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                  <text>he Daily

I
I

b Dick Cavalli

WINTHROP
r.x:&gt;

YOLJ KN::JN WHAT
THE BE5T 11-iiNq

IT LEADS INTO
MAY.

WHAT:.?

Spring storms leave 49 dead

ABOUT MAY 15-=?

I M601NGTO
HATE M'i'SELF
FOR THIS ...

'IOU KNOW WHAT
THE BEST THING
AB:::xsr JUNE 15-::?

LEADS INTO

[X)

JUNE .

I SAWTHAT
ONE COMINGA MILE AWA'i.

JUNE 15THE

MONTI-l WHEN
SCHOOL ENDS!

WHAT ~

-1 4

Priscilla's Pop

by Ed Sullivan

WHY 5o
Ci'EPRE%87,

I HAVE A BIG

STUART&lt;'

TO MAKE .'

I HAVE m CHCJC:)SE.
BET'WEEN MY BIRD CALL
AND MEMBERSHIP IN
THE BN:HELORS ' CLLIB.

OECISION

·· AND I ·ALSO
THE BACHELORS' CWB-·· LOVE TO SIT
OJT HERE AND
CALL BIRDS .'

I LOVE !3EING IN

WHITE TOURS TORNADO DAMAGE - Gov. Frank White helps out
with cleanup operdtions at the southwest Arkansas home where a tornado
killed a family of five. The governor toured the state's tomado'stricktn
areas by helicopter this past weekend. Here White stands in the wreckage
of the house where Robert and Sherry Calhoun and their three children
died ouL,ide of Hope. I AP Laserphoto).

b

.

.

YOU r;;o
BOn-l?

WELL, FOR SOME

STRANGE REASON, MY
CALL ONLY ATTR.ACT5
ONE KIN!/ 0!= 131R!7"·

··· AND THE &lt;3N5
AREN'T TOO
HAPPY ABOUT ITl

WHA.T DO l.rOLl
GET"· NOISY

BLUE JAYS&lt;'

17 counties in flight pattern
COLUMBUS, Ohio - Residents of rural areas in 17 Ohio counties
may be getting "bU2zed" by aircraft being flown at low altitudes on
training routes from Rickenbacker Air Force Base near here.
The newly acquired C-130a transport aircraft will ny over six routes,
genera lly 1,000 feet above ground level at night and 500 feet during the
day. But over unpopulated areas, some da)1ime training will be as low
as 300 feet , according to Air Force Reserve officials.
Counties on the six routes include Franklin, Pickaway, Licking,
Morgan, Hocking, Ross, Vinton, Jackson, Fayette, Perry,
Musklngum, Noble, Athens, Washington, Gallia, Fairfield and Pike.

High winds hamper operation
/
I

WIDTE SANDS MISSILE RANGE, N.M. - Technicians struggled
today against the high winds that have hampered their work since
Columbia landed as they tried to mount the space shuttle atop a
Boeing 747 for its flight to Cape Canaveral, Fla.
National Aeronautics and Space Administration ground operations
manager Jim Harrington said a decision would be made .later today on
whether the coupled aircraft would leave Northrup Strip this afternoon or wait until dawn Tuesdav.

P5;&gt;1Nif0 IN ( ANA0ll

DUSTY CHAPS
~HO IS F.ESfbfJSlBLE FOI2. Sl.JeA~tJ61HIS
~~PLODI~b GlbAR 100M''( HUMIOO~~!

Death sentence hangs in balance

W5LL., ,S1~ '{Ol)
PUT IT 111AT tJJA'{ ...

COM5. COMe, ,,,
OVJ~ UP~D

---~1

CLEVELAND - A possible death sentence hun~ in the balance
today at a sentencing hearing for the first man convicted under the
:.'tate's recently adopted capital punishment law.
Leonard Jenkins, convicted last month of aggravated murder for
the slaying of rookie Cleveland police officer Anthorty Johnson, could
be sentenced to die in the electric chair.

I WIL.L
~w~

'/OUJ2.
1-tO~T"r'!

British secretary resigns post
• •

,, l

..

H5"/, WAAT WAS lt\A.T BIT

N30UT RaJAgotWb M'-1
HO~... '?

'

LONDON - British Foreign Secretary Lord Carrington resigned
today, taking responsibility for his diplomatic failure to prevent
Argentina's seizure of the Falkland Islands.
Carrington quit only hours after the aircraft carrier Invincible,
leading Britain's mightiest fleet since the 1956 Suez crisis, left the
southern naval base at Portsmouth on an 8,0DO-mile, two-week voyage
to recapture the Falklands which Argentina seized Friday.
The resignation, accepted by Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher,
followed three days of mounting demands from newspapers and
lawmakers, including members of the ruling Conservative party, for
him and Defense Secretary John Nott to leave the government over
what critics called the Falklands debacle.

Weather Forecast
Rain changing to snow tonight. Lows in upper 20s: Mostly cloudy
with chance of snow flurries Tuesday. Highs in mld-;!Os. Chance ;of
precipitation 110 percent tonight and 30 percent Tuesday. Winds northerly to northwesterly 1~25 mph tonight.
Exteuded Oblo Forecast
Wednesday lbroup Friday:
Fair Wednesday aDd Tbunday. Cbance ol raiD Friday. Highs ID
mld-301 to mJd.4el Wednesday, u)lper 418 aDd 5GI Tbunday 81111 mJd.
5011 to ibw ... Friday. J,.owt ID upper lee114 to .lald-!11 WeciDelday morDIDg, upperZGII tclllikWDI '1'1111nday aDd mid to upper 3011 Friday.
.~
.
~

~

.,

By Associated Press
A wild spring weekend of snow,
high winds, forest fires and tornadoes bore down on the nation, forcing 200 people to flee Sierra Nevada
avalanches, engulfing Virginia
homes in flames and killing 49
people in a swath of swirlin~
destruction from Texas to Indiana .
"I bet it didn't take five minutes
for that house to burn down," said
Ernest Brookins, a resident of Suffolk, Va., where 17 homes were
destroyed Sunday by forest fires fanned by 50 mph winds.
Snow piled 21 feet deep at Norden
in northern California, threatening
new avalanches today while rescue
workers attempted to determine
how to search for two more victims
at the Alpine Meadows ski resort. An
avalanche there Wednesday killed

state.
In Illinois, the stonn knocked 18
trailer homes off their foundations in
suburban Chicago early Saturday
and blew a DC-9 off a taxi strip while
it was moving to a runway at O'Hare
International Airport. There were no
passengers aboard the Eastern
Airlines jet and the crew was not injured.
Snow in western Pennsylvania
caused an 11-vehicle accident on Interstate 79 that claimed two lives.
Wmds toppled a Conrail freight

six.

day, but there were no reports of
serious injuries. Winds gusting to 50
mph fann ed the flames .
There were nine major fires in
North Carolina. At least one home
and three house trailers were
destroyed as the fires advanced
before 45 mph winds.
"We haven't had weather this bad

train ca rrying chlorine

in Mississippi and two in Missouri .

The death toll in Arkansas reached
14 when a policeman in Conway was
struck by a car and killed at a road
block after the storm .
Other twisters touched down 111
Ohio, Tennessee, Kentucky, In-

di cma , Lo uis iane~ , Pennsylvon1a,
Il\m01 s and Oklahoma .
States reporting other weatherrell·alcd deaths were : WJSl'tHlSI!l , 4:
Ca lifornia . 7: Virg1nw , I : Ohw . I ;

M111nesuta, 1: Michigan. 1: ( ;l•orgla ,
I: Oil ill, I: New York . I , Pennsy lvHnla 2: and lndli;tna . I.

crystals

through Indiana, forcing the
evacution of 200 residents of I.a Porte
County . In Angola, a Tri-State
University professor was killed
when a tree limb hit him.
One hundred forest fires in
Virginia scorched 3,500 acres Sun-

Winds gusted to 81 mph Sunday in
Johnstown , Pa., as the stonn moved
east after spawning weekend tornadoes that killed 28.
Residents of Paris, Texas, were to
bury their eight dead today as relief
agencies sought to help the 200 injured and the thousands left
homeless Friday by two tornadoes.
City Manager Bob Sokoll said 480
homes were destroyed and 397
sustained major damage, making
them unfit for habitation.
In Arkansas, where 13 died in
twisters, Gov. Frank White pulled a
family Bible out of the debris in Conway as workers loaded the
remaining possessions of Ruby
Stu bits, 73, onto a pickup truck .
Her cedar chest was broken. "My
husband bought that for me the first
year we were married, and I thought
more of that than I did all the rest of
the furniture put together," she sa1d.
The remnants of the stonn pushed
eastward Sunday, leaving 9 inches of
snow in some areas of Michigan.
About 500 motorists stranded in
Grand Rapids on Saturday were
able to return to the roads on Sunday. Several thousand customers
were without power around the

in 19 or 20 years,'' said Torn Hegele

of the state Forest Service.
Another stonn was expected to
roll across northern California
tonight, dropping more snow on
Sierra peaks already burdened by
record snowfall in an incessant
series of storms that also routed
hundreds of people from their homes
due to nooding in San Jose.
Up to 200 residents in a three-mile
wide part of western and northern
Olympic Valley, near Squaw Valley
ski resort, were told to leave their
homes because of an avalanche
threat.
"There are apparently some
visibile faulL&lt; directly above those
residences," said Eric Engellenner,
of the Placer County sheriff's department .
Tornadoes caJSed most of the
deaths over the weekend, including
13 in Arkansas, nine in Texas, three

SIFTING THROUGH "V ICTORY" - Mt•mbers of Vietury Raptis!
Church in Paris, Texas sift thmugh thl' rubbh- of their ehun·h. dt•struyt·d
by Friday's tornado. Tht• ch urfh was complt-tely len·led. &lt;hw undaunted
church member raised Old Glury over tht• ('hur('h remains, e~ftn tht· flag
was found in tht• wret·kagt· . 1A P Last·rphoto) .

Storm watch posted in Ohio

.

WHY
CAN' r

1 Secl•ons, 11 Pages
IS Cents
A Multimedia Inc. New spaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, Aprils, 1982

CO 'iOU KNQW WHAT
THE' BE6T THIN&amp;

ABOUT APRIL 15':?

IT

Voi.JO,No.248
Copyrighted 1982

entinel

.,.

•

....

1

''

(

moves east of Ohio tonight. Temperatures will be mosily in the 20s
and 30s through Tuesday and
probably dip into the teens in many
sections Tuesday night.
A gradual wannup is likely for the
middle and latter part of the week.
Alter a taste of spring last week,
Ohio residents were stung by
another blast of winter-like weather
over the weekend as winds blew
down power lines and trees, then

By The Associated Press
The National Weather Service has
issued a winter stonn warning for
this afternoon for the Miami Valley
and central sections of Ohio where 3
to 5 inches of snow may accumulate
by this evening.
A travelers advisory was in effect
this afternoon from the northwest to
the east central sections of the state
with I to 3 inches likely to accumulate.
Snow may accwnulate around an

inch in the northeast by evening.
There will be a mixture of rain and
snow in southern Ohio with little or
no accumulation likely.
Credit for prolonging of winter
weather in Ohio goes to a low
pressure center over Oklahoma ,
which will move to Kentucky by this
evening and to the mid-Atlantic
coast Tuesday morning.

Snow tonight will taper off to
nurries by morning as the low

Fredericktown

in

Knox

County.

Mansfield melereulogist Thomas
Garrett said it appeared the tlc.unage

was caused by a tornado.
Serious property dama ).!e wa s

reported in Madison County as the
result of the same storm front , while
Colwnbus police received an unconfirmed report of a tornado touchdown on the city's northwest side.
Nearly 20,000 customers of Dayton

swept in £reczing temperatures.

Power a nd Lig ht Co. were without

Power outages were corrunon
around the state as several unconfinned reports were made of tornado touchdowns.

electricity Saturday afternoon when
a tree fell on a transmis::;ion and
distribution line. The outage forced
Dayton's three rmjor television
stations orr the air for several

The high winds were vicious
enough to push western Lake Erie
water levels below the point of safe
navigation.
At least six people were injured
Saturday when two mobile homes

minutes.
More than 4,900 t.:ustmner::; of

were

overturne&lt;;i

near

Toledo Edison Co. lust power at
various times during the day.
Power to Defianre Hospit..al was

cut for about 45 minutes early Saturday when a tree fell on a power line.

Hi;i ckup J..! l'rll'r(:ltors Wl'l'l' put tnlu
use.
Tht• t•n tJrP northeast st·ctwn nf
Fmdlay lust l'lednn ty for ctbout
four hours when a et tree fell l)n a

hi gh-tens ton wire an J ca ugh t ftre .

The lllgh Winds blew orr a porillJil
of the Holiday Inn roof at Ohio Turnpike Ex1l J 111 William&lt; County aod
wrappetltl arounJ a power lnw.
Nu rooms were exposed from the
Jamage bul 1t would cost about
$:10,000 to repair the roof.
C111cinnati Gas &amp; Electric Co. also

battled power outages throughout
the da y, &lt;H.'cording to
Richard Hwnmersmtlh.

At

Greater

s pokP sm~m

Clnl'lllllatl

In-

terhationctl Airport, two Delt&lt;J 727s
receivet.J an undetermined amL&gt;unt

of damage Saturday afternoon when
onL' of the planes rolled into tht' other
nne whi ch was parked at thL'
passenge r tumtnal.

WeHare cut under consideration
Bowen said the state has the
responsibility to help those who
can't help themselves. He also pointed out that increasing numbers of
Ohioans are having to turn to
welfare after exhausting their
jobless benefits.
With regard to the bill's 25 percent
surcharge on the state income tax,
designed to produce $437.5 million in
its one year of existence, Riffe said,
"I favor that approach:"
He said he believes a majority of
the House will go along because the
income tax is the most equitable,
especially in bad economic times,
since it is borne by people who have

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - State
senators say cuts in social services
such as welfare benefits are .needed
to offset a projected $1 billion budget
beficit, but House Democrats may
find that a little hard to swallow .
House Speaker Vernal G. Riffe, DNew Boston, says the income tax increase proposed in a Senate-passed
measure aimed at eliminating the
deficit probably is the best way to increase revenues because it affects
people who have jobs.
But Democrats, including state
Sen. William F. Bowen, of Cincinnati, say the social service cuts
are another matter.

Youth cited after wreck
Michael Gray, 18, Rt. 2, Racine, Gray vehicle and heavy damage to
has been cited to Meiga County the hill ear.
Clair Swan, Dexter, informed the
Court on charges of failing to yield
sheriff's
department Sunday that he
following · an accident in Racine
left
his
pickup truck (that had
Saturday at 11:45a.m.
broken
down)
parked near the
According to the sheriff's departSalem
Center
Fire
Station.
ment, Gray was driving a vehicle
When he returned Sunday morthat was owned !lY David Donahue,
Rt. 2, Racine. Gray failed to yield af- ning to pick up the truck the battery
ter stopping at a stop sign at' the' ln- had been taken as well as a 40 chantersectiori of Pearl St., and SR_338 in nel CB radio and a set of sockets.
Racine. Gray's car collided with a The incident is under investigation.
$aturday at 10:30 p.m. a deer was
car driven by Mary Hill Rt. 2,
Racine, was was traveling south on kllled when it ran into the path of a
car traveling on SR 7 driven by Rod338.
there was light damage to the ney Tripp, Rt. 3, Pomeroy.

J

jobs.
The cuts, however, could amount
to 17 percent in some welfare
checks, if benefit tn creases
scheduled for July I are deferred
and a possible across-the-board
slash of 7 percent come&gt; after that.
Aid to Dependent Children, Ohio"s
biggest welfare category with
584,862 recipients. is supposed to be
increased by 5 percent, while
general relief, with 92,512 recipients.
currently is down for a 10 percent increase.

An average ADC family of three
now receiv-es $263 a month which
would increase to $276.15 on July 1 if
the bill is not passed.
But if it is, and the department absorbs the bill's 7 percent agency cut
by lowering benefits proportionately, the same family would get
$244.59.
House Democrats also are expected to scrutinize language which
could prevent restoration of welfare
cuts even if caseloads drop enough
to pennitit.
The bill says any money picked up
as a result of reduced caseloads
must be put by the office of budget
and management into a budget
stabilization, or "rainy day" fund.
Defending the cuts, Sen. Richard
H. Finan, R-Cincinnati, said welfare
had to be included to come up with
the kinds of dollars needed, even
with the new taxes, to wipe out the

state's $1 billltln budgd del in!.
Finan and other Ht·publtc&lt;Jns also
semi welfare caseloads are on ttw

decline and !hat tht• dl'partment had
ovprestim&lt;Jll'd its budget needs.
The welfare reductions ctre bemg
counted on by lhern to ~&lt;J Vt' $190
million, alt hllugh the state Will lose

$76.2

mill ion

111

federal

funds

bt•causc of thL' loss nf federal 111alching fund~ .
Asked about 8tJwcn 's reference to
the uncmplnyt•d on welfart' , Jerrv
Colli::l llllll"l', Cl dcpcH lmen.t

spokesman. &gt;Xlld then probably are
about 8,000 cases mvolving 25.000
reci pients.

Probe incidents
The Pomeroy Poli ce Department
is investigaling several weekend incidents .
Police say that someone threw
paint o~to a car owned by John
Cook, Pomeroy, and parked near the
Liberty Christian Church about 9:30
Sunday. Someone broke into a
pickup truck owned by Bill
Ferguson, Pomeroy, parked in the
Wes~ Main St., area and ransacked a
toor'box and stole the spare tire. A
car owned by Peggy Ellis, Middleport, had damages to a door when
it was parked on the Jones Boys
parking lot and apparently was
struck by another car.

�)

'C ommentary
The Daily Sentinel
IIJ( 'uurtStn-1.'\

'14·992-2 156
l lt:von:UTOTHt-: INTF:Rfo'...\o!TIH'Tit t-: l'tU:H;S.MASIIN A It FA

ROBERT L. WINf;F.TT
PAT WHITEHEAD

BOB HOEFLI('II

untrulkr

DALE ROTHGEB, .JR.
Nt•ws t:thlur
A Mt:MHf&lt;:H uf Tlw A \ M&gt;I 'I&lt;Ih'tl l'n·,:o.. Inland
Amrrinu• Nt· 'A~pll~ ' r l'uhll ~ ht· r ~ A~ ~tl'l ' i ati.,n .

Ut~il)

l' rt'ss A:o.:o&gt;iM'Ia linn a nd lh•·

I.F.Tft:ll~ O F OPI N IH ~ an· ~t· kunh·d . Th•·\ s huuld lw lt·ss than 300 'Anrd~ Inn)! . All
lt'tlt'n. an· suhjt·t·l In r·thtmg 111111 mus t lu- s1giwd 'A ith nmm·, adrln·s:. 11 1111 h·h·phmunumlwr . Nn UIIM):Ot'd ll'lkr' ~ ill bt· publis ht'fl . Lt"th·r.. .. h11u ltl Ot· in gHud Wsh·. il ddrt"lo~oo in.:

j,surs. nut

'Censorship' battle
WASHJNGTON -

l'umt•rny , llhiu

A~s•slllnl l'uhll s ht• r/1

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Monday, Aprils, 1982

~· rsnnalith' s

~

Halving primaries

Romeo and

.J uliet were hav ing the famous

boll'ony conversation, and Juliet
l1sked a good question. " What's in a
ncu ne?" she wanted to kn ow . The U.
S. Supreme Court is puzzling OVl'r
the same industry. The name is
·· l·cnsorship." What's in it?
The hiJ.!h court heard argument
lcts t rnonth on a l"aSe from Long

lslond !hill appears to present for

111-servcd by the current nomlnatmg

lot.
- G1ving caucus s tates g rel1 lcr flexibilit y to set as ldl' uncwnm1Lted

delegates.
- Changing state laws and party ru les "to ass un· that all dd egatcs, nn
rnl1ller how they are chosen. would reUtrn the optron of exercising in·
dependent judgment 111 their conve nti on vote."
- Including members of Congress, governors and hrgh pa rty officials as

ex-off1 cio delegates who would not be bound by the result of delegate selection contests .
~ E n£on: ing a strict time frl1me within which primaries, caucuses cmd

"beil Uiy contests" or straw polls ma y be held , beginning no eo rlier lhon lhl'
first week in March and ending no la ter than the first week iil Junt•.
- Raising the ]unit on individuct l cl1 rnpai gn contri but iuns from $1,000 to

$5,000.

B~rry's World

members have both H rr ght and an

ment right was at stake?

obligation tu see that schtXilli braries

" The right to reccivt' infunnation ," Ciline the reply. " The
right to read il bt&gt;t&gt;k is t·lcarly

refl ect h&gt;t'al mores a nd do lltll tram-

ple upunl ucal values.
How far dues this supposed
wanted to know if a local board,

deed. sa1d the boa rd's counsel.
Justict· Stevens asked if tilt' board
could rernove all books that cunlain
displ1raging rema rks about blacks

Fret· St·hthll District yielded to the

and Jews. " Absolutely nul," sai d lht•

hit list of ct pctrents' oq._:l1 ni za tron anti
rl' lllllVCd nilll' bonks fnr111 tht• hi J.! h
schno ll ibrary. Five students latchet!
trnto l1 libertanan lawyer a nd nust'd.
erie; of " Censorship!" a nd " Fir:-;t
A111endm ent freedoms !" A U.S.

counsel. Well, then, as kt~ d severa l
justit'L'S, what 1-!Uidelines control the
remova l of l'Vcn one book? It turned

NEW YORK I AP) - Major pires, said the meeting began at 6
League baseball, hit by an wnpires' p.m. Sunday. "We're still fighting
strike seven years ago, apparently over some basic concepts," he said
wi ll not undergo such upheaval in during a midnight break in the
1982.
negotiations. But he sa id both sides
The Major League Umpires were close to an ag reement and it
Association and presidents Lee Mac- seemed unlikely that there would be
Phail of the American League and any disruption to the start of the 1982
Chub Feeney of the National League season.
Phillips also had scheduled a news
were meeting in the predawn hours
conference
today " to announce the
today, trying to agree on a new contract.
\- situa ti on" in terms of the
Richie P hillips, counsel to the um- negotiations.
Sala ries, improved pensions ilnd

When opposing counsel bt'ga n tu

inherent in First Amendment
ana lys is ."
But is there a right for t'Vl'I'Y hi J.! h
schtH ll student to read every book '!
Is lhcrt~ a rij.!ht, asked Chid Justi ce
Burge r, " to a particular book in a

particular place ' "
" AIJsolutcly nut, " sa id counsel.

Wel l, then, the court wonderetl.
how dn Wt' constitutiona ll y deterrnrrw which bnHks the s tudenl'l ha vt•
a right to rt•ild, and which b&lt;M&gt;k s the
students ha ve no ri J.! ht to read ? Do

no right to reatl Orwell 's " 1984,"
whirh the board has ordered
n• rnuvt•d? In the case a t hand, thl'
bol1nl bwmed one book bcc:miSl' of
" bl1d las tc." Justict•'Stevens wa nh'tl
to know whctt "bad t..a~te" lflt•ans. If
th1s IS a ctlns titutiona l standart.l .
whost• rd cas of bad task should
lhl' bo CJrd' s, th e
rrt'VHII
libra n a n's, the students' or the nbjl'd iiWparen ts'?
" These l'ast·s gd us mt u a F irst
Alllt'lldi!Jt'llt quicksand ... Olll' nf the
atlornt·ys rema rk ed. And sure
ennu i.! h. tlwse l'l1ses do just that. Jn a
fret· l'ountry, tt'l'nagt'rs ha\"e a right
tu re~ut anything tlw y can gel therr
hand!:i o11. But the notion tha t
teenagt· rs have a right to read
·· vulgctr" books in a llix-suppori ed
srhnol library is a notion thCit, cnn-

stitullunally speaking, must have

slutlenb haw a n ght to read Or- James Mad1son spinning in his
well's ·· Animal Farm," which thc grave.

!
"Sure. Grampa, I'd like to go for a walk with
you. What kind of special expensive gear do we
need for THAT sport?"

Today in history
Today ts Monday, Aprt15, the 95th day ofl982. ThereareZ70days left In
the year.
Today's highlight In lllstory:
On Aprt15, 1975, Natlonallst China's President. Chiang Kai·Shek, died at the age of 89.
On this date:
In ~. all Gennan chlldren between the ages of 10 and 13 were ordered
to serve In the Hitler Youth Organization.
In 1958, Fidel Castro began what be called his "total war" against the
Batista government In Cuba.
In 1969, a foor-man Brttlsh expedition reached the North Pole aftter a
14-month, 13-hundred-mtle trek by dog sled.
And tn 1981,
President Abolhassan Bani-Sadt called on the Egyptians to overthroW President Anwar sactat tor granting asylum to the
deposed Shah of Iran.
Ten years ago: North VIetnamese lorces In South VIetnam opened a new
~enslve and drove within 80 miles of Saigon.
Five years ago: Egyptian President Anwar Sadat, In Washington, asked
the Ulllt.ed States to start supplytng Egypt with arms, Including tighter
planes.

u.n·s

gamt's during the just-concluded
spring training . In 1979, wnpires sat

The umps sta ged a seven-week

out !-ipring train ing and picketed

strike of their own in 1979 . The
leagues hired substitute wnpires

pense allowa nces and permittL&gt;d umpi res to take in-season vaca ti ons.
The umpires ' worked exhibition

ballparks on opening day .

Jackson, in his Anaheim Stadium

thret..:....run sixth inn ing was the big

as the

Range rs poun ded Da ve

struck out seven batters in fi ve in-

debut with the Angels, batted once,
struck out, then left the game to nur-

blow in Houston's triumph over
Toronto - but it was overshadowed
by J .R. Richard's brief and ineffective appeara nce in the eighth inning.
Richard, pitching in a game
situation for the first time since a

Righetti . Lee Mazzill i, in his debut
with Texas after being obta ined

nings to trim ll&gt;e Twins in the
Metrodume.

from the Mels, went hitl ess in three

Gaylord Perry, ht!adi ng into the

at-bats as the des ignated hitter.
Dilrrell Porter's three-run shot
and Steve Braun's two-run clout
carried St. Louis past the Mets, who

season three vi ctories shy of 300 for
his big-league coreer, two-hit Siln

mutual agreement Hhe Mariners

left for Minnesota I.
Ron Hassey doubles to break a
!Uth-mning lie, then Von Hayes added a sac rifi ce fly to sea l
Cleve la nd 's vi ctory over the
Brewers.

stroke nearly killed him in June
t980, took the mound with two outs
and promptly walked the first three
Toronto batters he faced . But he got
Glenn Adams to ground to first. ending the inning.
Larry Parrish hit an RBI-smgle in
Texas' four-run first inning and

Ray Knight's two-run double in a

cracked a twl}-run homer in the fifth

were nt}--hit into the seventh in ning
by St ~ v e Mura an d Dave LaPo int

before Hubie Brooks singled.
Jim Rice set a Boston spring
training ba tting-a ve rage record of

.478 as he had two hits and a runbatted-in against Detroit. The
Phillics erupted for seven runs in the
fourth inni ng and La rry Christenson

Diego uver six

innings in the

Mariners' split-squad triumoh.

BACK UP NORTH - Cincinnati Reds Manager John McNamara
tries to keep wann during an exhibition game with the Pittsburgh Piralt's
in Columbus Sunda y. Temperatures were far from tht• sprin~ training 70s
and 80s falling around the thirties. The Piratt•s also (' ool t'd Cindnnati win*

ning :H. I AP Lascrphuto 1.

Windblown
long tenn, all right, and one much
deba ted by politicians and
economists. But at a lime most of
the nation is struggling to pull out of

economy .
As many economists see it, if

The Reagan administration hopes
increased savings eventually will
create a pool of investment money
big enough to finance both business
expansion and huge federal deficits
- red ink now expected to be $100
billion or more for at least the next

Rea ga n himself proclaim ed
savings progress in his recent
speech to the National Association of
Manufacturers and again last week
in remarks to the National
Association of Realtors.
The rate, measuring new personal
saving as a percentage of after-tax
income, was 5.1 percent in the final
quarter of 1980 and dropped· to 4.6
percent in the first quarter of 1981 as
the new administration took over.
But it gradually rose to 6.1 percent in
the final quarter of the year and that

few yea rs.

was the

recession?

increase Reagan

was

referring to.

However, the rate was declining
again by the end of thai fourth quarter and now has fallen for four
straight months, according to Commerce Department figures. In fact,
the rate dipped below 5 percent in
February on its way to what
probably will be a first-quarter rate
of aboul5 percent.
Reagan didn't mention that recent
decline, which occurred during the
worst months of the recession.
The savings rate usually rises in a
recession, since spending is usually
way down and people are more
careful about going into debt.
Lawrence Kudlow, an associate
director at the Office of
Management and Budget, said last
week that " l am somewhat concerned by the fact that the month-to-

nounced by private industry.
As millions of job seekers become
more desperate for work with each
passing day, President Reagan has
surfaced to proclaim his irritation
with the cormnercial television networks

for

their

'' downbeat"

coverage of the situation.
" It IS news that some fellow out in
South Succol&lt;lsh somewhere has
been laid off," said a sarcastic
president, "that he should be interviewed nationwide."
What Reagan won't or can't
recognize - perhaps because he
seldom spends much time with
anybody outside government except
business executives and a small circle of wealthy California friends- is
that the problem is not limited to
South Succotash.
It is nationwide, it is severe and it
is rapidly destroying the good will
the president enjoyed among the
nation's voters only one year ago.
When the TBS News-New "York
Times Poll recently asked a nationwide sample of men and women
whether any adult in their
households had been out of work and

actively looking for a job during the
past year, almost unc~ third replied
" yes."

Moreover, almost two-thirds of
those surveyed said someone they
knew well was jobless and actively
seeking employment at the t1me the
poll was being conducted.
Early last year, the NBC NewsAssociated Press national survey
found that respondents ov.erwhelmingly endorsed - by a 63-27
margin - the statement that
·:Rllllald Reagan has shown he
really cares about people like me."
Early this year, however, voters
rejected the same statement by a 4947margin.
Finally, a recent ABC NewsWashington Post survey found that
52 percent of those polled thought
"Reagan cares more about serving
upper-income people," while only 47
percent thought he was concerned
about serving the poor, middleincome people or all citizens
equally.
Where did those people get the
idea that the president might be insensitive to their problems?

home runs
defeat Reds
COLUMBUS, Ohio I APJ - Steve
Nicosia and Lee Lacey hit windblown home runs and Paul Moskau,
pi cked up on waivers from
Baltimore this week, got the victory
as the Pittsbur~ h Pirates defeated
the Cincinnati Reds :H in the team's
final exhibition game Sunday.
Moskau. traded by the Reds in the
off-season for third baseman Wayne
Krenchicki, pitched four innings in
relief of Pirate sl&lt;l rter Eddie
Solomon. He allowed no earned runs
and three hits in his second appearance for Pittsburgh before
being relieved by Kent Tekulve in
the eighth.
The Reds knocked Tekulve from
the box in the ninth when Paul
Householder hit a leadoff double,
Clint Hurdle singled, Alex Trevino
walked and German Barranca
grounded out to score Householder
to pull Cincinnati within one run at 5-

month savings rate nwnbers have
not shown the normal cyclical
rebound one would expect during a
recession ."

But is it something Reagan or his
advisers should worry about'
Lacy Hunt, chief economist for
Fidelity Bank in Philadelphia , says
that at least in the short term, " if
they really thought about it, they
might not be all that much in favor
of a higher savings rate ."
EveP if Americans could save
more of their income and spend less,
such a move away from buying companies' goods would hardly help
business pull out of the recession, he
said.
And if the economy doesn't
recover, he added, businesses won't
have much, if any, profit - the other
main source of money for expansion.

·· ..- .. ·· ...

' .

.'' · '•.
. '.
:- ·~..
. :·· .. .~

. . . . ·&gt;
·~

v.

. . '•·.:.:....' &gt;.'·
. ., ..

. ·..

,

4.

