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                  <text>10- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Tuesday. May 17, 1977

National health insurance is

----! Seven miShaps probed .

r----A.~~a -:De~ths
I
BLANCHE YEAGER

Carter project early in 1978

Blanche Yeager , 85, leta r t,
died Monday evening at the
residence of her daughter .
Born Mar ch 31. 1892, i n
Po int Pleasant. she wa s the
daughter of the late Le11i a nd
Genora C 1bbs. Roush, and a
member of the St. Mark

two granddaughters, Mrs :
Sharon Grbb:ii, Rt . 1, Letart ,

Mrs .

Beverly

Jordan ,

I
1

Monday by Q'Lw"
Patrol_.
r1
..

Salisbury. N . C.; two grand·
sons. Edwin and Paul Cross,
both of Rl. 2, Racine, and two
1
d h'ld
grea
.gran services
c o ren. will be
Funeral
held Thursday atl :JO r .m. at
lutheran Church.
the Foglesong Funera Home
She wa s preceded in death with the Rev . George Weirick
by her husband , Archie A. officiating. Burial will follow
In the Suncresl Memorial
Yeager in 1958.
Survi11ors
lnclvde . a Park .
daughter , Mrs . Andrew
Friends may call 2at the
(Nora) Cross, Racine ; one funeral home after
p.m.
son , Clarence, Rt _ 2, letart : Wednesday .

Seven accldenls were in· the side. There was slight :
"estl•ated Monday by the dama•e to "-'' vehicl.. No •
• "
•
""'"
·
Gallla·Melgs Post, State injwi.. were reported.
T
Pa'L
l
··'d
a
rock
slipped
•
Highway Patro1. wo persons
1&lt;1&gt; . . .
were cited. Noe one was up off the roadway from the •
LOS ANGELES (UPI ) national health insurance.
" It 's not legitimate used as "an exruse for not
seriously
injured.
wheel of an auto driven by •
Answering liberal critics in a
" I am committed to the spending on hwnan needs cleaning up our air."
,..,. Rio •
ma jor spee ch, President phasing in of a workable that causes our deficits,'' said
Michael R. Clevenger, 18, Grace E. Ellyson, "•
•
"!have proposed tough but
Rt. 2, Bidwell, was charged Grande, and struck the :
Carter today promised to national health insurance CarU!r. "It is principally fair air pollution standards,"
will! assured clear ciJstance in .Wtndshltld of 8 Vehicle driven :
submit a national health system," Carter told the auto inadequate revenues from a he said. "We have got to
a three-car accldent at I p.m. by George W. BUer,ll, Rt. 1, :
insurance plan early next workers. "We are aiming to sluggish economy that create improve tlle efficiency of our
"".. of a BidweU , arounci •o:50 p.m. on :
year and said tlle welfare submit legisative proposals them.
on Rt. t60, two-tenu..
cars. "
mile north of Rt. 35.
Rt. 160, one-tenth of a mile •
system must be "thoroughly early next year."
He also laid heavy
According to patrol, autos north of Rt. 554. Noe one was ;
redesigned."
He also declared that the emphasis on tile need for
But "we cannot do every- welfare system ''must be support for his energy
driven by Nella A. Seyler, 37, injured or cited. There was
Pomeroy, and Wanda M. slight damage to the Baker :
thing," he said, warning lllat thoroughly redesigned."
program . "You know that
hard choices must be made
Patterson, 27, Rt. 2, vehicle.
•
"Tinkering will not be meeting our energy goals will
by Americans to reach his enough, " said tile President, be tough, " he said. "It will
Pomeroy, were stopped on
A similar accident oc· •
goals of a s\ rong economy who has alfeady asked for · require sacrifice fro.m
Rt. 160, waiting to turn into curred at t :20 p.m. on Rt. 7, 7
and a balanced federal sweeping revisions tighten eve.rypne in the coWltry .''
the Holur Medical Center four-tenths of a mUe north of •
budget by 1981.
controls over the food stamp
parking lot. Patrol said the Gallta County line ill •
But he told tile union that
A research project aimed demonstration plant The sulfur in the coal Is Clevenger, northbound on Rt. Melgo County. Patrol said a ,
" I believe we can be program.
the fuel crisis could not be at enabling Ohio's high-sulfur
somewhere on the seven· largely absorbed in the bed so 160, apparently failed to see vehicle driven by Jam.. A. •
fiscally responsible and still
coal to comply with environ· state AEP System. Ohio lllat the waste gases are the stopped vehlcl... The Westfall, 50, Patriot Star. :
satisfy the needs of our
mental regulations will be Power said that If the
people. And I believe we
almost free of sulfur dioxide. Clevenger vehicle hit the Route, filpped a stone from •
reviewed at the May 24 research project Is located in Electricity is generated as Seyler auto in the rear, the roadway, striking the •
cannot satisfy our needs
meeting of the Power Siting Ohio, it will be installed at its air heated In the combustion forcing the Seyler vehicle into windahltld of a vehicle driven •
unless we are competent and
Eddie
Blankenship's
threeBlankenship
limited
the
Commission
of the State of existing Tidd Paint at device is fed at high pressure the Patterson car.
efficient," he said in remarks
by Betty J . Pugh, 41, Addison . .
Ohio.
·
run
double
and
gutty
pitching
power-hitting
Falcons
to
six
Brilliant, now in deactivated to the gas turbine and steam
prepared for the United Auto
Damage was slight to the There was allght damage to :
Ohio Power Company Is reserve status.
Monday lilted Buffalo of hits and personally drove in
Workers convention.
generated in the fluidized bed Clevenger vehicle.. and the Pugh vehicle. No one was '
Wayne
to
a
4·3
Class
AA
the
runs
necessary
for
his
conducting
a feasibility study
Total ca pacity of the flows to the steam turbine. moderate to the Seyler and Injured or cited.
Carter flew here early
:
today for the speech , Region 4 semifinal victory ninth win in II decisions with of a facility employing the project would be 177,000
According to Ohio Power, Patterson cars. Patrol said a
At 10 a.m. Monday, a twoobviously
aimed
at over Wahama at St. Cloud a booming bases-loaded pressurized fluidized-bed kilowatts, including a 110,000. the prospective plant would passenger in the Seyler auto, car colll.sion was probed on :
combustion (PFBC) process kilowatt generating unit at have a higher generating Angle Barton, 14, Pomeroy, Glenn-Summit Rd.,' one and •
double in the sixlll.
answering Democratic crit- Park.
With the tying run on third, whi ch not only would permit Tidd, plus the gas turbine efficiency than conventional claimed injury, but was not nine-tenths of a mile west of •
ics such as Sen. George
Blankenship got catcher Tim burning more Ohio coal but unit.
McGovern who claim he is
plants, would have lower inunediately treated.
Rt. t60. Patrol said a car •
Thompson, a 400-plus hitter, would increase power
The facility would test the emissions
foregoing welfare reform and
and
would
Jacquelin R. Graham, 44, headed west and driven by
to hounce weakly to third to generating efficiency as well. 'PFBC technique which calls eliminate the necessity of Rt. I, Northup, was cited for David A. Shaw, 16, Rt. 1, :
oilier social programS to
Ohio Power is an operating lor the burning oi coal installing complex, power· failure to yield from a Bidwell, slld to the left and :
give the history-making
halance tlle budget.
i:ompany
In the American at high pressure in a consuming gas scrubbing driveway foUowlng a two-car struck a vehicle headed ;
Bison
a
chance
to.
chart
new
Before flying back to WashElectric
Power
System, one bed of inert mater· facilities which are costly to collision at 2:50 p.m. on Rt. eastbound and driven by :
MASON,
W.
Va
,
An
waters:
ington early Wednesday, he
of
three
partners
engaged In ial, such as limeston e. conswners.
application
to
the
State
Road
In
th_e
first
regional
also arranged to answer
141, one-tenth of a mile west Maggie Logan, 6t, Rt. 2, •
a
joint
research
study to
Department
was
signed
by
baseball
tourney
in
school
" questions from Los Angeles
of the Fairfield-Centenary Vinton: There was slight ~
-, citizens on a regional members of the Mason Town history, Buffalo is now one determine the commercial
Rd.
damage to boll! vehicl... No :
television broadcast and to . Council Monday evening victory away from making its and technical feasibility of
Patrol
said
the
Graham
one
waa injured or cited.
(Continued from page I)
a
full -scale
take a close look at drought when the council met in first State Tournament ap- building
vehicle was pulllng from a
One accident which took •
pearance in any sport. The demonstration plant em- Shade . It was agreed to permit.the child to continue the year at private drive headed west place at 11 :30 p.m. Monday •
conditi ons in crop-rich reguh;ar session.
an
improved that school.
Th e application requests .Bison 22·7, face the Lenore- ploying
Southern California.
when struck by an auto on Rt. :Mil In Meigs County :
Sen. ~ward Kennedy, [).. that permission be given to Gary winner lor the regional technique for burning coal
The board set a value of $50 on some 34 electric typewriters driven by Keith C. Brown, 19, seven and two-tenths miles !
while
controlling
the which are no longer needed. It was agreed that some of the Rt. 2, GaWpolls. Brown was east of Rt. 7 was stW under :
Mass.. in a speech to the the town to work on the road title.
UAW Monday, asked Carter in order to · undertake the
Thompson's run • scoring emission of particulate and machines will be placed in the elementary ochool offices and heading west on Rt. 141. His investigation today by the. ,
to set a target date for water system project in double in the fourth and Jerry gaseous pollutants. The other the others will be offered to students. A request from the senior auto hit the Graham car In patrol.
•
which a $250,000 Colll1]1unity Tucker's pitching gave two partners are Babcock &amp; citizens In regard to kitchen equipment at the Pomeroy Junior
••
Development grant has been Wahama a Hl lead entering Wilcox, Ltd. of Great Britain High School was discussed with Dwight Goins. Goins said
•
and STAL-Laval Turbin AB, several schools had indicated IIIey wanted SOII)e of the
the sixth.
obtained.
'
•
All permits will be com·. · Tucker, who shut out the a turbine manufacturing equipment. It was agreed that the senior citizens group will get
(Continued from page!)
.
!
pleted when ~pproval ·is given Bisons In the regular season, subsidiary of ASEA of the equipment not requested by the other schools.
fell outside tile water supply storage 11rea and most of the;
to the town by the State Road gave Up a single to Chuck Sweden.
The board also discussed with 'Goins a fence at the Meigs
111
Department. After It Is Angie to open the inning. · The feasibility study is to Junior High, tile repair of tile parking lot at the high school, ~::."J :f :,~~to~~~~ ro:_::~::f.~aTtf
received, blds will be taken White Falcon manager be completed this summer. possibly gs tes for the high ochool and the condition of roofs at drought In California is expected to reduce river levels this
on June 20.
Muidon Spencer inunediately At that time AEP will tlle schools. Goins will gather more information on all of the smnmer to tile loweat ever recorded, tile govenunent said. The
to projects.
The council asks that all called up liCe lefthander Mike determine whether
!lrolll!ht is now two years old.
proceed
with
the
design
and
lots he mowed and trash Goldsberry.
The board approved trips for the Pomeroy Safety Patrol,
cleaned from yards. A free
Goldsberry, 4-2 entering construction of a 67,000- to Cedar Point later tllis month, and for sixth graders at the
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Flowers, Letart; Judy Willet,
gas
turbine Harrisonville Elementary School to Cincinnati later In the
trash pick-up will be held on the game.-walked the bases kllowatt
ADMITTED- Iva Howell, Point Pleasant; Thomas
May 26 and 27. Council also loaded between a sacrifice
summer. There are no board expenditures involved. A letter Rutland; June VanVranken, Byus, Point Pleasant, and
reminds residents that BB and pop out. The wiry lefty
from the Meigs High Athletic Boosters was read pointing out Pomeroy; Doris Haynes, Melinda Waugh, Huntington.
guns are not permitted ln then hit Jeff Rowe to lore
tlle need for visitor bleachers on the foothalllleld, the , la~k of . Pomeroy; Madolyn Chaffin,
DANCE NOTED
town.
home the tieing run.
There will be a square manhole covers between the school and the field, and the need . Pomeroy ; A.mos Cross,
Holzer Medical Ceutet
Attending were Mayor
Wahama gave the Bisons a dance Saturday at the Racine lor the development ol a track so that some track competitions Rutland ; Cleatus Arnott,
(DIIcbargea, May 16) '
·
Fred
Taylor,
council two-out .scare in tile seventh. Legion Post Home from 8:30 can be held here instead of at other schools.
Pomeroy; Donald Covert,
Gary Allen, Jr., Angela .
It was reported lllat tile manhole covers are being made, Pomeroy ;
members, Catllerine Smith, Tucker kept the White to 11:30 p.m. Admission 1&amp;._$1.
Maggie Canada, Mrs. Parris Cofer·
tllat
the bleachers must be purchased by next fall and tlle need Rosenkranz ; Pomeroy ; and son, Lillian Gladman, .
Lawrence
Roush,
Ed
Perry
Falcons
alive
with
a
walk
and
Middleport
for tlle development of the track was recognized by the board . Martha Taylor, Middleport; William Hamsgen, Mrs.•
and Charlotte Jenks. Also scored when Tim Sayre
MEETING CALLED
present was Calvin Smith.
followed with a triple. An
SYRACUSE - A special but cannot be done at this time due to.tlle money which would · Juanita Wamsley, Mid· David Martin and daughter.~
error brought home another meeting of the Syracuse • be required.
·
dleport; George Conde, Denver McLaughlin, Amy
l
The
board
approved
acceptance
of
one
kindergarten
run before Blankenship--got Minersville Athletic
Syraclise.
Metzler, Oliver Ousley,
Thompson to end it.
Associalion to plan money student on a tuition basis ant! acknowledged a letter from Jack
DISCHARGED - Elmer Virginia Perry, Laura
Wahama, a regionaL making projects has been Slavin, art teacher, suggesting an eight week program for Pickens.
Poling, Mary Smith, Robert
semifinalist last year, had Its . called for Wednesday, .May elementary and junior high students next year with a
Spangler, Debra Via, Roy
season end at 18-12.
18, at 7 p.m. at the Syracuse · substitute teacher to be named for the high scbool during that
PLEASANT VALLEY
. WaiJ!ier, Loretta Wriston.
Municipal building. AU in· perind. Supt. Cherlea Dowler said that there are chances of
DISCHARGES - Mrs.
. (Births, May Iii)
.
terested persons are urged to hiring an art teacher for the elemenll!rY schools next year but Cecil Phillips, Galli~olls :
Mr. and Mrs. Gary Adkins;
attend. The association asks If that doesn't work out, the Slavin suggestion, which Dowler Ernest
Fetty,
Point daughter, Rio Grande ; Y&gt;:fr.
public support for the benefit commended, might be followed.
Pleasant; Venneda . Smith, and Mrs. Charles Moore;,
The attend;mce of Karen Goins and Led&amp; Mae Kraeutter, Point Pleasant; Mrs. Dennis daughter, Hamden.
of the association which
Cloudy tonight, lows in the benefits all children of the home I!C()nomics, to a seminar In Athens this month was
mid 60s. Chance of showers two communities.
approved along will! attendance of the two and Mrs. Frances
Wednesday, highs in the
Roberta to a state home economics conference in Columbus in
upper 80s. Probabillty of
August.
LODGE TO MEET
precipitation 20 per cent
The board· took no action on hiring Esther' Black for a
Past officers of Racine
)
today and tonight, 30 per cent Eastern Star will meet at the kindergarten route. The route has been driven by Norman
TONI
Wednesday.
Wood.
Mrs.
Black
was
the
only
driver
to
bid
on
the
route.
It
home of Gretta Simpson
TODD
was pointed out that Mrs. Faye Manley, also present, had not
Thursday at 7:30 p.m.
YOUTH ARRESTED
been rehired as a regular kindergarten bus driver but is still
driving her kindergarten bus route as a substitute. Both
POINT PLEASANT - A
SALE NOTED
juvenile has been arrested in
RACINE - Racine Eastern women had attempted to resign the routes last fall along with
connection with the theft of Star will hold a bake sale several other kindergarten bus driver! for ''personal
over $400 worth of stereo Saturday at 9 a.m. on the reasons." Neither driver would comment on those personal
equipment from the Mason Racine Post Office parking reasons last night.
County Youth Center at lot. . Any member wishing
The board had asked Mrs. Manley to appear before the
Harmon Park, according to baked goods to be picked up board and explain why she resigned last fall but later bid on a
Point Pleasant Police Chief for the sale are to call 994-2:i61 kindergarten bus route. Dowler pointed out lllat he had
recommended Mrs. Manley earlier to be hired lor the route
Jim Gaskins.
or 949-2051.
and was ri!C()mmending Mrs. Black at last night's meeting.
Dowler pointed out that Mrs. Manley has filed a grievance with
tile board in the matter and he said lllat he is seeking ·legal
PLEASE I
If it's a worthwhile loan to you
counsel on the problem.
·
The bOard set a special meeting for next Tuesday evening
The must· have
- it's worth seeing us first. We'll
at which time tile legal advice is expected to be available.
white dress by'
start processing your loan without
The meeting concluded with Dowler reporting lllat a 7.5
Toni Todd.
delay. Your banking business is
mill levy will be placed before voters of the district at a special
With the newest
election of June 7. All of the millage is a renewal. Unless It is
taken seriously, here.
look in fashion passed this year, the state foundation moneys will be cut off
pleats! Permanently
Jan. 1, 1978, Dowler said, leaving tlle district with only 12.5
Give Us Cl Call
pleated skirt
mills on which to operate. The district could not operate on
such funding, Dowler salq.
fanning out from a
"THE
Board members attending the meeting were Wendell
5lim top accented
Hoover, Dr. Keith Riggs, Virgil King and Joe Sayre. Principals
in bold contrast
present were James Diehl, high ochool; Bob Morris, Pomeroy
color. White with
FRIENDLY BANK"
and Middleport elementary ochools, and John Mora, junior
black, red or green
high school. Charles Downie represented the teachers of the
polye5ter knit.
district. The board took no action on a request from Mrs.
Machine
wash-dry.
Bernice Hollman for a supplemental pay Increase for extra
..
printing dulles for the district.
·
8· 18. '30.1;10
~

Ohio Power taking part
in high sulfur coal studies

Proposal to vote
7.5 mills gets
cool reception

o d warns board
~

schOols needing mon
Ro\ClNE - The Southern
Local School Board in regular
session Tuesday night
rejected a proposal to vote on
a 7.5 miU levy at a special
election, granted contracts to
non-teaching personnel and
adopted a new school
calendar.
Based on projected income
and expenditures for the
coming
school
year,
Superintendent Bobby Ord
recommended to the board

that a 7.5 mill levy be placed
on the ballol at a special
election in August. The board
voted 4· 1 to reject the
proposal. Ord said that unless
the millage is passed soon
there is no way that Southern
Local Schools can keep their
doors open past October.
Supt. Ord told The Daily
Sentinel today the levy would
be in addition to the 20 mills
the district presently has lor
support of its schools. Since

20 mills falls short of the
minimum required by the
state for lull participation in
the Foundation Program. the
additional 7.5 mills of local
taxation actuall y would
produ ce approx imate ly
$190,000
annuall y
lor
Southern schools.
Supt. Ord proposed the levy
for a three year period.
He declined to say what
steps - if any - he would
proposed to the board next

tall when there is no money.
Given u continuing contract
was bus driv er Romaine
Frederick. Don Smith, also a
bus driver, was given a one
year contract.
Cooks rehired lor the '77-"78
sc hool year were Alm a
Johnson , with a continuing
contract ; Helen Diddle, two
year contract, and Ann Boso,
one year. Isabelle Lewi s
received a two year contract
(Continued on page 16)

.Falcons edged

•

/.

•

en tine
VOL. XXVIII NO. 24

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

WEDNESDAY, MAY 18, 1977

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

Application
is signed

. Teachers •••

QUALITY HOME
FURNISHINGS •••
AT THE

News •• in Briefs

LOWEST

POSSIBLE PRICE

BAI&lt;ER
FURNITURE

.,.liio,_________________..,.

OUR LOANS

A FULL
SERVICE

HELP TURN

BANK

Weather

ON A "HAPPY f.ACE"

..
•~·

"
..,

,,' .

.,

vJ
.0

"'

'"

"'
vi
C)

"'

ELBERFELDS ·IN . POMEROY

PLEAn,

FAMILY DINING

AT ITS BEST

THE INN PLACE
WEDNESDAt NIGHT SPECIAL
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
Our NEW Telephone Number Is

992-6661
Installment Loan Department Number Will
Remain the Same 992-3007.
Member Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation

DEPOSITS INSURED TO $40,000

Visit our Salad Bar . Fish and Ch ips,
Coffee, Tea or Milk .

'

Try Our Delicious Strawberry

Shortcake, with or without
Whipped Cream.

~
ADOLPH'S

·'

~

"

Main Store and
Mechanic Street
Warehouse
Open Friday
9:JOto I p.m .

Other
Weekendays
9:30 to 5 P·~ ·

DAIRY VAUFt
HRS. ' IB ,OO A.M. Iiili ,oo P .M. Sun . Thur&lt;. 10,00 A.M.
hi 12 :00 P.M. Fridl)' and S.turday.

See Us At The Pomeroy Bend Bridge

ELBERFELDS

t
'.,

•

~

'

.

MRS. ALICE WAMSLEY, Mrs. Jeanne Braun and
Thomas, I to r, of the staff of the Meigs
Seruor Citlzens Center kept the program rolling du ring t!JC
observa~ce of Senior Citizens Day Tuesday .
Mr~ . El~nor

By United Press International
BRUSSElS, BELGIUM - DEFENSE MINISTERS of the
Norlll Atlantic Treaty Organization today approved a
sweeping program to build up the alliance in the face of an
"increasingly offensive" Soviet military expansion. The
ministers, in effect, fully endorsed proposals made by
President Carter at the NATO swrunit meeting in London last
week.
They also agreed to aim for a large increase in defense
spending equalling the inflation rate pius 3 per cent every year
from 1979 to 1984. But they said allowances might have to be
made for I!C()nomically weaker members. U. S. Defense
Secretary Harold Brown, in a news conference after the
meeting, warned NATO is planning to meet tlle Soviet
challenge.
"I would hope that today's decisions would convey to the
Warsaw Pact.countries the tllought that in the absence of an
agreement on reduction and equality of forces In Europe, the
competition is not going to be one-sided," Brown said.
WASIDNGTON - A MEMBER OF THE HOUSE Ethnics
Committee invesiigating the alleged South Korean bribery
scandal in Congress says a potential witness had bee n asked to
testify two days before he was found murdered.
The congressman, declining to be identified, also said
Tuesday "it would be only circumstantial" to suggest Alex!
Goodarzi, 36, was slain to prevent him from testifying. But he
said Goodarzi, maitre d' of the Rotunda restaurant on Capitol
Hill, ''was very afraid' ' to go before the committee.
· The congressman said in an Interview that one of his aide s
contacted .Goodarzi a week ago to try to line up. his testimony
because 11 We were checking out rumors of wrongdoing,
including by members of. Congress, at the restaurant. "
•
NEW YORK - FEDERAL INVESTIGATORS have
recommended inspection of all Sikorsky ~I helicopters
because they suspect the failure of a small landing gear
attachment caused the Manhattan skyscraper helicopter
accident that claimed live lives on Monday.
Such a wide inspection program could include even the
helicopter used to shuttle Pre,sident Carter about. The
presidential craft is the same model as the one that toppled
over on the roof of the 59-story Pan Am Building in midtown ·
Manhattan. There was no immediate indication from the
White House of whether an inspection of the President's
helicopter was planned.
CHEYENNE, WYO. - THE STATE BUREAU of Land
Management said Tuesday there would be no "massive"
development of federal coal land in Wyoming although some
untapped coal deposits may be leased to energy companies.
Dan Baker, Wyoming BLD director, said the moratorium on
new leasing - In effect lor tlle past several years- will not be
broken until detailed environmental impact statemen~ were
finalized.
Leasing new coal lor strip mining has come under heavy
criticism from environmental groups and Sen. Malcoim
Wallop, R-Wyo. Environmentalists contend existing leases are
sufficient to supply coal for the nation's expanded needs, and
Wallop , has called for a moratorium on major new
development pending an energy review.
COLUMBUS - SIZEABLE APRIL COLLECI'IONS of
sales, personal income and corporation franchise taxes
boosted the .state's revenue receipts for the first 10 months of
tlle fiscal year more tllan 10 per cent beyond tile corresponding
figure for 1976.
State Treasurer Gertrude W. Donahey reported Tuesday
lllat corporation franchise tax collections in April totaled
$108.6 million- an increase of $25.8 million over the previous
year's figure. Mrs. Donahey said sales tax collections totaled
$100 billion and exceeded the previous April fi gure by $5.7
million, while personal income tax receipts totaled $94.7
million,ahikeof$15.8million overApril, 1976.
Thesecollectionsbroughtthe state$275 millionaheadolits
1976collections, a gain of 10.4 per cent, Mrs, Donahey said.
'

Citizens' Day in Pomeroy
By Bob Hoeflich
Harry Swan, Florence
Approxima tely 400. persons Michael, Lelia Forrest, Essie
turned out Tuesday to take Russell , Martha Robinson,
part in, a sta tewide ob- Sarah Perry, Walter Archer,
servance . of Senior Citi zens Laura Eise l s t~i n, George
Day.
Russell Newlun; Annie Price,
Staged outdoo rs at the Floyd Richards. Mary
Meigs Senior Citizens Center Sharon, Nancy Walker, Birtle
in Pomeroy, the local ob- Wyatt, Edna Wilcoxen, Mary
servance included a dinner, Bowman , and Clayton
recognition of many senior Tuppie, all over 9Q.
citizens, organizations and
Mrs . Alice Wamsley,
others for their work with the director of the Retired Senior
local program, music by th e Volunte·er gave recognition to
·senior citizens chorus . and volunteers of ·that program.
last but not least, a square
All
volunteers
were
dance.
presented a white carnation
The heat of the 80 degree worn with a ribhon to denote
day failed to discourage their . participation in th e
attenda nce at the observance program. New ·vol unteers in
or the enthusiasm of par· the p·ast year who received
ticipants in the celebration. pins and certificates include
C. E. Blakeslee, a member Pal Ingels, William Quivey,
of the Meigs County Council Lula Mae Lynch, Wilma
on Aging and chairman of the Sargent, Hugh Rousey,
Regional Commission on Lillian Demoskey , Homer
Aging, presided as master of Young, John Wickham, Iva
ceremonies over afternoon J ohn son, Edna _Carman ,
activities. Blakeslee, who Jerome Cook, Ann Cook, Ida
was also observing a birthday Young. Myrtle , Wilson,
Tuesday, said celebraHon Cres ton Newland, Phyllis
was the "best birthday party Newland, Leverett Roush,
I ever had."
Hazel Hilt, Rev. Wilbu r Hilt,
Senior citizens given Violet Jarrell, Mildred Riley,
specia l recognition - ·some Lucy Chipps, Vivian Phelps,
could attend, others couldn 't Sylvia Curt is, Virginia
-were Della Carnahan, 102; Thorne. Elva Cottrill, Cecil
Ma ry Diehl, 100; Robert Bradbury, Alma Young,
Outs, 100, and Laura Brad· Josephine Smith, Paul Burns,
bury, 100; Simon Newland, Helen Bloomer, Irene Busch,
Emma Scho ~nberg er, Goldie Edna Schaefer, Orville
Co lmer, Elizabeth Gardner, . Hogue, Garnell Clark, Lucille
Martin Mollohan , Ruth Clay, Paul Smith, Blythe
Parsons, General Hall, Ida Theiss, Helen Slack, Virgil
Christi e, Glenna Milhoan, McElroy and Mary Buck.
Lula Murray, Charles Smith, Those )"ith over 500 hours of
Bertha Lasher, Anne Grim, ~.rvice in 1976 include Betty
Nellie Groce, Belva Groce, Christopherson, Marcia
Edna Roush, Dana Hanun, Denison, . Faye Dunlavey,
Christy Baer, Anna Vaughan, Ruby Erb, Rose Ginther,
Jane Smith , Eunice Sprague, Alice Grant, Stella Grueser,
Mae Pearson, Frances Iles, Nettie Hayes, Charles Hilton,
Pearl Niday, Lois McKenzie, Jestie Molden, Alma Newton,
Cora Nichols, Clarence L ~ n co ln Russell, M~uie
Nichols, Sarah Brown, Oma Steiner, Nellie Vale and Mae
Winebrenner, Willie Cross, Weber. The oldest volunteer
Anna Hudson , Maude Bailey, is Britie Wyatt, 90, with

Local notices, briefs
OVer 50 wom en attended
the first forum on es tate
ma tt ~~s

he ld

Tuesday

e......,•ng a t the Ru t land
Bra nch of the Pomeroy
Nationa l Bank .
William J . Hobsletter ,
ma nage r of the bran ch,
extended a welcome and Mrs .

Maxine Gri ff ith spoke briefly
. on the forum before in.

LOS ANGELES- HENRY. KISSINGER says he's "hurt" · tradu cing Allorney Bernard
that Richard Nixon thinks Kissinger was delighted to find Fultz , speaker for the
evening . Joan May of the
(Continued on page 16)
Rutland

Branch

spoke on

Quarters leased
for BES office
The ~eigs County Com·
missioners Tuesday night
signed a lease with George S.
Hobstetter for the rental of
office space at 107 Sycamore
St. in Pomeroy for an un·
disclosed amount.
Also Tuesday night, a lease
was signed between the
commission and the Ohio
Bureau of Employment
Services subleasing the office
space for use as an unemployment office.
business
In
9ther

qualifications for the dog
warden job were discussed in
detail and a decision on hiring
will be made soon a com·
missioner said.

'County engi neer Wesley
Buehl was authorized to buy
asphalt materials from
Guernsey Asphalt, Big Sandy
Asphalt, Ashland Petroleum
Co., and Asphalt Materials
Co .. at his discretion, but with
a variance or no more than
$5,000 between the co m·
panit"·.
On o'r commendation lif the

Weather
Cloudy tonight, chance of
thundershowers, lows to 65.
Cloudy Thursday, highs to
upper 80s. Probability of
precipitation 69 per cent
today, 50 per cent tonight , 20
per cent Thursday.

engineer a PF"'5 bitwninous
paver will be purchased from
the Columbus Equipment Co.
for use by the copnty highway
depa rtment . Buehl also
presented plans for a steel
bridge to be constructed on
CR-29 in Sutton Township.
The project will be advertised
for bids.
. Attendinv were Henry
Wells, Richard Jones and
James
Roush.
com mi ssioA·crs, and Mary
Hobstetler, acting clerk.

servi ces of the bank . Han·
dling regis tration and fa11ors
were Georgene Grate and
Teresa Brown , bra nch em .
ployes . Sharon Barr , another
employe. jo ined other women
employes for serving of
r efreshments.
A marriage . license Was
issued to Clarence Arthur
Lawson , 19, Long Bottom ,
and Rema Rae Chafin, 18,
Pomeroy .
A $ulf ask ing $20,400 has
been flied in Meigs Coun t y
Common Pleas Court by Ida
Margaret VanMeter ,· Mid d lepor t , aga inst the Cin ·
d nna ti Insurance Co ., Cin · ·
ci i'mati . The suit is for loss of
dwel l ing and contents by f ir e
on Marc h 28 . 1977 . The
proper t y was located in
Chester .

A square dance being
sponsored bv Ra cine Legi on
Post w il l be held Friday night
a t the Post Home , not
Saturday , as wa~ announced
earlier.
A " kids Crusade " is being
held at Chester Church of God
entitled ' ' Come On and
Praise t he Lord " , t h is
evehing. 'Thursday, and
Saturday at 7: 30 p. m . There
w ilt also be a puppet show .
The pub l ic is invited .

The

Middleport

Baseball l eague
Thursday , May 19,
in
t h e former
chambers ol city
parents of player s
to attend as their
needed .
\

Yo uth

will m eet
at 7 p. m .
c oun c i l
haiL All
ar ~ asked
support is

Lessie Lusk, 89, the second
oldest . The oldest male
volunteer is Da na Howett, 88.
Mrs . Eleanor Thomas,
exec uti ve director of the
Meigs County Council on
Aging. presented certificates
of award to the Meigs Local
Board of Education , Barhara
Van Meter. Charles Barrett.
Ke nn eth Imboden, Or is
Smith, Gracie Wilson, Fern·
dora Story, the Cheste r
Yo ung Wives Club, the Meigs
Co unty Fa ir Board, . th e
Un ited Methodist Men, Bob
and Charlene Hoeflich :
Gera ld Powell, .Joe Struble,
the Southeastern Ohio
Emergency Medical Service
and Ja ck and Glenna Crisp.
Mrs. Thomas also paid high
tribute to her staff and introduced the group.
· Blakeslee was introduced
by Mrs. , Lula Hampton, a
member of the local and
regional aging groups, and a .
voca l quintet from the Meigs

High
School ,
Paula
Eichinger, Beverly Wilcox,
Laura Hoover, Jo McKinney
and Jenni Grate, accompanied by Teresa Ellis
presented musical numbers.
Invocation was by Clarence
Struble. first president of the
Meigs Council on Aging.
Pomeroy Mayor Clarence
Andrews ex tended greetings
as did Molly Varner. area
agency director on aging., and
Joan Brewer Dobbins, for·
mer ly of Meigs County ,
assistant specia I events
coordinator of the Ohio
Comm issio.n on Aging.
Jeann e . Braun, a · stall
mem ber with the RSVP
program, spoke preceding
the presentation of volunteers
by Mrs. Wamsley.
Randy Hunt directed the
vocal quintet from Meigs
Hi gh School on be~alf of his
wife, Paige, and Mrs. Hazel
Thom son , provided ac·
complmirnent for th e senior

citizens
choir
whh:h
presented several selections.
Leader of the group, Mrs.
Carrie Neutzling, is a patient
at Veterans Memorial
Hospital. Mrs. Nellie Tracy
gave a reading.
Co unty officia ls Auditor
Howard Frank, Treasurer
George Collins amj Judge
Buck were recognized.
Favors fo r the tables were
made by Ma rga ret Ella
Lewis and Dorothy Will and
flower arrangements for the
dinner were . prepared by
Mrs. Lewis, Grace Turner,
Janet Bolin, Pauline Atkins,
Juanita
Radekin .
Recognition was given local ·
counc il members . Closing
prayer was by the Rev.
William Middleswart.
After the dinner tables
were cletfred away and
seniors wrapped up the observance with a square dance
with music•provided by Carol
and Darrell Taylor. ·

C. E. BLAKESLEE, of
the Meigs and llegionnI,
organizations on agiug
was
mast er
t1f
c e remoni e s
fur
Tu e sda y ' s
Se ni or

Cilfz e n s

Day

observan ce .
T hP
audience was singing the

birthday
song . to
Blakeslee as this picture
wa! snapped .

SE LECTIONS were presented by the Senior Cilizens Choir with Mrs. Hazel Thomson accompanist du ring U1c
Senior Citizens Day observance.

Commencement speaker for
Eastern graduation announce(l
of Edu cation from Rio College Registration and was Pamela Congrove, llehl&gt;io
Grande College where he · a member of the Boa rd of Conn oll y, Etrmw Df!r.:;.t.
served as interim president Directors ,
Appalachia Jeffrey Day, Belinda lleetm·.
Cindy Dill . IJorr cl Drnk&lt;·.
from J uly 1976 th ro ugh Educational Laborat9ry.
February 1977.
Quick is a member of the T er es a E dwl!rd!'-1,, Hobin
In addition to vario us Local and Area Teachers Eikins, Mel an ie En&lt;'\"qld~rn
teaching positions, Quick has Associations , the Ohio Diana Epple. John Fvnns.
been superintendent in Education Association , th e Ma rlin E vans, Terry l"~u r a r\
Fi t1' h, Ku lh;
several Ohio school districts National
Educati o n Tamm y
F
oll
rod
,
J
c
nn ifl'r CHim·r.
and was assistant Superin- Association. and the Ohio
.
S
usa
n
Goe
bPl,
Df'h hi~· (; ri rfill,
lendent of Public Instruction Association of School Ad·
Mark
Gro
ss
nick
lf', .Jcur~t••,
for Administration in 1967. ministrators.
Ha
ll
,
Carolyn
ll nrper.
His community interests
NOw retired, he served on
the ·Ohio Board of School and include work with the Young Marcella Hartm an. Stephrn
Men's Christian Association Haube r, Jo F:llen ll"''ko.
Also, MMk H&lt;l wk, PAUl
(YMCA),
Lions
In ·
Hawk
. J am es I1 &lt;1 wth on1r,
ternation·al, Ma soni c and
Jeffer
y Hedri c k, H~Hh~Ha
Eastern Star Lodges. Ac·
Hend
erson
, J ohn l-h•nder~nn.
li vely involved in the Boy
Susan
Henderson.
t'onniP
Scouts of America as a
HO
ff
man
,
n
aPh('l
!lnnnr.
committeeman and camp
director, Dr . .. Quick is a Noah -ll ncll. ' llt•lonrl"
· member of the Presbyterian J a ckso n, Deannn Knapp,
Ph il lip l.cCo rn b. 11ro•nd;o
Church.
Baccalaureat e se rvi ces Lanha m. Mark L~w~tln,
will be conducted by Rev. La rr y L o n~en c t te. Tt&gt;rP•w
The Meigs County Commissioners released the following James Lea ch, minister .of the Longenctte-. r...:lm&lt;!l r,y&lt;mt;,
statement today concerning dust control on unpaved t;ounty Mt . Hermon United Brethren Robert McCl ure. l."n
and township highways.
in Christ Church at 2 p.m. and Ma st e rs,· .Ja ne Mi \lhoru•,
" During lhe last few day~ several people have advised the graduation will be at 8 p.m. David Mtlls. Richord Morn.
county commissioners that they have inquired at the county
·seniors to be awarded Jimmie Putman . Jr .. Br Uf'C
highway garage as to why dust control has not been placed on diplomas are Janet Ambrose, Rime, Cynth !~ Htlthi t•. .IO&lt;R&lt;
unpaved county and township highways and they have been
Cynthia Anderson , Ri ck Schm uck er, Jaynr Sm1th.
told by the county highway department that the reason no dust Barringer , Kevin Barton, Mi &lt;; hael Sm ith , I crP&lt;.;n
control has been used is because the commissioners would not Diana Benedum , Robert Smi th , .Juli a Sprnn·r,
accept bids or provide money for this expenditure.
Bennett, Jim Bing, Jewell P a m ela Spurl ock. Luonne
· "This is simply not true.
Blake , Patri cia Boston, Staats, Gatl Thonw, St nTn
"On May J, 1977 a resolution was introduced and
Bob
W
Gregory Browni ng. Gr eg Tru ssell .
unanimously passed for dust control. The county engineer. If
VanKampen
,
t'nug
Vt)nuy,
Bucha.nan, Teresa Lynn
he had chosen to do '!"· could have started inunediately to
Wh ite,
Ju li
Buckley, David Carnahan, Ken neth
apply tllts material. To say otherwise is not only untrue, but a
Whitehead,
Do
ris
Wells
Julia Carpenter , Teresa
clear misrepresentation of the facts."
.
Carr. John Cau sey. Timothy Willi ams, Br inn Wind on.
Chaffee , L&lt;&gt;tha Clark , Bonn ie Wood, ~ ni H Ynunu.
Dr. Thomas J, Quick ,
former president of Rio
Grande Community College,
will address t he 1977
grad uating class of Eastern
High School at the 20th an·
nual Baccalaureate and
Commencement exercises
Sunday.
The recipient of Bachelor
and Master Degrees from
Ohio University , Quick
completed his graduate work
at Ohio State and was granted ,
an honorary degree of Doctor

Dust controls
are available

.

