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                  <text>•

Colu 1a
in· orbit

Dick Caval

WINTHROP
,

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP)
- Colwnbla shrugged olf a predawn !ueUng hitch and roared !rom
Its launch pad this morning on Its
third, busiest and longest ttest
filght. Two astronauts made the
awesome ascent and began a week·
long trip that Is to double the shuttle's time In space.
The mission began with a burst of
Oame and b!)low of smoke as the
ship's three main engines and two
solid !uel rockets fiashed to life at 11
a.m. EST.
The craft, carrying commander
Jack R. Lousma and ptlot C. Gor·
don Fullerton, cleared ttJe 347-!oot
launch tower In 7 seconds and
twisted northeastward over the
Atlantic Ocean.
Cheers of amazement erupted
from more than a mltllon people
who jammed viewing spots for Co,Iumbla's fiery sendoff. Many
camped lor days to claim choice
sites along the Indian and Banana
rivers and the Atlantic beach.
During seven days and nearly 116
circuits of the globe, Lousma and

.
"
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. .I

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at y

COLUMBIA CREW - Commaader Jack R. Lousma, left, aod pOot C. Gordoa Fullen., Columbia's SPite llnaiUe erew.
-

- -

e
Voi.30,No.231
Copyrighted 1912

Fullerton are to subject Columbia
to the high heat and deep chltl iii
space, lift payloads for the . llrst
time with the ship's 50-foot meclian·
leal arm and evaluate Its capacity
as an orllltlng laboratory .
Liftoff was set back an hour tiecause a balky heater re!used to
start automatically and technl·
clan had to do the job. The unit Is
used to keep !lltrogen In a gaseous
state so It can cleanse !uel lines to
the main engines. '

a

No matter that launch was a little
late. It came on March 22, a date
the National Aeronautics and
Space Administration set three
months ago and which It very much
wanted to meet. NASA was deter·
mined to demonstrate to tbe shut·
tie's paying customers that the
craft can meet a timetable.
Countdowns for Columbia's first
two test flights were nearmasterpieces untU the final seconds when technical snags forced
days' postponements.
·

-

- ~omeroy-Middleport,

en tine

' .

Z Section•, 12 Pae•• 15 C.nll
A Mwhlmtdla In(, New•pa,_

Ohio, Monday, March 22, 1982

Third-· C olumbia liftoff
attracts large crowds
&lt;

•

'

"Priscilla's Po
LOOK AT OUR LITTLE
GIRL SLEEPING SO
PEACEFULLY .'

BE~E

WE BOUG-HT HER
A HOR5E,SHE' U5ED10~
ANI7 TURN AND CRY OUT.
·whG4···G'~P.,.

~

OOM !. VR.ROODM!

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) ·
- Beaches and causeways along
Florida's Space Coast, normatly
left to sun-worshippers and birds,
were thick today with campers and
vans as huge ·crowds gathered to
watch the fiery liftoff of the shuttle
Columbia.
Space o!flclals predicted a tur·
nQUt that might surpass the previoUs launch record of 1 mUllon
people, as shuttle watchers continued to jan\ public viewing sites
.i!!!.llour before.bl!!stpff. ... _ ,
Jaek Estes, iS, saved money
from a pai't-tlme restaurant job lor
an airplane ticket, skipped school
and became one of the estimated
250,000 to 300,000 people who·packed
themselves like sardines along the
Indian River In Titusville.
"Nobody cares about the space
shuttle back home," said the high .
school senior · from Leominster,
Mass. "People think I'm fanatical.
My parents are angry. And I guess
only ·til~ science teachers wtll be
easy to deal witrh when I get back."
Early, overcast skies left only a
hazy view of the spectacular flying
machine 15 mtles away. But as the
sun broke through, optlmlsm came
over the throngs - retirees sipping
coffee, college students on spring
break, and parents trying to keep

kids and pets,ln tow.

The Highway Patrol said traffic
was extremely heavy, but !lllwlng
smoothly. "This Is one of the big·
gest - a real blggle," said Dennis
Rathbun, a trooper In Titusville.
Twenty-two Michigan State col·
lege students came on an old school
bus, renovated with bunks and s~
reo and painted bright yellow and
orange. It stuck out among the decaled vans, the makeshift
campers, the luxury .recreation
vehlcl~ a!!d the pup tents that
' crammed tlie bea&lt;!h. The tlve stu·
dents' who own the bus charged soo·
a head to buddies on spring break
who wanted to combine the annual
trek to the beach with a stop at.the
Cape,
NASA spokesman Hugh Harris
said clvU defense estimated that
"somewhere between 800,1m and 1
mUllan people" would view the
launch :.... more than the 750,000 on
hand lor the shuttle's malden journey last Aprtl, or Its return to space
last November which drew 400,1m
to 500,!m.
The record of 1m!Won was set bY
ttJe crowd that gathered under star·
Ut skies to see the nighttime launch
of Apollo 17 In 1972, acrordlng to
Brevard County officials. That last
moon flight was the only night

• launch In the history of NASA's
manned space program.
:'Joular vlewinll sites on the
banks of the Indian River In Titusville, overlooking the Atlantic
Ocean at Jetty Park and along the
Banana River at the Cape were
filled hours before the scheduled 10
a.m. launch.
"I have never seen the good van.
!age points fUl up with campers as
soon as on this mlsalon," sAid NA.
SA's Rocky Raab. ~·u !hat

can·

tinues, we are very likely to l!ave
the biggest crowds ever."
In a special VIP section some
3,500 were expected, Including Gov.
Bruce King of New Mexico, a dozen
former astronauts, Canadian sing·
lng star Ann Mut:ay, British actor
Michael York, singer-songwriters
Jimmy Buffett and Gordon Light·
loot and a number of congressmen
and shuttle contractor executives.
Steve Hatton, a college senior
from East Stroudsburg, Pa., drove
all night, then waited around
sleepy-eyed hOping the countdown
would end on time. "I haVen't slept
yet," be said (rom ·the public view·
lng spot he picked 15 m1les from
launch pad 39A. "Hopefully It'll go
olf on time because I'm on a tight

schedule."

SHU1TLE INSIGNIA - IDIIPla for lhe ftlpt of lbe space shutlle Columbia contalna tlarte
rays, l'epl'ellelltiq the apace lnuulportatlon ayatem'• third ftlghl. The spaeecralt's
paylolld doors sre opeD, and lhe remote manipulator system (RMS) arm Is exlended. ·(AP Color

promlllellt

Some flooded cities may not get aid
By JAME'l HANNAH
Alloclaied PreM Writer

DUSTY CHAPS
, @T..'-1? '{otJI~
6UZZL\~ Vll-}~t

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AF) -Some
people who suffered losses In
northwestern Ohio Ooodlng this
year may be left out of any federal
aid the region gets, a disaster aid
otflclal says.
The state DisaSter Services
Agency says receding floodwaters
In northwestern Ohio ha.ve left
more than S5 ml111on In damages to
businesses and pubUc facttlties,
with damase to priVate dwellings
11kely tb triple that figure.
Gov. ,James A. Rhodes has asked
Reagan to, declare ·

President

Oooded counties disaster areas to
make them eligible for federal rellet !unds. He sent Reagan a damage estimate after teams of local
o!flelals, state and federal disaster
service representatives, officials
from the American Red Cross and
the federal Smatl Business Admln. lstratlon toured the area.
Defiance, Henry, Lucas, Pauld·
lng, Wood, Fulton and WW!arns
counties were hit bY the flooding.
Davida Matthews, lnfonnatlon
officer for the state agency, said the
governor's letter Indicated that
2,2M people were evacuated In the

area. ·

She said a major concern ot the
agency Is a stipulation In ellgtbutty
for federal aid that requires residents who have received flood assistance In the p~Ut to have taken
out and kept up payments on flood
lnaurance. Some people have Ukely
dropped the lnaurance, she said.
"Thele people really need llelp,"
Ms. Mstthews said, "but they kind
of trapped themselves Into lt."
Damage to roads and brldjjes trl
all of the counttesexcept Wood was
estimated at $4,020,(8), while dam·
age to sewer syste!lll - also excluding Wood County - was
$233,500.

I ~ITC.HeD I.ASEL5 1~

OClBOD'/'D

~16

0 1•.

S1 ~A

l..aserpbotf).

'

Second time in three
I

8 II

tea •

wllldl eiiMlal ILe
00 ... IIIII ! ll~n

ervn st
•m rt &amp;e.uWtlle.......

BySCO'ITWOLFE .. ATHENS- For the second time In
three leUOill, Southern's Tornadoes
are "COiumbua Bound" fer the Class
A State buketbaU tournament after
blowing
away
' literally
Southeastern's Panthers, . 86-44,
before a cheering crowd of 4,881 here
Saturday night. A 23-pOint fourth
quarter IIPiialna gave the high fiylng
Tornadoe.l another regional cJwn.
plonshlp and a berth In the Stale. as
one of Ohio's coveted "flnal four!"
Southern's Intensity, complete
team effort, and fait breaking attack gradually wore the P111thers
down, and at the finilh, left no doubt
In IIIYOile'l mind who Will the best
team In the regiOn.
Thill will be only the second time
that a South8m Valley Athletic Conference team In lilY sport hu ad·
vanced u far u the llate semifinals, the flnt time being
Southetn'a trip to~ llate In 1.,.
'l'lnw-pllyen apm hit double
figures for the hlgMiylng Tornadoe.l
of COIIch Carl 'olfe. Led by a
I(IUkiing 25 balthand1lng
eshlbltlon b)o I1J.dlstrlct point guard
Kent Wolle, who canned 10 of 1t field
golla, the Torna~ were able to
pen up 111 undllp(lted aecan6ohlllf attaek. Robert Bnllm ldded to the
celebnted YictGry drive with a great
14 pCIIIII, 10 .......... perforrnince to
add to 1111 ..... of p-eat toamament

I

Senior Jay

t. ILe sate ._.. .
.

y~

Tornadoes-Columbus bound!

CIUiinCI.
HAPPY llllNOI- S.tl~n's b+ " · u .....
-bes, --.en aad dlnallders were a.bppJ.
buell fellowlq 81111m11J's 14-44 wba enr

.

a-,

wbo

~

tine of five field goala for eo per·
cent and llllk toar of five elutdl free
throws that llelpWIW§' 1 b e 'I

twn In Southern's favor , netted 10
points. Junior Zane Beegle added
eight key buckets.
First Half
The game was headlined as a matclt up between,Southeastem's great
size versUB Southern's tremendous
qulclme&amp;!. In the beginning It was
Southeastern's height that look control of the game as ~ center Butch
Doles grabbed the tip and tripped
the clock for a 2-0 leadal7:36.
After a missed chance by both
clubs, Rambling Robert Brown zipped a towering tum-around jwnper
over the outstretched hands of Doles
to lock the score at 2-2. The Panthers' big line-up went on the prowl
for two more scores as Dole and 6-3
David Richter controlled the Inside

game.
With Southeastern leading &amp;-2,
Tornado Richard Wolfe grabbed a
looee ball and whirled In for a SIIS
score. At the five minute mark,
Doles notched his third score while
8-1 forward Jeff Oressbsch scored
the next goal after a long drought by
both clubl at 2:02. The powerhouse
Panthers bull! up a ·12-0 lead with 52
seconds left, then held on for a 12-9
leal! at the quarter.
Doles had six lor the Panthers,
while Robert Br:own kept pace at
live In the lnaide bottle of the .centers. Doles had the height advantage
but Brown wu soon to be the "Big
Man" on the court.
RCIIs went up-by five after gaining
control of the second tip and notching the first score on a Dressbach
drive. Robert Brown, who started

digging deep lor that ntra effM,
leaped high for SHS reboaild, then'
later scored to pull I* Club lliOaf at
14·11. Still In the f!tllt minute ot Ill«
frame, Kent Wolle ptilled the "Big
Purple Machine" a Blep cf01er, then
overhauled the foe 16-14 on a )lair of
freethrowsat6 :36.
·
SHS went up 19-16 on goals by Reea
and Beegle, but two buckets by
Dressba~h and Richter during the
next minute regained the lead at 2221 for the Panthers. BrOWII added
another nice aerial to glve·Southem
back the lead that II never
relinguished the remainder ot the
game.
Leatling 27-24 the Tornadoes ran
the clock from 2:20 on down to a
patented, nerv~ racking 20 loot jumper by Kent Wolfe that swished the
net at the buzzer lor a 29-24 Soutbem
lead at the half. Wolte had 10 and
Brown seven at the half.
AI the hall the "Big Purple
Mschine" went lo the locker room
for slight adjuslments.
Second fl,aU
Unlike the first half where
Southern depended on clutch foul
shooting to cOme to the top, the TornadOes sprinted Into the last half In
the driver's seat, where II controlled
the tempo of the game.
As Coach Wolle put It, "We're a
second halt ball team! We didn't
play real good the first half, but we
started to wear them down. One of
the keys to our secondhalf succes.s IS
that our klda are In superior con-

Contlllued on Page 3

•

�•

Commentary
Next in Central

111 c.rt Street

DEVOTEilTOTHE~hTo~~-MABONAREA
~11

I"'T"\...J'--"'T'"' ...--r:::lto=o

.

ROBERTL. WINGET!'
Publblber

BOB HOEFLICH

PAT WHITEHEAD
Aubllaat Publllhtr/CoatruJJcr

DALE R0111GEB, JR.
Nrw•Edllor
A MEMBER _,. 'l"hr A.a10tla&amp;ed P reu, lnllod Ollily Pml A110d1U. 1111.1
A.mel1caa Ntwllplptr Publltbert AIIIOCllttOIL

&amp;be

'

LEITERS OF OPINION are welcomed. Tbey abollJd be lal daaa 310 w.rcbloq. AU
lf:tlfn are -:ub)ftt to ediUJII aad mut be 11pfd wltll aame, addreu and ~
•mber. Nt aulped letkn wW be p~ablblbftl . LeUen 1huuW be lD &amp;Md la1&amp;e, IMktrt~t~ I.D(I

!!'_un, ""' po,....Uikt.

. ···" .

Letters to editor
Commends officers
I would like to publicly commend
Sheriff James Proffitt and all other
law enforcement agencies for doing
All excellent job in apprehending the
jpdividuals who held up our Tuppers
Jl!lljna branch.
· · 11Je are very ofteo quick to
ciiticize our public officials and slow
to praise them for a job well done.
The fact that the law enforcement
agencies combined to capture the
suspects in Jess than an hour and a

half, and that they were trted, and
sentenced within twenty-four hours
is remarkable In itself, and reflects
well on the county prosecutor's office.
My heartfelt thanka to all officers
involved, and I am sure others will
agree that this was an outsl&amp;ndlng
accomplishment. - Paul A. Barnett, President, BANK ONE of
Pomeroy, N.A.

Pleading parents

,.

I have never been much of a letter
writer, let alone to write one for
publication, but I feel the need for
myself, my wife lmd family to write
this one in the fonn of an apology to
you, the people of M~igs County, in
wave of the recent attempted bank
robbery by our son, Robert "Dink"
Kennedy.
· We are so thankful and grateful
that there were as few injuries as
there were since we all realize it
could have been much worse. There
lan't any doubt that an accessory to
that crime is sWI free In Meigs County. and is still committing the crime
of providing drugs for our young
people who are and may become
potential criminills to support their
habit- they just may be your son or
daug~ter, You may say "Dink" was
20 years old - a man - and this Is.
true but he came under the habit as
a freslunan. The anguish and pain
my wife and family have gone
)hrough the past few weeks is only
l)le Up of the iceberg - we are no different from you - we love - we hurt
just like anyone else and we have for
the few years. It is very dif~icult to
see someone you Jove very much,
deteriorate right before your eyes change from an outgoing fun-loving
individual to the complete opposite
no matter bow hard you try to help
them. We know that rtght now there
are other parents in Meigs County
who are in the various stages of hurt
with this problem just as we were.
We also know that the people,
Meigs Countians too, who supply
these drugs haven't gotten the
capability to hurt or love. All they
think about is the money they can

make on destroying other people's
.
'
lives.
In a way what happened to our son
ill a blessing In disguise because, at
Jeastfornow, weknowwhereheisat
and most, what he is doing. My wife
and I feel that he did what he did
because of drugs mostly and we
koow from experience tbst young
people under this influence will do
most anything because of it - lie,
rob, whatever. Our plea and
question is this- do you as parents
really know your children? We
thought we did too. What is your boy
or girl really doing? ~n are we in
Meigs County going to pull our heads
out of the sand and realize tbst we
are being betrayed by some of our
own people not outsiders? They only
come here to buy - we are famou.S
all over the nation - Meigs County
green brings a high prtce on the
market. It's down to the grade
schools here. Folks, do we really
care? We want to ,thank our many,
many friends who are and have
helped us In this crisis in our family
life. Thanks, ever so much, to all the
law enforcement agencies who have
been so kind and helped my wife and
me so much, and who conducted
themselves ' to the utmost
professionally throughout the whole
ordeal. A special apology to the employees and administrators of the
hank. Our sincere wish is that this
event which has changed our lives so
much will start someone ,
somewhere to thinking. Whoever
and whatever they may'be may this
letter help someone in some way. Ml:. alld ltlr8. Lewis Kennedy, parents of "Dink, ".BDx 212, Rutland.

Against paddlings
This is indirectly related to the
Issue of the parents who appeared at
a recent School Board meeting
questioning the corporal punishment
In school of their child. Not knowing
all the facts, I won't comment on
that particular case, but I would like
to make some general observations.
I realize that rules must be obeyed
and order maintained in our schools,
far If they are not, the teachers are
"fighting a losing battle," so to
speak. However, I'm not entirely
convinced that corporal punishment
(a negative approach, in my view) Is
ever justified, beneficial, or ever
contributes to a learning experience
ill a child of any age. Surely in a
world where violence seems more
and more to be the order of the f[ay,
corporal punishment tends to pe~
petuatethisproblem.
Any IQ over 20 could probably
figure out that the average adult
could overpower a young child, be
that · adult a teacher, parent, or
whomever, · and be that overpowering by physical means

(spanking, etc.) or emotional means

(!ear, etc.) Then, too, I would be
t;encerned about the emotioilal
trauma following an episode of
spanking. Looking at children in
general, don't we see enough anger,
frustration, fl!llr, and confusion
without adding to these problems In
this manner?
It's taken me three children
ranging in age from 141&gt; years to 15
montha, and a lot of both positive
and negative experiences here at
home, at church, and at school to
arrtve at my preseot feelings oo this
subject.
·
I just think there are better ways
of handllnll things, particularly in
the school-learning situation.
In fact, I would like to see corporal
punishment removed from our
schools entirely. Tllat would signify
progress to me. If there are other
parents who feel as I do, please
make your opinions known to your
school ·board, or as I have, to the entire Sentinel-reading population. Betsy Weaver, Middleport.

Coverup excuse
I really do not think it is necesaary
for Meigs High School ,to withdraw
from the SEO League.
To me it iB an excuse to cover up
the miserable showing in the sports
program. Most people like a winner.

William

To have a winner, you must have a
competent leader and teacher.
Sometimes a change ol personnel
will solve the problem. - C. W. Ellwarda.

Concerning the deteriorating
situation in central Ainerica, a few
observations:
·
I) There is no practical means by
which the United States can arrest
the violence sweeping the area. The
" Roosevelt (Teddy) C~·roUary" to
the Monroe DOctrine asserted a
general right to intervene in Latin
America In the case of (get tllis! ) :
" chronl~ .wrongdoing or an impotence which results in a general
loosening of the ties .ot clvlllzed
societies." Such language can keep
the Marines busy - and did, a
couple of dozen times during the ensuing 20 Yet~/:~·
.
It is not Intended as ethnically
invidious to remark that history
shows a propensity for violence In
Latin America. We have our crime
In the streets, the Germans had
Hitler, the Russians had Stalin and
his successors, the Asians Mao Tsetung and Pol Pot - the Latin
Americans incline to massive
political violence. DuriDg the civil
war in Colombia that began in 1948,
whose motivations are almost as difficult to recall as those of the great
powers that gave us the First World
War, violence reached heights that,
by contrast, make El Salvador
solmd like Walkiki Beach.
Historian Alistair Horne, in his
book, "Small Earthquake in Chile,"
merely suggests What it was like.
"Accounts of the atrocities committed durtng La Violencia (the
period of violence) turned the
stomach. Luckier victims escaped
with nose, lips, or ears cut off.
Crucifixions were commonplace
where the most refined tortures bad
their own special names (I eschew
the t!escription of some of .these).
The forces of law and order were
themselves often involved. There
were no battlefronts in the civil war.
By its end, 300,000 Colombians were
estimated to have been killed. In one
small community alone, 503 out of
509 families were found to have lost

Fulbright,· that the United States
bas no proper quarrel
govenunent
American terms, would amount to
with
aoy
nalion
no matter bow obfour millio~ to five rnllliM deaths by
noxious
its
domestic
policies, so long
violence, far more than have died at
as
it
does
not
seek
to
export
them. As
:-o-ar throughout the histQry of the
much
was
said
by
PresideD!
John
United Statea; about 100 times our
Quincy
AdamS
when
he'stressed
that
losses duriDg the excruciating war
Americans
were
friends
of
liberty
in Vietnam.
,
2) ThiB does not mean that the , everywhere, but custodians only of
United Statea should be indifferent their own.
3) However grotesque, then, the
to the scale of political violence in
Central America, but does mean leaders of Guatemala, or the death
that we . m~ lea\ously guard tile squads asaociate&lt;! with the gov~rn­
relevant distinCtJbn, And it is this: ment of &amp;I$111VIIdor, our co~rn Is
Where is violence being cultivated. with Nl~. Wby ? Because it is
with a view to exporting it? Olle ~ , p~aging base for tJtshOuld not tire o( · repeating the pdrted poll}l$li vlolen~. ·
fatalistic but wise maxim of Senatar Nicarague )¥! ·~

llll1!f'

,,

:/

Oblo'i CGDvocaUon Center. Soutbem won

: : JUMP BALL - Soulheastem~s Roger DoiH (52)
· · and Soutbem's Robert BI'OWII (ti) go up for tile Up
foUowiDg a jump ball during Saturday's actioo at

tbul ad-

WHEN rr RHNS, 11 POUR~.
.

.

.

requires ·such action, they argue, especially because the 'sOviet Union is
engagfll in' similar operations supporting "wars of national liberation" all
arolind the globe.
On the other side are uncompromising critics who would universall~
prohibit covert action on the grounds that it is fundamentally immdra),
That decades-old question is again topical because thi!i country has just . unethical and ilegal.
··
witnessed an extraordinary event - the contemporaneous disclosure of
what purports to be a plan for covert CIA-supported paramilitary operations
There is a compelling case for the highly selective use of covert action 111
in Nicaragua.
a measured response midway between diplomatic action, whose inherent
dangers are terrifyingly obvious.
Tlie overriding principle applied in detennining when covert action is to
The White House reportedly has authorized the CIA to organize, train
be used ought to be the establishment, enhancement and perpetuation of the
and finance a paramilitary force of as many as 500 Latin Americana who
one concept upon which our society supposedly places the highest premluln
would operate from commando campos along the Nicaraguan-Honduran
- democracy.
·
border.
Should the· Central Intelligence Agency encourage, organize or particpate in the clandestine operations designed to destabilize, disrupt or.
otherwise interfere with the le~ itimate government of another nation?

The question of whether the United States should mount such operations
against any nation lends itself to two easy, absolute answers - neither of
which. is especially satisfying to those seeking more than slogans.
On one side are those inside the CIA (and elsewhere in the go~ernment)
who are always eager to play what they fondly describe as "the game of
nations" in the name of protecting this country's "national security."
The pragmatic necessity of self-protection in an impt1'iect world

That excludes propping up military dictatorships because they're
"friendly" to the United States, protecting the cOmmercial interests of
various corporate enterprises and seeking meaningless grudge matclles
against the Soviet Union on assorted Third World playing fields.
The United States claims to be a " mature" nation with a sophisticated
_natiOnal-security and foreign-policy approach to the geographical perplexities of the contemporary world. A matching covert-action policy is long
overdue.

Bad business in Africu.a______
Do_n_Gr..;.;..u.a.u
which are allegedly Marxist in worse. It is not helped ·by the side of the idological fence is, if
Africa," he observed, "the more I repressive ways of a regime that, if anything, worse. President Mobuto
have a feeling it is more labels and it has an interest in Improving the lot . Sese Seko runs an operation in Zaire
of Mozambique's people, is certainly - supported economically and,
trappings than reality."
As he sees it, the primary interest not letting it interlere with pursuit of when the need arises, militarily
of their leaders is not ideology but political goals that include main- the West - tbal1s not only one•oartv
economic advancement and im- taining perhaps the harshest one- but one-man, and alsO the
tinent's most corrupt.
proving "the Jot of their people." party dictatorship on the continent.
Tanzania,
farther
up
the
Indian
Ghana, which blew its
They are raising no political
Ocean
coast,
is
not
so
badly
off
but
prospects
at independence, is
barriers to the outside aid essential
perhaps
a-sadder
example
because
through
another coup.
to achieving their goals.
has
had
much
more
to
work
with.
civilian
govem~nts
nor
it
Well, possibly in Zimbabwe,
The
colonial
power
was
Britain,
not
juntas
have
so
far
shown
thai. ·
where he was speaking. So far
Portugal,
and
it
was
granted
in~enuinely
··Interested
in
Prime Minister Robert Mugabe,
who fought a guerrilla war for in- dependence rather than having had the people's Jot, they have
realistic notions of how to go
dependence as an avowed Marxist, to win it in a resource-wasting war.
But
potentially
rich
Tanzania
'is
doi~
so.
is maintaining a more ·or less
also
an
economic
basket
case.
To
the
right or to the left, it's
pluralistic balance.
K.
Nyerere;
hailed
ficult
to
find in Africa 's
President
Julius
But you don't have to look far to
find less encouraging examples. abroad as one of Africa's great much of that oledication to the
Only as far as neighboring Mozalll' statesmen, remains determined to good that David R~ck~:!:~.~~.~
bique, addicted to a Maoist brand of build his idealized version · of professes to see. That
·Marxism. It has accepted non- socialism that is incompatible with necessarily mean that there
Communist aid, including help from the realities of the country. Am- isn'tbusinesstobedone.
But conaiderin~ the sh&lt;lrk:om•in!iJ
hated racist South Africa in the bilious state enterprises are
operation of essential port and tran- crushing the economy before it can of most of the governments
sportation facilities, but out of develop to- the peillt where it is ~llllllt-lle-dealt with, what's gOOd tot
business in Africa doesn"t
desperation, not apolitical capable of sustaining them.
II would be unfair anol inaccurate necessarily work to the gOOd of
pragmatism.
The economy nevertheless , to indict only Africa's Marxist Africa's peoples.
remains in bad shape and is getting regimes. The situation on the other

RACINE - Saturday evening immediately following Southern's
regional championship victory over
Ross-SOutheastern, Southern Tornado fans from everywhere started
a long evening of celebrating when
the hit song "Celebration" came
. over the PA system of the "Convo."
. "Celebration" came as a request by
Coach Carl Wolfe, who the night
before attended the class AA cham.pipnshipa at the "Convo."
. ' Wolfe joyfully stated, "I was Q,ere
llurt night after the game and
· .thought to myself how I'd Jove to be
: ·in that same situation tonight. It's
. just a greatfeeling."
; . . That was only a beginning. After
the victory dance the Tornadoes
whirled up at Athens, they packed
their bags and headed for home,
escorted by Meigs County Sheriff
James Proffitt. The convoy that
followed grew from one car to many
vehicles as the procession left the
Athena' city limits.
At the Meigs County Line additional escorts met th~ procession
and the Red carpet was rolled out for
the Meigs' heroes. By the time the
"Wolfe Pack" reached the Route 33
by-pass a line of cars several miles

•s

__-

NIT results

.....

N..a-1 ............... ~.

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

Br'lbe'

.,,...._

AIN•Y. .

-

....,,Man* II

..........

Bradley ('JI.lO) \'1, OklUoma (:zl.JO)

.Uit.loe.~

GeCJr&amp;M (lt-11 ) VI.

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

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Col. Northland

(11-13]

Punt\~!

• 7 7,

E . On. Shaw M

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~ppme

Warsaw River \'lew 51, an. ReldkW t6

Boys results

----

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311.

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NBA results

ZanesvWe Roeecnu n . Buckeye Cen tral Sl

&amp;AI'IDN CONn:IIENCJI:

--pAl OtM 8taa!

Toledo Scott

-~~"
L
Pd. GB
!I 15
.TTl -

......

1.JIItveniJ

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~5 \'IJ. Barterton 21 -~.

Friday, 11 a.m.
Uma SeaiOr 2).6 VI. a.nctnnatl S.C00
22--6; FridaY. 2:31p.m.
OUmpm.hip Saturday. l p.m.

.,..... ....

Younptown RayerJ 19-6 w. Wbeeter·
Iburg ~l, 11lurlllay, 6 p.m .
WlUanl 26-() vs, Daytoll Rol:h 72-f,,

ThW'tday, 9: .J.) p.m..
Qwnplonlhlp Saturday, U a.m.

ClAM A
IJelpbOI St. John , 2+2 VI , MktdJetOWrl
~ 1~7. Friday, 6 p.m.
Racine So\lthem 25-1 w . Wlnclham "-2.,
Friday, 9::11 p.m.

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Racine SovtiiiPm 64, R&amp;tM'Iarld Dale SE

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Detroit

Ch.lmpkmhlp Saturday, B.:•c·m

Uml Sr. 80, (bL MtmJn

Lol Anp¥s 10, ~ York (N LJ 4

a.. ll&amp; But 00.0 "

su.. w, UtU lCtl
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lAI A.1t1N1 llf, 11011MGc1 UD
Por1land 1111. llolloo lD1

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Wl.r.tham a'l, BucRyt Ctmtral 51

Mlddlt1own Fenwltk EB. &lt;:aAal Winchel-

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NHL results
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NCAA results

7

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TOPOAPII
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11

P\ftlbw'lh 10, PNladelphla 1
Atlanta 2. Routon 0
Onclnnltl .. Kanau Ctty 2
St.I...OWI 10, BMton 6, lt IMlngS
Toronto 8. Chicqo (ALl 4
OetrU.l t , M1nnaot.l 2
san FnndtcO .Chlcqo CNI 3

e.

