channel
sca nn er,
no
chrysta ls, $150 . Di ning
room suite, table, 6 chai r s,
48" li ghted hutch, $500.
Howard Mil le r Grandfat her c lock, West Minister
Chimes, $500 . Al so, 25"
Zen ith color TV. $400.
Ladies 11• carat diamond
ring, si1 e 6, $500 . 304·615·

MOBILE HOME S MOVEO Mob ile home tor rent. 2
Licensed &amp; Insured . Ca ll bedr oom completely fur nished . Call446·9669.
'304-576·2711 .
For sale 2 &amp; 3 bedroom Two-2bdr. mobile homes
trailers, furnished, with Dep. &amp; ref . required. Call
256· 1922.
air. Call 304·173·5651.
ALL E LECTRIC 1r
WIDE ,
2
BEDROOM
mob ile home setting on lot,
readv to .move into. S8995.
10% down, BANk FINAN·
CING AVAILABLE, JO•·
576-2711 .
1~ 1

The

DICK TRACY·

Motorcycles

74

75

~
ID~ j'ill TliAT ICRAIIIUD WORD OAMII
fl!} ~ ~~ ·
byHelviAmoldondBobLM

UnlcrlrnOII lour J u - .
one- to OICI1 IIClUm, to form

Boats an:a'
Motors for Sale

four ortllnary -

.

For sale or trade: 1979 Star
Crafl18 fl . Fish and sk i 140
Hp. Mercury out t&gt;Oard .
Mercury Thurster Trolling
Motor . 992·3083 .
"

CAPTAIN EASY

Auto Parh
&amp; Accessories

e

7:30

I YORRS
rx J

())

(l) You Aaluld
AnotMr Uftt

For It

(J) s.nford end $on

IF ANYTH i toJ~ HAPPENsTO IJS, ~ON, YOU'U. NE'VEit
GET 'fOU R P~IVACY. THE
cOPs- AND REPORTIO'R7
I'll~~ JE LIP HERE QLJIC~Eit
THI\N YOU CAW SAY-

Misc. Merchandice

TELEPHONE poles, 304·
675-6918 .
BROWN eggs, 85 cents
dozen, deliver down Rt. 2 to
Pt. Pleasant once a week .
304·895·3395.
TWO gu ns.
Palomino
mare. 304·675·4209.
55 •

Building Supplies

Building materia ls block,
br ick, sewer pipes, win dows, lintels, etc. Claude
Winters, Rio Grande, 0 .
Cal1245·5121.
LUMBER
1"x6"
an d
1"x8"x6' thru 16' Poplar
sheathing, air dried. Mill
Wood Inc. Yard nellr in·
lersection US 33 and wv 2.
304·273-2522 . M · F 8·4:30,
Saturday 8·1.
Pels lor Sale- DRAGONWYND
CAT ·
TE RY · KENNE L. AKC
Chow
puppies,
CFA
Himalayan, Persian and
Siamese kittens. Call 446·
384.4 after .4 p .m .
HILLCREST KENNEL ·
Boarding all breeds, clean
Indoor-outdoor f ac ilities .
A lso 1\KC Reg. Dober·
mans . Ca ll446·7795.
BRIARPATCH KENNELS
Boarding and grooming .
AKC
Gordon
setters,
English Cocker Spaniel s.
Call 388·9790.

YORkSHIRE
Terri er
pups, 4 months old, a ll
shots, reasonable price,
call 304·675·3638.
57

Musical
lnsJruments

SIGMA Guitar, like new
condition , 5250 .00. Ca ll 388·
9809 .
For Sale or Trade_

59

Will trade full size bed for
bunk , twin, or half size.
Cal l 367·0697.

Farm Equipment

"

Grave ly Tractors. purchase a new Gravely in
March and get a special
early Spring discount, in
addition to a FREE rotary
plow or tiller . Outdoor
Equ ipment Sales, Jet . Rt . 7
&amp; 35, Gallipolis . Ph . 446·
3670. Open weekdays 9 to 5,
Saturdays 9 to 1.
5 HP garden tiller prac ·
ti ca lly new . Ca ll367·0602 .
63

Livestock

16 pure bred
polled
Hereford cows: 985·3882 .
64

1977 Dodge Aspen, 6 cy l,
$1900 will negotiate, good
condition . 992 ·5544 .
HARTS · Used Cars, New
Haven West Virginia . Over
20 less expensive cars in
stock .

MI XE D hay, Jack Roush,
304-882·2079.

........ . .........
•

.L .

.....

,

'

.... . . .

.

Auto for Sale

1972 Dodge Dart 2dr ., hard·
l op, V·6, asking S500. Call
446·8013 .
79 Rabbit 4 dr. custom
diesel , air, new t ires, w ill
consider trade . Call U6-

2JOO.
1982 Plymouth Reliant.
A . T .,
AM· FM
stereo,
digital clock, 35 mJ)g, under
warranty . S7000 firm. 992·
5628.

()) Nlltlon.l Oeog111phlc

Auto Repair

Duality Autobody &amp; Paint
work . Professional custom
paint work on motorcyc les .
Auto Trim Center, 446·1968.