Rod Scurry then entered the game
and struck out Ron Oesler and
retired Dan Driessen on a grounder
to ea rn the save.
Charlie Leibrandt went seven innings and allowed 12 Pittsburgh hits
in absorbing the loss, his second
aga inst three spring training vic-

Per haps it was wh en he
proclaimed !hill there were plenty of
jobs being offered through clilssified
advertisemenb in newspaper when,
in fact, a vast nwnber of the
positions advertised in major urban
areas require specialized technical
skills.
Perhaps it was when he suggested
that jobless workers in areas of high
- unemployment could resol ve their
problems merely by moving
elsewhere -

Pag e

significant gai ns in sala ries, ex-

nosed out Toronto 3-2, Texas bombed
the New York Yankees IHJ, Pittsburgh tripped Cincinnati 5-4,
St.Louis beat the New York Mels 7-4,
Boston shaded Detroit 4-2,
Philadelphia outlasted Minnesota
11-!1, a sp lit Seattle squad downed4
San Diego 4-1, and it was Wichita of
the American Association 4, Montrea l I. Rain wiped out the CubsWhile Sox gil me in Chicilgo and the
other Seattle split-squad game.

WASHINGTON (APJ - Contrary
to President Reagan's claims, the
nation's savings rate is falling, not
rising. But for now, at least, it's
probably a good thing for the

r;~~~~~~~~~

minors and filling in with college
and semipro wnps.
That strike ended May 18 with a
three-year contract that provided

Miwaukee 8-6 in 10 innings, Houston

Reagan's sensitivity_____R_ob_ert_w_ai_ter_s

!'
'

that year, promoting ~orne from the

E lswehere, San Francisco ripped
Oakland 11-5, Cleveland edged

FalJJing savings rate may be good

MIAMI I NEAl- When the Postal
Service announced recently that it
wils searching for people to fill 700
jobs that will become vacant
through attrition here in the next two
years, agency officials expected a
flood of job seekers.
To cope with the expected ons laught of requests from unemployed South Florida workers
seeking a new source of income, farsighted Postal Service managers
were prepared to distnbute 40,000
job applications .
That's 200 applicants for every job
- and it's distressingly typical of a
pattern that has developed
throughout the country at a time
when one o~t of every 11 members of
the nation's work force is unemployed. ·
In New York City, the Postal Service received more than 225,000 employment applications alter it advertised the availability of 2,500
jobs. In Kansas City, Mo., 18,000
people applied for 60 Postal Seryice
jobs operating letter-sorting
machines. The same dismal
situation prevails when nontechnical job openings are an-

asslgnments

spring tra ining season.

In the casse at hand, to quotl' frnrn
dissent ing Jud g.e Wl11tcr R. Mansfreld 1r1 ltll' 2nd Ci rcurt , lhl're wHs unthsputed l' Videncc that the ba nned
books con tl11 11l'tl; " indl'cent matter.

Thal's an important matter for the

rotatin~

for the playoffs and World Series
were the basic iss ues. Some owners
feel basebilll should assign its best
wnpires to the most important
games, rather than deciding the
assignments by rotation .
The agreement expired at the end
of the strike-marred 1981 season .
Umpires were paid f&lt;&gt;r the time the
players were out.

against Atlanta , was ca nceled by

But he IS expected to be in the lineup
Tuesday night in the Angels' opener
inOaklilnd.
And the Angels, after beating Los
Angeles 2-1 Friday night and 9-1
Sa turday night, lost to the Dodgers
:H Sunday in the wrapup of the 1982

~ 1)11-IH~.

worsening the recession .

the policy of

By The Associated Press
The paid &lt;IFOwd nwn bered 61,026
fons, the largest crowd ever irf the
ballpark. If they came see the
California Angels win, they didn 't
get what they wanted. And if they
came to see Reggie Jackson, well,
they didn 't get much for their
money.

se his slightly strained ca lf muscle.

It 's a diff1 cu lt case. both semanlicillly and cunslllutiunally. "Cen-

Americans were banking more and
spending less, the slow sales pace in
many industries would slacken further, almost surely lengthening and

The Daily Sentinel

61,026 watch Reggie strikeout

DIStri ct Court threw out the studen-

sors hip." let us face it. is a dirty
word . Just about everyone opposes
" t•t• nsnrshrp." The noun carries all
tlw hectvy connntations of bluenoscd
t·onunittees, sniffrng a bout fur
sornel hrn g they finO morall y.
Slll' lally or polilicl1lly objectionable .
" EllitDrict l judgment," on the other
hand , has a mee sound. '' The in·
forrnL'li judgment uf c-t tra ined
lib ranl1n" rs an even hap pier cumbrnatinn of wnrds. Onl' hears nver·
tones in thrs Sl'ln&lt;m ti c dispute fro111
Orwt•ll 's ·· Anirnl1 1 Fa rrn ." Censor:-;hlp 1s be~-a-i:t ll . Librarians arc

IS

had no

Justice Rehnquist l eapt.~l on the constitutional issue. What First Amend-

l'ornposed of Dclllt&gt;l'rats, ctmld ban
all books l'O nktining favorable
refen•nces to Republicans. Nn, in-

Headed by former Defense Secretary Melvin R. Laird. a Wisconsin
Republican . and former Sen. Adlai E. Stevenson Ill , an Illinois Denwcral.
the cmmmsswn was established by the While Burkett M1llcr Center of
Public Affairs at the UmvcrSIIy of V1rgillla .

by the belief that the public mtcn•sl

lt ~l1 1 l~rartl

Christ. " Cuunsel fur the lucal school
board arg ued that the elected board

before : What arc lht· linuls, if any.

ts'
L'Oinp la int on s umma ry
judgment. but the 2nd Circuit reversed . 2-1, a nd sent the matter ba ck for
tric-tl. Now the casl' is in the hi gh
l'ourt's ll1 p.

system."
The commission, which took tes timony from about 1.000 people, sc-tid the
current nominating system " is 1110rc the result of unintended conseque nces
and mutual mrscalculations tha n delrbt.•rate design .
" MoreoVl' r, nnmw l'laims fl'S pnnsibility fnr this sy stl'll ! bec&lt;HJSi' rH r orw
eVL'r wan ted it to be as cumberso rT il'. cmnplex and confusing as it is. '·
The grou p sl1id rl was adVOl'l1 tin g a sma ll nwnber of practical changes
which r ould hi.· rmplernentcd inuned rl1tcly .
However, there appears to bt no inclination on the pl1 rl uf either the
Dermx:ral'i or Republicans tu jettison their own plans 111 favnr of the l.alrdStevensoncmru mssion views.
The Rcpublrcctns have no plctns for chctllJ.! eS 111 therr rule:-; bdore their
1984 co nve ntion . The Democrats ct rc rewrilln/.! their ruil's ct nd ct n · l'XJK'l'ted
to approve changes at o party meeting later thrs nwnth.
The rccmmnendl1 tions uf the I ,Cjini-Stevcnson corrunrsswn 1nclude :
- Redu dn~ the num~r of prcs 1dentictl primaries to a maximum of 16
ami schedulin J.! them regiona ll y by time zones. In each c lcl'lion yea r, the or·
der in which the region'l would hold their prima ri es would be determined by

out that the
guidelines.

argue for the students' right to read ,

authority extend ? Justice O'Connor

Calling the presidential nornin&lt;-~lin g system " t· umbcrsomc, coplex: and
confusing," a bip(utisan eommis!)ion has reeonunended halving till' num ber
of primaries and slwrtenin g the time period for selectin g ncttionctl co nve ntion delcgctles.
The corrunission ct lso urged increasing the influence of eleded ct nd party
offi cictls ctl conventions a nd eliminat ing rules bmdmg delegates to support
the resull'l of prirnar ies and ce~ u c u se!).

Also serving on the commiss ion's executi ve board Wl'rc Robe rt Stra uss,
former DemotTatie Pctrty chai rr mm, a nd Anrll' Wex le r. ct Whitl' HoUSl' ct idl'
during the Ca rter administre~tion .
" From both e nd~ of the politi ca l spectrum comt· demand.'i fnr chan ge,"
sa id the comm ission report. ·'Thi s new rnovernenl knows no pa rt isalcast,
nor does 1t sed to benefit a ny one candidl1 tc or facti on. ltrs molrva ted solely

James J. Kilpatrick

vul garities, . profanities, explicit
sexul11 descriptions or allusions,
sexual perversions, or dispa ragi ng
rema rks abuut blacks, Jews, or

Pom eroy- Middl e port, Ohio

Umpires'close to agreement

~--~~.~-~--------------------------lrbnman presumably rtpprnvt·s, but

the first time, oddly enough, an issue
thl1t must have l1 risen 10,000 times
upu11 t he powers of a local school
board over lhl' remuvl11 uf books
fro111 Cl school library ?
This parti cular case a rose 111 Scptl'rnber 197J. when the Board nf
Educa twn of lsla nd Trees Union

Monday, Aprils, 1982

tories.

Cincinnati scored two runs in the
second on a triple by Hurdle, an
error by left fielder Lacey and a
double by Cesar Cedeno.
The Pirates lied it in the third
when Solomon singled and stole
second. Omar Moreno singled and
Lacey hit a sacrifice fly . Dave
Parker tripled to ril(ht to score
Moreno for the second run.
The Pirates went ahead for good
when Bill Madlock doubled to right
to lead off the sixth, and Nicosia
followed with a two-run homer.
The Reds closed the gap to 4-3 in
their half of the sixth when shortstop
Dale Berra bobbled Oester's grounder to open the inning, Driessen
singled to left and Eddie Milner
singled to center, scoring Oester.
Lacey· hit his fourth home run of
· spring training in the eighth, a solo
shot off Lei brandt.

an option that i:;

trawnatic for all and unavailable to
many.
Perhaps it was when federal officials recently acknowledged that
not one of the air-traffic controllers
fired last year by the president had
since been hired for a civilian job in
the government, despite Reagan's

proclamation almost four months
ago that he would allow them to a(&gt;ply for such posb ilS an act of "cumpassion."

Indeed, if the president truly cares
about the plight of the country's ·
unemployed workers, he hasn't dune
much to manifest his "compassion"
- and the voters know it.

·Long wins

oOoNESBURY

marathon

I

ATHENS, Ohio (AP) - BiU Long
of Berea scoFed a ~second victory
Sunday in the chilly, . wlnd-blojl'n
15th annual Athens Mara.thon.
Long, 28, turned the 26-mile, 385- ·
yard course in 2 hours, 31 minutes
and 33.6 seconds. That was two
seconds off the 1981 winning time by
Joseph Metzger of Muncie, Ind., who
did not compete this year. ,
1!1 second place was ·David Ellis,
22, of Colwnbus, In 2:32:13. The top
female flnlsher was defending
champion Marie Burleson, 33; of
Columbus, in3:25 :03.

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�Page-4- The Daily Sentinel

Veterans continue chase
toward impressive
goals
.
By Associated Press
The 1982 baseball season is ur&gt;derway, with games scheduled in
Ba ltimore a nd Cincinnati, and lor a
nwnber of veterans, it marks the

reswnption or the chase toward impressive career goals.
Before the last out is recorded
sometime in October, Pete Rose,
Gaylord Perry, Nola n Ryan, Carl
Yastrtemski and a host ol others
could attain significant lifetime
achievements.
Philadelphios Rose, who will
celebrate his 41st birthday on April
14, goes into the season with 3,697
career hils. He is 74 away !rom Hank
Aaron's total Qf 3,771, second on the
all-time list behind the legendary Ty
Coqb. A year ago, Rose opened the
season 74 hils short ol Stan Musial's
National League record, a mark he

Derby Sunday afternoon • t Santa Anita Park in Arcadia, Cali!. I AP Laserphotol .

WINS BY A NOSE - Muttering, inside near the
rail, with Lalli! Pincay up, ht•ld off the challenge nl
Prince Spellbound 151 to win the $301,300 Santa Anita

Muttering in derby picture

lucky Derby picture Sunday with a
nuSt' Vll'lory 111 the $301.300 Santa

Won, who ran away from
Shunatoree 111 the $84,600 Gotham at
Aqueduct, leaving Shimatoree's
chances of going to Louisvi lle in
question.
Before Dawn, the 1981 2-year-old
lilly champion, also might have lost
any chance ol starting in the Derby
when she finished third in the
$271,700 Fantasy Sa turday at
Oaklaw n Park .
" Timely Writl'r is a super horse,"
sa id Dominic lmpresl'ia , the trainer
who picked up the colt for $13,500 at
a yearling sale in 1980 lor brothers
Fra ncis and Pe ter Martin .

t\nila

Prince

" Everyt hing he doc~. he does right."

Spt'llbou nd . the only member uf the
nim•-horsc field nut nominated fur
Ihe btg ri:tl'l' &lt;Jt Louisville .
Another Kentuck y Derby can-

In the Ftonda Derby, he played it
Star Ga llant's way a nd beat that
cult, who had won a ll lour ol h1s
previous starts, by Iwo icn~ths .
Many observers thought thai w1lh
the speedy Distincti ve Pro sera!-

By Associated Press

Timely Writer is the horse lo beat
1n the Kenlu cky Derby, and Muttering has earned at chcmce at
beat in ~ him on the lirsl Saturday in
May .
Timely Writer, who had beaten 15
other 3-year-olds in the F'lcuningu

March 6, whipped six rivals Satu rday in the $250,000 Florida Derby at
Gulfslream Park and soltd1fied his
role as the lop Kenlucky Derby conte nder .
Muttcn ng showt•d up in the Ken -

Derby

uvcr

dulah· to t•merge wa s Air Forbes

chcd beca use ol leg injury, Star
Ga llant , also a speed horse, would
set his own pace and either steal the
race or have enough left to hold orr
the stretc h-running Timely Writer.
Star Ga llant, ridden by Sandy
Hawley, sel a slow pace ol 471-5
seconds lor the hall mile and I :364-0
lor the m1le.
But Jell Fell never let Timely
Writer run worse than fourth or
more tha n six lengths orr the lead.
Timely Writer swept into contention
on the turn , took the lead passing the
eighth pole and completed the 1 •
miles in 1:491-5 under 122 pounds.
Reginald N. Webster' s Our
Escapa de, 122, fini shed third, c1ghl
lengths behind Star Ga llant, 122,
owned by Mahmoud Fuslok .
Timely Writer paid $3.60 in earning $150,000 to boost his career
bankroll to $518,31I.

fiREENSBOHO , N.C. IAPI Danny Edwards, whu hadn'I expected tl) mak e tl, i.s 1n the Ma.slers.
Anti Bobby Clampell , who full y experled to make 11, whu planned on
the tnp lu Augusta , Ga ., to the extent he 'tl made housing anti pl&lt;.tne
rcservatlllns, is out. He will be
a mong the m1 ssing thi:-.; week when
the ga llic 's uut.slanding playrrs
J.w lht•r fur tilt' ftrst of the yea r's four
llli:ljor tests of golfing grea tne:-;.s.
Monnenls aller Edwards had holed
" 3-loot bogey pull un the final hole
for il une-shu t vil'lory over Clampett
in the Greater Gn·cnsboro Open,
Danny recc1vcd a telephone ca ll
from Col. Dav1d Davis ol the
Au~ usla Nat ional Golf Cl ub with the

formal invitatiOn, the one reserved
for the winner of this event if he
hadn't ~reviou:-; l y qualified .
i
II was !he telephone ca ll the 22ycar-uld Cla mpel t wanted so
desperately to receive .
" I' ve been thinking about Augusta
since Decembt!r. And I wa::; thinking
about it all day today," said Clampelt, who needed a victory here lo
qua lily for the Masters field .
Ed ward::), who had planned on a
lwt}-We~k vacation, has to make
some adjustments. He's in the
Masters and also became eligible lor
the foll owing week's Tournament ol
Champions - when he'd expected to
bt· participating in the other hall of

Indians open season
at Milwaukee
SUN CITY , Ariz. 1API - The starling lineup the Cle veland Indians
plan lu dtspla y when they open the
regular season Tuesday afternoon
contains two new faces and underscores the cl ub's new philosophy.
The power-laden Milwaukee
Brewers will be hosting a Clevela nd
learn thai is practically devoid or
power. The India ns' only ser ious
home run threat is cleC:Jnup hitter
Andre Thornton, whu has m1ssed
most ()f th t• past two seasons because
nf injuri es.
Insll•ad . Cle veland has put
together il tectJJI based on speed, pitching and defense . Leadoff hitter
Miguel Dilune won the left field job
over 1980 American League Rookie
ollhe Year Joe Charboneau because
Dil one has blistcnng speed, while
Charboneau's biggest asset ts his
power.
Third baseman Toby Harrah is
slated to bat second , moving up !rom
the filth s pot. Manager Dave Ga rcia
said Harrah's bat control, his ability
to take a pitch and his good base runnin g ability earned him the
promotion in the order.
First baseman Mike Hargrove,

,.

,,

-·

the club's most consistent performer , returns in the third po::;ition.
H'lt'
·
d
1 mg beh md th e d· e::;Jgnate
hitter,
Thornton, will be Bake McBride,
. d r
lh
Ph'l
1 a de IPh'Ia
acqutre
rom
e
Phillies in an off-::;ea::;on trade for
'( h S'd M
P1 c er 1 onge .
McBride, a proven .300 hitlt!r in
th N (' J 1
had
bl
e a tona .eague, · pro ems
with his knees last sea::;on that con·
b ( G ·
'd
. d lh'
l muc
ts spnng, u arcJa sa l
the ri ght fielder has shown he can
still run.
Catcher Ron Hassey will hit sixth,
r0 II
db
t r· ld R' k M
owe Y cen cr IC er IC
anning.
Sec 0 nd ba.semC:Jn J ac k P creont e, a
left-handed hitler, is also new to the
lineup. He came to the Indians in an
oil-season trade with the Los
Angeles Dodgers a nd pleased
Cleveland ollicials with his defensive work and his hitting.
"Perconte
tough
kid,'; Garcia
said.
" I knowishea is
a left-handed
hitter, but he hits lefties a nd righties
the same. I plan to play him all the
time until he shows me he can't do
the job. I know we have Alan Bannister who can fill in at second, but
we'll stick with Jack for now.

h1s tw~sport career as a race car
driver.
Edwan.ls, whose two previous tour
victories had come in the 1977
Greensboro tournament and the 1980
National Team Championship with
his brother Danny, won this one with
a front-running, wind-blown final
round ol 75 - 3-ovcr-par on lhe
Foresl Oaks Country Cl ub course
that was scoured with winds gusting
up to 40 miles an hou r.
Edwards, winner or only $4,547
earl ier this season, picked up $54,000
from the total purse or $300,000 with
his winning total or 285 - 3-under
par. Clam pett, who chased bul never
caught Edwards throughout the day,
had a closing 73 and a 286 total.
He was followed by Jack Renner,
one of three men able to break par
on the final day. Renner was alone a t
287, one under, after a 70. Woody
Blackburn, 73-288, was next, with
Britis h 0 pen champion Bil I Rogers
and Ben Crenshaw tied at 289. CrenS haw had
· a 69 , Rogers 72.
Edwards sta rted the day with a
three-shot lead and retained sole
control of the top spot all the way,
despite a double booey on the sevenh
th. Clampetl, who also had some
troubles in the wind and mi::;sed 11
green::;, closed to within one shot
with 3 birdie on the 16th, but dropped
two shots back when he bogeyed the
17th from a bunker.
That sent Edwarili; to the final
hole with a two-shot leC:Jd . He needed
it. He drove into a fairway bunker,
hit the lip comin" out, reached the
t&gt;
green in three and had to make a 3foot second putt for the bogey that
won it.

needs three victories for 300 and can

also move closer to Walter Johnson's ali-time strikeout record ol
3,508. Perry goes into 1982 with 3,336
strikeouts, second on the ali-time lis!
11nd 172 s hort or Johnson's record.
But other pitchers could get there
first.
The main threal would seem to be

ti ed in June and burst past in

Ryan, who needs 259 strikeouts to

August. He is now 495 hits away
!rom Cobb's career total ul 4,191 a nd
is determined to reach that mark
before he leaves basebalL
Rose can make progress in three
ot her categories as welL With 11,910
at bats, he needs 454 to tie Aaron's
all-lime record ol 12,364. He has
averaged 640 at bats a year
throughout his career, so the mark
seems entirely within reach. He also

reach Johnson. That is a total the
flame-throwing Houston pitcher has
surpassed in six different seasons in
his brilliant career.
Ferguson Jenkins, signed to a free
agent contract by the Chicago Cubs,
needs just 38 strikeouts to become
the seventh pitcher in history to
reach 3,000 lor his career. Two ol
those who got there before him,
Steve Carlton ol Philadelphia and

•

Scoreboard...
Starting pitchers

Transactions

8y Tht• All!iodaled Prvss
AMERICAN J.EA(;UF.
Kansa~

Monday'sGa mt's
C1t y d~urutn.J \l-Ilt

HI

Be~ltl ·

more 10 MartLIIc'l \4-:i l

Only ganw scheduled
l'ut'sduy's Gumt•s
Turunlu •St1l'11 11 · \0) al Dt'lrmt 1Mur n s
14--71
Tt'Xa .~
Tltlliltla 4-Hll at Nt•w Yurk
•&lt;;urdr)' ll-5 r
Aqsh•r 1Turn·L 10-:l t at Ch r nt~H •Burn.~
1

,.,.,

Clevt"lantl Barker S-7r otl MIIWi!Ukt•c
Vut'kuvwh 1+-1 t
St'it ltl•· llia nnr!&gt; lt'r 9-9 1 at Mmrlt'sol&lt;t
•Ht·tlft•rn 9-8t, •nt
Calrfurma 1K Fnr.~rh 11 -71 at OHklitJHI
1

1

Edwards takes Greensboro

needs 55 games to tie Willie Mays lor
filth place on the a li-time games
played list at 2,992, and 34 runs
scored to tie Musial's filth-place
total oll,949.
Perry, who's 43 now, signed a freeagent contract with the Seattle
Mariners and gel&lt; a chance to reach
the 300-victory plateau, a milestone
last accomplished in 1963 by Hall ol
Fa mer Early Wynn .
The veteran right-hander, who
could be called the ancient Mariner,

l[.;m).!fon l

12-!0l . •Ill

Unl\· ..:outtt•s sdwdult•d
·
W.-tlnt'!lduy's {;;~m.-,.
K&lt;:~nsas l'tlv at Balt1
ttmn·. 1n1
&amp;iilllt· at ·Mrnrwsul&lt;t . 1111
Caltlurtlta at Oaklantl. 1nt
Ont~· ..:wrws sehctlull'll
.

NATIONALLEAGI JF.
Munday' sGu mt'~

Chtral(o 1Btrd 4-51 at Cm1·1nnat• 1Sutu
12-91

Onlv 1-:illllt' ,.,·hcdull'I.J
·
Tut•sduy's f:amt•s
Muntreitl Hu..:crs lZ-.'11 ill l ' rtl~ Uur ~ l l
1 H.hotlt•n 9--41
San Frannst'tl 1Hullanll 7-5 111 foillt· fl-61
;tl Lus An..:cll'.' 1Hcuss 10-4 1
New Yurk t7.&lt;1rhr} 7-14 1 at l'hllittlt:lplua
1Carlton 13-4 1
St. Lours B Furst·h 10-51 at Huusl&lt;lll
1Ryan !Hi t
Atl;mta 1Mahkr 11-61 at Sitn Drc~-:u ' f:lt'ht•lhcrgl·r A-8 r
Onlv ~i:llth' S st·hctlult"tl.
.
W.-dnt•Mhl)''s r:amt•s
Atlanla at San Dre ~o
Nt•w York at PhtlaJt•lphtil
Chlt'al!u at C1n• ·ttmali
St. Louts at ll uu.~ tun
S..n Frallt'tSt'tl al !AI~ Alll!t'lt·s
1

1

Exhibition scores
Mujor l...t!a.:ur S..s.-ball
Ex.hibitlun St•asun
Sllturduy'sGamrs
Cmnnnatr a. Houstun o ,
Turunltl A. l'illsbur..:h 8. 9 mmn..:s, Itt'
Raltimon· ~- Texus 4. 10 tnntn~S
Dct~oit 12 , Rustun a
Chtt'a ~ u
1AI.1 at Chtt·al!u •NI. 1. can,.,,.,~., '""'
Clt'vclanll 2. Milwaukee I
San Du:~u 9, Scattlt· 1SS 1 a
S..n Frannseu 6, Oakland I
&amp;aull· iSS I 8. Allanll:l 6. 10 rnnm~s
N•·w y,,..k •Nl.l &gt;. su~oi&lt; I
Montreal 3. New York fALl 2
M'"'"'·
'"'" 5. Pholadelphia o
rcatlfornlo ' · Lo• Aneot ..
Sunduy '~G ami'N
St.Louis 7. New York 1N1. 1 4
PitL-.bur~h 5, Cinl'ulfll'lt• 4
Boston 4, Dctrott 2
w..·hi'" 1AAA • &lt;. M""'""' 1
Huuston 3, Turunt11 2
Philallclplua II. Mmnl'sola 8
ctevclantl 8, Mitwauket· 6, 10 1nnw~s
Chil'a){u 1NL1 at Chll'a~o rALJ, L'e ti ..
eultl
Texas 8, Nt!w York (ALl o
Scalll•· ISS• 4. S.n D"'" 1
LIIS An~cl cs ~- California 4
S..n Franl'isl'll 11. (},.kland ~
Atlanta at Sct~Uic rsst. t'l'd.. mutu.wl
at!rcclnentF.XHIRITIONSEASON E.NOS

Wt'dr.t'nd Spuru Transat•tiun.'l
HASERAU.
Amrrkan l.eagut'
BAJ .TJMORE
ORIO I.ES - Opt •unnl
!1.1
Hmrun•1., ptlcht·r. tu Hot:hcslt•r ur ttw In·
h'rnulltlllHI l ..c&lt;:t~ ut • . P1Ht't:tl T un Studdard .
pl\t'hcr,
on Uw 21-duy
t~sablcd
b .~ l
S 1 ~n OO

[).1n

SL:tnhtiUSI'

ar-..1 Huss

C.run:.·

lt·y, p•ll'hcrs. tu u!lt'-ycar cuntnH'L~ . Pur·
d 1ast'tl lht• l 'Hntrlll'l tl Fluytl Rayfunl. lll·

fll'hkr-nltdwr . frurn lhlt.' lwsh·r.
DF.THOIT TTGER5-St·nt Mark lkJuhn.
mflddt'l", tu Evunsv llll' uf the A11wrwan
ASSIK_'Iilllttll.
MII.WAUKF.E BHEWEHS- Scnt Frank
DrP11111, ptll'ht·r. tu Vant·ouvt•r 11f Uw P11 ·
t'lflt' Cu~s t lo~'UI!UC
NEW YOHK YANKEF:S- Anrluunt·ed
tll&lt;ll Bttbby Munw, uu lftl'lder-t.lestgn&lt;tlt•tl
htllt'r. had a..:rectl h• ' lerttL~ on a lhn••·\t'&lt;ll' nmtrad . Sa~tlt'tl DHVt' I~Hodw .
i•riA·ht·r. to a nmtral'l wtlh Culumbus uf
ttw Intt·rnutwrlill J.ca~u· · .. ,., a player,.,.arh. Optrutwtl Aub Sykes. rutdwr. tu
('••lumbu.'
OAKIANO A'S- &amp;·nt Rnan K 1 n~uuu1
and f)(l vt' Bt·a nl , ptlt'hcr.,, ami Mr tdwll
PaJ.: t\ uulflt'ldt·r. tu Tat'tt111i:l uf tht· PanFil'
C•~&lt;~ Sl l.caJ.:Ut'
Nuli nRH II~W.~ Ut'
HOUSTON A.'-iTHO.'i- Pluo.:cd J.H. Hwhanl. ptlt'her. un tlw 60-t.lay tl1subleJ ltst
A.•&gt;st..:rwd Bert Hubt:r~c . Mt~rk Ros.~ antl
Hubbv Spnrwl. ptldk•rs, Harry Spilman.
u1fwlda. and S.:utl I AIUl'~S.
, mtftt"ltlt·r. tu
Tucsun uf ttw Panfil' Ct: l.t•CICUC.
MONTREAl. F.XPOS- 'SICn&lt;tlt·tl Bub·
bv H&lt;~ tll tiS , ··atdwr, fur rea ss r ~-: nmcnt
'NE W YOHK METS - Ih ·l t·a .~ t·d Mtk•·
thrnl bi!Sl'ttlaf\.

DALE HILL
FORD TRACTORS

Tammy Johnson was honored
wtth a surprise birthday party recently at her home. Gifts were presented to her and refreshments of
cake, tee cream and koolatd were
served. The cake was baked by the
honoree's niece, Shan Blac~ll.
Attending were her husband and
son, David and Jeremy Johnson,
who hosted the party, her mother,
Mamie Step henson, Ronnie
Guinther, Mr. and Mrs. Steve
Blackwell and Amber, Mrs. and
Mrs. Jerry Colmer, Bill and Tim,
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Bareswtlt and
Ryan, Mr. and Mrs. Harold Whitteklnd, Shawn a nd Daniel, Alberta
Richards, Jimmie and Randy
Snider, a nd Anita and Tom Van
Cooney.

.

Jeremy Johnson
Mr. and Mrs. David Johnson,
Pomeroy, entertained recently
wtth a party In celebration of the
third birthday of their son, Jeremy
Davld.
A Pink Panther theme was carried out wtth theme cake being
presented to the honored guest by
Pat Thomas a nd a train cake by his
grandmother, Mamie Stephenson.
Games were played wtth prizes
going to April Miller and Tabitha
Phllllips wtth SHAWN Whltteklnd
winning the door prize.
Gifts were presented to Jeremy
a nd refreshments of cake, Ice
cream, mints and koolaid were
served. Favors were balloons,
suckers and gum. Attending besides his parents were hts rna ternal
grandmother, Mamie Stephenson;
paternal grandmother, Evelyn
Johnson, Jill Johnson, Peggy Johnson, Jim and Randy Snider, Alberta Richards, Vicki MU!er, April,
Kart and Tiffany, Mrs. Penny
Clark and Jerrod, Tabiltha PhilUps, Mrs. Harold Whtttekind,
Shawn and Daniel, Mrs. Paulette
Farley, Rick!, Jamie and Davey,
Mrs. Barbara Cobmer and Tim,
Mrs. Shari Blackwell and Amber,
and Mr. a nd Mrs. Roy Bareswtlt
and Ryan.
Jeremy was also honored wtth a
birthday dinner by his grandmother, Mrs. Stephenson. AttendIng were his mother, Tammy,
Shari a nd Amber Blackwell,
Nancy, Shawn, Daniel Whitteklnd,
Paulette Farley, Rtckl and Jamie,
on Barbara Colmer and Randy
Snider.

S~o: lltltH: I
IUSPS Ua-960 I

lnt·.

l'ubhstwd t'Vt·ry 11fkrn uon, Mondi:l y throu~h
Fntl&lt;ty, Ill Court Slr•·ct. by llw Ohw Valley
Pubhshtrll! [ Otlll:tall)' - Multltltt'dla. Inc.
Pum.. roy. Ohw 45769, 992-2 1:;6. St•t·orld dass
puslat::t' J:ta•d at POI!lt"roy. OhiO.
Memlx-r . The As.-.Ol'lall'd Prt'ss. lnland Dally Press Assoda hurt &lt;1ntl the Arr rcncan
Nt'WSJJ«&lt;I)t'r Publishers Assonaltun. Nalwnal
AlhcrltSIIII&lt; Heprl'se niJtlt vl'. Brarlhuttt
Nt'WSI)Hpt:r Sales. 7:\:l Thtrd Awrtue, Nt&gt;w
York. Nl'w Yurk IOOi i
St_·nd ~ttltln·s~ to Tlw Dt~t lv
St·ntmd . Ill I 'ourt St. , POIIII'ruy. Ohtu4:i769·
SUBSCRII-"TION RATES
Hy t'a rril'r ur Mutur Ruutr
Otlt'Wl'ek
Ont' Month
One Year .
SINGLE COPY

MIDDLEPORT - Silver Run
Freewill Baptist Church will hold
a revival Monday through April
11 at 7:30p.m. each night. It will
feature Bob Rhodes .

