<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="14032" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/14032?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-22T02:47:06+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="45132">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/fa988ffa858b51de3ddfb7f3633a7066.pdf</src>
      <authentication>f547537f85bb3552b160a1159c56ba6c</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="43875">
                  <text>~all•

10-The Daily Sentinel

I.

e

Area deaths

Mary F. Duddin8

Mary Francis Magdelene Dud·
ding, 62, Mason, dJed Saturday
morning at Pleasant Valley
Hospital.
She was born Feb. 28,1920 In Ma·
wn to Robert L. and Minnie F .
(Plunkett) Dudding.
. The dece~ was a member of
Mason United Methodist Church
and the Sunshine Class. She also
belonged to the Rhododendron
Homemakers Club.
Surviving her are one brother,
JWbert P. Dudding, Mason, and
several nieces and nephews.
She IB preceded In death by three
brothers, Dennis, Evert and Davtd
l&gt;Jiddlng and three sisters, Pearl,
Margaret and Alma.
Funeral . services will be held
Wednesday at 1: ll p.m . at the Fogelsong Funeral Horne. Revs. Ben·
nle Stevens and Donald Kelley wW
o!tlclate and burial wW be held at
Graham Cemetery, Letart. .
Friends may call the funeral
borne tomorrow between 2-4 and 7-9
p.m.

Clifford Dem08key
Clltford Oemoskey, 77, 565 North
.Front St., Middleport, dJed Sunday
morning at Charleston General
Hospital.
· Mr. ·Demoskey had rettred as a
ldln operator o! the Ateo nJe Co. In
New Jersey. He and his wife, wbo
'iws fonnerly Ufed In Middleport,
returned to the community followIng his retirement. Mr. Demoekey
Willi a member of the First Baptist
'Church at Manaway, N. J .
· Surviving are his wife, Genevieve; a daughter, Mrs. Glorta
Ramona, Tarlln, N. J .; a half.
brother. siX step- brothers, two
;tep-slsters, his stepmother, Jennie
Dem01key, Pennsylvania, and a
ereat:grandchlld. .Two brothers,
Edward and Harold, who resided In
~rt also preceded hlm In
death.
.: Services will be held at 11 a.m.

.

..

Wednesday at the Gatens Funeral
Home at Poca, W. Va. Burial wUl
be In the Haven of Rest Cemetecy
at Redhouse, W. Va. Friends may
call at the funeral home from 2to 4
and 7 to 9 p.m. Tuesday.

Mrs. LUUan V. Carpenter, 48,
Route 4, Pomeroy, dted unex)X":t·
edly Saturday at O'Bleness Hospl·
tal In Athens.
Mrs. Carpenter wa&amp; born In Ma·
wn County, W. Va., a daugh1er Ql
Pearl Jones, Point Pleasant and
the late Beulah Wrtght Jones.
A housewife, Mrs. Carpenter Is
survived by her husband, Lawrence D. Carpenter; three daughters, Mrs. Anthony (Shella) Meek,
Athens; Mrs. Jerry (Connie)
Warner and Mrs. Larry (Dottle)
Whitt, bothotFortEu5tiB, Va.; two
sons and daughters-In-law, George
and Deborah Rowley, Columbus,
and Dale and Regina RowleY, servIng In the U. s. Army In Germany;
three stepSQns, Robert Carpenter,
Pickerington; Carol Carpenter,
Mansfield, and Jercy Carpenter,
Reynoldsburg; nine grandchlld·
ren, three step-grandchlldren, five
brothers and five sisters. Besides
her mother, she was preceded In
death by three sisters.
Services will be held at 10 a.m.
Wedqesday at the Blgony.Jordan
Funeral Home In Albany wtth the
Rev. James Cundiff otflclatlng.
Burtal wlll be In the Rawlings
Cemetery at Dyesvllle. Friends
may call at thefuneralbomefrom 7
to 9 this evening and !rom 2 to 4 and
7 to 9 p:m. Tuesday.

Fo~tE.

Underwood

Forrest E . Underwood, father of
Eugene E. Underwood, · a Meigs
County minister for the past 23 years, died Monday morning at his
home In Mount Vernon.
Funeral services wUl be held at
the Baughman Funeral Home at
Frazeysburg. Arrangements, bowever, are Incomplete.

County happenings..

'
.
Store accepts bills
: Residents of Racine can now pay

tllelr water and refuse biUs at the
Racine Department Store wtth
Betiy Sajrre now serving as agent.
Depostts tor water on rental property may call be made at the same
location. Any question regarding
bills can be answered by Mrs.
Sayre. Residents wishing to mall
payments can send them to the new
yWage address, P .O. Box 375, Ra·
cine, Ohio

45m.

Meet Tuesday
The Meigs Local School District
Vocal Boosters wUl meet at 7: ll
p.m. Tuesday In the music room of
the high school. AU parents are
uk£d to attend to make plans for a
1111bllc spaghetti supper to be
served.

Marriage license
• A marriage llcense has been
Issued In the Meigs County Probate
&lt;;ourt o Terry J . Hannon, 29, Mid·
_&amp;eport, and Cheryl A. Imboden, 22,
·Middleport.

Hit-skippers sought
Pomeroy pollee are looking ldt
iWo hit and run drtvers. •
· Saturday morning, a vehicle
$lr11Ck a stop sign, a tree and ran
through a fence near the Pomeroy
Church · of the Nazarene, Union
Ave. The drtver fled out Union
Avenue, evading pollee.
Sunday night a car owned by
Paul Hlll, Sr., parked on the Jot of
an Elllit Main St. restaurant, was
sideswiped and the driver o! the
Vehicle talled to stop or report the
accident.

Orden due Thursday
Order for the next Meigs County

Food Co-op dellvecy must be placed
no later than 4 p.m. Thursday.

·· Orders can be mailed to the
Meigs County Senior Citizens Cen·
ter, Box 7'1l, Pomeroy, Olllo 45769,
or ·placed In person on Thursday
Only at the center.
DeUvecy date tor the next orders
ts'Thursday, March 18, and orders
can be picked up from 3: ll to 4: 45
~.rn. on that date.

Veterans Memorial
Saturday Admissions--Wayne
GUUland, Reedsville; Raymond
Douglas, Pomeroy; VIrginia Fer·
rell, Gallipolis; Lllllan Bumgardner, Pomeroy; Misty Sayre,
Pomeroy.
Saturday Discharges--George
Molden, Marie Roy, James Eisel·
stein, Edwin Burnem, Brian
Ftiend, Donna Sellers.
Sunday Admissions--Fred Larkins, Long Bottom; Donald Plem·
mons, Middleport; Jack Lance,
Coolville.
.
Sunday Discharges--Michael
Hubbard.

Must confine dogs
Racine officials remind residents
of the community that dogs must be
tied or confined. Ordinance ll1
stated that no dog ls to be permitted
to run loose. Offenders are subject
to being fined, officials warned.

Meets Wednesday
The Pomeroy-Middleport LIOns
Club w1U hold a regular meeting at
12 noon Wednesday at the Meigs
Inn.
'

Tuesday meeting .
Middleport Lodge 363, F &amp;AM,
wW meet at 7 p.m. Tuesday at the
temple. Work wUI be In the E.A.
degree and refreshments wlll be
served.

Market report
AIMDIUVtt~S.In

Mllrchl, ltl%

CA1Tl.E PRICES'
·
Feeder steen (Good and Oloice) 30f.600 Ills.
:;&amp;.61; ~7GIIIbo . 41-$1.50.
Feeder Hellen : &lt;Good aM Oloict 1JJO.{I(J(IIbe.
47.-: i00-70G lbo. 40-49.50.
Feede1· B11J11: rGood end Oloicel 300-600 Jba.

By BOB HOEFUCH
Sentinel Stall Writer
Middleport village councu Monday night Initiated
plans tor buDding an addition to the Middleport Flre
Station wtth the placement of a two mill, nve year tax
levy on the June primary election ballOt.
Middleport Fire Chlef Jeff Parst, who discussed
plans tor the addition, pointed out It w1U run between
$85,tXXl and $100,roJ. He also noted that when the pres·
ent structure was bullt the Middleport Fire Depart·
ment had three vehicles and a boat. Wlth a new truck
to be deUvered soon, the department will have seven
vehicles and a boat.
The Increase means that some vehicles will have to
sit out In the weather during winter months, o!flclals ·
sail!.
Council agreed to purchase at a maximum price of
$8,roJ a lot next to the !Ire station owned by Mrs. Cass
Hlndy. The approx(!nate 50 by 50 lot wUl provide

S~tlterBuU.s

TOE TAPPIN' TIME - President allll Nancy Reag•n, joined by
ctlUJitry-weslern singer Merle Haggard, and Beverly Sllls, sealed on hay
bales, clapping their hands, tap their toes to the rhythm of Mark O'Co~

SANTA BARBARA, Callf. IA,P)
- It was an Insiders' joke between
President Reagan and countcy
music singer Merle Haggard and
most of the 500 people In the copcert
audience didn't get lt.
!n what many took to be nothing
more than a smlllng apology for
singing about America's problems,
Haggard joshed to Reagan: "I beg
your pardon one more time."
But Reagan caught Haggard's
double meaning and broke out
laughing. As governor of California
In 1972, Reagan granted an execu-

tlve pardon to Haggard, who had
spent nearly three years In San
Quentin State Prison on burglary
and escape convictions.
R,eagan, his wife Nancy and an
audience studded with Hollywood
celebrltles sat on bales of hay In a
chilly bam Sunday to hear Haggard perform In a Whlte House concert series that, untU now, had
featured opera and classical music
!rom the East Room of the Executive Mansion.
This time the setting was a 1,200:
acre horse and cattlE' ranch In the

Emergency squad has busy weekend
Pomeroy Health Care Center to
Veterans Memorial and at 2: 53
p.m. tonk Arthur Hoyt from Pomeroy Health Care Center to Veterans
Memorial and later to Holzer Medl·
cal Center.
Rutland at 8: 29 a .m. took Lllllan
Carpenter !rom the CarpenterPyesville Road to O'Bieness !Aspl·
tal In Athens and Tuppers Plains at
2:25a.m. took WayneG!Jilandfrom
Owl Hollow Road JJf Veterans
Memorial Hospital.

Eight calls were answered by local units over the weekend, the
Meigs County Emergency Medical
Service reports.
On Sunday at 8: 09 a .m., Kirby
Farms was taken !rom the Lazy
Day Cafe to Veterans Memorial
Hospital by the Middleport Unit;
the Tuppers Plains Unit at 8: 58
a.m. took Herb Matheny from
Route 681, the scene of an auto accident, to Camden-Clark Hospital In
Parkersburg, and Tuppers Plains
at 4: 11 p.m. tonk Jeriny Adams
!rom her residence to Holzer Medl·
cal Center.
On Saturday at 4:43p.m .. Middleport took Barb Srplth !rom 1117 Park
St. to Veterans Memortal and at
8: 50 p.m. answered a !Ire call to
Arnolds Body Shop. Pomeroy at
7:10 a.m. took Ray Douglas !rom

Santa Ynez Valley near the presl·
dent's own ranch, where he had
been vacationing since Thursday .
No' black tie audience here; It
was cowboy boots, cowboy hats,
leather jackets and goosedown
vests. Reagan sported a•strlng tie
wtth a sUver longhorn slide.
The -president, who was returnIng to Washington tills evening to
face mounting economic problems
and RepupJlcan plans to rewrite hls
budget, dldn'fwant to talk business
as he wound up his vacation .
Asked prior to the concert
whether he WQUld scale back on defense spending when he returned to
Washington, the president replied,
"Let's not even think about things
like that untll we get there."
By concert's end, Reagan told the
audience, o;I .leave here Inspired. I
can't walt to get back on Capitol
Hill."
I
The president .travels to the Capitol Tuesday to confer wtth the 53
Senate Republicans, many of
whom are searching for alternate
budget plans to trim the ·record delicit forecast tor 1983.
·
Reagan has dug In his heels

against cutting defense spending or
trimming the tax cuts already
enacted, but seemingly will have to
give ground somewhere In view of
the widespread GOP unhappiness
with his plan.
·
A top presidential aide, speaking
on the condition that his name not
he used, said Reagan Is returning to
the toughest time he has !aced as
president.
The R.eagans and the rest ot the
audience clapped their hands and
tapped their toes throughout thll .
hour-long perfomiance, whlch also
featured Mark O'Connor, a 2()-yearold who has won the grand national
fiddle championship three consecutive years.
The guest list tor the concert and
a barbecue luncheon - featuring
New York st11p steak cooked over a
wood-fire - InCluded the president's daughters, Maureen, a candidate for the Senate !roin
California, actress Patti Davis, and
celebrities Hugh O'Brien, Robert
Conrad, Michael Landon, Mike
Connors, Buddy Ebsen, Pat Boone,
Don DeFore and Fred
MacMurray.

Eight ·people die on Ohio highways
By 'lbe Auoclated Pre!18
Eight people were killed lnsepar·
ate traffic accidents across OhiO
over the weekend, the Highway Patrol said.
The patrol counts traffic lataHties .!rom 6:30 p.m. Friday to mid·
night Sunday.

To end marriages
Rpbert C. Fife, Belpre, and Me·
IIssa Fife, Route 1, Middleport,
have filed an action for dissolution
of their marriage In the Meigs
_Qlunty Common Pleas Court.
Dissolution petitiOns dismissed In
the court are those of Nora A. Cassady and Raymond C. Cassay and
Jessie Morris and Dorothy J.
Morris.
Granted divorces ln the court
were Hattie Ellen Hall from Marlon August Hall on grounds of gross
neglect of duty and extreme
cruelty; Toni Marte Andrew !rom
Joseph Palmer Andrew, gross neglect of duty, and Kimberly Sue Dowell !rom Benjamin Leonard
Dowell on grounds of gross neglect
of duty.

MIDDLETOWN - Lisa A.
Mokry, 22, of Middletown, In a twocar accident on a Middletown city
street.
MANSFIELD - Robert M.
Prtce, 24, of Manstleld, In a one-car
accident on a Mansfield city street.

AVON LAKE - Cheryl L.
Sprouse, 22, of Sheffield Lake, In a
one-car accident on a Avon' Lake
city street.
XENIA - Kenneth S. Owens, 46,
of Dayton, In a one-car accident on
U.S. 42 In Greene County.

~ed~ad:

SUNDAY
CHll.LICO'rnE- Vernon E. Ra·
pole, 48, of Balnbrldge,ln a two-car
accident on U.S. 351n Ross County. .
PAULDING- Augustine Barajas, 17, of Paulding, In a one-car
accident on U.S. 127 In Paulding
County.
SATURDAY
CIRCLEVll.LE - Russell Mollett!, 64, of Columbus, In a one-car
accident on a Plckaway County
. road.
WAVERLY - Michael S.
Barber, 'Z7, of Jackson, In a threecar accident on Ohlo 124 In Pike
County.

ELBERFELD$
THE ROUND-ABOUT

ACCENT
TABLE
.

DECORATE WITH A70-72"
ROUND TABLE COVER

•

S,P RINGFIELD, IJI. - A Columbus, Ohio, man charged wtth the
shooting death of a Huntington, W.Va., pollee officer was turned
over to Huntington pollee Mol)day after a brief extradition healing.
Bobby Dean Stacy, 30, was arrested without Incident at a Springfield motel last month, ending a two-month search. Aut~Wrltles
traced him to Illinois because lie has relatives In the area, the FBI
said.
After his arrest Feb. 7, Stacy refused to waive hls extradition
rtghts, and Sangamon County Judge Eugene 0 . Duban scheduled
the hearing. But Monday, .Duban ruled that Stacy could properly be
returned to West VIrginia .
FBI spokesman Bob Grooms said Stacy was due back In Huntlhgton late Monday .
'

Police probe triple homicide
COLUMBUS, Ohio - Pollee homicide. detectives today were
Investigating the shootings of three people whose bodies were found
In a downtown Columbus bar.
Officers said the three people were found dead this morning, of
gunshot wounds.
Detectives gave no detalls of the.shootlngs. They would say only
that the victims were two men and a woman and that their bodies
were found at Gig's Bar In an alley off Gay Street In downtown
Columbus.

Violent crime figures decrease
CINCINNATI- VIolent crime, whlch decre11sed In every categocy In 19811n Cincinnati, appears to be staying low this year, pollee
say.
Police homicide Investigators report only two deaths so far this
year. That's the lowest end-of-February rate since 1968.
But Sgt. Tom Oberschmldt, a veteran homicide Investigator,
scotts at compartsons of such murder statistics. He said he remembers a ·streak of two months at the end of 1979 and first month of
1980 when there were no kllllngs.
Cincinnati averages 'about 56 homicides each year. In 1981, there
were 47, the lowest ·year-end total in 12 years.

WASIDNGTON - The U.S. mlssUe attack warning system Is
plagued by "severe and potentially catastrophic deficiencies,"
warns a report by the House Government Operations Committee.
The panel, which llled lis 40-page report Monday with House
Speaker Thomas P . O'Neill, D·Mass .. urged that Defense Secretary
Caspar W. Weinberger give Ills "urgent attention" to the computer
network designed to warn of enemy nuclear attack .
The committee, chaired by Texas Democrat Jack Brooks, also
said Weinberger should "take decisive action to ensure that NORAD
{the North American Aerospace Defense Command) receives the
hlghest priority wtthln the department In Its· modernization plan."

WARSAW, Poland - Sollda11ty leaders still at large met secretly
and called for passive resistance to martial law but offered to negotiate wtth the Communist government I! It allows Lech Walesa and
other Interned union leaders to join the talks.
So1trces whose previous reports have been accurate said the clandestine meeting last week was attended by the lew members of the
Independent union's I117-member national commissiOn who have not
been lilterned.
The sources refused to disclose the exact date of the meeting, Its
slte or the roster ot participants. Tiley revealed what was discussed
on condition they remain anonymous to protect their salety.

Problems wtth duplication ot
work on phases of the Kerrs Run
sewer project by englneertng !lrins
were discussed and straightened
out when Pomeroy VIllage CouncU
met In special session Monday
I\lght.
Solicitor Fred Crow called the
special session to discuss the dupll·
cations with councll. It was reported the village no longer needs
the services of Burgess and Nlple
on phase two of the Kerrs Run pfo;
ject. It was agreed to pay the firm
$5979 tor work done to this point.
The firm was relieved of ahy
further expenses In the project.
Council en!Pred Into a contract
with Englneertr.;. Associates of
Wooster tor redesigning phase two
of the project. The firm was employed for eight weeks with the vU·
lage to pay $7roJ for l'f!des
_
lgnlng ro
be done.
I
Council hired Jim !;ichivinsky of
the Mohlcan Engl!le!!rlng Co. to ·
handle the latef!ll work and easements on phase two of lhii •Proj~t.
SchivlnskY, a construction engineer, was acuve wtth the first
phase of the work.
Easements needed tor phase two
were discussed and It was estl-

CouncU approved the report of Mayor Hottman
showing receipts of $3214 In tines and tees for Febru·
ary and Mayor Hottman reported that tour HUD
grant projects have been approved for 1!132.
Mayor Hottman explained that the Ohio Environmental Ageilcy requires that a water contingency
· plan must be completed by July 1, thls year. This
plan would outline what steps the village would take

In providing a water supply In va rious emergency
situations; The board ot public affairs was authorized
to enter Into a contract with Floyd G. Brown Associates for the study at a cost not to e xceed $4900. The
board was also authorized to sell a 1972 truck no
longer used by the water department.
Mayor Hottman announ~ed that Cableentertalnment will hold a dinner and meeting to dlsc11ss cable
services and rates at the Holiday Inn In Gallla County
at 6:30p.m . on March 10. Four representatives from
Middleport VIllage will attend.
Mayor Hottman also discussed wtth council the
need tor a plan for Improvements In the business
district. He and Klm Shields, village consulta nt, w1U
meet with the Middleport Chamber of Commerce on
March 23 to discuss drawing up such a plan.

!Continued on pa~e 121

1979. 1980. 1981

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -A Se·
nate panel Is abouttoQpen hearings
on a plan to prop up OhiO's moneyshort unemployment compensa·
tion program by decreasing some
benefits and raising taxes paid by
employers.
Backers of the proposal before
the Senate Agriculture, Commerce
and Labor Committee hope the
upper chamber can complete work
on the bW by mid -April and send It
to the House.
Sponsofed by Sen. M. Ben Gaeth,
the committee chairman, the measure ls aimed at helping the lund
gain solvency and begin paying
back a debt of nearly $1 bUllon to
the federal government.
"One of the things It will do ls
re-establish the fund, which Is
broke to the tune ot $970 miUion,"
Gaeth, R·Deflance, said.
The measure calls tor permanent

AGES: 6 to 16 Years
CLASSES HELD IN
FIVE LOCATIONS:
Pomeroy, Coolville, Belpre,
Parkersburg and Ripley, w.

Va.

i

· N.B.T.A.
INSTRUCTOR

JUDY RIGGS
CHESTER

985-3595

ENROLL NOW:J

'

CLEVELAND- The winning number drawn Monday night In the
OhiO Lottery'S daUy game "The Number" was 21l6.
The lottery reported earnings of $911,269 from the wagering on lts
dally game. The earnings came on sales ·of $1,207.428.50, whlle
holders of wtnnlng tickets are entitled to share $296,lll!l.50, lottery
o!ftclals said.

$1149

Weather forecast

•

•20" DIAMETER- 25" TALL
•EASY TO . ASSEMBLE-NO TOOLS
REQUIRED
•QUALITY WOOD COMPONENTS
•PERFECT FOR ANY ROOM
HOME FURNISHINGS- 1st FLOOR

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

Clear early tonight, becomllig partly cloudy by morning. Lows In
low to mid -~ - Partly cloudy and wanner Wednesday. Hlghalnmkl
to upper 50s. Chance ot precipitation 10 percent tonight and 20 percent Wednesday. Winds southerly to wutheasterly 5-10 mph tonight.
Extended Ohio FOfteUt
'l"'lurrda)' tbroacb 8atunla,y:
Fllr 'l1nlnday Uld a c • - ollhowen Friday and 8allaniay.
11111!1 In upper 1011 to
Tbanday,l'llld-lll to mid . . Frida)'
111111 In the . . lo low • lilllurdaJ, ._. IIi rnld4ll lo low •
'lbunday 111111 llllbe ....... 111111 . . Frtday and SMurday.

mid.

Scientists say
doomsday out
By The A880Clated Pre!l8
Scientists say doomsday won't
come Wednesday as predlcled In
"The Jupiter Effect," a book whlch
said eight years ago that the align·
ment of the solar system on March
10, 1982, would trigger a worldwide
wave o't earthquakes.
The planets are forming themselves Into a group within a 90degree angle. All the planets will
tine liP on the same side of the sun
and come the clo~t to each other
for the first time since 9!19 A.D.
And Wednesday marks the closest they wlll be for the next 510 years.

STATE TOURNAMENT BOUND - Ga~ Nakamoto, rtght, senior
wrestler for the Melp Marauders, will rep!'e1lellt Meigs c..nty •• wtllu
Southeutern Oblo Thurlday at St. John Arena ill Columbus, begbui~Da at
4p.m. Nakamoto claimed the dlalrlct championship Saru,day aDd earned
a right to compete In the State heavyweight division. Beoide1 gaining the
dl•lrlct title, Gary claimed champlunshiJIII In three other tournamtnl8.
Pictured wllh Gary IB Meigs Coach Lilrry Grimes, a former all-American
In the NCAA ranks. See story Page 4.

Increases tn amounts paid by the
state's 200,roJ employers and
tightens ellglblllty tor recipients .
It also provides tor a temporary
freeze on benetlts at current levels
and Imposes an emergency tax on
businesses untll the loans are
repaid .
Soaring jobless rates forced Ohio
to borrow $392.7 million from the
U.S. Labor Department ro help tl·
nance the program from January
through March. That was In addl·
tlon to the state's 1981 debt of $600
mllUon.
None of the money has been
repaid .
WIUiam Papler, chief statistician
tor the Bureau of Employment Services, said another loan wlll Ukely
have to be sought.
"We don't know how much more
we're going ro need," he said.
"We're still paying Itout a lotfaster

than It's coming ln ."
Maximum weekly be n e ll t
amounts would be frozen at current
levels as long as the state carries a n
oulslandlng Joan balance. An emergency tax ot one-tenth of 1 percent
on employers contributions to the
fund would remain In effect until
the loans are repaid .
Claimants now may receive as
much as S147 per week If they have
no dependents; up to $223 per week
If they have one or two dependents
and up to $233 per week If they have
three or more dependents.
Although those amounts would
not be deereas¢, they would no
longer be lncrea'sed with changes In
the cost of Jiving .
A permanent Increase In the em·
piQyer contribution r ate schedule,
combined with the emergency tax
and other changes , Is expected to
generate $57.1 mlllloQ annually.

Benefl~ now paid tor the !In!!
week of unemployment would be
eliminated by another sectlono!the ·

measure.

un-

Under current law, a person
employed tor only one week Isn't ·
paid. But It at any tlmeln a yearfhe
Individual sustains three consecutive weeks of joblessn~'Ss, the first
week Is compensable.
Estimates show thar eliminating
compensation tor the waiting week
would cut payments !rom the trust
fund about $27.6 million .
The bill would tighten ellglbUity
by changing requirements that allow a person who worked a s tew as
two or three hours a week !0 qualify
lor benefits. It would also require
the unemployed to be less selective
In the type ot work accepted.
Gaeth said Monday that hearings
on the bUJ are to begin March 18.

Leaders consider proposals
to modify Reagan's budget

Winning Ohio lottery number

Is now accepting new members- No previous training
is required. . ·

HOOPR!CES,
HOIJJ : (No. 1, S.rTOWs and Glltal 200-300 lbs.
47.:D-47.31.
Bul&lt;her8ow117.50-40.10.
Butcher Boln .M.7WUii.
Feeder Pip' !By tile Heod l !t-34 .7S
SHEEP PRICES:
Sla1111hler Limbo 54.7$-11.
Feeder I.Mnbl47-61.

mated that work on the project wUl
be started In about two weeks.
Attending the meeting were
Mayor Andrews, ,Crow, Clerk·
Treasurer Jane Walton, and coonell members John Anderson, Betty
Baronlck, Bruce Reed, Larcy Webrung and BUI.Young.

Hearings underway on plan to prop up
unemployment compensation program

"STATE CHAMPIONS"

Veals: jCholcund Pl·lme) - . ..
Blby Clllffl: I By the Headl :10-ito; By the
I'OundiHUO.

,

Shooting suspect in Huntington

Leaders hold secret session

BATON CORP

Spri"'lerCowa, 1BytheHeadi30ihTIS.
CowondC.Ualr" 18ytheUnlll31Htl.

DANNY &amp; DEE BROWN
JIM &amp; GINNY REES

so

neys they have raised through various fu nd raising
activities.
The present system causes a delay In answering
calls and repairs being born by the department are
costly. Mayor Hottman pointed out that In addition to
expenses Involved In the. purchase of equipment. a
small bulldlng tor Jtouslng the two channel , three unit
equipment wW be required as weU as a cooling system, phOne costs and other Incidental costs.

council
corrects sewer
project problems

Deficiencies plague system

..........................
RANGERETTES

andCulter~ll . -...~ . 7$.

I

Mayor Fred Hpttman said soUcltor Beman! Ful!z
had recoqunended the tax levy over a bond Issue
route for the new bulldlng. Chle! Darst said the new
structure wW be constructed as to blend In wtth the
present bulldlng. The tax levy must be certified to the.
Meigs County Board ot Elections by March 24.
PliRCHASE SYSTEM
In another action . councu voted to purchase a new
communication system for the fire department wtth
some $6,roJ ln HUD administrative funds to be used
for that purchase.
Chle! Darst said the system now being used Is old
and_Is owned by the county emergency medical service. Cost of the new set up wtll be some $8368 wtth
firemen to pay the balance over the $6,roJ wtth mo-

nor's music, a Haggard protege. The Reagans hosted the party for 1100, at
the Rancho Sierra Grande, near the Reagans' hllllop ranch. f AP Laserphoto)

(OYer t,ODOibll. 148.7W4.

I

village.

Haggard entertains Reagan at barbecue

Slau11tlter Cows : UtliiUes 38 . ~: Ca11nen

1982 IS AVERY SPECIAL YEAR FOR YOU!
WE'RE BEHIND YOU ALL THE WAY!

space tor the new addiUon which wUl be joined to the
present statlcn; Funds tor the purchase of the lot
have been aJlProved from HUDmonlesgranted to the

Po~eroy

49.5N(U0; -.100 lbr!. 411 .SN0.50: 501).700 lbl. 5260.::.0.

SOUTHERN TORNADOES

.,

en tine

at
,

Po-·

THE
"

I

Lillian V. Carpenter

'·

~Meigs

•

CLASS AA COACH OF 11IE
YEAR - Rick Vu Mlltn, former mldeld Ill MJddlepert aDd
, , _ . . . . . . ., CGIICb at o.JIUI
Academy Hlp 8cbool, 11M ben
cbalea .. the API Clau AA
CGIIda Ill tile year. Vu Maire Ill

ltla lint VUII&amp;y MIIIM +Hl
plded Grte&amp;'leld to • _ltape

····1-lllp
... 2N.record
avtnll.

WASHINGTON (AP) -Senate ,
GOP leaders are considering an array of proposals to modifY President Reagan's red-Ink-plagued 1983
budget that reportedly IncludeS .
"every conceivable notion" of how
to cut the deficit.
Congressional and White House
o!tlclals, however, were not expectIng an agreement on a compromise
spending plan would be reached
during Reagan's meeting today
with all 53 of his fellow Republicans
In the Senate.
The administration's latest projected deficit tor flscal1983, which
begins Oct. 1, totals $96.4 bWion.
B11t worrted Republicans and Democrats alike are citing Con, '8slonal Budget Office ligures
predicting a $12) bWion deficit next
year and even tarae~ ones In future

years.

'

The Senate, ineanwhlle, continued Its debate over the tate of
Sen. Harrison A. Williams Jr. fol·

lowing the New J ersey Democrat's
appeal on Monday not to be
expelled.
·
In other c;pngresslonal business
Monday:
- Five De moc ratic House
members Introduced legislation to
restrict U.S. aid to El Salvador. Republican Sen. Mark 0 . Hatfield of
Oregon also Introduced such a proposal, as did Senate Democratic
leader Robert C. Byrd of West
VIrginia.
Ratfleld also announced plans to
try to halt all U.S. mllltacy aid to El
Salvador unless Its government
makes a good-faith effort to negotiate wtth the leftist opposition or
President Reagan can certify the
rebels refused to negotiate.
-A study commissiOned by the
Senate Rules Committee recom·
mended a major rewrite of presl·
. dentlal campaign !lnanclng
legislation, saying that current
election laws have taUed to llmlt

....

campaign spending.
- Agriculture Secreta cy John
Block told the House Educa Uon and
Labor Committee tha t the Reagan
administration's Increase In school
lunch price• Is not the only reason
lor the 13 percent decline In the
number of children eating the .
meals. "To tell you the truth. 1 just
think there a rc more children who
just want to ea t a t McDona ld 's," he
sa id .
- AFL-CIO President Lane Kirkland told the House Budget Committee that hig he r Income taxes
should be Imposed on businesses to
help pay tor Reagan 's proposed detense bulld·up.
- The House Government Opera.
Uons Committee, In a 40-page report, said lop Pentagon officials
need to act quickly and decisively
to upgrade the computer network
that Is designed to warn of enemy
attack.

�...

JJI CDUrt Strrtl
Pumrr•y, Ohiu
Dt:VO'Tfo.:.O TO THE Jrr.TF..REST OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

tl~

~mRJ ~ L-..,...., r-T"""E!9.'d•-=a

.

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publbht!r

BOB HOEFLICH

PAT WHITEHEAD
AtO!iiKLilnt f'ublbiht&gt;r/(untrtJIIt&gt;r

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
Nt'WIIEdllur

A MEMRF:R uf Thr

Atnt~~t'illlt!d

Prr.11. lnhuMI DMIIy PMII Alntudatlun anti lht&gt;

Amt'rlun Nrwspapt&gt;r PubllKht!l'l' AlllltM'blllun.
U ·:1iF:RS or OPINION are wrkomed. Tht')' 11huuld bt- k»»• Ullin 300 wordlllt.tnl(. All
!lotll'fli llfl' ~ubjn·l W t:Uitin..: •ntl mWtt bt- llil(n~ with Dlllmr, 1uldrnJ11 and \t'lt'phtlllr
uumfJtlr. Ntt unlli)CnrtllrUt•nt will~ publhthett. klkr. Khuuld bt In Ko00 i»11k, addrn11lDJ{
iiiiUt"ti,IWI pt!fiiUOIIitif"IL

'Nervous Nellies'
·vs. ,' Sob Sisters'
When worried critics of Lyndon Johnson's pollcles said he was risking
lnllatlon, among other things, the president called them Ne!Vous Nellles.
Unable to generate enthusiasm for his policies, Jimmy Carter retreated
to camp Davis to figure It all out, returning after a week or so to explain
that a malaise affected the American people.
And now, as businesses fall and jobs are lost and criticism of his economic governance grows, Ronald Reagan brushes off his attackers as sob
sisters, the suggestion being they are weak and emotionaL
ln such ways do presidents defend themselves and their policies and, It
seems entirely possible. maybe hide from painful realities, too.
President Johnson's guns and ,b\ltter policy- war against communists
in Vietnam, war against poverty at home- may have Ignited the Inflation
that exists to this day. The Nellles seem to have been right.
History has yet to complete Its judgment, but the malaise referred to by
President Carter may have been his rather than the people's. and Pres I·
dent Reagan's dismissal of critics may be a refusal to face facts .
The fact Is that business groups which supported him In the past and
continue to hope for success of his economic program- big business and
sm all, and Wall Street among them - have grave and growing doubts
about his budget deficit and high Interest rates.
The essenr:e of crltfclsm Is tliat the supply-side economics practiced by
Reagan Is not supplying the private sector with energy needed to get the
economy going again. High Interest, It Is said. destroys supply.
Examples of this are found everywhere.
Households that benefit from tax cuts stlll cannot buy homes because the
costs of financing take too great a share of monthly Income.
Builders cannot build because borrowing costs produce expenses that, In
a poor market, cannot be passed along In selling prices.
Automobile users continue to drive older cars rather than retiring them
and buying new vehicles, one reason being that high Interest rates make
monthly charges prohibitive.
Businesses In general, It Is claimed, cannot expand and modernize so
long as tile high level of Interest rates pushes capital costs to levels that do
not permit a satisfactory net return.