~OVIE:
'The
MM'

BORNLOOER

GOVERNMENT
SUR ·
PLU S
CARS
A ND
TRUCKS
many sold
through loca l sa les, under
5300.00. Call 1-714-569-0241
for your directory on how
to purchase. Open 24 hours.
1981
CHEVY
Malibu ,
power steering. power
brakes, air, low mil eage,
must sell , 304-895·3618 .
1975 PONTIAC Astra . no
rust, 304-675·314•.

Men'
(J) •

-

-·--~-----

----

Truck's for Sale
-----------

1978 Dodge pickup with
cap., 6 cvl. standard . Ex·
cellent cond. Ca ll367·0457.
1977 Ford pickup, good
cond. 6 c yl. Call 446·4554.

ST VCCO PLASTE RIN G '
t extured cei l ing s com merc ial and residential,
free . esti mates. Ca ll 256·
1182.

Spec ial March and April
only . Gene's Deep St ea m
Cleaning. Scotch Gaurd .
Free estimate. 992-6309

1975 Ford 112 pi ck up with
flat bed . 50,000 miles. 11400.
949·2890.

RON'S Television Service.
Special iz ing in Zenith and
Motorola, Quazar , and
house ca ll s. Phone 576·2398
or .446·245 4.

7.4 FORD pickup with cattle
racks~ $1200. phone 304·675·
3628.
73

Vans&amp;4W.D.
---------.----

Jee p CJ5, 6 c yl. , 3 spd ..
loc k -in hubs, high back
bucket seats, AM· FM 8·
track, roll bar, 12)(15 tires
with wh ite spoke rim s, runs
good &amp; easy on gas. Looks
sharp, pr iced to sell . Call
367·7671 or 367·7560.
79 Ram Charger, 4-whee'l
d~ive . Ca ll 388 ·9991 or 388 ·
8623.
1974 Jeep CJ -5, ex . cond .
Call367 ·7804.

'I•

1980 CHEVY Sc ottsdale,
ton, 4·wh ee l drive, 4 speed,
AM ·FM, regular gas, 30,000
miles: good shape. 304-JJJ.
5150.

74 BLAZ ER, V·8, auto, PS,
PB, lock out hubs, 15)(38
motor, lift kit, headers. r oll
bar, AM·FM 304·675·5214 .
7~

Motorcycles

All used bikes reduced at
Betz Honda, check with us
before you pay to much.
Call 446·2240.
Harley par ts &amp; accessori es
now at Custom Cycles.
LTD.
Rt .
1 Nor t h,
Gallipolis. Open evenings,5·BPM . Ph . 446·7346.

1975 Honda 175, good cond .,
$350. Call446·•219.
1979 Honda CBX silver
sport fairing , 6 cyl .. hooker
header, SJ,OOO, exc . cond.
Call446· 172•.
1974 Honda 360 in A·l cond.
Will sell cheap, Call 446·

4395.
1973 Harley Davidson.
Recently overhauled. S500.
9·9·2163 .

2 mobile homes for rent. 2
bdr. each, fullv furn. ,
adults only . Call446· 4110.

HARLEY Davidson motor cycle, 304·675·4824.

All electric mobile home, 2
bdr., adults only, no pets.
Call367·7438 .

1981 HARLEY Davidson,
low rider, 80 cu . in. 1,340cc,
2500 ·miles, '304-675·6138
day, or 675·6071 alter 6 p.m .

*l'ttY ARE Y' lf~IM' YOU JUGT
ABOOT 110¥1 GAFE IT 16
'(()(.It TRAP 5llUT
A~OUNO HERE? ARE '!00
~D l'ttSifEit
HIOIH' FROM SO!ffOOE? MY OOE5n005!

9:00 •
(I) &lt;ll a...t M....tck
Maverick' a aweetheart is

Gift ot ut.'

Cll Amari...., Pllvhouee

ALLEYOOP
A PEN LIKE TWIS IS NO P~ACE
FOR THOSE LiTTI.E GuYS!

9:111

e C1J
Comfo!t

.GASOLINE ALLEY

demic claimed 20 miNion
victims.

CIJ Bamataln/Boothovon

'Symphony No. 7 In A Ma·
jor, Opus 82.' Leonard
Bernoteln and the Vienna
Philharmonic
eccompeny
dramllic reedings by Maximillen Schell and M.,;enne
Nentwich which ponray
Beethoven end hit relation ship with women. (60
min .)
10:30 ())Bing out AmoriCII
(I) TB8 Evening Newa
10:411 (HJ Hltilhcodt

qotoo
well?

11:oo • Cll Cll rne
@Nowa

WINNIE

HOW TO THANI&lt;

ASSOCIATING

l ONLY HOPE IT IS ,.,.,7 7DO
tArE! HE 15 CA~LE OF THE
MOST P£YIOU5 MEANS OF GET·

YOU! YOU'VE

wiTHOMAR

· TING WHAT HE WANTS!

~E~IOR

PEREZ,

l DON'T KNOW

PAINTIN G-i nterior , ex ·
·ter ior. L .M . Johnson , 304·
675 11 28 .

OPENED MY
EYES ...

