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                  <text>8-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0, Monday, Jw1e 13, 1!177

HOSPITAL NEWS
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Saturday Admissions Martha Mollohan, Tuppers
Plains; Olan Hysell, Mmers·
ville ; Carl Jeflers, Long
Bottom; . Grace Roush ,
Racine.
Saturday Dischar~e s Susan Tra cy, Clarence
Norris, Pauline Riley,
Clarice Randolph , George
Reitmire, Thoma s Casey,
Dora From. .Alice Games,
Edward Bowen .
Sunday Admissions Theron Durham, Pomeroy.
Sunday Disc harg es Deanna Norris, Shirley
Ables.

Pomeroy. 0 .: Mrs. Wilma
Wandling, Point Pleasant;
Mrs. Gene Williams, Point
Pleasant; Mrs. Curtis Cossin,
1A.'On; Charles Lanham, Point
Pleasant ; Lydia Long, Point
Pleasant ; Joseph Van Sickle,
Poi nt Pleasant; Karen
Nibert, Apple Grove; Ross

Holzer Medical Center
(Discharged June 10 I
Delores Adams, Lin da
Ault, Larry Bailey, Joseph
llond, Maude Butcher, Mrs.
David Coga r and daughter,

Hamlin ;

Mrs. Terry Crosier and son,

Nellie Cul!ums,

Phyllis

Dai ley, Pauline F ierce, Mona

Gibb, Bill Goble Jr., Leota
Henry, Millis Johnsonn, Jr.,
Mrs. Jerry Mahon .and son ,
Mi sty
Martin ,
Irene
·"M cGT arh,
Chr i s tine
McKinniss, Karen M oo r e,

Wilson Moore, Edna Neville,
Lasco Niday, Lealll)e Parson,
Linda Preston, L&lt;&gt;wie Rice,

Morris, New Haven ; Edna

Anderson, Point Pleasant ;
Mrs. Orville BaUinger, .Ad·
dison, 0.; Donald Cottrill,
Syracuse; Clinton Gillespie,
Poin t Pleasant; Randall
Wamsley, Gallipolis Ferry;
Penny Byus, Point Pleasant;
Keith Casto, Buflalo; Hallard
Shriber, Gallipolis; Mrs.
Ro bert Stickler, West
Michael

Swisher,

Point Pleasa nt; Mrs. Howard
Ca rder , Point Plea•ant;
Phillip Ro ush , Redhouse ;
William

Bonecutter, Jr.,

lllREE CHARGED

-----Are~-D-e;th~----! Armed
Emer son (Pate)Tr uesdell ,
63, a res i dent of Columbus
and a nativ e of Crown City
died Satu rday night in
Doc tor's
Hospital
in
Columbus follow ing a brie f
il lness .
Mr . Truesdell was born i n
Crown City on March I, 1914 ,
son of the late Ha rry
Truesdell and Rita Truesdell ,
who survives and resides on
Rt. 2, Cr own City .
He marr ied the former
Janice Henry . She SIJ rvlves ,
al ong with the follov-oing
children : Gerald Trvesdell ,
Gallipolis ;
Mr s . Joy ce
Marioth , Mrs. Peggy Carter,
Mrs. Diane Cuckler and Mr s.
Ca th y Mari ofh, · all o f
Columbus and Mrs. Carol
Gaunt, Cincinna ti. Th irteen
grandchildren and one greaTgrandchi ld survive .
·
He Was prec;eded in death
by one brott'1er , Estel. One
sister , Mrs. Janet Northup,
Ga llipolis, surv ives . ·
Mr . Truesdell was a Worl d
War II ve teran and a member

Kan~uga .

Southside
man killed
in wreck

Marie Richards, . Edson
Housh, Bonnie Skeens ,
Phyllis Stinson , Stacy
Walker, Marjorie Walton,
Gertrude Wickline.
(Discharges June 11)
POINT PLEASANT - A
Beverly Ault, Mildred one· vehicle accident on U.S.
Bctzing, Delores Bias, Pansy 3!) about seven miles south ol
Blackburn , Michael Crump, here early Sunday claimed
Glenn Dayton, Doris Denney, the life ol Hayden J .
Barbara Denniston, Mrs . Lemaster, 31, of Southside.
Herbert Elliott and da ughtcr,
State
Police
said
Baunnie Fletcher, Leta Hall, Lemaster's car ran oil the
Mrs. Marion Holcomb and road and struck a tree. He
son, Leota Hubbard, Mabel was its only occupant
Hughes, Geneva Jeffers, and · wsa pronounced dead
Velma Keller, Newton King, at the scene. The accident
Elton Lykins, Earl MaMon, occurred about 3 a.m.
Mi chael McWilliams,
Lemaster was the son ol
Catherine·Mi!ler, Dan Notter, Beulah Lemaster and an
Donna O'Dell , · William employe of the Williamson
Sexton, Buster Stanley, Latmes Pallet Co.
Ernest Thorne, Florence
His llineral will be Tuesday
Ziers, Cynthia Weaver, at I p.m. at the Crow-Hussell
Walter Werry, Gary Westfall, Funeral Home; burial in
Mrs. Donald Woodie and son. Beech Hill. Southside.
(Births, June II)
Friends may call at the
Mr. and Mrs. Vient Harris, funeral home after 5 p.YJI .
daughter, Crown City ; Mr. today.
and ·Mrs. Steven Clemons,
daughter, Wellston; Mr. and
Mrs. Kenneth Sharp, twins, GffiLS STATE OPENS
son and daughter, Ewlngton.
COLUMBUS (UP!)
(Discharges, June 12)
Some 1,300 high school
Robert Carson, Mrs .. Willis seniors started campaign
Turst and daughter, Mrs. activities in the 31st Buckeye
Terry Finn and daughter, Girls State at the capital
Goldie Green, Art Hartly Jr., University campus Sunday.
Annette .La mbert, Belva
The girls divided into the
·Miller, Edward Miller, Isaac Federalist and National
Riley, Anna Sheets, R. N., political parties, and will hold
Virginia Swain, Russell elections for state, county,
city and school board offices
Wolford, Lee Zaba)VskL
during
the
week-long
(Birth, June 12)
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Taylor, exercise in self government,
spon!IOred by tile American
daug!Jter, Le-tart, W. Va.
Legion Auxiliary.
Gov. James A. Rhodes wlll
PLEASANT VALLEY
address
· the delegation
DISCHARGES .:_ Mrs.
Wednesday
when tile Girls
Charles Burdette, Ripley;
State
governor
is
. Craig Barnette, Point
inaugotaled.
· Pleasant; Mrs. David Pierce,