Letter to the editor
Let them know

function of the FBI is. Probably it is
1 have received many phone calls to trap common mortals. The fellow
this week regarding a letter I wrote
who thought up the Abscam idea
to the editor. We agreed that we're
reminds us that you can't ca tch a
against U. S. involvement in El
thief by asking him if he is guilty. It
Salvador.
is better to put out a little sugar and
1 called the White House and told watch the flies come to it. The FBI
them I am opposed to sending caught some big flies - horse flies .
ec'Onomic and military aid there. 1 Some of those nies just couldn't get
also wrote to my Congressman.
enough money in their pockets.
Reagan has proposed aid to Latin Some of the flies came right out of
American that will raise to $824
our National Government. the body
million - up 96 percent - from last
that carried the greatest trust we
year. Reagan proposes tax in· can plac~ on any person.
centives for businessmen who·invest
There is a Democratic bias here
in these Latin American countries. someplace. A few years back SherQuoting Time magazine, "The 'cen· man Adams, · a Republican, was
terpiece' is a twelve-year exemption caught in a complexity far less
from tariffs on exports to the U.S., serious than Abscam .. He was rail·
the lirst such trading advantage to roaded out and fast and rocketed to
be given any region ."
oblivion. The Democratic Purists
Ask yourself why we are getting hung Richard Nixon from every
involved in El Salvador now' (And lamp post in Washington and his
the military aid will assure the cohorts went to prison.
deal .l
Let's look into a few other items
Write to your Congressman. Just that reflect this "King George Men·
send it to the House of Represen· tality ." These "Lords of the Land "
tatives, Washington. D. C. He will our United States Senators, do~'t
get it. Write to the President, or call want television cameras in their
the White House as I did. It's worth working Chambers. Television
the small cost if we can stop this im· cameras were strongly opposed by a
pending disaster. The number to call Democrat by the name of Long. they
is area 202-456-7639.
must think we will catch them with
Let's drive them crazy in their pants down . Thill same body of
Washington this week . Or should I "public servants" put a rider on a
say "sane"! We can win, but we bill they knew no one would dare
have to Jet them hear from us . Lot of turn down. In this way they gave
us! - Jan Groggel, Portland.
themselves a tax free cost of living
increase. To top this off it was
required that the Internal Revenue
Service rule no proof need be shown
how the raise was spent.
A Jot Of crowing has been done to
the effect that Senators Glenn and
Sometimes it looks like the mem· Metzenbauin voted " no" on their
bers of the United States Senate
pay raise. Don't be fooled. The vote
are getting the "King George Com· was a planned squeaker. The pig
plex." Sort of father nows best at· was stuck and those senate mem·
bers were at the cook out.
tilude.
Senator ·Harrison Williams, a
"The King George Complex" was
Democrat, was tried and convicted
vividly demonstrated when that red·
in a ,•ourt of law for his a·ctivities In
vested, fiddle playing senator from
coiUlection with the Abscam Scan- West Virginia told his constituents
dals. A move to oust him from the that he was going to vote to· give
Senate has been underway. Now that away the Panama Canal. "I know
is being watered down to censure;
what's best for the American
thanks to another Democrat, Alan People" was about the words he
Cranston, who is reported to be used. This despite the fact that polls
spear-heading a drive to save showed that the majority of the
Senator Williams' hide. Democratic American People did not want to
Senator, Daniel Inouye reminded give the Canal away.
television viewers this moring that,
Now it looks like the people were
"Members of the Senate make their right. The whole of Central America
own rules regarding their mem- is erupting In violence, Maybe we
btn."
will have to fight to get the Canal
The implication is that Senator back or have to fight to use it.
Williams was trapped by the FBI.
Didn't we put King George away
One wonders
what
they
think
the
In
I776?- Gayle Price.
.
.

Don't be fooled

Pro standings
~i

Caribbean basin .._p_la_n____w_u_tia_m_F_.n_uc_k_tey_Ir:
As for supplemental economic aid,
Mr. Reagan requests $350 miUion in
the current fiscal year. It is a substantial sum, but spread among 20
nations with a population of $39
million, it can fully be described as·a
massive giveaway . His ideas on
technical assistance, especial1y in
agriculture, are equally in scale.
The package o£fers nothing gran·
diose - and this is exactly as it
should be . Leftist critics in the Cribbean an1a will be hard put to charge
Yankee imperialism. Indeed, sear·
ching for something to complain
about, these c1itics may well con·
tend that too little is required.
Persons who are familiar with the
pride, the poverty and the perils of
the Caribbean are likely to find the
president's p1·ogram just shout
right Latin Americans bitterly
resent the least suggestion of

dominance by their great and
powerlul neighbor to the north. Yet
they acknowledge their almost
desperate need for help. As Reagan
observed. one barrel of imported oil
in 1977 was worth five pounds of cof·
fee or 155 pounds of sugar; in ot·der
to buy that same barrel the im·
portant nations must pay 26 pounds
of coffee Ol' 283 pounds of suga•·. This
way lies disaster. ·
In his feb. 24 address the
president spoke to the peril created
by continuing Soviet adventurism in·
the area . "Economic p1'0g1·ess can·
not be made while guerrillas
syslematieally burn, bomb and
destroy bridges, fanns· and power
and transportation systems." Cuba
and its Soviet backers seek nothing
less than to establish Marxist-Leftist
dictatorships throughout the Caribbean, with the .consequent extinction

..•

_

.150
.11'7

2

211

l)
l)

. ~16
.

M
16

......

.n

211

:6

....

18~

Mlhrf'III!IW

42
21

.100
.4'75
.4t8
.413

-

Indiana

111
:rJ
3'l
3&amp;
31

AUlrlta

36
D!trolt
2"1
Cbicqo
Z3
.:m
Clevtland
13 46
.71)
WDTERN C::ONn'.IU!:NCI:

-..-

San Anlonk&gt;

Htw.lston
DeriVer

Kansas City
OOas
Utah

pmden t" and "necessary." ·N&lt;Jt a~

syllable suggests any thought of a
jingoistic intervention, led by·
Ronald Reagan crying "Charge!" :
Coming from. a man who was:
caricatm·ed in his presidential cam-·
paign as an it'l'esponsible gun-;
slinger, the address should help toi
dispel the unwarranted image ofl
Ronald Reagan, the hawkiest hawk'
Of them all.
•.
·
;

38

:r1

M
31
21

n

J)

l3YI
)5
~~

19
28~

.633

:..
7
..

41

.:»'7
.33!1
.328

19

41

.317

19

I)

.,

.611
.661
.067

-

.:m

Z9

u

r.-......
tl .,

"

,.;
,.;

.l1.

4Y~

18Y~

.

·""

..

~I Gam.

I!

6\!

...

..

33

1

.:116

"

~&lt;M

O..M.Twaww:a
Upper Sand~ 42. H~ 2!1
0...4.Tw..a.:w-.
DelpMI St. JoM !2. Col. Gnwe 51

_,__

Arc:bbokl 56, ~wa HWJ t4
N. BaJtlmcft M, Carey 98

Exhibition scores
'&gt;'PI' ae.Moa:IQ'• Gamea
Atlanta 5, Lot An,Jek&gt;s 0
~all Baltimn 0

Bolton 4. {jetrott 1
New YQI'Ir. tALi (8 1 3, Atlanta (8) 2
Toronto 4, Chlcllgo (ALl 3

OtJdartd 3, San Fr~ 2. 10 JnMas
Cleveland 9, Mllwauketo 8, 12 lublgs

,..,...,, Oarr.
l.al AJ.,eles va. Monbl!lll .at Wet! Pa1rn

Beaclt,F1a.

•

PltllbuiJh

vs. Kansas

Ctty at Fon

Myers, Fla. ~
Allanta vs. Baltimore at Miam1;F1a.
Ebtlon va. Detro6t at Lakeland. na.
Chlcaao IALI V5. Toronto at Dwledln.

Atlanta 98, Milwalllft !16
ibton lll, Detroit l01
DaU.u 121, San Aittmkl 113

""·

Denver at Adanta

...,,AN
c:awomta vs. Su 01eso at Y,lm\8, Ariz.
Chlcqo tNLI vs. Oakland at Phc:enlx,

New Y orll ( Al ! IlL Teua at Pompano
Beach, Fla.
Cleo.'ela.M vs. Sal! Franctsoo at Scotts-

-·a.-

Golden Stall' at llktlana
Utah at New Yort
PhOeft.lx at w~

I

I I' t.1

O..AM~ ......

MaN&amp;Id Ma&amp;abarf7,

15
17

32

-·-

0111111 ..... llclllll Glrtl I

- WL
·..-Pd.GI
e

!Jy AMoclaled Press
EverYttung's up to date In Kan·
sas City. Now It's George Brett who
wants more money.
The Kansas City Star - the
newspaper, not the ballplayer said In a story from the Royals'
spring training camp Monday that
Brett Is seeking a contract slmtlar
to those recently signed by George
Foster of the New York Mets (five
years, $10 mUllon) and Gary Carter
of the Montreal Expos (eight years,
$15 mllllon) .
.
General Manager John Schuerholz said the Royals are wtlllng to
listen to Brett - the tWo have met
five times In the last morith - but
no promises hav~ ~Mien made.
The Royals opened their major
league exhibition schedule"today
against the Pittsburgh Pirates.
Meanwhile, the Cincinnati Reds
wt11 start left-hander Charlie Lei·
brandt In their spring tralntng op.
ener Wednesday against the
Pittsburgh Pirates in Bradenton.
Reds pitching Coach Blll Fischer
said Monday that rlght·hander
Mike LaCoss, reUever Tom Hume

Girls scores

llo\BIBIINillNP1!al!NCJt

of political f1·ee&lt;1om. .
"I[ we do not act promptly and
decisively in· defense of freedom,"
the president said, "new Cuba will
arise from the ruins of today's con•
flirts ... Let our friends and our ad·
versa•·ies understand that we will do
whatever is prudent and necessary.
to ensure the peace and security of
the Caribbean area."
The key words there are
11

Brett wants to renegotiate his contract

Scoreboard•••

Tuesday, March 9, 1982

WASHiNGTON President
Reagan's address o£ Feb. 24,
outlining his proposed Caribbean
Basin policy. provided only a oneday story for the press. Such is the
nature of news. The program deserves more extended corrunent and
analysis, partly because it gives us a
useful insight into Mr. Reagan's
whole approach to foreign policy.
The Caribbean policy is modestly
innovative. It is not notably brilliant,
or novel, or hold. Only a single
paragraph contains even a faint
echo or a saber rattling. The
program makes no pretensions
toward the historic status of a Mar·
shall Plan. What we have here is a
thoughtful, constructive outline for
helping our Caribbean neighbot·s to
help themselves.
These are the principal elements:
free trade for Caribbean products,
tax incentives for U. 'S. investment,
supplemental economic aid, and
new programs of technical assistan·
ce and training for the private sector
in the Basin countries.
'
None of these elements is radical.
Mr. Reagan's plan for"· a 12~year
suspension of duties on Caribbean
exports, for example, is carefully
qualified. Textile exports would not
be covet·ed : suga•· would receive
duty-free h·eatment " but only up to
a certain limit ln order to protect the
U. S. domestic sugar price
program." Pa•·ticular care would be
taken to protect the economic in·
tet·ests of Pue1to Rico and the Virgin
Islands . .
The administ•·ation's promise of
tax incentives is not precisely
defined. Says the White House : " An
exa mple of a )&gt;O!!sible tax measure is
a five-year legislative extension of
the domestic investment tax c•·edit
for up to 10 percent of the amount of
a fixed asset investment ih the coun·
tries of the region." Before even this
inchoate plan eoulil be put into

AN.

SNIDe vs. MilWaukee at SWl Oty, ArU.

SH.ttJe.at Chlcaao
MUwallkte at Hcuatoo
Kai'IMI Oty at Los Anaeles
San Antoolo at San flll¥l

fT A MfloiAct!

Look to us tor the quality Business Insurance coverages
you need , including Liability, Fire, Crtme and special
Package Plans. Call us today.

......
.......,
....-llmlll"
WILUTII

p--

w.-c

""-·
NY ·Rarwen
Phllad]:!lphl.a
PltliOJrg:tl

5

. . umml

:aw::t

Wllf . . .

WL TGFGA.Pit
46 14 7 3.1) 2lO 99
3'l 24 11 2M 'm ~
:nn 7273&amp;13
Zl l2 11 Zl) 288 61
9211\28}~

22J6

WuN~

.W...DI~.

- N-- ....
-'

Morltreal

:E 12 17 310
J6 ~ 9 261
33 I) 1t 2SJ
:11 24 141 :Ill

B&gt;o!on

BuU!Ilo.

191 9;1
221! 81

213 80
B '74

l8 12 16 %rl 2!0 S2

H anlOn!

cam,w ca '

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

&amp;MCE

Il
7J6
28
15

... , .

19 19 300
'll 13 25'1
3f 6 2IW 290Gl
ll 10 2lfl :mill
17 36 16 Zi9 31!1 !K)

Wlnnl!lfl

CNcaeo
Tcronto

li:Bl2'Ufi

""'"''

u

Edmcmtoo

.............
Cdotido

:m08

15 1.2 J64 . , 96

24 lJ 14 231 244 62

Vancouver
caJpl)'

3

:m

Z3 :It 16 281
62
18 :M 14 5 n :n
I64)UD29643

Ill
DAYS
MARCH
11·12·13

._..,.,GMW

Mlnnetota 8, St. LoWs I
NY Ranrers 6, DeUolt 3

.......,.,a...,..

'THE SEN~TE VOTES ON SENATOR WlU.IAMS

that past dertclts have been
damaging. ·
In flscal1976, he said; the deficit
was 4 percent of gross natimial product. "compared to our present es·
tlmate of 3.2 percent In fiscal 1982
and 2. 7 percent for the budget
under review. fiscal 19&amp;3."
As a percentage of private sav·
lng, Weldenbam continued, the deficit represented 22.5 percent of
total private saving In fiscal 1976.
"compared to 19.1 pecent this year
a nd 14.9 percent In 1!&amp;'1."
Weldenbaum came well prepared. As a percent of total budget
outlays, he said, the deficit was 13.9
percent In fiscal 1975 and 18.2 per·
cent In fiscal year 1976. This, the
chairman said, contrasts with 13.6
percent In fiscal year 1982 and 12.1
percent In fiscal year 1!&amp;'1.
Argus Research Corp., used by

noodle~

Calrary at QuebeC
Elo5t01l at Mootreal

MAlleN RIGHT IN
lAVE BIG!

NY lstanden IT SU..DUUI

Ptilladelphla at NY Rangers

"Gen~ral, accordinK to our reeot··
ds, the Al"my told us that the Noodle
would eost $15,000 per unit The first
one .to come off the line this sear is
priced at $250,000. Could you explain
the price differential?"
··As it was m·iginally conceived
tl)c Noodle was going to be an armored jeep which would be used to
transport mail and pay from
headquarters to the ft·ont Jines . But
then Gen. Savage ... "
" Who is Gen. Savage?"
" He was the Office•· originally in
charge ol designing and L'On·
structing the Noodle, with the aid of
the Well back Moto1· Company."
''When wa!l that ?''
" My l'eCOI'US show that was in
1961. I never knew Savage, but I un·
derstand he was a very fine office•··"

"Where is he now?"
"He was burled with full military
hono1-s at Al"lington Cemetery, in
1979."
"Then it was his program?"
" The o•·iginal Noodle was his (dea,
but after he left, the project was

WM0/11./SO~

Rtl6t5, /11/T)
IE$ ST1I.L. ONJ..Y
IIP70

securities firms, argues that the
budget Is "fairly credible," but that
the· media have made It seem al·
most incredible, particularly by
stressing the size of deficits.
"Some of the claims contain just
enough truth to cloak them In a
mantle of plauslblllty," It states.
"In fact, however, the garment is
full of holes." It uses Weldenba·
urn's technique for hole one:
"As a percentage of GNP, the de·
flclts proposed by the President for
fiscal 1982 and 1!&amp;'1 are smaller
than the deficit of 1976, a year in
which nominal GNP. rose 12 per·
. cent, real output Increased by 6 per·
cent, and Interest rates \"ere
essentially unchanged."
Argus argues that total federal
credit demand as a percentage of
credit raised In domestic markets
will decline rather than rise under
President Reagan's proposals. And

Pltuburlh at WashinltDn
Wlnnl.!JI!I •t Hartford
ChiCago aT Toronto
NY !~lander'S II MJnneiOia
Edmonton at 1.01 ~

Bldfakl a\ Vanl"'OI''er

It attacks .defense criticisms too.
"Defense outlays as a ,percen·,
tage of G)'IP would remain below•
the levels that prevailed betweeni
1952 and 1972 for the remainder of l
I
this decade -less than 8 percent ofl
output," s.ay the Argus •
researchers.
·
;
Weldenbaum Is aware of another i
defense, and in fact, referred toll in I
his address at The Conference ,,
Board. Many others, however, •
have made the same polrit: Budget :
deficits as a percent of gross na- :
tiona! product are much higher In :
many European nations and in i
Japan.
i
But Weldenbaum concedes that
deficits are damaging the Euro- ·
pean economy. and putllng de- ',
mands on the International pool of ;
credit. And In J apan, land of big :
deficits, growth has recently I
slowed.

Boys scores

taken over by Lt. Gen. Withe1·spoon
Rolf. an anti·airct·aftcxpert.
' 'Rolf and his people came up with
the notion of installing two heal·
seeking g•·ound-t(}.air missiles on the
fenders of the jeep. which could be
fired from a radar-controlled turret
in the ba ck seat."
" Would you say this added to the
cost of the vehicle?"
" Well, Jet's say it didn't lower the
price. t•
" What happened next?"
" When Gen. Rolf reti1·ect and wsa
tnade chairman of the boa1·d of
Wellback Motot·s, Gen .. Freeman
Druthers took over the Noodle. I
believe this was in 1971. Druthe•·s, a
fonne•· judge advocate, was going to
go ahead on p•·oduction, but tests
showed the •·adar tmnt made the
jeep top heavy , and every time it
moved in mud it fell ove•· on its side.
So it was decided to put a torpedo underneath It to balance the weight.
"This necessitated an entire new
chassis. Gen. Druthers was working
on this when he decided to 1-un for
Congress, and the r•-oject was then

given to Col. Mike Gilardi of the
.
!Oisl Alrbome Division. His learn
added a parat·hute to the ft·ont and
back bumper, and t'eplaced the
motor wi\11 a 105 howitzct· gun."
·· what good IS a jeep without a
motor?' '

.......
. .,__

rqamre '18.

:J6
Kinsman 8ad,er 66, Map&amp;ewoocl S2

'*

fQfilllliNCJN6
NO SIDf:/1¥Je

Newbury

l • • ANna
Frt&gt;epor1 Lakellnd ~. Shf'rla~h M
&amp;l&amp;acreek Caraway '10, BridfepOrt ,M

.U HI

The UaiJ·y Sentinel
iUSPSIIWIIII

A DM11km .t MuiUmfdla, l•t• .

DO BETTER
AT STIFFLER$

Ncwspa~ Publi~~ l'll Agsodalion, National

-UIIOI Of IWil$MEN'S.BOfS.YOUTHS

Rt!Jlft'!lt! ntativl' . Branha1n

NcwspuJ&gt;Cr Sules. 733 Thinl Avenut! . New

York. Nc~· York 10017.

LADIES' BLUE IIJLOII

POOTMASTEJI . &amp;nt.l udt.h!:Ui to Tl~ [H:Iily

.JOGGUS

St~uli1ll'l . lll ('ouJ1Sl.. Pon1croy, Ohio457,9 .

SUI\SCRIPTION RATES
By l'Brrit'r 1M' Motor Ruult!'
On~: w~ k ... . .... . ................. $1.00

Olll' Mont h...

. ............. $4 .40

Ont" Year . . . . . .. . . . .. ............ 5fl2.10

I
'
'
:

SINGLE COPY
PRICES

Dail)' .........

..... 15 Ct:nts

·I

.Sub:icribci'tt not desirinll. to flMY the earrit'r
may n.1u it in tith•anl't direct to Tht! Daily

1

Scntil'll'l on a 3, 6 or 12 month ~ sis . Credit
will bt• r,:i\'t'lll'arrier cat:h month.

:

:

•7!~

__15!1?

I 'Vt•}IJ'

FRUIT OF THE LOOM
MElt'S POCKET

Tho Public Utilities Com·
mtaalon of .Ohio haa set
for public he&amp;rtng CUe
No . 81·303·EL·El"C Bub·
Ill~ A, to review the fuel
procurement practices
and policies or Columbus
le Southern Ohio Etect.rlo
Company, tile oparation
of ita ell&lt;ltrio,.Fuel Com·
porlent and related mat·
tare . Thla he&amp;ring Ia
eoheduled to beCln at
9:30 a .m. on AprU 8.
1982 at the ortioee of the
PubUc UUIItiM Commie·
eton. 378 South Hil!h
Suoeet. Columbus, 01110
43218.

Larlrel ' new Sprrng coa ti rn

Fruit ot the Loom ·s .
100'1. cott on kmt tee
a h~r l&amp; in a wrde ra nga
ot br.gt\1 , bold coturs

6~%

IMGULAR $3.591

SMelT

12!~

'21~
FOLDING

DOONESBURY
NIJR5E.I
0

(I'

' -

All intareated partlea
will be given an oppor·
tunlty to be he&amp;rd. Pur·
thiJ' Information may be
obl&amp;lned by oon~tnl!
the Commtaalon.

THE PUBLIC UTILITIE8
, COIOIIBSION 011' OIDO
By: D&amp;vtd K . Polk.
llloM&amp;ry .

PACIAGt: Of THUI
T·SHim 01 III!FS

Save

Gn poput., f)lue nylOn
ana 1u.0e joggrng thOet.
Good range 01 Si:...

~

W liliESTO I YARD LEIIGTHS

· ASSORTED FA811CS

cnoooo !rom .

150!

SPECIAl PIIClS

f
FAiliiOI"iicis
SI'ECIAL PUICHASEI LADIES'

JUNIOR I MISSES'
DESIGNER LOOK

J£ANS

s tr etch
sla cks m
mtuu lind tadrea
ar:ea. New aorrng col ·
ora Z.lpper fron t style
She now
Po tyeatcH

Popular blue denim laatrr on
J8111n8 Aaaorted &amp;1)'1811 rn
Junror and miiSet srzes .

auortment ot
l1brlcs rn a vlrret~ o l
colors and print a.

Large

t;~aberdlne

17!~
SPECilflaS ·
-IAICI tf
SI'ECIAli'UilCHASE-CIIliCE OF

1
W
O
51···
ILANIIITS

7'l'IW' FW lED SIZE
SPARTA IIE£lii,DIOVEII

Saye on lull bed tlze .
netcnewwoven bltnktlt in
aasort.cl solid colora,

(IUUlAIISI.ttl '

7!1!
..,

as &amp;otted prints and sotrd
colors New Spr~ng oty te11 to

$3.99

120!

• B EAilY

JOGGaS

LIHirea · long ' tleeve
pofye&amp; l e t
biOlJ !IU rn

Nice select ion of llltJiea'
! o l dln~
umbr el la s.
A5 &amp;0 rt od colors Ragu tar

washable. Save now I

25~

IEII'SIIIf'S.YOUIHS
IIYLOII &amp; SUEDE

ILOUSB

UM8R£LLAS

tOO% cotton . Handles
loke cloth , Qulllfi !reel,- ,

R£MNANTS' ~--.J
!he Loom l ·Shrrts or Briel a.

LADIES' womo
LOIIG Sl£EVE

lADIES'

] ro•IIIO

Save now on boy' t F-rurt ol

potye3 tCrt35% cotton .

durBille rarn ar~d tiBHI
tiUU! Itent tabrrc Pastel cot ·
ora Mr nu and hat! sizes

PAIR

-IAICil tf IAPDSI'ECIAI.I aors
FIU!T Of IHE 1.0011

SPRING COATS

T-SIIIATS

IEAT IAIUIIIS
LltGAL NOTICE

lADIES' COTTOII/POLTESTER
STAIN/RAIII REPELLENT
LOIIG OR PANT STYLE

.;...tWCH Of UALUES-

sAns

SOCKS

1005 .

-UICII Of.UAUIU-

ll"a96" MT. MIST
COTTON QUILT

II'IHIT£ TUBE

OltioaiMIWntVIrMiala
3M,nth .. ............. . . ....... SlUG
S1x montl1 . . . . . . . . . . . . .
, , $20.80
Ynd Wt'lil Vlllllllil
:1Mooth .......................... Sll.OO
6Mooth .......................... 123.40
I Vt;'al' .. , ....... .. . ... . .. . , . . . ... $44.20

now On Amerrcan made .
canvaa. tace to l t\e toe.
gym o~tlords. Save now !
bla ~k

.....,

Boy' s llretch. I#III'Hte
lube
socks wilh
auorteo co lor st rrped

. 'fbi.;,; o..·~w.; 6ht~· . ' . ' ' S39.00

tia~e

BOrS STRIPE lOP

MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS

.

GYM SHOO

Lad:es ugnt tltua wllh con .
trasllng Him nyton and
!IUI!de togg ing shoes
Reg u tar S8 99

Ntl sultst.·riptlons by mail pennitll!d in lOWil!4
wl~t't' htMl~l'Mrri cr JWI"VIl~ is:av-.ihlble.

1

EARLY!

ALWAYS

Member : Tht! A.. ~ocia h.'CI Press. Inland Daily Prl!&amp;'l ASSOl'Jo~~ tion and tht Amcriun
Advt!rlhlin l!

SHOP

YOU

Published l'Vl'ry afkmoon. M11tldily throul(h
Fl'ldily. J11 Court Slrt!t.'l, by lhe Ohio Vall~y
Publhihln~ CCMn p.;~ny - MuiUmedilt . lnt' .,
Pontt:rO)', Ohio ~7&amp;11 , 992·2156. &amp;!t'Oiw.l cla!i'&gt;
potc&amp;.aJtt:: J)iill.t~l Potnt!roy. Oh10.

··G ilardi askc'll himself the same I
question after seeing a prototype, So j
he look the pt·oblem to the consulting :
f.nn of · Riggins &amp; D!Uid, who 1
dc~ ig1l'ed an armored tow truck to ;
pulllhe jeep along when it had· to be :
nuoved. II added $100.000 to the cost :
of the vehicle. But without the two '
truck we would have had to scrap··
Jhe cntit·c Noodle prO)!ra111, a nd
ri ~ht now Wl' have nothing to I'Cillat."c
it with."
·
··As the offkt·r now 111 charge of
tlw progrulll, ~an you guarantt•e U!"
that you ··an lli Odu n· lht• Noodle ror
$250.000 ea d 1?"
" 1 could if I was going to slav witl1
it. sir. But J'v" just been rea s~ig ned
to head a kasibility study [ll set•
what it wnulti:•11St to launL'h a l'I'Uist~
missile from an a11no!'ed tow
truek."

f'(}()( WHRY!
IIJT 'fJ /IKJfllrl.
11/H/ff A 'TI~ 70 Df Sin IE'S

-

ONo IIA . , . p krt'r I
Dlllrld'I'ICLL .....

___________A_rt_B_uc_hwa____:..;_ld

program ."

I HfM HIS' /.A7EST'
flj(J(J

BUSINESS:!n'::n,

l'ot!landatOollu
N_ _ , _

1982 budget deficits not unprecedented:

ltWillZI~ - IS

Nobody can protect your

.......

W~'aGamtt~

1}1; I&lt;ISS/NGf/1.
CJA.T1fT 'TIM/l'

ble as the Boston·Red Sox defeated
the Detroit Tigers H .
Rick Bosetti tagged San Francis·
co's Bob Tufts for a home Nn In the
bottom of the lOth Inning - the ball
hit the left field foul pole -giving
the Oakland A's a 3·2 viCtory over
the Giants.
·
Slngles by Kevtn Rhomberg,
Mike Flschtln and Joe Charbonea!l
broke a 12th-Inning tie and the
Cleveland Indians nipped the MJJ·
waukee Brewers 9-8.

•.....,..o.me.

Loe Aft&amp;"lel.at ('.ok)rado

President Reagan has been very
hat·sh on people who cheat on
welfa•·e. students who don't pay
back their loans to the govemment.
and those who ~re constantly looking
for handouts from the government.
He's ordered the Justice Depa1"1·
men\ to go after them with a
vengeance. ·
But to my knowledge not one per·
son in the Pentagon, or a defense
firm executive, has ever been cenSUI'ed for wasting the taKpaye•·'s
money on a military system that
doesn't wot'k.
There is a reason for this .
Weapons hav e be c ome so
sophisticated now that no one ever
stays around long enough to be
blamed when the final product is unveiled.
This is what would happen if
Congress held a hearing on the new
MT Noodle. foUI··seater jeep that the
Army claims it cannot do without.
"Will the witness identify himself
and tell us his p1·esent position in the
Pentagon?"
"Gen. Mark Dowdy, management
dit·ector of the MT Noodle weapons

Fryman tossed a perfect ninth as
the Expos beat the Baltimore Ori·
oles 2-0.
George Be.ll's nlnth·lnnlng double
gave the Toronto Blue Jays a 4-3
victory over the Chicago White Sox.
Bell also drove In the t;ylng run with
a seventh-Inning single, while rookies Paul Hodgson and Je~ Barfield homered for the Blue Jays.
Dennis Eckersley, Mike Torrez
and Mark Clear scattered five hits
and Jim Rice rapped a two-rundou·

Golden State at Philadelphia
Denver II Dtlrott
Oaicii'O at MUWjiukee

pa•·ticipating nations :

The

and minor leaguer Brad Leslle also
wtll pitch In the game. Hwne Is eK·
peeled to go one inning.
The Reds will send Tom Seaver,
Greg Harris, Jim Kern and Joe
Pnce to the mound ' Thursday
against' the Pirates in Tampa.
In Monday's action, four Atlanta
pitchers held Los Angeles to one hit
- a seventh-Inning double by Ron
Cey - and the Braves ran their
spring record to 3.() by blanking the
Dodgers 5-0. Jose Alvarez, Larry
Bradford, Gene Garber and AI Hra·
bosky were the pitchers as the
Braves continued their sensational
mound work - they haven't al·
lowed an earned run In an 'A'
game.
But the Braves' 'B' squad lost to
the' New· York Yankees 3·2. The
Yankees got RBI singles from An·
dre Robertson and Lou Ptnlella In a
three-run sixth inning. Both Atlanta
runs came against Tommy John.
The Montreal Expos also exhl·
blted some stroqg pitching. Ray
Burris hurled three perfect innings,
Scott Sanderson and David Palmer
allowed one hit apiece and Wooqle

Indiana at Bolton
PhCieD1K at New Jer~ey

operation, new executive agreements would have to be reached with the

NEW YORK (AP)- Budget deficits - $98 billion for fiscal 1982,
and edging close to $100 billion for
1983, the next fiscal year - are not
unprecedented when measured In
context, explains a government
offldal.
Murray L Weldenbaum, chair·
man of the Council of Economic Ad·
vtsers, offered his explanation In an
address at The Conference Board,
a business-supported research
organization.
'
For example, Weldenbaum
said,
you should measure them "against
the size of the economy. or of the
budget, or of the pool of private sav·
ing that will be available to finance
these deficits."
In making such comparisons.
however, Weldenbaum and others
risk criticizing their own avowed
goals for the United States econ·
amy. They have stated repeatedly

The Daily Sentinel Poge 3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
•

&amp;3

llf.ft!.%15fl

~v

Tu.sday, ~9, 1982

••
Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middlef!C!ri, OhiQ

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel

I

Altrtcth'e &amp;0" 1170''

lott•=

ot 70" dl0.. lurnuure

tluows Jr\ tolld colors. Quality tuturea
material with loam back. Se-te during
Stl!fler'a M4uCh ot Valutli Sale!

IO"a70'' Sill

1

FURNITURE

7f'd0" Silt

·3·~

LADIES' STIETCIIIIYLON
OIIE SIZ£ ms AU

PANTVHOS£
2
·PAIR

FO·'I'o

�I

P"""'"'Y-MidclepOrt,

Nakamoto
Gary Nakamoto, senior wrestler
for the Meigs High School
Marauders, has accomplished what
many people have temled in " impossible feat" in fulfilling a dream of
competing in the Ohio State
Wrestling Tournament at St. John
Arena in Columbus this Thursday.
The talented Nakamoto earned the
coveted state toEent berth with
three straight ·ctories over hlgh
ranking opponen
n the district
meet at Washington C. H. last Saturday.
What makes Gary's championship
and trip to the "slate" so special is
the fact that. this is his first season
ever competing on the mats.
Nakamoto has enjoyed an overwhelmingly successful season as hls
outstanding 24-G-1 record indicates.
Nothing would be more appropriate
than to end the sea•on with a
storybook finish, bringing home a
state championship for both him and
the Meigs Marauders.
Gary has gained valuable experience and learned the knowledge
of the mats from Meigs Coach Larry

CHAMPIONSHIP WORKOUT- District champion Gary Nakamoto,
, bottom, readl~slor one of many drills that make up a grueling wortout,
&gt; which Ia an Important pari of working towards a Slate Championship.
.' Wtefltlln!! with Gary Ia knowledgeable Meigs wresUlog Coach Larry
' Grlmea.