\

�J - The Dally Sentinel Middleport Pomero) 0 Wednesda) May 18 197

2- The Dally Sentmel Middleport Pornno• 0 Wedne•da) Ma) 16 1977

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

Araby peace
endangered
B) RICHARD C GROSS
TEL AVJV Israel (U P! l R ght wmg leader Menahem
Beg11 tile upset VIctor n
Israel s

national e lections

today S31d he would go to
Washwgton as soon as he IS
llC:Imed

prune nun ster

to

confer w th Pres dent Ca rter
on Middle East peace
proposals
Begm wl ose r ghtist L kud
bloc ended the Labor party s
29 )ear dom nat on of lsraeh
pol tics n Tuesday selectiOn
also sa d tile fortllcom ng
change of government would
not curta 1 peace efforts be
cause the entre nat on
craves peace
Begm s VICtory brought
angry Arab reactiOn The
off c al Damascus radio sa d
BegujiS wm means the area
IS headmg towards war
because tile nght st leader
refuses the dea of a
Palesllruan state and reJects
any
w thdrawal
from
occup ed Arab terr tory
The
olflc1al
Syr an
ewspaper AI Baath called
Begm an extrem sl and a
terronst Beg n led a Jew sh
underground group the Trgun
Zva1 Leum durmg Israel s
1948 war of mdependence
Begm told newsmen It
w1ll be a pleasure and a great
honor to VISi t President
Carter
We shall have many
many top1cs to dwell on and
we shall do so as free men
w th a sense of respons1b I ty
for the fu ture of our nalwns
he sa1d
Beg~n sa1d the VIctory of h1s
Likud bloc was a super or
act of democra cy
The
L•kud won 41 seats m tile next
parliament a ga n of two
compared w1tll the ..18-seat
loss suffered by Labor wh1ch
wJII be left w th 33
Begm spoke w th reporters
n Tel AVIV after the
executive committee of the
Likud endorsed his appeal to
all parties except the
COnunumsts to JOin a w de
rangmg coalltwn
We have only a few weeks
to deal With this problem he
sa1d
calhng for the
mstallat10n of a new
government by June 13 as

reqmred by law
I..abor party leaders srud 11
was unl kely the) ~ o uld JOID
Beg n s proposed coallt on
but I 1kud sources sa1d they
expected to put together a
gove rrunent representing at

least 70 ' otes a clear
maJontv tn the 120-member
pari ament
The extent of Labors un
precedenled defeat came as a
surpriSe to Likud politiCians
as well as almost C\ erybody
else m a country that has seen
no other part) m control smce
Israel was founded n !948
Pol t1c1ans and newspaper
ed1tonals agreed tile L1kud
VIctory was due as much to
the 38 per cent nflat on rate

CALL ANSWERED
The Pomeroy Emergency
Squad answered a call to
West Man St at 8 IS a m
Wednesday for Gilbert Mees
who was taken to Veterans
Memonal Hosp tal At 2 31
p m Tuesday the squad was
called to Me gs H1gh School
for Carolyn K G1lmore who
was hurt In a physical
educat on class She was
taken to Veterans Memonal
Hosp tal whe re she was
adm !ted
BONDS FORFEITED
Four defendants forfeited
bonds rn the court of Pomeroy
Mayor Clarence Andrews
Tuesday mght They are
Richard Shields Woodstock
Ill $00 posted on an open
flask charge Roger Hysell
Pomeroy $50 no motorcycle
Larry Mullins
helmet
Galllpohs $33 speedmg and
Robert McNemar V1enna
W Va $30 speedmg

HEALTH

Biggest auction
ever opens today
MENTMORE
England
(UP!) After a bmldup Ike
no other m h1story the
contents of Mentmore Towers
at last go on the auctwn block
loday m tile sale of the
century
Never has an aucl on n the
rarif ed atmosphere of f1ne
art heen more hke a c1rcus
Two l ears of controversy
preceded It Months of
publicity built 11 up
Amer ca n m1ll ona res n
pnvate Jets and European
m1lllona res m pnvate
helicopters have been
flocking to t and every
rentable room for m1les
around was reserved weeks
ago
It wJII take the speedy
auctwneers of Sotheby Parke
Bernet 18 sa le sessiOns
spread over 10 days to
co mplete what has been
called the greatest auctwn
sale
smce
French
revoluhonanes sold off
Versa lies
By the lime the !mal
hammer fa Us May '!/ on Lot
3 739 A George I tapered
cylindrical chocolate pot as
much as S17 m11lion wJII have
changed hands
Much of that w1ll be m
dollars or marks or francs
for much of the mcred1ble
collection amassed m the
1850s by Baron Mayer de
Rotllschild 1s too n ch for
English blood
The BntJsh gove rnment
itself dec1ded 1t could afford
only four 1tems of pre

United Press International
A severe sprmg drought
over the Southeast has dealt a
ilrlpphns blow to farmers and
J;Jt_aJdenllln some areas have
~en ordered to stop all non
essential use of water mclud
lng sprinkling lawns and
but that Will not correct your
wash
ng cars
bowel problem To help you
The
parched cond1t1ons
w1th that I am sendmg you
now
fam1llar
to res dents of
The Health letter number 2 I
Califorma
and
the Far West
lmtable or Spast1 Colon and
are
a
rare
occurrence
n the
Const1pat on Also I am sen
South
where
most
areas
have
d ng you number 4 9
enJoyed
an
abundant
water
Gallstones and Gall Bladder
D sease Others who want supply
But rainfall th1s sprwg has
e ther of these ssues can
been
far below normal and
send 50 cents for e ther one
the
Nahonal
Weatller Service
and a long stamped self
conditiOns
w1ll probably
says
addressed envelope for m1ul
mg Just send your request to not mprove for the next
several days
mt! ln c.: arc of U IS newspaper
We don t see much chance
P 0 Box 1551 RadiO C1ty
for
a major ram makmg
Stat on Ne\\ Vork NY 10019
10 tile next 72 hours
system
DEAR DR IAMB - A few
a
meteorologist m
sa1d
weeks ago there was an arti
Atlanta
cle n the pape1 by a lady who
The dry conditions have
was say11g wl at rei cf she
resulted
m numerous forest
got from a d1et of bananas
fires
that
have destroyed
all 101 ds and avocados fo r
tllousands
of
acres of tunber
her a rihr t s The paper got
land
espec~ally
m Nortll
Jru sla d before l got a chanc-e
Carolma
of notmg her addre•s
Only I 7 mches of rain fell
Would you be able to fur
tn
tile Atlanta area tn April
1 sit this to 11e as l would like
nearly three mches below
loll y t'
DEAR READER - Ill do normal So far this month
better than that by telling you less than an mch of ram has
such a d1et won t do any good fallen
Georgia
Agri c ulture
at all for artltr t s Save
Commissioner
Tommy
Irvm
yourself the troub le
3 here are no spec1al d1ets
f01 arthr I s An nd vidual
w th arlhr t s should eat a
sens ble d1el that prevents
obes ty Also some patients
w th rl emnatmd arthnt s
seem to do bette r f spec al
cal e s taken to be su re they
get more than the Recorn
me Jed Da ly Dietary
Allowance of YJtamms Care
must be taken to be sure the
diet 1s at least adequate
Oller ll an ll at any clauns
!01 mag c u es from super
v tamlns or spec a d ets s

Enema habit only hurt•

¥.here I have to u.se a laxat ve

or enema to have a bowel
movement and these stU
g1ve very httle results
My doctor says that I have
gall bladder problems Could
these be related'
Also s 1! necessal) that I
should have a gall bladder
ope ra! on when at this t me I
am exper1enc ng no pam JUSt
a slight occas onal
tenderness at the poSit on of
the gall bladder'
DEAR READER
It 1s
not necessary to have a bowel
move ment

everv

de:ty

However people who do not
usually are on a d et that IS
low m bulk If you eat mostly
ref ned food. and get 10
ce1eal fiber there simply IS
not enough resadue for 1 or
mal colon function The same
thmg happens to people who
go on a crash d1et that con
ta ns no b1ead ( t should be
whole wheat for a 1or nal
diet anyway and a httle
food
The laxatiVe and ene na
hab t only makes matters
worse By speed 1 g up
ellrrunahon art1f c ally vou
Simply empty the
olon
prematurely It takes longer
then for 11 to f1 1l suff c enlly
fo r the next ehmmatwn
Your symptoms may be
related to your colon rathc1
tllan your gall bladder In
any ca•e the nd cat on for
gall bladder s urger} s
defm1te diSease of the gall not t (:!..St:tl o s un I nfurma
bladder a compe tent l on
Tcstuno 1a l ~ su&lt; h as the
surgeon and a pat ent healthy
enough to m n m•ze the one you rea I u uallv d 1 t
neaaa tl g 1 r ~ li c
surg cal n sk If the ga ll blad
Y
u t &lt;ul I get lcSJ 1 or ~ I s
der s d seased t t:(_ bette• I&lt;
f
I
Sl akc II f v
wa (c I (
have 11 removed while you
are young and 11 g &lt;1 ltealll
lx thc1

emmen t Importance to the

na!Jon It made a deal w1tll
the seventh ea rl of Rosebery
to take tllose before tile sale
as a down payment on h s
huge mhentance tax b ll
Lord Rosebery tned for two
years to pay that tax bJII by
swappmg Mentmore Towers
for 11 plus a couple of m II on
m cash The government sa1d
no deal
So he tur ned over the
spra \\ ling many towered
stone mans10n ts 990 acres
of beautiful roll ng farm land
and Jts pr celess contents to
the auct oneers
The house and estate are
for sale separat ly Sotheby s
surrounded the house w th
huge c reus l1ke tents to
auctwn tile house s gaudy
contents
The blue and white stnped
sale room at Mentmore s
front door has seals for 800
standmg room for 200 an
electromc score board to
Instantly coqvert each b1d
mto s1x currencies a closed
cJrcu t televiSion system to
display each 1tem to all
In a separate CJrCUS tent
Ule orgamzers are servmg
qu1che lorra ne and smoked
chatea u bottled
salm on
claret
and
Tatt nge r
champagne at pr ces tllat
would make an Arab w1nce
Statuary scattered about
tile lawns JS tagged with lot
numbers and s1gns saytng
each must be (!Jsmantled and
removed at the buyer s nsk
before May 30

sad he JS senously
considering requestmg Ieder
al d1sa1ter assistance for
fanner• whoae crops have
belli nllned
Irngat10n systems m
south Georgia are runmng at
full for ce but 11 s not
enough sa d Irv1n
Our frmt
nut and
vegetable crops are cut m
half Peaches are very likely
to be reduced by half
peanuts our b1ggest cash
crop are only 74 per cent
planted and what s planted s
sproutmg very unevenly and
poorly
South Carolma crops have
also been hurt w1th offiCials
reportmg that peach growers
w1tlloot JrrJgatwn facJbtJes
are m bad need of rainfall
SC
C1ty
Florence
Manager Guy Srruth sa•d
reSidents have cooperated
beautifully With an order
tlley halt lawn spnnklmg and
car washmg We are now m
fa1r shape he sa1d
A ban on outdoor burmng 1s
m effeet m 13 eastern North
Carohna co unhes and
off1c als s81d 1t had reduced
the number of forest f1res
although
the
threat
remained
Conditions have not un
proved any
sa1d Forest
Serv1ces s pokesman Tom
Hegele HumJdJties are still
low and wmd conditions are
moderate

ATTEND CEREMONY
I ONG BOT'JOM Mr and
Mrs Paul Andrews Lo 1g
Bottom were m Nelso 1v lc
Sundav to atten I !he pat
&lt;h 1g cc emooy at H ck1 g
lcduucal College f01 the
f C.( yea Jlledlcal H&gt;SIS(a l
students fhelf da ugl le•
Barba a IS one of II e
lc l~ OH
1elat ves t
I g we c MIS Ma y W11
l1cvM a dM s
I I I d c
ar I
I 11
Weste r 111
IM

I

M I

M 1k I I
I I

I

the Doctor took Ch arge

Sunset hill growing weaker
ll) t EE I EUNA HIJ
UPI Swt&lt; h US&lt; llcp rt&lt; r
COl UMBUS I UP I 1
Sunset legJslat n emlded
tt~

the a l.':i"e' to burgeonmg
statr
burea ucracy
has

read ed the halfwa) pomt of
Its ]&lt; urne) llu uugl U e Ohio
( cncral Assembly w th
detra ctors complammg t s
hopelessly watered down
lgnormg \\arnmgs that t

sh

would be. a \'.capon agaanst

r tonwlldatc admm•stratlve

agencies wluch veto the
laws tllal we pass by the1r
rulernakwg powers They
destroy our leg slahve
ntent
Under U c b 11 tlle Jomt
I eg slatlve Rev1ew Co m
mlttee would have to 'tudy at
least 30 agencies per year
complet ng ts eva luat on of
cXJ•t ng agencies by Dec 31
1984 New agenc1es would get
an extra year to be
scrutin zed
The con m ttee after
publtc hear ngs would ssue
a wntten report to the
leg slature
bas ng 1ts
recommend atiOns on 13
suggested fa ctors as to
whether the agency was
JUSt f ed on grounds of
efhc1ency econo ny and
reflectiveness
The General Assc nbly
would then vote on a b 11
carry ng out the committee s

jM!(.:

a~c 1

a I c.: m r rtH.'t' fo abol

c t:s

TI 1:; s not sunset

eom

p amed Dav d Hetzler of
Oh s chapter of Common
(ause a c t zen watchdog
gr up Th1s s h gh noon
Th1s IS just one n ore layer of
state government wh ch 1s

not gomg to do the JOb
Lancwne sa ad the rr easure

was ~Aeak and unnecessary

the House Tuesday gave
top-heavy approval to a 1 11
se ttin g up a spec al
le g slat ve co 1 111tee to
p e r o d c a 11}

r ev e '"

Hospital News
Holzer M edu~_al Center

desig nated state agenc es
Discharges May 17
and
recon mend
the
Margaret
Bartelson
unprodud ve ones for Norma Berry Lou•s Blevms
extmct on

Jeremy Boles Frank Brown

Although th e so ca lled
sunset b II was sent to the
Senate the 93 3 vote nay
ha-. been dece v ng Some
lawmakers nd ca ted they
felt compelled to vote for the
measure because sunset s
pol t•cally appealmg
There "ere s gns that at
tempts w 11 be made to
strengthen tlle proposal 1n the
Senate
The b1ll sponsored by Rep
A G Lancwne D-Bella1re s
the
Democrat c-controlled
leg slature s answer to Go&gt;
James A Rhodes Task
Force on Com m ss10n
Rev1ew wh1ch studied 269
agenc1es and recommended
last January that 89 of them
be abol shed and 39 others
consolidated or transferred
Under I anc one s b ll a
e g hl me nber J o nt
I cg slat •ve
Rev ew
Comm ittee
\\ ould
be
established no later than
January 1979 to eva luate the
performance of a hst of
agencies at least once every
s x yea rs re co mmendmg
th at th ey be co nt nued
tranferred or abolished
Notable exemptwns from

I a nee Chapm an Elea nor
Dav s Laura Drosos Debra
F sher T mm e Frisby
Samuel Fry Jr Larry
Hudson Betty Jamey Kathy
Jewell Lorayne Jones
T•mothy Mass e Randall
McKenzie Jr N Ia M1ll ken
Mrs Donald Nunley and son
Manon Patr1ck Sharon
Ph II ps Richard P ckens
Elo1se R ley
M chelle
Saunders Charles Stevenson
Earnest Ward
Births May 17
Mr and Mrs Larry Speak
man son Ray Mr and Mrs
George
Markm
son
Chesh re Mr and Mrs
Donald Km g dau ghter New
Haven W Va Mr and Mrs
James Sheets son Rutland

the

sW\set

prov s ons are

the leg slature the state s
elected off ces the courts
local governme nts and
college boards of trustees
Th sWill be the graveyard
for useless goverrunent agen
sa d
Lane one
c1es
claunmg It Will Sa ve the Slate
about $1 m Ilion a yea r
Useless agenc es never d1e

They JUSl stay and stay and
stay
D ssatlsfactJOn w1th the b II
cen tered around the fact
there
1s
no
clause
automattcall)
lermmal ng
age nc•es
unless
the
leg1slatW'e acts to renew
them and the content on that
the lawmakers don I need a

Drought crippling southeast

Lawrence E Lamb, M D

DEAR DR LAMB - For
the past several years I ve
had a good bowel movement
twice a \\ eek My family doc
tor says th s IS normal for
some people Is this true'
Now I am !o the poml

CLEVELAND (U P! 1 - A remote control killer wa s
sought today m the bomb ng d•ath of Cleveland
Tearru;ters off c1al and reputed mob leader lohn Nardi
61 UmverSJty He ghts
A bomb beheved to be composed of plashc explosives
went off Tuesday as Nard• opened h1s car door n a
parkrng lot near the of! ces of Tea msters J01nt Co uncll41
Hom1c1de detecllves s81d the bomb was m a car next to
Nardi s and was apparently tnggered by remote control
He was dead on arr val at St Vmcent Chanty Hosp tal
The pollee and tile FBI charactenzed Nardi as one of
the n ost powerful men n Cleveland area orgamzed
crune H1s last scrape w•tll tile law was last year when he
was acqmtted n U S Distnct Court 10 M1am1 of
at!emptmg to unport tons of man Juana mto the country
through Flonda
He held the top post of secretary-treasurer m
Teamsters Local 410 which represents vendmg ma ch ne
service workers

and a ser es of strtkes as well

as to the read ness of Labor to
g1ve up occupied Arab land n
exchange for peace
The Labor party has also
been rocked by a senes of
Watergate style sca ndals
cu lm natm g
w1th
the
w1thdrawel of former Prune
M1ruster Y lzhak Rabin as
Labor s standardbearer JUS!
pr or to tile elect on
The I 1kud s pledged to
keep ng all tile occup1ed West
Bank of Jordan

Teamster, mob leader dies
by remote control bomber

He sa1d a number of mmor
fires reported late Monday
appeared to have been
deliberately set
In MisSISSipp i soybean
producers were a dvised to

delay plantmg tile rest of the
crop until tile state gels more
ram

Dr Wayne Jordan a state
agronom st sa d 40 to 50 per
cent of the crop has been
planted but because of the
lac k of mo1sture some
farmers have already begun
to slack off or even qu t
plantmg

Rio CC

to offer
CPR course
RIO GRANDE - A course
n

Cardiop ulm onary

Res usc tat on CPR ) cer
t1f1ed by th e Amencan Red
Cross will be offered by the
Health Physical Educat on
and RecreatiOn Department
of R o Grande College • d
Comm um ty College Wed
nesday May :u;
The course which w11l offer
CPR cert he t on fo par
liCJpants w 11 be held from
6 30 to 10 30 p m 10 the
college cafetena
F1ve registered nurses w 11
prov de mstruct10n which w 11
mclude motiOn pictures
lectures demonstratiOns and
a performance t es t for
partJC pants
Those who successfully
complete the course Will be
tramed to provide emergency
care for v ct ms of chokrng
and heart attacks Planners
emphas zed that anyone 18
eligible to register for the
class Prev•ous med 1cal
expenence 1s not necessary
There s no charge and pre
reg strat on IS not necessary
Interested people need only
"' vc at the RGC cc
cafete a and register on tl c
Pvcmn~ of the class

PLEASANT\ AI LEY
DISCHARGES - Mrs
Andrew McCarty Ew ngton
0
Mrs I eon Marcum
Kerm t W Va Mrs Nathan
Yonker
Letart
Lew s
Letterer Gall polls Teresa
Miller Pomt Pleasant Dav d
Thomas Po nl Pleasa nt
J ose ph
Black
Pont
Pleasant Sh rley Harmon
Henderson Ray Stutler
I etart Ethel Thornton
Leon Carl W !let Hen
derson Kelsy Henry Pomt
Pleasant St even Nutter
Hartford Robert Poore
Pont Pleasant and Michael
Kennedy Dayton Ky
B rths - A son to Mr and
Mrs John Green lee Po nt
Pleasant and a son to Mr
and Mrs George Schwartz
Po nt Pleasant
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Adm1tted - Els1e Poole r
Pomeroy Nancy Manley
Middleport Karla R cha rds
New Haven George Morr s
Pomeroy Carolyn G !more
Rutla d Man n Darst
Pomeroy Eva M11l ron
M ddleport
D scharged
Carr e
Neutzllng W l11am Fortney
Lew1s Laudermllt

NOWVOUKNOW
The Purple Heart medal
commonly awarded to se r
v cemen wounded n the hne
of duty was or gmated by
George Washmgton 10 1782 to
honor d stmgmshed m I tary
service

Pomeroy funds
are standing
at $220,575
Balance of all funds for the
Pomeroy treasury end ng
Apri l 30 totaled $220 575 43
accordmg to Jane Walton
clerk m her report to town
co uncil Monday
Receipts
expenditures
and balance n all act1ve
funds respect vely were
general $30 743 65 $14 108 82
$26 555 59 reven ue sharmg
$0 894 $12 313 11 $17 838 37
water we'n unprovement no
rece1pts
no expend tures
$2 705 44 ant1 reces10n $323
no expend tures $1 528
sewe r $5 365 29 $2 316 55
$46 248 32 fire department
$3 683 41 $842 82 $0 759 68
cemetery $686 $1 402 32
f$19 0 30) stree t $349 62
$2 583 80 $1 310 23 state
h ghway no receipts
no
expend tures
$2 993 82
water operating $1! 756 85
$11 523 87
$31 897 99
guaranty meter $200 $300
$5 611 27 park ng meters
$1 289 no expenditures
$24 864 94 utJI ty $7 776 10
$1 604 SO $6 658 47 ReceJptss
expenditures i\lld balance In
all act1ve funds respectively
were $68 066 92 $46 995 79
S173 781 82
Receipts expenditures and
ba lance respectively m the
nact ve funds were

sewer

constructiOn no receipts no
expenditures $3 !56 25 bond
retireme nt $818 54 $1903
$38 638 15
sewer bond
retirement no receipts no
expe nd lures $4 999 21
Recc pts expenditures and
bala1 cc 1n all fund s
respectively \\ere $68;M5 46
$47 014 82 $220 575 43

I h s 1s curtam pulhng
leg•slallon
he sa1d
We
walk over to the Window pull
the curtam and say My
goodness the sun has set
House M1nonty Wh1p Alan
E; Norr s R Westerville
co ncede d

sunset

IS

Memorial pro-am event
draws 30,000 persons

30000
I was m my own env1ron

ment n the playoff sa 1d
Maltbie That s my JOb But
today t was hard to be
concerned w1th yo ur game
SQmebody was always yelhng
Hey Gerry or somethmg
At a banquet Tuesday n ght
hosted by the Mmrf1eld golf
club and a sporhng goods
the
former
company
president pra sed the layout
of the course and h1s
receptiOn m Col umbus
Its a little unusual for a
person from Michigan to get
such a warm welcome as 1

did on the golf course today
sa•d Ford drawmg a round of
applause and aughs from
about I 000 persons uncluding
Nicklaus Gov James A
Rhodes real estate developer
John
Galbreath
and
Campbell
l always beheve n
compeb twn whether t s
athletics or politiCS sa d
Ford And I appreciate
excellence And I can say
w1thout a doubt that there s
none better tllan th1s golf
course
Ford sa1d he appreciated
h1s
retirement
and
part cularly hked ope rung the
mom ng paper and asking
who s takrng care of this
mess m Washmgton
After Ford s br1ef remarks
Campbell enterta m ed the
crowd w•th a 45 mmute
repertmre of songs he has
recorded and made famous
Maltbie who hasn t won
smce last year s Memor1al
and who sp&amp;.t a few days at
Mu1rf eld workmg with
famed teachmg professional
Jack Grout m an attempt to
get Ius game back on track
sa1d he was pleased w th h1s

Sport Parade
By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sports Editor

a

fad
but supported the
per1od1c rev1ew He sa1d a
self destruct clause on
agenc1es has not worked rn
other states because the
le gislature cannot rev1ew
them qUickly enough to meet
the deadlme
Rep Myrl H Shoemaker
D Bourneville
sa1d
automatic agency shutdowns
could be ach~eved through the
budgetary process and that
Republicans would get a
chance to vote on them UJ a
oompan on budget b1ll con
ta mng spend mg language

When you get a man
hungry he 11 I sten to you
smd Shoemaker When you
recommendat on
I m not opposed to the feed hun he 11 stand a long
conc-ept of sunset saJd Rep way off
Jo mng
Fauver
n
Scnbner L Fau ver R
oppoSition
to
tile
b1ll
were
Elyna one of the three House
members who reg stered Reps R1chard G Fman R
oppos1t10n But !Ius s not Cmc nnat1 and Peter N
sunse I Let s not k1d Crossland D-Akron
The House also passed 88
ourselves Th s s a very
to
6 and sent to the Senate a
very watered down and
bill
reqmrmg each state
weakened erston
med1cal college m
supported
House Mm or ly Leader
OhiO
to
estabhsh
an off1ce of
Charles F Kurfess R
Perrysburg aiS&lt;J was cnt cal ger1atr c med1cme
Rep John A Begala D
of the b I although he voted
Kent chief sponsor sa1d the
for Jt
Sunset •s the !977 catch program would cost abo ut
word of lh1s leg slature and $365 000 to begm He sa1d
all across the country sa d some I 5 milhon Ohwans are
Kurfess but I \\ Onder r m the elderly class are liVIng
we re vot ng for the longer but w th more chrome
catchword nstead of the 1l!ness
Fewer than half the
substance
med1ca
I schools m Amenca
The GOP leader po nted out
offer
even
one course rn
that among the 54 sponsors of
tile b II \\ere House membe rs ger atr c med1cme sa d
who half proposed other Begala
A smattermg of oppos1t1on
legJslatwn already th s year
settmg up 40 new boards and came from lawmakers wbo
sa d they were opposed to
comm ss ons
mandatm g curncula for
Kurfess sad the legislature
alr'eady has the power to higher educatiOn They sa1d
t could set a dangerous
rev iew and trans fer or
abolish government agenc1es precedent
Both chambers were to
through
ts
standmg
reconvene at I 30 p m today
commattees

By GENE CADDES
UP! Sports Writer
DUBLIN Oh10 (UPI)
To say I was a little
nervous
sa d Roger
s an
un
Maltb e
derstatement
Maltb e who beat Hale
Irwm m sudden death to wm
the
f1r st
Memor1al
Tournament a year ago
played m Tuesday s proam
w1tll former Pres dent Gerald
R Ford Jack N cklaus and
tllree of the b1g names of the
enterta nmenl world Bob
Hope Jackie Gleason and
Glen Campbell
The sudden death playoff
was a totally different thmg
sa1d Maltbie whose group
drew tile maJOrity of Tuesday
afternoon s gallery
estimated at more than

~

progress
I m playmg a little better
than t m1ght appear sa1d
Maltbie who had a 66 n the
first round of last week s
Colonial Natwnal I don t
thmk today was any
Indication of how I m1ght play
Thursday I was very happy
with my puttmg
N cklaus who des1gned the
Mmrf1eld VIllage Golf Club
course on wh1ch the $225 000
Memorial Tournament will
be held startmg Thursday
went along for the r1de
Tuesday as the siXth player m
the celebrity group
But the Golden Bear gave
notice he may not be qu1te
such a good host this year
f~rmg a four under-par 32 on
the back s1de m a round
which mcluded an eagle two
on tile 363-yard 14th when he
holed a pitching wedge from
115
yards
the ball
disappearmg mto the club on
the f rst bounce
The fo rm er president
except for a bnef flurry on
tile fronts de when he parred
tllree of four holes found the
rugged course much too
tough for hiS 17 ha~dJCap
swmg
1
In fa ct Ford p1cked up on
e ght of the 18 boles and JUS!
m1ssed hitting Maltb e on the
head on tile third when be hit
from one s1de of tile rough to
the other
Maltbie
dJplomat~eall!'
fielded questwns about the
former president s golf
game
I think he s a very good
athlete sa1d Maltbie He
makes his miStakes m tbe
f1rst half of h1s backswmg
From there on he has a
pretty good swmg He made
some good p1tch shQts
Although Ford d1dn t
unpress many WJth h1s golf
game he was giVen a warm
welcome by the huge gallery
which tournament official
John Montgomery called
the largest I ve ever seen
Ford even got a hello from
Anne Hayes wife of Ohio
State foothall coach Woody
Hayes
Mrs Hayes congratulated
the former M1ch1gan football
player for gettmg your law
degree at Yale
Andy North With a f1ve
under 67 turned In the best
score of the pros m the event
and the team headed by Art
Wall and Tom Watson
ca ptured tile team title w1th a
16-under par 56 Watson had a
four under 68

NEW YORK (UP!)- You talk to b1g league Jtlanagers about
th1s player or that player and usually they get around to one
who has good speed great reflexes and all tile natural ab1hty
m the world only what a temble shame 1! 1s he doesn t have
the proper attitude
Babe Ruth and D1zzy Dean were a pa1r of perfect examples
Baseball never really was a matter of 1 fe or death w1th them
and both wound up m the Hall of Fame So did Rabbit
Maranville who had a way of dr1vmg his managers up a wall
With some of tile thmgs he d do both on and off tile f1eld
It has generally come to be accepted that the best ballplay
ers are all busmess Maybe that s the b g trouble wltll baseball
now Somehow much of the fun seems to have squeezed out of
1t Everybody s dead ser ous today You see some ballplayers
together off tile field and they look as solemn as a group of
undertakers about to do an embalming W1th all the money
mvolved m baseball today you don t catch too many players
cuttmg up
There are a few exceptions
I don t care what anyone says you can t come to work
every day and be completely ser1ous says Jay Johnstone
Philadelplua s consistent hlltmg r1ght f1elder who has heard
himself described as a flake many tunes m h1s career
You gotta have a little fun once m awhile he lllSISts
Naturally theresa time and place for everytllmg You don t
pull something for a laugh when you re los ng or m the e•ghth
mmng of a hght ball game Anybody who plays the game
knows that I know It too I m SeriOUS when f have to be and
even though I kid around now and then I don t think of myself
as a flake
Johnstone who platoons w1th Jerry Martin 1s h1ttwg 320 for
the Ph1ls now He s m h1s 12th season m tile maJors and flrst got
a reputallon for bemg different because of some of the
thmgs he d1d when be f1rst came up to the b1g leagues With the
Angels
Junmy P ersall was my roorrunate he says They
wanted me to learn from him about playwg the outfield but he
taught me some otber thmgs Look k1d he d tell me As long
as your name •s m the papers and they re not writing anything
derogatory about you 1t s never go ng to hurt you because
people w11l get to know who you are That s what P1ersall kept
tellmg me
Well when I came to Philadelphia they found out !like to
have a little fun I threw some fJrecrackers m the clubhouse a
coupla tunes rust to liven 1t up What s wrong w1th that• I ve
also r1pped the seat of a guy s undershorts who used to be w1th
us so when he put em on he could pull em up around h1s neck
Thmgs like that Nothing to hurt anybody
Johnstone feels some of tile things he does m the clubhouse
and some of the thmgs others like Larry Bowa Tun McCarver
and Tommy Hutton do all help to keep tile club loose
He tells of one episode last year w1th particular relish It was
before a game w•th the Cardinals and M1ke Shannon their
former thJrd baseman who now broadcasts for them was an
accessory m this one
Joe Garag~ola was mterv1ewmg D1ck Allen on the field and
Shannon came and grabbed me and then dropped me r~ght
• behind Garag10la practiCally on the back of his feet laughs
Johnstone Garagwla had h1s back turned and had no 1dea
what happened He Jumped up stra1ght mto Allen and
knocked him completely off balance We fouled up hiS whole
tram of thought
This doesn t mean Johnstone goes around playmg JOkes all
the time You don t put m 11 years m the b1g leagues that way
!je hit 318 in 129 games for the Phils last year and feels tllat
could ve been closer tQ 330 had be not Jarruned hiS knee late m
the season
I was h1ttmg 321 gomg mto the last game and went oh for
four he says I could ve stayed out tllat last day and
protected my average but I wanted to play I was a little
disappomted w1th the way I fi!Ushed My leg cost me four or
fiVe hits That could be 15 pomts
Johnstone never k ds around when he s hitting
I need 142 more hits for I 000 he says I think t!Jat would
be mce

HOUSTON
1UPI)
Houston Rockets Coach Tom
N•ssalke sa d 1f PI Hade lph1a
s forced to go exclusively to
Julius Ervmg m the NBA
champwnsh1p senes the
76ers w11l not beat Portland
Juhus •s the finest player
to ever play the game

Marauders knocked out 10-1
The Me gs Marauders
s1x
errors
committed
Tuesday mommg enough to
let Washmgton Court House
knock them out of d str1ct
baseball play 10-1 on the Ohio
Un vers1ty d amond
In the last few ball games
the sechonal champion
Marauders had committed

Majc

in limelight now
MARlETTA Ohio (UPI) The man whose West V~rg~ma
State Meet d1scus record
stands after 20 years can
remember when d1scus
throwers at La1dley F1eld
were relegated to the parking
lot
A throw Wide to the r1ght
would sail over the fence and
crack mto the railroad cars
parked on the s1dmg Bill
Fields recalled at h1s Jaw
off1ce In tills hiStoriC Ohio
R1ver town 12 miles from hiS
hometown of Parkersburg
WVa
But at the State Meet we
were moved ns1de the
stadium and threw on the
football held
More tha n one F~eld s
discus throw skidded mto the
snow fence along the edge of
the runnwg track It was m
th•s setting he cut loose h1s
State Meet record of 175 feet
m 1957
Fields doesn t v1ew hunself
as a great athlete but he has

(8
and Fe guson
WP K
Forsc h 4 2
LP Rasmussen
2 5) HRs Hous on
ohn son 2
8 Cabe
2
AmE!'f" can Leagu e

IS nn ngs)
New Yo k

200 000 000 000 003 5 I 0
Oak land
000 000 002 000 000 2
1
Gu d V l y e (11 and Munson
B ue G us ( 4 Co eman
5
and W ams WP L ye 2 1
LP - G us
02
H Rs Oak
and Sang u en 3 A en 5
Tron o
002 000 o o-- 3 8 o
M w
000000 oo80
e fe son ohnson 8 and
Ashby H11as McC ure 7 and
Moo e WP ~ J e ffe son 3
LP
Haas 2 3

Nal on a Leagtie
San Dgo
0 000 400

a
20 oo ooo ~ 4 6 o
5u
on
Hough
a a nd
Yeager Cl'1r stenson B uss a
7 Ga be
8 an d Boone WP
Su
60
LP Ch sen
34
HRs Los Ange es
3
3 Ga vey 7
Ph adel
Jo1'1ns1one
De
100 000 000Te)(_a s
002 000 0 x- 3 6 0
San F an
000 00 000
4
3
and
May
Rozema
N Y
000 002 60)(.
8 12 0 A exande
5
and Sundbe g
Mon e usco Mo f t 7
La Fa hey 3
ve e
7
Co nu
8
and
Sadek H
7
Koosman (3 4
Boston
000 00 100
2 90
and S ea r ns. Gro e (7
LP Ca f
OOJ 210 oox
6 oo
Mon e usc o
26
HRs New
Jenk ns
Mu pl'1y (6
and
Yo k K anepoo
3
Koosman F sk S mpson Ha ze l 7 and
Humph ey WP - S mpson 3 3
LP Jenk ns 4 3 H R Ca o
Pt sbgh
000 000 o 2 3 7 0 n a Remy
en
ooooooooo-o 70
Cande a a Gossage 9 and Ba rn
020 000 000 2 2 o
Ot
B ngham ca dwe
9 Sea e
305 020 oox
0 0o
an d Bencl'1 WP Cande a a 5
R May M e
3) Hods
0 LP B ngham 4 3 HR
wortl'1 5) T Ma nez 7 and
P sbu gh s a ge 1 ( 7
Dempsey
Po e
Ramo
3)
Mon ague 9 and J u ze WP s Lu s
ooo o ooo-- 2 1 Romo I 2 L P R May 4 4
Hous n
000 000 23x
5 7 3 HRs- Ba t mo e DeC nces 6
8 and Sea e Lo pez 2
Rasmussen U ea
Se n 4
S mmons Banns e K Fo scl'1
u ze 2

6 95

Ch go

008 336 0 x 23 24 0
G If n Sp ner (3
Be na
4 Me zge
4
St om 6

Tom n
6
Sawyer
6 and
Oav S Bonham R Hernandez
and
M er wa d
WP
Bonham 52
LP- G f n 3
2
HRs- Ch cago B ner 2
2

On ve os

Mu cer
Rose lo

(6

2

C ne s

Mo a es
Sa n D ego

2

(3
va en

ne
Mn r ea
A t anta

9

21
2000200

LOS Ang

C eve
200 200 000
4
0
M nn
02 32 Ox - 0 0 0
Dobson Wa s 5 F tzmo r s
8 and Fosse Ho y Burgm e
e
4
and Wynegar
WP Burgme er
51
LP Dobson
04
H R M nn eso a
Ca ew

Ph

League Result s

6 2

977

ME IGS AMERICAN LEGION BASEBALL

DATE

DAY

MAY '2t

SUNDAY

JUNE

WE DNESDAY

J UNE 4

SAT UR DAY

JU NE 5

SUND1!.Y

JUNE

8

JUNE
JU NE

12

OPPON ENT

GAMES

PLACE

I

P

"

PORTSMOUTH

2

HOME

•

p

"
"

WELLSTON

2

HOME

LO WELL

2

AWAY

p

7

p

SATURDAY

1 p

SUNDAY

12

2

AWAY

GLOUST ER

2

!roME

M

ATHENS

2

HOME

p

M

ASHLAND

2

HOME

p

M

WELL STO N

2

AW AY

M

ATHENS

AWAY

PARKERSBU RG NO

AWAY

LANCASTER

"
30

p

WE DNESDAY

6 p

JUNE 18

SATURDAY

1

SU NDAY

HOME

BELPRE

H

JU NE 15

JU NE 1 9
JUNE

2

TUESDAY

6 P

JUNE

22

WEDNESDAY

1 30 ,

M

XY

JUNE 4!5

S ATURDAY

P

M

LOGAN

2

HO ME

JUNE llj6

SU NDAY

p

M

C EREDO KENOVII

2

AWAY

JUNE 29

WEDNESDAY

JULY 2

SATURDAY

M

LOWELL

2

HOHE

1 p

H

BELPRE

2

AWAY

p

M

LOGAN

2

AWAY

6 P

JULY 3

SU NDAY

JULY 6

WEDNESDAY

7 30 p

JULY 8

FRIDAY

8

JULY 9

JULY

0

JULY 13

M

Plflt.R!CERSBURG SO

AWAY

HOME

p

M

FAIRB ORN

SATURDAY

p

M

GLOUSTER

2

AWAY

SU NDAY

p

"

PARKERSBURG SO

2

HOME

WED NE SDAY

6 30 p

SATURDAY

p

JULY 11

SU NDA'i

p

JULY 20

WE DNESDAY

JULY 16
n

WE DNESDAY

TI ME

M

AWAY

P ORTS MOUTH

M

CEREDO JtENOVA

2

"

ASHLAND

2

7 )0 p

M

very few errors Tuesday the
roof caved m
Washmgton CH rumpcd on
starte r and lose r Dale
Brownmg for fiVe runs m the
top of the first mnmg on three
s ngles a walk and two
errors They added one more
m the second on an error and
a two-out smgle

Discuss throwers

Results, line scores
By un ted P ess Intern a onal

N1ssalke sa d The S1xers En mg led 76ers end h1s
There was one thing on
had to have all of hun to beat team s season w th a 112 109 my rn nd ton ght com ng n
us They got no support whe• "'"Tuesday n ~hltn the s xth I c&lt;eto wrn Ervmg sa d I
the gomg got tough ll at game
f the Eastern don t k1 ow wh ether that
caused rne to take charge or
won t work agamst the (U&lt; fc renc" playoff ser es
Trailblazers
1 he 6-{l Ervmg the highest not
N ssalke was b1tter He felt t;:'~ p~~yer n the NBA was
E1vmg scored 34 pmnts on
two poor calls by the ga 1e
lo of 24 field goa ls a •d four of
ofhc•al• had hel p• I lhe
fiVe from the lme Guard

XY

LOG II N
DISTRICT TOURNAMENT

been In close contact w1tll
great athletes m h1s career
mcludwg Ohio State golf
teammate Jack Nicklaus
Also at Oh10 State F elds
was on the same track team
w1th Olympic Games gold
medalist hurdler and sprmter
Glenn Jeep Dav•s at a
time when tile Buckeyes were
led m basketball by John
Havlicek and Jerry Lucas
I was always around great
athletes but never d1d much
myself F1elds chuckled
The &amp;-foot-5 235-pound B1g
Red atlllete also hurled the
discus 176 feet 5 mches m the
1957 Huntington regiOnal and
sent 1! 176 feet 3 mches n the
Parkersburg InvitatiOnal
For two decades no West
V~rgm•a high school d1scus
thrower has come close to
F1elds record
Ch1ef challenger m the 1977
meet startmg n Charleston
Fr1day IS Gordon Gordon of
John Marshall who logged a
tllrow of 166 feet 9 nches two
weeks ago
Fields best throw at Ohio
State was 165 feel He gave up
discus throWing after two
seasons because of mrury
and changed to golf He was a
teammate of a younger N1ck
laus while even younger Tom
We~skopf practiced w1th
them as a freshman awaiting
his vars•ty opportumty
If B1ll Fields were m high
school today could be beat
the 20-year-old record '
The Harva rd Law School
graduate wouldn t say yes or
no but he observed that
techniques have unproved
smce he dispatc hed th e
platter on record tr1ps
I JUst threw w1th my left
SJde facmg the area so there
was one complete turn
F1elds sa1d Now some start
w1th their back to the
tllrowmg area and they take a
turn and a half
What I d1dn t real1ze m
technique was that you essen
bally had to tllrow from a
planted posit on with your
nght leg We didn t have the
concept of havmg the nght
leg as your bolstermg rorce
Most of us used to throw
w th our body The Impetus
we gamed as we turned our
body was what he got
F1elds and his w1 fe
Prudence
a
former
Broadway actress and
smger spend about one
weekend a month smgmg at
chur ches and ChnstJan
schools tn several stales The
Manetta B1ble Center deacon
and Ius Wife are scheduled to
smg m a Columbus church
tll1s Saturday and Sunday
But come Fnday everung
tile d1scus throWing legend
and h1s father Jack of
Parkersburg hope to be
watchmg at Laidley Field
where Gordon Gordon and
another set of Mountam Stale
musclemen try to approach
his record