JOIN UP!

Our Vacation Club
Makes the Going ·
Easy!
Say "bon voyage" to the problem$ of
financing your vatation! All it takes
is 49 weekly deposits into our
Vacation Club, we pay the 50th
FREE. Start now!

Burial will be in Forest Lawn
Cemeter y.
Friends may call at the
funeral home from 7-9 p.m .
· and on Tuesday f rom 2-4 p.m .
and 7-9 p.m .

CLARA E. O'BRIEN
COLUMBUS - Mrs. Clara
E . 0 ' Bden , 88, ot 26~5

Ea rlwi ck Blvd ., Columbus ,
died ear ly Sunday morning at
St. Anthony Hospital in
Columbus following an extended illness.
Born in Orange Townst'1lp,
Meigs COUntY:· Mrs. O' Brien
was the ~·daughter of the lc,te
Or. Charles S. and Nevada
Parker Gutt'1rie.
She was a member of the
Orange Christian Church, of
tt'1e Royal Neighbors Lodge
and was a past wortt'1y
matron of tt'1e Order of the
Eastern Star in Manila, the
Phil ip pines,
wt'1ere she
resided from 1914 unti l 1945.
She was a resident of
Columbus since 1946.
Preceded in death by one
brother, Harry E-. GUthrie In
1971. Mrs . O'Brien Is surv ived
by her husband , Seldon W.

O'Brien, one son, Charles S. ·

Farmers Bank
POMEROY. OHIO
$40,000.00 Maximum Insurance
For Each Depositor

Member Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation
(

&gt;

Two white men, one anned
Edna Mulheron. 80 . a
with a long barrelled pistol,
residen t of Young '$ Tra iler
robbed three employees or
Court , died at '1 p m . Sa tur ·
the Burger Chel Sunday night
day at her home.
She was born Feb. 5, 1897,, or $4L5L
in New Hampshire.
Gallipolis city polke this
She marr ied John H .
morning
continued inMulheron on Jan . 19, 1924. He
vestigation
or the armed
preceded her i n death on
robbery which occurred at
MQrch 6, 1976.
She is su rv ived by one
10 :59 p.m. when the two men
sister. Mr s. J . W. Harrower , rode up to the dri¥e·in winOrmand Beach, Fla .
Funeral services will be dow on a motorcycle . They
held 7 p.m. Monday al lhe lirst demanded the receipts
Waugh-Hall ey .,Wood Funeral
lrom the restaurant's sale.
H ome with Rev. Alfred
One ol the men was
Holley offic ia ting . Burial will
described
as 6 foot tall and
be in Ri verside Ceme tery,
Plymouth, N . Y . Friends may 160 pounds, with a reddish
ca 1 at the funeral home from
beard. He was wearing a
7·9 p.m. today .
yellow helmet. He pulled the
gun.
CECil MOSSBARGER
The other man was about 21
Ceci l Franklin Mossbarger, years old also six feet tall
7B , a resident of Rt . 2, Patriot
w~ighed about 125
and
(Gage Community). died at
pounds.
2 · 30 c;~ . m . Sunday in Holzer
The manager told tile men
Medica l Center .
Mr. Mossba rger , a farmer. he could not open the safe
was bor'n Feb . 15. 1899, In
Walnut Twp. son of the l ate since he did not know its
Edward and Minn ie M c- combination.
The robbers then ordered
Donald Mossba~e r .
·
He married L· flle Er lt on three employees to empty
June 11 , 1924, in Ashland. _
Ky. their pockets, stating that tf
St'1e survlves along with one
daughter. Mrs. RUth Ann they didn't, they would shoot
up the place.
Schuldt G•lllpolls,

. (;ty .

sister, Mrs . Ruth
M~adows, preceded hi m in
death in 1968.
Funeral arrangements will
be announced by VVaugh Halley.Wood Funeral Home.
0]1e

fion !;

Amen"ca's

FUNNY BUSINESS

'iE5 1 1 CAN SEE Tt-IAT
YOUR TIME SPejT IN

THE PEACE CORPS

'MADE A LASTtNc;::, ·
IMPf?E'.SSION Of.J '/00.

