<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="14081" 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/14081?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-06T10:41:28+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="45181">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/3d3152af2d2fa3995bdb30dc215b965d.pdf</src>
      <authentication>93fb362d8b1579d6c2280116aa999655</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="44022">
                  <text>.... .

••

by Dick. Cavalli

WINTHROP

SO I WANT IT UNDERSTO::ID

YOU KNCM/1 CHII..DHC(:t:) FR1END5

50METIME6

CH rL..OHa:x&gt;

· ··

1HAT t'L.L 00 'Tl-fE HOU6E'AORK; ••:

~E'

eweE1'Hewcrre ...

-·-·M

\

• &lt;»,. ""~!
. -. i. J

· ~·

AND TAKE CARE a=-i'HE KI~~ND
ALL 1HAT. /&gt;15 l..CNS' A5 I
'6UNDAY
IERNo::?Ne&gt; F,RE'E: •.•

AF

60 I CAN PLAY MIDDL-E

UNEEWJ&lt;ER R:7R -n-4E
CINCINW\TJBE:NefAL-6.
...

....

.,

Ed Sullivan.

Priscilla's Po

'

HEY, YOU'RE RJGI-Ir. I
II$ 6EAUTIFUL IN HERE.'

IAOJI.:S COV.ING

UP 10 OiECf&lt;
'QJR ROOM .'

I'VE eEEN
1HI5 Pl.AtE
NEAT 17AY f'.l 'iJAY.'

KEEP!~

he Daily
Voi.JO,No.:Z61
Copy•lghtod 1912

knowledge of the reported attack .
But in a statement early today,
Argentina cried foul over the tor·
pedoing of its cruiser 50 miles out·
side the war zone.
"It·should be emphasized that the
attack took place to the southeast of
Isla de los Estados and outside the
s&lt;&gt;-called 'zone of exclusion,' " the
Argentine joint chiefs of staff said in
a communique.
The Argentines also announced
rejection of a new peace proposal
announced Sunday by Peru's
President Fernando Belaunde
Terry. Buenos Aires claimed the
plan was suggested by U.S.
Secretary of State Alexander M.
Haig.Jr., and like several previous
Haig proposals was not acceptable.
Britain admitted the submarine
attack Sunday on the cruiser
General Belgrano, the former U.S.
light cruiser Phoenix, occurred
"just outside the edge" of the 20().
mile "total exclusion" zone. But it
claimed the 44-year-old cruiser,
Argentina's second largest ship,
"posed a significant threat" to the
British fleet in the area.
The British Defense Ministry said
the submarine, reportedly one of
three nuclear-powered hunter·
killers in the area, "severely
damaged" the 13,64$-ton cruiser

Kroger to expand Pomeroy store
Kroger Food Stores, the national's second largest food retailer, have
announced plans to expand the Kroger Store located at 700 E. Main St.,
Pomeroy, to 35,904 square feet, an increase of 8200 square feet.
Construction will start in the near future with the expected com·
pletion date to be by the end of 1982.
The remodeled store will he designed to meet one-stop family shOJ&gt;"
ping needs with multi-featured departments and will include such ad·
ded specialty departments as a sit-down snack bar, floral shop which
will feature fresh cut flowers, dried and silk flowers, custom made
flower arrangements and foliage plants: cheese shop; card and party
needs shop; expanded wine department, and upgrading and increasing the fresh meat and produce departments .
General contractor will be Philip Diniaco and Sons, Inc., Hun·
tington, W.Va.

WASHINGTON- Four years ago today, thousands of Americans
turned the Washington Monument Into a gtant sundial, attended
sunrise services across the country and heard a president proclaim
his commitment to renewable sources of energy.
All the activities were for the first Sun Day. This year's sharply
scaled-back observance Is symbolic of the storm clouds threatening
the solar movement.
Supporters say 43 cities have scheduled events of some ktnd today,
but Instead of the president being a featured participant, he will be
portrayed as the movement's chief villain.

Palsy victim gets check back

..

fJAAT, ~D B~

*

A;R~;

R.0tV OF AA'I

CLEVELAND - A cerebral palsy victim who was a subject of a
recent CBS documentary has had his Social Securlty disability pen·
ston reinstated, according to a congresswoman.
Rep. Mary Rose Oakar, D·Ohio, said she was told Frtday of the
reinstatement for Larry Ham of Brook Park. He will receive back
checks to ald himself, his wife and four children, she said.
Ham was deemed employable and his benefits were cut oH In
December, despite his dociDr's disagreement. The documentary
"Pe9ple Like Us" profiled Ham and two others affected by federal
cost cutting.

Goodyear workers okay new pact
. PORTSMOUTH, Ohio- Workers at the Goodyear Atomic Corp.'s
uranium enrichment plant near here have approved a new threeyear contract.

Company oHlctals sald the contract, approved In voting Saturday
night, affects 1,450 hourly production, maintenance and service em·
ployees at the facility.
PreUmlnary results showed that members of 011, Chemical and
Atomic Workers Local 3-689 voted In favor of the pact by a 1,®136
margin, sald Goodyear Atomic spokesman Ttrn Matchett.
The ~bsldtary of the Goodyear Ttre and Rubber Co. operates the
enrichment plant under contract to the U.S. Department Energy.

Exxon writes off oil project

.• SO~ 5AlD10Me,
._......~ .... UP OR 'SHIPOUf
1~1He~'.

2 Seer ion~ , 12 Page•
1S Cenh
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, May 3, 1982

Sun Day observance different

Art &amp;Chi Sansom:

enttne

War deepens in Falklands
By The Associated Press
British missile-firing helicopters
sank one Argentine patrol boat and
"certainly damaged" another in a
clash inside the war zone Britain im·
posed around the Falkland Islands,
the British Defense Ministry an·
nounced today.
The sinking reportedly occurred
only hours after a British submarine
damaged Argentina's only cruiser in
a torpedo attack outside the war
zone.
A ministry communique said the
armed Argentine patrol boats
initiated the latest shootout around
midnight Sunday in the Falklands
( 11 p.m. EDT) when they "fired on a
Royal Navy Sea King (helicopter)
from HMS Hermes," the carrier·
flagship of the British fleet.
"Two Royal Navy Lynx heliCOJ&gt;'
ters from ships of the task force then
engaged the ships with missiles. One
of the ships was sunk and the other
certainly damaged," the' communique said.
It said the incident took place nor·
th of East Falkland island and 90
miles inside the blockade area.
"No damage" to the British
helicopters was reported, the
statement added.
In Buenos Aries, Argentine
military sources said thev had no

•

HOUSTON .- Exxon Corp.'s decision to write oH Its $1 bllllon
Colorado shale on project leaves analysts convinced that the push
for synthetic fuels to replace Imported oU Is over, at least for now·
"Synthetics have been Indefinitely postponed, maybe never to get
oH uie ground," sald John Uchblau, president of the Petroleum
Industry Research Foundation .
Exxon, the world's lar&amp;est on company, announced Sunday that It
was closing the C9kmY Shale 011 Project, tbe largest synthetic fuels
undertaking In the nation. 'rbeplan was tomlneoll-bearlngrockand
· crush and .heat It to extract the on.

Weather forecqst
Clear toalgbt. Lows lfOIIIId !!0. Winds Iillht and variable. Moslly ·
S111111Y 'l'ue!day. ,Highs ln. the mid·~.
.J Me+d Ohio F~
.

·wedre'1•r tllraaP ~
•
·.
l'llr WecJns11J. ca.- af·.l lwW•I Gl' &amp;lwideaiiiGIIIW ~
IIi l'ltlllf· 111P1 Ill llle ..... ._ IIIIIIDw Ill Wet ' r IIIII

..,....., ........ ,. ~•._. IIIGIIIIr .. ..., ..

Sunday's action was the first sea
with a number of torpedoes.
of the South Atlantic crisis
attack
When fully manned, the General
flared
into battle Saturday
that
Belgrando has a crew of 1,000, but
when
British
jets attacked the
there was no word of casualties. The
British communique said the sub- Falklands' two airfields, and ships
marine " resumed her patrol" after of the British fleet pummeled Argen·
tine shore positions on East
the attack.
Argentina said the General Falkland while planes of the nations
Belgrano was hit by one torpedo battled in the skies above.
Argentina initially claimed as
"that produced damage," and that
Argentine ships "have been dispat· many as 13 British warplanes and
ched to the area to aid the cruiser helicopters destroyed, but it
backtracked in a communique early
should it become necessary ."
today,
saying it downed two British
Earlier Sunday, British Foreign
Harrier
fighters and damaged two
Secretary Francis Pym told repor·
.
others,
and
hit three British frigates,
ters in Washington that Britain did
not plan new attacks if Argentine one ofthem seriously.
Britain denied any of its planes
forces stayed out of the 200-mile air·
sea blockade zone the British gover· were lost and said two ships suffered
superticial damage and one sailor
nment imposed Friday.
"There is no other military action was hit by shrapnel.
The latest peace effort came to
envisaged at the moment other than
light
before Sunday's naval
making that secure," he said.
The Isla de los Estados, or Staten engagement, when Peru's president
Island, is at the southern tip of the said Argentina and Britain were on
South American continent about 250 the verge of announcing acceptance
of a plan to cease hostilities and
miles southwest of the Falklands.
The General Belgrano is the only have both sides withdraw from the
warship still in active service that Falklands.
Tony Joy, a British Foreign Office
survived the Japanese attack on
Pearl Harbor. Launched in 1938, it spokesman, said, "We have no in·
fought throughout World War II with formation on this. If it is true, no
the 7th Fleet in the Pacific and was doubt it will be discussed with Mr.
Pym in New York."
sold to Argentina in 1951.
The State Department said
In addition to the cruiser, the
of State Alexander M.
Secretary
Argentine navy has one aircraft
Haig Jr. "has been in touch with
carrier, seven destroyers, seven
President Belaunde and Foreign
frigates, three submarines, nine
Secretary Pym in recent hours and a
patrol craft, two fast gunboats and
number of ideas have been ex·
two torpedo boats, according to
changed,
but there is no agreement
Jane's Fighting Ships 1981-82.
on
anything."
Argentina lost a submarine a week
Pym flew from Washington to
ago when it was scuttled after being
New York for a meeting today with
damaged at South Georgia Island by
U.N. Secretary-General Javier
British forces who recaptured the
Perez de Cuellar of Peru.
Falklands dependency.

'
I

I

)

,'

~

·.

&lt;,I ~; I )

'

I

/\ SC I N SI()N

I

l SI 1\N[)

BRA ZIL

\

I

I
I
I

' o~ 1/Jllr

·r 11

1·.

FALKLAND
"' ISLAND S

I

I

l - --- -

SO UTH
&lt;&gt; GEORGIA ISLANDS

SITES OF CONFRONTATION - British jets attacked both airtields
on the Argentine-held Falkland Islands Saturday and warships born·
barded Argentine army positions near the capital of Stanley, battle rommunlques from the warring nations reported. This map is for use as
desired on related Falkland Island stories. I AP Lascrphoto 1.

Kaiser announces additional layoffs
Employees at Kaiser Aluminum's means most of our projects, like EM
"Many customers for our products period of time after the end usc
(electro magnetic) casting and the have restricted their operations to markel~ stdrt to increase." he t-ldRavenswood Plant have been informed that the company an· plant air compression, has been put the point that we do not expect to see ded. " Locally our order book has
ticipates an additional cutback of on hold," Scelfo said.
an increase in demand until some
I Con tinu ed on pa~t: 12)
between 200 and 300 jobs next month.
In a letter to employees of the
fabrication plant, Plant Manager
John Scelfo said the cutback,
blamed on the company's worsening
financial · ·condition, wiD atfect
salaried and hourly employees.
•'We are working our way through
the options now and should be
prepared within 30 days" to an·
nounce know how large the cuts will
be, Scelfo said. "There will have to
be both salaried and hourly reductions. Combined, the work force
reduction will total between 200-300. \
These activities are not related to
our reorganization strategy; they
are moves made to reduce our
losses," Scelfo added.
The plant has already had its work
force of 4,000 nearly cut in half since
last fall.
"As a company, we lost $24.9
million during the first quarter,"
4
Scelfo explained. "At Ravenswood
our first quarter losses were substantial, and our current projection
for April is that our losses will be
\
worse than initially expected."
Scelfo added the company has
ROYALTY - Amid an attractive "Somewhere Eichinger, Greg Thomas and Pam Crooks. Other
moved to reduce capital spending,
Over the Rainbow" theme, Angela Harmon and Brian nominees lor king and queen but not present included
and the projection is that Kaiser will
Whaley, seated, senlon, were crowned queen and king James Carsey, Max Geary, George Brent Sisson.
reduce from the $436 million level
of the annual Meigs 111gb Sehool Junior-Senior Prom Kathy Parker, and Susan Swan Sisson. Mrs. Carni
spent in 1981 to a rate of about $275
Saturday olgbt. Court membel'll with them from the Crow was faculty advisor for the annual event.
million a year by the end of 1982.
left are Tanya Alesbtre, Brent Houdasbelt, Tammy
Most of the money, he said, has
been allocated for major moder·
nization projects already underway
at other Kaiser plants. "Locally this

'v

Decision
favors
Syracuse
A decision in favor of the defendant, Village of Syracuse, eta!., was
rendered by Meigs County Common
Pleas Court Judge John C. Bacon
Friday afternoon following a trial of
a civil suit brought against the town
and its council members by Vernon
Bartels, Cincinnati.
Bartels, represented by attoreny
Charles Knight, had sued seeking to
have the village's easement of the
former Syracuse Roadside Park,
deeded to the town In 1973 by the Ohio
Department of Transportation,
vacated and reverted to Bartels.
Bartels had also asked for damages
in the amount of $10,000.
Attorney Frank W. Porter, Jr.,
Syracuse solicitor, served as legal
cOun&amp;e1 for the village during the

three-houftrial.
'
Teatllying for the plaintiff were
Kenneth CUndiff, Malcobn Guinther,
Don Hendricks and Bartels. Wit- .
nesseatestlfying for the vmale were
Kathryn Crow, council prealdm
and Robert WlngeU.

'

'

.

.

.
'

r •'

I

.

Two schools
enjoy annual
•
sprmgproms
PROM QUEEN - Min·
dy Morris, daughter of
Robert and Betty Morris,
RD, Racine, was crowned
queen of the junior-senior
prom held at Southern
High School in Racine,
Saturday night. The theme
for the event was "S!llir·
way to Heaven." The
prom Saturday night was
the first junior-senior
prom staged at Racine since the 1930s. With queen
Mindy Is her escort Pat
Johnson, son of Arthur and
Margaret Johnso11, RD,
Racine. Photo by Danny
Crow.

�Monday, MGy 3, 1982

Comment~ry

Pag-2- The Daily ~ntinel
Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio
Monday, May 3, 1982

Q and A________
The Dai ly Sentinel
Ill f 'nurl Stn·o·t
l'nm•·rm . flhin

6JU~i- 2156

nn liT Ell Tit TilE I'ITt-:Rt:ST IIF THE MJ-:If;S-MASUJ\ Aft E ,\

ROBERT L. WINGETT
PAT WHITF:HEAO

ROB HOEFLICH

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.

1\

MFMilEH uf Tho·

Amo·nnlll

N•·"~ jlllpt • r

'"~'" ' mlt•d l'n ·~~ .

lnlltncl llaih

l'n·~~ A .~MM'iu tinn

and lht•

l'uhJi,ho•r, ,\),.,,,..if! linn .

I.ETit-:lt:O. OF 01'1\IO'\ an· v.o·kumo·tl . Thn , huukl lw l n.~ than 300 v.unh lun ~ . All
l..th' r ' an· !ooUhJnl In o·thtm l( a nol mu .. t ho· .. . .i!;lt'tl v. ith no•m•·. ltddr.-.... and tdrphum·
numho·r \u un' t.I!IWII 1.-th·r, -A til ht· puhh .. ht•d. l.dtrn. !&lt;.huuhl bo· tn .1!'""' l&lt;Jl&gt; h·. addrrs1&gt; in,.:

'" 'w'. nut

l~ ' ''"'wlttw'

Power failure
When a presidential policy is universally assailed by experts whose
ideological preferences range from conservative to liberal, the White House
probably ought to pay attention to the criticism. . .
But President Reagan appears to be qUite obhv1ous to the assessments
of knowledgeable critics all across the political spectrum who have
denigrated his energy policy as unworkable, short-sighted and potentially
disastrous.
The extent to which responsi ble critics view the president's energy
program as seriously nawed is illustrated by the concurrent distribution of
two recent reports - one from a conservative "think tank" and one from a
coa lition of liberal and moderate public-interest organizations.
The conservati ve group is the Ce nter for Stra tegic a nd Inte rnational

Studies. affiliated with Georgetown University here. Its book-length report
is titled "The Critica l Link : Energy and National Security in the 19&amp;ls."
The report issued by the coalition of energy, environmental, scientific,
consumer and public-interest groups is considerably less ambitious but even
more scathing in its analysis of "The Reagan Energy Plan : A Major Power
Failure."
In discussing the imperative need for contingency planning to deal with
likely energy crises in the future, the CSIS report says "President Reagan's
program to achieve economic stability involves emasculatfng the Depart·
ment of Energy, the most logical base for developing a response to threats to
national energy security.··
Noting that Reagan refuses to wa iver from his absolute reliance upon
"free market" mechanisms to allocate fuels - even in cases of major
energy emergencies - CSIS says :
"It is dangerous not to have a I government-administered) backup plan
should the market not work, however, because the initial reaction to a severe
disruption of energy supplies will be pamc."
Stressing the future importance of global energy security, the CSJS
analysis is especially critical of Reagan:
"Despite the need for greater bilateral and multilateral international
energy initiatives to deal with the energy crisis, there are disturbing indications that the Reagan administration may be retreating into an Energy
Fortress America.
·· Rather than moving forward and articulating a renewed approach to
international energy policy such as wsa launched during the Ford and Car·
ter administrations, this country seems to have retreated to an earlier era"
under Reagan.
Finally, the CSIS report notes the need for increased emphasis on conservaton - a major theme of the critique prepared by the coalition, which
bluntly says " no evidence indicates that the Reagan administration un·
derstands the real nature of the energy supply ."
Among the sponsors of that report are the Federation of American
Scientists, the Union of Concerned Scientists , the Costeau Society, the Environmental Defense Fund, Friends of the Earth, the National Audubon
Society, the Sierra Club and the Natural Resources Defense Council.
The Reagan administration's 1983 budget proposals, the coalition notes,
call for slashing energy-conservation programs by 98 percent from the 19&amp;1
level and cutting federal funding for renewable resources by 86 percent.
At the same time, the White House is pressing for continued heavy fun·
ding by Office of Management and Budget Director David A. Stockman
when he was a member of Congress as "totally incompatible with our freemark et appraoch to energy."
When the Clinch River project was first proposed in 1970, it carried a
price tag ot $500 million. Twice that amount - $1 billion - already has been
invested and the estimated cost of completion now stands at $3.5 billion.
"The Reagan administration," says one spokesman for the coalition, "is
pouring billions of dollars into technological black holes that the private sector would never touch" while ignoring conservation and new energy sources.

Berry's World

"Hey, come on, Mr. President, a compromise
on the budget lsn 't 'as bad as a root canal
job'/"

Questioner. Can I ask you some
questions? I mean, you've talked
about the nuclear business for 45
minutes, OK?
A. Go right ahead.
Q. Do you assume that people who
oppose a nuclear freeze are more
anxious to die than people who want
a nuclear freeze ?
A. Well, no, I mean, you look like a
healthy fellow who enjoys life. No, I
didn't mean to say you wanted to die
Q. Well, in that case, if you ass ume
that those who oppose a nuclear
freeze are as anxious to avoid
nuclear war as those who favor it,
then what separates us is merely a
matter of tactics, not morality. Is
that correct?
A. Well, that's the way you put it.
Q. Now wait a minute. It's not just
that that 's the way I put it, it's that
it's the only way to put it.
A. We don't believe in nuclear
war.
Q. What does it mean not to
" believe" in nuclear war? Does it
mean that you don 't believe that the
threat of nuclear war is ever effective?
A. That's right, we cannot go
around threatening nuclear war.
Q. I didn't say, "Let's threaten
nuclear war. " I said was the threat
of nuclear war effective? I assume
that for the same reasons you and I
don't want to die in a nuclear war,
neither do the Russians. And
therefore the existence of our
nuclear arsenal in fact helps to
assure that they won't use thei rs? Is
that right?
A. The fact of the matter is that
any use of nuclea r weapons is im·
moral.
Q. Well , now we've re-introduced
the moral question, which is OK by
me. But if what you say is correct,

having nuclear bombs. We should
destroy them?
A. Nuclear weapons are in·
defensible.
Q. In that case, you favor
unilateral disarmament. Wouldn't it
save a lot of time if you just said so,
' of goind on about a freeze in
instead
nuclear weapons?
A. A freeze should precede nuclear
disarmament.
Q. Why ?
A. Because by freezing, we might
persuade the Soviet Union, pari
passu, to denuclearize as we do.
Q. But if we couldn't persuade

them, then what?
A. Then - what I say.
Q. Suppose that you look at a
couple of propositions and construct
a syllogism based on them. Ready?
Premise A: The Soviet Union would
use its nuclear arsenal if necessary
to bring the West into submission.
Premise B: The Soviet Union would
not initia: nuclear action if nuclear
counteraction were then to result.
Conclus ion : The existence of poten·
tial counteractive nuclea r forces
reduces the probability of any
nuclear explosion of any sort. How
about! haP

A. You are playing with fire w~n
you talk about a nuclear arsenal.
Q. You are playing with deception
if you refuse to say that we should
toss our nuclear weapons into the
sea irrespective of whether the
Soviet Union does.
A. The Bible says man was born to
live in peace.
Q. The Bible says man was born to
be free .
.
A. We're not getting anywhere.
Q. Not so fast. You're not getting
anywhere. Your slogan should be,
pure and simple: "The United States
is prepared to surrender.''

then we have no business even

Higher utility rates become
COLUMBUS, Ohio (API - Get
ready, Ohio voters.
You likely will be heartng a lot or
talk In this election year about
higher rates charged by natural
gas, electricity and telephone
companies.
Candidates for many o!tlces have
already started to expend their pol·
Itical energies over the Issue of util·
lty rate reform.
Utlllties are the common targets.
But a Senate-passed bill restructur·
lng the Public Utllltles Commission
of Ohio also has come under fire.
The Republican-sponsored measure would Increase the number of
state regulatory commissioners
from three to five and change the

Eagles sweep Vikings
EAST MEIGS - The talented
Eastern Eagles continued to roll
over their opponent Saturday af·
ternoon by soaring to two big victones over the diamond men from
Vinton County, blanking the Vikings
10 the first card IHI, then trimming
the foe S-3 in the nightcap.
Eastern now owns an outstanding
14-7-1 overall record. Vinton County
drops to 4-12 overall.
Eastern's batsmen stepped into
the batters' box with keen batting
eyes after setting the Vikings down
10 order in the initial frame. Vinton
County's hurler, Griffith, had
trouble finding the plate in the round
and gave up six costly walks and a
wild pitch.
EHS quickly jumped at the opportunity as John Beaver, Mike
Bissell, Chris Allen, Rob Smith, Jay
Carpenter, and Deron Jewett each
drew walks, forcing in three runs
while the latter marker came on a
wild pitch.
All was quiet at the plate for the
struggling Vinton Countians as Rob
Smith did a good job on the mound
for the winners. Eastern meanwhile,
plated another single run in the
second. Bever reched on an error,
Ga ul walked, followed by a double
steal, and Mark Holter delivered an
RBI single.

way they are appointed by a
governor.
PUCO members currently are
appointed at a governor's discretion. Under the bUI, a governor
would have to make the selections
from a list drawn up by a special
nominating councU.
A committee In the Democrat·
controlled House hopes to wrap up
work on the bUI this week. It has
sought to strengthen the measure
by adding language that would bar
a utlllty from fUing more than one
rate Increase case at a time with
the commission, a practice known
as pancaking.
Mlnortty Democrats In the Senate have blasted the GOP version

•
ISSUe

and are ready to take their case to
voters In dtstrtcts throughout the
state.
"The bill was a sham masquerading as reform," Sen. Neal F.
Zimmers Jr., D-Dayton, said. "It
did not address the rate-relief reform that Ohio citizens are rightly
demanding of their legislators."
Senate Democrats have offered
their own bUI which they malntaln
would provide meaningful utlllty
rate relief.
"We offer this bill as a response
to the wishes of our constituents
who are demanding relief !rom uncontroUable utlllty bills," Minority
Leader Harry Meshel said.
"Predictably, the Republican
majority In the Senate has faUed to

protect the Interests of utlllty consumers," he said.
Also opposing the pending PUCO
btu ts the Committee for Direct
Election, which Is the group mount·
tng an lnltlative petition drive to
place a constitutional amendment
on the November ballot that would
require commissioners to be
elected.
Henry Eckhart, a former PUCO
commissioner who ts a co·
chairman of the group, said the
Senate-passed bUlls an attempt to
undermine the petition campaign.
Eckhart has accused House lead·
ers of IIylng to railroad the bW to
quick passage because they are
worried about the momentum
gained by the direct election effort.

CINCINNATI (AP) - The way
his predecessors had fared , St.
Louis left hander John Martin just
wanted to survive tor more than
half of a game on the mound.
The floundering St. Louis Card!·
nais had dropped their three prevlous games to the Cincinnati Reds
by lopsided scores, Including a 5-1
drubbing In the first game of a
double-header Sunday.
"Cincinnati was hitting the stuf·
flng out of the ball," Martin said.
"Joaquin (Andujar) had good stuff,
and he got hit hard. It was the same
with Andy (Rincon) and Steve
(Mural. I was concerned with goIng six or seven lnntngs because the
bullpen needed a rest. "
Martin pitched one-hit ball for
eight Innings, then yielded to Bruce
Sutter In the ninth when Cincinnati
scored four times. St. Louis wound
up with a 64 victory, Its only trl·
umph durtng the series.
"I was thinking about a no-hitter
from the first Inning, " said Martin,
3-2, who hetd the Reds hitless until
Ron Oester doubled to lead off the
Cincinnati seventh. "I started to be
a little more picky around the
fourth or tlfth Inning. The way I've
been pitching, I'm glad to get out
with a victory after losing three
games."

May 5, day workers start own earnings
NEW YORK (AP) - A $25,00ayear household can feel small In an
economy measured In the trtlllons
and run on a federal budget of $725
btlllon, ligures nearly Incomprehensible to most people.
Until they are divided Into the
share that can be attributed to or

assessed against each household, a
skill that the Tax Foundation has
developed to a fine art, and a for·
mldable weapon too.
A weapon that can be used by
editorial writers and cartoonists to
sting spendthrift congressmen or
support more e!tlclency In govern·

mentor warn the country about the
dangers of government debt.
May 5 Is the foundation's tax freedom day. On that date the average
worker will have earned sutticlenUy to pay his federal, state and
local taxes for the year, and can
begin working for himself.

'The average worker will set
aside 2 hours, 44 minutes for the tax
collectors each day this year.
The foundation was founded In
1937 during the admlntstratlon of
President Franklin Roosevelt

Sinai: before and after...____no_nG_raff_
" The past two months represent
one of history's true watersheds.
The Mideast's pre-November status
quo is gone forever."
Those · words appeared in this
space more than four years ago. The
subject was the rush of events
following Egyptian President Anwar
Sadat's electrifying journey to
Jerusalem.
It may be helpful at this point in
time to recall the situation at that
point, in January of 1978.
The wave of optimism - more like
euphoria in some quarters - loosed
by Sadat' s initiative had receded.
Fragile Egyptian-Israeli contact
was close to being broken. Bilateral
talks had been temporarily suspended. Jerusalem having rejected as
"absurd" proposals for complete
withdrawal fr~m the Sinai and
Palestinian self-determination.
Cairo countered that the Israelis
were "arrogant" in refusing to consider more than limited seHgovernment within the occupied
territories and insisting on retaining

The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

While Smith and the Eastern
defense were blanking VC's offense,
Eastern keyed up for another single
run in the fifth when Rogie Gaul,
who had a tremendous day at the
plate, singled and stole second
before riding horne on the tail end of
Chris Allen's triple, the score then fl.
0.