Ohio

~n

..

The Dally Sentinei-Par:-5

Tueutay, Marj;h 9, 1912:

state tourney

Grimel!, who has done an outstanding job with the Marauders
over the past couple of aeasons.
Nakamoto is seeded against Mark
Smith from Lorain Brookside in ,the
opening round. Next he will face the
Winner of the Dan McDonald Of
Springfield and Swanson's Jeff
Rider match.
Nakamoto has come on strong in
· the last one hall of the 81\BSon, winning his last 23 matches. He started
the season late ani! had a couple of
early losses due to inexperience.
Coach Grimes reflects on his experience of the slate tournament,
saying: ' 'I've been to the state tournament every year since 1973, but
only to watch and never to participate. The only experiimce I've
had in this big a tournament is the
NCAA tournament in which I placed
three years in a row, becoming an
All-American my senior year."
''I hope Gary isn't shaken by the
big crowd and aU the excitement
that goes on during the slate meet."
In the district the Meigs champion
and Mike· Wilford were the only

Meigs wreStlers to place. Nakamoto
grabbed the tournament championship, w~le Willford finished
fourth. Nakamoto defeated James

Boggs of South Point, Joe Koehl of
Hillsboro, then downed Keith Clay of
Ironton for the heavyweight title.
Nakamoto, also an all-league
selection in football for Meigs High
School, has · claimed four chainpionship titles this season. They
were New Lexington tournament
champ, SEOAL champion, sectional
champion, and distric~ champion.

.Kite captures playoff victory

Transactiqns
a~

.,,. A

N~~. ··
CL E V t LAND CAVALIERs..,....,

"""m

-n. Horned lllll .,,..
~-·

N-r - ._

,

" ousT oN oiL~Rs-wa~ve•

Cart

"''"'' '~"'"'·

,---==:=::__----.,-APPEARIN.G
THIS THURSDAY
In the Lounge
At the LaSalle
Recording A~tist

DAVE DUNKtL
8:3.0-12:30
And
Friday &amp; Saturday .
From Athel!s

Plays tonight
Tonight the. Southern Tornadoell of Coach Carl Wolle,
along wlth more than 650 Tornado
laos departed for the district
tournament 11t Cblillcothe where
Southern meets Peebles. Game
time Is scheduled lor 7 p.m. It ill •
to be aired on WMPO radio.

DAllAS &amp;DEE
Organ and\'ocal ·

LaSA~LE
~~

137,.2nd

under ""'~IM!Ihi'

,

PERFECT SEASON - The Southern Junior Higb
Tomadoettes of Coach Brenda Jolmson and assislaot
Coach Tammy Smith completed a perfect 11.0 season.
Pictured are team Llembers Tracie Hubbard, Tammy
Theiss, .DJana Simpson, Joy Spauo, Karla Smith, Lori
, Adalll8, Tammy Adkins, Kelly Clark, and Kellle

.

Associated Press' major awards
this season In Ohio Southeastern
Class AAA boys prep basketball.

COLUMBUS, Ohio I AP I -Steve
'Bruning of Athens a nd Lancaster
·t:oach Arden Reid have won The

,·

Class AAA., AA., A All-District teams
COLUMBUS, Ohio

Wa11Cr1y. 6-3 Sr.,, 16.!1: Eric Rclgers,

11le Aa.'IOCI·

j,.(p) -

1!18H:I2 Ohio Southeutem DW.
trtct ll!ilh .chool boyt balketbaD all-star

McDermott N011hW!m1, 6-:Z Sr., 2JJ.6: Todd
Stukey, Belpre, 6-4 Sr., 17.0; Dan P~ .
Albany Alexander, 6-5 Sr .. 18.!1.

CIAS8.\M
F1RST TEAM S&amp;evP Brunlrw.
Athena, &amp;.foot -!1 Jr., 23.1J polnl.!l ~ QamP:
Tony Bt&gt;verty. Chillleolhe, S.!l J r.• U.8:
Jen ftk!J'J(tln. Lopn, ~n Jr., UU : PaW
Cnms1on. Marietta, &amp;-2 Sr., 13.0, and
Mill@ A.vant. Lancaster. &amp;-3 Jr., 13.~.
~o !lt'OOI'Id tf'am M!lecttcl becawte of

PL.AYER OF YEAR - Chris Q&gt;ntry,
Portsmouth.
COACH OF YEAR - Rick Van M11tre,

attd

Pres~~ '

_,.....

F'IRST TEAM - Butch Doles, Richmond Dal(' SouUwastem, 6-8 Sr., 18.~:

cut(&gt;r.

CIASBM
f1RST TEAM - Chrb Gentry, Por1arr'ICJU1h, Mooi Sr., Ul.~: Ron f'Umicr .
Pommouth Wl!llt, &amp;4 Sr.• n .t : ROO Mun·
yan, Gl"«'nlleld McClain, 6-3 .Jr .• 19.1!;
Chuck McKn!J!hl. Coal Grove, G-1 Sr.,
30.4; Phil Kifli, Gallipolis, !t-7 Sr.. 11.8:
PluJ. Newman, \Yileell'nbui"J!, G-7 Sr.,
JU.

00.1; Gary Hockwm-th, Franlclln F\&amp;rnac.'(!

GI"CCn, 6-1 Sr., 19.0.
PI..A YER OF YEAR -

Dutch DoJn,

Rlchroond Dale Sou1hcastem.

SECOND TI:AM - Tom T8i11Hrl. Nrl·
ICI"Iville--Yortl:. 6-J Jr., 20. ~ John IJemNI,
Welll\en, 6-:J Sr., :U.!i: EriC Brelk&gt;nbach.

COACH OF YEAR -

Gary DcV!vu,

Otllllrothe Uc»m,_

Trl-Cuu ntyBuwllng l.euJ;:Ut'

Early Sunday

feb . Z. 1982

Mixed Bowling Lea~
Feb. II, IV82
Sta1Jdln«8 .

'(e•m
·Powell'sSuperValu

Tt&gt;u m

Ph .
46

'C.&amp;J . Auto Parts '

'42

.JaymarCoaJ Co.

all
40

17. AJa .· BIITI'IInjJtulm
1ft. Wake FOl"e!!t

TopOfThcSt.Mit'll
l8
Jl}
Bill's RDdy Shop
!UtA. Ftrcstone
30
Tet~m hil(h serie11 - ltoach's Gun Shop 2602;
ToltJI''II l mlllrance Co, zaGB: H.&amp;R. Firestone

42

)loyal Crown

52

Tnler·s lnSUJ'IUJce Co.
rratenl810rt.le1' 0£Eagles

44

'-"~c h 'liG un Shup

1•111.

UIJ&lt;U 'h'!i l iun Shop

40

.f'rll!ndlyTavern
~
•• Hil(h series mt!n - La •·i'y Du~an 609: Handy
Sl'lldery 584: Charlie VanMeter :A)O,
High !lefies women - Deb!Jie HmL&lt;~Iey ~33 :
Helen Phelp!-!!Jz:J ; Betty Whitlatch ~I fl .
' HIMh pine men - I.arry DuHtln 243 ; Rand)!
Shidet· 223 ; Terry Seldensbei 2J&amp;.
' Hil(h game wGmrn - Debbie Hensley 21 3·
~y11JeSt. Clair 211 : Betty Wtlitlatt:h 200.
'

2!122.

Hi!!h Ind. ~rles -

2J.5

II. In one decade, the former Unl·
' COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP I verslty of Rhode Island assistant
James Madison has become one of
has a 188-78 record. In six years at
the nation's better college basket·
·'Division I, his record Is 115-47.
ball success stortes.
"I &lt;!on't know of any other team
: The state-supported school In
going Into Division I that has
Harrisonburg, Va ., was strictly ,for
reached the NCAA Tournament In
'Yomen until the mld·1960s.
such a short period of time," Cam·
. It started out playing the smal·
panelll said via telephone .
. lest or Division Ill schools before
James Madison, named for the
moving up to Division II In 1972.
nation's fourth President, has done
Four years later, the Dukes were
it back to back. The Dukes upset
wmpetlng among the majors In
Georgetown, D.C., In the 1981
Division I.
NCAA Tournament before losllig to
Now, In 1982, James Madison preNotre Dame. They were 21·9 last
pares for its second straight NCAA
season, earning an automatic tour·
Tournament, squ~rlng off In a first·
nament berth as the ECAC's South·
ever meeting with the Big Ten . The
em Division :roumament winner.
Dukes. 23-5, go against Ohio State,
James Madison Is a school of
21·9, Thursday night In an East Reabout
9,00l students located In a
gional game In Charlotte, N.C.
VIrginia city of around 20,00l. That
"We're really coming," Rich
is some contrast to Ohio State, with
Murray, the school' s sports infor·
an
enrollment or more than 50,00l
rilation director, said Monday via
In
the
middle of a metropolis o!
telephone.
600,lXXJ.
"Our name Is starting to get out.
"Certainly, we're not a household
We didn't win our conference tourIn the Big Ten," said
word
nament this time, but we were seCampanelli.
lected as an at-large team. That
James Madison has four regusays something about the respect
lars back from last year's NCAA
o'u r program Is gaining around the
Tournament team. The Dukes
country;" he said.
made more than 51 percent of their
Coach Lou Campanelli was hired
1ft 1972 to make James Madison floor shots this winter whUe ranking among the nation's top 10defen·
cOmpetitive nationally In Division

REASON #2: Free brochure ··
about the new tax laws.
\f.the recent tax law changes have you com-sed, we can
l'lt~lp. H&amp;R Block is offering a free brochure on the Economic
IR1eco,vervTax Act of 1981 . We'll show how you can benefit
the new tax changes.

-..,rvn

H&amp;RBLOCit

Top Twenty

' •!!tlce, Pceble!, 6- loot Sr.. 00.5;
Uce. Peeb\c$, &amp;-fool Sr.. 11.9',
; tor. Crmk.ivltk!, 6-8 Sr.. J).3;
K
.oll~. Racine- Southern, !'t-10 Sr..
21...... Jim Bur1on, J..atham Western, 6-1
Sr., !lUi.
SECOND 1T.AM - ~n 'Tiiltle, Rea·
vt'r Eutern, 6-1 Sr., 20.1 : Rand)' Mooro,
South Webster. ~ 11 Sr .. 18.8; Jay Dow·
!Iller, Chllllrn\00 Unloto, !Hoot Sr.. 17.7;
Jl'fl DuM, Oak Hill, :0,. 11 Sr ., 16.2: Jeff
LA.&gt;tllh, Ba.lnbr1dQe Paint Valley. 6-2 Sr .•
Brt!"'

AtheM.
COACH OF YEAR - Arde-n Rrid. Lan-

' '

reg-

Greenfield McClain.
CLAS8.

Umltcd AChools In dlm1ct.
PLAYER OF YEAR- SteVe Bruning,

Bruning, a &amp;foot·5 junior forRookie Greenfield McClain
ward, averaged 23.0 poln)s and 10.5
Coach Rick VIlli Matre, fonnerly of
rebounds and was named as the dis·
Middleport and a fanner assistant
trict' s Class AAA Player of the
at Gallla Academy High coach In
Year. Reid was the No. 1 coach af·
Gallipolis, wu voted as the No. 1.
ter guiding Lancaster to a 12-8 reClass AA are coach while the Class
cord after the Golden Gales were
1\A Player ot the Year honon went
5-16 each of the last two seaSOII5.
to Chrb Gentry of Portsmouth.
The selections, based on only
In CJua A, GaryDeVlvoolChllliular season performances, were · cothe Unloto was the Coach of the
made by a district panel of sports
Year and Butch Doles of Richmond
writers.
Dale Southeastern the Player ofthe
Year In the district.
Van Matre guided Greenfield to
an 18-2 record and its first South
~tral Ohio League championship
11lc Top 'TWenty leaml ln !liP nn.l AAsoclated Pm.s' oollese basUtball poll for
. In the last decade. Gentry, a &amp;foot
tOO 1981-82 11ea1011, with llnt-pl;acf YOtrt
senior JUArd, earned hls second
ln purenlhttn, tbD &amp;eaiOn's NCOrd aad
totHI .,olnta. Polnlll baaed on :ll-19-18-li·llstraight aU-district herth after
l.!l-14-ll-1:J.U·10.U7+U3-2·1:
averaging 18.5 points lor the
t. North cardlna (471
11·:1 1.UII
'Z. DePaul UO)
16-1 1,100
TrojaAS.
3. Vlrgl.nla (I I
a-3 l,Oin
DeVIvo, In his first tun season at
t. Oregoft St (1)
l'U
!119
!i, Mlawwi
tl-3
811
UnlotD, llilded the team tD a 17-3
s. Georwemwn. o.c
»&amp;
1153
record after ~ an 11-5 record
7. Mhai'IN')la
M
115
s. IdahO
-.2
ru
when he replaced the previous
9. ~St.
'lJ.4
..
coach Ill mldaeason of 1~.
:10. N:aa
'U-~
&amp;i1
11. F"-'l!lnG St .
IS-2
1'1"7
Doles, a 6-8 senior center, aver·
12. Arkamas
11-~
!162
aged
18.5 points this season after
l.l Alatlilmu
23-6
427
14. WeKI Vtrginla
2&amp;-3
:M5
being a second-team all-&lt;llstrlct seI~ Kentucky
22.-7
n
lection as a junior.
16. Iowa
:D7
:m

THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE

17 reasons. One smart decision.
618 E. Main St.
2nd &amp;Brown Sts.
.
Pomeroy, Oh. 45769
Mason, WV. 25260
992-3795
773-9128
'
'

Hours:
Mon. -Fr i. 9 to 6
Sat.9to5

Hours :
· Tues. &amp; Thurs. 9 to 6
Sat.9to5

m

19. UCLA

31. LoulsvUle

:»9

what it takes to be a wrestler and
also gained valuable self-&lt;liscipline.
Following is a list of individual

season records.
varsity

tll

22
24
21
14

18
17
18
12
20 18

Doug Priddy

Brill Ki ng
Greg Thomas

Trov Bauer
Mike W itlfbrd
Larrv Romine

25

11 1

27

12

25

13

J.anova.

W~hlla

24

400·19
500x15
550xl6
550116
. 660116
"1lmil6

PRICE
~31.50

$33.00
$32.50
$36.50
$39.00
$41.50

6 1

Reserves
Mike Mourn ing
Chad Williams
Crrtiq s ·i nc lai r

McCullough

6
1

7

1

l

12

1

9

.
• ••
.,
'•

-I

''

INiERESi
f\1\it

'I

"'

.......
~

•

• More tluln the 8-month rate at any Ohio bank
or federally-chartered ..wings a~d loan.

.

• Minimum deposit only $5,000 ••• not.$10,000
as with mod financial Institutions.

.."

&amp;uspension .

Well Jet cuter, umbtr and toe· In to man·
ufacturcri orifltnli J.pecifkallons. NoeJ~tra
dtarlk lor cars wtlb factory air or lorlion
t.n. hrh utra. If needed. Call for your

,_,

'

1

• Uncompletod "To -Do "
Item• Autom~~tlcelly
Trenefer To the Next
Dey

LEBANON, Ohio (API - Uttle
Tar Miss took the lead at the half
mUe and won the $L;·~ featured
eighth race Monday at Lebanon In .
2:06.
Little Tar Mtss paid $3.:/D, $3.60
and $3. Carlisle's Queen was second, $4.60 and $3.60. Jackie Mite
was third, $7.80.
The S-2 double of Brtte Ieye Sue
and One By Land paid $25.80.
A crowd of 1,027 wagered
$132,638.

'

:.1

,

, ,
.

• Quickly Scan for Data
on Phone Calle, Clients,
Producte, More

ftad1e/haek
,_, DIVISION OF T-.NOY CORPORATION

• No need to tie up your money tor longer periods
tor higher rates.
• lntereat mailed monthly or quarterly. Or
let II compound.

....

.

........
.
~

.
.....,
•

Capital Savings &amp; Loan, a Benelicial Finance System affiliated
company has been accepting deposits in Ohio since 1892.
Phone or visit your local Beneficial office today tor lurther
inform~tion as to how you can start earning this high rate of
interest on a 6-month Time Deposit. Come in now and pick up
your postage-free de[Josit envelope at any Beneficial Finance
System office in Ohio. Or call our toll·free number:

.97 '

1.08

SAUSAGE ....• ~ •....•.•••... !~!] 39

CHUNK ~

HOMEMADE

HAM SALAD........• •••••eL!·.~.1 79

BOLOGNA

ROYAL CREST

ate

19

LB.

••
•

'

DIET RITE, RC100
SPACK

$ 29
ALL WEEK

..•
..••

1 . . .212·1 7ot.

RC COLA

COTTAGE CHEESE ..•••••• ~~.~z:. '1.19

..•
3Ls.

&lt;"

'

99¢ CABBAGE

LB. } 9 ¢

PEPSI
8 PACK
16 OZ. BTLS.

~

w

,
•

••

••

,

POMEROY HOME &amp; AUTO
FRONT END ALIGNMENT
BRAKE SERVICE

I

BUTTERMILK.......... :~.~~~L~.~. 99C
VALLEY BELL ICE MILK .................. ;'~?~~~~~.. 99C
VALLEY BELL 2% MILK .................. ~~~~?~.~l-.79

.~

7 .1~ tor Passbook Savers: If flexibility is important to you,
ask about our 7.50/o interest. day in · day out No Penalty CD with
passbook availability.

.8&amp;
1.00

99e

BROUGHTON

•

~

Wed Benetlcllll ,....nee, Inc.
POMEIIIOY-300 West s8cond Street .... ...... ... (614) 992-2111
GALUPOI..k.. -416 2nd Awnue . . .. ... .. , .• , . ... (614) 446·2765
ATHENS--1015 East State Street . ....... ......... (614) 5~3·3372 ·

'

....

. ••

FRENCH FRIED

•
..."•

'...

LARGE BAG

..

All• It time d pure~ II guerlfM9ed for lhe enti"' lix-month period. Stmtantiel perwny 101' e_,.,
wilhltl~,..l allimo ll&lt;lCOUIU. ll!'l"*1• OOCO!I'ecl onty 110m Ohio · Ro111 1111&lt;1 '"""' SIA&gt;je&lt;:llo
'

ICE

JUMBO ROLL

, 2 LB.

89C

t.

•

"
'•'

GALA
PAPER
TOWELS

BAG

79¢

REGULAR or
WIDE MOUTH.

JAR LIDS

9¢ 4 oo~l

00

IIAIIET - OPEl DMY $ 10 10 P.M.
SUIDAY :9 10 10 .

rtlt

•

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

T1me Manager 11 a lrldemark of Image PrOducefl, Inc.
PRICES MAY VARY AT INDIVIDUAL SlORES AND DEALERS

PORK ROAST ...•....... :~·.!.1

•

Leithia unique system help manage your schedule. Eoter meet·
lnga, "to do's," expenaee, end
·more ae they occur. Then review
dally agendas or eearch and r•
trleve recorde by category and/
or keyword. Add optional
program• for meny other manegementjoba.
'

• Keep Tr.ck of
Appointments, Jobs,
Schedule• and Colla

Lebanon results

'

·...:......:...:•

HOMEMADE

BOSTOM BUTT

I

'

~cPherson

I

•
•

MONTH Of MARCH SPECIAL

.All amenct'ln can tn,tucrt•'ch!!'IOtlcli ,,ncl
cC-ft~ch wtttl front wheel dr_ive ud/ or

I

• Just Add Our $99.115
Time MenegerProgrem to Ort~enlze
Your Calendar end
Bualne•Informetlon

\

480x8 AND 480x12 - '22.00 Plus .63 FET

3~.5

48K 2-Diak Model

~ACQN .... ~ ...•...•..•..•.•••... eL~· ••

"',,".

Most Outsfand inq Senior - Greg
Thomas .
Pin R(' cord - Larry Romine (22
pins /

TRAILER TIRES - Tub'e Type

Front-end
allpment

2495°0

•

"

Individual awilrds as voted on by
M c iqs team members.
Most Improved - Keith Kinzel.
Most Valuable Wr estler - Gary
Nnkamoto.

EXCISE
.67!
.72

sLAB

BOILED
HAM

1 5
3 26

Greg H icks
Danny Dav is
Gary Nakamoto

NYLON CORD -TUBE TRACTOR

PLY RATING
4
4
4
6
4
6

Co111puter
'

111111111111111111111111111111111111111111

Slate, Wyoming.

FRONT TRACTOR TIRES
SIZE

wisr

PhOne 446· 4524

Lamar, Marque-tte, MtNINtppl, Nortfl

Ken
W. L.

P ia yer
James Snyder
Kei t h Kunze l

531 .w;KSON PfKE · At . 35

13l

).leigs wrestlers complete campaign
second year Coach Larry Grimes,
finished its season with an excellent
~ual record of 12-3 and a tournament
mark of 59-26, excluding district and
state meets.
Grimes said, "The boys worked
exceptionally hard this year and it
certainly shows. They all posted
good season ending records. We
started the season with 35 boys and
ended up with only 15, however, this
group worked hard and paid the

r---------------~

l8t

'»8
21-tl

carolina Stalt, Pepperdine, Plttsbw'gh,
Ofllll State, St.JQIE!Ph'a, Pa., S.n Francl~~m, Southl.'rn Cal. SwlhWfltem Lo.ll·
•JaN , T~rteW!e . TeM.-Chat\lnoiiJa, VU·

llu)lmond Roach [171; Bill Radfol'd and Raymond
Smi th 546.
Team hi~h ~tunc - Rooch':t Gun Simp HO; .
Toler's lnsuranc~ Co. IJ92 ;.H.&amp;:R. ~' i rcst onc 887 .
Hi~tl illd. ~a me - JerrY Vanlnwtt~en 216 ; Bill
funt fm·d 215 : HHy1norldSmilh 212.

;The Meigs wrestling team under ' price for success. They found out

sive teams. They yield only 52.1
points per game.
"We play exceUent defense. We
use multiple defenses. It helps us
control the tempo of the game,"
Campanelli said.
The four holdover starters are 6!oot·B senior forward Clinton
Townes, 6-8, 240-pound center Dan
Ruland and guards David Dupont,
a 6-5 junior, and Charles Fisher, a
6·2 ~unlor.
Townes paces the Dukes In scor·
lng with 16.6 points per game.
Townes supplies 12.5 point• a start.
They are the only players averag·
Ing In double figures on a team that
has hit 51.4 percent o! Its floor shots
this season.

Ottlt&gt;r t.P.am rt!t'f!Mnl lt'fRI ln aiptwllrltucal MJer: Bncnty, EVllnWuW, Houstm.
lndiN'IQ, Jamft MatUaon, Ka.llllas State,

Jl'l'l)' VanlnwH ~cn 574 :

'

Mullen. Ba•k r~~W - Coach Tammy Smith, Regina
Nance, Becky VaoM•ter, .J oyce Foreman, Theresa
Bing, Teresa Sbuler, Jodie Harris, Alana Lyons, Tony
Cummins, Rachel Reiber, 'uod Coacb Brenda Jolmson.
Absent were Roberta Green and Mandy Hill.

Buckeyes' opponent very successful

Rick Van Matre Class AA top mentor
·~·Southern's Kent Wolfe on Class A team
'

ORLANDO, Fla. (APl - There scoring average. He had one strtni:
don't know how It stayed out ." But
wasastrangesortofvindlcattonfor
of 17 consecutive tournaments . In
it did. And Watson missed a 12•
Tom Kite In hls playoff victory In
which he finished eighth or better.
footer that would have extended the ·
the Bay HUI Golf Classic.
But In all that long string, he didn't
playorr.
"I've played a lot better several
win,
Watson, with a closing 72, had the·
And It was becoming very, very
best tournament of his brief Amerl&lt;
Urnes, both last year and thls year,
and haven't won," Kite said Mon- frustrating.
can career.
But he won this one, a day late
Lanny Wadkins and Craig
day after he'd chlpped In for a winnlng birdie on the first hole of
due to a serles ot storms that dis·
StaHler missed the playoff by a sin·
sudden death, beating Jack Nick·
rupted and delayed theeventonAr·
gle stroke at 279. Stadler, who had a
taus and young Denis Watson of nold Palmer's Bay HIU Club share of the lead until he bogeyed
South Africa.
cou rse '
the 18th from a bunker, shot 70 and
"But I'm not ~vlng It back. It's
And Kite, who sUpped almost un- Wadkins matched par n.
awful hard to Win a golf touma·
noticed out of the pack with a last·
Ray Floyd, led or shared the lead
ment," Kite said .
round 69, was almost embarrassed
most of the day but knocked him·
He knows that as well as anyone.
by 11.
self out of It with two late double
He once mlsse!j a title by the mar·
Kite. Nicklaus and Watson, a 26bogeys, the final one from an em·
gin of one stroke. And that was a
year-old native of Rhodesia now Uv·
bedded tie In a hazard on the 17th.
penalty he called on himself when
lng In South Africa In his second full
He finished with a 76 and was tied at
he and he alone saw his ball move
year of competition on the tour, aU
2SJ with Fuzzy Zoeller, who had a
on the green.
finished the regulation 72 holes at
closing 67.
He had an incredible 21 finishes
278, S-under par. All had chances on
The victory, only Kite's fourth,
of 10th or better last year. And won
the playo{f hole. Nicklaus missed a
was worth $54,00l from the total
only once. He lost a playoff earlier
24·foot birdie putt that, Kite said,
purse of $ll0,00l and pushed his
was "as good a putt as you cantJt. 1
earnings tor the year to $115.nO.
this year In a remarkable tuma·
round when .E d Florl rolled In a 4Q. , - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - foot birdie putt and Kite missed a
6-footer.
In the last two seasons he'd done
almost all that could be done In golf
- except win. He topped the 1981
money-winners. He led the tour In

.r

Fired:
Clluct&lt; DaJ&gt; """'

WI

a.. 1lle IWit To lilt

�,.om.roy-Midd~,

The Dail Sentinel

o; :io

March 9• 1912''•
Present Access Line .Rates·Mfddlefield

NOTICE OF APPLICATION FOR INCREASES AND AD'. IUSTMINTS
IN UoTESANDCHARGES AND FOR CHANGES IN
REGULATIONS AND PRACTICES

•

THE. WESTERN RESERVE TELEPHONE COMPANY
Purl\llnl totht feflllirtmtnh of Stcfion 4'f" ,1'0f IM Ohiotl:tYi ..dCOIIt, Tht W"ttrn R"'nt Ttteptlont ComPIIfiY llht "COifiPII"'Y"I
lttreby ' '"'' notlc. tNt tn Jtnvery 21, ltlt, it l itH with the Pubtlc Utilities Ctmmlnlon of Otllo (the " Ctmmlt.s..,..' l •• ANflcatlon
( PUCO Doc:lltt No. 11-1116-TP·AIRI for euthorltv to lncrttM enct edjwst Itt retp t!MI cftartH for ttl......,.• Mf'V~" . . ttM!MfWk tii1'H9ft
Its forty ·ont ltltpftont txcMntll IOcltft 11 tnd ~nown es ... sllti!MIIa, Aurore, Auttlnlturt. lt lfiiN'ict,., lloaml"fNie, Centervllt., CMr·
don, Chaster, Ceolvlllt, CumMrlaM, DHstt, Ctst Cllr.,.,, Ftlrvltw, Gf'II"!YI, Hinckley, Hirlm , tt'fN'd .. it, H\lciiOI't, HuntMvrt.
l&lt;inesvlllt, Lltnt Hockin" MtdiHft, Mtst,otamie, Mlddltfletct. Mon•vl•t .~. Morr•ttOoNf , H.lWCM. • .,, fl!o . '"f;,.,, Old WI ~•""tttt'I. Parlilmtn,
Ptt~insult , Ptny. Pierpont, ~owlt.tttn Polat, Ouelltr City, Aitltlltld, R~ll Crtllll, AIISitll, !'MK.p!IOI'. Tr••mDUII. •net l ~.· inteur., tf!O: to
clttn9f certtln ol ill regutetionllrtd praettces rtitting tn suctlstrvlce 1M to lilt o~pproprltto ro~rill '""'' ,.tLectinl sue:" 1ncrusa ud
cl'lanoes.
Tl'llt noliu c:Dflfo!lins 1tH1 Jubttanct aN:I prayer of rt1t Altl)liratlon. toto-"'"· any lnttnstlod p,~rty ltttirinv complttlt dtlo~ll .. in•
formation with r",.ct to tll•ffec:ltd rat••· cl'ltrtes. r~ttulatlonJ anti practtu• shoukl inspect 1 copy ot Htt AtuMicatiOtt al'lclall •ttacttltd
sc:ntdults at lhit ofllct ot ltlt Commlnlon, JJS Sauttt Hittl StrMf. Colurnltut. Oh io 0111, ..- durlnt rtormai!MIIintn flours at tiM public
businltu otticn of tflt Company locettd tf 245 Nor-th Mtln StrHI, Hudson, Ohio 44U6; 4616 Park Avltnut, Ashtekt•, Ohio....,.; HS ~ambo
dtn StrHt, Chardon, Ohto44024 ; and M North fovrth Strlttl, New.,k, Otlio4liSS. tn a.Wit..,., ~ proposfod terrifs wtrt mallt4 on Octctber
s, lftl , •• p.~rt of tht Company's notification ot ih intltnl to 1111 to fttt meyors and llttltlatlve authOrlfiK ot ell munlciJNIIIift lhr041thollt tltt
tltrtitory In wt!lch tM Com,.ny opertlltl ,
This .Application tfiKit ratn end thtrttt for lltltpiMirllt Jtrvlctt to 111 customers of tht Cempaflly, e111c.Pt those sarvLctt ,..,.,.... by
concurrtncttwilh o.ftltr ttltpi!OM compenlttand tffltcts ttlt Company's Gtneral ExchanttTtrrit tnd us Local EIIC:P\tntt TarUI.
Arty person, fi rm. urporatton or auoclttlon m1y lilt, ,wrsu1nt te S.ctlon 4'P09. " of tttt OhiO ~evittcl COde, ottjec:tlont to me Pf'OIM*Iod
lncrus" and tdjustmt"'s In " ' " anct cftarttt. 1nd to IN propHMJ cl'llfl911 in rttuloltiffU aiMI ,racflc:n atttc:tlltf tN uma. Tilt Ob\tctiont may tllfVI '"-' sucl'l Appllc:etiM conlllnt proposalS thlt are unjt~staiMI dlltrlmlnttory or unnt10no1bM. Rec:or~~m.-.tlont whitl'l
dllfar from IN Appllcatiofl may 1M m.tllt by"" "au of me. PUOIIC Utllltln Commlttlon ot'C)tlloor by inttrvtnint partlts net mey liD adopfHOy tMCommlnlon.
The ComiNirt~ ' s Appllcetjon stat•• thtt txislmt rat" and cholrtot areln.Oequtlt ancl unnot produce ttlt rev.nvu rtciYirtd to mtltf
the Ofi90int cosh of pr-ovkllnt ••rvict and do not provide a ill1f ancl nasontblt rtturn on ltle walua of the Comu-ny' s uNd aiHI uutul
properly as of Novtmbt&gt;r )0, 1ft I . Tht ... ppllutlon turthtrstatu thlt bttwltn DtctmMr 11, 1t74 tltd Novam!Mr' H, I ttl, the Comp.~ny his
lnvtsiM $1U, UI ,fti .H lor uklltlons tnd Improvements toltllitltphont pint, whlit Itt e•pentts havtlncrt:tHCitt • more rapid r11ta thlt
111 rev.nuts . Th.t COfriPIInY slaNt that it nttffs the propottcllncretN In nvenutt to enable II to·m•lntain quality serViet•ncl It tntble It to
mt lnttln crHit .-.nd tHreiCt uplttl for tht upen1ion 1nd lmprovfment of Us ptent In ltcordlnc:e wlttl IMfiMic dtmend. At Ml forth in tN
Appllctlon, tho Company tnllciJNits tltat the rat" and clltrtt proposed In tflt AppiiUIIofl wllllncreuti.Jtalannuat rtwtt~utt bV St,JI7,0n
and tNt such addttionJI rev.nut will provide • minimum return anCI will not provide more thiln • teir o~nd rti~DftAOit rettot rtturn on""
vetueol tltt compan¥' 1 prOPtrt¥ .
.
NM ratUIIfiOIIS proposed In ntt Appllct!lon intluelt tht fOllOWing I
.-~ provitlo~ rnat cuttomen who disconnect or removt urvlct "!Uti return tlltllfititJit Compen~·provldtd •"'•phone lnstr•m•nts to a
sptelfltd Company location, unlltlt other lptclfic erranvltmtnlt have bttn malte lt;~r rKavtry of the lnslruat:~tnll. !lhould cwt!Ointn elect
not to return lfltu Instruments, the cus tomer will bt bllml an appropriate cholrfillt lor instruments not returned and upon payment. ftlt In·
strumtnts will btcon1ttht1WO..,-ty of the cu1tom1tr .
·
·
- R111utat1on• thet cl•ultl menr U•m• otl&lt;ttHCI ,,,li.,n •PNrttws end mlsctllen.ou• eqvipmtnt as " limited ~veiltblllty ", whereby
svclt efllll,mtnt l•pr.ovlclfd on y If avalleblfl; 1 ~om Wlll5tinCIL wtrrn~o~.~ttstoclc .
· '' ··
- • c..,r..tt ,., Oi.ltlet IOCifion for pre-ln~t•ll•ll~ etl conceattd Interior wire wlll'lln a buildint durlna the initial cortatructlon tr- durlnt
remodellnt of tit• t:lulldlnt .
- A servltt charge lor clttiCIIt received trom 1 custome-r in PIYmtnl for strvlce ,.!Mitred. or for any ot!Mr reason ot incltbttclneu,
which ert tulultctutntly rtturntct fro.., tiM bank due to lnsulfltltnt fundi or tor any otl'ler retsOfl.
- A chtrtt tor calls mac~~ to DlrtCtory Anlstanct. Tltlt Cfllrvt will 01 blllt&lt;l on a per all blsis tor etch call made aner thlt monthly
tllowanca of liVe c•llt per llrte or trunll .
·•
- Ttw basis at ctlarpl tor uble PAin will be chanted from II . ) billing lor one pair !rom custom11r IOC111ion to customer location to Cb. )
Olllintforont ~tflr tram cuslomer lou lion tocrnlriiil olf iu plut c»ntpair from unfnl office to customer location.
- • proVIsion whtrtl:l'l' cuttomert ord~tring tingle-lint feltphont ltbtnd otller tncllltry dtvlctt f11rnlslttcl by ttllt Com~&gt;oan~ on 1 l1ta11t basis
may reflli"ltlllt Compan~ to •hlp liM tctU1pm1tnt to the customer' s toullon vit postal or deliverr ~trvlct' hw thtcou Incurred .
-h«:illarr•nttmt nh lor servlcts not s~aclfltd below will be charted on t basis of cents Incurred by ttle Com,eny in provld int such
~nlte. (9fllrtch lor billint of such ltrvlce1 may bit uttblishtd for a p~trloel of up to tlthtv-tour Ct41 months In lentlh.
The schtdult of pr"entend proposed r•tet rltquuted In theComptny's Applletlion lsllstect INlow .