San D6e&amp;o 6, Set.ttle t
Cll!wlar.l B. Oakland 1

Ha~. F'll.
[)ftrQt VI. Toronto

-·-

Lol Aft1etet

~

New von tNLI o

"'""""'"
~ Clncltutod
Atll.llla 5, Montr"N.l
4 3

St.l..od 1, MJnned.l iSS) 0
Phlladr41Ua 11. Toronto 5
Balamote iSS) t . Houlton 2
0\lcqo (A.L) t , Bolton 1
MIMHOta iSS) 8. Detrdt t
Ka . . . City 1, Teu.l !I

Baltimore (SS) 8, New Yol'tl iAL l l

Qllcqo INLI 8, S.n Ftancbco 1

--

SUI ~4, S..Itlf!3
CleYeland 9, OUI&amp;nd 3
CaliJornla !5, Mllwi~Alte 4

ClnclMiti VI. Sli..OWI I I St.f'etertiNI"',

""·

Kanau City VII . Phbdelphla II Clet.r·
J'la ,
Tcrcnto (SS) VI. PI~WI"'h 11 Bradentoo, Fla..
nxu w . A.tlafttl at wen Palm BNch,
WI~ ,

.,.,

U.

s

Score by quarters :

SE

m

Ill 1CI
111 n

21a11•m•

13 If IS • m II
aa.~o
t7 • u 210 •
e
-~ant . . . . . . . .

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9 20 12 23 - 64
12 12

Palm Spc1np,

Mon!JMI n . NI!W Yort. tAL) at Fort
La\aCIM'clale, Flt., ( 1'1)

- ·-

Routon vs. Bti.Umore at Pumo RJco.
(n)

K a I'l l I &amp; C1ty
St . ~lf!nl:JulJ, Fla.

VL

StLoull

at

Plttlbl.lratl VI. Toronto •1 I:Nnecl1n. Fla .
Ne'l¥ Yort tNL) va. Chlcqo (AL l a t
S.J'IliDta, Fla.
.
Atlantl YL 'hxa1 11 Pompano Buch.,

Fla .
.
Mlnne.otll va. &amp;...100 at Llkelad:l . n..
U . of Miami VI. Montrw.l at Wet\ Palm

--

Btar h, F\a.
·MllWI~ VI.

OIJcqo

Oakland (SS) VI. Saft

(NL ) II Mea,

D&amp;tso at Y wna,

S.n ~ VI. C!PvN.nd I I Turton,

""'·

o.kland

(SSJ "'· SNtUe

(SS) It .

Tempi!. Arl1:.
Seattle (SS )
Sprlnp,C.W.

'Ill ,

CalU'om&amp;a at Palm

MIJwaukee at l\rtmiY

s..te. (n)

Pllllaclelpllta VI. New York (ALl at Ft.
Ll~.

Fll., .Cnl

BaltiiTD"'! VI. ilwiiDII at Puf!rto RJco,
(R )

Clnc.innaU VI. Detroit at LUeiand, Fla.,
~~

vs . MillnetiOtl at Orla ndo.

(n l

All-star games set ·this evening
The irurd annual boys and girls
all-star basketball game between
All-Southeastern Ohio League senior
boys and girls and All-Ohio Valley
Conference aenior boys and girls will
be held in the Ironton Sports Arena,
beginning at 8 o'clock this evening.
Adrniaslon for the two contests is

$2.
.
Meigs players taking part will be
Kristen Anderson, Pam Crooks, Bob
Ashley and Randy Murray.
Gallipolis players wiD be Sarah
Evans Shari Howard, Phil King and
Marty' ·GleM. Jim Osborne will
coach the SEOAL boys all-slats.

,

Electricity is one of the most convenient and dependable
forms of energy we have. But care must be taken when
you're around it. If misused, electricity can be dangerous. So
treat it with respect and make sure you follow these
safety rules.
1. If you're trimming trees, painting a house, repairing a
roof or putting up aluminum siding, make sure you're
well clear of overhead power lines.
2. When using a ladder, make sure it will not come in
contact wHh any power lines.
3. Before installing a CB, lV or ham radio antenna, make
sure it's at least one and one-half times its total height
away from all power lines.
4. Don't use electrical yard tools when the ground is wet.
• And make sure they're double-insulated or properly
grounded with a 3-wire plug.
5. Before you do any type of digging, contact your power
company to make sure there are 110 buried electric
cables.
6. Never go near any fallen lines. If you see a victim of
electrical shock, don't touch him if he's still in contact
with the wire.

A safety message from•••

Ohio Power Company
Conbict ua for your he ••fety booklet.

R.

newitz 0·0·0 ; Higley 0·0·0 ; Doles 2·0·
4; Richter 3·0·6; Carroll 0·0·0;
Weaver 0·0 ·0 ; Skag gs 3·2·8;
Dressbach 5· 1· 11 ; Dole s 6·2· 14 ; Reed
0·0·0; Eld ridge 0·0·0; Skaggs 0·0 0,
Totals 19·5·44 .

CoW.

Cl.l!f0m11 4, MUwiiiJCet 2

BIJtimort 3, Montlftl 1
Tf!xu 5, New Vert !AL l 2

at Wln1cr

CNL l at Meta.

VL CalU'otnil.~t

SOuthern Tornadoes (64) -

Wolfe 1·0·2; Rees J -4- 10; Brown 6·2·
14; Roseberry 1·0·2· K. woue 10·5·
25; Frederick O·H ; N. Bostick 0·0·0;
c. Bostick 0·0·0; Beegle 1·6·8;
Brlnager O·O·O; Pape 0· ·0: c um·
mlns0-0·0. Totals 22·21 ·64.

Southeastern Pirate• (44) - Den·

(SS] at ow.ed!Jl.

~ Dd VI.

defense as he l.s on offense."
Finally the fourth quarae
provided the icing on the cake as
Tomadoes wrote the final chap
by emptying ill bench and comlni
home with the 64-44 win.
Southern hit 22 ol 44 for 50 perce
from the floor, while its oppone
netted 19 ol 61 for 31 percent. SHS
20 of 'l1 from the line, while R
claimed only six of 16 for a meag
32 percent.
Southern had 30 rebounds led by
Brown's 10, had six steals, just sUr:
turnovers, 10 assists led by Wolfe's
six, and corrunltted 15 foul!i. Ross
had 39 rebounds led by Dressbach's
12, seven assists, U turnovers and 23
personal fouls.
The regional champion Southern
Tornadoes with Its outstanding 26-1
record wili play Windham 24-2
Friday evening at 9:30 i. St. John
Arena in Columbus.
Box.score:

r

·Scoreboard...
&lt;»*' H.8. Girt. . . . . .

-

Southern's running game was
opening up, and the Tornadoes were
rolling with Kent Wolfe at the throttle. When tbst frame had ended SHS
Ut up the score board to the tune of a
411-33 lead.
In the fourth and final frame
Southern relaxed an&lt;! 'started its
celebration with a closing touch of
basketball finesse.
The rampaging Tornadoes out·
scored the R088 Countians 23-11 on
great passing pl&amp;ys off the fastbreak by Kent Wolfe. Wolfe bad six
of Southern's 10 aasista on the night,
most of which came in this frame.
Despite scoring 23 points,
Southern played deliberately when It
couldn't get off the break.
Unheralded Tom RO&amp;eberry and
determined Jay Rees were credited
with outstanding Door gamll!l.
Coach Wolfe said, "Kent Wolfe
provided the spark and Beegle,
Roseberry, and Rees gave us some
unbelievable bal1bandllng outside.
And Brown, he did a tremendous job
inside. He's just as Important on

Exhibition scores
"'·Olicaao !ALl vs. Bolton
.....
......seatue Chlcqo

-·Ey

Jay Reel commented, "At the firlong foUowed. The parade route
went through Middleport and ' st of the year we set goala for ourPomeroy where many Meigs County selves and one goal was to go to the
residents stood outside, waving ban- state ... and to win the state. After
our loss to Nelsonville-York we
ners.
The Racine and Syracuse Fire and decided that we would never lose
Emergency units along with pollee again. That means we have more
units from Pomeroy, Middleport, games to go, and as Robert said,
Syractl8e, and Racine participated "We will bring home the big
in the parade In Ita route to Racine.
trophy."
Coach Wolfe and assistant Coach
By the · time Southern's bus
reached Racine, the Syracuse Howie Caldwell were introduced
squad, reporting from the rear of the before a long round of applause.
Jim Adams, Southern Principal,
convoy, was stl\1 in Syracuse behind
an organizer of the event, said, "We
a line of at least 200 cars.
A large pep- rally concluded the have the best player possible on our .
evening
an estimated crowd of bench. He has made our victories
more than IMJO fiockl!ll into the possible. One reason for our success
Southern gymnasium to bonor the . is that our boys are all good boys."
Tornado team. A standing ovation Ronn•~ Salser then gave a prayer of
welcomed the men of the hour as thanks aud inspiration.
Coach Wolfe concluded, "Two
they came into the gym.
Senior Robert Brown spoke, years ago we went to the state and
thanking fans for their great support we left something there. This club
In helping make the champlonahlp has told me they are going .to bring
trophy he held posaible. Brown ad- tbst something back this time, and I
ded, "This trophy means a lot, but believe they will! It's a rare opwe're not stopping there, we're portunity to go to the slate, let alone
going all the way and bring home the twice in three years. We ean't. pass
big one," referring to the huge state up this opportunity to come home
championship trophy,
with a championship."

Girls result's

_.__

vuelDg to tbe 1tate taunwneut for the secmlll Ume In
tbree years. Tim Tucker plloto.

Convoy escorts Tornadoes;
pep rally celebrates win

Today in history
Today Is Monday, March 22, thell1Btdayof1982. There are284 days left
iD the year.
Today's highlight In history:
On March 22,1917, the Unf\edStiltes becamethellrstnatlonto~ -­
tbe' provisiollal govetnment l,n Russia. Tile Bolshevik regime came to
pilwer later that year.

(Continued from paj!e l l
dition.
"In the second half we switched to
a zone and tightened It up Inside. We
pressured them all over the court,
but didn't give them anything Inside.
We decided to give them the long
shot ... if they were going to lhe state
they were going to have to shoot outside."
While talking about offensive
changes, Coach Wolfe added, "We
spread the offense out and sent Kent
inside. I don't care if a guy is s-8, 611, or 7 f!&gt;OI taU, Kent Wolfe will outquick them inside! ,
In the third frame the Tornadoes
utilized its cbanges to perlectlon and
gradually took Complete control of
the game. Beegle, Roseberry, and
Brown claimed the first scores early
in the canto before Kent Wolfe warmed up for the fourth quarter
fireworks. Wolfe canned four
straight baskets inside against hi.s
towering opposition with streakingquick drives.

F.

A matching policy for covert action

Someone had better speak to
David Rockefeller.
And not only because some of the
opinions he has delivered himself of
on a tour of Africa are not the sort to
increase his popularity in some circles back home.
He has, for example, dismissed
Cuban troops and Soviet advisers in
Angola, a back-burner crisis as far
as lhe State Department is concerned, as no obstacle to the pursuit
of American'interests there.
True, he was speaking of business
interests and specifically of his own
business - banking. But he added a
plug for normal political relations
with an Angolan sovernrnent that
the administration bas given every
indication it would rather help
remove frorp office. It Is 'barred
from doing so at present by
congressional prohibition of U.S. aid
to Angolsn political factions.
Rockefeller's larger inierest,
however, was Africa's Marxistoriented regimes In general. Contrary to the way they have been
represented in this country, he does
not see them as advei'S8J'ies.
"The more I've seen of countries

Tornadoes-Columbus bound.

You will ~y : to guard a~ being ·
overthrowA . by the CIA. But the
mobiliZatlilil was . under way well
before the United States turned
hostile toward the Sandini.stas.
And, of course, Nicarague
becomes an arsenal as a result of
another staging base, namely .Cuba.
And Cuba? We all know the answer.
Cuba would be pr9strate
economically if it were not for the
Soviet
which incldentallr
would not
revolutions tln'llli!l
w~re it

some close relatives." That, in

The Dally Sentinel Pag1

Middleport, Ohio

,,

I

P =,a.lo

Pomeroy

Page-2- The ~ly Sentinel
Pomei'O'f Middleport, Ohio
Mot.day, Ma.ch 22, 1982

',

·. The Daily Sentinef
~~

Monday, March 22, 1982

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9 11- 44

�PQrrlervy-Middleport, Ohio

Monday, March 22, 1982

Victorious North Carolina, Cougars .join
Louisville, Georgetown i~ NCAA finals

' .
SAVE8 TWO
- Houston's Lynden Rose (00) Upo tbe ball
'away from &amp;I ton College's Michael Adams (23) as Adams went In for a
shot In the NCAA Midwest regioul final Sunday afternoon at SL Louis.
Tbe HOUBton Cougars won the game, 9!1-92. (AP Laserphoto ~.

·Bradley, Purdue
~ in NIT semifinals
: NEW YORK (AP~ -Dominique
WUklns Is shooting for a good pro
offer. And Purdue may pay !or It
; tonight In the National Invitation
: Tournament at Madison Square
Garden.
One of the hottest scorers In the
country, Wilkins leads Georgia
· against the Boilermakers In the
nightcap o! the NIT semlflnals after Bradley plays Oklahoma.
"He' s intimidating," says
Purdue Coach Gene Keady o! the
S.!oot-7 WUklns. "That guy can get
up higher than any o!our people.
He's Impressive."
. _ WUklns was No. 46 among the
:. i:ountry's scorers at midseason, but
Jumped lnW the Top 20, thanks
.; to some strong performances re- cently. He had 33 polnls In . the
; ,regular-season finale against Mls' . stsslpp!, then scored 29 as Georgia
: was beaten by Alabama In the Sou:- theastem Conference tournament.
·=J'n three NIT victories, Wilkins
,: scored 24 points against Temple, 23
--aga!nst Maryland and 27 againSt
..Virginia Tech.

:has

- The Georgia forward Is only a
Junior, but has already been of!ered
: a reported $400,&lt;XXl a .Year by the
- Detroit Pistons and Wllklns lnd!. cates that he Is considering turning
pro after this year.
· ''I came to Georgia tc llelp bulld a
program that could do well !or the
. first time In 45 or ro years," said
WUklns. "And we've accompllshed
some things here. We won 19 games
last year and look who's the only
Southeastern Conference team still
aUve In postseason play - we are.

"I'm not complaining about beIng In a so-called losers' tourna-

ment. The national TV cameras
wUl be nice, the prestige of playing
In the final fouro! a national tournament In New York wUl be nice. The
whole thing will definitely add
another dimension to my thinking
about turning pro."
While admitting that Wilkins has
played a key role In this year's 19-11
team, Coach Hugh Durham InSists
that the BuUdogsarenotaone-man
team.
"I think any time you have a
great player, people rely on him,"
says Durham. "We certainly
prefer to play with WUklns In the
lineup and we prefer to play when
he gets a lot o! points, but at the
sa'me time we've got other talented
players who are capable of
.
scoring ."
' In Purdue, .the Bulldogs face a
hot team. The BoUermakers, 17-13,
were 9-12 at one point before winning eight of their last nine games.
Keady's club sewed up the seml!!nal berth with an 86-68 rout of Texas
A&amp;M.
Bradley has been playing well,
too. ThEi Braves, 24-10, rolled Into
the semifinals with a 77-61 trouncIng of Tulane.
"Thank God there Is an NIT because It Is a place where teams can
come and grow and gain recognition, and have a place In the sun,"
said Bradley Coach Dick Versace,
who was highly critical of the
NCAA for snubbing his team !or Its
playof!s.
Oklahoma, 22-10, beat Dayton 9182 to reach the seml!lnals.

Bcl!ton College, 23-10, scol'ing 26
played just about as well as we're
By ..4w0clated Pre.
game that would get us ba~ to the
points to keep the Eagles In . the
capable ·or playing."
The NCAA'.s Final Four picture · Final Four. l was very !Ired up and
game from start to finish.
''Tiley were very well-coached.
has been completed and few people
I was Just trying tc spread It to the
"Bagley Is everything they said
You just have to give them at lot of
- least of all VIllanova Coach RDlrest of the team."
' "Obviously when you fall behind ..he was," said Lewis. "He was
credit," said Eagles senior forward
Ue Masslmlno - are surprised that
great."
Rich Shrtgley. "They're a great
North Carolina 's Tar Heels are In
a team like North Carolina It's
BC Coach Tom Davis labeled
lt.
really tough tc come back, espeteam. Everybody contributes.
Houston
"ten1flc:·
and
noted.
"we
cially with their fo\11' corners - (ofThey passed the baU real well.''
"They showed us today why they
are the No. 1 team In the nation,"
fense~," said VUlanovacenterJohn
said Massimino after Sunday's 7().
Plnone. "You have tc try the best
you can, try and anticipate the
60 loss to the Atlantic Coast Conferpa!lS!ng lanes."
ence champions In the East
Regional finals. "They are an out·
Rob WUllams scored 25 points
and freshman Reid Gettys hit J().ofstanding team - they could be the
best team."
10 shots from the free throw Une to
pace Houston, Typical of their seaNor.th Carolina's convincing vic·
tcry at Ralelgl), N.C., camepriortc
son, the Cougars were In foul trouble midway through the second
Houston's 99-92 defeat of Boston
half, but ~ttys rescued Guy LeCollege's giant-killers In the Midwwis' team with' his foul shooting.
est Regional at St. Louis and set up
the Final Four field for New OrA key !or the Cougars, 26-7, was
leans later this week.
sharp baUhandUng that helped
them withatand Boston College's
On Saturday, Georgetown won
trap defense and hot shooting.
the West at Provo, Utah, with a 69"We had oilly three turnovers at
4~ decision over Oregon State and
the half," said Lewis. "We worked
. Louisville took the Mideast In Birmingham, Ala., · by beating
on It (passing) 75 minutes yesterAlabama-Birmingham 75-68.
day. I felt If we could beat the press,
''Some years you're thrilled just
.
we could win the ballgame."
Against the Eagles, the Cinderto get this far," said North Carolina
ella entry !rom the Big East who
Coach Dean Smith, who's In the FInal Four for the seventh time 1rl his
upset top-seeded DePaul on their
career. "Last year, we got there by
way to the regional finals, t)le Cougars were close to flawless.
a" upset In Utah. But I feel like we
deserve to be there this year.''
" We had to play It Uke It was
close at the half," said Lewis,
Smith referred to last season's
whose team clung tc a 4&amp;-43 advanWest playoffs, when the Tar Heels
beat Utah before an Intimidating
tage at lnterinlss!on despite 66.7hometown cl-owd, and then Kansas
percent Boston CoUege shooting.
"With the press, we had the feelStale, to reach the finals In PhllaIng that lf we could get the ball to
delphla. The Tar Heels eventually
our end, we ought to punish them.
lost the national championship tc
Indiana, continuing a string of frusWe did, because we shot well,"
tration !or Smith In these playoffs.
added Lewis. "I'm Just so happy
with the way we passed.''
He has missed on all six previous
tries !or the NCAA title.
Lewis, who w1ll be taking his CouSmith's ~en Final Four apgars to the Final Folir a third !me,
pearances, by the way, Is the most
said that sub-par play by a Houston '
by any college basketball coach
starter led to Gettys' appearance.
'
with the exception of UCLA's John
"Michael Young wasn't having a
STOPPING A WILDCAT - North CaroUna's Sam Perldns, left, .
Wooden, who made l2 trips to the
very good game," Lewis said. "We
bloclul the shot of VIllanova's Ed Pinckney, 54, during first baH action In
NCAA's championship round. Sunknew Gettys was a good foul
Sunday's East Regional champloD&amp;hip game be!Dg played at Reynolds
shooter. For a freshmaq, he gave a
day's victory helped Smith break a
CoUseum In Raleiib, N.C. The Number one ranked Tar Heels defeaied
pretty gutty performance."
tie with Adolph Rupp, who led Ken·
the Wlldcats 70.00. (AP Laserphoto).
tucky to six regional
John Bagley was the blg gun !or
r--------championships.
T~evino's
The Tar Heels, 30-2, took charge
Th e U•il y Sentinel
early In Sunday's game, racing tea
TAMPA, F1a. (AP~- The CincinTAMPA, Fla. (AP~ -Cincinnati
t USPS 145-IM t
19-polnt lead 7: 38 before halftime. Reds catcher Alex Trevino says his
A Dlwi1IOD o( M11UimHL1, lnf:.
nati Reds have cut two more minor
Vlllanova, 24-8, never got closer first home run of the exhibition sealeague players from their spring
Published ew ry a£tt1moon, Monday through
than four the rest of the way and at son Isn't necessarily a taste of
Friday, 111 Court StMet, by lhe OtUo Valley
tralnlng camp.
Publishin~ Company • Multimedia, Inc .,
one stage, North Carollna had a 15- things to come.
The Reds on Sunday sent third
Pomeroy. Ohlo 457&amp;9, !Mt2·2l:i6. Seeond elas.s
polnt advantage. Michael Jordan
posl.agt: paid 11t Poml!roy, Ohio.
baseman Nick Esasky and non'
Trevino, who never has hit a
led the Tar Heels' balanced attack
roster catcher Steve Christmas to
home run In a major league
Member: The A.ssocialt.&gt;d PrC5.'! Inland Dai·
· with 1S points, and each o! the other regular-season game, hit a solo · their !arm system for assignment
ly Pre:~S A&amp;IOCialioo and t~ AmerlcHn
Nt!wapaper Publishers A.uoci t~ tion , ~Uonal
starters also had 10 or more points. shot Sunday to lead ott the eighth
later.
Advertl:dnJ.: Rt!presl:'!nlati ve, Branham
Freshman Ed Pinckney paced VIlNrwspa~ Sales. 133 Third Avenue, New
Esasky played !or the Reds' TrilnnlngoftheReds'~3~Wthe
York, New York JOOJ7 .
lanova w!th 18 points.
ple AAA lndlanapoUs club last
Pittsburgh Pirates.
"That was probably 0ne o! the
POSTMt\.STER; Send adUrc~ lo The Daily
year, whlle Christmas was on the
The small catcher later pointed
Sentinel. Ill Court Sl., Pom.eruy, Ohio 45769.
most emotional games I've had this out that hls Job Is tc play defense
Class AA Waterbury team of the
year," said Tar Heel forward
SUBSCRIYI'ION RATES
Eastern League.
and get base hits - not to try to
8)' Carrier or Mutor Route
James Worthy. "This was the provide power.
One week . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . Sl .00

~ Full

court press
:gives Northland
~ Class AAA title

COLUMBUS, Ohlo (AP) - Columbus Northland pulled Its fullcourt press out of mothballs to
'deprive East Cleveland Shaw of Its
first Class AAA girls basketball
. tiUe.
1 • "We've pressed only twice this
:year- the last time Jan. ~ against
. Columbus Watterson. We changed
tempo of the game with It," saki
· .Northland Coach Elaine Boltz. "We
· have II.· We just fell we haven't
needed it."
· · Shaw led 42-36 when Boltz called
-for the,defense with 7~ minutes to
play. Northland went on to a 51-46
.victory Saturday over the Cardl'ilala, making them the state runnersup for the second straight Season.
Edith Spivey, Shaw's i:oach,
:charged the officials ~t her team
·their first lolls In 27 games this sea·IIOJI. "They didn't call anything on
No. 11 (Northland's Georgeann
' Wells) . She fouled constantly. Forlt
t.o be taken away from our young
ladles hurts," she said.
• WeUs, the Class AAA tourna:ment's Most Valuable Player, had
211 points and 16 rebounds to lead
Northland (25-1) to Its first state tl-

·:the

tlelnansport.~aUlly,Shaw's

''

·'

all-state forward, took game scorIng honors with 26 points, however.
Meanwhile, Warsaw River View
Is celebrating Its second Class AA
girls . title In the last six seasons
whlle Zanesv!Ue Rosecrans has Its
first Class A crown.
Coach Dave Mast's daughter, 511 aU-stater CaroUne Mast, powered River View (27-1) past
Clnc!nilatl Reading 51-46 and
prompted dad to break hls poUcy of
not talldng about her.
Mast, the Class AA Most Valuable Player, destroyed Reading In
close with 26 points, leading her
coach to say: "I wonder where she
gets her dflye. She's a good shooter.
She moves extremely well without
the ball. She anticipates rebounds
very well."
Mast devised a special box-andone defense to cutof!theshootlngof
Reading all-stater Jenny Glll!gan.
GI1Ug81J managed only six shot5 In
the first three quarters and settled
for 10 points as the·Blue Devils !In•
!shed at 26-1.
Rosecrans (22-2) turned a close
game after three quarters Into a 1
1
71-111routofNewWBihln&amp;tonBuck- .
eye Central (27-1) . ·
-

Not

job

The Daily

Sentinei -Pa~5

Scenes from Southern's regional championship game

WHAT A 'I'IIRIIL - Kent WoHe, senior point

Saturday nlghl With the win Southern goes to the state
basketball tournament for the second Ume In three
years. AI right lB Tornado Nick BosUc. Scott Wolfe
photo.
·
·

guard and floor leader lor the Southern Tornadoes,

. bolda both baudll In a cUncb style slp!fy!ng the
acbool'a trlumpb over Southeastern of Roll8 County

WE'RE NUMBER ONE- ChanUDg we're number
one whUe bolsUDg their champloD&amp;blp II'Opby, members o! the Southern Tornado basketball team rejoice
moments after Saturday's 64-44 will over Southeastern

of Ross .County. Southern, which returns to St. John
Areu after a year's absence, will face Windham at
9:30p.m. Friday In a Class A semi-final game.

Daily . .

DALE HILL
FORD TRACTORS

NOT BOWSER BUT JAY REES -

A blghly

emotlo.IIAI Jay Rees twirls a purple scarf arouad
following Saturday'• regl-l cbaJ!lplonablp victory at

OU's ConvoeaUoa Center 1n Athe01. In this 8cou Wolfe
pboto, Rees with mouth open loob like Sha-Na-Na's
BOwser.
·

the Southern To11111do cage team ran Into the standi tO
celebrate with !belt' fans.
·

. . ....... 54.4(1

Ollt! Year

Pirate power stops Reds, 5-3
score Lacy for a ~ lead.
Ron Oester tripled with two out In
the third Inning and Sam Mejias
looped a single W left field for the
Reds' first run.
Omar Moreno reached first base
on Dan Driessen's fielding en-or
with two out In the eighth 'Inning,
.just before Easler hit his homer
down the right field llne ott pitcher
.
Joe Price.
The Reds got two runs In the botto;n o! the eighth oft Kent Tekulve,
the third of !our Pirate pitchers.
Alex Trevino hit a solo homer to
lead ott for the Reds, Tekulve
walked two batters, and Dave Concepcion slapped a run-scoring Infield hit.

Pomiroy-Middleport, Ohio

Reds trim roster

One Month . . . . . . . .

TAMPA, F1a. , (AP~ - WWle
Stargell and Mike Easier slammed
home runs and collected three hits
apiece Sunday, powering the Pittsburgh Plra~ tc a ~3 victory over
the Cincinnati Reds In an exhibition
baseball game.
Easler hit a two-run homer In the
eighth Inning, his second ot the
year, w give the Pirates a H lead.
Stargell slam,med his second homer o! the year leading off the ninth
for Pittsburgh's final run.
Left-bander John Candelaria
scattered three hits over five lnalnis !or his first victory In two decisions. Cincinnati starter Mike
LaCoss fell to 1-1.
Easler sparked a two-run Pirate
rally In the fourth Inning with a oneout slnile ott LaCoss. Lee Lacy
singled, and Stargell hit his second
single of the ballgame to right field
to score Easler. Shor!atop Dale
Berra then singled to center to

Monday, March 22, 1982

..

~2 . 80

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MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
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214 W. Main

Pomeroy
992-2668

1Sill llF. Ni SF.t,
SLOWS P·ACE - Jay Rees (fl) prepares to pass
the ball to Zane Beegle (21~ In a spread 0\ll offeuslve
pattern set up dnrlng the second half of Saturday's

Class A Regional CluimploD&amp;blp game at OU.
Southeastern players are Steve Dennew!u (10) and big
. Roger Doles (52~ . TlmTuekerpboto.

ON FEET - Southern basketball laD&amp; were on
their feet most of the night Saturday as the Tornadoes
I'OIIred from an early first period deflclr to ea1lly

defeat Southeastern of Ross, 116-44 to advance to the
state basketball toum&amp;ment.

The Reds loaded the bases In the
ninth Inning off reUever Rod
Scurry, but tailed tc score as Concepcion grounded out to end the
game.

Sl-llmRno

·All 4 Sizes

MODEL
IOSG

BANTAM
BAITCAST REEL

lWIN, FULL, QUEEN &amp;KING

llow. Price
9
·' $89 ~~-~f

• Shima no Super Gears

• Low friction, high precision
• Gear ratio 4.7: 1
• Lightweight design

~
I

Price EHecti11 lhru Sal, lllr. 27, 1912

-

'3995
'

J

'

....
!.
(

.

leit to "Jiason County falf'IJOUnd
675-2988
·• Store Hou~ Mon. thru Sat 9:30 a.m.-7:00 p.m.
·,.
~
'

..

-•led

'WOIIIUEDLOOit- Tile Puple o - . - t.llaft a
W
........ tlllllllot lib. befare8ulllnlll ullidl'IIIS.twdlit l1flld, '111e
'T a 'r11111Wied ~ IW4, Ia
tile etalit llallt&amp;
ball ~~~a~-"

...._...to

SANDWICHED IN

8salbera'aKatWolfe(tl~ lll!ifllbttweentwo

I'Utberl, fteler Dole. (I!) ud Jeff Dnlbacl1 (U~ fw- o1 hlllla)'IIIJI
dliriDg Saturday'• eba...,._.lp pme at OU. WoUe damped Ia Z5 po1D11
to lead the Ton111tlo attllek. Tim Tlleker photo.
'

•

NET COMES DOWN - Soutben'e Rulty Cummlllll cull a etraDd' of
the aet foDowlrll llalnrday's regloul cbamplo01hlp victory over
Soalbeaatern of kMI County.