--------.- ------·
-. -

.. ABOUT THE

PAN6Eil50F

JA8AR.'

IN7'1MIPA7A?N,

THEN I

VIOLENCE. //tAcK- MU5THU~Y
MAIL, HM'ASS- --· WH/1.£
THEK£15
MENT. ., THEY
$7/LJ.
ARE A/.l

CIJ &lt;m •

(J) Another Uftt
(I} MOVIE: 'Arry Which
Wrty You C..'
(I) MOVIE: 'The Bamboo
Prtoon'
(J) lonny HIH Show
(J) Allee Vera, Alice
and Flo go to a olnglea bar .
(I) Dick Cevott Concluaion. Gwen Verdon ia the

e

HIM.

CARTER'S PLUMBING
A ND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine
Phone 446·3888 or 446· 4477

~11 .

()11

e

MOVIE: 'Swimmer'

iDI Nlghtllnt

12:00 ()) 8urn8 • Allan
(J) NfthdiM
(J) .MOVIE: 'McCloud:

83
_E~~~a!!'!.9 . __ ~
Gallipolis Diver sified Con·
st . Co. Custom dozer &amp;
backhoe work . Specia l
farm r ates . Call us for ' r ee
estima tes. 446 -.4.440.

eThe

AIN'T VOU GLAD
YOU MARRIED A
GO-GITTER, PAW?

- Electrical
-·- --

- ~-~e!!"~9~~t!~':l - SEWI NG M achi ne repairs.
service . Authorized Singer
Sa les B. Service Sharpen
Scissors . Fab;ic Shop,
Pomeroy . Y92 · 22.7~ .

'

JACKS REFRIGERATIO·
N Air conditi on service,
commercia l . in du strial.
PhOne 882·2()79.

''

YEP·· 60 61T MY
CORtJ-SQUEEZIN'5

(I) PBS Let&lt;~ Night
iD1 F~ lol8nd Two
women get the chance to
apend half • mlllon dollart
in 48 houro and a hunter
leoma what it's llko to be
huntod . (II) 180 min.)
1 2:30 • Cll Cll Uta Night with
' o.vld l.ettMmln David Ia
joined by cllnouur expert
Jim Jenaen. (80 min.)

e

()) Jeclc lenny Bilow
(J) F~ lol8nd Two
womtn get tho choince 10
apend half • million doflora
In 48 hours · and a hunter
leoma what it' 1 Ike to be
huntod. (II) (80 min.)
1 :00 ()) I Married Joen

I'

. •·
- - .. -~~n~r~J~HiUJ.i~i ~
-~ ·

JONE S BOY S WATER
SERVICE . Ca ll 367·7471 or
367 ·0591 .

,_.. Avonuo Rua-

dorl'

BARNEY

eGJN-

PEANUTS

J IMS Water Service . Ca ll
Ji m Lanier, 304-675·7397.
Camp Conley .

A simple convention
By Oswald Jacoby

••d Alan Soata1

Bill Root and Dick Pavlicek are two of the nicest
people In bridge or In anything el!e. Thus, they give
the late Albert Morehead
credit for ·this simple artlff.
cial convention. The /ump to
five of an unbid su 1 when
you are In an uncontested
auction aslts partner to show
first· or second·round con·
trol or no control as the case
may be.
Bill and Dick are too
modes!. They deserve most
of the credit for this. It Is
simple although the chance
to use It occurs so seldom
that any ordinary player Is
likely to forset It Defore be
gets a chance to use it. Let's
see It at work.
North might well open
with a forcing bid, but he
elects to bid jusl one spade.
South makes a normal twoheart response.
North looks at his hand
and sees that he wants to be
In seven If South has first·
round diamond control, In
six If South has IM!COnd-round
diamond control and just In
five If South .can't take
either the first or second
diamond lead.
South. looks at his two little diamonds and makes the
cheapest bid he can to show
that. It _happens to be five

1 :30 (J) My IJtllo Margie
(J) MOVIE: 'The Electric
1............
(I) MOVIE: 'Olin Fury'

9! ~ :· ~ ~upholsf!r:i ===:

2:30
3:00

. 3:11

•

..,

3:30

~ ...... .-.....
CJIII11.w

Ufuf llll.y

n

mother
5 Old Gr.
length Wlit

WEST
tQt

us
.....

.,

EAST

•u

t!OH

tKQ107Z
tAJa&amp;
tJHS
.101&amp;42
SOUTH .

•a
.QJi081

t84 .
.AKQI
Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: North

Woot

It
5t

Eut
Pw
Pw

Pau

Pan

Norlll

.Openinslead:

tK

hearts. If South held a sin·
gleton diamond or the king
6e would bid five spades
while with first-round diamond control be would 10
one more slep and bid five
notrump.
A beautiful convention for
anyone who will remember ,
lt.
(NEWSPAPER !NTERPRISil ASSN.)