MAilSUBSCRII"TIONS

214 W. Main
Pomeroy
992-2668

.
GMonth .
IYl!&lt;l r
~Mon th

Ohio and

Wt's t Vir.:lnla

Rah·s Oul'lidl' Ohlv
aod Wt•sl VirRinia

. $12.35
.. $20 .80
.... $39 .00

... SIJ.OO

RACINE CHAPTER 134, OES
will meet Monday at 7:30 p.m. at
the Racine Masonic Temple. All
officers are urged to attend to
practice.

. $2.140
... $44 .20

EASTER
CHICKS,

MEIGS COUNTY Fair Board
will meet at 8 p.m. Monday at !he
secretary's ollice on the Rock
Springs Fairgrounds.
REGULAR MEETING, Racine
Village Council, 7 p.m. Monday;
board ol public allairs meeting at
6:30p.m.

DUCKS
and
RABBITS

THE MEIG:S ~and Boosters
will meet Monday at 7 p.m. at the
band room or the high school.

GUINEA .PIGS, HAM~RS, GERBILS, PARAKEETS,
FINQIES AND TROPICAL FISH

Jimmy Lambert Jr. celebrated h1 s
seventh birthday Sunday at the
home ul his grandpa rents, Mr. and
Mrs. John Lambert, Rutland .
Theme ul "Superman" was
carried out with a Supenn&lt;ln eakc
made by Violet Walker. Icc cream
and sort dnnks were also served.
Gilts, including a puppy , were
presented to him. Others attending
besides his gra ndparents were his
parents, Jim and Annette Lambert.
an uncle , Jell Lambert, and aunts,
Joyce and Joyce Lambert.

Buskirk

Smith

, Topics ol discussion will include
the 200 Club, the band banquet to
be held next month, tag day and
another lund raising activity.
Any interested parent;; are urged
to be at the meeting.

James 1Jam1e I Donald Buskirk
was honored un his first birthday by
h1 s parents, Dave and Sherry
Busk1rk a~d his three yea r old
brother, Jeremy Dav1d.
Sesame Slreel's "Big Bi rd" wsa
the theme lor the party attended by
Marlin,
Nancy and jos hu a
Broderick, Mr. a nd Mrs. Sherman
Buskirk, Mr. a nd Mrs. Donald Ha rtley , Cla rence, Susie, and Kristen
Hill, Steve, Cozy, and Seth Halstead,
John, Brenda and Stacy Shuler, and
Ta1runy Bearhs.
Sending gilts were Dymple
Cockrell , Ruby Hannon, Connie
Gilland, Tim Bearhs, and Mike, Jan,
J ay, Beth and Ryan Buskirk .

THE MIDDLEPORT Garden
Club will meet Monday at 7:30
p.m. at the home ol Mrs. Mary
Skinner. The spring flower show
will be held.

TUESDAY
POMEROY Chamber ol Commerce will meet Tuesday at noon
in the east-west dining room or
Veterans Memorial H?spital.

Buskirk

Roberts
Mr. a nd Mrs. Todd Roberts, the
fonner Terri Crouch, Burlison.

Muldleport Garden Cl ub wtll IIH't'l
Thursda y ill the hnllll' of Mrs. Arthur Skmnt·r. 7::10 p . 111.

A meet111 g of parenL'&gt; and t~lher s
tnkn:sted 111 ass tsting wtlh Mctg.s
Ht gll Sl'huul junior-sentor prolll al'-·
tivttie .., will be held ot Me1gs L•brary
al 7 :10 p.m. Thursda y.·· Mrs. Carol
Crow IS soltciting ht•lp fro11 1 por t•nts
tmtl asks hat tho::;e who an: unable to
alkntl th e planning mel'tmg, a d v t ~e
lwr 11f the1r 1nten:st by call tn f.! 9922158.

Mrs. Allegra Will ren1a 1ns a
palienl at St. A11lhun y Husp1 ta l '"
Columbu s anti is ten tali vt·ly
scheduled for surgery on Friday.
Ca rds ma y be sent to her at West
Wing, Room 555 . Her telephone nUJnber, incorrectly published earlier, is
25 1-3555.

~------------­

53 1 JACKSON PIKE Rt 35 WEST

Roberts
Rankin

'

Tickets arc available from any
subordinate grang~ 11lilslcr 111 \1e1gs
County lor the ann ual count y-wide
grange banquet to be hdd al 7: 15
p.m. on Ap ril Z:l at the Salisbury
Ek111entary Sehoul.
Cost fur the lickcL&lt; is $4 fur adults
and $3 lor ' htldrcn anti must be purl'ha~ed by
18. Tht• Revelatnrs,
gospel singers fr n McArthu r, will
provide enterta mcnt for tht•
eVCil lllg .

Phone 446 · 4524

I

~ M.,&gt;NEES

" Roys ant.! Gtrl s Together ," a
musical written by James 1•. St·ay,
will be presented at Me1gs High
Schoulun Apri I 22 and 23 a t 7:JO p.lll .
The musica l is betng presented by
membe rs of tht• Me1gs High Vocal
Musu· Departnwnl. Adm1sswn is $2
fur adulL"i, and $1 fur students. Thl'
publir ts invited tu attend .

~

JA CKSON -- Jal'kson Cuu11ty
Hereford Assucmttnn will hold its
ninth ann ual s&lt;Jlt· of polled ami horned regislt·red Hcrl'fnnl catllt•. a t

oN

s"' suN

I

ALL SEArS JUST S 100
AD MISSION EVERY TUE SDAY S 1 ~-

1111\1

nn I'-'·
I \IIIII t I
I ' l ' I ·Iii 1", Ill! IIIII ~ &gt;, I I

~~~ -.,

IJttlel.J..

se~t~

, R.

l ~t

WEEK : 1 :1 ~ &amp; 9·00 ~ . M
SAT l )U"l MATINE E'&gt; I l'l &amp; ) 00

.

_....., .,-,
KM-p •• .,.. 0..1""'

tMfunnM.tmovW

abo.ot srowiD&amp; •P

'

•,

'

'

'

,RI"
~~
t5!.

~

).

lsl W((~' 7
9 10 P "1
SAT &amp; SUN ~ TI NEE S I I ~ &amp;
1

Mr. and Mrs. J ohn Rank1n , Tuppers Plains, are announcing the birth ul a sun, David Lee, born March
12 allhc Camden Clark Hospital.
The baby weighed six pounds, 15
ounces, and was 20 inches long .
Grandpa rents are Mr. and Mrs .
Tony Jones, Tuppers Plains, and
Mr. and Mrs. Leroy Fryer, Calaway
Ridge . Mr. and Mrs. Kankm ha ve
anot her sun, Jclln•y .

Matthews
Mr. and Mrs. Gera ld Matthew s,
Cheshire, announce the birth of a s ix
pound, lour ounce son. Shawn
Rubert, born March 24 at Holzer
Medical Center. They have another
son, Gerald E u~enc Jr. IJay I, age
nine.
MaternC:JI gra ndpC:Jrents are Mr
and Mrs . Robert Gooda ll , Middleport. Paternal gra ndmother is
Mrs. Evelyn Matthews, Cheshire.
Great-grandmother is Mrs. Phyllis
Mulford, Kanauga . Mrs. Matthews
is the form er Rebecca Goodall.

Glcndil Ri ce, a eom rnun ity
outreach mission worker in Columbus, will be speaker at tonight 's
meeting ol the B. H. Sanborm
Missionary Society of the Middleport First Bapt1sl Church.
Miss Rice, who was a Baptisl
scholarship student a t Judson
College, began her work in Columbus to reach the unchurched youth in
the public school system. She will
speak following a 6 p.m. dinner at
the church, Reservations lor the dinner are to be made with either June
Kloes or Cathy Riggs.

BEN PEARSON

COMPOUND
BOW

50 LBS. RH 30" DRAW
This Price Is In Effect
Thru AprillO, 1982
:
-

T11 County Sport Shop
'

:-.....

-

j

(

·
•

·Next to Mason County Fairground

675-2988
Store Hours: Mon. thru Sat 9:30 a.m.-7:00 p.m.
Closed

r•••;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~

CClRSSIFI'ED ADS sure to get results)
·ACommon Cla&amp;•iiied ad gets your message -Ill over 18,000 reader In 3 Cnunties.

PAPERS

LINES

CORRECTION

A PLUSH ANIMAL
WITH EACH SITTING!
CXlME IN FOil A POR11!AIT
ON IIOOAJ( 1W'ER FOil QUAliTY YOU CAN 580.

ONLY ··~8!1

~

Color Pol1ralt Package Includes:

.•

..-.
''·

In Sunday's Ad for
Meigs Tire Center
Prices are effective thru
AprillO, not April3 as
stated. We are very sorry
for any inconvenience.
'

,

DAYS

$45~~
__ .

PC.

SAVE$24
Sold in sets
oflhree only.

_ (atiClS SOlD IN .LOtS
Rellblt Pellefl, Chick Sterter, Bunny Selt $pools, Cages,
. Rebblt Bottles, LIHer, end Supplies for all Small
Anlmels.
·
•'·

MODERN
SUPPLY
m-2164
·

J99 W. Meln

THE! STORE WITH "ALL KIN
PETS, STABLES,

'Pomeroy, Ohio
FF"- FOR
IMALS,

..
,,

Two 8 )( 10s, Three 5 &gt;&lt; 7s, Fifteen wallets.

DOLLARS

The Daily Sentinel
Gallipolis ·Daily Trilbune
Point Pleasant Register

I

7::10 p.m . Fnday at Jackst111 C'ounly
Cuunty Lt vestock Market at Fatrplainl, W. Va .

fi a.m .

Speaker named

MIDDLEPORT - Silver Run
Freewill Baptist Church will hold
a revival Monday through April
11 at 7:30 p.m. featuring Bob
Rhodes.

POMEROY-Holy Week services
will be held Thursday, Friday and
Saturday night at the Rock Springs
United Methodist Church, at 7:30
p.m. each evening. There will be
special singing by the Harvest Trio.
John Douglas will be speaker. Rev .
Richard Rothemi ch, pastor, invites
the public.
Easter :-;erv ice:-; a rc he111 g hdd ctt
Middleport F1rst Bapl1sl Chun·h
starting today and continu tng
through Apnl 10. The se rv1ces w1ll
be held I rom noon to 12::10 p.m On
Thursday L'Vcning, a communton
::;erviee will be held and llw sunn.st•
service on Easter nwrnu1g wtll be a t

Lambert

Lambert

Social Calendar

No subsl'rtplion.s by lll&lt;llif&gt;l'nTUitctl m towns
when· Itt II Ill' l'&lt;l rrlt'r .. ervtl't' rs ava1lablt'

Rash&lt;-:~n .

11 N 1 '~

~2 . 80

.MONDAY

are announcing the birth of a
da ughter, Carie Meagn, born on
Feb. 28 at Fort Worth, Texas.
The six pound 11 ounce infant was
20 inches long. Grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs . Randall Roberts,
Racine. Great-grandparents arc
Mrs. Gladys Shields, Raci ne, and
Mr . and Mrs. George Roberts ,

T~xas ,

Smith

$1.00
$4.40

t5Cents

Kelly Lynn Smith, daughter nl Ms .
June Smith, Village Green Apartments, Pomerpy, observed her
seventh birthday recently with a dinner at Long John Silver's in
Galli polis .
Later t hat evemng she enjoyed
cake and ice cream with her famil y.
Attending were Mrs. Debbie Davidsun and John Michael, Middleport.
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Smith, Middleport; Mrs. Tern Smith a nd Shannon, Pomeroy, and Tina Smith,
POmeroy .
Unable to attt:ntJ were Mr. and
Mrs . Rick Sm ith , Ricky, Randy and
Robby, Rutland, Charley Smith ,
Pomeroy, and John Davidson, Middleport. Gtlls were presented to
Kelly .

Davidson

John Michael Davidson, son ol Mr.
and Mrs. John Davidson, Logan St.,
Middleport, rece ntl y celebrated his

Subst:rrbcrs not dcs1nnJ; to pay' the carnl'r
may rt••nit 111 atlvancl' ll1ret'l to Tht• Da1ly
Scutinl'l on a 3. Gor 12 111onth b&lt;tsts Crl'tlit
will bt• ~ 1 ve n ear.rier cadt month.

:!Munth .
SIX 1111111\h
I Yl'ar

first btrlhday with a party at the
Riverboat Room in Pomeroy .
A Sesame Street theme was
ca rried out in the decorations. The
cake was "Cookie Monster" and was
baked by Mrs. Patty Thomas, Middleport. Games were played with
prizes going to all ul the guests.
Michael Davison, Pomeroy, won the
doo r prize .
Presenting gifts to John were his
parents. his gra ndmother. Ms. June
Smith, Tina and Kelly Smith, Mr.
and Mrs . Clifford Thomas and Clillurd Scott Ill, Mr. and Mrs. Michael
Smith and Michael Davidson.
Others sending gilts were Mr. and
Mrs. Bill Davidson and Nichuc, Mr.
and Mrs . Emmett Rawson, Debbie
and Josiah Rawson, Pam, Kyla and
Scottie Sellers, Mr. and Mrs. Rick
Smith and Ricky, Randy, and Rolr
by, Mr. a nd Mrs. Charles Smith and
Shannon, Mr. and Mrs. David Herdman and Kelly, Davey , and Johnny
May, Ruth Farmer, and Mr. and
Mrs. Jack Clark .

Davidson

I'( ~TMASTF:H

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

l----~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~---~

Tammy Johnson

The: lhlll )

PRICF.S

'

(

the legends of their sport
America's su rmn er game.

Datty

Th P Daily Sentine l- Page- S

Meigs County births and b·i rthdays jAnnouncements

Cincinnati's Tom Seaver, will seek
to add to their totals as they continue
their own pursuit ol Johnson's.
record. Carlton enters the season
with 3,148 strikeouts and Seaver with
3,075.
Jenkins 12641, Carlton 12621,
Seaver (2591 and Baltimore's Jim
Palmer 12481 are bunched in careeL
wins, and ali could make inroads on
the journey to 300. Perry is almost
certain to get there first, though.
When St. Ltluis opens its season
Tue:;day night in Houston, it will
ma rk the 24th opening day lor Cardmal pitcher Jim Kaat. No other
hurler has lasted that long in the
majors. Kaat, who's.,also 43, has 278
viclorics. second most lor any active
pitcher.
Perry and Kaat share the senior
citizen role w1lh Boston's Carl
Yastrt.eJTlliki, who's &lt;J iso 43. Yaz is
starting his 22nd season with the Red
Sox, one short ol Brooks Robi nson's
record lor years spent with one club.
His next home run will be the 427lh
or his career, breaking a 16th-place
tic with Billy Williams. With 600
doubles, he is three away !rum Paul
Waner's ninth-place total ul 603 and
24 short ol Aaron's eighth-place total
of 624 .
Yaz needs 15 runs scored to match
Honus Wagner's 15th-place total of
1,740 and 16 runs batted in to reach
Wagner's 12th-place tul4 ol 1,732.
With 3,192 hits, Yasl r'lCinski is 59
away !rom Nap La joi e's ninth-place
total or 3,251 and 91 short ol Mays'
e t ~ hth-p lace total ol 3,283. He needs
63 singles to tie F'rankic Frisch lor
15th place on that list with 2,171 and
280 at-bats to reach Cobb's thirdplace total or II ,429.
For the vets with milestones on
their minds, the winter's wa it is over
anti now they l'an resume their
chase agai nst the record book and

A Divisiun nf Multhnt•tlia,

Pomeroy- Middleport , Ohio

Monday, AprilS, 1982

Monday, AprilS, 1982

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

• No additional charge lor groups
• Additional packages only $12.00 no

deposit • Poses our selection

• Beautiful backgrounds available
• Ask about our Decorator Portrait

DATES

April 6 thru AprillO

Tues.- Sat.

Photography Hours
Tues ., Wed ., Sat .: 10-1,2-6
Thurs. &amp; Fri.: 10-1, 2·5: 30, 6-8
Lunch 1 to 2

�Page-6- The Daoly Sentonel

Pomeroy-Micldl

Monday, A pro I 5, 1982

rt, Ohoo

NOT!( E Of ~ PPLIC A fiON FOR INCR EASES AND ADJUSTMENTS

REGULATIONS AND PRAC TI CES

1PUCO Docket NO 11 1116 T P AIR 1 tor .1uthontv to .ncn•o~se o1nd •dtust IT\ rat es dnd ch.rges tor telephon e striiiUS to the I)Ubhc throug~
h tort v ont&gt; t elephone ~H hillll!l es to&lt;.aU~d ,., ;~nd known on Ash t abu l ol Auror• Auilmburll Balnbndljle Btoommf(lale Centerville Ch.u
don (hn ter Coo tv Ue Cumberlo~nd Oonet Eoul (l,u odon F;urvt£&gt;w Ge n l'YII HinCkley Hu•m Hopflfa le Hud1on Huntsburg
l(mgwtlle Ltllle Hoc kong Moldt\Ofl MUopolo~mta Mtddlt'IU! Id Mont vi Ill' Morrntown Ne wbury North held Old Wl$htnvton Piirkm•n
Penunul.t Purv Poerponl Powho~tan f&gt;otnl Ouoilkcr Ctl y R1chl~tld Rock Cree k Rune ll Thompson Trumbl.lll il nd Twinsburg iind to
ch&lt;~ng~ cer ia on o t th requldhons ~ nd pro1 c to ce~ relo~tmg t o s uch u• r vtCI.' oilnd to tol e dppropnil te lin II lheet5 rellechno such tncr eiiSts and

7 10

s

00

n tv

'""

so

3

• 00
600

Trunk Line Mll~ag~
each quart~r !111~(2)
Two·Party Access
line Mll~age, each
quarter mile (2)

Th11 not ce con ta ,n s th e Uib\tance and prayt'r ot lht Apphcill!on How ~&gt;~e r any tn!E1rnled p.~rly d!!~tr+no complete delaiiN m
lormlt on w th ro!\I)GC I to all a fl ee ted rol t c~ c h ~rf,le~ rcgul .. lo on ~ ""d pr ac t oce1 \ hould lfliPI!Cf il COPY olth9 Application ilnd il l! ii ltii Ch t'd
Hhedut~s .11 tht ol!oce ol the Commou ton JIS Sou th Htgh 5 tr et'1 Colum bu !i Ohoo 4lllS or dur ing normal buslneu hours • t the pubttc
bu1oneH olio u s of th e Compo~nv loca ted .11 1H North Ma tn Stret'l Hud son OhtO 441)6 U16 Pillrk A~o~enue Aihliibula OhloU004 lOS Hilmbden Strtel Choltdon Ohoo 44014 and 66 North fourth St r ee t New.nk Ohoo 4JOSS In ii ddthon the propost&gt;d tarrth were mat IN on October
s 191 1 o1s pdrl o l th e C omp&lt;~nv s notttocd to on o t 11s utteni!O tolt' to th e mol von an d legtSiol h¥ e authonlles of i ll muntctpdlllles throughout I he
!err lory on wh tCh 11\e Compo~ n v operol t t'~
Th, Appl c"t on ,o Uech r.1tu .;and ch•rqe\ tor telephone urv en to all cu,tomen ot ttwt Compiln¥ e•ceotthose services go~o~erned by
concurrtnct' wtlh other telepJ10nt' compdntl!\ and &lt;tflt&gt;ch tht' Compolny \Gene ral E ~c h1nge T an i! and IIi localE xc h e~nge Til rill

300

••

ua

II 11

s 15

II 11

900

'""

'""

8 11
11 71

II 11
11 25

60

60

60

Heartng llllllrJ!red
H('dr nq IIIIOdlre(l
Hedr ng lllllldlred
H('J r ng lmpdlrf!d
~ 0 \ t (dOC(' I "&lt;l
N ut&lt;,~ C ~o c p l l ng

75

n

..,

••

ua

Zone A (2)
lndlvld u'l Access/
Tr unk Line Mileage
each quarter al le(2)
T,.o.Party Access Line
Mileage each quart er
mil e ( 2)

s

I 6S

75

60

60

60

60

60
II

n t~o~ t ua

Bdse Rate Area
Zone A (2)

Bu s 1ness Service

Residence Se r~o~i c e
~
our arty

Ltne

4 II

• so

900

8 10

~

4 00
I 00

n~o~ua

~

s

25
I I 25

II

3 II

10 ~5

Buz a
( hllllf

' 15

13 75

Trunk Line Mlleaqe,
@ach quartH aile {Z)
Two Party Access Line
Mlleaqe, each quarter
"'lle ( 2)

Residence Ser~lce
nt~o~ua

Individua l Access /
Tr unk line Mileage
each llrte (2}
Two Party Ac cess Line
Mil e age ,
each custoner (2}

n

~~

I 15
S Sl

641
641

Base lla te Area
lo ne A (2)

LINE AATESfiJ

1 ne

¥ 1 ua

4 65
• 61

I]

ne

95

1110
1110

1J 9S

71

I J 05

8u~ t n.c!SS

P~v ~~It' ~r~~

ll4no I

(C JOOO .,.
lU I Orll/

n

8•nd II

8.ano:t 1 11
{6001 11 000
.. ,o \ldltons

8•od IV
(11 001 } 4 000
. . 10 I I,I I{Wl\ 1
8 ... '
( } 4 001

-a {)()()

. . In \141

81

~)

oU

8 .,

,,

/OOP

1/
Arp~

""'

' lone •
Hd\1!

'
10

•1 90

' /()tie

86~ 1' ~ale

"

Toto! 1 I tCitat&gt;&lt;jr

I J II!.
10 ,.,
I II

10
II

,.,I

A.rea

1! BS

'I

o I

I
IU
I

J hi

9 Bl

ROO

'

\Pfl\

01

10 10
I}

~~

l&lt;j 10
I I /0
ll 10

18 ••

19

j~

]I

.,.,
""'

~!.

19 40

""'·~

Jl S!J
JJ ss

1010

19

II 00

}! ~~

""

""'
""'

ll

1~

l~

n

l '':l "t ~

n

11 10

I

(91&gt;

.,.,"

JU

II

001 191

'

4180

lJ )0

s.no

11

l.,

lJ

"

, , 10

I? /)

901

Residence Servtce
~y Four Party

7 65

folal r~chanqe

""'

II

19 7'i

1100

J8 lS

I J J~

I co
ora
foo t Co r d
f oo t (o ~ d
1/ l oo t 'n ~ &lt;l
1' r &lt;u t 'co 11

MUlti Party

S IS

II 25

9 61

) I d5

J9 15

PBX Trunk

65

51

8ustne ss Service
lndl~o~ l dual [In~
KTS Trunk

PBX Trunk

10 10

19 ?S

I ot 4 I £ •chanqe

6l 90

PBX

Trunk

JO 4S

so

J9 IS

Jl

1

0

~l(f'v

Rate eana
~ ~~~Call n~

Present Access L1ne Rates - 8loom1ngdal e
Re~t dence r er~ICC

lntJ I;id~ Jl Li nef;;o:ll d':!J
~dH

lld te A t e~
lon t' A

"I

1\ llO
HO

f' o ur Pdrt1

'd5

II

Trunk

Tiilf'i'VT&lt;Iudl

so

lO JS

18 90

14 80

?J 35

10 90

ll

' 91
\0 70

(](]

PBX

Trunk

Bustness Sen t ee
L1ne kf5 Trunk PBX Trunk

20 40
n 40

30 90
33 90

Hand I
(U ll OUO P!a tn
\ tat tOll\ l

a.. ~('

band 1
JI &lt;'IX I2400U
Pla tn Stat on~ )

Bast

Band

J

(/ 4 ()()I J6 OUtJ
Pl,s tn Statt on\)

Present Access Lt ne Rute s

Hopedale
Bu~ •ne~~

lndnldLdi
R.sl~

Ar~.s

lont! A

l

ne

K15

BaM 4
IJb IJC\ b4 OUO
Man 5tH on~)

Serv !Ct!
Trunk PBX Trunk

3 JO
9 01

' Jl

II

10

II

IS

11 85

1J 15

lbOO

II SO

20 81

18 00

19 50

Res 1dence Sen ce
four P.,r!y

I ll

8 9S

26 2S
29 25

29

IS OS

PBX Trunk

Res tdence Serv tee
Two Pa':..!l: l o ur Party

IS

8 10

• 00
800

Mu1t ~ kTS Trunk

3 10

100

II 25
11 25

3 00

60

10

Ill

BaH' lldte
/one A'
/one B·

A""

P ~S
~

J•w

s

II
10 11

II 11
II 11

Jf't

)

J

nE&lt;

IIQ

SO
4S

li d •r~te

l'lt'rr
~ ~ ""
v ~ • d\r ~1
~r J
~

~ rPd '&gt;€

\

0

f

d
~

€0" ~ -­
1..
!p., Q~t€

1 ~d t e
n P ~ &gt;1:'

AcceH L ne
Ooe Te lep'looe
o~ e o~ t t u
ot e 1 '-e• II ate
Ol d Rue
1:

lt~uee~t

Acce~s L 1n e
One Te lepnone
On P Outll't
To ta l Ne .. IIHe
01 !1 line
\ !ncr ea~e

AcceB L t~e
One Te ephone
Ot~e Outlet
To tal New Aete

I.e\\
l 4r dO"
"'o:&gt;\ Opott" •
~ o oe'ea

01 11 llet~

1: !ncrene
-'&lt;cess L toe
One le tephone
One Out let
Tote\ Ne~ ~He
Ol d Rete
l lncrt'He
A&lt;ceH l• ne
One Tel ephone
Ont&gt; Out let
Tout Ne~ Rate
Old IIHe
" Increase
Access Ltne
One Tel ephone
Ont' Out et
To ut Ne• Rue
Old Rate
S Increase

See Above

Abo~e

Acceu Line
One Telephone
Or'le Outlet
Total Ht111 Aatt'
Old Rue
:r; Increase

~

'&gt; bO
80
41

JS

-,ns

0 "~

lO SC

H

J7

1~

1T1l'l

tla~e

Adte AreJ
lont' A•
lo ne B'

or

!6 'I

2() 20

4C 40

I

12 75

rr

S IZ 80
80
&lt;I

--rr:u;
981

raYi

Prrst'r'lt

Proposed

li. r~ tu/8and~

~

Io ta !

&gt;nl

80
BC

SZ5 &amp;0
80

41

•I

\ l(

--rr:u;

-w.sl

9 41

""

--.nt

-.nl

s12

S2S 60

80
80

80

"

•I

--rr:u;

I 11

=
s 12

80
80

"

--rr:u;
I II

=
s12

80
80

' 11

us

'lll

"""

f • ( h~nljt

COIII!)ar hon
Desc ription

I'&gt;

m:rr

s ll

80

"

--rr:u;
' 01

so

&lt;I

-w.sl
I 81

m:1l'l

s12

BO

125 60
80

&lt;I

41

-rn!S
11 15

--zo.1ll

Accus Line
Sl2 80
One T!ltp~ont
80
One Outltt
45
Totll New Alte IT':115'
Old htt
II 90
S tncrtau
"'"'I'T':1I

8

125 60

m:H
80

Hud1on
( "650 liS5 )

10 65

80

&lt;ns
11

so

&gt;PI
S25 60

80

45

-n:n

-H

II

14 JU

ll 50
JO
j4

/ I ~0
IS 10
l B 10

~()

21

9~

4480

~0

4 \ 2~
44 10
46 10

JO 95

40

J4 40

16 10
Jl JO
JS O&lt;J

26 70
12 JO

ll 90

II 00
58 45

4) 05

57

46 65
1010

6100
64 60

sa

l9 20
32 6S

29 10

4) . ,

12 65

41

36

16 )0

51 ld

62 05
65 70

so

4 7 25

6100

so

l I 50

23 60

J1

45

so 55

)) 70

JJ 10

l 'J JO

ll 65

14 65

I? 95

..,,

11 60

Ill

1)

1190

zo

)4

so

J4

JS ZO

l b 40

Aurora
Bainbridge
Hlnctlty
Horthfleld
Richfield
Runell
Twinsburg

I'&gt; 95

I~

14

'

0~

so

40

1n

IC

"'

Cl•rt don fal r v •e~ Hopeda le
dnd Quake r Cttyi'~C hdnqn only

8

\ 21

so

BO

45
-,rn
21 40
~

S21 50

10 40

5625

l l so
'I 'ie

~s

l~

n
n

)0

10
00
910
ll 00

Bus tn eu

'~

80

KtfKjhllle

"

-,ps

10 10

-.nl

Acc e ss l ne
SIJ IS
One TelephOn€
80
One Out let
45
Total Me. Rate -n-:lm
Old Rate
12 80
1 lncreHe
""1T.ll

sn so

AneH Line
I 14 JS
One Telephone
flO
One Outlet
45
toul Ne~ A~te """'TS'":llJ
Old ~a te
II l5
X Jnc ren e
~

\ 26 10

-rr:1l

Acce~\

\ 26 10

80

'I

&lt;nl

20 10

-.u-:n

BO
41

~
22 50

80

Ol
~
IS 4S

-n:ll
S2g 20

80
45

~

1&lt;10

~

ACCt\1 Line
\lb 85
One f e 1eo hone
80
One Out ht
45
Tot•l ltt111 Aatt' ""'Tlr.IO
Ol d Rate
20 20
I lncreue
Tl'lJ':'ll)

SJJ 10

Accns Line
J 16 85
One Telephone
80
One Out let
as
Total New ~ate """T8:11l
Old Rate
12 75
Slncruse
~

SJJ 10

Access Line
'11 60
One Telephone
80
One Out let
45
Tot al Ne,. R•t t llf:l5
Old Rate
13 35
I lncreue
""1T.7I

Present ~nUtly Rate

Litt le

BO
45

-yr.-vs
40 40

nr.lll

.,
45

&gt;G5

-v:;,25 50

U i ZO
00
41

T.TS
26 70

~

(I) All ABOVE PRESENT AltO PROPOSED RATES ARE FQA: ACCE SS LINE S ONLY
SEE RATES
liSTED 8Et01l, WHICH ARE IN ADDITION TO ACCESS LUtE AATES
(&lt;')Mileage ch•rjes app ly In additiOfl to the prf~ent ilccess line chugn
The)'
will be e1111 nattd 0t1 the proposed rates

Monthl~

41
41

"
4&lt;

00
4\
10"

4'

45
41
41

so••

10

II

PBx•
PBX (Rock Cr!tk)
PBX ( Hopedale/81o01111ngdo~le)

11
00

41
41
41

II '

Out lets
Non ilus lt
Non f luih (Hope4ale /8loomlngd a le)
Ou tdoor In CoqlaOy f urn ished eo~
Flush/Outdoor In CustOflltr furn is htll Bo•
Flush/Outdoo r In Cust()!lt'r Furnished Bo•
( Hopedale/81 ooml ngd il e)
Ou tlet Monthly Rate•
Plug Monthly Rate•
(3) One t 1111t' c harge for ne111 IMUl\at ton s on ly

10
5
10
10

I('

Jo r {

9 00( J)
'l 00( J)
9 00(3 )
9 00(1 )

OO(J)

5 00( J)
))•
30"

9 00(3)
'l 00(3)

"

no monthly rate appl1es

10
Standard Telephone
oo•
Co lor Teltphone•
50• •
Co lor Telephone••
15•
wa II Te 1e ~h one•
Compact Set w/Oial L lght
Contfllll)ra
10
Con ttlll)ra ( Hopedale /8 l oa~~ingda 1e)
1 50•
Conttatpra•
l
11
Dia l In Handset
I 50
0111 1n·H,ndset (Hoptdiii!/RioOOtlngdale)
1 I()•
01 tl· ln·Hindset•
2
Ohl In Handset••
1 10
P•nel
15••
Statlons/htenslons from Guest Ao0111s ..
100
Candlutlct
J
00
Chest
J 00
Cradlt
OJ
Erlcofon
Hopedale/BloOMingdale)
85
Erlcofon (Rock CrHk
Bl•
[rlc ofon•
10 50
hploslon Proof Telephone
El ploslon Proof TelephOne (Rock Cretk,
8 10
Hoped a I e/81001111ngdale)

Proposed

~thly

80

"""
11
40
40

""

so.-.

Ray Station (Aurora, Austlnbllrt, lalnbrldgt,
Hinckley, Hudson, Htwbury, Korthfttld,
Ptnlnsula Ptrry, A1cllfltld, Ruutll,
Twinsburg)
Pay Station (Ashttbuh, CtnttrvOlt , Kldlson,
P1trp0flt, Trtlllbu11)
Pay Statton (Chardon, Cllllttr, Gtnt~t. Little
Hocking, ""ntvlllt, Morrhto...n, Old
Wulllngton, Powhatan Point, ThOIIPSon)
P&lt;~y St&lt;~t l on (fltrvlh, Htr•, QuaUr City, Aoct
Crnk)
Pay Stat i on lCoohtlll, C_,.rllnd)
Pay Stat i on Hoptdallr 11oc.1ngda1t)
P1y Stat1on Klngsv111t, Dorset)
PU:/KTS l lnt Appeari!ICI

' "'

t o the

C u~tomer 1

(

ou

'

"

All Otlltr
·I

OU•
00 '.

•o

30

JO
JO
l JO
1 60

80

~ II

J 61
390
I II

lll

l II

10 so
10 50

Rate

II

1~d

d I

per

4ll

lj

()

~

liP

t

&lt;1

rt,&gt;C

( 8u~ 1 oes ~

~

6
rf'O;' o

to o (~ rre nre

~o ·

80

••

" I I
)t
l

\

l Jr
Jl

II,

, 1,

!

,,

1

so··
10 '
so· ·

&gt;00

JO

I 00

P

l ~~

D~

t

1

rn

'.,

'"""
" l

o

1

'

Cos t"

0000

co0
co
CQ

I 10

00'"

nt •

p~r

oeo

00'
"'

.,
10

' 00•

n

II
' 00
I 11
J 10
J 11
' 11

00
lr

) :...C

Tn:~~t'~~~~T~~:~~~n;o~ ~ac n

I SO•

N(

I

u\ed •

O('

)

var abl e •

J(

JO
( "!J

") 00

lft type ~ ey Tele rhoo,. Sy~t~m
lA l~pe (ey Telephone Systtm '
lA Type ~er Telephone Srste"' "
rour l•ne Key felepltone Sy~ tt'fll
A!l!lrt•ond l CO/fl / WA TS L• ne Cdrd
N1n e Stat ton ln t erci)PI f•pan\ IOO
Ntne Stdt on lntercC~~~~ f•pan ~ on
Otd lnte rc0111 St at ton
Mdnual Int e r com
i'l4t'ludl In t erc om
Tel Touch Intercom
Tel Touch Inter com
Otoll Call Pt c k up
Key System S1n9le L• ne Tel t&gt;ph OI\1'
St• Button Key Telephone
S • But t oo ~ey le epnone •
S • Button Key Te lephone ..
len Button Key T~ lep hone
len Bulton Key Telephone'
len Button Key Telephone ••
T..elve Button tey lelephont
[ •g hteen Butt on Key le lephone
Twenty Button Key Telephone
Twenty Button (ey Te tepnon!'
Thtrtr Button Key felep hone
Busy Humbe r Display
Bu ~ y Humber Display
Handsfree Unit
(!JIIp an 1on ttan!lsfret&gt; Un t
Turrets \lnqle or double qded "
lte Trunk to PU S~ itclt board"
Eac h Unit of C•ble (?Q or frr~ct

'"'

100
I 00
I 00

I

• oo

II

&gt; II

00

R IJO
lc 00

6 "'
6JIO
"'
' Jl

10
JW
J ~o ·
II "
J 00
J so·

"""
0

"

I lS ••

' 0
801

oOO

• oo
• oo

I I 65
II 15
II /~

l OO
,, 00
600

10
I 4&gt;
I 4&gt;

I~

o' "
II
100

I 6J

6 10

oo••

""
"

2~ "

1

11

thereof)

PreHn\ Monthly llate

?4 )0

?0 00

Nor111a I Ser~ 1ce Area
Normal Ser~•ce Area•
Single rh r~nne l Standard Sel
Single Chan ne l St and.srd Set•
Si ngle Chan ne l Oelu•e Set
Addition•! Channel
Additional Channe l •
Mobile (•tension Telephone
Non Continuous Relay Cuntrol
~ton Cont!nous Relay Contro •
Ccntinuous Reily Co ntrol
Au• lla ry lall'l!l
A~•lli1ry Horn
Weatherproof (q~lp~~~eot Cab net

?s
•o
?O
a;o

1

5

oo•
oo
oo•
oo
so
oo·

·~

1

""

fill IS

II
II
II
10
10

oo·

l 10

1

so

Pre\ent Monthly Rue

I 61

Bnlc Service
Bnlc Se r vice (Tone&amp;. Messa9e1•
Bnlc Ser~!ce (fone Ortly)•
Pocket Receiver
Toni' Only
Pocket Receiver
VIbrator /Tone
Pocket Ruelver•
Foreign Cent ral Off1ce Serli iCt

ou·
•o oo•
IS

0100
11 50

Present J1Qnthly Ratr

Contiguous Cen tral OfftCl'\
A rl lne 01\tancc S "'tle~ or less
PU Trunk
Bus1ne u L• ne
AeS!dencr L1ne
1111

"
'"
'"

Proposed Monthly Ratt!

I &amp;I
11 50

10 90
II 50
10 oo•

Bet~een

JC

9J lO
I ll SO

100
II

Proposed Monthly Aate

•
I 10

I)

25

10 00
I 10

IJ

2'&gt;

IJ 2S

Res i dence Line

15

so

I) &lt;'5 •
00/ l/4 111lle (5)

1) 25 ..

1J 00
10

00/ 1/4 mtle (5)
13 25 ..
00/ 1{4 mile { 5)

so

IS SO
!Xll•lle

1J OO

.•

"'

00/hllle 161
10 50
00/m il e (6)

I)

25 •

1 00/ l/1 lllil(' (5)
13 2S ..
00/ 1/~ lllllt (5)
1] 25 •
00/ 1/~ mile (5)

(5) t\pp11u to dhtances over 5 lllllf'S
(6) ~plies to distan ce~ o~o~tr 10 Miles

Spec hl Recording Trunk. S.Centra l Office
Tert~ln•t loo
RlngdOijl'l Circuit
Tertttlnat I on
C•blr Pair • Jn t reofflte

Pruen t filonthlJ Aate

1080

"
"

'lilrhblf {7)

700

Proposed /tlnthly A•h

28 15

41
9 l! IBI
41
' l5

"

.

'

•

.

'

l

Jl

;c!

"'

'"

,,
If

t...otl

·'

''

"

as

JJ ' 0

10

'I
' 91

1 11
J 10
I OC
II

lO SO

J 00
J OO
J 00

c
JO

0000

10
001

•oo

' 00

J'l

0 10

Meeting notes

1 so
l 10

Slinderella
A talk on votamons and nutnilon
was given by Claudoa and Terry
Mabe of Madison W Va at a re J
cent meeting of the Pomeroy class
of Sllnderella DlxJe Sayre, JoAnn
Crosp and Janice Losle tied for the
mosl weight losl and Marjorie Wo
gal was runner up AI the Chester
class Carlotta Reed lost the most
weigh! while al lhe Mason class
Diann Jewell lost the most weigh I
and Mary Guess and Ella Richard
son tied for nmner up New

001

J 00

001

II

",_'"
'

I

IJO
I

"

I

I'

~
)I]

"'
•c

10
Co\ !

''

members are nov. bemg accepted

"

for lhe ro ve Poonl s exeocose class
by JoAnn Newsome 992 3382

n

I II

' 91

I II

?4 10
29 s~
• 81
)J 40

10 50

'

Preceptor Beta

4~

J IJC

10
• 10

OffH:tls
nwdt fur
Sll-:!lla

16 JS

100

lo] 4,

i DC

G 9'

91

20

nf tht

~L

8 00

50 co
82 00

ZJO :xJ
llO OC

01 00

1

20 w
l O "0

IS 00

1000

2100

10 00

11 00

2115 00

HI Oil

?65 00

tlf

Mu t

Line

Telephon e~

2000
10 00

' " 00

100

4000
40 00

10 Oil

"
"

80 00

•o oo

lntt'rCC~~~~

Ke1

Telephone

S ~H em~

0000

"

(II)

lA Type Key Systl!ll
f our I lot' Key SyHI!tll
Additional CO/fX/WATS Ltne C•r!l
Ke~ S~~tetn Si ngle ltne Telepllo&lt;te
S h 8utton (ey Telephone
}
T~ n Button Key Telephone
Twelve Button Key Telephone
Eighteen Button Key Telephone
Twenty Button Key Telephone
Tltlrty 8utton Key lelepltooe
Busy NUI'Ilber Display
tt•ndsfrtf u~lt
C0111panlon Telephone Handsfree Unit

1800

0100

JSIJIJ

JBOO

JOO

"

J 00
pe r work og
but t on

11 00

400
0400

,,""

per (heck

Charges

0000
0100

JOO
Charg€

' 10
Present Cltarqe

Malnttnance of Servlc~ Charge
Tfst Ch1r9e
PrH!he Vhlt Charge
Prtfllhe Vhlt Charge (Rock Creek
Hoped• Ie)

'""

0000
I 00

Propo~ed

Atconne ct' fr0111 lfon P•ywtent
Reconnect from Hon·Pa)'lllt'nt (Rock Creek
BIOOII'IIngdale, Ho~dale)
Recoonrct from Non·Pt)1'!ent (P1rkman)
Reconnect from Non Pa,....ent (Huntsbur~,
Eut Chr1don ltlddlefleld Mesopoto111'!14 )
Reconnect rr011 "on Pl)ftlent {ll. l n9svll le Dorset/
Reconnect frO!ll Vacat lOft ht1

(~d'S!

16 00

l~s~ffl clen t Fund Chi'ck Charge

Insuffi c ient Fund Check Ch ar ge

I 00
I 00
Propo&gt;ed

1100
0000

P ropo~t'!l

211 45

ze

100

l8 4S

l

~0 ..

I 00
Presen t Cha r ge
10 00

Cha r ge

28 45

l 00

zs

45
~s

28 45
P r opo~ed

( ha r.2!:

•o oo

JO 00

JO 00

20 00

JO 00

BloOMingdale

P l•ce~~tnt ot pre,.lrt to out let
St4ndard Interior sutton 111lre (n OII•key]
Pfr outlet
eus lneu
Ruld•nce
Multi· line or uble

N(

"
N(

p1

nt..lsh1p bl rn g .tnnouJH ld

ud arm

lh c~t do)

BLl&lt;:~

f,,,

Stgmrt

~1\ tll
ell

41 65
lJ 45
(•pen,e tncurreo

who had helped with lhr [Pglon
birthday par1)l
She also thanked several bus~
nesses who had contri buted onclud
lng
Betsy Ross Pov.ells
Vaughans and Mrs J Boweo s A
flower arrangment from I he Crow
famll y for the observance was also
noled Poppies "ere ordered
Iva Powell had the praye1 and
Dorothy Wells assisted by \ eda
DaVls and her juniors had th&lt;• com
munlty servoce program Tips for
safety when tornadoes slnke were
given by the juniors Lanev
Hankla, Amber Hankla Kim Pal
lr rson Rob in Campbell and Erica
McCimtock l"he junoors passed oul
bookie is on emergency aids too 1he
home !"hey a lso doscusscd Mano
bia a counlrY Ln South Wesl Nrlca
wh och 1s the foreogn relations cou n
lry Ihis yea o Robin Cam pix•II read
her travel log on the counlo '
The traveling prlZl' "as

tlh

Plans for an Easter egg hunt and
potluck dinner on Easter Sunday
were made at Tuesday night' s
meeting of the American Leglon
Auxiliary, Drew Webster Post 39,
Pomeroy
Mrs Ellen Rought was appointed
chairman, with Dorothy JMklns to
serve as telephone chairman
Those planning to attend are to ad
vise Mrs Jenkins at 992 3133 The
egg hunt will be held at 2 p m with
the potluck at 3 p m
The unit endorsed Anita Smith
for Eighth District Junior president
Election wtll be at the junior confer
ence to be held at Racine on April
17
Loretta Tiemeyer presided at the
meeting during which time the unit
voted to give a donation to the
Cancer Fund, and also to donate for
a chair for the new American Legion Auxiliary Department head
quarters In Zanesville A report
was given on the proceeds from an
afghan sale which were used on the
purchase of new drapes for the hall
The leadership training session
to be held In Gallipolis was noted
and the unit voted to pay the regis
tratlon fee for four members whO
wtll be attending the Aprll17 spring
conference of the juniors
Mrs Tiemeyer thanked those

\\O n

b\

Rabon Campbell The me&gt;ellng
clu'ed wol h g ouu~ slngong of Goo
Bless America

Veterans
Memorial
Auxiliary
pc~tu_ nt

A p1 og1 CJIIl on

SUI

Drew Webster

11 50
Proposed Cn o ge

for ~lt1 1 ne telt'phones
per twa sta t ton~
l hrt'e 1 lne Po~t~er Supp 1y

of

11

mcdlng After tht: dns tn g lllUdl clll
l:ludron of hnrncrnm1L ct rttlll s \\s
held and r dr l sill ilL nts \HIt :-i t 1\' t1
by MCJidri Mnra and I llll.tn Moot t

1000

per wark nr;l
t&gt;ultOf\
J 00
per work llllj
but ton

F'rlt

mt:dtn p
Offtt:crs 1t:po1ts "Atlt
Clant l' Kr a ultl'r PI csldt d

1 91

000

\td ! S

s1

~made 111 lht

1JC 00

20 00

10 00

11 1d

tlt t pr'

umtec n donatwn s an• bcmg 0(
ct:plt: d f1 o111 all tht: Illt:lltb ~ J s
Rcg1str a lums for the uuwen t1on to
bt• held Ill rt nt 1/lnOLI WL' I t Sl Ill 111 to
lht d1a1nna n It v.c~ s sugg\ s lt d th&lt;-tl
a UII!Ulll ltn bt sl'llt ted for llt:X I
vca r tn drsl'uss L twngt s "hit h • r111

JOO

Three line te lepllOne

stt ttl rll \
1h lllUilt

It wa s dct.:Jtkd to st.: nd a gn l to
Buckeye Goris State The blocxl·
onublle woll be held on Apool 21 &lt;~nd

I J(J 00

20 00

2000

\HI

Aprol8at8 lOp Ill

1]0 00

2B 4~
10 00
1) 0 00
1JD 00

10 00

Jnnt s

Mlll.t

Tht.• grrl of the year v.as Lhnsen by
:sn rtt ballot Hern cu nc wrll bt. an
nuunc.:etl at Founders Day dmner A
wme eilld dlel'S t: part) was :-1d for

1000

(11)

Twa I toe telephone

Dtllllld

Ma!d.t

Pho Day
Plans were completed fur Fuun
dt•o s Day to be held dt the Spur
L"ooan Club on Athens on Aprol 30

?5

{J

9000

I 00
10 00

I 11.111

111d

the 1982-8:1 vea l Mayuo wlll be ask"!

2s

1100

10 00

r

Will bt tt ltiJ r &lt;-tlttlnn Ap ri l Ul
\\llh lht tht uH nf I hl Goldt n Kt y

I I 00

"

Bt l

II lO wht n

tL' SS

o

0000

{ l'ldrljl'

Apr

S,n 111 ~s

Wlrt

Ltllt t:s pondiii J-:
lil lian Muo1 t t

o rc

n

pltns

p! l :-l idt Ill J&lt;llli ( f ht ISS st'l I drll \
Ru bv B elt 1 tlt d SU tt 1 Vt lrr t.l Hut

added oo \e parat e

~ervt C €

Dlcll!lllrHI

Elttttd

Prt&gt;sent CMrge
(stab ll \rwrtent of

on

l&lt;lllV t
It \\riS !lll(td lhri\ 50
1100
11 00

~ml

r Vdl1 t t of

(n
t

~at ~ fa c tory
Change fr0111 Jne tdnd&amp;rd {O ior co ntrol nea o
to another H.sn!IM!I color
Act vdt •ng Servtce (h ar~f for the ~eces\dry
ddjustmenB to connect an olre•dr •n\ta ll e&lt;l
custQftlt'r Olffle!l un •t wh tC II ·~of d s~1 Ub l t
type and make It ready f or rnobt l t' servt(e
to th€ Normal Servt ce Area
East ( Ian do n Exchanqe
Hud so n Aust 1nburg bchaoge
Mob le [~tens to n le epllOne tnHd eo et tne
~ ame ttme H
nnut !n\tallat•on each
Moblle E• tens1011 TelephOne added on sepdrate
vt\H tach
Au•IIU ry horn aod noo coo t !ouous rel•y (01\ tr ol
equipment tnstalled at ~&lt;IIIII' \l"'t' dS •ollta l
nstallat!on each
[a~ t C ar1don bchange
Hud ~on Au~t nburq !•Change
Au• 1 !dry horn 4nd non c~nt nuou~ re l ay cPntr o \
equipment tn\l a lled on \epar.s te • ~ t Pacn
E1st C1•,.,don f oclt&amp;ft'J~
Hud\On Aust !nburq ( •Change
Au • t1tary l.t~~p and cont!nuou\ relay contro l
eQutpmeot tns ta ll ed a t \Mtt' ttfJte a\ •n•t a l
nstalld t on each
Au • 1 ary l.rn p ~f\d con t nuou~ re dy (Ontr o
equ pme nt tnst41lell on \e parate • ~ t
edCh
hta blt ~ h aM t•onal alphabet cal \ H•ng
€t Ch
Resto ra l charge for rt'stonng HrviCf ~h tC n ha~
oeen 4enlf!l for non parme nt
( hanQe colo r of dul control head
InSid e rr.ove o f dtal con 1ro l nud
ln~!!le move of rad o control head
In\ de mo~e o f ant enna
RPm&lt;lva\ of ~ er~ ce and e~ u pment
ln ~tal l at on of ~eHnerpr oof eQu pment
C 4b net for mount •ng •ad o eQu !)llll!"t

obst

Ph1 OCl\

r• s ltlt Ill

"~
When \at \fdctory fu ll c .sb lt nq ·~
oreseot
llhen c ab ltng 1\ not pre~ent or nJt

t:kclnl

We l l
lht

tht P r t ( t pl ot r-h lc~ Bt lei ( hdpkl
lilt 11 u ~: nth at lht Ht \ t r hoc~ I Httt l lll

J II
J 00
I 10
8 II

Pre111lrt Chlr!!t (II)
C•bh Pairs and Mlluge

1

"

ss0

41

trcnange~

[e\t Claridon [Acnange
Hud~on
Aust 1nburg (J c nange
for removal frono one vell•c le aod re •n&gt;ta l
l •t•on
a d i fferent •eh tcl e at tn ~ \drnt

~conn•ct

les

Bu \i nl'SS Li nt'

"

1 91

"
29

and Re s •denc€

~J )0

' 00
0 II

PrrsQnal Signa ling Se r viCe

Al rl1ne Ohtance 1110re th&amp;n S
leH than 10 rrttles
f&gt;IU Trunk

/ 4 50
I LXI

ou

•on

so

?~

' oo··
flO"
b
YJ I db lp
JOO
1 c&lt;

J

~0

/' 4

0800

1

(~

~es t deoce

~!ldtt1onal c hannel
s 1t each

P

rb

1

( Marge~ (q

Stan!larO Set prov dt!l
and l nHa ll e!l by the Como aoy
East Cl arldO~ £. c hange
Hudson Aust nbu~g E•~hang~~
ng le Ch annel Delu oe ~et prov dell
and Installed bJ the Co111pan)
A!l!llt tontl Cll4nnel Insta ll ed at tnt ~.une
t tn:e u lnt t l a l tnst t ll at ton ~ o• c tner
add !tloo a l cnann! l eac11
En t Cla r idon [ ~ c tlonqe
Hudson Au~tloburg {JChange

I 10

10
0
0

r

tn

I

I

t om

Mob il e TelephOne St'r. ce

~

lO

1 oo··
100
10'

Pl

( n

"

I Ill I

"

nl\ ul Ser vtCeOroer Cnarge
Su blt(luent 5er .tce Oraer C h~r9t
Central Off1ce Charge
~~~ltatlon Charge
Prtllhe Jl r i ng Charge per o t le t
Stat 10n He~d l In~ Ch arge oer set