Rob Smith went the distance for
the victors, stringing out four hits,
four strike outs, and just one walk
along the way. Walks and timely hit·
ling led to VC's downfall.
Griffith got the start, but lasted
just one and two-thirds of a frame
before giving way to reliever Har·
tins. They combined to fan two and
give up seven walks.
In the nightcap, Eastern picked up
where it left off in the first game to
score another impressive win,
despite a late game threat by the
visitors. In the top of the first Mark
Holter set down the side for Coach
Ralph Wigal's nine. John Beaver led
off with a walk, Rogie Gaul laid
down a perfect sacrifice bunt, and
Holter helped his cause with a hue
drive RBI single.
Eastern pitchers drew nothing,
but blanks for the VC offense as it
shut out the Vikes for 11 straight innings. In the bottom half of the four·
th, Eastern delivered its deadly blow

and moved in for the kill.
It struck for four big runs on an
Allen single, Smith walk, Carpenter
walk, and a three RBI double by
Nick Leonard.
Leonard tried to stretch the blast
into a triple, but was edged at third
in a close play. Beaver singled, stole
second, and Rogie Gaul delivered
the final run of the game for the
hosts.
Vinton County scored two runs in
the fifth and a single run in the
finale .
Eastern hitters were Allen, a
double and single, Gaul two singles,
Leonard a double, and Holter a
single. In the first tilt Holter and
Gaul singled, while Allen tripled.
Vinton County hitters were Oney,
Crow,
Radekin, Womeldorf .
Graham, Hale and Keefer.
First game
Linescore:

vc

000 000 0- 0 4 1

E

410 010 x--6 3 2
Batteries : Smi th IWP) and
Leonard. Griffith ILPI, Hartins,
2nd, and Cottrill.
Second game
E

-----

200 400 x-6 6 I

VC
()()() 021! 1- 3 7 4
Holter IWP) and Cowdery.
Radekin I LP I, Griffith and Hale.

FOULS ONE OFF- Jay Carpenter fouls off a pit·
ch during the Eastern-Vinton County game Saturday.
Eastern won both ends of a twinbill, S-0 and S-3. Wat·

ching the ball's flight are the Viking catcher and plate
umpire Charlie Hamilton. Tim Tucker photn.

Heavy hitting comes too late;
Reds-Cardinals split twinbill

key Sinai settlements.
But contact was not broken. Talks
resumed, leading eventually to
Camp David and, at this point in
time,..,Jerael's •painfully completed
withdrawal from the Sinai.
Both parties have reason to
question the price paid for this
limited achievement of initial goals.
Egypt has paid with Sactat's life and
ostracism by the Arab world. For
Israel, it has meant bitter internal
division and, in its ever harsher rule
in the restive occupied territories, a
souring of original promise. A nation
whose founding was a protest against oppression has become an oppressor.
There are questions, and causes
for real concern, now as to what happens next.
There can be no realistic prospect
of progress toward Palestinian
autanomy until there is a
Palestinian leadershp that will deal
with Israel and that Israel will deal
with. The PLO is still the only thing

resembling a leadership in sight, but
its hard-line factions are more implacable than ever. It is incapable of
making accommodations similar to
Egypt's and surviving, even were its
dominant elements so inclined.
They give no sign of that. Lacking
a country of their own, they occupy
much of another, Lebanon, and are
largely responsible for turning it in·
to a ground for battles that could explode into regional war at any time.
The best that can be hoped for on
that front is stalemate. It is pilssible
that Egypt, meanwhile, havipg
gained its primary objective, could
drift back into the Arab camp,
leaving Israel once more surrounded by enemies.
In short, as one ol the most
agonizingly negotiated agreements
of modern times comes to partial
fruition, there is none of the
euphoria with which it all began.
Which is just as well. Euphoria is not
an adequate basis for realistic
policies and lasting peace.
There·is a basis, however, In what

has been accomplished, even if so
imperfectly. Egypt's repossession of
the Sinai is convincing evidence that
Arabs and Israelis can do business
with each other.
And it is in the continuing best interests of both parties to stick to
their deal. Should Egypt renege, it
would end forever any possibility of
extracting anything from Israel
short of war, in which there is no
reason to believe the outcome would
be significantly different in the
foreseeable future than it has been
in the past.
Israel's only hope of breaking out
of its state of siege is in the Egyptian
example eventually being accepted
and followed, to which end a post·
Sinai Egyptian-Arab rap·
prochement could actually contribute. ·
Whatever comes now, the old
status quo is indeed gone. The task
now is to convince the Palestinians
and others of the need to accept this
fact.

The Cardinals' trtp to Riverfront
Stadium matched two ballclubs
that had been struggling. The Reds'
offense, which generated just 18
runs tn Its previous six games, fl.
nally sparked to life as Cincinnati
romped to 8-2 and 1().1 victories In
the first two games. Andujar and
Rincon started those games for St.
Louis.
The Reds continued the pace In
the first game Sunday against
Mura, as rookie outfielder Eddie
Milner coUected a pair of singles, a
double and a trtple In a 5-1 trtumph.
It was the Reds' seventh victory In
nine games, and the Cardinals'
sixth loss In seven games.
"That's the way they've been goIng, and we're not," St. Louts Manager Whitey Herzog lamented
between games. "They're hot, a nd
we're cold."
Charlie Lelbrandt, 1·1, benefitted
!rom the Reds' 12-hlt attack. He
scattered seven hits over 61-3 Innings In his second start of the season, enjoying the chance to pitch
with a comfortable lead.
"It makes.pltching easier," Lei·
brandt said. "You don't have to
make every pitch so fine. You can
go after hitters a Utile more, chal·
Ienge them. You score some runs,
and It makes up for some of the
mistakes your pitchers are going to

.,,,,.,.,~~·~·..'· 'r "~

'

BARGAIN M AfiNEES ON SAT &amp; SUN

AU S EATS JUST S2 0Q

Para si te ·s playing
th ea tr e but
not in 3· 0.

il l thi s

DELIVERS PITCH - Eastern's Rob Smith geL• ready to deliver a
pitch during first game action of Saturday's doubleheader against Vinton
County. Eastern won both games to up il' season record to 14-7·1. Tim
Tucker photo.

Calltomla 6, Baltimore 4, 13 lnnlngs
Kansas City 8, Toronto 7
New York ~. SeattlE&gt; 1

Majors

-.. ..........

NA110NAL LEAGUE
W

t&gt;ct.

L

~'aGamea

GB

St. Lou1s
MonlrPal

~

11

9
8

.GZI
.Si'9

New York

U

12

.478

llh

Pltub.llll:h
Chkago
Phl.ladelphla

8
8
7

l2
15
14

.400
.348

:;
61h

.liJ

6~

Weatet11 DlvWon
17
6
.739

Atlanta

Soo """"

If

Los Angelt's
San FranciscO
Houston

u

7
12

u

1Yl

-

.667
.f 78

u

6

.f'18
.t40

6
7
7

ll If
10 13
-~
Saturday'1 GatnN
C1nctnnat1 10, SU.Duls I
San FranctJco 6, New- York 3
Los Angeles 2, Montreal 1
Houston 6, Plttsburah 3
Clllcago 5, AUant.ll
San [Mego 9, PhlJ.adripllia 6

Cloc"""'U

-·-

Ctnc!nnatl 5-4, St. louis

-.... ........
W

""'/Dn

-Yori&lt;

Califomla
Kansu Oty

OoiOaDd

Sea""
MIMeo&gt;ta

Texu

.682

9

.lUI

ll

8

.579

9

.4Sl

8
7

11
13
12
13

16
12
12

8
9
9

.661
.571
.511

-1311
11 14

-·-

.«B
.«XX
..1!0

1~
2~

5
'6
6
7
2~

2~

.5G. 3
.6«1
5~

15

.675

7

6

13

..116

7~

Milwallltee 6, Mlnnelota 5

.....

--.._.......
--·-

NBA results

9

OoiOand ~ Oew!land 2
Bolton 6, Tnu 5, 12 lftnlnp
Demit s. aucaao 2

tFeltoo 0.21 at Boston t Rain·

Calllomla (Kbon ~~ at Cleveland
(Bar1ter 3-1) , (n )
Oakland (Keough 2·2) a t New York
(John 1-3). )n)
Kansas Ctty tSpHnortt H l at Mil-

~.o

Pd..GI

7

!

Toron!O
O.V.I"ld
Bal""""'

auc...,

L

If

~

Baltimore

ey 1.0) , tnJ

Only games scheduled

3-t

lS

Mllwaukte ll, Minnesota 4
Toronto 1, Kansas Ctty 5
ftoloadq'a GMM'll
Seattle tMoore HI at
!Flanagan C..J), t nl

Seattle at Ballimore, (n)
MJJU'le$0ta at Boston, tn)
Calllomla at Cleveland, (n )
Te:xaJ at Dttrolt, tnl
Oakland at New Yon. 1n J
Toronto 11 Chicli'O, (n )
Kansas Qty at Milwaukee. !n l

AMEIUCAN LEAGUE

o.troil
Mllwau.kee

Chkago 10, Detroit 3

waukee tCakiWl'lll-1). (nl

1~

\)louston 6, Pittsburgh 2
Atlanta 10, Otlcago 3
San FranctJco U, New Y«k
Mootrt&gt;al 13, lDI Anef'let l
Philadelphia 3, San Dleao 0

New York 4. Seattk&gt; 2
Baltimon&gt; 6, Callfomla 4
Boston 6, Texas o
Oakland 5, &lt;::.1eveland 2

OONI'EBENCE SEMIPINAlll

........,.,....,_,

.......,...o.zn-

-~W-&amp;1
MUwtuke!
92, Philadelphia 91

or.

Bolton 103. w~ 99,
lkwton
leadl aeries 3-1
Ph!ladelphllllOO, Milwaukft 93, Phlla· ·

w.....,..o....
---~1
Waah.lnltm II Bolton (nl.

w..... cw.....
8illadQ'a Gam.

San Antollo 115, SeattJt 113, San An·
tookllNdlleriea S-1

w.
. .....,..au..

Loo let wlna se!W U

Pboenlx ""· Loo ...,...

San Antonio at SstUe (n) .

12th ANNIVERSARY SALE
IN PROGRESS
OPEN TOMORROW 9-6

Today Is Monday, May 3, the 123rd day of 1!182. There are 242 days left In
the year.
.
.
Today's hlghllght In history:
On May 3, 149f, Christopher Columbus dlscovered the Island of Jamaica.
On this date:
· In 1841, New Zealand was fonnally proClaimed a British colony.
In 111!!9, France declared war on Austria. ·
In ~. Allied troops entered Hamburg, Germany, In World War n.
ADd 1n 1958, Presldellt Eisenhower propoeed the demWtarlzatloo It
Antarctica.
Ten years ago: About lliO people fled from the South VIetnamese city It
Hue as Cominunlst forces pushed toward the outskirts.

make."
Several mistakes by Reds' reliever Bob Shirley, a former Card I·
nal pitcher, led to Cincinnati 's
demise In the second game. With
Martin nursing a no-hitter and HI
lead through stx Innings, Shirley
came on to get the first two outs In
the top of the seventh. He then
walked Martin and the next two
batters to toad the bases.
Kelth Hernandez, who drove In a
run In the first Inning, singled for
two runs and Gene Tenace homered off Joe Edelen for a &amp;{I lead.
What happened to Martin In the
ninth gave Herzog a brief pause.
Martin gave up a double to Alex
Trevino, one out later a walk to Oes·
ter and a three-run homer to Dave
Concepcion. When Cesar Cedeno
followed with a solo blast, Herzog
brought on Sutter.
"They made a ballgame out of
that, didn't they? Wowee," Herzog
said, breathing easier.

53 1 JACKSON PIKE Rt 35 WEST
Phone 446· 4524

Scoreboard...

DOONESBURY

Today in history

There are tons of reasons why your
electric rates are below average.
\

coal. All of the electricity we make, we
make from coal. And the American Electric
Power system we·re part of uses more coal
than any other utllltv In the country.
Almost 45 million tons last year alone.

so. since coal Is more economical to
use than other fuels, and fuel is the maJor
factor In the cost of making electricity, our
use of it helps keep your electric rates
below the national average.·
·source: E.E.I. Stltlstlcal Yearbook No. 48 November. 1981

. ·we give it ourbest.
OHIO POWER COMPANY

,,
••

...:...:..
W =:
illi.:.:am
:..:.·_ F _. B_uc
_kl_ey::;__J_r.

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

I

�J
Page-4-The Daily Sentinel

Monday, May

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

3, 1982

Palli
team
wins
tournament
.
By Tim Davis
A lour-man team led by pro golfer
Anne Marie Palli captured the
Mister Bee Pro-Am Golf Tournament held Sunday in Mason
kicking off a three-day Mister Bee
Classic of the Women's Pro Golf
Tour, which started early today.
The lour-man scramble format is
a tournament in which there is only
one score and that being a team
score for all four team members.
Each member of the team hits a tee
shot and the team plays the best of
the four shots. From that point all
four players once again hit a shot
and they play the best one from that
point.
One stipulation made for yesterday's tourney, was that. each team

had to use at least four tee shots of
each team member at one point or
another and that being up to each
team's discretion when to use it.
Palli's team finished the 18-hole
tournament in a three way tie with a
team score of 61 with Sherrin
Galbraith's team and, Jane
Reynolds' team for first place. Palli
and her team eventually won the
tournament in a sudden death
playoff on the first hole.
Her team consisting of three
amateur golfers included, Fran
McEwen, Willis Davis and Jim
Thomas, who finished with a team
score of 61 after 18-holes.
Sherrin Galbraith's team, who
finished second, was made up of

Gary Fenderbosch, Deb Roush and
Dorothy Karr.
Jane Reynolds' team finishing
third cons.isted of Reed Blain, Bob
Miller and Mrs. Mendenhall.
Following yesterday's Pro-Am is
the Mister Bee Classic which started
early this morning. The three-day
tournament on the Women 's Pro
Golf Tour (WPGT) will run through
Wednesday with each r ound beginning at lOa .m.
The Mister Bee Classic, which is
being sponsored by the Mister Bee
Potato Chip Company will have a
purse value of $10,000 and feature
approximately 50 to 60 WPGT pros.
The public is invited to gallery the
event each day.

Guilder takes Byron Nelson Classic
WINNING TEAM - MemberS of the winning team
which took the Mister Bee Pr&lt;&gt;-Am Golf Tournament
Sunday at Mason in a sudden death playoff were, left to

right, Wlllls Davis, Fran McEwen, amateurs ; Aonle
Marie Palli, pro golfer, and Jim Thoma s.

Schmidt's blast tops Padres
By Associated Press
Mike Schmidt . who says he
hasn't fully recover ed from a . rib
cage Inj ury that sidelined hlm for 17
days, didn 't need much time to
start Inflicting pa in on National
League pitchers again .
Schmidt . five- time NL hom e run
champion and the league's Most
Valuable Player the last two yea r s,
ll!t a two- run homer and a double
Sunday In his second game since
retur ning fro m the disabled list.
Mike Krukow pitched a four-llltter
as PhUadelphla bea t San Diego 3-0.
"Right now I' ve got to concentrate on my physical condition,"

Third annual
five mile race
slated May 16

~.
Chilli coth e's Grea t Seal Running
Club, Ross County Y.M.C. A. and
Natura l Light wi ll sponsor the third
annual " Fi ve Mile Challenge" and a
" Two Mile Fun Run " on May !6 at
the Scioto Trail State For est located
on Route 23 - eight miles south of
Chillico the - East on Route 372.
The five mile run is on a scenic circular course with one long hill. Tshirts will be gi ven to the first 200 entrant.&lt; . The entry fee is $5 if postmarked by May 13, $6 for late entry .
The race will begin a t 12 noon. First place overall wmn er s in both the
ma le and female divi sions will
rece ive Frank Shorter running gear.
Awards will be given first through
fourth places in the following

di visions:
Men and Women - 15 and under,
16-19, 2().29, 3().39, 40-49, 50 and over.
The Two Mile Fun Run will be on a
nat course. All fini shers will r eceive
their time and ribbons. The entry fee
is $2.
Registration wi ll start at 9:30a .m .
Spli ts will be given at each mile. All
registrant.&lt; who are present will be
eligible for a drawing. Previous winning time in the men's division is
held by Glen Bartholmen from
Athens - age 25, 25 :21 and in the
women's by Sara Emlich from Lancaster - age2 1,32 :57.
Mail entries to the Y.M.C. A. at 100
Mill Street, Chillicothe, Ohio 45601.
For further infonnation call Melissa
H1ggs-Norw ell after 4 p. m ., (614 )
772-4038.
Entry blanks are available at l ocal
sporting goods store.

Th e Doil y Se ntinel

&lt;t flt• rr h ~m . M onti&lt;~\'

thr• •uKh

Fr 11la ~ . I l l Cuurt Stn •t'l . by lhl' Oliw Valin
Publ tshuu: Cumpany - Mu lltmt•tha . . (lw :.
P •IIJH" t "~ . Oh:" 4:1769, 992-21:i6 Scnmll d ass
post cu~ t· ]l&lt;t HI &lt;JI Po rt lt'rtl~.

WAannscti_Olenybe
, togurl
_nsnaTmueensdatdiy·r.eMctaoyr. 4, at

nan Trace will play Kyger Creek at
4:30p.m . Tuesday at Cheshire. North Gallia and Southwestern meet the
·
t N hG I
same everung a ort a lia.
The Kyger Creek-Hannan Trace
winner plays Southern Wednesday
while the North Gallia.SOuthwestern
winner meets Symmes Valley on
Thursda y. Tournament c h~mhi
pions 'p game is slated for Friday
evening at 4:30p.m .

th Gallia and Hannan Trace battle in
the second contest at 4:30p.m. May
5.
The winner of the KG-Southern
game plays Southwestern May 6
while the winner of the North Galli·a-

6
Astros • Pirates 2
Joe Nlekro and Randy M offitt

Hannan Tra ce tilt plays Eastern the

DALE HILL
FORD TRACTORS

BEAR

SURSCRIPTJON RATES
8}· Cu rri t' r or Mulur Roo It'
Ont• wt•t•k
... $1.00
Ont• Month
.. . . .. . $4 .40

SINGLF. COPY

95

OTHER REPAIRED BOWS ALSO AVAILABLE

PRICES

.. . .. 15 Cents

Prices in effect thru Sat. May 8,1982

S ubsen ~ rs not Ucsm n)! hl P&lt;tr the earn er
uwy rcm1t 111 advant"c U1red In The Daily
&amp; nt mt'l on ~ 3, 6 ur 12 month b&lt;is1s. Crctlit

v.-1 1J bt- j.!i vcn l'&lt;lrrier cctt•h month .
Nn s u bs\-riptum::~ by nuul pt·nnitlt:tl 111 towns
where home t:arrier servit't! IS 11~uil a ble .

MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS

Next To Mason County Fairground

675-2988

Store Hours Mon. thru Sat. 9:30a.m. 8:00 p.m.,
Closed Su

..

handed - and only three RBI comIng Into the game.
In other American L eague
games, the Boston Red Sox handed
the Texas Rangel'!l their ninth consecutive loss IHJ, the Chicago White
Sox hammered the Det&lt;olt Tigers
10-3, the Baltimore Orioles downed
the Calt Jmla Angels 6-4, the New
York Yankees shaded the Seattle
Mariners 4-2, tbe Oakland A's
trimmed the Cleveland Indians 5-2
and the Toronto Blue Jays beat the
Kansas City Royals 7-5.
The Brewers jumped on WUllams l or four runs Jn the first lonlng
on Ben Ogllvie's RBI single and the
first of Simmons' homers, tills one
batting left-handed. Gorman Thomas homered In the Brewers' third,
Charlie Moore tripled a run acr oss
In the sixth and Simmons struck

Notice of Application to
The Public Utilities Commission of Ohio
For an Increase In Electric Rates

again with two men on base Jn the
seventh, tills time hitting righthanded against Jackson.
Red Sox 6, Rangers 0
Dennis E ckersley scattered eight
lllts for his second shutout of the
season and Boston wrapped up the
decision with five runs In the first
Inning off Doc Medlch. Glenn Hoffman and Rich Gedman each drove
ln two runs as the Red Sox won for
the 11th time In the last 12 games
and opened a 1 ~ -game lead over
Detroit In the AL East.
While Sox 10, Tigers 3
Harold Baines drove ln three
runs with a sacrifice fl y and a tworun triple and unbeaten Lamarr
Hoyt, making only Ills second start
of the season, became the Ameri can Ll ague's first fi ve -ga me
winner. The White Sox knocked out

To whom it may concern

The lollow1ng Serv1ce Charge Clause IS 1ncluded under the Rules
and Regulations lor Electrrc Serv1ce

Pursuant to Ihe requirements of Sec tion 4909 19 ol the Rev1sed
Code of Ohio. the Columbus and Southern Ohio Elec t r~c Company
hereby gives notice that on December 3t . t 981 , it liled wi th the
Public Utilities Commission ol Ohio. an Appl ication (or authorit y 10
amend and inc re ase its rate sch edules wh1 ch are under the Ju ri sdiction ot th e Public Utilities Commission of Ohio .

Wh en a c heck rece1ved !rom a cu stomer 1n paym ent lo r serv1CP
rendered IS no t honored by the bank due to 1nsu fh c1en t fund s the

RESIDENCE SERVICE- SC HEDU LE R-R

Per Month:
Proposed

Present

Winter

Summer

Winter

Summer

Customer Charge

$5 00

$5 00

$5 00

$5 00

F1rst 3000 KVA or
le ss ol ma x1mum
dem and

Over 3000 KVA

Energy Cha•ge
First 800 KW H

4 6t c

4 6t c

6.28c

6 28c per KWH

All addt!IOnal KW H

I 85c

4 6t c

3 13C

6 28c per KWH

SMALL USc-LOAD MANAGEM ENT- SCHEDULE R-R-1
Proposed

Present

Por Month:

Winter

Summer

Winter

Summer

$5 00

$5 .00

$5 00

$500

Customer Charge

Pomeroy

Nexl 100 KWH

3 63c

NrA

5 65c

N/A per KWH

Ove• 800 KWH

3 13c

N/A

185c

N /A per k.WH

OPTI ONAL DE MAND RATE- SCHEDULE RLM
Proposed

Present

Per Month:

Wlnler

Summer

Winter

Summer

$7 00

$7 00

$7 00

$7 00

Customer Charge

Exc ess demand

Frrsl 750 KWH

5 OOc

6 70c pe• KWH

6 70c

5 OOc

150 KWH per KW 1n
exc ess ol 5 KW

We Don't Skimp On Shrimp!

Over 400 KWH per
KVA or maxunum
demand

Billing Demand

t 85c

4 61c

3 13c

6 2Bc per KWH

All Addilronal KWH

1 OOc

2 OOc

1 70c

3 OOc per KWH

The General Se rvrce ra tes have been mod1hed and rncreased as follows

The oil-peak hour s have been c hanged !rom th e hour s betwee n t O 00
p.m of each da y ana 8 00 a.m ot rn e following day for au days to the hOUI S
between 11.00 p.m ol each day and 7.00 a m oil he following day for all days
Sundays and holidays remain olli)eak

GENERAL SERVICE - SMALL- SCHEDULE G5- 1

ll l.t ...,o ( ;, t rl"l , t. w t1o Jr H

l. r·•l

I' lTV!

))\ :-. horhtup I llll \ f

11 , ,

r:lr

· I 1.1

r 1q
t

and '-. l tJlt ·"t"l'l)nd .\1 \\ ' "'~'1-.. dt,uhl••l
L' p o.;h; IW tlurrw Tht·l\lu1 · l.t'
\• rll
up l ll tn HH· ll l ltl1Jil .\ l 1• ~. 1 IJ\ ·· I\\ 1
rundt&gt;ubl! • I n tlH '&gt; t '\1'11 1!1 \\, .....~ l t\
d ouhlt'\.J .IIHI o.,t•• t~! "r;; '1• it.,'.\..,

:-.i nglt ·

t

,'

An tn1e r.m ·,vrctl.nqt' (} 1.;, CJiJ!t' .; 1 :•· •
pitPd tO all rdl t' &lt;;(ll t 'dui p ~, .U Oji 'Ll .
1· .
tn cf!ect fo r J rnd ~ lntum J.Jt·r1od o ' ·,-,. '; ·
the ef!ecttvP dJh" or u11tll •rwo·. ~ ·· ,
: ' ·i

Pe• Mon th
~1 ,', tH· • ·'

$1 000000

$12.500 00

3 20

4

$20

00

1

20

I

?Oo oo

1 lr! ··,l

·

·· ·,tt

6 85
per KVA

20

1

20

pe r KVA

Per Month:

Winter

Summer

$5 00

$500

$5 00

7 02c

7 23c

866c per KWH

Customer Charge

F11s1 400 KWH'

KWH per KW

and 130 KWH per KW in excess of 6 KW

per KWH

5 20c

6 ~0c

2 70c

2 70c

3.47c per KWH

Rate
per Lamp
Type of Lamp

Nominal Lamp
Wattage

Present

Proposed

· t OO
175
400

$4 .75
5.20
8 15

$6 25
6 85
1085

Next 950 KW

5.70

Nexl 2000 KW

5 35

Over 3000 KW

4.40

6.55 per KW
6.20 per KW
5.25 per KW

so

.SOper KVA

I

100
• t 50
200
"250
400

$6 00
6 75
N/A
9 75
t 1.50

$6 85

250
400
1000

$10 75
t 2 50
22 75

$12 30
t 4 30
N/A

775
995
t t 15
t3 t5

High Pressure

Sodium Vapor
Floodlight

Excess demand

.

Ene1gy Charge
First 200 KWH per KW
of maximum demand but
not less than 50.000
KWH

2.00per KW

Rate
per Lamp
Type of Lamp

Nominal Lamp
Wattage

Present

Proposed

Mercury Vapor

175

$ 8. 50

$ t I 25

High Pressure
Sodium Vapor

100
150

1 1.00
11.75

t 2 60
13 45

$548 00

Per Month
Rate
per Lamp

10.17 pe• KW

2.25c per KWH

Next 250 KWH per KW
of maximum demand

1.19c·

1.34c per KWH

Over 450 KWH per KW
of maximum demand

O.SOc

'·

61 per KVA

Merc ury Vapor

2.00per KW
High Pressure
Sodium Vapor

t 10,c''.
,.

0.60c par KWH

.,

.

r·

I

.,

1·

The OII ·PcJk Hour s haw bt'P n t t· r'lr ;, · 1 · n
t OOO p m ofP;JChdayClnd 800.t rn r• ' " 11· ' ' 1.
between 11 00 p m ot each dJy it fl(l i rll' 1 rn

·•

·'·

All ra tes arc s ubj0.C I to thr f l, ·&lt;.. lr r&lt;.. f Lr •'' l,l ·r:,
Rid e r No 1 and p rcsrn: r at~'~~ &lt;-H(' , J I'~O ~uiJJt'r r · ·r ·
c ha rge lor Recove ry otlncr t'&lt;JSCJ On to Grc t•,:, fi··

B ased on Ihe twctve monllt Dl 'ltOd .· nd lfl, , .
q uested ra1 es would 1ncrea c.e 111e u•p r1· ,· nt II, .. . • • ,1,•
c ustom er s b1 tl by appr ox1ma!ely ! G
;Jnd tn t· ','1 : .. •
cu stome r 's bill by app rox 1matrly '{1
T~ t • .1v • t· ;· ·
sma ll and med1um gc n.c rJ I •,e1v •&lt;..P 1 usto rn• r
~&gt;', 1 rrrto~r··!
15 6% and l or all o the r se rv1ce :; I!W ''ll' l l' d '· ''
. 1• r n&lt;~'·· · r ·
prox1 mat ely 25 o,Q
Th e rates. chrllge s ,1nd o tt lL't OtOV1',1(1't : ··r,p1 "d 1: '
subJ ec t to ch;:wges 1nclu cJ .ng c hdnot· I' 1•1 t" "•·
!' ·r r •,
Pubhc Ut1lr t1es Co mm 1~C. 1on o' Ol11 r) ' OIIIIV/ ·
appli c ation

ANY PERSON 1-IR M COf~ rO n AI II: N I 'H ,v,:,, · •.-.
., "
FILE. PURSUAN f TO S'cCT ION " 'l0'! I l1 0 1 I I r[ I &lt;I '1 1' I ''
1
OBJECTI ON TO TH E INCREASE OR INC' HI Aof ', I'H •I '&lt; -1
THE COMPAN Y WHICH MA.Y All ECI THill THf 1&lt;•1.' .'/' J ·
PLICATION CONTAI NS PROPOSALS 1HAT Alii U'";
·
DISCRIM INATORY OR UNREASONAB le

...
""
I'·
•'
.

t' ·

rese rves

Type of Lamp

2.00

1,J • ···I

' '

Th e Comprnw s Appl1ca t1011 1S 'or .JutnOi tlv ::J ;,11:•·' 1
c rease certa 1n elec triC r a t e~-, a nd c t 1 r~r qP' ) d lllt 'ltC1 1 · ·r' 1•1 ···r·•.
COnditiOn S OJ SCI VIC!' an d rr vt:,f' 11'-. CJl'r"J IVCioil t'l l i I',. I ,, ·,

Nominal Lamp
Wattage

Present

Proposed

. 1 00
175
400

$ 4.25

775

$ 5 60
6.25
10.30

100
150
200
"250
400

$ 5 75

$ 6.55

6.25

7.20
9.25
10.30
t t45

Excess KVA Demand

Charge
Off-Peak Hours

Il l '',.~ ~

No 3
High Pressure
Sodium Vapor

Proposed

$36000

': •

per KWH to 1 20c pe r KWH

STREET LI GHTING SERVICE- SCHEDU LE SL

First 50 KW or less
ol ma ximum demand $320.00

I'•

$1 20 pe r KW and l heE ne rgy C h ;urp·li.r ',

Summer

On-Peak Hour s

,,.r•~+

Ma xrmum cn.:HCW lld '. Dt•t•n r rt. Hrt l•'tl ·· ,n
per KW H 10 70c ppr KW , HlU I&lt; !l''l I' wtr

Per Mont h:

Minimum charge tnc reased from $5 00 to $6 .00 per KW applied to the max·
imum demand in excess ol 6 KW but not less than $5.00

Winter

·~ ~~·

Per Month .