Antelopes'
playmates

DOWN

10 Detail

I Sarah or Vera

II Bad buys

2 Ring-shaped
Island

13 Chicago

3Useful

district,
with "the"

support

(Lat.)
15 Popular
street name
Tlmorese coin
17 Edward,

ta

to pals
18 Calumny
%0 Tennlnus

4 Elec. unit
5 Splinter
8 G. Martinelli,

YHlerday'o .Auwer '
18 "What - Z5 Exasperate

this has
been ... "
19 Never,
e.g.
7 Totallabbr.)
for bard!!
8 Help
Z2 Long walk
9 Convenanl
%3 Hoosegow
12 Soaked
t4 Served

27 23 Acr0811
was one
%9 Retinue
30 Saltpeter
31 Pigment
38 Townsman
37 Bankroll

ZIA~~~~tknatel~~~-+~

Z2 Abhor

Z3 "" .ml(lhty

- has
struck out"
25 On high
Higher than
Z7 Junior's .
vehicle
Paddle
2!11tallan
seaport

za
za

32Ullmann
33 Colorado
Indian
34 Morrow
3S Bring out

37 "Dance Me, Henry"
38Declalm

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work It:
AXYDLBAAXR
II

LONGFELLOW

One letter almply otanda for another. In thll umple A Ia
uiOd for the three L '1, X for the two O's, etc. Slncle letten,
apoatropheo, the lencth and formation of the worda are all
blall. Each day the code letters ore dU!erent,

CRYPTOQUOJ'E8

s
.

1-lHI

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
39 Israeli port
I Buddha 's
CO Constrain

mNewa/8ltll orr

2:o0 ()) 81 liaiUI fa!Mr ·

NORTH
UIJIII
•AKTH

tl£'···~-

14 Completely

(J)NMhvllloRFD
11:30. (I) (!) Tonight Show
Johnny II joined by Richard
Pryor. 180 m1n:1

FAMILIAR TO

Plumbing
_____ &amp; ~ea!!_'!j__ _

MOWREYS Upholstery Rt.
1 Box 1:2.4, Pt . Pleasant, 30.4·
675·4154.

for

10:16 (J)
Flahbock:
Oreal
Plegue In 19t8 an epi-

I think Gretchen
has a
crush

Dancinq
class
didn't

CARPENTRY,
ho m e
building B. r emod lin g,
plumbing. e l ec tr ical.
mas~nary , 304·675·2440.

TRISTATE
UPHO LSTE RY SHOP
1163 Sec . Ave .• Gallipolis.
446· 7833 or 446·1833.

.

(I) (!) Fllmlneo R'*'
Field finds out how his
father waa manipulated . by
T~us and Con11ance be·
gino her afle~ with Michael ·
~one. (80 min .)
CIJ • ()I ~ to Hart
[Cio10d Captioned)

LOCK SM ITH
Service .
Residenti al, automotiv e.
Emergency service. Call
882·2079.

as

cro..

Too

10:00 •

water wells. Commercial
and Domestic. Test holes.
Pumps Sales and Ser vice .
304-895 3802.

84

' Great American Founh oi
July and Other Oloa11ers .'
Jean Shepherd's original
teleplay doplcto the bitter·
swaet pengo of growing up
In the late 1930a and eerly
19401. (80 min.} (Closed
Captioned I
(HJ Klngotan Trio and
Frtanda: Reunion The original Klngoton Trio--Bob
Shane, Nick Reynolds and
Dave Guard- pertorm together lor the 111'11 time in
more than ·20 yearo. 190
min.)

9:30 Cll

RINGLES' S SERV ICE ex·
per ienced mason. roofer,
carpe nter,
e lec tr icia n,
gene r a l repa i r s and
r emode ling . Phone 304 -6152088 or 675·4560 .

-

BRIDGE

8nd

1!10

F &amp; K Tree Tr imming.
stump removal . 675· 133 1.

82

ut. On .Eerth

killed In an Indian ombuoh.
min.)
()) 700 Club
(J)
•
!BI ThrM' I
Comlllfl\l (Ciosad Captioned!
D . (J) ()I MOVIE: ·Tho

French Ci t y Pa int ing
r esidentia l &amp; com mer cial.
inter ior , exter ior, paper
&amp;
t ext ur ed
h angi ng ,
ceil ings. Call 367·7784 or
367· 7160.

1978 Ford 3/4 Ton pickup.
1973 Plymouth in exc . cond .
Morri s
Bl aze r ,
Sa nd
Hollow Rd .

Jumbtllook No.~ COftlllning 110 pullttt, It IVIIIIblllor S1 .H pottpllcl
frOm Jurnttat. c:Jo thlt MWIPIJ*, Box 34, Norwood, N.J. 07148.1ncludt your
name. .cldrau,
code •nd m.1h chec:kl
ablt to Newt
a.

o.y.

Varietion.' .
David Attenborough opotlighta the anteeters, moles,
bats, . porpoiMa
and .
whaiH, all of which seem
to be daocended from a
tiny prehlotoric ahrew-like
mammal. (80 min .) [Cioaed
Coptlonedl
8:30 Cll • !BI Leveme Md
8hltley Carmine bolts Into
prominence
al1tr being
IlNCk by lightning, [Closed
C.plloned)

ANNIE

PAINTING
inter ior and
e)( t erio r . plumb i ng ,
roofing, somfi!' remodeling.20 yrs. ex p. Call 388 ·9652 .