'

.....

"

,... '

"{O·lOOO Min

tnt htt Aru
lolll

• sut Ions)

' '-I II

( lOOI-6000

Min ltt~ltons)

I

..... htt Arll
"lOflt A
"lON I

'

...
"
IZ , OOI-24,000
1•hi
llalfMI)

12. S&lt;l

10.60

ll. JO

6 . 1~

9.10
10.95

7.25
8.00

7. OS
1.00

'.

uo

)Z4,001-41,000 I
.. 111 u~ott.-•1
10.80

rot• I hth.lnft

• • Yl
"(.. ,001 · 91,CXXI
\lltiCJrlt)

I.,.

1).45

1\,ll)

• • Yll
• Tou\ hthangt
I96 ,001·192,000

•11e

(l}

? U•S

]l_)S

I

4. 25
8.65

Bue lite Artt

Zooe

~

121

":'1"

9.90

ll. BO

rrunk line M11eege.
tach quarter •tle{Z)

Two-Party Access Line

each

Ml1e~,

9.05

10. 40

..

Btu A&amp;tt Artt

11.80

Zone A

13.00

11.00
12 . 75

I"

1.95

11 .60

10 . 70

14 .80

',

••

Residence Service
fwo-Partr Fou r~Pa r-ty

lnd hldut l Cine
illst . Atte

Arl!t

Zone A

10.15

1. 35

12. IS

11. 10

.

KTS

PBX

I I. IS
1J . ' 5

8. 30
9. 05

s.55

Area

I . 55

lnd1vldual Lint

w

us

5.05
5.05

3.60
3.60

Ul

lnd1vtduti line

4.25

·~

Base ht@ Aru
1 Zone A (2)

8. 50

lwo-Parlt

four-Party

4.00
8.00

10.40
11.40

Total

10 .85

18.00

19.50

) . 00

5.00

7.65

5.75

Rl!sfQenc• Service
ne
run

Ul

•actl quuter •tle(2)

29.25

Business Servtce
Line kiS Trunk

PBX

29.70

Trunk

29.70

Bush1e•n Servlct! '

lndhlduai

11 .25

I . Z5

11 .25

IO.Z5

.60

-~ lwei - Part) Access Line

Mileage ...en Ql.larter

19.25

20.zo

Sc ~ed~o~ le

EAchange

of

~rese nt

Pretent
Ratntaand

Accn ~

~nhllle

M:&gt;rrlsto.n
Old Wuh ln9ton
Powhlttn ~ o ht
See AbOf !

CMip&amp;r I s o~
Du cript lon

1R
Comp1r lsan

Acc ess l lnt
One Telephone
One !&gt;.It let
Total Nelj htr
Ol d R1te
I Increase

."

Acuu L tn1
O~t T1lepnone
Ont O~tllt
Tou l Nt._ RIU
Old RHt
I Incrust

F1tr ~ lh•

Qutkar Cit)'
"'"'"

...
cool~t ll1

Acctu Lint
Ont Tit ltphont
Onlt Out let
roul Ill• Rite
Olo htt
I Incrust

Clllllbtrltnd

AcCUI line
Ont T411phont
Ont Outln
Total lltw RUt
Ole
1 lncrutt

Cllrldon
Me•opotMI!h
Ml dd 11tfllld

[Ut

•u• "

Park1111n

Stt AbOwt

Sit

Do rut

Abo~t

SU AbOYit

Acuu lint
One Tt l tphOnt
Ont O...t l tt
TOUl 111111 IIUit
Old llltt
1 lncrutt
Acctu Ltnt
ll!lt Tt ltpl\clne
Ont Out let
foul 11111 llltt
Old R&amp;u
1 lncrtue
~ c e\t ll~e

Ont re ltphone
Ont Ol!tlltt
Tot1l Ntw hte
Old Rltt
'I Jncruu
~ceu Lh11
Ont Tt l tj'I~Onlt
One Out let
rct1l New R1tt
Old Rate
I lncrute

"
Roell Crnk

15

n v

run

111

Bus iness SerYice
ne
ex run

9.65

I

line kTS

PSI

Trunk

11.11
'1.25

lrunk

Rates-Char~on

Lint

PBJ

kf$ Trunk

(with

'

Clevela"~
n

Trunk

20.2U

v

.60

30 .• 5

IZ . 75

...

51.65

62. 90

Calling)

ua

run

111

'""

50.65

39. 15

.60

.60

lifO•

' ...

111nd 2
112,001-2.. ,00U
11111n stttlons)

Ban Jf1te ~r'e 1

I J, J5
11 .20
20 . 60

11 . 10
15. 15

IO.JO
1],15

Sind J

Ben R1tt Aru
Zonlt A•
Zone II*

U.J5
. 17.95
21.50

Bne ~Itt Aru
Zone A•

1-4 ,6()
18 .l5
21.9C

A'

Zone I'

lon• 11•

Bind 5
(64 , 00 1·128 , 000
M1tn 5Utlons)

rot1 l f.cn1n9•

B~nd

6
J 12B,U01 ·2S6,00J
Jilaln Stations )

rout hchln9'-

S.nd 1
(25.6,001 · 512,000
Ma i n Stat ions)

Tot a l hCh1n9e

15 ' 75

18.&amp;0

17 .20

ll . l'O

10 .75
14. 35
17 .95

IS.80
11) . 40

ll. 40
16.05

B.JO
11. !Ml
14 .70

11. •o

Z5.60
28.80
12.00

25.60

Z0.60
l4. 05
u . so

l1 . 50
30.95

Zl. SO

34 .~o

zs. 10

11.110

125.60

17 . 25

11 . 60

.so
.41

'70.S5
20. 50

-ml'l

17. 60

)5. 20

.BO

.so

·"

. 41
lr:t5

!PIT

I r.I'Jl

...

S2S . 60
. 80
. 4!

lH:!S
20. 20

' 12 .80
.80

"1Tll!
9.85

jg , ?0

...

Sl5 . 60

"1Tll!
9 . 45

18.90

...·"'

125. 60

5 .2~

5. 2S

.80

·''

"In!

'ITr.!l

m:n

......

S2Ui0
.80
.!I

"1Tll!

"Znl

5..75

IU S

"2 .80

=

.80

"1Tll!

"Znl

9. 115

1l':ll
$12 . 80

...
·"'
"1Tll!

6.05

16 .15

12. 00

ss.oo

34.40

41 . Z5
44,10
48 .1 0

~8.70

U.M

57 . • 0

41 . 65

JO; !15

28 , 10

32.30

41.60
44 .80

•

lt.JO

29.l{)

U . IO

·58.40

ZIJ . 20

36 . 50

29.20
)2 . 85
15. 50

41 . 45
Sl .IO

115 . 70

32 . 115
JUO

l\.50

JO

]3.10

41 . 25

50. 55

•

26. 40

14.05

15. 95

t 8. 10

MISCULAICEOUS SERWIC£ MID

) 4.50

]4.50

15.20

15. 20

) 1. 50

]1 . 50

.41

"'11":1!
7.85

$25.60
.80

-r&lt;:v!

"In!

...

17 .so

'"5T.1l
125 .60

...·"'

olluror•
lllnbrldge
H1ncklty
llorthfle1d
Aicnfiela

Run.tll .

•

21. 40

-n:JI
S27 . 50

.so

·"

"lP5
lO.SO

~

Tel-To~ct!

...

.

~-

-.·

26.00
22.25
19.00

21.50
22.25
22 . 25

1.110
' .110

.Ill

'·"'
8.00
11.75

.41

·"

Non-flu'~

Non -Fl ush (Hopadtlt/11oonintdl1e)
Outdoor In CIIIIJUny F~rnhhed Boa
Fluih/Ch.itdoor In CutlONr Furnls~e&lt;l Be•
Flwsh/Outdoor In Cust~r FurnhhltG Bo•
{ifoptd11t/fll00111lngltalt)
Outlet-Monthly Rate•
P'IUt•Milnt~11 Rite•

...
.41

~

n.so

5 1. 75

U.M

· Shndard Te l1tph011t
Color TelqlloM•
Color Titlepllont..
W•ll Ttleplton••
C1111p1tt Set w/0 111 Li ght
Cont""r•
Conttllprt {Hoptdl1e/110!IIIngdtlit )
ContiiiiiPrt•
\l1tl·ln-Htndstt
0111·1"·111ndstt (Hopecl&amp;lt/flliXIIIf'IIJdl l e )

"1r.ll

...
. 45

T.l5

22.50
......,.,.

01a1-tn~HW!dsltt*

......

$JJ,70

D111 • 1n·llandut••
'•n•1
St 1tims/ht1nslon5 fr• Gunt ltOWts*•
Clndlttttct
Cht1t

-n:'l!l

4D . • O

11T.111

Ct1dhi

5l. Z!

'

Ctlllnq Stn iu

63.00

Cii . 40

...·"'

~
z~.

so

'"11:1'1135.10
. 00

. 41

"'!r:u
25.10

"lr.1l

T•lnsburg

Pt)' StetCori (AurOI'I·, AutttnOwrg, h tft~t drga,
Hlnc,1t11 , Hwdsod, .....,r,, lklrthfttlo.
Pn lnsuJ•I ,.,r,., lttctlflt1f, Rutttll,
,
Twlnsburt
PQ Sutton (Atlltlbuh. Centtr11lle, !Whon.
"ltf"P«&lt;t, TN~D~ll )
Pl.)' St1tton {CIIirHn, CMsW, lenl~t, l\Ult
lloctl .. , MllntwHlt, NorrhtOIIII, Old
'lllsltl~t~ltlll, ,..,..,-' ~1nt, r•son)
,.., SUt1CII (1'1\rviiW, M1r•• Qa,.~Ur Cl\y, Rot.

C-)
'Q SUttCifl ICoohllla, Cllllbtr11nd)
P'J Stltllfl ..-ale 11oa.tt'llftle)
P1.1 Stattan ll"'"llle; DorstU
l t• ...,_aranc:t

"•/lTS

."

"..

\() .
, \()

~,

1.00

1. 00

.zsu

1.00

. 25•
. 25 ..

·'"
.&lt;0
1.00

,.;o

.so••

. . 40
I. O&lt;l
112 Auocht ·•o

. 50 ..
NC

~r¥1ct

~r¥ i u

l . 25

ltr ftllpltont Systtllls

75.00

may bltcllllt effltcthe.

...
...
.45
. 4!

l!!l!rDYtd lllob llt T1tltphont Strv l u
Sl!nlu Artl
,..,..., Sentu An••
~tritle i': h111nt l St.ndtrd Stt
5"1' Ch.,.nt l 5ttrt'dird Stt •
Si11111t Chlnn• l Dtlwxt Stt
AdclltCon•l Chenn.l
tljllllitton•l Channt1•
Mob11t Eatens l on Ttltphone
...,. .. Cdntlnuou~ hl11 Control
-.n -Conttnous ll•hJ Control•
t~~nttnuet~~s l1thy Con,rol
A111tlt1ry LIIIIP
Atl-111ary Morn
"'Uittrj)ri)C)f E.uipllfflt Ctblntt

10.00131

i . OOill
9.00
))

10. 00 l

9. 00 31

s.oo

'I

IO .OO!l J

1. 00 l l

,,..

9. 00( 3)

1.00131
.31l"

9.00 jl)

'"

.50

.80

1.00•

"'tc:

.50••

.15•
1.25
1.2 5
1.50

1. so•
1.25
1.50
1.50*

!IC

1.25

1.40

1.40
1.40
1.30
1.30

Z.SO••

1. 30
1.30

1.50

1 .10

2.00
3.00
l .OO

L&amp;S

.75••

:

.UIIC 5er~tu
hiic Strvlct jTOIIt I llltUtt)•
•utc SM-viu (Tont OnlJ)•
'-OJ••t Rtceher .. Tor\e Only
~odti Recthtr • Ytbr1tor/Tona
fOCltt IKttver•
~.
Fo,..lll'l Ctntul Office Strwlct
htlfltefl Contiguous Ctl\trt l Off lc" :
AJrlh•e Dh tance S •llu or ltu :
PIX Trunk
lus l ntu Lint
An illtnu llrte

.80
2 .!6

3.90
1.15
1.15
1.15

1 0 .~ 0

10 .5(]

1.00
1.00
1.00

1.00

·""'

zo. so
II . &amp;0
11.4!
IO . 90

) .10

1 .00

·"

PreUI't

~t~~~ntnlr

10.00

1.50
Pr(!posed

1.00
vartfble••
l.OO

:1ot1t~ly

10.00
t. 50

(101
(10

so

( 10)

r IO )

1. 00

1. ! 0•
Vuhbilt••

1. 00

1.00
Prut~[ ltonthly Rate

...."'
ProEX!std "'&gt;nthly htt

111 . 00

Z4.50

JB .OO•
6 .00**

24 . 50
24.50

VtrliDll!

5.00

3.00

1.1{)

3.00
2.00..

'.00
1.00

.11

1. 00

1.25.

1.00

4 . 25
! . 00
10.00
Ytr11bilt

'·"'
'·"'
3."'

1. 0l
3.00
J . so•
1. 25 ••
). 00
).50•
1.25 ..
6.00

•.oo

6. 00

9.00

15.(10
6 . 00
1. 60

'1.· 00
75
J . OO..
] . ~··

·"

Prtttnt MonU l y R1t1t

1.00

8.10
11 .10

8.65

11 .65
II , 75
II , 75
15 . 70
1. 45

....,.
, . 4~

15 . 60

""
Prorottd Monthlr R4tlt

40 .00

u .so

zs .oo-

lO .OO•

82 . 00

1. 50

s.oo•
5. 00
l.1S

twsintn ltllt

5.as

14 , 55

liltS i4tftelt l lnt

5.11

14.51

s.u

14. 5!

4.30
l.2S••
i.!S

lUI
14.51

Ttr~~tnttiOfl

'

.

li O)
l iOI
{10 )
( 10 )
( 10 )
(101

2. 00
I · 50

I. 00
3.00
1. 50
Cost

1. §0

·"

7.65
IS.DOlO. CIO"
10. 10
11.50

lO.oo-

1111 Ttleprtone Sntalt

7.50

1111

.n

7.55

7.55
ll .SO
12.00
11 .50

· loll T)'lle Key Systltlll
Four~ line let 5)'1tM
Adlittton•l CO/fX/WATS ltnr C•rd
ktJ S15t~ Sl111J lit•llnt Ttlf1)honlt
5b-lutton ley T~tlltpftonl!
}
Ttn-lutton ley TeltptJone
twln-lutton Kly Ttltphont
Etg~tten-lutton ltiJ Talephonlt
Twnty-lutton Kl)' Ttl_.none
ttltrty-lutton liti Tt1eptloot
1~1)'
Dhp I)'
HandtfrM Uni t
C.atptnton feltllhtlllll Htndsfree unit

,._.r

lnt~fflcltnt Fund

13.25
13.25
1).25

Ch!sk ChlrQt

ln t~o~ ffl cltnt f und ChKk Chtf'9t, per check

RKQ!!IIDCt ClttriU

IS.SO • ,

1.00(•11• (6 )
ll .OO •

I.CIO/IIIlt 161
IO . SO +
1.00/11111 (6)

JJ .25 •

1.001 l/4 •Clt (S)
ll .:S •
1.001 1/4 •lit (5)
1). 25 •
1 . 00/l/~•11• (5)

IJ , 2S +
1.001 114 •tie (!!I)

.n.

1). 25 +

1.001 lf4
ll . lS +

(51

1. 00/ 1/4 •11• (5)

~Konntet fro. IIOn·h~t
RKc:rt.-ct frOIL llon•hJIItnt (Rock Crftt,
11-IRJidllt, ...,_ala)
Recon!lkt rr• IIDn~hJMf'lt (rerkllan)
RtcormKt fr!JII IIIMI·h~t lttuntlbllr',
hst thrlekll, Nhfctltfla d, Mts.,ot• I•J
Reconnect fr011 Jlott ~ h)lllnt (tclngsvtlle, Oorstt)
RKonntet frOIL Ytcttlon ll•ta
'

M&amp; t ntf"MC• of Stn tct Chtrtt

Tttt Ow'..
Pr•tse Vhlt Cltartt
'r•i .. YhH Chtrtt (Rock Cr"k, l1001111~ftle,

-hi

7.95

s.50

?0.!0
11 , 60

I . 75

1.00

1.00

fl ,l!
10 .90

50.00
82.00

no.oo
no.oo

82.00

310.00

15 .00
25 .00

10.00

20 . 00

70.00

15. 00

_25. 00

70.00

l5.00

265 . 00

82 .00

255.00

25.00

10.00

25.00

"

23.25
21 . 25

20.00

90 , 00

10.00

liO . OO

1.00

•o.oo
•o.oo

10. 00

1)0 .00

1.110
20.00

1)0. 00

20.00

•o.oo

10.00

1)0. 00
1. t5

"
10.110
20. 00
20.00

20.00
20.00

.

00 .00

NC
20.00
C~ar;t

Prntnt

10 .00
Prtttllt Chlrpt

11. 5(l
Proputd

.oo

1. 25

) ,00

10 .00

Ct~•r;e

! .110
! .00

10.00
NC

Prultnt Chtrplt

C l~trlt

15 . 00

11.00
18. 00
3. 00

18 . 00

"'

•c

I. 25

3.00
per work lnt
tNt ton

""'"'

Prettnt Ctlirtt

NC
Preunt

Propoull

10.00
12.00
12.00

u .oo

14 . 00
16.00
ID .OO
12.00

3. 00
Proposed Ch&amp;rpe

' . !0
Ch~ru

proposld Ch•rge

15.00

21.-45

10.00
1.00

28.45

:!.00

1.$0••

!.00
Prt!!f!t Ch1r11t

2~ . -45

28.45

:!8.45
28.45
P!'OI!Ottd Cllltt!

10 .00
30 .00

,10.00
30.'110

10 .00

30.00

Pl~e-.nt

II:
wartlbl.• (7)
II:

1.00

...
,.,,...

rt• a l0111

~ll c&amp;tlon

b ch&amp;nvt

Vlt r~f

u

dur t n~

1nd the dtte upOn

t~

f~o~ rt he r

for uld proposed " hedvln; •nd
rt li ltf to which .\ppllc&amp;f'lt 1111y be cntltltd

prllit uu .

C Qt!PA~f

'

Charles G. Sheets, Dorothy Sheets
to Delta Resour(!j!S Inc., Right Of
Way, Scipio.
Donnie W. Baninger, Kathy A.
Ba11inge1· to Racine Home National
Bank, Two Pa1·ceis, Lebanon.
Anna
Louise Harbrecht,
Deceased. to Phil J . Harbrecht,
Robert F. Harbt·echt, Cert. of Tran·
sfer, Pomeroy .
·
Maynard L. Baker, Shit·ley M.
Baker by Atty. In fact, Maynard L.
Bahr, to Ca1·l J . Gillilan, Carole s.
Gillilan, Parcels, Cheslet·.
Timothy R. Conner, Thebiia Coil.
ner to RobeJ'I Eugene Roble, Clara
Lugene Roble, .412 ac1·e, Salisbury .

28.15

1.11 Ill

or ltl'twlrt to ovtltt
St..,..d Interior stttlon •irt (non•kt1 l .
Ptr out1tt
·
luthtttt
llatlctl!'ttt
1\!ltl-lint or clblt

they called on their granddaughters,
Cindy and Doris Ross who are at·
tending Hocking Technical College
In Nelsonville. Fred Cheadle Is in 8
serious co"ditlon.
Mrs. Rex Cheadle Is in MI. Cannel
Medical Cente1·, Colwnbus, where
she Is scheduled far major surgery.
Those from .this conununlty who
were In Columbus on·Saturday far a
wedding reception han01ing Mr. and
Mrs. Duane C. Baldwin Included
Madge Dye, Dale Dye, Mr. and Mrs.
Thad Dye and children, Murl
Galaway., Mr. and Mrs. Arthur
Crabtree and Freda Smith. The
reception was held at the Olentangy
Chapel, Olentangy River Road. The
marriage of the young couple was
solemnized Feb. 12 In the
Washington, D. C. temple of Church
of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints.
The bo·ide, the former Usa Dye, Ia
the daughter of Madge Dye, local,
and the late Alvin Dye and a granddaughter of Dale W. Dye, local. Mrs.
Baldwin attends Ohio Stale University and Mr. Baldwin Is a 1981
graduate of OSU.
Kare" Gilkey, Athens, and Mrs.
Walter Jordan, Joshua and Jeremy,
called on their gramlfather, Uncoln
RWISell, at the home of their uncle
and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. Franklin
Russell I" Middleport. They slopped .
enroute home and visited their aunt ·

•

Carmel News, By the Day ·

2fl.t5
10 .00
130. 00
130 .00
110 .00

Prnl rt thtrf! ()I)

10.10

~IJC II

£ - 1 of tlllt

~nil l~•l

t o orders of rQ11r C011111 lulon,

Mark Gillogly, soo1 uf Mi'. nnd Mrs.
John David Gillogly. haHcompleted
an 18 noonth course as· Electronic
Technician at the Ohio Institute of
Technology In Colwnbus. Mark Is
now at the home of hla parents
where he helps with the 01·chard and
layer !ann operation.
Mr. a"d Mrs. Dorsey Jordan,
local, and Ralph Jordan, Nelsonville, spent a weekend, In Colwnbus
with their son-In-law and daughter,
Mr. and M1'S. Dennis Devine.
George (Jack) Lowther, who
spent several daya at O'Bieness
Memorial Hospital in Athens Is now
ip MI. Ca1mel Hospital (Westl In
Columbus for observation and treatment.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Frazier,
Gallipolis, visited Mr. and Mrs.
Harold Gillogly and the two couples
called on Mr. and· Mrs. Paul Gaston
and Mr. a"d Mrs. Joe Gaston and
baby son.
Billy Ross, Stoutsville, came for
hill grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
William Cheadle and they visited
their daughter, Linda Harrison,
Stoutsville and granddaughter and
family, Mr. and Mra. Sam Johnson,
Circleville, then they journeyed on
to LockbOur"e whe1-e they epe"l
some time with Mr. Cheadle's
bt·othel' and sislel'·in-law, Mr. and
Mrs. F1·ed Cheadle. Enroute home

16. 11

).15
) .00

3

I

1

'rnltllt Monthlr ftttt !ropoltil ~thlr Rtta

12 . 50
10.00

2~1·"
. 10
29. 55
-1 .85
33.40

10.50 .
11 . 50
.. . 50

Pltr II'Ork tng
button

lnttr-cc. for Mwlt l· l lne: teln'lonu,
p1r t«~ sUt iont
Ttlrft•llllt Powr ~pP l y

"
1

S c hltd ~lt

Carpenter Personals

22 .45

3.00
1. 75

Dw t ton

"'
• IS

5!1.15

2. 50

s.75

per worl: i nq

c.tle '''~"' .,.; lit! lt.,.

,01)

Estsbl h iw111nt of ttrvlci! c nute

T11111•I1M tt lephOI'!t

~~~~~ to d tstlflttt o • S •II••·
to dHttnCtt o.-r 10 •tles .
1!1I .,1111

S,.Chl heordlfll lrllftlt. s Ctfttrll OffiCI
- t.,..t~tetton
fit....... ClrCIIH

Strwtce

9).10

1.20
1.10

IO. SO

14.51

~l gn11 1 ns

ll~.SG
NC

'1.00

Rts t dltnet ll nt

6. IS

Ptnon•l

N .OC

. 11
.11

1.00&lt;

13. 00

Trv~k

htlblhh 1ddltlon11 •1plllllttlu1 lhtln9, u ch
Ru t oral c"~rtt for rutort~ servlct wh i t ~ ~~~
btlt, Otnled for n6n·p•Jflllnt
C ha~9• color of dill contrcl Mill
!n5 1de IIIOvt .of dhl control htsO
!n• lde 1110ve of r1dla control Mill
lnt ldt MOvt of 11\ttnu
Rt1110w1l gf urvlCit lftd equ i PMnt
ln,t • 11 •t lon of lfltltlltrproof equ1p~W~~t
"~ i net for 111011/ltl"f r111 10 t&lt;J~ t PM"t

Multi-Lint f• lephOI'!n ( 11)

BusiMU Line

"

"
(101
(10

1\0

uch

a. 10

l4 . 00

\_

( 10)

2 . 00
\ , SO

1_,

1.05
7. 15
1. 15
I, 15

10.00

15, 50

(10)

J.SO
2 .~0
).50

2.S0

When ut lsflctory full clbll rtg Is
present
Wilen cab lint Is "ot prttant or 110t
ut tsf1ctory
Ch1ngt frOfll one l hndlrd color control ~ld
to lf'IOthtr stltldlfd cclor
Acthltlng 5-ervl cl Chli'~t. fer tllfl ""cuur)'
td j ~stlllents to COflllltCt an alrtld}' 1nsu l lltd
custOilllr-owntd ~ntt, .tllctl It of 1 tuiubh
tJ'IIIt , 1ncl make It r•ad)' for MObllt urwlce
to t~e Nor~ttl Servin Aru:
[ut Cltrlllon hch111g1
ll\ld10fl, Autlil\bllrg £~en1n9e
~11 1\ t htenslon TltltjlflOfllt, 1nSU I 1td 1t t~e
, . . t1111 •s lnlthl tnst1 ll 1t 1on, tKn
14oblle htenston Ttltpflone, IGded on separ•te
whtt, uch
Aw• t I l&amp;ry horn and 11011-tont 1n~o~ous rtlt)' con t r o1
tq~o~lp~~~nt, lnttllltd It uMt t111f u lnithl
l11stt l1 1tlon ucn
Eut Chrlclcn [IChll''
Hwdson, ~st tnburt lChtngt
Au~ll hrJ horn Md non-contlnuoal rehy CO'ItrOI
tq\llplllent, tnt tllltcl on SIPifiU ~ hi t , lttCh
Eut Chr t d~ htllanl}l
Hudson , A.ust tr~twrg b t ha1191
Au~111art
a~d ccntlnaous reh~ contrQl
equ ip!lltut , l n1hl11d It IMII tt1111 n Initial
ln1t1 l h t Lon, uc~
A~•lliary 1111111 1nd continuous rehy control
ltqulp~~tnt, tnstt1 1td on uparate ~hit,

Ratt

1.10
1. 50
1.00

p~o~ rs vtnt

Elson Dailey, Anna Lee D~iley to
James E. Diddle, Right of Way,
Lebanon .
Vicky J . Matheny, June WhytseU
to James E. Diddle, Right of Way,
Olive.
Dorothy Hoffman to Benz Land
Company, Parcels, Colwnbla.
Mary Elizabeth Archer to Edward
,Archer, Griff Archer Jr., Phyllis
Haley, Parcela,Salbbury.
Roy A. Briggs, Donna J, Briggs to
Franklin Laudermtll, Judy Landermilt, parcel, Salisbury.
Clara Jean France to Phyllis L.
Young, Lot, Middleport.
Eva D. Stout to Mary Stewart,
Joeeph stewart, Lot, Middleport.

tl~~~t:

"

) .00•

Itt conttineo in

Property transfers
( 10 1
( 10 )
( 10 )

]. 00

Addlttcnt l ctltnntl, addltd on ft~lfltt
vhlt, uch:
hll ChridClll flct11nge
Mwhcn, ~us tlnburg Exc n1nge
For rtm•• ' fr011 one 'Illite It and rtl nltt liltl on In • diflltrent ~tl'll c lt 1t tilt •Mill

1.00

Rate

E1t1Dihll

lirtnt suc h other 1nd

fit( IIUU RN RESERVE rELEPHOit£

3. 00
3.00
3.00

1.

Slntlt Channtl Sttn4u4 Set, prn tetd
1nd lntt&amp;lltcl by ll'lt C011Pa11y :
[ut C16Jildon E•c.h•nt•
Hudson, ~ust tnbwrg EIChlflfU
Stnglt Cllannt l Dt lu..t Stt, provldtd
and lnstlll~.t&gt;Y tiM COIIPfill)'
Additlou l Ch1nnal, \nsttlltd 1t U• u111
tl• n ln1tlt1 installatlolft or otr.tr
tddltlou l c~1nntl, tach :
Eut Claridon C•ch•nt•
Mwdson, Aw1tlnb11rg bcP\tnge

10.00
10 .00

1.00&lt;

lrld t ill rfiJ!.IIIt iOOI f;rld

16 . 15
1. 9!

Mobile Te14ph0f\f Sir~lct

10 .00 .

Cost••
10.00
i . 00*•
1.QOt•
7.co-•

"hid~

•n tfhclht 1hte

C.
0.

t o ln

(5 )

1. 10
1.50
7.50

. 50•
7.00*•

. ~{rllllf Dh tlnCi!! _,,. t lllll S 11t l tf,
1 leu til111 10 111111 :
•
PU frvn•

PJX

14.S5

. 50•

PtrtOiltl StanaHnt S.rwlct

Airline Oltt•nce owtr 10 • ll es :

S.Z!

1. 00
1. 00

C he~s

)) , "~)

Anteltnet (10)

Proeotfd Montl'llr IIIU

,50•

Apprqwe t l'le propo11td rllltl 1nd

B• .\pprov• t he f l l lfl9 of t iM

41.1!

l. SO
1. 00
2.U

lnltltl Strw , ct Ordtr Cllargt
Sirvlct Ordtr ( ~If~·
Ctntrel Office Ch•rtt
~ 1t ittt ton C~lrtt
PrtMht Wlrlnt Chlrgt, ptr o~o~t Itt
Suticn Hand11nt Cll1rgt, l)lr stt

'"'"II@' fhlt

6. 50••
2.00

Single Line Tltlephone
Key Tel ep ~one
Kty Telel)hone•
Ko felephon• ..
ICIJ Telephone
Kty Telephone•
Ke)' Teltpltol\lt**
Y•ht·B~uon Key TeliPftOne
fl9~ tnn•lutton Key hl~t~~IIOnlt
Tilnt)'·lutton Key Tthl»lottl
T.ienty·lutton Key. TtltPhOM
Thlrl7·B~tt01'1 Key TtltPIIOfll
lu1yltulllltr tllsplty
lusy ,._..r Ohplty
Hl.nd1frt1t Unit
Catjtlnlon Handtfrte Unit
Turrlttl, s i ng It or doubllt t ldtd*•
Tie Tru11k to PIX S.ltchi»trd••
. ~tch U..lt of C1ble (lO' or fr1ttlon tl'lertof)

.45

1.00

..

5.so••

Pltk~uo

Kfy 5)'Sttlll
Sh · lutton
Sli-Button
Sh Button
Ten·lulton
Ten•lutt0f1
Ttn•lutton

.4!
. 45
.45
.4!

.45
. 45
. 45

"'
Present Moftthh hte

lA l.JI)t Key TtlepiiOne S7stett
1A lJPt key Teltphone Systlll*
lA T)111 ·Key TelepiiOnlt 5)'1ttii*Four·ltnt Key hlepiiOtlt 5Jstt11
AdO \ tlon•l CO/Fl/WATS Lint Card
Nlne · 5tttion lnttrcOIII hptns ion
Ntnlt•Stltlon lnttrCOill hp1nsion ..
Oil\ lntercOIJI Stttion
Muw1l lnterc~
Kiflull IntercOM
Tt l~ TO!oth lnter~OM
Ttl·fOII(h IntercOM

P1-oposU Monthlr lhte

\ , 75•
I. 25

.20

COMhslon or Otl lo

pr1c t lcts •ffltctlng the s.-;

lt.U

').· !0
25
l.lS

s~bttqutnt

"

Llt il lt l ~t

fo llo~o~IIHJ :

A.

22.4!
7.95
24. 10

1.00

Initial Serwlct Of'dtr Chtrgt
SuOuqwtnt Sar~lu Oretr C114rge
Ctntrel Oft~~ ~ Ch~rt•
¥hltetfon ~"" · ;e
Pr.. ht Wirlfl! F;t\lfgl, ptr c~o~tltt
Statton Hindi ng Chlrgt, ptr lit

. 40

l /2 Auocl&amp;ttd

rtquut s tile P\lbllc

lwtineu ( 10)

1.00

.tO

to do trll

~llcatlon

All Ot~er E~t hlllt' l

. &lt;0

1. 00

TM prayer of thlt

TlrHf , P. u.C.O. No.9) 1110dlf 1t11 t o reflttt

1. 00

. 50•

f...O·llne Teltohont
f_,o·l l ~• Teltphone*Tiirtlt llnt-Telt!»&gt;one
Thrtt· l tnt Telephone•
htenslon cher;e for e&amp;c~ l ine used•
ThrU · l 1M Teleplioneu
T~n - Llnt Power Supply

119.00

0111 C•ll

·"'

(rtcofon
. 80
(rlcofon (Roci Crnk, lloptclalaJIIOOI!lintdllt ) . 85
(ricofon•
. 85•
hploslon-Proor Ttltpttone
10. 50
hplOIIO'I•Pri)Of ftiepllont (Rock Cr..k,
lli:lpedalt/8100111119dllt)
,
II . SO

Ul . 70

,I{)
. I{)

NC•

-otnotts r1tt for cun~rl cf t lllt P•rlllltn, Huntlbwrv. MIOclletleld, '-•opot•l•.
and [Ut ClltlllOf'l IIChl"'llli.
••Otf!Ottt rnt for c~o~stu.an of t he I( ln\)n t lle and [)or\tt uch•MIIIS .

llh to .

lncl ividutl Ll nt·Rts l denu
Part1 Llnt-luslneu
Plrty Llnt-RnhltllU
Adc!ltlon•l hltpllone Sit
Addlticntl TeltpMflt S1t t
~econlltct\01\ of utstlng flci1Hies with
chnge In loCitlon, type or 'tJlt of
equ tpMnt
Trtn,fer gf ur~\ C I
lt)ve of te II phone Itt w1tl'l1n UM rOOIII
J4oye of tel4pll0nt set 'o dlfftnnl rOOM
C~1ng1t l n typt or style of ttltpiiOnt
All ot her ehangts

"

NC•

( 10)

Chlrgt, suiUiqufllt servlu ordt!r chuje, t1ntr1l off lu c: IIUIJI, vhitn iiKI c ~1rgt ,
pr•ht wlr\Af CIIU~I or st1t lon Nf!CI lnj Chtrtt wil l 1pp \y n In otltltr ucungn .
(\I) Chargts IPP 11 In aadltlon t o r~u l u ~p lt1llh strwlu cn1rges .

~

1.15

!~stalhtion of ne" or &amp;c!dltlon•l ••n lu :
' lndlvidull ~lne-8us t nt u

1.00
1.00
1.00

.!0

ru

52.80

. 41

-n;1l

15.45

.

b.OO

I 10)
( 10 )

. 10
. 10

Business a11d Ru idtnu

4.00

4 .00
IIA
5.00

10.00
10 .00
10.00
18 .00

101

P O)
( 10)

llfl lch uld proposed "htdwl1t1 beCOIIII tffKthe :

4.00

S.OO

110)

(9) Serwl ct COIIMCtiOII CIII~S 1r1t b jll~ on • per occurrrnu t1111~ .
( 10) "'OCMUt4 CU.rftl for urvtct conniCt ion • il I 0@ lj)j) I lfll bnt!d on tnt Ktua 1 work
CSOnt. Tilt pr011011d char'9u ihoWI for bus lnen or rn lllltnca lnh l•l let"~ in crdtr

Ito

Inttl llltlon of nl• ser~ltlt
Tnnsfltr or ur~IU
lnttf;lht lon Of CO}Gr U l tp'IO/If Itt
lnttalhtlon of urv lct wMn drop wlrt
1t bwr t td
1140111 of tlltphont ttt wtH'11n liM prM t u
Chan~• .tn ty,. or lt)'lt or ttlepnont nt
Chan~• of no11- lt st1d or non-pwbl1sllltfS
teltpt!Oill nlolllltllr

9.!0

5.00
2.50

fll·Tovcll, lu1 1NU Llrtt
Ttl-T~WC II, htllatlfl TMiAit Liftt
Ttl-rouell, VATS At:ceu ltl'lf
S..t-Publlt TtlttlfiOM Wvt ct

the Inter 111 between the fll 11'19 of the

lnlt hl Slrvlct Orllar Chtrgt
SuDUQu4nt Strwtct Ordlr C hlr~t
Ctntrll Off1U Cll 41'Qit
VIS I tit lOll Chlrgt
Prtllllt ll t rln~ Chtrtt, ptr out let
Sttt101'1 MI~Cllng Chargt, p.tr ut
H~nttbur
Ptnllltl JIMLI
Ulltl IUddhf lt ld,
u
tr on lC •~J!!
~vstntu 1nc1 Rutcttnee

,I{)

....

l

Ot.ltltt~

. ~

(I) A,!.l AIOVf Pl£5EII1 Mil ~S£0 IIATES ARE FOil ACCESS llllS OfllY . SEE IIATES
li5TEO tEl&lt;*, WHICH M£ IN AOOITIOIII TO ACC£55 lllllf: IIATU .
(2) Ntlltfl ClllfgtS ,1Pf111 tft Mdhion to the Jlr"lttent ucen line charges. Tht1
•111 11t t 1 tlllllttt!l on the propotte! rete!.

i

21.50

12.00

Tai 1!fO "_;fri'c t or&gt;'

Cllilt Pllr • t•traofftu

.

Rltt

Urltble

~I

~0 . 40

129.20

*I

1. 00

Pll
PBX (lhl9itdllt/BI00111t~dllt )

"1PJ

Acceu li ne
S\4 . 60
One Telephone
.80
One O~tltt
,4S
fota l ~~ .... Rate~
Old R1te
IUS
I incrust
tG':ll'

"'11":1!

.so·

1.00..
1. 25

.""
.....

PIX jRock Cretll)

.10

One Telephone
One tNt let
Tout Ne.,. Rate "1l.lU
Old Rttl
U5
1 ! ncr~tnt
T'!!J:lJ

Accen Lln•
111.60
One Ttltthcnlt
.80
One Dlltltt
. 45
Tot1l lte11 Rate "'Tr.15
Ollt A•te
13. 35
1 lncrean
4T:1I

"
Proposed lblt11 1r R1tt

.21.50

Atlldtnte, per I tne•
tildtnce, (&gt;tr li ne ..
r ~~ IM:II , pltr l lntt
twtlnen, per 11nt..
t~t1nltss, per . line (Rock Crltel)
I(TS Trunk , 111r 1 tne•
ICTS Trunk, ptr ' line••
,
lT! Trunk, ]H:r \I nit !~ock Creek)
PU Trunk, ~r line•
Trunk, p1tr llnltu
I'll Trunll, per line
, IIAT5 Accest (8us\n1t11 ) , pltr line••
W.T5 Acun (Pill, Ptr line••
IIAT5 Access (KTS , per line••
Tltl·TOiiCh Tthptlone Sets•

RATES

.II

lltstlttnCt
Rtt tdtf!CI*
Rn1denct'"'
lln 1cl1t11ct (Hopedllt, IIOOI!I Iflidllt)

PIX•

sv.so

.80
.41
'7nl

.•s

.so

...

.so

EQIJI~ENT

Pruent lllonttLb R•t•

St1tl0t1 CNtltts (Auoc t lttd •lth
Ttlephont Stt}
lnlntll
lw1inD1t*
Bu1Cnatt'"'
luslntttlllotk Cr"k)
luslnnt Hoptdllt!llOOIII InljLclllt)

"lP5

S28. 10

Acctn Llnlt
516, 85
One TtlltPhOflt
.80
'One O..tlet
.45
Toul l'ie• 11etlt --,u:-rn
Old hte
1 Jncreue
tm:lll

~t h I r

Pruent

Cord
Cord (klngsvt ll e , Dorset)
Cord
Card (Ruck Crltl!~. Hopecll lt, U1oan i !lljldll~ )
Card
C"rll
card (Rock Cr11rk, MopH1le , 8 10a.1hlg(ftlt l

il'

Ill. 90

ll. 90
2 ~ . !IS

zs .90

q.zo

14. ts

$21.50

Accen Line

keen l ine
S16 . 85
One Tt i tphon~t
.80
Ont!),t l et
Tot•l M,. ~•t• T.Tc:
Old lt1tt
12.15
llncrtu•
4l:nl

8

S25. 50

' 11 2.(10
.801

Accns Ll!lt
S12.80
Ont lit ltc~llont
.10
011t Outlet
,45
Totti Nh ~Itt ...,..-;'Cl
Old lttte
9,go
I lncreue
-n:1l

Sltl Above

. 10

l'ionthly .t llow•nct of dlrtct dllltlt t l11 5 to director~ ll!&gt; hllllct
~&amp;lh Ptr a&lt;:ctu lt e or tl'ilnk .

(4)

58.45

fil.OO
114 . 6()

Shndud O!.ltlttt

11

128.70

S14 .J5
,80
, 45

·"'

NC

J.oo··

uslst•nce, per u \ 1

sq . 10

2~ .

I( .95

14 . 65

COI!!I!trhon

~cctn Line
SI~.J5
Ont Telephone
.80
One Outlet
,15
To hl New Rttlt ~
Old R•te
11.25
1 Increase
J!:-71

zo.ro