NBA Payoffs

Bv Un ted P en Intern atonal
Eastern conter~l1ce
F nal Round
(Best of Seven
Ph lade lph a s Houston
( Ph ade phla w ns 4 2
May 5 Ph a 28 Hous
1
May 8 Ph a 06 Hous 97
May
Hqus a Pl'1 a 94
May 3 Ph a 07 Hous 95
May 5 Hous 8 Ph a
S
Mi:ly 7 Ph a 2 Hous 09
W este n Co ntere nce
F na Round
f

Best ot Seven)

Los Ange es s Portland
CPo I and w ns 4 0
May
May
May
May

6 Po nd 2 LA 09
8 Por nd 99 LA 97
0 Por nd 02 LA 97
13 Po
i'lnd 05 LA

0

Hrowmng work ed three
After g1vmg up one more
nn
ngs befor e he was
run n the top of the th1rd t1 e
rei
eved
by Ebersbach
Marauders got on the board
t1red
and
Ebersba
ch
when Brown 1 g reached on
Brown
ng
ca
me
back
n
the
a 1 e rror Cat cher R ck
sJxtl&gt;
to
f
n
sl
hiS
game
Johnson s ngled and after
two were out M ke Wayland Together they faru ed two and
Wayland
smgled m Me1gs only run walk ed f ve
son
and
T1m
Hood had
John
The hrebalhng wmn ng
the
Marauder
h1ts
all
p tcher Ell ott allowed the
s1ngles
Marauders only three h1ts as
Wh1le the Marauders were
he went the d stance He
comm
tt ng their stx errors
fanned on ly four but gave up
only one free pass Mean the CH team comm !ted JUSt
while hiS teammates banged one and that one cost Elhot
ou t e1ght h ts aga nst h1 s shutout
Coach Dale Hamson was
Brownmg and reliever Ttm
pleased
w th h1s team as they
Ebersbach Johnson had a
got
off
to
a slow start 1n the
double and a smgle for the
early
season
but battled
wmners wh le Dean had two
back
to
reach
the
sem r nals
safet es
of the .d strJct bes des w n
mng the Sect onal t•tle The
youth of the squad began
gettmg son e expenence and
a wmr ng attitude and the
Me1gs crew surpnsed the !me
SEOAI teams m the last half
of the season
lnternat anal League
Me1gs has two games left
Un fed Press lnte nat ~na
on the yea r Ton ght they
W L Pel GB
travel to Logan and Thursday
Pawlucke
20 10 667
they go to Athens to battle the
Cha les on t8
0 643
Bulldogs Me1gs IS no\\ 6-13 on
T dewa te
15 13 538 4
Roches e
14 4 500 5
the season 4-8 and m r fth
R chmond
3 13 500 5
place n the SEOAI
Sy r acuse
16 407 7
WCH
511 012 0 10 8 I
To eda
J 19 406 B
Me gs
001 000 0 I 3 6
Columbus
9 18 333 9
Tuesday s Res ult s
Elliot and DeWeese
Cha leston 4 R c hmond 2
Brown ng LP) Ebersbach
Co umbus- 2 Tol edo 5
(4)
Brown ng (6) and
Rochester 1 Sy1 acuse 6
Pawtucke t 5 T dewater
Johnson

Standings

Doug Collins scored 27 pomts It JUSt made me s1ck he
and ba~kup forward Darryl sa1d
Houston suffered from
Dawk ns ch pped m a 13Rudy
Tomjanovlch s
pomt thJrd.quarter burst of
shooting
lapse
H1s two of 11
pomts But m the crucial fmal
rught
frmn
the
f1eld was
quarter ErVIng got preciOUS
c~used 1f you d1dn t guess
little help
He respon ded wt th n1ne already
by
Ervmg s
straight pomts m a brutal defens1ve play
hear t pounding !mal 12
mm tes 1
Roc~ets atob1:st keep the
Starters George McGmn s
Henry Bibby and CaldweJI
Jones scored JUS! 16 pomts
from tile held
I m JUS! happy as hell
we re u tile fmals
sa d
76ers Coach Gene Shu e
INTEREST
Houston was much tougher
tllan I thought tlley would be
We are fortunate to ha ve
som e time tQ rest now

The bes t -&lt;~f seve n ser es
Wlth Portland begms Sunday
afternoon n Ph ladelph a
Rookie guard John I ucas
who led the Rock ets w1tll 24
pomts had a chance to be the
game w th the score 111109
and about five seconds left
On l1s successful dr Vlng
layup though he wa s called
for an offens ve foul
Don t call 1t a charge
Lucas sa1d Colhns faked 1!
He was not touched
N1ssalke who has often
refused to CritiCIZe offiCials
after games this season was
liVId about the charge called
on M1ke Newlm earlier when
he stole the ball drove
uncontested and then was
confronted at the basket by
Caldwell Jones
!'he off c a!Jng was s ck

On Certificates
Of Deposit
'1.000 Mm1mum
1 Yr Term

N neh day nf e esl pe na tv
r
w thd awn
befo e
maulydate

Me1gs

(A)

Branch

-f!iJ

Th e Athen s Coun y
Sav ng s &amp; Loan Co
196 Second Sf
Pome oy Oh o

~~~~

Smith-Nelson Motors
500 E MAIN ST

992 2174

POMEROY OHIC

LOOKING FOR AGOOD USED CAR FOR YOUR SUMMER VACATION,
TliEN LOOK NO MORE. WE HAVE SOlD SO MANY NEW PONTIACS
&amp; BUICKS WE NEED ROOM FOR MORE TRADE-INS. SO NOW IS
TliE TIME TO TRADE FOR ONE OF OUR LATE MODI..ES Willi OUR
12,000 MILE OR 12 MONTli WARRANTY
BUY NOW &amp; SAVE

SALE
PRICE
$4 995

1976 Chevy Monte Carlo 2 dr H T do ub e ba rr e l s harp
1976 Chev Maltbu Class1c a r auto p s p b on ly II 821
$4366
m les
$27 66
1975 Pont1ac Ven lura 2 dr auto p s p b 260 VB n ce car
1975 Chrysler Cordoba a1r cru se AM F M v nyllop extra
$4666
n ce
1975 Bu1ck Lesabre 4 dr h I a r v ny top p s p b o ca l o ne
$4266
owner
1975 Olds Cutlass Supreme 2 dr h t v nyl top a r extra clea n and
$4366
sha rp
AM
FM
st
e
reo
ha s
1974 Ford T B1rd red and wh te cru1 se a r
54266
ever yth ng
1974 Olds 98 Luxury 4 dr gold w lh v ny l top a r loca owner $3866
1975 Pont1ac Grand Pnx whteandredtop ar ta pe mags sol dths
$4866
one new
1974 Chev C20 '• Ton Fleefs1de a uto p s p b rad o n ce
$3266
pic kup
1973 Pont1a c Bonnev11le 4 dr h t a r v nyl top loca one
$2366
ow ner
1973 Bu1ck Elec 225 4 dr h t a r v n yl top p s p b loca
53066
owner
$1766
1973 Chev Imp 2 dr h t aJr body ro ug h r uns real good
S1466
1973 AMC Gremlin 2 dr auto p s p b a r ea l ga s save r
$3566
1973 Pontiac Grand Pn x a r v n y lo p tape loca owner
$1866
1972 Chrysler Newport 4 dr sed a r good fam ly car
$1466
1972 Chrysler Newport 2 dr h t a r good transport at on
1972 Chev Imp 4 dr h t go d and black a r n ce car local
$1866
owner
$1866
1972 Chev Imp 4d r h t v nyl top a r one owner sharp
$2495
1972 C 20 P1ckup 3 s peed 350 V 8 red a nd wh t e t n s h
$1995
1972 Chevy Impa la 2 dr H T
1971 Pont1ac Lemans 2 dr h t auto p s p b bod y I ttl e
$1166
rough
$1366
1971 BUJck Lesabre 2 dr h t go ld a r extra n ce 71 mod e l
$1066
1970 Chev C10 2 Ton P1ckup w th topp er good work tr uc k

We have about 10 good older model ca.s pnced from $195.00 to '895.00.
Make you a Good Work Car.
Just Look at These Prices and Then You Know, You Owe It To Yourself
To Check with Smith Nelson Before You Buy Any Car, New or Used.
We Are The Friendly Dealer We Have the Sharpest Pencil In Town.
Come In and See or Call One of These friendly Salesmen, Ceward
Ce~lvert, J.D. Story or Bill Nelson.

�~ - Tl&gt;e

~-The

Oath· Senunel. Mtddleport-PomerO!'. 0 .. Wt&gt;dnesda; . May 18, 197i

Yeager's slump end~

Tornados near crown
M.ll•tlr LUgut Stlnd tn!Ji

By un. te&lt;l Preu tnre-rnatron.al
t~ationll League
E~st

W l

Pet. GB

Ptthl ,,,
( h ic&lt;t

n

9
11

:n9
656

?0 13

2

St. Lo v \

6(1.6

)

S.!S

5'

4)]

9

n

11

P'lil«
~.'Of'lff"

NE'~~o

13

l!

IJ
p

12 20

'V&lt;:rk

PeL

GB

Los ;.~·q
C•n(

H
IJ

8
19

711 4tJ 12

~ou-.t·n

IJ

10

.l\1

12

San r &lt;'n

11 1t1

) 9J

13

Sa nD • "JO
1.1 7&lt;~ 368
ll. tl81"'',1
II 2.a 31.:
TtH•sd ay ' s R!'sults
( h ic(t · 0 :;'3, San 0 ego 6

lJ
16

~

t. lli!!r''

Monrrea.l 6

P1IIS. bura h 3 Cinnnn&lt;tt
Hov~' l~"- S S! Lou is 'l

Today• s Probo1ble P tPCI'IIPrs

{All T•mes EDT)
321

a

C1nc.•nnali rza chry 2 5L 12 30
pm
Mon•rea\

( Rogror:;

ett

.1 2)

Alla rHil (Ca pra 0 4 or EaS'er ty
0 01 7 JSpm
Los An9eles { Rhoden 5 1J a
Phil a:~lel phia
flw itchell 0 3',
1 lS p m

S;:u . r- ra nc•sco ( Barr S-31 at
N e'!'•
Pm

Sl

l -1

J'~

6 -

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11 706-

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Wut
W
:l..t

j

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19

11 10

1\-'qnn
-Chicago

10 11

6'5

Te'l!:as
Kan Crlv

17
17

1..1
l6

5.:8
.S.I5

Oa ~ l and

17

18

J86

Caltl

1~

10

-1.u

8 .

Seatrle-

13

'17

n.s

13 •

Toronto 3,

gelt-s 6 Ptut ade tpnia a
Ne,., 'r'crlo, 8 San Franc tsco 1

~ KIS(Hl

•

GB

5
5

B 05

(orlc. f Mattac!... 23 1
·

LOU'i s ( D'Acau •sto OO J at

HOL•S'cn ( Lemongello 1 41. 8 35

M t~ waukee

2·.

s

.6
7

I

1\'·rnnes.ota 10. Cleveland.!
Texas 3, Oetro rt I
Car tornia 6. Boston 1
5£&gt;aflte 10 Ba tt •more 1
Today ' s Probable P•tchers
( All Trmu EDT)
Kansas Ctly I Leonard 2 '1 1 at
Chic_ago {Kn&lt;Jpp.s1 ). 8 JOpm
Toronto {lemanczyk. '1 31 dl
Milwaukee {H aas 3 II , 8 30

om

Detro it ! Ruh l e 3 4) at Tex as
( Perry 1-4) 8 35 p m
Tnursday ' s Games

Thursday ' s Games
Chicar,o a1 Atlanta , n;ght
San o.e-go at Montrea t, n1ght
Los t~n 9 at P it sburgh nig t

MADDEN
UPI Sports Writer
While their more affluent
major teague rhrals were
handing out million-dollar
contracts w more glamorous
names. the Texas Rangers
took the conservative route
and investfd their money in a
couple of ".lesser " free agents
- Bert Ca mpaneris and
Doyle Alexander - and it has
paid off.
Alexander stopped Detroit,
3- l , on a seven-h itter
Thursday night for his fifth
\1cwry in sill decisions. It
also was his fourth complete
game and lowered his ea rn ed
run avera ge to 2.21.
Campaneris, meanwhile, was
2-for-4 which lifted his batting
average to .310.
"I'm not an over:POwer ing
pitcher, but I feel I can go out
there every four or five days
and be .consis tent ," said
Alellander. " I was 7-1 in
my last eight decisions last
·
II)' lULL

Sports

San fran a1 Ne-w York . nigh
PhiL -~ pnia at Houston n gnt

transactions
Leaders

Sports Tr:anuctions
8y ·u nited Press International
Tuesday
Hocltey

I" ajar League leaders

•

Bart inQ
( EJauel on 65 at bat.s l

Hationallea_grue

•

G AB

Pr\er, p 1t
Mtt- .... 3. Atl
Smn• StL
Jhnsrr Hou
Vl ntne, Mll
Tr illo Chi

R. H

Pet.

31113 25 Sl 398
23 81 l8 J:l' J 9 S
Jl 110 ll 4 31
1
3

So
signf'd coacr~ Don
57on Cherrv loa t wo year cont ra ct
Ba seball

Houston- Ca lle-d \..lp pitcher
Gt"ne Pentz !rom Ct'lar lesron of
The ln Ternal onar League To
reD I I!!lce
lt\e . i njure-d
Dou~

Kon ie-czn y

California - Called up f iqt
baseman Willi e A iken s from
·
jl 107 19 38 .J.5S
a1' Lake . City of !h.e Pac ific
&amp;col t. st L
'17
Coast
LeaQ v e and reacTivated
19 76 8
355
Sm ith L A
37117 31 38 339 ou1f ie lder Rusty , Torres . who
Ro .. t', Cin
33 IZS 16 42 . 336 was on the d1 isabled lis t 0 F irs t
anny
Wntld .S.O
38 ISA JO 51 33 } baseman .out iel der
AME'RICAN LEAGUE .
• Br iggs
was
optioned
antl
G AB . R H . Pet . outfletder
Botr
Jones
was
27 lOA 71 39 375 ass igned 10 Sau Lake City
6a ilr Tor ·
Pro F ootball
AWds Tor
19 105 14 39 371
Seattle - Signed tackle Ca l
Cr ew, M in
3.6 1J2 · 25 5:? 366 Van Va lkenberg of Washi'ngton ,
Gr ubb. C!e
21 61 6 24 358 defensi ve oacks Char l es Bel l
Kelly, Ba t
21 70 8 25 357
31 109 ]J 37 339 and Regg ie W il l iams of T e1tas
F isk, Bos
l.S
A&amp;M , lin£&gt;backer Joe Jt.~scen ot
136 76 Jb
Pag e, Odk
W.n ksjl; i, Ot·
2J 65 7 22 . 338 Idaho State . w'ide rece iver
1_
larry W il l iams of Colorado and
33 125 74 4 336 defe-ns iv£" back Marton Beaver s
Bstc'&lt;. M in
Br tsn, Bos
JQ 130 17 43 .331
of Nevada -Las Vegas. all free
Home Runs
agents .
Niltfonallea gue: Cey , LA 13 ;
Atlanta _ Signed defens ive
Bu rroughs, AH 9 , Johnson ,
d R b t s
1 A k
Ho v. Smi th , LA and: Ki ngman , ~
o er
peer o
r ansas
·NY e ·
State , iJ
ninth -round
draft
choice , as we ll as · s·i x · fre e
Amfr ican Leagu_e : Zisk., Chi agents : offensive gu ard Brad
and Gross , Oo!ik 10; Bonds , Cal, Harr i man of M issouri- Rolla ,
t:Jr siP , M inn , P ag~ a nd W it- oifens iVe tackle R icharct .R uck
ha m s, Oa~ and Horton , Tex 8.
- dashel of Augestand College ,
' N 1 Runs Batt ~d In
, South Dakota ; de.f ensive back
a r ~ nat League . Cev , LA 47 . Ernest Madison of East Caroli
Wrn:het d. SO ~6 ; Burrough s, At l na ~ delt&gt;ns i ve back Jotmny
12. Pa rker , P 1tt 31 ; Garvey , LA Anctrews Of
Kansas
State
11 73 12 '17 370
17 . 106 13 l8 358

s

Dempsey

na

and

sued by
'his sori'

St L 77.
'
Amer ·can
Leao e· R 0 1. C 1 lmeback.er . ~en Culbertson . of
1
•
_
u .- u • a West V•rg• nJa ; and defensrve
Stolen Basn .

.

N ationa l Lea~ue : Lopes. LA
B':ld Ta-..er as, .P 11t 16: Moreno .
P 11t 15; Cabell and Cedeno. Hou

.

·

Amen urn lea:gue : Remy , Ca l
18 , Patek; , KC I:? ; North , Oak.
11 , Bon ds , Cat and Norr is , Clev

IO .

P itching
Most Victorie s
N ati onal League : Sutton . LA
6·0 · R . Reuscnet, Ch i and
Forse h. St L 6 li Rau . -A ,
Candel ar ia, Pi tt and Denny,
st .L

s.o;

Rhoden.

LA

NEW YORK (UP I)

~d Robert Bri nson of Southern
Universily _
Cleveland - Signed Quarter ·
ba&lt;:k w ayne Stanley ot Iowa
State as a tree. agent

wins just one.

Southern
133 020 :i-14 13 5
N. Gallia
203 100 1)- 6 8 4
Sayre and Forbes, Cundiff
(3). Minnis ILP), Tackett [3)
and Tackett, Minnis (3).

yearand&gt;-1so far this year. I Yankees, who blew a ~lead
can't complain a boot that. " in the ninth when Manny
Claudell Wash ington , Sanguillen and Dick Allen hit
another new acquisition by solo homers off Ron Guidry.
the Rangers, stole third and The loss wasted a brilliant
raced home with the go- pitching .effort by Oakland 's
ahead run on catcher Milt Vida Blue, who went 13
May's third-inning throwing · innings and at one point,
error. Washington also made hurled no-llit ball fer 9 1-3
a sensational running catch innings.
on Jason Thompson's drive in Blue Jays 3, Brewers 1:
the sixth inning and scored
Ron Fairly's bases-loaded
the fina! Texas run in the tw&lt;&gt;-run single in the third
eighth on a sacrifice fly.
inning keyetl the Blue Jay
Elsewhere in the American victory . Toronto 's ' rooki e
League, Minnesota drubbed hitting sensations Bob Bailor
Cleveland, HH. New York (.375) a.nd Alvis Woods (.371 )
put away Oakland, 4-2, in 15 went l·fo r-3 and 2-for-4,
innings, Toronto beat Mil- respectively. Jesse Jefferson
waukee , :\-1, Seattle routed went seven innings for his
Baltimore,
10-2 ,
and first victory of the season.
California downed Boston , &amp;- Angels 6, Red Sos 2:
2.
Jerry Remy drove in two
fWlS with his second rna jor
Twins 10, Indians 4:
league homer and a sacrifice
Butch Wynegar stroked a fl y. Bobby Bonds also had a
bases-loaded single to snap a tw!H'un double for Ca!ilornia.
4-4 tie in the fifth , while Larry Wayne Simpson, with relief
Hisle doubled twice and help from Paul Hartzell ,
scored three times as evened his record at :\-3.
Minnesota won its fifth Mariners 10, Orioles 2:
straight. Rod Carew had a
Skip Jutze's third-inning
solo homer for the Twins. grand slam was one of three
Tom Burgmeier, who hurled SeatUe homers. Carlos Lopez
o2-3 innings of relief, was the hit a solo shot and Bill Stein a
wirmer.
tw()ortln homer in the first
Yankees 4, A's 2:
inning. Enrique Romo, 1·2,
Chris Chambli.s s' bases- was the winner in relief and
loaded single scored two of benefitted from the 10 Seattle
.
.
three lath-inning runs for the hits.

Ste,•e Yeager broke out of a
l.for-22 slump Tuesday night
with three doubles to help the
Los Allge!es Dodgers defeat
the Phillies, 6-4, in
Philadelphia.
The 28-yeat-old catcher
.
to '!7
·•
raised hlS average
after it had dropped :;(! points,
from .349 to .299, over the last
four games.
" I had the best start of my
career and then went l.for-22
on this road trip, " Yeager
said. " I know the numbers
because my wile told me."
Steve Garvey obliged his
team with a twp.run homer in
the seventh inning wsnap a 4,
4 tie. It was his seventh of the
season and came after Roo
G.ey drew a tw&lt;K&gt;ul walk and
gave pitcher Don Sutton his
sixth triumph without a loss.
Charlie Hough hurled the last
two innings to earn his lOth
save.
In other National League
games, Chicago blitzed San
Diego, 23-jj, New York
whipped San Franc.isco, 8-!,

A me rican League : . Tanana,
Cal
and
Zahn, Mrnn
6·1;

Burgm eier , M inn. Alexander,
Te)C and Garvin , Tor S-1; Brttt .
Ch i .and Torrez . NY
5·2-,:
Palmer , Bait and Colborn . KC

-

FOR YOUR
Put a tmte spr ing
bock myour carpets ...
Get BLUE LUSTRE sr.:~mpoo
and rent a shampaoe r to
scrub away grouno-10 dill·
and grime. Leoves )&lt;JUt corpets bnght. cteon ono plush!

vancouver ( NASL ). An ·
the res iQnat icn of son.
Ec.khard Krautzun as head
Jack L. Hayes of
coacti , to
be, rep ldc ed by ~anford , COOn., who
Ass i stant Coach Ho lgar Osieck . ,
1

FLORAL SPRAYS
•CROSSES
•WREATHS
•HEADSTONE
SPRAYS
•PILLOW SPRAYS
UP TO 42" LENGTH

Look Around!
Compare!
· Bul . don't wait to long . Our
seleclion is huge - A Vi1St

array ol colors and typu.
but they' re selling fa st .
Most all are bo.11ed. Hurrr
on in this weekend .

DAY

A

a

claims

drug treatment program SO

Harper

and

" false r

contained

libelous

FLOWER
FILLED .
CEMETERY
VASE

While Quantities Last
Quantity Rights Reser ved

Crest

Publishers In c.
[n hi
·t H
ha ed
s SUI , ayes C r g

Dempsey's book

and

R ue~ .

O.llha

Toothpaste

:}

Righi Reslti'ved To Limit Quontities
We Gladly Accept Fed . Food Stamp&gt;
Mondoy lhru Fridoy
9 : 0010 7 : 00
Soturdoy ?to 7

.

BACON .................... ~~.

CABBAGE .......~~:.
TOMATOES
lb.
Basket
fl/4

69~

SJ89

LB.

.

C.mp~te

new

.

shipment including

$5~9 .

Green~ .

s~

And 17'

GREEN FOILAGE
Extra la1ge · Up To 42" long
Regular ' 1.99

$1

29

~

89~

12 Ol.

WIENERS

79~
VALLEY BELL

COTTAGE CHEESE
24 az.
Carton

.,~

Mileti has had it,
up to here •••

CLE VELAND (U P! ) Nick Mileti said today he has
had it with professional
sports and, while still trying
tocleanupa few multimilliondollar "loose ends" from his
once extensive s portsentertainment empire, is
considering a number of
possible careers - amon
them sliow business.
Mileti, in an excl sive
interview with United ess
International, &lt;lfso rev ·
.
-He's exiting from sports
because "it's so difficult to
make money" and ''the tax
situation is not nearly as
attractive" as it once was.
- His NBA Cleveland
Cavaliers, which made more
money last season than ever
before even though they were
knocked out of the playoffs In
the quarterfinals, are for sale
- if the price is right.
- Cavs' General ManagerCoach Bill Fitch, who has a
year left on his contract, is
"going to live up w it in the
proper way" but isn't a shooin to stay,
- He kept his general
partnership in the Cleveland
lndians until a few weeks ago
" as a tax thing for my
partners and other factors."
- ' Radio Station WWWMFM, Cleveland, owned by
Mileti, will be sold, as was
sister station WWWE-AM,
recently was purchased by
Combined Communications.
- The $37 million Coliseum
in Richfield, Ohio, was sold
by Mileti to Sanford
Greenberg because "! made
a very attractive deal."
- He unloaded the World
Team Tennis ClevelandPittsburgh Nets on his cousin,
Joe Zingale, adding : "Let
him lose the money."
- He recently had the
Cleveland Arena razed
because "nobody cared about
it to a point where I sold it
four times and never got a
dime and had . to tear it

H'-C
. k............. .. 49c
1 Fru1't Dnn
Liquid Dish Detergent Any Siu

it.''

Muliers 2 Lb .

Elbow Macaroni ............... 79c
Cookies ......................~ :~..~~:. 7gc
Twin Pak

Pringles....................:,.: ...... 79c
Bryan

Tomato Juice............ ~~-~~:. 59c
Assorted 46

oz.

lux ..................... 20c Off

Shelf
Price

Argo Peas ........... ~~~-.~~-': 4/$1 00
"

Store Hours:
Mon.·Sat. 8 am-10 pm
Sunday 10 am-10 pm

:298 SECOND ST.

POMEROY, 0.
NO SALES TO DEALERS
QUANTilY RIGHTS RESERVED

Prices Effective
Thru May 21st

anything."

That's why Mileti fell in
love with his work "doing
eight trillion things." But for
him it was "just another day
at the office" as he picked up
more franchises and slowty
went deep~ into debt along with some of U!e people
who invested with him:

CENTER CUT RIB..

$ 29
PORK CHOPS •••••••• ~~ ..•

"There was a time when
you came .into sports, if you
got a license - the franchise
- you made money,, he
recalled. "It was just a
matter of how much.

CENTER CUT LOIN

" If you were a poor

$ 39

PORK CHOPS.•••••• ~.~~ ••
RIB PORK

LOIN ROAST••••••••••L!·••

WILSON'S .

SAVORY BACON. ••••• ~TASTEE ·TREAT

BULK BOLOGNA .•••• ~s~_.
EXCEPT BEEF

32

oz.

ET DINNERS ••

BAN

Reds

love real estate. I love the
law , I love show biz. It could
be anything."
Before it materializes,
Mileti's main concern is to
eradicate the red ink from his
ledger books - having lost
millions of dollars in three
cities with the hockey fran.chises, not w mention the
financial drain the arena has
had on his pocket. .
"I've been concentrating
on cleaning up the loose ends,
so to speak," he says, adding
that he has had "to spend a
ton of dough and a lot of time
on the cleanup of the Arena ."
"We carried it for 21&gt; years
hoping somebody in the community would step up an\1
save the only covered ice rink
in the City of Cleveland,"
Mileti admitted . "Think of
that - the only cover~ ice
rink in the City of Cleveland.
"We had to tear it down
because we sold it four times
and nobody came up with a
dime except me. That has to
be must be , should be
c!e'aned up. You just can't
leave a multimillion-dollar
loose end. You just can't do

Teri Towels ........ ~.~~~~-.~~-~~ .. 59c

"I learned from Joe
Zingale, who knows more
about business - he'll forget
more Ulan I'Ll ever know, as
they say - he really Is a
great businessman," Mlleti
smiled. "He said: 'You never
fall in love with your
investments.' And it's great
advice."
Although calm on the
outside, Mileti, at times ,
quivered on the Inside while
putting together deals to
acquire and sell his Interests.
" You put togeU!er a ton of
dough , you buy it, you have
an opportunity - and you sell
it, " Mileti said of his
holdings, current and past.
" We did . some pretty
incredible, difficult, mind·
boggling things, " he. added.
"The reason· is that they
needed w be done, so we did
'em. I neve r doubted

operator In a good situation
you made money. If you were
a good operator in a poor
situation you made money. If
you were a good operator in a
good situation you made a ton
of money. But you always
ended up making mooey. But
that has changed recenUy."
One reason, Mileti says, is
because of high salaries paid
nowadays to players and the
other reason is that the tax
situation is not ne~~rly as
attractive as it once was.
1
~~vou have to have incendown .'
tives,"
he emphasizes,
"! feel as if I've done niy
adding
that's
why he got into
sports thing ... I don 't have
the
sports
world
in the first
any intention to do any more
place
.
in sports," Mileti said, adding·
Of his various sports-enterthat
sports
"has
encompassed a good portiolt tainment interests, along
with his relationship · wiU!
of my life."
Fitch,
this is what Mileti has
"What am I going to do
to
say:
now' " he asked . " What
CAVALIERS: "We don't
would be the challenge?
have
the figures, but on a
"There aren't any more
balanced
basis and on an
challenges for me in sports
educated
guess,
I'd say we
except to win the NBA
did
better
this
year
Championship. That would be
(financially)
than
last
even
the only one left. We made the
though
we
had
one
playoff
playoffs (twice) . We have one
game instead of seven. It was
of the most financially viable
a
very bitter and very sweet
teams in the finest building
(the Coliseum). So now it's a season. I was thrilled that we
matter of what do you do ?" made it and considering the
Besides the Cavaliers, injuries, I think we had a ·
Mileti's other sports holdings helluva season. On the other
once included: the American hand, it was almost like not
League Indians, the defunct being in the playoffs - w
World Hockey Association have one home game. It was
Cleveland . Crusaders (later ·so sudden. That new tw&lt;HJutknown as the New Minnesota of-three (playoff formula )
Fighting Saints). the defunct was brutai for the losers."
American Hockey League '
Cleveland Barons (later
known as the Jacksonville,
Fla ., Barons) and the old
Cleveland Arena.
The former prosecutor also
has a number of housing
developments for the elderly
to. his credit.
''I've had a helluva ride /'
Mileti says of his life to
date.
"I just don't know where
it's going to _go," he adds. " I

Fireside Sandwtcn

CLOSEO

BOILED
HAM

~a n cl
• niln g~men lJ

tft'"""'~

BOLOGNA.~~~~.......~:. 69
SLAB

our

The Special Of The Week!

c

TASTEE

PHEBE' STORE

ARTIFICIAL
FLOWERS ·

Maj:nn l!a. phllc,, lu~o:. (Jr
rhuf/11. Rranrh..s ani;! drOOII'I'~.
Dott'D! of usrs In \'OUr bnmt.

LB.

Racine, 0.

REALISTIC
CENTER
PIECES
n.tve been reduc ed .

Nelson's Reg. 51.05

Limit 1 Please

JUST ARRIVED

.:nUllO

69~

0.
~-~

-~~&lt;:ll y ;u

$}19

7az.
Regular or Mint

.... \ . . .

a

Not

POLY VINYL

Manv ol

Carution~ .

i kown

BACON

·5th &amp; Pearl

Vase

lhru May 22

he could rejoin the New

Orleans Saints, will miss

$1399

Plastic
flo. h .. ~

Row

defamatory matter" in its
denial that Dempsey ever
(based on l6 innings p i tched )
f th ed
·
Na lion.-1 League : Candelar ia . three-day training camp ses-·
a er a son.
P 1H
1 :16 ; Su11on , LA
l. 7~ ;
·
•
Dempsey wrote in the book
Rogors. Mtr 1.80; Hough . L A Slon.
that he had two daughters by
1 88 ; Koosman ~ NY 2 1" .
Saints Coach Hank Stram
.
Arn erlc;,n League : Figueroa . Monday said tlle National another wife, Hannah,· and
N Y 1 76; Btv teven, Tex 1.5-4:
that through . the uears, at
N" 1 15 s1 t
M't
Football League office is least 20 young men presented
'
T·oro
'
~-·
'
'
a
on
·
'
1.96. Stone, Ch i, Colbnrn, KC studyin g whether Gilliam
an d Ale xander . Tex 7 11
should be allowed to play. themselves to him "as my
Strikeouts
1·ong.J ost sons. Unfortunat e Iy,
Na~ lonai" Lugu• : Rogers . Mil Gilliam, 25, has narcotics and
S2'; Koosman , NY so . R ichard. weapons charges pendin g Qr fortunately, I had no son
Hou "8 • Seaver , NY
.s7 ;
and that was that."
Montef usco, SF 46.
against him from an arrest
A meri can League : Ryan . Cal last June and another for
Hayes said he was born on
77 : la nat"la , Cal 70 ; Bly!even . possession of heroin ror June '1:1, 1925, in Oakland ,
~:~~~.; Palmer. Bait 43 ; Bl ue. resa le in December.
Iowa, the son of the fighter
and Minnie Hayes Eaton.
Ryan . ca l 5·&lt;.
Earned Run A ver.lge

Prices Good May 18

~' Dempsey,t'

write the book

and

Virginia

TO

North

Piatelli Dempsey, who helped

.

from

$}19

IS MAY 30th

as defendants Dempsey, his
stepdaughter r Bar bara

transferred

VERY LIFELIKE . A~T!F!CIAL POLY

day

MEMORIAL

to be Dempsey s son, filed the
$300•()()(!} l'bel sm't an d names

Veteran black quarterba ck
J&lt;M! Gilliam , who was

The Biggest Selection You'll See!

Rent only 52.50
per

against Jack Dempsey for
denying that he ever had a

nounced

NEW ORLEANS (UPI)

::o

Supreme Court Tuesday .

Soccer

•

tuu c hin~ off • stx-run,
seventh-Inning outburst for
th Mel• Ed Kranepool's
e
taked N
·
twiH'un 1!Orner s
ew
York to a ~I lead . Koosman
!Joo~1cd ~· record to 3-4,
while loset John Montefusco
fell W .2-6.
.
Ilraves 9, Exp08 6.
Btff Pocoroba belled a
· hh ' , d 1
pmc . 1t gr~n s ammer run
~ff ~til Atk:J:"?n ~tth
ou~
'" e mn st m~ng t !senA
Atlanta pa
on rea .
three-run home run by
Atlanta 's Jeff Burroughs lfl
thethtrdand~leadoffhomer
by Gary Matthews m the
SIXth gave the Braves an
early 4-1 lead.

Pittsburgh
blanked
Cincinnati 3-0 Atlanta
'
'
defeated Montreal, 9~. and
Houston beat St. Louis, 6-2.
Cubo %3, Plldres 6:
Aided by a 2:J.mile-an-hour
wind Larry Buttner, Bobby
Murcer and Jerry Morales hit
consecutive home runs ~~ the
fifth innmg· as the Clucago
rolled to its sixth ~tralght
victory . Steve onuveros.
Gene Clines, Dave Rosello
and Biittner again, homered
for the Cubs. Bob Valentine
homered for San Diego.
Mets 8,-Gilmts I:
Jerry Koosman pitched a
four-hitter and hit the second
home run of his career,

suit was filed in Manhattan

ano

Carlton , Phil 5- 1,• Booha m . Chi
an(! Lerch, Ph il s 2 ; Barr, SF 5
J ; Burris. en , 5 &lt;.

s J;

Y 1 8.......,. 'if-"•
UP
. - - .. ~r

~1m mons ,

;35 . H tsle, Mtnn J7 , Velez. Tor
30. 7 s k . Cn l 29 ,; Page .. oak. :?6.

11..

B GREG AIELLO

tinued his late season hitting
with two singles. t"·o walks.
t•·o RB!s and SC&lt;&gt;red four
times. Mike Huddleston had
two singles. and Hill, Scott
Wolle. Richard Teaford, and
Mark Forbes each had a
single.
Southern can win the SYAC
outright if they win their two
remaining games . They host
North .Gallia tonight , and
tra\·el to Eastern Thursday to
wrap up the season. Eastern
knocked the Tornados out of
the Sectional tournament last
•·eek. Symmes Valley needs
to win its remaining contests
while Southern can ha,•e at
least a share of the crown if it

Rangers' policy pays off

Toronto at Milwauk ee
Se aH l£&gt; at Oak la nd
Ba l t rmore a! New York. nH;;ht
Kan C it y a t Chicago. night
M innesota .:n Cali f n1Qhf

pm

By Unit·e d Preu Internat ional

another walk , a fielder 's
choice and an error.

But the SVAC leaders
plated thr.ee in the second and
three more in the third lo take
the lead for good . In the
second they got four hits and
a walk. and then in the third
runs, three on a home run in Cundiff blasted his homer.
the third inning. and Sayre The Pirates came bark v.ith
struck out 10 and walked four three of the[r o"'nin the third.
as he went the distance. · Casey drew a walk, Logan
Southern [s now 9-1 in the tripled, Tackett and Minnis
teague, one game ahead of singled, and after a Southern
second place Symmes Valley. error . Tony Glassburn drO\'e
Overall. the Tornados are 10- home ihe third run with a
3. and those 15 wins set a sacrifice ny.
record for the school
The rest of the game was
Southern took a 1-IJ lead in all the Tornados' as they got
the top of the first on Sayre's t •·o in the fifth and nailed it
triple and Steve Hill's single. down with fhre in the seventh .
But the hosts came back to Cundiff had a double and
take the lead as they scort&gt;d single to go with his homer,
twice in the first on a walk , a and Sayre helped his own
single by Fred Logan . cause with his triple and a
double . Eric Dunning con·

Tuesdiv ' s Resuns
1'-ff&gt;'N Yor~t 5 Oa kJod 1 IS nns

Loo; •

P iP'\burgh

D~lro

CIE'\•E'Ind

315 11

Wrst
W l

Amtncan League
East
W l
Pet
Ne .... York
19 l.1 576
eau. , r.e
l:' IJ 56~
Boston
18 JJ 563
M ·l ..,.
ll 18 J86
Toron1o
lS '20 ..t19

Behind the hitting of Greg
Cundiff and pttching of John
Sayre. the So uthern Tornados
took another step to"·ard the
Southern Vall ey Conferen ce
crown ~1 on day "hen they
do,.nt&gt;d host :-;orth Gallia 146. Cundiff battt&gt;d in se'•en

Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0., Wednesday.

Mileti burst onto the local
sports scene · when be
purchased the Arena in 1968.
Then ca me the Barons,
Cavaliers, Crusaders, the two
radio stations and the
Culiseum. He did it all, he
says, to help the community
- and to make a few bucks.

CABBAGE ....~ ..l:~ ..

shut
out

CINCINNATI (UP!) - Ed
Ott singled home Rennie
Stennett to break a scoreless
tie in the eighth inning and
Willie Stargell added a tworun homer in the ninth
Tuesday riight to give the
Pittsburgh Pirates a 3-0
victory over the Cincinnati
Reds behind the combined
shutout pitching of John
Candelaria
and
Rich
Gossage .
The triumph was the fifth
without a loss for Candelaria,
who scattered six hits, struck
out six and walked none
before giving way to Gossage
in the ninth. It was Gossage's
eighth save ..
Stennett opened the eighth
with a double off loser Jack
after
Billingham
and
advancing to third on a

sacrifice, scored on Ott's
single. Reds' lefty Mike
Caldwell was the victim of
Stargell 's seventh homer,
which Cflllle with two out in
the ninth and AI Oliver on
base.
Only once during the gflllle
did the Reds get as many as
two runners on base. That
was in the fourth inning when
George Foster and Dave
Concepcion sing!ed .
However, they were stranded
when Ed Annbrister flied to
centerfield to end the inning.

FLORIDA
.

5 LB.

ORANGES......~~.
89

CRISCO .....~~~~···~

$

VALLEY BELL

19

PLASTIC

49
2%.MILK....... :~~-N...
NESTEA .......~~... ~
. ,-,-;--:. . . . . . ·I
~

COUPON

PRINGLE$
TWIN PACK
9 oz. .

2/$1
W/C

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only At Powell's
Offer Expires May 21,1977

COUNTRY TIMES

COUPON

COUPON

.' :1

TIDE DETERGENT

LEMONADE
REGULAR OR PINK
33 OZ.

$129

W/C

W/C

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only At Powell's
Offer Ex res May 21, 1977

Limit 1 Per Cuslom~r
Good Only AI Powell's
Offer Expires May21,

5LB.
4 OZ.

$189

W! C

Li m it 1 Per Cu stomer
Good Only At Powell 's

19'77~~~~~0f:l;e:r;E;x:p;ir;e;s;M:a;y~21;,:1:97;7~~J

�6 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-l'omeroy, 0 ., Wednt·s&lt;lay , Mav IR 1!177

Regional meeting
reports are heard

~~~~!:!POINTERS l

I
I

I

j

l

Trinity Church
enjoys potluck

recent regwnal

meetin~

at

l.ogt.m where Mrs . Charles
Kuh.l was elected region(:!)

direc.:tor were given at there·
t-ent~ meeting of the Chester
Garden Club held a t the home
of Mrs. Purley Kar r . .
Four members of the cl ub
attended th e r eg ional

meeting. PlanHfor providing
nuwcr arnmg:crnents for the
band banquet at Ea&gt;1cm
Hi~h School were made with
Mrs. Roy Holler a nd Mrs.