All additional

KWH

1.

I 1·

PR IVATE AREA LIGHTING SERVI CE - SCHEDULE AL· t

per KWH

5 20c

These l dlt'' w ril tt'lll. Jllt
Rt de r No 2

CHURCH AN D SC I IOOI •;[INII I

PRIVATE AREA LI GHTING SERV ICE - SCHED ULE AL -2

in excess of 6
KW ma ximum
demand

maximum demand in .Winter months

Th e mrn1rnu m mo nt iT IV r ~l diCJ • ' ltJr : •r + ' t~~!l• w"
1n c rease d frorn $1 1rJ 10 $t1 1;0 P' ' r KV/ , ,. , .. , r

I '1

o ss e

0 55c

*Plus t4 0

• Plus 150 KWH pe r KW in excess of 6 KW
ma ximum demand in Summer months

Nexl 600 KWH

1 t60c
pe r KW H

Each additional pole and span ol wire ha s been 1ncre ased !rom $1 75
to $2.20 and each 150 It span ol wrr e has been 1ncre ased from $0 40
to $0.50.

Ene1gy Charge

SPECIAL PROVI SIONS API'IICAI\11 UN! II I• l'i
TI ONS TO SPEC II II D SC HI llUII ', '.UI'I'II ',II' '

OPTIO NAL UNMIH 111 IJ ((lMMI HI II\!
FIXED LOADS- SUI'i't I Me NT Nl • ' 1

t 34c

t 16 c

1.305 c per KWH

475

N/A
9.00
10.00

• No new installations alter January 1, 1980.
"No new installations after October 1, 1982 under the proposed ra te
schedule .

.11l

·jo(-Jc r/i

The dPmrtnd C. ll.J rq! · 'ld tlt'r·n :r 11 '•',!' , .. ;I·· ·
$3 67 per KW I'H' t·~cP:;', 'r\VA 1.r•o~rq·· .. ,,11
Pleenergycnarqr·f· of!t(ll!k i(Tt•r,'n p··· r .'.• •
hour of rn tc r• up110il lr.J '. Dt•r•n Ill( · · ·d .•·rl

"No new installalions al ter Octobe r t . t 982 under th e proposed rale
sch edule.

Proposed

Present

Present

POINT-PLEASAN·T
S-HONEYS ONLYf··

'-1 •

SPACE HEATING H[AI STORAI .t ',1 fiVII I
20
The demand Cho1 rgr· n.r ; ht'f•l l lilt .,. I .•"l

The Summer!Winter dilfere ntia l ha s been deleted from all General
Serv1ce Sc hedules

Per Month:

Monday from 4PM to closing you can get all the boiled
. shrimp you can eat, along with fries, warm toasted grecian bread,
Shoney's ·own cocktail sauce, and our all-you-care-to-eat
soup and salad bar, featuring our great new homemade seafood
gumbo, for just $4.99. Children under 12 get a free · ·
· dessert with any ~r purchase. It's a new, nicelY nautical way
we're saying, "Thank you for coming to Shoney's!'

f )!'h.r\\

. . in)dt· 1n tht• flro..,t 1nntn.L:

A new n l(h'l illdt'l NCJ L'
1•11•·•1 11 1
Te mpo ra ry AOUIIIO!ld l Un to Gtu ·, ~, I&lt;··· • .r:•
all p10pose d ra1t' ~.c.h~·dule~ 11 lt'.l J·

A $25000 Srrv1::e Ul dtCJr '

Other sch edules have been mod1lied and 1ncrea sed as lollows

Mercury Vapor

GENERAL SERVICE - MED IUM - SCHEDULE GS-2

~Our New Homemade Seafood Gumbo

drtJ\' t• iJ1f Hill"ti l1 '-.ljl]l'll

pe r KWH

Energy Charge

1

Propose d

Present
Winter
Summer

Off -Pea k Hou rs

F1rst 400 KWH per
KVA ol max1mum
dema nd

5 65c per KWH

Monday 4PM ToOosing

doublP, D.I\T :\k h ,n ·.., H l ~l
groumlPr &lt;~ nd :\ twm.trl ·.., llr11rw1
1\hw . J a _y ~ i , H.o_\·aJ, :,
!.l ov e! Mo:-.,f' h\ :Hld \\" i llir ' l ·p,tlt'.\

I NTERRUPTIRLE POWr 11 - S\,HI UU 1

On-Peak Hours

Per Month:

5 65c

POINT PLEASANT

twice to support thr four-hit pitch
ing of Mike Norris, who st1-uck oul
fi ve and walk ed thrN' . 'Jorri s held

th ird on T oiJy· J l:lr~ :ttl ·..; 1\\ 'r) nu1l1q
nlf'l' but Oakland got th t •~ · .!~ !tll'
top rJf tilt' fou rth . 1g. nn '-r l~t&lt; k
Wa i ts. 0 -1. o n ;t w .tlk. h~ Hl!d J·-.

Demand Cha rge

3 63c

;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i

ho m er a nd Jeff Burr uu g tl ~ scon'&lt;-l

th(' Indians hill&lt;'._,_. ., tn ,Ill huttH r• Hl
ni ngs, gi \'ing up two hit..., in l ilt· 1l1in!
and fourt h.
Cirvfl la nc\ took ;1 2 ll lt ·. td iJ tllf•

th at the bank was in e rro r

GENERAL SERVICE - lARGE - SCHED ULE G-4

3 63c

992-2668

Moreno.
Y ankees 4, Mariners 2
Dave Winfield drove In th e tiebrea king run with a line dri ve off
the tlllrd base bag In the eight h Inning and Roy Smalley added a tworun single, as the Yankees broke up
a pitching duel between winner Ron
Guidry and loser Floyd Bannister.
With one out , Willie Randolph
doubled and took third on .Jer ry
Mumphrey's Infield hi t. M ike Sianton r elieved Bannister and Winfield
r ipped a smas h down th f' Hm· which
hit the bag and bounced stra 'ghl in
the air.
i\'s 5, !ndhut' 2
J eff Newman C'l'ilCkPd a two-r un

custome r will be charged $6 00 to p;,y the add1t1on al cosI 1ncur red by
th e Company lor process1ng the chec k. unless th e cus1omer shows

The residential rates have been modilied and inc reased as
fol lows

Frrsl 700 KWH

~~fio~llo;w;i;n;g;e;v;en;i;n;g.;T;h;e;;ch;a;m;-

•,

loser Jack Mom s with four runs ln
the fifth . Tom Paclorek singled
hom e two runs In the first Inning
and Baines delivered his sacrifice
fly In the fourth following singles by
Greg Luzlnskl and Paclorek. Bill
Almon opened the Chicago !lfth
with a single and scored on a double
by Steve Kemp. Luzlnskl slngled
Kemp home and. after Pactorek
walked, Baines tripled. Tony Ber nazard socked a two-run tr iple In
the sixth.
Orioles 6, Angels 4
E ddie Murray hit two doubles.
drove In a run and scored one and
Scott McGregor recorded his lOth
stralght victory over California.
Murray doubled In the first Inning
to drive In AI Bumbry, who walked,
and hit another double In the third,
chaslng California starter Angel

The subslance ol th e rate re VI SIOns proposed 1n the Appi1 Cal1on
l1led on December 3 t . 198 t . 1S as lollows

Demand Charge

aow·

'99

. $52.80

By A... ialed Press
Ted Simmons says switch-hitting
Is like being two different personalities - so both sides of Ted Simmons
hit three-run homen Sunday ... one
from each side of the plate.
" Switch hitting Is a strange thlhg.
It's like being two separate people," Simmons sald alter homering
ott AI WUllams In the first lonlng
and Darrell Jackson ln the seventh.
His six runs batted ln led the MUwaukee Brewers to an ll-4 victory
over the Minnesota Twins.
Both Ted stmmonses had combined for only a .W4 batting average going Into the game and neither
had a home run.
"Today, both people are alive
and well," added Simmons, who
was struggling with a .W4 average
- .243 from the left side, .118 right·

214 W. Main

Monday N. bt Is
All.fou-Care- o-Eat
Shrimp Night!

Brown

POSTM ASTFil So·rhl &lt;lddrl'ss tu Tht.• Dt~il v
S.·ntrrwl. I I I Cuurt St , P•u r u: n •~. Ohrv 1!)769:

Switch _hitting Simmons has six RBis in Brewer win

Energy C'"'arge

$59'5

YPrk . Nt·\\ York 1001 7.

The Daily Sentinel - Page- S

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Energy Charge

FULLf
WARRANTED

Nt·ws p.a pl'r Publrslwrs 1\ sso~.: m lwn . N a lt~ tnt~l
ll d l 't•r lr srnl! H t• p rt• s t ·n t ;~ t rv r · . Br an harn
Nr · ~' S J:l&lt;l))l' l" S&lt;t lt·s. 7:1:1 Tl unl A.l·t·n w·, Nt•w

and Wn t Ylrxlnla
3 Month . .. ..... . .
. . $13.00
&amp;Month .
.... . . . 123.40
IYe11r .. . .
. 144.20

Girls' Sectional
In the Class A girls' pairings, Han-

-----------

BEAR WHITETAIL HUNTER

Mt• trlbl·r Tlw i\ ss t ~ · r ;rl t'tl Prt'ss. Inla nd Darly Pn-.'i.~ AS.'&gt;Ut' tCt !to n und thr Atrr l'n t•au

Ohln and W ~11 t Vlr~lniB
:! Month .
. 11 2.35
S1x month .
................ .. 1211.80
I Year
. . .. .. . ..... ... $39.00
Ratrl Oul.llldr Oblo

Rio Grande College's Stanley Evans
Field were announced today by Bill

4:30 p.m . when Kyger Creek plays
SVAC championship Southern. Nor-

and a double play sandwiched
around a walk.

"I knew my wife w as going to
come so I had better win, " said
GUder. "I didn't want to blow It llke
I did at Mutrfield. I was nervous at
first but the putts dldn 't drop for
Curtis and that made It easter."
GUder made blrd1e putts of 2, 15,
and 16 feet and saved par on two
holeS coming out of bunkers In his
relentless round.
The • Arizona State graduate
boosted his earnings this year to
$ll0,344 with his third tour victory.
He also won the 1976 Phoenix Open.
GUder said he knew he had the
victory after he btrdted the 15tH and
16th holes.
Playing partner David Graham,
who finished Jn a three-way tie for
third, sidled over to him and
quipped: " Do you think you can get
ln now?' '
Graham was In GUder 's group at
the Mutrf1eld disaster.
"David made m e laugh," said
Gilder ·

pionship game is slated for 1 p.m. , -Saturday, May 8.

Pairings for the Class A boys' sectiona! baseball tournament slated at

shutout. But he gave up Jim Wohlf rd ' f
0 s ourth hit of the second ga me
befor e Nell Allen came In to r egister his sixth save with a strikeout

Pittsburgh.
N lekro blanked the Plra tes on
one hit through six Innings before
allowing consecutive homer s to Jason Thompson and Bill Madlock .
A double by Mike Easier chased
Nlekro and brought In Moffitt, who
allowed one hit the last three tnnnlngs for his first save.
Howe slngled ln runs ln Houston's
three- run third Inning and Jn the
ninth. Cruz had a two-run double ln
the fourth.
Braves !0, Cubs 3
Bob Walk gave up two hits through
eight Innings and Atlanta scored
four runs ln the third Inning and six
In the fifth to rout Chicago.
Walk, 3-0, finished with a flvellltter as he gave up a solo homer to
Keith Moreland and a run-scoring
single to Ty Waller Jn the ninth.

with a tlnal round !-under 69 and a
271 total.
"Bob played just perfect ... He
was just too tough to catch," said
Strange.
GUder's total, wlllch was compUed on four relatively windless
days, was 15 shots better than the
w1onlng four rounds posted by
Bruce Lietzke last year. Gilder aiso
set records at the 36 and 54 hole
marks.
The deterrnlned GUder, boosted
by an overnight red-eye tllght from
Portland, Ore., made by his wife
Peggy, wasn't about to collapse Jtke
he did In 19&amp;1 at the Memorial
Tournament.
Leading going lnto the final
round, he stumbled to an 82 and finIshed 41st.

Announce patnngs

doubled .
Randy Jones, 3-l , went Into the
ninth looking for Ills 19th car eer

comblned on a five-llltter and Jose
Cruz and Art Howe each drove In
two runs to Iead Houst on over

Curtis Strange, who cashed $37,!m

• •

r----------------------------1

0/uu

Ont· Yl'ur

record streak of 2691-J innlngs with·
out yleldlng a home run .
Minton, who broke Dale Murray 's previous homerless m ark of
2471-31nnlngs last year, pitched the
final two innings to earn his fourth
save of the season. The victory
went to AI Holland, 2-3.
Geor ge Foster, who got four hits
ln the tw!nbill to Improve his aver age from .179 to .'JJJ7, gave the Mets
all the run s they needed Jn the second game when he homered In the
first lnnlng off Giants rookie Bill
Laskey, l -l, after M ookle Wilson

New Factory Repaired

!US PS 145-9601
A Dh tl&gt;iun uf MuiUm~dia , lm·.

Publ tshetll'l o · r~·

said Schmidt, who was Injured
April 13 when he twisted his side
whUe llltllng a single during a
game. " I'm always thlnklng about
m y rib cage. Because of that I
sometimes don't take a good funda mental swing at the ball."
His swing was fundamentally
sound enough Sunday to give him
Ills first homer of the season and
first two extra-base hits.
"It was one of the most fun home
runs and doubles I've ever lllt,"
said Schmidt, who hit Ills homer ln
the lltth lnnlng off John Curtis, 2-1,
giving Philadelphia a 3-0 lead. " After sitting out so long, I was beginning to wonder If I'd ever be able to
swlng fluidly again."
Krukow, 2-2, pitched his second
shutout of the season for the Phillies. who have won only seven ol 21
ga mes.
Expos 13, Dodgers I
Tim Wallach led Montreal' s 17lllt attack with a homer , two slngle6
and four RBI as the Expos won
their first series In Los Angeles
slnce July 19TI by winning their second game of the three-game set.
Right-hander Steve Roger s, 4-1,
pitched a five-hitter, but he lost his
shutout with two outs In the ninth
Inning when he Issued two walks
and Wallach threw wUdly to first
alter Pedro Guerrero hit an Infield
slngle.
Andre Dawson added four hits
and Warren Cromartie drove In
three runs lor the E xpos.
Giants ~. Mei8 ~2
San Francisco won Its fifth
straight game by capturing the opener, while New York snapped a
five-game slide with Its nightcap
triumph.
ChUI Davis and Darrell Evans
homered to give the Giants a 4-1
lead In the opener . They hung on to
win although John Stearns' two-run
homer Jn the eighth lnnlng ended
Gr eg Minton's major league-

Gilder won by five .shots over

DALLAS (AP)- BobGUdersatd
goodbye to Preston Trail Golf Club
In a par-wrecking finale that
forever will leave his name Usted Jn
the Byron Neison Classic record
book.
GUder cruised home with no fives
o" Ills card and a 3-under par or
Sunday to establish a tournament
record 14-under-par 266.
The tournament leaves Preston
TraU after 15 years In 1983 and wtn
be played at a new course, Cottonwood Valley, Jn nearby Irving.
" I'm sad to see tt go," said
GUder, who earned a $63,!XXJ check
and his first victory since the Cana·
dian Open In 19&amp;1.
The 31-year-old GUder's score, fashioned with four rounds Jn the 60s,
was three strokes lower than the
previous record held by Buddy Allin and Tom Watson .

Monday, May 3, 1982

• , ·
The Company ~ Appllc .l 1•on ·,l ilt•· . ., tr•.Ji p, . · , ·,
authorrzed by the Com miSSIOn and !l tP r,d •' o ~ 110: •" 11 ·r · • , .•
the property aff ec ted 1S madcqudte . ullJL• ~,; u:-'t'.l · •.~: • ,., : ,. "
c ten t to yield JUS t co m pensa11on and 111.11 P1~" ',111 ' :vr;:
r ...
produ ce mo re tt1an n ta 1r re tur n on ~,ud1 rr()pi"IV ,· 1,..r ,1r· 'H · t
r' .
fo r the assurance o l adequ ate sc rv 1r: t ~ 111lf1 r0 vl'f"l•·· ·· r• ' ,. il' ,,.hJ: •.

fi nanc ial soundn ess
Th e Com pany p ra ys that the Commt ·.~.10n t 1 1 · · 1 " 1 . "
t ·
p 1tcat1on . Exh1b1t s a nd Sc hedules arP hl('d 1n .I CCO!d o~·
•'· ~" ,,.
4909 18 . Ot1 io Rev1 sed Cod e an d the rules ot PV' Lnn
prove th e p roposed Not1ce for N ew spaprr Putl lh. d1 · ··
·1' • 1 . 1 ·
l or a hearr11g , (4) l.nd that th e p resen t r ;;11P&lt;.; prttt'-, 1 • ~· l·
:· 1 ! ·• ·
pr ovls ron s of th e sc hedu les a fle c lc d hy suc ll AI..JDI•, ,tJ ,. 1'1 c~' · ·
a nd unrea so nabl e a nd .n sutlrc1ent to y1 e ld JU SI U l llHJ• ·' I .ti l •
servi ce rendered t her e under . ( ~ ) fmd and dt 'lt"rTlt" ;· ··
p r1ces . c ha rge s and o lhe r p rOVI Sio ns of I he o.,c twd L.Ir· ·, ,.1d•"t'·J 'l t' '
ing are JUSt and rea so nab le . and appr ove sucn sc n~·Oult" 1"1 •'11 '1)r:1
tendered and make suc h schedu les e fl ecttvP '"' o.,o, · 1 : ,. n· ,
trca bl e to do so . (6 ) f1nd that the pr oposed dPOrt"cl&lt;lllun 1 cn .o1 1 r.P •
a nd reserves are p rope r and adequa te charges for dt~P 't', t:t(Jn 1' c
ma ke them effec trve as soon as r11s p ra c t1cal and l,mdt,llo J n \O fi'Ht
(7) g ran t to the Compa ny such o th er and fu rt he r l (' ilt.::l to N 1l1C tt 11 rn 1v

be entitled
A copy of th e Applica t1on and all anacilt'C ! ~ 1 1 1!/ s o~ nu
Sc hed ules are ava ilable lor inspec t1on du n ng normal busr ness llOL;r'

at th e ollice ol Th e Public Utilit1es Commrss1on ol 01110 375 Soul''
High Str eet. Columbu s. Oh10 432 t 5. and at Ihe oll1ce ol Ihe Apnl• ·
ca nt . 215 North F10nt Streel . Columbus. Oh1o 43215
Recommendations whiCh diller !rom the Appl 1ca t1on rn.1 y be
made by th e Stall ol The Publ1 c Utrl1tres Co mm 1SS 1on of 0 1110 or ,,
tervening pa111e s and may be adopted by th e CommiSSIOn
COLU MBU S AND SOUTHERN OHIO ELECTR IC COMPANY
BenT . Ray , President and Ch1el Opera t1ng Oll1cer

�Pag.--6--The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Meigs area births and birthdays
Rigoli
Mr. and Mrs. Riccardo Rigoli of
Bolzano, Italy are announcing the
birth of a daughter, Anita Marjo~ie,
born on April 22. The infant weighed
six pounds, eight ounces. Mrs. Rigoli
1s the former Kathy Harris of Middleport.
Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Lucio Rigoli of Bolzano, Italy, and
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Harris, Ghana,
South Africa, formerly of Middleport.

son, Justin Michael, April 14, at the
Riverside Hospital, Colwnbus. He
weighed six pounds, eight ounces.
Long is formerly of Middleport, and
his wife is the former Susan Custer,
Ashville.
Paternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Lewis Long, Middleport.
Maternal grandmother is Dorothy
Custer, Ashville; and the maternal
grandfather is Marvin Custer, Reno,
Nev . The paternal greatgrandmother is Margaret Clatworthy, Middleport.

Vanlnwagen

Craig

Mr. and Mrs. Keith Vanlnwagen,
Powhatan Point, are announcing the
birth of a son, Aaron Keith on Apri13
at the Bellaire City Hospital. He
weighed 10 pounds, five ounces and
was 23 inches long .
Paternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Ernest Vanlnwagen of
Bradbury, and maternal grandmother is Mrs . Mae Kenny,
Powhatan Point. Paternal greatgrandmother is Mrs. Jessie Mae

Sara Jean Circle, daughter of
Steven and Fae Craig celebrated her
second birthday at her home in
Minersville Sunday.
A Sesame Street theme was
earned out with a Big Bird cake
baked by her aunt, Mrs. Donna
Shato. Ice cream, Kooi-Aid and coffee were served. She received many
gifts.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs. Leo
Searls, Middleport, and Mr. and
Mrs. Henry Reibel, Pomeroy, greatgrandparents: Mrs. Jean Craig and
Mr. and Mrs. Donley Reibel ,
Pomeory: Mrs. Joe Custer, L. D.
Hartinger, Middleport : Cindy Craig,
Glouster: Althea Strong,
Wilkesville : Donna Shato and
Kristin, Gallipolis: Mr . and Mrs.

Vanlnwagen, Pomeroy .

Houser
Mrs. Terne Lee Miller Houser,
Rutland, and Frank W. Houser,
Virgima, are announcing the birth of
their f11·st child, a daughter, Melissa
Rayne lie Houser. Born on April 25 at
the Pleasant Valley Hospital, she
weighed fiv e pounds, 14 ounces and
was 19 inches long .
She is joined at home by a brother,
Anthony Ryan Miller, nine . Paternal
grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Lee Miller, Rutland, and the
paternal grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Everett Houser, Lynchburg,
Va .

Victor Brown, Mrs. Helen Maag ,
Minersville; Caroline Searles,
Donley Strong and Jenhica, Colwnbus. Sending gifts were Tom Lane,
Minersville; Mr. and Mrs. Joe
Eskew and daughters, Gallipolis:
Herbert, Bertha Reibel, and Emma
Ogdin, Pomeroy; and Violet Hartinger, Middleport, great-greatgrandmother of the honored guest.

l

Service notes
Mark S. Smith, son of Vernon L.
and Janet R. Smith of New Haven,
W. Va., has been promoted in the
U.S. Air Force to the rank of airman
first class.
Smith is a parachute specialist at
Seymour Johnson Air Force Base,
N.C., with the 4th Component Repair
Squadron.
He is a 1979 graduate of Wahama
High School, Mason, W.Va.

By The Bend

.----------_!.---------------:-

All 4 Sizes

Helen Help Us

TWIN, FULl, QUEEI &amp; lUNG

BY HELEN AND SUE BOTIEL
DEAR READERS :
l recently returned from vacation
to find twice as much waiting mail
as expected. Reasons'. Vietnam
Vets and the " Heavy Metal Sound."
Today we'll run responses to the
charge that people stereotype Nam
veterans as "unstable."
Our weekend column will be heavy
metal time, when rockers use heavy

1 Low Price
$89 9~A.PC.

Army Pvt. Roy A. Murphy, son of
Robert Murphy of Martin, Ky., and
Mary M. May of 409 Hanford,
Colwnbus, has completed training
as an Army military police
specialist under the one station unit
training (0SUT) program at Fort
McClellan, Ala .

15.75°/0
K

MONDAY
RACINE Village Council will
meet at 7 p.m. Monday. Board of
public affairs will meet at 6:30
p.m.
POMEROY - Yard Sale all
day Monday. W. Main St.,
Pomeroy. near upper Monkey
Run by county Coon Hunters

I
•

Associatwn Auxiliary .

ATHENS - Meeting of area
Mon ~

day in basement of Umted Campus Ministry, 185 College, Athens .
LETART Township Trustees
will meet Monday at 7 p.m. at
Leta rt Falls.

POMEROY - Revival May :1-9,
7:3{) each night, Rev . Noah
Burgess, evangelist: special
smging . Rev. James Cundiff,
pastor. invites public.
MIDDLEPORT Garden Club,
7:30p.m. Monday at the home of
Mrs . Paul Haptonstall .
POMEROY - The Women's
Auxiliary of the Coon Hunters
Association will hold a yard sale
all day Monday on West Main St .
near the entrance of Upper
Monkey Run .
RACINE - Annual inspection
of Racine Chapter 134, Order of
the Eastern Star, will be held
Monday at 7:30 p.m. at Racine
Masonic Temple. Officers are to
wear chapter dresses and members are to take either sandwiches or a salad. The worthy
matron asks members to help
clean the temple on Saturday and
has announced a practice for Sunday at 2 p.m.

INDIVIDUAL
RmRIMIMT
ACCOUNT

SYRACUSE - Sutton Township Trustees will meet Tuesday
at 8 p.m. at Syracuse Municipal
Building.

Receives degree
Becky Fultz, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Bernard Fultz, 129 Fairlane
Drive, Middleport, received her
bachelor of science degree· in pharmacy at the winter quarter commencement exercises of Ohio State
University held March 13 in St. John
Arena. Ms. Fultz is employed in
Belpre.

Srudents compete
Three of the Eastern Junior High
students recently performed at the
district Solo and Ensemble competition held at Ohio University in
Athens. Students participating were
Dawna Grueser, superior rating:
Eddie Collins, superior rating: and
Todd Clay, excellent rating.
Meigs All-County Band concert
was called a success and Eastern
High School had 30 students selected
for this group. Three Eastern High
School students have been selected
for this year's Dogwood Festival
Honors Band to be held in Piketon.
Chosen were Tim Roberts, trombone, Kevin Brooks, trombone, and
Jeff Shrivers, trwnpet. This is the
second year in a row that Eastern
students have been selected for this
band.
Other events included April 26,
spring concert; April30, band awards banquet, and May 4, ·band
boosters meeting.

\

40
3042435

"Th1s assumes that you make a $2,000 contnbut1on at the beg1nning ol each year at a 12% Interest rat
and that you leave funds in your IRA through your 65th year

EASTERN Band Boosters, 7:30
p.m. Tuesday in high school band
room. Plans for camp and summer uniforms will be made.

There 15 a substanhal 1nterest penalty tor early withdrawal.

Stop by any
BANK ONE office
for details.

Monthly party
The Arcadia Nursing Home mon-

POMEROY
Eagles
Auxiliary 2171, election of officers, Tuesday at the hall.

WEDNESDAY
'ThiS IS the 1nterest rete and eflectlve l!lnnual yield

CHESTER - An open meeting
of the Chester Garden will be held
Wednesday at 8 p.m. at Chester
United Methodist Church.
Thomas Stahl, a landscape artist
from Stahl's Nursery, Uttle
Hocking, will be speaker. All
members of Meigs County Garden Clubs, as well as others, are
invited to attend.

Whenever you lhln~
ol saviiiiii!OMJ, our name
comes up flnt.

BANK
ONE.M
BANK ONE OF POMEROY
POMERQY•RUTLAHDeTUPPERS PLAINS

®

•

thly party was staged Monday by the
American Legion Auxiliary of
Feeney-Bennett Post 128, Middleport.
For the past year, the Auxiliary
"' has staged monthly parties at the
nursing home for not only the
veterans there but also other patients.
In observance of Mother's Day,
each woman at the party Monday
was presented a rose perfume stick
pin. GIJ1lles were conducted with
nwnerous prizes being awarded to
the winners. Music was provided by
Ethel Hawkand Nettie Hayes for the
18 veterans and 43 other patients attending the party.
The recreation room was

decorated with three large centerpieces, and bud vases of fake fur
flowers in the windows. Sandwiches,
cake, bananas and other refreshments were served.
Each one was given a loot bag containing an apple, a candy bar, gwn,
and crackers.
Representing the Auxiliary at the
party were Mary Madden, Peggy
Caton, Sonia Parsons, Sonja
Wayland, Etta Will, Erma Hendricks, Ethel Ha'wk, Nettie Hayes,
Mr. and Mrs. Lanny Tyree, Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Gilmore, and Mr. and
Mrs. Virgil Parsons.