Bell Contracting Gener al
plumb ing service, home
remodeling &amp; r epa ir s. Free
estimates. Call 446·4002 .

(II)

"Theme

- -------81
Home
_ _,1"-'m"'~~~e me'!!!._ _

1978 Cheyenne Blazer, ex .
cond., lots of extras. Call
256·1397 or 446·4835.

1979 Internati ona l dump. 6
cy l inder . DT466 . Singl e
ax le, 2 speed with air pick
up cheeter . 14 ff dump. A ll
steel belted radial tires,
good condition . 10.00 by 20
tires, 8 new extra tires .
65,000 actual miles. 742·
2505 .

H_.,

YoSiorday'sl Jumbles: EPOCH HAREM CASKET MOSQUE
Answer: Made an lmpreaalon on the bridle path.
A HORSESHOE

reunion ne..-ty cotta them

servJees

CAPTAIN STEE MER Car·
pet Cl ean ing fea tured by
·Haffelt Brosthers Custom
Carpets. Free estim ates.
Call446·2107.

(Answers tomorrow)

eA.J (J)
Ill Simon • Simon
. and Rlck'o high school '
(])

1975 CHEVROLET 350
automatic. good running
condition, 5650.00, 304-675·

7'1.

!BI

their llvao. (80 min .)

M arc um
Roofing
B.
Spouting. 30 year s experi ence, specializi ng in
built up roof. Call 388 ·9857 .

)
Mrtlr: AT A (X I I JFOR (I I I I J

Jenny Plccalo 'o gossip·.
gets her into trooble.
[Ciooed C.ptiontd)

1977 Sfarcratt fold out ca m ·
per. sleeps 6. e)( . cond,
$1,400. Cal l446·3040.

1975 VW Ra bbit, good con·
d itio n , 35 plus MPG ,
$1895.00. Ca ll, 304-675-4327
after 7 p.m.

1455 .

Stunt

(]) MOVIE: 'The Quiet

Motor Hom e
&amp; Campers

79

Now orrange the Cln:tod loners lo
form the aurpriM answer, 11 sug·
geattd by t~ above cartoon.

ond Mtadowfar1&lt; Lemon .

1976 PINTO, 304-675·5995 or
675·2247 .

Hay &amp; Gra in

Hay tor sale . Call256· 1922.

71

Auto lor Sale

11

NU"T I~ NEVE~
i.II&lt;.I!L..Y "TO l!le.

Brenda Lee, Paul Willlama
(80 min,)

S4

WHAT A DICTIONAf(y

·.. I tJ

her olotero are joined by

For sale two Chevy motors .
327 lor $50, 292 lor $75. Ca ll
245-9578 .
17

., STELED

I TRYSAPt

I ~~Dogo

. _
the Millie
8:00 •
Cll
ll:i a.n..r. '
Manchll end the Men·
dNII Sra.te Batbora and

0 ~.--. ...

.
...
tJ
1

(X)

(J) • (J) Femily Feud
(!) .._... end Shirley
(I) Bu.ain t I I Report
&lt;ID ·RlcNnl Slmmono

Ford 300, 6 cyl . engine . Call
379·2761.

·

.

EVENING

Windshield broken? Call
Southern Glass. Insurance
claims welcome, free
mobile service available .
Call446· 1011.

I1-~=========~;::=========W

11

Television f}l}f.\.ft
•
•
VIewmg
I DYNOW I
. I tiY I
TUESDAY
·=- -.. .
3/16/82

Part interest in 19' Baja Ski
boat. 175 HP Mercury, all
ski, accessories. $700 down
plus $31 . per mo. payment.
446·7265.

2 00
hay, $ . ba le. 304 .
r ---- :30:4:-6:7:5:-3:76:.;9:.::::..l36:2:8~·=:.:.======~ OATS,
576·2394.

:====:::::::;:::=::::::===

---------For sale 1981 Honda CR80,
Elsinore. Phone 895·3599 .

Plastic Septic Tank s. State
a nd county approved. 1.000
3 room furnished apt . ga l. tank, price $340. Other Good clean horses for sale.
Call 388·8623 .
Util ities pai d . 356 N . 4th . St. sizes in stock, haul in
Middleport, Ohio.
pickup tru ck . Call ""' ""'
5930, Jackson, Oh. RON POODLE GROOMING .
Call Judy Taylor at 367Furnished 1 bedroom apar - EVANS E NTERPRISES
7220.
tm ent
in
Mi dd l epor t .
Utilities included . Deposi t , For Sa le Beautiful fl oor
model console stero, AM- TWO mice &amp; cage, $10.00. 7
. no pets . 992· 7177.
FM a-t r ack &amp; record Labrador Retriever pupplayer, $300 .00 . Ca ll 379· pies. Cah't be regi stered,
Apartments. 675-5548.
23 14 .
S25. each . 304-675·3628 .

e-eFEbaRdiSI!

5 rm . house in Gallipolis.
1979 Winsor 14x70, 3 bdr .•· Call446·3945 after 5PM . ·
microwave, stero, wood
floor in kit chen, full bay
5 roo m house w ith bath .
window, furniture. S1 4,995.
Large lot nea r Raci ne. 99:2 ·
Cal l446·3547 .
5858 .
1970 Hillcrest M ob ile
Home. 12 by 65 . 53500. 992·
7559..