Carter urged

to ban sale of
vital computer
WASHING T 0 N

&lt;YBrien, an~ o~e !ilrandsoh,
Congressman Clarence
Charles Kevtn 0 Bnen, all of , Mill
i
, p . 'd t
Columbus.
.er s urgmg
rest en

F"neral servkes will be

held Wednesday at 11 a.m . at

the White Funeral Home In
Coolvil le, Burial wil l follow at
the B"rlingham Cemetery .
Calf;ng hours are afternoon
on Tuesday . The taml ly will
receive friends from 2-4 and
7. 9 p.m .

n...,..,.n
taking
v~
on passengers
in Pittsburgh
PITTSBURGH (UP!)
The last of the old time
steamboats - the famed
Delta Queen - this year wlll
take on passengers at Pittsburgh, the Eastern-most port
ol its . Mississippi River
system voyage.
The boat will originate a
cruise out of her home port of ·
Cincinnati
17 and make
port
atJIUle Pittsburgh's
Monongahela Wharf June 21
for the first time this sea,.,n.
The sternwheeler will take
on passengers here and
depart at noon lor a three ·
night cruise on the Ohio River
to Cincinnati.
Passengers can travel
round trip from Cincinnati or
Pittsburgh. Going upstream
to Pittsburgh takes 4 days;
going back down takes 3
days. Fares ·begin at $80 per
night.
The Delta Queen makes
port stops for passenger tours
In the rivertowris ol Marietta,
Ohio; Parkersburg, W. Va.;
and East Liverpool, Ohio.
ASK TO WED
Marriage licenses have
been granted to Charles
Henry Faulk, Jr. ; Massillon,
and Linda Rebecca Rupe, 22,
Pomeroy, and to Gregory
Keith McCall, 29, The Plains
and Debra Jo May, 22,
Rutland.
•·

MASON DRIVE-IN
thru TUES.

advanced

DELIVERY

•

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Williams SL (I block by addition $4,700 In revenue office again.
Legion Hall) .
sharing funds designated lor
Council members exMain St. (So. First Ave. to transportation and $1 ,400 in pressed opinions \hal the
So. Third Ave.) (I block) .
the cemetery fund from additional money - although
Alley between Mill St and revenue sharing that is to be a Ioken lor the time and
Main St., So. Fourth and So. used on the cemetery road. expense involved - would
Third (2 blocks).
In another matter, council help some and lelt that people
Alley between Race St and voted 5-1 with Allen Lee King of the town would not object
Coal St. and NO. Third and casting the dissenting vote to to the Increase.
No. Fourth (I block ).
raise the wages ol luture
However, King opposed the
Intersections at No. Second council members.
raise on the hasis that "It Is a
and Race, Pearl and Locust,
According to the ordinance, privilege to serve on council"
and Beach and Locust.
gl ven three readings under and that a small town cannot
Cemetery entrance (old) emergency measures last afford to compensate village
and 222 ft. on old cemetery night, council members will officials lor the amount of
road.
receive $8 for each meeting work they do. King suggested
Council appropriated rather than the present $4 and that council members at$13,900 from the street fund the council president will tending specia-l community
lor street repair, It has in receive $10 rather than tile meetings ot sessions in
present $4. The raise will not Columbus, Marietta and
benefit present council elsewhere dealing with town
members who do not seek
(Continued on page 10)

en tine

at
VOL XXVW NO. 42

Kelly ,
If the costs .are beyond the
financial ability of the town,
then the scope ol the project
will be reduced. The committee recommended also
limestone lor several alleys
and the materials ordered
will include enough for some
roall repair to the cemeteries.
Streets recomiJ1ended lor
resurfacing were No, Fourth
Ave. from Dead end through
intersection with Walnut St
(I block).
Bryan Place.
Hamilton St. (1 block to
dead end) ,
Ash St .. Beech to Powell.

TUESDAY, JUNE 14, 1977

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

coming out."
Another ol the fugitives, David Lee Powell, 27, of Chicago,
serving a IOU.year jail IA!rm for murder, was recaptured
Saturday and hank robber Larry Hacker, 32, whom authorities
believed mastenninded the escape, was found earlier Sunday
in tiny Beech Grove Baptist Church, about six miles lrom tbe
prison.
At tile height ol tbe search, some 200 state and local police,'
prison guards and FBI agents, aided by bloodhounds and
helicopters, were pressed into service lllrough a search area 25
miles around the prison.
Ray and the others made lllelr escape - it was the third try
for Ray - at dusk Friday by slamming a makeshift pipe
ladder against a wall in tile prison's rear corner,
As guards turned their attention to a faked fight and other
diversions set up by Ray's fellow inma!A!s, the six men
scampered over the wall to lteednm. Aseventh man was shot
and wounded while trying to climb the ladder. He was
captured just a few yards outside the. wall.

76"

l(Cy ber

h So · U ·
computer tot e vtet .mon.
In a letter to the PreSident,
Miller and 64 other
Congressmen said such a sale
is not in the national interest
because of t h e computer ' s

strategic military ap.plications.
The "Cyber 76" used lor
navigation and weapons .
goidance is regarded as the
brain center •of the United
States defense command and .
backbone ol the Nation's
nuclear research . program.

Variety
numbers
list·e·d.
1

.

The Regatta variety show
committee today announced
some of the acts that will be
in the show Thursday at 8
p.m. at the Meigs Junior High
School auditorium.
"The Voices of Liberty"
will present the finale for the
program using a medley of
river songs. · The group
recently appeared at the
Memorial Day observance in
Pomerby and has presented
several concerts in the past
year.
Other acts will include a
number by the Meigs County
Junior Miss Teresa Carr;
Paula Eichinger and Beverly
Wilcox, vocal, accompanied
by Teresa Ellis, representing
Meigs High School; Beth
Teaford, vocal, Chester; the
Order of the Arrow Thal-coozyo Local 457 dance team,
and the Five Point Star
Stitchers J. L.'s in · a
blacklight dance routine.
There will be other acts from ,
Southern, Meigs High School
and Meigs Junior High,
Admission lor the program
will be $1 for adjult5 and oO
cents for students.