Banquet and dance
Middleport Alwnni banquet and
dance will be held May 29 at Middleport Elementary School with dinner to be served at 6:30p.m.
A dance will follow at 9 p.m. to be
held at Meigs Junior High. Admission is $10 for one alumni, for
dinner, dance, and dues, $20 for two
alwnni, dinner, dance, and dues,
and $18 for one alwruii and guest,
dinner, dance and dues.
Music for the dance will be
provided by "Last Shot Band."
Those wishing to make reservations
may contact Kathy Hood at 992-5064,
Ann Johnson at 992-2990 or Carolyn
Grueser at 992-3853.·

330:1. - DAVID (;

:l·k ~1l i HHAY .

d1red ur.

DEAR HELE N ANI! SUE
I read tlw ll'l!t'r frn11 1 · Ddu s t·d
Tura: Bum b." wllu rq.: rt'! s lht • Vll· t ll&lt;:llll Jmage, and rouldn 'l l'l' :.; 1s l
kllin~

yuu of our s on , &lt;1 l'11111bat
vell'ran awardt•d tilt' Bronn· Star
Nuw a ll1 g hly S llt ' t't •ss ful
bus illt_' SSitli Hl , ]lt' Wrt S S t ' kdt't]ilflt' tlf

the

Outstandin g

Ytlllll ).!

Anwnra by tilt' .Ja yn •t•s

Ml'll

111

11f

lfl / 9

MRS . D. I.. M
DEAR HE I.E:'&gt;/
Our daughlt•r \ f1a11n· 1. . . il :--J; un
vl'lcran . He IS a St' II S i h lt •. Sl' lbl l l\"t'.
successful y uu n).! 1nan ;nul Wt' an· a ll
pruud of hun . l-It• Cilllll' throu l! h With

pieces and gone on with our lives.

problems.
Our Viet Vel House, :1316 H1gh St. .
Sacramento, Cali f. 95838, is a contact supp&lt;Jrl community for all those
physica lly and psychologically affected by the V1etnam confl ict.

Vel the media publicize the unstables, psychologists agonize with
them, books and fihns push the

We have proeessed some 10 ,000
vd s s ince our inception, and the cost
is right: we ask only that peoplt•

''crazed veteran" angle.
I'm remmded of a recent TV news

aided by Viet Vel House reach out tu

report on a man who went berserk ,
taking numerous people hostage at
gunpoint. Listening to the an-

care enough tv help one another.

uther::; in truutJh: , .shuwi11 g we all
We

pro vi de

coun s el

and

h1s co ura ~e ant.J p~t\n P \t S II tl lal'l
Ma y Wt' LiD DUI' part llm.'. t u ta•J p

111akt' tht• futun· n ght fur nur Vll'l nam \' l'lera~l s .
DONNA

1GOT A PHOBLf.M '' Or a ' "llJ"ll
f Ul' Lii Sl'USS itlll , IWO-)~ t 'll t '1'(1 \IUI I S\ y ll' ·~
D1rect yu ur qut'SIItlll S tu e1tlwr Sul'
nr Helt•n Rnttel ~ 111' bt1\h . 1f yuu
wan t

a

workshops on personal, family ,
social, legal and medical concerns.

Liauglltl'r answt·r

Our services include information. in-

lll'vt spapt'r . 1

t ' OIIlblll i-dltJil

111

lllll\her -

t'&lt;lrt ' 11f

th1s

County groups hold meetings
Slinderella
Ca rlotta Reed received her 2()pound wetght los nbbon and certificate at the April 26 night meeting
of the Chester class of Slinderella.
She was also the top loser for the
week with Beverly Smith as runnerup. At the Tuesday morning Mason
class, three new members were

taken in and Audrey Grant lost the
most weight and Janet Norris was
runner-up.

In the Pomeroy class Tuesday
night, there was a tie for the most

weight lost between Emma Paugh,
Kathryn Knight, and Carla McFarland . Beatrice Weaver and
Christy Roush tied for runner-up and
Miss McFarland also received her 35
pound weight loss ribbon and certificate. Thursday morning exercise

classes continue. Information may
be obtained from JoAnn Newsome,
Slinderella director.

Racine PTO

Patterson

. Several donations to school projects were made at the recent meeting
of the Racine Elementary PTO held
at the school.
It was noted that the new electric
duplicator purchased by the PTO
has arrived and is now in use. A
donation was made to the Southern
Junior High paving project and also
to the project of building a new
trophy case for the high school. A
donation was also made to Mr. and
Mrs. Sam Shain and family who
recently lost their hom. ~o fire.
Officers for the 198U3 school year
were installed by Jean Cleek, vice
president. They are Mrs. Maxlne
Rose, president; Mrs. Judy
Harrison, vice president; Mrs. Barbara Dugan, treasurer, and Mrs.
Ruth Shain, secretary.
Mrs. Maxine Rose presided at the
meeting which opened with the
pledge to the flag and The Lord's
Prayer. Band students presented the
program and advanced students
participating were Patrece Circle,
Heather Shuler, Jon Tuttle, and
Pam Ash. Performing on
flutophones from the fourth grade

Meigs area happenings

BANK ONE's IRA lets you set aside
the 18-month rate in effect at the time
tax-deferred savings of up to $2,000, which
they are deposited. (During March the
can be subtracted from your income before
18-month rate is 15.75%. *) Or you can
your taxes are figured each year. If you
choose a variable rate plan. (The variable
have a non-working spouse, you can
rate in effect for March is 15.00%.*)
contribute up to $2,250. Of course, if you
Act quickly to get
and your spouse both work, you can each
the best tax advantage.
open an IRA and contribute up to a total of
Whether you sign up for a fixed rate plan
$4,000 to your plans. And you'll earn high
or the variable rate plan, you will be assured
money market interest rates for an
your money is earning inflation-proof interest
inflation-proof rate of return.
for your retirement. To maximize the taxThe chart below illustrates how quickly
deferred interest you eam, you should make
your financial future can grow.
your contributions as soon as possible after
You can choose one of two ways
the first of the year. You will receive monthly
to earn your interest at BANK ONE.
statements on the status of the Account and
You can choose an ,..-.------,.----...,...-----. your funds are
interest rate which
AMOUNT insured by an
AGE
is set for 18 months.
When You Open
You Will Accumulate
agency of the
Your IRA
AtA 65*•
Any new funds
federal
deposited will earn
50
83506 government.

chance to plead temporary insan1ly
- as in, "You can't t'o rn vid rne ~

ll'rventltlll a11d otl\t'J'I liilln · tlp\ 1011:-.
for lllll llt'dlalt · s un' l \ ·a J ll t 't 'd . . . For
f urthl'l' lllfon nc.t\1011 . ca ll ~ 9lli 1 924-

Thank!; for yo ur professionalis m
in the column un Vil'tnalll Vete rans'

chorman's corrunenl'), his co-archor
asked, " Was this fellow a Vietmun

Pomeroy residents receive scholarships

Calendar

co-hostess.

by the Meigs Association for Retarded Citizens
(MARC), Chaperones for the event were members of
the REACT team of Meigs County as well as many
volunteer riders.

Post, she has been active with the
group for four years. She is a member of the Steno Club at Meigs.

with apprehension l;ut the " time
bomb" theory gives cnrninals a

my life hurls, but 1t's best fur surVIval. - HJM
DEAR HELEN •

His wife, Kathy, is the daughter or
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Shain of Racine.

secretary .
Current
Kim Patterson and Laura Smith medical
president
of
the
Junior
American
have been awarded scholarships of
$100 each by American Legion Legion Auxiliary of the Pomeroy
Auxiliary's Drew Webster Post 39 of
Pomeroy.
Both Patterson and Smith have
been active members and past officers of the Junior American Legion
Auxiliary of the Pomeroy Post.
The daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Oscar Smith, Laurel Cliff, Pomeory,
Smith will be attending Marietta
College where she will major in
biology. She is a member of the
Meigs Chapter of National Honor
Society and has been active in
volleyball, basketball and track
during her high school years. She is :
also a member of the Computer Club
and attends Laurel Cliff Free
Methodis.l_Church.
Patterson is the daughter of Connie Patterson and resides on Brick
Street in Pomeroy. She plans to attend Hocking Technical College at
Nelsonville to receive training as a
Smith

tially exphive and often watched

critique.
Now - vets and their familtes
have the floor :

combines basic training with advanced individual training. Students
were trained in civil and military
law, traffic control, map reading
and self-&lt;lefense.

HlKE-BlKE-Approxlmately 300 children and adults
took part In the eighth annual Hike-Bike for the mentally retarded held Saturday. The event was sponsored

Not only a re ve ts ass umed poten-

ammunition on my recent music

OSUT is a 1:1-week period which

Craig

veteran ' " (As if that would expla111
the whole tl1ing.l
Incidentally, he wasn't'

Vietnam made me crCJzy .··
I've learned never to ment1on .ny
military record . Denying &lt;J part of

DEAR HELEN AND SUE :
Thank you for printing the rebuttal to the stereotype of Vietnam
veterans as " walking around," time
bombs, or crime-prone.
Most of us vets have picked up the

Mr and Mrs. Jan Long, Worthiogton, announce the birth of a

MIDDLEPORT Garden Club
will meet at 7:30p.m. Monday at
the home of Mrs. Paul Haptonsta ll with Mrs. dorothy Roller,

Monday, May 3, 1982

·Page- 7

Long

Vietnam vete rans at 7 p.m .

The Daily Sentinel

Bellringer drive
Dorothy Sayre, Bellringer drive
chairperson for Letart Falls, announced that three workers will go
house-t()-house during the May campaign to collect for mental health.
"The need is great," said Sayre.
" Most people don't realize that mental and emotional problems affect
one family in four, and can cause
physical symptoms. Our campaign
this year stresses the importance of
'Memtal Health for Everybody .' "
The Bellringer drive benefits the
Mental Health Association of Ohio, a
volunteer citizens' advocacy
organization dedicated to preventing mental illness and promoting
mental health. The Mental Health
Associaton is not a state agency and
must be supported by private contributions such as those collected in
the May BeHringer campaign.
Bellringer workers in Letart Falls
are Monice Hill, Cindy Allen and
Carol O'Brien.

were Kathy !hie, Tricia Wolfe, Jennifer Johnson, Brenda Zirkle, Amy
Harrison, Scott Hill, Aimee Wolfe,
Ammy Roush, Chris Ash, Shelly
Sawyers, Angie Manuel.
The room count was won by Donna
Norris' fourth grade. Next meeting
will be held on May 10 with the
program to be the art fair .
Refreshments were served by the
second grade room mothers.

AAUW
POMEROY ·· Endorsement of
the 1.5 operallng levy for the ca.
rleton School and tostaUatton of
new officers highltghted the Tues·
day ntghl meettog of Middleport·
Pomer oy Area Branch of
Amertcan Association of Unlver·
stty Women .
Jeanette Thomas spoke to the
group on the levy to provideoperat·
lng funds for the new school for the
mentally retarded which Is scheduled for completion next month. It
received the unanimous endorsement of the group.
Carla Shuler, teacher at South·
ern High School, was tostalled as
president of the Branch with Maxtoe Philson being Installed as mem·
bershlp vice president. Officers to
continue for another year are Helen
F . Smith, program vice president;
Lee Lee, secretary; and Kathryn
Knight, treasurer.
Mrs. Shuler on behalf of the
branch, presented Mrs. Fay Sauer,
outgoing president, a bouquet or
red roses. Rosalle Story, retlrtog
membershtp vice president , was
presented a certiftcate from the
state board commending the
branch for an Increase to membership this year.
Guest speaker at the meettog
was Harriett Wood, cultural toter·
est representatiVe on the state
board of the MUW. An educator

and artist from Wellston, Wood
presented a !lim called "Heritage"
featuring ptctures from throughout
thestate'by MUW. Two of the local
branch, Maurtta Miller and Rachel
Downie, worked on the !lim

materiaL
Margaret Ella Lew b prl' !Ja rl--'&lt;.1

the tables carrying out tho "April
Showers" the me which was also
used In the name tags and favors.
Attending were Rachel Downie.
Kate Jarrell. who presided at the
guest book, Kath ryn Knight, Mrs.
Lewts, Mrs. Miller, Christine Nap·
ler. Mrs. Philson, Mrs. Sauer. Mrs.
Shuler , Smith, Mrs. Thomas. Mi ss
Story, Maxine Wingett and Doroth)·
Woodard. members. Cuests a t
tending were Ms. Wood . Wellston:
Violet Ge ttl es . Wellston: Rose
Easterman Dcl3ruhl. Middleport :
Janice Eastman Haynes . Coolvil le.
David Shuler. Earl Knight. Rov
Miller, and E . A . Wingett .

Riverview Garden
Mrs. Walter Brown, Mrs Donald

M)ers and Mrs. Gene Young hosterl
a recent meeting of Ri ve rview Gar-

den Club held at the Myers horne .
Mrs. Ernest Whitehead preSided
at the meeting w1th Mrs. Okey Connolly rcad111g "The Sunshme of
May ," and " Fnendship" for the
devotional penod. Get-well ca rds
were signed for Mrs. Thomas Spencer and Mrs. Harilss Frank . patients
at University Hospita l. A thank you
note was read from Mrs. Frank and

Mrs. Spence r for the g1!Ls they
received

before

entenng

the

hospital.
For the program , Mrs. Okey Connolly showed interest ing colored
fi~n

on chrysanthemwns. Mrs . Ge1w
Young and Mrs. Ray Young had
games with several winni ng prizes .

The door prize went to Mrs. Ronald
Cowdery. Using the Easter theme .
refreshments were served to Mrs.
Lyle Ba lderson, Mrs. Frank BISe.
Mrs. Okey Connolly, Mrs. Ronald
Cowdery ,
Mrs .
He rman
Gross ni ckl e,

Mrs.

Clctrt: mu nt

Harris, Mrs . Roy Hannwn , Mrs.
Ronald Osborne, Mrs. Donald Putman, Mrs. Richard Roberts, Mrs.
Denver

We be r ,

Mr s .

Ernest

Whitehead, and Mrs. Ray Young .
The May meeting will be held at
the home of Mrs. Ronald Osborne .

Magazine campaign

Pomeroy Seventh-day
Church has joined a nationwide
ventist campaign raising money
send Christian magazine gift
scriptions to more than
quarters of a million homes across
· America. ''We want to make religion
a more important part of American
life," Pastor Albert Dittes said.
••·
Begonias to be. given as Mothers'
Local campaign director, Bob Lip. .. i' '• ..(
Day gifts were potted by children of scomb, said funds raised locally will
.
.
l
the special education classes at be used for gift subscriptions to ,
Chester Elementary School recently three magazines: "These Times,"
d.urlng a therapy session conducted "Signs of the Times, " and
by the Chester Garden Club.
'' Message.''
Betty Dean and Jennie Machir
"These Times" has won three
represented the club at the session awards from the Associated Church
and provided the begonias, pots, Press as the best religious journal in
planting . soU and peat for the America. "Message," with a cirproject. Plant life was compared to culation of 110,000, is targeted to
i
the life of a child with Mrs. Dean and black Americans.
'
I
Mra. Machir explaining each phase
"Signs of the Times" has the ,.. . .I
of the plapling and growth process.
largest circulation of the three - I ,•
Red foU wu left ~th the teacher 400,000 monthly. Editor Lawrence ·
and wiJl ·be used ai'ound the pots Maxwell says that the magazine has
before they are taken borile to their "IIOW become as good as money at one
mothers on Friday. The children third-world border crossing.
also made cards to atta~ to the
U you would like to receive a complants.
.
.
INSTAlLED - New alflcen al lbe 0b1o Eta Pbl left, Uncia Faulk, recording and corresponding
plimentary subscription to one of
CUpcakes and Euter candy were
Cbapter
a1 Beta 8lpla Pill Sanrlty laalalled 'l'llelday secretary; Brenda Hill, president; Darla Kelly, vice
these magazines call Mr. Lipscomb '
se.rved by MrL Machlr and Mn. at
Jllpt
c1ur1-c
a meetla&amp; at lbe Metp IJul are, fnm lbe president; aud Dee Spencer, treasurer.
(:1)4) 882-2562.
Dean. '

Mothers' Day gifts

·.

.....

t

·"

.

�What's
Cooking?

and paprika to meal Pour mto

rnam dish a·, easily digested, too
If you guessed n ee. then yo u're
ab,olulely correct. R1ce 1' .1 real

avculable 1n many
fla vo rs The box or package of
seasoned n ee rnay contcun a pc~ c k el
of nee and a package of seasomngs
Since the measurmg of the nee and
the seasomngs 1s already done for
you, you ma y be paymg extra for
lh1s convemence Check pnces per
ounce anrl compare w1th the cost of a
sunila r amount of plam nee plus
seasumn gs You can mak e your own
sea,.med n ee eas1ly The followm g

fnemt to a fooC budget Ld'::.i ta ke a

rec1pe l:s a super s1de d1sh w1th

l'heese dunn K the last few mmutes

look at the type' of n ee available
It wouldn't be dlffJculllo become
totall y confused when choo,ng n ee
You can buy nee tn a bag or a box.

chicken Compare the cost of th1s

of bak1ng or spnnkle w1lh pannesan

nee w1th a pre-packaged rm x

cheese.

pre-eooked or frozen Some n ee has
seasomngs added
Let' s be~un w1th pla 1n wh1te n n •

Usuall) plain n ee IS marketed 111
lxl,k!s You ma y choose long gra 111,
medmrn gram or short gra111 Lung

2 T buller or marganne
1cup raw wh1le nee
2 cups chicken broth
I teaspoon browmng sa uce 1optional)
Sa ute onwns Ill buller until nearly

gnun n ee, when cooked , tends tu

tnmsparcnt Add the' nee and st1r

, epa rate and the grams are light and
fluffy For lh1' reason you ma y
choose lung gnun r! Cl' for sa lads.

ronslanlly for three to four ll!lnules
over rned1wn heat until f,rams
become milky while Meanwhile
heal the chicken broth and browmng
sa uce, combme the nee and broth
Bnng to a boil on top of the range
Cover and place Ill a 325 degree oven
for 20 m1nules or cook on lop of the
stove for about 18 m111ule' on low
heal This n ee ma y be cooked ahead

Are you lookmg for way' to , [retch" your food budget'
There 1' a food on the market that
1' low m co,l . qu1ck and easy to
prepare, and ve rsatile enough to be
used m soups, se~ lads, casseroles or
dessert' This food 1s popular w1lh
children and ad ults and 1s a perfeLl
e~ccompa nunent

fur

Seasoned n ee IS

t:t lmosl any

Imed1um

nee a re plwnp gra1ns that cook up
tender and m01sl w1lh the particles
clingmg together Short or med1um
gram nee would be a good ch01ce for
puddmgs, n ee rmgs or croquettes

nf serv mg

To k ee p n ee wh1le when c ookm g m
hard WCiler. Cldd ont! teas poon lemon
JUil'l' or one klblespoon v m ega r to

Spamsh Rice
6 sl 1ces bacon, chopped
I onwn , chopped
I'&gt; pounds ground beef
ll sa il
I L'UP uncooked n ee
4cups tomato JUICe, healed
I l papnka
Sa ute bacon slowly and pour off
part of the fat Brown chopped om on
and beef 111 hot fat Dram Add sail
Add nee w1lh I'"' cups tomato JUICe

curt1 ght conklmt•r 111 d

cool place
Prt'-Cooketl n ee 1 ~ abo av&lt;clllablt•
S1nce the cook1ng has already been
done, all you need to do 1s ic~dd water
e~ccord1ng to the d1rectums to r econ-

slllule 1l Th1s lypt· of nee has a
slightl y different te xture from plain
The pnce

To hold tht• net&gt; , st't

tune

stuff raw

on prc-coukcJ 11ce

may be h1gher than pla1n nee

pepper

halves w1lh the Spamsh nee and
Jm c ruwav e until the nee mixture IS
hot. rolalmg the d1sh halfway
through the cookmg tune Top w1lh
cheese 1f des1red and 1mcrowave unlillhe chee'e melts
For your

free

copy of a

1 ec 1pe

for

creamy rue puddmg contact Dale
Stoll, Me1gs Count y Exlenswn
Agent, Home Econom1cs, al992~96
or wnte to Box 32, Pomeroy, Oh10
45769

NOTE In last week's colwnn, the
Ca rrot-Ra1s1n Bread recipe , hould
have read Bake al350 degrees for
about 55 mmule,, or until bread tests
done. Let cool 1n an for 10 mmules :
then turn onto w1re rack I'm .s orry
for th1s Jmslake'

SOUTHERN FHA/HERO members, Brenda Heck, Lois Frank and
Elsie Roach, left to right, represented the chapter at the recent slate convention.

SY RA CUS f-. -

Tilt- Synu usr F:lr mt'nblry

,, huul huour roll fur th1· fifth stx \u•rlo; gradmf:

pt"rtod has bt·rn

cmnoo~·~

Thttst' mak1ng u

I(TBdr uf 8 ur abuH· m all lhdr sUhJrl lli tu 1M&gt;

namt'd tolhr rollanGradr unr - Mark Allrn. lkthany &amp;Iss, John

IWntlry. Vttlt·nr C1mnully Jt·nrufrr Cn)!ols,
Tant11ra Hayman. Klmbt&gt;rly Jrn1um;
(.rudr twn - S&lt;-utt Lisle, Rubin Full'\ , JaNun
Anwtt, Kr rrt Mulh·n, SWI't'Y Fry, Mu~ry Htll,
Rrnl"t' Ru!lsrll, Ambt:r Cum111gs
Gntdr thrrr - Mtca Jonrs. Chrryl Papt•, Jud·
lu Pl:n:inu, Robyn Stout. Mtchal'l Russt'll
Gradt' lour - Sht'lh Arnold, Chnsh Brumfu•ld. Krvln Bur.:ns, Tn,·ta Mkhar lli Chasltv
JHrlu.:,ChrisSit&gt;"Hrt

-

The Umled States Achievement
Academy has announced that Juli e
Elberfeld has been named a 1982
Umted States NatiOnal Award wmner m band.
The Academy recogmzes less than
f1ve percent of all American high
school students selectmg wmners
upon the exclusive recommendatiOn
of teachers, coaches, counselors and
other school sponsors and upon the
standards for selectwn set forth by
the Academy. The cntena for seleclion are a student's academ1c per·
fonnance, mlerest and aplilude,

leadershp qualities, respnsibilily ,
enthusiasm, motivatiOn to learn and
Improve, Citizenship, altitude and
cooperative sp1nl, dependabJlit)
and recommendation from a lecher
or director.
Elberfeld, who attends Eastern
H1gh School. was nommaled for th1s
nalional award by Eastern's band
director, James L. Wilhelm Jr. She
will appear 111 the United States
Achievement Academy Official
Yearbook, published naliOnaiiy. She
1s the daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Elberfeld of near Pomeroy .

Gntdt• IIH - Shell) (unnully, Tudd lidt•.
Krbtt·n Papt•, Hruan Wt&gt;HVN, Ht•&lt;'ky Wmt'brrnDt'r Sarah Pb1lsun
C.nuk s ix - Jt'ruufrr Arnuld . Sha"n Arnutt.
(hns Bal'r, Runrur Burkhumm1•r. Wrndv Fn-,
Ant: II' Grut'sl'r, Srutt McPhail, Wend\ Tnplt'll

Real Estate

Hou se hold Good s
CB, TV &amp; Rad10 EQu1pment
Ant1ques Mt sc Merc handt se
Bulldtng Suppltes
Pets for Sale
Musc 1al Instruments
Frutts &amp; Vegetables
For Sale or Trade

55
56

31
32
33
34
35
36

employment

Homes tor Sale
Mobile Homes for Sale
Farms tor Sa le
Bu s•ness Budd.ngs
Lots &amp; Acreage
Real Estate Want ed

services

57
58
59

RA CINE - Tht&gt; H.adlk' Elementary School
hunor rull for lht' fifth six wecka gradinK period
has ~n an.nmmced Thust' makinl( a gradt' uf H
ur abovt' In all their subjl'&lt;'tl&gt; to be_. m:~mrd to lh t&gt;
ruillU't'.
C.111dr one . Misty Hayman, Ht'u ther Hill, Juht•
Hill, Nikki lhlt', Eddit' Sawyt&gt;rs, Ke rl Whltakrr,
!'thchdle Sloblilrt

11 H e lpWanted
11 Sr tu a tron Want ed
13 In suran ce
1ll Bus•ness Tra•n•ng
15 Sc hool s 1nstruct1on
16 Rad10 TV &amp; CB Repa1r
17 M• sce ll aneous
18 Wanted To d o

lll
ll2
43
44
45
46
47
48
49

Hou ses for Rent
Mob de Homes for Rent
Farms for Rent
Apartment tor Rent
Furn1shed Room s
Space for r ent
Wanted to Rent
Equ1pment for Rent
For Lease

61
62
63
64
65

Farm EQuipment
Wanted to buy
L IVestock
Hay &amp; Gra1n
Seed &amp; Fert11 1zer

nmoun 1 equal to f1v e per
cent of h•s b1d, but •n no
eve nt more than
f•fty
thousand dol lar s, or a bond
for ten per ce.nt ol hts b1d,
payabl e to the Dtre c tor
B•dde rs must app l y, on
the proper
form s , for
qual•f• c afion at leas t ten
days pnor to the da te set
lor open•n9 b1ds 1n ac
cordan ce w•th Chapter 5525
Oh•o Rev•sed Code
Pl ans and spec 1f1cat1ons
are on file tn the Depart
ment of Tran sportat1on and
the off1ce of the Dtstnc t
Deputy D•rector
The D1rector reserves
the r1ght to re1ect any and
all b•ds
OAVIDL WEIR

for men and women, and at
least 15 parktng spaces for
automobi les
Rental requtred for sa td
bu d d 1ng
and
re l ated
faclllttes should be broken
down for. a 1 year, 2 year
and 5 year bas1s All b •ds
shou ld 1nd1cate the ren ta l
necessary for the b tdder to
prov •de mamtenance for
the extenor and 1ntenor of
the bulldmg and the renta l
reQu tred 1f the matn
tenance IS prov 1ded by the
unders tgned
The Board of County
CommtSSIO~ters
may
requ 1re addtttonal contract
provrs1ons w1th the sue
cessfu l b •dder, 1nc l udtng
but not 11 m 1ted to, the nght
of the opt ton to cance l the
lease, 1f necessary
The front of the enve lope
enc los1ng the b •d must be
marked "Sea l ed
B •d."
"Welfare
Department
Bu dd.n9" B 1dder to fur
ntsh the tr own b 1d form

PROBATE COURT
OF MEIGS
COUNTY, OH 10
ESTATE OF CLARA L
PAULSEN,OECEASED
Case No. 23560
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY

t.,./1-.._ -1/J,_$
FRH FALL from drawstring
neckhne- thrs cover-up IS the
most comfortable th•ng to wear

Elberfeld

The f rflh siX wet•ks honor rull uf tlw Southern
Juurur H1 ~ h &amp; hou! IS mmuunn'tl Makmg a
~ ~ at.lt• uf B ur a bow 111 all th,· rr subjt'Cls tu be
flillllt'd tu tht•r orllv. t•n•
1-. 1ghth ~-:rmk ~ l .or 1 Adalrts Tl.lllll Adams
Ann Rl•t•glt• Th,·rcsa Bm ~-: Dr x1e Dugan, Ti:lnya
Yuunl.! Kt•l lt•\ Grut•st r ~.111 (;rut'ser Heath
Hill H) all Ol1 vr·r Stull Wl tk luw Jodr Harns,
M.mth Hrll Ml'lr s.-.c~ !hit• P.unl'la Jrrhn ~un , L1!1&lt;1
Parsons Ktlh Hr1t'f Hublll SavH '' '' Tt•res.&lt;~
Shuk r Rt•t·k\ V;~n Melt'r Paula Wmebrenncr
St\urlh gr,ult· - Kun Adilln.-;, Ca rol Burnl'm
Dla llt Snnpsun Karlil Snnth MilfCI Mcrnheld
H,u ht l H.r rbt•r 1 a nUll) Thc1ss Malt Harns,
l.l'l.! rna

T,mu m

Hart, 1 r.u II' Hubbard. Pl'l1' Johnson
Wulfl' Wt•f\11} Wulft• C.nd) Arnold

\.(lrn Pn"ell

the b•d proposa l "

"The date set for com
p letion of this work sha l l be
set forth in the b1ddmg
proposal .''