0
/00
\DO

J 00
J 00 •

8u sl neu Line

I

(o ncurrenL P

~in lj l t (~ a nne!

l llre€ t• ne I lep hont'
Three L tne Telephone•

Res ldencl! Llot!

14 55
14 55
14 55

11.. 1 •

t~nro: ' "~'

10"

tAl~ ACCI'\
(PB i r Ot'• I nt&gt; '
WAI S A(( e\ I ~ T~! PI''
ne
1,. 1 luuc h l~ l~p honl' ~ t't \

14 55 I

14 55

J\'

\0'

oence per l 1ne'
Re s den ce per l1ne ••
Bus np~~ per I ne '
Bus ne s~ pc• I nt' '
B~\•n f' \&lt;,
o"r ltne fll.:r n
r t~ trun k
pt'r I n,.
U
Trun~
per I ne'
~ T') I runk
oer I nt' ~ ..,
r 51 Trunk Df'r
n~
fB ~ !runt
oe
tnt •·
PB A l ~unk cer
n~

1• 55

545
5 25
4 lO
3 25 ..
I 25

~tit

r;

T

~~s

s 81

14 55

P r pu\f'&lt;l

4

Airline Outance over 10 rntles
PBX Trunk

I 65

\P fl! lit! I

ft 1 Tc u~g .2~€

• 15

n.,

1

l)ljtl f

1t \

1 ' t•

I

"'

0110 '
1

' •

1 ~ rr upu

10

off ce 4nd dn o th e•
o ther loc H •on

!n l t t a l Serv iC E Order Charge
Sot11equent Ser~ •c r Order Ch arge
Central Office C ~arqe
Yl~ tat •on (llargt
P ~ e,., ~e 11 ring (hArge
11er out €!
Stat!Ofl Handll~g Charge per ~H

' '

ltJled t dlh tc !ltrert o •;
Cd ll\ per dCtt\\ I e or trun k

ACC~\ \

'1 1

• It uh'
"

Bu\tntH ( 10 )

I'

t o !I nctll 1
d

) l Ad

"

c ~ntra\

1n Ha ll d\1on of ne~ or add t ond l &lt;, P • ~
lnd 1v I dud 1 Li lli' 8u\ toes\
lnd!vt!ludl L•nE' li. t srdenle
Party Lr ne Bultnr n
Pa rty L1 ne Pe11dence
Additional le e pllone et
Ar1!11t oM I Te ephone Set
Re cor nect on o l e • st q f4 r
t e ~ • 11
r h~nge n loot on type or \\ 1IP uf
I'QU lpro!'flt
Tran s ltr of \er.•ce
Move o f te lepllo nt ~ et • •thtn \ .tnoe r oulll
folove o l te lephOnt \ et t o !I ff€r €nt rOCJPI
Cnanqe tn typl' or ~ ty l e o l t€1epttont
AI ot tle ct1anqe1

I ll

•

ana

~e\~

)(

"

Dt

ht t•

o n~,.

rc,,

K 1nqH l ie and Oorset l.o cMnge\

.

Bornqdt €

r! dl t d l

~~

01 troJOHd

or.., 1\

Tra~sfer

"

Improved Mobtle Telephone Sen1ce

"

00(3)
OO(J)
OO(J)

Present Monthly Aate

Rate

4'

2S

PBX

Tele phone Se ts

Proposed

IS
SO•
00...

BIOOI'IIIogda l e l

01

lnHa ll at lo n o• ""' \er , ce
of ~er~lce
lnstal14t to n of co lor te ~pn o ne at
Insta l lat i on of ~er, ce ~nen drop~ re
t~ byr ed
Mo~e of t! ephone ~et " thin salllf' pre\1\ t\ e
Cnange In type or Hy le of telepllon€ HI
(h aoge o l non li sted or non Pub lt ~hod
te hphone number

&gt;0
&gt;0

.o
.o

' 01
lc

'" '

~ tan c e

rr.

I

•10
I

lnltr a l Serv ic e Orde• Cnarqe
Su b~tq~ent ServiCe Oroer (h a•ge
Centra l Offtce Charge
VIs tatlon Charge
Premise Wiring Cnarge per outlet
Stat ton Hand I (ng Char ge cer ~e\
Hunt~burql Pari.un , Mu opot•" a 1 Mlddlef e d
East Clar doo (~than.i!_!

1100

MIS CELL AHEOIJS SERVICE AAO EQUIPMENT RATES

Au ldence
Residence•
Au ldence••
Residence ( Hopedale

oo•

r~t u r

~es. l dence

'"

' 10
00

t ne r~IPon o
l •o l nf' I~ ep n o~€

wh 1 ch the customer res 1 des

Statton Outlets (AHoclated with
Telephone Set)
Bu s I ntH
Business•
Business••
Bus I ness (~oc k Creek )
Bus!ous (Hopedale /Biocmlnljd ale )

II

ny

(

'U

~6

o1

r,.

Slt1tl

)7 50

(•~t

Standard Outlets

18

tl

'IC

oo•

'I

1! w J ~ I
jh
m1"
1 r~ n 1
ql 1
le i lor ~ Ho &lt;, !IPn ~
1P I IOuf ~ Bu s O!'\ I n
lt&gt;l Toul~ ( Hh 40ij o lr r l t
lr l lou( h liAI Ar t 'I t "'
l'f!l
l'ublH lt&gt;IPphnf' \ • '
t '

II

lnntal Ser vic e Or der (llarge
Subsequent Servtce Order ( h4rqe
Centra Oil l ee ( 11erge
~Is tat lon Cha rge
Premise lllnng Char9e cer Ou t et
Stat 1on Hand ng r narge r&gt;e r \t't

",,

~&lt;~ont n l y ~ lto•a nce o l !l••ect

61 40

51 IS

15!0

Jl50

76 10

(tnt en t lie C he~t@r Coolvil le ( umb('r l r~nd Oo r ~et
Morrt\to"'" Old wa ~ h•nqton Parkman Powhatan Po1nt

C0111p ar! son

AueH l 1ne
S 14 60
One Telephone
80
On~ Outlet
4S
Iota I Ne111 Rate """T5:15
Old Ra te
11 25
X Increase
~

Hud&gt;on 1"6Sl I

41

l"5":"!I

" 0
I J 40

16 65

To tal [ochanqe

L•ne
S 14 lS
One Te Iephone
80
On~ Out let
4S
Iota I N e ~ ~4te """TS"':bll
Old R~lt'
7 45
S Increase
~

( lOij \V t il e

S25 60
80

-w.sl

'"

Auq lnbcrq
Perry
Newbury

60
80
&lt;I

"

--rr:u;

Above

&lt;ns
TinY

Jl
j (JI) "

l hree L ne Po ooer SutVI I'

~ 1J IS
Access Line
One Teltphone
80
One Out lei
Total l+e~ Rdte "1DIO
10 25
Old A•te
1 Increase
-.n'l
~~e

I oO

Oor\ Pl

~u __!___•_n~-~~P. n o~t

Acce ss Llne
S IJ 75
One Telephone
~0
One Outlet
45
Tot• I He" II ate i;-:-ml
Old Rate
10 70
S lncredSe
"""10":ll

A~htrJbula

-w.sl

~

1110

10 9~
14 60
1!1 7~

Prestnt and Proposed Access Line Rates By [xchangt' (Conti nued )

60
80
&lt;I

19 10

10 "'
1401

""' ""'
""•o

1200

If t he proposed rate Increases are grant ed 1n full, a represe nt at 1ve res1dentoal
customer and a representativ e bus1nes s customer, eac h w1th an ond1v1dual l1ne and
one standard telephone, would exper1e nce the percentage changes s hown below for

60

4'

S2~

12 40
16 OS

14 bO

IB ?5
l l 90

• zoned r•tes •pply to 8 1()()1111 1oq da le
Hockinq "e~OPOUilla Mtddle l tid

Centervtl lt'
i'ldd 1son
P erpont
lrumtlu l

Bloom ngda e

00

l ~ cr

Qpe rdtOr d'&gt; '&gt;
JS'&gt; \l dn l f'

l'l&lt;l
5• •o

)6 40

18 BO

llOO

?0

10 '~
14 J~
I I 95

25 60

II AT ~

"

•'11

bO

PSI

25 t&gt;O
26 60

tO JO
I

OJ

II

/ I 50

l ot r1l (r t llat tP

BH•d 9
(1024001up
Ma•n St at •ons)

8 IS

60

60

~~'~

eoncoe
PI
'tl'" ~ !lP

'

kiS lrun'

8 JO
II !10
1d 10

Matn Stat ton\)

Bust ness Servtce
lnd1vtdual L1 ne KTS Trunk PBX Trunk

&lt;,r r

~~

06 00

14 J'&gt;
I I 9'&gt;

the app[O Prl ate exchange area

(~"t"

14 10

II JO

II IQ
I 01

l j '~

lO 60

II ?S

6

II

Je

Ste

Are 4

j51Z UO I I 024 000

Sc lled~h

Rock ( ruk

~ate

lone A'
lon~ 8'

(lS6 001 ~l&lt;' 000
Platn S td\t on~)

79 10

10

""

0600
19 /0

Band 7

Present Access L1ne Rates-Meso po t am1a

Honedale

/ont A•
/ OIIt' 8 '

960
11 60

d~\

M• •n Sta t ton \)

Br~ntJ

lndl¥ldu al Access /
frunt.: l IIH! M1l eagt&gt;
e ac h Quarter mtlef i' )
l ~ o Pdrly Access L1ne
M1le49e each Qudrt e r
mile (7)

,,.

~ ..