Woodrow

Mora to make

them. Mrs. Holter recently

OFFICERS INSTALLED - Mrs. Mary Martin, left,
installed the 1977-78 officers of the Middleport Business
and Professional Women's Club in ceremonies at Monday
night's meeting. lnsta lleq were left to right, Mrs. Alwilda

CALLED TWICE ·
RACINE - The Racine
Emergency Squad made two
runs Monday and Tuesday .
Monday at 8 p, m. the squad
took Doug Johnson, Racine ,
to Holzer Medical Center and
at 10 :25 Tuesday morning
answered a call for Charlie

Werner, president; Mrs . Eloise Wilson, vice president;
Mrs . Eva Robson, secretary pro tern, for Mrs. Dortha
Salser, who is ill ; 'and Mrs . Louise D&lt;!vis, treasurer.

B&amp;PW installs officers Monday
Insta llation of officers
highlighted the Monday nig ht
meeting of the Middleport
Business ~nd Professional
Women 's Club at the Columbia Gas Co. office.
Installed were Mr s.
Alwilda Werner, president ,
Mrs. Eloise Wilson, vice
president; and Mrs. Louise
Davis, trea ~ urer. Mrs. Dortha Sal se r , the new '

secret.a rv was unable to attent! du ~ io illnel-is ~nd Mrs.
Eva Robson parti cipated for
llCr ill the tercmuny.
Mrs. Marv Marlin, installing officer. · used c.u1 arch of
emnc.ttiuns in gold tmd gi·een ,
lhe dub colors. Officers were
escorted by Mrs. Catherine
Welsh, sergeant at arms
thr-ough the a reh as Mrs.
Martin read the duties of

c::H:h office and gave the
cllal'ge to the officer. The
creed of the cl ub was given
IJy a ll of the members and
Mrs. Marlin concluded with
prayer. She C:~bo presented
each officer witl1 a booklet
e ntitl ed "How to Make a Better Organ ization.' '
Mrs: Martin gave a resume
of the club's history , thi s
yeal"s national theme " The

Mrs. · Eich is new regent
Mrs. Pau l Eich was elected
regent .of Return Jonatlwn
Meig s Cha pt er of .the
Daughters of the American
Revolution Ht a r ecent
meetmg at the Grace
Episcopal Ch urch parish
house.
Ot her offic-ers eleded were
Mrs. Gene Yost , vice regent ;
Mrs.
Dayton
Parsons,
ch(Jplain; Mrs. Emerson
Jones 1 rerortli ng s~creta ry;

Mrs. Vernon Weber, corresponding set:ret.ary ; Mrs.

Pearl M01:a, trca~mrer ;

Mr ~.

Nan Moore, hi storian; Mrs.
Jam4..! s
Bre~·- in g tor1,
librt.~rian , ami Mrs . J. Edward Foster, rcgistretr . "
Plans were made fo r the
annual n ag (.i&lt;Jy picnk to be
held June 10 at 6 p.m . at the
home of Mrs . Thereon
Johnson, A moment of silent
prayer was held for Miss
Freiilae. Mrs . Robert Ashley
noted t11at her· son, Keith, is a
member at large of the Sons

The Almanac
read "I An'! Still Proud of You
United Press International
Mother" to conclude the
Today is Wednesday, May
tribute to mothers.
-18, the 138th day oll977 with
Mrs. John McClain of Lan- 227 to follow.
Mr. a nd Mrs. J ames R.
caster, a g uest, spoke briefly
The moon is between its
ner.
Miller,
WaVerl y, annou nce
about progr ams in other new phase and first quarter.
Booklets by Helen Steiner chun:hcs.
the
bi1th
of a daughte r , May 8
Th e mornin~ stars are
Rice were presented to Mrs.
at
the
Scioto
Hospital in PortMrs. Duffy , pianist for" the Mercury, Venus and Mars.
Neva Seyfried,- Mrs. Lillie meeti ng, rcCJd two poems,
smouth
.
The
six pound, eight
The eve ning stars a r e
Houck, Mrs. Gladys Cuckler , "Wh~t Then •" and "Gift Exounce
infant
has
been l")amed
Jupiter and S;iturn.
Mrs. Stella Kloes , Mrs. change ," A r ourid-robm card
Those born on this date are Elizabeth Danielle.
Freda Duffy and Mrs. Edi th was sig ned fur Mrs. 'Carrie
Mr . and Mrs. Miller have
und er the sign of Taurus.
Lanning.
a
nother
· daughter , An gela
Neutzli ng. Mrs . Glenroy Ew· American mis Sionary
The program on mothers ing was sent a sympa thy
Lyn,
age
four, and Mathew
Sheldon Jackson was born
opened with ·'Faith of Our- c~rd , an d l\ll rs. Lo uise
Jared,
two.
Grand parents
May 18, 1834 .
Mothers" and a reading by Finsterwald a Cl.)nvalcscent
Mr
.
and
Mrs
. Gene Kauf£,
a
rc
On th is d ay in history:
E dith Lanning e ntitled card.
Middleport,
and
Mr. and
In 1860, Abraham Lincoln
" None Like a Mother." Mrs.
Plans were made for a card was nominated lor president
II
I
Rose Gi nther and Mrs. shower for Mrs . Mabel Wolle
by
the
Republican
party
a
t
it
s
Wilma Terrell sang " Man- on her May 23 bi1t hday .
Chicago convention .
sion High on the Hilltop, " and Hosksses for June will be
In 1941, the first na tionwide
~0 SAYS T~ ERE 5 NEVER A
Mrs. Ella Smith read "A · Mrs. Ginther and Mrs. Ada
" I Am An American Day"
Mother's Creed." Following Holter, Mrs. Genev ieve
was held, honoring 300,000
the hymn Hfvory Palaces", Swartz wiil be program
aliens who had become U.S.
Mrs. Genevieve Meinhar t leade1·.
citizens the past year.
In . 1969, Apollo )0, with
three American astronauts
aboard' blasted off for the
moon in rehearsal for a lunar
landing.
Miss Donna Boyd enter- eman and Cleo Hego.
In 1975, the Pentagon said
Others sending ca rds and . five U.S. servicemen were
tained recently with a
barbecue in celebration of gifts were Marie Cyr us , Pam killed in the rescue of the
her 21st birthday. Assisting Franklin , Frances and Carl cargo ship Mayagoez from
with the barbecue were her Qualls, Tina Calloway, Mary the Ca mbodians, tha t 70 to 80
parents, Mr.. and Mrs . Sheron, Jada Hall , Marv were wounded in the action in
Lawrence Boyd, Mrs . Jones, Ada Payne, Myrtle
the Gulf of Siam, and I6 men j't.!:~;:;:::~~~
Dorothy
Williams
a nd Warren, Laura Brown, Edna
were missing.
Payne, Clarence Loga n, LinMarg ie Payne.
Attending were David tli:t Canmm, .Jwn Bass, BrehBoyd, Janice Dotson, Janice da Sme ltzer, Sharon Bt:rnard
NAMES OMITTED
Harper, Greg James, IA&gt;ri and Becky Card. She also
The
names of Terry Rowley
James , Jeannie EVa nS, received ca lls of congratulaStewart, eighth
a
nd
Charles
Richard Payne, Muck Mm- tions from Rhonda Doss, a
graders,
were
unintentionally
nis, Steve Mundell , Kim penpa l of Cincinnati, and
omitted
from
the Meigs
Payne, Orrion Blancllard. another penpa l in England
Junior
High
School
honor roll
Raelena Bass, Mitchell Col- who a lso ~t::nt H dozen roses .
for the fifth six weeks grading
·
period.
R ecognition o f octogenarians of the Happy
Harvesters Class, Trinity
Church, was held ~' riday
night following a potluck din-

of the American Revolutiun.
Mrs. Theodore Reed , Jr.
wa s guest speaker. She spoke
on "Roots'' and the innuet1ce
it ha.s had in inspiring others
to look up their families. She
told of the r esearch which
went into the book and of th e
hope, truth am\ need for
famil y lies which it presents.
Mrs. Eich presented her with
a gift
Ho s h~ss e s
G~orge

wen~

Mrs .
Skinner, Mr s. · Mt.trk

Grueser, Mrs. Thomas Ewing and Mrs . 0. P. Klein .

Second daughter born

Th

,

D

Foster, Racine, who

Third Century Women in
Amerit·CJ '' , ond the Ohio
theme , ·· Talents Shape
Tomorrow 's Hi story".

Martin ,

While Quantities Last
We are not

Quantity

slbl• far

SPAULDING
WOODEN

· ~·

.-···"'·

Tennis Bolls.
Htovy Duty.

Nelson's
R.g. $11.99

Nelson's

calories was won by Mrs.

BADMINTON
SET

i
.'..
~

•

SALE '1.98 yd.

..
•
•

NEW SHIPMENT

&amp; Carrying Case.

.

· 60'' MEN'S KNITS
'1.98 yd.
New. Spring Prints
60" Polyester Knits
'2.99 yd.

-

·•" ··-· ~ Nelson's Rea. 54.79

NELSON'S REG. 51.39

-••

ALUMINUM

TROPIC TORCHES
With. Poles
2 QT. TORCH

Conslru~lion

wirh Major Hoople
IDLE
,v ~·~'~DE,

ALI&gt;1QUGf\
HI$ KONOR

DOES RcSEN T

BEING MADE:
\0 WAIT FOR
M£MBIOR5HtP 1

••

KORDITE PLASTIC
TABLECLOTHS

CROQUET SET
5 Player

Set

China-Foam
Plastic

enough to re use.
With wind tabs Packed In hand y shelf
organizer .
'

; ~ FONDA
' PAPER
PLATES

Classier than paper, won' t bend

or 509 through . For partyt ime or
anytime .

Nel•on's Reg. 79¢

57~

PATIO LITE SETS

24 Pltctl Totti

79~

Nelson's
Reg. 51.29

RAID

MIKADO

a Plastic Forks
8 Plastic Knlns .
8 Plastic
SpOOns

1OO's

Tableware

59~

HOST WARE

RAID SOLID

House &amp; Garden
Bug Killer

69'
FOAM CUPS

INSECT
KILLER

13'/. oz.

1

2.7 Ol.

Nelson's Reg. 57.59
I Qt. Torch
Now Only ...

••
"
•••
•

..•

.

"'

~cCall's, Kwick-sew, Simplicity Patterns

·

Po'meroy, ;, - - - ...

•••

Nelson's
Reg. 55.95

Nelson's
Reg. 522.99

PANASONIC PORTABLE CASSETTE RECORDER
Panasonic RQ-309AS
_,

. ...

.,.,

Nelson's
Reg. $5.79

Nelson's Reg. 52.09

FOLDING RATCHET

C

Baby Oil

-

Nels.o n's
Reg. 59¢

Nelson's Reg. s I. 99

Sday

Johnson's

R &amp; LOUNGE

49'

$149

~

•
•
••

cOP AROuND • · ·
.i
~,

SCOPE
MOUTHWASH
AND
GARGLE

ANTI-PERSPIRANT

18

•·-

..:x,

Nelson's Rq. S1.67

~

Vi sine
Eye Drops
Gets the Red
Out.

ON THIS PURCHASE

Superior Boiled Ham •••••••••••.•••••••• ~!.:~·..$1
Superior Wieners.l lb. pkg••••••••••••••

85 ct.

.."'
~

WATER SOLUBiliZED

09

VITAMIN E
tOO CAPSUlES

200 I.U.

~.k~~.894

100 I.U.
Regular

Regular

4"

' 2"

PREDIGESTED LIQUID

PROTEIN
CHERRY FLAVORED

NELSON'S
REG. 51.37

88~

•;. oz.

atka
2'

97~
JOO's

Nelson's Reg. 51.27

• NO SUGAR QR FATS
• NO CARBOHVDAATES
• 30 CALORIE$/T ABLlSPOOftl

Nelson's
52.73

Nelson's Reg.

siNGLES

94:
.f 794:

American&amp;

or PIMENTOS....

MeARGARiN~ lb2.
QUARTERS..
rn

''MY LUCK.,"
..1AO&lt;.S0NVILLE,

. FLA.

.

5
.
69~
SWEET CORN ••

TABI..ETS

.

~~~PERS ........ 3/39~

..

2

RADISHES ...... Pkg. 25~

PURE VITAMIN E

SKIN OIL
CONCENTRATE

CONTAIIIS 21,000 I.U.

..-

2 lb. Or-Ida Krinkle Cut French Fries ••••• 79

EXTRA STRENGTH

6 Y2 OL Star Kist Tuna ...................... 79'
15% oz. Armour ~rn Beef Hash ........ 69'

KELP•LECJTH1N•B6
wilh CIDER VINEGAR
Rogul10

MEIGS TIRE CENTER, INC.
JOHN F. FULTZ, MANAGER

Pomeroy, 0.

992-2101
(

$249

4"
" 33 dJy supply "

•M

-.

~=~

fir~

with ROSE HIPS
·250 mg.

''

100 TABLETS

.......
-.-.

EXTU STRENGTH

~

100 CAPSULES

$

279

HIGH POTENC'f
YtTAMINS &amp; MINEAALS

THERAPEUTIC M
1DOTABLETS

Regu l10

4"

$279

1cawm: ~ 110 1111. v ~'

60 TAIUTS
Regular

500 mg.

PUJIE HIOH PJIOTfiN

-..
••

GELATIN CAPS •

-....

MTUI1AL

•

VITAMIN E.

--

2DOIU
100C,APSULES

-

e 150 TABLETS

•

$179

100 CAPSULES

500 mg.

A~ular

2"

•
""
"

-

'lo

Nelson's

fl&gt;'~~"''"'
TROPIC 'v

.Coppertom!
OIL OR LOTION
4

LOTION
OR OIL

oz.

Memorial
Cross:
Pedestal
Cross:
Pillow Wreath:
Spray

FROM:

$339

VITAMIN 8·6 •
•

100 ....
1DI TAILETI

R-vullr

••

RHULISPRAY

,.'II Air"'
'lo

TROPIC ·'v

For temporary
rtlltf of Itching,
pa in &amp; dltc:om fert of •••
Ivy
&amp;
Oak
Polsonlno. Mild
Sunburn.

ROYAL
TANNING
BLEND

.....

8 Ol.

.......
I

.

~~

I

J

I
,I
I

•

Nllltn'l

R..,. su7

LAWN

Wagon
Grill

6 Positions
Bottom Tray
. Roll -About

$1599

STERNO Canned Heat

CHAIR
&amp; LOtJNGE ·
•

Wldt webbing In
bright colors, square
btnd suh &amp; backs .
Full s lzt waltrlall

iillllliiiili
.. u
!!I
8 8 q;

arms.

NtlsOrt't
R..,. $11 .99

Structo BBQ Grills
Folding
~~ - Brazier

$

Grill
4 Positions

N•llon's
R-a . S12.99

-2% oz. 3 Can Slee\'e

Nelson's R•g. Sl.09
I

iJiiiJ
1
09

- 7 oz. 2 Can Slet\'e

Nelson's Reg. 51.:19

$
A $ef

M

Nelson's
$2.09

52.17

SJ49

WREATHS

Analgesic· Anesthetic
2 oz.

$139

.-f·•

DARK
TANNING

3"
Regular

~

· ~

Beautiful Tan ..
Beautiful Skin ..

NELSON'S
REG. S1.79

ASIA TIC GINSENG • so CAPSULES

~

'· ·· oi l

~··· ·" ~"'

with 300mg. VITAMIN C

S"

M

' .

BCOMPLEX

VITAMIN C

•

AEROSOL
4.5 oz. Net WI.

IIHIIIPHC

100 TABLETS

~

3 OL Instant Nestaa ...................... '1.89
29oL
Teen Queen Peaches, sliced or halves ••59•
10112 oz.
~raft Miniature Marshmallows ....... 2/69•

7"

4"

' 1ina!lng Cider YlnOpr lllef'

27 OL Del Monte Spinach ............... 2/89'
32 OL Kraft
Miracle Whip Salad Draulng ............. 99•

Bactine

Regular

Regular

•

4

46 o~ Walch Aid Grape Drlnk ............ 49'

WEDNESDAY, MAY 31, 1977)

$1 49

Re~~lar

as ct.

3 oL Armour Pottacl Meat ..............3/69'

Now In Progress - Tire Prices

SEE CAP TOP
STICKER

Florida

Ears

sus

lteh1

Head &amp; Shoulders
by mail

.....,-;J&lt;IAN.&gt;t

01.

~

Home Made .Ham Salad ••••••••••••••••••••L.~.• 994

I.

oz.

HOT OR COLD
CUPS
51 CT.

AT THE CHECKOUT

(HURRY - PRICES ONLY IN EFFECT UNTIL

•

TABLE CLOTH
CLAMPS

FONDA PAPER
PLATES

~-w-=;)

Red gingham plastic tab lecloths. lnex·
pensive enough to throw away, strong

E

Slashed Like Never Before

..

ln&amp;tructtons.

~

·M y r on
Miller,
Min ersv ille. Maternal great·
gr~ndparents are . Mr. and
Mrs. 1.. B. Barnett, Buffalo,
W. Va., a nd the patemal
grt!at-gr andpart!nl~ are Mr.
a nd Mrs. Hugh L. Miller;
G•·afton, W. Va .
Mrs . Myron Miller returned Monday after spending
two weeks wiU1 the family,
a nd Mrs. Kauff is in Waverly
with lhe family this week .

UN-FLATION
SALE

700 E. Main St.

~~

N•lson's Reg. S7 .99

$577

•

M1's.

Barbecue fetes birthday

OUR BOARDING HOUSE

lnfiiNnt

10"x17" Hibachi
4" Coal Bed
NELSON'S
REG. 57.77

"7:/_:-_e..v:.___o_t: -_v_e_r.:._y_T_im_e-::::1!?';;:'W

~

NELSON'S
REG. Sl.89 "

UTILITY CAN

Nelson's
Reg. 79¢

• 42~ .
• Urethane ln1ufaled
• Rugged Slee i/Mol ded

•

THE FABRIC
SHOP
.
992-2264

I

'/• Gallon

COOLER THERMOS

'

Ttrgtl
Rllllll And

, Jhlo~wlllunrooo

TM bHI

Cr9quet

$117

$399

Deluxe

•
•
•

PltiiiC Dtrts.

7

NELSON'S
REG. $4.19

Nelson's
69¢

.'•

Nylon lipped
Lown Dorn.

ant

tot.llll ..... _ _ ....

Bag

•

Re g . 53.98 &amp; $4.49

~. . . . .

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

• •01 . .

5 Gallon

Avocado, Apricot,
Yellow &amp; Blue.
Hot &amp;
Cold
Polyurethane Insulation.
Unbreakable.

•'•

·--·

, ......

LAWN DARTS

10 PoU'Id

4 Steel Shaft Rackets.
2 Birdies, Net, Poles

,,..,.,... ·''

53.49

HIBACHI

CHARCOAL
BRIQUETS

4 Player
!.;

SPIN·CAST
COMBO

Yellow.

N•lson•s
Reg. S'-99

POLYESTER KNITS

115 W. Second

Center Court
Championship

lt!-Dcu

60"

Responsibility for Accident
Prevention. Mrs. Wilson
repo rt on rlowers, and Mrs.
M1:1ry Kunzelman , by-laws.
Plans were made to have
an entry in the Memoria l Day
parade. Games were played
and refreslunents se rved .

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

·~~

$499

William Buckley. The . pr&lt;&gt;- .
gram was on propagating gift
plants given by Mrs . Robert
Woods.
A plant auction was held
following the meeting . Mrs.
Karr and Mrs. Woodrow
Mora served refreshments to
the ~I members and a guest,
Mrs. Steve Frost.

lolllll . . .

Tennis Balls

tnckHMs •ftfY!Nne w tNt b.c:k ward

TENNIS
. RACKET

•

PENN

Vollerball and lldmlnton
In One Set

Plastic Picnic
Plates

Women' s

Starts Today
Good Thru
May 30th

;

Named to the eo1runittee to
plan programs lor the next
yea r were Mrs. Leonard Erwin. Mrs. Paul Karr, Mrs.
Sally Ingles, Mrs . Karl
Krautter , Mrs. Horace Karr.
Names presented for
membership were Mrs. Glenda Hunt, Mrs. Randy Young
and Mrs. Gary Wolfe .
It wa s announced that the
OAGC is selling bulb~ and
that orders must be to Mrs .
James Dates, Reynoldsburg
by June . I. A s unshine project
was planned.
Devotions to open the
meeting were taken from
Psalm 126. A game on

••
'

G if t s · from
D e lore s
Chambers, s4Jte membership cl1airman and the triple
hea1t button were presented
to Mrs. Werner for spqnsoring thr.e e members. Mrs.
Grace P ratt thanked the
members for helping with the
cance r drive. The silver
dollar attendance aw::~nl was
won by Mrs. Wanda Eblin.
Repmts for the past year
were given by Mrs . J::~net
Kom, membership ; Mrs.
Wels h, legisfation ; Mrs.
l.Aluise Davis , financial ; Mrs.
Dollie Hayes, program ; Mrs,
Wanda Eblin, publi c relations; Mrs. P ratt, federation
&lt;;Jnd foundation ; Mrs. Eva
Robson, hostess; Mrs. Pratt,
dvic participation ; Mrs .
Korn, welcoming comm ittee;
Mrs. Werner, telephone, and

Mrs .

was

dead on arrival at Veterans
Memorial Hospital.

Senior Citizens Center.

moriaI

*

provided nine i:jfrangemenUi
for the FFA banquet and
these were then taken to the .,

CHESTEK- Heports on the
POLLY'S PROBLEM
Polllter is for those who like
DEAR POLLY - We live in to piece qu•lts. Instea d of
the country and get our water usin~ stiff rardboa rd to tra ce
from a well. The water is a nd cut my qu ilt patterns, I
evidently hard, since it leaves cut a piece from the side of a
a mineral deposit on cooking plastic ga llon milk carton .
utensils . How can these hard Lay it on a flat surtace, trace
mineral deposits be safely and cut out the pattern. Lay
removed• - MR. E .P .H.
this plasti c patt ern flat on the
DEAR MR . E.P .H. - Boil material to be used and trace .
two teaspoon s or cream of The edges on the pattern will
tartar to each quart of water not fra y as they do when it is
in s uch pans lor a lew made of ca rdboard . - MRS.
minutes and then scrub with D.A.M .
a steel wool pad . Cooking
DEAR POLLY - When you
tomatoes , rhubarb or other are planning to use several
acid foods might also tum the eolors of paint, or even just
trick. - POLLY .
one, line the roller pan with
DEAR POLLY - I have a heavy duty aluminum foil.
tried and true way to keep This saves a messy cle8n·up
from cleaning my sterling job. Discard the foil, reline
silver flatware . The last time the pan and you a re ready for
I cleaned it must have been 25 the next job . Husbands
years ago . Clean the silver especially like this idea, lor
very well, wash and dry in the they are often the ones who
air overnight. Secure a wide get the clean-up job. - MRS.
mouthed gallon jar and put a G. Y.
.
layer of cotton in the bottom.
DEAR POLLY - I have a
Buy a cake of camphor at the great 1 'gimm ick" I use when
drug store, but this on the .!,t anding on a swaying public
cotton and stand silver pieces vehicle. I do not sta nd flat on
in the jar. The silver does my feet but lift them enough
smell of the camphor when to compensa te for the
first remov ed from the jar vehicle's motion . I have used
but the odor soon disappears . this for yeat s on street cars,
After each use, wash, dry buses, tra ins and even th e
well and next day put back in · rapid transit when no scats
the jar. I have often given were ava ilable. Even this
such a jar as a shower gift. winter "fhen the streets were
VIRGINIA .
rough , I have ridden without
DEAR POLLY - My Pet feeli 0 g pou'nded just by
Peeve concerns those eating standing on tip toe - that is
places that have st ationary with the heels off the floor
tables a nd chairs. One cannot just a fraction. This has
put a child in a cha ir and pull worked for me for 60 years. it up to the table nor ca n older EVELYNNE.
folks move away from the
Polly will send you one of
table . Do they think someone her signed th ank-you newswill steal their tables and paper-coupon clippers if she
chairs if they are not fastened uses yoQ.r favori te Pointer,
to the noor ? It certainly is . Peeve or Problem in the
awkward
10r pregnant column . Write POLLY'S
women , too. - 10.
PoiNTERS .in care of this
DEAR POLLY My newspaper.

•
''

Chair-Nelson's Reg. SS.77

Lounv•·Nelson's Reg. S10.99

·•

449

Nelson's
R-a. $5.49

STOVE &amp; rv•~L
COMBOPAK

�•
9- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0. , Wednesday. May 1$, 1977

Birthday celebrated Sunday

Helen Help
Us . .. By lldt'll llollt·l

.!111 Hey nulds, dau~hlcr of
Mr . anc..l Mrs. Nelson
Ht•yuuld:;, t·ei~!Jrallotl lH.:r

" xth hll'thday Sund;;y afternwJrL

durin~

l111· •lay was the bi1'lhaay of
Nunmm Hcynuld:;.
II ca ke for each w;;s b;;kt'tl
I.Jy .Jill 's mother. Attending
were Mr. cmd Mrs. Nonmm

Uvtng With a King-Type ...
Dear Helen :
I'm a 32-year-old housewife with four kids and maybe
more, U my husband gets his way.

Heynolds, Mr. and Mrs. Ken-

He wants sex most every night and he doesn 't warit me
using the pill, or any contraceptive, as he says it's

neth Keynolds, Keith Allen
and Kelly, Mr. and Mrs, John
r1ck and daughter, Jo and

"unnatural."
He loves his kids when they 're under five, but throws them
at me from six on . He won 't let me take a part-time job
because he wants to play "man of tbe house. "
U I don 't do as he says, he threatens divorce. I love him,
buthowcan I make him see l'ma - DESPERATE WirE
Dear Wife :
You're in charge of your own body, and what you put into it
is your prerogative. SQ get a prescription for the pill, and don't
let your husband hassle you about it . (If that means "Don't tell
him," 1!0 be it. )
About a part-time job: Rather than fight over his
stubbornness, discuss the advantages, which include more
money and a more cheerflll wife .
Uving with a king-type man takes tact, calmness, and the
resolve to talk it out, no matter how he shouts. You'll win when
be learns he can no longer bluff you. (I hope!) - H.

+++

Also ccld.m.:tted

*

Mrs. Ceithcrim: Smith.

TO ATTEND CHURCH
The Mason Homemakers
will attend the Mason United
Methodist in a group Sunday.
Graduates will he recognized
during the service.

*

NIAN CADMAN is choreographer lor "Gallia Country" for the second consecutive
year.

Dance tryouts begin Saturday
examination

for those
wishing to join the Dance
Masters of America.
Her students have been
members of touring groups
throughout Europe and many

obtained from the Chamber
of Commerce o!fice, State
Street, Gallipolis.
Dates for this year's
production are the last four
weekends in July; 8-10, li}-17,
22-24 and 29'31. The locale is
the natural amphitheatre on
Bob Evans Farms, Rio ·

Start a
Chain
Reaction

* GENUINE DIAMOND

JP.--------""'=-------:-.1

Grande College. It will be Grande.
granted subject to the approval of their' high school
principal. Further information may be obtained
by conatcting Dr. Smith at
have won state as well as
the college.
national titles in competition.
It is also with a great deal
The Gallia Dramatic Arts of enthusiasm that the
Society, producers of "Gallia . Society announces that Brant
Country," feel lortunate in Adams, a 1977 graduate of
obtaining Miss Cadman's . Capitol University, will he
services · again this year, as
musical director this year
LARGE SELECTION OF
well as those of Greg Miller, and this is his fifth year with
director.
the production. Merlyn Ross,
COLORS AND STYLES
The Society wishes to Director ol Music at Rio
remind those interested in Grande College, is also ad·
any phase of participation in ding his many talents to the
1 GROUP
"Gallia Country," that Rio drama this year for the first
Grande Coliege-Rio Grands time. Word will be released
regarding
the
Community College has later
scheduling
for
those
inannounced plans to olfer four
terested
in
joining
the
chorus,
credits to those participants.
Two courses olfered are, 121 an integral part of "Gallia
Drama Lab Practicum and Country."
263 Dramatic Production. · Interest is picking up,
Both are .open to all who take publicity is already reaching
part in the drama who have distant points in many states
high school diplomas or the and tickets are even now
equivalent. Students not yet being ordered from parties of
graduated from high school two , three and four to
would have to write a spe.cial chartered buses !rom the
letter to Dr. Sam Smith, northern part of the state.
Acting Academic Dean, Rio Ticket infol'l!latlon may he

WOMEN'S SANDAL SALE
NOW IN PROGRESS

WOMEN'S DRESS SHOES

lf2 PRICE

of Point Pleasant Is

Deposits, in multiples of $5AJOQ each. ·

MAXIMUM PERCENT
PER ANNUM

This is the Highest Interest Rates

30 Days or more

Payable By Law for Banks

but less than 90 Days
90 Days or more

•SUBSTANTIAL PENALTY FOR EARLY WITHDRAWAL

but less than 1 Year

1 Year or more
but less than 30 Months

.... ..
~

',

61h
'

OF POl NT PLEASANT

PHONE ~7~1121

MEMBER FDIC

side" -

it is in more of a

croak than a voice.
AI that point we don't yet
know that .she had run away
from the Minnesota farm
where she'd heen raped by a
cousin; that she had worked
first as a "nurse girl," then

OVER 200 PAIRS IN STOCK

OTHER C.D. RATES AVAILABLE

Johnny-the-Priest's saloon
down by Fulton fish market,
she is tired past the point of
pain. ·
It is evident in the way she
walks, stands, then flops
down on a chair at a
backroom table. Her eyes are
veiled with fatigue; dbnly lit
only by apprehension. When
she speaks - "Gimme a
whisky; ginger ale on the

as a prostitute in St. Paul;
had been imprisoned then
hospitalized after a police
raid on the "house" where
she helped entertain men;
and had just spent a day-and·
a-half on ~ dirty railway
coach comin,g to New York to
find the sea-going old father
who had dumped her with \he
Midwestern relatives years
before, and whom she d~lly
hates.
.
But we sense the despair,
the resentment, the aliena·
lion, all engendered by such a
past. Anna is impressed in·
delibly on our consciousness
and, as if it were our fault, on

interest on four year Certificates of

,,

By Norman Nadel
NEW YORK - (NEAl
When Anna Christopherson
- or Anna Christie, as she
calls herseU - cautiously
pushes open the "family en·

STYLED BY JEWELMQNT

pleased to announce an offering of 7%%

FDIC:
....... ...

Liv Ullmann:
a director's dream

10K CHAIN RING

2212 w:KS0rt AVE.

LIV ULLMANN as O' Netll's " Anna Chris lie" ; she is silly
loud, strident, wounded, terrified , brave and muddled
strong.

NEW YOIU&lt; - 1NEA I l&lt;!t , just keep lhis betWl'Cn
m;, becau.sL· ir accessorie!:i
people ever gel ,.·ind of it,
there'll beJhc devil to pay.
ilil&lt;Jut those channing little
nowers ami things you're
supposL'tl tu stick in your hair
tu add pizzazz to a swnmer
outfit and legal tender lo
stun: cash registers : you can
make them, for a song and a
dance.
First, dean out your
jewelry .box and put aside the
rhinestone earring you never
. round the mate to, the two
channs you saved from the
bracelet you broke. •: •.:
brooch that dn"' " ·L have a
pin on the back, and the
"emerald" necklace you
bought in Spain, which hegan
to w1ravel midway across the
Atlantic.
You're not going to throw
any of this out; you're going
to glue them, however you
like, on some inexpensive
combs you bought'in the five
1 anddime.
Well, you won't glue the
necklace onto anything. What
you'll do with that is wrap it
arow1d your pony tail or
around a pigtail which we
hear i~ the chic hairstyle for
fail .
Then you'll t,ake a couple of
real flowers, or a fake tulip or
a few feathers from· an old
hat, and slick them in the
necklace. If you're handy,
you can twist a pipe cleaner
into a black-eyed Susan and
gussy it up with a bit of
gingham ribbon.
The ribbon'' You got it

FASHION

FLOWERS FLIRT wilh fashion lhis year, bul the romance
~~~ .

from that small drawer
crammed with old buttons,
strands of rick rack, loose sequins, lace trimming and
pennies and nickels,
After putting the loose
change in your pocket, lie the
rick rack or the lace around
the feathers and glue them to
·a barrette this time, instead
of a comb.
As a matter of fact, you can

your

own

feminlne magic wilh inex·
pensive flowers from a

can come from sprig from an old Easter bonnet transform·
ed into an appealing hair adornment with matc~ing floral

novelty shop. paper mache
lruil, old jewelry, ribbons
and shells sewn onto plain

~---

com bs or glued onto
barrettes to create fanciful,
inex·pensive
hair

glue the buttons onto a bor·
accessories.
rette, too. They don 't have to
be pearlized, metal, or
wooden toggles, you realize.
There's no law against wear·
ing an old campaign button in agination you can not only
your hair, or .one that says · create some costless daz:zl·
"'Smiie,'' or some other ing hair ornaments, yo~ can
philosophical ideology. You make room for future broken
can even change them to jewelry, odd buttons, useless
pieces of ribbon and pennies
match your moods.
and
dimes .
In short, with a little im·

and

TODAY'S TREASURES..-----------,
j10nesty are inevWable
bulwarks of the portrayaL
What are the sources of
such · strength, insight,
technique? On the one hand,
living ; training in London,
working with a Norwegian
provincial theater, a marriage (dissolved after five
years), living with Bergman
I also dissolved after five
years). motherhood, fame,
uncertainty.
.
On (he other hand, direc·
tors. Bergman of course. An
absolute genius. He taught
her to summon up feeling to
any part of her bQdy - her
lips, her buttocks if need be.
When she was 22, the German
director Peter Palitzsch
worked with her in Oslo. She
writes; "He taught me that
every thing we portray on the
stage ought to he shown from
two sides. When I smile, I
must also show the grimace
hehind it. Try to depict the
counter-movement
the

a womanizing Irish stoker
who.. is as self-righteous as
sin, and she hecomes ~gain
as vulnerable as a child. She
gambles that Matt, outraged
by her soiled past, will come
bock to her, and he does, fur
whatever misery and wisps
of happiness the future will
our conscience.
These nights at the lm· hold fo1· the two ol them. She
perial theater, it is Liv is silly, .and loud, and sinUllman, the Norwegian ac· dent, and wounded, and ter·
tress most widely known in rified, and brave, and mudd!·
the U.S. for her performance ed, and strong.
in Jngmar Bergman's , Especially strong. Anyone
movies·, who achieves all this · who has seen Ul(jnarin on the
in her first ·minute on stage. screen, on stage, in the re-"
She must be as authentic an cent six-hour TV showing of
"Anna Christie' ' as ·any ac- Bergman's ;'Scenes From a
tress who has attempted the · Marriage," or has read her
published
role since Pauline Lord recently
originated it for playwright autobiography " Changing,"
knows she is strong. The book
Eugene O'Neill in 1920.
I marvelled that she could is a mishmash by literary
veil her eyes; not just half· standards, but it reveals her
close the lids, which is the agonizing vulnerability, and
usual acting device, but the strength she must have to
somehow rob them of their coexist with such sensitivity.
She looks strong, and not
piercing blueness, their
luster, their remarkable just in the sturdy wrists, the counter-emotion.''
And eventually, the ac·
reflectivity. 1t was merely laboring woman's hands, the
cum
ul ating o[ all ex·
one of many evidences that shoulders and the good, slur·
periences.
Again from her
Liv Ullmann is an extraor· dy back. She . is ·no super·
dinary actress, who is able, woman, but one wr.~.y or book: "It is as If every new
as in this instance, to com- another, whether in ~~scenes role becomes a surrunary of
municate
exhaustion, Ffom a Marriage," &gt;~Per~ previous ones.''
Strong yet malleable,
despair, resentment and sona," "T.he Emigrants,"
several other feelings almost " Anna Christie" or as Nora beautiful yet capable of apin Ibsen's "A Doll's House," pearing plain or bitter, self·
before she speaks.
There is more to the role of she is the woman who has sufficient yet apt to be aimosl
Anna than that, of course. come to terms with life. She mortally hurt, Liv Ullmann
She rediscovers a sense of he· hasn 't stopped screaming, must be a director's dream,
ing clean, in a salt night fog sometimes literally, but for and a playwright's. She br·
aboard her father's coal the most part the screams ings a high intelligence and a
splendid intuition to stage
barge. She hugs a misshapen are boxed away, inside,
and
screen drama. And these
Whether the role Ulimann
old sweater around her as if it
are
among the reasons why
might protect her from a happens to be playing remany
of us will travel far,
malevolent world ruled by quires her to rise above the
,. terrors of living, or to suc- and wait patiently, to watch
the men she despises.
She falls in love with Matt, cumb to them, strength and her in any role she assays.

Amazing exhibit of
American Indian art
By Jean Barnes
Coe organized the exhibition
The words Sacred Circles for the Arts Council of Great
have come to mean an ex- Britain. It opened at the
citing experience for hun· Hayward Gallery in London
dreds of thousands of persons last fall and closed Jan. !6. In
who have seen the ' the Sacred Circles catalogue,
remarkable exhibit of North Coe stated, "While no exhibi·
American Indian Art.
lion .ca n be definitive, this
Although it's understan· one is at least encyclopedic,
dable because of the scope affording broad. bases for
and varied origins of the in· c1·oss-cuftural artistic com·
.dividual objects, it is regret· parisons, just at that moment
table that there have·been·on· · when North American Indian
Jy two showings of the Sacred Art joins the mainstream of
Ci rcles. One took place in art history ."
London, England; the se·
John K. White, an Indian,
cond, at the Nelson Gallery educator and anthropologist
Atkins Museum in Kansas Ci· and Sacred Circles education
ty; Mo., will continue through director, is credited with
June 19.
"putting together the most
How to describe the impact . significant cultural rep1·escn·
of Sacred Circles poses a pro- tation of North American In·
blem. We could qu0te. you dian performing arts ever
many statistics: 850 objects scheduled. in a single loca·
from 90 private collections tion.~~ according to Coe.
·and museums representing
White, whose home is in II·
six countries, at a cost of linois, traveled thousands of
$700,000 and spanning 2,000 miles to visit Indian and
yea rs of Indian culture. It has Eskimo tribal groups, seek·
already been seen by nearly ing their partictpation. Thus,
200,000 visitors in England (he 'Ksan dancers of the
tmd an even larger number is Gitksan Indian s fr om
expected at the Nelson Hazelton, British Columbia;
Gallery.
•
Eskimo dancers from King
Or we could tell you about Island, Alaska ; Poma Indian
the creative talents which perf01mets from Northern
breathed life into the exhibi· California; Yakimas from
lion. Musewn Director Ralph
T. (Ted) Coe who spent four
vears searching known and
~b!lcure collections deserves
a large share of the credit.

get ahead, they give va lue for
what they are paid. Un·
fortunately, others have a
different attitud&lt;(, But we do
find that kids with some
edueotion are often more ihdustrious. They know the
value of an education and
they know the value of a good
job to help pay for it."
The industry obviously has
,; great need for hetter
educated employees who

DESIGN FROM early 19th century Tsimsh.ian bulton

blanket ~s from private collection in Montana. It is_used to
advertise the Sacred Cir.cles, Two Thousand Years of North

American Indian Art on display at lhe Nelson Gallery·
Atkins Museum· in Kansas City, Mo.

the state of· Washington;
lroouoi&amp; from Ontario ; Crow
from Montana; Menominee
from Wisconsin; Pawnee
from Oklahoma, and
Seminole Indian dancers
from South Florida are
scheduled to perform.
Anoth e r per so n who
deserves credit is Michael R.
Hagler, assistant cu rator of
installations for the Nelson
Gallery. His talent has made
the exhibi tion easier to com·.
prchend and ah&gt;lorb.