Each bidder shall be

required to file w1th h•s b•d
a cert1f1ed
check or
cash1er's c heck tor an

on a busy day Sew 1l lor round
lhe house, beach vacatiOn
Pr10led Pattern 4696 Half
S11es 10\\, 11\\, 14 \\, 16\\,
1811. 101\ S11e 14 \\ (bust 37)
short takes 1~ yards 45-IOCh
$2.25 for uch pottem. Add 504
for uch pottem for postago
aad h..dlina. Send to:
Anno Adlms
Pattern Dopl
1 •I

I

Jr'l. Huu~h t~n d

Brme Wulfl'

The Daily Sentinel
243 West 17 Sl, Now YO!l, NY
!0011. Print NAME, ADDRESS,
ZIP, SIZI, and 5nl£ NUMBER.
SaVIngs Breakthrough' Send
now lor NEW SPRING·SUMMER
PAITERN CATALOG · Sew and gel
marvelous clothes lor much tess
Free Pattern Coupon - choose
from over 100 styles SI 50
All CRAfT BOOKS .. $2.00 each
121-Pillow Slrow-offs
124-Easy Gilts 'n' Ornaments
125-Petal Quilb
126-Thritt, Cr•IIJ Aow011
Books and Catalog - add 501
each for postage and handling
54

Dl RECTOR

141 26. 151 3. 21c
-

- -Public
- -- Not1ce
- --

-

-

NOTICE BY
MEIGS COUNTY
COMMISSIONERS
REQUESTING OFFICE
SPACE FOR THE MEIGS
COUNTY WELFARE
DEPARTMENT

In accordance w1th
tron 307 86 of the
Rev 1sed Code, sea led
w 111 be rece1ved by

Sec Oh•o
b tds
the

Me,gs County Board of

Comm iSSioners, tn the.r of ·
fiCe, located m the Cour·
thouse, Pomeroy, Oh10 un-

ti l 12 noon on May ll, 1982.
The b1ds w1 ll be opened at 2
P.M on May ll, 1982 and
read aloud for the following

bui ldmg lease Each bid to
meet the conditions and
spectftcations as follows:

Office Building to house
the Me1gs County Welfare

Department, 3,000 square
teet mm1mum tota l space;

2,500

square

feel

minimum office
space,
consisting of a mintmum of
15 rooms, toilet facilit 1es

The Board of County

Comm iSSi oners may ac
cepf the lowest b 1d, or

select lhe best bod for lhe

tntended
purpose, and
reserve the nght to re tect
any or all b 1ds, and or any
part thereof
Meigs County
Commtss1oners

Mary Hobsteller,
Clerk
Approved

FredW Crow. lit
!41 26, !51 3, 2tc

Home Improvements
Plumb •ng &amp; Heattng
Exc avat1ng
E lecncal &amp; Refngeratton
General Haul•ng
M H Repa•r

Mason Co .• wv
Area Code l04

Me1gs County
Area Code614

67s-PI. Ple•sanl
45&amp;-Leon
576-Apple Grove
77l-Mason

992-Middleport

l67-Chesh•re
388-Vinton
24s-Rio Grande
2S6--Guyan Dis1.
643-Arabla D1St.
379- Walnut

Pomeroy
98s-Chester .

34l- Portland
247-Lelart Falls

M1sc . Merchandtce
-- - - - - --- - -

JUST RECEIVED
A complete line of
shrubbery, trees
and rose bushes.
see us for the
lowest prices in
town.
AND A GOOD
USED8HP
JOHN DEERE
TRACTOR-$700

89s-Lelarl
937- Bufl•lo

949-Racine

742-Rutland

Uptol5words

Oneday

Up to 15 woro s

Three day

1nsertion

S1x day

1nsert1on

Up to 15 Words

Real Estate -

sub
zero temperatures
• Spnng Developm ents

i Fr ee to g oo d hom e 4 k1t
1 ten s gray
and whd e and
char coal qray 992 3702
On e fem,11c l ns h se tl e r , 2
pup s, Phone 304 675 6140

JIM LUCAS

One mal e wh•t r cat alm os t
qr own, on e femal e c nl

qrey They are ready lo
o.ve away Call 304 675

FRYE'S PENNZOIL

5321

R~~~~:~.s~h.

hom e Ju st

Lost a nd Found

6

L OS T
Brown1 sh bl ac k
Billfold , los t 10 V1C1 n d y
G a !1 1p0I1 S Call 388 8810

SJOO
$.400
57 00

""· 992-2259
TUPPERS PLAINS

CARPET STARTING AT $12.95
Squa1e Yard With Pad. Installed

KITCHEN CARPET

$ gg

INSTALL£0

8

GOOD SELECTION. OF

GOLD SEAL CONGOLEUM

. STARTING AT $4.99 Cash &amp;Carry
lN 9 FT. and 12FT. WIDTHS

RUBBU BACK_CARPET

$4~·~"-

THIS AD

for only $59,900.
NEW LISTING Large niCe lOt and a one

BUILDING LOTS - A lillie

over an acre of beautiful laymg land w •th electnc
and water available Price reduced to $5,500 .

Partly furniShed 12'x60' Schu ll

mobi le home with a 12'x30' matching addition.
Two-three bedrooms, family room, large living
room, and an equipped kitchen Large lot with

strawberry patch. S19,500.
STATELY OLDER HOME - In Middleport ThiS
9 room home has up to f1ve bedrooms, formal dm·
ing, fami l y room, and ftrep lace, plus a three room

garage apartment. $35,000.
NEW LISTING - FARM - LONG BOTTON
Approximately 71 acres of wooded acreagepasture, with a three bedroom home, completely
remodeled, custom wood burner. pine cab1n~ts in
kitchen, equtpped kitchen, new p l umbing and w 1r ·
ing, two car garage. Beaut iful view of nver.

$55,000.

REALTORS
HENR!t E. CLELAND, JR .. GRI
JEAN TRUSSELL
DOTTIE TURNER
OFFICE

992-6191
949·2660
991-5692
1&gt;91-2259

lB .
IULIOI ., ··

acres

of

pasture

25
and

woods. Good remodeled
2 bedroom home. Balh,
cook and bake un 1ts,
carpeting,
pane l1 ng,

basement, FA furnace
and garden. $39,900
$17,500.00 - Good 2
bedroom frame home
with bath, natural gas,

city water, full base·
ment and one acre for
the klddies or pony.

COUNTRY HOME ' Garden,

2

garages,

basement, 3 bedrooms,
modern kitchen with

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
•
All Makes
-

e Washers
washers

• DISh -

eRanges eRefrigerat
OrS
e Dryers e Freezers
PARTS and SERVICE
4 5 tfc

Roger Hysell

GARAGE

St. Rt.124Pomeroy,OH

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

Rad•ator Spec•altst
NATHAN BIGGS
3S Yrs. Expenence

SMITH NELSON
MQJQRS, INC.

Also Transmission
PH. 992-S682
Or 992-7121
3 24

tfc

Pomeroy, Oh .
Ph.992 -2174
2 26 tf c

;=~;;:;~~;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~j~~~~~~~~~~~~
J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION

Vinyl &amp;
Aluminum Siding
•lnsulat&gt;on
•Storm Doors
•Storm Windows
•Replacement
1ndows

w

•New Roofrng

Free Estimate
James Keesee
Ph · 992 - 2772

ALL STEEL
BUILDINGS

Util1'ty Bu1'ld1'ngs

S1zes from 4 to

6 and all

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Ph. 614 ·843·259!

lot 1n Ppmeroy and 3 in

Harrfsonvllle with
water taps.
NEW LISTING - 6
room farm ·home, balh,
city water, kflchen,
carpeting, basement,
gas heat and small
garden. Askin gonly
$16,000.
-issoe:·.~ TIEs
Helen THford, Gordon
THford, •1111 Sue· Mur'
"

....,,

Huusing
Headquarters

°

E rne~

E rl'&gt; l
r\llrl tn
'1 1
3 70
l t /1 c1tnbf'4571!9
T1 1 lf"&gt;'&gt;t
Pnnt er n y F 0~
Cr1'&gt; f'
0

NO,~:, n'~, IHr ehy nnld "'"
~;~',,',''/n.'~,v~~',~~
v . ~~~~,.A~I
n t o r c m f' nt r on ccl
T ~t r

C'1f' r l rl~ Pd l n l e of &lt;.,,11(1 Co un
1
Y wr-r r hi ed 1n th 1c., Court

5
" 'd •nvcntorv end Ap

reclamatiOn.

I .Jr

backhoe ser-

J 3 tfn

6 15 tfc

W

AL TROMM
BUILDING &amp;
REPAIR

FILIN G OF

1N V F NTOR'I' A N D
A f'PRAI ~E Mr NT
The .., t,1te of Oh10 Mc tq "&gt;
Co unty , Court ol Co mmon
r' lc.1s r rob.1t e Ot v ts.on
To lhr Exf'r ul or or Ad
m•n os t rn To r ol Hl f'f'"&gt; IAi f' to
-., ur l1 of Th f' fo lt ow•n d ,15. M f'
1 100 1
rr&gt;o.,
flw S I C~ If' of
1' ' 0C Vll"&gt; nl nw
survl v •nn
o., p o u ~ t
11w nex t of k 1n HH'
tJ f' nl i tc t,l rt f'S
u ndf' r
l l tf'
Wt ll ,1n c1 w !IH' cl!lorni 'Y nr
,11 1nrrw v &lt;. r! prt '&lt;;f' n l tnq ,Hoy
nf ll 'i rl l nr t' m rn r tnnr( l 1w r
" nne.,

vtce, water, sewer, ponds,
foundattons,
L1dnsed &amp; Bonded
Phone 949-2293
or949 · 2417

Rt. 3, Box 54
Racme, Oh.

Ya rd Sa le

Rrn 1".C'm• nt will hf' for
f'Min q betorf' th ~ Courl
on tf1f' 13th nay of Mny
19R? nt 1 30 o'c loc k PM
Any pf'r son dcs1r 1nq to

Dozer &amp;

wood bulldmgs 24xl6 .
lnsulatedOogHouses

4/29/1 mo

CARPET
BINDING
SERVICE

C&amp;M
EXCAVATING
AND
CONSTRUCTION

S1tes start from JOx24"

REESE
TRENCHING
SERVICE

rxccp l&gt; ons

th errln

mu sl ftl r tlt r m at lf'd SI t.w·
dnys nr •nr 10 ttw datr c.,r t
tnr rwar.nq
G 1vcn unclf'r my ~•nnrl
rtnd Sf'A I of ~)(ltd Cour t rlw;
??nd clnv o f April 19R?
Rober! E Bu c k
Jud ctf'
By Cnr olyn G Thomn s
Deputy ( INk
t-11?6 t5 ! 3 2t c

1837

Cl1 es lnut

2 family yard sa le M a y 6
Turn flr sl r oa d lf' fl pas !
r ad• o stat1 on F oll ow s1qn s
Y ar d sa le 238 Co ndo r Sl
Tue s day
W e dn esdny
T~1 ur sda y
9 l o 5 Bf'h 1nd
Ln ndmMk
P om er oy
0
Var 1e t y of il c m s
M ay 4 and 5 Sy r acust
Chur c h ot God Co rn er ol
Ap pl e and Seco nd Sl 9 l o 3
M ond a y and Tu esd ay l60tl
M l V ern on . Po •nl Pl cc1snn1
c lot hf'S
Childr ens adult s
lurnilur c
dr ,1 pcs brei
spr rnc1s E l c
Yard Snl e, So lurd ay MclY I
and M ond cW M C~ y 3 ?0 11 N
M n1n P ornt Pl casv nt
F 1vr · fnmrl y ynr d Sell
m il es oul Cr nb Cr ee k Roclcl
Gnll1p OI1S F erry L OIS Ol
c t1 11drrn c loth 1nq p lc n ls
hoo k s
pos ter
b ccf r oom
SUII C' ond m1 SC
M Ay l&lt;, t
nex l
w f'ek
11 11
1t1ru
f' \I N Yih 1nq 1&lt;; &lt;;O ld

Yrlrc!
Snl c
B uln v1llc
rownh ou sf' Mny 3 &amp; 1111 9
Ia ? L oi s o f n1 cP r l olh rnq
nnd other rt em s
4 F a mily G ar aqc S&lt;ll e 356
L eG rnnC'1f' B l vd
( G rPen
Acr es Sub! M a y 3rd &amp; .1
Monday &amp; Tu esd.1y 9 5
Drnp es
b c dd1nq
lw o
sw ef'p er s
bnby c lolhe s
playpen bo) s 10 spd b1k c
and n1 cc cl ol h •n q ni l s1zes
MI SC and other QOOd 1C'S
Yard Sa le May 3r d thru
7th Man thru F r1 Fr om
9 00 to 4 00 2 mile s E as t of
Porter on 554 Clo thes c ur
ta1ns &amp; tupperwarc

5 Family Y nrd Sal e May 4
Green Terrace Dr 1n Cen
F enton qlil ss
t cnary
wwe lry
curtc11ns, 1Cnn s
c lothes all s •ze s. m1 sc
Yard Sa le Tu e 4th &amp; Wed
5th 9 5 Lot I K &amp; K Park
Eas tern Ave
Ga ll•po l• s
m en
women, chlldren s
c l othrn g, other Items

Ca rport Sale 8 Family 49
Rea r Spruc e Sl Man Fr1

J

7 10 00 AM lo 6 00 PM

Yard Sa le Thur s

OHIO VALLEY
ROOFING
And Home Maintenance

• Roofing of all types
• Siding
• Remodeling
• Free estimates
• 20 Yrs. experience

TOM HOSKINS

Ph. 949·2160 or 949·2322
4·20-lfc

Aim BQ n cements------

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
SIDING

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

New Homes - extensive remodeling
• E lectnc work
•Custom Pole Bldgs.
•Roofmg work
14 Years Expenence

"Beautiful, Custom
But it Garages"
Call for free s1d1ng
esttmates, 949-2801 or

Greg Roush
Ph. 992-7583
or 992-2282

949-2860.
No Sunday Calls
3 ll lfc

4 29 1 mo

3

Announcements

SWEEPER
and sew mg
ma c htne r epa tr, parts, and
suppl• es
P1 c k up and
de l tvery, Dav•s Vacuum
Cleaner , one half mtl e up
Georges C reek Rd
Call

446 0294
T1r ed of 1nvesttng tn whole
ltf e 1nsurance? Lower your
cos t tod a y 1 Ruml ey Agen

cy, 446 3320

&amp; Fr1

1158
Se c o n d
Ga ll1pOI1 S Oh

Ave.

4 Famdy Yard Sa le N1c e
1tem s Bulavllle Ra
1st
hou se p as t Shr1n e C lub
Mon &amp; Tues. 8 00 to .,

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE
For all your wiring
needs; furnaces
repair service and
installation.
Residential
&amp; commercial
Call742-3195
3·7-lfc

PIANO TUNING
AND REPAIR

C. R. MASH
CONSTRUCTION
Cusrom kllchens and appliances, custom
bathrooms, remodeling,
plumbing, eleclrlc, and
healing,

FREE
ESTIMATES
PH. 992-6011
8·20-tfc

~

Call Bill Ward
At Ward's Keyboard
Vosa 1-446-4372

~M=a=s=le=r=C=h:a:r:g:e~=4=9=·=tf=cJ
COMING BANDS
Fro., Apr. 30, Sal., May I
WILOWATER
Country Rock

Thurs ·Frt -sat Sun
May n 14·a ·16

CROSSOVERS
Dnnk &amp; Drown a ll ntohls
nun ·Frt ·Sat. Sun
May 20·21 -22-!l

CANDLELIGHT INN
Rl. 1, Cheshire, Oh.
Ohio St. Rt. 7
PH. 992-9913
OPEN
Monday·hnd•v
2: l0p.m.- 2:Ha.m.
DAILY SPECIALS
H•PPY Hr. +6 Dally

Mon.-ktt Nl9ht•2
Tuts.-LidiiS Nltflll-2
Wtci.-Drink ud Drown
AU you can drink 1·2
Thur.-Poo( tournamenfl
ltlfOYif
Fri. &amp; Sat. lands
Drink &amp; Orown 1•2
During land Only
Sun.-PIJII and
Plfcntr a~r
1
4/Jt/Hc

~:s~~~"~2i 65

22

automal•c
~0~d$ 1~ ~ee l combo, Zebco
Rod &amp; reel combo, Zebco
202$7 99
Me 600 Jr reloader tor 12
gauge $69 95
Feder
R amo
50,
$1 a59I 22
or L
$14
50 a box
br1ckof
Must bnng copy of ad w 1th
you Spnng Va ll ey Tradmg
Co, Spnng Va ll ey Plaza,
Gal l&gt;poi&gt;S, 446 8025
Why not have a mag•c •an
at your home com1ngs ,
church P•cn1cs, c l ubs and
b i rthday parttes? It .n

teresled cal l 992·7352 tor an

Lar ge yard sa le May 3r d
and lith 91 2 S,3 rd Ave M1d
dl epor t
C h•l cJ r Pns
c l oths,lar ge s•z es and fur
n•tur e
Garage Sa le I 1/2 m from
H M C on 160 left Lots of
mtsc 1dems Hill and Nea l
sa le Thur May 6,9?

YOJJNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICE
'Addoos 1114 ~··

:~work

-Phl!llilllllll4

. tlocllfcalwork

v. C.YOONG Ill
992-6215 or 992-7314

Pomeroy, Ohio
9·30-lfc

CROSSOVERS
Drink I Drown"" nl9hts

MONTH OF JUNE
Friday and S•turday
MAIUHALL TENNENT
Country Rock
NOTE : CrotsO'&lt;Ierl, Thurs I
Sun band starts 7: JO, ends
ll:JO Othernights, 1Dto2
Carryout Beer A'&lt;lallabte
Drink &amp; Drown dvrlnt Band

"'"eANDLELlGHT INN
Rl. 1 Cheshire, Ohio
PH. 992·9913
• St. Rt. 7

3 FAMILY, Mytle Kuhn's
re s 1d en ce
af Thurman
across from Centerville
Sc hool, May 5, 6, 7

Yard sa le 810 So 2nd M•d
dleport, May 1 thru 10
Avon, anttque turntfure ,
other furntture, small ap
pl•an ces,
Silverstone
dt shea s, c loth.ng, kntve s,
toy s tool s, lots of m1 sc,
com e see Someth 1ng for
eve ryone
Yard sa le Thur s and Fn
May 6 7, 10 to 3 on the cor
ner of Forest Run Rd and

Rl7

appotntment.

CROSSOVERS
Drink I Drown all nlohts
Thun Frl Sat Sun
May l1· 21-2f·JO

May 7 8 9 a m 4 30p m
Racine Gun Club Attent.on
all members, fiShing der-

by, B B·Q, horseshoe lour·
nament. Sunday May 9
from 9 a m t,o 7 p.m
No Hunt1ng or trespassing

on lhe Edsel Hughes Farm,
L u cas

Lane,

Pornt

Pleasant
NEED

CRED IT?

In -

formation
on rece1ving
Visa . Mastercard, wtth no

credit check . Other cards
aVailable . Free Brochure

CR
28 mil e north
of
Bashan
Ram or shme
John Rose res•dence
Garage sa le May 6, 7 at
John
Keck
res1dence
Mu l berry Hgts Porn Real
gbod dresses and shoes,
blouses and s lacks, coats,
bed
l tnens,
ptllows,
1rons,radio, fan and small
Otl heater. Sweeper and lots
more good 1tems
Ntce cloth1ng all s1zes and
rr]isc 740 H•gh St M•d

ca ll Public Cr.ed1t Service : dleporl , Dh Mon and
Tues. the 3rd and 4th 9 to 3
L--------...JI 602:9~9--0~~--~~·~0=3- _
4/ 24/ Hc

R 1c k
P e ar so n
E )I
pcrr c nce d AU CT IO N EER
Es t n tes
anl 1qu es
l c~rm
llOU SC hOid LI Cf'OSf'd 0 1110
wv Buy1nq nnTt QUf''&gt; 304

773 5785 77 3 91 85

L E Nc.11 A u c tr once r Sr r
Fs l n t f' F ,1rm
v 1CC
Hou sc holcJ M 1sc Wr srl1 tl'
LICC' nsecJ &amp; bo nd cct OlltO &amp;
wvn 36 7 7101
Au c r. on ev ery Fn n t(IIH ,H
lt'lf' H rlr lt or (l Co m mul Tv
Cc nl rr Tr uc k loacls ot nf'w
m c r c hcln cl rSt' C'Vf' r y Wf'f'k
Co n s rqm en ts ot nrw ,1nrt
USf'r1 m er 0 l t1 ()(1 1&lt;.,f' ,1 1w,1y&lt;;
we lcome
R t C to,1rcl
R&gt;" yn old s A tJ Cl tOOf'rr ?7'-.

3069
An t 1q ur Show .1 nct S,J ir'
Hun11 nq ton Go l lf'r ll'&lt;; Hun
t,n q l on W V M ,W Rlh Noon
ltl l 9 00 P M
M el¥ 9 111
Noon t . ll 5 00 P M
.30
De ni NS A nt rQU f'S of .1 11
clescrl pt 1on&lt;:, E)( lf A 16&lt;1

l mme d ra te ope n1n q
for
M ed rca l Tec hnol ogi SI or
qual lf 1y
ML T
with
~Jac k q r o und
1n Cl1n 1c a)
Ctw m rstry Pl ease conta ct
Vn ll ey
01 aq n os lr !':
Labo r a tor 1PS 446 03 53
·
1n scr v1CP l1g ht
L 1ve
hOU'-'P k f'r'plnQ
nnd
lr qht
LUU k lflq Crtl l Jll 8 83 76
N n t1 on~1 1
Compn ny
1n
ln r qesl
111 lrJ
Sf'C k 1nq
r rpresPn l r1 11 Vf'5 1n ,1rcn
Fu l l or pMI l rnw Cnll 6 14
446 9332 or 6 14 446 47/J

H1 qh SctlOO I Gr~lCI U rl l f'S &amp;
S\· tu ur s yuu L &lt;'ln l' rt rn vv r•r
S550 00 per mo nth whil e
lr&gt;n r n1nq n v.=1lunblc skill
l1k &lt;' co mpul f' r r 0pc1 1rer
~ t1 ec t
mPt nl w ork er
or
rf' lr qcr,1 11on Pl us you w il l
hnvr n sec urt pnr l l 1m C' 10h
willt Hw Amry Ncl i 10nn!
Gun r rl
,t ilt r
sc hoo l 1nq
Bc n.-. h lo., tncluc•· c1 $ 1 500 00
r•nl 1&lt;, l mf'n l
b o nu s
S3S 00 0 00 l tk f' 1nsu rnn c1
.1 n cl i rer 1u1110n to n ny
LO l li qe or 1r.1de &lt;,r hoo l 1n
Wrst Vr r Qin tcl ln tr r rs k d
DN .:;onc., mc)y fel l I (30 41 675
39':i0o r 1n W r&gt;.., t V 1r q 1tl tcl (,11 1
to l l FREE I 130064? 3619
1rnm&lt;&gt;d t,lll opt n1nq l or lu l l
ltlllf' R N SupNvt&lt;;,or II 10 7
'&gt;ll tl ' Co nt nCl P 1n0 Cr es t
C.1r~ Crnlr' r
::: .1 11 446 711 2

FOC
w ,,ntr'c1 Pr'nptr 1n Gai i 1A
J.tChon or Mf'1QS Co
Wtll tnq to pn r1 1C1pn t f' 1n n
toslrr r1om( 11 p c pr oq r n m
tor peo pl e Wl lll em o11ona 1
problf' rn&lt;., Rf' lm h u r scmf'nt
o f S700 'i.J50 pN m o F or
mo rr 1n l or mn t1 on cn l l o
wr tlr 01 r~nf' Rr1 m sf'yf' r or
B1'c k y Cr1 nl cr Com mu n 11 y
!3,1c;r• d Hom es
P 0
box
Si t Grl ll 1pO I1". Olr .! 563 1
I 6 14 ! 446 30 2?
H[ _p
r.1rr
t or
hcl n
Cll fnppf'fl WO IT,lll ttl tlotre
Mu&lt;. t ltf l
roo k
I 1C!Il l
llOUSC' kecp tnq ,1nd nur'&gt; ttlq
h'r t,~ r r n cr''&gt;
lf'QUtrr ct 367
/S.I9 cl l1 f'r 6
/\VO N Or rl &lt;.urr1&lt;.,c, Sv ll
Avon whf'r&lt; you work or
l tvr (t i l l t J 7755 or ro l lrc l
0 I l 69H 7 I I I
Fu l l nr ()rtr l ),rn&lt; R N or
LP N tor J IO I I shd l (JI I
N ,Jnr y V.ln Ml l l'r 99? 66C6
Dnr1 1 lllt'&gt;'&gt; Til t'&gt; onr Th P
r tr r 1 t 'Hll 1y nuc,.nr''&gt;':&gt; no
r t", k&lt;.,
ltclvr
f un
rn,l kf'
rnnnr y Cel l i 'Yi'} 20RA rliiPr 6
n rn

W,11'1l 1 cl Pf'OP I• tn C"ll l ,.=r
J,lr kc,r,n
nr M1 1 ' 1~ Co
Wi l ltnO 10 pclrl•C IPr1 1f' Ill a
fo&lt;;, l f'r 1lOTTlr l ypf' pr oq r .-HYI
tor ]WOp l! WI Th f' m Oi tOO t'll
9
Wa nted to Buy
p r ob lr m&lt;, Rf'•mburc,f'•n rr) t
WANT TO BUY O lct fu r
ol 5700 5)')0 pr r mon11'1 Fo r
n tTur e nn d A nl rqurc., of .1 11 morf' ,r1 torm1 t •o n cnl1 or
k rnd s r rrll Kcn nf' lll Sw,ltl1
wr. t f' Dt,lll\' R,!mscyC'r oi"
446 3159 rl OC 256 1967 1'1 l hl' BI'L k Y C.1nlf' r Commu n1ty
evcn 1nq s
Bn:.rct Homes P 0
Bo x
)IJ Gcl l lipOI IS o n '156Jf
.
CAS H PA ID l or CIC' n n 1,1 11' 161·11 146 30?2
mod el used ca r s Sm 1lh
Bu1 Ck P onl lc1C
( ,fll l q)Oit&lt;;
PAR r
t , 11 r
h 0 1p
Oh1 0 Cal l ll46 2282
ho u'&gt; t wo rk w tl l tnq to n m
r•r r.-1 n ds JOJ 773 5897
Buy 1nq
Go l ct
St tvc r
Pln t1n um old co1n c, c.,r r,1p J oh ovr r Sf'rlS B1 0 m one y
r 1ngs &amp; sllvcrwarP Drr lly t.1s 1 JoiJ ott er s qunrnnl eP d
quote s n va rl nbl e
A l so
•
I 716 842 60000 f'XI 784 3
co1n s &amp; co 1n suppl1 es for
so lr
Spr 1n Q
V .-l ll f' y
Tr c1d1nq
Spr1nq
VAl ley
Plnza 446 802 5 or 446 8026
17
~ IIU &lt;1f 1 0n'&gt; Wa nt ed
1/w pay c ast1 for lilt C' m o e! cl
c lcrln used car s
Fr c nchlown Car Co
Bill Gene John so n
446 0069

L OI S already set up tor
m ob•lc home 1n K yer Cree k
D1r Sir1 Cf L l l l 446 146?

BED S IRON, BRA SS old
iurntlu r e, qold
s ilv e r
dollar s wood •cc box es
stone 1ars. an t 1q ues et c
Comp l e l c
household s
Wrrle M D Miller R t 4
Pomuoy On Or 997 7760
Go ld
Silver
stcr l 1nq
1ewe!ry, r 1ngs, old c o1n s &amp;
curren c y Ed Burk ett Bar
bcr Shop, M rdd lepor t 992

3476

Raven 25 automat•c p1 sto l

$47 79

Pub li C SJ IC
&amp; Auc tiOn

8

Help Wan ted

p1

May 61h &amp; 71h 10 00 5 00

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

100 Sm 1th S1r c0t
H1 n
cter son 5 fn m ily Tuf''.dciy
and Wed ncscln y 9 4

Sl

Yard Sa le Thousand s of
•tems to p1ck from Man
Wed Mny 3 5, Texas Rd 10
til ')

Ph. 367-7560
1 7 1 lfc

4 29 I mo

'

G all i pOl i S
2 b &lt;IS.S1ne ts
toy s c lothrnq at a l l s rH'S
tru c k too l b ox 1979 F ord
p 1n l o

Ya rd Sale May 4th and 5th
1/ 4 mil e off Rt
7 on
George's Cr eek Rd New
and used rtems

Water-Sewer- E lectnc
Gas Line-Ditches
Water Line Hook -ups
Septic Tanks
County Certtfted
Roush Lane
Cheshire, Oh.