15

Band b
11?!1 UUI 2Sb 000
Matn StH oo~)

Bus1nes s Sen t ce
lnd1~tdua l li ne
KTS Trunk

rna, v ti!_u~:_TTl ne

4

A

ttus!nrs~ Se rv1 ce
f run' lnd!vldu•i lint' kfS Trunk PBX frun'

( b4 UO I 1/ll lii..IU

Prese nt Access L1ne Rates-Rock Creek

BHe Rate Area
]Q{le A( (')

q ~~~

BaM 5

10 I')
li' I'J

fwo Po~rty

lndlndua l L inr

Ae~!de~ce Ser~lCe
l our P1rfy R&lt;Jift Pa~

r~l t

0

l

,lud t ~

00
00

"'

I

Dmi)J

,,"

60 90

61

Proposed Access L1 ne Rate Bands
IM&lt;jt\dPPI
( ty

1\

10
II
Jl
J '0
1 iO

'

J I

r

'"

B,He

IIJ1.! "

Non Pub ! •sited Number
Non Pub I 1Shell ~~~~~~bf' r •
Non L Hell Nulflbe r•
~ on Pub 1 1~ hell N~mb~r ( Hoped a I •
9 I 1om OQdd
Roc&lt; r~ " '
li on P 1tll ~ h ed Number "
Add t OOdl ll\ t n9 Bu ~ n~ \\
Add t IOMI l Hog Bu \ ne~
Add t •on a l l \ t og Bu \toes\
Addttronal tiS\IO!f Rl' \l d!'n(t
ttaa t u• d' t•H"'II Rt,, a.. n(f
Add t to n• l tl\llnQ Rn !l!'ncr ••
fort qn l •~t ng Bu~ ne~s
ror€•gn t \ t n~ Bu\ nt\\ •
rorr qn l \ \ nq R~~ de t'
fn rt tgn L \1 nq ~t\ d(fl(f'"
)pee a Oprrdt or I tercept
Jo1 nt IJ\l'' &gt;t" rv r e

IZ 15

I J }'

10 00

Oo net l
! All otller e&gt; Ch dnqe\ )

per cal

PBX Trunk

II 25

Business Servtce
lndl~o~ldual Line
KTS Trunk

PBX Trunk

w

I

"t Bustness Service
Individual li ne Key Trunk

Key Trunk

300

20 20

Restdence Service
lndl~•dual L1ne
KTS Tru nk

,t•t ons .na

r.'tllj

""
""

W

I

1~ I 1/h r

I UI 1

II

lJC
JU

1 01\•

41
9 II

i Ktn~svt ll e

Sen tee Connec t oo

10
10

bO
' I•

ee • l

~He

ao

"
,,

50

SJ 40

40 OS

"uc

~ate ptr Cal

0
0

0 Jler
[) ~ l~

Lor

Present Access Lone Rates-Chardo n (woth Clevela nd Ca ll ong )