These are just three of (he
thousands who contributed
heavily to make the Sacred
Circles a meaningful educa·
tiona! experience for those
fortunate enough to view it.
rot those of you who will
not have that opportunity, we
will describe some o[ the·
ma'terial in the exhibition in
two succeeding columns.' We
believe the Sacred Circles is
a historic event, one wbic~
reveals the spiritual oneness
of humankind.

Ohio politics

Heat of battle growing in

Food.service jobs attrack students
By Gaynor Maddox
three food dollars is spent for
High school and college food away from home. By
students now hold one out of 1980, ! · predict confidently·
every three food service jobs. that $2 out of every $5 for food
Most work only part-time.
will be spent in various types
More than half of all food of eating places. It is part of
service employees are under our new way of life."
24-years-old. You find them
The generally ' optimistic
working in drive-ins, at quick O'Malley is hostile to the
food counters, in pizzarias President's· desire to raise
and other quick-service the minimum wage from
places. Food service is enor· $2.30 to $2.50 an hour and to
mous today. It is growing so · Labor's insistance that it be
rapidly that it naturally at· · raised to$2.85.
tracts students in need of ex·
" I am violently against
tracash.
raising the minimum wage, "
What will the President's S.vs O'Malley. " It will wreak
energy program do to fond havoc with many owners, I
service?
see 700,000 jobs for young
" It may slow down those people eliminated by this profeeding spots along highways positton. And it isn 't
and it may slow down necessa•·y. A boy or girl
business at resorts far from start&gt; at $2.30 an hour. In a
the cities. But I don't think it short time, provided he or
will hurt the business gneral· she works hard and shows in·
Jy," says Patrick L. · teres\ in the joh, he or she
O'Malley, enthusiastic presi· will get raise:;. In fact, ex·
dent of the National ecutive jou:; in our industry
Restaurant Association.
arc held by large numbers of
"Rememher our business former part-time high school
is growing by 11 per cent a and college workers who
year. More and more people started at $2 .30 and were
are enjoying the habit of grateful for that."
eating awh from home O'Malley comments or. the
either at a' quick spot or in~ ch:&lt;racter ol young wo•·kcrs,
sltdown restaurant. I'd say indudingstudents.
~ ·
that t~ay one out ol every
"Many of them arc keen to

for creative

By Ellil' lJws.sman

CRITIC-AT·LARGE

'

Peoples Bank

30 Months or more

Accessories~-free

Fashion, the arts,
theater criticism

trance" door at the side of

Dear Helen;
I thought I was very mistreated by my husband, but now I
realize I was only very spoiled. Actually, he Jet me win all the
battles. He was very considerate and loving, but I acted like a
real stinker, cri!icizing and complaining. He put me on a
Dance tryouts for this
year's production of "Gallia
pedestal.
Then I met a guy I thought would give me all the Country ," will be held
Saturday, May 21 at 7:30 p..
excitement I was missing. So I left Andy, for Mark.
You guessed it, Mark walked out on me in seven months, and Sunday, May 22 at 1:30
probably because I was trying the same numbers on him that p.m. in the Little Theatre,
. Lower Level, Lafayette Mall,
Andy took so well .
I realize how stupid I've been and would give anything to Second Ave. and Court Street,
have Andy back. Do you think, if I ate enough crow, I could be downtown Gallipolis.
his wUe again• (He hasn't tried to get in toueh with me since I
For this, the fifth season for
left,' and.! hear he's seeing another woman. ) -REPENT ANT the historical musical-drama
which depicts tile founding,
Dear Rep:
settlement and growth of the
Sometimes "eating crow'' only gives you heartburn. When area settled by the rrench,
a man finally sees a woman clearly, he seldom believes she and developed with the help
can become the idol he once thought he saw.
ol the Welsh, Nian Cadman
(And I sort of doubt it too. If Andy took you h;!ck, how long will serve as choreographer.
would it be before you'd revert to spoiled-brat tactics?)- H. Nian has been a dancer for 25
+++
years and has owned and
Dear Helen:
operated her own studio in
I was treated for depression lor years, and thought of Youngstown for 17 years. She
suicide many times as a "that'll show 'em" out. Psychiatry has appeared in "Meet Me in
didn't help, but somehow (as you once.· said) time did. I St. Louis,'' with Robert
gradually grew out of my miseries and now wonder how I ever Goulet and also ln ''Kismet,"
got so down. Maybe it's an imbalance in the system, something I· both with the Kenley Players
that rights itself.
in Warren, Ohio.
One think I read in a book helped a Jot. In it a man tells a
Nian is . a member or the
potential suicide, ''If they didn't love you when you were still Dance Masters of Ohio,
alive, they won't be sorry when you're gone." - STILL HERE Pennsylvania and America
and .the Professional Dance
Parkersburg, Teachers of America. She
Hospital,
HOSPITALIZED
Mrs. Alice Freeland, Room 215. She expects to he was also selected as one of a
Syracuse, is a medical · pa- . confined there lor a week three-member committee
tient at the Camden Clark undergoing therapy. ·
chosen to write a new tap

MATURITY

f..ostless and dazding

I

might later return in ad·
ministrative

positions .

O'Malley sums it up by say·
ing :
"Each year, 250,000 new
jobs are added to America 's
growing food service in·
dustry, !rom dishwashers to
managers. Somewhere there
is a place fur the high school
or college student who needs
a job to help with his education."
'
"

Laurel Oiff News Notes
Attendance at the Free rriday and they returned to
Methodist Church on May 15 their home on Saturday.
Mark Stahl, Stockdale ,
was 89. The Senior Citizens
were recognized and had . visited Sunday with Mr. and
Mrs. N. E. Schaefer. ·
their picture taken.
Twenty,six persons at· . The Young Adults of the
tended the Mother-Daughter local church held their picnic
Banquet held at the Trinity at the Wright camp in West
Virginia.
Church in Pomeroy.
Thirteen members of the
Mr. Wyatt Schaefer, Mt.
Laurel
Cliff Health Club met
Vernon. vis ited over the
at
the
home of Mrs. Allen
weekend with his parents,
Eichinger,
Mrs.
Max
Mr . and Mrs. Norman
.
Eichi
nger
was
co-hostess.
Schaefer.
J. R. Tracy is a patient in Games were played and won
Veterans Memorial Hospital. by Amber Lohn and Mildred
Mrs. Ed Bauer of Marion Jacob!&gt;. Refreshments were
spent a week recently with served. The next meeting will
her parents, Mr. and Mrs. be Mrs. Jean W!';jght.
Dick Karr. Mr. Bauer came

•

•

war on voter regtstration
•

By LEE LEONARD
UP! Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS (UP I)
There 's a lascinatlng
political game of cat-andmouse gomg on at the
Statehouse that contains the
elements of ·the "Six-Day
War" and the state income
tax repeal rolled into 011e.
And before it's finished, it
could well exceed those
monumental .episodes in
import.
The 11 Six-Day War/' you
may recall, involved a series
or bills which Democrats in
the legislature attempted to
enact before Gov. James A.
Rhodes took office in !975 and
vetoed them. They fail¢, just
as income tax repeal did in
1972.
The newest political contest
involves a Democratic voter
registration bill. The rules
are so complex they have
some of the participants
scratching their heads. At
stake is the future of the
Republican party in Ohio.
Here's what's happening :
Democrats and organized
labor are trying to push
through a bill making voter
registration wide open in

•

Ohio.
They reason that there is a
great untapped source of
Democrats, and if they can
get them registered and
voting next year, they can
capture the governor's office ,
the state Apportionment
Board and put a lock on state
government until 1990.
But widely-publicized
opposition is mountlng,
helped along by Republican
Secretary of State Ted W.
Brown and a small band of
county election board
members called "Ohioans for
the Preservation of Honest
Elections."
The
opponents
are
targeting a provision called
"instant registration" in
which
they
portray
of
labor
truckloads
supporters and Democrats
descending on the polls on
election day, registering and
immediately voting
Democratic, naturally.
Armageddon is at hand for
the Republicaq party.
. So with passage of the bill
virtually assured and Gov.
Rhodes powerless to sustain a
veto, Brown and the opponent
group allt already planning a

referendum to repeal the law
after it'S enacted. Here's
where the masterminding
begins.
When the new Jaw is filed
with Brown's office, the oppo·
nents will have 90 days to
collect 184,321 signatures to
place the repealer on the
ballot .
U they collect enough sig·
natures, the law will be
suspended until after the
referendum, meaning no
election day registration,
house-to-house drives or any
of the other liberalized
procedu"res.
The referendum will he
held at the next general
election, provided it is no
sooner than 60 days after the
signature collection ends.
Here's where the opponents
can control when that
election is held.
They may want to shoot for
this Novemher, when there
are no major elections and no
burning issues. Percentagewise, they might have their
hest chance of repealing the
registration law . Off-year ·
elections bring out habitu~l
voters. Republicans. People
opposing instant registration.

�It - The Daily Sentinel. Middleport:Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesda y, M•y 18, 1977

Calendar .
WEDNESDAY
WINDING Trail Garden
Club. 8 p.m . Wcdncscav at
the home of Mrs. Wihu0:1 ~I't:!r­
rell . Members tu take seeds.

Mrs. Cora Beeg:le to have the
ecology report , Mrs. Ruth
Moor e, a paper on planting a
garden m a basket. Arrangemeut to be ··vuur Pleasu re
Using Flowers from Spring
Bulbs."
YARD sale Tuesday and
Wednesday at the corner of
Cole and Front Streets in
Middleport from 9 a.m. to
3:30 p.m . sponsored by the
Middleport Fire Department
Ladies Auxiliary.
THURSDAY
· . RO C K
SPR I NGS
GRANGE, 8 p.m . Thursday.
open meeting with new Hppli ca nts a nd prospective
members invited. Program
to be presented and the state
bakin g and sewing contests
to be held tha t night. A 6:30
p.m . potluck dinner will be
held with the meat to be pmvided.
BEl- LES AND Beaus
Western Square Dance Club,
6:30p.m. potluck dinner wit~
the meal to be provided,
gradua tion ceremony at 7
p.m . and dancing at 8 p.m. at
the Royal Oak recreation
hall.
PAST Officers of Racine
Eastern Star Thursday at the
home of Gretta Simpson at
7:30 p.m .
SATURDAY
BAKE sale Saturday 9 a.m.
on Post Office parking lot in
Racine. Sponsored by Racine
Eastern Stars. Any member
wishing baked goods to be
picked up are to call 949-2561
or 949-2051.
ICE Cream Social Saturday
6 p.m . at Rock Springs United
Methodist Church. Also , cake
and pie to be sold. ·
SQUARE Dance Saturday,
8:30 to II :30 at Racine Legion
Post Horne. Admission , $1.
BAKE SALE, Rulland
Department Store, 9:30 a.m .
Saturday by the United
Methodist Women of the
Rutland Church .

Apple Grove
News Notes . By Mrs. Herb.ert Roush
Dale
Pancake ,
Billy
Pancake, Joey Hill, all of.
Rogers, Ohio, spent Saturday
with Mr. and Mrs. Dallas ilill
and family .
Mike Rhodes of Griffin Air
Force Base, Ind., visited his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Rhodes and Karen.
Mr. and Mrs. Butch Wilson
and children , Mrs. Erma
Wilson, Mr. and Mrs. William
Wickline, Scott and Kyle,
enjoyed a cookout Sunday at
the home of Mrs. Kathryn
Hunt.
Mr. and Mrs. Dallas Hill,
Mrs. Dolly Wolfe, Mr. and
~rs . Marshall Roush, Joey

and Cortney, were dinner
guests on Mother's Day of
Mr . and Mrs. Darrell Norris
and Tracy.
Mrs. Facie Hayman spent
Wednesday
with
Mrs .
Beverly Cunningham and
!laughter at Racine .
David
Roush . Vickie
Roush , Rick Findley left
Monday with other seniors of
Souther Local High School on
a trip to Washington, D. C.,
Virginia Beach and other
places of interest.
Mrs. Marvene Beegle and
children of Spiller accompanied Mrs. Ferne B.
Hayman and Mrs . June
Wickersham to Sunday
School on Mother's Day at
East
Letart
Methodist
Church .
Mother 's Day weekend
guests of Mr. and Mrs . Roy
Donohew were their four sons
and families, Mr. and Mrs .
George
Donohew
and
children of Circleville: Mr.
and Mrs. Johnn ie Donohew
and family of Clovis, N.
Mex.; Mr . and Mrs. J eff
Donohew and children of ·
Belpre a nd Mr. and Mrs .
Greg Donohew of Columbus
and Mr. Donohew's sister .
Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Web~er and Anita of Cleveland.
Johnnie Donohew and family
are here for a longer visit .
Mrs. Frances Coe, Delores
Lemon of Carbon Hill visited
Monday with Mr. and Mrs.
Gerald Hayman , Mr. and
Mrs. Wallie Stover and Mrs .
Bertha Robinson at Racine.
Mother's Day guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Gerald Hayman and
Keith were Mr. and Mrs . TEd
Hi'yman and famil y of
Westerville,
and Mrs . _

ilr.

Conference on fund sources coming June 18

Grange dress contest
held at Rock Springs
Mt.,'IJ..:-':&gt; l 'uuut~ ·!\ rra two; 11
grange drt'~.'i euut~!;l was
hdd recently at a mt•ctilll-! uf
lhl' PomomJ (;rangt• (jt the •
Bo1·k Spnngs Gt·angc halL
Jud~cs were Hcbe!'Ca Cottl'l'ill . Pam Holcoml.umd Bet'·
tha Crip1&gt;cn . Winner::; in Class
A were Mrs. MargiJrct Hiin ~
ing , first, and Mrs. M&lt;:~x
Eidungcr. sccund ; in Class
C. Mrs. F;tetunger , first and
Mrs. Louise He:u.tford, se-cond : in Clas:; D. Mrs.
Etchingcr . first and Mrs.
Huse Hooper, second , and m
Class E, Mrs. E ichinger,
fir·st.
Ann uum;cd i:i l the rlteeting
w~s the Pumonu G ran~e in·
spection to be held on July 1
wlth the degree team to practke on June '24 al ; tht'
Hernlo&lt;: k halL Deputy Master

Buckeye Hills - Hocking Commission, Economic
Ad·
Valley Begional Develop- Development
m ent Oistrid is sponsorJng a ministration , Farmers Home
l·onfercncc
on funding AdminMration , Department
sourl'es for local governme nt of Housing and Urban
at Marietta College, Satur- Development, Ohio Department of Economic and
day .. I une I R.
Development ,
The con fer ence wiJJ provide Cqmmunity
local gove rnm ent offi cials a nd Ohi o Environmental
with a practi cal insight into Protection Agency.
The seminar is open to all
the procedu res involved in
public
serVice per so nn el
obtaining monies, and more
includin
g co unt y
co mimportantly, the Nlnference
missioners,
mayors,
coun·
format a llnws participants an
opportu nit y to have a
dia logue with Federal and
Slate people on one·tCHJne
basis.
The conference, des igned
to provide repres~ntatives
from various municipalities

Mt\tuJal .I uruau ;r ru 11 •UI Il'L'ti in·
llatcs ~~ f..,Hvws:
.Junt• 17, Columbia : July ~.
Laurel: July 2. Star: July !4,
Olnu Valley, "'"' June 9.
Ru(·k ~prin~s.
~J'Cl'tlon

Mc1gs Cuunty gra ngers
were inv1tcd tu Hoc.lney

f

Grange and Lo (iallii:i County
on June 18 for a f1 ve county
l»tnquel s lC:Irlm~ e:tt 6:30p.m.
Mrs. Lucille Leifheit aske&lt;l
that Uw granges tnterc!:itt.&gt;d in

!"'"

&lt;tisplaying at the Meigs County Fair notify her by July I.
Donations on a dcc.:ura lt."ti
cake were taken by the
Women's Ac.:t1 vitics Cununi tltie Chai rman with proceeds
to !Je used for expenses of
tltat committee.
Laure l Gr::mge served
refres hments to the 34
":"'mbers present.

TV.•.in Review
By JOAN HANAUER
UP! Television Writer
NEW YORK (UP! I - It ha s taken television a long time to
jump on the occult bandwagon but now there 's a high budget
television movie that has everything from orgies to a demon in
the upper ·echelons of the lower depths.
This particular devil's brew also has a dash of HoimesWatson and a goo d pinch of camp.
.·
The show is "Spectre," which NBC will present May 21, 9-11
p .m ., Eastern time . It is a splashy affair, full of eerie effects,
from the black cathedral of the demon Asmodeous to the
splendor of an over-decorated restored abbey to a bevy of
beasts, h'a gs and bad beauties.
The main characters are Robert Culp as American
criminologist Sebastian, and Gig Young as his physician
sidekick , Dr. Hamilton .
.
Off they go to England at the request of a woman who insists
her rich and powerful brother is under an' other-worldly evil
influence .
Culp a nd Young play it straight camp, with occasional
lapses.
" Are you a succubus?" Young nervously asks a scantily clad
woman who turns up in his waterbed. "No, but it has a nice
sound to it ," she r eplies with a smirk.
~ succub1;1s, as the qSpectre" script explains early on, is a
mmor demon who takes the form of a provocative woman to
rempt men through lust .
Sebastian and Hamilton travel to- lavish Cyon House, a
restored abbey wit)! a ~ruid 's circle of stones in the back yard.
Str Geoffrey Cyoo, hrs brother and troubled sister live in
splendor which includes an all-female staff, mostly dressed in
clinging halter{opped gowns,
Sebastian convinces the sceptical Dr. Hamilton that the
demon Asmodeus has been loosed at Cyon House, But which oi
the Cyons is he? Gordon Jackson, Mr. Hudson of "Upstairs
Downstairs," is a Scotland Yard inspector who eveptually als~
becomes. a believer.
·
The Americans learn the truth down in the subcellar, where
skeletons nestle in niches and a beautiful girl hangs cbained
upside down on the rocky wall.
·.
" Incredible - and fasCinating " one character says and
that about sums it up. ·
· '
·.
-'
"Spectre" was an NBC "development project, " which did
not make it for fall series prl!llentation, .possibly in part
because o f its high cost. There'a nothing worse than sleazy
demons and bargain beasts.
Another pilot that failed to mal!e the schedule is ABC 's " The
Harvey Korman Show," to be bi'badcast May 19, 9:30-10 p .m ..
Korman 1s under contract-to ABC, so he undoubredly will turn
up eventually with this or another format.
. The show casts Korman as a ham actor who runs an acting
schoolm h1s home and whose more flamboyant tendencies are
kept in checkby his beautiful but practical daughrer.
The 10 top network television programs for the week ending
May 15, according to the A.C. Nielsen Co., were :
I : " High Plains Drifter," (ABC Sunday movie ) ,2: "Lave rn•
and Shirley;" 3: " M-A-S-H;" 4: " Eiger Sanction" (NBC
Monday movie) ; S: "Father~ Best Reunion " (NBC Big
Event) ; 6: AmertcanJuniorMI.iS: 7: "Handle With Care·" 8:
" Miss USA ; " 9: "Happy Days;" 10 : Heavyweight Boxi~g Norton vs Bobick.
·

\

cilmen,
administrators,
planning commissions and
ot her individuals whose
positions require them to be
knowledgeable in the areas of
funding for their units of
gover nment. Further In·
formation can be obtained
from
Kimball
Shields,
Director of Economic and
O;&gt;mmunity
Development,
Buckeye Hills - Hoc king
Valley Regional Development District (614 ) 374-9436.

_Dinner 6 to 10
Tuesdays thru Saturdays

.Uve. Entertainment
Tuesdays thru saturdays

"BUFFEr' EVERY SUNDAY

12 to 4
We have over 140 Rooms and
Banquet or Meeting Room for 250 People
&lt;

---------~---------

Mrs.

Nick Wright accepts plaque
MASoN, W. Va . - Olston 0 . (Nick ) Wright, Mason , left,
presrdent of the West Virginia Trappers Assn., is
acceptln~ a~ award from Dave Brantner, president of the
W. Va . Wtldlife Federation that singles out the trappers as
the nation's "Conservation Group of 1977. "
The West Virginia Trappers Assn. was chosen from
over 8000 eligible affiliate groups of the National Wildlife
Federation . Awards we represented in specia l cer emonies
during the trappers annual spring meeting at Glenville
recently.
The national citation from Wildlife President G. Ray
Arnett srud : " (congratulate you and your membership
for outstanding and distinguished service in the fields of
natural resource m anage ment and environmenta l
education during 1976. Your collective efforts have served
to emphasite the importance of an alert, active and
aggressive local conservati on club as the essential
ingredient of an efficient and effective state Federation ."

leave soon for Louisville, Ky. , of Jeffery, W. Va ., visited Mr.
lomaketheir home. Mr . Bass
ha s heen appointed staff
manager of the insurance
agency there .
Mr. and Mrs . Sidney Hoge r

and Mrs . Arnold Hupp
Sunday evening .
George Hupp is still confined to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.

BOB McCLURE at McClure's Dairy Isle .

Pomeroy

••

UNIT NOW

AT

$24995

MARK LAWSON working with Dick Gaul at Gaul's
Grocery.

•

AND WE'LL
GIVE YOU
THE GRATE

,.•

..

FREE!

.•••'·

PICKENS
HARDWARE
MASON, W. VA.

~

•

•••

~

HOURS :
Mon ., Thurs.,&amp; Sat . B: 00 - 5: 30
8:00 - 8: 00

~

•

•
•

•·

•••

.

,.
•

"
••
•

It's time to fix up your
home for Spring. Big
handyman specials ••.

" II'

NO. 1

PRE-CUTS

4" X 10 fl .
Solid or
Perforated

92-5/8
1 WEEK ONLY

WEEK ONLY

ROOF

.

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W ' SHEETING GRADE

PLYWOOD ...... -··-~-~-~-~~-~~~~- .. ~7~heet

=-------

1 WEEK ONLY

1 WEEK ONLY

ALUMINUM
WINDOWS

ROOFING
SHINGLES

SIZES

3030 ............... 121.56
1 WEEK ONLY

2X12 12'
2X10 10'
2X8 8'

Per Thousand

•
'

JOHN EVANS working at Newell's Service Station .

Racine Social Events

"

SEWER &amp; DRAIN

COATING

..:;:.

$}780

3020 •··•••········· 117.34
2020 ................ 115.01

per. sq.

PRIME
16 tt .
SIDING ........ ~~~-~~~.~~-'~.-~28 50 sq.

ROOF TRUSSES
24 FOOT

26 FOOT

28 FOOT

"'· parents ,

AVAILABLE
lWEEKONLY - AVAlLABILlTY
TOPRICE SALE

SUBJECT

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN MATERIALS CO.

By Mrs . Francis Morris
,.
Mr. and Mrs. Geo rge
:;:: Cleland and daughter, Vickie,
: • of Ashley, Bruce Cleland of
• Pomeroy , Route 3, David
:". Cleland and two children of
! . Belpre, Mr. and Mrs. Marion
~ ~. Sloter and children and Mr.
: . and Mrs.- Earl Cleland and
'"' three sons, lo'cal, spent
: "" Moth er's Day with th eir
: .:: mother, Mrs . Mae Cleland .
:_
Miss Carol Foster returned
to her home a t Livonia,
Mich ., after spending two
weeks with her gra ndpa rents,
Mr . and Mrs. Ralph Webb
and Mrs . Edward Foster .
Mr. and Mrs . Don Jr .
Walker and children of Dixie,
W. Va. were guests of his
~ ... parents, Rev . and Mrs. Don
' Walker .
Mr. and Mrs. Bill McKenzie
and children of Ga llipolis
visit ed Mr. and Mrs . Roy
: Riffle Saturday afternoon.
:' Mr . and Mrs. Ted Bailey ,
: Michael, Jori and Christa , of
Patriot, were Mother's Day
•• dinner guests of his parents,
Mr. and Mrs . Otis Bailey.
, Afternoon guests were Mr.
~- and Mrs. Lawrence Theiss of
•,. Vinton.
•
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Hart
• a nd children of Newark spent
: the weekend with his parents,
~ Mr. and Mrs. Rona ld Hart.
:
Bobby Joe Adams and
•w daughter, Melanie , wer e
... dinner guests of Mr: and Mrs.
~, J :;tck Adams , Mother's Day.
::
Pam Parsons of Columbus
:; spent the weekend with her
• · brother-in-law and sister, Mr .
• and Mrs . Bob Spaun and
:. Tina.
:,
Mr . and Mrs . Kenneth
: . Turley a nd sons spent
:: Mother's Day wit'h their

-

DELIVERY

Mr . and

Mr s.

:; Clarence Turley at Gallipolis
and Mr . and Mrs. Sheridan
:;., Russell , Jr . at Mason, W.Va.
:: Brian Sayre o£ Jackson is
:::; spending a week with his
..-.. great·grandparents, Mr. and
:;.. Mrs. Herbert Sayre. Th ey
!:" enjoyed Mother'S Day dinner
: in Belpre and visited Mr . and
• Mrs. Norman Styer at
l Waterford in the afternoon .
••
Weekend and Mother 's Day
: guests of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph
: Badgley were Mr. and Mrs.
: Steve Badley, Kelli and Amy
: Jo, o~ Columbus, Mr. and
Mrs . Brian Simpson and
, children of Baltimore and
'
M~s. Helen Simpson. locaL

=:-·

Four student~ of Eastern
High School participate in
Distributive Education at
Meigs High near Pomeroy

Mr . Henry Roush accompanied by his daughterin-law, Mrs. Gamet Roush,
left April 27 for Oklahoma
City , Okla., to attend the
wedding of his greatg randda ug ht e r and Mrs.
Roush' s g r a ndaughter ,
Terrol Jacobs, daughter of
M.-Sgt. Steven and Wanda
Roush Jacobs on April 29 .
They returned home May 7
after visiting M. Sgt. and
Mrs. Steven Jacobs and son,
Jeff. Mr . and Mrs. Harry
Wilford met them at the
airpo rt in Columbus.
Mr . and Mrs. Linley Hart ,
Henry Roush and Dale
Roush were Sunday , May 8,
afternoon dinner guests , of
Mr . and Mrs . David Roush
a nd children, Loreli ·and
Benny in Columbus. Other
guests in their hom e were
Mrs. Gertrude Roush and
daughter, Suzie . They a ll
attended the Red Poppy
Ballet at the Ohio Theatre .
Loreli was a member of the
cast:

Parkersburg to see Paul
Peck who is confined to
Worthington
Manor
at
Parkersburg where he is
being ca red for following a
stroke.
Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Smith
visited their son-in-law and
daughter , Mr . and Mrs .
Larry Stanley and Anna at
Edison the pa st weekend .
Mr . and Mrs. John Culwell
of O;&gt;[umbus were guests of
his brother and sister-in-law,
Mr . and Mrs. William Culwell
on Saturday,
Rose Greenlees Hooper,
first place winner in the
National Grange Sewin g
O;&gt;ntest at Columbia Grange,
placed second in Class D in
the Meigs County Pomona
Grange Contest. Columbia
Grange members attending
Pomona Grange were Earl
Starkey, Bertha Crippen and
Mr . and Mrs. Mendal Jordan.
Carpe nter Baptist Church
honored
the
mothers
present on Sunday with
Oma
Starkey,
oldest
mother; Mary Brady, youngest mother; Helen J effer s, mother with .the most
children , and Joan Nelson,
y&lt;Jungest grandmother, being
given flowers.
.
The Busy BEe Society of
the Carpenter Baptist Church
will hold their rummage .and
bake sa le a t the Columbia
Townhouse on May 21 from 1
a . m. until 4 p. m.
Mothers were honored at
Temple United Methodis t
Church with Murl Ga laway
being th e oldest mother
present ; Ginger Kirkendall ,
the youngest . mother, a ~d
Mrs . M. Wri ght, having th e
most children. Each mother

"'

7: JO p.m. and Sunday

present was given a flower Mr. and Mrs, Jerry Stansbury , Rita and Aaron, and
pla nt.
The United Methodist Wanda Tumcr, local.
Women' s group of the Temple
Church met wi th Ava
Gr eenlees on Wed nesday
evening. Plans were mad~ to
contribute to vacation bibl e
schooL The devotions, using
the theme. mother, were
give n by Mu ra] Galaway ,
assisted by other members
us ing readings, poems and
sc ripture . A m ee ting is
planned in Belpre , Ohio . with
Mr . and Mrs . floward
Stanley,
former
loca l
·
residents.
Recent guests of Mr . and
Mrs. Dale Stansb ury were
their children a nd families,
Mr . and Mrs. Clair D.
Stansbury and child ren, Mr .
a nd Mrs. Bob .Barton and son,
Groveport, Mr. and Mrs.
Larry Stans bury a nd sons,
Reynold sbu rg. a long with

10

a.m . and 6 p .m .

.*'-.'...
, .- "' ....' . ..·.

lassie -tie

~

'.

BEIGE
PIGSKIN

s20.00

Ventilat ed foolwear for men is always in
fashion for warm · we ather l e i sure
li v ing . . ·. especial ly when t hey' r e Hush
Puppies comfort casual s. Gr eat w ith slacks
and shirt s or in a dressed up blazer look.
And Hush Puppies casuals are cr eated
comfortab le ... easy -to-ca r e for .

Gibson
17.0 Cu.Ft.
Model RT 17F 3

Hartley's Shoes
MI DOLE OF UPPER BLOCK
POMEROY, OHIO
OPEN :
9 a.m . to 5 p .m. Mon . thru Thur s.
9 a .m . to 8 p.m. Fr iday
Saturday 9 a.m . to 5 p.m .

Carpenter
Personals
Mr . and Mrs . Gl e n
Gassaway, Powell, 0 ., a nd
Mrs . F r ed Whetnall of
Col umbu s spe nt Mother' s
Day Weekend here with the
Gassaways' daughter a nd ·
family, Mr. a nd Mrs . William
Miller, Debbie and Laura .
Conn ie Akers and dau ghter,
Linda , Albany, also visited
her parents on Mother's Day .
Those a tt ending a family
gathering at the home of Mr .
and Mrs. Lavern Jorda n in
honor of Danny Jordan's
birthday on Sunday were Mr .
and Mrs. Reed Jeffers, Mr .
and Mrs . Danny Dordan and
Daren, Mr . and Mrs. Ja ck
Jordan and Ja son, Id a
Dennison, David Llewelyn,
Jennie and Melissa, and the
host family, Mr. and Mrs.
Lavern Jordan, Betty Jean
and Jerrie Sue.
Goldie Gillog ly s pent
Mother's Day at th e hom e of
her son-in-law and daughter,
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur r.rabtree. ·
W. C. Peck accompanied
Frank Epple; Middleport, to

Mike Willi s
speaker

.TIM BING worKmg at Ridenour's TV and Appliance
Stor e .

Bob McClure, John Evans, Jim Bing and Mark Lawson are
four students of Eastern High School who par ticipated in the
DIStributiVe Educatton prog ram at Meigs High School this
year.
Each student received practical experience whi1ewo(king
for McC1ur~ 's Dairy Isle in Middleport, Newell 's $unoco
Servtce St~hon m Chester, Ridneours TV and Appliances in
Chester, and Gaut:s M!'fket in Chesler respectively. It is only
throu!(h the parttctpatlon of these employers that this type of
practical expenence can be offered to students that are
~terested in a career in various business areas. The average
high school student will spend approximately 1,080 hours in
school each year.
These students, however, have spent approximately 1780
hours apiece in training during their senior year . This time
was made up of 540 hours in classroom time and an average of
124U hours of practical training at their training s tations.
In addition to their training , all of them also found time for
extracurricular activities. All four were starting members of
the Eastern Eagles football team last fa ll and John Evans was
a pitcher for the Eagles baseball team this spring .

•

•

~~

at We stside
church of Christ
We st Main St .

N

•••

PIPE _

59,

Gospel Meeting,
May 23 .thru
May 29th

..•
BUY THE
COMPLETE

Tom
Norris
e ntered
Veterans Memory Hospital
-on Tuesday and was
sc hedule d
for
su rg ery
Thursday .
Mr . and Mrs . Bob Casper
and grandson , Kevin Dye of
O;&gt;Iumbus were Mother's Day
guests of Mrs. Dolly Wolfe.
Bill Connolly of Ann Arbor,
Mi ch ., accompanied the
Caspers here and was a
Saturday night guest of Mr .
and Mrs. Dallas Hill .
Mr. and Mrs. Steve .Norri s
of Long Bottom spent
Mother 's Day with Mrs.
Pearl Norris.

Brooke,

husband as " Mr . Brooke,"
testified the senator did no!
give her enough money for
food and household expenses
and said she was forced to
wear second-hand clotbes.
Under the se tUement, to be
finalized Wednesday, Mrs.
Brooke re&lt;.., ives title to the
couple's three homes - one
in Newton, Mass., and two in
the Caribbean - and $16,000 a
year in alimony .

continu&lt;Jlly re£erring to her

in th'"e eight counti es se rved

POINT PLEASANT
INN

wnch 11 to 2
Mond&amp;,s thru 'Saturdays

mate,

~

Sl DING

RT. 62 N., PT. PLEASANT
PH. 67~276
Breakfast 6 to 11
Mondays thru Sundays

I

..••

5 GALLON
Robert Hart and children, Jerry Hill house at Letart.
Mrs. Beverly Cunningham
Mr. and Mrs. Kenny Bass
and daughter of Racine and enjoyed a vacation in the
Mrs . Linda Jewell and Bahama Islands. They were
children of Letart , W. Va .
accompanied by Mr. and
Mr. and Mrs . Edward Mrs. Mike Walker. The two
Lawson and son have pur- • couples ivon the trip from
chased the Pete Cundiff Matlonal Life and Accident
res idence at Syracuse and · i!Uiurance Company. Mr. and
moved there from the former Mrs. Bass and family will

I

I

a

by Buckeye Hills - Hocking
Valley Regional Development District an opportunity
to meet with and question ··
State and Federal a d·
ministrators on funding and
grantsmanship . Representatives from the following
agencies will participate :
-Appalachian
Regional

llltOOKES SETTLE
CAMBR IDGE ,
Mass .
r UPIJ
Sen. F.dward W.
--Brooke,
R·Mass .,
and
ht s
wtfc
of
3U
years, Hemig.ia, reached
a
tentative
di\'Qrce
settlement Monday at a
hearing after Mrs. Brook~
so bbingly testified about allegL'&lt;I mistreatment by her

Ounlr!y h'&gt;;Hrn• !' m .g kl&gt; Plt5 o
Qr ( I'll !luY
h p•)St tron &lt;llf!u·,t·
.J IJh• Qlrri••-Ou l ~. t l{~:vos 2 qlniP:r rt uro.,rH' r s

liHl t • 1 !;, ~ ';;· up'r•."ltllr&lt;)ll •·t';; ,u 1r !
rc; ; · rna-;t.? r capaUIIrt-y

....

\-

Refrigerator Freezer

-

r~

.1
'.

"'

Frost*Ciear

co.nvl'rlrhlf'·

I

.1
I

..

'

15.3cu.ft.

$299

Prices Good May 18
Thru May 22
Whil e Quantitie s La st
Quantity Righl s Reserved

Kodacolor II Cl26-20
For Color Prints
20 Exposutres · ·

89~
Nelson's Reg . $1.55

~4

Burry! Stop in today!

·~4

·~4

RIDENOUR ~:ANCE ~~~
RACINE, OHIO
949-2020

'

CHESTER, OHIO
985-3307

~~

.· ~¢:

:&lt;~¢-~

�0

13-The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o., Wednesday, May 18, 1m

12 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Wedn&lt;!sda), Mar 18. 1977

Expanded weather servi~e
could aid food production
IVASIUNGTON (UP!) Tw o government agencies
art' preparing to expand a n

expt· rimental

weath er

sen iu~ which experts say
r fluld produce dr amat ic

Improvements in production

on the fann front
L"fficiency for farmers.
The heart of th e program is
a 'net work of volunteer
we&lt;tU1er reporters who use
touch-tone phones to send
repQrls
on
temper ature s,

local
r a infall ,

storms and other weather
co n ~ i lio ns directly to a

computer ce nter .

The "network " program
began experimentally in
Maryland last Ju ly with a
reporting system including 80
volunteers in 20 counties.
Ag riculture Seereta ry Bob
Bergland announced Tuesday
that the test will be expanded
this summer to a number of

other

areas

including

California 's San Joaquin

valley, eastern Colorado ,
part of Washington state,
Michigan 's lower peninsula,
all of Delawa re and part of
Virginia .
Later, another spokesman
said, offi cials of the

Agricu lture

Department 's
Extension Service and the

Co mm erce

Department' s

Na tional Weather Servit't:' -

th e tw o federal agencies
coo perating in the program
hope to ex pand to
nationwid e covera ge.
No date has been set for
nationwide coverage, but one
source ind iCated it could be
ordered late this year or in
19i8.

Howard Lell!lert, an Extension officia1, said the network
reports
give
weather

specialists and farm experts
inforrriation on ''grou nd
truth "
the exact
tempera lure or amount of
rain in specific, scattered

locations - which they have
never been able to get before .
Thunderstorms· and hailstorms can be plotted more
accurately than in the past,
and farmers in their path can

be
warn ed .
Detailed
temperature and moisture
reports from farming areas
can be used by agricultural
experts to predict wh en and
where insect pests , often
acutely sensitive to weather

conditions, will emerge and
become serious threats.
"The weather program will
cover sueh infOrmation as the

right
combi na tion
of
temperature and humidity
for cutting hay, when forage
crops will rea ch their
.maximum nutritive .level and
should be harvested , when to
begin control measures
against insect and disease
outbreaks, when to irrigate,

SAVE

OFF
ON LAWN FURNITURE
IN STOCK

I

LARRY'S
WAYSIDE FURNITURE
Third &amp; Olive

Gallipolis, 0.

and when to apply fertilizer
for maximum benefit ,"
Bergland said in a statement.
Planning for the new
weather pro gra m began
before Bergland took office,
but it fit neatly into his
personal campaign to make
better use of weather
information in reduci,ng both
the natural and economic
risks of farming. He has also
launched an effort aimed at
makin g use of long-range
weather data to help predict
the odds on good and bad crop
conditions.

Apple·Grove
News Notes
Mr. a.nd Mrs. Jack' Ables
spent Mother's Day with their
children at the home ol Vickie
Ables at Canal Winchester.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Ronnie Ables, Mr . and Mrs.
Laurence Ables and Linda
Griffith.
Mr. and ·Mrs . Lowell
Burton and daughter, Sherry,
of Columbus were Mother's
Day guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Vernon Do,pohue.
A cookout was enjoyed over
the weekend at Roush 's
Landing,
Racine,
to
celebrate the · birthday of
Charles Pyles and Joyce
Manuel , hosted by Don
Manuel and Mrs. Charles
Pyles. Others attending
besides those named were
Mr. and Mrs. Buddy Pyles,
Randy Pyles, Mr. and Mrs.
Mike lhle and Kevin of
Racine, Donnita and Robin
Manuel.
There will be a Memorial
Day dinner at the Letart
Falls Community Hall
Sunday. May 29.
Flowers were given to each
who 'attended
mother
the
lo cal
Methodist
Church on Mother'~ Day
by Mr. and Mrs. Dallas
Hill and son. Art Hill.