•

�•
Page-6-The Daily Sentinel

Monday, March 22, 1982

, Ohio

Pomeroy-Middle

'

Punuant to"" riiQulnmentl ol S.ctl011 ..., ,If ot tMOftiO Rivls.ti"{Odi.-ttMi \lrr"Hfim iKtrYt Ttllpnone ComiNnY one ' Com~Nnr"l
hereby ,,,.., r~otlu ttwlt «NN Jtnu.,y 20, 1911, It filM wittl "" PuDik Utllltltl" CommiUIOft ot onto (tlllt "Comm ln•on' I an Applictttlon
tPUCO Docht NO. 11-117.,.TP-AUt) tor'tutttorlty tolncrttlt tttd adjust Its ratK and c iMirps fDr ltltpfleM aervlces to tht JX~bll_c througb
Itt. forty -one felttM'IOM ••&lt;htneH tocatf'CI at ai'HII k,...,. as Ashtabula, Au,.., a,
aatllbtkl,., IIDOmlntdate, Ctnltrv•Ue, Char·
don, Che11ter, cooMift, CumMrMuMI, Dtnet, East c;:tarlcton, '•lrvkw. a.ntwa, HlrlellllfV, Hiram . HoPt'Nit, Hu4bon, Hu11tsburg,

4.25
7.50

t ndhd®ll "&lt;:cess/
Trunk Line M11ta9f,
each quarter •lle(2)
lwo-P•rty Access
Line Mtltige, tiCh
qurter •11e (2)

klnvsvllt.. Llttlt' Hctellifte, MlidiiOfl, ~sopotamla, Mltlcllefteld, Mofrt-.riNO, Mon' IUOWI'I, N~ry, Norfhfltkl, Old WlliUngton, P.,km•n,
Pnlnwll . Perry, PiorpcMat, P~tM Point, Qvollot City, .lc,..lol4, Rock CrHiil, •us .. tl, Tll..nPion, Trvmb&amp;lll•nd Twinsburt , ud to
cu..- certain of ttl r_.,.lofMnt ofMI pruffcos rolatl"' to such NrYic:o aMI to mo aWoptialte t.arlfl shnts nfle&lt;tll'll •udllncr utfl ond
cMnt!!:
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1ornurot1on wllll rnttKI to attofiKttG rotn, d••r ... , ,..,., .. , .... and ,ae11c.s should Inspect • CDfiiY ot Hlo Allpllcotlon 1nd ollo«•chtd
Khloi UIO'I If tM offko of tM CMI,dS&amp;t.fl, J71 S.tll Hltfl StrMt, COhiMIIUI, Ollkl Q211, Of' durlnt normll '"'lhMai hoc;rs II the publiC
-.us !nell ott len of IN Corn,.ny 1Kaftdtf'241 North Mila Sir..,, H..-..... Oh~ i142UJ 461• lllrtl "venue, Astlfobwlo, Ohkt+iOM , 20S H•mb'"\tlfft strHt, cts.rdOft, Ohi044124: INMI w H.,.._ Fourtft strNt, N. . on, Ofti04MSS. In . . . ltkM'I, tk propo1H tarrlfa wore rnlited on Octobtr
$, 1tl1 11 port &amp;t tfle compaf'IY' I Mtltlcatllft otltsintenl to file to tho mntn o..-lqlslotlve•vttwfitln of all "'unlclpilliflfl througMut tfl t
territory In Wlll~~:n tiM Compaay ...,otn.
Tills ApplicatiOn otfecb ra'" oiMI chlr ... tor,,..,..,.. Mt"W icn to oil customers &amp;t tM Cornp~l'lylo•co pt tllou senkn liiOnrnl'd b'l'
•con&lt;vrronc• with other t•to,.._ , .... ,.,...,and offtctl tho ComplftV't G....,,, E•cfloap T•J:II! and II Loco I E •chlnee T•rlfl
p

.60

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Trunk Line M1le1ge,
each quarter t111e(2}
Two~ Party Actess line
Nt lt19e, each quarter
111ilt {2)

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laflll II

IIY Rate "'''
•laM A

pocn -1000

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(1001 - 12.000
. . In Stltltfloi)

10.90
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8. 60

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22 15

1150

21 25

6. 41

Base Rate Are•
Zone A (2)
lndtvldull Access/
Trunk line Mtleage.
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l\tlo-Pnty Access line
Mtleage,
each c u st0111r (2)

10.00

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Present Access Line Rates-Dorset

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4100

32 75
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5.05

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each It ne (2)
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62.90

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lndlwtduai line
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10.20

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13.80

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20.35

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20190

23.!5

PBX

Trunk

]J , !H)

Hopedale

·,c. 15

Hue Rate Are•

12 .'15

Zone A ~

!.JO

9 JS
II 10

11. IS
13 15

9 . 05

17 .85

1750
19 50

16 . 00
18 . 00

20. 85

Rtsld~nce Serwtce

lndtwlduel Llne

Trunk

7. 25

8.~

To tal £xchange

Business Serwice
lndiYidual line
KTS

Four-Party

PBI

29. 70

18.05

Trunk

29.70

Present Access Line Rates-Mesopotam i a
Residence Service
f.u - P•rty four- Party

lndhldul line
Base Rate Area

8.50

Zooe A(Z)
lndlvl~al Access/

! .50
5.00

4.00
8.00

4 . 25

AUI£1 - Party

RTS Trunk

11.15
11.25

J .OO

Bus I ness Sen h ;:e
Individual Line kiS Trunk

PBX

1.21
10. 25

lrunk

8.25

11.21
11 .25

12. 75

.60

60

60

.60

Hand 3
(24 ,00 1·16,000
Mam St ~ l\1)11,)

ant Rue Area
l(Jfll! ....
lon~ 11 •

14. ]5
11 95
21. so

12 20
l!i. 80

Hand 4

8aoe ~ate Area
l(llle A•
lont s•

U . 60
18 25
Zl. 90

12 . 40
16.05

10 .95

19.10

18 .25

St ~t lon,)

B"nd b
( 128,001·156,000
Mat n Sttt •ons)

To t~

Hand 1
t 2!i6 ,001 - S12 ,000
Main ~tati011sl

Tot4l £•chan9 e

[lcnange

Pre,en t
llatn/lhnd

ProPOsed
~

Acctu Line

Su AIJove

One Telepnone
One Outlet
Tot al Ne• ~H e
Ol d R1t1
t IM ru u
Acton lln1
One Telegi'IOnt
!Ntl tt
Tofll Mew Rau
Old Rat e
1 Incruu

r 11n1 1'11
Klrllll
Ouktr CIty

en.

AcCIIU Lillt
One Ttlaphone
Ona Outhl
Total ~. Rate
Ol d Rate
1 Incr ust

Coolville
Cll!lbtr land

Ent Cleridon

Ac:cou ~ Ina
One ltltphone
Onl Dutht
To t t i 'Mw ~ttt
Old Rltt
1 ln~~:ruu

Sit AbOVI

"

"-'opot~ta

Mlddl1fltld

Accns li nt
One ltl t pllone
One Outlet
To tal lttw R4te
Old Rate
I Incrust
Acctu Llna
Ont l elapllone
one Out ltt
Total fill• R1tt
Ol d Rate
1 lncreut

Slit Above

Hopadlle

Stt Abovl

'

I

11,
1

Present

"

"

COI!IFiar hon

'1 2 80

S25 60

C01111ar h on

Ace us Li ne
One Ttlepllone
One Outlet
To tal Ntw ~1te
Old AIU
1 Incruu

Cnnttr
Char don
Ltttlt Hoc-. ing
Mont~ I lie
Morristown
Old \jUhlngton
Pown•tan Point
Chardon
(w/ Citwel and
Call ing)

(CJIIlP ir I son
Oncrlptlon

"'41
"lT:1!l
10

l~

"lT:1I

.,"'
""/r!"S
20 50

-rr:1ll

17 60

35 lO

.80

·"

80

Tnl

Jn!

(Pf)

(v:!fT

20 10

40 40

$25.,0

"lT:1!l

·"

""21:11"

"lnl

"1nl:

' 12 fKl

S25 60

v.8s

"11:"11

"Tf.1l

112 .eo

\ 25.60

.,eo

""21:11"

m:n

m:-11

'1 2 80

Sl5.60

s 25

"'.,
"lT:1!l

6.75

5"
11n'l

m:1ll

112 60
80

SIS .~

"1T.1f!

""/r!"S

"'

10 65

m:1llt

Ac:CIU Lint
Ont Ttlt~Onl
Ont Outllt
Tot al No• Rue
.Old Ratt
t Inc rout

Sll . 80

U560

.80
. 45

-,r.'b!
11. 15

"'1'D.Dr

Acun Li nt
SU.IO
llf1t TtltpfiOnt
.10
One Outltt
.45
Totti New lltto ""lT."''5'
Ol d ~1t1
11.90
I 1" crlll4
-.r:1l

S11

.,
-n-:1"!

1"650. ISS "I

."

"!r.1!
H

~0

&gt;J:1I
m .~

...

.10

"lr.ll

-H

Auror1
ll lnbrtdge
Hinck II)'
IIOrthf illd
Alt flf it lei
Auut11
f•ln bur'il

""21f:n
21. 40

"101

'

'

.so

.80
.45
"2PS
20.50

"l1r.2l
S27 50

...
80

""21f:n
20. 40

"l1r.!l
S28. 10

80

"
2210

~

-rnt

Accus LJ~e
IU J~
one Tele11Mnf!
80
01\e fkltltt
. 45
loti I New R1te ~
Old R!lte
7. ~ 5
~ lncreue
Ta§:ll

S28 70

Access Line
S14 60
One Te Iepilone
. 80
One Outlet
45
lot4l He• R1tt IS':lS
Old Rate
11 25
l I ncre.u
ttr:Vl

S29 . 20

"'.,

~

15. 45

"Jr.!~

80

45
""]1f."T;

22.50

~

...

5JJ.7D

.80

"lt:1S
40 . 40

rrr.sll

...

$33 .70

Acteu Line
S16.85.
One Te Iephone
•80
One tNt let
•s
Total Pit~ R.•tt IT.lO
Old Rill
12,75
ll"~~:ruu
~

Ftnlnsull

.80

1. 85

.45

ACCtU Lint
Slfl 85
Ont i @lepn~&gt;nt
.80
Ont 01/tltt
.45
Tt~tal il'e'll Rete 1!:10
Old ~1te
20.2'0
I lncreue
"'{iC':'ll)

A bo~e

125.6()

m:Jl

"lT:1!l
6.05

Hudson

Tint

112 .80

. 45

•

.,

Ac:nu Llnt
One Ttll~one
One Outlat
Tot1l "'" htt
Old At te
I 1ncrout

.eo

Hut:UM \'653')

.eo

45

tnt

Ab~&gt;ve

5.0
80

Access line
514 35
One Telephone
80
Or1e Oo.tt let
•s
t otal Nf~ Rate -rr.lO
Old Rite
II 25
l lncru1e
"""lS'7l

. 80

.45
""/r!"S

~9

29 . 20

4380

12 .e5
36 50

47 45
51 10

20

14 10

12 65

2S 10

13 10

33. JO

12 . 95

14 95

IJ 20

""'

15 95

""'

J4 50

26 10

J5 20

)4 50

J~

)/ 50

28 10

MI ~C ELLNI EOUS

4) 05

58.45

]1

20

50

"
2550

~

""Jr.!I

Sl5 lO

,l,cten line
511 60
One leI ephone
80
One Ovt It t
45
lo tal Mew Rate 1'8":1!
Ol d ~1te
13 l5
"""'lT':'"2I
I Jncre•u

( \1 All .I\OOYE PR£5Efll .P,NO PROPOSED RAT£S AR£

"'
"
;::;:

~

FO~

sd

ACCESS LUtES OKtl
IIATE S
LlSTEDIELCJII, WHICH ARE IN .AOOITION TO ACCESS liNE RATES
(21 Mllu ge chlr91!' apply tn •ddltlon to t ht ~rne~t access llnr Ch1rgn . l hl)l
'11111 be elllllntted Of'l t~t proposed r1Us.

..

.

.1 •'

·'

1.25*

50
g5
.95

Rock Creek

2 50

I IS
\00
25
50
\ 00

2 60
2 60

2.J5

J.2o

' 50
l200

so

55

67 40

51 15

5Z 80

56 Z5

6900

70.40

"OO

.,

15

45
.45

1
I 15

45

·"

100

. 45
·"
.,"

.45
• 50•

.so..

45

50

"

PIX

I 7S•

PU•

5 00
2 50
5 00

' 00
' 00
NA

' 00
NA

5 00

000
0. 00

1.00

.45

·"

1.00

Hopedalt/81001'1olngdl lt)

OutltU
Non·F i us ll
Non·F 1us II (Hoptdlle/ ll oOIIin'ildllt)
Outdoor In COIIPinJ Furnhhtd Box
Fl~sh/l)utdoor 1" CustOMr furnhhtd lo•
Flus,.(Outdoor In C~o~stCIHr hrnhhed lo•
( Hopeda le/ 81oa~tngdal e)

9.ool
11
9.00{ ll

10 .00{) 1
5.001)
10.00 J)

9.00( 11
9.00( 3)

10.00{ l )
5 00(11

!:1.00(3)
g 00{3)

](]•
)(]•

Outlet -Month l y R1 te•
Plug -Nonth lJ Rite•

"

(l) ()nt·tllll! c~1r91 fOr nt• tnst1lhtions only, no 11011tnl)l ratt appllu.
Prnent Monthlr

.50

l t1nd01rd Telephone
Co lor Ttlephone•
Co lor Telephone ...
1o1111 Teleottane•
(OIIJII ICt Set '11/0111 Ll41ht

~ttl!

Proposed Hontnly Rate

.80

1. 00*

N(
N(

• 75•

NC

.so--

I

15

15

•o
•o

125

Cont~r•

Con teMpi" I (Hoped a I e/8loal'liii1Jdl l t)
Contltii1Pn•
Otal-tn-Handltt
Oi al-ln·Hilndstt ( HOJIO(II Ie/! I OD1111"9dl1e I
Ot al -ln-Hinllstt•
Di ll·tn•Hinds.tt••
Plntl
Sut lons./huns1ons frtlll Guut Ro01111 ...
Ctnd1tstlck
•
C ~ut

I

50

I 60 •

'ISO"

1 50'"

z so••
150

J.OO
J .SO

Credle
80
Ert cofon
Erlcof0f1 (Rock Creek, Hoptdiii/IIOOIIi~Oilt) 15
Ertcofon•
10, 50
h p1otiCI'I-PI"OOf TtltPfl 01'11
hp l otiOti•Procf Ttltphont (Roell. Crnt,
8.50
H0,0011t/lloc.lngdlll )

...

Ply 5Utton (Aurora, Austinburg, h tn tJrlcJit,
'
M1nckltl' Hl.tdson, Jitt'llt11rJ' , lltorth1 1e'f1,
Penlu11
Porr1, ll1chf1t111, ll.uulll ·~
l•lntHrt
f
h1 Sht i on (t\shtiiMih , Clflotti"V111t, "'dttOI'I ,
P1trp0tlt 1 Tru.-tjl1)
PI)' StltiOf\ (CIIII'dOfll,.tletttr, Qoflll¥1, Llttlt
Hock1"1, llbltv11111, *'rr i StCIIIfl, Old
WttMnttOfll , PM1t1n Point, Th011plon)
Pi¥ Stltlon (Fttr ... tow, Mtr•, Qulktr en,, Roc;;k
Croelt)
,
Pay 5ta,t:ICIII lcoo,wlllt, Ct~~~~trltnd)
Pay SUtton Hoptdalll ll0011 1119 d11tl
Pl.)' St1tlon lttngsvtl o, Oorstt)
PIJ/II:TS li nt ~rlfl t e

•I

140

I 10
1. )O

I 10
IJO

160

80

75 ••

100

·''

.

.so

50

50

"'

10
100

so•

100

"0

40

25 "*

40

Ki!!r

Telepil~&gt;ne

155
!05

.
•o

5.00
1n AHOCUt 11&gt;
Strvice

NC
\ I? As!I&gt;C •~ted
Se r~ 1ce

Pr oposed

~He/ Call

Present

dlrtCt~&gt;ry

~ate/(~

Serwlc~

Betwetn C0t1tlguous Ctntral Offlcu
1\lrllne Distance 5 1111les 1&gt;r leu ·
PU Trun\11:
11u stnus Line
Ru ldt"te Line
Airl in e Oht1nce 1110re th1n 5 11 iln,
ltn thtn 10 •Iiles:
I'll Trunk

I. 75
10 50

'
10. 5o 1

'5.85"
1.65
5.45

5.25
4.JO

3 25••
) 21

14.55
14 . 55
11 . 5!
14 55
14 55

' 00
500
500

50•
7 00**

150

150

'.50

2.00

.so-

10 00
10 00
0 00
~ 00
10 00
7 10

Cos t*"'
10.00

oou
1 oou
7 oou
i

,,

.

1 00'"

Mo1•thly Rdlt

Propl&gt;sed l'l onth ly RHe
I ~0
150

1.00
V•ndble·•

5 00
100

100
J.OO•
1 .~0 ·
VH I~ ble••

2

24 50
24 50

oo··

Var•&lt;Jbll'

500

1 00
J 00
2 oo••

2 00

l50

100

100

1""

100

• oo

• 21
600

6.80

150
""
'"

1000
Y&amp;r i~ b le

2 10

,..25 ••

115

)00

)

' 15
' 15

1
1 00
J ~o ·

'' "•o
' 65"
11' "

I ZS "*
600

;oo

II 1S
15 10
1. 45
I 05
1560

900
1500
600

1.60
6.H

'.00
J.O(I*'

6 10

1.25*'

""

NA

.25

Present l'lontftoiJ R1te

o~tr

2000

24.00

25 oo•
40.00
2o.oo•

S3. 5-0

24. DO

so

(10)
{10)

1 SO

(101

1.00

110)

2

""

5815
15
. 15
15

5.00

,_.,
1.75

l .OO&lt;

1.20
l20

.15
1.50

"

2.50

hte

Propned Hontnlr R1te
7. 65
7. 65

1.65
15.00"

Hl.(lO"

7. 65

11.50
""'

11.50
12 00'

lO.obPrnent fii)I'HIIlr RUt

1150
Pr~&gt;posed

l'loflthlr ll.lte

ll 25
1). 25
1J 25

\l.SO
10.00
I 10

11.25 •
00/ 11a •lle (5)
13.25 •
00/ 1/4 •tle (5 )

13.25 +
1. 00/ 114 111 11 1! (5)
13.25 •
1 00/ 114 •\lt (5)
13.25 ..
I 00/ 1/4 •lit (5)

15.5o0 •
1.00/11111! (6)

IJ.25 +
I 001 11• •llt (5)

s-

Pmeout:l Jtmthlr ll:1te

..

10.10
IIC

Y~rlltlle

IIC

28 .1 5

.

'

f1l

9.25 Ill

.45

, .OJ

\, ,

IIIO~If l eC

r ~quld t

•ons

an~

cont•lfitd 1n )chedule f - 1 1&gt;\ the
t.r ha~ ge

B 4nd Local

to reflt c l sucn rev l$1ons the reof dS

effect 1ve dGtl!! for

~a

d~r • n9

effec tl~e.