IIRII

Plus
SPECIAL

-..,

TilE SWING IN' GYIIIa jllll one 1'1. lbe many I'IIIM laiD~ up on tile midway
this
weekend's Regatta. (n 8dd!tlon to tile rldell, beinlllotlded by Nolan lllon, featured
attractions include the Goodyear Blimp, Falla Oty Ho( Air Bllloon rides, and ot couroe,
"boat racing at ita best," along with the traditional Ohio State Frog jumping contest.

BY BOB HOEFLICH
Middleport Village Council
voted to advertise lor bids on
resurfacing parts of a
number of streets and alleys
in the community ata regular
meeting at village hall.
Until bids on the ma!A!riala
for the resurfacing are
received council Ia not ll!1rt
that it will be able to resurface all of the areas
recommended by tbe street
committee headed by Marvin
Kelly. However, it was ,
agreed to advertise for bids
on 850 tons of asphalt and 350
gallons of tack for the
resurfacing outlined by

Carter to ban the sale of an

KILLER FORCE

'' PG"

Fo

The man with the gun was and enterings over the dru~ charges stemming fr~m
wearing a yellow flaMelshirt weekend plus two minor a~a1data local motel, pol ce
and blue jeans. The other complaints.
smd.
erts
man, also wearing a helmet,
Pat Petrella reported K G~y AhaPo:r, .~ :ing ~
was wearing blue jeans and a · ,.,meone entered a trailer
y ..' Is c rg , WI
•
blue jean jacket
located behind the French fu!!Jhve and Will&gt; posse~ 011
A missing person's report Quarter Nite Club in of dru~s lor saleJ:r1a~aR;'
was llled Sunday night by Kanauga. Entry was gained G.J;oll"!:r, -~
sslon·~i
Grace Smeltzer lor her 16- by prying the door open. The IS arg WI posse
year old daughter, Carol~n intruders attempted to open a drugs for sal~d bo arrested
Smeltzer.
sale but were unsuccesslul.
A 17-yeaN&gt;
Y
The girl listed at 5-I, 180
The Apostolic Faith Church last Friday along with Potier
pounds with brown shoulder on the Fairview Rd. was hit an~ Coh':Jger w~s t"!""d over
length hair and green eyes by someone over the to Ju~en e a~ ~~~esbushel0 tee sm
was last seen at 6 p.m. weekend. The church door
Saturday wearing a pink and was pried open and the baskets~U of bo:':' lllought
white top and blue jeans: ,
building was ransacked, but to
;:r ~cs w~~
Gallla County sher1ll s nothing was taken.
con scat
om e m
deputies. join~d ci~y police
John R. Borden, Kerr, room.
officers m the mvest1galion ol reported that a new home
'
G Iii
a missing 1972 Ford pick-up building site on the Fairview· di~~~~ ~~~~r"~en~ :
owned by Charles Watson, Everg reen Rd . has been
,
Rt I, Bidwell. The truck was ransacked. Four .windows IA!Iescope,
which was
1808. in ••Holland.
invenled ind his
taken from Pine St
were broken out
It was later found by
He did buil
own""1escope
in
1609
and
ls respmslble lor
Deputy
Dabney
near
develop;•• the instrwnent.
Evergreen., Jerry Parsons,
30, Bidwell, was charged with
.
unauthorized use of a motor
vehicle. .
,
(Continued lrom page 1)
Meanwhile, Gallla County
she rill's
deputies in- area, crossed a log road , went back into a wooded area, ~arne
vestigated three breakmg out on a power line, lllen came back out into another wooded
area, a cleared woody area.
"When IIley hit the log road, they hit a hot track."
Bollen
Lane said Ray would get a physical eramina lion - ''lllat we
do with every escapee" - then be placed "in an administrative lockup in 'D' block."
Lane said the administrative lockup "ls a Wlit in which IIley
are escorted or their meals are taken to him in a cell.
Everything is diree!A!d to him in that cell rather than him

EONAMULHERON

Five grandchildren reared
in the Mossbarger home
were : Patricia Ann Schuldt,
Susan Ellen Schuldt, Alfred
Charles Schu ldt and Rick
Schuldt, all at home and M~s .
N\ary Bess Coleman, Patnot
Star Route .
Two brothers survive, Asa
Mossbarger, Rt. 2, Patriot
and Elmer M ossbarger, Tipp

Middleport to repair
some of its streets

othen~ have been arrested on

:

Point Pleasant; and George
Turn er, Sr., Point Pleasant.
the Eag les Lodge .
Births - Adaughter to Mr. ol Funeral
will be
and Mrs. Robert Russell, held at the services
0 . R. Woodyard
Point Pleasant, and a son to Funeral Home i n Columbus
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Gard· on Wednesday a t 2: 30 p.m.
ncr,

robbery probed ~:J!r~o=~~;;

COFCTOMEET
Pomeroy Chamber of
Commerce
will
meet
Tuesday at noon at the Meigs
Inn.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
FAllfER'S DAY IS NEXT SUNDAY .
©