If you need it built
or fixed we can do
it.
742· 2328
RUTLAND

30467568 78

Yard Sal e May 4 5 &amp; 6 10

NOTI CE ON

From
the
Smallest
Heater
Core to the
Largest Radiator.

stove and refrigerator,

furnace, family room
and level tot out a short
trip.
LOTS - One building

Los l
sm n ll c h tldr en s
qrccn s u11 c~1 s e out Sa nd hill

Public Notic e

COMPLETE
RADIATOR
SERVICE

and large landscaped

trade propert1es With you $34,500

REEDSVILLE -

SAVE 53.00 WITH

lot near Meigs school

story frame home w tth attiC fm 1shed Heavy .nsu lation, centra l a1r, and many more features
makes th 1s three bedroom home attracttve, but
owner wi ll sell W1th a sma ll down payment or may

FIVE POOINTS -

baths, 2

good
woodburning
fireplaces
Foyer,
natura l gas FA furnace, d.ntng rm, fu ll
basement, 2 car garage

Fo und 1 R et! lr 1s h Se tter
F e m a le
H &lt;l S
c oll a r
Ch es h1r e ar ea 367 04 13 af
ler 5

~==;;~;;;;;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~====================~ Road

4 12· 1 mo pd

3

Farm Equipment
Parts &amp;Service
1 3 lf c

Fo und b nc k
L nb
Retr1 c v c r Mal e I yenr old
or y oun qe r No co llar 742
3120 betw C'en 9 and 4

2 24

PH. 614-992-7848

VIRGIL B. SR. IULTOR
216 E. 2nd 51.
Phone
1-(614)-992-3325
NEW LISTING

1'1&gt;

. tfc

Carpet Installation
Reasonable Rates
For more .nformatlon-

shopping for on ly
$17,500.
NEVI LISTING - Very

General

949·2263
949·2160

Guysvtlle, Ohto
Authonzed John Deere ,
New Hofland, Bush Hog
Farm Equ1pment
Dealer

''The machtne of tomorrow today•
Soanng Ahead Nature's Way
CurtailS your house dust problems
u P s Servtce
GallipOliS 614-446-2096
Parkersburg, W v 304·485 5434
Murdoch Av

Reasonable Prices
Call Howard

Rugs Bound

General

Reasonable 6 room
frame home Bath, fur
nace, c tty water, leve l
lot, garage, and near

POMEROY, OHIO

GIANT CARPET SALE

u .s Rt so Easl

Free Estimates

Carpet Pieces Bound
Room Size and Area

TEAFORD

608 E.' MAIN

!.......................~.....................