2 bedroom unf urnished
apartment in Crown Citv .
Ca ll256·6520.

rK_rr_·_N_'C.;.A..;.RL~Y;.:LE;;;;_"'_ _ _ _ _...:;by:.Larry::::!..W:.:.rlgb:::::;
·t

GOOD
USED
AP ·
PL I ANCES
washers.
dryers,
refrigerators,
ranges .
Skaggs · Ap ·
pliances, Upper River Rd.,
beside Stone Crest Motel.
446·7398 .
Coffee table &amp; end tables.
Must see to appreciate,

Mardi 1

March 16, 1982

Ohio

LHVSB

IWEZW

WSM

ZEBK
BWV

EM

B WS B

LHVSBVMB

TVJ

MOVIE: 'Valutt fDr

~.:;. lennr lhouu

Cll MOVIE: 'Ciwlle CMn
IIICI tho C.. uf tho
QNean a.-.· .

..:00 (J) I Married Joen •
4:30 ())My~ ......

SJX
IRTVJ . ISAB
JWEBTSJ
Yelterday'l CryptGquote: WE CAN DO MORE GOOD BY BEING GOOD, mAN IN ANY OTHER WAY. -ROWLAND HilL

•'

�Tuesday, March 16, 1Yo•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

'4

Five die as tornadoes hit central Plains

Area deaths
Virgil Dunfee
Vlrgtl Dunfee, 80, Coolvllle, died
Tuesday morning at CamdenClark Memorial Hospital In Parkersburg following a short Illness.
He. was bam at Little Hocking, a
son of the late Ruben and Jennie
Conley Dunfee.
Mr. Dunfee was a member of the
Torch Baptist Church. He was retired from the Parkersburg Steel
MUI and he had worked as a carpenter during his career.
Surviving are his wife, Pauline;
two sons, Howard (BUI). Coolvllle,
and Harry of Morrow; three brothers, I)oyd, Earl and Merrtll, aU of
Little Hocking; five sisters, Ellen
Alklnson, Mlldred McComas and
Betty Holcomb, all of Little HockIng; Myrtle Buckley and Gertrude
Wagner, both of Belpre.
Services wUI be held at 2 p.m.
Frtday at the Torch Baptist Church
wtth the Rev. James L. Hodge and
the Rev. Harold Lemley officiating.
Burial wlll be In the church cemetery. Friends may call at the White
Funeral Home In Coolvllle anytime
after 7 p .m . Wednesday.

Dorothy L. Veith
Mrs. Dorothy L. Veith, 63, Route
1, Cheshire, died Tuesday morning
at Holzer Medical center following
a llngerlng Ulness.
Mrs. Veith was born June 15, 1918
at Cheshire, a daughter of the late

By The A.ocbUed Pre.

Albert R. and Bessie G. Hood Fl!e.
Surviving are her husband , John
R. Veith; a daughter and son-Inlaw, Dorothy Ann and Donald W.
Leach, a son and daughter-In-law,
Carl R. and Sandra Veith, all of
Cheshire Route 1; seven grandchildren, two great-grandchlldren;
six sisters and brothers-In-law,
Evelyn Matthews, Cheshire; Margaret and Guy Prtddy, Rutland;
Marte and Kenneth Ralph, Cheshire; Kathryn and Delbert Russell, Mason, W. Va.; Ermaglne
(cq ) and Grant Russell, Wllllamsburg, Pa. , and Dorts and Franklin
Cook, Point Pleasant, W. Va.; five
brothers and sisters-In-law, Albert
Raymond and Myrtle Flfe, Cheshire; John and Madge Flfe, Lake
City, Tenn. ; Lewis and Dorts Fife.
Cheshire; Roscoe and Betty Flfe,
Middleport; Clarence Fl!e, Pomeroy. Several nieces and nephews
also survive.
Mrs. Veith was a member of the
Silver Memorial Free Will Baptist
Church at Kanauga.
Services will be held at the Sl\ver
Memorial Free WW Baptist Church
at 2 p.m. Thursday with the Rev.
Andrew Parsons,· assisted by his
sons, Dennis and Jack, officiating.
Burial will be in Gravel HU1 cemetery at Cheshire. Friends may call
at the Rawllngs-Coats-Biower Funeral Home from2 to4 and 7 to 9 p.m.
Wednesday and until noon Thursday at which time the body wlll be
taken to the church.