lei prl)pl&gt;\ed schedu

It~ ,

ottler •nd fyrlher rf\tef t o •lt i ch ,l,pp\t r ant

notiCI! hu

bee~

•nd

~~~ ~ )be e~tl tlcd

apprl&gt;•t&gt;d by The Publ• c U1•1•1lu Cbnnll B•o n o f

to

TU£PHO~ C~ I'ANl

Home EconOllllst ,
POMEROY - For the last two
weeks, I've been up to my elbows in
new recipes! I have chopped,
stirred, kneaded, and sauteed madly
in pre para lion lor the two
microwave cooking classes held
March 4 and 11. Even though there
were over 90 men and women attending each class, I thought that I
would share a few microwave
recipes with you. If you don't have a
microwave oven, don't despair!
These recipes can easily be made by
conventional methods, too!
Breakfast can be a truly hwndnun meal. If you are tired of the
cereal or egg route, consider the
following recipe. This fruit compote
was one of the recipes that Cindy
Oliveri, Athens County 4-H Agent,
demoll8trated during the second
microwave cooking class. In ad·
dillon to driving us aU crazy with the
deUcloua aroma, this dish is a
healthful and interesting way to add
fruit to your famlly'li meals. It would
make a great light dessert, too, or~
super addition to a brunch buffet.

....

(101

1 50
110

(101

) 10

I~~l
(10)

( 101
( 101
101

1

"I

{10

22.45
7.95
24 10

! .75
J.OO
15
\0' 50

29.55
41 . 85

11 50
• 10

]3 .40

1nltta1 Str ~lce Order cnarge
SubU'lllent Str vlct Order Ct111"9e
Contr1l OHiet Cftol r ge
~hltlt1on ( fllr!t
Prt~~~tu Wir i ng hargt , l)lr outlet
SU tton H1nd ll ~g C~argt, ptr ut

16 .75
7.95

lJOO
"
s. 50

20

so

II 60
1) 15
jQ 90

8.15

5.00

z.oo

Moblle ltl tphone Strvict
Stnt lt ChiMIIl Standard Sot, prov ided
a ~o tnsu lltd b1 the COf'IPany
hst Chrl don bch1n111
tt~dson . 1\ust tn'u"' hthl"ll"
Stng1t Chennol Otlw~ • S.t, proviCIIO
an\1 1n1 t1 1l td by tilt COIIIOI"Y
Addltlanel Clllnnt l, 1nsUlled It t ht ume
ttllll u tntthl lnsu lhtlons ar other
ld4ttton•l thannl l , each •
tut Cllrtdon C~e fl•nyt
Hudton, .lusttnburg Exc htnge

!0.00
12.00

230.00

81 .00

310.00

15.00
25 .00

20 00
20.00

2!0.00

•

Ad!lltl~&gt;nal

cn1nnel, ldded 1&gt;n up1r1t1
... l stt , uch
Ent Claridon E•t h•nQI
Hudso~. Austlnburt h Cfllnge
For rernov1l from one vthlcle lnd rt 1nll111.at ll&gt;n tn 1 differen t ~enlcle 1t the ume
tl ..
Whtn ut1Sflctory full utJllng It
pr1sent
wn.en clb ling h nl&gt;t pruent or not
Uthflctor)l
Ctlanot from one 1t1odard color CGI\trol held
to 1nother 't1nd1rd color
Act lv1ting S.r~ t ce Char;e , fer tne ntcu ur)'
•d Ju HrMnh lCI con~et t 1n alrtld)' ln su l l tll
cut tOI!Ier-owned u ~tt, ..nlch 1\ of a tuiubl!
t ype, and 1111kt i t re1dy f or IIIOblle ~trvlct
to the Jtor1111 Sen ice 'ru
[1St Claridon bCtllniJ~
H~dson , Aust lrtob urg Etch&amp;nge
Mobllt hten,ion Tt ltpttoone, Inst-alled 1t till!
ur~e ttlllt as 1nlt i •l inst i llation, eactl
~ootlt bten,lon Teleghone, •ddtd on separati
vt,lt, u ch
Al.lxlliary norn and non-cont tnuou\ re II)' contrl&gt; I
equiP~~~tnt, Instilled at salle t lnroe u 1nltlll
i nstallat10fl n ell
Eut Cl1rldon hc h1nge
H~d$On, .l.utt lnbur g Excnangt
.luxlllary Mrn 111d non-cont inuous rt l ay contr 1&gt; l
equlp-.e:n l, fnltl lltd on ieparate vhlt , eiCh
Eut Cl1ri(I(Jn bchange
Hudson, .lust l nburg Exch1n;e
Aux t lllry 1111P and cont1 nyous rtht COfttro I
tquiptntllt, iMt ll ltd H Still!! tiM I t in1t111
tn~tlllatll&gt;n, uctl
Au•t ll ary l ..p end contln~ous re l1y CCMlt rol
oquipmenl. tns t411ed on UplriU vhit,
uctto
htltllhtl add itlon1l 1lphlflttic11 listing, ucn
Rutoral cn•rge for restor ing servtu •~len hn
betn denied for ~l&gt;n -p a)'l'tnt
Ch1 nge color of dtal control field
lns i dt ~"''of dt•l control ttoud
Inside ,.g~• of rad iO contro l hud
ln,ldl IJICIVt of anten~a
'11!!11'0¥11 of ser~tu and e~u l pmtnt
Instal litton of wutherprol&gt;f equlpr.ent
c abinet tor 1110unt t ng rad iQ eC]Yi pntoent

Pers~&gt;nal

of 1en1te

2500

265 00

8200

26~

2500

NC
2100

1]

25
23.25

10 00

MillO

00

190 .00

5. 00

4000

20.00

1000

500
20 00

130.00
130.00
40

20 00

"'

28 as
1000
1)0.00
130 . 00
110.00

20.00
20.00
20.00

2000
10 00

..

110.00

"
2000
Preunt Chlr'j!t

Prttent (herq•
1.00
par 'IIOrklnt
button
100
ptr worll.lnt

lwo-ltne ttle11hone
Tflree-llne te lepflone

Proposed Cn aru

1750

1000

c~ ar91

00

1lll 00
195

20.00

Proposed Chartt
I 15

10. 00

~1.1tton

lnltrCOII for ttultl-11ne ll ltj)hDnts,
P" two $ht lOfl'
Thrte-llnt Po'llllr Supp ly

Pruenl Cnarg•
111.00

J.oo·

lnsuffld1nt hnd Chet~ Cfil&amp;r9t• •ptr chte~

"

NC

121
1000

100
per IIOrk 1nQ
fluttm

l200

NC

28.45

10 .00

211.45

1.00

211.45

100

28.45
28. 45

1.!0..

s.oo

ch•rt•

1000

~Pf~llt)

~0.00

Prt~~lse

Vlstt Chart•
Prtlllllt Ylstt Char ge (ROCk Cntk, 8lo011t ngdl l t ,

1.50
PropcsetJ Cnargt

15.00

26. 45

Present Ch•!11t

C~trte

14 .00
14.00
lti.OO
10.00

PrcpoHd Chlrqe

7 PrUII\t Charqt

Reconnect frOM Mon•PI)IIInt
Reconnect trOll IIOn·P•JMilt (Roct Cruk,
1100111"941 1t , ~Ill )
Rtconntct frM &amp;oft•PIJ!Mn t (PirWnl
Rtconnact fr011 lkln•Pa)'lltnt (Munts.tH.Ir'il,
Eut Cl1rl don , Middlefie ld , MUCIIICitMh)
Rtconn«t frOII tton•P •Y"*"t (ll:hHJII~Ille, Oorsotl
RecOI'Intct frQII heat ton lllt1

l200

12.00
J .OO

""

IU11ff iclent Fund Cneck Ch1ru

Propond ChlrQt

15.00
18.00

18 .00

l A Type Key l)lstl!l11
four• I tne ltJ 5)11telll
AdOitlon11 C0/0/WATS ~! ne C ~rd
Key Snte• Sinqle·lint TeltphOne
Sh·lutton Key lelephont
}
Ten-Button Ke)' Telephone
Twtht-!lutton ll:ey Ttlf9hone
Et 9lltNn -111tton i(tl Tt ltphofll
Twtn t y-lutton ltty ellptlOne
Tfto ir t)'•ltutton lttY Teltphone
lu1y ~r Otsp11)1
"andlfru Un it
C011111anlon Tele phOne Mtndsfne Untt

Tut

!.00

HC

ltt ltl!(lhi&gt;AI SYUfiiiS (11)

Malnun.,ct of Strrlu

2.00

10.00

~rd$!Ctld

Clllti!

10.00

JOOO

JO.IJO
•

JO .OO

'·"

"'

Pllct111tnt of prhl" to out l tt
Standtrd tntertor tt•tlon wi re ~non-key),
por outlet
lilllntll
Rulderlct
~t.~ltl ·lt ne or ctll le

oc

IIC

"

FRUIT COMPOTE
Cooldoa Ume:
4 minute•

116 oz. can peach slices (dramed )

00

10. 00

10

Si gnal i ng Sen1ce

Estebll:;llnle~t

25.00

1000
1000

1500

Prt~t~lrl Cllerae ( Ill

Pruent MDnthlrllltl:

9)

By DALE M. STOLL

( 10)

!!tonnec\ Chartes
l!i. 50

:;cheOule~

Meigs Couuly EsleDBion

91.50

117. 5.()

S 111lles
10 ~Wfies

Cable P1tn and IUlo•qe
Specttl Reurdt"CJ Trunt,
Ctntral OffiCI
T.,.tn1t ton
R tngdiMI CI r cu I
r .... tnlt lOti
C1ble Ill I ~ • Jntraorrtce

Propo\e!l Monttlly R1te

82.00
2. 50
5,00"

•nd I hi'

Up to elbows
in new recipes!

{10)
(10)
(10)

1000

ltltJiti·Unt Teluncnel (111

1.00/11111e (6)
10.50 •
1.00/lllilt (6)
o~er

T~

II

600

13.00 •

1

Monttl lr Rate

24 5.0

te oo•

1&lt;1. 10

{5) Appltes t o distances
(6) Appli es t o dist1nces

Propo~ed

18.00

6

"so

100

5 00

Rn idtnu Ltnt

Res idence Line

. 80

200

200

6 50• •

ll .OO

lus1ness Line

l4.S5

10"

so••

llls i neu Line

.l.trl lne Olstance o... er 10 111tln
Pll lrun\11:

14.55

200

~rutnt Mont~ly

SI Gnl ll ns Str'tiU

eutc S1rvlce
8ulc Str~tu (Tono ' ll'tsuge)•
lute Service (lone Only)•
Pockot ~tctlwlr ·font On l)'
Pocket llacelw•r • V1bretor/l0flt
Pocklt RICi htr•
Foretan Ctn trll Offlct Servite

'"

.so•
5

~n

luth

tl"l i~

TilE IIEST£RII RESERVE

and Dorset (Jchan'j!l!!\

~n t denu

II

Proposf'd Monthly Rate

Pre stnt Jonnthlr ~ate

Systems

Nonllt l St r'tlte Ar e• '
Norll'lll Stnlce Ard*
Sing le r.~1nnel St1nd1rd Set
Slnl)le C~1nnel Standard Set•
Single Channel Delu~• Set
Add1tl0111l CIIIMtl
Addtttoul Ch1nnel•
l&gt;loblll ht1nslon Teltpftoonl!
Non-Continuous RthJ Cuntrol
Ncn- Cot~tt nous Rehy Con trol•
Ccnttnuou' RlhJ Control
Aullltary LMIJI
.lu~t 11 hry Horn
wenntrproof [C]u l~t C1blnet

111

Tht fo rm of

40

Pr~ser&gt;t

Servroce

lr:1proved Nobile Telephone

1 "'

l.OO

Jnitill Servt~t Ordlr Cht rge
Subsequent Ser~lc" Order Cn1r~e
centrll Off let Chargl
VIs i tation Char~t
Prl!lflht 'lllrtn~ Cilln;t, Pll'" outlet
Stltlon Htnd11"g Charge, per ut

100
1.00

sou

lA Type Key Te lephl&gt;ne System
I.A fype Key Telephone System•
l.A Type ley Te teptoone Systemu
Four-li~r Kty TelepM~t 5ystem
Add ltiQnal CO/fX/WATS li ne Cord
Pl ine-Stltlon lntertom Exunsion
"ine-Statlon Intercom [~pansion u
Ohl lnt~r c om Stat i()ll
N~nual lnterc'l"'
Man_.ol Intercom
Tei·Tov~n lnterc0111
Tel·Toucn l nterc0111
0141 C1ll ~let up
Key Syste111 Si ngle L\nP Ttltptlone
~~~· BI.IttM Key Ttlep~ont
~~~· 8ultl&gt;n Key Telepn~&gt;ne •
Sh Iutton ltty TelepMne**
hn·!~o~tton ltey Telechonl'
Ten-Button Key •f elephone•
Ten. &amp;vtton Key T!lephone ••
Tilll!ht-Button Key Telephl&gt;ne
El ghtten-8uUon KtJ Tehpil1&gt;ne
T~~enty-Button ltey Telephone
T ~~ent,·Button Key lelept11&gt;ne
Ttlirty-8utton Kelleleph~&gt;ne
9u')' Kull'lller Ohp IY
IYSY Plumber Ohph)'
Hands free Unit
COIIIJ)anlon Handsfret Unit
Turrtts, il nglt or dOullle sided••
Tie Trunk to PBl S• l tchboard••
Eltft untt cf Cab]e (ZO" or fr acti on tnertorl

Ptrso~ll

Grant

~(TO)

40

50*"
40

c h1 rgt ~

fltcc.e e fftC11YI! , pursuant lo ordtr \ ot JOur COIIWII SS IOn,

hta!Jl h h

All Other bch•nqes

100

,.
'"

and Oor\e l r•cn1n!le!i

UN

Approve the fil1ng of the

1111)

16 75
7.'il5
20 . 50
18.60
IJ.45
10.90

I 50
Party l ine-Residen ce
100
Addtt tonal TelepM~@ StU
1.50
Addltlon•l lelephone Set
~ec onntct lo n of e•lsti"9 flcll ltt u with no
ctlange i n louthn , tyPt! or UJl ~ of
200
equipllol!nt
ISO
TraMfer 1&gt;f service
lOO
Jtlowe of telephQne set with I~ S&amp;M ro011
100
llowe of telephone tel to dtfhrtnt r o0111
1SO
Change In LtPt or st)'lt of te 1tphont
Cost
A\ I l&gt;ther Ctl11'1 9eS

Propoud Monti11y R1te

25 ..

llngs~ille

the proposed r1tts •nd

hr \H, PUC 0 No

41.85
33.40

1.00
) 00

~1rty Lt~e - Buslnus

NC "
NC•

1-..o · Ll nt T t l eo~poe
TIO·l ine TelepMne••
T~ree Llne- Tel epnone
Three-Li ne Telepnone•
E.tenstM charge for ~dCh I me used'
Three-t lne Te lephone••
Three -L l ne Power Supp ly

I·

•

Te l ep~one

) 25
I 25

tnst1llatlon of new cr adcl ltional urv ice·
lndivtdutl line lusln~u
lnc11v l dui1 Line Ruldentt

5.00

NC"
100

IWu~pOtMtola ,

29.55

1 25
1 50
100
15

"

Present Monthly R1 te

.45

1.Z5

PI! ! Rock Crook)

Lt ne

2.25
] , 50

lnsu l htton 1&gt;f new servtce
Tr onsflr of u rvtu
lnHtl l ttlon of co lor teltphOI'It sot
Jnsulht lon of ur vtct ,..,., c!rop o;1ro
Is bvrled
~ve of ttlephont ut 'llltnln 511'4 prom1u
C~ 1n91 II\ typt or sty!t of ttlepnone set
Ch1nge of non- I Is t ad or non ·putll i 'ntd
tellphon e nu:&lt;~~~r

II 75

50

" lt!lll f!fl tl d ,

What's cookin'!

BOO

PreuM I'Onthly R4le

ltunUilt.~riJ,

Appl lc• t lon {Gener•l (•thenge Tar iff , PUC 0 Ito

Business and Residence

Cor d
Cord (Kin9sv1lle, Dorset )
Co rd
Cord (~uclc Creek H1&gt;pedale, 81o~&gt;~r~ 1 n!fdalet
Cord
Cord
C1&gt; rd (!lock Creek Hopl!dall!' RIoor:nngaa 1e I

Apprl&gt;~l

pr•ct Ices aff fct 1ng tnt
B

0~

Ktngs~llll

per line*
per line• •
Business, per l1ne •
B~s1nes s , per ltne u
Bu,lness, pt!r 1 ine (~ock Cre!!k)
KTS Trunk , per 1 ine•
KU Trunk, per li ne••
KTS Trunk, per ,lint l~ock Creek)
PB~ Trunk , per liner
PBX Trunk , per 1 ineu
PSI Trunk, per 1\nl'
WATS Access (Su\iness ) , per I i ne ..
uATS Acce~s (PBX ) , per l,ne• ..
fiATS Acce~s (KlSJ. ~r I me••
Tel-Touch Tel~phl)ne Set5 •

63.00

A.

2Z. 45
7. 95
24.10

1.00

lOO

so

800
Vortab\e

P~rkllloln,

t•C~I"91!S

l1&gt; do the f o l l1&gt;wln4J

Propoud Ch1rte

110

10
10 •
950
g,

1.00

200

1800

The pre1er of the .\ppllcat1on req uest s tne Pu b llc UtlltotlfS CMt!l iSSICln of Otuo

Ru i dtnce

Zl 50
• ll $0
n 25
22 25

I !I 00

.coo
.coo
.coo

••Denotes ralt for cus tlllllers llf tht

10
10

1. 75

Proposed Mcnttlly Ratt

22 Z5

1000

tile ronterhll bet ..,.,~ trte ·f,l 1ng c f ttl!! ll.ppl l c~t•on •M ltll! dal e upon

50
20
11,1,

Zl ~0
16 00

(101
( 101
( 101
( 10)
( 101
(10)
( 10)
( 10)
( 10)

1.00
I 00
100

.n lch uld l)ri&gt;QOUd schedule\ become

45

Present Ml&gt;nthly fhte

Of~i e,~

10.00

ratt for cu\tOII!ers or t ilt

•net East Cl&amp;rtdon

Ho

45

oo••

·Oe~tu

Propoud Chtrge

Prtun t Char!JI

Charges (g)

lntth l Sarvlcs Ordtr Charge
Subsequent S.rvlct l)'der Cllarge
Centrtl Offlct Cfllrgt
Vllllltlon Charge
Premlst Wiring Ct11ryt. ptr outlet
st1tton tt1nd l ing Ch1rg1 , per set

2 JS

N(

1

Conn~t i on

llor'&gt;etl

Chlrgu Ire b il led on • ptr occurrtnce btSl ~
( 101 PrDPOttd cflargtt for ser• lce co~nect ton will be appltl!d bUtd on tht ac tual worl
doltl
The proposed cfto1rge' tltooo;n for blls i ntss or rn l dt~ce lnl t t • l serv ice order
Ch1rgt , subsequent ser vice order tflln)t , centra l of fi cr charge, v • \1 14t Ion ch•NJt',
prM!ht wirl~tg C h~tgl or Hit ion ftoandling c harg• will •p~l y u 11'1 ol tltr t~ c ~un9t-s
( II ) Ch1r9u appl)' In addition to rf&gt;twlar applroublt serv•ce c ~•rgu

~~

g5
,g5

80
] . 15
3 00

Resld~ n ce ,
Re~l den ce ,

•
j

Ser, tce

~s

1.00..

Rec1&gt;ra•n

htl! per c1l1 (All ottter uthange' )

80

Ch1rn

(lt1ng~••llt,

COfl~ecl l on

( 9 ) Ser,lct

.

05
10

Rate per t:11l {K ingsville, Corset)

so

eo

~rtunt

Ply Statton Ca lls

4~

.40
25•
I 15
gs

l el·TI&gt;uCh Calling Ser vtte

65 .70

Proposea MMttllr Altt

,..oo•·

hs ldenct
Res tclence•
Rn i dtnce••
Residence (Hoped1l e, 11o01111n;dale)

Toltp!!ont Se ts

4)
I. 10
1.10

Mo~t hly .allo•anct of dtr(!Ct dil led calls to dire&lt;tor1 as ,ntGnce \h~ll bl! fht ( ~ )
c.l \' per atreH II! or triJnk

{4 )

58.40
62.05

Klng\v\111". Li tt l e

Prtsent stonthly Rltt

Stet ton GJtlets {Auocllttd lflt~
Ttltp~ont Set)
Ius tnon
lus l 1'11111•
luslnus••
Ius tnon !Rock Creek I
lus i non Hopedsle/ I 1CK11111ngdalt)

PU

I .00
9!1
.80
100

shed Number
Non · Publ !shed N\lllber•
Non-1. Is ttd Null'ber•
Non-Publlshtd pjllb@r (lll&gt;pedale, 6\Q()!II ifi QOole,
Rock (r~k)
No~·Pub ll~ hed KumiJer••
Additional ltstlng·Bu~1ness
Additional L t stlng•Bu\lnt~~·
AdO it lon~l Lu t in9-8us1nus ..
Additlondl l t ~ttnlj·R~sidence
Adaitlon•l ll!ttng-Resldence•
Add it1onol Lbt1 ng-Resl dence••
rl&gt;re ign Lhtln9 Busines&gt;
fQrtfgn Latlng Busi ness ..
roretgn Listl n9 -lles,deuce
fo re ign L1 u I ng.Res •den ce ••
~ PH ia1 Operator ln terceot
Jo &gt;Mt User Ser v1ce

57.40
6100
64 .60

SERVICE "ND EQU IPMENT IU.T£S

Stand.rd Out lstt

18

Comparison

AcCI!B lint
S13 75
One ftltp tlont
80
One Ou tlet
45
lOti I Nt• Rllt! -rr:1m
Old RHI'
12 .60
1 lncru5e
~

See Above

""lfll ury

6.25

IR
C01nparhcn

Genev•

....eo

"lT:1!l

(Oflllllrhon
Oucrtptton

S2 7

See

70
48 10

46 M
50 20

J2 .es
36 so

25.55
29. 20

2~

41

35.90

16.85

14 65

1 ao

Mon - P~bl l

Sf 60

26.70

32.30

Sl 20
54 40

""'
""' "()()
u
""'

35 90

) 1 50

Lint htu By E•th1nge fCI&gt;"ti nutl))

Acc eH line
SlJ 75
One r~ leptlQne
.eo
One Outlet
. 45
Tot~ I New 'l8te 15':"00
Old Atte
10.25
Gr:-Jl
I lncruse

K•nqsvll le

11 "'

18 40

28 70
32 .JO

J 1 50

18 15

Tou I hcllaniJI."

sv

P~rry

1!!.90

25 10
28. TO

Zl 60

11 25

Atcen Lt~e
SlJ 15
O..e Telephone
SO
O..e Out let
45
Total Ne• Aalt IS:1JIJ
Old ~ate
10 70
I lntreau
~

-uH lnDur!J

..."'

""21:11"

9.45

Fropo5td
Band

.80

"lT:1!l
·""'

21.50

""'

11 .1!0

Band 9
( l, Oi' 4,00 1· ufl
Ha1n Station')

""'II

. •45

11 .70

30 95
34 .40

1150

14 60

1.80

z.2s

50

Olrectorr •~d Lh\1ng Strv ices

M~ lt1

.ll\ht1bu la
Centerville
Madison
Pierpont
Trumbull

eloomtngdalf

J0.95
34 ,40

28 80

If t he proposed rate in creases are granted 1n ful l, a repre sentative residential
customer and a representative business cus tomer, each with an indiv 1dual l1ne and
one sta ndard telephone , would experience the percentage change s shown be low for
the appropriate exchange area in which the customer res ides .

T~ornpson

"

' 12.80

.eo

~ nes / h nd5

£.11.~ han9e

""'
12 00

13 . 40

11 60

60

Sc~eclult of Pru~nt 1nd Propo sed

5cneclult of PrneM and Proputd Ac:c:eu Line htu er h chan9e

I

2880
""'
12 00
""' ,.,

1060
14 05

10. 75
14 . 35
17 95

19. 40

1910
ll 40

15.7S

Hand II
lo l a I Eac illniJt
{512 ,Wl·1,0(4,0W
Main St ations)

.75

mtht l2)

I~

' JO

II ~0
14 TO

Monthly Rate

Direct did I c al I to dl r ettory
4Hhtance, ptr c~ll (4)

•zoned r &lt;1tn appl)l tl&gt; 8lo011lngdale, Cent rrvllle, Chnter, Coohill t!, C1111berlaod, Oor!iet, (a\l Clar hJon, Fairv iew, lii&gt;PI!dale
Hocki n9, Mesop!Jtamla, MaJd le fh!!ld, 14or r l s t~ . Old ltuhlngtoo, P1 ~~~~~•n Powhatln Po mt, and O..lker City 1!!1C hlnges onl y

•

Trunl l1ne Mlle1Qe
e•ch quarter •lle( 2 )
Two- P1rty Access Line
Ml lnge, each qu•rter

10 30
13 75
17.20

1280

!land 5
(&amp;4,00 1·128 .000
Main Stations)

Present Acce&amp;s Line Rates-Rock Creek

11 10
15 I ~
18.60

!Jut Ra t e Aru
Zl&gt;nt A•
Zont e•

Mam

16 25
29 25

13 T5
17 20
20 ..

Sand l
( 12 .OOI·l4 OOJ

1Jb,OO I ·6~.ooo

Business Serv tce
lnd h l dual Line kt$ Trunk P8 X Trunk

. .0
l l 80
16 00

1000

Mlln Stat ll&gt;n,)

10. 90

20 . 40
22. 40

10

14 10
11 lO

lone A•
Zl&gt;nt 8'

~He

Are1

""'

But

Pr 1&gt;pos~

eo

Operator-assisted call to
tSStstonce, p~:r call
8and I
(0-11,000 Main
Sllt ii)I'H ]

1.00

1 liD

Directo ry AssiHance Service

fiOrr tnOIIIII, Old tjUhl"9tott , POWtatln Point

Present Ac cess Line Rate s - Bloomingdale

13 55

21 15
16 ..
5.65
40
15.30

16 50
100

60 90

50.65

!9. 15

Proposed Access Line Rate Bands

ower)
'lCifllf19 ch.,tts IJIPI~ onl)l tc
Mid Qulktr Ctl)l

HC

,,"

(C ont I

Color Telephone
(0111\)JC t Set o;/01 1I Ll'ht
Hearln9 IIIIPill"ed H1~dstt
Jndlutcr L l9ht
Tel -Touch, Residence llnt
Ttl·TOUCh, BioiS1MH Lil'll
Tel·TOIIC~. hChlnQt lrunk Line
Tel•lCII.ICfto, 'dTS ~UU Ul\fl
S.I.Publ tc Telepnone Sl!r'tlce

. .,

.sou

(E• tra Ll'n9th )

f1&gt;1&gt;l
fPOl
Foot
Foot
Foot
1 ~ Foot
15 Foot

run

ey

,,. Y

"
"

J.OO
J.OO
.25
.25
.25
.25

25

(I&gt;~I!·A ·Pncne, U O
Code ·A·Pfl l&gt;ne 440 ( H~&gt;Pt'dal~. Bli&gt;Oill lflg dalel
Code·A·Ftlc~e ;60
Cod~·A·Ptmn e 560 (Hopedale, 61COI:llngd41e )
fool Sw1tctl
foot Swltch (Hopedale, Bloc~nngd• l e )
Me!IICir 1 Ph 1&gt;ne
M(&gt;IIIC)r1 Ph1&gt;ne {111&gt;0. Cree~)

9
12
\2
1(
Bus i nes s Ser v ic e
Y ua
ne
ey run

'"

50'

Busy Lamp (Aoclc Creel)
Buzzcor
Buner ( llopedall'. 8 1oo•nng04le)
ChI me
Chime (Hopedale. 6lo0011n9dale)
(omKJn Aud ib le
Shndard Sel l
St4ndard Bell•
G&lt;m9
&amp;ong i Rock Creek I
&amp;ong (Hopedale, BloollnnQdale )
Gong•

Co ra ~

Present Access L1ne Rates-Hunt shur
Service
our- ar y

151

• 75•

Card Ol~le r
L09it 0 1a le r

.JO

Residence

I. 'iO•
l

~

7.85
7. 85

.50

.30

1. 55

v,rlal:llt

ll'l~

C ~arsu

~~~--~

·""

1. )5

.50

"

Tel'llf"UIM
Pair · Interoffice- Cl&gt;nt l'iluous
12.00
9.l5
Tefl!1tnet ton
1nterl&gt;fflte Ci rcuit
13.75
C1bl1 Ptir • Interoffice- lfon•COfltlguous
20. 00
Off · Prl'lllhe Mllugt .
Ftnt 1/ 4 Mllr
1.00
1. ..
AddHional 1/4 Mill
1.00
Off PrMhe Miltlft (Rock Crnll Hoptdllt,
lllC1011oln91• 1t) :
Fi r\l 114 11111
'
181
Md t t iontl 1/4 •lle
1. 50
Orf·flrl'llhl Mll1191 •
First 1/4 lllle
.60•
l. BS
Addit ional 1/4 •ile
.60 •
1.50
Off ·PrMhl fttl uge
In d ifftrent bv il dtngs. ,.,. cr connected
prl'tli su
E1ch lt lO 1ir l ine 11ile or fuction
Dif ferent bu ildings, different and nonconn•c ted l)f'ettot ses 1n SIMe I oca I excfto1nge or
5ti"V1Ce Htl .
1.85
Fi rst 111 111t11
1.50
AltditlonJI l f l II Il i!!
In difftrfllt Oyil d i ng s, dlffertM lnd
non- conr~ected prmtsu in different but
conttgu1&gt;us lcx:al eKChtflge tru
3.00"·
Conc"rrenc1
First 1/Z olrllne ~~toile or friction
l.SO-:,.concurr:enr:e
1\dodltlo~•l 1/4 1lrl 1 ~! mile or fraction
(7) ~mber of cable p1t'rs billed butd on present ~Ntflod of ch1r9 lng ont cab le patr
from the custaner's loca t ion dlrtUlJ to t~e custCIIIIIr's l)t her location
(8) NUII'Iber of cable pairs b illed bued on prOj)Ostd Method of chnglng ont c1b l1 p1lr
fi"OIII ttlt cvst0111oer's loutlon to the un tr1\ Mflu and anotfler cabll p1tr frc.
the centr1l office to t~t cuHOIIIotr 's o tt\l!r II)( at ton

""

l.l'i

2.50

8loom 1 ~gdale)

..,

...
....

Cablt Pa i rs end Mlluu (Cont.)
C t~lt

....

.81

8U£)' LIIIIP

~

44 .00
42

11eary

ne~

1.11

8ustness Serylce
~
ve- ,,. '1
er

I. 55

Prtsent "''n~hly Rate

AutiJIP1&amp;t 1C Answenn

. 50

.50

JOO

3. 00

or Ho10ler
LOud t&lt;orn
Ll&gt;ud Horn (Rock Creek )
Rei ~1
Sp!c 1 a1 Gon~
Spec hI Gong (Rot~ Creek)
Ll9hts
LighH (Ki ngsw 111e, Dorset)
Vh~A l S1gnol
Tr1nsformer

runk

run

I. 55

50

Hor~

Jus t ne ss Serwl ce
~
ve- 1r y

)

1.00

oo-•

\ole~tflerprOOf ~ eJ\ U

8. 65

23.50

12 25

• 10

941

•. 65

5. 55
5 55

6 45

(211 ,001.48 ,000
. . till IUl\Pfll)

.... VI

60

.60

.60

100

( llopeoalt,
llotwingdale)

Gong*"

_ II

30.35
12 , )5

32. 10
34. 10

11. 25

10. 75

•75

Residence StrYlce

19 25.
21 25. •
l l 25.

8 . 75
IJ,75

11. 25

5.75

11.21
11".25

3.25

Tran~ittl!r
TranY~htf!r

To ll Restrlctor
Pustl-To-hlt
C411 Oiverter
EHluslon ( H~&gt;pea•le.

~ni"TrUnl

eyrun

Ats1dentt Service

~r~tn

1. 65

10 95

9. l0

.... lllte ...,.,.

(12,CXII -24,000
. . 1111 s.tltlc.!S)

'' "'"

.60

)

Full~Booth

Present Access Line Rates-Kin sville

nt~~

'"
1060
'"

.60

1 00

1.25

~

.60

n v

10 50
12.50

• . 00
5.00

1.50
8.50

4. 75

Present Access Line Rates - Banded Exchan es

:e.1s

12.15

Bu siness Service

ne~~~

9.00

I ndhldu•1 Access/
Trunk Ltne MlltiCJe,
u o;h qu1rter 11llt (2 1
Two-Party Access l l ne
Milea ge , eech qu•rter
11t1e (Z)

For lh&amp; '1K''P"* Gf d•ttrmlniftl ttcl\ango sorvlce monlftly ootcns. 11ne rlltl, ttcltantts on c l•nllled In ra te groups acco rd1n9 to
the total moln ltltpnOI'IH 1n a local calling ana TM lout ulllrtlil aree Is t.t1e ern wltflln which CUIIGmen make call~ Without the
~vm e ntof mn uge tol l cll•rgn •nd mty includl! Glle or mGre txchanve•roas.

17 65
19.liS
11 65

8.25

11.25
11. 25

.60

.60

r-k

• 10
110
JO

1.00

H1ndset
lilnlfset (Hopedale, 8loc..1n9d• le )
Handset•
141ndsetu

Outdoor llous ing
Outdoor liCiusi~g {Hoped&amp;lt, BlconinQda l t )
Switch Ke1
Swttch ltey•
Cutoff ltey
C11toff Key•
P•y Slit !011 Boo ttl
Haff-8ooth (11111 fri!C)Unt )
Halt-81&gt;1&gt;th {Pedesul Moun!)

• 75

v uo

Bue lhte Area
Zone A (2 )

MONTHlY ACCESS LINE RATES CI)

•u•
RAte ~"'
font .I

9.65

11.15

3. 00

ResidenCe Servlc•

SCHfDULE OF PRESENT ANO PROPOSED RATES AND CHANGES

.... I
tO- lOOO .. In

5.75

.60

II'"

18.90
20. 40
21.90

5.25

11 . 25

! . 50

4.00
7.65

..

'

ru nk

~

011r· ary

luslness servtce
M
run

Present Access Line Rates-Parkman

,,.m,

'"

He1dset Jack
He1ring J ~a l rect
H11rln9 lctpalred
Htlrlng IIIIJlllred
Hurln.g l ~~topllrltd
Kolse Cantt1llng
K1&gt;1se Canttlllng

. 60

.60

.60

Sl~vtce

~

1. 25
8.65

hse Rite Aru
~

8.25
12.75

.75

n •
Zooe

11 .25

11.25

100

so

B 1 o~ingd•lt)

Restdlnel

,.,.pttol'le

8 10

9.00

11.25

J .OO

ISO

Sputerpt\Of'1t {MindsfrM)
Stlndlrd Hudstt. utra
COIII)Inat1~ HanltUt/Htlllset
L fghtwelgflt ~rltor Headset
Llgltt'llll! ight Operator KeidSI!t (Hoptoa l t,
S100111 ngaa le)
L lght ~~~tlght Supltl"rhor Hudset
L 1ghtwe lght Superrllor lk!adset ( lloptcl&amp;le,

run

run

5.25

11.25

3. 50
5.00

4.00
6.00

••

Ul

II

Present Access Line Rates-East Claridon

ANY PERSON, FtRM, COi"PORATION OR ASSOCIATOIN MAY FILE , PURSUANT TO SECTION tfOt 19 OF T"'E OHIO REVISED
CODE, OI.IECTIOHS TO THE PROPOS E D INCR&amp;ASES AND ADJUSTMENTS IN .ATES AND Ct4AAGE5, AND Tt;)THE PROPOSED
CHANGES IN REGULATIONS AND PRACTICES AFFECTING THE SAME THE OBJECTIONS MAY ALLEGE THAT SUCH AP
PLICATION CONTAINS PROPOSALS THAT ARE UNJUST AND DISCRIMIMATO.Y OR UHREASONABL E R ECOMMENDA T ION.S
WHICH DIFFER FROM TME APPLLCATION MAY II MADE IV THE STAFF OF THE PUBLIC UTILITIES COMMISSION OF OHIO
OR BY INT E RVENING PARTIES AN~ MAY IE ~.OOPTED BY TMIE COMMI$SION
,
Tht Com,.ny •s Application sllttl lhlt t•lstlnt rorn art~~ cNrtts art lnHequo,. ond cunot produu tho rn•nun required to meet
tM on.,olnt costs of provklktl s.rvloto •net 110 ltOf provkle o 1u11t •nd re11onoblt return 011 tnt nlut ol tl'tt Com5NnY'I und and 111elul
PNIMrfY 11 of frllovombft M. lfll Tht AIIPIICotion further 1tatt1 thll between December Jl, 1914 tncl NovemiMir )0, 1f11, tiM ComNnv tl.s
t nvt~ledlll• , nl,tll DO tor odclttlonl af'ICf improwomonh ftlts
~ant, whlltlts •xttonstt llavolnc...,.ltd at a more ra p1d n te ttroan t
111 revonuos ••TIIe Company stalft thlllt nHdt the ~tropoHdlrterelleln rowtnutl to ONble It te mllnll ll'l quallly ttrvlott and toen~ble It to
maintain crltllt ilncllttract cooltll for tt.o t•Nnsion aH imorowtmont of Itt Planr In occotdaiN!t wltll pubflt oomtnd As U!t fortn tn the
Appll~~:atlon. mo com,.ny tntl~~:l,.tH that thO ,.,.. allll cllan.-s. propctHd In tlw Appllc&amp;tiDn will lncre•ae tot11 onnu11 revenues by
..,JIJ,Otr IIMIINII sucft addttiOftal ,.,. .. .,..wilt prowklt a minimum retvrn and will not prowllle mort th1n • f•lr net re n onable rate of
rtturn on me utut ot tftt CornJOitY" l tM'~rrv
New retrulltiCH'IIIfl"opDStG\n tM ANIICIIIOft lfiCMHfll lite followlnt .
,
-A "'ovltlon ~~ c"stomon who 4itconnect or rtmowe ttrvlott must ntvra aU tllllbl• Company· provlctKI toleptlont 1n1trumont1 to •
spodfiH Company letutlon, unlns ottttr s.pec:illc orronltfl'tnll Nve Nen modo tor r ec:overy of tiM tns.trumentt ShOUkt cus.tomen e lect
not to roturfllt,..selnstrumontt, tht cultomtr wllllbt biUtd an af)prtprlatt otha'9t for IMtrumnh nol roturnKI • nd upon payment. the 1n
1trumefttt wmMoto~no ttlt property ot 1M cuttomor
- R._ulattoM that ~lustty many
Gf JOaHCittlflon •PtNraf\ls 11td miKellai'IPioll oqu lpment 01 " tlmiftd awaliabthf'l'"· wh~treby
tuoth O(IUipmtttt II tM'OVkiH only ilow•lloiMt I ram e•llflnt warehouse IIOdl
- Achor . . por outlot location for pre·lnltlflltlon of concealtd lnterltr wiro wilttln • bu lldlntcturlng the In lila I connruc11on or dunn !I
remadellnt of lt\.e INIIdlnt
- .0. ttrVtCt CMr. . tor Cnt&lt;:llt roctlwtd from il ~~:ustom11r In paymtnl tor sorwlct rftMiorttl, or for any other reaUJfl ollndebtednen,
which oro subiO(IutflfiY roturltad frorn ""bank diJIIO lns.ulllotiontlunds or lor ' " ' othtr ro11on.
- A cttargt for ulls made to Dlroctory Anhton" ne choree wtll bt ltllltcl on • por colt ba1l1 lor eu fl celt mode 11ter tfle montllt v
otlawance of five calli por lint or trunk.
·- The basis ot chartu lor otdloHirs wilt bt !=hi"'" from (a,) DllllnJ for ~.,_tr froM customer lOCation to cutlon)er toutlon to !b I
ll1lllfll lor one pair from customer IOC:IIietn to control offict plua ont JMir trorn cttth'al otftc:t to cuuom'r lOUT
- A provltlonwhoroby customvt orderiiUI &amp;Inai ..flnl teteMoAt ttrs onllother oncltlorw dowlcn furn!Ahtd by lhv Company on • iii!•!e basn
mav rft!UOII tN compony' to ahlp ,,.. equipment to the customor'slontiGn via POStal or clollwerv ttrv'lco for the c01t Incurred
- 5pecialllrrugamonh lor ••rvlcnnutspecllloG below will bo chlrttd on a basis of toth lncurrtd by the Ctmp•nv In pro vtdtng such
servko. Controch tor bllllnt of such sorwlct• may bettflbfllhH lor • poriod of vp to tlthly lour (141 montflsln lentlh .
Tho •chtdvl• ot prottntanct proposed nltt roq~ottsttclln ttlo Company' • Application 11 tisttdbolow

n "'

n

run

Ul

Bue Rue Are•
Zone A {2)

"•'""bUtt.

lul4fftt•

Justness Serylce

Residence Ser~tce

REGULATIONS AND PRACTICES

The Daily Sentine

Ohio
s.r ... lct CCII'Inec:tlon

~

Prennt Montlllt hte

Present Access Line Rates-Middlefield

NOT ICE OF APPLICATI ON F O R INCREASEs.AND ADJUSTMENTS
IN RATES AND CHARGES AND FOR CHANGES IN

P~Middleport,

Monday, March 22, 1982

'"
85
ll .ilt
h iMfiSt incurred

1 BY• oz. can pineapple (un·
drained)
1 small can mandarin oranges
(drained)
1/4 tasp. cinnamon
1/3 cup orange jwce
1 banana, sliced
1. Combine all ingredients (except
bananas ) in a two quart bowl. Cover
and cook at high power lor two
minutes.
2. Add banana sllces. Cover and
cook on high power for two minutes.
Serve wann or cold.
NOTE : To prepare conventionally, heat fruit (except
bananas) in the oven until hot, then
add bananas and continue heating
until aU fruit Is hot.
The second recipe is a real
favorite of my family and it Is sur·
prlsingly easy, too. The great thing
about this bread ill that it has so
much good stuff in it. It's loaded
with whole gram goodness and
coated with nutrition wheat genn.
ThJs recipe Is a cool rise bread,
which makes it extra easy to
.manage.