~~~:n ~

m:-or

ll. I!
"1l':1ll

H1.11.110n
1"650 , 655 ")

. !I

m:n

.4 5

Hud\on ( " 653" )

$25 . 60

.80

·''

Perry
MI!Wbury

"In!

su.so

m:x

A~,t inburg

.•5

'TI:1t

Sl2 . 80

Acceu line
SIJ. 75
()rle Telep~one
. 80
()rleOIItlet
. -45
leta! New Rtt lt -rs:tiD
OJd IIILt
12,80
I Incrust
1'7":'3

See Abo•e

.80

"lT.7J

"1Tll!

.eo

"'11":1!
~

. 4!

keen line
SIJ.75
I)Je Te tephou
I)Je o~ t let
.-45
Tot•l t1e111 ~tte !'5'JJIJ
Old Rat e
10.25
1 Incrust
-.r:ll

40 , 40

"lT.R
~ 12.80

Cenurv 111e
ftl1!1 I 'on
P 1erpon t
Tr~Mu 11

.50
1.00

( 10 )
( 10 )

~ . 00

1.00
3.00
10.00

AlJpllutlon (Gtntnl (•chtnge h rtrf, P.U.C . O Mo . 8

Rttldt!lCf

.41
.41

. . 25

'

Tot el hcll1nqe

Accen Llne
lll. 15
One Tele~~one
. 80
One Outlet
.45
Toll\ ~!II ~itt 1'5":'00
Old Rttt
IQ , 70
I Incrust
"'1D:'2I

!.60
!.60

'.110

Ott•~• iot -ii • t sted.

Eut Chrldon. rt l rvltw, Hopect•llt, L(f"9S~IIIe, little
Moc:klniJ, !"tOJJotamle, Middlefield , MorrhtiiWI, Old Washlnt;~too, Plrk•lll , Powfl1t1n Polftt, anct Q~o~•-er City e•ch1n9u only,

Athllbul~

\, 15

~
10. 00

Che~il !

.0!!1
. 10

I111tt1l Sltrvlct Ordtr Clltrgt
SuDttq~tnt S.rvtn l)rdtr C lltr~e
Ctntrtl Off tee Dtargt
¥h 1tit 101'1 Chtr'Qt
itrtllht ll irtn~ Cherge, ptr out l ift
Sttt!Otl 111M ling Cllarl)l , ptr U t

3.10

1.110

·"

Present Cherg•

'

!Mic ttor l ltllt
Ttl•TOUCIII, Rttl-nc:t li"'

1. 10

Propo'1td

~f2t_ __.
~ (ltiNjlSYil l t, Orlr\et )

ll.lslntu

35
Z.35

.so

Oevlcu

Rock Crttk

'."'
z.

.80

l't,lltt • Lj ne Tl!l!l!hone Service

IR
Co!!l!whon

.!0
.91
.91
.15
. 91
.91

Dttliny (qul!!!!!nt

'

51.20
54 . 40
57 . 60

Jt g()

21. 60

12. 65

28. 80

ll. 4b

)!!.90

28 . 10

14.110
18.25

jg .7o

!.,divid~tl

lysl'!'!
Smtil
Lillt
tlrun'
P Trunk

19.20
2Z . 40
lS. 60

21.50

10.95

u;. es

·fat a l (lchln!Je

CDI!IJ* ho11
Otscr lptloll

,I{)

...

3.15
3.00

Dlrict dhl e~ll to dirKtory
usltttnt t, per u11 (•)

•zon~td rttes apply to 81aa.lngdllt , Cltn tenllle , Ct-.ester, Coolville, Ctlllberllnd, Oorsl!t,

Prutnt
Propoud
Ratnlllnds ___!!!!.__

18
Co mptrlson

. 40

~1te ptr C1ll (Kingswtlllt, Dorset)
htt Pf' c.111 (All othtr ucn•ngu )
Str~let Colllltctton Cllar]U (9)

Ol rtdory AHh t •nct Service

M1 l n Sttttons

12 . 75

I. 10
I. 10

1.l5•
1.00..

..

'

60.90

]~~~[g~"]~~~1·~·~··~·~''[''~~1·~·~·,~·~~r1![!5@f!m~~
n ~ !.II
1r 1
our- 1r l
• lr l
run
rllft

15.12,001 - 1,0241000

8.21

. 80

.so

Nbn · PIIb lhhltd ftUIIlblr j
Non-Pub It shltd ~r•
fion-L htt4 tlulber•
Non-Pwbl !51'1t4 N..llber l~Ptlltlt, (1\QOIIIIngdlle,
lloc• CrHII:)
N0n-P11b It sfttd Nullbtr••
I4Jililon• 1 Lhtlnt -Bust neu
Addfllon•1 Lhting -lutirteSt•·
Addltlonll Ll stlng-lusCneu••
..... jti!HIII L l 1tlng-R~tldenct
Aclditlonll Ll stlnt-Restdel\ce•
AOdltlon•l Lt stlf'1-Rttidence••
Forel~r1 Llst tng - Bwsi ntts
Foreign listi ng lutlntss..
forii'iln Llstl nt-Rellclence
Fo , tiljLn L ls tl n~·Rtslclence..
Spt&lt;.:ill Operttor Intercept
Joint Ustr Stn tu
6

Bus tne$S ServIce

lf . lO

Bind 8

·"

·"
.95

'1,15

Prnent Chi!'Sit

P•r StltiOI'I Ctlh

Dlr1dorr. 1ncl Ltnlns Strvtus

runk

ll.ZI

lus1ness Service
ne
run

39.15

5tntllu It of Prtu~ t •ncl PropOlltcl Acuu l1 nt ,P•tu St hchnat !Cant lnvtd 1

Line Rates By htt14nge

.\t ceu L l ~ e
1 12. 80
One Telepno~e
. 80
One o~t I el
. 45
Total New ~ate "'TT."OS
Old Rtle
10.l5
l lncr e&amp;H
JT.1l

Chet l l!r
Cha rdon
Litt l e Hocklnq

Chtrdon
{w/Cleveland
Ctll ing )

Proposed

IS

Foot
Fl)Ot
Foot
Foot
Foot
Foot
Fl)Ot

If the proposed rate increases are granted in full, a representative residential
customer and a representative busi"ess customer, each with an individual li"e a"d
one sta"dard telephone, would experience the percentage cha"ges show" below for
the appropriate exchange area in which the customer resides.

and Pr oposed
~

n

31.45

11.80
16 . 00

.IS

(2)

9
12
12
1'

11.Z5

run

10. 90
14 . 10

Band 4...
I 3ti .110 1-64,000
Mtin St1tlons)

16.25

• Individual Accenl

.60

•r

t

3.00

12.80
16 .00
19 .20

~24,001 - JII,OIXI

.45

1.00
1.00

l.tS
Addit1ontl 1/4 11111
. IS
1.!0
Off·P,...he "'ll1t11Jt : •
.60•
first 11• •11•
I. IS
Additional 1/4 111l1t
1.!0
Off - Pr .. tst IUitatt l u
In cllftartnt bi.d \d ll'tfl, ttlllt or CMMCttCI
pr•hes :
hch l/10 1lrl1n1t •11• or fract iOII
.so-•
1M
OIHutnt biJIICI I II~I, Cllfferent and ftOII•
connKttd ·prtlllus In ,..., Iot ti ext 111n9t or
urvlce 1ru:
first 1/4 llllt
1.00'-•
LIS
Addltton•l l / 4 Milt
1.00••
1.50
In cllfferent bwlldl1191, dlfftl"lflt tlld
non -conr~« ttd prtllhn In different biJt
cont h~uous letell UCfilln~l ,,..,
f lrst l /2 11rliM 11111 or frtct ton
l . OQ&lt;r•
Concur,.nce
· Mel it ton• I 1/1 1ir1it~t 11101 or frtetiGn
l.SO••
Concwrrltntlt
(7) ltuelber of Clbll p1 irs bl lltcl battlt on prne1H .,tnod of Cl'lerqlnj Oftt ut11t .psir
fr0111 the cuslCIIMir ' l lou t ton directly to t ilt c ~o~stoetr 't otntr OUt )on . •
(8) Mlllltltr of c1blt pairs bill tcl butd on propostcl .. u~ad of Ch&amp;rgl"9 0111 "bit ~W;ir
frOII tl'll c~o~s t0111r '1 lout1~ to tM ctntr&amp; l offtu and MOtlltr Clblt p1ir ·frf*
t tw ctr~tul off ice to tlllt c ~o~ltOIM!r ' s otr11r loutton .

Present Ont -Timt Chtrae Proeostcl Ont-TIN Char9e

Rates-Huntsb~

• ar

Btse llltl! Arl'l
Zone A*
Zone a•

M1ln St•tton~)

,\()

l.eq

.lS•

Lagle Dialer

:3o

Res tdenu Sl!rv 1ce

8.65

Exchange

zone

I. SO

1.1~

.50

. 50

,J(J

Present Access Line

St 1t i&amp;ns)

1. 60
Z. 25

1.00

ca~d · Oh ler

'iL

E.lch1"9e

Bind ')
! 1, Ol4 ,00 1-up
"•in St1t ions)

Trunk Line Nlleage

5.6S

A~o~t011atic

7.85
7.85

7.85
7.85

.50

tacn custOIRr (2)

10-11 ,000 "''"

30; 90
)].90

.so

17

3.50

4.60
4.60

•••

Proposed Access Line Rate Bands

BuSiness Service
lndJV idutl l1ne KTS Trunk Pll Trunk

Trunk

6.35 .
6.35

.SG

Rite 61nd
l"'C'ilTtil tnv Aru

16.00

Miliit1 -Party US

I

JO
1.110

1.00

Code·A·PIIOne 440
todt~A ·Phone 440 (Hoped1h1, BloOIIItngd•h l
Codt·A·Phont :i60
Cod•·.A..Phont 560 (Hopedt le, 81o01fl i ~dalt)
Foot Sw1 tch
Foot Sw l tc~ jHopedlle, l loC'IIIngdlle)
Metory Plione
,..._,r1 P~one (Rock Crtet J

.

~~-

1.00

13. 1$

llnuvllle tnd Dors•t hch•ns••

,,

18.0S

Residence Service

8ustness rvict
ne ~ !..!..'!!.:.!:. ev tun

M11HQe,

53.40

Present Access Line Rates-Mesopotamia

.'

' •'

Residence Sl!rwict

w ua

UiS
. 40..

Preunt Monthlr ~Itt .Pnpostd Monthly ~Itt

Au t lllll tc Anslftrl

.so

~ristOfl'lft, Old W.nhington, PPJM1l111 Poln'

10. 91)

.7S

51.00

18 . 25

2 5 . 4~

.
'.

Individual

. 75

)6 .60

1.110

Speclil lion~
S,ltt i tl Gong (~ock Creek)
LJtithts
L1ghtt (ICings ttlle, Do"et)
Yl sua1 Signal
Transfonoer
Wutfltrptoof llell••

15.C5

. 71

49.00

16 . 75

24. 25.

1S. 91)

frynk

7.15

8.95

Total E•change

13 . 05

11.50

.so

Individual Access/
Trunk line "tletve,
each 110. IZ)
Two~Party Atti!SS Lt ne

u.oo

J5.ii!5

11.85

four ~Party

13.91

1J.55
ll. 15

16 . 50

""''

15.CS

·"

""
"

R~t11J

12.50

13.91

.71

Aret

Bind 1

Residence Service

.,.

llilf!

4. 6S
• . 65

.2!
.2!
. 21

Yar1Ult

Gong (ROICk Creek )
Gong (Hoped~le, 810011in9dalt)
Gong*
Wong ..
Horn gr Howler
loud Hcrn
Loucl lhlrn (~oc k Creek )

-" ua

45 . 00

Present Access Line Rates-Rock Creek

'

.fiO

. fiO

3.110
3.110

....
·"

\lzztr

13.71

...
...

. 75•

.

"00
10, "

Senl ce tonn~tton Chlrlts (C.OIIt .J

CoI v Te 1tPftOnt
re~~~Ptct Stt w/Dt•l llght
14tar l*9 [t!ptlrfd Klndut

....

1.55
1.55

, \()

...
...
'·"

"

IICX1111t90ilt) :

1.55

Aatt " DtOM4 Mtftth h lttt

ll .OO

f lrtt 11• •II•

1.55

3. 00

Prtstfllt lbltlllt

''"n

1.40

2. !0

lunar (Hopeda l e, llOOMingd•le)
Chflfpi
Cht1M (Hopedale, 11ocwlngdlh)
Ca-on Audibl1t
Stenclard lei I
St lndard Bell•

8. 71

ll.ZS
11.25

Business Servtce

v 111

Zono A IZ)

t2 . 80
45 . 80

Trunk.

10. 35
1J.J5

Trunk

J.Z5

runt

.75

n

IJ .00

Off P.... hf IUllllllJf (li:O(k CrtR , MoCM&lt;Itlt ,

, \()

Bus}' Lilli!
Busy LIIIIP (Rock Cntk)

Present Access Line Rates - Dorset

Present Access Line Rates- Hopedale

.'

4.00
5.• 011

Residence Serv ice

811St Rate

1.55

.81

~

Prese"t Access Li"e Rates-Kingsville

u .oo

Jl.15

2l. 25

26. 10

PBI

Trunk

.

Ul

5.75
10.75

.60

o11e I Z)

41.00

to
]4. 10

Present Access Line Rates • Bloomingdale

'·

4.50
8.50

'

11 .Z5
11.Z5

l2) .6Q

Two•Ptrty Access Ltne
M11t•9•• each qu•rter

Bas~ Rate

3.011'

Fyll-loot~

Individual Access/

n

ou.pr•tn llltlugt :
1/t •tit
lddttloiltl ,,. •11t

I . !JO•

loll Rtstrlctor

Buslraess SerYite
1 . run

Sl!ntce

ne~~~~

9.00

121

Trunlt Line M11e-.e
each quarter •11 e

3.45
1.55

1. 00"•

hclnlon (H09fcltle, 1100111\ngdtlt )

Resl6tnce

us

Base Rite Area
zone~

) .110
1.110

Cwtctf key•

.60

. &amp;0

. 60

Prese"t Access Line Rates-Parkman

19 . 15

RTS

12. JS

3.45

1.25

0\ltljoor lti)Us\ng (HoptCtle , l l •tngd tlt)
S"ltch'Ke1
Swlt(h ~ey•
C~o~tof'f Key

""''
8.ZS

1.110

lloo. lntcltle )

~1)115\llf

Outaoor

.75

Aestdence Service

Tndlwldutl llne

1

(tlllt Ptlr • lnttrOfflct • COIItl giJOUl
Ttr"Miflttlon
lirlt..-otrtct C t rc~H
CUilt Pttr • lnltrofftct • Jtolt•COII'IttguoY1

.30

1.11
1.00

HIIHistt
Handttt (HIIj)tcltlt, 11oc.lf9lllt)
Htndstt*
H«nuet.
TrtnSIIItter
TrMSIIItttl" (Hoptdtlt,

Ct11 Dherur

lndtvldutl

Res i dence Service
fwo.Par-tz four-Par-ty

Httrlng l1p1 i rtd
Htt~l"9 llllltirtd
Htartng llptl rtd
tlttrl"! llll!l•lred
fiiOIH l/lttll l flg
NG tlt Cti\C:tlliftt

Pwsh-To-Talk

quarter

'

Tot•l
Tot1l htfl1119e

ll.ZS
11. zs

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

25. . so

1), 35

3.011

I

5.25
9. 65

. 60

•11t (2)

19. 40
12. «1
45 . 40

]l .

Zl.25

.: .. l01111MJ c:hlrfel "ff9ly only to Ctl\t erv lll t , Che\ter, Cooh l lle, CII!Derhnd , '•lnlew, litt le Moc•inq,

·' '

5.75

W

11.25
11.25

.60

'· ' &amp;IHI l)w1ter Clt7 .

1

7.61

H1tlons)

11114 II
()84,00 1 ....
Hat Ions 1nd
. ~ Owltr)

'

3. 50

Present Access Line

24. so

12 . 1S

8.60

Headset Jatt

,10

Ser•ice

HtaciMt

110Clllrlgdt lt )
L lghtlrllllfht Suptrw lsor Hllilstt
LtghtwtlgM ~Jtrvhor Headut (Hopecltlt,
Bloc.htgdtle )

lndhtduJl .\ccess/

n v

Total hchangt

4. 011

.

... StiiiSS

...

C&amp;ll lt Pairs end !!lltt9t (COtlt-1
ltl'tllllfo\1011

•• 10
1. 10

1.110

Pty Shtlon 8ootll
Htlf-Bootn l "' ll Mount)
Htlf-lootll Ptduul Mount)

.... tlltiOfll)

la'MI Ylll
I Itt ,001-384,000

....

les 14eM:e Sen let

w

H . 80
40 . 80
1). 80

30 . 75
)2.75
14 . 75

ZZ.25.

12 .25

IUS

.ill

.&amp;0

Present Access Line Rates-East Claridon

lNOk l 1111! MllHQI,
tiCh 11M Ill
Twe-. Party Access l1 M

19. 55
31.55
)] . 55

l2. IS

11 . 15

8.10

9.00

~

!.10

Ltg"tlllllfllt Optntor Htldtet {Hoptatlt,

.II

n w ut

'·"

9.05

J0 . )5

zo. 15.

22 . so

11.25

\()

19 . 6~

l3 . 2~

21.40
25 . 40

10.10
12' 70

~ll.l!l

19 . 25.
Zl . 25.

20 . ~

14 .25

I I . 65.

18. 45.
ZO . IS
l2 . 45.

22 . 00
Zl.!KI

12 .25

5.25

.60

'

."

lZ . 10

10.25

1."'
IUS

11.25
11.Z5

3. 00

.ill

Mllt19e,
tach custaer (2) ·

19. 10
21. l0

11.85.
11.85
IJ . IIS

6. 75

9.90

10 .30

Tohl hthlfltlt

1' 4~

a. 15

1) , 75
II. 15

lne ltatt Arat
•zone A

13 . 45

1.65

5. 011

Llg~Ut1tllt ' })ptrttor

8.25

11 . 25
11.25

Individual Access/

18 . 90
20 . 40
Zl. 90

11.45

7. 50

""'

Llne Mtleage, tach

qu&amp;rtl!r

. Zoroe A 121

"'

9.45.

6. IS

7.15
1), 50
11 .25

\l,ll)

*lOflt I

1....

s.a~

g,)O

•z.. A

....

10

10 . 50
8. 90
10.90
12. 90

.... lilt , ••

._Ill
16001-li.OCXI
... In StltiMt)

I,

] . 50

C.OII
6.011

.. .

(Huclsf,...)
Stl!'dvd lttad~tt, t11tra
c•t nat 101'! H~CitttiHtaciSit

Ius iness Service

1

'''Uitflt MorltMr lttt

SptllltrjNlG~M

T-o-Party Access

(I)

RtsidMC:It ~rvlct
nt ~ our- &amp;r y
run

-. a.so

!!!::!!!!l

4.Zii

lrri LiM Jlllt191,
tach ~ter •lle(2)

Present Access Line Rates· Ba"~ed Excha"ges
' ['i('iTt'il111!1J Artl

vfc•
IM"• 1r

~

1~1vfdual ~cets!

For tht purpottsol dtttrrnlrtlng ••cntnv• ltYitt monthly •tcttt une ra1tt, tJCfl,nttt an clanlfiPd In rate groups accwdlnt to the
tOtlt mtlrt ltlltpllonH In a i$UI tailing,, ... The LOU I ulllnv arttll ttle aru within which custom1tr1 m•~• uill wilhot.~tlht! IN'tment
of mettagetoll cnarget and may Jntlude one or more tuhan1• ann .

, It~

ne

line lilt Ar-e•
Zone ~ 121

SCHEDULE OF PRESENT AND PAOPOSEDRATESANOCHARGES
MONTHLY ACCESS LINE RATES

.. afdtnte

The Dai Sentinel

, Ohio

, March 9, 1ft2

41.15
ll.-45
hiM'lte lnc~o~rrH

Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Circle
visited Mr. and Mrs. WanhmOura of
Chester on Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Circle and
daughter of Keno Road visited Mr.
and Mrs. Homer Circle and Verna on
Monday evening.
There were 35 pl'eJ!e"l for Sunday
School on Feb. 21.
William Carelton Of Racine was
calling In the community recently.
Sheryl Leann Johnaon, Betty Va"

Meter a"d Eunle Brinker spent a
Sunday evenl"g with William
Careltpn and family of Racine.
There were 35 present for Sunday
school o" February 28.
Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Circle
~ailed on Mr. and Mrs. John Rose
and daughter, · Julia, on Thursday
evening.
Those calling at the Douglas Clr·
cle home recently were Rev. and
Mra. Tobias Myers of Letart, W. Va.,
Mr.and Mrs. R. G. Ables of Bald
Knobs and Brent Patterson and
Helen Zlnn of Rio Grande.
Patrick and Sheryl Johnson, Betty
Van Meter and Eunie Brinker at.
tended the birthday In honor of Jen·
Duane Stanley was installed as an ny LyM Carel ton at the home of her
Elder Sunday at the Presbyterian patents, Mr. and Mrs. Willa1m
Church.
Carelton of Racine on Thursday
Ray Alkire, Colwnbus, vlalled his evening. She waa one year old .
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Bob Alkire,
Keith Barnlu and sons, Tom and
over the weekend.
Tlni, of KI"gston, and Hayman Bar- .
Mr. and Mra. Harold Ball, Colunr nltz of Pomeroy were at the home of
bus, were weekend vl8itors of hill Eunle Brinker on Sunday.
• ~r,FrancesYoung .
Sue Hager and Elale Circle ca lled
Mr. Burl Drllke, Vinton, vlalled at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Homer
. Friday with Mr. and Mra. Mike Ep- Circle and Verna Sunday afternoon.
ple.
Mr. and Mrs. Millard Christian
and Mr. and Mrs. Nick Grueser,
Rutland, helped celebrate their Acqui8ition
granddaughter, Meron Grueser'•
illxth birthday Tuelday evening at
WORCESTER, Mass. (AP) the home of Mr. and Mrs. Mike The painting "Twin Lights, Purple
Grueaer.
Rocka" by llllh-century reallJt
Mr. and Mrs. Mike Epple wete John Sloan has bee" acquired by
dlnnet guest. of Mr. ·and Mra. the Worcester Art Museum.
Raymond Smith Thunday.
Executed In 1915, the aeascape 11
Mn. Beale Graham went to the first worJ&lt; by Sloan to enter the
Olarlelton Saturday to 1ee her miLiellm's collection.
aliter who II In a hospital.

Harrisonville
Social News

•

�March

Meigs County meeting notes
OES

Kesterson 8IIIIOiliiCed that
Initiatory work would be exempli·
fled at the AprU and May meetings
with Inspection to be held on May

MIDDLEPORT··Several pro.
jects Including a Sl Patrick's Day
dinner and an Easter bazaar were
planned during 'I'IIursday night's

'n.
Sbe also 8IIIIOIIIICed that district
Une officers meet1nga ha.v e been

mSettngofEvangellneCIIapter176,
~r of the Eastern Star, held at
the Middleport Muonlc Temple.
The St. Patrick's Day dinner will
be held on March 18 and tickets.are
being sold In advance by members
of the chapter. The bazaar will beheld Aprll2 and 3 with baked goods

scheduled for March 7 at Marietta
and May 2 at Albany, 2:00p.m. Of.
fleers are asked to wear their chap.
ter dresses at the April meeting and
any long dreu at the V..ay meeting
when past matrons and paat pa·
tron11 of the cbspter will be honored.
Sbe also stu~ that the 25 year pins
wiD be presented to those eligible at
the JUDe meeting.
Invitations were read for a reception on March 12 at the Athens
Chapter honoring Donna Mclean,
grand 1ep1esentative to South Da·
kota; annual Inspection of Webb
chapter at Stockport; March 17;
grand visitation
the worthy
grand matron, QJrrlne Wilham,
Grand Chapter of Ohio to Lowell In
honor of lts '75th anniversary; an·
nual Inspection of Eudora Chapter
in Nelsonvllle, March 30; Belpre
Chapter's Inspection, May 8; Ma·
tamoras Chapter on April 2 with
A.G.M. Marilyn Rowley 1n5pect1ng
since It Is . that chapter's 75th
anniversary.
Vlrelnla Buchanan, associate
conductress, gave a lecture: Table
gra~ was given by James Bucha·
nan a1ter which a social hour waa
held In the dining room. Farle
. Kennedy and Lorenna Ault served
refreshments of sandwlcbes, po.
tato chips, mints, coffee and tea.

and homemade Items lncludlni
stutted toys and Easter candy for
sale. A luncheon wiD be llei'Ved at
noon. The bazaar wiD begin at 9
a.m. and close at 3: :ll p.m. each
day.
Maxine Kesterson, worthy matron, and Robert Kuhn, wortlly pa·
tron, prealded at the meeting with
the pro-tem omcers for the evening
being Paul Darnell, chaplain, and
Delbert Mitchell, sen~l. The
charter was draped for the late
Fred Karshner, Sumner Road,
Chapter members were invited

to the 40th wedding Blinlversary ·
c.e lebration for Jim and Emma
Kay Clatworthy to be held on
March 21 from 2 to 4 p.m. at the
Middleport Masonic Temple. The
reception will be hosted by their
daugbter and son·ln-law, Twtia
and Mlck Chllda. All trterida are In·
vlted to attend. Thetamnyrequests
that gifts be omitted.
Members reported ill were Field·
lng Hawklngs, and Dorothy Young,
both now home from hospitals.

trifled model W8l ll8ed darlaC tbe prelelllaUOD to empbaalse tbe aceldents lbat can ocear. Alb aclvflel tbat
the program will be presented to all !l"hools of the

PROGRAM - Roa Asb, pictured, maaager, alld
Doa KOIIDI of The Oblo Power Co. preseated a safety
program for studenlll ol the Racine Elementary
School. Both wore variOUB pieces of aafety equipment
as worn by Unemea worklag on po1Ver Uaes. Aa elec-

C4lllllty u time permits.