11

1' \! QIV (' tn Sfr UC!IOn S

~~~~~~~r~.;nood

SALES &amp; SERVICE

new or repair gutter and
downspouts,
gutter
cleaning and painting.

Small &amp; Large

82

Real Estate -

bedrooms,

s/ Roberl E Buck

LAFF·A·DAY

.14-

nice modern r;.anch

was appo •nted Executor of
the estate of Cl ara L
Pau lsen, deceased , late of
Bedford
Townsh 1p,
Hemlock Grove, Oh1o

lSI 3, 10, 17, 31c

~LANDMARK
-

882-New Haven

667- Coolville

Courl. Case No 23,560,
Robert C Pau l sen, Rt 1.
Box 290, Albany, Dh&gt;o45710

Clerk

• No Energy Need ed
ewater Ava1tabl e a t

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING

All work guaranleed.

On November 20, 1981. 1n
The Me1gs County Prob a te

Probate Judge/

'

2 36 1nc h TV G1v ea way
need part s Cal\446 3618

.......

All lypes of roof work,

10'12-20Yz

(Average 4 words per ltne)

NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF

Rev 8 17 73

Galha County
Area Coch!',14

87 Uphol stery

Notace
- - -PubliC
------

- -----

PULLINS
EXCAVATING

off
er not
anyoffer
oth or
er att
th.n
g for
does
empt
to
sa le may pla ce an ad 1n t h• s
co lumn There wil l be no
ch ar ge to the adverl 1se r

"' ·

TUES thruSAT
9AM lo10PM
SUN. lOA M. to6P M
Phone 742-9575

'ttl... _ POMEROY

446-Gallipolis

81
82
e3
84
85
86

Public NOtiCE

tmprovem ents 1n
Adam s, Athens. Brow n,
Ga ll •d, Htghland , Hock •ng,
Jack son, Lawrenc e. M e•gs,
Monroe, Morgan, Nobl e,
P1ke, Ross, Sc 1oto, Vmton
and WaShington Count• es,
Oh 10. on vartous loca tiOn s
by appl{ 1ng retroflect•v e
polyes er
pavem e nt
markmg matena l for lin es
The Oh10 Departm ent of
Transportatton
he r eby
notlf• es al l btdders that 1t
will aff1rmat 1vely msur e
that tn any c ontrac;t en
tereil 1nto pur suant to th• s
adverttsement,
m •nor 1ty
bus•necs enterpnses w1l l be
afford0-d full opportun1ty to
submtt b 1ds tn r esponse to
th1S lfW·1tatton and wil l not
be dtscr1m•nated aga•nst
on the grounds of race,
color, or na ttona l ongmal
1n constderatiOn for an
award
"M1n 1mum wage rates
tor th1s pro1ect have been
predetermtned as reQuired
by taw and are set forth 1n

74 Motorcycl es
75 Boats &amp; Motor s
76 Auto Part s &amp; Accessor1es.
77 Auto Repa•r
78 camp1ng Equ1pment

&amp; lheSIU£1!

Public Not1ce

Tuesday, May 18, 1982. for

~

At the hom e of the I al e An n
Wal son tn F or es t Run
Sponsered byF or es t Run
M eth od• st Chur c t1 fr om 9
till 3 M a y 6 t~nd 7 L oca ted
onM1n er svlll e Rd 99? 272 4

Need good hom es for 8
mtxed b r eed pupp 1es c ul e
Ca \1446 8196

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;4~2~1~l~m~o~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~P~h~.~74~2~-2~7~5~3~~4~9~1~m~o~~

following telephone exchanges. ..

73Vans&amp;4WD

ser-•lees

Public Noflce

Sea led proposal s will be
rece •ved at the offiCe of the
D 1rector of the Oh10 Depar
tment of Tran sportation
Columbus, Ohto , until 10 00
AM , Oh 10 Standard T1me.

PH. 992-3543 or 992-2386

A N Y PERSON who ha s
an yt hm g to g•ve awaf and

BOGGS

PHONE 992-2156

71 Autos tor Sa le
72 Truck s for Sa le

Farm 5UIIIIIIes

Rentals

16 YEARS EXP .
• Restdentia 1
•Commercoal
•Industnal
Racine, OhiO
247 ·3 534
Free Estrmates
4 20 lt c

FROM CONCRETE TP ROOFING
AND EVERYTHING IN BETWEEN

Classified pages cover the

1 Card of Thank s (!)&lt;Wiln ndv&lt;tnrP)
2 Cord ot Tha nk s (pa1d rn advance)
3 A nnoun ce m ent s
4 G tv eaway
5 Happy Ads
6 Lost and Found
7 Yard Sale (pa 1d 1n advan ce )
8 Publ•c Sa l e
&amp; Auct •on
9 Wanted to Buy

UNIT PRICE
CONTRACT
IPM5-000SI2171

CAN' HELP YOU
BUILD YOUR DREAMS!
New Construction
and Remodeling.

The Automatic
FreezeWater

SIZES

l aradt&gt; t"u Kelht' Ervin, Angda Goody,
\ult&gt;sSH Hunnt•\, David lhh·, R• hln lmbod1•n
Trt'\Or Pt'tn\, Ht'ldl Smdt&gt;r, Jt'My Vamt'y
Grudt' thn:e Juhn &amp;mt's. JamKI C1rd1,
Jason C 1rdt', Shannon Counts, Jt'MY Uamrun,
John Rill Hobul'k. Cohn Maldt'ns, Norman Malsun, Jennift'r Sm1th, Jan WiiUamb, Sht'l1y
Wmt'brenllt'r, M11yl11 Yoal'ham
Gradt' four Amy Harmun. K.Hthy lhle, Ant::lr
Manu t' l, Chr111 Murphy , Aim~ Wolft' TrU'ill
Wnlft' Brt'DdH Zarklt'
Gradt' f1v t"': I..esht&gt; Duddml(, EU'l.Hbeth Sm1th,
Mdanlt' VanMder
Gradt' slx . Pabl lt't' Clrdt', T11mmy Hollt'r,
l.t·annt' Clark , Oonrut' Rifflt', Hl'atht'r Shult'r,
Tm.a SloWr, Pamela Ash

ARABQAEEMEAfS
51
52
53
54

O'Brien Electric
Service

I

Yard Sa le

Rum m nqc Snl c Sl Prlu l U
M Chur Ctl Po 1n l P lc,Y-,'l nl
WPdn cs d cl Y M ay Sit , 10?
Thur sd.w 9 17

Or Write Daily Sentinel Classified Dept.
Ill Court St., Pomeory, Ohio 45769

HlANSPORTATION
Columbus, Oh10
Apnl16, 1982
Contract Sales legal
Copy No 82-469

FOWLER CONSTRUCTION

G tv eaway

Resident awarded for music

The Daily Sentinel

1 1 Bust ness Opportuntty
22 Money to Loan
23 Profess1ona l Serv •ces

4

rLf.----------~~----------"T-----------.,..-----------~

A qmlt created by chapter members across the state was awarded
dunng the convenbon. Special ac·
tlvlbes included recogmtion of win·
ners in vanous activities, installatiOn of new officers, and
special singers and speakers.
The Southern FHA/HERO Chapter rece1ved an award of ment nl&gt;bon. Represenbng the local chapter
were Brenda Heck, Lo1s Frank and
Elsie Roach. Also attending was
the1r

County and area schools' honor rolls

f01 k UlCCISIUllaJ\ y

Com parl' pn ccs on bag ~ u1 boxe :i
of wh1te n ee Gtnenc n ee IIW ) be
availabl e. too Store large quantities

nee

mi crowa ve uven,

omon, rmnced

the cooked li Ce as1de. uncovered To
reheat, cover and place m pan of
smunenn g water , fluffmg w1lh a

the cook111g water

an

To hx the slu!fed peppers 111 the

Mom 's Super Rice

stews, chicken or meat lhshes or fur
s1de di shes Short and medium gra1n

of nee m

grea:sed casserole and bake at 350

degrees unlil n ee 1' tender, aboul30
mmules, addmg more tomato JUICe
as 1l1s absorbed
Spamsh nee IS a real favonte w1th
our farmly ll 1s the ve ry best combmatwn of hamburger and n ee that
1 have ever tned l hke 1l just as a
ca"erole, but many limes I sluff
parboiled peppers w1lh the m1xlure.
Top the sluffed peppers w1lh a lillie

The Daily Sentinei-Page-9

Business Services

Three members of the Southern
FHA/HERO Chapter recently attended the state convention held in
Colwnbus.
Theme was "Team up w1th the
FHA/HERO Family" and members
attended workshops on nutrition,
helping and under.standing the handicapped, developing self·
confidence, building membership by
public relations and how soap operas
affect the family.

By DALE M. STOLL
Meigs County Extension
Home Economist

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Quick Cover-Up!

FHA-HERO members at convention

.
.
.
.
..
'· ... .
,

May 3, 1982

Monday,

Monday, May 3, 1982

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Page-8- The Daily Sentinel

WIDO W Ind y lo Sh21E'
hn mr W1ll1 nno 1twr W1 ctow
Rr ff' r f' nces Wr tl r P 0
Bm 10 Grl l l1pOI1 S 45631
Nef'd r 1d C'
s11y (8 00
F e Jn cl l f'
S.-11urd&lt;1y&lt;&gt;

to m1 10 Un 1vr r :
5 001 M on F r1
Cn l l 99 2 3390
cl lt er 5 p m

H,1Vl' va ca nc y 10 m y hom e
A m b ulnl or'r'
tor f'ld cr ly
mcln or w om an 7 yea r s ex
pN tc ncc
66 7 3402
Tup
prr spln1n s Oh
Pr rva te room and boi!rd
n nd ln undry t or r lclerly
per so n 992 6748
Will boby sil ' n my hom t!
c h c np
304 67 5 7831 ·
ln "&gt; ur a nce

OLD FURNITU RE beds.

13

1r on br&lt;"!ss, or wood K 1f
c hen cu bbards of all type s
Tables. r ou nd or sq uar e
Wood tce boxes Old desks
and bookc ases Will buy
com pl e te hou se hold Go ld ,
silv er , old money poc ket
watches, cha• n s. r1ngs and
etc l nd1an Artrfacts of a ll
t yp es Also buy•ng baseball
ca rds Osby Marftn 992

SANDY AND BEAV E R In
Co ha s olt errd
sc rv1 c es l or fire 1n surancc
c ovcraqf' 10 Gall1a Coun t y
for
almo sl n
c entury
Farm home nnd pe r sonal
property cov eraq es ar c
avadclb lc lo mPet 1n
d1V1dual need s
Co ntnc l
Hnrry P1f c hford
nrwn l
Ph one .t46 1427
s urr~n ce

6370
Want to buy So l• d wood
c hes t and drawer s, good
co nd
Will
refurn• s h

myself 304 882 3168
JUNK E D ca r s, baseba l l
car d s,
scrap
metal s
alum1num ca n s,
tran
smt ss tons,
motors,
ba f
ten es , rad1 a tor s, st am ps
and co •ns Offer.ng tra sh
p1ckup se rvt ce
H arper
Ha l stead Sa lvag e Co 300
Eleventh St, Pt Plea sant

304 67 5 5868

Also

Acreage 1n Galltpol•s Fe rry
area, Phone 304 675 2807 or

675 5972
Lot 1n C1ty l1m1ts Po1nt
Pleasant, Ordnan ce sc hool

area 304 9976 or 675 6276
Ext 160

employmeRI

11

He_tp_~a~ted

17

Mtc;.cellaneous

8Ft sl• d e 1n cam per sleeps
4 $950 175 Honda tr ail b1ke
1973 $450 Russell Young,
West Co lumb1a , W Va
18

Wanted to Do

Baby s1tt1nq lull ttm c o r
while you shop No 1nl ants
Ca ll 446 8264
Wtll
do scwtng,
dress
mak1nQ , a lt ero t• ons , m en
d •nq
Rea sonab lf' pr1 rcs
Ca l l 446 3564

ser, lees
_

Sc hoo l s ln stru c t• on

flea

market
open
Monday
through Fr•day, 1 5 p m

r-:_

IS

KMtllf' lh C' Ull1m il l C' 10 ":&gt;C if
d ell'n cr .ill pr 1va te lesso ns
M en women &amp; c hddr (' n
l nstru c t1 on ttu u black bel t
Al so clVrlllilblr
Knr &lt;1 t e
und o rm s pu c h 1nq and
k 1c k 1nq b,l qs and pr otrc
ttv c equ1pmen t
Jf'rry
LOwPry
&amp;
A SSOCi at e s
Karn t e
Stud • o
143
Bur l1nqton Rd , Ja c k son
O t1 Coll 286 3074

__

You can earn good $$$
sellrng Avon For more tn

tormat•on Call446·3358

Yards, mowed and tr•m
m ed . reasonab le
r&lt;"!te s,
r e li ab le
Phone 304 675

1804

�Page-l 0-The Daily Sentinel
18

Wanted to Do

' ''&lt;'

They'll Do It Every Time

S4 __Misc . M~rchandic~ _

Wanted to Rent

47

Silk Hou se (cus tom
flowers) . Comp lete

·-. · k..

Pa sture

f or

S•x

heifers .

Phone 304-895 3477

-- ~

.,. n ' to br q or sma ll. hou se
l)rlrrl l rnq
&amp; roofing, and
446 3 159

51

niter 6PM I 786 5740
Will

or

rar"

tor

womr~n

elderly man

on our t.um .

prrvrtte room. $700 per mo
Ca ll446 8163

FinanCial
ANOTHE~

eus •ness

11

7)ttJ lt'EIEI&lt;S

Opportuntfy
Qusrnf'SS

ANP SHE

or s tore room

,Ctiii;U.LY

rn

PAYS....

PMk Central Hotel

we w.1n t on0 stovfl de a ler
.n Mr 1QS Co 11 you have an
tnbi1SI1ed
bus•ness
or con
nre
,,f'Sse
r1ou s w ood
burner.
tact Gle{l MMple at th('
VaiiC'Y Gem Sl ave Fa c tory
1n So Zanesville. Oh10 61.4
•1)4 JJ &lt;~B co llrc 1

~t
E~ SOluL.rt,
1522 SMnff

s-r..

C1llW s~v.

~--~"':"':.· -~==::==~~::==~~====!.J
32

Vcndrnq
Busrncss Ct"lll )Qd 773 5651

Money to Loan

11

REFINANCE or purchose
your h o me 30 yc,l r fixed
rn tc wv,1 &amp; 011to Leader

MortQ.lC/C'. 77 E Stntc 51 ,
1\ !11('0 5, 011 597 3051

42

Mobile Hom es
for Sa le

MOBI LE HOMES MOVED
L•ce n sed &amp;

(rq~lr£'11('

.nsured

Cr:'\ 11

304 576 2711
For sale 2 &amp; 3 bedroom
tr aders . fur.11Shed . w1 th
a1r Calt30.4 77) 565 1

1981 ALL EL EC TRIC 11'
WIDE ,
1
BEDROOM
mobile home se tting on lot ,
ready to move 1n to. $8995
10°¢ down, BANK FI NA N

H,wf' lnnrJ? Wr~nt to bur l d?
N othrno down. low rnt cres t.
no pr1yrnrnt t o r 6 mon th s

CING AVA ILABLE,
576 17ll

6" 591 3053

1973 Gran dvill e 14 X 70, 3
bedroom mobile Hom e will
sell
turn1shed or un
furn•shed mus t be moved

13

Profcss ronal
Sc r v •ccs

C&amp; L Book kf'ep.nq
Bookk cep•nQ &amp; tax se r v.ce
tor &lt;'IIIIYPf'S Ol bUC:.Inf'C.C:.£'5
(MO l Nf'al
446 3867
w. ndc:;n.eld tJrokf'n? Ca l l
Snu llwrn Glas~ rn':&gt;urilnce
clrl•m ~
w l' ICo rn f'
Free
mobil!' srrv• Cf' rlVilililble
(.1 11,146 1011

Jt

Bei'lu!dul tJr 1c k &amp; fr amr .
twdr 00m 11 0 me w t scen•(
v1rw .
w oo d burn.ntr
f• r rpi&lt;'ICe . form&lt;'ll d.n•nq .
cf'n trill i'llr w hf'a l pump
L,lO'ioC&lt;'IPC'CL
1 ilUe
lo l
W II'O( l'CI
lfl l)cl Ck yo r d,
$45 .900
fl 0 o liOrlO Ci nQ ,
&lt;., nlrlll clown paympnt Call
446 )766
Hotr&lt;,l' tor Srll f' ,n town
Pr, ct· ct on .nspf' c lion , 3 or 4
bclr , FR . 7 l1rllt1 S Celli 446
177)

bnt h .

nou~r.

b,1~1 · mrn t

,n

Cily

Phone 304 881 1810

Mobile home for rent Cull
446 .4')')5 or .446 0756

lul l

379 1196
5 75 tevel acrt'S. tocatrd on
Hannan Trfl((' Rd
1977
14x70 frclller w dh 11x IJ
room . total e trctr•c. IRrQC
yf!rd . trull tr ee . 7 out
build•nqs , larq(' qarden
plot Call 756 9357
I ncrf' r1vrr front lots. fir st
11m e ndvcrt•sed F•nnnc . nq
rwnilnb l e Call rl lt er 1 p m
378 6278

l~tnlls

'i/7.000 F&lt;'lrtll 6 r house.
b rl H' . u tilrt y r oorn. root
ce iiM. 75 I 7 rl . tractor .
tnrm rau.pmen t , lnrqe
bMn . 900 IIJ IObMCO bilSP,
$3) .000 Crll l 61J 446 4767 or
:56 1713

1R rlcrer;, for sa le lrWS n•ce.
mendowr;, and woodli!nds .
SIO.OOO 985 41 16
TWO nue lots I SO It ro,ld
lr on taQP .
c lly
water .
be ll•ncl 84 L umbPr . Crlll 304

675 6873.675 3618
F or Srllf' ') nr b) bdr llOUSP
•n Pr Pte,l"&gt; rlnl B I 7 °o
rl ~"&gt; umrlblf' IOrlO , montnly
p.lymf'n l s. S?56 Call 675

6586
41
1 f loor . lull brl Sf'menL Cf'n
tr ,11 t1e,1t ,1ncl rl•r . full c ar
pf'l CMPM I . 3 i'IUC'S 1n M1CI
dlepor l 927 Br ownf'llf' , 992

3935

Hou ses for Rent

Lrlrqe house for r ent, 4 bdr

c&lt;11 1388 9909

J bdr

1,1kc
ov('r
prrylnt•nh
NL' w ly
remodl' l rd.
3
bf'drnorn homr 10 M1d
dleport ,FHA ,lpproved
Half'ln ce '¥3 ,000 99'/ 5841
HouSf' r('dUC('(I for QUICk
sate . J bedroom centr.'ll r~ •r .
Excf'llent
IOCrlliOO.
Ex
CPIII •Ot j ,n~n r1 fl(! i'!Vill l rlbiC'
Ph onr 30.1 895 344J flflrr 5

PM
H' .· per ce nt
rlSSumclblr
lonn . onr yer1r ole! tr • level,
Mcn cto wlrlncl
Esti'l l cs,
),67 .500 (rlll 30d 675 1579 at
IN 5 P M
Hou se . M radowbroo k Ad
dil1on. 3 bcclroom. family
room w1lh l ircplace. cc n
tr tll ,, 1r . basement. Phone

df'lux r hom e. rxr
ne 1qllborhood. pool. cen tr al
fl•r Cr=~ l t 304 67 5 5104 or 675

7 bdr
trail er furn1shed.
flC1u1 ts only, Brown Trader
Pi!rk , 992 332.4

For rent J bdr house fu r
n•&lt;;hed . 5 m• f rom town ,
Sl 65 Call 44604 59 . keep
try1nQ
1 bdr h ou se .n R10 Grand e
Call446 0 157
4 bedroom, ce ntral n•r and
heat , c dy water . fir ep la ce.
un furn 1shed
ex ce pt
k1 t
c hen
$300 mon th plu s
util1t 1es
Re fer ence and
depo s 1t
required
In
R ac 'nc 949 2293

Mobil e Hom es
lor Sil l e

TRISTATE

MOBILE

H OMES GnllrpOI IS Pr.c e
redu ce d . u sed
m obile
hOmf'S CALL 446 757'1 .

$1 19 up lo $495

CLE A N

USED

MOB I LE

HOMES
KESSEL'S
QUALITY
MOBILE
HOM E SALES, 4 Ml
WEST. GALLIPOL~S. RT
35 P HO NE "6 3868
Cn ll Sk1 dmore for m obil e
t1omes m oved . G r eenla w n
Transpo rt . Ca ll d46 2783
days, 446 )479 Pven .n gs
L •censed &amp; insu r ed .
Mobde home on 112 f!cre
tot. Has por(. h awning, un
derot nn ing.
w..,st&gt;er &amp;
dryer . e tc Call 416 4736 .

75 Kit~w :::~ a d ld x70, 2 bdr .•
al l t'iec t r1c. new ca rpet ,
fron t end kitchen wi th ap
pHa nces . Loca ted in Quail
Cr ee k . Rodney, Qh _Ca ll af -

1d mile out Sandhill Road.
Po1nt Ptensant Phone 304

Farms for Rent

80 ncres. 11 till able. located
I' 1 miles wes t of Allred on
C R 13 1

Ap.1rtment
lor Rent

Deluxe turn apart . cent
,11r &amp; t1e.1 t I or 7 adults
only Call 446 03J8

9596.
12 x 60 tr ai ler . exce ll ent
co ndition . Call 446· 1552.
Furni shed. air condit ioned,
underpinnin g, se t up on lot
in Middleport.

USED MOBILE
576·2711.

HOME .

Desk Si lO

Furn.snf'd npt 3 bdr. $200.
wnlcr pd. ch.to re n ac
Cf'plable Ca ll446 4416 nit er

APARTME NT S
brdroom. rent starts .1 1
$152 pe r month 2 bPdroom
stnrt s at $188 per mon th
Spr c1 iil rates for Se n• or
Cil•tens
Ca ll 446 1745
Ja c kson Est.1te s

7PM
1 bC"droom l urn•shed rtp t
992 5434 997 5914 or 304 887

Ca ll 145 512 1
56

Pe ts for Sa l e

D RAGO NWYND
CAT
TERY
KE NN E L AK C
C h ow
p uppi es.
CFA
H •ma l aya n , Persian and
S•a mese ki tten s. Ca ll .446
38.4.4 aft er .4 p m

HI LLC REST

Modern 1 bd room Town
Hou se Apt
.n Tu pper s
Pla.ns area No pet s Call

CR, T V. Radio
E qutpment

10 Mid
54

Mi sc. M er chandice

UTIIIT'f' trailer tor sale C.111
nflcr 5, 614 245 5747

Fnr rent 2 bd room apt m
Pom eroy 992 562 1

BRIARPA TC H KE NN E L S
Boa r d•ng and qroom.nq .
AKC
Go rd on
setters.
Enqi1Sh Cocker Span•et s

Call 388 9790.
POODLE

GROOM IN G

Cr=~ !l

Tay lor a t 367

Judy

7110

Apar tm ents 675 55 4fl

Fruit

GRE E N HOUSE

,94 91 11 5
For Sa le or Tra d e

F or sale or Tr ade for p1c k
up. horse or ca ttl e, a 1972
GMC 'l I , 1969 2 T Ford Ca ll

367 7533.

Furn• shed one bedroom
ap art m en t , ex tra
nic e,
ad ult s on l y . No pets . Phone

I 1: 30AM .

Sim i l ar bMQains available
Ca ll for your direc tory on
how to purchase . 602 ·998
0575 Ext . 7965 Ca ll r ef un
dable

Mn r c um
Ro o f , ng
&amp;
Spoutin q
30 yea r s ex
perience . spec•a l izing in
budt up r oof. Call 388 9857

New F ord 2 row cor n plan ter , never been u sed . Call

379 2468.
HC' MY duty

tr ac tor

di sc

$600 . Phone 304 675 4373
Fa rmall
C ub
with
cult iva tors and turn p lows
in exce ll e nt
co nditi on

Phone 304-576·1 147 .
Farm

Ga tes,

all

A lo t of d•fferent part s tor
350 or 400 engines . Also par
I s for 74 Impala i nt eri or
perf ec t 742 3063
For Sa le 15 she et s .4xB
Celo l ex. Redwood 6 1n
s•d•nQ . Eld on Walburn . __, ;d
St, M•dd lepo rt . 992 2805 .
HMvest qold co l d spot
Rc tr .qera tor , harves t qp td
Roper qas ranqe,
se lf
(_ fea ntnq oven . Will tak e
$~75 for both _ less than 1
y r s old. Se lt .n q due to
Illness 992 6204
I S It M o tor boat w•th
tr&lt;"'iler. I farm tractor .

9911105

1 se t of John Deer e 4 bot ·
tom 16' se m i m ount plows,
I -Hillsboro tr i ax le goose ·
neck 28' trailer . Ca ll 614 ·

Beautifu l u sed tiv in q r oom
se t . cou c h and c ha1 r . pri ce d
for qui c k sa le. Sl 50 . Phon e

1979 Pont1ac Bonnevi l le
PS,PB ,
St at•onwage n .
P owe r sea t s. AC. below
loan va lue. Phone 304 675
2.499 .

Da ts un ,

Far'!! ~qu!p'!lent

156·6534.
Gravely r idin c; tr ac tor , l7
HP , 2 cy lind er
w ith
tlydraulic lift, 50 inch
mower and doz er blade.

1981 model , new , S•1DO. 1982
l is t price i s $5750 . Outdoor
Equipment Sales, J et . Rts .
7 &amp; 35 , Ga llipoli s. Ph . 4-46 ·

180Z

1977,

ce ll f'n t Conditi on
s 1zes .

P hone 304675 5054
1967 JDIOIO dozer qas ,
$3500. Phone 304·675 2034

Ex

Ca ll 304

675 1183 .
Vo lk swage n Bee tl e 1969
$450 . engi ne nee d s work

Phone 304·675 3181 .

CARS and Truc ks, mos t
makes and m ode ls under
S'JOO .OO sold through local
qovern me nt sa les .Ca ll I

Livestock

Req 1sfered and g r ayed hor
ses. excellen t 4-H pr otec t .
Enql•s tl and wes tern sad
di es
eve ryth i n g
•maq,nable in horse equip
m ent and suppl•e s. a l so
ridin q lesson s and trail
rides and horse traininq .

1855 for

714 569 0141 Ext

d• r ec tor y on how to pur
chase
74

N ove~

H a t c h back

)04 675 5506
1972 Chevy
N ovr~,
new
sna c k s.
ex h aus t , qood
motor an d new pr:'\1nt

I I, 150 Call 304 881 3692

8. Gra in

Truck' s for Sr:'\ le

Seed &amp; Fertilizer

BULK

BLENDED

Aqr,c ullur al
fert i l ize r
de l• verrd &amp; spread or
del•vered &amp; dumped or
picked up at plant . B ien ·
ding serv •ce hour s 8 to .4 ,
Monday thru Friday, o ther
hour s r eq u est on spreader
huqqy r ent als A complete
•ndependen t busines . F arm
E quipmPnl serrvce, Cl if
ford W
Snyder ow ner.
Jac kson, OH , 286 4983
11 you rc11se co rn to feed
l •ves l oc k you owe it to
you r se lf to tr y stmc h1qh
protetn corn
( no t h •Qh
l ys .nc 1 Have lt m1ted sup
p l y call M&lt;l rk G rueser a t

696 IDO l

' 74 JEEP CJ 5. .4 whee l
dr1ve. 2 tops, sa te or tr ade !

Ca ll6 14 643 0198
1977 JEEP WitQoneer As'"
or wi ll se ll for pMts Pn

446 7876 or 446 1500
1981 D atsun W1lh

1978 . lnf ern a t. onC'I I pickup
scout 31,000 mile s. exce ll en t
cond•tion $2.350. Ph one 30.4
895 3477

Motorc yc l es

74

198 1 Honda 80

Call 446

1950
1977

Hondit

X L350. QOOd

cond, 5550 Coli 446 2089

1981

Yamohil

Exce ll ent con d
Autos for Sa l e

YZ80
S375

9.49

1967 M er cede s 200 D. ex
con d . , rebui lt e n g •n e,

S4.100. Ca ll 446·0026

5170.

1977 Chevro let Nova Con ·
cour s low miteaqe, PS . PB ,
r:'\ir . AM F M , ga rage kept ,
ex tr a n• ce . Cal1446·.4053 .
198 1 Chevy Cita tt on E x ce ll en t cond ., l ow mileage .
Wtl l con sider 4 wheel dri ve
on tr ade . 992 ·5170 .
20 f t. boat trailer , 1975
Dod ge Charge r . PS. PB .
A(. exce ll ent co ndition -388

9755 or 4461642 ext .332
1981
Bui c k
Park
Ave .
Di ese l Demo. Save hun
dreds of dollars · on thi s
v ehi c l r . Sm ith Nel so n
Motors of 500 E. Main,
Pomeroy . 992·2174 .
1
1980 Dat sun, 2 dr _, auto ..
17 ,000 mit es,
exce ll ent
cond, $4 ,500. Call446· 7322.
1978 Corvett e Silver An ni vesa ry Edition all or
t ions. tow mil eage, exc.

cond . Call 367 · 767·1 or 367
7560.

1978 HOND A XL 350, 304
675 6544 .
1981 KAWASAKI K D X 175,
917 actu al mi tes. 304 887

1418
1976 Kawask 1 KZ 900, ltd
pipes. pu ll b ac k hr:'\ndle
bars , kinq quee n sea ts ,
very qood cond . 9500 mil es

1975 Suzuk i G T 550, ve r v
good
co nd .
Wind shi eld,
sissy bar , lu qqage r ack,
new tir es. new tune up .

10,500 mil es 304-6 75·5693
1980

C R80

Honda

$400 .

Phone 304 · 675 ·203.4 after 5
75

Boats and
Motors for Sale

1978 16 fl . Chrvster Sk o boa t
and 85 HP ou tboard m otor
with all acc essdri es . Ca ll

367 0394.
1979 M onte Carlo Hop,
loaded with ex tras. 23,000

P o mer oy 2
bd r oo m ,
remodeled, 408 Spring
Carpete d, sec urity depos it .

TWO
bed r oom.
un ·
furni shed . One bedroom ef
f iciency . 304 -675 ·2722.

ler Phone 304·675·4631 .

6 roo ms .
r emodeled.
Adu lts only .
th Pom eroy

42

unfurn is hed,
E x tra c lean .
$185 . per man·
304 ·88?·2466

Mobile Homes
for Rent

SLEE PING

ROOMS a nd

li gh t hou se keeping
Park Centra l Hotel.

apt .,

~

For r ent space for total
elec tri c mobile home. Call

on

446· 4303.

Rl .

143,

deposit

required, adults only or
couple lljith one c hild. After

5 992·3647 .
Mobil e Home, 2 bedroom ,
furnished,
all e lec tri c,

washer, drve r hookup, $175.
monthly

plus

304·576·2441 .

electricity .

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33, North of
Pome rov . Large lots . Call
9'12· 7479.
La rge trai ler lots for rent

in Middleport . Call'l'/2·2101
or 9'12·2319 after 5FM.

cond., AM · FM radio &amp;
tape . Phone 446·4772 davs.

Auto Trim Center, 446· 1968 .

Olds

Cutlass,

exc

cond., low mites, new tires,

i:i:JiWWll new exhaust. Call675·6586.

_ _ __5pa_c~!~ r _R.!_~I __

.A':'tl? ~epair. _

77

Oualitv Autobody &amp; Paint

1974

Ca ll446·44 16 after 7PM.

PONTOON Boot . 446·4143

AT, AC , tilt wheel, cruise
.control, power door locks,
new tires, 55,800 miles, exc .
446·4855 nights.

Sl eepi n g
room , $125
ut iliti es pd .• single mal e.

2 bd .room Mobil e home fur ·
ni s h ed.
Paid utilities,
located 2 and 2 t enthsmiles

mil e . Cal l 446·7393 .

1976 Monte Carlo white,

Furni. s~~ d ~!?OmS

STIGKI~

French
Cdy
P a1 nt ing
res1dent i&lt;ll &amp; co mmer cia l.
•nterior . exter1or, paper
hanqlfl 'J,
&amp;
t ex tur ed
ce 11 1ng s (&lt;'Ill 367 778.4 or

71 vw, 71 Chevv pick up. In
goodcond . Call367-7238 .
'
1979 Dodge Aspen, 2 dr .,
AC, 6 cvl. , automatic . Con·
tact Ed Durst, Central
Trust Bank . 992-3007 .
HARTS Used Cars, New
Haven West VIrginia . Over
less expensive cBrs in

stock.

work . Professi onal custom
paint work on motorcycles.

78
Camping
.... __ Eq_ui_P'!'~nl
Pop up camper. Sleeps 6,
ice box, stove , vinyl over
~anvas

ends. 9~5- 3920 .

23 Ft. Dodge Motor Home.
Phone · 304·675· 1181 or 675 ·
3226.
1971 10 FT Svcamore truck
camper; gas stove, hot ·
water heater, 2 wav
refrigerator,
shower &amp;
'commode, excellent con dition, $1,000. Phone 304·

773·5187 .

''EM

ANNIE

8 :00 0 Cil CD Little House On
the Prairie Pan one of
two James IS shot when
he madvertantly walks 1n
on _
a bank robbery ~60
m1n.)
(]) National Geographic
Special

Spe c•al Mar ch and April
on l y Gene's Deep Steam
Ctean.nq
Sco tcn Gil urd
Freeest 1mnte . 992 6309
RON 'S TeleVI Sio n SNV tCC'
Spec •al •z •no in Zeni tn fl n d
Motoro l a, Quazar.
and
hou se ca ll s Phone 576 2398
or -446 2454

Gl MOVIE : ' Escape from
New York '
II) MOVIE :
Race'

Cll

F &amp; K Trf'P Tr.mm,nq ,
s tump remov.11 675 IJ3 1

R oN GLES'SSERV1CE ex
pp n enced mnson . roo fer .
cC'Ir p ent er .
elcctr •Ciil n .
qe n e r &lt;ll
r e pa.r s
flnd
remodet .nq Phone 304 675
1088 or 675 -4560

0

•

ALLEYOOP

304 895 3801

-

ADVANCED
Sea mles s
G utt er Do ors
Otf ertnq
con t•nuolJ5
qutterlnq,
sea ml ess ~ ~d inq, roofinq ,
q;~r;Jqe
dCior s.
tr ee
f'St •m otec.,6 14 69fl8705

... ...
"''.:.
, ...~,

9 :00

..,

Gl

~

Cll ® Bugs Bunnv/

0

Cil CD

C1J 700
(I) (E)
GASO I.INE ALLEY

0

Is we callin'onth'
Skinners or ain't

we?

PA 1N T1NG .n ter 1or &amp; C'x
!Pr1or . dry wall &amp; f f'x tur ed
( f'1 l1nq s, 304 6 75 1573

10:00 0

Plumbinq

Cll ®l

Cor Fourth and P•ne
Phon e 446 ·3888 or 446 44 77

CD

0 Cll ®l
E xcav~ ting

Gi!l l i poli s Di ve r sifi ed Con
st . Co . Custom doze r &amp;
bi! c khoe wo rk . Sp ec•al
f&lt;"!rm rat es . Call u s for f r ee
es t i mate s. 4.46 44.40

RIGHT THIS WAY,
!&gt;IR ... Mf?. WRIGHT

Lawren ce Si dens tr •cker
Ba ckhoe Se rv ice. Ca ll 675

15
~

..,.

5580.

"'
''

Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration

&amp;XPB:m"IIG
you!

the

TV Censored

G00P AEWS FeR
A CHAAGE, W/NIJIE/
THE STORfS CAN'T
VOILE NUM!JER
YOU PESlG~W/

.~ · ·

-~ ·

'

(jj) Hitchcock

11 :oo

News

1 1 :30 0 (J)

BARNEY

,, '

WHAR IN THUNDER

'

IS TH' MAILMAN--

'
I

I

·j

DOVOU RECKON HE

GOT UP LATE, PAW?

11 :45
12:00

'

'
I
\I

if you need your tritsh
haulrd ilway . ca ll HA( per

12:30

J

304 675 5868 bc lwoon 1 PM
&lt;lnd 5 P M . L awn mower
r c pcH r Pd .

PEANUTS
R e p.:~~ir

1 :00

MrbiiP hom e rrpA ir , Vee .
Escort Se rvi ce·. Cr111 245:

6E0~6E

9514 .

WASIIIN6TON
Upholstery

-n.IE TURNOVeRS ARE
KILLING ME !

1:30

1 :46
2:00

TRIST ATE
UPHOL STERY SHOP
1163 Sec . Ave., Gallipolis.
446·7833 or 4~ - 1833

CD Tonight Show

C1J Another Life
CII MOVIE: ' T9rror Train '

L 1mC'stonr hi!ul ed tr&lt;l c Tnr
and trailer 25 to 35 ton
l•m i T 99? 5275 or 7-17 21S3
J IM S Wf'ltP.r Se r vicr Cit II
J •m L r~nier . 304·675 7397

m ®I m CUI

of 2 part s. Soph1a Loren IS
the guest .

General Haulmq

610R6 5740"11er6

o

Nashville RFD
News/Sports/ Weather
(]) Dick Cavett The f1rs1

JONES . BOY S

NePct someth1nQ n;~ulee1
ilW&lt;lY or somethinq mnvPct?
We ' ll On i t . CA ll 4.46 3159 nr

Cll

C1J
CD

~·

WATER
SERVICE Call 367 7471 or
361 0591

om

.

'

Jumble Book No. 19. containing 110 puutes. •s ava•lable It" St 'J' . 1 .o~IPillt1
this newspaper , 80.11. l4 . NorwOOd. N J OlMH lnclurtc· VU\1'
I name , address. l ip code and make check s payable 10 N f'w'_f' "P•··•~·"~ 1

BRIDGE
Problems, problems
~--- -------

By Oswa ld J acob)
and Alan So nt ag

\OHJ'It

in a

rath er ex perl

ga me . Nol that ail play e rs

indeed for r ubber bndgP .1ml
1t was easy for North to

\\ E\ I

I . \ ;&gt;. t

• \ '·l
. 1\
f

• !I 7, ·1

+ )\

\ Ill Ill
•

)\ .I

't ()':
f ·\ I

+ Al/

:-;l)tJ[h

a heart finP ssP &lt;II tri ck om·

1 '.1~~

( \ '1

and go after

I· .~~~

set up

so

that

So uth

ran takl'

ovcrtncks If lw
does tha t Eas t ca n t:-t kr ht s

~.

L

\'ulru' r :Jhl•· H1 llli
\orlh

game ..

1

+'

111

Wt•..;t

to

I ,

• ltl :t ~
. IHilld~

l k;iln

Jump nght

~~_.

• -\ .I
f 1\ Ill
4 IH

c\uh

were ex pert s. but even thr
poorest ola ve r s co uld hold
t hc1 r own fatrly W£'11 w1th
ex pert s
Ala n " I take 1t yu u would
l1kc t o s how so mt.' rubbt·r
brtdgc pr oblem s th1s wt•d
Here ts a hand I saw rt•ct•nt
ly South 's onf' no- trump
opc n t ng was reasonable

-·

•\ .J ' -l

Oswald
'' 1 recent!\·
play ed a lol of rubber bndgt'

'I

kmg. shtft to a spade and ~t't

declare r two t n cks."

Ala n. "South was a rubber
bridge player He wan ted to
scor e ga me and rubber and
he saw th at he rou ld go up
wtth dummy's ace of hcJrt:-.
and collect at least mnt·
tncks. So he pla yed the &lt;tt 't'
an d l ed a l ow club to ht ~
qlleen

Oswa ld

"Our

readers

s hould note that th1 s eluh
play guarded aga &gt;nst a 4-0

club

break . How manv lrtcks
did So llth act ua ll y mik l''"

:\ l.tn
! !1 .11 li 1
! : \1., 1'"1 1 llfl\llllll'd I
:dter t&lt;~..,tn g lilt 'lut. ~ ·.~
i·:a ~ t w:ts 111 \\ i l h iL'
1.~
and It'd ,~ !11\, ·f',1d• \\ ~~~~ ,,
ran Lu duntlll\ .., J·'l J.. '-H•IJit ,
ra n ht ~ r luh.., ;oHJ )l'lltd lt '.\
or nlht•r 1&lt;;1:-.1 g111 ':Jlll'l' ·, , 1

p~

~-

·r ,

1

by THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS
I Gallimaufry
5 Skin problems
II Make eyes at
12 O ut--a nd-out
13 Crawford
film

14 Cower
15 Taste

41 Vale
DOWN
I Back the
wrong -

2 Repeatedl y
3 Escape
4 Bidd y
5 "- With
the Moon "

16 Hurry off

6 Old French

17 Snarling

decr ee
7 Title in India

sound

18 Contest

19 U.S

joiner

'!5 it."
1, 1

9 Impress deeply

21 Dangling
22 Volcanic spe w

10 Of the

23 Importune
25 Jury list

16 One of the

breast bone

•,1J:-

:r:

1196Hi9t

22

··;qr~t ;t ~

ts :\sunr:nn

s lat~&gt;

"neckwea r"

bourine -"

s t·c~·

of

8 Cattle
rustler's

20 " Mr . Tam-

" Zhtv~tgo "

heroin e

2:1 Uke
certain

meta ls
Katzen jamme rs 24 Hen ley -

Ht·st·Htfu!
'!!I ·· \ 'o! pt •nl' .,
t· harartt-r
:10 Will)
31 1\uss
labor tm ton
!&lt;nmwt

:16
:17 Cf'n t t&lt;-11

old s tyle

27 Prison
s ymbols

28 Self
29 Cannen or !sa
Eden "
character

33 Jaranese

river

Cll Benny Hill Show
0 Cll Ouincv A voung
medical student reports the
nomicid e dea th of a gangster which ha s been cov ·
ered up . (R) (60 min .)

35 Lord

(]) Captioned ABC News
® MOVIE: 'Operation
C .I.A.'
Ill (ill Nightline
(II MOVIE: 'Safari'
C1J Bums &amp; Allen
Cll Nightline
(]) PBS Late Night
Ill (ill MOVIE: 'Amorica thon'
0 CIJ (1) Late Night With
David Lattenftan
C1J Jack Benny Show
(I) Solid Gold
0 (I) MOVIE: 'Columbo:
Double Elcposure'
(Ill Married Joan
CII Flaa~back: Fire at
Cocoanut Grove
(I) My Uttle Margie
C!l News/Sign Off
(I) CNN 2
(1) Bachelor Father
(!l
MOVIE:
'Smokev
Bites the Dust'

2:1 6 (I) Mluion lmpo11lble
2:30 (I) Ute of Riley
3:00 (I) Bumo It Allen

h--+---+--1

32 "East of

34 Hockey

&lt;D I BeliiiYe
D Ill Newa/Sign Off

I

'~

111

26 Heed,

(60 min .l

CID Newswatch
10:30 C1J Sing out Ameroca
10:45 (II TBS Evening News

"'
., '
~. '·
_,

E l ec tr •c•a n
ll((' n sed
ma s t rr.
lo wes t
r f!tes
M ound . Phone )0.4 ·89 5 38?6

Lou Grant A

crisis in the M iddle East
has Lou and h1s stafl
geared up for the b•gges t
disaster story of all (60
min.)
(1) Middletown Revisited
This program profiles the
hi storical significance of
the Middletown stud1es o f
the 20· s and 30 's and how
ttley relate to the rece ntly
aired Middletown se ries .

/11EAJVWHILE...

STOCK S{Ot/6'H OF
THAT LITTU: WHITE

• rot

SEW IN G Ma c hin e rep a ir s,
se rvice . Authorized S1nqer
Sal es &amp; Se rvi ce Sharpen
Sc 1ss or s
Fa br i c Shop ,
P omeroy 991 7284 .

MOWREYS Uphol s &gt;orv Rl .
1 Box 114. PI/Pi e"sant , :!04
675 - 415~ .' .
'

Making

1')1'

!rom Jumble. do

(I) @ M'A'S ' H Con -

(J)

rI I I j crrn
IArl'&gt;Wl'l',

Club
CUI MOVIE : 'The

Bloopers Ho st 01ck Clark
looks at so m e of telev •sion
and movie 's funn• est mom ent s. (60 min .)
G)
MOVIE :
' Up
the
Academy'

CAR TER 'S PLUM B IN G
A ND HEATING

87

Hope

Grade Felspar h1res an ed ·
ucati onal co ns ult anl

&amp; Heating

M . H.

Bob

clusion .
Klinger
stands
court -martial for allegedly
stealing
Hawk eye
and
B.J.'s new ca m era_ (RJ

9 :30 0

Now arrange !I re o rclod lcrTel&lt;; t,,
form the s urpr~ sc dn Sw•' l &lt;~'&gt; '&gt; ll lJ
gesled by th e abovn t;.ll1 0nn

BULLY LOWLY AFHAI [J I ll .1 ~~
The sor1 o f tile you rT11Yh 1 , .• ! ,,, • , •'' r:
to lead - A f='ULL ON(

Saturday's ! Jumbles
Answer

Letter'

B Ut L D 1N(.- &amp; rC'mOhP I •n q .
carpPnt r y, r oni•" '-L o 1um
b•no. concreh · · ..•.._. )04
67f) )440

86

Tha t' s

IHE 'viC::--·

DIFFICULI LOCK
TO PI CK'(