197rby fl fA

TAXES RETURNED '
COLUMBUS (UPI) -State
Auditor Thomas Ferguson
says Licking a.nd Perry
counties have been returned
$1,113,920 in first half 1976
property tax rollback,
homestead exemption and
administration eosts.
A check for $710,459 was
sent to Licking County as
reimbursement for local tax
revenues lost in granting the
10 per cent property tax
rollbacks to homeowners,
and for $201,652 in homestead
exemption reimbursements . .
County
was
Perry
reimbursed $135,249 on
property and $61,300 for
homesteading.
GOVERNMENT GROWS
BOWLING GREEN, Ohio
(UP!) - The federal government is taking too much
authority away from local
govenunents, Rep. Delbert
Latta, R-Obio, charged
Sunday,
Latta, speaking at the
dedication ceremony for
Wood County's new $4.6
million office builqing, said if
the federal government
continues to expand \h~ ~e
won 'I be a need for local
government.
·
He said local government
can provide the same
services as the federal
government at a lower cost·
and warned that increased
federal
bureaucracy
threatens w create an over,
whelming federal debt.
GUARD TRAINS
CAMP GRAYLING, Mich.
(UP!) - The annual swnmer
training at Camp Grayling
starled Sunday for more 3,000
members or the Ohio
National
Guard,
in
conjunction with several
Wisconsin Guard units.
The Ohio support group
includes
units
from
Columbus, Worthington,
Kettering, Lakewood,
Youngstown, Toledo,
Cleveland, New Philadelphia,
Coshocton and Newark.

BLOOMINGTON, Minn.
(UP!) - Quarterbacks Bob
Lee and Tom Kramer have
signed contracts with the
Minilesota Vikings.
The Vikings said General
Manager Mike LyM flew to
San Francisco Saturday night
to sign Lee, then flew to
Houston where he signed
Kramer, tbe Vikings' No. 1
dralt cbolce lrom Rice.

tnc I M Reo US 11at 011

CUBA CONSIDERED
CLEVELAND ( UPI) .The Cleveland City Club
reportedly is completing
arrangements for one of its
forums to be held in Havana
in latA! fall or early winter, at
which Fidel Castro would
speak and submit to. a
question-and-answer senes.
The Cleveland Press said
that Cyrus Eaton, long-time
friend of Castro has
personally made contact with
him and expects an OK for
club members and their
spouses to n~ down for a lol)g
weekend in late fall or early
winter.

SALE! MEN'S WALK SHORTS
100 per cent polyester
dou.ble knits and
cotton · polyester
blends.
Solids
stri pes and plaids .".
.Sizes 32 to 42.

JOYCE BING

RHONDA HUDSON

BRENDA SUE LAWRENCE

REG. $8.95

SALE ?.25
REG. $9.95

SALE $7.95

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

Admiral

Six Meigs County girls are
competing for the title ol Big
Bend Regatta Queen ol 1977.
The queen candidates Wlll
be guests at a queen's luncheon to be held at the Meigs
IM Friday. Queens of other
area observances will be
guests at the luncheon also.
The 1977 Regatta Queen will
be crowned immediately
following the annual regatta
parade which moves froin
Middleport at 6 p.m. Friday.
The crowning wlll take place
on Lynn St. in Pomeroy.
· The six candidates are:
JOYCE BING, daughter of
Clyda an4 Guy Bing, Route I, .
Middleport. Miss Bing will
graduate from Meigs High
School next spring. She is a
porn porn girl, a member of
the Future Homemakers of
America and the French Club
at Meigs High. She has been
active in 4-H Club work.
NIESEL DUVALL,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Jsines Duvall of Reedsville.
Miss Duvall .is a 1976
graduate of Eastern High
SchooL She now attends Ohio
State University. At Eastern,
Miss Duvall was a member ol
the Future Homemakers of
America, the National Honor
Society, was a football,
basketball and baseball
statistician, a student ollice
aide, a librarian. She was a
member of the Riverview 4-H
Club,
president,
vice
president and secretary of
the Meigs County Junior Fair
Board; president of the Meigs
County 4-H Advisory Committee. On the university
level she is a member of the
Economics As.Ociation. She
was the Meigs County Junio&lt;
Fair Queen, first runnerup in
the subregional Miss Ohio
FHA contest; received the
State Homemakers Degree

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CLASSES? WHAT CLASSES? - These Meigs High
School students take it easy outside the band room
Mmday afternoon just !X"ior to the official 3:15 p.m.
c1o11nc of school lor tile summer. With the vacation time
students had back in February, due to the severe and
1110wy winter, school days were r-rced to. run a little
•

longer into the sununer than usual. But, to tile relief of the
faculty and administration as well as the students, it's
finally over! In the picture above are Bev Holfinan, Tina
Smith, Slierry Osborn~. and Carin Bailey. At right are
'l'om Hawley, Randy Simpson, Mike Triplett and Mike
MitchelL

DEBBIE HOLSINGER

Middleport Police are
investigating breaking and
enterings of the Tom Rue
·Motor Co. and the Dan
Thompson Ford Co. on South
Third Ave. Sunday morning.
Chiel J. J . Cremeans said
the cash register was taken
from the Rue premises and a
car was stolen and wrecked
on Grant St where it was
recovered. The Thompson
company was vandalized and
some money stolen.

and the senior home
economics key at Eastern
and represented Meigs
County in 4-H work several
times at the Ohio State Fair.
DEBBIE HOLSINGER,
daughter of Larry and Nancy
Holsinger, Ro~te 2, Racine, is
a 1977 graduate ol Southern
and Meigs High Schools
having been enrolled In the
vocational program or the
latter schooL She was a
member of the Meigs VICA
Club, the cosmetology club
and was on the Southern
volleybail and track te$ms.
She played softball for two
years with the Hits 'n Misses
and has played with the
Racine Junior League.
RHONDA HUDSON ,
daughter of Paul and Mildred
Hudson, 399 Wright St. ,
Pomeroy, will graduate from
Meigs High School next
spring. She is a member of
the band, the flag corps, the
student council, the B.O.E.
Club, the Girls Athletic Club.
She has studied dancing and
has been in the Big Bend
Minstrel Association shows.
BRENDA
SUE
LAWRENCE , daughter of
(Continued on page 10)