Social Calendar
TIJESDAY
POMEROY - A meeting of
Eastern School District Band
Boosters has been set at 7:30 p.m.
Tues day at Eastern High
School's band room.
•
POMEROY - Ohio Eta Phi
Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority, 7:30 p.m . Wednesday at
the Meigs·1M.
MEIGS VOCAL Music Boosters
meeting 7:30 this evening in
music room of high school to plan
publlc spaghetti supper.
MIDDLEPORT WDGE 363,
F&amp;AM, 7 this evening; work in
E.A. degree and refreshments.
1 RACINE LODGE 461, F. and A.
M., 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, Masonic
Temple. Work in the entered apprentice degree.

WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT AMATEUR
Gardeners, 8 p.m. Wednesday,
home of Mrs. Edgar Reynolds
with Mrs. Erroil Conroy, co.
hostess.
POMEROY CHAPTER 80,
Bosworth Council 46, fuU fonn
opening practice for Ohio VaHey

COmmandery 24,
masonic temple.

March

10,

THE MEIGS COUNTY Junior
Leadership Club will be holding
its second meeting of the 1982 4-H
year, Wednesday, March 10,
beginning at 7:30 p.m . at the
Meigs County extenaion office.
All 4-H members 13 years and
older are welcome to attend. This
year's activities include
canoeing, a trip, a joint meeting
with Junior leaders from other
counties, and a . program on
decision making. The officers for
the 1982 4-H year were elected in
January and are as follows: Lisa
Collina, president; Scott Upton,
vice president; Pam Riebel,
secretory; Mark Rice, treasurer;
Allee Ritchie, refreslunents; and
BIU Dyer, recreation. Wednesday
night's meeting will include a
CPR demonstration. All members are urged to attend.
POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT
Uona Club, 12 noon Wednesday,
atMeigsiM ..

MIDDlEPORT - The Middleport Amateur Gardeners will
meet at 8 p.m. Wednesday at the
lwme of Mrs. Edgar Reynolds.
Mrs. Erroll Conroy will be the CDhostess. Mrs. Frank Powers will
show slides on birds and flowers.

Business Services

Kav Sands and Ed1th Har·•

per. addreSses -unknown;
you are hereby notified
that you have been named
defendants ;n a legal action
entitled Jon M . Grueser, et

Plalnlfffs,
· vs·
plaintiffs. ·vs· E.R.
E. R. Hoffman aka Ella R . al.,
Hoffman aka Elza R. HoffHoffman, et al.,
man, et. al ., defendants.
Defft!Ciants.
Th is action has been

The February meeting of the
Riverview Garden Club was held al
the home of Mrs. Denver Weber,
with Mrs Richard Roberts and Mrs.
Ernest Whitehead assisting.
· Devotions "What is an AmeriC!III? ·~
and "Love". were presented by ·Mrs.
Weber. rotl catl was answered by
members naming a "Patriotic
SOng." Mrs. Whitehead welcomed
Mrs. Warren Pickens
a guest.
Thank yous were read from Mrs. R.
E. Williams, Mrs. Mabel Hetzer and
Herman Grossnickle for gifts they
receivad from the club. Mrs. Walter.
Brown expressed thanks for a gift
that was given to Naomi Pickens.

as

For the program, Mr. and Mrs.
Weber showed slidea of Mrs~
Weber's European trip. That was enjoyed by aU. Games were conducted,
by Mrs. Bise and Mrs. Roberts with
several winning prizes. Door prizes
went to Mrs. Gene Young. Refreshments using the patriotic theme
were served to Mrs. Pickens, Mrs.
Frank Bise, Mrs. Brown, Mrs. Okey
Connolly, Mrs. Ronald Cowdery~
Mrs. Harliss Frank, Mrs. Donald
Myers, Mrs. Ronald Osborne, Mrs .
Donald Putman, Mrs. Tom Spencer,
Mrs. Gene Young, Mrs. Ray Young
and Mrs. Lyle Balderson by the
hostesses. An auction wili be held at
the next meeting.

Southern FHA/HERO
wins award of merit

NOTICE IIY
PUIILICATION
To E.P. _ Hoffman aka
Elza R. Hoffman, Ros.a
Hoffman, R. D. Harper,
Neva Dresher aka Mrs.
Waller Dresher, Raymond
s. Hoffman, Marion E . Hof·

frnan,

Doris

Hoffman.

Roche!, Smith .aka Mrs .
Herbert A. Smith, Roy Hof ·
tman, Charles Clifford Hof ·
fman, Edna Hoffman ,
Charles
L. Hoffman,
Robert Hoffman, Zelma

Hoffman, Jerry Hoffman,
Kay Sands, Edith Harper
and the unknown hetrs,
- next of ·. kin, devisees.
1e9atees, ' executors, ad · I
m.nistrators,_ guardians,
successors, assigns and

speuses. if anv. Of E.R.
~offman

aka E lza R . Hoff ·
man, Rosa Hoffman, R.D .

Harper. Neva Dresher aka

Mrs .

Walter

Dresher,

Raymond ·s. Hoffman,
Marion E . Hottman, Doris
Hoffr'na.n. Rachel Smith

aka Mrs. Herbert A. Smith,

Herbert A. Smith. Roy Hal·
fman. Charles Cl1ffo.rd
Hoffman, Edna Hoffman,
Charles l , Hoffman,
Robert Hoffman, Zelma
Hoffm~n.

•Jerry

H_o~fman,

REESE~{

assigned (:ase Num~r
18,084 and is pending in the
Court of Common P-leas of
Meigs County, Pomeroy,

Vinyl &amp;
Aluminum· Siding

Ohio45769.
The .o bject of the Com -

plaint IS a partition atfion
concerning the oil, gas and·
all ather minerals un·
deriving the following
des~dbed _
r-eal estate: · ·
S•tuated in the Township
of Orange, County of Meigs

•Mobile
Slles
•Water &amp; Gas Lines
•Spring De•elopments
"Smafl Job$ A
Specialty"

PH. 742-2753

f iOr_l 6, Town 4, Range 12,
Ohu:~ Cqmpany's Purchase .

descr.bed land : Beginning
at the northwest ·corner Of
the above-described land;
t~ence south 61 ·7/ 13 rods;
thence east 26 rOds ; thence
north 61 ·7/13 rOds; thence
to · the place_ of beginning,

rOds.
or
Said three parce ls of r ea l
estate are subject to all
easements and highways of

record.

Deed ·Reterence : volume
236, Page 57; Volume 277.
Page ss and Volume 281,
Page 689 , Meigs County
Deed Records .

and the praver is that the
above described ·esta te be
partitioned; that the in·
terests be set off or ordered
sold if i t cannot be !"ar·
cost s.

You are r equired to an ·
swer the Comp laint within

twen ty ·eight 1281 days af ·

NOTICE TO SYRACUSE
RESIDENTS &amp; PROPERTY OWNERS
Syracus~

Village Council urges per·
sons h&lt;!lving knowledge of uncompleted or
uiiSitisfactory repairs, that resu.tted
from in.s tallatiofl of sewage lines in the
town, to file ttteir comments in writing by
April 8, 1982, with Clerk Janice Lawson,
Syracuse Municipal Building, Third·St.,
Syracuse, Ohio.

.TIIURSDAY

ter the last pUb licat•on of
this notice which will be
publ ished once each week

A REVIVAL will begin Thursday and continue through March
21 at the Freedom Gospel
Mission, County Road 31, 7:30
p.m. each evening. The Rev. 0 .
G. McKiMey will be the speaker.

21· Business Opportunity
21 -Money to Loan
23 -Prolcssiona I Services

1-Card of Thank s (paid tn rtdva nce)

2 Card of Thanks (pa1d in rtdvance)

3-Announcements
4-Giveaway

«

. .......

AGENTS:

J l ·Homestor Sa le

9·Wantcd to Buy

33 Farms for Sale

32-Mobile Homes for Sa le

serr.•1ces

51· Household Goads
52·CB. TV 8. Radio E quipment
53 Antiques ·

57 -Musciallnstruments
58· Fruits &amp; vegetables
59-For Sa le or Trade

71 -Autos for Sale
n Trucks for Sate
73-Vansa. 4 WD
74·Molorcvcles
75· Boats &amp; Motors
76-Auto Parts &amp; Accessories

following
Ga Ilia county
Area CodU14
446-Gatllpolis
347-Cheshlre ,
311-VInton
245-Rlo Grande
256--Guyan Dis!.
64:J-Arabla Dist.

71 -Auto Repair

78 ·Camping Equipment

Rentals

l t·He tp wanted

.tl ·Housesfor Rent

12 -Situafion wanted
13-lnsuranc e
14-Business Training

42-Mobile Homes for Rent
43· Farms for Rent
4-t·Apartment tor Rent
.45-Furnished Rooms

IS· Sc hools lnslr4clion
16· Radio, TV &amp; C~ Repair

3~-Walnut

81 ·Home Improvements
82·PiumbiM &amp; Heating

83·ExcavaJing
8-f·Eiecrical &amp; RefriQeration
85·General Hauling
III&gt;·M.H. Repair
87 ·Uphotsterv

61 ·Farm Equipment

62·Wanted to buy
63· Livestock
64· Hav &amp; Grain
65·Seed 8. Fertilizer

.46-Space for rent

17-Misce llaneous

telepho~e

exchanges. .

Meigs County
Area Code 614
992-Mt~dleperf

Pomeroy

915-Chester
l4l-Portland

247-letort Falls
949-Racine
742-Ruttand
667- Coolville

Up to lS words ... Three day
Up to 15 Words ... One dav
Up to 15 Words . ..Six day

........
Mason Co., wv
Area COcle304
675-Pt. Pleasant
4S8-leon
S76-Appfe Grove
77:J-Mason
882-New Haven

895-Letart
937-Buffalo

ORDINANC E
NO. 526
Pursuant to Section
743.28 of the Ohio Revised
Code as arnended by Amen·
ded House Bill No. 156.
1\Jih General Assembly
the council of the V illage of
Pomeroy hereby

notifies

Columbia Gas of Ohio and
the PUblic Utilities Com ·

mission of Ohio of i ts intent

to negotiate loinlly with
other
municipal
cor ·
porat lons in Gailia ,
Lawrence, Jackson, Vinto n
and Meigs Counties for th e

purpose of establishing a
uniform gas rate.

BE IT ORDAINED BY
THE COUNCIL OF THE
VfLLI\ISE OF POMEROY,
OHIO :
SECTION 1: That, for lhe
purpose of this ordinance,
uniform rati shall be
defined as a single gas rate
which would apply to everv
mu~iclpal corporation in
the qroup. Group shall be

=

det ined as all of the
mul")iclpalities which enact
ordinances expressing
their intent to negotiate
joi ntly for a uniform rate

and give jointly written
notif ication by' the Movers
to the company, Mayors
sha ll mean the mayors of
all the municipalities in the
group, and Company shal l
mean Columbia Gas of

Ohio, Inc.

SECTION 2: That, upon
written receipt of a Joint
notification by the Mayors
of
the
grouR
of

mu nicipalities which have
ena.c ted ordinances expressing a , desire to
negotiate a ·uniform gas

rate. the Village of
Pomerov
resr,eclfully
requests Columba Gas of
Ohio to commence
negotiations with the

uniform

gas

rate

com-

mittee to be comprised of

representatives from the
Office of the Consumers'

Public Notice

Public Notice

Counsel as well as
represe ntatives from the
munic ipalities who choose
to attend such negotiations.
Unless
otherwise in ·

743 .26 of the Ohio Revised
CodE: on the same basis as
if it we re a sin~le

rpqucsts the Commiss,on to
flit ' fl uniform cost of ser·
vice wn ich •ncludes the service
~rea
of
all

act as principal negotiator
and a II correspondences,
communications,
in ·
formation, etc ., sha ll be

may be charged by Colum·

~rovlo:ted

to the Office of the ·
Consumers' Counsel .
SECTION 3: That, lhe
date the companv receives
joint notlflc~tion by the
Mavors shall be the date
which designates the cOm·
mence"1enl of the firs I 9Q.
day period of negotiations .
for a uniform gas rate.
SECTION 4: Where such
negotiations do not, within
ninetv davs after com·
mencement, resUlt in an
agreem,nt between the
group and the company,
the grouf may exercise the

Civil

jud~ment

by
default will be rendered
against you for the relief
demanded in the Com·
plaint .
DATE : 2/ 18/82
Larrv E . Spencer
Meigs County
Common Pleas Court
12123 (31 2. 9, 16, 23, 30, 61&lt;

Aft work guaranteed.
Free Estimates

Reasonable Prices

Call Howord
949·2263
949·2160
..,______2_·2_4-·1-fc_.J

FRONT-END
~

free

siding

estimates, 949·2801 or
949·2160.
,NQ Sunday Ca !ls
3·1J.tfc

municipal corporation and
t&gt;nact a uniform rate or·
dinance (s) fi)(ing and
reguiatinq the price that

successors or assic,ns, tor

t11e gas to the group of

municipal cor porations
and to their inhabitants, in
accordance with section
4909.34 of the Ohio Revised
Code as amended by Amen·
ded House Bill No. 156 .

SECTION 5: That. should
the companr, refuse to ac·

cept the ra es establ ished
by' a uniform rate or·

d1nance and thereafter file
a complaint wilh the Public
Utilities Commlssior of
Ohio, In accordance with
section 4909.34 (B) of the
Ohio Revised Code . as
Amended by Amended
rights o a municipal cor·
House Bill No. 156. the
Pomeroy
ooration . un9er section . Vif'laqe of

· ·· ~ · ·-· ·

Modern Electrical
Equipment

PA RTSANO SERV I C£

ALL MAH ES

SIMMON'S OLDS.·
CAD.·CHEV., INC .

•W u tten
eOryen

Ph. 992-6,14
308 E. Main Pomeroy,

•

eAMQII'! I
•Oi s pOIIIII
Dil ll w•~hcn

•HotWo~tcrTIIInkt

951lc

MARCH
PERM SALE

thru
Wed., March 31
Reg.S20
Nowsti.so
Reg. SU
Now 522.50
Reg. S30
Now 527 .50
SJ5 Wave lentn.
For longer Hair
Now 529.50

Sl. Rt. 124

Pomeo1y, Oh .

3mi. west on

124t,.lld Rutland

AUTO &amp; TRANS.
REPAIR
PH. 992·5682
or

992·1121

Open 9 AM.tol:lO P.M.

1·11·1mo.

In Lov1nq Memory o•
Puriey T . Karr who' passed
awAy one year aoo Ma rch
7. Greatly missed bY wife
Altona, sons Paul and
Horace Karr and dauqhter
Kathryn Mora . Grand ·
children and great grand·
children.

_!.est a!'d Fo_l!.~d ~
LOST Tachimine gu ita r on·
Rt . 588 . Rewa rd $50 . Ca ll·
446·3428 .
.

6

---·----·

------ i

LOST Siberian Hu skey'
lll1ale l most ly dMk gray
with wh ite markings, one'
eve~

Public Notice
rPSOIUtlon, incons.istent
1lPrewith, is, to the e)(tent
of s uch lncons,istency,

Shop• the
AD WAY

Or-._.,

I'

\

Three

2 paths,
modern k itchen, livi ng
room w/ fireplace, for·
mel dinind room wtbay
window, family room,
full basement w lwOOd·
burner. A qua I ity home

DOll~.

MULLEN
JOHN f. MUSSER
CHARL£S B, MULlEN
MICHAEL L CHILDS

full

IN MEMORY OF :
Donald l. Sheets
left March 9,1976
you
1 That morning
were sitting around iust
talking and laughing.
Then vou ·had to leave
so soon. but vou said, I'll
be back arouncl n0011.
' You never knew vour
journey would end.
Because waltlnt for vou
was a better friend. He

..,,d vour work here Don
Is d~ne. 1 have for vou a
betterhome.
·
You know you will see
1vour loved ones again.
Thev just knock at the
door and I will fet them
ln.
Sadly missed by
Mom, Dad I All tho
ShMfs Family

•Roofing &amp; Gutter
•VInvl Siding
•Carports / Patio
Covers
•Concrete work

CALL: 992· 6323

u.s. Rt . 50 East

Guysville. Ohio
Authorized John Deer ,
New Holland, Bush Hog
Farm Equipment
Dealer

Farm Equipment
Parts &amp; Service

'I

-

.

Savin&amp;s Breaklhrouch! Send
now for NEW SPRING-SUMMER
P~TTERN CATALOG. Sew and &amp;et
mar~elous clothes for much less.
free PaHem Coupon - choose
from over 100 styles. $1.50

AU CWI IIOOIS : . $2.00 _.
lZH'ifllll Sltlw-tlfs .
Ut-hsf Qifb '•' ar-t.
1ZS.Ptllt Qlltta
125-lltrllly Cllf1Y ftlrnrl
Books and Callllllll - add SOl
each for posla&amp;e and h.lndlin&amp;.

--- -----...-lost_and Foun!l

6

...!.. _

fir eplace,

throughout.
Magnifi cent view of
river! Call for your

R.. t Eotote - Oonltl'iol

VIRGILB. SR.

hfA liQ II

ON TIME - You can
buv this 2 bedroom full

home.

' • "

l

o

POMEROY
'
lANDMARK
614-99~·2182

For Farm and
Home Delivery of
Gas
Diesel

PRIUDRIGHT

heating .

FREE
ESTIMATES
P.H. 992·6011

tak ing .

OUT OF TOWN - 5 yr.
old 8 room, one floor

,._,

- brushes

plumbing, electric, and

POMEROY - 2 acres.
more or less. building
lot. Panorami c view of
the river and breath

call after

O-J . I

-sprav

~lichens
and
appliances~
custom
bathrooms, remodeling ~

Phone
1-(614)·992·3325

Wee~davs .

0

- m.rrors

, Custom

21' E. 2nd St.

REWARD

0

Pomeroy, Oh.

Ph. 992-2174
2·26·1fc

C&amp;M
EXCAVATING
AND

CONSTRUCTION
Dozer &amp; bac~hoe ser·
vice, water, sewer,
ponds,
foundations,

reclamation .

1

EAFOR

Substantial

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

- paint

C. R. MASH
CONSTRUCTION

family room. basement
and 2 garages with
storage over one.

8:00p.m .

SMITH NELSON
NOTORS INC.

\Ieima Nicinskv. Ass.lc.
FREELicensed &amp; Bonded
Phone 742·3092
A S2.00 detail brush,
Cheryl Lemley, Assoc.
with the purchase of a
P~~n9~:~;~:93
Y-hone 742 .317!
paint kit.
========== _::====3=·5=-=
1 :m::o:.=pd=·~~=======3·:3:::
:: 11:::n~

round scar on right
rear leg, occasional
limp. Last seen near

to

-s t~tues

- plaques

private showing .

state road.
COUNTRY - Nice car ·
peted 3 bedroom
modern home with bath ,

responds

°

woodwork

of land for cattle, pets,

&amp;

OHIO

PH .
992 - '2063
STOP and look at our
Ji
f 1 1
fine se 1ec on
pas er
and ceramics.
b k5
- an
- planters

carpet, chandeliers end

rust,

black

DABBLE SHOP

POMEROY.

bui lt-i n kitchen, break·
fast
room,
tull
basement . Beautiful

tie down. Nearly one
acre. Only $17.500.
COUNTRY - 13 acres

ears uncllpped, large

Radiator Specialist
NATHAN BIGGS
35 Yrs. EKperience

2 baths/

car·

·peting, and 1.88 acres of
level land near town on
hard road.
INCOME - You can
buv )hese houses and let
one · help vou pav for
bOth. 3 bedrooms each
and all utlt ities.
COUNTRY Finish
this horne yourself and
save . · Now being
renovated. 3 bedrooms.
bath, and ov.r 3 acres
for ontv S19,SOO.
NOW IS THE RIGHT
TIME TO SEE US
ABOUT THE IALE 0~
YOUR PLACES. CALL
ftHI7.. BRUCE OR
VIRGIL

!I(JIJ',t:rr,

II••,Jifrtu.Jf/i'l',

l

Gerald Ret!ter

INCOME
TAX
SERVICE
PHOII.E
992·2490
FOR AN
APPOINTMENT
2·25-1 mo. pd.

8·20.'tfc

t"I:=========+=========~

ALL STEEL

BUILDINGS
Sizes start from 30x24"

U~litJ

Buildings

Sizes from 4 to 6 and alf
wOOd buildings 24x36.
Insulated Dot Houses

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Rt. 3, IOK S4
Racine, Oh.
Ph. 614·843-·2591

......,,

ROUSH

CONSTRUCTIOPf

For bulk del iv ery of
gasoli ne. healing oil and
diesel fuel, call Landmark,
992·2181. Pomeroy. Oh .
Shoot Rac ine Gun
Club. Every Sun. starting
at 1 p.m . Factory choke
gunson lv.

Gun

----------

&lt;Formerly Bare Metal)
27I,W. Main, Pomeroy

Rick &amp; Bill Cogar
owners
IRAKES·TUNE·UPS
OVERHAULS·
DIESIL•EXHAUST
Open MCIII.·Sat. H
3·5·1.

choke 12 gauge shotgun.

Traders Day Sa turday
13th. a t Fox Hunters Cabin
on Eagle Ridge . Bob Cion·
ch .

--- - "'--===

"--...---H~a~:!.
· L--.
ANY PERSON who has
anything to give away and
does not offer or,~ltcmpt to
offer anv other thing for
sale mav place an ad In thi s
column . There will be no
charge to the advert iser .
THREE CATS. One white
w itt'! gray markings, one
white
w i th
ca lic o
markings, one all calico .

4 puppies to a good home
part Co lli e· part Shephard .
Call ~46 · 960~ .
Toys to giv e away . 2 to S yr .
old. See a\ 830 4th Ave ..
Gallipolis .

-==
•

(fill~

V. C. YOUNG Ill
ftH2150r "2·7314

Pomeroy,

1

-· '
Lost : Post earring In f ront ;
of Pomerov P .O. Reward _!
992-726 1. Los t Saturday :
eve .

'

~

LOST· Car

keys.

I

Dull s :

park ing lot, Silver Bridg e ~
Plaza , Reward . Call 304 -'

675·1595 .

.I

-

•

I
I

Smail black shaggy dog, l
part terri er, part poodle. •
answers to name of 'Jot ' '

-\ 8

·

-

___

Public Sa le
&amp; Auction
---

-

_..
L.E . Nea l Aucti oneer Ser -:
vice -

E s t a t e- Farm ·'

Household-Misc. We sel l it! '
Licensed &amp; bonded Ohio ' &amp; :
wva . 367·7101 .

----

-· .
9 _ . _wa ~~d .!o_Buy _ ,
WANT TO BUY Old fuo';o
niture and Ant iqu es of aW
kinds, ca ll Kenn et h Swain',;
4~6· 3159 and 256 1967 in 1he.
eve nings.

.,'

CASH PAl D for clean. Ia to'
model used cars. Smit h:
Bui ck· Pontiac,

Gallipoli!1.~

Ohio . Call446·2282 .
·- - '- Buying

Gol d,

..•.

-

Si lv er.~

Platinum , ol d coins, sc ra p:
rings &amp; silverware. Dail y•
quot es available . AlsO'
coins &amp; coi n su pp lies for:
sale .
Spring
ValleY·
Trading, Spring Valley

Plaza, 446 ·8025 o'r 446·8026.
We pay cash for late model1

clean used cars.

French town Car Co.
Bill Gene JOilnson,
·~6 · 0069 .

.

I

TOP PRICE Sc rap Meta l,,
au to bodies, and ca r s. Bat ,j
terlesl alumiurn. brass &amp;'

coppe r . Gallipolis Bl oc k:
Co .. 123 1/2 Pine St., 446•
2783.
' '
Wanted to buy junk cars or 1
wre cked car s. Phone 388 -~

--------

9303.

4 femalepartpups
Part.
Shepard.
Irish. Setter
992-6736 alter~ : 30 p.m .

want ed t o huy cas h
rcgi stcr ..Call 4461240 .

Long haired gray female
kitten . 10 months old. Litter
trained. 992·7885.

Greg Roush
Ph. 992· 7583
or992·2282

-114.-.Hnc
....... 1141 ptter"""
.Cauall..tl

Cal l Dai ly Sentinel.

2 male puppies. Call 388·
9306.

1 FEMALE dog , 85%
Husky, 15% vnknown .
F ixed at 6 weeks, S years
old, goad with kids. goad
wat ch dog. Lived indoors
first 2 vears, outside last 3
vears . Had to put her· on
cha in In city. Wanl home
where she can run free as
she did her con run first 4
yeors . Hate seeing her
cha ined. 304·675·1179.

CARPENTER
SERVICE

Pick ed up set of keys by;
mistake. Have h11d about•
two weeks. I n Pomeroy .'

All female . Call388·8510 .

OLD Kelvlnator dryer , lor
parts or scrap, 304-675·5726 .

1----"------+----------1
MAIN STREET
GARAGE

6 30 p.m., Bashan Fa c tory

New Homes - · ex·
tensive remodel·
ina

• Electn,arwork
•Custom Pofe. Bfdg1,
• R oofin'g work
14 Years Experience

'

'

Ann Ri ce, 675·3598.

~=========t=========~ aRaGun
ci ne Fire Dept. sponsors
I,
Shoot. Sat . nights

dining

and garden . All utilities
and a 6 room homezon

Male,

Largest Radiator .

1-J· tfC

half baths, living room

with

Turkey Hunte rs We have

SALES &amp; SERVtCE

walk -in cooler . Second
floor apartment rent~d .

room

Valley Trading co., Spring
Vallev Ploza. 446·8025.

BOGGS

SALEM
ST.
RUTLAND - Two story
store building with

with fireplace,

refinishing ,
new
grips,
length ctlange, weighl
change.
*fast service
2 - ~8- 1 mo.
• free consult ing

Fishing License on sale .
Come and see our new ship·
ment of 1982 Fising Rods.
Reels, &amp; Lures . Spring

mouth calls.. slate bo•
ca lls, camo gear &amp; decoys
~---------+----------1 Trading
in stockCo.,
. Spring
ev
Spr ing Vall
Valley
Plaza. 446·8025.
COMPLETE
RAOIATOR
Easter Candy Pri c~s. S1.60
5ERVICE
lb. St.5() lb . for lull case .
From the Smallest
Di's Craft Supply, Spring
Heater Core to the
Val ley Plaza . Ca ll ~46 · 2 134 .
1-19·1 mo.

detail s.

Soft , feminine , ele&amp;antfash ion's new blouses team wijh
daytime pants. go out to dinner
with loni skirts. Save dollars,
sew in crepe, knit.
Printed Pattern 4846: Half
Sizes 10\1. 12\1, i4\l, 16\1,
18\1, 20\1. Women 's Sizes 34,
36 , 38, 40, 42. 44, 46, 48.
$2.25 fw Oldl peltent . ... 50$·
fw Oldl patllnt fw ..... '
. •• ftaMIIna. Sett4 tr.
Alfttt Ad.s
A 'f 1

• Repair : cleaning

Insurance Worl&lt;
Wind, Wafer/ or Fire

of

Extra tot adlolns .
Asking S12.ooo.oo.
EXECUTIVE HOME Beautiful two story
brick hom e . Three
bedrooms. 2 full baths. 2

Flatswoods area . Reward .'

992-3439, 992·1382 .

Scout Camp
Chester, Oh.
*short game practice
• Pro Golf lessons
for all ages.

•Room Additions

warmth and
gra cious living. Call tor

tor return or leading in·
tormar1on. t'n. 742· 7316.

PROBATE cOuRT
OF MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO

part ot an ora•nancl' or

c~~ l : Blac~-;--;h~;;ol~e~

type male dog . S Points or

bedrooms,

Insertion .. ............. S4.00

Public Notice

approach . REWARD . Calf
.446· 4998 or 446· 31 72 .
i

5, Hcbstetter Jr.

condition.

OOBERMAN
PINCHER

insertion ............. ;.$7.00

VD1110D!tr

I

Call Ken Young
For Fast Service
985· 3561

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

Mon., March 1

Only $30,000.00.
GOOO
LOCTION,
SPACIOUS and in mint

LOST DOG

municipalities in the group hereby repealed .
ESTATE OF GLENN G.
in order to eslablish a
SECTION 8: Thattnisor· VANCE,. DECEASED
uniform rate which would dinance shall become cl·
NOTICE OF
apply to each municipality. lective at the earliest date
APPOINTMENT
SECTI ON 6: That the allowed by taw.
OF FIDUCIARY
Villaqe of Pomeroy respt.'C·
On Fobruarv 24th, 1982,
!fully requests Columbia PASSED: March 1, 1982
In the Me ips County
Gas of Oh1o to delay in sub
Probate Court. Case No.
mi ttlnq to the Public Jane Walton
'23t82, Gene Vance and
Ul;[ities Commission of CLERK OF COUNCIL
~yt'-ddf=:'
Ert,VOa~foe'••~•,Pw·als,
Ohio any formal ap·
Clarenc~ Andrews
. C A -1
pli cat ion for an tncrease ln
MAYOR OF COUNCIL 'appo n
o- dmlnlstrat·
'"'' Rates to be c har !fed
ors of the estate of Glenn G.
and collected in due service (3) 9, 10, 2tc
•Vance, deceased. late of R.
in the Village of Pomeroy,
~ ft760~· Middleport, Ohio
for a period of not less than 1 _..;._----~----.·~
Robert E. Buck
180 davs from the date in
Probate Jlld.ge/
which
uniform rate
neQotiations commenced,
WANTED TO IUV
(3) 2 9 16 31
Clerk
in order to allow the qroup
GOOD USED
• • • c
of munictr,alitles twO 90·
CONSOLE PIANO
.•
day negot ating periods to i
'a
enact a uniform rate or· '
CALL 992-3546
dinance.
1 .......
SECTION7: Thatanvor·
,... ... ~
dlnance or resc:&gt;lulion, or ,.__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _~·
· [. w.ruw a

bia Gas of Ohio, Inc ., its

APPLIANCE
SERVICE ·

Parts!

~-

Built Garages"
for

Keep This Ad For
Future R eterenct

ALIGI\I~ENT
·· ·~-. With Genuine GM

"Bea utiful / Custom
Call

3·7·1fc

Set Mr. GDodwrertctl Ftr A

BISSEll:
SIDING CO.

1

LAFF -A- DAY

bedroom.
11h
bath
home . U vi ng room
features b-.. : ~t- i n book·
case, kitchen and d ining
comb., utility room,
Ohio Power electric, air
condition . Plenty room
for garden on your one
acre. Must see this one!

Rutland,

_ _ _,_Public Notlc"e' - - -

dicaled, the Office of lhe
Consumers' Co1..1nsel will

of

All type~ of roof work ,
new or repair gutter and
downspouts,
gutter
cleaning and painting,

COUNTRY
LIVING - Immaculate
ran ch · style.
three

inseruon ............... $3 .011

to Rent
~8 · Equipment for Rent
~9 - For Lease

=_Public Notice=

2·14·1 mo.

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
SIDING

ROOFING

COZV

the name "G".

Public Notice

Rules

Procedur~.

basement home with lit·

~7 · Wanted

IBWantcdTodo

PH. 99z.7201

Broker

t4l w.t 17 Sl, 1ttw Yilt. NY
10011. Prittt IIAIIE, MIDifSS,
ZIP, SIZE, 111d sm.E IIUIIIER.

,~

34 -Business Buildings
35 Lots &amp; Acreage
36 · Real Estate Wan ted

empleymeat

· Ucense!U llgodtd.. .

OFFICE 70-XIO)

AWARDED-M-ben on tbe Award ol Merit Team are bottom, left '
ta rtpt, Mary Evanl, Loll Fraak; top, CbailoUe ~and Brenda
Heck. Other memben wbo parUciJ18ted and are not pictured are Elsie
Roach, Jady Klier and Patricia Pauley. The advller Ia Pam Helcomb.

Classified pages cover the

56· Pe ts for Sale

8-Publ ic Sa le
&amp; Auction

Ohto

C.~or11e

WILliAM D. CHI LOS

PHONE 992-2156·.

.,,..,

' ""'

55· Building Supplies

6-Lost and Found
7-Yard Sale (pa id 1n c1dvanc cl

•limestOne

HOBSTETTER REALTY

.MPIIen ,lns,ur~~-~~

........ .. ·-·....... ...