! J!J4001••n

~~~~

~ d&lt; C

30

Restdence Se r~o~ice
ln dl~o~1dud l ltne
KTS Trunk

. . n 'ta t
1/ 411

7 81
7 81

so

10

Individual ltne

4100

0

&lt; oO

Totdl htr1a qe

I 6S

'
'

PBI Trunk

JJ IS

1t•t•on~J

ll•od VIII
I I'll 00 I 1114 000

4 60

lrom the CuHonte r '&gt; ocH
the centra offl(f t o tile

"
.,•I

00

(o!lt' A Phone u u
Code A Pnone 440 i fl&lt;lol' dd l., B oor:ttngd a le l
Cod!' A Phone ) 60
( udl' A P~on, Sb0 l"u lll'dd l P !I CO'" nqd, le
f oo t ~ .. tc h
t or It " 'H h H op~Jdl€ B lo~ m nq!lt e
~Lt' &gt;c r 1 Pno €
Me!llQr ~ PhO ne
Ror • ( ~el.

7 85
7 81

"
""

'100

(I) Numoe r of Cob le par s b lied b4~ ~ ~~ on p re ~ent tr:t&gt;tn od o t Clldr q og une t atlle pd r
1~0111 \hi.' Lu \tomH s
ocat on d 'eel r to t'l~ ru tome~ s o t npr l oc • t un ,
(8 ) Numbe o Cl b1e patrs b l li'rt bdH!I o propo~et.J methOlf o l (hdfq r g np L d~ e Dd lr

IJO

75

Present Access L1ne Rates-Hudson (650/655 Numbers)

II

'"

00()

4 60

(• ]5

30

(48001%{)()()
. . n 116 1 ornl
8....0 Yll

6 JS

10

8 61
"

3 60

3 60

40
IS JO

10

•

'• IJDdl
lq nSfo rmt'r
~ ~at h€rpr oof B

Present Access L1 ne Rates-HuntsbLrg

. .,

ll 10
l4 10

~~

lndtvldual Access/
Trunk Line Hlleagf'
f'IICh line (2)
Two Party Access L lnf'
Mi l ~age,
e-ach c u s tcmer (2)

4400
4100

jt ,.,

10 ·~

•o

4 35
4 JS

5 01

161

•oo

V \u~l

4100

ll /S

~~

I OS

Base Rate Area
Zone A ( 2 )

""'

OJ

JO J~
J? J!J

/l 40

10

o I

0 lO

II b•
19 b•
?I 6•

I l 10

I

""

'"

10 Jl)

""'

0 00
II &lt;J

"

"

''

0

9

' /onl'

,,
"

~~

lU
' lU

AHf ~r"4

' lone A
' lone ~

yI

~tnt!

~)

10

8nt' AHe

1JOO t 6000
.. ,n ll•ll ort \ l

""

lonP

Sotntce
kiS ii'unl PBI ffurii

line

~O( •

L gttt \ I ~ IOijl • tllt

Business Service
Two Party F lve- Parfy Key Trun k

lndhldual line

IJ 55
l l 15

Va rr •ttl e
OJ(J
lb so

tt'k

15 4S

10

Reside n ce Service
Individual l tne Two Party Fhe Party

II
11
II
21

I

15 45

Present Access Lo ne Rates-Dorset
Banded Exchanges

01

JOO

.

Cable P.s 1n and Ill luge (Con t )
lenrtndt ton
1~\trotftct
Cont •!JuOu\
C•b le P•tr
Tt&gt; r mtn6 \ lon
lnterotft ce ( rcu t
c ~~le P41r
nterolf le
~01 (QI t g~uu~
Off Premt ~I! M eage
rtrH 114 ml e
~dd!\looal l/4 mtle
Off Prt!!lll~e Pll luge (Roc k Cru ~ ti&lt;J oe!l• le
8 1o01111ngdd lt' )
f trst 1/ 4 m1\e
Add!\ ton• I 1/ 4 mll e
Off Prl'!llt\1' P! lluge •
First 1/4 mtle
Add II&lt;Jnal
4 m e
Jff Prt'lllt}e Ml le dqe
Jn dtffert&gt;nt bu1ld1nq\ ~4111t' or (Onne(te~
pretn 1~es
£4r h 1/10 .str lt oe r.ttl~ or t rauton
Ot f(ere nt butldlnQ\ !I II Prl'nt om! nnn
conoi!' c ted prem l\1"\ n \ ~lllf local t•(hdnqt&gt; or
~e rv ce arpa
f r~ t 1• r.t le
A.dd t t on~ I 1/4 m 1€
In !I f! ere nt bu ld nqs !I llerent and
non connt, c le!l prern \el n d ff~renl lut
cont t qu ou~ loc 4l e •Change area
ftrH 1/} atrltne mlle o r lr• ct•o&lt;t
.\!1(11{ oru l l/4 4 1rlrne rrt•lt o• fqUt on

100

,,
,,,,

Bloom nqOd lt&gt;

~I)( ~

n

Aa te

The Daoly Sentonei - Page- 7

1.0

81 oom•nqa d lr

15 45

75

so

01

(r l'(l l

15 45

IS

&gt;0

81

~e

runk

oo••

II
II
II
II

I

14)
~ O t' ld 1 GooQ
~ PI:'t•a
Gon1

y

•o

,.,
( Ro! ~

i lto).lt&gt;da ' "

LO u~ ~ 0

~

5I

lOll
I 10
10
II •
II
\0'

C.On9 ( ~ oo. ( r('t' l t
C.Ong l Honl'dd t, 61 oom•n gda e
Gong •
C.ong ••
11or n o r 11o- P
Oud 11orn

Bu s I ness Ser~o~lce
~
~o~e· ary

JOO
' 11

Hopedd e
Blnomtnq!ldlf )

"'"'

Present Access L1 ne Rates-Kon sv ol le

J 41
I II

J

f r~ "" tter

( htm~ { Hopet.Jdl~

75

l 00
I 00

' 11

( (JfiYnCn Aud b
St dndJrO fl€
St dMdrd fi e I •

60

60

60

60

60

'000
00
JO
HI

•oo

Uand~et••

lqn sm ttl'•

~oth I

ProposeO

110
00
10
100

1 ~o·

8~1 z cr

II 11
11 25

71

Bu~y Lamp
Bu\y l dmo

runt

ne~

[ndl~o~idual Access/

ANDCHANGF&lt;;

Tii"dtwtd~•l

tldnd\et
Hdnd\et i HOO€ddle
Hdndset •

Present Access L1ne Rates-Park man

r or tho purpO\l' Ul dttttmtnllll:j erchtnq t \erv r&lt; t&gt; monlhy oiC Ct \\ lone ra te\ t•Chil nges olrt' &lt;lii\S tltl!d tn ra lt&gt; groups &lt;ttcord m g to
lh Io ta! md n ttl! phont\ n" toe ill &lt; rtl nq .H( 1 Tht toe 11 Cdlhtlq ilred • S the olrt'ol wtlhtn wht c h cus tomt'n mo~~t' Col li ~ w th ou! th e
tt 1vmt&gt;nl ol mr \\ 1111 lo ti thdr Qf' l •1111 m tv nrl1t1P onf' or mort r•rhangP ~rP.l\

Present Access L1ne Rates

e
Bloom ngdd e)

Ou t CIOO r Hou\ •ng
Outdoor HOU\'nq (HOOt'll .s le Bloom•oqaalel
•• llln ~e1
s.. \ ( h ~l'y'
Cutot t ~e,
l uto I ~Ey'
P4y l tdt or ~ oo th
Md ! Boo tn ( Wa
Pl ou nt
H.s! Booth f Pedt'\!~ 1 Mn ot )
f u I Booth
loll Re\lroct or
Pu~ h to Tal ~
Ca ll O• .er t~ r
( cl ~~ on I 110PI'!Idle ~ ln om nqad e

runk

8 II
12 75

11 11
11 2S

S IS
9 6S

1r 25
II 25

300

Bus intss Sen Ice
ne
run

' "'

runk

~

so

3

• 00

4 1S
B 61

Base Rate Area

Tht Lomp;~ny s Appltcahon \ t.tl es th a t l.'~t\ lmg roll!'\ and c hargu are tnadequate and canno t produ&lt;e the rt~o~enues requlfH to mel!'t
thl' ongoonq cosh o l provodtng se r~o~o cl' o~ nd do not pr o~o~ ld l' ~ tu s l and r easo nable return on the vil lu e ot the Comp.1 ny s used o1nd useful
prooerlv ol\ ol No ve mber 30 1981 Th[ Ap pl co~ I on further ~ t a t t&gt;s I holt between Oecembi'r Jl 1974 and N o~o~e mber JO lfll the Comoan~o~ ho1\
Htvesled illl IJI &lt;n6 00 tor uldtl om md mprovcmcn ts to •Is telephone pl&lt;~nl whtle Its e~pe n ses h •ve mcr eued&lt;~ l a more raptd rate than'
•II revenues The Compo1ny s tat e~ th•t I nuds the proposed ncreau.• tn rt~o~enuer. lo enable tt to matntoltn qudllly ser~o~ t ce ilnd t o e n iible tll o
'"" nt.am c r edt l o~ nd il llr &lt;lc t ca o1l~l lot th e e•oan\lon iln d tmoro~o~cment ol th oliln ltn iiCCOrdance w1th publtc dem•nd AI set forth tn the
Applt&lt;a loon the Co mpo~ny o~nltc polle\ th.tl the rdl e~ o~nd c h o~nqes propOSld m the Appltciltton w1 1! mcreilse tolill o~nnuill re~o~enui'S by
U ll7 091 o1nd lh &lt;tt \U(h o~d d t h on•t re~o~enut w II prov odt' o1 mtn mum rl'l u rn and wtll not pro~o~td i' more than • filtr ilnd r easof!dble rail' of
rt lur" on lht v.:th1e o tt he Co mp&lt;~nv ~ pr opertv
Ntw n•quto~ tr On\ proposed n lhl' Apphcatton tnctuoe the lollowong
A pro~o~o~tOillh~l cus tomers who dtHonnut or rtmovt strvtet must r t' lurtl illl e ltgoblt' Compilny pro~o~lded telephone tnltrvm e nh to a
1pec I ~d Comp;~ n y IOCollton unl eH o th er ~ P H I IC ilrrilfltjtm~nh ho~ve bee11 mdd e tor reco~o~erv ollhe mr.lrumenh Should cu1tomers elect
not to r e turn lhe r.e tn\lruments th e cus tom~r w II be b lied ~n olppropr &lt;1!~ charge tor n~lrumenh not retur ned ilnd upon paymen t th e tn
11rumen ts w II becom~ the property of llle cus lomer
RPQUI.Jtton~ !hil l (Iii\\ t v m~nv terns ol t'dsed \la l•on oiPOiHdiU\ olnd tntlteii.Jneou\ equopmenl ill ltmtted il¥olt lilbtltty
whereby
\U(h cau •pm t&gt;nt t\ pr o~o~t dt&gt;d on lv d ~vii l.tblt&gt; I rom pr s l nq wMehou~e s to ck
A chdr~JI' pe r oulle t lou lo on lor pre msloilldto On of concto~led n lcr o r wtrc w tth1n a butldtng dunng the 1nol1al cons tru e I ton or dunng
rt modtl onq ollh.t' bu tldtnq
A SN¥ tCe cno1r 9e tor cnec ~ s n ee lll'd !rom ol cus tomN n pilymenl lor se r vttt' render ed or l o r a nv other re•son ot ondt&gt; btedne u
wh rh ~re su b ~t&gt;qutnllv rt'lurned !rom lh (' bolllk due to nsull c tnl tunds or lor ;~ny olhH rt'.Json
A (hilrQ P tor &lt;ol lh mold!' lo Dor rc to r v A\l tSiolnCl' Tht c hMqe wtfl be b•ll ed on 01 per till! bo1sos lor each ca ll m.Jde ilfler the monthly
d!IOwdnce o t I ~l' c Ill s per I me or trunk
- Tht&gt; b&lt;l~ts ol Ch.trges tor Colble Pd n w II be ch.Jnqed fro m (a 1 btlhnglor one patr from customer tou t ton to cus tomer localton to (b J
b I nQ lor onP pd r !rom cus tomer toe I !Jon to ctntrat ott ct plu~ Olll pol 1 trom ccn tr.JI olloctto customer tout1on
A provosoon whrreoy (U\ Iomenorde r no 1 nolr lmf' IPIPohonr ~ets and other .Jnctllilrv devtees turnrshed bv the Co mpany on ;~lease biiSI\
mol v , eques t th e Comp.Jny to shtp fh(' equ ,pm t nl to lhl c u~ t omer \ loc.a I on ..,, .. postal or deh ~o~e ry ~e r~• Ce lor the cos t tncurrN
~tx'C '"' I M r o~nQt m pn • ~ lor ltrvte t'\ no t spec tiled bt low w1ll bt&gt; &lt;hdrQt&gt;d on o1 bii SII ol cosh me ur rN b~o~ the Com pin ¥ on provtdtno such
Hrv &lt;I' Conlro~rl\ lor btlltnQ o l wch H r ~o~ oo 1 mdv be tstolbhlhed lor il pl.'nod o f up toetgh ty lour 1141 m onth s tn length
I h~ Hhl.'dUit&gt; o t pn 11 nt Jnd propoH•d r lll ~rt'qut'S it&gt;d n th e Com po1ny \ Applttil lt on ts Its ted be low

Residtnce Servic e
wo-ary ~

( Hoped~

L lqhtwe19ht ~upervt~or Headset
L lghlllll!'tgllt Supervi\Or ttead\tl (Hopedale
81oont•niJCl41el

Present Access L1ne Rates-East Clar1don

ANY PER SO N FIRM CORPORAT ION Oil ASS0CIA10 t N MAY fiL E PURSUANT TO SECT ION 4t09 190f THE OHIO REVIS ED
CO DE OBJECT IONS TO TH E PROPOSED IN CREASES AND ADJUS TM E NTS IN RATES AND CHARGES AND TO THE PROPOSED
CHANGES IN REGULATION~ AND PRACTICES AFFEC TIN G THE SAME THE OBJE CTION S MAY AL LEGE THAT SUCH AP
PLICATION CON T AIN~ PllOPO \A l\ THAT ARE UNJUH AND OtSCRIMINATOil'ol OR UNREA SO NABLE RE CO MMENDATION S
WH ICH Olff(ll fli'OM THE APPLICATION MAY BE MADE BY THE HAFF O F THE PUBLIC UTtl!TtESCOMMt SS !ON Of OH IO
01? B v INT ER liE Nl NG PAR li ES A NOMA y BE AOOP TED 8 y 1 H E COMM ISS ION

ACCE~S

4 11

Zone A ( l)

y

lndl~o~ldu•l Accesi/

Cho1 n1 t'~

MONTHLY

Base Rate Area

• ar

Moo~

Prtunt
Speatt'rpltone (Handsfree)
Stand r~rd Htad\et e•tra
C C~~~~btnat !on Handset/Headset
L lljht.,..iqht Ooerato r Head set
l !ghtwt!11j ht Operator Head\et

8uslness Service

Residen ce Service
WO· ar y
our ar

••

••

"

Punuantto th l:' l l'qu •reme nt\ ~ • Sec t• on 49(19 19 ot th e Oh o Revtud Code-lhi W'isiun Aue rve Te le phone Company IItie Company I
h~rl'by govts nohce !hat on Januar y 10 1981 ,, h ied wtlh tn e Public Ulll•ll es Commln•on ol Ohto llh e Commluton I an App hcahon

ANOPROPOSEDRATF~

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Present Access Lone Rates -M1ddlef1eld

IN RATES A ND C HAR GES AND FOR C HANGES IN

)C HFDULI OF PRE'&gt;ENI

Monday, A pro I 5, 1982

tso!&lt;Jt11ln

WCls p1es~ntrd at (h~ ICLtnt rnu.:lmg

ttw

nf

Wurr 1u1 s

VdeJ&lt;:~ns

Murli)r

Hhonda Ddolq

O.ux!lldl,

101

I{ ~

uf

Husp1t..d 1)\
sldff pu

sOOJ it:l

Daolcy ta lked abuut doffc oUll kill
Of ISO]d{It)ll prt VUltd[IVl'

ds

lll c&lt;:~s u :-es to bt: lC:Ikt:n when Lntt:nng
a room \\tlh Wlt so l&lt;:~teLI piill t: lll aJHI
htm tO plep.IIL llrH.'St'lf to a\UHJ LOll

l&lt;Hnmatwn

matk fn 1 St:Vt.:l &lt;:t]
tu attend the &lt;:umua I
c~ux tilai y ~.nnventwn 111 Ctn c1nnatJ
Plans \\et t

Jncrnbcrs

on Aprol19 20 and 21
Refreshmenls &lt;a rr)ong but the St
Patru.: k s Day the me "l'ff.' scr·ved

Meigs Athletic
Boosters
A JUnt or

h 1g h

all spo rts

b&lt;:~nqut•t

was planned for Apool 25 at Mugs
Hr ~ h Sd10ol when Mt• tg ~ 1\.lhle tK
Boosters mel lut.:sdav mght &lt;.~t lhe
hi ~ h .Sl hool

The banqud woll be held Ill lhc
h1 gh sc.: hool

&lt; ilfetena

at 6 \0 p 111

w1lh Jnn Snubby as mc1 stu

of
&lt;Lll'lnlllllt:S N&lt;Hned to LUIIIIII!ltu~s
wt: re Pot K1td1ln Glorta Alex.tnrlcr

Susoe Pullons Shao on Wose dnd John
Hood telephone Gordon F tsher dlld
John Morc1 p1ugrdlll Mr s Klt t h en

Mrs

Wo se

Phvllos Baku

t.Jblc
rowl'll
fO\Jd It was noted thai the I &lt;'I&lt; phone

ar r angem~nts
t.: OIIUlllth:t:

&lt;~nt..l Jee~n

Will llllllo.Ll

PCJI~Ills \Ill

fLJ&lt;Jd otems fuo the banqud
Plans ha vt.: dlso been lllctlk fo1 tht:
booste1 s to spo nsm an ad ult d.mt l
un Aprol 18 dt Royal Oak p," k

George Hall woll provodt• musoL and
tockets woll be $i2 a LUuple The dan
ce woll be held fo om H p on to mod
mght Locatoons Lll Moddleporl and
Pooneo uy for lOLket purchase woll be
announced later

Feeney -Bennett
MIDDLEPORT-A report 1111 the
recent part1 held at the All adoa
Nursong Home where the borthdays
of eoght patoents were ubseoved was
goven at the Wednesday mght
meetong of the Amerocan Lcgoon
Awuhary Feeney-Bennett Post 128,
Moddleport
Each of those havong borthdays
were goven cards woth dollars and all
were served crackers, cake, and

pop Auxoliary members goong out
for the party were Gerry Parsons,
Becky Tyree, Carol Troplett, Mary
Madden, Shelly Fox, Peggy CatQn,
Etta Woll, Erma Hendrox, Ethel
IconhnueJ on page 91

�Page-S- The Daily Sentinel
AAeeting

Monday, AprilS, 1982

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Pom e roy - Middl eport , Ohio

Monday , April 5. 1982

notes ~~c=on=
tin=u~~fr=o·~
n ~=·g~e7~'------------------------------------------------------~--~~~Hockingport was pla nned for April5
lea ving Rutla nd at 4 p.m ., and plans
were also discuss~ for a tour of the
daffodil garde n of All egra and Norman Will this month. A flowe r show
was set for Labor Day weekend.
A report was given on recent

Rutland
Friendly
Gardeners

Hawk, a nd Ne ttie Hayes.
Mrs. Hendrix presided a t the
meeting with Mrs . Caton giving the
praye r .
Members repeated the
pl~ge a nd officers ' reports were
giv en .
Ackn owl e dge d we re
donati ons from Alma Newton a nd
E mma Way la nd.
It was not~ t hat at t he April
meeting there will be nomina tion
and electi on of delega tes and alternates to the Department of Ohio con-

therapy work with the fifth grade
class at the Rutland Elementary
School. Seeds we re plant~ and will
be transplanted later in front of the
school. Margaret Johnson and
Margie Bishop we re chairmen of the
thera py project.

Suzy Carpenter broug ht th e
traveling prize which was won by
Marie Birchfield. A program was
presented by Jaunita Lambert on
"When and How to Trim Trees and
Shrubs."
Three arrangme nls on the them e

ffgo lfiokinf-//f

" The Wind" we re display~ by
Janet Bolin, Judy Snowden and J oa n
Stewart. It was not~ that Charlotte
Willford made arrangemeJlls for the
sports banquet a t Meigs Hi gh
School, and Janet Bolin for the
Meigs FFA banquet.

TEAFOR
VIRGIL B . SR .

216 E. 2nd 51.

vention.
Craft da ys will be observ~ on the
third Wednesday of every month a t
the hall, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m . R eport~
ill were Roy Miller a nd Della Stahl.
It was vot~ by the unit to pa y the
dues of gold star mothers , charter
members and nursing home patien-

ts.
A dinne r for the Leg ion a nd
Auxilia ry members preceded the rr
respective meetings .
The door prizes brought by Vels ia
Roush a nd Mrs. P a rsons were won
by Mrs. Pa rsons a nd Mrs. Triplett.

l-

Phone
1-( 614 )-992-3325

608

IN LOVIN G MEMORY
OF
OUR
WIFE ,
MOTHER , AND GRAN DMOTH E R , R UTH
LARKIN S.

Ex

ce ll en t view o f t he Oh io
R 1ver and t he coun t ry .

J

leve l lo ts with Leadi ng
Creek wa ter avai l ab le.
Abou t one · acre on
blac ktop road for onl y

$5,000.
ALL UTILITI ES -

Give your furnace
an enerf}y-saving
partner.

Who depar ted thi s lif e
two year s ago toda y
April5, 1980.
Lo ved , r em embered •.
longed for .
The rolling str ea m of
life roll s on.
But still th e vac ant
chair
Reca ll s th e lov e, the
voic e, th e smit e,
Of th e on e w ho onc e
sa t th er e,
Ou r Moth er.

1

bed r oom home, bath,
full baseme n t, garage,
and al mos t one ac r e ot
lilnd Jus t $17,500.

I

NIC E OLDER HOM E La r ge lot of .66 of an
ac r e, 3 bedr oo m s, bath,
·entr a I a ir and hea I .
~.-a rp e tin g,
baseme nt,
and four porc hes on St.

E . Ma inl.~. .lll:~-11

" Learn How Fr ee"
On e Simpl e Cla ss
• Summer Coatings
• A co m p lete l ine o f
Molds &amp; Candy
Suppl ies
• Wi tton Cake
Decor a t ing Su ppl ies

Something Special
103 Washington St .
Ra ve nswood, w. V i}.

PH . 304·273·3148
l - 19· 1 mo.

Roger Hysell

12

54

Large level l o t , 3
bedrooms, moder n kit
c he n
with
range,
disposal ,
and
re fr iger ator . Gas f or ced
air f urn ace wi th wood
bu rner
(a tt ac hed). 2
ga r ages,
o ne
wi th
stora ge
7 ROOMS - A l l u t i l it ies,
3 or m ore bedroo m s,
ba th , 2 por c hes, car;port,
garden
spo t s.
a nd

'1HE.Y SAY WE. CAN BOK~OW UP fO

$30,000 OR ~Oil.£ ON OUK HOIJSE. !'

sr. Rr. 114

~

•

If you own your home,

WASHER &amp;DRYER
1
33u per mo.

AUTO &amp;TRUCK
REPAIR

OR

PH. 992-5682

MAYTAG WASHER
1
22'7 per.mo.
Call 742-2211

OR 992-7121

Main Sf., R ulland

CALL

POMEROY
LANDMARK

Housing
Headquarters

The Add-On Electric Heat Pump
will give you a nice,warm feeling.
You·II feel good about your new Add-Qn
Elec tric Heat Pump beca use it could help save
you energy and money You see, it works with
your existing furnace (no matter what kind of
fuel it uses) to share the task of heating your
home more eHiciently.
And that's not all. In summer. it's a central
air conditioner, cooling and dehumidifying your
home.
So you've got an awful lot to feel good
about . .. a heat pump that can actually work
year-round for you and could save you money
on your winter heating bills.
Want to know more? Fill out the coupon and
send for our fact-filled, free booklet today!

HOW DO YO(J APPLY?
Just phone . When you see for yourself how fast we say
"yes," you11 wonder why you waited so long! Call to find
out how low your monthly payment could be.

In Gallipolis:
502 Second Street
Phone 446-4113

I would like
have
lnlonnaUon on the Add-On
Electric Heat Pump. Please send me your free booklet.

Address

I

Crly

I
I

Ma il coupon to:
Customer Services Departmen t
Ohio Power Company

FREE
ESTIMATES
PH. 992-6011

K ee p Thi s Ad For
Futur e Refer enc e

'1529

APPLIANCE
SERVICE

GIANT CARPET SALE

Call Ken Young
For Fa sf Serv ice
985-3561

CARPET STARTING AT $12.95
Square Yard With Pad. Installed

KITCHEN CARPET

INSTALLED

gg

$8

PAii' l S.A N OS t R VI(f:
All MAKES.

• w,n nrn

•
•

R~ngB

Oo~po~~"

• 0•\hWd\h('r \
eH oTW.l l l'rT.ln~\

IN 9FT. and 12FT. WIDTHS

DABBLE

STARTING AT $4.99 Cash &amp; Carry

POM E ROY ,
OHI O
PH .
992 · 2063

RUBBER BACK CAR PET $499cash &amp;

We give it ourbest.

Ohio POwer Company

FINA.NCIAL

Gasoline T cH

REPORT OF
TOWNSHIP S
31 , 1981

614 ·985·3544
SUMMARY OF
CASH BALANCE S,
RECE IPT S AND
EXPENDITURE S

Bal a nc e
Jan . 1, 1981
General F und
S. 4, 480. 15
M otor Veh i cle
Li cen se Tax
Fund
323 .77
Gaso l1ne Tax
1,64103
Fun d
Road an d Br idge
Fund
64.42
Ce m etery Fund
618.51
Federal Revenu e
Sharing Fund
671.95
Anti · Recess ion
- 161.68

7,638 15

Total R eceipts

16,329 60

Motor V ehicl e
Li cen se Ta x

13, 48857

G asoline T ax

16.200 47

Fund

Road and Brid ge
Fund
Cem etery Fund
Fire Protec tion
Fund
Federal Revenue

Sharing Fund

Total

4,628.05
3.999.38
2,332 .36
5.762 00

62, 940.43
"Transfers In"
Ant i· Recession
161.68

Total Receipts
and Balances

General Fund

20,8Ql1.7S

Motor Vehicle
License Tax

·

13,812 .34

Fund

Gasopne Tax

Fund
Road and Bridge
Fund

Cemetery Fund
FIre Protection

Fund

Federal Revenue

17,841.50
4,892.47
4,617.89

2,332.36

Sharing Fund
Total

6,433.95
70,7&lt;10.26

Genera l Fund
Motor Vehicle

14,392.18 .

Expenditures

Fund

4,370 85

2,3 19. 14

Fund

7.002 .48

Fede r al Reve nu e
Shann g Fu nd
6,2 41 .37
Tota l
56,6 78 .03
Balanc e
Dec. 31 , 1981
Genera l Fu nd
6,.:11 7.57
M otor Vehic le
Lice nse Tax
F und
2.35.:1.68
GaSOli ne Ta x
Fund
1,947 15
Road and Bridge

Fund

Ce m eter y Fu nd
Fire Pr otec tion
Fu nd
Feder al Reve nue
Shar 1ng Fund

Tora r

52 1.62

2,298. 75

329.88
192.58

14, 062.23

CASH BALANC E,

RECEIPTS AND
EXPENDITURE
BY FUND
General Fund

Balance, Jan . 1,

1981

4,480.15

Receipts
Gener a l Pr operty
Ta x - Real E state
and Tr a i ler

!Grossi

Fund

License Tax

Fund

Ceme ter y Fund
F i r e Pr otec t ion

Oli ve Town ship
M eig s County
Long Bottom , Oh10
March27, 1982
1 ce rtify the following
r eport to be corr ect .
Ada Bis sell
Town ship Clerk
Tel. No.

General Fund

15,894 .35

Road and Br idge

For Fisc a l Y ear
Ending D ec ember

Tola l

Fund

149 .86

Tax

4, 401.00

Cigar ette Fees a nd
Fines (Gross )
38.25
Intangible Tax
4, 843 .25

2.264 .28
16,329.60

Tota l Beginning
Balance Plus
Receipts
20,809.75
Expenditures
Total Expenditures

11.243 .0S

- Town Halls,
Memorial Buildings and

198 1

3,590 .82

11 ,457 66
2,354.68

To t al Ex p Pl us B al.,
Dec. 31, 1981
13,6 11.34
Gasoline Ta x
Fund
Balance. Jan . I.
1981
1.64 1.03
Receipt s
14,400.00
Gaso l i ne Ta x

Olher

1,800.47

To tal Beg inn i ng
Balance Plu s
Rece ipt s
17. 841 .50
Expenditures
To tal Expenditures
- Mi sc.
7, 430 .35
- M aint .
8,464.00
Grand Total E xp . Gasoline Tax

1981

15,894 .35
1,947 .15

Tota l E xp. Plu s Bal. ,

17,841.50

Road and Bridge
Fund
Bal ance, Jan . l ,

1981

Receipts
Gener al Pr,operty
Tax - Rea l E state
and Trailer

(Gross &gt;

Tangibl e Person al
Property Ta x

!Gross&gt;
Othe r

64 .42

STOP and look at our
fin e se lec tion of pla ster
and ce r a mi cs
- ba nk s
- pl anters
-s tatu es
- paint
- mirr ors
-s pra y
- pla ques
- bru shes

CARPET AT LAST YEAR'S PRICES

A s2.00 detail bru sh,
with the purch ase of a
paint kit .
3-5· 1 m o. pd .

Curb Inflation
Pay Cash for
Classifieds .· and
Savell I

PHONE 992-2156

3, 187 .74
S5 .33
1,584 .98
4,828 .05

Total Rece ipts
Total Beginning
Balance Plus
Receipts
4,892 .47
Expenditures
Total Expenditures

- Misc .
4,370.85
Grand Tota l Exp. -

Balance, Dec . 31.
1981
6,417 .S7
Total Exp. tlius Bat ..
20,809,75
Dec . 31, 1981
Motor Vehicle

Balance, Dec. Jl,

Genera l Fu nd

1~,392 . 18

License Tax

Fund

1981

Road and Bridge

Fund

1981
S21.62
Total Exp. Plus Bal. ,
Dec . 31 , 1981
4,892 .47
Cemetery Fund
Balance, Jan. 1,

1981

323.77

4,370.85

Receipts
General Property

618.S1

Public Notice

Public Notice

Public Notice

ADVERTISEMENT
FOR BIDS

will be con sid ered on the
ba si s of the total amount

ME G-- S. R. 124·130.37·31.091
- Sla te Route 124. by

Public Notice
Tax -

Red ! E51ate

and T r ai ler
(G r oSSI
2.228.12
T an gi bt e Persona l

Pr ope rt y Tax
(G r oss)
Oth e r
Total Rece ip ts
To tal Beg inn i ng
Bal ance Plu s
Rece ipt s

79.04
1.692.22
3,999 38
4,6 17 89

E xpenditur es
Sa lar ies
1,460 . 13
Su pp l1es
762.94
Aud . and Tr eas
F ees
96.07

To tal Ex p

Balance, Dec. J 1.
198 1

2,3 19.14
2,298 .75

Tola l Ex p. Plu s Bal.,

Oec.3 1.1981
4,61 7 89
Fire Protection
Fund

ReCe ipts
Gener al Propert y T ax
. :. ._ Reai" E state
and Tr iti ler
(G r oss)
1,686.04
Tan gi bl e Per sona l
Propert y Tax

(Gross i

616.98

O th e r

Tora r Receipts

29 .34

2, 332 36

Expenditures
Utilities
607 .28
Contr ac t s
282 .00

Insurance
Oth er Expenses
Toral E xp.

Balance, Dec . 31

900.00
213 .20
2.002.48

1981
329.88
Tota l E xp.
Dec. 31. 1981
2. 332.36
Federal Revenue
Sharing Fund

Grounds
489.56
- Lighting
1,659.S7
Grand Total Exp. .

Balance, Jan. 1,

11 ,457 .66

Fund

Bal ance, Dec. 31,

Ba lan c e, D ec. 31,

79.04

Local Gove rnm ent
and State Incom e

- Adm .

Gr and Tota l Ex p M oto r Ve hi c le
Li ce nse Ta x

Dec. 31, 1981

!Gross i

Othe r
Tota l Receipts

-- Marnl.

Fund

4,553.91

Tan g ibl e Personal
Pr oper t y Tax
(Gross)
E state Ta x

Public Notice
Receipt s
Mo tor Ve hi c le
L icen se T ax
13, 488.57
To tal Rece ipt s
13,488.57
To tal Beg 1nn i ng
Ba lance Plu s
Rece ipts
.
13,8 12.34
E x pend1ture s
To tal Ex pend i tur es
- Mi sc .
7,866.84

Ba la nce, Jan. l ,
1981
Receipts

Gr ants Feder al

Total Rece ipls

Total Beginning
Balance Plus

671.9S
5,762 .00

S,762 .00

~e c eipts

6,433.95
Expenditures
.

Supplies
Total Exp.

6,241.37
6,241.37

Balance, Dec . 31.

1981
192.S8
Total Exp. Plus Bal.,
Dec. 31 , 1981
6,433.9S
Miscellaneous
• Funds
Balance, January 1,

1981

Receipts

- 161.68

Transfers
161.68
Total Receipts
161 .68
Total Beginning Ba lance
Plus Receipts
~ 161.68
( 4) S, lie

Village of Pomeroy, Oh io
Village HaiL
Pomeroy ,
Ohio 45769
Separate sealed Bt D S for
the
con s tru c tion
of
alterations
to
Pomeroy
Vi ll age Hall (Separate bids
wi ll be received for the
Genera l Contract work, the
Mechanical Contract work,
and the E lectri c a t Contract
work) will be received by
Honorabl e Clarence An·
drews at the office of the

Mayor unti I II AM, 1ap·

plicable time at Pomeroy,

Ohio) Tuesday , April 27,

1982, and then at sa1d office
publicly opened and read
aloud.

Th e
CONTRACT
DOCUMENTS may be

examined at the followi ng
locations:
Offi ce of David C. Reiser ,

Architect, 131 West Slate
Street, Athens, Ohio 45701.
Copies of the CON ·
DOCUMENTS
TRACT

may be obtained at the Of·
fice of the Architect upon

payment of $40.00 for each

set.
Any

BIDDER,

upon

returning the CONTRACT
DOCUMENTS promptly

and in good condition, will

be refunded the payment,

and any non -bidder upon so

returning the CONTRACT
DOCUMENTS will be
refunded $2S.OO.
March

MIJyor
Clarence Andrews

13) 22. 29 W

19 ,

1982

s, 12. 4tc

Public Notice·
NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
Columbus, Ohio
Ma rc;h 26, 1982

Contract Sales Legal
Copy No. 82-328
UNIT PRICE
CONTRACT
Seated proposals will be
received at the office of the
Director of the Ohio Oepar·
tment of Transportation
Columbus, Ohio; unll\10:00
A.M., Ohio Standard Time,
Tuesday, April 20, 1982, for
improvements in:
Parts 1 to 27 inclusive are
offered as one contract and

bid .

Parts 1 thru 27
Athens. Hocking , Meig s,
N o bl e,
Vinton
and
Wa shington Counties, Ohio,
on twenty seven bridge s on
various routes and section s, by cl eaning anp pqin ·
ting .
Fie l d
Painting
of
Exis ting SteeL
"The da te set lor com ·
pletion of t his work shall be
as set forth in the bidding
proposal. "
Each bidder shall be
r equired to file with hi s bid
a c e rtifi ed c hec k or
cashi er ' s check for an
amount equa l to five per
ctmt of his bid, but in no
event more than fifty
thousand dollar s, or a bond
for ten per cent of his bid,
payable to the Directdr .
Bidders must apply , on
the proper forms, for
qualification at least ten
days prior to the date set
for oj;&gt;enin9 bids in ac·
cordance w1th Chapter 5525
Oh io Revised Code.
Plans and specifications
are on file in the Depart·
ment of Transportation and
the office of the District
Deputy Director .
The Director reserves
the right to reject any and
all bids.

DAVID L. WEIR
DIRECTOR
Rev. 8·17-73

r esurf aci ng w ith asph a lt
con cr ete.
Pavem e nt
Width
Varies.
Projec t and W ork L ength
- 36 ,590 fee t or 6.93 miles.
" The date set for com ·
plefion Of tni s work shall be
as se t forth in the bidding
proposal."
Ea c h bidd er shal l be
required to fil e with hi s bid
a ce rtifi ed
c h ec k or
c ashi er 's chec k for an
amount equa l to five per
cent of his bid, but in no
event more than f i fty
thousand dt&gt;llars, or a bond
for ten percent of his bid,
payab le to the Director .
Bidders must appl y, on
the proper
form s,
for
qualification a t lea st ten
days prior to the date se t
for openin9 bids in ac·
cordance w1th Chapter 5525
Ohio Revised Code .
Plans and specification s
are on fi le in the Depart·
ment of Transportation and
the office of the Di stri c t
Deputy Director .
The Direc·t or reserves
the right to reject any and
all bids .

OAVIDL. WEIR
DIRECTOR
Rev . 8·17·73
(4)

s, 12, 21c

Ca se No. 18, 120 and is pen
d ing in the Court of Com·
mon Pl eas of M eig s Coun
ty , Pom eroy , Ohio 45769 .
The object of the Compl a int
is for divor ce and other
r elief .
You are r equired to an·
swer the Complaint within
28 day s ·after the l ast
publication of thi s noti ce,
which will be publi shed on·
ce each week for si x sue·
cessive weeks . Th e last
publication will be made on

Nam•------------------Address--------------1

Phon•-----------------Print one word in each

space below. Each In·
titiat or group of figu~es

counts.as a word . Cou nt
name and address or
phone number if used.

April 19, 1982, and the 28

You'll get better results

any ad. Your ad wilt be
put in the
proper
c lassification if you ' ll
check the proper bo x
below.

)Announcem ent

) For Rent

'1 1 IS, 22 , 29 ; (4) S, 12, 19

I.

2.
3.
- -

4.

(4, 5, 12, 2tc

M~~~~Rc~~~!Yn~~-ifo. 1~7 ~1~1n~r~~r';} Ele~~er;::,~:

- State Route 124, in the
Villaoe 61 Racine. and

terson, Defendant. This ac·
lion has 11een assigned

Case No. 23656

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
On March 17, 1982, in the
County

Probate

Court, Case No. 23656,
Ramona K. Compton, 210
w. Main Street, Pomeroy,
OhiO 45769 was appointed
Administratrix of the
estate of Erna Elizabeth
Jesse, deceased, tate of 376

E . Main St., Pomeroy, Ohio

45769.

Robert E . Buck
Probate Judge/
Clerk
13) 22, 29, 14) 5, Jtc

--+-'-+-+--lr-·!1

_......_

- -- - - - - ·---- ---

- --

---~~-

----·----------·--

·-· - '

~---- ~ - 11--

V, t. YOUNG Ill

s.

r
I
I
I

6.

7.

8.
9.

.1 10.
I

11 '
12.
13.
14.
IS.

16.

Pomeroy , Ohio

9-30-tlc

OHIO VALlEY
ROOFING
And Hom e Mainten anc e
e Roofing of all types
• Siding
• Remod eling
• Free es timat es
e10 Y r s. experi enc e

TOM HOSKINS
Ph. 949-2160 or 949-2ii2
7 5 rrc

BRAKES -TUNE -UP S
OVERHAUL SDIESEL-EXHAUST

L 1re n sed &amp; Bond ed

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
SIDING

" Bea utiful. Custom
Built G a r ages"
Call for free sidin g
es timat es, 949-2 801 or

P om ero y - 3 bedroom
no m e
w1111
t ull
base m ent
Assume at
13°1o A . P. R . $?9,800 lonn
w ith $5,000 down Ap
29 yrs .. P &amp;I
prox
$330 20 monthly To tnl
Pr1ce $34,500 .00
SY RA CU SE - Blended
low
1ntere s t
ralc
ava i lable~ 3 bcd ,·oom .
r anch, lull bA se ment.
attached
gn r age

$39,900 00 .
SYRAC U SE - 6 rooms ,
3 bed r ooms. carport ,
elec heat . npprox 1.1
acre . Assumable F H A

Phon e 949-2293
or 949-24 17
3 3 II n

Open Mon.-Sat. 9-S
3·5· 1 mo.

roan $37.500

loan . $35,000 .00
bed r oom hom e.
in
su lated , storms.. qas
heat, on an acre lo t
B lended rate 1n l eres t

U. S. Rl . SO Ea st
Gu ysv ill e, Ohio
Authoriz ed John Deer ,
New Holland, Bu sh Hog
Farm Equipm ent
Deal er

$24,900 00
POMERO Y
Seller
f inancing available on
new 3 bed room home
E lec h e~ol. F1replac e
1.75 acres $4? .000 00

Farm Equipment
Paris &amp; Service

No Sund ay Ca ll s

3 11 li e

Old TV 's lor part s Call 99?

3408
One Y' Al il ska n Mctl &lt;tmutt •
male 991 6706

5 Qr&lt;ly k1tlC'n s. I wk \
(.lll 446 0718

MIDDL E P O RT

1 3 rt c

Seller h nanc1nq on new

ole!

base m ent. 211 bn ths
A ppr ox
I ncre 101

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION
New Homes - ex tensive remodeling

COMPLETE
RADIATOR
SERVI CE

$48 .900.00
Ml DOL£ POR T

$3 .500

Radi ato r Speci a lis t
NATHAN BI GGS
35 Y r s. E xpe ri ence

• El ectri c al work
. • Cu stom Pole Btdg s.
e Rooting work
14 Y ear s Ex peri enc e

down,

monfhly

To g1ve away Bnrn full ot
M rmure Ple&lt;~ S f' p1 r k up
742?47 1

Los t and Found

6

FOUND 6' blade hunl1nq
kn de 1n c ase Identify Ca ll

GRI
Jean Tru sse ll
Dotti e Turn er
Offi ce

2 26 lfc

CANDLELIGHT INN
PH. 992·991 3
Rt. I Cheshire, Oh.
St. Rt. 7
OPEN 7 DAYS
A WEEK
Open Mon.-Sat.
!2 :00p.m . to 2: 30a.m .
Sun. 12 a .m.-12 p.m.

17 .
18.
19,
20.
21.
22 .
23.
24.
2S.
26.
27.
28,
29.
30.
31 . - - -- 32. _ _ _ __

Carryout Seer
Available
Bands Every Fri. &amp;

Sat. Night
THIS FRI. &amp; SAT .
MARSHALL
TENNANT BAND
coming Next

Lone Wolfe Band

~

33.

34.
35.

Mail This Coupon with RemiHance
The Dally Seiltinel111 Court St.