'

Meigs County happenings
Display planned

Emergency runs

. Two emergency calls were ansA display of aU kinds of handwork wered by local units Monday, the
such as embroldertng, needlepoint, Meigs County Emergency Medical
crocheting, crewel, knitting and Service reports. At 10: 18 a.m ., the
other related types Is being planned · Pomeroy Unit took Ethel Stewart
tor the Meigs County Museum.
from Pomeroy CUff Apartments to
The articles displayed need not Holzer Medical Center and at 10: 27
be antique and aU women of the a.m ., the Syracuse Unit took Dora
county are invited to take part. Per- Heaton from the Pomeroy Health
soMe) from the Meigs County Plo- Care Center to Veterans·Memortal
neeer and Historical Society wtUI be Hospital.
at the museum from 1 to 4 p.m.
Wednesday to receive Items from To end marriage
those who wish to take part In the
Da vld R. J enklns and Petra M.
display.
Jenkins have flied tor dissolution of
A committee in charge of the distheir marriage In the Meigs County
play includes Nancy Reed, Clara
Common Pleas Court.
Lochary and Annie Chapman.
An action for a reciprocal support agreement has been tiled In
Veterans Memorial
the court by Diana Kay Deeter
against Ralph Benton Wells.
Admitted --E dgar Greenlee,
Pomeroy; Ruby Halliday, Ru- Thursday observance
tland; Rolande .Brown , New
Meigs countlans wlll observe
Haven; Mary Divers, New Haven;
Agrtculture Day 1982 this ThursDora Heaton, Pomeroy; Mary Co- day, according to spokesmen for
ates, Minersvllle; Michael Stahl,
the central Trust Co. and Federal
MiddlepOrt; Jennifer Newman,
Land Bank Association, both of
Pomeroy; ·Norma Hawley,
Gallipolis.
Middleport.
Discharged--Fred Larkins, Lori
Mullins, Michelle Stahl.

Inspection...

AORICULTURE DAY
THURSDAY,
MARCH18

(Continued from page I)
businesses.
Carter said cleanup efforts would
begin in Grand Rapids today as the
water leve l drops.
"We're looking at a decrease of
about a foot In the (Maumee ) river
level, and we're planning to start
going Into buildings and wash them
down, " Carter said. " We're not expecting another water level as high
as before."
·
Breckler said cleanup efforts will
be undeJWay In Defiance, too.
Na tiona! Guard troops remained
on duty In Grand Rapids to protect
against looting and mont tor traffic
coming Into the · community
southwest of Toledo.
Meanwhile, federal inspectors
were preparing to survey the destruction as soon as they could enter
the damaged areas.
An Ohio Disa ster Services
Agency official, Davida Matthews,
said Monday that prellminary
damage estimates from Paulding
County showed $874,&lt;XXl damage to
prtvate property and $1 million
damage to public bulldlngs, sewer
systems, brtdges and roads.

National Guardsmen patrolled
several towns in the central Plains
today after more than 20 tornadoes
swept through the region and k111ed
at least five people.
Downed branches and power
llnes caused by Monday nlght' s tornadoes left some areas virtually
inaccessible.
"I've been here since '55 and this
is the worst one I've seen," Crawford County Undersherlf! Lynn
Fields said of the tornado that
struck the town of Mulberry, Kansas, Monday night.
"It was a blgsonof a gun," Fields
said. ''Looking at it, you couldn't
see anything but it."
One man was k111ed in the Mulberry twister. Two others dted in
Kansas, one In Oklahoma and
another in Missouri.
Gov. J ohn Carlln Issued an emergency order sending a National
Guard unit to patrol Mulberry ·on
the Kansas-Missouri llne about 90
miles south of Kansas City, Mo.
Kansas Highway Patrol troopers
also were in Mulberry, where some

"looting was reported lmmedlately
after the tornado struck.
In Mlssourl, twisters accompanIed by high winds, hall and heavy
rain struck western, southwestern
an&lt;! west-central portions of the
state.
Five tornadoes were reported in
a ~mlle stretch in west-central
Missouri, coming just two days before a statewide tornado drll1 was
planned.
TWisters also cut a path through
Bartlesville, Okla . N a tiona!
Guardsmen armed with ax handles
stood watch against looters overnight in that City.

victims were not Immediately

ldentltled-

Most likely your
mattress is too ·OLD
and too SOFf!
According to a recent survey 8 out of 10 beds have
mattresses not giving proper support because they are
beyond the age limit ! Don't neglect yours any longer.
come see and test our fine quality Simmons
Beautyrest or Stearns and Foster Correct Comfort toda.y .

ON SALE!

More tornadoes struck the town
of Ada, Okla., about 50 miles southeastof Oklahoma City. Floyd Fullinglm , tlO, dted of Injuries he
suffered in the Ada twisters, authorities said.
Two other victims were Identified as Lois Smith, 75, of rural El
Dorado Springs, Mo., Carl Thomison, 45, of Tyro, Kansas, a small
town just north of the KansasOklahoma llne. Two other Kansas

I

Lifestyle

'

.

Sale ends Saturday, March 20.\982

The Saving Place•

CORNER THIRD and OLIVE, GALLIPOLIS -

442·3045

SAV\NG OF
THE REEN

GOP leaders seek reactions
WASHINGTON (AP) -Senate
Republican leaders are seeking
reaction from their colleagues to a
list of Ideas they have proposed for
trtmmlng the record deficits in
President Reagan's budget.
The Ideas, contained in a so·call~ "working paper" developed
during a series of private meetings
last week, were being presented to
a meeting of GOP senators today.
Congressional sources have said
the hope Is that the options - Including higher taxes, reductions in
mUitary spending and a 2-year
freeze in Social Securtty cost-ofliving payments -can become the
basl.s for a bipartisan budget that
the presldent and cqngresslonal Republicans and Democrats have
said they want.
The sources have Insisted that
the paper Is not a comprehensive
plan, but merely an Ulustration of
an approach tor reducing the
budget deficit to $20 bllllon by 1985
-far below the$140 bllllon the Congressional Budget Office estimates
under Reagan's program. The

c=- .........