Courtroom
trial opens
A jury trial in which· the
state has indicted Terry
Brewer of Portland lor arson,
and making
extortion
menacing threats got underway in . Meigs Cotiniy
Common Pleas Court today.
The charges against
Brewer were brought in by
the grand jury as the result of
a fire that occurred ·at
Chester on March 29 of this
year. Brewer allegedly made
menacing threats against Ida
Margaret VanMeter , Mid·
dleport, owner ol the
property, Representing
Brewer is Charles Knight .
Serving on the jury are
Beverly Wickline, Roger
Frecker, Betty Wagner,
Janice Reuter, Don Johnson,
Cathy King. Yvonne Young,
George Glaze, Jr., Ora Jea n
Holter, James Gilmore, Earl
Mossman, Juanita Grueser
and Martha Lee, alternate.
Presenting the State's case is
Prosecutor Rick Crow. Judge
John C. Bacon is on the
bench .

�2- The Daily Sentmel M ddleport Pomeroy 0 Tuesday June 14 1977
3- The Daily Senttnel Middleport Pomeroy 0 Tuesday J une H 1977

Brown challenged
COLUMBUS {UP!)
Columbta Gas of Ohto
Monday satd Oh o Attorney
General Will am J Brown
has no authonly to ftle
acttons aga nst the gas
company and tha t a pending
action he dtsmissed
The com pany f led a
sever al hundre d page
document wtth the Pubhc
Uti! ties Corrurnss10n of Ohio
(PUCO) charg ng that
Brown s attempt to hold the
company respons ble for last
wmter s natural gas shortage
IS an unetlucal confhct of l!l
teres!
The company says that
Brown s act on should he
d sm ssed beca use as
attorney general Brown also
represents the PUCO as legal
counsel
Further Columbta Gas
charged that Brown lacks
authority under Ohio law to
request the company he held
responstble for last Winter s
natural gas shortage
The company also accu•ed
Brown of trymg to represent
a hrmted group of Clttzens
and srud that Ohio law does
not gtve the attorney general

authortty to move at will on
behalf of whatever mterest
group happens to catch the
attorney general s fancy
Last April 22 Brown !tied
an actton wtth the PUCO
chargmg Columba Gas
wtth dtrectly contr but ng oo
the "'ltura l gas shortage of
last wmter and asked that
the company be forced to
lower tts rates or to provtde
refunds to tis customers
In hts CQIIlplamt Brown
charged that Col umbta Gas
and tts parent f rm Columb a
Transmtss on refused to pur
chase gas that was offered
durmg the energy shortage
Brown
charged
the
company refused to purchase
:;o bill10n cub c feet of natural
gas m the rruddle of the
energy crtsts
That gas
Brown says was offered on
Feb I by a Loutsia na
company
COlumb a Gas sa d that
most of the issues ratsed by
Brown are a rehas h of
matters whtch are or have
been before the PUCO
The company satd that
under normal ctrcllnlSiances
t would defend ttseU against

complamts ftled wtth the
PUCO
But tn th s case the
company satd even a
cursory read ng of the
complaint filed by Brown
reveals that most of the
Issues have been constdered
before
Coiumbta added that ts
mot on to dism ss the
attor ney generals case
would avotd a wasteful and
unn eccessary expendtture of
time and effort

DINNER HELD
The annual Fellowsh p
DtMer of Women of the
Church of God of New Haven
was held at the Western
Stzzler m Parkersburg The
welcome was g ven by the
pres dent Mrs Orpha F elds
The nvocatton wa s given by
Iva Capehart Attend ng were
Fay Ca rpenter
Patty
Maynard Margaret Dodson
Bonne Ftelds Vera Dodson
Orpha F elds Iva Capehart
Kay Grueser Sarah G bbs
Mary Kelly and Gr ace
Cunn ngham

Nazis get it together for 1977
CLEVELAND {UPI )
The Executtve Council of the
Nat onai Soctalist Congress
met n Cleveland last Feb 28
co n sol dated t he
nternat10nal power of seven
Nazt parttes and mapped
plans for pol I cal actmstn
for the summer the Lora n
Ohio Journal re ported
Monday
The a pprox mately 35
persons chatting at d nner
could have been any soc al
frate rn al or c v c club
accordmg to the copyr ghled
story m the Journal except
for the brown shtrts and
Swashka armbands
Like thetr fol owers these
Nazt
chteftan s
vtew
themselves as patrioh c
Amer cans the art cle said
Most Naz s I met seemed
I ke ord nary people Some
were obsessed grun and
tough
sa d J
Ross
Baughman
a J ournal
photographer who nf ltrated
the party
Thetr pnmary pol h eal
dr ves are ant -busmg anti
mtegrallon and ant -abort on
m concert wtth other groups
plus recrwtm.g of members

Baughman satd m the arttcie
Baughman sa d Frank
Collm of Chtcago leader of
Nazt parties m 26 ctties was
conf rm ed as national
coordinator of the congress
perm ttmg him to dommate
and shape all of the poi cy
that followed
One chtef problem to be
solved was a feud between a
Cmcmnatt propagandtsl and
a V rgtrua pamphleteer the
kind of mf ghting that had
lT ppled the Nazt movement
for the last 10 years the
art cle satd
He convmced one to res gn
then denounced hun for
hattimg wtlh a fellow wh te
man the arttcle satd
In the subsequent busmess
meeting delegates severed
all ties to other rtghl wmg
groups put all national and
state party pohcy under
Collin s control and set up a
mtl tary style cham of
command w th the counc 1 rn
charge
Groundwork was latd for a
Nazt youth Olymp cs th s
s ummer as well as for
commando trammg camps
based m Panorama C ty