(:oral Ieeth 11re
prettier,

Jury given Rife case today

lon~er

lasting, too
TOKYO tUPil - The
World's best false teeth In
the future will be made
from coral. a Japanese

dental scientis t
Wednesday.

said

Dr . lchlro Yamashita

told a meellng of the Japan
Oral Surgery Society In
Osaka that coral lasts
longer than gold , silver or
rera mir tt&gt;eth .
Yasashita, an assistant

events leading up to the
robber y in cludin g alleged
conversations with Rile, the
robbery itself, stoppage of a
blue •nd whit e Oldsmobile by
l 'll Y poli ce officers, the return
to the Queen Bee Hotel
following the robbery, and
dt.vi sion of the robbery 's
proceeds.
He said the money was
divided in room 21 , (Rile's
room ), then the pants !taken
from the victim s' were
placed in pillow cases and
dumped in the Ohio River.
On cross-examination by
Atty .
Co nl ey ,
Lawson
recalled his alleged con·
versation with Rife on Feb.
11, the day before the robbery .
Con ley ,
using
statement s given by the
Lawson boys to Gallia County
sheriff's deputies on Sunday,
Feb. 13, kept asking about
apparent descrepandes he
gave then and was testifying
to Tuesday.
He said in the Feb. II
conversation , Rife said he
would furnish the guns and a
car. Lawson said he and his
cousin, Teddy Lawson. spent
that night in Columbus with
his mother.
The first witness called by
the defense was Robert
Spears, Kanau ga, owner of
the Colony Inn (Queen Bee)
who had been named as a co-

Deliberation was expected

to begin late this morn ing in
the complicity trial of 47yea r·old Herbert · Hife of
(;alJipolis chal'f(ed in the Feb.
12 ag~ra v a t e d ·• pants 1 '
robbery of the Ohi o Valley
Li ve stoc k
Yard s,
in
Gallipolis.
The case will go to the jury
following final arguments
this momjng by Prosecuting
Attorney Joseph L. Cain and
defen se counsel William
Conley. Both rested their
cases Tuesday afternoon, the

second day of the trial.
professor at the Tokyo
The prosecution rested at
Univ ers it y school of 2:30 p.m. following the
medicine, said he had been testimony of one of its key
makin g experimental false witnesses, Clarence Alonzo
teeth lor four years with Lawson, Jr., one of the two
deep water cor~l from the
persons who has admitted
East China Sea.
committing the robbery.
He said co ral Is much
Clarence A. Lawson Jr. and
harder than other sub- Teddy Lawson have already
stances used in dentures,
pleaded g uilt y to fourth
cannot be eroded by body degree feloni es involving th e
or food acids and does nut
armed robbery . of the
Inflame the gums.
stockyards . They fa ce prison
:-:·:·&gt;:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:-:.:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:-:·:·&gt;:·:·:-:·:·:·:·&gt;:·:.:·:-:·&gt; terms of six months to five
years. Rife is charged with
planning the robbery and
driving the car involved in it.
Clarence Lawson gave a
detailed
account on th e
By Glenna Shuler
Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Conkle and Cindy spent a
weekend with Mr. and Mrs. , ca ll ed on Mr . and Mrs .
Homer Cline at Marysville. Adolph Smith in Ja ckson
Mrs . Shirl ey Ca rruth er s recently .
Mr. and Mrs. Steve Taylor
ha s returned to her home
and
soli of Baltimore , Ohio,
here a ft er spen din g two
were
recent overnight guests
weeks with her mother, Mrs.
of
Mr
. and Mrs. Ronni e
Hall and other relatives in
· Sargent and children .
Alexandria, Va.
Johnny Leach was a recent
Mr. and Mrs. Ca rl Rath·
overnight
guest of his cousin,
bum of Gallipolis ca lled on
Keith
Veith,
on George's
Mr. and Mrs. John Veith a
Creek
Road.
day recently.
Mr. and Mrs. Denny Spires ,
Mr. and Mrs . Denny Spires
Denise,
Julie and Stephen
and Stephen called on Mrs.
ca
lled
on
Mrs. Muriel Spires
Florence Caldwell and
and
frma
Bales.
Also visiting
Brenda Sizemore a day
were
Mr.
and
Mrs.
George
recently.
Markin
and
Ralph
Bales.
Vi siting Rev . and Mrs.
Mr. and Mr s. Charle s
Raymond Fife on Sunday
Young
and Darrell of Little
were Mr. and Mrs. Buddy
Kyger
Rd
. and Mr. and Mrs-.
Fife and Linda of Turkey
Alva
Rife,
Bt. I, Middleport,
Run, Mr. and Mrs. Roscoe E.
Mr.
and Mrs. Marlin
visited
Fife of Eno, Mr. and Mrs.
Rife
a
day
rec
ently.
Jack Riggs and Pam, Letart
Mrs.
JoAnn
Conkle
spent a
Falls, W. Va .. Mr. and Mrs.
George Keefer of Leon, W. day recently with Mr. and
Va ., Mr. and Mrs. James Mrs . Charles Pyles at
Keefer of Leon , Mr. and Mrs. Gallipolis Ferr,y, W. Va .
Calling on Mr. and Mrs .
Joe Keefer and Mrs.
Joseph
Leach and Arthur on
Catherine Durst of Leon .
Sunday
were Mr . and Mrs .
Mr. and Mrs. Marlin Rife
Jay
McGhee
, Carol Sue ,
spent a day reeently with Mr.
and Christina
David,Pafricia
and Mrs . .Hurley Rife and
Mr.
and Mrs .
of
Langsville,
children in Wellston.
Don
Leach,
Marcia,
Johnny
Keith
Bradbury
of
and
Roger
,
Mr
.
and
Mrs.
Columb us. spent Mother's
Charles
Leach,
Chad
and
Day with Mrs. Malinda
Rt.
1,
Vinton,
and
Joey
Chris,
Bradbury. Mrs. Allie Hawley
spent Saturday with he r Leach , Rio Grande.
Callin g on Mr. and Mrs.
mother.
Alex
Shuler recently were
Mr . and Mrs. Asel Searls of
Mr.
and
Mrs. William Larkin,
Dayton and Mrs. Rosa Searls
Pvt.
Martin
Shuler, Fort
of Middleport and M'rs. Joan
Jackson,
S.
C.,
Tony Hutton,
Fife and Melissa spent a day
recently with Mr. and Mrs. Rutland , Miss Jennifer
Ohlinger, Po111eroy, Mr. and
Paul Searls.
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Leach Mrs. Clarence Searls; Mrs.
Terry , &amp;earls and daughter ,
Rt. I, Bidwell, Mrs. L&lt;&gt;uise
Roush, Old Kyger, Mr. and
Mothers receiVIng flowers Mrs . Leo · Rupe, Kyger ,
were Mrs. Dolly Wolfe, Mrs. Kenneth Ralph , Old Kyger ,
Lucille Rhodes, Mrs. Bernice Mrs . Beulah Shuler and
Roush, Mrs. Peggy Hill, Mrs. Martha Ann and Steven , Miss
Alice Balser, Mrs. Herbert Crissie Jones, Langsville.
Roush,, Mrs. Anna Ally , Mrs.
Shirley Ables, Mrs. Dee

Storys Run

conspirator in the crime , but

was found not guilty last
month.
Deni se McGinn ess, onetime bar maid at the Colony
Inn, was the next defense
witness. She described Rife's
emotional state during the
day of the robbery. She said
Rife was in the bar at the
time it occurred. She said
Rife had l)een arguing with
his ex-wile that day and was
drinking heavily. She said he
was involved in a fight with
another bar patron, James
Rece between 11 :15 and 11:30
p.m. that night.
She remembered the time
because she had asked
Sherman Thompson, anoth er
bar patron , what time it was.
Sherman Thompson, Rio
Grande, form er resident of
the Colony Inn , followed for
the defense. ·Thompson said
he witnessed a disturbance at
the bar bet ween Rife and
Rese which occurred between
11: 15 p.m. and 11 :30 p.m.
Thompson, who admitted to
staying
with · Den ise
McGinness at the Colony Inn,

Mrs . Stella Jarrell , Mrs.
Christy Roush, Mrs. Dorothy
Roseberry , Mrs . Delores
Casper, Mrs. lona Hupp, Mrs.
Nancy Russell, Mrs. Bertha
Robinson, Mrs. Florence
Smith, Mrs. Ruth Snodgrass.
Mrs. Dolly Wolfe received a
flower for th e oldest mother
present and Mrs. Jan Norris
the youngest mother present.
Mr . and Mrs. Jeff Miller of
Middleport and Franklin
LeWis of Pomeroy Route
visited Mr. and Mrs. Herbert
Miller.

While Quantities La st
Quantity Rights Reserved

...........

2

49

Nelson's Reg. $ 1.09

NESTEA

ROBIN HOOD
ALL PURPOSE

FLOUR

J oz.
Jar

Dorothy M . Johnston
Clerk
Dated April 29, 1977

PORK &amp;
·BEANS

5 Lb . Bag.

$}49
BROUGHTONS

COTTAGE CHEESE
24 oz . carton

89~

14 .5

oz.

5/$1 00
ROUGHTONS
ASSORTED FLAVORS
DAIRYLAND

ICE CREAM
lh Gallon 89~

PRODUCE SPECIALS

SALAD TOMATOES

LB.
FRENCH CITY

WIENERS ••••••••••••
12

OL- Pkq.

N.OTICE OF ELECTION
ON TAX LEVY IN
excess OF THE
TEN MILL LIMITATION
N OTI CE iS hereby given
that in pursuance ol a
Resolution of the Board of
Edu cat ion of the M eigs Lo cal
Sc hoo l
D lst r icL .
Me igs
CountY, Otdo , passed on the
21st day of · Febr uary , 1971,
there will be submitted to a
vote of the people of said
School Di stri ct at a Specia l
ELECT ION to be held in the
Meigs Local Schoo l D istrict,
OhiO , at the regu lar places of
vot i ng therein . on Tuesday ,
the 7th day of June, 19 77, the
quest ion of levying , in excess
of the ter1 mill limitat ion, for
the benefi t of Meigs ' Local
Schoo) D istrict for the pur po se o f
Current ex pen ses of the
sc hool distri ct .
Said ta x being : a renewal
of an ex isting tax of 7.5 mills
t o run tor a continuing period
of lime.

Ernest A . Wingett
Cha i rman

"' "'"~

SMOKED

c
ePlus
T,ox &amp; Deposit

i9~

·TEETERS BRAND

RETURNABLE BOTTLES

NOTICE OF ELECTION
OF TAX LEVY IN
excess OF THe
TEN MILL LIMITATION
N OTICE Is hereby given
that in pursuance of a
Re solut ion of the Board of
County Com m iss lon ers of the
Cou nty of Me igs, Pomeroy,
Oh io , J)assed on the 19th day
ol March , 1977, there Will be
su bmitted to a .... ote of the
people of said County at a·
Spec ial ELECTION to beheld
in the County of Meigs , Ohio ,
at the regu l ar place.s o'f voting
therein, on Tuesday , the 7th
day of June • . 19 77, the
question of levy ing . in excess
of the ten mill l im itation , for
the benef it of Meigs County
for the purpos e of the
ma int.enance and operat ion of
schools, tra i ning centers ,
wo-rkshops and clin ics tor
m entally retarded persons .
Said ta x being · a renewal
of 0.20 mill and an inc r ease of
0.80 mill to coristitule a ta x of
one mill to rvn tor a con .
t inu ing period of time .

1_5) 4, n. 18. 2s. 4tc

PICNIC

32 oz.
Bottles

·10 Qlpsules

Limit I Please

79~

Prices Effective ThuiSday thru Sunday

COCA-COLA

I

CONTAC

REVIVAL NOTED
GUYSVILLE
The
Guysville Community Church
will hold a revival the week of
May 23. Evangelist Rev.
David Glass, Cooksville, will
be featured at the meetings
scheduled to begin at 7:30
Monday through Friday .
There will be special singing.
Pastor Elswick invites the
public.

·,a,

at a rate not u.ceeding 7.5
mills for each one dollar .of
\o' aluation . which amounts t o
seventy -five cents for each
one hundred dollars of
.,.~ luatlon , for a continuing
period of time .
The Pol ls for said Election
will be open at 6:30 o'clock
A.M . and remain open un.tll
7: JOo 'c lock P .M . of said day .
By order of the Board of
Elections, of Meigs County ,
Ohio .

CONTAC

·ffi·

BREAD

Su"day

1~.?

BEN* FRANKLIN

rf "~
~ .~

Dorothy M . Johnston
Clerk
Dated April 29 , 1977
(5) "'· n,
2s, 4!.£.

Doro thy M . J ohnston
Clerk
Dated April 29, 19 77
JJ.l~ 1J.~ 181 25 , 4tc

POMEROY

12-HOUR
RELIEF

9 til 7
Mon.-Sat.
10 til 5

Reg. 12.49

Carry-w it h t ab le t op g ri ll
has 3-posl t ion adjust. 9 in. high. Durable steel.

Spencer, Mrs. Barbara Hunt,

OPEN
SHOPPERS

13-in. Size!

PICNIC
GRILL

at a rate not exceed ing s.o
mi lls for each one hundred
dollars Of va l ua t ion . fo r a
continuing period of time .
Tt1e Polls for said Electlo,
w ilt be open at 6:30 o'ctoek
A .M . and rema ~n open un t i l
7 : 30o'ctoc k P .M . of said day .
Bv order of the Board or
Elect ions , of MeigS County,
OhiO .
·
Ernest A . W ingett
Chairman

at a rate not exceeding l.O
mill for each one dollar of
va luation , which amounts to
ten cents for eacn one h.un dred dollars of .,.aluat ion , for
a continUing per i&amp;d of time .
The Poll~ lor said Election
w i l l be open ~~ 6: 30 o'clock
A .M . a nd remain . open until
7 : 30 o'clock t=t .M . of said da·y .
By order of the Board of
Elections, of Meigs county ,
Ohio .
·
Ernest A. Wingett
Cha irman

Prices Good May 18
. Thru May 22

GOLDEN ISLE

WE WELCOME
FOOD STAMP

up Lonnie Lawson around II
said he would not lie in thi s p.m. Saturday, Feb . 12, but
matter to protect Rile , after bein g stopped by P!l.
because Herb was going with Bernard Goelling on Seeond
his wife.
Ave. nea r Thaler Ford, he
James D. Rece, Rt. I, ·got out of the car on the
Gallipolis. partici pant in th e return trip pass the Queen
fight , al so testified con· ·
cerning it. He said it occurred Bee.
Rife said he had been
around II :30 p.m.
drinking heavily that day and
Rece said Rife got loud and
he was just trying to be a was " drunk." He said he told
Pll . Goelling that he was on
''peacemaker" when Herb diet medi cation . He denied
struck him.
having participated in the
Carl Askew , RL 2,
Gallipolis, was called · as a robbery and denied any
divi sion of the robbe ry
character witness for Rife.
proceeds in his room at the
Askew , owner of the tavern l Queen Bee. He 'maintained
said he had known Rile for 25 his innocence stating, "I am
years and that Rife wa s a
not a bad person, but I do
trusted employee.
drink too much and fight too
At 4:13p.m. the defendant , much .'' He said he is too easy
Herb Rife·, took the stand on
going which is probably one
his own behalf.
of
the reasons he is now in
He said he had sold th e
oourt.
Rife said he has neve r
Queen Bee to Bob Spears last
owned
a
shotgun in his life but
July. He said he did not see
has
owned
pistols. He said he
the Lawson boys on Friday,
had
played
cards several
Feb. 11 and on Saturday, he
times at the Ohio Valley
had been go ing back and
Stockyards.
He said he was
forth to Carl's Tavern to see
involved
in
the fight with
his ex-wife. He sa1d he did
Reece
the
night
of the robdrive Teddy Lawson ctown to bery.
·
Third Ave. where they picked

NOTICE OF ELECTION
ON TAX LEVY
IN EXCESS OF THE
TEN MILL LIMITATION
NOTICE Is hereby given
that in Dursuance ot a
Resolut ion of the Board of
Educat ion of the Eastern
Local School D istricf. Meigs
County . Ohio . passed on rhe
Sth day of April. 1971 , there
w ill be submitted to a vote of
U'le people of sa id Sct'!ool
D i str i ct
at
a
Spec f al
ELECTION to be held in the
Eastern
Local
School
D i str lcJ, Oh io at the regular
places or vot ing therein . on
Tuesady, the 71h day of June .
1977 , the question of levying ,
in excess o l the ten mill
li mitation , for the benef it of
Easter n Local School District
for the purpose of
Current expenses
Sa id tax being : an ad .
dit ional tax 0 1 S.O mills to run
for a EOntln u ing period of
ti me .

59~

PA LB.
PKG.

NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT' OF
TRANSPORTATION
Columbus. Ohio
May 6. 1'77
Contract Sales Legal
Copy No. 17 -640
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
Seated proposals will be
received at the office of the
Director
ot
the
Ohio
Departmen t
of
Trans portation . Col u mb u s, Ohio,
until
10 : 00
A .M ., Ohio
Standard T im e, Thursday ,
J·une
2,
1977 ,
to r
im pro\o'em ents in :
Meigs and wa shington
Counties, Ohio, on Var ious
Route-:; and Sections, by in ·
sta l ling p lowable prismat ic
reflector type pavem e nt
markers,
Pavement Width - var ies .
Proj ect and work Length Vary .
" The date set for com.
plet ion of tn is work sha ll be
as set forth fn the bidding
proposal"
E:ach b i dder sh all be
requ ired t o file with h is -b id a
ce rtified check or cashier's
c:neck for an amount equal to
live per cent of his; ·bid, but in
no event more than f ifty
thousand dollars, or a bond
lor ten per cent · of his bid.
payable to the Dir ec tor .
- Bidders must apply, on the
proper
forms ,
for

IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT
OF MEIGS COUNTY .
OHIO
THOMAS J . SCOTT,
P l l lntlll,
vs .
JAMES MORGAN ,
Addreu unknown ;
CHARLES MORGAN ,
Addren unknown i
THE UNkNOWN HEIRS .
DEVISEES , LEGATEES .
ADMINISTRATORS.
EXECUTORS AND ASSIGNS
OF
EACH
OF
THE
F p L LOWING
0 E FEN .
DANTS :
Ellen Mor 9 an ,
Elinbeth M . Blough, James
Morg•n , Charles Morg•n.
5ara Jones, Ellnbeth Co•••s.
Herbert A . coates . Hiram
Jones; , Elitabeth Jone s,
Thomas T . Jones and Joseph
Jones : Address Unknown ;
ET AL. ,
Defendants .
No. 16,441
- SERVICE BY
PUBLICATION TO THE
DE FEN DAN TS
ABOVE NAMEO :
You are hereby riotified
that a Compla i nt has been
f.lled in the Common P le as
Court of Meigs County , Oh io,
Case No . 16,442 , demanding
partition of th e following
described real estate. to -w it :
Parcel No . 1: The following
described real estate situate
in Sulton Township, in the
County of Meig s, and State of
Ohio, to -wit : And being in one
hUndred acre lot numbered
two hundre&lt;t and n in ety .
seven I n the Oh io Company's
Purchase . and be ing in the
Town..s'h l p of Sutton and
Village o f Syracuse in said
County
and
State
and
beginning f ifteen feet South ot_
lot number one in Carteton't
Addit i on to said V i llage:
thence South one hundr ..
feet ; then ce west ninety.
eight feet ; then ce North ont
hundred f eet; thence East
n i nety -eight feet to the plact
Of beginn i ng .
~arcel No . 2:
Also , tht
following r ea l estate situatt
in . the county of Meigs and
State of Ohio. and in one
h·undred ac re lot No . 297 in
Town No . 2, and Range No . 12
1
of t h e Ohio Company's .
Purchase , and being a strip of
land 25 feet by 100 feet and
bounded as follows : Beginni ng at the northwest corner
ol a lot formerly belonging ro
said Elizabeth Jones at the
a l ley ; thence west along tht
alley 2S feet to a st ake;
thence south 100 feet to ii
stake ; thence east 25 feet to •
stake at the southwest corner
of said lot former ly belonging
to Elizabeth Jones ; thence
North 100 feet to pla ce of
beginning .
_
,
Ftar G~i11 No . 3 : The following
described reat"eslate , to.w it:
Being 1 -acre loca ted in the
South West corner of the
North East 13 1/.t acre of
Fract ion No . 31. in Bedford
Township , Meig s County,
Ohio.
'
Parcel No . 4 : The following
described real estate , to -w it :
Being 3/• acre lo cated in the
North East corner of Frac.
l ion N o . 31 in Bedford
Townst1 i p , Meig s County,
Ohio.
Refreence Deed : Vol. lSO,
Page -SJO. Deed Records
Meigs County . Ohio .
You are notified that you
are requ ired to answer the
Comp la l_nt with in twenty .
ei"ght days after the last
publication .
The
last
publication will be made on
the 22nd day ol June, 1977 .

NEW CABBAGE
LB.
J

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sopt. 221 BOld
ve11tures m•ght cow you a bn at

A thought for the day :
Spanish novelist Miguel De
Cervantes said : "Ill luck, you
know,
seldom
comes
alone ."

b ird 1n th e hand ts definitely
worth two in the bu :;h where
you 're co ncerned today. Reap
your harve st. Let th e ruture lake
care of Jl sell.

-

ASTRO•GRAPH
Bernice Bede Osol

~EO

(July 23-Aug. 22) Make

PUBLIC NOTICE
In following Section 5115 .09
of the Ohio Re.,.lsed c ode the
Board of Revision he ld their
regular Yearly meeting in the
Meigs County Auditor's Of.
l ice, electing officer_s 1 under
Section 5715 .09 of ttve Ohio
Revised Code were as follows :
George Collins , Meigs County
Treasurer
was
elected
Chairman, Howard E . Frank,
Meigs County Auditor serves
as Secretary to the Board in
com pl ia n ce with this Sec tion,
and Henry W el ls se rve s as the
th ird member being President
of the Boa.rd of County
Commissioners .
The change in valuation for
the . t ax year 1977 will only
affect those tax payers who
have added new constru ctio n .
The new co nstruction pic~ed
up was done by the County
Auditor during the first t hree
months of 1977 for the tax year
1977 .
Va!ues on new construct ion
can now be \o'iewed at the
County Aud itor 's Off ice at any
time.

It

a

pomt today to raise those you
associate with to your high stan ·
dards . Don't slip to levels ol
those less scrupulous.

t~rs t

ARIES (Mitch 21 -Aprlt 19) Lei
your heart rule your head today
m deahng w1lh people who mean
som el hmg to you E\'en 1f the1r
Qes1 res are rn volous . go ai OOQ
wtt h them

Howe\ler , once you stan

'S W•ng•ng, you'll realize your fears
were groundless

•

LIBRA (Sept, 23·0&lt;1. 23) People
a d mt re you more today tf you ad·
m tt when you don't knOw how to
do somelhmg They'll be most
w tllmg to ex ptatn

To fmd ou t more about yourself.

send to r your co p y of Bern1ce
Osot's A sl ro-G rapr, Lener Ma11
50 ce nt s a nd a l ong , self.
ad d ressed , stam ped en... elope to
A sl ro- Graph , P 0
Bo -. 489.
Aad to C1ty Stat1on. N Y 10019
Be sure to specif y yo ur birth
s1gn

SCORPIO (Oct. 2•-No• . 221
M one:t' 1sn't the only negotia ble
currency tor you to day See •t
there's someth tng etse yo u can
off er 10 Ira de or · e~tchang e m
you r d ealmgs.

SAGITTARIUS

Langsville

(No•. 23-Doc.

211 The opp os• te sex wtll be tar
more tmpressed 11 you co m pli ment t h em s•ncerety to da y
Avoi d blat an t bla rney thaf s easy
to see throug h

CAPRICORN

(Dec. 22·Jon,

19)

Pl ace you r tr us t to d ay tn those
you know to be re Ha b ~,~! Don't
depend on someone who has let
yo u d.own b efo re .

AQUARIUS

(Jan.

20-Fob. 19)

Turn a deaf e ar to any pe1ty
goss1p by p a ls tod ay, Built; yo ur
re p utat 1on as a per son who has
only mcc thmgs to say about
oth er s

PISCES (Fob. 20·March 20) The

Mrs. Clair Parkerson spend
the weekend in Moundsville,
W. Va., visiting her niece,.
Mrs. Wilma Stout, who is ill
She also visited her brother at
Charleston, W. Va.
Mr. and Mrs. Duane Barr
and son, Shawn, of Oak Hill,
Ohio, Mr. and Mrs. Harley
Riggs of Pomeroy R D. and
Elvira Barr were Sunday
night dinner guest of Mr. and
Mrs. Michael Barr. Callers
were Mr. and Mrs. Larry
Barr, David and Michelle, of
Rutland.
Mr. and Mrs . Howard
Thoma of Pomeroy and Miss

Fairview News Notes
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Roy
of Ra cine were Mother's Day
guests of Mr . and Mrs.

By Mn. Herbert Roudo
Mother's Day guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Lawson and
Wilda were Mr. and Mrs.
Edward Lawson and son of
Syracqse, Mrs. Cindy Morris
and daughter, Mr. and Mrs.
Bob Lawson and family . On
Saturday Mrs. Dorothy
Parsons and sons of Antiquity
and Mr. and Mrs. Harold
Lawson and son, Charley,
visited the Lawsons.

Homer Wamer .
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Manuel
visited Mr. and Mrs. Arnold
Hupp on Sa t ur day. Mrs.
Lewis Hudson , Mrs. Harry
Roush of Minersville Route
visited the Manuels Saturday
evening.
Mrs. Edith Manuel visited
her sisters Thursday, Mrs.
Betty McGuire of Pomeroy,
Mrs. Bernice Bailey, L&lt;&gt;ng
Bottom , Mrs. Elva Hudson,
and Mr s. J ean Roush,
Minersville.
Mr. and Mr s. Ru ssell
Roush , Cindy, David and
Edward, Mr. and Mr s.
Ronald Russell , Ma ndy and
Michael, Mr. and Mrs. Jim
Van Meter and L&lt;Jri, Mr. and
Mrs . Issac Lewis were
Mother 's Day guests of Mr.

Pat Thomas, L&lt;&gt;uisville, Ky.
were Sunday dinner guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Barr.
Dena Hoffman is home and
feeling better after spending
a week with her sister, Mr.
and Mrs. Bill Phillips of
Chillicothe.
Marlene Ho!!man • of
Gallipolis spent Sunday with
her mother, Dena Hoffman .
Dorothy Handley spent
Mother's Day weekend with and Mrs. Dana Lewis . at
her mother and brother, Clifton .
Howard
Spurlock
of
Mrs. Danny Dodson and
Hurricane, W. Va.
son, Ryan, of Racine viSited
Mrs. Vona Gillenwater Thursday evening with Mr.
called on Elvira Barr and Mrs. Russell Roush and
Tuesday afternoon.
familY .

•

•
IUZZIUnEIID llANO

Buttered
Beef Patties

·~=·

:
:

i

$139

I
UIIT ZPIGS. WITN COIIPON UD S7.5f AIOITIONAt l'IICNW I
I
(EICLIDING IMIIITII)
1LIMIT ONE COU10N ' l l FAMIL't
MAnU IAr.ll . , ll. ltn
11DF I

1--·--

.......
-

. - - _M_!tw_!!~..!'!!liJICL'I!O--

. . . v i TMI IIGtfl TO lMl OUAIITfNI. MOtll 101.0 TO

~~NT~uarter Pork Loin$
Pork Chops ............ lb.
U.l. GOY'T GtADIO CHOICI

Boneless Top.
Sirloin Steak .... .... . lb..

119

KIOGllt

Sandwich 'Or
r Buns

• REGULAR GROUND BEEF
M1a1 11011'1 ~ l,ous eu 1~ 01 llfll!l Conta•M
no l'n(&gt;te than ]()% 1 ~ 1

• EXTRA LEAN GROU ND BEEF
Ma&lt;1e lr t. m • 8"00J• culs &lt;)I 1.&gt;.-el Ct.lllitn&amp;
no more lh an 2!&gt;~. 1 ~1

• GROUND BEEF CHUCK

$1 9

Boneless
Boston RoiL.. .. .. ..

t!Mt'

I

Made only lrom beet chuck. nothm!l oldclea
mote lhan 211~ ta t
M a'de Qnly lrom bfet r011rM1 , noth •ng ad ded
Cont ~i n ~ r!(l
r lhiln 11% lal

·I

Pkgs.

ieiDIDillotiAt l'UICMUI

UIIT lPIGS

. LIMIT ONl cqUPON PU

FA~Il V

,.. WI u~' .., n. un
llllf.et "llf'l.ltllll snn &amp;ltcM Tam

Armour
.
1 lb
Hot Dogs........ Pkg: •
SIIYI'N' SAVE ALL VAIIITIES

Sliced Luncheon

l-Ib.

.. ........... Pkg .

t:~~~·. . "". .

1

lb .

Canned Hams

HomePride
Batlertes.... :....
e

(;:;;·

1

46·01.
CanS

s129:l .
]

Armour·Star
Bacon ............. ~~~:
lUClO , . . ll. 79'

3 . $1

1

can .

3 $1
g·gc

f-

liMIT l em WITH CGUPOM AND 17.50 ADDITIOUL PUICMASI
(uctuotNc rHts ITEM)
•
LIMIT ONE COUPON PU fAMilY

DpFE'E

2-Ct.

Pkg.

A.. D fill ~IOUM Qll

S NG. Of

frenCh's Gravy cmd
Sauce Mins

Toothpaste .. '1~·::·

2
89
C
, - - - - - - - Peaches.... .
A;;~d;le

MOU.V PAlMS. U.S.D.A. INSftiCTID

ftijji~

Hi-C
Drinks

I

ggc (~;~~·rjclub 3-lb.S499!
SLICED

Fresh Picnic
Pork Roast ......Jb.
'ii·CINTII CUT$. /2•FIIST CUTS IY
COUNT
Fresh Assorted
P.ork Chops ...... lb.

~---

$

U.S . O,A. CHO!Cl FllSH ,
AMEIICAN WHOU

29·o• .

cans

Mixed Fryer
l'arts.. .........

AT KROGER, WE PROTECT
EGG QUALin FOR YOU ••

WITH COUPON

WITH COUPON

AltO'"' P"IJI(IIW Of-

A-cl 1111 P\II(NA$1 1M 0111
II 01 . 101

14 -01 • •

lucky Char1111

Wheaties

CtrHI

Cereal

Howard E . F r ank
Me'i gs Co unty Auditor
(5) 18 25 (61 I, 8, 41c

BELTONE

Cheer
Detergent

..... ,............. .::::~ $42'
...
WITH COUPON

,..,. NUll ....... , ..

Hearing Aid

W1Ti1 COUPOJIIi

Service Center
Mr . H. W. Mattingly
will be at the Meigs
Inn, Pomeroy, Ohio
on Thursday. Nlay 19,
1977 from 9 a .m. to 12
noon to repair and
service hearing aids.

Batteries
and
supplies for all makes
for sale.

Mr . Nlattingly will be
glad to give you a free
hearing test w ith the
latest
Bellone
Electronic
equipment.

-10011

Evaporated
.
Milk.. .. .. .. ... .. ...

-·

2 Sl
c;"t"6;~;~
4
S1
eanS ....... ,.. . ...
Kroger
Tomato Juice

4

13-oz..

4·

UMIT -4 WITH 17.50 01 MOIU P'UICHASE

~~::·

TOTAl SATISFACTION C.UAIANIE(O
W• Httv• Whot W• Adverth• . /lot tt11 pttu l bl• . 11 , du• Itt c.oro ·
run Ollt of cu, od\l.• rtl1.d sp•·
ditioro• b•yond our ccH.trol ,
d ol, we tubttihJte o cumparobl• brand ot o timilar 1tt¥1ng or
glv• . yo!' a RAIN CHlCM lor the advertlt•d tp•dol et the
tpt!dol price ony tim• withlro 30 doy1. W• Gu oron t•• What We
S.ll. 1f J'OU Gr• eoter dinot1lfiecl with a !( roger purchate , ..,.
vwlll replace your item or refund your mu,.,ey,

w•

r'

16-oz..

B

c•••

Cans

c::~~~ . . . . . . .3~:;~~· 1
5

Pork 'N'
leans.......... .. 16-oa.
cans •
C11i:h r Clab 'I.-Gel. ..ag~c
.
Ice Crea11 ........ , c...
·

~;~g;';mm•

4 1
$

12-oz .

. • •.• .•. , , , • , •• ,

Cans

Donuts

~119

BELTONE

Fresh Sweet
Yellow Corn ........ .~a;
72 Sill W4SHIHGTOH 'lAIItS Ollt
lED 01 GOLDEN

· Hearing Aid Center

Delicious
Apples ............. ...£och

601 Sixth Ave.
Huntington ,
Va.
Phone 525-7221

w.

,I

I

J. *1":
C......

C.1t11ams no

• GROUND BEEF ROUND

lb.

1

'o.iii- .... I

U.S. GOV'T GIAIMO CHOTa, IIIP
OIUCIIHOULDII POT IOAST

LARRY E . SPENCER ,
CLERK OF COURTS,
. MEIGS COUNTY,OHIO
(51 11. 18.25 (61 1. 8. IS. 22. lie

~~ 1~i:fl~~t i~geat ~~a,:' r:;t~~~~

open i ng bids in ac cordan.c e
with Chapter 5525 Ohio
Revised Cod e.
Plans and speci f )catic;ms
are on file in the Department
of Transportation and the
office or the D is tr ict Deputy
D irector .
The Director reserVes the
riQht to fefect any and ~II
b ids .
OAVIO L . WEIR
DIRECTOR
Rev . 8·17 ·13
est. 18, 25, , 2tc

NOTICE ON FILING
Fot Thutaday, M•y 11, 1177
OF INVENTORY
ANO APPRAISEMENT
The State of Ohio, Meigs
County, Court Of Common
Ple~s. Probate Division .
To the Exet utor o t the
estate, to su ch Of th e follow ing
as are res i den ts ot the State ol
Ohio , v iz : the surv i\' ing
spou se. the nex t of k i n , the
benef i ci ar ies under the w i ll ;
and to rhe attorney o r at
tornevs rep r esenr ing any of
the afore m enti oned p er sons ·
Creed J ane s. de ce ased ,
Portland . OhiO . Le ban o n
Mly 11, 1917
Townsh i o , No . 11950.
You are hereby not if ied that You 're l1kety to fare better thts
the Am ended Inventory and year 1M \'entures that have hmtted
Appra isem ent of the estate of sc ope, but where you are m t1rm
the
aforem e nt i oned ,
oeceasecL late of sa id County . co ntrol Intervention by others
was filed in th i s Court . Sa id co uld d1l ute the profits.
amended
Inventory
an d
Appra i s~m e nt ·w fl t be tor TAURUS (April 2D· Moy 20) It
hear ing before th i s Co urt on yau·re out to buy a luxury Item
the lst day of June , 1971 . at today. don't snap at the first
10 : 00 o' clock A .M .
pnce Horse-trade a b!t. You
Any person desiring to file
ould save money.
c
exc eptions thereto mvsl f i le
them at l east fiv e days pr ior to GEMINI (,.., 21-June 20) You
the- date set for hear ii"'Q .
may be i nv1ted ou1 today by
Given under my hand a nd
friends
who overlook another
seal or sa td Court , tt'l is 16th
sensitt\'e member ol your c1 q::le .
day of May 1977 .
Manning D . Webster See that she 's inc luded.
1
Judge
CANCER (Juno 21 ·July 22)
.&gt;:
By Ann B . Watson Ra1se your Si ghts today to
Deputy Clerk pos itive goats . and those only.
(5) 18, 25, 2tc
You'll feel loolish tater tl you
waste your time on tr ivta.

,I

�14 - The Daily Sentinel, Mld&lt;llepor t-Pomeroy 0., Wednesday , Ma y

Let The Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash

WANT AD
CHARGES
15 Wurtb vr Und~·r
t..'ll:.h
ll lilr~o:t:

""''

100
150

125
1 !\Q

1l!ll
.I 00

2.!5
J 75

l ~~~ ) S
3dMy ~

li dlll~ '

Eod1 word t.t\'tr Ilk• mmiiJ'WI1 I;,
WUI'lis IS ,f t't'llll; !XI ~11 1d 1)1.'1 &lt;lli)
Alb rwuung 1•Uk•t U~tt u tvn~-utl \ 1
tl~}.o; ~!II lit• d ki t ~t-d at ltw I d.t )

I Ph&gt;
C;,~nl uf Th.mk ' &lt;Jilt!
ObllU&lt;li'Y 6 t l'J\1!&gt; IX! I I'. VIII , J:l f-.J
n tlllUIIUU l C~:tsb u1 ad\ am. ~

In

ltlt'mor~

MuUIIt· Homt ,sj,jJes !:illd Y&lt;~td l!&lt;llo..'s
an· lil l~pLt·d onl~ w•th t:ash -... 11h
order 25l't'lll dtal'l': t' fur ads t arr) ·
Ul~ Bvx Numl&gt;-.·•· ln C&lt;~u· uf I ht" S.:nuneJ
Tlw Pul&gt;hsht•t l l'S(!I'\'t•s !IH• t l)o:hl
l H J..'dJ t 0 1' f l'}t' t"\ CUI}' ild ~ dt.'\ ' IUt•d 0~
}l't'1Julwl Tlw Pulll• ~ ht ·• ~•II nut U..·
l l'Spo!ISIIJ[t: ftW lllVI +! [han llll t' IIIV.II •
I t't'l UtSCiliUII

Photw 992·21::.6

NOTICE
WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES
I.

18, 1977

M untl&lt;~)

Noon vn S...tu•tloy
r ut!stl&lt;J)

thru ~" 11LI.ty
&lt;PM

tht' L1.1 y lx-f01t publa·atnH t
Sw1d&lt;1)
&lt;PM
F'1 LLia y &lt;JftCII\{)1111

PIANO LESSONS , chtldrens and
adults . Mrs. Harvey Von
Vranken 992 ·2270
THE RACINE VOL Ftre Dept wtll
have a chicken ba rbecue on
Sunday , May 29 or tfle ft re sta .
tion S torttn~ot 11 OOA_M

FOUND · FEMALE Beagle wttf-'1 2
pups gweowoy to good home
Phone 949 2413.
.liTTlE TAN female Chthuohuo
FOUND on rtver bank , Front
St Mrddleporl obout3 yrs old.
Phone 992-3832.