FOUR GRAIN BREAD
1cup whole wheat flour

1/2 cup rye flour
112 cup rolled oats
114 cup com meat ·
3 tablespoons light molasses or
mapleayrup
112 teaspoon salt
1tablespoon vegetable oil
114 cup wann water (105 deg.-115
deg.)
I cup boUing water
I pkg. active dry yeast
I to I ¥• cups white flour
Skim milk
1/4 cup wheat germ
I. Bien whole wheat fiour, rye
flour, rolled oats, com meal,
molaaaes, all, salt and boiling water
in mWrlg bowl. Set aside and Jet
cool. Sprinkle yeallt over wann
water in ~ measure. Stir to
· dlslolve. Stir into flour mlsture. Stir
white nour gradually into mlsture,
adding juat enough to make lltlff
dough. turn dougli out on floured sur' face; with lighUy greased hands,
knead unUI smooth. Knead by
folding dough over toward you. Pwlh
· with palma. Turn dough one-fourth
turn. Repeat, adding nour as
needed. Knead about fivHight

minutea.
2. Cover dough with plaatlc 'wrap,
then' a towel and Jet test for 20
minutes After the rest period, pull-

chdown.
3. Ughtly 011 nine inch pie plate.
Shape dough into 18 inch strip. Brush
with milk. Coat top and sides with
wheat germ. Sprinkle pie plate with
remaining wheat genn. Shape
dough, coated side up, mta ring in
pie plate. Pinch ends together. Place
lightly greased glass open side up in
center of loaf.
4. Cover loosely with plastic wrap
and place in the refrigerator lor two
to 24 hours. When read to bake,
remove from the refrigerator,
remove the plastic wrap, place In
microwave and microwave at
"Defrost" lor one minute. Then
microwave at 50 percent (medium)
sbl: minutes,_rotating pie plate onehall turn after three minutes. Increase power to high. Microwave
three to seven mmutes, or until surlace springs back when lightly
touched, rotating pie plate once or
twice. Remove glass, Let stand 10
·minutes. Transfer· ring e.ar~y to
cooling rack. From "Microwave
Cook in&amp; Ubrary - Microwaving on
a Diet."
NOTE: To Bake in a Conwntlonal
Oven : Remove bread from
refrigerator after two to 24 hours.
Carefully remove plastic wrap Let
stand at room temperature for 10
minutes. Meanwhile preheat the
oven at 375 degrees for 10 lllJnutes.
Bake at 375 degrees for 3lH5
111lnutes or until bottom or loaf sounds hollow when tapped. Cool on 8
rack. This bread may be shaped into
a traditional loaf fonn for bakmg in
a conventional oven.
Betty Reese, Athens County Extension Home Economist, shared
this bread recipe at the microwave
cooking class.
Many people do not include whole
grain cereals and breads in their
diets. As a result, there may be a
deficiency of some vitamins and Iron
as well as roughage.
"There are many brands of whole
grain breads on the market. Try
whole wheat bread this week. It
makes super toast and goes so well
with everything from peanut butter
to egg salad. Of course there's
nothing quite like a crusty loaf of
homemade whole wheat bread!
For your free copy of the recipes
and infonnation that was distributed
at the;. microwave cooking classe1 ,
contact the Meigs County Extension
Office at 992-0096.

Honor roll
SYRACUSE -

111&lt; Syrocuoe Elementory

ScOOol honor roll for the fourth six week• gradir~~:
poMod ho• ...... aM"""&lt;l'd n._ malc"'l 1
gndt of B or obove In all their t Ubjedtto bl
namedtothefOIIIre
Flt'ltgrtdt, Tbomu Adkins, Mark Allen, K. c .
A.rnotl , Bethlny BaN, John Bently, Valerit (',en.
noll.)'. JeM!t er Crou, Wendl Hirmon , Tamara
Htyman, fOmbeTiy J enkin,, Juon Powell, Ray
Proffitt.

Second grade, Juoo Amott, Rtnee Ruuoll 1

Michie Bent!, Amber Cummlnp, Stacty Fry,
Kerri Mullen, Scott l .lsle, Marcy H(IJ, Robin

Foley.
11Urd crade. Andy Baer, Mica J one1, Cheryl
Pape 1 Joett.s Pl:ulnq. Michael Ruaae11, Roby11
Stool

Fourth ~~:ride , Kevin Burge~~ , Trlcla Michael,

ChriliStewltl.
•
Fifth arlde, TOdd U.le, K riJUn Pape, Sarah
PhilJon,l)rlan Weaver, Bectty Winebrenner .

Slxth 111de, je M ifer Arnold, Shawn Ar nott
BIJ!~nle Burkhlmmer, Wendy Fr/
AngleO~, Scott McPhr.ll, We ndj Triplett '

Chrll

IIARIUfiONVIU.E

The

-

llarrill&lt;xlvllle

Elementory School honor roll lor the fourth oJx
srodlllf! period hu ..... 111110U11c:141.

n.. rmking 11rode of 8 or abovt in 111 their

1\lb)ect.lto bll RlrDed to the roll1re :

_l"'m ovlde, Melll&amp;t Duthlm•Silane HaUield
CIWIIII1pller Nee~ l.uale usborne.
Btonle)', lie&lt;ky~n. Mike Vllllet.
llec&lt;i&lt;id ~ride, TOlly Six, Andy Vance. Bobby

SooP:

VafiCt!, Ronald Vance.
'ndrd fl...de - Jennifer

Barrett,

Steve Mlrtln, Aaron Sheet~ .

Ronntt Fr).

'

Fourth lrlclt, Rodney Butcher, Kimberly

Cheprr~~n, KeUy

HamJitoft,

DIMy Kennedy

1111&gt;ect1 Napr&gt;er/:tiDebbie Blx. Mt!eia Donoh.. •
FUih 1'0110. t r1IU111 Duo, J..., Dodaan
Btocey Dolton, Wealey Howonl, Joied 9hotU •
. SiJ:Ih Jtlde,Sun Dodoon, Tlllar)Y Dillon, 1icoU
QbtfhOIJtr, Juon Rupe
. '

�Pag&amp;-8-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, l)hio

MONDAY
EAST MEIGS - The .annual
Eastern High School basketball
banquet will be held at 6:30p.m.
Monday at the school. Tickets at
$5 each are available at the office
of the superintendent.
-GALUA-Jackson-Meigs Men.tal Health Board will meet Monday for a meeting rescheduled
from March 15.

TUESDAY
MIDDLEPORT Chamber of
Conunerce, Tuesday, 7 p.m .
Lasalle Hotel.

own.

WEDNESDAY

MEIGS
Area
Holiness
Association, 7:30p.m. Tuesday at
the Pomeroy Church of the
Nazarene. The Rev. Herbert
Grate, speaker.

OHIO VALLEY Commandery
24, and Pomeroy Chapter 80,
Wednesday, 7:30 p.m. Pomeroy
Masonic Temple, with mark
master and past master degrees
to be conferred.

County happenings

POMEROY - A film narrated by
Kirk Douglas, national crusade
chairman, wi~ be presented when
the Meigs County Unit of the
American Cancer Society holds its
crusade kick of! a.n d training session
for volunteers at 8 p.m. Tuesday at
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Warren Parrish, senior division
representative from the Ohio
Division of the Society, Cleveland,
will lje attending also. The film
presentation tells of James Longley,

tion,

education

and training
program directed towards freshmen, sophnmore and junior high
school students who represert
today's youth.
The three day, live-in ellperience

Pomeroy sixth graders
study drug, alcohol abuse

POMEROY - The Harrisonville Golden Age Club wj.ll meet
Tuesday at 6 p.m. at the to,.vnhall.
Each family ls to take a covered
diah and their
table service.
Beverages will be provided.

POMEROY - MIDDLEPORT
Lions Club, Wednesday noon at
the Meigs Inn.

Tbe teenage institute is a preven-

Meigs Community Mental Health
Center, in cooperation with Southern
Ohij) Regional 'Council on
Alcoholism, is sponsoring a
~theastem Ohio Teefll!ge Institute ·
for the prevention of alcohol and ·
other drug abuse.

POMEROY
Ladies
Auxiliary will meet Tuesday at 2
p.m . at Veterans Memorial
Hospital. Rhonda Dalley, R.N.,
will give an in-service talk on
Isolation patients. Each member
is asked t'o take a toy for an older
child. Hostesses will be Carrie
Kennedy, · Ethel HaUleld, and
KatieMees.

AMERICAN Legion Auxiliary,
Drew Webster Post39, Pomeroy,
7:30p.m. both junior and senior
units.

REEDSVILLE- A revival will be
held at the Eden United Brethren
Church, two miles north of Reedsvllle on Route 124 from March 28
through April 4 at 7:30 each evening.
The .Rev. Robert Sanders will be
evangelist· and Mrs. Nina Sanders,
song leader. The Rev. Elden Blake,
pastor, invites the public.

The prevention program of the

'

Darlene Hussell's sixth grade
class of Pomeroy Elementary
School has been doing a unit on drug,
alcohol and tobacco abuse. They
were honoreb by visits from three
local guest speakers on March 12.
These spe,1kers were Charles
"Chuck" Riffle, a local phannacist
from Swisher and Lohse Drugs ; Carl
Hysell and Cindy Schneider of the
Meigs County Probate Court. Hysell
is the Meigs County Juvenile Officer
and Miss Schneider the youth counselor.
Riffle spoke to the class about
prescription drugs and their uses.
He broke these drugs down into five
important categories and briefly explained each. Riffle brought examples of some widely used narcotics
and showed th.e m to ~ class. He

former govemor of Maine, and his
bout with cancer.
A social hour will be held and
refreshments served. All volunteers
and interested persons are invited.

had these drugs labeled with their
pharmaceutical names and their
slang names. He held a questio nand
answer session after his talk.
Ms. Schneider and Hysell spoke to
the class about the legal aspects of
drug use. Ms. Schneider gave the
class a drug quiz pertaining to street
drugs and their usage.
Hysell spoke to the class about
" their" responsibility in using
drugs. He informed them of the
hazards and _ penalties for using
illegal drugs. Ms. Schneider and
Hysell also held a feedback session
after speaking to the class.
These sessions made the class
very aware of the legal and illegal
uses Of drugy and the consequences
for abusing drugs, alcohol, and
tobacco.

Scott Maurice Johnson, senior at
Meigs High School, was selected for
Who's Who Among American High
School Students for the 19ro-81 year.
He is the son of Maurice and
Margaret Johnson, Bailey Run
Road, Pomeroy. He will be attending Rio Grande College in the .
fall.

Personals

Eric Russell Smith, son of Tim and
Karen Smith of Chester was baptized at St. Paul Lutheran Church at
the morning worship service March
14. His grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Fick, were sponsors.

Lee Rudisell , well-known
Pomeroy resident, underwent
surgery at Holzer Medical Center
Wednesday. Cards may be sent to
Room212.

Johnson

values. A rational
•
process 1s emphaslud to
ticlpants concerning their·~~~;::
behaviors, health and their z
ships to their communities
fellow students.
The Institute, which Is
Meigs County students, will
April 2, 3, and 4 with a
cover costs of food and lod!J:ing.
more information call
Community Mental He.e~th'Center .~t
992-2192.

Astrpgraph

5·Happv Ads
6-Lost and Found
7· Y·ard Sa le (pa id m advanc(' )
8-Publi c Sale
&amp; Auction
9-Wanled to Buy

Real

Estate

31 -Ho mes tor Sa le
3'2 Mobil e Homes for Sa le
Jl·Farms for Sa le
J4 ·Busi ness Buildings
35 Lots &amp; Acreage
36· Rf'al Estate Wanted

51· Household Goads
52-CB , TV &amp; Radio Equ ipment
53· Antiques 54-Misc . M erc handi se
55 · Building Supplies
56· Pets for Sale
57 -Musc iallnstruments
5A· Fruits &amp; V ege tabl es

you have known for a long time, who feel they can trust you. They'll be
lucky for you and you wiD be lucky for them.
ARIES (March Zl·April 19) Show a willingness to listen today if
others want to confide in you. You could be told something beneficial
which they wouldn't telllmyone else.
TAURUS (April ~May 20) Tbe companions you share your time
with today will have a great influence on your outlook and attitude. Pal
around with these who hope for something bettet.
GEMINI (May 21-Juoe 2t) Something which may at first appear to be ·
but a small opportunity could actually be quite iarge if viewed from
another angle. Don'tllrnityourvision.
CANCER (Juoe 2l-JIIiy %2) Although you may not think so at the
time, others will put great stock in your ideas and suggestions today. Fortunately, what you say will be sound and helpful.
LEO (July 23-Aug. %2) This ls a good day to implement a change
about which you have been thinking - one you feel cou)d be be~eficiai to
your family. Put your thoughts into action.
VmGO (Aug. 23-Sept. %2) Others wil\ appreciate dealing with you on
a one-t~ne basis today. You'll put yourself in the other guy's shoes and
act accordingly;
LIBRA (Sept. %3-0ct. 23) It pays to put forth your very best effort,
regardless of the size of the task today. Even s~ii jobs could pro&lt;Juce a
hig yield.
.
SCORPIO (Oct. :U.Nov. %2) This is one of those days when you W9n't
have to seek tbe spotlight; it will search for you. Regardless of the crowd,
you'll not go unnoticed.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. :IS-De~. 21) You cOuld be rather prophetic
today. Your hunches about tt.. . ·•tcome Of events should be right on
target. Utilize your insights wisely.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 191 Don't permit yourself to think pettily
today. Raise your sights. Try to visualize what is the very best that could
happen from a given situation.
AQUARIUS (JIIn. zt.Feb. Z9) You could be exceptionally lucky today
in areas meaningful to you materially. Focus your attention and smarts
on what you believe to bemoneymakers .•
PISCES (Feb. ZD-March 20) Projects you originate or develop today
have a better-than-average chance for success. Be imaginative, creative
and believe in what you conceive.

59-For Sa le or Trade

4411-Gallipolis
:1&lt;17"-Cheshire

17 Situation Wanted
13 Insurance
14·Business Tra ining
15 Schools In stru ction
16 Ri'ldio. TV &amp; CB Repair
17·Mi sce llarieous·
18· Wanted To do

Public Notice
OFFICE OF

41 ·Houses tor Rent
42-Mobile Homes for Rent
43·Farms for Rent
·U ·Apartment for Rent
45l'Furnished Room s
.46-Space for rent
47-Wanted to Rent
48-EQuipmenl for Rent
49·For Lease

388- VInton

245-RioGrande
256-Guvan Dist.
'43- Arabla Dist.
379- Walnut

4. _ _ _ _ __
5. _ _ _ _ __
6. _ _ _ _ __
7. _ _ _ __

8. _ _ _ _ __
9. -~----

10.
11 .
. 12.
13.
14.
15.
16.

Public Notice
chromesh transmission,
direct in f ifth

SALIS Bu n~Y

1141 Engine 366, 4 BBL
ex haust

TOWNSHIP

carb. or large, with dual

TRUSTEES

41000 Laurel Cliff

Road on
P omerov,
io
45769
Phone992·2212
NOTICE TO

MOTo n VEHICLE
DE~ALERS

In accordl!nce with sec·

lfon 307.86 of the Ohio
Revised COder sealed bids

will be rece ved by the
clerk, of Salls~urv Town·

(15) Factory in cab steel

19·20gal. fuel tank
(16) 50 gal. left side step
fuel tank
111) 11 ,000 lbs. rear
spring capacity or heavier
(18) Combination front

and rear directional lights

1101 18,500 lbs . 2 speed

brakes
(37)

Heavy duty front

rear axle
bumper
(11) Rear end ratlo. must'j
(38) Front and rear tow

rnlno higher than) 7: 11· 1 h?I':M Senior . west coast
(12)
Rear Auxlllory · mlrrorsleflondrlghlslde
spring 2.2so· lbs
or '
(-10) 77 amp. heovy duty
equlvolent
· · 1 baHerv
1131 5 speed •yn·
W) 60 amp or larger
.,.

••

•

reinforced frame
(All Gledhill 707 type ta il
~ate spreader or equal
mounted

144) Gledhill snow plow
model type IOSBRH, 10 fl .
length · x 35" height light·

weiqht or equivalent to this
in StZe and weight for In-

tended purgose.
NOTRA E IN .
(I ) Bidders to furnish

their own bid forms, listing
bid prices as indicated on
ch
.
line
items
from
120) Dual electric horns
(21) Heater and defroster specification sheet . ·
(2) Delivery must be
122) AM and FM radio
123) Ammeter and oil made liO days after b id is
pressure Igauges)
, awarded or bid is voided.

(19) Traffic hazard swlt-

ship, Wanda Eblin at the
abOve address until noon 011
124) Hand control throl·
April 2, 1982. The. bids will
tie
be OPened at tne s~c lal
(25) Full size, custom
meeting time of 7 o clock
hi
h
on lhe. same dale ot April cus .on v 1ny 1 sea 1 eavv
duty black In color
19, 1982. Each bid to meet
(261 9:00 x 20 12 plv steel
, the apeclffcatlons os ' belledfronlllres
· !~/~'mp Truck
. •
(27) 9 :00 • 2012 plv extra
( 1~ one li&gt;82 mOdel dump grip mud and snow rear
fires
true with Day brook Bed
1281 Color _ painted
or "~ulvatenl
dump
....
headbody
and so lid ch rome ye 11 ow co 1or
120 x -••" "• ""
(29) 2" X 6" WOOd Side .
tailgate with center door fn boards on bed Installed and
gate, minimum gate size pa,·nted
.
16" x 10" opening.
0
12l Front mounted 12 ton sp~!~de~edcon&amp;oTs ·1m"u"s~
telescopic hcilsl
• (3) J/4 cab protector with be) on tt&gt;e (left) side rans·
4" wings
. mission, close tbdrlver
3
( 4) 5 cab lights, 4 corner ; he~ J: ~~~::ri~~fa'rl~
lights and 6 bolt on reflec· on II
,
torl~) Mud flaps
(32) Cast spoke wh'l"ls
6) Wheel base 84" cab to
(33) One ' additional 7"
rim 20and rfng
axle or suitable for 10 fl.
(34 ) Heavy duly clutch
dump bOdy
(35) Two speed ·wfn·
• 171 24,000 G.V.W. or dshieldwl~rsandwasn.ra
heav ier
r(8) 9.000 lbs. front axle
(361 Heavy duty Drakes
(9) 3,700 to 4,000 lbs. front - booster, with 7" rear
springs

Public Notice
142) Heavy duly factory

alternator

(3) The Sallsburv Town·

ship Trustees resente the
right to accept or relect t
any or all bids, to accept !
the lowest bid or select the

83·Excava,Jing
84·Eiecrical &amp; Refriqerati on
85-General Hauling
86-M .H. Repa ir
R7 ·Upholstery

~-~------,.,,,.

Public Notice
Tuesday, April 6, 1982, for

Case No. 18,120

' crete~
1

Pavement Width 18
feet.
Project and Work Length

Improvements In :
Gallia and Meigs Coun·

lies, Ohio, on GAL·S. R. 325·
(6.82-7.29) (18.21) - Slate
- 4;9:~&lt;~ feel or 8.70 miles.
" r he date set for com- Route 325 in Gall Ia County;
pletion of this work shall be . GAL·S. R. 325-( 13.97) as set forth In the bidding 1 State Route 325, ·ln1 the
proposal."

Vill!ge

Each bidder

shall be

required to file with his bid
a certified ctieck or
cashier's check for an
amount equal to five per
cent of his bid, but In no
everit more than . fifty
thousand dollars, or a bond
for ten percent of his bid,

payable to the Dl rector. ·

Bidders must apply, on

the ·proper

forms,

for

qt.iallflcafion at least ten

davs prior td the dale set

of

VInton ;

and

MEG·S. R. 325· (0.00·5.22) -

882- New Haven
895-Letart

741-R'utland

937- Buffalo

insen.on .... .......... $3 .00

Up to lS Words ... One day

ins-ertion .. ........ .... $4.00

for opening bids In ac·

DAVID L. WE IR
DIRECTOR
Rev. 8·17·73 ·

NOTICE TO
. CONTRACTORS
(3) 22 1 29, 2tc
STAT'E.OF OHIO
, DEPARTMENT OF
: PuDIIc Notice
. TRANSPORT A·
TION
NOTICE TO
Columbus, Ohio
M•rchl2, lfl2 •
CONTRACTORS
Contncl Slifn Lilli• I
STATE OF OHIO
Copy No. 12-lf.- .
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORT A·
' UNIT PRICE
I TIDN
CONTRACT
Columbus, Ohio
Staled p r - l s ~II be j
Mlrch.l2, 1912
received at tile office of "'"
Director .of tile Ohio Depar·
Conlr•ct So ttl Legot
Copy No. 12·213
tmenl of Tran~allon ,
Columbus, Ohio, until 10:00
UNIT PRICE
A.M., Ohfo Standard Time,
CONTRACT
Tundliy, April 6, 1982, for [ · Seoled proposals will be
Improvements In:
received al tile office of tn.
Meigs Countv,. Ohio, on · Director Of the Ohio DeiHir·
MEG·S.R . 12.1-.(0.00) tment ot Transporlalfon
Slate Route 114, by resur· Columbus, Ohio, unllf 10:00
faclnq with osp_h alt con· f&gt;;.M., Ohio Standard Time,

•

PuDIIc Notice
Ohio 45769 was appointed

will be received for the
General Contract work, the
Mech~nical Contract work,

estate of ·Erna Elizabeth
Jesse, deceased, late ot 376

work) will be received by
Honorable Clarence An·

Robert E. Buck
Probote Judge/
Clerk
( 3) 22, 29, ( 4) 5, 3tc

to

VIllage Hall (Separate bids

and the Electrical Contract

drews al the office Of the
Movor unti I 11 AM, (ap·

pletion of this work shall be

examined at the following

proposal. "

Architect, 131 West State
Street, Athens, Ohio -15701 .
co~ies
of the CON ·
TRACT
DOCUMENTS
may be obtained •I the Of·

as set forth in the bidding
Each

bidder

shall ·be

required to file with his bid

for -nlng bids In ac ·
cordance with Chapter 5525
Olllo Revised Code.
Plans and specifications
are 011 file In the Depart·
mentot Transportation and
the office Of the District
Deputy Director.
The

Director

reserves

the right to retect anv and
all bids.
OAVIOL . WEIR
DIRECTOR
Rev. 8· T7·73
(3) 2!- 29, 21c

PuDIIc Notice
ADVERTISEMENT
FOR BIDS
Village ot Pomeroy, Ohio
Village Hall, Pornerov,
Ollfo-15769
Separate sealed BIDS for
the construction ·of

1982, and then at said office
publicly opened and read
aloud.
The
CONTRACT
DOCUMENTS mav be
locations:

Office of David C. Reiser,

flee of the Architect upon

pavment ot $-10.110 for each
set.
Any BIDDER, upon
returning_ the CONTRACT
DOCUMENTS promptly
and in good condition. wlfl
be refunded the payment, .
and any non·bioder upon so
returning_ the CONTRACT
DOCUMENTS will De
refunded $25.00.
Clarence
March
19 ,

Anlfl.:
1982

13) 22. 29 (A) 5, 12, 4tc
PuDIIc Notice
PROBAT! COURT
OF MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO
ESTATE
OF ERNA
ELIZABETH JESSE,
DECEASED .
Coso No. 236S.
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
On March t7, 1912, In tn.
Meigs Countv Probate
Court, Cue No . 236561
Ramona K. Compton, 21u
w. Main Street, Pomeroy,

•

AdministratriK

of

ns. Nicely remodeled 1
three bedroonn horne.
Even an old mill.

$89,500 .00.
NEW LISTING
Remodeled
three

insertion ... ............ S7 .00

Pomeroy

alterations

time at Pomeroy,
glicable
hlo) Tuesday, APrfl 27,

- 7~1164feet or 13.80 miles.
" J he date set for com-

acres tillable, 27.5
p111sture, mostly fenced.

,up to 15Words .. ThreedaY

State Route 325, in Meigs·
County. b{ resurfacing
with asphal concrete.
Pavement Width varies.
Project and Work Length

a certified check or
cordance with Chapter 5525 cashier's check for an
best bid for the intended · Ohio Revised COde .
1amount equal to rive per
1
purpose.
Plans and specifications c,nl" of his Did, but In no
Wanda L. Eblin, are on file in the Depart· event more than fifth
Clerk ment of Tra'nsportatlon and thousand dollars, or a bond
Salisbury the Office · of lhe District .for 11ft per cent aa..llolll&lt;l,
Township Trustees Oeptitv Director.
payable to lhe Director.
Bidders must applv, on
The Oirtctor reserves
131 22, 29. 21c
the right to reject any and ·the proper forms, lor
qballflcatlon at least ten
all bids.
days prior to the da~ set

- -====---·
•
Public Notice

247-Letart Falls
949-Racine

I

NEW LISTING - ON
THE RIVER-75Acres
with a one story home.

the

E . Ma in St., Pomeroy, Ohio
45769.

15·20

Gr,A6c,13.,,Ni

have been named Oefen·
dant in a legal action en·

Plaintiff,
vs . E .Belly
Pat·.
tilled Charles
Patrerson,
terson, Defendant. This ac·
tlon has been asslg"ed
Case No. l8,120and Is pen·
ding in the Court of Com·
mon Pleas of Meigs Coun·

color

divides

bedroom
· was

and

hondline . Sood

•

to:

•'j 1 ·-·
'

Alice . . .llopt
lltHitcroll

The obJect ot the Complaint
is for divorce and other
relief.

Radiator SpecialiS t -~

ty, Pomeroo; , Ohio 45769.

28 davs after the
puDIIcatlon of lhl
which will be DUb•llshed on·
ce each week tor •f• sue·
cessive weeks. The last
publication wlll .be made on

rings &amp; silverware. Da lly

quotes

Yft, RY 10113. Pritot

N-

Zl" ,...... • .....

-I NZ Rll' 1 till C11oJai; -j
free patterns inside. 170 best .
racliets. dolls, quilts more'
. Knit. Crochet, Embroid;,.. $l.so· • ·

w. cwr IDOlS. .suo ..,. .·
MIIIDIMC•::J
,_...... ~-~ -·

.....

......

· JM~ti!'{~~,
i~...... . ·
lfi1:.'1:'
Qlilb
1:t':.:"
E-. ,_...,. "
I
Ptkl kllo."'lf5.1MIJ
- .......
121.,.. g~~~r:_•m
lli·C I I . . S.,..

117..... 111 11• tCtJIIII

11'-CnJIJL.,.....

.1.......,.,._
.,...
........... ...,

IU-Hri-\
Ill~ Ill II 1111tJitt C!ldlll i
ll..llllllr .
:

I ............

•· ,

~

••

cahr'aCter

For bulk delivery of
gasoline. heating oil and
diesel fuel, call Landmark,
m ·2181 ; Pomeroy, Oh.
Gun Shoot Racine Gun
CluD. EVery Sun. stilrllng
at I p.m. Factory cnoke
guns only.

Racine Fire Oept. sponsors

•

IIJ·Ifc

16911.Znd

992-5896 .

sale . Spring Vall ey
Trading, Spring Volley
Plaza, 446·8025 or 446·8026.
We pay cash for late model
clean used cars.

Frenchtown Car Co .
Bill Gene Johnson ,
446·0069.

Antique furniture, old cupboards, stone Iars with blue

writing, 8. old egg baskets.
Call367 ·0138.
ROSENBERG RECYCLI ·
NG Opening APRIL 2 In
Gallipolis. Specializing In
aluminum cans, aluminum
siding , sheets &amp; cast alum.,
copper wire. brass ,

radiators, auto ballerles &amp;
IBM cards. Watch this
paper for location.
Wanted timber. We cut,

paving good prices . Call
446·0706.

candv · learn

to

make your own hollow or
solid chocolate Bunnys.
Filled easter eggs and
much more . Free candy
mal&lt;'lno demonstrations.

Clil992·2725
3·3·1 mo.
L-----.....;:.:..:..;;.;.;.:..-41 Decorated \. es
for
chlldrens
blrtho•vs
and
other occasions. For more
Information call992·5239.

All work vu•ranteed.

baby gerbils to give
away, also a 1 year Old

GARAGE

ch glider . 304-675·5453 .

(Formerly Bart Melt I)
271 W. Main, Pomeroy

-pal~!

-plaques

- Drurhes

PUPPIES &amp; mother dog,
small breed, 3lJH75·423A .

Rick ·&amp; 8111 Cogar
Owners

FREEA u.oo detail brush,
with the purchase of a
palntkll.

Lgstond Found
FOUND large, young
female dOIJ . All black with
small amount Of white on
chest. Garfield Ave. area .
Cal1446·4249 .
6

BRAKES-TUNE-UPS
OVERHAULS·
OIESEL·ElCHAUST
Open Mon.-Sot.ll-5

'

I

""•""'"'=

LISTING ~

' . .·

~DS

~~t ...::~~ - 1 room
remodeled carpeted

INT . IHllt
OIOINGM-EO

'495

11 HPTIACTO.

1

850

WITHMOWEI

·~

FOUR BEDROOMS In Langsville with a
large kitchen, family

;..c

house.

614-tH-2112

. acres which part are
fenced, a cellar with
building over and a
garage .
Reduced
$24,900.00.

dining,

carport

extra

nice

2

bedroom Schultz trailer,
12•52. garden and
several buldlngs. Just
$32.000 .
OWNER FINANCING
- Here Is one you can
alford. Small down
pavmenl and move ln.
Has ieveral bedrooms,

new bath, basement,
new roof
and a
WOrkshop on a large lot.

'395

1

Only 132.500.
•
:IGO ACRES - CaHie
farm and hav land. 10
room farm home with 2

baths. Large family
room. mOdern kitchen,
lots of gOOd carpeting,

We have a full ·
warehouse of good
selectio~ and ex·
tra good prices on
'our carpeting.

Rubbelback
CARPET

WEHAVtA
W&amp;l

SlL£CT10II Of :f

Slllrtlng At

$4!19

Sq. Yd.

1

free gas furnace heet,

basement, and large
wraJ!"around porch. Will
sell for less than tn. ap·
pralsal. Try me.
MIDDLEPORT - 20 ojr.
old 4 bedroom home.
Large family room,
largo patio, garago and
Iaroe lot above all
flOOds. Natural gas fur·
naco, 2 lull baths and
beautiful view. Asking
147,000 .
Offer
welcomed.