Cal f wtth the Nahonal
Soctalisl Liberation Front
and n Raletgh N C the
article satd
Fred Cowan a self..tyled
Naz who ktUed five men and
wounded four others m a New
York shootout two weeks
ear her was first cr t ctzesl as
a kook and a nut certainly
not a bona fide member of our
group by one leader
As he talked further howe
ver he called Cowan a
vahant but m15gwded whtte
man a sunple working-class
man turned warr or forced
to do what he dtd by Jew
slavedrtvers
The only rmstake Cowan
made was takm mggers
instead of Jews the article
quoted the Naz leader as
sayrng Even tf he had shot
up more of the black
bastards no white man s life
ts worth tradmg for 10 or 20
ruggers When I deCide that
I ve had enough I m gonna
take really big Jews down
w th me
Two weeks later a meeting
of about 30 members of the
Uruted Whtte People s Party
ranged from teen aged boys

tltrough brownshirt storm blow stuff up aU over the
troopers to the blackshirl place come the Fourth of
shock tro ops the best July the article satd
tramed and dt sct plined
fighters the arttcle sa d
AI the meetmg tl was
announced an expans10n
group at Br ghton Mlch was
accepted for membership
and that the party s T-Mlrt
stlk-screenmg busmess had
recetved large orders from
Raletgh N C and Texas
Afterward a smaU urn of
ashes was tgmted and
Sybil Ebersbach to Bernice
members sang the Horst F Grueser Elmer B
Wessel song tts Iynes Johnson Lot Middleport
pratSl!lg Aryan courage and
Mtchael Kent to Peter F
the scourgmg of race traitors Klem Jr Richard F Klein
A Ll X later m the Minerals Salisbury
sprmg dlSBgreed wtth the
Sarah A Koehler to
Cleveland conunander and
Lawrence D Hartmger Cert
stopptng n at the Nazt of trans Pomeroy
bookstore to ptck up hts
Rex H Cheadle Bonme M
possesmons pomted a 357 Cheadle to Ohio Power Co
magnum ptslol at the 114 7D acres coal Columbta
reporter to force hun to
John P Burnell Mary E
dtsarm
then he and Burnell to Karen Gregg
comparuons took two rifles Roush 100 acre lot 339 acre
and a shotgun the report Sutton
srud
Robert E Grueser Norma
Asked by the commander Jean Grueser to Everett E
what he planned to do he Levacy Berntce Levacy
answered
We re gonna Lot 19 Chester
shoot the rtght people and

Meigs
Property
Transfers

Ma o League Ltade s

State board approves
.
own desegregation p1an
COLUMBUS - The State
Board of Education approved
by a 20-3 vote Monday a
desegregatiOn plan for
Columbus public schools
whtch calls for busrng of
37 076 students at the com
pletton of the plans 1m
plementation m September
1979 The plan as approved
by the board would cost
shghtly over $20 million for
the ftrst two years of
desegregation
It differs from the plan
approved Frtday by the
Columbus
Board
of
Educalton m the number of
students to be bussed costs of
transportation and number of
ractally tdenttha ble whtle
schools left after the plan is
unplemented The state pian
would leave the system with
hve tdentihably white
schools based on the system

w de ractal ratio of 67 per
cent wh te students and 33 per
cent black wtth an aUowable
variance of 15 percent
The state plan cails for
desegregallon of teachers
and staff of the schools m
September of thts year
desegregatton of elementary
schools m September 1976
and desegregatton of JUnior
and sentor high schools m
September 1979
The state board noted m ts
253-page plan 11 had en
countered near unammous
pubhc senttment agamst
busing
It also satd that extenstve
research led the board s staff
to conclude that ample buses
and other transportation
equtpment were not avada ble
upon short nottce to beg n
busmg tbts fail

HEALTH
Lawrence E Lamb, M D

Preventing poisoning

d

h

Ray expecte to try anot er escape
By CARL VINES
PETROS Tenn (UP! )
James Earl Ray back behind
bars ts keepmg thoughts of
his aborttve escape a~mpt
to himself but Gov Ray
Blanton fears Ray may
dectde to try tl agam
Blanton along wtth some
black leaders susptctous over
the ctrcumstances that
helped Ray and SIX other
mmates make it over the
Brushy Mountam State
Prtson wall urged Pres dent
Carter Monday to have the
federal government w take
custody of Dr Marlm Luther
King s confessed assassm
If he s gomg to be a
federal case he ought to be a
federal prtsoner
satd
Blanton There was no
tmmedtate response from
Carter
Only one escapee Douglas
Shelton remamed at large
today
and
searchers
reported they beheved they
were closmg in on hun m the
same area - about 10 m les
from the prison
where
Ray s !i6 hours on the run
ended m the pre dawn
blackness Monday after a
by
grueling
chase
bloodhounds
The 49 year-old Ray after
a checkup m the priSOn inftr
mary was placed m a
maxunum securtly ceO wtth
another mmate Warden
Stonney Lane satd a room
problem - overcrowding prevented placrng Ray m
sohtary confmement
Lane satd Ray servmg a
99-year sentence has done
hltle talkmg Sl!lce his capture
and spectftcally refused to
speak to reporters
I asked hun tf he wanted
to talk to the press satd
Lane He srud No I do
not
Two House Assassmat10ns
Commtttee mvesltgators
quest oned priSOn offtcials
about the breakout but Lane
said they would not learn
much from Ray
Any mterrogation of Mr
Ray would be futile He just
sunply
wouldn t
say
anythmg
Lane srud prison offtClals
believe Ray Shelton and Earl
Htil Jr Ray s ceilmate
planned Frtday ntght s
escape whtch began wtth a
fake ftght and other
diverstons m the priSOn yard
while the escapees scaled a
wall with a homemade ptpe
ladder
We know the breakout
was plaMed over a pertod of
several weeks at least and
we know tt was well planned
because of the makmg of the
ladder Lane satd He satd