APPLIANCE SERVICE man , eK
.. penenced No phone calls .
Golha Refrtgerotion Co. 611
nu rd Ave .._9o olhpolts , O~c:.__ OLDER RESPONSIBLE lady to ltve
In and core for aged wtdow m
Rutland , Ohio Not invaltd nor
sen1 le ltght housework ond
cooktng
No laundry , Call
742·2078 for lnformotron
fRIENDLY HOME Toy Portres has
opentngs for managers and
dealers in your oreo Toy Party
Plan expertence helpful Cor
and telephone necessary . Coli
collect to Coral Day (5 18)
489·8395 or write ,rtendfy
Home Port1es, 20 Railroad
Ave , Albany , N V 12205
GUARANTEED JOB Tram.ng·
location
$374 40 , s tng te ,
$502 60 marned Coli Army
Recrut1tng, \614) 593·3022 or
385·6316 (co l ect).
WAITRESS WANTED · apply In per·
Crows Steak House
son
Pomeroy , Ohto
- - UGHTDELIVERY, must hove cor
Naorea Apply 111 person, Ltbb~
Hotel Rm 101 , 10 30 a m tt I
400pm
LIGHT OFFICE and telephone
work. Days and evenmgs ,
open Apply tn person ~tbby
Hotel Room 101 10 30 a .m . tdl
?;
400pm

Yard Sale

ACAREER .JOB IN
CONSUMER FINANCE

IF YOU hove a serv1ce to olfer,
wont to buy or sell somethu1g,
oe looktng for work
or
who re..,er
you II get resuhs
laster wtth a Sentmel Wont Ad
Colt 992 2156.
YARD SALE , Thu tJdoy and Fnday
May 19 ond 10 at 15.tS Nv e
Ave . Pomeroy, Childrell and
baby women s clnl htu g
YARD SAlE-, FRJOAV May 20
D•shes . Elec stove, clothes
mens
women · ~ .
childrens
Stamese k1ttens b ~eycle misc .
I mile f on 248 Chester
YA RD SALE Thursday and Frtdoy,
9 t, ll dorlo. baby clo thes, baby
walker baby both tub, chtld s
pool tab le, clothmg dtshes,
avon bottles Ftrs t house: on
rtg ht. Happy Hollow Ro od off
Rt 124 near Rutla nd 742 2694

Gain recogntfion and pres ttge through a career in
consu m er finance Consumer finance is an tn teg ral and
tmportant for ce in our coun tr y's e-conom ic growth and
progress.
A position he re will give you economi c security The
consu mer finance busrness IS s teady - even during
recessions.
You can wrn prom ot ton rapid ly You will be patd a
good starting salary and receive exce ption al employee
benefits
There are Bran c h Representa t tve positions open now
for high school graduates Must have auto.
Phone Mr Snodgrllss today for a con f 1den t 1al.
personal lntennew Call 992-2 111

CAPITAL FINANCE SERVICES
300 West Second Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER

BA SEMENT SALE , Across from
Hubbard s Green house m
Syracuse Th ur sday fnday , Sol
10 ttll .t Tools good clothmg
ovon , jewle ry lots at mtsc
Nothtng sol d before 10 00 a .m
CARPORT SALE 1165 Vtne St
Wed s , Th ursday and Frtdoy
Mtsc ttems toys lo ts of books

.. '
'•

d» CASH patd for all makes and

,.,_.,

models of mobde homes
·!::..,. Phone a reo code 614 · 423- 95~1 .
TIMBER , Pomeroy Forest Pro.
itu , ducts Top price tor stondmg
lil"'f' · sawttmber Call Kent Hanby ,
1·446·8570
t'u ~ COINS, CURRENCY , tokens , old
-.~ I
,~J

,!1..~· ~

:jf\'! \
ul

•f.

pocket watches and chains ,
srlver and gold We need 1964
and older sil ... ercotns Buy sell ,
or trade' Call Roger Wamsley ,
742·2331

CASH I I I for 1unk cars Frye '
Truck and Auto WRECKER SER
VICE I Phone 742-2081.
E \ o OLD FURNITURE, tee boxes, brass
'~f : beds . etc ,\ complete
c.• ' households Wrtle M D. Mdler,
Rt 4 , Pomeroy Oh to or call
992-776/J
...-_.-, t STANDING TIMBER WANTED
::_. PHONE (614) 667-6214

Pomeroy Landmark

----

-- - -- -

ONCE A year Yard Sole, Wednes
PIANO USED 3 months Phone
~ !"l T
day , May 18 thru Sol , May 21 ,
992-31BI
~,.., J
7"'2 Easl Main St , Pomeroy
·
Clothing
opphonces , toys ,
3 AND 4 RM furm shed and un · GENTlE BROWN and whtle
i~.
mtsc Ph 992·73-14 .
geldmg pony Phone949-2739.
.. . 1~
furntshed opts . Phone 992 ·
~l.'if . 3 FAMILY Corpor1 Sole Homer
5434 .
26 IN BOYS btke , record player ,
, • ..,. 1
Hysell restdence, 3 mtles north
ond records 1958 Chevy 6
COUNTRY
Mobde
Home
Pork
,
Rt
~
of Old 33 Clothing ond many
cyl tnder standard , new battery ,
33
ten miles north of Pomeroy
ofiler •lems
17 m Zemlh T V block and
Lorge lots wtth concrete pallos
whtte call742 2078
HUGE YARD Sale! • 10 years oc
stdewolks runners and off
":-'~~ ,
cumulat1on boby tlems fUr .
street porktng Phone 9_92 7479
nlture . household tlems ,
0\r
cloth.ng, toys , mtscellan Fn ORCHID ROOM lor rent for on
ntversortes , weddtng recep ·
~~&lt;i • day , Saturday , Moy 20th 21st
!tons brtdol stlowers or prtvote
.~~-:~..
9 11/1 4, rain cancels Old 33
meetmg room Phone 992 3975
New Co-Op water sof Follow srgns on Four Lone near
teners , model VC -S\11 .
or 992 2571.
Roadstde Rest. Phone 992·7300.
.
Onty 5279.U
Save S50 . 00 on a new
YARD SALE. Thursday ond Frtday. FURNISHED APT . Adults only , no
Phone
992
3874
,
Mtd
pets
Hotpoint
Refrtaerator
May 19, 20tt'l 3 Fomtly . Thnd
dleport
l New 20 ' cubic ft.
,---.
trail•r on nght luspan St.,
Chest Free1er
1319.95
f
:
Mason, W.Va
ONE BEDROOM furntshed aport·
Now'" stock, compteTe une
ment tn Mtddleport
Call
of bulk garden seeds and
·: YARD SALE Fndoy a~~fu7day,
992
5434
or
992
3129
t)n ion sets.
/
9 till 4. Corner of ASh and
~
Sycamore st , Mtddleporl._
1.. good McCullough Cha '"
Saw
S6S ,
~
YARD SALE, Friday and Sot . 9 hll
I Good Used Poulan Cha•n
441 Beech Sr .. M1ddleporl.
Saw
$50
Phone992-371 B.
ANTIQUES AND Collectors ttems
S_urvrvor Safes only 129.95
c hmo ook cupboard 6 leg oak
YARD SAlE. Fnday and S,aturdoy
Onion Sets J lbs ,
Sl oo
table , Goteleg drop leaf !It!
9 30 Am . fill~ P m Rolhn Rod·
chen table chestnut, 100 yeorc
f
ford restdence, I mtle norftt of
old , Duncan Ftl[&gt; gloss In;- ·~of
4
_ _ Fa'!:ground ..?"Old 33 _
fee table w tlh bruss feet
YIIRDAND lloko Sole. Mov 20, 21
Decanters cnnl mtner on ~ l )1m
1 UXJ till 7 00 dotly ot Eden Par
-Jc•ck w. Carsey , Mgr
Beam ~nr,1e deprcsston gtoss
nsh Hall Two mtle north of
~ Phone 992·2111
ond Hetsy b()Q Htgh St . M•d
Reedsville on Roufe 124
dleporl, ~'.J. 7666,

•; fl·:

FOR SALE

-

I

L/ ;

r
I

L .
.

•

~

Pomeroy Landmark

.9.

NEW LISTINGS 2
Bedroom. balh. natural
gas, ctty water and 2 large
lots, garden space. $11 ,000 .
NEW LISTINGS 4
room house with bath and
2:1f.a acres of land near
Rulland 59,500 00
Buy now with only 3 Per
Cent down . A few hundred
and you w•ll own your own
home.
G. Bruce Teaford
Helen L. Teaford
Associates

Formerly
lola's Beauty Salon
For appointment call
992 -2549 Tuesday thru
Saturday 8:00a.m . to
5:00p.m. Open nights
by appointment.
Vmyl &amp; Aluminum
Siding.
Storm
Windows
&amp;
Insulation .
Call Professionals

Free Estimates
Installation, samples
brought to your home
with no charge.

BISSELL SIDING CO.
A local contractor
Phone 949-2801
or 949-2860

Carpet- L1no. -Tile
Phone Mike Young at
992 -2206 or992-7630

Free EsttmiJtes
No Sunday Ccllls Please
4-2.4-1 mo

2-23- 1 mo

FREE ESTIMATES

DUGAN'S

BlOwu

a:

Phone 949-2814
9 a .m . to 5 p ,m .
4-28-1 mo.

Superior
Steam Extraction

Young's Carpeting
Route 3, Pomeroy, 0.

Carpel &amp; Upholstery
Phone Mike Young
At
992-2206 or 992-7630

• ftjf\f~\li)ft ~THATSCRAMBLEDWORDGIIME
~ ~ ~~~L!l tlil

4-1 0 I mo

''The Origin•tors
Not The Imitators''

I

2 23· 1 mo

-

NEW 3 bedroom house 2 bolhs
a ll elec , 1 acre, Mtddleport
close to Ru tlo,nd Phone 992
7481
•SMAll farm for sale, IO 'Yo down
owner finan ced Monroe Coun
ty W Vo Phone (304) 7.72
3102 or (304 ) 772·3227
COUNT RY farm land wttf-'1 seclud
ed woods water and good oc
cess tn Monroe (ounty W Va
$1 000 down call (30.S ) 772
3102 or (304) 772 3227
Commemol properly opprox 17
acres level land , located at
Tuppers Pla1ns on Ohm , Route
7 ~hone (614 ) 667 6~4- ~
NEW 3 bed roo m house butll m
kttchen , both and 1/t, Phone
742 2306 or contact Mi lO 8 Hut
c htson Ru! lond , Oh1o

----

VA FHA 3Q yr ftnonctng Ireland
Mortgage 77 E State , Athens ,
phone (614) 592 3051

New Home

Lyons Add&amp;tion - Located
on lhe hill m Mason City,
W. Va. (close to Wahama
H1gh School 1 All brick,
extra large kitchen w wood
burning
ftreplace ,
3
bedrooms, 2 baths, dtning
&amp; famtly room . la rge living
room (fireplace), (over
3500 sq ft of floor space)
Large
porch
(patio ).
double car garage, 2 acres
of land (chain link fence)
Lots of extras
Upper
bracket Pr.ced on tn
spectton Call or see.

J. H. "Jake"
Somerville
Real Estate Broker

HARRISON'S T V Rep01r Servtce
Cot Is 276 Sycamore St , Mtd ·
dleport Ph~~ 992·2522
BROWN S FIRE ond Safety Elltin
quts hers All stzes bus•ness,
home boat Refdl ed , tested
Btll Brown Rut land , Ohto
Phone742 2777.

----

EXCAVATING BACKHOE , dozer.
trencher Low Boy, dump truck
truck s sep tic systems Btll
Pu lltns phone 992 2478 day or
ntgflt ~- _·_ _

OWN YOUR Own Bust ness Area
Dtslnbutor for Rand McNally
Mops No Selling Sennce prees tobltshed accoun ts Investment $12 500 secured by tnven tory and equtpment Wrtte, tn ·
elude
name
address ,
telephone and 3 references to
Personnel Director . NAMCO
J928 Montdotr Rd .
B1rm
tngham AL 35213 or colt col.
lecl (205 ) B70-422B

---

-·--

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

212-51h Street
Point Pleasant, W Va.
25550
Phones: 675-3030 (Office)
675-4232 (evenings}
675-3431 (evenmgsl

~A SHAN

- Nice 2 story country home, containtng 7
rooms and 1 1/:~ baths, mostly carpeted. K1tchen has~~~
new built -In cabinets with bronze stove and
refrigerator to match, new porches and all new
aluminum siding and storm windows, forced air
natural gas furnace and drilled well, garden space.
This house is warm and ready for Immediate
occupancy, come take a look just 518.900
NEW LISTING- FREE GAS- Nice modern 1'/:z story
farm house containing 4 bedrooms, dining room,
kitchen with built in appliances, basement, citv and
well water, 2 barns, work shop and other bulldln_9s,
large pond stocked with fish , approximately 23 acres
till~ble and 46 acres fenced . Good location, call for
appointment, price 580.000.
RACIN~ - Good 3 br (. n_lO dining room, low
utilities, even a garden~ ~\.· . _,.. at only ss,soo .

CHESTER-113 acre farm, B() acres tillable land, nice
2 story farm house, 7 rooms and balh, all hardwood
floors and basement. Barna and other outbuildings, 2
ponds, a niCe laying farm priced to go, located near
Chesler, call for appointment.
COOLVILLE- Nice modern brick home containing
three bedrooms, dining room , living room with
fireplace, fullbasement with gar.r"c;'arge front porch,
natural gas furnac:t:, .::~·,· . ...,. ~Q\ dnd well water, a
beautiful home with apP. .. 9'-.dtely S1h acres of land,
fruit trees and sha~s-,\..~.:s surrounding It, plenty of
garden space, good .•:~!ling area close by, located 1n
Coolville, Ohio, priced at only $32,000. Call now
WE ARE SELLING PROPERTY AND NEED YOUR
HELP, LIST WITH US. WE HAVE BUYERS FOR
VACANT LAND, FARM AND RESIDENTIAL
PROPERTY.
JIMMY DEEM REALTOR

No. ~06 - Middleport, 3
bedroom older
home ,
several b ig closets, modern
kitchen , has pnvate patlo,
tust the right stze to beat
the gas bills , wllhln
walking distance to stores .
Price $21,000 .
CALL US AND CHECK TO
SEE
IF
WE
HAVE
SOMETHING
YOU
MIGHT NEED.

w.

804
Matn
Pomeroy
992-2298
Alter Hours Call
992-7133
CONTACT:
lots Pauley
Branch Manager

Ph. HZ-2174

LITTLE

P-

TO MilKE "'ATTERS
·o~1VIS
HE TOI.D POoR MRS, oo
THAT SHE DOESN'T
MUCH TIME LEFT ··

ORPHAN

ANNIE-THE

DR ZEE IS HERE TO SEE
YOU, MRS. JARVJ5 -- 10
61\fE A SECOND OPIN ION

NO MAL!Gt-I~NC'( ,
JUST A SMALL LUMP
THAT ~N OPERATI ON
CAN RE MOV'E PER MAMENTL'I'
~~ N OW YOU GET SOME

DO YOU AGR'EE'
WITH OR ouee '7
IS

IT ~ ­

HOPEL ESS'?

,..

BORN LOSER

~D

•
.•
•

•

·•
:-

Nixon a1de
greetmg

1 could move
upafloorfrom

my firetrap..

40U

23 Set nght
25 Soft; fluff y
26 Nobel
phySICISI
(1944 )
21 Unas s is ted
28 Me ll ow
29 Qwte
a few
12 My &lt;Fr I
J3 Surface

could move

a floor from

your firetrap!

34 Hmdu title
35 Harvest ,
gain
31 School
Eden
attended
38 PlagJame d
39 Learned

-AH' 8£7T£R !MIOYTl-/!SMEAL •- ;TU8F- SCBTH/LASTONG M KIN PAY Rf WHILE AH)
IS STILL IN WAS!I!NTON .•r-J
~

•

'

••
•

;;
11

•

•

'l

lo
'•

•

: -742 -iill

ARNOLD GRATE'

,:

RUt-t.AN·D~

·························~
·•
I

musketeer

36 Fatuna's
husband
31 Greek letter

BRIDGE
----:---;::;:-- ..:;=:;--=-=:;=-;;::=:-=7.::--::-:::'i::-:----Oswald and Jim Jacoby

Win on first-round finesse·
NO I\TII

t A 93
A t\752
W~ :ST

o!&gt;
¥
t
o!&gt;

EQUIPMENT, MUCH

MOI(E: SPACE:, ANO

A NEWNAM£/

"A NEW

NAWE:'&lt;'

A AK.fl0 7ti

••+

K86

o!o KQ4
Both v u l nera hl ~

b--+- +--

is

Pa:ss I N !' !'.J ~s
P.•ss
Pa ss 4 A
Pass
Opemng(lead - K •

it:

I . 0 N G F E I. L 0 W

CRY I'TOQUOTES
EVCWKTW

YES T":'. EXECUT IVE
WARD JECID::D

MVF GN WV

E7HOULD CALL OU&lt; 5::CLVES "WINNIE:
W/NKcE FA5" 10N~/

AW

IV=

BKCV

J LV P

JGXY

Thus, when you are gomg to
fmesse
for a qu een you hrst
WABEXP

J LA T Y

WKNTR

BGTGZVGMXV
BG C ZG C VJ

J L GT

LGXWVP

•

lea rn to postpone the fmesse
until the second round to g1ve
yourself a chance lo p1c k up
lhe queen 1f 1t happens to be a
s mgleton
Toda y's hand presents an
exceptiOn to the rule South ' s
carrecl hne of play ts to ruff
lhe second heart , enter dum·
my with lhe ace of diamonds,
lead th e mne o f s pades and

•

WHEW!!
LET'S

•

DOESN'T BLAP ANI{ MOI&lt;E
PUT-AWA\'5, WE'LL WIN~

NOT 60NNA 6LAP
MORE PUT-AWA'I'S,
PAIZTNER 7
r----'-1 I WOULDN'T
TI-l iNK
11" ' 1' oc

IT

•

STOP AN'
REST

FER A
SPELL,
TATER

NOW, THAR'S

A PERFECT
SPOT

take a first round l i n -.
When 1t works he repea!J llle
finesse , picks up the queen 01
trumps and makes five or six
depending on whether or not
h1s opponents discard correct·
ly on the spades
Why IS the first round
finesse correct With today'a
hand?
The reason is that dummy
only has Lwo trumps Hence,
while the play of the ace plcka
up a s ingleton queen ln llle
West hand 1t makes it Impossible to p1ck up four to llle
queen m the Easl hand
Thus. the first-round flnt!IH
gams any lime Wesl hal a
small Singleton, loses only lo
the smgleton queen and Is
c lea rly the better play

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

lec hmques

' Yes lerday"s Cryptoquotc: THE SUC~ESSf' UL PEOPLE
ARE THE ONES WHO THINK UP THINGS FOR THE REST
OF THE WORLD TO KEEP BUS Y AT - DON MARQUIS·
() 1977 Klnl Futurrs Sy ndicate , Inc

IF Ml{ PARTNER.HEQE, '

South
lA
3A
Pass

lctl ~r

WAXVTFV

I'M IN
THE ZONE ,
KID!

:'o.'orth East

One of the Inherent dlf·
s rmpl y s t,111ds for an other In lht s sa mple A IS fJcullles m learmng the best
used for .th e thn:c L '~. X fm the t'.l. u 0 ~. etc S 1n gh:~ letters , way to play vanous ca rd co mapos trophl's, th e }pn g lh and fo rmnt1nn o f the \\nrds are all b~nalion s IS that apparently
htnt s E ac h da y lhr f'odc IPttcrs arc drffcrcnt
stmtlar ones requ1re dtfferent

One

•

•

EAST
5
AQ 832
KQI 05
¥ Ui3
Q i52
tJ104
J 108 3
o!o 96
SOUTII 10 1

\\'t&gt;s t

WKBV

GOT LOI5 OF N~W

18

A 94
• 9862

DAILY CllYf'TO&lt;IUOTE - Here's ho" to work
AXYDLBAAXR

WINNIE

' OH BESSie WE'VE MAD!:
SUCH CHANISES IN THE
COMPANY! WE 'RE: IN
A NE:W BU ILDING ...

• ' •

RUTLAND FURNITURE

Punclure
23 Famous

,.

volwne

&lt;J

~
f
11'

WE VE

Rutl1nd

22

Answer
Purplish red
Peace
symbol
Plac id
Fal co n
Re dolence
Sh1p

40 Like
Ch1cago
In 187 1

_lh/;--n?

30 rolls of carpet in stock .
Good sele&lt;ltton all on sale.
Installed with podding, no
extra to pay.

'

Yesterday's
9 Board a
24
sleeper
25
12 W1th mtense
emotion
21
16 Nullify
29
19 RaJah's
30
lady
31

measure

t Roll Blue Shag
1 Roll Brown Shag
Both Rubber Back
Regular SB.95
Sale SS.88 Sq. Yd.

Close Sat. At 5 P.M.

onesel f,
With " It"
(4 wds I
4 Lambkm's
dam
5 Yawmn g
6 Re feren ce
work
7 Actress
Hagen
8 - 11 (lose)
( 4 wds J

22 H1llenan

~

•· •

3 Reco nCil e

r iver

ULA~NER

'

creator

14 Nebraska

(

•

Joey' s

13 L1bertme

15 Fury
16 Rom e's Veneto
11 Three , m
Napo\1
18 Customer s
20 Chan ce
21 Forme1

NoWThru
Mayl, 1977

,.. •
••
.• : .-

(Answers tomorrow)
PRIMED DONKEY

di stance
DOWN
1 Gaza 2 Pal

10 Defrost
11 Wa1t upo n

Rf&gt;VE'Rf3tJD, 6VT 111!;
C.KOIR WAS OFFI&lt;B'1.

SAVE ON
CARPETING

Mon., Tues., Wed.
8:00til5:00
Thursd"v 8 tit Noon

ELEGY

41 From a

5 Meas ure

Sf3f&lt;MDt-J,

•

........
-.
.
• ••
••
...••·••. FRIDAY TIL 5 ·-·~
..
...
,,
.: •..········-·~·.• :.

'T II I IJ"

An swer A crtttcal state of affatrs! Go out and
look ~"' EMERGE-" N '· SEE "" (eme1gency)

ACROSS

WILL do rooftng, consfructton
plumbtng and heattng. No tab
too large or too small Phone
_742 - 234~
B ~~~--------­
CARPENTER
floonng
ce•ltng
paneltng Phone 992· 2759

,

I

A

J umoles OBESE

I Suffix for
two and fou1

:

:•

Print answer here ·

by THOMAS JOSEPH

Modern

RUTLAND
FURNITURE

Now arrange the ctrcled letters to
lorm the surpn se answer. as sug·
gested by the above car1oon.

~

EXCAVATING dozer, backhoe
and dttcher. Charles R. Hal·
fteld , Bock Hoe Servtce
Rutland Ohio Phone 742 2008

Call742-22ll
TALK TO
WENDELL GRATE
CARPET CONSULTANT

J I
Y

EXc;AVATING dozer , loader and
backhoe work , dump trucks
and Ia boys for htre wrll haul
fdt dtrt to so•l limestone and
grovel Coli Bob or Roger Jeffers
day phone 992-7089,
night phone 992-3525 or 992·
5232

Candy Strip
Rubber Back
Regular$6.95
Save S4.88 Sq. Yd.

A "IAN6LE. "

kMURBEN

Yesle rd a s

-

SEPTIC TANKS cleaned
Santtotton 992 3954

WHAT YOU MIGHT
HEA~ WHEN YOUR
[706 6E:TG INTO

I
I

GOOD WORD

RE'5 T·-

BRADFORD. Auctroneer Com
plete Servtee. Phone 949-2487
or 949 2000 Roc1ne , Ohto Crttt
Bradford.'-~~~~~-ElWOOD BOWERS REPAIR ~
Sweepers toasters 1rons, olt
small oppl tonces Lawn mower
nex t to State Htghwoy Goroge
on Route 7 Phone (614) 985·
3B25
...::::::::.:__~~ - REMODELING, Plumbing , healing
and al l types of general repatr
Work guaranteed 20 years eK·
pene nce Phone 992·2409
SEWING MACHINE Reparrs ser
vtce all makes 992-2284 The
Fabrtc Shop
Pomeroy
Authonzed Smger Sales and
Servtce We shar en Sct5sOrs.

742-2211

)

KJ

I

UTILE ORPHAN ANNIE

MOBILE Home Repo1r, Elec .
plumbtng and heatmg Phone
992 5B5B''------'-'-~

No. 205 - 1 a c re, w1th 12x65
mobtle home with 3
bedrooms, 4 closets, new
.carpeting, close to mine
area, has 20x18 utility
building, large open porch ,
excellent cond1tion, welt
worth price of 517.600

I D _

ENFLOY

~

HOWERY AND MARTIN Ex·
covoltng , sep t tc systems .
dozer ba ck hoe dump truck,
ltmes tone , grovel . blacktop
pavtng Rt 143 Phone 1 (614)
698 ·7331

ROCKA - 1-1--r----1

I I

Rea1£stateforSa1e:
-- -.
HOMESITE$ for sole . I a cre and
up Mtddleport, 1e or Rutland
Co lt 992 7481

by HennArnoldand Bob Lee

Unscramble these low Jumbles.
one letter to each sq uare, to form
fou r ordm ary words

EXPERIENCED_

Behind Rulland Grade
School Evenmg work by
appointment. Ph. 742-2005 .
5-6 1 mo pd

THURSDAY , MAY 19, 1971
6 · oo-Summer Semester 10.
6 1$- Farm Report 13.
6 2()- Nol for Women Onl y 13.
6 31)--()SU Overview A, News 6; Summer Semester I ;
Urban League 10
6 .45-MornlnQ Reoort J.
6 50-Good Morning , Trl Slate 13
6 5$-Good Morning. Trl State 13
7 oo-Todav 3. 4,1 5: Good Morning America 6,13; CBS
News 8, Chuck White Reports 10.
7 o;-Porkv P 1g 10
7·30--Schoolies 10
B:oo-Howdy Doody 6, Capt Kangaroo 8, 10; Sesamo
St . 33 .
B. 3()-Big Valley 6 .
9 oo-A M 3, Phil Donahue 4, 13, 15, Andy Griffith I;
Mtke Douglas 10
9 · 3()-C ross-Wits 3; Edge of Nlghl 6.
IO·OQ-Sanford &amp; Son 3, 4, IS; Olnah 6, Here' s Lucy 8, 10;
M1ke Douglas 13
10 3()-Hollvwood Squares 3.4, 15; Price lo Right I, 10.
11 OQ-Wheel of Fortune3,4, IS; Happy Oays 6, 13; Eltc.
Co 20
11 3G-Shoot for the Stars 3,A, lS. Love of Life 1,10;
Family Feud 6, 13, Sesame St 20
11 5$-C BS News B; Ms F lxlt 10
12 oo-News 3.4,6.10. 13, Name That Tune 1S; Divorce
Court 8.
12 . 3()-ChicO &amp; lhe Man 3, 15; Ryan ' s Hope 6, 13; Bob
Braun .4 ; Sea r ch tor Tomorrow 8, 10.
1 oo-Gong Show 3; All My Children 6, 13; News I;
Young &amp; lhe Restless 10; Nol For Women Only 15.
1 3()-0ays of Our Lives 3,4, 15, As The World Turna
B. 10
2 oo-s20,000 Pyram id 6, 13.
2 30-Doctors 3,.4 , 15 , One Ute to Live 6,131 Guiding
Lighl B, 10
3 ·QO-Another World 3,4,15; All In lhe Family 8.10
Know Your Antlque1 20.
3 . 1$-General Hospital 6, 13.
3 3()-Malch Ga me 8, 10 ; Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20.
4 oo--Misler Car loon 3, Little Rascals A, Gong Show
15; New Mtckey Mouse Club 6i Lucy Show 8;
Sesame Sl 20,33, Movie " Bir th of a Legend" 10;
D•nah 13.
4 15-Litt le Rascals 4
4 3()-My Three Sons 3 , Partridge Family 4;
Emergenc y One 6; Partridge Family 8; Flintstones 15
5 oo-Big Valley 3, My Three Sons 4; Brody Bunch I;
MiSter Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33 ; Emer~ncy
One 13; Star Trek 15
5 3()-Adam -12 4 , News 6, Family Affair 8; Elec. Co.
20,33
6 · 0()-News 3,&lt;5,
6 3()-N BC News 3,4, 15, ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6;
Classic 20,33
6 3()-N BC News 3,4, 15, A BCNews 13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8,10
7 0()-Trut h or Cons . 3, To Telllhe Truth 4; Liar's Club
6. Muppet Show 8; ; News 10. To Tell the Truth 13;
My Three Sons 15. Almanac 20, Consumer Survival
Kll 33
7 J~Hollywoood Squares 31 War at Home &amp; Abr011d
4, Ohio Slate Lottery 6; Price Is Right 8; Wild
K1ngdom 10. Nashville on the Road 13; Dolly 15;
MacNeil Lehrer Report 20,33.
8 00-Predators 3, Welcome Back, Kotter '· 13;
Waltons 8, 10, Music: Hall America 15; Classic
Theatre 2(); Masterpiece Theatre 33
B· 3()-Whal's Happening 6, 13.
9 oo-PIIot 3,4.15. Barney Miller 13; Testimony of Two
Men 6, Hawaii F ive 0 B, Movie "Enter Laughing''
l O; Age of Uncertainty 33
8 · 3()-Mov•e "The Deadly Triangle' " 3,4,15; Pilot 13.
lO · OQ-Streets of San Francisco 13, Barnaby Jones 8;
News 20, At The Top 33 .
'
10 3()-Woma n 20.
11 oo-News 3,4,6,8, 10, 13, 15; MacNeil Lehrer Report
33
11 3()-Johnny Carson 3,4, 1S; Rona Barrett 6, 13; Kolak
B. Mary Hariman 10; ABC News 33
12 0()-Movle " Hud" 10; Janakl 33
12 ·3()-Streets ol San Francisco 6.13
12 4()-Cool Million 8
1 0()-Tomorrow 3,;
1 40-News 13

5 . 3G-Adam 12 4, News 6. Fam1ly Affair 8. Elec Co
20.33
b 00- News 3,4,6, 8, 10, 13, 15 ; ABC News 6, Zoom 20,33
6 3()-NBC Ne ws 3,4.15, ABC News13, Andy Grl fl lth 6 ;
CBS News 8. 10 , Vegelabl e Soup 20; Lilias Yoga &amp;
You 33
•
7,QO- Truth or Cons 3, To Tell the Truth 4, Liars C lub
6, Pop Goes lhe Country
News 10 , To Tell lhe
T ruth 13 . My Three Sons IS : Consumer $urv1va l Kit
20, Big Green Magaztne 33
7 30--Dolly 3, Mmor League Baseball 4, Match Game
PM 6 ; S2S,OOO Pyram id 8, MacNeil -Lehrer Report
20,33, The Judge 10; Break lhe Bank 13 , Wild
K1ngdom 15
8 oo-Mov1e " Pine Canyon 1s Burnlng" 3, 15, Pilot
" Arc hie " 6.1 3, Good Ttmes 8,1 0; Nov a 20,33
9 OQ-Charlle' s Angels 6, 13; Mov re 11 King Creole" 8;
Great Performances 20,33 ; Mov ie " R ed Alert " 1()
9 30-Movre "Cover Gtr ls" 3, 15.
10 · QD-;-Charlle's Angel s 6. 13. Bobby Vmlon 4; Shadow s
on the Grass 33. N ~ws 20 .
10 30-$100,000 Name That Tune 4 ; In Sea r c h of the
Rea l Amenca 20 , Book Beat 33
11 DO-News 3,4,6,8, 10, 13, 1S; MacNeil Lehrer Repor t
33. Monty PylhQn' s Flying C~rcus 20 .
ll · 3()-..-Johnny Carson 3.4, 1S,
12 . 0()-Movle " The Rack" 10 , Janak l 33
12 .40--Mystery of the Week 6 , 13
1 oo- Tomorrow 3,.4
2 to- News 13

Continuous one
piece
guHers. We hang it, or do tl
yourself Spectal prices to
build en.

Alignment,
wheel
balancing, tune-up,
brake · work, minor
repair.

LARR~..~~'~DER

CENTRAL REALTY CO.

WEDNESDAY , MAY 18, 1971

FRONT END
ALIGNMENT

lnsulahon Serv1ces
ftnlnCtnJ•va•llble
Blown jnto W1Us &amp; Att•cs
STORM
WIIIDOIIS&amp;OOORS
REPIACE¥ENT
WIN DOllS
WJIIINUII
SIPINii-SOffln
GUnERS-AWNING_S

Ph. 992-3!1!13

Television log for easy viewing

A'IIPLE FOOD FOR
SEVERAL OAYS. NO ONE
NEEDS TO LEAVE THE
HOUSE- NICE - NO L E

GlJlliR SERVICE

Cf5· 1 mo

Young's Carpeting

TEAFORD

Large Showplace home.
Rooms
and
closets
everywhere, Jlh baths and
n1ce gameroom -with builtin bar and restroom
faCilitieS . Large lol with
beauliful lrees
KENO 2 acres, 3
bedroom
home,
bath,
furnace. garage. on good
country road $25,000
DEXTER
Slorage
building 30' x40' . Will sell on
time
Ml DOLE PORT
2
bedroom home tn good
location , natural gas heat,
balh and vard $12,000
8 ACRES - Jusl oulslde
Pomeroy 8 room home
w1th bath , centra l heatmg
and rural water $20,000

Shirley (Jeffers) Wolfe

Nob1ISummit Road
Rl . 1
M!ddleporl, 0 .
992-5724
Complete
Sales
and
HOUSE IN Tuppers Plo tn~ . 2
bedrooms elec ·heat double
Service and Supplres
garage 2 lots Phone (614 ) L ______..;!3.!1:!4.!1.!m!_!!!
O-:..J
667 ·3065 or 667·3360.
REDUCED AGAIN 3 bedroom , 2 1,
ba th bt level 1 mde nort fl ol
Ftve Pom t $42 ,500 Phone
Route 3, Pomeroy, 0 .
99'1 '1492

N EED A WATER
SOFTENER?

Syracuse

Owner

bedr oo ms , and both tot 100 x
150 Goo rage cement dnve and
sma ll s torage bldg Furmshed
orunf urnt she d Col199'1 -7147

---

MA VT AG DISH wosl:ier for sole
$100 Phone992
·3966
- _...,..,_
lOCAl TEACHER needs 2·3 YARD SALE . Friday on Rt 325
bedroom house to rent
Donv tlle . Electnc oven rodto,
preferably out m count ry Call
reco rd player baby clothes ,
992 5191 ofter 7p m ,
many other items
~-- ._.,

Shirley's Beauty Nook
John St .

HOUSE FOR sole tn Syracuse, 2

--~

---

18, 1977

Business Services

HOME IN Porneroy. 2 slory cen
trol he011ng , some (O rpe ttng
and ponnelltny Both &amp; ,
Phone 9q') .7074 or 992 JAbS

-

~

!t41'"'

IWO story hctrne wtth
two co• qoroge, 5 bedrooms
dtmng room , Iorge ltvmg room
modem k1tchen. 2' , bath'l
Iorge reueotton room . fully ou
condtltoned , ' , mtle from
school. One quarter mtle oil
Sto le · Route 30 year ltnonong
ovoiloble Co lt 992 3863 bet
ween9a m ond 3p m