54 -Misc . Merchandise

S·Happy Ads

weeks . The la st publ ication
will be maoe o·n March 30,
1982, a nd the twenly·elght
(28) davs for answer will
commence on that date.
In case of .your failure to·
answer or
otherwi!e
respond as reQu i-red b'i the

Clll 992·2725

' " " " " .,.,.,

~ ·· ·· · · · · ···

H. L WRITESEL

successive

Middleport

The Daily Sentinel
a o,-. .

(6)

169 N. 2nd

Downing-Childs Insurance
and

-

F laaeelal

six

Kay's Bt1uty S.lon

SERVE YOU BEnER
'

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

~.

for

It's ABlouse Year

WE'RE TOGETHER TO

The Daily Sentinel

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

mo.

Septic Ta.n ks
County Certified
Roush Lane
Cheshire, Oh ,
Ph. !61·1560
H ·t tfc

brown eve &amp; one blue

SOuthern Chapter has mel the Standards of Excellence set up by the
Ohio Assn. of Future Homemakers
of America. The total chapter works
as a team throughout the year and
then are Judgad to win the award.
Activities the chapter had to Include
in their program are :
Understanding local, state and
natlonal structure of FHA/HERO;
explaining the decision making
process of . Impact; · promoting
leadership skills; explaining the
relatlon of Home Economics classes
and FHA/HERO; how members
were involved with State Projects
such as the handicapped, nutrition
and children's hcispltal; ways the
chapter promoted National
FHA/HERO Week; ways chapter
promoted individual growth; how
members are kept infonned II chapter actlvltles; and, proof
attendance at the District Meeting
beldearlierin the year.

at the Diamond Savings and Loan

' ,.._.
.. , . . , . ,

&amp; gas lines
·• dump truck

answers to' K eeGee' sa fe tb

ville.
Thlrls an award in which the

PRECEPTOR BETA BETA
CHAPTER, Tlnirsday, 7:45 p.m.

~

Gas Line-Ditches

Z· l~l

For all your wiring
needs; furnaces
repair service and·
installation.
Residentia I
&amp; Commercial
Call 742-3195

*septic systems
• water, sewer

Water Line Hook -ups

3·3·1 mo.

ter recently won the Award of Merit
at an FHA/HERO Rally held at Trl
County Vocational School in Nelson-

A VARlETY of ·music will be
presented at 7 p.m. Thursday at
the Meigs Junior High School
Auditorium in Middleport when
the junior high music department
gives a concert. The junior high
concert choir under the direction
of T. Edwin Harkless will present
numbers as will the seventh
grade concert bilnd and the
eighth grade concert bsnd directed by Douglas M. Hlll. Admlssion is free and patrena
should arrive as early as possible
since parking at the school can
sometimes be a problem.

. ..

•INic~hoe

*excava ting

Public Notice

=====:r:=~~~~~~======j of
titioned;
forfees
an herein
allowance
attorney
and

=

TRENCHING
SERVICE ·
Water-Sewer - ~lectric

Free Estimate
Jam.es Keesee
Ph. 992·2772

JIM LUCAS

and State of Ohio :
. FIRST T~ACT: In Frac-

Beg1nnmg at the southwest
corner of sa id Fraction 6 ;
thence north 113 rods and
10 links; thence east 169112 1
rods; thence south 113 rods
and 10 links; thence west
·1691h rods to the. place of
beginning. Said tract of
land as df!scribed contains
120 acrs and 21 .03 rods,
more or less. The tract of
land to be conv~.yed by this
deed is 10 acres off the nor·
thwes_t corner of the above

etnsutatlon
• Storm Doors
• Storm Windows
• Replace mont
WjnciOW$,
• New !looling

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING

The Southern FlWHERO Chap-

Co., Riverboat Room.
RUTLAND - The Silver Circle
Senior Citizens Club of Rutland
will have a blood pressure clinic
at the Hill Street Center, Wed·
nesday from noon until 1 p.m.
Barbara Van Meter, R.N., will be
conducting the clinic.

JOft M. Grues•r. Itt. al.,

Case No. 18,0&amp;4

or

Pomeroy.

IN THE .
COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS,
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO

RiverV'iew
Garden Oub

'Mn.

The

Ohio

.'
'

Antique corner cupboa rd s~
other antique cupboard io
any

0138 .

condit ion.

Ca ll

367 ·

CHIP WOO D. Pol es max
diameter 14" on lar ges t
end . $12.50 per ton . Bundled
s ial&gt; . $10.50 per ton .
Dcllvcrd to Ohio Pall &lt;•i co ..
R ock Spr i ngs Rd ..
Pomeroy. 992-2689.
~old ,

si lver, s terling,
1ewelry , rings, old coins &amp;
currency . Ed Burkett Bar •

l&gt;er Shop, M ld dlcpor1. 992
3476.

'

--

.

.

Sears 19' color TV doesn't

OLD FURNITUR E, I&gt;Cd5 ,

work for parts. Call 67,5·
6627.

chen cubbards of all tv pes .

Pups dnale and 1 female.
mo!her pure Chow Chow.
Excellent kids dog. well
behaved . ·First come first
serve . Ready Wed. March
10th. 675· 1569 between 6·8
PM.
~

part Huokey pups 2 male
and 2 female . Phone 675·
"9' before JPM.

iron, brass, or wood . Kit·

Tabl es,. round or square .

Wood •ce boxes. Old desks
and bookca•es. Wi II but
comple te hou sehold. Gold,
silver, old money , pock et

watches, chains, rings, f)nd
etc . Indian Art ifacts of all
ry pes . Also buying baseball '
cards. Osbv Martin 992· '
6370.
-

-·----··-"U'J

Good used console plano&gt;
Call992·3546 or 992-2049.

-- .,

�10--The Daily Sentinel

'

p
42

They'll Do It Every Time

Good used baby furniture.
Call.u6-6695 evenings.

Help W•nted

It's never too late to start
your own career. Sell Avon
and earn good SSS. Set your
own hours. For information
call +46·3358.

Around OHIO Magazine Is
looking for a media
represeljtati ve tor the
Gallia County area to handle advertising and
editorials. Please write or
call :
Around
OHIO
Magazine, 1035 Walnut St.,
coshocton, Oh 43812, 614·
623-8133.
Applications now being ac·
cepted for summer em·
ployment at the Middleport
n,tmlclpal park. Positions
afallable Include pool
manager, life gua f ds, and
SY,'immjng Instructor. ap·
p(y at Middleport Mayor's
oHice Monday through
Ffiday , BAM to 4PM.

si.udent page at Bossard
Memorial Library after
school and weekends. Ap·
pr.ox . 17 hr . per week at
SZ1 35 per hr . Must be 16 yrs.
old. 4 weeks probationary
Jl&lt;lriod. Call «6-7323.

'

G~T VALUABLE training
as a young business person
a~d earn good money plus
some great gifts as a Sen·
tinel route carr ier. Phone
u~ right away arid get on
th~ eligibi lity list at 99221Z6or992·2157 .

21
Business
_ ____,0'-'p'-'po
= rt"'
u,_
ni,_ty
' -- Cigarette
Vending
Business. Call304·773·5651 .

22

Money to Loan

REFINANCE or purchase
vour home . 30 year f ixed
rate. WVa . &amp; Ohio. Leader
Mortgage, 77 E. State St.,
Athens, Oh . 592·3051 .
23

Professional
Services

Piano
Tuning
&amp;
Repa ir .Cail Bill Ward for
appointment,
Ward ' s
Keyboard, 4&lt;46·4372 .

C &amp; L Bookkeeping , Com·
plete bookkeeping and tax
service for bUsiness and in·
div iduals .
Carol Neal446·3862
STARKS Tree &amp; Lawn Ser·
vice, all types trimming &amp;
removal, insured, 30-t-576·
2010.
Fl RST
and second
morgages, land contracts,
and receivabl es purchased.
614 - ~..S-4113 .

E~perienced

Auto .
Mechahic . Experienced in
enDine tune-up. Air condlf-ionlng and heating .
Wtite Box 743, Pomeroy,
ON. 45769 .

'

POOL

'MANAGER and
lif~guard applications for
'London Pool for 1982
sesson will be accepted by

syracuse VIll age Clerk
Janlco Lawson until 7:30
PM March 15, 1982.
Lead Guitarist wanted for
est, Country rock band. 992·
5541. Ask for Nick. 992·3187
ask for Jim .
PRIVATE duty Nursing, at
PinCrest care center, for
m'ale ,patient, 304- ~75· 5941
or 614·«6·9727.
CLAN MILLS needs people
for light del ivery work ,
must provide economical
transportation . Apply to
Jackie Carsey, Scottish
Inn, Mon'day, Tuesday &amp;
Wednesday, from 12 to 1 or
5·6 p.m . Room 163. Equal
Opportunity Emp.loyer.
CLAN MILLS has severa l
Immediate openings tor
telephOne . appointment
c lerks . No e)(perience
necessary , we train. May
work 9 a.m . to 1 p.m . or s
p.m . to 9 p.m. Apply to
Jackie Car~ey , Scottish
Inn. Monday, Tuesday &amp;
Wednesday from 12 to 1 or
5·6 p.m . Room 163. Equal
Opportunity Employer.
12

Situations Wanted

Have room, board, and
1 undry for elderly person
my home . 992·6748 .
Ill do .baby sitting in my
me for preschool chi Id .
01111 992·2772 afler 5 or
~&gt;).tore noon.

1,

Insurance

DY AND BEAVER In·
nee Co. has offered
Ices for. fire insurance
rage In Gallla County
almost a century.
~ . home and personal
6f&gt;erty coverages are
lllable to meet in·
vidual · needs. Contact
osJer Lewis, agent. Phone
79·3318.

~

l;::::;::===--

.

5

Schools Instruction

arate the ultimate In self
.e.nce all private lessons,
Men, women. &amp; children.
Instruction thru black belt.
Also available Karate
uniforms puchlng and
kicking bags. and protec·
five equipment. Jerry
Lowery &amp;
Associates
Karate Stud io.
143
Burlington Rd .. Jackson, ·
Oh. Call 286·3074.
GUH A R
lessons ,
In ·
dlvidual classes, personal
attention, modest prices.
Caii30H75·3734.
18

Wanted to Do

j]

__H~me...........Sa~

1972 Concord Mobile Home.
12x6S. Call 446·7015 after
5:30p.m .

.t bedroom hovse for sale.
Rt. 325 toward Rio Grande.
Call 388·9676 .
Beautiful brick &amp; frame, 3
bedroom home w/scenic
view,
wood · burning
fireplace, formal dining,
central air w/heat pump.
Lanscaped, 1 acre lot
w/ fenced in back yard,
$45,900. Ca II +46·3766.
New Income Limits. If you
earn between $9,000 · to
$15,000. a year, you may be
able to buy a 3 bedroom
house {not a mobile home)
for as little as S13S. mo. No
down payment . Call 992·
7034.
House ·27 acres . Eagle
Ridge Road. Pr ice reduced
for quick sale. $37,500. Also
2 bedroom house trailer
$1.800. Ca11949·2793 .

Can be for 1 I ami ly or 2
separate
Apartments.
Near town. Call after 7p.m,
992-3592 .

3 Bedroom all electric
home . Fully carpeted.
Garage · and workshop.
Patio. E)Ccellent cond.
$49,500. 742·2201.
2 story house in Mid·
dleport. Corner lo't. Close to
stores. $15,300. 992 ·5548.

ASSUMABLE 8'h% loan . 2
year old , three bedroom
house. All electric. 1117
baths. Large level lot.
Stove. refrigerator and
dishwasher (all 2 years
old) stay . Upper end of Pt.
Pleasant . $56,000. 304·675·
1538.
ONE owner house, 1211
Main St. 6 rooms. 2 story
brick, custom built by
Everett Lutton . 30~ · 675 ·
2381 '
4 bedroom house by owner.
1110 mile l rom Shadle
bridge. Rt. 35, S37,500. Call
675· 1325.

...

....

- - ·7"7":';-:-:---

-

32

Mobile Homes
for Sale
1970 mobile home Elcona
with expando. Large lot in
Mercerville . Call +46·0827
after 5.
1970 Hill c r est Mobile
Home. 12 by 65. $3500. 992·
7559 ..
1976 2 bedroom Hillcrest
mobile home . Down
payment. Assume loan
payments. 992·3917.
USED MOBILE
576 ·2711 .

HOM E.

---------

MOBI L E HOMES MOVED
Licensed &amp; insured. Call
304·576·2711 .
For sale 2 &amp; 3 bedroom
tra ilers, furnished, with
air. Caii304·773·56Sl .
1972 12X65 Schultz , 3
bedroom, gas heat, partially furni shed. Call 675·
2907.
14X70 SKYLINE,
two
bedroom, all elec tri c, central air. 304·675 ·6986.

51

14' WIDE . 3 bedroom
mobile home. $8995. All
State Modular Homes. 30~576·2711 .

3} ~= 'Farm~ iOrsaie-Farm 76 acres . Good
house , barn, work shop,
sma ll chicken house. 1 mile
west of Langsville on Sr .
124. 742·2860after4p.m.

3-5-

18 acres, beautiful building
site, r ural water, septi c
tank, toba cco base. 8 acres
tillable . Caii256 · 11S6.

LARGE TRACT of land.
Dead ends on Peacock Ave .
Has water and sewage.
Will finance to r es ponsible
party at 12 percent. 992·
5786.

Rentals
41

Houses for Rent

Furnished house, 4 rooms,
near HMC, S200, water
paid, one c hild acceptable.
Call +46·«16 after 7PM.

5 room house, porch,
basement, S150 mo. Call
675·5104.
2 bdr., First Ave ., historic
home, just redor ated . Ca ll
«6·2570.

Furnished 3 room cottage
in town. One lady or a
married couple please.
Deposit required also
references, no pets. Call
«6·2543 .
Homes for Rent, Leasem or
Land Contract in town, or
country .
Call
Strout
Realty, «6·0008 .
For rent or flor sale . Fully
carpeted 6 rms. &amp; bath, 5
miles from town. Call 446·
1158.

•

5 room house with bath.
Large lot near Rac ine. 992·
5858.

KIT 'N' CARL VLE TW

Household Goods

baby
matresses.
$25
&amp; $35,
bed frames
S20 S25,
&amp; $30
.
Electric fireplace, gun
cabinet, Living room suite,
wood table &amp; 4 cha irs.
used ·
ranges,
refrigerators, and TV's. 3
m iles out Bulaville Rd.
Open 9am to 7pm, Mon.
thru Fri .. 9am to 5pm, sat.
+46·0322

3 bedroom unfurn ished
apartment. S215.00 month.
plus utilities. $100 deposit.
Three credit references
required, Court Stree1. Call
+46·0088 for appointm.enl lo
see apartment.

3 bedroom unfurnished
apartment. 992·5434 or 992·
5914 or 304-882·2566.
1 bedroom furnished apt.
992·5434. 992·5914 or 304·882·
2566 .
1 Bedroom Apt., utilities in·
eluded . Middleport, Oh.
$180. 992-7177.
~&lt;46 ·

3 room furnished apt.
Utilities paid. No drunks or
dope or pets. John Sheets.
3&amp; 1h mi. So. of Mid·
dleport.R -7.
Apartments. 675·5548.
APARTMENTS , mobile
hom es , . houses,
Pt .
Pleasant and Ga llipolis.
614·446·8221 or 614·245·9484.
45

Furnished Rooms

SLEEPING ROOMS and
light housekeeping apt. ,
Park centra l Hotel.
46

Space for Rent

COUNTRY MOBI .L E Home
Park; Route 33, North of
Pomeroy . Large lots. Call
992 - 7~79 .

47

Wanted to Rent

Farm with hOuse, tillable
acreage In Ga ll ipolis area .
Call «6·83816r 367·7141.
49

For Lease

USED
MUELLER
Climatrol Fuel Oil Fur·
nace, 100,000 BTU . Ph. 992·
7815 after 6 p.m.

..... ., ........
......... ,.
........
'

s.~l-~
H~o~u~
se~h~o~ld~G~ood=•c._

BATHROOM sink with
faucetts, S20. phone 304·675·
2973.
• pc. rose sectional sofa

$75, wicker Clothes hamper
$12, wrought iron benth
with padded vinyl seat S20,
manual typewriter S-45. 675·
3325 after 4:00PM.

GOOD
USED
AP ·
PLIANCES · washers,
dryers.
refrigerators.
range s.
Skaggs
Ap ·
pliances. Upper River Rd.,
beside Stone Crest Motel.
«6·7398.
Used Furniture 2 sofas,
Cannonball maple bed,
Queen mattress and box
springs. Corbin &amp; Snyder
~urn i ture, 446-1171 .
late model GE au to.
washer, perfect shape,
S110. Electric ran ge, real
nice $110 . Call «6·8181 or
4&lt;46·2674.
.
Westinghouse dryer, 3 tem·
peratures, $80. Kenmore
auto washer, 2 spd.. $90,
guaran te e~. Call 256·1207.
Call256·1207.

1----------.. .

---------~

54n_ ____!:M
~i'!s~
c ·c!M!!!'er~c~h'!a!':nd!!'i'!'c.!
e_
USED
MUE-LLER
Climatrol Fuel 011 Fur·
nace .
100. 000
BTU .
Pomeroy, PH. 992·7815

63

Dairy Herd, grade
Holsteins. Phone 304·675·
1336. after 7 P.M .

64

THAT 5 HOU~D TeACH
'fOU TO 8UH IN WHERE
YOU'RE I-lOT WANTED.

Auto Pilr1s

23 in. Motorola black and
white T.V. Console, works
good. $50 . 992·6115.

Fuel Heater, all electric lit
with blower $300. Warm
morning coal stove, like
new $250. Topper for small
truck S75. pressure canner
$20. Phone 304·576·2069.
&gt;5~5'-.....!'
B'-'!u:'.'if~d!!ln'l!g!..'S!.!!u'l'p'I'P!!fle
!'s!.._

Building materials block,
brick, sewer pipes, windows, lintels, etc. Claude
Winters. Rio Grande, 0.
Ca11245·5121 .
POODLE GROOMING .
Call Judy Taylor at 367·

7220.

Mixed hay for sale. Call
379·2424.

MIXED hay, Jack Roush.
304-882·2079.

Ouality Autobody &amp; Paint
work . Professional custom
p,1inf work on motorcycles.
Auto Trim Center, .u6-1968.
CHECK US OUT Guaran·
teed automative repair, 35
years experience. Garage
behind Arcade on Court St.
in old G &amp; J alley . LOW
rates. Call «6·9159.

·~·IS OUR SMALL Slz&amp; .

-mal COWE.S "SIJPel2.'· AIJO

Flt..l~L'/ "JoM80. 11
\-X)W '\tlal, IF
'IOU

WN-\TW

81
71

Auto for Sale

78 Ford Fiesta 45,000M,
exc . cond., $2,800, 536
Jackson Pike, Apt. 858 .
For sale 1978 Chrysler Cor·
doba automatic, AT , PS,
PB. air, cruise, leather in·
terlor, low mileage. Must
sell . Ca11245·5841.

--- ---~- --

1972 Ford Mustang Mach I,
351 Cleveland engine. auto.
trans.. air shocks. S400.
Call388·9354.

1976 12 passanger Chateau
Ford van loaded with extras. exc . cond. Harry
Rhodes, 675·1981 .
74 _ _ _ _Matorcycies

·::.

All used bikes reduced a1
Betz Honda, check with us
before you pay to much.
Call «6·22ol0.

698&lt;1.
1977 XL· Honda 350, IIOod
NEW Idee haY conditioner, . condition, $450. Call · 614·
304·1195·3471.
388-9809.

m::; SAAW...

Home
Improvements

STUCCO PLASTERING
texturPd ceilings com ·
mercia! and residential,
tree estimates. Call 256·
1182.
PAINTING - interior and
exterior,
plumbing ,
roofing, some remodeling .
20 yrs. exp. Call388·9652.
Marcum
Roofing
&amp;
Spouting. 30 years ex perience. specializing in
built up roof. Ca ll388·9857. ,

(!) 'Lefty, the Dfnplng .
Lynx' Pert 1 A mixed-up
lynx , ...eparaled from hia
mother· end adopted by a
forest ranger, tries 10 find
his rightful place in 1ho
wilderneas.
(]) Gomer Pyle
(]) Muppet $how
D (I) ()D CBS News
(I) Or. Who
(jJj ABC Nawa
7:00 D ())P.M. Megazlne
()) John Ankerberg
(]) · Carol Burnett and
Friend a
(I) Entenalnmant Tonlght
Cil HIIJIPV Days
D (I) Tic Toe Dough
(I) (fD MacNeil-Lehrer
Report
til.
Cl!I ,Nawa
II (jJj Family Feud
7:30 D ())You AUed For It
(J) Another uta
(!) Sporto llfuetratecl: The
Flret 2&amp; Ye1re Great moments in sports are the
subject of this spacial.
(]) · NBA
Bauetbell:
Denver .t At'-'ta
(]) D (() Femlly Feud
Cil Laverne and Shirley
(I) Buelneu Report
® Richerd Slmm0111
(lJ) Training Dogo
D (jJj Face the Muolc
8:00 D ()) Cil F.thar Murphy
Fath~r Joe Parker goes
against Murphy's advice
and leaves the priesthood
to work at a frontier sal ~
oon. (60 min .\ !Closed
Caplioned)
(J) Nlltlonel Geog,.phlc
Specillf
(I) II (jJj Happy Oeye
ICiosed-Caplionedl

a

I IF" lEeS

DRAGONWYND
CAT ·
TERY · KENNEL. AKC· 1963 Ford low mileage,
Chow
puppies,
C FA $1,000, collector item. Cal l
Himalayan, Persian and «6·1735.
Siamese kittens. Call «6·
38« after 4 p.m .
1965 Mustang automatic,
pony interior, 289, new
HILLCREST KENNEL
front shocks &amp; air shocks,
Boarding all breeds, clean $1,600. Call «6·«08.
indoor·outdoor facilities.
Also AKC Reg. Doper· 1972 Chevrolet 1mpala,
mans. Call «6·7795 .
good condition, USO. Call
367·7822 .
BRIARPATCH KENNELS
Boarding and grooming .
1980 Bonneville' diesel
AKC
Gordon
setters, 20,000 mi ., $7,400 firm . Call
English Cocker Spaniels. 446·8310.
Call 388·9790.
Good clean horses for sale
and horse trailer. Call 388·
8623.

Windshield brOken?· Call
Southern Glass. Insurance
claims welcome, free
mobile service available.
Call +46·1011 .

--------

Hay I Grain

(jJj

6 :31) D ()) Cil NBC News
()) S&amp;O.OOO Py,.mld

i'i-·
- Auto Re~lr
--- - - - --

Livestock

•

(() Andy Grffftth
(()ABC Nawa
(I) 3· 2· 1' Contact
(fD Prog cont' d
6:15 (fD Over Easy

&amp; Accessories

1911
Bolens
12
h. p.
Hydrostatic 42 ln. mower .
Tractor
tires,
utility Hlllrley parts &amp; accessories
trailer. 992·7605 or992·284S. · now . at Custom Cycles,
L TO .
Rt.
7 North ,
135 MF tractor, perk. gas, Gallipolis. Open evenings,
excellent condition, 304-675· HPM. P~. «6·73&lt;46.

'

6:oo •NeWII
m m a Cll ®

773 · 594~ .

i981 Ford 1700 tractor -25
. hp. 4 wheel drive. p.s. 3 pt
hitch. Used one summer .
Includes 5 II. Ford rear
mower and woods post hole
digger. $91001614-985- ~290.

12x60 2 bedroom, un·
furnished, $175 per mo.,
SIOO dep., Gas &amp; water fur·
nlshed, no pets. Call «6·
47o45 or «6· 1630.

EVENING

18ft. RUNABOUT ski boat
with lots of extras. in·
chJding buil t in stereo_ 304-

2 bedroom house. Call 675·
1]431.

Centenary, 2bdr.. private
lot, rei. Jo dep.. $160 mo.,
adults. Call6)4·643·26«.

. 3/9/82

Boats and
Motors for Sillle

76

.........,_
I____
I
r
....... - .

TUESDAY

-- - -------

1980 CHEVY Scottsdale, 3.4
ton, A-wheel drive, 4 speed,
AM· FM, regular gas, 30,000
miles. good shape. 304·773·
5150.

Mobile Homes
for Rent

•
•
VIewmg·

1981 Honda 750 Custom 1600
miles, cr ash bars and road
pegs. Paid S3600. new , will
sell tor $3000. Cal' 992·2722
after six.

3506.

42

Television

1979 Honda XL 1855. On or
off road, gOOd condition,
S750.00. Phone «6·1003 af·
fer 5:00.

Registered
Brittany
Spaniel Puppies. Females. 1977 Chevy Malibu 305 auto,
PS, PB , ver·y-, good con8 weeks old. Have shots and dition. Call +46·8523 .
S60.00
each.
992·
·
wormed.
Coffee tabl e &amp; end tables.
Must see to appreciate, 7.563.
1980 Ford Pinto, 16,000
rea sona 1be . Call446·3937 .
miles, 4 cyl .. 4 speed, like
OOG ·l year old, registered
new. $3600. 992·7892.
English
Bulldog
With
Whirlpool2 speed washer, 3
temp. Whirlpool dryer papers. price negotiable,
1975 Chevrolet Impala. 2
looks nearly new. guaran· call614·992·2807 .
door. Call before lp.m ;
teed. Call256·1207.
Mon. thru Fri . any Time
S7
Musical
weekends. 992·7675.
Instruments
Singer Sewing Machine in
cabinet. 446· 1216.
Micromoog Synthesizer 77 For Sale. 1972 Monte Carlo,
model, 32 note key board, a.c. , p.s .. p.b . Excellent
Couch &amp; matching chair, 2 excellent condition. Call condition . 667·3333.
end tables, 2 lamps, 1 cha ir Nick at «6·0921 .
needs repair and Pricilla
drapes 1 pair 8~x70 &amp; I pair Kimball electric organ En· 1970 Plymouth G TX ·«&lt;
Magnum,
completely
40x7S. Call 256·6215 .
'tertaine r
3,
double restored, stock, must sell
keyboard. Call «6·7230.
immediatlv . Sacrifice at
$2,500. 614-742·2143 .
54
Misc. Merchandlce
PEAVEY bass amphlifier
Plastic Septic Tanks . State and guitar. like new, both
and coUnty approved. 1,000 for SSOO. or wi II sell HARTS Used Cars, New
Haven West Virginia. Over
gal . tank, pri ce $340. Other separate, 304·675·3978.
20 · less e&gt;&lt;pensive cars in
sizes in stock, haul in your
stock .
pickup truck . Call 614·286·
5930, Jackson, Oh. RON 5,9~2:
F~or~S~a~l~
e~o~
rT
~
ra~d~e;__
EVANS ENTERPRISES
1977 Monte Carlo, low
3 Bedroom , large Garage. mileage, nice . Contact
2 Bedroom rental 2 acees
For Sale' Beautiful floor ground, Mason. 3&amp; 1h MI. Mike at 28th St. Amoco.
615·9768 .
model console stero, AM· South of Middleport. R-7.
FM B·track &amp; record
player, S300.00. Call 379·
1976 CHEVY Nova , ex ·
2314 . '
cellent condition, 304·773 ·
5944 .
Dried walnut lumber for
sale. Call «6·2738 .
·h - -· rr.ick7i liirsale-61
Form Equipment
67 Chevrolet PJ.J 283. Call
Firewood
split
and
FARM A-46·9219 after 4.·
delivered, S35 pickup load. JIVIDEN'S
Also taking orders for next EQUIPMENT
«6·1675
year-. Call388·9823 .
Special Sale on NEW 1936 Antique Ford 1/~ ton.
Must see to appreciate,
LONG TRACTOR I
collectors item . Call 388Massey
Ferguson Model
HP
Price
9696.
bulldozer diesel , 7ft. blade, 26024
$4924.00
wench, good cond., $14,000. 31~
28 5594.00
Call «6·2522 after 5.
31~4x4-28 7072.00
~ : ~ -v.~~-4 w:-o~ -::_
36035 6S5S.OO
1977 Jeep Wagoneer, $2,700.
41 .9- 7353.00
Wedding gown perfect con · ol6(fPhone ;188·9334 after 6PM.
diton, size 9. Call 4-46·2959 ol6&lt;f-4x4-~1 .9- 9619.00
51~
48.5-7771.00
after 5.
51~4x 4- 48 . 5-9886.00
1975 Dodge Ramcharger.
51~
48.5-- 8450.00
Automatic, Full time ,
Locust Post for sell . Call 61~
64
9314.00
Mileage 50,632. Good con·
367·0632 before 2:00PM.
61~4x4-64 - 11,304.00
dillon . $1600. 992·2382 . Call
Plus Freight after 5: p.m .
Excelsior Oil Co., 636 E .
Main St., Po.meroy, Ohio. ·sale Date March 13, 1982
1978 FORD· 4-WD . 1/2 ton,
992·2205.
CALL NOW! $3,200 .00 Needs minor .
repairs; 304·675·3534 or 615·

J bedroom house, family
room with woodburnlng
fireplace, central air cone!.,
carpeted, ref. required.
Call 304-675·2497 after SPM.

lf!4_ _;M~ot~o!!rc~y~cl~es!.:._ _

----- - ·-·--

CLEAN USED MOBILE
HOMES
KESSEL'S
QUALITY
MOBILE
HOME SALES, 4 MI.
WEST, GALLIPOLIS, RT
35, PHONE «6·3868.
12x60 2 beqroom Buddy
, mobile home. Set up with 2
or 4 lots, gas heat, rural
water,· c lose to town, finan·
clng available. Phone +46·
1294.

by Larry Wright

S I Z~ ..

ANNIE

..:ME? fM Hlll/1/HWI()Y!

LlliE IT 1£R.E, AtiHIE!

WELL'TRAIH
fM HatE
T'I!Oti
OOT
Fffi Ttf

FOR OL' MR. OATES. THEY
KEEP 6El\DIH' ~ ()liE&amp;
T' SEE IF'H 1£ HE€05

MK. OATES HAG GOT

OLYMPICS, WT ...

TlWir'5
JU6T AHORGE!
~[](!

SI..Eci6, SNATE5... I'IE
COULD HITCH UP
THI~ 0C SLEIGH ••

AHYTHIMEi!

'

:::~·l I

® FOOLIH'? YOO'LL

MY FOLKS TENAHT·FAitlol

YOU'VE 6€EH

'EM BEFORE!

CAPTAIN STEEMER Car·
pet Cleaning featured by
Hoffelt Brosthers Custom
Carpets. Free estimates.
Call «6·2107.

D Cll Simon &amp; Simon
A.J. uses a computer dat ~
ing service to crack a bur·
;Eirv ring. (60 min.)
(J) (fD Ufe On Earth 'Riae
of the Mamtnels.' Platypuses, numbats, wombats,
Tosman·ian davits, kangaroos an~ opossums are
among the odd collection
of creatures .aean in this
account of the developm,nt of mammals. (60
min .ljCioaed Caplionedt
(iD Blly Graham Cruude
8:30 Ill MOVIE: 'DreeHd to

Carpenter
work,
remodeling, &amp; roof ing. Call
367-0194.
French , City Painting .
residential &amp; commercial,
interiorr exterior, paper
hanging,
&amp;
textured
ceilings. Call 367·77U or
367· 7160.

TN,_,- TeUS IT, YOU CRUMMY UTILE

YEP! l-ET~ JAB 'IM

La--.! J:W HMt E~ OF

WITH IT II.N' Sf';E IF
HE JUMPS'!

ntiSlfGIMME TH,.T!.

Kill'

Spec ial March and April
only. Gene's Deep Steam
Cleaning. Scotch Gaurd.
Free estimate. 992·6309

(]) e

(jJj Leveme end
Shirley Laverne and Shirley
apoof' some famous op·
eras. jCioaed·Captionedl
9:00
(!) Bret Maverick
(J) ~00 Club
(I)
•
(jJj
ThrH'I
·Company
jCio110d·
Captioned!
II (I) · ()D MOVIE:
'Between Two Brothere'
(I) River of S.nd When a
four-year droughl atrikea
the Tlva Rlver in Kenya,
the area's wildlife is forced
to adapt to the new circumarances or die and cameras capture the animal
behavior
which
results
from tf1e · creature 's effons
to deal with and survive
this natural diaas1er. 160
min .)
9: 15 (fD Neuron Suite While
comparing the func1ion~ of
the nervous system with
those of a luxury hotel,
Jam8s Burke conducts an
engrossing tour through
the hul'non brain end de·

RON ' S Television Service.
Specializing in Zenith and
Motorola , Quazar, and
house calls. Phone 576·2398
or +46-2454.

Th' bliqhter
qot in the way
of me foot I

That's it,
~owser!

F &amp; K Tree Trimming, ·
stump removal. 675·1331.

One, two...

RINGLES' SSERVICE ex·
periEmced mason, roofer,
carpenter,
electrician,
general repairs . and
remodeling. Phone 304-615·
2088 or 675· 4560 .
Water wells . Commercial
and Domestic . Test holes.
Pumps Sales and Service.
304-895·3802.

monatrates how messages

82 ·

WINNIE
~T,'f11SS

WINKlE! SENOR
PEREZ'S ~SINES5

Plumbing
I Healing

... WHICH OMAI?
OOUGHT FORA

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine
Phone «6·3888 or «6· AA77
~~

SON6l

Excantlng

Gallipolis Diversified Const. Co. Custom dozer &amp;
backhoe work , Special
farm rlt1es. Call us for free
estimates. 446- 4~.

==-= == ::!=:::-::::=:_·

'
:::. =. 14

84
Electrical
.. . .. ~f!e!r~!!'alia~. • __
SEWI NG Machine repa irs,
service. Authorized Singer
Sales &amp; Service Sh.rpen
Scissors , Fabric Shop,
Pomeroy . 992·22U.
JACKS REF.RIGERATIO·
N A ir condition service,
commercial. industrial.
Phone 882·2Q79.