Oswald " I sre the hand ts

Special: Stars Over Texa s
Bob 's Guests are Mo rg an
Fairchild , Jack
Lemmon
and l arry Gatlm and the
Ga tlin Brother s. (60 m m.)

STARK 'S Tree an d l&lt;lwn
Sf' rvice . free fertd •Ter w•th
an nual c.1 r e.
1n sured
P hon e 304 -57 t• '1010

84

Great

Road Ru nner Movie n .e
h1lanou s advent ures and
shenanigan s of Bugs Bunny
and the Road Runner w 11l
be re capped . (60 m1n !
({) (jj) Great Perform ances ·A T nbute to Billy
Wilder .· Th1 s 1s a two -nour
special tribute to the d1St1n gu1shcd
writer /prod ucer I
director by the Film Soc1ety
of l1ncoln Center . (2 hr s )

Wi!ter we lls Comme r c•nl
i!Od Dom est •c. Te sl hol es
Pumps Salrs and Se rvi cr

83

'The

Incredible! A female quart erba ck. a somersaulting re
cord and an 88 -year-old
d tsc JOCkey ar e feat ur ed on
th1 s ep•sodc _ (60 mm )

, I

''

Mac N eil · l ehrer

Report
®I News
(E) lill Muppet Show
0 (J) You Asked For It

(]) Business Report
CiiD Ric hard Simmons
ill) Creativity : Bill M oyers
'Out - Art .· Th1 s program
present s a survey of art1 sts
who are breakmg w1th tr ad t!lon to create me ssages
that are un1qu e. outra geous , un conventional . de lightful
and
some t1mes
absurd
1D {j2) Entertainment
Tonight

lf-l WtJTAlf..\QO

Call 388 9761

b
_

@ CNN 2

367 7160

85

16 1IJ toot deep V , runabout
with 30 H . P
M er c ury
Motor and trailer , mak e of ·

45

Ca ll 446 2107

_ I ICJ

WHE~E ' 5

Answer here . ON A

Cll 0 Cll Famifv Fe ud
CD laverne and Shi rley

•46·8117 or 446 8286 .
1979 Starcra ft 15 ft . tr1
ha ul, 80 HP M erc ury . exc.
cond .• ski equipment . Ca ll

(J) P . M. Magazine
Bulf's Eve

(ill

I

(I) Anoth er life

ew~~ 1tJ
aml~ 11-I~R
i-1~DS Cff .A!-JD

pel C lea n .ng fea tur ed by
H al l e tt Brosthers Cu stom
Ca rp e ts. F r ee es t ima tes .

82
1979 R/\11 400 Suzuk• d• rt
bik e. new par ts. 304 773

Apartments,
r e fe r en ce
r equir ed , 30.4 -675 -2946

SJOO . Ren t $195 . Ca ll a ft e r 6
p.m . 991·1188.

7:30

00\JtT

1703 or 949 1043 .

304 675 1386

304-675 18ll .

... BUll

CA P TAI N ST EEMER Cor

367 0657 .

Rac•ne Ni ce 2 bd .room.
co mpl et ely turn ., A C., $260 .
mon th . Deposi t r eq . Gl en
B• sse ll. 949 2801 or 949 2860

3670. Weekdavs 9 to 5, Sat . 9
to 1.

(1)

coi l 304-675 1751

1981 Honda SOR . $450 . C.1!1

= ;rr~!DtiDll ~
7I

topper ,

0
C1J

CIJ Happv Davs
0 Cll Tic Tac Dough

RORNLOSER

rJ

IDEEMLY

(I) ® CBS News
Dr. Who

([) Carol Burn ett and
Friends
(I) Entertainment Toni ght

Ca ll991 7473
H ~y

m

(fflli lias, Yoga and You
(E) lill _ABC News

....

I TURBAP I

NBC News
$50,000 Pyramid
II) Gomer Pyle

0

7:00

, -'

CD

(J)

(I} Muppet Show

Crea t1 ve wood
decks ,
p r essurized p1ne. ceda r &amp;
r edwood Free est•matC'

a fter 5

- -- - - -

61

RED UCE sa l e &amp; f as t w• t h
GoBese T ab tet s &amp; E Va p
"wa ter p i l ls", Fruth Phar
macy .

_ __ _ __ _
AutosforSale

71

}2

&amp; Vegetab les

IT PROIIA&amp;LY JUST SKIPPED
HIS MIND IT WA S FRIDA¥
ALI&lt;:EAD Y. YA 5EE ~
THERE HE J!'&gt;.

0

Cll

1182.
PAINTING
1nt erior and
ex t erio r .
pl umbin g,
roof ing, so me remode l ing .

10 vrs exp. Ca ll 388 9651 .

64

58

TO MEET U.G.

Doctor In the House

(jj) Over Easv

6:30

tex tur ed ce il•n gs co m
mer cia I and r es i de ntiill,
free es ti m~ t es . Ca ll 256

SURP LU S J EEPS $65 ..
CARS 589 , TRUCK $ 100 .

POODLE
pups.
AK(
r cq,stNf'd No Checks . 30.4

&gt;h s old , 304 675 1076

1'/H¥ DID~'T EASY PICK
US UP AT T~E HI G HWAY~
IT'S NOT LIKE ~IN\ 'iOT

Hom e
Improvements

HAY BALER, sq uar e t ype .
Ca lt
156 6038
after

7 yr old pony . 51 10 . htqh .
Ha tt er b r oken , ex tr a n•ce

E xcc l s10r 01 1 Co . 636 E
Ma1n St , Pomeroy, OhJO

9 shee t s 4x8 Ce to tex and 4
•nt er 10r oak door s, dtf
ler ent sizes . Ca I I 992 · 7005 .

675 1365

- ·
Fa.r"!l~'LUP!!:I ~"!

61

Yorksh1re Terr.er femf!le.
3 mos old 1st shots &amp; wor
meO Call4.469417

$800 e a c h phone 458 I 780

991 55 II

~=======::==:;=======o:·:~:~:~:·:~=~

Hoof Ho llow . 614 698 3190

H10 EABED
( !l eap
if
SO ld tll Ofl Cf' I n QOOd Shape
.446 1245

upper.
fur
plu s depos11

.~ _

tu:llrHf

63

59

RCA Sol.cl Stat e 100 Con
sa te Cou l d be fixed or used
for p.1r t s . .446 4173

30 4 485 5185

KE NNEL

Board.ng all br eeds , c tean
1ndoor outdoor
la c il ll •es .
A l so AKC Reg . Dober
m ans. Ca l l446 7795

7-J

Open f or
th e seaso n .
Veqetab les and beddinq
plan ts. hanginq ba sk e ts.
foliage plants , n•cc se l ec t
sh rubbery Co Rd 30 ne)l f
to M orninq Star Hous.nq
Deve lopment Ra c 1ne. Oh

S1

Apa rtm en ts. furni shpd nnd
unfurn • s h e d
Point
P leasant Ref er ences. 304

Build1nq ma ten a ts b l ock.
bnck , sewer pipe s. win
dows. l1nlels. etc. Claude
Winters , R10 Grande, 0

MOVIE : ' Hot Lead a nd
Cold Feet '
II) Andv Griffith
(I) ABC News

ST UC CO PLA STERIN G

9 p• ecr d1n1nq room su1te,
tr=~bl e 8.
6 ch n•rc. . lnrqc
cll1nil c nb• ne t &amp; bullet Ca ll

2506

75 Jl

Bu ttdmg Supplie s

81

m ® m ®

CII

CA PTAIN EASY

6S

FLA t R FURNITURE &amp;
D EStG N . Bemco mn t
tresses or Bo)( s pr.nqs , lull
ortwm.$58 used furn.tur e
S pc d1ne tt se t. 7 pc ct1nP ll
SC I , SIUCII O CO UCh , l1v1nQ
r oom
SU1t e.
comp l e t e
bed room su•t e. bunk beds.
qlass fr on t boo k cf'!sc. Open
9
AM 6PM
MondrlY
Wednesd&lt;ly Fnday . 9AM
SPM
Tu esday Thur sday
Si'lfurdr:'\Y or cal l 675 137 1
for SPC'C~&lt;11 nppo tntmen t

Fu rn1 shed ap!
bdr .
rlclull s. $?00. elec tr• c. wa ter
p(11d
C1H 446 4.416 a ft er

3 bd room
n1 sn eo. $ 150

1981

o m CD o

CIJ

MOVIOQ. must Se ll AK(.
black and wh•tf' cocker
spanH'I . ma iP. $100. 7 m an

1207

5818

1 IJd room Apt
dleport 997 7177

Ca ll 388 874 7

For sa le mis c. offi ce fur
n.ture &amp; equ.pme nt . Sea ted
b •d s only. may be see n at
Federa l Land Bank . 228
Upper
R iver
Rd ..
Ga ll •pol1s , Oh . 446 0203
B1d s w ill be opened May 7.

6:oo

News

NOW YOU CA N AFFORD
TO
KEEP
YOUR
COOL! ........... Driv e i nto
you r
ow n
top quality ,
guaranteed pool. Easy se t
up, easy fi n anc in g, no down
payment. no ex tr a c har ges.
POOL PEOPLE, 52 Sta te
St .. Ga llipol is,
446 ·3051.
317 11 Nob le Summit Rd.
Middleport, 992 ·5714 .

Unscramble these tour Jumbles.
one lener to each square . 10 form
lour ordinary words .

EVENING

Cal l 367·78" For Sale 66 Motor H ome .
full y equ 1ped, pr ice S3,000

RAY 'S
U SE D
FUR
NITURE K.tchen cab1 n rt
S65 . round wood brcak t ost
c:.e t SBS. chest $.4 5. dresser
S60 . uiii•IY 1&lt;:'\ble SIO. bilr
StOOl $400. CO II CC II OO Of Sa lt
&amp; pep pN shok er s S2 00 e N .
c hurn dr~ t cd 1907 $45, sto ne
tars. d•shes C.1 ll )67 0637

Kf' n morf' wasllN &amp; dryer .
heflvy ctu ty . mr:'\ tch p;ur .
QUclr an teed . $')')5 Call ?56

Un t urn. shed npartment . .4
rm s &amp; bath 10 Vtnton
Refr.q &amp; stove turn 1shed
La rq p ynrd &amp; qarden spo t
Df'p &amp; re f req Coli 245

~ARe .

Round bat es of hf!y for sa le
Call 446 4036 or 446 6566 .

"618 13

1973 28 II . Rovol Knigh t
camper. furn ishedm new
carpe t.
Ex ce ll en t co nd .

!X&gt;N'T

l}\J~';MlfB)'il ~ ~ THATSCRAMBLEOWOROGAME
~ ~ ~~ ®
by Henr~ Arnold and Bob lee

MONDAY
5/3/82

Motor Home
&amp; Campers

79

ars

·'
'"

,,, I

0919

SUE'S

7PM

Chr ys ler $175.

895 3958

446 0317

ApMtment no 3. 2nd I Ioar
furniShed adults only . no
pet s. rrf &amp; dep req Call
446 0957

APARTMENTS, mobile
home s.
houses .
Pt .
P leasant . and Gall ipol is
6 14 .446·8221 or 614 245-948.4

te r 4PM , 245· 5288 .
2 bdr . mobil e home. fur ·
ni shed , good co nd . Ca ll 446 ·

and up .

Hut c hes. $300 rlnd S375 ,
ma ple or p.ne
hn1sh
Bedroom su• tes
Bassett
Cnerry , $795
Bunk bed
compl e te wiTh mallresses.
$150 nnd up !o $350 . Cap
ta•n 's beds , $175 comp l e te
Baby beds . $99 Maltresses
or bO): sp r. nqs. l ull or tw•n .
$58. firm. $68 and S78
Queen se ts. $ 195 4 dr
c hest s. $42 Bed f rames ,
$10 and $25 . 10 oun Gun
cnb tnrls,
SJSO . d•ne tt e
cha 1rs S70 and $75 Gas or
elec lr1 c ranq cs. $795 Or
th oprcl• c super f1 rm. $95.
bnby mi'ltres srs. $?5 &amp; $35.
beet lr c'lme s $70 . $75. &amp; $30
USC'd Furnilur r ])OOkcase.
S PC d10C' I! Se t. 3 L1V1nQ
r oom su• tc R ilOQf'S ~nd
TV ' s 3 milr s out Bu l cw d lr
Ref Opf'n 9rlm l o 7pm . Man
thru Frt . 9&lt;lrn to Spm , Sit!

I' 1 bd room . su• lable for
tal people Furn •shed $135
plu s uttlrt •es
Country
mob•le home park Lot no

Trniler 10 Syrac use, Aport
ment
and
hou se
10
Pomeroy. house rn Le tar t
F .1lls. Apartment •n New
Ha vPn and Midd lepor l. 992

Extrfl n•ce cou ntr y hom e
cf! rpeled nfltural
gas -2
bath 's, no ch ildr en no pe ts.
Located at Snowvil le. 698
4040

AP

Wood tabl e w•th 4 c ha1rs.

304 675 1542
31

USED

S385 7 pc . $189

7 bd r oorr house trader
You pay
utilities
un
turn 1ShC'd
except table .
ch.11rsandcook stove $175
PN month . $75 depos•t

5386
Furn•shcd 4 r oom co llnq e,
near HMC $190 Water pd .
child nc c ep tal1le Call 446
4416n tt er 7PM

more
4.46
) 159Open lO am to 5pm,

LAY N E ' S FURNITURE

5818

44

An t ique
and
m•sc .
hou se hold •!ems Ca ll 4-46 ·

So li! , cha1r, r ocker. o t
toman. J tnbles . $500 So fa .
cha•r and loveseill. $275
So fa s and Chr:'\.rs pr•ced
fr om $285 to $795 Tables .
$38 and up to $ 109 H •de a
beds.S3 40 . Queen S1Ze. $380
Re c l ine r s. Sl75 to $295.
Li!mps fr om $18 to $65 . 5
pc d1nettes fr om $79 . . t o

Lot s &amp; Acreage

1mproved flat lots
1/ .4
ncre S5.000 3 31 4 ncres
S12.000 5 acres at $ 15.000
(, t y sc hool d •s tr 1c t Wilt
t .nanu &lt;'II 10°o down Call

Ga lli po li s. New so l a beds
$250, u sed sofa beds $ 100,
rec l iners sao. bunk beds
$100 , bunki e ma ltresses
$40 , mapl e rockers $.49,
mApl e dtne tt se ts f rom $ 125
to $175. bed r oom su1t es
$150. 3 pc
I1V1ng room
SUi fCS $199, 2 p c ii VI n Q
room su• te s $140, love sea ts
$70, ow l l amps S25, nnger
washers
$75,
drye r s,
severa l
rc f r1gerators.
ufilily
cab •n e t s,
m ec hrl n• c's t oo ls.
b ed s,
sil ver stone. TV .s. wood
bur ners. stero 's and lo ts

55

1 bdr furn.shed . m odern &amp;
c lean Conve nient IOCill 10n
Ref &amp; dep req . Ca ll 745

43

good cond .. $14 ,900 . Ca ll
"6 4537 .

.. .:

tru ck. $600 304-67 5·4373 o r
304· 675 7845 . 70 mode l

1975 Case 450, dozer ·
tr ac tor, 1,800 hr s., ve ry

Television
•
•
viewing

,.,

w ith
pi ck up

The Daily Sentinel - Page- 11

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

fliCK TRACY

-· ~qu i_pf!1 ~nt .
8ft
Cam'p e r
every th i n g,
fi ts

pickup truc k. C• JJ 614·286 5930, J ackson, Oh . RON
EVA NS ENTERPR ISES

SWAIN
AUCTIO N FURNITURE &amp;
PAWN SHOP 61 O love 51.,

PLIANCES
we~shers.
d r ye r s.
refr•gerators .
rnnges
Sk&lt;l qgs
Ap
Pl1ances . Upper River R d .
hes1de Stone Crest Motel
J46 7398

Cente nar y, lbdr _, pr •vate
tot . re f &amp; dep., $160 mo.
ad u l ts Call I 643 2644

35 992 7479
Two bf'droom mob1le homr
S4,500 Phonp 304 675 6517
or con tact Hu qh Burr1 5

Hou se hold Goods

GOOD

367 0288
1979 3 bedroom . L •berty ,
l 4x70 . $14 ,000 . exce l len t
co nd•tton . exce l len t buy .
675 ?474 or 304 576 2490 af
!Pr 4 30

35

Hom es for Sa l e

6

304

Mobil e Hom es
for R ent

675 383 4

Real Estate

Pla sti c Se ptic Tanks . State
and county approved . 1.000

Monday, May 3, i 982

camping

bv Larry Wright

si zes in stoc k , hau l in your

l . •, n Mow.nq Serive, no

(;~I I

KIT ' N' CARLYLE'"

ga l. tank . pri ce S340. Other

r;r lldt lrnc. weddings. and
,, r r c.tc;r ons Cal l 367 7566

lrqlrt hnulrnq

May 3, 1982

Pomeroy- Middleport, .Ohio

name

be

praise d'
37 Debatable
311 Position

39 - of Wight
40 Bad-tempered
one

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here'" hnw
io

il :

to work

A X Y D L B A A X R
LONGFE LLOW

One lett er simply stands f o r another I n th is samp le A is
u sed for the three L's, X (or th e l wo 0' :- . l'tr Sing \{' lelt ers,
apostrophes, the l ength and form at ion or llw words are all

hints. Each day the code lellers are different
CRYPTOQUOTES
PYV

AN I

JFRFIB

N

N

TNUM

F I

WZM

GYO.II'
WZNI

HYYWZHNPM O

WOVWZHNPMO . - B .

QMWWM()

A.

NH

'li

H
N

JFA Z WMIQMOB

Yestenlay's.Cryptoquote: PROSE IS WORDS IN THEIR BEST
ORDER ; POETRY IS THE BEST WORDS IN THE BEST
ORDER. - COLERIDGE

-•

�Monday, May 3, 1982

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Pa~12-The Daily Sentinel

13 hurt in accidents
Weekend accidents investigated
by the state highway patrol resulted
in injury to 13 people and nwnerous
citations.
The bulk of the injury-related werck occurred in Meigs County, the
Gallia-Meigs Post reported this morning, the first mvolving a carmotorcycle accident on Ohio 7 and
County Rd . 21 late Friday night.
Troopers said Donald L. Dailey.
29, Middleport, slowed to make a left
turn onto the county road at 10 p.m.
when a vehicle behind his motorcycle driven by David A. Mardis, 2JI,
Colwnbus. was unable to stop and
struck Dailey's bike.
Dailey and a passenger, Debra L.
Dailey, 23, Middleport, were taken
to Veterans Memorial Hospital by
the Middleport emergency squad,
where they were later treated and
released.
The acc id ent ca used sli ght
damage to both vehicles and Mardis
was c1ted for assured clear distance.
According to the report, a southbound auto driven by DavidS. Henderson, 31. Olive Hill, Ky ., was
southbound on 7 at County Rd . 5 at
5:08p.m. Saturday when his vehicle
went left or center and struck a northbound vehicle driven by Susan A.
Sheppard. 26, Rt. I, Rutland, in the
left-turn lane.
The dnvers were hurt in the
wreck, including a passenger in
Henderson's vehicle, Mary L. Henderson. 2JI, also Olive Hill, and a
passenger m the Sheppard auto,
Patrice E. Circle. II, Ra cine . The
Hendersons were taken to Veterans
by the Meigs EMS, where they were
admitled and listed in stable condition this morning.
Sheppa rd and Circle were treated

and released from the emergency Joseph Adu, 2JI, Athens, was unable
room . The incident severely to stop in time and struck the car in
damaged both vehicles and Hen- the left rear, causing slight damage
derson was cited lor OWl and no to his auto.
Carr was not treated for her inoperator's license.
The patrol said Irina T Hayman, jury, and the patrol cited her for
18, Pomeroy, was southbound on OWl . Adu was ticketed lor assured
Ohio 143 at 10:20 a.m. Sunday when clear distance.
her vehicle dropped off the right
The patrol said a vehicle driven by
edge of the road and crossed over, Vincent T. Lockhart, 17, Rt. 3,
striking an embankment and a small Gallipolis, was southbound on Ohio
tree. The vehicle overturned on' its 160 at I : 10 p.m. Sunday when it went
top, causing severe damage.
of( the right side of the road, crossed
Injured were the driver and two over to the left , struck a mailbox,
passengers, Sandy M. Lee and Larry · continued on and struck an emR. Lee, both 16 and of Pomeroy . The bankment.
The vehicle was moderately
three were taken to Veterans by the
county EMS, where Hayman was damaged. Lockhart was injured, but
admitted lor her injuries and listed not treated, and the patrol cited him
in stable condition . The Lees were lor excessive speed.
treated and released.
In other matters, the patrol said a
Phillip A. King, 18, Gallipolis, was
treated and released from Holzer vehicle driven by Mark M. Davis, 2JI,
Medica l Center early Sunday alter Gallipolis, was eastbound on U.S. 35
receiving possible head injuries a!- · at 1:45 a. m. Saturday when his auto
ter his vehicle struck a large rock on went off the right side of the road,
striking a guard rail and leaving the
Ohio554 .
Don Beach, 16, Bidwell, a scene.
Davis' ve hi cle was slightly
passenger, was treated at the scene
by Gallia EMS personnel for an in- damaged, and Davis was cited lor
DWI and driving under suspension.
jury suffered in the wreck.
No injuries were reported in two
The patrol said King was eastbound at 12 :15 a.m. when his vehicle car-&lt;leer accidents reported during
went off the left side of the road and the weekend period.
Michael D. Hindy , 21, Middleport,
struck the rock, severely damaging
was northbound on 143 at II :35 p.m.
the car.
Troopers said Sandra S. Carr, 23, Saturday when his vehicle collided
Rt. 2, Patriot, suffered minor injury with a deer, causing slight damage
when her vehicle lost control on U.S. to his vehicle. The patrol said Larry
D. Barr, 37, Rt. I, Rutla nd, was
35 at 12:01 a.m. Sunday, went off the
left side of the road and struck an travelling northbound on 7 at 9:35
embankment, causing the car to a.m. Saturday when a deer ran into
overturn . The vehicle was the path of his vehicle.
The deer was killed in the accident
moderately damaged.
While the car was lying in the and Barr's vehicle was moderately
road , a westbound auto driven by dama~ed .

Sale Starts Todar
Good through Mar 9, 1982

Albuquerque
Atlanta
Boston
Chicago
Dallas
.79
Detroit
Los Angeles 105 1.05
89 .85
Miami
139 .99
New York

While quantities last.
Quantity rights reserved.
We are not responsible
for typographical errors. Sorry, no dealers.

REMEMBER MOM
MAY 9th

Providence
Salt lake
Seattle

l1

17

a struggle between the two of them
on the sidewalk . Denuit said the man
reached into his pocket, possibly for
a gun.
Denuit then fell to the ground. The
man dropped his dollar bill and fled
to a car parked nearby . It was la&gt;t
seen travelling west on Court Street.
As o!!icers were finishing up their
survey of the attempted crime
scene, a call came in to the police
desk at 9:30p.m. informing them the
Ohio Highway Patrol had located
and stopped a car matching the
description and registration given to
officers. The ca r was stopped near
Beech Hill in Middleport.
Officers then took Denuit up to the
Middleport Police Department,
where a lineup of the three subjects
travelling in the stopped car was
conducted. The manager was unable
to identify any of three, and they
were released.

Area deaths
Carl F. McNemar
Carl Franklin McNemar, 68,
Frazeysburg, died Saturday at
Bethesda Hospital. Zanesvill e,
following a heart attack.
Mr. McNemar was born March 13,
1914 at Melon , W. Va . He was a
member of the Second Street Church
of Christ. Frazeysburg. He was an
employe of the Preston Oil Co. , and
had lived at Hemlock Grove a nwnber or years.
He is survived by his wife, Pauline
McNemar ; lour daughters, Mrs.
Homer I Irene 1 Baxter, Pomeroy ;
Mrs. Leland IDoris) Hinde!, Mrs.
Donald IBarbara 1 Chapman and
Mrs. Basil !Madeline) Smith all of
Nashport, Ohio; 17 grandchildren, 12
great grandchildren, three sisters
and two brothers.
Funeral services will be held
Tuesday at I p.m. at the BaughmanVe nsii -O rr Funeral Home,
Frazeysburg with the Rev. Robert
Knox officiating. Burial will be in
Frazeysburg Cemetery. Friends
may call at the funeral home today
from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9.

~rgaretCoughenour
Margaret V. Coughenour, 79, died
Sunday evening at her Roush Lane
Road home in Cheshire.
She was born June 16, 1902 in
Cheshire Township, a daughter of
the late George and Alice Bobo Van
Zandt. She was also preceded in
death by a daughter, Betty Jo
Coughenour, at the age of 14; a son,
James Carroll Coughenour, in infancy; a sister, Helen Scott, and a
brother, George Van Zandt.
She nnarried Clarence Coughenour
.•in 1920. She was a school bus driver
in the Cheshire and Kyger School
Districts for more than 30 years.
Surviving are a sister and brother·
in-law, Mary and Manning Webster
of Pomeroy; a niece, Dian Meyer,
Moor Head, Minn.; a nephew, Joe
Reichman, Columbus, another
niece, Missy Van Zandt of Huntington, and a devoted friend who
made her home with Mrs.
Coughenour for many years, Janet

Gordon .
Services will be held at 2 p.m.
Wednesday at the Rawlings-CoatsBlower Funera l Home in Middleport
with the Rev . Chester Lemley officiating . Burial will be in Gravel
Hill Cemetery at Cheshire. Friends
may call at the funeral home
anytime on Tuesday. Relatives will
receive friends from 2 to I and 7 to 9
p.m. Tuesday .

George J. Lowther
George J . (Jack) Lowther, 63,
Route 3, Albany, died Sunday at Mt.
Carmel West Hospital in Colwnbus.
Mr. Lowther was born in Colwnbia Township of Meigs County, a son
of the late Lewis Vincent and Myrta
Lavina Isles Lowther.
He was employed by the Tennessee Gas Transmission Co., and
was a veteran of the U. S. Army in
World War II. He belonged to the
Albany Veterans of Foreign Wars,
Post 9893; the Albany Masonic
Lodge 723, Free and Accepted
Masons and was a past master of the
lodge; the Athens County Shrine
Club, the Ancient Accepted Scottish
Rite, Colwnbus; Aladdin Temple
Shrine, Colwnbus, and the Athens
American Legion Post 21.
Surviving are a son and daughterin-law, George Douglas and April
Lowther; a daughter and son-in-law,
Kathy and Gary Spencer, five gran·
dchildren, Stephenie, Wendy and
Chet Lowther, and Curt and Terry
Spencer, all of Athens, and four
sisters, Evelyn Ward, Athens;
Goldie Bobo, Chillicothe; Beulah
Udvardy, Albany, and Doris
Stevens, Coco Beach, Fla.
Preceding him in death were his
wife, Amy Perry Lowther, and a
brother, Lewis, in infancy .
Services will be held at I p.m
Thursday at the Bigony-Jordan
Funeral Home in Albany with the
Rev. Cecil Cox officiating. Burial
will be in Caster Cemetery. Friends
may call at the funeral home from 2
to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. Wednesday.
Masonic rites will be conducted at
the funeral home at 7 p.m Wednesd8y. Military graveside rites
will be conducted by the Albany

VFWPost.

.

A description of the suspect given
to police reports that the man is !'&gt;-9
1o !'&gt;-10 in height, weighs approximately 160 pounds and
medium-length, reddish-tinted hair.
He was wearing a hat, blue jeans
and a black leather jacket.

Kaiser....

!Continued from page I I
dropped to about 50 percent of its
normal level. Our monthly production rate is running about 35 percent
below normal.
" Because of the worsening
situation, we must control all spending as tightly as possible. Our objective during this period will be to
spend our money on those things
necessary to be as ready as possible,
both from an equipment standpoint
and an organizational standpoint, to
respond when the market does come
back. We are looking at everything
from purchasing controls, metals inventory reduction and manpower
reduction to minimize our losses."

Correction

•Smooth , ..-elvety-soft durable

CHOPPED
CHUCK

nylon rollers surface that 11

gentle to hair and scalo·so,ft/
prongs

'2999

NELSON'S
REG. U4.H

THEFODr

Ap

Drug store incident probed
A foiled anned robbery at Revco
Drugs, 314 Second Ave., on Saturday
night is still being investigated by
Gallipolis City Police.
There were no injuries reported in
the incident, and ;&gt;olice said all the
robber got away with was a bottle or
merthiolate, a roll or gauze and a
box of Band Aids.
The incident began at 9: lt p.m.
when manager Ra y Denuit was
closi ng the store. At that point, a
white male came to the front door.
The subject told Denuit he needed
the merthiolate, gauze and Band
Aids.
DenUit then closed the door and
got the items. When he went to the
door again, he opened it and
prepared to hand the items to the
subject, who was holding a dollar
bill in his hand .
Pollee said the subject then
pushed Denuit backwards, sta rting

•20 rolla" In three sizes

Soothes Tired , aching feet

ween April! and May I, 1982. (AP Laserphoto) .

with

Veterans Memorial

Saturday Admissions-James
Meadows,
Portland; Mary HenMrs. Zuelelia Smith who died last
derson,
Gallipolis;
David HenTuesday at her home was 83 years of
derson, Gallipolis.
age not 96.
Saturday Discharges-Michael
She as a charter member of Lewis
Manley Auxiliary, Post 263 and also Stanley, Verne Ord, Helena Daniels,
past president. She was chapeaux Marilyn Shamblin, William
passe of the 6 et 40 Salon 710. She was Keebaugh, Annette Lambert, Kimsupervisor over 25 years of berly Dailey, Cledith King, Helen
Providence Hat:ie Jack.:;on Guilds Williams, Josephine Myers.
Sunday Admissions-Cerald Amand chairman of the deawness of
the women's auxilary. The last two berger, Syracuse; Julian Moore,
Trina Hayman,
organization are auxiliaries of The Middleport;
Prov idence Missionary Baptist Pomeroy; Vicki Bradshaw, Middleport; Robert Hysell, Pomeroy ;
Association.
Lilliam Gress, Middleport; Charles
Clark, Mason; Dottie Sizemore,
Middleport; Donald Smith, Racine;
A vehicle was extensive ly Leah Swatzel, Pomeroy.
damaged and the driver was cited on
Sunday Discharges--Ollie McKinreckless operations in an accident on ney, Della Stahl.
W. Main St., Pomeroy , at 10 a.m.
Sunday.
Pomeroy Police said a eastbound
car driven by Forrest Jones, Route
Eastern Athletic Boosters will
2, Crown City, went out of control
and struck a utility pole. Jones was meet Tuesday, May 4, at7:30 p.m. at
taken to Veterans Memorial the high school.
Hospital lor treatment of injuries by
the Pomeroy Emergency Squad.
Jones told officers that the steering
on his vehicle locked.
The Eastern Local School District
Board of Education will hold a
special meeting at 8 p.m. Thursday
at the high school.

Camden Clark Hospital in Parkersburg.
POMEROY - Six runs were made
by local emergency units Friday
according to Meigs Emergency
Service.
At 11:00 a.m. Rutland was called
to Depot Street for Helen Augustine
who was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital; at 1; '1:1 p.m. Pomeroy
was called to Davis Insurance for
Marcia Chapman who was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital; at
5: 13 p.m. Middletx&gt;rt went to 7'01

con -

troll ed heat and Vibratory
Water Massage .
•Exclusive leak -proof hood
prevents spilling .
•Maintain s proper water
temperatu re
•4-Way Control Dial - Heat ,
Mouage &amp; Heat Off .

Meigs squads busy weekend
Emergency and lire units in Meigs
County were kept on the move with
nwnerous calls over the weekend,
the Meigs County Emergency
)'lledical Service reports.
On Sunday at 1:41 a.m. ; the
Pomeroy Unit took Jean Mayes
from the Meigs Inn to Veterans
Memorial Hospital and at 10:03 a.m.
took Forrest Jones from the scene of
an accident on W. Main St. to
Veterans Memorial. At 10 :24 a.m.,
the Pomeroy Unit took Sandy Lee,
Larry Lee and Irina Hayman from
the scene of an accident on Route 143
to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Pomeroy at 2:40 p.m. took Robert
Hysell, Ann St., to Veterans
Memorial and the Tuppers Plains
Unit at 3:54 p.m. took Clifford
Longenette, Tuppers Plains area, to

automatically

Hysell Street for Wayne Jarvis who
was taken to Holzer Medical Center; at 5: '57 p.m. Racine was called
for Raymond Snider who was taken
to Holzer Medical Center; at 6: 19
p.m . Syracuse was called to Racine
Ballfield for Pamela Granen who
was taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; at 10: 23 p.m . Middleport
was called to the Hobson area
where a motorcycle accident had
occurred. Don and ·Debbie Dalley
· who were involved In the accident
were taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.

'2''
MR. COFFEE®
MEANS
COFFEE ...

'6''

NILSON'S RIO ......

it'~

the best
hug of all.
And we con
send rhe

FTD OIG HUG''

CB302
•Mr . Coffee features the patented
" Ultra-Speed " brewing system .
•Brews 2 to 10 cups .
•3-position operating switch fQr easy opera·
lion .

OIG HUG•

Oouquer . lr's
a beouliful
orrongemenr
of fresh fllowersl!l

olmoSJ
anywhere
rhe FTD way. So
ca ll or v isit u s today.

~;,g,_.IJI'I
352 E. Main, Pomeroy

FLORIST

..

HUBEBNAHORD'S
GRE
USE
SYRACUSE, OHIO
NOW OPEN FOR THE
SPRING SEASON
•Vegetable Plants
• Bedding P!ants
• Foilage Plants and
Hanging Baskets
OPEN DAILY 9 ti18
. SUNDAY1TIL5

PHONE 992·5776

Regular Price $44.99
Ad price U9.99
Le11 Mfg. Rebate $4.00

•a K•r Moomory
•AAWI,IulttNCII,
-ltlplt.o, &amp; tllvl....
· • Aut-tic ohut-oH
.......... &amp; .."..., IMitHIH

Your Cost
After Rebate

'35

'7''

Ph. 992 ·2644

Your FTD Florist

G. ijelping you suy it right.

99

'.

'

To Mother with love

REDWOOD CHAIR

Let her know what's in you heart on her spedal
day, Sunday, May 9. Choose the message that
expresses your thoughts perfectly from our
beautiful collection of Halmark cards for Mother's
Day.

•O.nul ... C.lllornto IHwootl, lollf
l•otlnt rich •P-NM••Cotor -tchlllf onoldH orrna. vinyl

lnHrt on

1. . liNe•.

•Ioehr hot doultto ltrocH loe10 lor
................h.

Meets Wednesday

,,.,,5 .
NILscl..ft
•.

.

, tltt.tS
'

MoHttl•

CEITURIOI II
FIRE;Ill SIOKE DETECTOR
~m

~;:::::::::::::::;;:::======::j
p R E- p u B Ll c A TJ 0 N
SALE OF
The Pioneer History of
Meigs Co.-1908
For $16.00
and
Hardesty's History of
Meigs Co.-1883
For $20.00
Reprinted by: The Meigs
Co. Pioneer &amp; Historical
Society, Inc . and· ·the
Me igs Co. Genealogical
Society.
Last Day to make out
checks is May 15.
Make checks payable to
and send orders to:
Meigs Co .. Pioneer Society
P.O. Box 145
Pomero , Ohio

The distinctive new look in toaster
ovens! It broi ls, it bakes , it toosts up to
four slices of toast .
•Temperature sellings from '"Keep
Worm" to 450° and " Broil "
•Oven temperature light

111 ht 111 1t

Meets Tuesday

The Middleport Amateur Gardeners will meet Wednesday
evening at the home of Mrs. Harold
Lohse with Mrs. Charles Blakeslee
as cohostess. The program on
spring flower arranging will be
presented by Mrs. Joe Bolin.

TOASTER OVEN/
BROILER

....01:.
, -..Dl.,t•v

Regular Price S2t.99
Ad Price S24. 99
Leu Mfg. Rebate S7 .00
Your Colt
After Rebate

Your "Ex1ri!To.cb"

PROCTOR-SILEX '

II II CREDIT·CARD
CALCULATOR·

Feolturing our e~
c lu$ive ,- 1 Mom
Bud,Vase.

Make her day
really specia l
G1veMom
all your love
ond1he

n.Jt

PURIII
D08 OIOW

'26 99

Pofted Plants, Dish
Gardens,
Hanging
Baskets, Silk &amp; Dried
Arrangements,
Cor sages.

Sundoy. Moy 9 .

NELSON'S RIG.

Your Colt
After Rebate

Hig ijug· llouquet.
Mother's Day is

'149

10 Lb1.

Send her our FTD

Hurt in accident

Special meeting

YOUR CIIOIOE
Regular Price Ut.tt
Ad Price U1.H
Le11 Mfg. Rebate U.OO

by Clalral

MARKETBASKET - This chart compares the
prices lor three grocery Items In various cities and bt&gt;t-

•7 Pack lara

'1399

NILSON'S RIO. nt.H

DREPLACEMENT
KIT

(C.t. No. 45-111

·m'l'·"
:,. · ,

f

...u.-r, Price

Atl, " ' "
L- M...,_JeHte' U
YOUIIC..t •

att-r....-.!-'

'9"
·~
..........................

'5''

NILION'SRIO. t7.71

loploco wom-out webbing with
In mlnutoa. Deluxe
liniah
will NmGin hondtam• qnd woothor-reilltant tor yoora. Savel you money 1
loilto your good aluminum.lrom01l Adluttablollrop• lit oil aluminum chaira.
All ·'fP4l n~ }• 0 •~river ~ c~ Vour worri·out w~ choir lrito on
·, itlogont W..tem woodtlat chair.
•

ELBERFELDS

. IN POME·ROY
.

~ - --·---- · ·----

.,
--- --· ·--. __ ,_,..,._..___·-:·-+----·
' .. ' }... "- ~ -

-

f

I

'-t

,.•

~

'
-

•

o;~

• 9

.
',

Jl

..

"""
l'f-_,

uo

l· -

.&gt;..,.&lt;: I
.&gt;..,'.&lt;:"'I

..
~

•
•

~

"t_

'

\(

$

.I

j

t/ ,

...

.
'

--

.

~

\..,.j
-

~ .

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="146">
    <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="2730">
                <text>05. May</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="44024">
            <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="44023">
              <text>May 3, 1982</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="1451">
      <name>coughenour</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2877">
      <name>lowther</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="3991">
      <name>mcnemar</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="7316">
      <name>van zandt</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