--

279 •9 ,_

31;;,~

I:U::AUII~UL

ECONOMY TRA CTOR wtth oil or- COAl luneslone ond colct um
&lt;; fllonde and co lc tum brin e for
tochments L•k e new osk mg
dust co ntro l ond spectal mDdng
$2250 Phone (61 4) 696 3290
sal t for forme rs bcelstor Salt 1 ROOM House both . noiUiol
FOR MEMORIA L DAY Beouttlul
Works
, Matn Str ee t Pomeroy
gas, 2 acres. Rutland on
RISING STAR Kennel Boordmg
selec ltO{' of fl owers Baskets ,
Ohto or phone 992 3891
Indoor Outdoor r1,1n s groomtng
Beechgrov e Rood
Phone
sprays , wreaths V0 5C5 Pay 5
all breeds
dean sontlory
Al so
hor!oe
742 3031
Nove lty Shop N Second St. CAMPER , S60D
focdthesoe367·7 112 Chesh1re
tra der , $450 Phone (b l.t ) 6q8
Mtddlepo rl
58 ACRES
more o r less on
Phone (614) 367 0292_
3290
Kingsbury Rood Me tgs Co
GOOD RICH Top soil Charles R
HOOF HOllOW Buy , sell , trade
Mllleral nghts mcluded For
Holfteld Ba ckh oe Servtce SPRING GARDEN Suppltes , Co b
more tnf ormotton , call 1 (5 13)
o r tra tn horses RUTH REEVES
boge
cou ltflo"'!er
broccol1
Phone 742-2008
399 5981 or wntc G E Bowers
lr01ne r Phone (614 ) 698 3290
ond heod lettuoe plonls
1 AND H Beams , 8 9 and 10 mc h
160 Floral Ave Sp. tn glteld ,
yellow wh tle a nd red omon
AKC SHETLAND sheep dogs
Coll992 7034
Oh10 45504
se ts an ton plants , Kenne bec
(M1n ) Coll tes 2 females 7
cobble r, Kolohdm, Red Pon troc
weeks old Shots and wormed WOODEN HOLLOW core cobtnef
and Red Losada seed potatoes
doors and drawer fronts from
Phone (614) 367 0292 or
Bu lk garden seed!. , potting s01l
7Sc up Coll992 7034
367-7112
- ----,---- VERMEER BALER S 6050 4395 605C peol moss frut l trees and rose
AVAilABLE FOR adoptton ,
bushes . M1dway Morket ,
4995 ttll June 1. Me rn ll Cho se
beauttful mole block and whtte
Po me roy , Ohto
992 2582
R D '1 AIbony Oh10 {614 )
dog long s•lky hotr mediUm
Bob s Market Mason , W Va
69B 302 1
stze , one year old Several cute
(304 ) 773 5721
pupptes of m•xed breed Me1gs USED FORESTRY EQUIPMENT
TOMATO
PlANTS
Cabbage
County Humane Sooety Phone
Joh n Deere 540 Sk tdde r Prenbroccoli
cauliflower
brllsse1
992 7680 or 843 3()()9 loca l
ltce GOBC Loader w PulpwoOd
sprouts. egg p lants hongmg
number
grapple, John Deere 4408 Sk•d
basket s, pols
geron tum s,
der Contact Denms Smu rr
GIVE A·WAY Mole Collte dog to
begonto S, flat s
petumos
phone (6 14 ) 838·5345
Ron Cowdery .
gtve away
mortgolds. pons•es
solzto ,
bol so m , dtonlhus , sn ap
~ ph~ne 985 3581
1974 360 MX YAMAHA good con.
dragons alyssu m Vmco . col.
$675
Phone (304 )
dtl ton
HEALTHY . ADOPT ABLE dogs k•l
eus
Cle land s Greenhou se
BB2-n97
tens , puppies Wormed and
JUST LISTED - 4 Lots
Roc:: tne Geroldtne Cleland
shots Metgs County Humane 1975 HONDA 750 8 000 rntles
wtth n1ce home . 6 room
Wtndsh1e ld a nd for rtn g wrth 1 42 m cost •ron kttchen st nk I
·-~~ ty . ~32009or99~B£
frame has 3 or 4 bedrooms ,
bosm and 1 dro tn board , hong
crash bars s1ssy bor with pad
bath , carpeting. porches,
FREE PUPPIES, real cute Phone
on wa ll !ype whtte , 1 3 burner
luggage
rock
,
$1500
Excellen
t
workshop, garden space
_(_6J4 ) 6b7 63B I
gas , hotplate Phone q92 -5714 ,
condt t10n Colt 992 3287 or
$13,000 00
992 249b
JUST LISTED 2 Lois
with
house , 2 or 3
FIREWOOD FOR SALE PHONE S..nices Offered
bedrooms, 2 have just been
742 ·2131
1975 JEEP CHEROKEE . p b . P'
remodeled,
bath , porches,
Will
do
odd
1obs
rooftng
potn
e:~~: ·
Quodrolrock
Good t~r es APPALOOSA GELDING
s trll needs some r epa tr,
ltng guller work Phone Q92
penen
ced
nde
r
Babycnb
mot
Phone (304) B77·23.t0
7409
ASKING JUST $4,85000
------tress and bumper pod, SSO
1972 GRAN TORINO
53 ,000
JUST LISTED - 4 Acres
Htgh c ho•r
Phone (614 ) S EWING ALTERATIONS
m1les Phone 742 ·2746
lays close to the mrnes,
096 1036
Upho l steri n g
drapes
water tap paid . Jlh miles
reasonabl e 577 South Th~rd
196(, V W. BEETLE , $400 Two new 1976 HONDA MINI TRAil Z50
off Rt . 124, tdeal for home
Ave , Mtddlep o rt
Phone
recap tires , good motor Phone
motorcycle , excellent condt·
or
trailer S-4,600 00 .
992
0306
9B5-4201 .
RCA Whtrlpool
lton
$250
JUST
LISTED - HI ON A
1974 MERCURY Copn , PonosoniC
retngerotor good cond1t ton PIANO TUNING lone Dome ls 12
HILL - 1 floor plan has 3
Am ·F m stereo. 8 track rotlto ls
$100 Kenmore gas k•t chen
yea rs of service
Phone
bedrooms , bath. formal
2800 V·6. Phone
range good condthon SSO
992 2082
4 speed
.,
d1n1ng
, k1tchen w .range &amp;
Phone
992-5b06
949 '" 493
WILL PAINT houses and rools
ref,,
some
carpeting,
guaranteed
work
tre e
1975 CMC TRUCK .t wheel dnve , ROTOTILlER RIDING Mower, 302
storage
bldg ,
part
Ford mower 1967 Ford stolton
estimates , Phone 992 6037
three quarter ton
Phone
basement. $14,000 00
wagon
ott
drums
55
gallon
,
949-20B9.
JUST
LISTED
3
ports for Ford P•ckup 1965
bedrooms, bath, own water
197"' BlAZER , automatiC , p.s .. 4
mode l. .t speed truck tronsmts MoJJile -Homes [or Sale
new 6 ply tires. 26 ,000 mtles,
syste m,
porches,
ston , old buffet
Phone
basement,
RIVER
_::
S4::,~5::
00::_:.P,.:h_:
o;_:
ne~
99;.:2:._·c7 ,1:.:4':9'-:::--:742-2174
1974 TWO BEDROOM mobile
FRONTAGE ideal for
196B VOLKSWAGON , $450 Phone
home
,
co
mpletely
furmshed
tn·
A 0 SMJTH Hyd rontc Boiler, Per
fisherman or boatsman, 2
742 2267
cl udtng wasne r and dryer two
mog las lmed Phone 9Gl2 9442
f~replaces ASKING JUS T
owntngs
wtl
h
enclosed
storage
1976CHEVROLET Chevette Phone
_s.rrac'!_S_! ::__
$7,300.00.
buddmg Wtll rent 1/ , acre
992 7274
JUST LISTED Lovelv
mobtle home stte wtlh water
1972 VOlKSWA,GON Von o•r con.
e lec tric and sepltc sys tem
fog cabin, 2 bedrooms,
d 1t 1oned completely reb udt
Phone 992-2508 or 992 3435
bath, dinmg room , porches,
engtne, 63 000 m1les . Colt
basement, large fireplace
992
7277
1n l1ving R Forced atr hot
water heat, porche-s, 2 car
1966 MUSTANG 351 W 4 bar rel
Let Pomeroy Landmark
garage, 1 acre of ground A
corb
recently rebutll ,
soften &amp; condttion your
FM
outomoltc
slot mags
STEAL
AT
JUST
wafer and a Co op water
stereo 8 track lope player and
$12,000 00.
soUener, Model UC XVI
more call 992 ·2995 after 5 00
JUST LISTED - Close m
Vtrgtl B. Sr .• Realtor
Pm
Now Only ·,
2 s tory frame, 3
216 E . Second Slreet
bedrooms ,
bath ,
full
1972 PlYMOUTH Scomp 6 cyl
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Let us test your wah.r
basemen!, k1tchen has
automaltc , power steenng otr
Phone 992-3325
Free.
Range, Ref and other
conddloner
Phone (614 )
Almosl furniShed ASKING
367 7401 .~-POMEROY - Restaurant
JUST $13,500 00
1
Be independent and make a
~~~Jack W. Carsey, Mgr
ROUTE
124 - Very lovely
reasonable liv in g
All
~ Phone 992-2181
bnck &amp; frame . About 4
eqUipment . Seats over 75
years old . Must sell. owner
Quick sale for only $13,500
COONER S CAMPERS on Rotn.
moving.
G I. APPROVED .
Centrallv localed
bowrldge . Soles Rental , Ser. SWEET POTATO Plants . Phone R
4 bedrooms , bath, cenlral
W Lewts , 843 ·2432, Ractne
RUTLAND Larg"e 3
vtce,
Suppl1es
traders
gas and atr cond. 1f2 acre.
Ohto
campers, cops, alum owntngs
bedroom
home
w1th
GOING
AT
A
LOW
and porche!&gt; by Durobdt Open 1976 CB 750 Hondo , 1800 m1 wllh
equipped
kitchen ,
$2B.500.00.
eventngs Metgs 28 or 32 to
basement
,
2
car
garage
ace, ltke new condt lton Call
BUYING OR SELLING
Boshon Owner Robert Codner .
and nice yard
alter7pm 9853919
LOOK
TO
CLELAND
_
L_
on
_g_!lo
~l.lo
:.:cm
:::___
MIDDLEPORT Good
TURN OF Tfle Cen!ury, so hd oak
REALTY FOR HELP.
rnves tment 3 apartment
1971 LEISURE TIME Camper, 18ft
motchmg dmmg room chotrs,
HENRY E . CLELAND
brick butldlng wtth garages
sleeps 6, self-contomed , httch
Bentwood Supports slrtpped
REALTOR
ond mtrrors tncluded , e~ecellent
near
shopptng
Only
and ready for Ftnishmg $175
Hank
Cleland
condtl!on Pflone 992-2386
$17,500 .
for set. Phone 992 2413 alter 5
Associate
pm
1967 LAYTON TRAVEl trat~er , 21
992-2259 - 985-4112
Space reserved for your
f t self-contotned . good condt · 1975 HONDA 125 Coli 991-b6BB 9
992-256B
property .
fton Coll8ob Ftsher 949·2378
hi! 5, 985 3501 after 6 or co ntact
Tonyo O_c:vts
SOMETHING NEW ~

u ., Wednesoay, May

DTCKTRACY

Heal Estutp (ur Sale

NEW All elec hom e 1n Syracuse
Lo rge lor , olum tnl.lm stdtng, 3
bedrooms , kttch en
dm ing
oreo oil fu lly carpeted , both,
u t1l 1~ room ond garage Phone
992 7419

fi'&lt;&gt;r Sale

1~- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy,

That same Texas reader
asked us to descnbe the "Tez·

as' conventiOn
It v. as the first transfer bid
and provided that m response
to an openmg b1d of one or two
n oLrump a four -diamond
r es ponse s howed a heart 11111
and a four-heart responH a
spade s u1t. Opener was lllp-posed to then bid the correc:t

SUit
(For

a copy of JACOBY

MODERN, send $1 ro ""Win
a r Br i dge ." c l o tnis
newspaper. P 0 Box 48.
Radto C•ty Srar1on. r raw York ,
N Y 100 1g)

�..

16 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, U.. Wednesday, M:.l 18, 1!177
r--------------- ------- --- - ~

!

Area Deaths
Dalla s O'Dell Donahue

LETART, W. VA.

Word

has been received of the
death of Dallas o· Dell
Donahue , Salem , Mo . for
merly ot here .
The son of the tate Homer
and Amanda Donah!Je , he is
survived by his wife, Mary
Songbird
Donahue :
a
brother , Gale Donahue,
Letart. and four si s t ers .
Mam ie Warner , All i ance ;
Daisy Pa u ley , Deerf ie ld ;
Mable P ickens. Syritcuse .,
and
Teressa Boulware ,
Newber g, M o.
·
Funer.al services will be at
2 p . m . Thursday at the Casto
Funeral Home in Evans. W.

Va .
CHARLES CROSS FOSTER
RA( !Nt: - Charles Cross

Foster, Rt. 2, Ra ci ne, died
Tuesday at his re si dence .
M r. Foster was born Feb .
24. 1900 to the la te Waid and
Althea Ca nt er Wi ck line
Fos ter . A l i felong residerit of
Letart Twp. and a well known
Ohio boatman . he was also a
prominen t Letar t farmer . He
was a r eti red emp ioyee of the
Dr avo Cor p. and a member of
Master .. M ates and Pi lol.Lof
Ameri ca Local 47 .
He is survived by his wife.
Edna ; two sons, Georg e C. ,
Pi ttsburgh ;
Wa id
K .,
Columbus ; f i ve daugh ter s,
Mrs. M a tthew (Mary Jane)
Carr and M rs. C-arroll

{Margaret) Cleek , both of

Columbus ; Mrs. Ted ( Dee
Dee) Grindley , Wes t ~ r v ill e ;

Mrs. John {Joy ) Ellis, Sim i.

Ca l if., 1 a nd Mr s. Dal e
( Mir i am )
Comp l iment ,
M anassas, Va .; 10 grand·

I

i

I
sons , nme granddaugh ters :
two daughters tn law, and
five sons in law .
funeral services will be 1
p. m . Friday at the Plant s
Memor ta l Chapel with the
Revs , Ernest Deeter and
Freeland .Norris offi cia ting .
Burial wHI be in Letart Falls
Cemetery . Friends may c.a·ll
at the E;wing Funeral Home
after :Z p . m . today

OTHO SPRAGUE

Otho E . Sprague, 91 . c
residen t of R1. 1, Bidwe lL
died at his hom e around 1'1 r1.
m . Wednesd-ay .
M r. Sprague was a retired
ta rm er . born Dec. 5, H186. in
Spr ingfield Twp., Gal li a
lou nty ; son ot the late Ja mes
and Emma L.
Russel l
Sprague .
He mar r ied Lela M oore .
She preceded him in dea th on

Ocf. 7, 1'972.

One
so n ,
James
E.
Spr ague, R t. 1. Bidwell ,
survives .
One
brother ,
Chancey, preceded him in
death .
He was a member of the
Eve r gree n
M e t hod is t
Church , a charter member of
Spr ingfi eld Grange , and he
served thr ee te rm s on
township schoOl boards . He
a lso ser ved on the coun ty
election board .
Funeral services w ill be
held 2 p. m . Friday at Wil l is
Fu neral Home with Rev . Otis
Denny officiating . Burial will
follow in Prospect Ceme tery .
Friends may ca ll a t th e Wi ll is
Funeral Home from 1· 4 and 79 p. m . Thursdar .
Pallbearers wi I be Tommy
Spra~a;e, Buster Sprague ,

.

IF Your&lt;£§)@[J[/O!J 000
BEcAUSE Y6U cAN'T AND
~--

~~:t;~
.,
~ -­
~

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

...:--;:,...~ &lt;-0-

~ DECENT COLOR T.V.,
· --~ 0 - .

COME SEE OS ..

-'

0UR.5ELECTrON WILL HELP
/?AI~ YOUR SPIRITS.

O.w,ct Atha. Paul Atha . Scott
Ath(1 And Tim Alha

Ord Warns Five injured
ft:ontinued from page I )

LOUIS A. GLASSBURN
Louis 4, . Glassburn . 60, a
resident of Rt 1, Bidwell .
d1ed unexpec tedly arouod II
n rn
Tuesday at HolTer
Medi cal Center .
Mr . Glassburn was born
June '19, 1916, in Columbus .
son of the tate Lewis and

Ethel Woods Glassburn .
He marri~d Mary Godfr ey
on Aug . 16, 1937, in Newpor1,
Ky . She survives, along with

two sons dnd two _d aughters:
Donald, Augsburg, Ger
many ; David , Columbus ;
Mrs . Paul (Mar y) Hackman,
Colu mbu s ; M rs . Vernon
{(ato l) Adams, in Penn sy l vania ;
four
grand
chi ldren ; two sis ters; Mr s.
Eileen Forman, Cen tervill e,
Ind .; Gl adys Loughran.
Co l umbus. One br pthe r
preceded him in dea th.
Mr . Glassburn was a Wor ld
War II ve teran . He was a
mem ber of St . Louis Ca tho lic
Church, and was a re t ired
employee of the Franklin
Coun ty Cour t House.
Funeral services w ifl be
held 11 a .m . Friday at the
M_cCoy ·Moore Funeral Home
w1 fh Rev. A.. J . Golubiewski
off iciat ing , Bur ial wil l be in
Fairview Cemetery.
· Friends may call ~t the
funer.a l home from 6 -9 on
Thursday .

INA JANE HOBACK
RACINE Ina Jane
Hoback, 79 , of Racine , died
early Wednesday morning at
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Preceded in death by one son,
Joe Hoba ck , she is su r vived

by

a

daughter ,

Belly

Bri ck les, Gall i po lis ; fi ve
gr andchi ldr en , and severa l
great .grandch i ldren . Funeral
plan s
are
incompl e te .
Friends may cal l at the
Ewing Funeral Home a11er 7
· p. m . thi s even ing .

KIRK THOMAS Dl)RST
AT HENS - Kirk Thomas
Du rst. t wo and one - half
month old son of Robert (V ic)
and Chery l Hood Durst , 4
Connett Road , The Pla ins,
di ed Tuesday at Children 's
Hospit-al
in
Columbus
following open heart surgery .
Besides his parents, K irk is
survived by two brother s,
Robert Scott and Jason R ..
both at h om e ; pa te r na l
grandparent s, Robert and
Maxine Durst, R ou te 1.
Por·t land ; materna l grand parents Melv in and Hel en
Hood, Pom ero y ; two great.
grandmothers . Mrs . . Emma
Hood, Pomeroy , and Mr s.
Maude Erwin , M iddleport.
Fune.r al services will be
held at 11 a , m . Friday at the
HI.Jghes Funeral Home, 168
Morris Ave ., Athens. where
fr iends may call from 2 to 4
and 7. to 9 p. m . Thursday .

as custodian .
Suppl emental

one-yea r

con trat1.s were granted to
!.arTy Smi th a nd Delbert

Smith fo r the Kindergarten
bus route: L. Smith was given
the Specia l Education bus
route and D. Smith th e
Vocational Education route.
Lunch room supervisor Anna
Grace Oiler and Clerk
Custodi an Ma ril yn Powell
a lso were gra nted one·y ear

contracts.
The

clerk-treasurer was

in structed to borrow money
£rom the Racine Home
National Bank to be used for
payment of May bills and to
meet the May payroll. The
money will be borrowed
againot the August tax settl emenl.
In other business the board
tabled · the activities fund '
a
se ttl eme nt , adopted
ca lendar for the '77-'78 school
year, sold an old John Deere
riding mower to Bill Cozart,
and approved plans for the
Letart Community Assn . to
use the Letart Elementary
School lun chroom for its
annual Memorial Day dinner.
Sev.enty-onc seniors from a
list s~bmitted by High School
Principal Jam es Adams ,

were
approv ed
for
graduation.
Supt. Ord indicated -he is
still accepting appli cations
for Portland Elementary
School custodian.
Also present at the meeting
were Vke President Dennie
Evans and board members

Jack Bostick, Roger Adams
and Dallas Hill ; Larry Wolfe,
Portland Elementary
principal, and Linda Spencer,
clcrk·treasurer.

Vive persons were injured
in four traffic accidents in·
vesti~c.tted Tuesday in Gallia
and Meigs Co unties by the
Ohio Stote Highway Patrol.
The hr.t occ urred at 2 p.m.
on SR 7, two and three tenths
or a mile south of Chester in
Meigs County. An auto driven
by William A. Watson. 47, Rt.
I, Reed sv ille. struck the rear
end of a veh icle ope rated by
Roy C. Betzing, 73, Pomeroy.
Watson and a passenger in
his car, Nancy L. Watson, 46,
Rt. I , Reedsville, claimed
minor injuries but were not

immediafely treated. Watson
was cited to Meigs County
Court lor fallure to stop
within the assured clear
distance.

Three persons suffered
injuries in an accident at 4:34
p.m . on US 35 at )ts junction
with Mitchell Rd . An auto
driven by Dillard D. Maher,
64 , Charleston , struck the
rear end of a car operated by
Hattie D. Keatley, 64 1 South
Shore, Ky . The impact
knocked the Keatley car into
a vehicle operated by Avalon

G. Roush, 56, Patriot Star Rt . Esberadado Villanueva, 37,
Roush and Keatley were ·Addison, attempted to pass as
injured as was John J . a car driven by Paul M.
Keatley , 67, So uth Shore, Ky ., McElroy, Tl, Rt. 4, Pomeroy,
a passenger in the Keatley went to tum left. The vehicles
vehicle. Maher was charged
with failure to stop within the
assured distance. There was
moderate property damage.
Barry G. Halley, 19, Rt . 3,
Crown City, was cited to
Meigs Co unty Court for
failure to yield right of way at
an intersu1ion following an
acci dent at 5 ·p.m . Tuesday,
on SR 7 at the junction to SR
33,
The patrol said the Halley
vehicle was turning off the
exit ramp to SR 33 and failed
to see a vehicle driven by
Steve J. Blackwell, 21, Rt. 4,
Pomeroy.
Blackwell swerved his car
to miss the Halley vehicle and
his car slammed into a
guardrail causing moderate
damage. There was no
contact between the two
vehicles.
A final accident occurred at
5:20 p.m. on SR 7 at Union
Ave. where an auto driven by

sideswiped , resulting in
moderate damage, No one
was injured. VUJanueva was
charged with pa8.!1lng at an
intersection.

ELBERFELD$

PAULA EICHINGER

,
Wrang ler spri ng
\ coordinate s add up to
}
quality fashi on at
pin money prices. Sporty

VOL. XXVIII NO. 25

breast pockets a nd
epau lettes on sleeve~
and shoulders. Machin e
washable polyester and

(Continued from page 1)
himself hobnobbing with celebrities and becoming one
himself ..But Kissinger didn't sound hurt when he sa id it. He
sounded amused ,
" It 's been said that I went to so many parties here in Los
Angeles that my head was turned and I started getting carried
away by my celebrity status," Kissinger said in a speech to the ,
NBC-TV network affiliates convention Tuesday . " I was very
hurt by such comments," Kissinger said sa~castically .
" It is true 1 enjoyed my celebrity status in my previous
position, but I can prove that when I left Washington I wore
exactly the same s ize crown as when I arrived." Kissinger was
obviously replying to remarks Nixon made to interviewer
David Frost in their conversations broadcast last week.

Hawley fined,
sentenced to
High
.
•'
probation time

cotton . Red, green ,
b lue, navy, b lack.

Sizes 30-40 . Cinch
· waist Ivy League
pant with st raight

· leg . Mach ine washabl e ;
polyester and cotton .
Red, green , royal.

Sizes 3/4-1 5!16,

speed chase
results in crash

Fined by Middleport Mayor
Fred Hoffman Tuesday night
were J effrey Hawley, 22,
WEST COLUMBIA, W. Va.
Middleport, $100 and costs
- Mason policeman Larry
and given probation for 15
Duncan, IB, and William
days on conviction of con ~
Edward.
Roush, 23, Mason,
tributing to the delinquency
were
seriously
injured late
minor;
George
of a
Tuesday
evening
when a high
Washingto n Miller, 37,
speed
chase
resulted
in a
Middleport, $200 and costs
spectacular crash near here.
and three days in jail, DWI ;
Roush, listed in critical
Richard W. Salser, Miners·
condition
with head injuries
LEVY REJECTED
vi.[le, $10 and costs, spinning .
this
morning,
is in the inKENTON , Ohio (UPI)
tires, and Charles H. Wagner,
tensive care unit of St.
Voters in \he Har(lln County 58, Pomeroy, $10 and costs,
community of
Kenton assured clear distance.
· Mary 's ·Hospital in Huntington . Duncan, in the in·
Lawren ce Hysell, Mid·
Tuesday voted down a 4.6 mill
tensive
c8re unit at Holzer
additional operating levy for dleport , was pla ced on
Medical
Center with chest
the city's schools.
probation for 15 days for
injuries,
was
reported in fair
The spec ial election vote being disorderly, and David
condition.
was overwhelmingly against M. Smith, 20, Syracuse,
According to officials from
the levy and School Board forfeited a $27 bond posted for
.
the
Mason County Sheriff's
President Ora Winzenri ed speeding,
Department
and the West
Jr. , attributed that to a poor
Virginia
State
Police · who
turnout the board's failure to
OUTLOOK
EXTENDED
were waiting to talk with both
get the people out.
Friday
through
Sunday,
driv~rs this morning , Duncan
He said the board will meet
was apparently chasing
warm and humid with a
soon to decide what stop to
chance
of
afternoon
and
Roush south, out of Mason , at
ta ke next. He sa id a new
evening
showers
or·
an
extremely high rate of
election may be held.
speed, when one of the
thundershowers through
vehicles, (not identified)
the period. Highs will be in
went out of control and struck
the 80s and lows wlll be hi
a power pole owned by Apthe 60s.
Fri ., Sat., Sun .
palachian Power Co. The
May 20, 21,22
pole, which also contained a
CENTER BOMBED
television ca ble, was knocked
MADRID, Spain (UP!) - A down,
R
bomb wrecked part oi the U,
. Officials are not certain
Gregory Peck
S. Cultural Center in Madrid
- Plusearly today , only hours what happened next . Both
before Vice President Walter drivers were apparen tly
Mondale arrived on an of· thrown from their cars, and a
PG
ficial visit. The porter of the spokesman from the sheriff's
department said Duncan
building was cut by flying
OF HELL HOUSE .
crawled from afield, where
glass . There were no" other
injuries.

.

he was thrown some distance,
to the highway. Parts of both
ca rs were strewn over the
area . The accident is still
under investigation.
The Roush car, a 1966 Ford,
and the 1976 Plymouth police
cruiser· was also demolished,
Damage to the power pole
was estimated at $500.
Transporting the victims to
the hospital were the Mason
and Point Pleasant rescue
squads. Uhits from the Mason
and Point Pleasant Volunteer
fire departments were also on
the scene to prevent. a
possible lire from occurring.

,_J

•

Be sure to see all the other Wrangler
sportswear on the 2nd floor, shorts,
skirts, coordinate sportswear.

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

firs! National CityTraYOicrs Che&lt;ks:

Big May Sale
Save up to 96% of the
usUal
fee.
\SIIttnd!. MaylhiJ

and leg s ol
Simul ated wood
with grained
Ame rl(: an
Walnut !mish.

Chrornacolor

Picture Tube .
100% Solld·State

Chassis wil h

Power Sentry.

FAMILY DINING

AT ITS BEST
COLOR SENTRY'"
The automatic pldure control
system Conuols the color picture
when the scene ch anQes . or the
cha nnel ct1a nges, even when the
roamllght c hanges,

THE INN PLACE

High official
of O.arleston
speaking here

West Virginia Secretary of
State A. J. Manchin and
James Winebrenner of Ohio
University will be guest
speakers at a diMer Thursday at the Meigs Inn at 6:30
p. m . sponsored by the
Pomeroy
Chamber
of
Commerce and Pomeroy
. Citizens Action Group,
Tickets may be purcha$ed
from chamber secretary
Barbara Chapman, the office
of Crow, Crow &amp; Porter,
Richard Jones, Kermit
Walton , Paul Simon or Jim
Frecker.

THURSDAY NIGHT SP ..v.
Visit our salad bar, sliced roast beef, ,
mashed potatoes and gravy, hot roll s,
vegetable, coffee. tea or milk .

HURRY! StoP-In today. ..

INGELS FURNITURE
Middleport. 0.

106 N. 2nd .
STOP IN AND

SHOPQUR NEW JEWELR

DI:.PT.

$2

95 Phis tax

:·.·~!:iNews •

Big May~~

•

Buy up to $5,000 worth of First National City
Travelers Checks for only a $2 fee during
the Big May Sale.

_...

~"" See llow-.ch you s...

-..-.e-••

ss.~ 1 ~~~
[ - JSOO , 25~00
~-l.(X)J

I

500
(Ill., II&lt;""'~ ..

If yoU hm.: 1n w~til ahd lme to S&lt;l\'e, y~)u' ll
lnvc Fi rst Natic.mal Cit)' Tra\'dets C h ~cks'
Big May Sa l ~. Buy them now and san: up to
96% of tht= fcc. Use them whenc\·er you go

on vacation .

·
And i£ th ey get lost or ~wl cn you won't have·

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) An official of the AAAInternalional League '
Columbus Clippers
announced Monday tha't
outfielder Ken Macha has
been recalled by the parent
Pittsburgh Pirates ~nd will
join tbe team in Cincinnati for
tonight's game.
He replaces Miguel Dilone,
injured in Sunday's HoustonPittsburgh contest. This Is
the secOfl.d time Macha has
been recalled , ·

Hines will speak
at commencement

\an.

10 oo

5 00

us

;

IIIIW~"

_p.oo
2.00
2.00
2.00

--

YOUUvt

92%

60%

....,........,..,0·¥11!-111• •

)J I !f

to wai t for a refund . Bee&lt;~ use First Natio nal Ci ry
Tr&lt;tvelcrs Checks can give you an on·the-spot
refund ol ove r 45.000 locmions worldwide.
Tho usa~ds more Jhan any other travelers check.
· Bu.y F1rst N&lt;~t ional City Travelers Checks
:.,
...
no wm May. and s.;.1~·e·.

Farmers Bank
f

POMEROY, OHIO

540,000.00 Maximum lnsur•nce For E•ch. Dellosltet
I'Mmber Feder•l Deposit Insurance Corpor•llon

'

and "The L&lt;&gt;rd's Prayer."
Eric Dunning will introduce
the speaker. Benediction by
Brenda Lawrence and the
recessional by Mrs. Lee Lee.
Graduating students are:
l,.isa Al len, Heidi Ashley,
Bea
Autherson ,
Mary
Auther so n, Sh.aron Baker ,
David ' Bass, Steven Boso,

Roger Brauer, Jr.. Joseph
Brown , James Carnahan,
Bobbi Chapman, Carolyn

Charles,

Corbett

Cleek,

Dani el Codner, Bruce Cottrill , Jeffrey Counts, Gregory

Cundiff.

·

Michael Dailey, Jer rena
D ill, Darlene Duncan, Eric

Dunning , Gregory

Eben.

Ricky Findl ey, Chr istopher
Forbes, Melvin Forester ,·
An na Frank , Brian Dudding.
Carol Guinther, Juli 'Gooch,
Lisa Grind ley, A l isa Harris,

Dwain Ha ll , Stephen Hen dri cks, Chr i stopher Hill.
Josep h . Ho l rnan,
Debra
Holsinger and Dav id Huston.
Also, James Imboden ,
Josep h Im boden, Oreama
Jenkins. Jerry Johnson. Jr.,

Carl Johnston , David Kiser,

Nea .l e
Knight,
Stephen
Layalley , Brenda Lawrence,
Brenda ) Lewis , Gregory
Lynch , Roger Michael , Nina
M ill er, Steven . Nease, Candy

Riffle. Teresa Riff le,

Den~e

WASHINGTON- WITH U'ITLE MENTION of its most
controversial provision -power to regulate prices of oil and
natural gas -the Senate approved consolidation of federal
energy activities into a new cabinet-level department
The 74-10 vote Wednesday night gave President Carter an
initial congressional victory on one of the prime points of both
his government reorganization and energy package. It now
goes to tiiti House, where a committee has approved a
somewhat different version.
TEL AVIV, MAY 19 - MENAHEM BEGIN'S victorious
Likud party began hard bargaining today with smaller
political blocs in an effort to Iorge a coalition government
strong enough to lead Israel out of financial crisis and toward
peace wlth the Arabs,
"We want a strong government that can take effective
action," sald Fimha Ehrlich, the No. 2man in the Likud and 'a
likely candidate for finance minister. "Not a government that
will depend on one vote." Other sources within the Likud said
the only major obstacle to a powerful coalition of more than 75
.lle8ts in the 12G-member parliament was the insistence of
leaders of the new Democratic Movement for Change on
electoral reform and new elections within two years.
COLUMBUS - TELEVISION SETS SHOULD carry
(Continued on Pa ~, Sl

•

I

~~
'

'

Local notices, briefs

Kathy Shain . Lee Smith,
Thompson , Robert Waldnig,
Jr .. She ll y Ward, Douglas

RAC INE - Deadline to buy
tickets for he Racine Alumni
Banquet Is May 21. The d ~nce
at the Southern High and the
Juni or High is ·opened to the
public . Alumni · Queen candida tes are U~a Allen , Heidi
Ashley, Brenda Lawrence
and Trac y Weese. The queen
wil l be crowned at t he close of

Warden , Traci Weese, Kevin
Willford , Robert Wilson ,

Daniel Wolfe , Scott Woife and

linda Young .
Valed ictorian is Scott
Wolfe, Salutatorian is Kevin

Willford.

ChIC·
• k ens
.

•

0 mmg

Vorster is
listening

VIENNA, Austria (UP! ) - A black U.S. diplomat at his
side, Vice President Walter Mondale told Prime Minister John
. Vorster today_the United Sta.tes shares politicalpower with its
blacks and mtiiilllted South AfriC11 should do tbe same.
Inf?rmants said the heavy-set Vorster listened
impaSSively as the two delegations conversed across two long,
parallel, tables set up in a -meeting room in the imperial
Hofburg Palace.
Mondale emerged almost
Two uniformed Austrian
precisely on time from the
first three-hour session, and guards, submachine guns at
flashed his boyish grin at the ready, stood guard at tbe
reporters as he climbed into a entrance used by Mondale
gray limousine and sped and Vorster to enter the
palace.
away for lWlch .
As
a
photographers
Vorster left minutes later.
snapped
pictures
of the U.S.
Asked by reporters how the
and
South
African
first encoWlter had gone, he
delegations,
Vorster
quipped
replied with a single word:
about
the
reporters:
"
If they
"Continuing .''
. DANFORTH AWARD WINNERS - Eric Dunning, left, and Bobbi Chapman received
knew
what
they
were
getting
seated to Mondale 's left
the Danforth Awards Wednesday in ~he Southern Local High School's annual awards
during
the meeting was in for there wouldn't be so
assembly. Eric, the son of Mr. and Mrs. Herb White, Crossville, TeM., also received the
Ambassador Donald many! ' '
Larry.MorrLson award for athletic ability ,leadership and academic accomplishments. Miss
They did not shake hands in
McHenry ,
deputy - to
Chapman is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Chapman, Syracuse.
front
of photographers, how·
Ambassador Andrew YoWlg
at the Uni!OO Nations. The ever.
U.S. aides said Mondale
presence of a black American
·,:.,.-".:
was
planning to spend about
diplomat underlined
Mondale's point that the equal time discussing U.S.
~·
United States , de spite objections to South Africa's
difficulties, is com mitted to apartheid discrimination
integrating blacks and policies, diplomatic efforts to
·minorities into the U.S, promote black majority rule
in Rhodesia, and the longpolitical process,
elections
for ·
The meeting got off to an delayed
apparently cordial start independence in Sooth West
Africa.
'
Wider tight security.

Timothy Sm ith , Terry Spaun,
Denise Ta lb ott., Timothy

• •in Brie-fs)~
J.; ·:;:; -.

._._.
By United Pressloternadonal
MAPUTO, MOZAMBIQUE - U. N. AMBASSADOR
Andrew YoWlg suggested today that millions of Rhodesian
blacks should boycott white merchants In tactics similar to
those used in the American civil rights movement of the 1960s.
Such an economic boycott would have as devastating an
effectontopplingthewhiteminority governmentoflanSmith
as the current guerrilla war raging in Rhodesia, Young said in
a keynote speech to aU. N. conference on Rhodesia and South
West Africa,
Young circulated a 10-page memorandum to delegates
from 87 nations and black liberation leaders outling the
principles guiding American policy on southern Africa and
then delivered an emotional 40-minute speech in which he
constantly parallels with the American civil rights movement
and his and President Carter's persol)al involvement.

·'

Roberts, David Roush .
Vickie
Ro us h,
Jacob
Schuler, Edward Sel lers,

C

demand that the U. S. Environmental Protection Agency
enforce air pollutioo particulate standards In the state of
Ohio.
Also authorized by the cominissloo was a request that
the a ttorney general file suit agains\ Wheeling-Pittsburgh
Steel Corp. for alleged violations of air quality standards
by non~ompliance of by-product coke batteries at its
Follansbee plant.
"There is an enforces ble particulate regulation in
Ohio," said APCC director Carl Beard. "We strongly
protest the lack of enforcement of the particulate law by
the EPA in Ohio."
West Virginia manufacturers have complained to the
cominisslon that they are being forced to comply with
stringent West Virginia air poUution laws, whlle no
regulations have been forced on competitors just across
the Ohio River in Ohio.
The commission rejee!OO a suggestloo that West
Virginia file suit against the EPA and Ohio in federal "
district court to force enforcement of Ohio particulate
regulations. "No," said chairman Adonis Hunt, " ! don't
want to get involved in ooe of those. "

A member of the National
Honor Society, she has been
awarded the titles of Out:
standing French Student and
Outstanding Ch emis try
Student. In her junior year
she won the American Legion
Americanism and Government Test and was a delegate
to Buckeye Girls State.
A Student Booster, Paula is
a member of the concert
(Continued on Page 5)

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

THURSDAY, MAY 19, 1977

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

RACINE - Paul D. Hines,
vice president-dean of
Marshall CommWlity College
will be the guest speaker at
the annual commencement
exercises at Southern High
School Sunday at 8 p.m.
Hines graduated from
Raytown High School,
Raytown, Mo., in 1952. He
received hls B.S. in education
in 1959 from Central Missouri
State, He attended Missouri
. University from 1960·62
where he received a M.A. in
history and Educational
Degree in Social Science
Education from Ball State
University ln 1964.
PAUL D. HINES
He has done numerous
professional writing , con·
sultation , worked with tendent and Robert Sayre,
foundations and federal president of the board of
programs, prepared education, will present the
speeches and papers, and diplomas .
The benediction will be
involved
himself
in
presentation of material for given by Bobbi Chapman
which Marshall University followed by the recessional
Distinguished by the band.,
received a
Service Award (AACTE) in
The Rev . Steve Wilson will
1970.
be the guest speaker at
In addition he has taught, Baccalaureate services to be
coached, and was president held Sunday at 2 p.m. at 1the
at Rio Grande Community high school. The Rev. Wilson
College from 1975 to 1976 .
is the pastor at Cannel,
He and his wife, Pauline Bethany, Portland and Sutton
have four· children, Scot 17. Churches.
Bruce 16, Mary 12 and Susan
Rev. Wilson graduated
10.
·
from Toledo Devllbiss High
The processional " Pomp School in 19:;6. He attended
and Circumstance" will be the University of Toledo from
by the high school hand, 1966to 1971 and was ordained
invocation by Heidi Ashley a student minister in 1973.
and the band will present Since 1974 he has attended
"Balladair.' 1
Ohio University where he is
The sa lutatory address will working toward a philosophy
be given by Kevin Willford degree .
and Valedictory address by
The processional will be
Scott Wolfe.
g1ven by Mrs. Lee Lee and
The speaker will be in· 'the invocation by Brenda
troduced by Dave Roush . Lewis.
Presentation of the class will
The high school choir will

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (UP[) ·- The West Virginia

Air l'ollutioo Control Ccmmlssion voted Wednesday to

en tine

at

~;,,:,::,,,:,:::,,,,,::,:,:, , :::,:~,:,:, , , , :::,::~,:,,,:,::,:,~,:, , : ,:, ,,~,::,:,: for meet

THE LEGEND

styled

School has prepared mem- fall and eventually become a
bers of the 1977 senior class nurse anesthetist. To prepare
for her choSen career, Paula
for their future."
Sandra
Lee
Garnes , has worked as a candystriper
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Bill at Veterans Memorial
Games, Dex.ter, will give the Hospital and is currently
of
that
salutatory address on the president
topic,
" The
Class organization.
Active in student govern·
Achievements.''
A Scientific College Prep · ment, Paula is president of
student, Miss Eichinger plans the Student Co uncil and
to enter the School of ~ursing previously served as its
at Capital University ·in the secretaiy and vice--president.

•

e

News .. in Briefs

THE OMEN

console. Cabine t

SANDRA GARNES

Meigs Local High School
will break tradition ~this year
when, in lieu of a con..
ventional co mmencement
speaker, valedictory and
salutatory addresses are
featured by its two top
graduating seniors.
Valedictorian Paula June
Eichinger, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Paul D. Eichinger,
Pomeroy. will speak on the
topic , " How Meigs Hi gh

check safari shirt has flap

MASON DRIVE-IN

Modem

Student addresses
feature commencement

in four accidents

West Virginia to insist
Ohio enforce clean air
particulate standards

the banquet.
TOP SOUTHERN LOCAL STUDENTS-Scott Wolfe,left, is valedictorian of this year's
class, and Kevin Willford is salutatorian. Scott is -the son of Mr. and Mrs. Hilton Wolfe Jr .,
Racine, and Kevin the son of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Willford, Racine. See Page 21or account of
awards assembly.

Dues of $1 used for the
scho larship are to be sen t to
sec retary . f reasurer If the
banquet is not attended .

Tickets are on sale at Cross
Sons Sto r e, Rac i ne Food
Mkt. , and Paul's aarber Shop
or by send i ng a self addressed stamped envelope
to Mrs. Raymond Pierce, Rt.
2 Box 44, Racine .

The Big Bend CB Radio
Cl ub. will hold a _pi cnic a t 11
noon Sunday at the roadside
park, northbound on Route
33 . Those attend ing are to
take a covered d ish.

RACINE

It

was

r equested in the Wednesday

Memorial Day parade .planned

KIU GRANDE, Ohio (UP!)

Plans for local Memorial
While It's not exactly Day activities and election of
Olyrnpic class athletics, the officers highlighted Tuesday
annual Bob Evans Chicken night's regular session of the
Flying Meet has attracted a American Legion Drew
squawking field of 200 this Webster Post 39 _
year, double the entrants last
Frank Vaughan, program
year.
co-ehairman, outlined plans
The
sixth
annual for the 1977 Memorial Day
international meet is set for services Monday, May 30 .
Saturday at the Bob Evans with the Legion, firemen and
Farm in this southeastern
Ohio commWlily and ICFM
.
officials say chickens from as
far a'w ay · as Bolivia and
#
#
irela nd
have
already[' I
entered,
·
In ·the event, chickens. are
Meigs ltlgh School is
placed one by one in sponsoring its first fast pitch
rr.ailboxes
affixed
to softball tournament this
scaffolds 11 feet off the weekend startin g Friday
groWld. The mailbox doors evening .
are flipped open and the birds
Six teams have entered the
take wing . The bird in each tournament . They are
assigned weight classes that Federal Hocking, Trimble,
goes the longest distance South
Point,
Ironton.
wins.
Gallipolis and Meigs .
Flight director Glyde
South Point comes in with a
Marsh , a doctor of veterinary 14-1 record and is seeded
medic ine at Ohio State number one while Meigs has
University, said $500 wiU go a 13-2 record and is seeded
to any bird that breaks the number two.
1973 record of !63-feet, 2The tournament will be
lncbessetbyLoisLald, an'old double elimination and will
English game hen.
begin Friday at 4:30 p.m.
Evans, an Ohio farmer and with Federal Hocking playing
businessman, started the ::::::::::::::::::::,:,:,:::,:::,:::::::::::::,:,::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
contest in 1971 based on his
recollections of such meets
EXTENDED OUTLoOK
when he was a youngster .
Saturday
through
Last year 's winner was
Monday, fair Saturqay and ·
Lynda, a West Bend, Wis.,
Sunda y and a cha nce of
bird that flew 92 feet.
showers Monday. Highs
Thebirdswillbeweighedln
w111 be in the 80s and lows
Saturday morning and flying
wlll be li! the 80s.
begins at I pm .
:::::::::::::::::::::::·:::::::::::::::-:,:,:-:::,:,:,:,::::::::::::::::::::

DB

emergency squad members
again having leading in the
activities.
Memorial services will be
conducted at 9 a.m. around
the flagpole in Pomeroy's
upper parking lot prior to the
parade. Charles Green, past
Department of Ohio cam·
mander, will be the guest
speaker.
All marching units wishing

·
Trimble and Ironton playing
Gallipolis,
At 6 p.m. number one
seeded South Point will play
the winner of the Federal
Hocking-Trimble
gam·e.
Meigs will take on the winner
of the Ironton-Gallipolis
game also at 6 p.m. The loser
of the Federal Hocking ·
Trimble game will play the
Ironton- Gallipolis loser.
Play will continue Saturday
at 10 a .m . with two games, at
11:30 one game, 2 p.m, one
game, 3:30 one gam~, finals,

CLINIC SET
The next cervical cancer
clinic free to Meigs Area
women will be staged from
12:30to3 :30p.m. Wednesday
at Veterans Memorial
Hospital. There are some
appointments open for the
clinic. Womenwishingtotake
advantage Of the clinic may
call 992-7531 or 992-3382.

the Southern Local School
Distr ict Board ·of · EdUca tion

voted 4-1 to re [ect a proposal
by Supt . Bobby Ord that a 7 .5

mill levy be placed before
voters of the district at a
speci al election In August.
Actua l ly, the board voted 31 i n favor of the proposal but
w ith four member s present
ou t of fhe fiv e the vote count
w.as not ·high enough to pass
the proposal. Four yes votes
would ha ve been required for
prt ssage ot the proposal.

to take part should be at the services .
parking lot by 9 a.m.
After a lunch for Legion
After the parade featuring participants, the squad will
the Meigs, Eastern and be at Memorial Gardens ·for
Wahama hands, the Post's services at 12:45. A second
!iring squad will travel to the parade, to begin at 1: 30, will
Beech Grove Cemetary for march through Chester, In
prayer and a salute to the case of rain on Monday
dead. The same group will morning, all services will be
then move to the Sacred . held at 10 a.m. at the Post
Heart Cemetary for similar home .
Unanimously elected to
~
offices were Schmucker as
·
·
Post Coma nder , Bruce
-1 _ Cleland,
first
vice·
Meigs County Sheriff
commander, and Cha rlie
James J . Proffitt's depart·
Hayes,
second
vicement Wednesday transported
and at5 p.m .. if necessary to commander. Others named
three Meigs County prisoners
play a second game. Whether were Paul Casci, Post Ad·
Meigs wins or loses Friday judicate ; Charles Swatzel, to the Ohio Department of
Co rrect io n 's Medical
they will play at 10 a.m . finance officer, and Alan
Reception Cente r to begin
Saturday.
Downie, Post Chaplin .
their sentences.
Leonard Jewell was elected
They were Earl Phelps ,_ 26,
trustee and Edgar Vanln·
Middleport, sentenced one to
VOTE FRAUD
wagen, Sargent-At-Arms.
lO yea rs for ca rrying a
COLUMBUS (UPI)
Appointed delegates to the
Charges and denials of poten- district and state conventions con cealed weapon ; Kim
21, Racine, two to 15
tial vote fraud flew through were Schumucker, Casci , Hayman,
the air in the Ohio House Vaughn and Vanlnwagen . years each on six counts of
aggravated robbery , and
Wed nesday as m embers Alternates are Hayes and
Brian E. Bass, 21, Syracuse,
dehated the consequences of Swatzel.'
two to 15 years on six counts
electio n
day
voter
In other business, Swatzel
of aggravated robbery,
registration,
gave a report of money taken
"Do you realize that one in on the recent gun raffle
vote per precinct in the which was held to raise funds
gubernatorial election in 1974 for the American Legion ·
co uld have reversed the basehall team . The 12 gauge
VETERANS MEMORIAL
results ?" asked House 8-70 shotgun was won by
ADMITTED - Gilbert
Minority Leader Charles F . Pierce Morgan of Parkers·
Mees,
Pomeroy; Gladys
Kurfess, R-BowlingGreen,in
burg, W. Va. The. Legion
Barber,
Reedsville; Juanita
warning of fraudulent votes. members wish to thank
Laudermilt,
Middleport ;·
"Maybe it did," shouted everyone who contributed to
Steven
Call.
Pomeroy.
one Democrat thinking of the the sales and purchase of
DISCHARGED - Meryle
narrow victory won by raffle tickets. Coi!U)}ander
Lawton,
Juanita Chapman,
Republican Gov. James A. Claren c h
Schmucker
Oscar Imboden , AMa Grim.
Rhodes.
presided.

t .• h ..ournament begzns
• Fn(J,ify
•

S •pl1.C

edi tion of The Sentinel that

Prisoners go
to confinement

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