•i

j

IOUliD ,
JI[JIIIUTS

1

WI! NED OUR HOMI!
TO SELL. IF NO SALE,
NO CHARGE. TRY US
FOil BEST RESULTS.
"2-3171 NOW.
Ae11tors:

Gordon,

Helen, Vlreu• s.. Mur·

pity • .

H011 '

IIl i i

He, u It fll. 11 I t:r.;

leg. Los! In or near Rutland

G. Reward for return or In·
formation . 742·2316. W""k·
davsafler 8.

a Dozers
• Bock hoes
eDumpTrucko
eL&lt;&gt;-Boy
•Trencher
•Woler
• sewer
e Gu Linea
• Septic Sysjoms
Lorge or Smoll Jobs
PH. 992-7 471

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

CARPENTER
SERVICE
_._,_,.....,..,.1

New Homes - extensive remodeling .

ltl-'

• Electrical wark

...-a~

o Custom Pole Bldgs.
• Roofing work

o1octJ1c1f -·
fstio1111o1

'
v.·'·e''"YOUNG
Ill

14

Ye1rs Experience

Greg Roush
Ph. 992-7583
or 992-2282
3·11·1 mo.

992-621Sor992-7314
Pomeroy, Ohio

9-30-lfc

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

1.._----------t

C. R. MASH
CONSTRUCJION
Custom

kitchens

oppllances,

and

custom

IN"'roams, remodeling,

plumbing, electric,
hooting.

o~d

,

_

2

Annot~ncemOflts

SWEEPER and sewing
machine repair, ports, and
SUPPlies.
PICk Up and
delivery, Davis Vacuum
Cleaner, one hell mile up
Georges Creek Rd. Call
446·0294 ..
Fishing License on sale.

FREE
ESTIMATES
PH. 992-6011
1·20·1fc

Come and

FOUND· EO week old beagle
pup, brown collar, found
North Point School, moatly
white, temale, 30H75·1Afl0.
LOST· Biack &amp; while killen,
black spot on chin, half
grown, area of K &amp; K.
childs ~r. 304-675·2048.

ROOFING
And Home Mtlnlltlance
• Roofing of oil types
•Siding
• Remodeling
• Free estimates
e2o Yrs . e-xperience

TOM HOSIINS
Ph. Ht-21.. or Hf·Ui2
7·5-tfc

vicinity of Fl. Randolph
Ter.roce, 3lJH75·29A7.
Yortl Slit
YARD sale, Inside, starling
March 22, at 212 Walnut

7

Street. Henderson, across

OLD FURNITURE , beds,
Iron, brass, or wood . Kit·
chen cubbards of all types.
Tables, round or squa-re .

WOOd .Ice bo•es. Old desks
ond bookcases. Will Duy
complete household. Gold,
sliver, old money, P&lt;&gt;cktl
watches, chains, rings, and

etc. Indian Artifacts of all
types . Also buvlng Dastball
cards . . Dsby Martin
6370 .

m·

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

.,
. . . ... "

Help Wonted

Need

a paid

vacation from

housework? Earn good sss
and moot ni ce people. Coli
446·3358 .
Babysitter needed In my
home 5 days per waek . Call
446·2959 alters.
GET VALUABLE training
as a young business person
and earn gOQII: !'l@llff.:lus
some great glf11· " '
1\·
tinel route carrier . · ·.hone·
us right away and ge( on
the eligibility list at f92 ·
2156 or "2·2157.
Security guards and Bar·
melds,

expe'rlence

necessary . Apply In person
at the Candlelight Ill(!. 12·4
Mon . thru Sat.

men! of 1982 Flolng ROds,
R..,ls, &amp; Lures. Spring
Valley Trading Co., Spring
valley Plaza, 446·8025.
Hunters We have
calls, slate bo•
colla, camo gear &amp; decoys
In stock. Spring Valley
Trading Co., Spring Valley
Plaza, 416·8015. ·

Easter Candv Prices, S1.60
ID. SUO lb. for full case.
01'1 Craft Supply, Spring
Valley Plaza. Call-446'213&lt;1.
Gun Repair 8. Hot Blulng .
We stock modern rilles,
guns. All
&amp; ac ·
Jn
Riverside Gun
7, Athelia, Oh.,
614-1116-51194.

Adult lo clean downtown
Pomeroy office. Minimum
wage, ma•imum flv•houra

weekiV. Write Box 729· 0
Pomeroy, Ohlo45769.
'
Someone to play plano Illguitar for Gospel Singers.
Call675·5123.
------· ~

"DRIVERS wanted, II J ht
pickup and dellverv . cftll
Gene, 304-675·7491 .
·
EVENING telephone sales,

call Gene, 304-675·7491.

ELDERLY man needed,
mechanlcolly Inclined,
Wrlle· Bo• C· l9 , Point
Pleasant Register, Pt.
Pleasant, wv .

trom Church of ChriSt. New
8. used merchandise, also

12

drapes,

fortabl e 2 bdr. house, goOd
location . Cal l 245·5639 alter
7PM .

bedspreads

blankets.

&amp;

Sltuollons Wtnled

Fem!le

to

sh.ne

&amp; Auction

Tree

trimming
and
removal . Free est imates.

L.E. Neal Auctioneer Ser ·
vice
Estate ~ Farm ·

949·2129 or 742·2573.

Household·Misc . we oellltl
Licensed &amp; l&gt;onded Ohfo &amp;
wva . 367·7101.

meals . 992·5422.

Auction every Fri. night at
the Harllord communltv
Center. Truckloads of new

merchandise every week.

C011slgments of new and
used merchandise always

welcome.
Rlcnerd
Reynolds Auctioneer. 275·
3069.
Rick

Pearson,

Ex ·

antiques,

farm,

Estates,

household . Licensed Ohio·
WV . Buying antiques. 304·
773·5785, 773·9185.
'

com-

PUDIIc Sole

I

W OUr niaw ship· perlenced AUCTION EER .

Turkey
1-----------1 mouth

VAU.EY

m·

ber Shop, Middleport.
3476 .

area. Responds to name of

lj~:9~8~S~-9~9;9~6~:;3~-1~2·:1:m:o~.~======3=1l=·l=mo=.·=P&lt;I=·:;i FOUND·
~ ladles wristwatch,

~..,,.....,

large

clipped ears, scar on rear

PULLINS
EXCAVATING

Play Million
. Dollar Skating
Game
Stop In For Card
Wed., Frl, &amp; Sat.
7:30 to 10:00
S
• 00 to 4 30
un, •:
:
Available for
Private Parties
PH. 985 _39 29 or

home. MOdern blth,
nice kitchen with range,

ond levellol66xl50. L.C.
water . Only $28.000.
II ACRES - Rt. 7 near
Eastern . Has old 7 room

POMEROY
LANDMARK
USED MOWERS

SKAJ£.AWAY
lr
Chesler, Qh,

VIRGIL B. SR .
7t6 E. 2nd st.
Phone
l·(
_ •
6141 992 3325

currency. Ed Burkett Bar ·

PI

.c

2·2.C·tfc

line selection of plaster .

-spny

Gold, sliver, sterling,
jewelry, rings, old coins 8.

Puppies to give oway. 3
months old. "2-6513.

3

'-m
•••·2160

silver

stone tars, antiques, etc .,
Complete
households .
Write : M.D. Miller, Rl . 4,

charge to tn. advertiser.

Ae•sonable Prices
Call Howard

~old,

dollars. wood Ice ·bo•es,

Free Esllmales
94

- mirrori

furniture .

Pomerov, on . Or 992-7760.

Easter

Corousel Confecllo"ery,
Middleport. Call tor date
a~d lime. 092-6342.

Middlt,otl

STOP and look at our

- olotuos

NEW LISTING - Level
lot In Middleport, 50x94 .
Good tor trailer or
house . Want only S5,000 .
NEW
Small
countrv home with bath,
natural gas heat, new
addition
with lull
baSement being buill
and 1'1• acres. Leading

IN GOOD SHAPE

, $1~q.

..,........, Slfan

and ceramics.
-banks
-pt1 nters·

RNI E1to1e _ Oenerol

Water-Sewer·Eiettric
Gos Llne-Di)ches
water Line Hook-ups
Septic Tanks
county Certified
Roush Lane
Cheohire, Oh.
Ph 367 7560
.
. I

PULA II&amp;.

Willi PH
Stirling AI

Wed, March 31
Reg . 520
Now$T7 .50
Rflt. I2S
Now 122.50
~811. 130
Now 127.50
$35 Wove Lenth
For Longer.Htlr
Now 129.50

POMEROY ,
OHIO
PH ·
992 · 2063

1

REESE
. ··
TRENCHING '
SERVICE .

CLRSSIFIED

cARPET
:1NSTAU.£D

trv School Tuesday the
23rd . at 6p.m. 992·5421 or

thru

2·19·1 mo.

Buill Garages"
Call for lree siding
estlmatoo, 949-2101 or
949-2160.
No Sunday Calls

_.,,I·

~"

Home Is one nice street

Beginners Karate classes
at the Middleport E Iemen·

Mon., Much 1

Insurance wortc
Wind, water, or Fire

"Beautiful, Custom

•

1.8

In Middleport. Has SIX
rooms and Is a 1112 story
frame wllh a nice porch,
storage building over
garage. Has lots of
closet space. 129,900.00.
NEW LISTING
REEDSVILLE
12' &gt;1W Mobile home
with 12'•38' matching
addillon, Mostly furgood connished dillon. 170'xl80' lol.
&amp;19,500.00.
REALTORS
Henry E. Clelond, Jr.
GRI
992•6191
Jean Trussell 949·2640
Dollie Turner 992·S.92
Office
992-2259

Also

cakes,

brflhcloy and annlverslty
cakes. For estimates call
675·5527.

~~======2~-2~6~-t~fc~f=======J=·'=·=tl=c~~~~~~3~-~5-~t~m~o~.pd~.~Pr=~~~~~J·~S=·1=m=o=.;i male,
LOST : black
Doberman
Pincer,
and rust,
un·

respond as required Dv the
Ohio Rules Of CIVIl
Procedure, iudgment of
default will be rendered
against you for the relief
demonded in the Com·
plaint.
Date : Moren 10,1982 .
LARRY E. SPENCER,
Clerk of Court of
Common Pleas of
Meigs county, Ohfo
Meigs county
court House
OhiO••7•9
P
(3) 15, 22,omeroy
29; W ,5, 12, 19

acre Of level yard and
garden.
Reduced,
&amp;19,500.110 .
ASSUMABLI': LOAN -

~

cakes,

available.

coins A. coin supplies for

BEO S-IRON , BRASS, old

· MARCH
PERM SALE

•Room Additions

BISSEll
SID.lNG CO•

Pomeroy, Oh.
Ph. "2-2174

tillable,

has

3~ 17 . 1

CAI.:L: 992·6323

eHotw•"'r"""'

SMITH NELSON.
NOTORS INC,

otherwise

I

01100""
"• Dittlw••ll•n

NATHAf\1 BIGGS
35 Yrs. Experience

swer the Complaint within

l

2·28-fino.

•WuMn

room, ll"lng 'rdom ,
garage, and over an

The Daily Sentinel
.. 1U, 0111 tiMhoe Sll. llew-

~

of u 1 h
r
g cost nea 1
Insurance? We have the
answer. Rumley Insurance

r,~==:;:;::;::::::=;t========~fr~;;~~:;;=;;;~~,;========~~ Irish SeHer. 992·3472.
COMPLE·TE
BOTTLED gas floor fur ·
Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
MAIN STREET
nace, blowers &amp; piROS. Por ·
RADIATOR
SIDING

home which
recently

remodeled.

Supplies
•Wilton Cake
Decorating Supplies
something Special
103 Woshlngton Sl.
RIVInswoocf, W, Va.
PH . 304·273-3141
3-19-1 mo.

Phone 949·2293
or '149·2417
3·3·ttn

: ~:~;•,

2·25-1 mo. pd.

sites. Gas and oil rights.
$62,000 .00.
NEAR MINE I I - Two

dramatim .the lean lines ol ,
blazer in easy, putty shell
slitches. Crochet of 3-piJ sport
yarn 1n 3 colors f01 all to admire.
Pattern 7070: ~zes 10-16 incl.
$2.25 for each pattern. Add
501 each pattern for posta1e

' and

acres

·~~~~:~~~~~or

Licensfll &amp; Bonded

P.un aND se:•v1cE
ACLMAMU

SERVECE
f'"rom the Smallest
Heater core to the
Largest Radiator.

or

change.
*fast service
•tree

APPOINTMENT

some acreage cleared
on the river for camp

The lllOfe colorful the better lor
sprin&amp;'s newest blazer.
Pur~

Rt:Dair : cleaning
inishlng,
new
IJ grllfiS•
chinge, weight

bedroom home on ' a
level lot. Cute as a but. ton and a bargain at
$17,800.00.

Bands of Color!

•su~::;~!:1~~~~as

0o1er &amp; backhoe ser-·
vice, wate r, sewer,
ponds,
foundations,
reclamltlon.
..

• Pro Golf lenons
tor all aees.

PHONE
992·2490
FOR AN

You are required to an·

several sheds and Dor·

PuDiic Notice

n edof HI h

----------+---------+---------+----------1
Gmld Reutar
SOUTHEAST
H. L WRITESEL
CONSTRUCTION
ANY PERSON who has
ROOFING
INCOME
SERVICE
anvthlng to give away and
•Roofing GuHer
does not Offer or allempl to
•Vinyl Sldln•
All types of roof work,
Call Ken OUng
TAX.
•Pallo
new or repair •utrer
and
any other thing for
Offer
•Carports
I
•
For Fast Service
covers
downspoutS,
gutter
sale may place an ad In this
SERVICE
985·356 I
•Concrete work
cleaning and pointing.
column. nere will be no

Public Notice

E.MalrtW..
POMEROY,O.
992·2259
NEW LISTING
NEAR CHESTER
82 .5 Acre farm · with 30

576-Apple Grove

(Average -4 w ords per line}

.necessary.

&amp;

..,.. ________ _

answer

713-Mason

Up fo 15 Words ... SIX day

Public Notice

"1

April for
19, answer
1982. and
28
.days
willthe
com·
mence on that date.

98S- Chester
34:1-Portland

SAVE MONEY
MAKE; YOUR OWN
EASTER CANDY
"Learn How Free"

C&amp;M
EXCAVATING
IRD
CONSTRUCTION

Chester, on.
• short game practice

H ·lfc

30.
31.
32.
33.
34 .
35.

BETTY PATTERSON
Address Unknown

67s-Pt. Pleasant
458--Leon

• or no• -

ScoutC•mp

For ail your wiring .
needs;
furnaces
repair service and
installation.
Residential
&amp; Commercial ·
Cali 742·3195

Mail This Coupon with Remittance
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court St.
Pomeroy, Oli. 45769

667'-Coolville

82· Plumbiflg 8. Hea ting

61 Fa rm Equipment
62-Wanted to buy
63· Livestock
64· Hay &amp; Grain
65·Seed&amp; Fer t ilizer

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

19, - - - - -20. - - - - - 21.-- - - - 22.
23.
24.
25.
26.
27. - - - - - 28. - - - - - 29. _ _ _ __

3. _ _ _ _ __

- vs-

997-Middleporl
Pomeroy

registration

Chocolote 11 .60 lb.

Buying Gold, Sliver.
Plotlnum, old coins, scrap

choke12 gouge shotgun .

17.
18.

I. _ _ _ _ __
2. _ _ _ _ __

MaSOf1 Co ., WV
Area Code 304

Meigs County

Ph. 614 ·843·25 91

: Dl's Crall Supply, Spring
Valley Ptara, 446-2t34.
FREE
Easter candy
making class, 7:00 Thurs.
M-rch 18 8. 25 . No

Sal.
nights
t-~:=========~====~====+==========+=========~a6:3llGun
p.mShoot,
.• Bashan
. Factory

( &gt;For Sale
( )Announcement
1 )For Rent

.r

PH • y....

PH . 742-2753 .

I JWanled

IN THE COURT
OF COMMON PLEAS
OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
CHARLES
E.
PAT ·
TERSON
Box 118
• Rullond, Ohio45775

Area Code~14

,~~~~~~~:::'"1 P&amp;~,~U~~~GS
Racine, Oh.

FROM CONCRETE TO ROOFING
AND EVERYTHING
IN BElWEEN.
....,. •54• _. 2••._

JIM LUCAS

These cash rates
InclUde discount

following telephofte exchanges. •.
Gallia County

lnsuloted Dog Houses

,
and RemodeImg.

Speclolfy"

In coie of your failure to

Arei1 CodeOI4

Sizes from 4 to • tnd oil

wi&gt;Oil buildings 24ol6.

Farm
Parts &amp;

Ph. 992·2772

•Spring Development$
"Smlll Jobs A

Classified pag~s cover the

61 -Home Improvements
11 Help w anted

•NF~:eoo~':f.mate
James Keesee

•Mobile
•W•ter &amp; G•s lines

'

71 -Autos for Sate
72 · Trucks for Sale
73 -Vans&amp; 4 WD
74 ·Motorcv c tes
75-Boats&amp; Motors
76-Auto Parts &amp; Ac cess ori es
77 -Auto Repair
7B ·€a mping EQuipment

Autllorlztd John Deer,
New Holland, Bush Hog
Farm Equipment
Deoler

CAN HELP YOU
.BUILD YOUR DREAMS! ·
New Construction

NOTICE BY
PUBLICATION
• To Belly Patterson, whose
address Is unknown .
· You are notified that y~

21 · Business Opportunity
2'1 -M oney to Loan
23 · Professional Services

Utility Buildings

.FOWLER CONSTRUCTION
·

Defendant .

1-Ca rd of Thank s tpa•d in c1dVa nce )
2 Ci'lrd of T hank s (paid in advance)
3· Announcements
·
4-Gi vea way

~Jvs~Ji:, ~:~:

• Storm Doors
• Storm Windows
eReplacoment
Windows

March 23, 1982
This coming year you are likely to reap benefits from several persons

.......
. . ..... . ···-·
....... ... "

SiltS st1rt from JOx24"

-

Or Write Daily Sentinel Classified Depl.
11 I Court St., Pomeo-:y, Ohio 45769

~ "

••••u~tlon

evenings.

Special rates on Wedding

Plaintiff,

l!~erebandlse

•blckhoe
•excnatlng
• septic svstems
• wohtr, HWtr
&amp; gosllnes
•dump )ru~k

WAI'IT TO BUY Old lur·
nlture and Antiques of all
kinds, call Kenneth Swain.
446·3159 and 256·1967 In the

CASH PAlO tor clean, late
mOdel used cars. Smith
IBM cards. watch !Ills Bulck· Ponllac, Gallipolis,
paper lor location.
OhiO. Calf 446·2282.

BUILDINGS

SALES &amp; SERVICE

Vinyl &amp;
Alur. ,lnum Siding

ROSENBERG R!CYCLI ·
NG Opening APRIL 2 In
Gallipolis.
Specializing
In
aluminum cans,
aluminum
siding, sheets &amp; cast alum.,

copper wl re, brass ,
radiators, auto. batteries &amp;

IIJGGS

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING

Announcements

~========:::~======~2·~11-:l:mo~.~·+=======1=·3=·=1f=c::Jt======6·=15=·=1f=c~ Aoencv. 446·3320.

Public Notice

fiRanelal

•+-.;..--------r---------..,.---------r---------"1

*.':.k;:d_
i.II«&lt;41L..
PH. 992·7201

PHONE 992-2156

_.

3

, .,

Write vour own ad and ,;.der by "mall wlltl thiS
coupon. Cancel your ad by Phon• when you gel
results. Money not refundable.

The Daily Sentinel

............. .. ·······
...............................

The Dally Sentinel Pag• 9

llusiness Services

2-11-lmo.

Meigs senior named
to Who's Who

Coaches of the Pomeroy Youth
League will meet at the Laurel Cliff
Free Methodlst Church basement
Thursday at 7 p.m. for those involved in tee bail and girls' softbai~
and at 8 p.m. for those involved in
pee wee, little league, and pony
league. Further information may be
obtained from Bob Barton, 992-$31,
or Darla Hawley, 992-7074.

provides basic factual lnforrniltion,
prevention strategies and alternatives to alcobol and drug use.
Workshops ittclude: the effecta and
riaks of alcohol and other drugs,
coping with feelings, decision
making, stress management,
becoming a people helper, assertiveness and other topics relating to
youth.
The Institute will be held at Lake
Hope and provides the needed environment to explore personal

Pomeroy Middleport, CiMo

r-----Curb lnflatloq
Pay Cash for
Classlfleds and
Savell I

Monday, March 22,

·Mental. health group sponsors drug abuse program

Social Calendar

Matdi 22, 1982
.Monday,
.

.._...

cars,

U

and

board,

plus

lnsuronc,_,e: .__ _

SANDY AND BEAVER In·
surance Co. has offered
services for fire Insurance

coveroge In Galllo county
for almoat a century.

Farm, home and personal
property cover!ges are
available t o meet In·
dl vldua t needs. Contact
Foster Lew is, agent , Phone

379·3318.
15 Schools Instruction
Karate the ultimate In sell
defence all private lessons,
Men, women, &amp; children.
Instructlon thru Dlack bell.

Wtnltd to Buy

JUNKED

Room

glass,

baseball cards, scrap
metata, aluminum cans,

transmissions, motora, bat·
terfn, radiators, ofl well
drilling bits, tungsten car·
Dlde, hfgh speed steel,
waste paper, cardboard,
raw furs, hides. glnslng
and vellow root. Harper·
Halstead Salvage .Co. 300
Eleventh St.. Pt . Pleasant,

304·675·5a68 . Also fl ea
market open Mondov
ltlrough Friday, 1-S p.m.

IS.OO

Also avalleble Karate
uniforms puchlng and
kicking bags, and protec·
live equipment . J~rry
Lowerv &amp; Associates
Karate Studio. 143
Burlington Rd., Jackson,
Oh. Call286·3074.
Ml K K I

Casto' s

"Studio .

211", 6th St., Pt. Pleasont.
wv 304·675·666-4, 675-4539.
Classes tor childr en, teens
&amp; odulli. Ballet, Top, Jazz,

Modern
dance,
Cheerteadlng, BOlon,
Karate, Ooncerclse, Dan·
ceaerolllcs&amp; Ballroom.

I •'

lh-15- "',..,
" .I

..
l
,•·

''

,.

�10-The Daily Sentinel
11

Wanted to Do

Hou!lecleanlng. Call
(].127.

They'll ,Do It Every Time

367-

Call
2nd. floor efflency apt.
Adults only , no pels. Brad·
· bury Apartments, 446·0957 .

3 room unfurnished apart·
men I. adults only, no ,pels,
utilities paid. Call4-46·3437.
Business
Opportunity

2 bedroom · unfurnished
apartment In Crown City.
Call 256-6520.

C ig arette
Vending
Business. Coii30H13-5651.

APARTMENTS:
bedroom, rent Starts at
S152 per mo. &amp; 2 bedroom
starts at S188 per. mo.
Special " rates for Senior
Citizens. Call -4-46-2745.

MINIATURE
GOLF
COURSES. Outdoors, Excel, f inancing, Immediate
Installation. Min. $4,900.
MINI GOLF; 202 Bridge,
Jessup. PA 18434. 717-4898623 .
22

2 bdr. apt. HUD excepted,
kitchen turn, utilities partially pd ., excellent
location . Call 675-5104' or
675-7284.

Money to Loan

REI I NANCE or purchase
your nome . 30 year fixed
rate. WVa . &amp; Ohio. Leader
Mortgage,
E. State St.,
Athens,
Oh.77
592·3051.

23

Professional

Services

Plano
Tun i ng
&amp;
Repalr.Cafl Bill Ward tor
appointment,
Ward's
KeybOard, -4-46-4312.
C &amp;

L Bookkeeping. In·

come tax returns for individuals &amp; businesses.
Carol Neal446-3862

STARKS Tree &amp; Lawn Service, all types trimming &amp;
removal, Insured, 304·576·
2010.
FIRST
and
second
oiorgeges, ll!lnd contracts,
and receivables purchased.
614--4-46·4113.

31

Homes tor Sale

)912 Concord Mobile Home,
12x6S. Call 4-46·7015 after
5:30-p .m.
Beautiful brick &amp; frame. 3
bedroom home w/scenic

·view,

wood · burnlng

Mobile Homes
tor Sale

TRI · STATE
MOBILE
HOMES . Gallipolis. Pr ice
reduced, used mobile
homes. CALL 4-46·7512 .
CLEAN USED MOBILE
HOMES
KESSEL'S
QUALITY
MOBILE
HOME SALES. 4 MI.
WEST. GALLIPOLIS, RT
35. PHONE 446·3868.
12x60 2 bedroom Buddy
mobile home. Set up with 2
or 4 lots, gas l'lel!lt, rural
water. close to town, finan ·
clng available. Phone 4-46·
1294.

1979 Winsor 14d0, 3 bdr.,
microwave, stero, wood
floor in kitchen, full bay
window, furniture, $14,995.
Call4-46-3547.

1970 mobile home E kana
with expando. Large lot in
Mercerville . Call 446·0827
after 5.
House trailer on lot. Will
sale on land contract . Call
446-8012 between 6 &amp; 7.

:fireplace, formal dining,
,central air w/ heat pump.
·Lanscaped, 1 acre lot
w/fenced in back yard,
l-45,900. 11% financing,
smpll down payment. Call
4-46-3166.

12 X 60 trailer, excellent
condition. Call 4-46·1552 .
Furnished, air conditioned,
underpinninQ, set up on lot
in M iddleport.

·For sale by owner. In Rod ·
IL new carpet, large

2 bedroom 10 x 50 trailer.
Brown's Trailer Park. 992·
3324.

:nev

kitchen &amp; LR, 3 bdr., 1 car
garage, assumable loan 8
114'11&gt; Farmers Home
Financing evailable, In·
terest credit subsidy may
rt!duce payments. Call 256·
· 1'254 after 5:00.
6 rm . house attached
garage, good condition . 345
East Broadway, (Rt. 35) ,
.Jackson . Price only
12,000. 286-6305.

s

House for sale in Gallipolis
near Holzer, city schools, 3
bdr . . all brick , 10%
assumable Interest on
$53,000. Call446-1080 or 675·

mo.

2 bedroom cottage on Blue
Lake south of Gallipolis
just off of Raccoon Creek,
S17S per mo ., S175 deposit .
Cail286·4346.
NICE well kept home with
full basement on 1.2 acres
in rural setting. 5 min.
from Gallipolis. Includes 2story garage. S39,000. Call
446· 8~85 .

NEW INCOME LIMITS. If
you earn between S9000 to
$15,000 a year, you may be
able to buy a 3 bedroom
house (not a mobile home)
for as little as $135 a month .
No down payment . Call992··
7034.
PRICE reduced , sale by
owner . 2 Story house, 13
rooms. Ideal for large
family or ren·tal property .
Needs some repairs . 1n the
20's as is. Phone 3041·675·
7353afler 5 p.m.
ONE owner house, 1211
Main St. 6 rooms, 2 story
brick, custom built. 304-675·
2381 .
·HOUSE, Meadowbrook Addillon, 3 bedroom , family
room with lriepiace, cen ' tral air, basement, 30-4·6751542.
THREE bedroom home, 5
acres, 9 miles from town .
• Phone after 6:00 p.m. 304675·7198.
---:77~;-"

..- 32
~t ·'

•.·

Mobile Homes
fDr Sale

t :-1r . WIDE, 3 bedroom
,._ raoblle home, $8995 . All
• State Modular Homes, 304·
576-2711.
~973

2 bedroom mobile
home on 2 acres, Jerry's
Run
Rd ., 2 storage
, buildings, 304-576-2664.

....

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~::::l~
32

________

' 1972 Schultz trailer, 14x68, 3
bedroom . Coll675-3868.
1979 LIBERTY mobile
home, 14x60, 304-675-7337 .

1975 Memory Mobile home.
Unfurnish e d ,
un ·
derpinning, 2 porches. 7..42·
2156.
USED MOBILE
516-2711.

HOME .

For sale eight acre building
site, rural water 5 mile
from ·f.o wn . Phone 446· 1158.
One hundred acres with
frontage on SR35 west of
Jackson .
Beautifullv
WOoded and adjacent to
fully
developed
recreational facilities (I.e.
swimming, canoeing.
hiking ,
much
more).
Several exciting financing
plans available to meet Individual needs. A rare opportunity . Call us today at
992·6696 or 614·286·2117 .
Evenings call614·286·4058 .
Corner lot. 7th and John St.
Syracuse, Ohio. Call 304675-6269 alter 4 p.m .
lS

'

2 bdr., First Ave., historic
home, just redorated. Call
446-2510.
5 rm . house in Gallipolis.
Call4-46·3945 after 5PM.

Homes

for Rent,. Lease or
Land Contract in town, or
country.
Call
Strout
Realty, 446·0008 .
Large house for rent in
dowr,~town
Gallipol i s .
Available immediately,
$300. Call -4-46-7265 or 4460644.
3 bdr. house deluxe, 2
fireplace, central air,
garage, carpet. Ret. &amp; dep.
Call675-5104 or 675-5386.
House containing two apar·
tments. Cheap price. Will
sell land contract. Main St.,
Vinton. Oh. Caii245·581B.

5 room house with bath.

Large lot near Racine. 992·
5858.

4 bedroom. central air and
heat, city water, fireplace,
unfurnished excEtpt kit·
chen. $300 month plus
utilities. Reference and
deposit
required .
In
Rac ine. 949-2293 .
Nice 2 bedroom home in
Pomeroy for rent. Stove,
refrlgator furnished. $185
plus utilities and security
deposit.
Adults ,
no
chi ldren. no pets. Ava II a bIe
about Apri I 2. Phone 9925292 after 5 p.m.
2 bedroom house for rent.
Completely furnished, with
air cond ., all utilities paid.
S350. month plus deposit In
Racine. 949·2801.

TWO bedroom, furnished,
12x65, all electric, Glen·
wood, WV. $200. monthly
plus electric . 304·576·9073
or 576-2441.
TWO or 3 bedroom, fur ·
nlshed and unfurnished .
Also, 1 bedroom apart·
ment. 304·675-1371 and 675·
3812.
44
Apartment
_____.t"'o,_
r~R~e'!'n.'..t_ __
1 bedroom furnished apt.
992-5434. 992-5914 or 304-882·
2566.
Unfurnished 5 room Apt.
985·33So or 985·3351 .