BARNEY

SNUFfY!! VOU TOLD
ME Ot: BULLET WAS
Ttf BEST BIRD DOG
11\t HOOTtl\t'
HOLLER

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1163 Sec. Ave., Gallipolis .
«6· 7833 or 446·1833.
MOWREYS Upholstery Rl.
1 Box 124. Pl. Pleasant, JQ.I·
675·4154.

17
ENPAN-

60EP?

PAULO,
ARE. YOU
AWAKE

YET? '

e

Comfort

9:46 (() TBS Evening Newo
10:00 (I) e (jJj Hart to Hart
The Harts anemp1 to clear
a friend framed tO&lt; murder.
(60
min .)
(Closed·
Caplionedl
Cll Neuron Suite While
comparing lhe funcllons of
the nervous syttem with
those of 1 luxury hotel,
Jamlls Burke conducts an
engrossing tour througli
the human brain and de·
monstretes how meaaagea
are transmitted, how decisions are made and how
behavior it influenced. (60
min.)
10:15 Ill MOVIE: 'The Poetmllf1
AlwiiY. Ringe Twlce'
(fDrHWa-ch
10:;10 (()~out America
10:415 ilD Hitchcock

C1J N•~lle RFD
(() AH In the Family
11 :115 (I) Auetln City Umlta
'TM Bellamy Brothers JOnd
John Anderson.' 160 min.)
11 :30 D ()) (f) T onlght Show
Guest hoot Bill Cosby ia
i oined by Terl Garr. (60
min .J
Cll Another uta
(() MOVIE: ' J - and

Hauling
limestone or
gravel
by tons for
driveway, or misc . hauling ,
George Woodyard . Call «6·
9428.

:::_u_p_lioilila _ ::.=

MY

(BJ NeWII

JONES BOYS WATER
SERVICE. Call 367·7471 or
367·0591 .

•L~

~UT,

SAFETY...
I{OWIS

are transmitted, how decl ~
sions are made and how
behavior ia inflyenced . {60
min.)
9:30 (()
(jJj Too Clooe for

11:00D(J)CIJCilD(])CiDe

al "~~n!!i; ~~~~~~~~ ~

JIMS Wlller Service. Call
Jim Lanier, JQ.I-675·7397 .
Camp Conley .

SHOIT

tiJ

IRAYATS t

I

'BARKEY'

Now arrange 1,, . Clrclld lenoro 10
form the 1Urpr1U lnlftr, II IUQ·
geo1od by the lbove canoon.
·

(AntwtralomorrQW)
Yes terday's

I

Jumbles: BLESS DIRTV FIRING INDOOR
Answer: In thla altuallon" you'll be very close to. 1
!lghi - RINGSIO•
.
.

BRI.DGE..-----__;_-....,

By Oswald Jacoby
ond Alan Sontag

(J't(A'f ~IRED I-lAND,
LET'S STAAT PLANTING

MV GARDEN ...

·

••a

+HI
.AJIO&amp; .
tiOIU
tiU
+QUI
+KI04
SOliTII
.AQJS
9QIU
tKQ

''

.
'

•Au

.,

Will

'

.,

Vulnerable: Nortb-Boutb
Dealer:' South
..

1\'

INT

z+

Pau

P111

Paa ...

P111
Openln&amp;lead: t2

finesse . West took his king·, ' ;
and led a second trump, bu~ declarer was hi full control , "
He won, cashed the' heart •
queen, ruffed a heart, rutted .
the fast diamond and ruff~
his lest low heart.
.
The defense still scored the ·
last trick, but that was only •'
their third .
"

loy tHOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS .
DOWN
1 Entertainer
1 Minced meat
5 Cruel one
2 Musical group
11 Throb
3 Old-time
1% l\lght now!
warship
13 Cooking
4 Thrice (Lat .)
5 Spar

direction

It Spoiled
I Venezuelan
15 Word with cat
copper
11 Rome's
center
- Veneto

7 Speck
8 Mutually
troubled

17 "Ball -"
11 Realty sign
2G Encircle

21 Payment
22 Noble
Italian name

·,

Yeelercltly'• Alllwer
ztStopl (lllut.)
U Qulle a few

31 R1141lln

%4 Urchin

33 Utah
city ·

9 Furtiveness %5 Maple's
10 Exploalve
fruit
11 Swerve
!8 cambric.
19 Memorize
21 Awaken

••

river
35 Alutalr ..:. :,
31 Hawllllan

·'

game

23 Play the lead
%4 Nonsense
(slantJ)

%5 Very (Ger.)
:11 CoWcle with
27 Ancient
Egyptian

city

!8Stratwn
38 Brooks
ofcom~y

31 Aglow

3i Scary
utterance .
34 Gone aloft
31 Rush 37 Frogl.lke
38 Alleviate
39 Ez-Medcan

prealclent
to Detail

.

'
'

•

I

'

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work It-: , ;
AXYDLBAAXR
· :
It

LONGFELLOW

• .';

'l
·' I

One letter almplr • tandt for another. In tbla Nmple A

Ia , '

uted for the three L's, X lor the two O'o, etc . Slnale letten, · _
apo~tropbea, the lenfllh end formation ol the worde ere all :
hlnll. E~c:h day the code letten are different.

.. •
CE:YPTOQUOT£8

z

(]) Nlghlllne

z

(]) WKIIP In
Clncllwlllll BeMbal rMna·
ger Spartty Auder1011 re·
(II)
tumo to
(]) PBS ..... Night •
. D .(BJ Fatteov llland A
woman 11M ravolutiontry
Idol• about hou-Oit

...

IWT

WEST
+K4

tltUM~·jt'

py

D

Hoa

9K4
tAJ74
.J73

'

tile Lend'

D (BJ Nlghdlna
12:00 Cll Bulna • Allen

NORTH

.,.. u

Most of the hands in
'' Trump Management' ' were
played In tournaments by
expert players. Here Is an
Instructive one as played by
the late Albert H. Morehead .
He reached four spades
after a S1ayman respon1e to
his
opening
n~trump.
Against ~ny lead but a club
the hand would be a cinch .
But he got a club lead . .
He elected to play low
from dummy and East stuck
In the 10 to force Al's ace. He
needed a club discord right
aV&lt;(ay so he played the king
and then que.n of diamonds,
overtaking the queen In
orde·r to get one club discard
on the lock·.
Now he had one club loser,
one sure heart loser, one
possible trump loser and two
more possible heart loser. It
was easy for Albert to see
that as long as he could
prevent three trump leads he
could gel to ruff two hearts
with dummy's trumps and
even If one heart got
overrulfed he would be home
wllh 10 lrlcks.
Therefore, he led dummy's
king of hearts. East took his
ace and led back a trump,
but now AI could afford to

D

(I) Allee Alice moon·
llghto ao a oinger in a local
tavern. (R)
(lD MOVIE: 'Shedow- on

D( I I I I )

Print answer here:

the AIVOI*Ih'
(() lenny HHI 8how

PEANUTS

M16HT l!fE"
A C.U~~EN'T

~EN6A'TION.

e ())

Custom
Wood
Work,
Planing, Moulding, Knick
Knacks and some repair.
«6·3201 after 8p.m . +46·
2738 days.

LOCKSMITH
Service .
Residential , automotive.
Emergency service. Call
882·2079.

,.
11

The Daily Sentinel-

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

1980 Honda 750 custom.
exc. cond . with extras:
Price is right. Call Bob at
«6·8655 after S: 30PM

2nd. floor efflency · apt. ,
SWAI.N
Adults on ly, no pets. Brad· AUCTION FURNITURE &amp;
bury Apartments, 4&lt;46·0957 . PAWN SHOP 62 Olive St.,
Gallipolis. 3 nice bedroom
3 room unfurnished apart· suites, gas &amp; electric
5
used
ment, adults only, no pets, ranges,
refrigerators, 3 piece living
utilities paid. Call «6·3437.
room suites $199.00, 2 piece
living room suites S140.00,
2 bedroom unfurnished love seats $70.00, wood
apartment in Crown City . dlnet set with 4 captain
Call 256·6520.
chairs (new) 275.00, large
owl lamps S25.00, padded
Furnished apartment 4 rm. maple rockers $34.00, new
&amp; bath . Adults only, ret . &amp; &amp; used wood burners from
S60.00 to $275.00, several
sec . deposit. Call «6·0444.
chest and dressers, variety
of silver stone cook ware, 4
APARTMENTS :
utility kitchen cabinetS, 1
bedroom, rent starts at
TV's, dinet sets, beds,
S152. Special rates for desks, and lots more . o;)en
Senior Citizens. Call 446·
lOam to Spm, 446·3159.
27-45.

Lot! .[Acreage- -

TRI - STATE MOBILE
HOMES . Ga ll ipolis. Price
r educed, used mobile
homes. CALU46·7S72.

Mobile Homes
tor Sale

Apartment for rent. Call
446·0390.

Nice furnished Apt.
2731 or 992·2430.

3 bed. home in Centenary .
Call446·6566 .

-----· -- --~-

2 bdr . apt. HUD excepted,
kitchen turn, utilities par·
tially pd ., excellent
location. Call 675·5104 or
675-7284.

1981 ALL ELECTR IC 12'
WI DE ,
2
BEDROOM ·
mobile home setting on lot,
Partially furnished aport·
ready to move into. $8995 . ment in the city, SIBS mo.
10% down, BANK FINAN · Ref . &amp; dep. ·rcq. Call +46·
CING AVAILAB·L E, 304· 7482 mornings.
576·2711 .

----------

l2

Custom
woodwork,
planing, molding, nlc nacs, 1 acre w i th mobile home,
and some repair. Call .uts· . water, cellar house, wash
2738 day and 466·3201 after house, utility building. Will
8.
sell with or without mobile
home or visa versa. Call
Will do babysitting In my 367-0218.
hofl'\e on Rt. 35. Call +46·
9-457 .
New 82 E leona 70xU, $1.000
off. 1964 champion «x20,
Housecleaning. Call «6· DBL·wide, $7,995 . 1978'
-Hillcrest 70xl~, $9,995. 1973
81~ .
Fle.twood 65x14 SS,995.
Will babysit In my home for 1965 Castle SSxiO, $3,~95.
Call «6·9662 or «6·~ .
2 children. Call388-9306.

---

Mobile Homes
for Rent

Tuesday, Mardi 9, 1982·

, Ohio

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Mobile .home for rent . 2 Sofa, chair, rocker, ot·
bedroom completely fur· toman, 3 tables, S500. Sola,
chair lind loveseat, $275.
nlshed. Call «6·9669 .
Sofas and chairs priced
from $285. to S79S.. T abies,
2 bdr. trailer · furnished, $38 and up to $109. Hlde·a·
adults only, Brown Trailer beds,$340., queen size, $380.
Park, 992·3324.
Recliners, $175. to S295.,
Lamps from $18. to $65 . 5
Nice I bedroom furnished pc. difettes from S79., to
'mobile. home. 9 mile from S385. 7 pc., S189. and up.
Pomeroy on Rt. 33. Phpne Wood table with 4 chairs,
for appointment 992·7479.
S219 up to U9S. Desk $110.
Hutches, $300. and $375.,
3 Bedroom fu rnished maple or pine finish .
Mobile home with washer Bedroom suites · Bassen
and dryer on private lot. Oak, $675., Bassett Cherry,
Deposit required . No pets . $795. Bunk bed complete
with mattresses. S250. and
9.49·2253.
up to $350. Captain's beds,
$275. complete. Baby beds,
Mobile home. No pet~ or $99. Mattresses or box
drunks. 3&amp; 112 miles South springs, full or twin, S58 ..
of Middleport. R-7.
firm , $68 , and $78. Queen
sets. S19S. 5 dr. chests, U9.
TWO bedroom trailer tor 4 dr. · chests, U2 . Bed
rent, Hereford Lane, Apple frames, S20.and $25 .• 10 gun
· Gun cabinets, $350 .. dinet·
Grove, 304·576·2103.
te chairs S20. and S25. Gas
or electric ranges. S295. Or·
lhopedlc super firm, $95,

BEDS·IRON, BRASS, old
furniture, gold, silver
dollars. wood ice boxes,
stone Iars, antiques, etc.,
Complete
households .
Write : M .D. M iller , Rt. 4,
Pomeroy , Oh . Or992·7760.

11

-Midd

SXWSKIPQ

XG

TVIGPM

QSP

GZRGZWV

ZML

TXEZGGP .

Z. T
1

usv

AXML 'I.

FPPAG

zu

USXMAG

py

_,'

~

SVIKVIt,J .,

c -.

"

lw

Yealerdly'1 Crypteqaele: THE TROUBLE WI'I1I OUR .TIMES · r
IS mAT

tliE' P1JTURE

BE.- PAtn..VAIERY

IS NOT WHAT IT ~D TO

�.

'•

Page

P~-Middleport, Ohio

12-The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, Marth 9, 1912 '

Federal judge deities injunction request
CINCINNATI (AP) -A federal
judge today denied a request for a
preliminary Injunction that would
have prevented Marathon OU Co.
stockholders from meeting Thursday to vote on the company's
merger with U.S. Steel Corp.
"The court holds that neither the
meeting nor the vote nor the con·
summation of the merger should be
enjoined at this time," said U.S.
District Judge Carl Rubin In a brief
order.
Dissident Marathon share·
holders, including tht' Dreyfus
Fund that controls 700,00! shares,
had complained during court argu·
ments last week that they were beIng underpaid for thelr Marathon
common stock in the $6.2 billion

deal.
The shareholders said the 12year, 12.5 percent notes that U.S.
Steel offered for the stock acljJa!ly
carried a market value of about $75
a share, substantlaUy less than
what they consider to be the worth
_
of Marathon stock.
At Marathon headquarters In
Findlay, Ohio, company otflclals
preparlrlg for the special shareholders meeting voiced delight with
the rullllg.
" We are pleased that Marathon
shareholders are now free to make
a decision on the merits of the
merger with U.S. Steel," said Ml·
chael Russo, Marathon vice president for public relations.
"For the reasons set forth In our

proxy statement we feel that the
U.S. Steel offer Is a falr one and we
urge all stockllolders to vote thelr
shares In favor of the merger,"
Russo said.
The dissident stockholders had
complained tbey were not getting
the tull value tot thelr stock, which
Industry analytsts have said Is
worth $200 or more based on Mara·
than's vast holdings In the Yates
oU!Ield in West Texas.
U.S. Steel offered a two-step takeover deal for Marathon. The In·
ltlal step, which U.S. Steel has
completed , was tCJ acquire a major·
tty of Marathon's 58.7 mUllan ·outstanding shares for Sl25 a share In
cash.
The second step was for the bal·

SUPPLEMENT TO:·

EITIRE

ance of the shares. needed under
Ohio law to complete a takeover
merger, 66.6 percent, to be purchased with notes.
The dissident stockholders, led
by Washington lawyer Frances
Armstrong, said they would take
advanta¥e of an "appraiSal rights"
provision In theOhlolawtohavean
independent party examine the offering for thelr stock.
In his ruting, Judge RUbin noted
the large amount of evidence and
number of documents presented
during last week's hearings; sayIng: ''The quantity of evidence prodl!ced was such that this court Is
unable at this time to Issue the appropriate findings of fact and conclusions of law."

STOCK

UST BE

•sr 10!

EYERYTHII&amp;

SALE STilTS
THURSDAY,
MIRCH 11th

SHOP EARLY· ·•

I 1.1. SHARP

two 350-bed reintegration centers In
work.
"That seemed reasonable to
Cleveland and Columbus. One
me." he said or the compromise. He
Under a compromise worked out
smaller lacWty would 1M! built In
said prisoners should be used
with the House and the governor's
each of those cities and a third In
where
possible
to
save
construction
office, Pfeifer said the Deparlment
Toledo, under the amendment.
of Administrative Services would
funds.
The centers are used to help pri·
Chairman
Myrl
House
Finance
decide If and how Inmates might be
soners
leaving the penal system.
H.
Shoemaker,
D-Boumev!Ue,
a
nd
used for some work on projects.
The
five-year
construction plan,
other
House
Democrats
opposed
Earlier, the proposal caned for
with
bonds
to
be
paid orr with genthe
plan
and
said
using
Inmates
project architects to be Involved In
eral
state
revenues,
has a $93.5 mU·
would preclude some new jobs in
making the decision.
lion
remodeling
and
conversion of
Ohio's sagg ing construction
That section now wiU come out of
the
ChiWcothe
Correctional
Insti·
the bill, along with some other lanindustry.
SNOW TIEUPS - Traffic came to a :JO.mlnule halt on lntentate 11M
tute
as
Ita
largest
project.
Shoemaker Is chief sponsor o!.the
guage to waive competltlveat St. Paul, Minn., Monday as a tbree loch saowfaU caUBed accldeall and
Others Include converting the
bUl, which has been languishing In
blddlng requirements on some
raised the season snowfall to more than 8Z Inches. (AP Laserphotol.
Ohio
State Reformatory at MansInmate-assisted projects, Pfeifer . the conference committee since the
field into a maximum security pri·
Senate passed ·Its version last
said.
son at a cost of $52.4 mUlion;
November.
.
Another Issue that apparently construction or additional housing
at the Lebanon Correctional Instituhas been settled, Pfeifer said, Is
(Continlled f1·om page I)
!rom the Department of Commun~
tion, $40.7 rrdUlon; and construction
that the Ohio BuUdlng Authority
APPROVES
READING
lty and Economic Development
will Issue bonds to finance the of new facUltY in Cuyahoga County
CouncU
read
and
approved
the
that planned cuts of some 5.8 per;
on a site not yet selected, $54.2
Name omitted
construction.
thlrd
reading
of
an
ordinance
which
•
cent
on projects wiU not be made. A ·
mUllen.
Earlier, the committee was preprovides
the
slze
and
material
of
meeting
of the Middleport RecreaOmitted from a report of spelling
Additional bousing also would ·be ·
vaUed upon to let the Ohio Public
water
pipes
from
the
meter
to
the
Uon
Commission
was announced
bee finalists who will take part in
buUt at the London Correctional InFacUlties Commission handle the
home In the case of new conslrl!c· tor March 18. Carl Horky submit;_
tonight's county speUlng bee at the
stitution at a cost of $35.4 mUllan.
bonds.
tlon or renewed Unes being In· ted plans from the Columbus
Salisbury Elementary School was
Another project Involves a $6 mU·
Pfeifer said he has an amendstaUed in the community.
Southern Ohio Electric Co. on the
lion expansion with more single
the Salisbury finalist, Tamra
ment he hasn't discussed with ShoIt wa~ reported that final plans installation of high pressure soVance, a sixth grader, who will recells at the Ohio Reformatory for
emaker and the other conferees.
for a new water tank and water dlum street lights In the communpresent the host school. She Is a
It would scale down the size of Women in MarysvUle.
llnes In the vicinity of Grant and lty replacing the present mercury
daughter of Ronald Vance and Mrs.
.
VIne Sts. have ben submitted to tbe vapor lights, Members of the street
Joyce lflad (CQ) . Alternate chamOhio EPA for approval and the pro- lighting committee wiU study the
pion of the · Salisbury School Is
· ject Is almost ready to put up for plans. Rol;lert GUmore discussed
Kevin King, a sixth grader, son of
bids. Mayor Hoffman was au tho- plans for the first festival to be held
Mr. and Mrs. Larry King, Shade.
BEAVER, Utah (AP)!- Two Ohio pollee detectives were sche·
rlzed to advertise the project as in Middleport In conjunction with
duled today to questl~n an East Cleveland, Ohio m an arrested here
soon as It Is approved and ease- Gen. James Hartinger Day proba-·
in connection with the murder of his three sons, Beaver County
ments are signed. The mayor an- bly over Memorial weekend.
authorities say .
nounced that 1978 and 1979 HUD
Atte nding the meeting were
Reginald Brooks, 36, was arrested without Incident early Monday
projects
have
been
audited
and
Mayor
Hortniiiii,- "Clerk·Tteasurer
Veterans Memorial
afternoon when the bus he was riding stopped at a Beaver hotel.
councu approved a payment of $7~ Jon Buck, and CouncUmen Horky,
Beaver County Attorney John 0 . Christensen said two detectives
for the audit. The mayor an· Gilmore, Dewey Horton, WUllam
Admitted: VIcki Ellis, Middlewere to ny from East Cleveland to Salt Lake City Monday night and
nounced that he has received notice Walters and Jack Satterfield.
port; Floyd Reynolds, Middleport.
planned to be in Beaver today.
Discharged: Esta David, Harold
East Cleveland pollee said Monday that no charges have been
Chaney, Misty Sayre, Bertha Dut·
filed In the case.
ton, Donald Plemmons, and Willi·
Utah lflghway Patrol Sgt. Gary Whitney said the patrol In Salt
First round action. games In the - In the final game of the evening,
ams Richmond.
Lake City received a cau from East Cleveland Monday morning that
·Meigs Junior High School spon- Eastern m defeated Rutland :1).28.
Brooks was on the bus In Richfield and would be headmg south.
sored basketball tournament on the lflgh scorer tor Eastern was Shawn .
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
He said two plainclothes pollee oftlcers boarded a bus at a stop at
fourth and fifth grade level got un· Savoy with 22 and for Rutland
DISCHARGES MARCH 8
Beaver, In west-central Utah. The bus made another routine stop at
Vaughan Mitchell made 13 all!l
derway Monday night.
a hotel In Beaver, where the officers asked the other people on the
Jimmy
Cleland made 7.
Bradbury Baker received a forTeresa Boggs, Cindy Burris,
b11s to get off, Whitney said.
First round action for the grade '
felt
from
Syracuse.
Pomeroy
PoStella Clark, Melinda Cool, Sheryl
The pajama-clad bodies of Brooks' three sons were found by thelr
well defeated Letart 41-24. High level wiU conclude Wednesday .
Durst, Evva Durst, Kevin Hawley,
mother after they had been shot to death In thelr beds.
scorers lor Pomeroy were Powell night with Salem Center playing
Brady Johnson, Robert Johnson,
Beverly Brooks, 33, said she first thought her sons were sleeping
with 20, Maddox with 10 and Bach· Portland at 5: ll and Bradbury
LucUle Lambert, Mrs. James Mol·
when she arrived home from work Saturday afternoon. She later
tel with 7. High scorers lor Letart Ogden meellng Pomeroy Barton at _
lohan and daughter, J effrey Music,
discovered that Reginald Jr., l7; Vaughn, 15, and Nlarchos,ll, were
were JarreU with 10 and Lauder- 7p.m.
Bradley P aullns, Julia Pyles, TIdead.
mUt with 6.
mothy Rees, Alma Ridge, Mrs.
Pollee In Ohio said Brooks had not been seen In East Cleveland
Kenneth Rose and da ughter, Karen
since before the shootings. Two days earlier, Brooks had been
Ruth, Linda Siders, Opal Stones,
served with divorce papers, pollee said.
Tangle Wood.
Each boy was shot once In the head, pollee said.
"The word I get from principals and teacl}ers Is they were exemplary kids," said Randle E. Edwards, superintendent of schools in
BmTHS
East Cleveland.
Pollee said Brooks had been unemployed since 1976.
Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey Lawson,
"From the Information we've received, they (the couple) were
daughter, Coalton; Mr. and Mrs.
having marital problems, and he was despondent over that," said
Thomas Snyder, son, WeUston; Mr.
pollee officer Robert Artlm.
and Mrs. Danny Spurlock, son,
The couple flad been married about 17 years . Mrs. Brooks said her
Letart.
husband formerly had been employed by several shipping
departments.

Levy approval

.Meigs County happenings...
Emergency runs
Four calls were answered by unIts or the Meigs County Emergency
Medical Service Monday. At 12: 52
a.m. Mary Ferguson was trans·
ported by the Rutand unit !rom her
residence on Long St. In Rutland to
the Holzer Medical Center; atlO: 37
a.m. the Pomeroy unit transported
Charles Nalstettler from Mechanic
Street to the Holzer Medical Center; at 3:04p.m. the Pomeroy unit
took George Molden from his Oak
Street residence to Pleasant Valley
Hospital and at 5: 23 p.m. the Ra·
cine unit transported Bill Foster
tram MUe Hill Road to Pleasant
Valley Hospital.

Seek license
Roger Clairmont Tolley, 25, Sissonville, W. Va. and VIcki Lynn•
Rizer. 24, Syracuse have a pplied
tor a marriage license In Meigs
Probate Court.

To end marriage
A petition for dissolution of the
marriage of Ronald L. Da lley,
Route 1, Portland, and Debbie Su·
san Dalley, Box 144A, Portland, has
been tiled in the Meigs County
Common Pleas Court.

Dismiss action
Dismissed In Meigs County Common Pleas court was the case of the
Rac ine Home National Bank
against WUbur Burke, et al, on the
basts ol an action fUed by the defendants In the Eastern Division ol
the U. S. Bankruptcy Court, South·
ern District.

Meet tonight
The Meigs Athletic Boosters will
meet at 7: ll p.m. this evening at
the high school. All parents interested In the athletic programs are
asked to attend.

Meets Wednesday
• Pomeroy Chapter Ill and Bos·
worth CouncU 46 will meet at 7: ll
p.m . Wednesday at the temple.
There wUl be full form opening
practic e In comllmnck.) L_and
members are to take their sworos'
to the session.

.

ANN ARBOR, Mich. (AP) Science and art wUl converge In an
exhibition featuring works by Leonardo da Vinci at the University of
Michigan Museum of Ar1 May &amp;June 13.
The show wiU combine paintings
by the Italian Renaissance master
with reproductions of his technical
drawings.

TO

WE WILL
CLOSE AT
1:11 P.l.
WEOIE$DAY

T8 1111

DOWIIIO
IIRillE
STOCK

-••n

liT IF

••••a-

FISHIOI JEllS·
Misses, Junior and ladies
assor ted style ·blue denim
fas hion jeans. Be ·here early
for . bes t selection on t his
popu lar item!

$ 00
P~IR .

Package of two regu lar s ize,
permanen t press pillow cases
in assorted prin t patterns .
Stock up now and save!

PKG•
'•

SPECIAL GROUP-ASSORTED

LADIES' BRAS
.$ 44

Special group ot famous brand

ladies bras in assort ed styles
and s izes. Pligt, tly irregular~
Save over 50% .

t hroughout the countr y. In a com·
prehensive anGI fasc inating three
hour progra m, those who attend
the se m inar e)(perience the
r ela~&lt;l ng and beneficial effects ot
c lin ical hypnosis.. Not onlv do
people pcrman :ontly lose weig ht
and stop smoking as a r esult of
th e seminar, mey also report tt'lat
they sleep better, feel more
cnerqetic, and general ly enjoy
life mor e t han they had
previous ly .
·Mr . Genthner ' s ski ll is clin ica l
tlypnns is was noted by oan
Rathe r ot CBS' " 60 Minutes', who
referred to him in d nationally
t elevi sed r eport as a well -t ra ined
and hlgtl l y experienced hypnotist."
" Clinica l hypnosi s is the
eAsiest way there is to solve these
problems' ', Genthner says. "Sim ·
pl y put, inieiPS10eli m ina te t hese
t ypes ot problems pe~ma n en tlv .
Genthner says that ·the reason
clin ica l hypnosis is so successful
is that "i t removes the causes of
problems, not just the symp·
t oms. " For e)(ample, he eM ·
plains : " People whoare over·
weight go on d iefs. A d iet is only
good for as long as you follow it.

FRANK B. SMITH

PRESIDENT

WADE II. GENTHNER, F.A.I.H.
Diredor ql Te&lt;hniques for Living
Are you overweight or a cigare1te
smoker? Have you tried to lose
weight or stop smoking, only to
fail time and time again? If you
find yourself answering .. yes" to

either of these questions then the

Techniques For Living Sminar,
under the direction of Wade M.

Genthner F,A.I.H. at the Holiday
tnn, 450 Pike Street, will be the

Once 9ou stop t~ e die! you re-gain

the weight . Hypnosis is per·
manent because it eliminates the
causes of overeating 1 not just the

place for you to be on Tuesday,
Marctl16. Techniques For Living ·
will be conducting their famous

Lose Weight -

Seminar

which

symptoms." The same holds !rue
for smokers where the need to

Slop smoking
has

helPed

thousands ot people throughout
the United Stales. Techniques
For Living Is a niltional
organl1atlon dedicated to help

1

Americans solve these and other

problems thai have kepi them
from enioying their livE!$ to the

ca ll ing, lOll fr ee, HOO·M5·5454 .

fuliesl.

•

prevent crav ings for cigarettes
or weight Qain is just as impOrtant . 8oth probl ems , are
covered at the se m1nar, ·and each
seminar leader is personallv
trained by Mr . Genthner. Further
information cB n be obtained bv

ll

I

r

r
I

MEN'S 5-POCKET BLUE

DENIM JEllS
Men's Mavy colton, lirs t quai l·
ly 5-pocket bl ue denim jeans.
Good rang e of sizes . Save now.

II

$ 00

IJ

PAIR '

- mFFUI'S IIIILIPIIIT

HTIF

(1 LOT) SIMPLICITY
DISCONTINUED

COATS AND CLARK
ASSORTED

PAnERNS

ZIPPERS

c

Your choice of
dis conli nued

Simplicity pal·
terns . While
they tasl!

EA.

Close ·out group
Coats and Clark nylon
and meta l zippers. 7·:
lo 24" sizes. Stock up

al Ihis low prl.cel

SILE STARTS THURSDAY
. 1:00 1.1. SHARP .

I 't

•

u

EACH

, ,, I'
,

OHIO

LADIES' ASSORTED BWE DENIM

)v \

~~
; .,

IIDD~EPORT,

SILE STARTS THURSDAY
1:00 1.1. SHARP

First round action resumes

NOTED HYPNOTISTS IN GALLIPOLIS
Ttlc subj ec t of • numerous
and m.=tgazine articles
TO HELP SMOKERS &amp; newspaper
as well as tel evision apearanc es,
Mr . Ge nthner and his staff have
THE OVERWEIGHT
been conducting t hese sem inars

ST.,

-

Hospital news

Da.Vinci show

128

WE HAVE
.

Charge father with slayings

Due to the recent publicity about a coal
· mine near the old Pomeroy Salt Works at
Minersville, I would like to inform you that the
owners and operators of the mine will be Smith
Associates, Inc.
,
I sincerely regret any misunderstandings
concerning this matter. The only persons
·authorized to conduct business for Smith
·Associates, Inc., in this area are Frank B.
Smith and Daniel Smith.
If there are any questions regarding ·this
, coal mine we would be happy to answer them.
You may contact Daniel Smith at the mine site
. or by writing to P.O. Box 1006, Gallipolis, Ohio
45631.

•

.

a.mt

A'FTENTION

:\

.,

DUE TO TIE FAOT TilT THIS IS
I OLOSEIIT SIU, SOlE IRIS
liE II LIIITED SUPPLY.

SOLD!

Committee seeks end to impasse on prison bill
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Members of a lolnt conference
committee sought today · to end a
long Impasse over whether prtson
labor should be used in a $599 mil·
lion prison construction program.
Senate Judiciary Chairman Paul
E. Pfeifer, R-Bucyrus - who fa·
vors It - said Monday the question
apparently had been resolved in In·
formal telephone talks.
The slx-ineml)er committee was
resuming formal deliberations as
lawmakers returned from weekend recess for a week, which wiU
be devoted mostly to committee

DAILY SENTINEL

• I

-·II liT IF 1111m1 UU-

SAVE ON MEN'S BEITER

WillER JICK.ETS

..
'

~ ;..

.
'":. •

.

-

\ ,.
t .'

·"'• . \..~

· ~ · ·~

",("'

:

'

-.. .

\ t'

- -11111 1fr ,
I'AIR
LADIES• ASS .,,,..., , 11_

'

Our basic western cut
jellns . Made to take it
day in and da y out.
100% cotton 14¥. oz.
-Wrangler
"NO -FAULT""'
:· broken twill indigo
denim that won't
shrink, wrinkle or
pu c ker . Straight leg
bottoms in
prewashed denim .
Sizes 27 -42.

sucrrit'
E
ll
v'•n RA'"
r~:~·:~•nawomen·
JAt:lf'~-0 ·

SO/fcJ

c~~ker
With h~ snap fro nt VI
ors. lle
oa in ' ny1

· ·1/U/a;;·

$

•••orrea

WE Qllli .

f 0

08

Closeout group of men's be Iter
wint er jackets. Assorted styles ,
sizes and colors to choose

from. Out they go at this low
p~lce!

-·E QUIT-

ALSO AVAILABLE IN BOOT CUT

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

·RUI BLOOkS

WE'IE SELLIII
OUT TO THE liRE
WILUI DGWT 1111 IT!

EA.

UIIIP T8 10%

--· ............_

-Ill-lilT. IIIIIIU WI-

AGOOD SElECTION OF MEl'S
SPRIICi &amp;SUMMER DRESS AND ·

LADIES' DRESS AND CASUAL

SPORTS SHIRTS
$ 00
t

ASSORTED 13"Xl8" SIZE
BROADLOOM

$·

•

A group of men 's short S'lee\le
lhirte In a good si!tection of
popular solid rcolors. Dress &amp;
sport l hirta Included. Every
one,, tlergaiq
.
'

'

•

FOOTWEAR
$ 00

Ladles· better quality spring,
llummer and fall footwear In
· drau a.nd casual s tyle s.
Regular values up to Sl2.99.
The sizes are broken, but the
valu•s are the greatest. Save
nowt

t

'

PAIR

-WE QIIT.:.._
ONE LOT
ASSORTED

liFTS
One group ol assorted
glflware Items al savings of 50% during th is
close·oiJt sale.

·

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="126">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="2701">
                <text>03. March</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="43877">
            <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="43876">
              <text>March 9, 1982</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
</item>