Pomeroy, Oh. 45769

•
•
•
•

949-2660
992 ·5692
992·225 9

rn

388 9809
LOST on L 1ddy H ollow Rd
2 Wa lker Hounds I m,11 e &amp;
1 fema le Black , wl1 1fc &amp;
br own $200 .00 Reward l or
nny 1nformal10n lead1ng 10
th e recovery of lllcse dog s
C&lt;l l l 446 13.:16
Ya rd Sa l e
Yard Sale Rt 141, Cen
tena r y Townhou se Tues &amp;
Wed Baby cl othes. A von
bottles . teen clo th1ng
Carport Sale 17 Wood land
Or April 7. 9 5 Lot s ol
good1es
Garage Sale Thur s April 8
2 M1 fr om HMC on R l 160
New 1tem s tor t111 S sa lr

Free E stimates
Reasonable Pr ic es
Call Howard

*
licensea 6 Bonded

949-2263
949-2160

3 29 ti c

All STEEL
BUILDINGS

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

Size s start from JOx24 "

.-'f"&amp;S BUILDINGS
Rt\ l , Box 54
Ri~Cine , Oh .

Ptt 614·843-2591
6 15 He

For all your wiring
needs; furnaces
repair service and
inslallalion.
Residential
&amp; Commercial
Caii742-319S
3-7 li e

~----------,

PULLINS
EXCAVATING

CHERRY TREE
MINIATURE
GOLF COUR SE

Ra ven swood , W. Va .
Now Open W eekend s

llo4 P.M.
Weather Perm1ttinq

Clip This Ad lot a Flee
Game with 1 paid Game.
bpires mar l5.
Located acro ss from
the Shopping Plaza at
wa shington Mot el .

3 29 I mo.

•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•

Dozers
Backhoes
Dump Truck s
Lo-Boy
Trencher
Water
Sewer
Ga s line s
Septic Sy stem s
L a rge or Small Jobs

PH . 992-2478
J.ll lmopd

MARCH
PERM SALE
Mon ., March 1
thru
Wed .1 March 11

Reg. 520
_Reg. 525
Reg. 530

Nowsrno
Now 522.50
Now 527 .SO

$35 Wave Lenth
For Longer Hair

Now 529 .50

Kay's Beauty Salon
169 N. 2nd
Middleport

Call 992-2725

REESETRENCHING
SERVICE
Water ~ Sewer - E

lectric
Gas Line-Ditches
Water Line Hook -ups
Septic Tanks
County Cer-tified
Roush lane
Ch eshire , Oh..

Ph . 367-7560
1· 7· 1 tt c

3·3· 1

3

Announc em ent s

SWE E P ER and sewm g
mac hin e re pa ir , par ts, and
suppli es
Pic k up and
deliver y, Davis Vac uum
Clea ner , one ha lf mile up
Geor ges Cr eek Rd . Ca l l

446 029 4..
Fi shi ng L1cense on sale
Co m e and see ou r new sh1p
ment of 1982 F1 s1ng Rods,
Sprmg
Ree ls, &amp; L ures
Va lley T r ad ing Co .. Sp r 1nq
Va ll ey Pl aza, 446 8025 .
Tu rk ey Hunters We have
m outh ca ll s, slate boJI:
ca ll s, camo gea r &amp; decoys.
i n st oc k
Spr inq Va ll ey
Trading Co .. Sp r i ng Va ll ey

Pla za, 446 8025 .
Gun Repair &amp; Hot Blu1 ng
We stoc k m odern ril les.
shotgun s &amp; han d guns . A ll
mu zzl e loadi nq quns &amp; ac
cessori es. Bes t pr ices in
the ar ea . R i ve r s1de Gun
Shop, Rt . 7. A t hal i a, Oh.
61.:1 ·886 5194.
Shepparp Sew i ng Mac hine
Sat es &amp;
Se r v i ce . Wi ll
reopen Mond ay, Apn l 5t h.
Open Mon . Sa t . 9 4, Closed
Thur s. &amp; Sun .
LO ST sm a ll w hite West
High l and T erri er . Los t in
. vin cinity of T ar a Es tates.
Rew ard . Ca ll 367 ·0.:135.

F or
bulk de li ve r y ol
gasoline, heating o il and
di ese l fuel. call L andm ark ,

992 2181 , Pomeroy, Oh.
Rac ine Fir e Dept. spon sors
a Gun Shoot, Sat . nights
6:30p.m ., B ashan. Fac tor y
chok e 12 gauge shotgun.
Bunny suit for r ent . $10 to

115. Kiddi e Shoppe. 992·
5044.

Weds.-Gent. f1ig~t
Thurs .-Pool Tourn.

J-24-lfc.

Y nrcl
S&lt;1lc
and
F lei"t
Mrtrkel. daily 10 00 AM l o
5 00 P M except Sundr1Y
Oldnkcr 's Var1ety . L C'on.

w vo
S1x family sa l e. 123 Sou111
Park . Po1n t
Plcn s~1nt .
Clot h1nq chddrens . ndult
SIZeS and m i SC
Publ1 c Sa le
&amp; Aucti on

wva 367

Happy Hour
4:00 to 6:00p.m.
Mon. - Keg Night
Tues.-Ladies Night

April 7 9 4 Turn fir st r and
lt'tt past rad10 sl al1on .
follow s1gns II ra1n 11 will
be 1ns1de . Lawn mower .
sl nnds . lots of ilem s

L E . N eal Aucl1oneer Srr
vtce
Estate Farm
Househo l d M1S C. Wf' SC II1I~
L ice nsed &amp; bonded Oh1 0 &amp;

PH. 992-7201
2 24 li e

Larqe Yard snle April 5,
and 6 2 m il es on Flatwood s
Rd !r om F1v e P ts Boy ~
c lo th es, lnrge l nb le, l oo ls.
d1shes. sl onC' jars. beet
spreads. d r apes . 992 7669

R1 c k
Pearson .
Ex
per1enced AUCTIONEER
Esta tes, nni 1Qucs. farm .
household L1censcd Oll1 0
WV . B u yi ng an11ques 304
77J 5785 , 773 9185

backhoe
excava ting
se ptic sy st em s
wa t er , sewe r
&amp; gas lin es
• dump truck
lirpii,sfm e

FOWLER CONSTRUCTION

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

FROM CONCRETE TO ROOFING
AND EVERYTHING IN BETWEEN.
PH. tfl-3543 or tfl-2316
3·17·1 mo.

The abandoned Antiquity
Methodist Church building
and its land is for sale . In·
terested persons may sub·
mit bids to : Athens Di strict
United M ethodi st Union,
? '1
Mulb e rr y
Av e .

' .. neroy , Ohio 45769. All

nor

Auct io n every Fr1 n1Qhl ill
Hle H a rH or a ComfTlun it y
Ce nt er . T r uc kl oads of new
m er ch and ise every week
Co ns1g m en ts of new nnd
used m er c handiSe alway s
we l come
R 1chnrd
Re yno l ds Auc t ioneer 275

3069 .
New Auction Wednesdny
April 7. 1982, Mason F1rc
Dep t . Mason W .VA nt 7
p.m . Two tr uck loads new
m er ch nndi se. Com e and
bu y w ho lesale or below
Bil l Brow n a nd ar1ck Pear
son Auc t ionee r s.
9

Wanted to Bu y

Wan ted t o buy smr111 t ~1rm
1n Gr ee n , Perry , Wnlnu t, or
Har r1 so n Twps Cnll 446

3881.
BEDS IRO N, BRAS S. old
f u rni t u r e, qo ld , silver
doll ars, wood ice boxes.
stone 1ar s. an 11qucs, etc ..
Comp l e t e
hou seholds
Wr it e · M .D . M i ller , R t 4.
Pomeroy , Oh Or 992 7760
Go l d, si l ve r , s terl 1n q ,
jewel r y , rings, old co 1ns &amp;
cur r ency . Ed Bur kett Bar
ber Shop , M idd lepor t. 99?

3476.
OLD FURNITU RE, bed s,
iron , br ass, or wood . Kit
chen c ubb a r ds of a ll ty pes.
Tabl es , r ound or sq uar e
Wood i cc boxes. Old des k s
and book c ases . Will buy
co mpl ete hou se hold . Go ld,
sil ve r , old m o ney, pocket
w atc he s, c ha in s, r i ngs, and
etc. Ind ian Artif ac ts of all
types. A l so bu y in g base ball
cetrds. Osb y M art in 992

6370.
JUN K ED cars, base ba ll
ca rd s,
sc rap
m et a l s,
aluminum c an s, fr a n
sm issions, m otors, ba t·
teries , radiators, stamps
and coins . Off ering tra sh
pickup servi ce . Harper ·

Halstead Salvage Co. 300
E leventh St ., Pt . Pl easant ,•

304 ·675 5868 .

Also . tl e'a

mark et
ope n
M ond a y
through Friday , 1·5 p.m .

WELDIN G ca ble a nd used
stee l &amp; pipe, 304·6/S-3677.

bids must be submitted bt

Apri I 26, 1982,
5 sm . mixed br eed pups. 2
female, 3 mal e. Call 245·

5671.

CA SH PAl D tor c lean. lat e
m odel use d c "'rs Sm1lh
Bu1 ck PonliPt C Gnl l1pOI1 S,
OhiO C.tll 446 278?
13UY11Hl
Gold,
Silver .
Plil lll•u m old co1ns. scr np
r1 nqs &amp; &lt;;. dv erw are Oady
QuO it ' :&gt; n v.=~1la bl e
A l so
(Oms &amp; co 11l suppt 1es l or
\rllr
Spr1nq
V alley
I r.1d 1nq
"lp r 1nQ Valley
PI&lt;Hr1 •146 80?5 or tl-16 8026
&lt;~'&gt; I I tor 1,1te model
u&lt;,t •rl (,1r '&gt;
r r t•n( tl l own ( ,!r Co
11111 G•·rw John so n,
&lt;1M1 0069

I • dll

W&lt;~rllt •c t
l 1mhr&gt;r W(' c. ul ,
pdy1 11q qood prtct&gt;s Cn 1
-1·16 0/06

ful liQU r
o. d&lt;.
lurru l ure .
round l &lt;l l11t•\ IJook c ,l '&gt;('~ .
dC&lt;:.k&lt;;&gt;, Clrt•SSl'r'&gt;. Cht•') IS, l( t'
bOX('S, Cl ( C ! ll •146 ]/)9

ROSE NBERG
LOST
fema le A1rd,1lf' .
brown &amp; bla ck , 1n VI Ci nily
of V1nton Reward Call

B

Then Tranzit
Mon.· Thurs.

--'-

All types of roof work ,
new or repair gutt er and
downspout~ .
gutt e r
cl eaning and painting .
All work guara nt eed .

992·61 91

WANT TO 13UY Old fur
nlt ure nnd Anl1qucs of nil
k1n cto.,, C&lt;JII Kenneth Swa 1n,
.:1 '16 3159 ~11l (J ?56 1967 In th('
Pvrn 1nq .;,

756 1379

REA LTORS

Ph . 991-2 174

J&amp;F
CONTRACT! NG

pr1ce

H enr y E . Cl el and, Jr .

P om eroy, Oh .

H. L. WRITESEL
ROOFING

1302 00

Tolr11

129.900 00

SMITH NELSON
NOTORS INC.

3 II 1 mo.

3

bed rooms. remodeled ,
F A . gas t1ea t Ao;:,sume
a l 1117°'o, approx ?8
yrs , on $26 ,400 00 wllh

Fr om
th e Sm a ll es t
Hea ter c or e to th e
Lar ges t Rad1 ator .

W.1 nt ed to Bu y

We p,1y r

Poodl e no pape r s C 111 J.l,.,
6361

LANG SV ILL E

SALES &amp;SERVICE

949·1860 .

oo

SYRACU SE - 6 room s,
3 bed r ooms, qas heal ,
s l orrns
i n sul a t ed,
Ass umab le low 1n teres t

BOGGS

L----------~

These caSh rates
inc l ude discount

fr.~~---·=r~~~,---~----~---

------- --

Rick &amp; Bitt Cogar
Owners

BISSELl
SIDING CO.

126,900.0U

CONSTRUCTION
Dozer &amp; bac khoe se r VICe, wa te r , sewe r ,
pond s,
t ound a t1on s,
r ec lam a hon.

Size s from 4 lO b and all
wood buildings 24 x36.
Insulated Dog Hou ses

--,.,.L--'---L--..J..--

&gt;Wanted
) For Sa le

C lerk of Court of
Common Plea s of
M eigs County , Ohio
M e igs County
Court House
Pom eroy , Ohio .:15769

PROBATE COURT
OF MEIGS COUNTY ,
OHIO
ESTATE
OF
ERNA
ELIZABETH
JESSE,
DECEASED

--+--+--'-+--t--il

if you describe fully ,
give price . The Sentinel
reserves the right to ---t---t-...,.f---t---11
class ify , edit or reject

LARRY E. SPENCER ,

Meigs

(Form erly Bare M e ta l)
278 W. Main . Pom er oy

AND

Utility Buildings

-Addons and re'modeling
!...Roofing and rutter work
-Concrete work
- Plumbing and
electrical wor~
(free Estimates)

992-6215 or 992-7314

days for answ er will co m ·
mence on that date.
In c ase of your failure to
answer
or
oth e rwi se
respond as r equired by the
Ohio
Ru l e s
of
Ci v il
Proc edure, judgm ent of
default wi ll b e r ender ed
again st you for the r eli ef
demand ed in the Com ·
plaint .
Oat~ : M arch 10, 1982 .

Public NotiU

CARPENTER
SERVICE

Write your own ad and order by mail w ith this
coupon . Cancel your ad by phone w hen you get
results . Money not refundable .

~_ub_!ic Notice -

Public Notice

IN THE COURT
OF COMMON PLEAS
OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
Public Notice
CHARLES
E.
PAT ·
NOTICE TO'
TERSON
CONTRACTORS
Box 118
STATE OF OHIO
Rutland, Ohio 4S77S
DEPARTMENT OF
Plaintiff.
TRANSPORTATION
Case No. 18,120
Colun:tbus, Ohio
March 26, 1982
-vsContract SaleHegal
BETTY PATTERSON
Address 'Unknown
Copy No. 82-361
UNIT PRICE
Defendant.
CONTRACT
Sealed proposals will be
NOTICE BY
received at the office of the
PUBLICATION
Director of the Ohio Depar- To Belly Patterson, whose
tment of Transportation I acldr·essis unknown.
Columbus, Ohio, untillO:OO
You are notified that you
A.M., Ohio Standard Time,. have been named Defen· .
Tuesday, April 20, 1982, for
dant In a legal action en·
Improvements in : ·

C&amp;M
EXCAVATING

PRO PE RTI ES !!
Pom eroy - Se ll er wil l
fina nce this 3 bedroom
home, full basement ,
$3.000 down. 10o.-o rR fP.
\ 5 y r s., $254.69 monthly
on bala nce Tot al pr1 ce,

GOLD SEAL CONGOLEUM

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

Public Notice

MAIN STREET
GARAGE

ll~ ll c

FREE -

Public Notice

3S IIn

Greg Roush
Ph . 992-7583
or 992-2282

• O r yl'n

GOOD SELECTION OF

.. _____________ ..

The Daily Sentinel

SP EC IAL F IN ANCIN G
ON TH ESE

446·4999 .

3 bedroom hom e. lull

SAlE
~l' q . ,181'1

1
1
1

I
1 301
·305 Cleveland Avenu e SW
PO. Box 400
1 Canton , Ohio 44702

PH. 742-2753

8 20 ti c

MOWF R

I
I

Telephone

Play Million
Dollar Skating
Gam e
Slop In For Card
Wed ., Fri. &amp; Sal.
7: 30 to 10 : 00
Sun . 2: 001o4 : 30
Available for
Private Parties
PH. 985-3929 or
985-9996

16HP 44 In Cu i

I

Srare _ _ Zrp

Custom kit chens and
applianc es,
custom
bathroom s, r emod eling,
plumbing , el ec tric , and
heat i ng .

S H f' 16 1N
fi_LLER

1
I
I

Name

3-14-rtc

C. R. MASH
CONSTRUCTiflN

sgs

10 1n. cu • 1', H P
PUS H MOWER

Ip•··-·--------~
to
more
I

1
1
1

AlSO TRANSMISSIONS

614-"2-2182

•

you could get a large loan, too.

Pometoy, OH.

JIM LUCAS

NEW MAY TAG

RUTLAND FURNITURE

As krn g iusr $9,800 .
FARMS AND WOOD·
LAND NEEDED . WILL
TAKE TRADE ON
SOME OF THE ABOV E
PROPERTIES . CALL
992·3876 .

GARAGE

Mi sc. M erchandice

COUNTR Y HOM E -

POMEROY,O .
992-2259

Chesler, Oh.

e Site s
•Water &amp; Gas Lin es
• Spring Developm ents
" Small Jobs A
Specialty "

Ki tt ens gray &amp; bla c k Celli

SKATE-A-WAY

SAVE MONEY
MAKE YOUR OWN
E ASTER CANDY

Rl. 124
A CR ES 3 or 4
bedroom home, ba th ,
na tur al gas hea t, car
peting,
ci t y
wa t er,
located on b l acktoproad . Asking $35,000 .

9

G tveaway

ANY PERSON who 110 ~
anylh1nq to g1vc nway ilnd
does not offer or attempt 1o
off er any other lh1n g l or
sale may plac e an nd 1n th1 s
column . Tber e will be no
cha r ge to thr ndvert 1scr

Business Services

~! ~ 1 1r 1 11

TRAILER LOT S -

4

Rea l Es tate - Genera l

iJTJeWMTAIC

BUILDIN G LOT RuTLAND-An open meeting to be
held on April 28 at the Rutla nd
Uni~ Methodist Church was planned during a rece nt meeting of the
Rutla nd Friendl y Gardners held at
the home of Mrs. Margaret Ed·
wa rds.
Mrs. Macil Ba rt on will be guest
demonstra tor a t the ope n meeting
using pla nt propaga ti on as her
theme. Members of all ga rden clubs
of the county will be invited to at·
tend.
Joan F etty presided a t the
meeting with Mrs. Edwards giving
the devotions us ing a poem by He len
Steiner Rice. Oflicers ' reports were
given . A corrununication was read
from the Rutla nd Civic Ce nte r and
the club voted to purchase a chair.
A tour of Stahls Nurser y at

T h e Da il y Se nlin e i- Pa g e-9

Early Antique c ountry fur ·
niture, cupboards, all kind s
of
chests ,
d e sk s,
stoneware , et c. Call 367·

0138.

RECYCL!

NG 307 Upp{'r Rtvf' r Rd ,
Gnll1 pOI 1S
131ur 11u ild1nq
riU O"&gt;"&gt; fr om ~dv rr Br 1dQe
PI &lt;H r1 Opr •n Man Wee! . &amp;
Fr 1 tO to .1 ~)(Jt 10 to 3
S P EC II~LI 71N G
IN
ALUMINUM
CA NS ,
.t lu rnonurn S1d1flQ. s!H'f't S &amp;
c.1.;, 1 alum
ro ppf'r w1rf'.
br nss. r nd1 at or s. auto ba t
trr1 C'') &amp; IBM r &lt;trd&lt;, 4.:16
IJ.IQ

Ccdnr Tr ees 1 to &lt;1 It will
c!lq
Cnll J46 4416 alte r

IP M

Em lllovme.nt
s-ervices
11

He lp w.o nted

c ee l BhltJidul 1 SPii Avo n
Enrn qood '!.~$ Mt'f'l qr0 at
proplr C.111 ·146 3358
Fu ll or p,1 1 ll 1i1H' '&gt;r1le&lt;, Will
lr.1 1n
M .1n,lql • mt•n t
PO':I iii Oil ,W,l 11 r1 1Jit · 4.16 3320.
9 noon
M1dd l r·tHH '
1.1dy
tor
hCIUS(' kf.' (•pf'r N PPC!f'd 1111
mPd1 ,11r1v C&lt;~ l l .IJ6 1930

J OB

SE EKERS'

o:o Need h{Qp
1n clevr toplllC/ .1 compc lil 1 ve- ~~
f'Orw
on
t od,,y · "&gt;
10b
10,1rlq •P \ l'l lllrl,tr ') .1 nd i ll
diV ICI Ur11 l){'lp r1Vild~1 ble
For
1n l n rm ,Jtoon se nd
rp&lt;.umr 01 hr1f'l wo rk
ll o". tory lo Gillen Cnr err
(OUil5f'lonq 1n , ,) r(' ot Box
.:Q I
C.l llq; oiiS
Dnily
' roiJunt·
11/S Jrct
Avr:,
G, JII ipP i o\ . O tl .1')6)1
F RU S TRA 1 E

Own1·r np t'r ,l tors w 1Hl
&lt;,o rHt lr• .nit· or t.lncJom t rac
lor·, Olr! 1' r tr ,""lr tcr -. on qood
co ne! t' XCt'Pii' d Work out ot
r onl on ,lrt•d C.111 Motor
l}(' rv1 r r Co. Inc 61.1672
7967
G[T VALUA BLE tr,11n1nq
rl S r1 yOUn(l bUSi nes s perso n
rln&lt;l rr1rn qood money plus
'JO rTif ' qrc'rl l q d 1&lt;, ~1 s r1 Se n
t11WI rou lr• Cr1rr 1er Phone
u&lt;:, r1qhl r1W r)Y ,1nci (j('l on
ti) p PIICiihddy l1&lt;, l ill 99/
?1)6or99'J 7 15/

Hurn ,ln St·rv 1cc Pos1t1on .
fll C Gn ll 1il J,1ckson Me1qs
Mrntn l Hr•(1lth Board 1S
IOOk ln(l l Or ,1n 111Cii VIdUal
"Nh O c,1n w ork on a month
to m onth co ntr,1 cl bas1s to
sct·k ou t. l 1nd ,1nc1 l1cense
c xlr r1mur r11 c,1n:- homes 1n
GniiiN, J~1 c k so n r1nct MeigS
M1m 1mum
Co u n 11r.;,
rcqu1rmr:nt&lt;, B A or 8 S
1n ~1 hum.1n sr rvt Cf' f 1eld
Willl ,1n (' lllphilSIS 1n
Psycll Oioqy or Soc 1al Work
Plrrt'if' ~1p pl y by subm1 tt 1ng
&lt;1 resume to Th e Gallia
Jack so n Mc1q s
Mental
Hcall h Board . P 0
Box
51.:1. G~111ipO II ~ OhiO. 4563 1
Thr Gn lll c1 Jn c kson Me1qs
Mcn 1,1 1 Hralth Bonrd 1S iin
eC]Uil l Oppor ttmily
Em
r loy f'r
I 110 Grl l l1rt MC'1C1sCommun
l!y A c t 1on Aq c nc y 's Head
stMt
Proqram hn s an
open1nq l or rl Program
5C'cr r1My Dut1e s 1ncl ude
lyp1no . &lt;; llorlhnnd , ill1ng,
rout1n C' Oli1 Cc work and
tak1nq m111u tes at mont hly
mer hnq~
Ounldlcallons
H 1Qh Sc llOOI Dip l oma
Typ1nq 70 plus words per
m1nutr. Shor!hnnct 80 plus
word s per m1nu te A pile an
ts must al so hov(' c1 vnl1 d
Or1vN s L 1cen se and depen
In
ctrlbl e trnn spor tat1 on
tcr cs led nppi1 C.=1 nt s s t~ ou l d
npply tor
th 1s po&lt;.,1t1on
I)Cfor r 5 p m , Wednesc1ny,
April 7. 1987. at 111e Ohi o
Burr(1u of
Employ m ent
Sc rv1 Cf'S
45 O l1 vc Sl
Gn l lop oi 1S. Oh10 A s he ~ '
lhilnrt nnd typ1nq te st wil l
bf' o1ven by OBES The
G ALL1A MEIG S
CO M

MUNITY ACTION AGE N
( Y IS AN EQUAL OP
PORTUNITY
EM
PLOYER .
WORK SH OP
supe r vtsor
Bus dnver , H 1gh Sc hool
01p1oma pl us 2 yea r s
colleqc Reg i stered Nur se.
Con tac t D av i d Eakle, c- o
Gr een Acres Reg1on a1 Cen
ter, P 0 . Box 11 5, Lesa ge,
West V1 r gi n ia 25537 Phone

J04 762 2522. E .O.E
RES PONSIBLE baby sri·
'ter, Monday Friday day s,
reference s required , ca 11
614 446 7693 .
WanTed. ser1ous m1nded
m usic1a n. any th 1ng and
ever y th ing t o form ba nd .
Phone 61 4·4.:16·73.:1 4.
Someone to bui ld fences.

Phone 304 937 ·2205

�'

Page-10-The Daily Sentinel

They'll Do It Every Time

would

HOWCIIAIP
~w:rF&lt;ESS
7IJ()I&lt; SV lOIIG

to

FURN ISHED

cove ra ge in Ga l lia Count y

Fa r m , hom e and personal

are

lS

.

apartment,

I

uniforms pu c htng and
kt c king bag s, a nd prot ec

l ive equ1pmen t
Jerry
Lowery
&amp;
A ssoc ia t es
Karate
S tud1 0,
143
Burt1n gton Rd , Jack son.
011 Call 786 3074

18

Wanted to Do

L1rne stonc for driveways,
wilt spread _Ca ll 379 2642
Expert lawn mow1ng scr
v1 ce , dependable. low r ate,
lrcc cs l 1ma tes Call 245

5017
The Sd k Hou se (cus tom
s1ll&lt;
flower s)
Co mplete
br1d al tine. weddings , an d
all oc casions. Call367 7566
Babys1t11nq 1n my home
Re f erences av,lilab le. Ca ll

446 0930
Custom qa rden plowi ng,
Ga l lipOl iS ar ea Call 446

31

Ho'!les ~~a~

32

2 bd .room i n Harrisonvill e.
$8,000. May co nsi der tand
co ntra ct. 614 928 ·4417
2 story, almost 1l1acre . 4
bd ., 2 livin g r oo m , kitchen ,
dining r oom , bath -small
base m en t , 2 large carports.
Si de porch , front porch
wood burner . 949-2403·9 to
4. 949 2460 evenings.
New 3 bd .room home with
4.8 acres nea r Meigs mine

no

- - - - --=';:...

1.$35,000. 742 3132 or

742 2764 after 4.
In M as on 2 acres , 3
bd .roo m large garage, 2
bd room 'R ental take ca r or
mobil e hom e in trade . John
Shee ts 311:1 mile s South
Middleport . R·7.

Mobile Homes
for Sale

TRI -S TATE

MOBILE

HOME S. Gallipo li s. Pri ce
reduced,
u sed mobil e
hom e$. CALL 446-7572 .

CLEAN USED MOBILE
HOME S
KESSEL 'S
QUALITY
MOBILE
HOM E SALES. 4 MI.
WEST, GALLIPOLIS, RT
35. PHONE 446·3868.
12x60 2 bedroom Budd y
mobil e hom e. Set up with 1
or 4 lot s, gas heat. rural
wa ter , cl ose to town , finan
ci ng available. Phone 446

Wa sher and Dryer Repa1r
Al l w ork
Quaran tecd
RC'ilsonabl c r ai ('S Call 256

1396
W ill p1ck up old washers
and dryer s Cal l 446 BIB\ or
256 1]96
Lawn Mow1nq Sen11ce. no
yard to b1 g or small , house
pa1nl1ng &amp; roofin g, and
l 1ghl haul 1nq Call 446 3159
aft er 6PM \ 286 57 40
Babysitting 1n my home

Ca ll446 1282 .
-----~ CCE!Iiri!C-tjll- =
21

Bu sme ss
Opportunity

C1g(Helle
V e nd1ng
Bus1ness. Call 304 773 565 1.

12

Money to Loan

REFI N A NCE or pur cl"lase
you r home 30 year f ixed
rate wva . &amp; Oh1o. Leade r
M ortgag e, 77 E . State St ,

Athens, Oh 592 3051
23

Professional
Servic es

PiClno
• Tuning
&amp;
Repa1 r .Ci'lll Bill Ward for
&lt;lPP Oin lm f'n t,
Ward 's
Keybo'a rd , 446 4372 .
C &amp; L BookkC'epi ng . In
come ta x re tu rns for 1n
d1v1duals &amp; bu s1ne sses
Carol Nea l 446 3867
Shoe r cp.:11r nnd Metal
s tampin g . Qui senbe rry .
992 1954, Sy ra cuse, Ohio
FIRST

and
seco nd
m o rgag e~. land c o ntra ct~ .
and receivables pur chased.

614 44HI1 3.
DOT SO NS Tree Se rvi ce, 15
yea r s exper1ence , we ca n
remove any tree anyw her e,
reasonable, fr ee es tim ates,
1n s ur ~d. 304 576 7897 .

433 3.

Home s for Sale

1971 Con cord Mobile Home,

12x65 . Call 446·70 15 afler
5:30p .m .
Bea utiful br ick &amp; fram e, 3
bedroom h om e w / sce nic
view,
wood · burning
fireplace , formal dining,
centra l air w / heat pump.
Lanscaped, 1 acre lot
w/fenced in back yard,
$45,900 . 11 % financ ing,
sma ll down paym ent . Call

446 3766.

r------House for sate i n town .
Priced on inspect1on , 3 or 4

bdr .. FR. 2 baths. Can 446·
1223.
SMALL FARM FOR SA LE
A nice 4 bedroom home
with 8 acres of pasture gar·
den space, barn , nice out
buildings. Locat~d one mile

from State Rt . 7. Call 256·
6663.
2 bed. house in the East end

of Gallipolis, very good
neighborhood. $16,000 . Call

3 bd .r oom , 2 baths, built in
k1tchen, poo l. J111 garage,
fir ep lace. w ood burn e r
cl ose to town, finan cing
availabl e a t low interest.
pr1 ced be low appraised
value .992 5505
Hou se tor sa l e or r ent .
Be s1de Bapi1SI Church 1n
Antiqu1ty . Jl l2 m i. below
Hydro Plant 949 228 1 or
949 -2129
HOUSE . Meadowbrook Ad
d1 t1on , J bedroo m . tam 11y
room w1 fh fr ie place. cen
tral a~r, basement. 304 -67 5
1541.
THR EE bedroom hom e. 5
acres, 9 mil es from town .
Phone aft er 6 :00p .m . 304

67 5 7198
IF you ca n afford $405 per
month total pa yme nt. ta xes
and insur ance in cluded ,
th 1s ran ch with 3 bedrooms ,
2 baths &amp; family room on 1/ 7
acre, can be yours for
sma ll down payment . Cal l
304 458 1582, Mason Coun

ty

Farm 76 acr es . . Good
house, barn , work shop,
small c hicken hou se. 1 mil e
west of Langsville on Sr
124 . 742 2860 afte r 4 p. m .

12 11 Main Sl , custom built
by Eve r ett Lutton , 304 -675

2381.
FOUR r oo m s &amp; bath, in
Ma so n, 4th St . c lose to
sc hool 304 773 526 1.

bunk beds

$100,

mattresses

bunkie

APARTMENTS,
homes,
Pleasant

m obol e

hou ses,
Pt .
and Ga llipolis .

614 446·8221 or 6ln45 9484.
--~---

4S

Furnished Rooms
--·-

----

SLEEPING

ROOM S and

Mobile Homes
for Sale

moved . Ca ll 388 8270.
2 bedroom trailer , 1960
Pontia c. $300 . Call446·1391.

U SE D

\

Homes for Rent, Lease or
La nd Co ntra c t in town , or
co unt r y .
Ca ll
Str out
Realty , 446 -0008.
5 rm s. &amp; bath , locat ed 110
4th . Ave . Ga llipoli s, ni ce
garden space. Ca ll446·3870 .

Love l y quiet ranch style
house . J bedrooms , 2 bath s,
exce llent cond ., cent _ air,
larg e tot. garden area
Loca ted 3 mi . from Rio
Grande, $250 month plus

dep. Call 379-2785.

2 bdr . unfurnished hou se
1013 2nd . Ave . No utiliti es
paid, $150 per mo. Dep. req .

Ca ll 446·7886 .

12x65 Hill c rest, 2 bd .room ,
good cond . Pri ced to se ll.

4 room house tor rent in
Ra cin e. 949-2619.
42

Mobile Homes
for Rent

2 bed . mobile home. Dep &amp;

r ef . req . Ca ll 256· 1922.

1974 Champion Mobile
hom e. 12x60. Total elec .,
underpinning, washer and
dryer,beamed livingroom

cei ling . 17,000. 88).3250.

51

Mobile home tor rent . Call

Sof&lt;1, chair , rock er , ot
loman, 3 tables, $500. Sofa ,
chair and loveseat. $275 .
Sofa s and chairs pri ced

from $285 . to $795. Tabi es,
$38 and up to $109 . Hide·a ·
beds, $340 .. qu ee n siz e, $380.
Recl iners , $1 75. t o $295.,

La mps from $18 . to $65. 5
pc

dineftes from $79 ., to

$385 . 7 pc.. $189. and up .
$2 19 up to $495 . Desk $110 .
Hut ches. $300 . and $375.,
mapl e or p1ne fini sh .
Bedroom suit es
Ba sse tt
Cherr y. $795.
Bunk bed
co mplete wi th mattresses,

$250. and up to $350 Cap
la i n's beds, $275. complete .
Baby beds, $99 . Mattresses
or box spri ng s, full or twin,
$58 .. firm, $68 . and $78 .
Queen sets , $195 . 4 dr.
chests, $42 . Bed frames,
$20 .and $25 ., 10 gun Gun
c ab in ets, $350., dinette
chairs $20. and $25. Gas or
elect ric ranges, $295. Or·
thopedic super firm, $95,
baby rna tre sses. $25 &amp; $35,
bed frame s $20, $25, &amp; $30.
Used Furnitur e bookcase,
5 pc. dinett set , 3 Living
room suite. Ranges and
TV's . 3 miles out Butaville
Rd . Open 9am to 7pm , Mon .
thru Fri ., 9am toSpm , Sa t.

HOME .

MOBILE HOM ES MOVED
L icen sed &amp; insured. Call

...

Park. 992-3324.

304 576·2711.

895·3388.
CB,TV, Radio
_ ~~iJ!ment __ _

$100. PH . 44H013 or 446·
4327 .
54

Misc. Merchandice

Plastic Septic Tanks . State
and county approved. 1.000
ga l. tank , pric e $340 . Other
sizes in s tock, haul in your
pickup truck . Ca ll 614-286 -

5930, Ja c kson, Oh . RON
EVANS ENTERPR ISES
A hom e you ca n afford,
$25, 500 . P a triot Home
Bu i ld er s wil l build on your
lot a 3 bed r . home, ca r peted, ready to m ove in to,
will co nsider tr ade in on
mobi le hom e. Cal l 379·26 17 .
And see our model 1 mile
North of Silv er Bridge on
Rt . 7, across from Honda

$450.00. Ca ii 256·6J51.
Exc elsior Oi l Co., 636 E .
Main St., Pomeroy, Ohio.

79 Starcraft 16' aluminum
v·haut. open bow win
dshield, canopy, 80 Mer ·
cury outboard, trailer craft
trailer . Ex c . co nd . 992·2849

- ------

Pets for Sale

DRAGONWYNO
CAT ·
TERY
KENNEL. AKC
Ch ow
puppies , CFA

mobile home setting on lot,
ready to move into. $8995 .

HILLCRES T KENNEL

1974 Buick Regal AM·FM
stero, PS. PB , $650. Ca ll
245·9567 .

Boarding ail breeds, clean
i ndoor · outdoor facilities .

Also

AKC

Reg.

Dober ·

mans. Call 446· 7795.

Boarding and grooming .
AK C
Gordon
setters ,
English Cocker Spanie ls.

Call 388 9790.
POODLE

GROOMING .

Call Judy Taylor at 367·

Building m ater ials block,
brick, sewer pipes, windows, lint els, etc. Claude
Winters, Rio Grande, 0.

Caii24S.S121.

56- - - - Pets for Sale
------- KENNEL Club. Registe red

Full blooded IRI SH SET·
TER pups, 8 weeks old. 304·
435,
675·5053· P .O. Box
Gallipolis Ferry , WV .

Norris,

2

bedroom, assume loan, set·
up on rented lot. Must sell.

NEW IN COME LIM IT S. If
you earn between $9000 to

Easter bunnies and Beagle
puppi es . Ca ll 245·56 14 or

co mplete $100, 6 drawer
dresser $50, dryer $.45, por·
ch swing S20, oak dresser
$100, gas cook stove $45,
refr igerator $75. Hours 9 to

Phone 304 ·675·2105 . .'

furnished,

30H75·

79 SCHULTZ, excellent
shape, asking $14,000.00
304·675· 1419 after 6.

79
_

or Trade
- - -For
- -Sale
--- ---

Fqr
Sa l e:Barbie
Doll
clothes and all sizes of

Raggedy ann doll s . Call
992·6729 .
L eaded glass hanging light,
ail fitt ings, tess than cost
price . Beautiful cond. $150 .

Cutlass

Ps ..

pb .,

Ashton -Upland

L TO

400

Au tomat ic, all pow e r .
Needs body work, but runs

Haven West Virgini a. Over
20 less expensive cars in
stock .

CAPTA IN STEEMER Car

&amp; LIVeSIBEII

351

_

New \ &amp; Used Troy built
tillers. Bulk garden seed .
Swisher Implement. Inc ..

Gallipolis. Call 446·0475.
1-12' John Deere wheel
disc, l ·set of John Deere 4
bottom 16' semi mount
plows, 1·Hillsboro tri -axle
goose·n eck 28' trailer . Call

614 256·6534 .
Wanted -MF 35 tractor or
similar with live power .

Specia l March and April
only. Gene's Deep Steam
Cleaning. Sco tch Gaurd.
Free estimate . 992·6309

1976 Mvstang, run s good,
$500. 305 Henderson St r ee t ,
Henderson, WV .

RON'S Tel evi sion Serv ice.
Spec ializing in Zenith and
Motorola , Quazar, and
house calls . Phone 576 ·2398
or 446 -2454.

9 :30

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

1 0 :00 (!) SRO: Barefoot in the
Park Viewers take a funny

RINGLES'S SERVICE ex ·

look at newlywed life. Richard Thomas , Bess Arms trong, Barbara Barna

30H75·3406.

Call256 · 1379 .
Comp le te set ot c ultivators
for Farmalt cub or next •

s ize bigger . Call 614·593·
6535 .

2.000 Ford tractor gas, PS,
with all hydratic loader,
will sell loader separate.

72

Truck's for Sale

1977

Ford

pi ck up,

good

new

no answer

4.46·

4141.

Massey Ferguson model
65 , diesel tractor . good

engine, good cond ., $2 ,400.

cond. Call 256· 1492.
Pototoe grader with motor
and transmission . Stalk
cutter, cultlpaker 7ft ., Ford
pull type rake like new.

Paul Sayre, Portland, 0 .
Rt. 338. 1 mile below new

grader

blade,
electric start. phone 304458· 1854.

Apartment
THREE year old mare,
weighs 700 lbs. Due to foal
in June, 304·675·6626.

Apt. in Pomero.y .

.c

Ground ear

rooms

Corl), $5~00

100. Call675-3308.

and bath. 992·5621.

per

YOU MEAN YOU

1978 Chevy 3/4 pick up, 350

LOCKSMITH

HAVE A ~l'N£1(
.. .AND YOU HAVEN'T

SPOKEN TO HIM
IN YFAitS?

I

/l6 SOON AS SHE
r?f?AWS AGAINST IT,

1979 &amp; 1978 GMC pickups
with CB's. Call 1·304·882·
2237.
Used pick\Jp truck topper s,
$95 to.S195. Call446·7322.
72 Dodge 1/2 ton pickup,
flatbed , $500 . Call245·5015 .

t1oo,ooo!

Service .-

=---=-=--= =-- ::

82

HE'S ALIVE .•.
ANI? !MNKIMS

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

finds himself caught in a le-

gal whirlpool. 160 min.)
10:30 (])Sing out Am~rica
(I) June Wayne: Dorothy
Sar.
® Naws
1 1 :00 0 (I) Cll 0 Cll ® 01 ll2l
News
(]) Nashvilla RFD
(I) All In the Family
CD News/Sporu/Weather
(I) Dick Caven 'Cocaine .·
First of 2 parts. lester
Grins Spoon, Leslie Fuller
and Peter Bourne are the
guests.

OF YOU.'

=- =::._ = =

Plumbing

____ ~~ _ti~_a!_i'!_g _ _

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING

11 :30

BARNEY

Cor. Fourth and Pine

Phone 446·3888 or 446·4477

WHAT'S TATER
CRVIN' ABOUT,

8! __ ~- !~-a~~'!_g __ _

63 Ford F-600 dump truck .
$1,200. Call458· 1875.

WANT/1£1?/

THI\T M()t!ES

882·2079.
I

I'VE 607HER
1?16/IT WIYER£ I

BUT THAT
CHECK FOR

Gallipolis Diver sified Con·
st. Co. Custom dozer &amp;
backhoe work . Special
farm r.:~tes. Call us for fi"ee
estimates. 446·.4440.

LOWEEZV?

HE AIN'T

CRY IN:

~LVINEY

HE'S JUST HOLLERIN'

(Rl 160 min.)

FOR A GLASS OF

Cil Another Ufe

WAH WAH

(I) MOVIE:

'The President's Analyst'
(I) Benny Hill Show
0 Cll Quincy A teen-age
girt dies from a botched
abortion by a drunken sur~on . (60 min .l

__ ~~e!~igerat!_o'! _.

74 CJ5 jeep, A· l condition,
304·V8, 2 tops, $2000.00, 304·
675·6726.

SEWING Machine r epairs.
service. Authorized Singer
Sates &amp; Service Sharpen
Scissors.
Fabric Shop,

i4 -"""' t..iotor(vCr..--

a}:"_- Generii~ujr~::_ ::_

78 Honda Hawk, 400CC
automatic, 7,600 miles.
Blue with sissy liar and
crash bars with highway
pegs. Hasn't been on road
fof 1 112 yrs. Very good
condition. $900. Call 446·
4249.

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

Pomeroy . 992-2274,
---- --- -~ ....

®Hitchcock
(I) CD Tonight Johnny

0

is joined by Engelbert Humperdinck , Steve landesburg and Loni Anderson .

•84-:-:.. :: =-=-Electrical
=--:::::-:: ==::-::-

(I) Captioned ABC News
(lD MOVIE: 'Rooamary's
Baby'
G ~ Nlghtllno
1 2:00 Cil Buma &amp; Allen
(I) Nlghdlll!l
(f) PB$ Late Night
G (Jt MOVIE: ' Blue- .

--

As WE 60TH KNOW,
SILENCE IS GOLDEN ...

JIMS Water Service. Call
Jim Lanier, 304·675·7397.

AN

IGLABE~
I 1- K

E)(l'E~Ie'-JCEt::'
5Ail.O~.

Now arrange the carcled leners to
form the surprise answer. as sug ·
gested by the above cartoon

I

Print answer here:

A

'l I r x xI r

{Answers l omor row )

Jumbles CROWN

I Answer

What

OUEST

ADRIFT

FLURRY

tun e maktts a ped o rmttr happy?-

A "FOR-TUNE"

Jumble Book No. 19, eont1lnlng 110 puzzles, Is available lew $ 1_95 po.I!Jald
!rom

Jumble, cJo this newspaper, Bo11 34, Norwood. N.J. 07648. Include your

name, address, zip code and maka checks payable lo Newspaperboob.

BRIDGE
The luck factor
By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag
tournaments is

+K9 7

most

• A 10 53

important. A pair that plays
well is going to finish near
the top, but good play alone
does not determine the