Lots &amp; Acreage

18 ACRE;S, price $8,000,,
see Charles Tony Jordan,
Crab Creek Rd .

41

' 1973 GRANDVILLE, 14XIO,
3 bedroom mobile home:
¥ust be moved. phone Jo.l: 182·2120.

Houses for Rent

Houses for Rent

Apartments. 675·5548,
APARTMENTS. mobile
homes,
houses,
Pt .
Pleasant and Gallipolis.
614-4-46-8221 or 614•2-45-9484.
2 bedroom furnished apt..
efficiency apt. Cail675-3000
10·5PM, after 5-4-46·0682.

5 room house. 2 bdr .• S200.
One

child

acceptable ;
R~d~coroted, range &amp;
refrigerator turn. 4-46·-1416
alter I PM.

TWO apartments.
nlshed, 3o.l·675·4378.

fur ·

NEWLY decorated. 2
bedroom apartment, CIO!Ie
5 room house, porch, · to Hospital; deposit and
basement, $150 mo. Call reference required, 304-675·
675-5104.
1962.

-----

SWAIN
AUCTION FURNITURE &amp;
PAWij SHOP 62 Olive St.,
Gallipolis. Recliners $8(),
bunk beds 1100, bunkie
mattresses S40, maple
r~kers $49, maple dlnett
""'" from $125 to $175,
bedroom suites $150, 3 pc.
living room svltes $199, 2
pc. living r09m suites $140,
love !leafs $70, owl lamps _
S25, ringer washers $75,
dryers,
several
refrigerators,
utility
cabinets, mechanic's tools,
beds, sliver stone, TV~s,
woodburners, stero's and
lots more. Opeti 10ani io.
5pm, -4-46-3159.

Furnished apt. 2 bdr., $230.
Utilities Pd. , one child ac ceptable. Cali 446·4416 after
I PM.
Furnished upstairs aprt., 4
rms. &amp; bath. Clean, no pets,
adults, dep . &amp; ref . req . Call
-4-46-1519,
3 bedroom unturnlsned
apartment. 992·5.04 or 992·
5914 or 304-882 -2566.
45

Furnished Rooms

SLEEPING ROOMS ~nd
light housekeeping apt.,
Park central Hotel.
46

Spac~

far Rent

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33. North of
Pomeroy . Large lots, Call
992·7419.
47 ___=
w a:::n:::
ted=t'-'o"R"'e"'n'-'t__
Would like to rent or buy
garage and lot In Middleport, Pomeroy or Mason
area . Call773-5905.
4.c9_ _ ___cF
:_o::.:rc..::
L.::
e•::.:•:.:•:___ _
Professional office &amp; com·
mercia I space available at
362 Jackson Pike. Call 4-460149or 446·1819.

.···-" ·' .........
..............
... ..
5
; ;1,----;:H;:o:cu::
se
" 'h" o"'l"d"'G"Ood
="
sCoffee table &amp; end tables.
Must see to appreciate,
reasonalbe. Call4-46-3937 .

Two matching medium size
overstuffed chairs, exc.
cond., reasonable. Call .446·
4481.

·"

The Daily Sentinel-Page-T1 ·

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Monday, March 22, 1982
Windshield broken? Call
southern Glass. Insurance
claimS welcome, free
mobile service available.
Call-4-46·1011 .

DICK TRACY

Television
•
•
vtewmg

1977 Ford Pickup, 4-wheel
drive for parts. Call 367·
7533 .

77

EVENING

Auto Repair

Quality Autobody &amp; Paint
work. Professi onal custom
pa int work on motorcvcles.
Auto Trim Center, -4-46-1968.

GOOD
USED
AP ·
PLIANCES - washers,
dryers.
refrigerators,
ranges .
Skaggs
Ap ·
pliances, Upper River Rd.,
beside Stone Crest Motel .
446-7398.

AND I THOUGHT I 'D BE' ABLE
TO TAKE A QUIH VACATIO;.J
I~ THE WILD!&lt;FtNE~!1o.

~ THATSCRAMILEDWORDGAME

Unocromble thaN lour JumbiH,
ono 10 aeon ......... tci form

lour ordinary wonll.

~

byHonll Mloldsnd Bob lee

12:::.:::,.

UPTiij
I K

·:a.=-~- -

I LAHCK
rJ

•'
8:00 . . (f) (IJ • Cll tiD • tD
New. ·
1
(l) MOVIE: 'Bed knobs
and Broomttlcka'
(I) Andy Grifflth
(I) ABC Ne(1)3·2·1, Con1act
HOW 10 c;;&gt;FI!ESS
())) Dvar Eaay
ON A VERY
6:30 B (f) (IJ NBC Nowo
C.OL.c;;&gt;
c;;&gt;AY.
(I) $!50,000 Py111mld
(I) Gomer ,Pyle
(I) Muppot Show
Now arrange the circled lett8ra to .. '
Ill (I) (JI CBS Neform the surprise answer, as sug- "
gested b~ the above cartoon.
.
Cil Dr. Who
())) Ullat, Yoga and You
GtDAIIC News
Print answer here: (
7:00 II CIJ P.M , Magulno
(Anaw•rs tomorrow) ' .
&lt;II
Greet
Day
to ,
Remember
: Saturday's J\imbloa: ARRAY PIPER SECOND BUSHEL
(I) Carol Burnett and
Answer: What she said baking a good dessert was•
Frlendo
EASY AS PIE
(I) Entertainment Tonight
Jumblt Book No. 10. con .. ll'\ing 110 pualn, It t¥alllble lor 11.15 pot.tPIId ~ •
CIJ Happy Days
ftom Jumbhi, c/o thll newsp1per. Box 34, Norwood, N.J. 07848.1ncludt your
Ill Cll Tlc Tee Dough
n•m•. •dd.. ss, d code and m•k• chllcll• pay•ble lo Newtpaperbooh.
Cll ())) MecNell·lehrer
Report
tiD Nowo
G (jJ Muppet Show
7:30 II (f) You Asked For lt
(I) Anothor Ute
·'
(I) Sanford and Son
(I) II (I) Family Feud
('l) Laverne end Shirley
Alan : " How many times
Cll Bualneoo Report
have you been declarer at a
NORTII
11-11·11
I]J Richerd Slmmono
slam that depended entirely
tiD Creativity: 8111 Moyaro
.K
...
on a guess? "
Ill (jJ Entertainment
t1011111
Oswold : " Never . I don' l
Tonight
consider that declarer never
8:00 II CIJ CD Uttle Houoo On
gets a chance to use some
WEST
EAST
the P111lrie .O,n eging cl1cus
)udgment. On the other hand
• •.•.
• 8
daredevil endangers his
I have been set on many
•QJ9&amp;6 3
•1onc2
own life and those of the
t 74
tQ5
Walnut Grove children. 160 · . slams that a slight dltference
In judgment might have
.108652
+J974 3
min.) [Closed Captioned)
lound the contract rolling
Cil liletlonal Geographic
SOUTH
home . Here ls a hand from a
~clal
+AQJIOII
(!)
MOVIE:
'Wholly
Vanderbilt final back when
Moaea'
the vulnerable grand slam
tAKJ
(I) MOVIE: ·A Time For
bonus was 2,2 50 points. If the
+AKQ
love'
reade'rs can keep tram
Vulnerable: Bntb
(J)
G
(JJ
That's
looking at the Eosi-Wesl
Incredible! A nine-year-old
. , ..
Dealer: South
cards they can see my
girl attempts to 11ft a car
•problem ."
Soalll
West
Nortb Eatl
and a group of students
Alan : " Ills a pretty tough
2.1 '
demonstrate a car that
4 N'P '
grandslamloslayoutof . lt's
Pass
s+
Pass
gets ,100 miles to the gel- ·
5 NT'.
your
story
.
Finish
up."
Pass
5•
Pass
ion . 160 min .)
Oswald': " If was the last 16
Pass "
Pass 7+ .•'
D (I) ® Chortle Bmwn
Pass
Pass
Pass
boards
of
a
64
board
match
.
Special 'II' s Magic. Charlie
Opening lead:
We carried a 2,500 point lead
Brown .' Snoopy as tho
into the set and I wa5 ce rtain
Great Houndini, puts on an
tha i
Henry Chanin or
exhibition of magic for the
Atlanta. who would
be
Peanuts gang. (R)
the car ds and see that iheril
(J) (j]) Greet Polform·
holding my ca rds at lhe
was no way to go wronQ .
other table, would be in
ancee 'Brideshead RevlsK igh
Imag ine you took one _
iled : Charles end Julia ·s
seven I didn 't really care
and
llnany
came
dlomond
wedding plans are Interanything
except
about
down lo the second diamond
rupted when Bridey ac· making the same play as
lead from dummy . What
cuses Julia of immoral
Henry . Of course, I would be
would
you have done If Ei\$1
behavior and stirs up feelhappier It n\y play was the
Ings of Catholic guilt . 160
had followed sma ll ?" · •
winner . but that wasn' t the
min .) !Closed Captioned) .
Oswald : " I have always
crux o( lhe matter . I didn ' t
8:30 D Cll tiD Mr . Merlin Zac
r
efused
to answer becmise
want' to lose .2,530 points on
uses magic to help Lea ov. mv
mind was never"made
lhe
hand
."
ercome a spell of selfup. However, Henry said
Alan : -.. I have looked at all
doubt .
wha t he would have done. He
9 :00 0 CIJ ('l) MOVIE: ' The
woul d have tossed a co in and
Towering Inferno' Part 2
lei me try to ou.tguess It ." '
(I) 700 Club ·
(I) Collage Beokotball:
Netlonel
1nvl1ationel
Tournement Seml-finela
Ill (I) tiD M•A•S•H Colo·
nel Potter turn s the 407 7th
into a bowling alley.
(I)
liD
Bomstein/
Beethoven 'Symphony No .
8 in F Major.' Maximilian
by THOMAS JOSEPH
introduces
' The
Schell
·'
Creatures of Prometheus,
ACROSS
DOWN
Opus 43' which leonard
j Molt
I Persian
Bomstein and the Vienna
Philharmonic
Orchestra
tiger
5 Fit
then- play in addition to the 10 Habitat
Z lsraeU
major work . (60 min.)
II Lack of color
dance
Ill (jJ MOVIE: 'Tomor·
13
Author
3
Exude
row's Child'
Ambler
I Lessen
9:30 Ill (I) I]J Houoe Colla
Kensing10n Hospital finds 14 Apparel
5 Set at
itself with a resident were15 Vicious
Intervals
wotf .
circle
6 Eton boy's
10:00 (l) MOVIE: 'Tho Cat and
17 Dilly
father
20 Sha m
%8 N .Z,
the Canary'
21
Cozy
tribesman
(I) TBS Evening News
7 Hgt,
18 Wife of
I!) Cll ® lou Grant An
aJ
" What's the
·cuchulain
8 Tricky ;
couple's
obituary becomes an ex,"
bl a - 1
place
•
traordinary assignment for 19 " - Love Y ou" elusive
Billie end Lou. 160 min 1
(1934 song)
9 Historian
2l Gustatory
32 Abound , :
(I)
Golden
Ago
of 20 Salaried ,
Samuel Eliot
sense
33 Joe
Television: ' Pett1m1'
21 Mexican
23 Nourislunent
Palooka 's
())) Newo
10:30 (I) Sing out America
city
12 Complain'
24 Syrian
wife
liD Hitchcock
22 Analyze
16 French
city
35 Facslmlie
1 1 :00 . . CIJ (I) I!) (I) (jJ Ill (jJ
a sentence
lady friend
2fi Doomed
( abbr
Newo
24
Soprano
~...,.....,,_,......,_.
Cil Naohvtlle RFD
(I) All In the Family
Marilyn
('l) Newo/Sporto/Woother
25
Sheltered
(I) D.l ck Cavett First of 2
%8 Sir Humphrey ~+-+--!parts. Cher is the guest.
1 1 :30 II Cil ('l) Tonight Show
Johnny is joined by Dionne
Warwick , Beau Bridges 21 Burning
and Calvin Trillin . lA) 160 28 Eccentric

[)

IEXGONYI
. I KJ

.·

,.....

I

·tREQUIV

. J t)

I I I I I J )·

78

Plastic Septic Tanks. State
and county approved . 1,000
gal. tank, price $340. Other.
sizes .in stotk, haul In your
pickup truck . Cali 614·286· HILLCREST . KENNEL 5930, Jackson, Oh . RON Boarding all breeds, clean
indoor-outdoor facilities .
EVANS ENTERPRISES
Also AKC Reg. Dober-,
1978 Jeep Renegade, good mans. Call446·1795 .
cond. 1980 Harley Davison
SL T, fully dressed, ex. BRIARPATCH KENNELS
Boarding and grooming.
cond . c;all615·6545.
AKC
Gordon setters,
E~glish
Cocker Spaniels.
Grand Prix stero system,
record player. AM·FM 8· Call388-9790.
track. Call 367·7793.
GOOd clean horses for sale.
For slae Homellte chain· Caii38B·B623 .
saw,
business
cash
register, antique rocker,
good used plano. Call 245·
57
Musical
9112.
Instruments

Nova, 350, 4 barrell , 4
speed,
oversize cain ,
cutlass wheels, ·great tires,
new paint, little putty, lot of
n~ parts, perfect con·
dillon. 1969, $1495. 742-3063.
1960 Chevy . ~ speed. 6 cylin·
der . 50,000 original miles.
A-1. $1000. 992 -3798 after 5.
HARTS Used Cars, New
Haven West Virginia . Over
20 less expensive cars in
stock . ·
SURPLUS JEEPS $65,
CARS $89, TRUCK $100.
Similar bargains available.
Call for your directory on
how to purchase. 602·998·
0575 Ext. 7965 Call Refun dable.
1964 FORD, 2 door, 4 speed,
$300., phone 304-675-4399.

Refrigerator like new,
stero&amp;AM·FM radio, air
conditioners 10,000 BTU
casement, sliding window.
Call 446·0990.

For Sale Bundy clarinet,
gOod condition . Call 4-461797.

E.
Excelsior 011 ·co..
Main St.. Pomero , Ohio.
992-2205 .

1\169 VALIANT. 14 International travel, 4·Wheel·
drive. 1979 Dodge truck, 6
61
cyi, standard, · LWB . 1968
Gravely Tractors; pur· Pontiac, 400 cu . in . engine .
chase a new Gravely in &amp; automatic transmisioO .
March and get a \,r&gt;ecial 304-615-66.28 .
early Spr ing discount, in
addition to a FREE rotary
plow or tiller. Outdoor 1980 TOYOTA Celica, exEquipment Sales, Jet. Rt. 1 ceJient condition. asking
&amp; 35, Gallipolis. Ph . 446- $6500. Call after 5. 304-615·
3670. Open weekdays 9 to 5, 7438 .
Saturdays 9 to 1.
16 MUSTANG, runs good,
305 Henderson St .,
New· &amp; Used Troy built
tillers. Bulk garden seed . Henderson, wv .
Swisher Implement, Inc.,
Ga IIi pol is. Ca 11 446·0475.
7.~2'---_T
.:_r:_:u,_,c:::k:c's'-'f"'o,_
r _,s,a,lec__
1917 Ford pickup, good
1·12' John Deere wheel cond . 6 tyl. Call4-46·4554.
disc, 1·set of John Deere 4
bottom 16' semi mount 1969 .Ford, 1972 GMC, 1969
plows, 1· Hillsboro tri ·axle InternationaL 1968 In·
goose-neck 28' trailer. Call ternational,
1967
In ·
614·256·6534 .
ternational. Call367-7533.

For sale: Gas dryer, like
new. 113 Chevy ·caprice
body in gOod shape. 72 Hor·
net tor parts . Must sell,
need space. 949·2488 .
16 ft . stock 1railer $2.200,
100 egg Incubator $35. Call
614-742-2738 or 742·2178 .
WEIGHTS and bench with
leg extension, phone 30.4·
615-4634 .
FOLEY saw filling equipment tor sale. Phone 304576·2293.
BED, Colemen heater,
clock, -4 radial tires. 2
radios, water filter housing
and element, and water
tank, phone 304-675·5375.
5.~5,_~
B"'u.!!ll~d!!ln~gt.:S~u~p~p~ll~e:!.s_

Building materials block,
brick, sewer pipes, win·
dows, lintels, etc . Claude
Winters. Rio Grande. o .
Call245·5121 .
LUMBER
1"x6" · and
1"x8"x6' thru 16' Poplar
sheath1ng, air dried. Mill
Wood Inc . Yard near in·
fersectlon US 33 and WV 2.
304-273-2522 . M -F 8-4 :30,
Saturday 8· 1.
56

Pets for Sale

POODLE GROOMING.
Call Judy Taylor at 3677220.
1 yr . old Cocker Spaniel,
spaded &amp; also toy poodles.
Call446,6310.
Fish
aquarium
tully
equiped with everything
even fish. 520.00. Call 256·
1322 after 5PM.
For sale ACK Alakan
Malamute puppies also 5
year old female &amp; 9 year
old male. Call 4-46-9319.
German Shepard puppies.
$25. 992-9981.
All white male German
Shepard 1112 yrs. old . Ex·
cellent watch dog. 575. 742·
2753 .

AKC registered Alaskan
Frigadalre dryer avocado, . Malamute puppies. 614·4-46·
S90. Kenmore washer 2 9319.
spd., avocado, $90 . Both
guaranteed. Cali256-1207.
FINCHES $10.99 each,
parakeets $15.99 each,
KELVINATDR refrigerat- coc~atails $50. Fish Tank
or, gOod condition, $35.00. Pet Shop, 2413 Jackson
Call 304-576·2757 .
Ave. 304·675·2063.

-. . ......
.......... .
-....
····-··
._

1915 MUSTANG II , 39,000
miles. Want someone to
assume pavments. 614·446·
8617 .

·

camping
Equipment

1978 STARCRAFT camper,
Starmaster 7, awning, por ·
ta potfv, curtains, excellent
shape, phone 304-615·4217.
Motor Home
&amp; Campers

79

STUCCO PLASTERING
textured ceilings • com ·
mercial and res idential,
free estimates. Call 256·
1182.
PAINT I NG
interior and
exterior,
plumbing,
roofing, some remodeling.
20 yrs. exp. Call388·9652 .

JOHN Deere, 13 hoe grain
drill, model FB ·B and a
Kools 54" forage blower,
304-675-4308 .
Livestock

vans &amp; 4 w .o .

Jeep CJ5, 6 cyl .. 3 spd ..
lock -In hubs, high back
bucket seats, AM·FM 8·
track, roll bar, 12x15 tires
with white spoke rims, runs
good &amp; easy on _gas. Looks
sharp, priced to sell. Call
367 ·7671 or 361·7560.

22 month old Registered
Polled Hereford bull, SSOO.
Call446·4635.

'I•

1918 CHEVROLET,
ton.
-4 -wheel ·drive, 23,000 miles,
La r ge round bales. Phone A-1 shape, phone 304-615·
614·985-3887 or contact 3625 .
Albert Parker after 6 p.m.
1978 CJ5 Jeep Renegade, V·
HAY for sale, first cutting B, with e&gt;ctras, 37,000 miles.
orchard grass, call 304·675· $4800.00, 304-882·3128.
4308.
14

71

Autos for Sale

Motorcycles

All used bikes reduced at
Betz Honda, check with us
before you pay to much .
Call4-46-2240.
2-1981 Honda motorcycles.
900 &amp; 750 CB custom . Call
388-8711.

1977 Trans Am , auto, PS,
PB , air, low miles. 1979
vw. Hpd, air cond. Call
4-46·2599.

1980 Honda 750 custom.
good condition, w /ex tras,
need to sale Sl.IIOO. Call446·
8655 after 5:30PM .

79 Ford Fairmont, ~ door
station wagon, fully loaded,
$4200. Ca II 286-4346.

1980 A TC 70 Honda, 3
wheels, like new. Call 4-464292 .

1974 PINTO. gold, $450,
gOod work car ; 446-3159. ,

1978 Kawasaki 650. New
chl'lins and tires, good condillon. 1978 RM -100, gOod
condition. 992·7382.

73 Chevy Statlonwagon, air
conditioning, p.s. and p.b.
Will sell cheap . -4-46·4260 af·
ter 4.
1982 Plymouth Reliant.
A .T.,
AM - FM
stereo,
digital clock, 35 mpg, under
wr ·only. $7000 firm . 992·
$6!tu ,

..

1977 Ford Thunderbird,
White With blue interior,
AC, PB, PS, AM·FM 8
track •tereo. Excellent
condition. $3500. 992-7735.

Bell Contracting Genertl
plumbing service, home
remodeling &amp; repairs. Free
estimates. Call4-46-4002 .

RON 'S Television Service.
Spec ializing in Zenith and
Motorola , Quazar. and
house calls. Phone 576·2.398
or 446·2454 .
F &amp; K Tree Trimmil'\;,
stump removal. 675·1331 .
RINGLES' S SERVICE e~ ­
perienced mason, roofer ,
carpenter , electrician,
9,eneral repairs ar'ld
remodeling . Phone 30.4·675·
2088 or 615 ·4560 .

82

HAVE THIG PRETTY
KOO!ol, I'IILOA ... 1 PUT FRE5H
UHEH ON TH' !lED, AH' -·

- GOT I'IILOA

OI&lt;.AYft

BLOW!

- BUT HIG GR111HD·
DAUGHTER'S.•
5UDOEH ARRIVAL
fo\AY 61VE 06 A
OIFf:t1REifT WAY

TUCKE17 AWAY - l't-1

ALL HICE 'H' COZY,
AHNIE '? &lt;;URE 15 NICE
T' HAVE FIIMILY
AROUND AGAIH •·

SURE IT
I"'UGT eE,
OOKS.

lOGO!

ALLEYOOP

WE'LL HII.VE A NICE
VARIETY OF LITTlE .

HE'S NOT MUCH, BUT WE FIGURED
HAVING THAT 0~ CORYTHOSAURUS
DINOSAURS TO I'.DD
IN ll&lt;ERE 'NOUlD GIVE TH' KIDS
~SOON!
- -'""-SOMETHING :-fiLODK AT!

·GASOUNE ALLEY

Ain't nobodij loolt.in'
at me in no ~Jt.innl.l
tiqhts!

Did you wow them in
yot,jr new outfit at
dance
Yes'
cla~s
·
t.oda4?

WINNIE

IVfNNIE RETt/RNS 70 HER
OFFIC't ANP 7FLL5 BIRDIE WHAT

SH£'5 tEAI?NEP Ai .sEilCJR .P£,VEZ'S.
I'E'/lEZ .stiYS .J'A&amp;4I(

HE WILL STOP AT
M171WNG 10
ACCOMPLISH HIS
GOALS ..• EVEN

OH, WINNIE ...
WHAI AF?E
'NE GOING

TOPO!'

MUI(PS?/'

~AY... FOR ANOTHER

MlltACLE, 1 ~UE'SS!
WE'VE SIMPLY 607
10 ~y JA!JAR OFF
6£/"QffE HE TAI&lt;f~
OVER OUR
COMPANY/

·tsi&lt;U?/(i.ESS/

Gallipolis Diversified Con st . co. custom dozer &amp;
backhoe work. . Special
farm rates. Call us for free
estimates. 446·4.440.
E-;ectrica I -==:__

BARNEY

I BETTER
WARM UPMY.

SEWING Machine repairs ,
service. Authorized Singer
Sales &amp; Service Sharpen
Scissors . ~abric Shop,
Pomeroy . 992·227-4 .

INNARDS -...

,----- - - JACKS REFRIGERATIO N Air condition serv ice,
industrial.

ELECTRICIAN, licensed&amp;
. certified, all types of
wiring, low rates. guaran ~
teed work, 304-895-3826.

~ - --CieneraiH~9

125 KTM Motorcross, like
new, never raced, rode
very little, 304·882-2695.

17

Upholstery

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1163 Sec. Av,e, Gallipolis.
4-46-7833 or 446-1833.

tSSttl ·•~tal

min.l

- ~Refrigeratio_'!

~~bn~:~~-i:ri; 9 ,

_PEANUTS

THIS 15 MY REPORT
ON OUR

FIELD TRIP
AMON6 THE TREES ...

ARST WE 80AADED THE
805 lAAT 'TOOK US FOR

A RID£ niAT WA5 THE

ff.IJ5T M15EAASI.E,I!O~N6.
SICKENI~J~I"'FVL. ,

--AN' MY
OUT'ARDS,
TOO

(I) Another Ufe
•
(l) MOVIE: 'Hopocotch'
Cll MOVIE : 'The Black
Knight'
Cll 8eMy Hill Show
D Cll Quincy Ouincy'a
decision to authorize an accident victim as a transplant donor embroils him
In a multi-million dollar lawsuit . IAl 160 min .l
Cll Captioned ABC Newo
(jJ MOVIE: 'Wild In the
Sky'
D (JJ Nlghtline
12:00 Cll Bumo &amp; Allen
(I) Nlghttlne
Cll PBS late Night
D (jJ MOVIE : 'Where
the ledleo Oo'
12:30 B Cil (IJ late Night with
David lettenmon David Is
joined by former btoeball
umpire and author Ron Luciano. [80 min.)
&lt;II JIICit Benny Show
Cll Solid Gold
D (I) MOVIE: 'ColumbO:
Murder by the Book'
1 :00 (I) I Mented .._,
· 1:15 (l) MOVIE: 'Rollicking
Advemum
of
Eliza

UNCOMKJK.TASLE .••

MOWREY~

1970 DODGE ChallenV..r
parts. pllone 304-451-1882.

Upholstery Rt.
1 Box 124, Pt. Pleasant. 304·
675·4154.

.

...

&amp;_! _ __Excavating

8~=--

. ,.

·.

-

.

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CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor . Fourth and Pine
Phone 446-38&amp;8·or 446-4477

JONES BOYS WATER
SERVICE . Call 361·7471 or
361·0591.

Auto Parts
&amp;Accessories

,.,YQUR 6RANDPI\ ~ID 'fOO YEAH,
::&gt;nvu~»

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

79 HONDA Custom 500 CX.
excellent condition, full
faring, new tires, $2,100.
304-458-1163.

76

ANNIE

CAPTAIN STEEMER Carpet Cleaning featured by
Haffelt Brosthers Custom
Carpets. Free estimates.
Call 446-2107 .

1978 Jeep CJ ·5, hard1op,
PS, AT, 25,000 easy mi. , 4
extra tires, $4,300. Call367·
Polled Hertords for sale. 0449 after 5PM.
Water wells. Commercial
Yearling bulls, bred cows,
and Domestic. Test holes.
4H and FFA heif ~ rs . Call Blue &amp; Silver 1915 Dodge
Pumps Sales and Serv ice .
614·247·2704 or see Counrry van, good cond . Call 379· ' 304-895-3802 .
Road Farm at the Meigs 2701 evenings .
County
Fairground~ .
LOCKSMITH
Service .
Pomeroy Ohto, March 26, 1976 Dodge Sportsman
Residential . automotive .
the SEOPHA sale .
Van , bucket seats in front,
Emergency service . Call
2 big seats in back . Call379· 882-2019 .
2712 .
64
Hay &amp; Grain
Hay tor sale. Call 379-:!424.

•...

Mar c um
Roofing
&amp;
Spouting . 30 years ex ·
perience, specializing in
bu ilt up roof. Call 388·9851 .

French City Painting
residential &amp; commercial,
interior, exterior, paper
hanging ,
&amp;
texturtd
ceilings . Call 367·778.4 or
367-1160 .

.

•unu

81
Home
_ _ Improvements

Wanted to do: remodlln~.
interior and ederior'paln·
ting , plumb i ng , lind
roof ing . Free estimates.
985-4121 .

13

BRIDGE

: er 1ees

69 Chevy v, ton P.U. Flat
bed, 301 Standard Iran·
John Deere 4010 A -1 con· -smission, good cond, $500 .
dillon. 985·3537 or 985·4131 992·3682.
after 6.

Sale Massey Ferguson
To35. Front end loader,
Back end winch. Call 9927678.

rM .C:O ~'I,WAU.'I,~D
I RXL E~ffi'/ m Cf rr.
f+a IT TM OLD~ OLD!

1977 Starer aft fold out cam per, sleeps 6, e,._ , cond,
$1,400. Call446-3040.

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

1980 DATSUN pickup, 304·
675-4568 .

BORN LOSJ!;R

·

69 Ford pickup truck, flatbed, $500 or best offer. Call
256-1528.

10FT. PICO DISC, with 18
in . discs, notched in front,
smooth in rear. $600 .
FIRM.
Call 388-9996
evenings and weekends.

I

CAMPER,
Sleeps J,
refrigerator, stove &amp; mise;.,
S600. phone 304-675-4373 .

1 :30

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'

"Auntie"
29 Wooden
core
JO Poisonous
mushroom

· '34 Muscle
connector
:ui Elysium
37 Guarantee
38 Espied
311 Lukewann
40 Uke
a pussycat

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used for th~ lhree L'1, X lor the lwo O's, etc. Sin&amp;le !etten,
apootrophe1, \he leneth and lormalion ol the wordo ore all
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MONDAY
3/?-2/82

TRUCK topper for short
wide bed. insulated &amp;
wired. $100. Phone 304·882·
3256 evenings &amp; weekends.

2
apartments
Main
St..
Vinton,
Oh. 2 on
bdr.,
clean,
large yard &amp; garden spot,
sec, dep. Call 245·5818.