FURNITURE
SHOWCASE

so urces asked to remain
anonymous.
The options were drafted by Sen.
Majority Leader Howard H. Baker
Jr., R-TeM. ; Senate Finance Committee Chairman Bob Dole of Kansas; Senate Budget Committee
Chairman Pete V. Domenlct of
New Mexico; Senate Appropriations Committee Chairman Mark
0 . Hatfleldo!OregonandPaulLaxalt of Nevada, the president's closest friend In the Senate.
The same material already has
been sent to White House aides .
Over the weekend, Reagan spokesman David Gergen dismissed
the idea of Social Security changes
saying "In the president's view, Socla_l Securtty Is off the agenda for

..... .•••
3 COLORS

IASnR

·::·33c a89c
/II!Q. llfl'Ait W

I!ECI.IIfl'Aif. .....

1982.''
On the other side of the Capitol
today, the House Budget Committee was getting Wall Street's view
of the president's budget and the
economy from Henry Kaufman, an
lnDuential economist with the investment firm of Salomon
Brothers.

··!•

...

"'!tl#~'

'

"1

•• ,,1

:•

BIANS

. __ 53 c.
'

REO. RETAIL

.

,

RADIO
AUCTION

OurReg.
78C Eo.
2•pl•jPaper TOWell ..
Roll· contains 100. 11x11"
sheeb. M-sq. ft. White.

Rolli

rr

10 BE HELD APRIL 2, 1982 AT 8:45 A.M.
USfEN 10 WMPO RADIO 'FOR THE
RCA &amp; Baker Furniture
Leaden In VIda o Disc Home
Entertalnme,.t.

jQI;J
•.:::. : '-~.

&amp;.TIPS

COTrON SWABS

.... 93C·:J~

.va-...
..........,.

•

Ol.lrReg.

•
2.12
LyiOP' lpray Dlllnfectant
Choose regular or Scent 11.

K mart- Air Flhrl
Sizes available to fit many
U.S. and foreign cars. Save.

Helps kill germs. 12 oz.'
•Netwt.

.

1.27~~~

Ughtnlng,. LR •• 22 Ammo'
High-velocity; 40-graln lubricated bullets. Box of 50.

c••LOIION

.JI!t
,,,.

©1981 , AgriCulture COUncil Of Amerlr..a

AGRICULTURE:
IT'S YOUR
HEARTBEAT,
AMERICA

LA~QI

LOWEST
PRICE
EVER!
HANDY POCKET COMPUTER

.I

Presented to you by:

Was 229.95

CORNY

In Cat. RSC-6

Member FDIC

What A Pair!

Stop In our men's and boys' department
on the 1st floor. See what' s new this
spring and summer In boys' knit shirts· ac·
tl ve sportswear · cut·off jeans · swim
trunks. You'll li ke the selection.

pius ' boyS' 'dress slacks, dress shirts,

• UH AI 1 Cllculltor, Or Program For Complox Problem• .
• UH "On-Sito" In Rool Eltate, Englnoortng, Bullne11
Tho TRs.ao computer that goos whore you gol Moro poworful, yet IIIIer to UH than • progromlll8blo calculator.
Add ono of our ln.terfiCft (1l10 at new low prlcoal) and an
optional ~er and you can uM our Hlectlon of l'lllldytCHUn c•aette 10ftw81'11. Progrommablo 1n BASIC, too.
Only
1'/a x 2¥•" -put one In your pocket lochlyl

"'••»!

western shirts. Selections ar e best now .

ftad1e /haek
ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

a

4 DMSION Of TANDY COIII'ORI.TION

USICD .

~ __ _ 11 .~-~- $879
'.

1

.

SEE IT AT YOUil.NEAREST
RADIO SHACK STORE,
COMPUTER CENTER
OR PARTICIPATING DEALER

2 .•

TYN
MG. MT-'4 III.H

._..

-

In microwave, conventional ovens.

NU1'1ee

.:·.~ . \ $383
.

.......

w-•

llalldf Con••
"erab-ll''lowl
.15-oz. IIOUPicereol bowl Is sole for use

eOLD-ICK

llfCI. MTAIL 11.10

ELBERFELDS

KNIT SHIRTS
AND SHORTS

wna

i\l

we urge every
American to
consider this
message on
Agriculture oav
. . . everyday!

fiLI.ID

•

75c

MG. lilTAI. II. If

1 57

Our Reg. 1,78
•
Your Choice
TCIIIy Cookies In Favorite Flavol'l
Choose chocolate chip. butter cookIes. Iced ootmeol or mlx. 2-lb.' bog.

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="126">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="2701">
                <text>03. March</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="43895">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="43894">
              <text>March 16, 1982</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="1431">
      <name>dunfee</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="609">
      <name>fife</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2078">
      <name>veith</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