+9 3

+ Q7 6 4

winner ."
Today 's

Dallas

hand

from

the

WEST

EAST

+J 104 2

+(1 883

.K8 2
+Q

.QJ 7
+A 865 4

+109 532

is an exam-

regional

ple of the luck factor . Every

+A 5
• 964

in three no-trump. Usually
South was the declarer but
some Norths got to play the
hand . Most declarers made
10 tricks but a r.. w got bad

+KJ1 072
+AK J
Vulnerable: Both
Dealer South

they were

because

+s

SOUTH

North-South pair wound up

scores

4 - ~- 82

NORTH

Oswald : "The skill fa ctor

in pair

held to just nine ."
Alan: " The pair that won
the event were lucky enough
to come home with 11 tricks

West

North

East

Soulb

Pa ss
Pa ss
Pas.s

2•
3 NT

Pass
Pass

2+
Pass

I NT

and an absolute top score on
the hand. It wasn't a matter
of great play by declarer. It

Opemng lead + 3

just happened that West
decided to make the unusual
attacking lead of the quee n
of diamonds."

clubs, two spades, one heart

Oswald : "That lead by
itself didn 't give South his
top. East cou ld have ducked
but East played his ace and
returned the suit.
Alan: "South won that sec·
and trick with dummy's nine
and had no trouble collecting four diamonds, four

and a lllhe matc h points."
Oswa ld: " As you ca n see tt

~fUNII'(J ..

wasn't a matter of great
declarer pla y. Once that
queen and ace we r e played

at trick on~ . any declarer
was sure of 11 tricks. It was
what golf playe rs call ·a
lu cky rub of the ~ree n . · _..

r

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
Woody fiber
5 "Too - the
Pha Ia rope"
9 Asian river
10 Chan
portrayer
·12 Sluggish
13 Clutter
15 Work unit
16 Twitch
17 Hiller's mate
18 Bring
merriment
20 Nonsense!
21 Hebrew
O.T. notes
Z3 N.Y .C. street
24 Bandleader
Shaw
25 Inheritor
U Agitate
27 Life's work
28 Hold session
2ll Lech Walesa
and others
30 Letter
31 Fish product
3! Disfigure
35 Accelerate
37 Row
3ll Drop in
the saying
39 Against
40 Nourish
41 Heavenly
DOWN
I Bundle

DAILY
'

2 Cupid
3 Appear;
come to one
4 Effort
5 Film role
for Sue Lyon
6 TV role for
Linda Lavin
7 Make lace
Yeslerdlcy's Answer
8 Come to one
22 Dancer
29 Bluenose
II Zealot
or s inger 33 Poker tenn
14 Cat with
Z3 Additional 34 Leather
a rodent
25 Man or
strap
16 Biblical
woman's 36 Slapstick
weed

name
item
21 - up
31 New Guinea
I confined 1 port

19 Eur.
rodent
21 Populace

CRYPTOQliOTE - Here·s how to work
AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW

it:

One letter simply stands lor another . In this sample A is
used for the three L's, X lor the two o ·s. etc . Single letter&amp;,
apostrophes, lhe length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code leiters are different

D

(I) CD Late Night With
David lattonnan
(]) Jack Bonny Show
(!) MOVIE: 'Ftaah Gor·

don'
(I) Solld Gold

Ill

87

WHAT SAILING A
BOAT MI&lt;SHT !!IE FOR:

beanl'

1 2:30

PEANUTS

(I) MOVIE: 'Columbo:
Short Fuse'
1 :00 (]) I Menlod Joan
1 :30 Cil My Uttle Marvlo
CD Newa/S~n Off
1:46 (I) MOVIE: Royal African

Upholstery - ~

1976 Honda 360. Call 446·
.4185. II

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1163 Sec. Ave., Gallipolis.
1979 Yamaha 750 Special. . fA6·7833 or 446·1833.
12,000 mi. 992·5760.
---"------- -MOWREYS Upholstery Rt .
1981 Yamaha 650 MI\)&lt;IM·
1 Box 124, Pt. Pleasan,, 304675·41.54.
.
only 1900 miles. 992·6139.

Rtn.'
2:00 (]) Bachelor Flllher
(1!11 Balleve
CD News/Sign Off

e

11--- -

•

CHECKING ACCOUNTl

Residential. automotive.
Emergency service. Call

Call after 5, 446·4316.

Cll ® Making the

(I) TBS Evening Nawa
0 Cll ® Lou Grant Lou

,-----1 WINN1t'5 1/EF\?SITEP
MY MONEY IN HER

304·895·3802 .

- --~ ---

1975 Gravely tractor, real
good condition, sulky,

WINNIE

Water wells . Commercial
and Domeslic . Test hol es.
Pumps Sales and Service.

tires, V G cond., 12.195. Call
446·4554,

0

Grade Harry plays marriage
counselor to save his ow n
sanity.

2088 or 675·4560.

1977 Ford 6 cyl., 3 spd .
tr ans .. with topper,

4077th.
(I)
ill)
Bernstein/
Beethoven 'Mi ssa Solem·
nisin 0 Major, Opus 123.'
Maximilian
Schell,
de scribes Beethoven 's funeral
and
Leonard
Bernstein
leads the Concertgebouw
Orchestra and the Chorus
of Radio Hilversum . (90
min)

perienced mason, .roofer,
carpenter,
elec trician ,
ge neral
repairs and
remodeling . Phone 304-675-

cond _6 cyl. Call 446·4554.

MF 135 gas, PS, $3,500. Call
446·7322.

REGISTERED Hereford
Cattle sate, Jackson coon'
ty Hereford Association an·
nual 'sale. Friday, April
9th. at 7:30p.m. Livestock
Market, Falrplain, wv.

ONE bedroom apartment,
$150.00 per month. 304·6751972 after 5 P·l" ·

ger buys a goat which
at
the
causes
havo c

1967 Ford Fairlane GT, 2
door very littl e rust,
orginal paint . Call 576·2919
after 4.

1971 Volkeswagen with new
engine asking $700. Phone

b

I I I

girl becomes hi s n1ghtmare.
(I) CD MOVIE : ' Thou

cel lent condtition , 304·675·
3008, ask for Neva .

THUNDERBIRD, ex·

byHenriArnoldandBot&gt;Lee

""

.:-..-.

0

Shalt Not Kill'
(]) 700 Club
(I) 01 ®I MOVIE : 'M y
Body, My Child'
0 (I) ® M"A"S"H Khn -

GASOUNE ALLEY

367 ·7160.

$2500.

Private

Bell Contra c ting General
plumbing service, home
remodeling &amp; repair s Free
est imates . Call 446·4002 .

76

9001b. mare work, single,
double, or ride. Reg. POA
(Appaloosa). Outstanding
color &amp; coaformation. Call
446·2222 .

for Rent

9 :00

Fren c h
City
Paint i ng
residential &amp; co mm er c ial.
interi or , ex teri or , paper
hanging ,
&amp;
textured
ceilings. Call 367 ·7784 or

0575 . Call refundabl e.

®

8 :30 0
Cll ® Repon to
Murphy Murphy 's dream

Call4462107 .

Similar bargains availa ble.
Call tor your directory on
how to purchase . 602·.998·

1970,

ALLEYOOP

pet Cleaning featured hy
Haffett Brosther s Custom
Carpets. Free es tim ate s

SURPLUS JEEPS 165 .•
CARS $89 ., TRUCK $100

Cll

Benjamin Captain Lewis
goes undercover to get the
goods on a bar owner who
is fleecing soldiers
(I) (ff) Great Perform ances: Dance In America
'Paul Taylor/ Two landmark Dances .' The Paul
T ay!or Dance Company 1s
featured in performance at
the 198 1 American Dance
Festival held in Durham,
Nonh Carolina . (60 min .)

Marcum
Roofing
&amp;
Spou ting _ 30 years ex
perien ce, spec ia li zing in
built up roof . Ca ll 388 ·9857 .

real good . $7 .00. 742·2263 .

engin e,

lifesaving parachute dev1ce
and a 12-year·old star of
the Ice Capades . (60 m1n .)

30H75·4114.

2 Holstein Springer heifer.

Road

Again'
([) MOVIE: 'Written on
the Wind'
Cll
01
~
That 's
Incredible Featured ere a

0

20 yrs . exp . Cal l 388·9652 .

Ford

Geographic

Special

1182.

1975

Cleveland

Close-up. Cat1446·40S3.

$150. month. plus deposit
and utilities. Phone 304·675·
4088.

(]) National

t ex tur ed ce il i ng s co m
mercia! and r es idential,
f ree estim ates. Call 256

p.w ..

CD Unle Housa On

(I)

the Prairie Mr. Oleson 1s
taken prisoner and his w1fe
refuses to pay the ran som .
(A) (60 min .) ICiosod Cap·
tionedj

Hom e

79 Mustang $3400 742·2451.

73

ficiency . 304·675·2722.

5Q ...

0

(!) MOVIE: 'Kill and Kill

PAINTING
interior and
exterior,
p lumbin g,
r oofing, some r emodelin g .

MUSTANG,

~quipmen!

--,

... ~HAT'G 601HG NO \'I, NOY/ .. NO HEED
00? ~HAT'S
TO TAAE THAT TONE,
THE IDEA OF
I'M YOUR FRIEHO,
All THESE
l'fiLDA ..
QUEGTION6?

1 GUEGG J'LL
JUGT NEVER
GET UGED T'
LIFE 5EIH'

STUCCO PLASTER IN G

Supr em e

992·2961.

6_1__Farm

Tonight
B:OO

~m_p~oveme'!_!s

HARTS Used Cars, New

30H82·3596.

TWO
bedroom ,
un ·
furnished . One bedroom ef·

-~- ~am_pers

1875 .

Call256·6038 .

59

m

.. SO \'tHAT IF I'IILOA SAVED HIRAM
JU5T T' GET ON TV'? AIN'T IT
5ETIEit T' DO A 6000 THNG tv-FER A 8AO ~EAGON THAI'( A
8110 THING FElt
A 6000 ltEAGON?

good cond ., $850. 1971 VW
S450 . Call 367 ·7238 .

$3600. 992-6362 .

Sl ing erland Trap drum set
with Zi lgean cy mbal s. 10
yrs . old . Perfect tor begin·

Norman Le11r .' In the first
of a two-pan series we
see how the king of sit
corns and his associates
translate ideas · into enter taining shows.
CD Entertainment

ANNIE

Motor Home.

For sa le 1977 Chevette, 4
speed, AM -FM 8 tr ack
stero . Call 446 -0076 or 446· 81

19 77

Richard Simmons

®
Creativity w I Bill
Moyars 'The World of

ser.lces

57

upright · p1ano.

7 :30

-

Salurd ay s

Repon
®News
01 ~ Muppet Show
0 (I) You Asked For It
Cil Another Ufa
(I) Sanford and Son
Cll 0 Cll Family Feud
CD laverne and Shirley
(I) Business Repon

®

1969 Cobra sl i de in camper

72 Pontiac ex . cond ., new
v in y l top , can be seen at 107
Chil li cot he rd .

reclining bu cket s, T top,
velou r interior . Like new .

Sat e

v..tl.l. BBTThR ~
'TW~DSI

10 ~ 11-l~ OFFIC£ STAFF
11-.\ f&gt;L:TIOtJ . 1---::=&lt;"'----::-o;:-

Repa_ir_

cond . Call 675·3626 after
5PM

1975 Cutlass Supreme 350
auto, loaded, ex . cond . Ca ll
446·0515 anytime.

Salon .

brushhog,

AKC
Silver
min i ture
Poodle tor stud service,

CHI~ S'IQq(j.J,()L(;.tR ... ff \;. ~

1\H£.TIOt.J 11 HM :.OLL'I

1971 21 ft . Star c rafl tra vC'I
trailer , self con tai ned. E xc

77 Chevy Matibu Classi c,
small V·8 regular gas,
auto, fully loaded, 53,000
miles. $2,375.00 245 ·9118

For Sa te·$100 . 6 month old
AKC registered Bassett
Hound puppy . House brok e
and good with children .
Call 992·3005 or 992·6167.
H e's so ugly he 's cute .

For

11

I

Camping

245·5597 .

Musical
Instruments

l0L~MPH OUR. J::l

E~ipm ~ _

to sell. 3007.3·9185.

44
tially
2907 .

78

9118 .

bridge.
Easter rabbits $3.00 and
up, five different kinds .

1\\I&gt;.,TI; WIM6ERL~

~ __Auf&lt;!_

~

CD Happy Days
0 Cll Tic Tac Dough
Cll ® MacNeil -Lehrer

Quality Autobody &amp; Paint
work. Prof ess ional cus tom
paint work on motorcy c les.
Auto Trim Center, 446 -1968 .

388·8623 .

tri · co lor ed . 7 wks . old.985-

3567 .

BORN LOSER

&amp; Accessone s

----.

Gentle horse, broke but not
f inished . Phone 388·9991 or

Riding lawn mower 36 in

FIAT -A ll is m odel 545, rub·
ber tir e end loader, 2 yard
bucket, co mpletely over
hauled with new engi ne, ex ·
cellenl condition, Blaine
King, Ripley WV 304· 372·

-· A ut_o_PartS :;;----

Oh . 992 6246.
77

CD 0 Cll ® 01

(I) Carol Bumen and
Friends
(I) Entertainment Tonight

For sale : Topper 8 fl . $140.
400 Lasl ey St Pom er oy ,

75 TR -6 Convertible, A · l
condition, 6 cyl ., 27 MPG,
two
conver tibl e
top s,
60 · day
storage cover,
warranty
$3,375.00 . 245 -

1979 Ford 4x4, customized
paint job and interior. LOw
milage, good cond . Priced

at

Hx65

1979 VW , 4-spd , air co nd .

7220.

cut . 7 h.p. $300 . 742·2249 .

10% down, BANK FINAN ·
CING AVAILABLE, 304·
576·2711.
· TWO bedroom, all electric,
furnished, $175. monthly,
14' WIDE. 3 bedroom plus electricity, 304·576·
2441.
mobile home. $8995. All
State Modular Homes, 304·
576·2711 .
3 two bedroom trailers, one
1979

76 -

Autos for Sate

Call446·2599.

air. Call 304-77J.5651.
1981 ALL ELECTRIC 12'
WIDE.
2 BEDROOM

71

Himalayan, PerSian and
Siamese kittens . New
Siamese kittens . Call 446·
3844 after 4 p .m .

(I)

Remember

1975 Captains Cra ft . 45 ft ,
steel hauL sleeps 6, Ex
ce ll ent
c ondition ,
reasonably pri ced . 304 -342
3121, 304·344·3896 eve ning s.

56
Transportation
r~~~~~~~~~~T~~i~i~~i~~l

Farm Supplies

Collie Puppies. America n

washer. Call 388·8641.

Davidso n,

Boats and
Motors for Sale

75

99n205

55 __ --~U~'!_gj~~~~ ­

Hoov er

HARLEY

304 675 48 24.

Boys new 4 pc . trim ·fit suit .

guaranteed. Call256· 1207 .
model

Majestic Conical fre e
stand ing firepl ace with in·
su lated pipe, roof boot and
top, $275 .00 . Five 36" sec
lions of Ameriven t 8" in·
sulated stove pipe, $30.00
per sec ti o n or $130.00 for all
5 section s. Bl aze King wood
burner stove , l i ke new,

$37.00 . Phone 304·675·5646.

Kenmore 6 cyc le washer
S90 and Norge washer &amp;
Frigidaire dryer $80 each

new, $800.

CAPTAIN EASY
1981

0

THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

Unscramble these lour Jum~es ,
one letter to each square. to form
tour ordinary words .

EVERF

News
(!) MOVIE: 'Hot Lead and
Cold Foot'
(I) Andy Griffith
(I) ABC News
(I) 3-2-1, Contact
®Over Easy
6 :30 0 (I) CD NBC News
Cil $50,000 Pyramid
(I) Gomer Pyle
(I) Muppet Show
0 (I) ® CBS News
(I) Dr. Who
® Ulias, Yoga and You
01 ~ABC News
7 :00 0 (I) P .M. Magazine
Cil
Great
Day
to

12 5

ca ll 36J.Il47 .

BRIARPATCH KENNELS

-----

Ford ton tru ck with lincoln
200 amp welder, A · l con dition . Phone 304-895·3534.

5. Call367·0637 .

For sa le 2 &amp; 3 bedroom
trailers, furnished , with

Two piece living room
suite, lovesea t , 13sveu X 13
Orange ca rpet, good con ·
di tion . $350. all . phone 30.4·

9 10 thu r 13· 14, phone 304
675·2045.

RAY'S
U SE D FUR ·
NITURE Hospital bed

2 bdr. trailer furnished ,
adults only , Brown Trailer

Call
Both

FOUR prom dr esses, size

Coppertone
kit chen ap pliances sid e by sid e
refrigerator, built i n gas
oven, gas cook top and 36
in. hood, sofa and chair .
Call 446· 1171 , Corbin &amp;
Snyder Furniture. "*

Lat e
4229.

1210 .00

6390.

446·0322

li ke

CR

W

';1jfl}'iMf ~'il

~ ~ ~~ ~

~

EVENING
6 :00

H o nd a

E l sinore,

ner , S250 .00. Call256·6351.

35. Oep . &amp; ref . req . Call446·
USED MOBILE
5762711 .

dry er .

Hou se hold Goods

446·3358 .
2 bdr. partially furn ., Rt .

256 1207

36ft . froz en food and 24 ft .
dairy d1splay cases . Good
cor).d . and ca n be seen
be h in d for m er A &amp; P Super
mark et. Call 446·2601 bet
ween 9AM and SPM.

LAYNE'S FURNITUR E

4/12/82

1980 Harl ey Da v ison road ster 1000 CC. ex . cond . Cia I

1980

r ent, 304·

Wood tabl e with 4 chair s,

11 x: 60 trail er , exce llent
condi ti on . Call 446 1552.
Furni shed, a ir c onditioned ,
underpinning, set up on tot
i n Middleport.

1975 M emory 12x60 un derpinning, and 2 porches.

for

MerttJanDtse==-

Hou se, 3 bdr . in Rodn ey
Vi ll age II $200 mo . Ca ll
446 4416 after 7PM .

c opp e r ton e

52

PaQe- 11

I.,.., ,, ti··- ·"
.. ....

MONDAY

446·0448.

Wood s hop . 446·0978 .

nentals
Hou!le s for Rent

K e nm o r e
washer &amp;
guarantee d .

Cabine ts, l awn furni ture,
pi c ni c tabl es r ep a ired . See
Arnold Skag gs 101 Court

3338.

ex .

Call 446-2445 .

AP ·

Shop . Open Mon . Sal . lOAM
to I PM.

Corn ground for r ent . 985

675 51 10

4 bedroom , centra l air and
heat, city water , fireplace ,
unfurnished except
kit ·
chen . $300 month plus
utiliti es. Reference and
deposi t
required .
In
Ra cine. 949·2293.

304 773-9185.

COUNTRY MOBIL E H ome
Park , Route 33, N orth of
Pomeroy . large tot s. Cali
992 7479 .

5PM .

AC. 2 bdr . house, HUO. 304
675·5104 or 675·5386.

24x52 double w1de mobil e
home , $10,000. Must be

Sp.:~ce_ for_Re'!t

46

PASTURE

41

apt .,

mopeds,

446 3159.

Console model c olor TV,
Ni ce furnish~ 1 bd .room
apt. in Middl eport. close to
Utilitie s
fur ·
sc hoo l .
ni shed .$235.992·3 190.

Hond a

1977 Harley Davidson spar
tster , like new and 1979 CJ ·
7 Jeep, V ·8, 23,000 mil es.

Wl\al l Cw.,e() ·,T AIJD ~FI fOR.
WCf?!l.. 'fHi'&gt; MoRt-!; !I&amp; ~

S40, maple rockers $49,
mapl e dinett sets from $125
to $175, bedroom suites
$150, J pc . living room
sui tes $199, 2 pc . li v ing
room su ites SUO, love sea ts
$70, ow l tamps $25, ringer
washers
$75,
dryers ,
several
r ef rigerators,
utility
cabi n ets,
mechani c's tools, beds,
silver stone, TV ,s, wood burner s. stero's and lots
more. Open lOam to spm,

2566 .

Grandview
2 l ots af
Heights Call6753626 a fter

3 bdr _ home deluxe. pool.

72 SC HULTZ mobile home,
3 bed rooms, gas heat, par -

house (not a mobile home)
.for as llnle as $135 a month.
No down payment. Call 992·
7034.

Lots &amp; A..£!"ea~e

35

$150 dep . and $250 rent . Cal l
SI X room s, 2 stor y br ic k , 446·0367 .

446·2942.

able to buy a 3 bedroom

Farms for Sale

33

3 bedroom house in ci ty ,

Call773·5260.

$15,000 a year, you may be

1 bedroom furn 1shed apt .

992 5434 992 5914 or 304 882

light house k eeping
Park Central Hot el.

Ca ll992 2156 .

31

3 bedroom unfurni shed
apartment. 992 5434 or 992 5914 or 304-882 2566.

Apartments . 675·5548 .

l4x 70 1978 Shannon, all
elect ., excel l ent cond ., 3
bdr, 12x24 room built on,
coa l &amp; wood burner, partly
For Sa le : two bd .room Jurnished, air cond ., un
home fully ca rpeted. 20x40 ·derpinned, good we ll , 2 l g.
garage, ce llar , barn, on porches, out -building, acre
3.92 ac r es of excellent land , moved mu st se ll.
lay 1n g l a nd . East of Jer r ys Run Rd . Ca ll 675·
Wil k sv ille on St .Rt. 124 . 669
2356.

31

Apartment partia lly fur ·
ni shed , upstair s, utili ti es
furnished . Call at 631 4th ,
Gal lipoli s.

1294.

1300
Tempory offi ce w ork , good
acc ounli nq &amp; typ1n q ski ll s
(ri ll 446 4408

WeU-,1-\oW WP6 I ~lo KNoW
Yoo UJe.Re s~..eep;~ ; " 'Tfle CPt:£r

446·7398.

Kara te the ultima te tn sel f
de fence al l pr tva l e lessons.
lnstruc ft on l hru blr~ck belt
Also available Karate

2·

cond. , $300 each . Ca ll a fler
5. 446·4316.

l si
fl oor
furn ished ef
PLIAN CES
wa shers,
fici enc y apt . 729 2nd Ave ., dryers,
r ef rigerators ,
Ga 11 i pol is. Adult s ont y, · range s .
Sk a ggs
Ap ·
s hower . Call446·0957 .
pliances, Upper River Rd .,
beside Stone Cr es t Motel.

School s In s truction

Me n. women , &amp; c hildr en .

recliner s S80,

G·ooo

ava i labl e to mee t tn
dividua I needs
Con ta ct
Foster L ewt s, agen t Phone
379 ]JIH

675

ce ntrally loca ted . Adults .,
r ef . and deposit r eq uired.
446·0444 after 2 p .m .

cen tur y.

coverages

at

2 bedroom

Ca ll 304675·5104 or
7284 .

se rvi ces for l ire insu r ance

property

a.

starts

2 &amp; 3 bedroom apa rtment s
for tease or se ll 2 bed room
house, 3 bedr oom hou se A c
and pool. HUO Progra m .

SA NDY A ND BEAVER In
sur ance Co has offered

a

$250, used sofa beds SlOO,

starts at $188 per _ mo.
Spec ial rates tor Sen ior
Citizens. Call-446·2745.

Insurance

a lmost

APARTMENT S :
rent

The Daily Sen

Television
•
•
VIewmg·

~MOtOrCvC ies--

1_4_

by Larry Wright

KIT 'N' CARLYLE '"

446·0390.

Sl52 per mo.

3758

for

-

Household Goods

SWAIN
AUCTION FURNITURE &amp;
PAWN SHOP 62 Olive St..

bedroom,

sh are rtde to Oh to Un iver
si ty Phone 446 3861 or 446 ·

13

51

Gallipolis. New sofa beds

"!HE

70 SE/&lt;YE
I"Hil.O ....

like

Apartment
for Rent

Apartment for rent. Ca ll

_Situa_tions Wanted

Student s

44

--------

Full or part lime RN fo r 7
to 3 shi ft . Full or part t i m e
RN or LPN for 11 to 7 shift .
Ca lt N ancy Va nM et er .
Pomeroy Hea lth Ca r e Ce n
·ter . 992 6606 .

12

Ohio
Monday, AprilS, 1982

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

- ~ -~~--

-----;----·-

CllYPTOQUOTES

zc

RV

DCCPMAJ

zc

MEZMBFZV
DQMVEH

RVH

RVESFBME

G M Z J

MA

G M ZJ
PMOV

F

F

WCMEW

Q F K C Q.

DQFEOPME

Yesterday's Cryptoquote: THE TRUTil WOUlD BEcOME
MORE POPULAR IF IT WERE NOT ALWAYS STATING
LY FACI'S.-HENRY S. HASKINS

UG-

�·.
Page-12-T he Dai ly Sent ine l

P om e roy- Middl e port, Ohio

Blaine

Haskins, 59, former
area resident, died Saturday at his horne at173 S. Chesler St.,
West Jefferson .
He was born at Crown C1 ty , Jul y
20, 1922, a son of the late Stanley and
Laura Sheets Haskins. He was ser·
ving as assisting director of the Ohio
Department of Rehabilitation and
Correction from 1975 until he retired
on Jan . I, 1982, due to ill health .
Prior to that he was supenntendenl of the London Correcti onal
Institution . Mr . Haskins was a
veteran of World War II ha vmg ser·
ve&lt;l in the Pacific Theatre. He was a
member of Siloam Lodge 456,
F&amp;AM, Chchsire, and seve ral other
Masom c bodies. He belonged to Post
Chesh~rc

brothers, Byron Haskins and
Sherley Sheets, both of Colwnbus.
Friends may call at the Rader
Funeral Home at West Jefferson,
tonJghl from 7lo 9 un. Scrv1ces wtll
be held at 11 a.m . Tuesday at the
West Jefferson United Method"t
Church with the Rev . Frederick R.
Silber officiatmg . Buna l wi ll be Ill
the Pleasant Hil l Cemetery at West
Jefferson. Friends may contnbute
to the West Jefferson Ltbrary
Building Fund .

Helen R. Atkins
Scrv1ecs for Helen R. Atkins,
Pomeroy, will be held at I p.m.
Tuesday at the lwwlings-CoatsRiuwer Funeral Home in Middleport
wit h the Rev . Hobc1·t McGee of-

201, Ameri ca n Legion, at Wes t Jpf-

fi l'iatin g. Burial will be in Beech

ferson, and was a member of st·veral

Grove Celnt.:tcr.v.
Mrs. Atk1ns was a clerk at Stiffler' s fnr more than 20 years.
Survivors not listed in an earlier
obituary include two ni eces, Frankie
Rusche! and Shirley Poling, both of
CulUJnbus. Preceding her in death
and not named earlier was a
brother. Dale Wippel.

profcssionCJI orga niza ti ons.
Surviving are his Wlfl' , Wanda

Thomas Haskins: a daughte r, Mrs.
Phillip i Elaine 1 Lawlc,, West Jefferson; six sons, Thomas, William ,
H~eh a rd and Phillip, all of West Jd·
ferson, and John and James, both of
Colwnbus: a granddaughter: two

Meigs County happenings
Firefighters
have busy day

Meets Tuesday
Middleport Lodge 363, F&amp;AM will
IIJcel Tuesday, April 6, at 7:30p.m.
All members arc urged to attend and
refreshments will be served .

The Pomeroy FJrc Department
answered three calls Sunda y.
At :1 :24 a.m. the department was
Tuesday meeting
ca lled to a lw()-apartrncnl dwilling
at 170 Mulberry Ave. FJre had been
The Women 's Association of
started in a sma ll coal shed wh1ch Ja~' mar wil l meet Tuesday Apri l 6,
adjoined tht• downstai rs apartment atlO a.m.
ucc up1ed by Trudy Mal'. 0l'cupants

Rummage sale on

of thl' upsta1rs ap&lt;:~rtnwnt slllellcd

srnuk c and ca lled tlw ft rt:' depart -

ment.
Fire Ch1cf Charles Legar sa1d that
whoever started the fire had torn
open a bundle of newspapers whil'h
had been left near the homt• for
deii VL'ry on Sunday morning and had

Supplement to: The Pomeroy Sentinel

I Legislator wants employers to pay

Area deaths
Blaine Haskins

Monday, April S, 1982

The Sa lva ti on Army will continue

COLUMBUS, Ohio (API _ The
chairma n of the House Conunerce
and Labor Conunittee says the
state's employers haven't . contributed enough to Ohio's unemployment compensation fund to keep
it solvent.
" Y(;e told them (employers) 12
years ago" the system was
inadequately fwlded and would go
broke duri ng a major recession, sa id
Rep. J . Leonard Camera, [).Lora in .
"They said there was no use putling the money in there whe n it was
not needed. They said, 'H things
ever get tough, we'll take care of
tt. "'
That time may be now. The fund is
more tha n $1 billion in debt and is expeeled to be $2 billion in the red by
1983.
A curren t proposa l before
legislators is aimed at freezing
jobless benefits until Ohio's unennployment compensation fund is
restored to solvency.
The bill , sponsored by Sen. M. Ben
Gaeth, R-Defi ance, also would temporarily increase employer payroll
taxes, eliminate benefi ts for the first
week of unemployment and increase
req uirements for eligi bility.
Approval of the measure is expected by the Republican-&lt;:ont rolled
Senate. The bill , however , will face
strong labor opposition when it
reaches the Dernocrakontrolled
I )USC.
The legislation has drawn support
from the Ohio Chamber of Commerce, the Ohio Manufacturers'

Association and other business lobbymg groups. .
.
They mamta m the b tU would be
worth about $100 rrulhon to the fund
- $50 nulhon from mcreased taxes
on employers a nd $50 mtlhon from
reduced beneftts to the unemployed.
The bill is expected to reach the
Senate floor soon after legtslators
return to Columbus Apnl 20 from
thetr Easter break.
.
.
But Camera satd the btll wtll face
changes when tt reaches hts comnuttee.
" We're going to have to take a
hard look at the premiums and see
what industry can bear" to provide
more money for the fund, Camera
said.
Opposition to the proposa l is
spearheaded by the Ohio AF' I.rCIO,

which also agrees the unennploYJTl fund is bankrupt because
employers have been a llowed to
fund it inadeq uately for years.
Although unemployment benefits

have increased over the years, th~
average tax on employers has
decreased from 2.7 percent of
payroll . m 1939 to 0.88 percent of
payroll m 1980.

SLINDERELLA
EXERCISE CLASS

Sale Starts Today
Good Throuch April 11, 1982
While quantities los!.
Quantity rights reserved.
We ore not respon sibl e
for typographical errors.
Sorry, no dealers.

JOANN NEWSOME, PH. 992-3382
FIVE POINTS AREA
THURSDAYS,AT 10:30 A.M.

PLASTIC
EGGS
TO FILL

Eight die
in wrecks

NIUON'IIIO, U.lt

.
CHIRPII CHUBBI

By The Associated Press
Eig ht people, six of them
youngsters, we re killed in traffi c accidents around Ohio over the
weekend, according to the Highway
Patrol.
Veterans Memorial
Three of the you n~ people we re
Sa turda y AdmiSsions-Nellie Vin- struck by cars while on foot. Another
renl. Pomeroy: Edith Barnett, was riding a bicycle. Two teen-agers
Langsville : Wayne Gilliand, Reed- died in one sihgle-ca r accident.
The patrol counts traffic dea ths
svil le
from
6 p.m. F riday un til midnight
Saturday DIScharges--Robert
Sunday
.
Goldsberry . Teresa Ca nterbury .
The dead :
Sunda y Ad miss1ons-Otho Karr,
Middleport: Lester Hart, Pomeroy ;
SATURDAY
Charles
Neece,
Middle port ;
TIFFIN - Mildred L. Frey, 80, of
Dl'lmarva Kirk , Pomeroy ; Wil bur Tiffin, in a tw()-ca r accident on a TifHanning, Middleport.
fin street.
Sunday Dissharge-Cynthia HoffBAY VILLAGE - Thomas Ross,
man .
16, Lorain, and John Molnar, 15,
Lorain, in a one-ca r accident on a
Bay Village street.
Six calls were answered by loca l

Ignited th em . Damages were set at

onl y about $150 anti the stall' fin'
lllCJrshall 's uff1 ce 1s condudmg an investi gation . There an· suspel'L"i.
Ch1ef Lcget r reports .
At 4:28 a.m. Sunda y. the depart·
rnc nl went to Bcarwallow Ridge
where a ca r owned by Gary Bas ham
was on fire. Damages were hght. At
10 :26 a .m. the department went to

the Ron Vogler properly on County
Road 11 near Carpenter to ex·
tin guish a brus h fire .

•20"x5'

•Coltophono

emergency unit'i over the weekend,

ducted by Meigs High Wrestling
Coach Larry Grimes will get un-

the Meigs County Eme rgency
Medical Serv1ce reports.
On Sunday at 2:20 p.m., the
Ru tland Un1t took Ed ith Strong,
Salem Township, to Holzer Medical

derwa y this evening at the Meigs

High School.
The cl inic IS for Meigs Local
School Di stri ct fift h, sixth, seventh
and eighth graders will be conducted
from 7 to 9 p.m. each evening this
week at the high school.

Ce nkr .

Saturday ca lls mcluded Pomeroy,
.1 :51 p.m. , F'red Cla rk from Hemlock
Grove to Holzer Medica l Center:
Middleport, 10 :24 a.m., Nellie Vincent, Bailey Ru n, to Veterans
Memonal Hospita l: Racine, 3: 03
p.m. Mall ie Teafo rd from County
Hoad 35 to Veterans Memorial; 12
noon, Tuppers Plai ns Unit, Kim

is a $5 regist ration ft'l'
wh ich will incl udt• instruction and
ThtTC

the fee will prov1de for trnp h1 es to be
awarded dun ng matches at the close
of the cltnic. The first three places m
each we ight class will receive a
trophy.
Boys inl~ res tcd in laking part are
to report to the h1 gh sehoul th1s

WP iner . Route 7, to St. Jose ph

Hospita l, Parkersburg, and at 5:56
p.m. , Wa yne Gi ll iand from residence to Vetera ns Memoria l.

even ing.

EASTER IRrss
...... '"'_...,. ----.
'· . ·- .. ·-·._.,.

FTD8LORY
OFSPRING '"
13ouquet in our
~xcl u si ve FTD
Woven Willow 13osket.
~I

~aKL!/4-.

~.

•72" • 22"
•Vinyl

$9''

Hefty~
ODOR GUARD

MATCHING GARDEN CHAIR

.

.

'4 J9

space·tavlng In the small apartment or
trailer.

•SIIIcOno ocorch-proaf cover.dnd pod.
•Logo wllh non:akld iul!ber tlpa.
.
.•Can be · UI~ .01\ "'!Y, 11 ~ yr &lt;l'&lt;!_lr '&lt; ~,~ILION'S RIO,
I

"·',to

~'l.IJ_

•,·\

'•

\

···~··
,.

.

TALL KITCHEl GARBAGE BAGS

'799

Odor G ua rd Tall Korck•n Gorbag• llog t 2' ,JO
ft•ot.O .,. 1tk do l onl•cto nt orod lo gtu l ~ tU"'e-d
tp•(lol H•lty l•atu r•t that .., ,11 meon oroc&lt; eo l @"(l
volum e I] gollon ' apacoty

NELSON'S REO . nl .ft
NELSON'S REG •• 1.tt

CHICKEN OF THE SEA
OYSTER STEW

U.4· t·

.PYRAMID. PUZZLE
'

.,
... 1r1111"" ComlllnetiOtlit' One lolutl""

•24'

NILSON'S RIO. tt.tt

13rimming with
on assortment
of lovely
fresh flowers.
theGLOIW

Come In -We'll Try To Clarify Them
,.

We know how sometimes money matters can
become one big puzzle. That's why we're here
... to help put the pieces together for you! Stop
in and· see us . today ... for your crystal-clear
financial picture! We have the solution for you!

OF SPRING'M

~ l}~ping you ~v it right.

J UMBO PACK RlfiLLS . n .H NILSON'S 110. t4.2t

TABLETOP IROIIII BOARD
Cantway

Protect Vour
Pholographs
in Magnetic
Poges

NELSON'S REG . 110.99

NELSON'S REG. t14.9t

MUMS, AZALEAS
TULIPS, HYACINTHS
and HYDRANGEAS
DISH GARDENS
CUT ARRANGEMENTS
DRIED &amp; SILK
CORSAGES

~

$8''

•Tubular Co n s t r u c ti on

•Porfocl for lhat quick Ironing lob or

f'L0At•1'

KLEER·VU
100 PAGE PHOTO ALBUM

'

FRIDAY NIGHT
DAYTON - Richard D. Arnold, 9,
of Dayton, a pedestrian struck by a
car on Interstate 75 in Montgomery
County.
VAN WERT - Amy H. Keezer, 2,
of Paulding, a pedestrian struck by a
car on a Paulding County road.
LANCASTER - Terry L. Bixler,
16, of Lancaster, a bicyclist struck
on Ohio 37 in Fairfield County.

Meigs County's Oldest Florist
352 E. Main St.
Ph. 992-2644
Pomeroy, OH.
"OFT E N IMI T AT ED - NEVER DUPLICATED"

12 Oz.

MULTI POSITION LOUNGE CHAIR

NILSON'S RIO. 4t'

'

Fo
...&amp;M
..... 0. 0 a ... .

'

10'/, Oz •

~~CHIOKEI

OF TH SEA
TUIA IN
01~ OR WATER

NeStle
COOKIE MIX

$1 09

.Vt Oz.

..

FEIIII••E
·aani·SCALES
'

87'

TIMEX®

NILSON'S 110. n . 1t

lleaultly' your

bathroom with a
soli - 1 In whtlo • ., tho ('11011

Bank

popular do.;araiOf colon .. lllol·on
hinge lnslolla In' ·IOCOiwfa. Full
jladdlng on _, a..t . - .

'Member IDIC

Your ;(ommqnit)· Owned ;Bank

...l

•Chocolate Chip
.,. Oa .

YOUR CHOICE

SOFTSEIT$

Fa·r n1ers

M
i\&amp;'
Q)n

, 4PoWilltilttt ...•!l

MASSILLON - Coll ee n M.
Ma urer, 18, of Louisv ille, a
pedestria n struck on a Sta rk County
road.
ATHENS - Kermit Gra ham, 39,
Albany, in a one-car accident on
Ohio 256 in Athens County.

13ouquet
is on ideal way
to soy "Happy Easter:
So ca ll or visit us today

NELSON' S REG. 11.19

.

.

~--·.

POTTED LILIES

Capture the
essence of spring
and Easter in a
delightful way
Send the new

LODEN'S.
JELLY EGGS

•Rabbitt
•Plush. soft cuddl es
•Hear the m chrlp when you shak e the m.

NELSON'S REO. t7'

· bQc)ts.

Sunday. AptiJ.-i·· r

\ Ji
r•• r

~~~~~~~

•Chicks

NELSON'S REG. Sl .tt

NILSON'S RIO. St'

Glory of ~pring·· ncuquet.
...------'

,..,._.~,.

YOUR CHOICE

49•

Send our FTD

Easter is

, ,I

• 12 Pack
•2'/, Inches

•Asst. Colors

'•

Wrestling clinic Emergency runs
A nov ice wrestling clinic to be con-

From $449

~(J&gt;

1ls nurunage sa le Tuesday from
10 :30 a .Ill. to 2: 30 p.m. in the former
Warner Insurance Buildmg, West
Ma1n St . A bag full of good clothes
will be offt•rcd for$1.25 .

pla Cl'd thc 111 iu the cuct l house rtnd

FILLED EASTER BASKETS

·SESIIE STREET
ElSTER EGG COLOR KIT

..

ALAR·I CLOCK
•Compact alarm clo&lt;k
•Easy· to-reod black numera lt
with IW"P second hond .

MODIL

7U.. M2

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