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sofa, chair, rocker, ottoman. 3 tables, $500. Sofa,
chair and loveseat, S275.
1\LMOST ne.w. 3 bedroom Sofas and chairs priced
house . Fully carpeted, air from $285. to $795. Tables,
For sale 2 &amp; 3 bedroom conditioned, family room S38 and up to S109 . Hlde·atrailers. furnished , with with fireplace. one and one- beds,$340,, queen size, $380.
half baths. References Recliners, $175 . to $295 .•
air. Call 304-773 ·5651 .
required. call 304·675·2497 Lamps from $1'8. to S65. 5
alter
5:00p.m .
pc. dinettes from $79., to
1981 ALL ELECTRIC 12'
S385. 7 pc .• $189 . and up.
WIO.E,
2
BEDROOM
Ave . Wood table with 4 chairs.
mobile home setting on lot, 2710 LINCOLN
ready to mo-ve into . $8995. Available flrs1 of April, S219 up to $495. Desk $110.
adults only, no pets, 3041· Hutches. $300 . and $375.,
10% down, BANK Fl
maple or pine finish .
675·4469.
CING AVAILABLE.
Bedroom suites · Bassett
576-2111 .
Cherry, $795.
Bunk bed
complete
with
mattresses.
42
Mobile Homes
$250. and up to $350. Capfor Rent
tain's beds, $215 . complete.
33 _ __cF~a'!'·r~m!.'!.s.!!
fo~r_:S~a!':le
!__
2 mobile homes for rent. 2 Baby beds, $99 . Mattresses
6 rm . house with bath, fob. bdr. each, fully turn ., or box springs, full or twin,
barn &amp; 1200 lb. tob. base, on adults only . Call 446-4110.
558 ., firm, $68. and SIB .
40 acres on St. Rt. 218, Only
Queen sets, $195. 5 dr.
7 1/2 miles from town,
chests, S49 . ·4 dr. chests,
$47,000 . Call 245-9222 after All electr ic mobile home, 2 $42 . Bed frames, S20.and
bdr
..
adults
only,
no
pets.
6.
$25., 10 gun · Gun cabinets,
Call 367-7438 .
S359., dinette chairs $20.
and 525. Gas or electric
Farm 76 acres . Good
house, barn, work shop, For sale or rent. 3 trailers- ranges, $295. Orthopedic
small chicken house . 1 mile 1 w/ family rm . &amp; fireplace. super firm, $95, baby
west of Langsville on Sr. House on REt. 1 above ma tresses. S25 &amp; SJ5. bed
Eureka on River . Call 388· frames $20, 525, &amp; S30. Used
124. 742·2860after 4 p.m.
8683 for information .
Furniture· bookcase, 5 pc .
dinen set, Living room
Farm . 27 acres, 3 bedroom
house, total electric, heat 2 bedroom on Kerr -Bethel suite. Used· ranges and
TV's. 3 'm iles out Bulovllle
pump, central air, all car· Rd . No pets. Call446·3371 .
Rd . Open 9am to lpm, Mon.
peted, new 12 x 36 metal out
building, pond, all new fen · 2 bdr. trailer furnished, thru Fri., 9am to 5pm. Sat.
446·0322
ces, l'lll mineral rights. City adults only, Brown Trailer
water and spring water. Park, 992·3324.
G . E . washer large
Wood, good hunting . Close
to r'lew Megis mines TWO bedroom , un · capaci1y. G.E. dryer 3 tem clean, nice,
opening up. Beautiful furnished . One bedroom ef· perature's,
guaranteed . $100 each . Call
location tor family . Asking ficiency . 304·615·2122 .
256-1201.
35.500 . Must sell, will
negotiate. Immediate oc·
THREE bedroom mobile Electric stove·. white, ex .
cupancy . 614-949·2793 .
home, adults only, no pets,
reference required, Camp cond . Call 4-46·3945 after
5PM .
Conley, 304-675-2133.
35
Lots &amp; Acreage

MOBILE HOMES MOVED.
Licensed &amp; insured . Call
304·576·2711 .

• Jt72 12x65 SHULTZ, 3
:; bedroom, gas heat, par·
tlally furnished. Call 304·
675·2907.
1981 .1NDEPENDANCE by
, ·O..tfolt, 14x70, Someone to
take over payments and
12,000. down, Pay off
$10.000. 30H58·1825.

41

by Larry Wright

KIT 'N' CARLYLE "'

LAWN mowers repa ired,
phone30Hn2931 .

21

Monday, March 22, 1982

Pomeroy-Middlepoff, Ohio

·)'a
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RE

PL(!~W
.

1

Yeaterday's Cryp!oquote: THlS IS THE BEST DAY
WORlD HAS EVER SEEN. TOMORROW WILL

BE:TI'ER.- R.A.CAMPBELL
'I

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·'

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�Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Page 12-The Daily Sentinel

e.

OSP .cites driver
following wreck

, Yoi .30,No.239
c;=erlphtM 1912

kerson, 25, Rodney, was traveltlng
A two-vehicle accident In Meigs
westbound on U.S. 35 at 7:W p.m .
County late Saturday afternoon rewhen her vehicle struck and killed
sulted ·In a citation lor one of the
a deer which had run Into the path
diivers, according to the Galllaol her auto. The car su!lered modMetgs Post of the state highway
erate damage. :
patrol.
According to the report, two vehi·
1be patrol said Thomas F . Cumcles were both southbound on Ohio
·mlns, 16, Rt. 2, Racine, backed onto
Ohio 124 at County Rd. 28 and col- 7, live-tenthS of a mile south of Ohio
218, at 9: 15 p.m. when one of the
lided with an eastbound vehicle
vehicles, driven by Gary L. St.
driven by Melodi J.Cundl11, 17, SyrJohn, 37, Mount Vernon, attempted
acuse, traveltlng on 124.
to pass the one ahead of him, driven
'There was moderate damage to
by Roger L. GUbert Jr., 20, Rt. 2,
the Cundltl vehicle and slight to
Crown City.
Cummins' auto, and Cummins was
GUbert's vehicle then turned Into
cited lor Improper bacldng.
the path of St. John's, and they colIn an otherwise quiet weekend, a
lided, causing sUght damage to
series ol minOr wrecks kept the paboth cars.
trol on the go, particularly on
In a similar kind ol accident at
Saturday.
12:10 a.m. Sunday on 7, troopers
1be day began at 12:45 a.m. on
said Louise E . Fife, 51, Eureka Star
Meigs County Rd. 36whena vehicle
driven by Dixie L. Bealr, 18, Ches- Route, tried to pass a northbound'
auto driven by·WIWam F. Rogers,
ter, lost control on a curve, went oil
51,
Chesapeake, and collided when
the left side ol the road and struck
Rogers
made a left turn Into the
several trees.
path
ol
Fife's
auto.
1be vehicle then came to rest on
F!fe's
vehicle
was severely damIts right side. The driver was not
aged
and
the
Rogers
vehicle had
Injured and the vehicle was modersUght
damage.
ately damaged.
1be patrol reported no Injury alRichard E. McDonald, 22, Pol'l'IE!-ter
a vehicle driven by Deborah L.
roy, was travelling on U.S. 33 at the
W, Athens, laUed to negoBrown,
Intersection with Ohio 681 at Dartiate
a
curve
on Meigs County Rd.l,
win at 1 a.m. when he lalled ID
four
miles
north
ol124, at 11:45 a.m.
make a curve, drove right and
struck a signpost and ditch, causing Sunday, drove oft the Jell side of the
road and struck a fence, causing
sUght damage to his vehicle.
The patrol said Cynthia K Ful- moderate damage to her vehicle.

Training held Sunday
· FIRE TRAINING - About 75 Meigs County volunteer
firemee participated in fire training Sunday at Syracuse
by bUrning au old twHtory bouse, formerly lmowo as the
Flaoagam home, along Route l24. The traloiog program
lasted some five hOUI'II and included practicing with air
masks, blaze containment and extinguishing fires inside
the slx·room frame structure that was about 100 y~rs old.
The Syracuse Volunteer Fire Department, headed by
Chief Gene Imboden, hosted the lraloiog session. Other
departments participating were Pomeroy, Racine, Middleport, Salem Township, and Chester.

Ellen Anna Frye

-

Meigs County happenings •.
Probe complaints
Meigs sheriff's deputies are ln-

vesUgatlng a brealdng and enterIng at the Portland School.
Several.locks on doors were damaged In t1Je Incident which occurrred sometime between Friday
evening and noon Sunday. A pop
machine In the building was broken
lniD.
The department Is also Investigating the complaint of Earl
Young, Route 3, Pomeroy, who notIfied the department that Saturday
evening, the rear glass was broken
out of bls station wagon. There was
sound equipment In the vehicle but
nothing was taken.

Money action filed
The Kentucky Mortgage Co.,
Inc., Lexington, has tued a foreclosure action against Robert F.
Brown, Langsville, et al. The plalntlfl charges that' there Is due from
the defendants $22,1J73.90 plus Interest on mortgaged real estate In RuUand Township.
In the same court an action
charging breach of lease has been
llled by the Trahan Petroleum Co.,
EUtngton, N.Y., IV(alnst HUand OJ
and Gas Enterprtses, Inc., Girard;
the East Ohio Gas Co., Cleveland,
and Leo Story, as executor of the
estate of tucllle Story, Leo Story
and Janice Stary Lochary.

Veterans Memorial
Saturday Admissions--Larry
Grimm, Mason; Woodrow Himdrlx, Sr., Syrscuse; JohnR!chaRis,
Minersville.
Saturday Discharges--George
Kautf, Bess Ellis, Avice Frecker,
Shirley Ables, James Fisher.
sunday Admissions--Homer
Young, Middleport; Walter
France, Rutland; Shirley Harrls,
Reedsville; Lorena Laudermnt,
Middleport; Evelyn Maynard,

Best diUlcers chosen
Best dancers were selected durIng a dance contest held Friday
night In conjunction with a teen
event at the Rutland Civic Center.
Best girl dancer was Debbie Por·
ter, John Russell was the best boy
dancer and the best couple was
Penny Mtuer and Paul Riggs. La·
test 45 RPM recordings were given
as prizes.
Over 100 teens attended Friday's
dance. The next dance will be at 8
p.m. Friday at the center with
music by the Itomlc D.J . Only students In grade seven and above are
eUglble to attend the dances.
Anyone Interested In renting a
room at the center Is asked to call
Je'rry Black, Rutland.

Meeting Tuesday
Past Matrons ol Pomeroy Chapter, Order of Eastern Star, will
meet at 7: 30Tuesday at the home of
Mrs. Thelma DIU In Syracuse.

Scholarship available
The Crawiord-Gray-Lewis Scholarship Is avauable ID Meigs High
School graduating seniors this
spring who are residents of Middle:
port. Letters of application should
be malled to Mrs. Lowell Beaver,
Middleport, or may be left at the
high school principal's o!!lce.

.

House·will debate public.utility policies .
ity Democrats and touched of! a
COLUMBUS, OIUo (AP) partisan clash, that ended when DeHouse Democrats S!'Y they plan to
dissect ·a Republlcan bill revamp- , mocratlc leaders walked off the
foor and refused to vote on the blll.
Ing the state's publlc utUity policies
which passed the Senate last · Sen. Sam Speck, R-New Concord, the bUI'schlefsponsor, denied
month.
Rep. Ronald H. James . D- Democratic charges that the
amendment would give the utllitles
Proctorvllle, chairman of the
a blank check. He said It was
House Uttlltles Commission, said
he wants the measure to deal only drafted to conform language In the
with some procedural matters and bUI with language In existing law.
Under the amendment, utilities
the way state utilities commissionwould
be allowed to pass to their
ers are chosen.
customers
any expenditure not de"We're going to take everything
termined
by
the utilities commisIn the blll that deals with ratesion
to
have
resulted from
making and put It Into a separate
imprudent
management.
biU," said James, wllose commit·
tee begins hearings Tuesday.
He said It is Important that Ohio
During four grueling hours of demove expeditiously to change the bate, Senate Minority Leader
structure of the Public UtUities Harry Meshel, D-Youngstown, said
Commission. u his committee tries the amendment changes present
to deal with rates at the same time procedures and that the utilities
"! just think the bill would bog down have to come In and document their
and we wouldn't pass anything," he e xpenditures before the
said.
commission.
One thing that is sure to go Into
Under the amendment "they
the new bill Is a Senate Republican
(commissioners) would have to go
fioor amendment dealing with In and examine the companies'
costs utUitles can 'p ass along ID their books, and they say they don't have
customers.
enough time now to half way keep
The amendment angered minor- up with their caseload," Meshel

Five die in traffic mishaps
By The Assoclaled Pre88
Tralflc accidents claimed live
lives In Ohio over the weekend, the
Highway Patrol said. The deathS
occurred In sej:larate, single-car
crashes.
The patrol counts traffic fatalities !rom 6 p.m. f'rtday until midnight Sunday.
The dead:

SUNDAY
CLEVELAND - 'Howard Jones,
50, ol Cleveland, In a ohe-car accident on a city street.
HAMILTON -ClementHale,49,

of Hamilton, In a one-car accident
on U.S. 127 In Butler County.

SATURDAY
ELYRIA - Bradley A. Smith, 28,
of Elyria, In a one-car crash on a
City street.
GREENVILLE- Robert E . Wit·
ters, 24, of Union City, In a one-car
accident on Ohio 571 In Darke
County.
TOLEDO - WUIIam J. Hurley
Jr., 27, of Genoa, In a one-car accident on Interstate 475 In Lucas
County.

Special meeting
A special meeting of Middleport
Lodge 363, F&amp;AM will be held at 7
p.m. Tuesday. Work will be In the
fellow craft degree. All members
are asked to attend. Refreshments
wiU be served.

Emergency ru,_
Only one call was received by the

Cheshire-

Meigs County Emergency Medical

Sunday Discharges--Eugene
Smith, John RJchanls, Anna Koenig, Robert Moore, LaiTy G;lmm . .

Service Sunday.
The Tuppen1
Plains Unit at 7: 24 p.m . treated
Sally Pooler, at' her Route ,7 home.

..

at y

•

enttne
1 Section, I 0 Pat••
1S Cents
A Multlm.dla Inc, N•wipap...

. Pome~oy-Middle~rt, Ohio, Tuesday, March 23, 1982

Governor orders
more budget cuts

Area deaths
Pleasant.
Friends may call the funeral
.
borne
tomorrow from 2-4 and 7-9
Ellen Anna Lee Frye, 51, New
p.m.
Haven died yesterday at Holzer
Medical Center.
She was born Jan. 25, 1931 In
Maggie.
Jo Ann Hetzer
She was a membe·r of the St.
Mark Lutheran Church.
Jo Ann Hetzer, ReedsvUle, died
Surviving Is her husband, ChaSaturday
at Camden-aark Hospl·
rles CecU Frye, New Haven; one
tal
In
Parkersburg
foUowlng an exdaughter, Atricla L. Hoffman, New
tended
Illness.
Haven; one stepdaughter, Pamela
Mrs. Hetzer was a daughter of
s. Herdman, Letart; father, Harrl·
the
tate John and Velma Kessler.
son H. Robinson Sr., GalllpoUs;
mother, Clara N. Staats, New She attended the White Chapel
Haven; two sisters, Emma L. Bos· Church.
Survlvlnll are her . husband,
wen, Point Pleasant and Clara Jo
warne;
three sons, Kenneth or eoGordon, New Haven; three brothers, Harrison H. Robinson Jr., Clif- lorado Springs, Colo.; Kevin, at
ton, Charles K. Robinson, home, and Kary of Reedsville; a
Honolulu, Hawaii and Earl W. Ro- daughter, Plane, Columbus, and
binson, Gaillpolls, Ohio and lour six grandchUdren.
· Services will be held at 2 p.m .
grandchildren.
at tlle White Funeral
Tuesday
Funeral services wiU be held on
Home
In
C()Oivtue with the Rev.
Wednesday at t::lO p.m. at the FoRoy
Deeter
ofticlatlng. Burial will
glesong F)meral Home, Mason.
be
In
the
Heiney
Cemetery, ReedsRev. John Campbell will officiate
vtue.
Friends
may
call at the tUnand burial will be held at the Kirkera!
home
at
anytime.
land Memorial Gardens, Point

•

Teamsters settle Kahn's contract
CINCINNATI (AP) - As more
than l,&lt;ro workers rallled outside
the Kahn's. Meatpacklng Co. on
Sunday, union representatives
worked secretly, reaching a contract agreement with ·the company
,for 37 dock workers and truck
drivers.
Galrald Kiser, presideat of 'the
Teamsters Local 100, reached
agreement with Kahn's at a time
when he was scheduled to be at the
raUy.

The Teamsters union agreed to a
60-cen!-per-hour wage cut and
other concessions In return lor a
promise that Kahn's would provide
a dlstlbutlon facUlty In the Clncln·
nat! area lor four years regardless
.of the outcome ol negoUBtlons with
the meatpackers union.
The workers wiU receive a $400
bonus per person.
At the rally, civU rights 1eailers
and union leaders showed their support lor the meatpackers.

'

.

said.
:James Indicated be agreed with
Meshel. In any case, he said the
amendment "certainly deals with

rates."
The utilities chairman said he
also Intends to shift Into the new blll

provisions restricting the passthrough by utilities of their media
advertising and charitable donations except If they show that such
donations directly benefit !hell:
customers.
Left In the Senate bill wiU be a

provision Increasing the number of
commissioners from three to live
and requtrlng the governor to lUI
vacancies !rom names sent·hlm by
a 12- member ~omlnatlng
commission.
That body would consist of representatives of groups such as senior
citizens, farmers, labor unions, businesses and others.
Currently, the g()vemor Is free to
name anyone to the commission although confirmation by the Senate
Is required.

ELBERFELDS

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- Gov.
James A. Rhodes, whUe pushing
for a tax hike, has ordered another
spending cut that money experts
say threatens education and state
payroUs.
Rhodes onlered another $180 mUliOn In state government spending
cuts Monday, saying, "This ji percent cut Is going to be felt. We are
past the fat, we are ln!o.the bone."
He repeated caUs lor a tax hike to
help recession;drained · state govemment, but said legislative support Is 1acklng.
.
Last January, when Budget Dlrector Howard L. Collier disclosed
a projected $1 bUIIOII budget deficit,
Rhodes called for a o~ent sales
tax boost and Increase$ In other
taxes to IIU the revenue gap.
Senate and House leaders who
presided over a $1,3 bUll on tax Increase only two.months earlier said
there was not enough support to approve the package.
Senate ~!dent Paul E . Gil!mar, R-Portptnton, who was with
Rhodes at a news conference Mon-

day, Satd that hasn't changed.
, Rhodes and the Legislature earller this year cut spending for the
current llscal year by 4 percent.
That was an annual retroactive
slash ol10.4 percent.
· The latest cut'pushes that total to
34.4 percent for the balance of the
current fiscal year ending June 30,
except for prisons, mental health
and welfare, whiCh hilve escaped
spending cutS.
CoWer said a $56 01UIIon shortlall
In revenues In January and February, growing welfare caseloads, Increased needs for higher education
funding and demands on the school
loan fund were responsible lor the
new cuts.
He ~ld the state needs another
$56.8 million for welfare during the
rest of the fiscal year, another $11
mllllon for higher education and an
additional DJ mllllon to assist
money-troubled school districts.
Collier said be was worl,&lt;lng on
aUocatlng the cuts and that they
would be presented ID the Controlling Board within two weeks, but

thSt tMy will not be

across~the-

board because o1 social program

exemptions ,
He said the public schools will be
hurt, however. There are, or soon
will be, requests for more than $40
million for school loans with only
about $6 mUIIon In the sclioolloan
fund.
·Part of the new cuts wllllree DJ
million for Joan appllcatiohs from
about 200 of Ohio's ~15 school districts, he said.
The loan fund fiuctuates as loanS
are repaid. The current $6 million
balance does not necessartly reflect
the lund's tOtal assets.
Collier said some state agencies
are going to be hlt so hard by the 6
percent cut they may not be able ID
meet payroUs later this spring.
He said they c811 •t save much
•wUh layo!ls because clvll service
and other laws would require selectlve layo!ls and extend the layoff
process Into the next biennium.
State law requires the budget to be
In balance at the startof _every tiscal year.

Mayor outlines plans for water system
tlmate lor the water tines tS$166,&lt;ro
By BOB HOEFLICH
and
for the water tank, S230,&lt;ro and
Mayor Fred Holtman outlined
these
figures do not Include the enplans for the new $500,&lt;rowater sergineerlng
lees which would push
vice Improvement and an easethe
HUD
funded
project to around
ment on the Jlm ,Brewer property
$500,000.
lor the water tank which Is a part of
Mayor Hoffman said the autothe Improvement was approved
matte turnon and turnoff at the
wljen Middleport VU!age CouncU
tank will be a big ad~antage. This
met In regular session Monday
must be handled manuaUy at the
night.
present water tank.
·
Using drawings on the project,
Mayor Hollman oulli11ed the per·
Mayor Hoffman pointed out that
manent easements which have
the Improvement wiU Include lnbeen secured on the Brewer oroPstaUatlon of 10 Inch lines In the
erty. In all, the easements tolal
areas of Beech and Gratlt Sis. and
about .9 ol one acre and the village
new meters and new taps lor water
will have a temporary easement
customers on Beech and Grant Sts.
over aU of the Brewer property durThe large line wiU go up Vine St.
lng' the cona~tlon period. Brewer
and, there will be lour new water
hydrants lnstaUed In the system. ·. will receive up to 8,000 g'anons ol
water free of charge each month as
Tile system will Include autoa part ol the easement and wUI rematic control lor both high and low
ceive a cash payment ol $4125.
water levels at the water tank site
The agreement provides lor cleaon the Brewer property. The 200,000
nup
ol the Brewer property followtan)&lt; will he mostly underground
lng
the
completion of construction,
and will be made of concrete reinthe
mayor
reported. If the property
forced with steel. 'I:he engineer's es-

Is sold the free water service will be
to residentiaL This actiO!) was
discontinued according to the
taken at the request ol the Middleagreement approved by councU
port PlaMing Commission.
last night. Bids on the project are
After a lengthy discussion Is was
expected to be opened Apri!2.
agreed to proceed with a new street
CouncU was given a llst of live
lighting plan drafted by Columbus
more properties which are.ta be reand Southern Ohio Electric Co. The
habllltated In the town under a
plan wUIInclude cbanPti over th!l
HUD ph:,;;!'am and approved going . present mercul}' vapor lights to
ahead with one of the homes which . high pressure sodium street lights.
does exceed the $9000 Umlt estabThe recommended chjlllge comes
llshed . earlier lor each house
alter the company had demonworkedon. 'Ibeadditlonalcostover
strated the slftngth of the new
the limit to the property In question
lights In a couple areas of the town.
Is not to exceed $500 more.
The plan, however, does call for the
COMMUNITY MEEtiNGS
eUmlnatlon of 17 street lights tn varMayor Holtman anrtounced that . lous locations of the town.
two meetings on the suggested
CouncUman AU~n King objected
community union for a uniform gas
to the removf-1 of IIOIIle ol the presrate have been called by the Co~suent Ughts statlnil that they had been
mers CouncU. One Is a\ Lancaster
plact:d as a result of need over long
on March 24 and the other at Rio
years of experience. H~ said that
Grande on March 31. Any o!!lclal
the more light that Is In the iown,
interested may attend.
the less trouble there wUI be. He
Council gave a first real:llng to an
cited on Instance In an alley where
ordinance which rezones the area
a light Is scheduled to be removed.
southwest of Page St. from special
(Continued on page 10)

Good news- inflation smallest -in 18 months
WASHINGTON (AP) - Tempered by falling gasoline prices, lnfiatlon rose at an annual rate of just
3 percent In FebrUary, the smaUest
gain since July 19!ll, and much the
product, economists said, of the
sharp recession.
In advance of today's report by
the Labor Department, some econ·
.omlsts even predicted the recession, a worldwide oU surplus and
abundant food suppUes mlgh$ actually produce small dectlnes In the
Consumer Prlce Index In the comIng months.
For February, the department

reported-today, lntlatlon rose a seasonally adjusted 0.2 percent, off
from the0.3 percent of January, untu last month the smallest advance
since tile summer of 19!ll.
February's gain was well under
the 1 percent Increase of February
1981. If last month 's figure held for
12 straight months, the annual rate
would be 3 percent.
For all oll981, lnfiatlon rose 8.9
percent; well below the.12.4 pe~ent
ol19111 and the smaUest Increase In
four years·. Most analysts are forecasting an Increase ranging from 6
percent to 7 percent lor all of this

year.
Consumer prices rose 7. 7 percent
In the last 12 months, the smallest
yearly advance since the period·
ending In June 1978, the department said. In another sign of the
slowdown In lntlatlon, the .department also said consumer prices
had risen at an annual rate of 3.7
percent for the three months endIng In February, the lowest gain
since .the period ending In May 1976.
Today's report said food prices
climbed 0.6 percent Ill February, a
little lower than January's 0.7 per·
cent. Housing costs were up 0.4 per-

'

II you 're the type of
person that thrives on
activity here's the outfit
lor you. The Playoffs
Collection brings you
these unbrushed fleece
gym shorts of
polyester/cotton with
lull elastic waistband
lor eose of movement
ond comfort. Pair them
up with our
polyester/cotton terry
V-neck pullover that
features controsting
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I
I

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Shorts S-XL
Shirt S-XL

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
j .

REWARDS - 'l'bele f_. Melli o..ty ,_. pr1' ' .......... llle rubbei'J ud lanled Ia tile
peeple reeehed ·,ewanl dleda fnm a.lk 0. II . _ , . letlle lluL 11eee1.t11 tlletr renrdl rr- Bllb
" - " M.-ley . , . . _ Ia .,.ec:I8U. fer lllelr • Miller, Malty ud - . alfleer oC Jillk Ole, are,
'-'Y• illlpla)ed ibi 11J ........... tile ni*rJ II· _..., AD ... Blltcb Grover, ... mocHnc, I to r,
tile bul'1 Ta;pn 1'111111 BnwiL 'l'lle1 r.-..t.t TGa)'RJalactaudDeiCaD.
Ia tile wlleft &amp;we .upeell were •

..7,•

cent, about In line with the gains of
the last three months.
Energy costs, however, tumbled,
as did prices for new cars due to the
rebate programs offered bydomes(lc automakers.
Gasotlne prices feU 2.3 percent after a 1.7 percent drop In January.
The drop was the biggest since the
2.7 percent drop of Aprtl1981. New
car prices were down O.B percent,
following a 0.1 percent fall In the
previous month. Used car prices
were up 0.5 percent, compared with
the 0.3 percent of January.
Housing costs were up 0.4 percent, renectlng the 0.4 percent rlse
In home prices and a 0.2 percent
decline in mortgage rates. Rent
rose 0.4 percent. Fuel oll prices and
electrlclty costs were doWn while
natural gas prices rose, but at a
slower pace than In January.
Prices for food bought at grocery
stores rose 0.8 percent, ·a little less
than the . 1 percent advance of
January.
Economist Allen Sinal, anticipatIng February's moderate rate,
said, .. We're seeing the benefits of
the severe recession" on lnfiatlon .

Arrest trio
for break-in
Three men ·were arrested Monday by Sher1!f James J . Prollltt on
charges of breaking and entering.
Arrested were Doyle Brooks, W,
Tuppers Plains, Robert Scott
Sprague, 18, 1\ippers Plains, and
Ricky David Srnlth,.21, Reedsvtue.
They were arrested In connectlong
with the allepd brealdng and entering ol the Portland Elementary
School, the Tom Hayman Garage
In Long Bottom and a summer
cabin In Long Bottom !!Wiled by
Jim Ryan, Athens.
.
In other activity, a number o1
· tooiA, vallle!S at over ,$1,&lt;ro were
stolen !rom the Richanlaoft San4
and Gravel Co. over the weekend
and the InCident Is being IDVetttpted. Anyone having any lnlormaUon reprdlng this theft Ia uked 1o
contact the sheriff's olllce.

.
Accident victim. in stable ~ondition
Candy Lynn Caughey, 14, Pomeroy, Is In stable c ondltlon at
Veterans Memorial Hospital where she was' taken by the Pomeroy
Emergency Squad Monday alter being struck by a car on! West
Main St. Pomeroy Pollee said that the girl ran In front of a vehicle
driven by Gene A. Davis, Coltumbus, traveling east on Main. The
accident Is still being Investigated.

Space. shuttle on daily schedule
CAPE CJ\NAVERAL, Fla. -Columbia, Its tall brolled by the sun,
soared almost !lawlessly through space today, Its astronauts eager
to guide the ship through a demanding series Qf tests.
Doctors who spoke by radio with astronauts Jack R. Lousma and
C. Gordon Fullerton belore ihey rettlred for their first night reported
"they're enjbylng what tl)ey're doing."
.
On the astronauts' schedule today were extensive checks of the
50-foot mechanical arm, fiexlng Its metallic muscles ; the llrst serious attempts at processing drugs In orbit, and thermal tests, subjecting the craft to the high heat and deep chill of space.

Charges leveled against Soviets
WASHINGTON - The Reagan administration charged Monday
that Soviet-supplied chemical weapons have killed more than lO,&lt;ro
people ill Afghanistan, LaC$ and Cambodia and appealed to other
nations to join In condemning such practlces.
A State Department official, Gary Crocker, said there are also
reports ol an unknown and unseen "mystery agent" being used
against anti-Soviet rebels In Afghanistan. He said It kUis so swiftly
that It freezes the dead In the positions they are In when It strikes .

U.S. living standards decline
PARIS- Uvlng standards in the United States, Britain and the
Netherlands are decUnlng compared to other non-communist lndustrtallzed natlons, according to the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development.
The OECD, whose members Include the major Western Industrial
!zed nations_and Japan, Issued ligures Monday covering 19'7S-19!ll
The staUstlcs were based on "purchasing power parity," which th1
OECD said eliminated distortions caused by exchange rates ant
provided a more accurate picture of what people can buy with theh
Incomes.

Promises to release prisoner
CAIRO, EGYPI' - Israel had given Egypt the names of nine
Egyptians held In lsraeU jails for non-poUtlcal crimes, such as smuggling, and promised tofreeoneofthemln a week, a Foreign Mlnlstry
spokesman said.
Egypt first asked Israel for the names when normalization talks
between the ~0 former roes started three years avJ after they
signed a peace treaty, the spokesman said Mopday.
He said '!sraelllnally handed over the list last week in Tel Aviv to
visiting Egyptian Foreign Minister Kamal Hassan Aly.

Winning Ohio lottery number .
dra~

CLEVELAND- The winning number
ay night In the
Ohio Lottery's daUy game "The Number"' was 572.
1be lottery reported earnings of $438,539.50 from the wagering on
Its daUy game. 1be earnings came on sales ol $1,002,445.50, whUe
holders of winning tickets are entitled ID share $653,906, lottery officials said.

Weather foreoost
Clear tonight. Lows 35-40. MosUy cloudy WE!(Inesday. Highs In the

low 608. Chance ol precipitation near zero percent tonight and W
percent Wednesday. Winds variable 10 mph or less tonight. .
E'dellded Ohio FOI'eClllt
~unday

lhroalh I!Murday:

.

.

: c-J••fllble llloov'h,.. wl&amp;b a ehMoo of llhowen Thurlday and
Frldar. PariiJ clowdy twurdaJ. mp. In tile 111111 lltaleWkle Thursday, 111ea alllde cooler friday 111111 Salurday with highllln the 40o
iiOrth lo low ........ Ovenqllt lowJ Ia the •

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