or taste
Of course if the components
DEAR DR LAMB _ I am of the food are bacterta free
really concerned about food and stay that way there ts
potsonmg Now that the sum less chance of food pmsorung
mer months are here 1 from any orgamsm That ts
pres)lffie there ts a btgger where cooking comes n A
chance of gettmg 1t I ve baked ttem that ts thoroughly
heard that eating potato cooked long enough to ktll all
salad will gtve you food bacterta and then protected
po somng Is this true? 1 love as a stertle food wtU not g ve
potato salad I m almost you food potsomng After ail
afratd to eat out because you that ts really what proper
never kn6w what they are do- food cannmg ts all about
mg m the kitchen Any sug
The other common cause of
gestions about that? Just I01bod potsonmg ts salmoneila
what causes food potsomng• These orgamsms are com
What can 1 do at home to mon on meat products They
avotd havmg food potsorung• are so wtdespread that you
I m a pretty careful cook m. may as well assume the meat
r could be overlookmg you buy~hicken pork or
something
whatever-Is contammated
DEAR READER
Food wtth tl These act differently
potsonmg covers a lot of ter from
staphylococcal
ntory Actually food potson organtsms If you mgest
rng by varmus bacterta ts enough of the orgamsms they
more corrunon and a greater set up housekeepmg m your
tltreat to your food than any mtestme and then release a
or all the problems posed by loXl!l that makes you tll That
cherrucal contamination of IS why this form of food
foods that you hear so much potsomng usually occurs
about Estunates are that later than staphylococcal
over two rrullion cases offood food potsomng after eatmg
potsonmg from bacterta oc- contarrunated food
cur every year l!l the United
I am sending you The
States and these Illnesses are Health Letter number 6-2
all preventable
Food PoiSontng to gtve you
Potato salad wtll not gtve ttps on handlmg your own
you food polSonmg unless tt food to prevent food pmson
has been contaminated wtth mg Others who want this m
bacterta
usually the fonnallon can send 50 cents
staphylococcal genns These wtth a long stamped sell
genns mulbply raptdly n addressed envelope for rna I
starchy foods such as potato mg It tells you how to follow
NEW HAVEN W Va salad and cream pies or other a semt-stenie techmque to
Rev
and Mrs Davtd Fields
slmilar bakery goods The prevent bactena from
Jr
of
New Haven are at
toxin 18 formed m the food multiplymg m your food In
tending
the 118th International
before you eat 1t and heating brtef keep your refrtgerator
Convention
of the Church of
cold enough Measure the
1t will not eliminate the toXIn
God
m
Anderson
lndtana
The way you prevent this 15 to temperature to check tt Cook
preyent the multipbcatton of all meat so that ail oftts mter The theme of the convention
the bacteria How' By stor nal temperature s 17~ F (110 is Ltve by the Word Rev
such foods after they are C) for atleast 30 mmutes For Fields will be attending the
ll1ll red a refrigerator at poultry cook to about 190 F General Assembly Sessions
preps
m
(87 8 C Care of ta ble lops at the Park Place Church of
temperatures below 42 and utenstls s also tmpor God
degrees F (8 degrees CJ You ta 1
The Missionary Com
have good re8liOII to suspect
~r Linterest m hts column mtssionmg Servtce wtll be
these foods when you are Write to htm m care of thts held on Wednesday in Warner
eatinl out It only takeu few newspaper p 0 Box 1551
Auditorium The Bill Gaither
houn for such foods to be fill- Rsdio Ctty Statton New Trio Concert will be held on
ed with toxins you cannot see York NY 10019
Friday
m
Warner
By Lawrence E Lamb M D

By un ted P ess lnterllat onal
Ban ng

Shelton worked on the
plumbmg gang which put
him m direct contact w th
the ptpe
Lane sa d prtson secor ty
had been tightened and he
feels Ray can be safely
guarded there He declined to
comment on the governor s
call for Rays removal to a
federal prison

Some utilities
cited for delay
By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS (UP!)
The
Oh o Senate has passed and
sentto Gov James A Rhodes
leg slalton brtng ng motor
vehicle and mobtle home
sales under the consumer.
protection umbrella offered
by the stale s Reta I
Installment Sales Act The
btil cleared Monday on a 29-1

vote
Effect of the measure
approved by the House last
March ts to extend the
consumer protection secttons
of the !972law to installment
purchases of motor vehtcles
and mobtle homes now
covered only by case law and
general seCllftltes statutes
The legtslatlon authored
by Rep Edward J Or lett 0Daylon was vetoed last year
when tl was part of a measure
elumnatmg a patr of maJor
consumer credtt traps
relating to all Installment
purchases
Rhodes srud he vetoed that
btil not because of the
mcluston of motor vehtcles
and mobtle homes but
because the consumer credit
language duplicated brand
new rules put mto effect by
the Federal Trade CommtSSton
The lone opponent to the
streamhned btil
Sen
W !ham H Mussey R
Batavta satd tt was an
example
of
over
consumertsm and that
small businesses are gettrng
clobbered by consumers who
take advantage of them
The
Senate
also
unammously rallfted and
sent to the governor House
passed legislation makmg
mmors subject to Ohto s
ftnanClal responstbility law
for motor vehicle drtvers
The btU authored by Rep
Wtlliam G Batchelder R
Medrna would make JUVenile
drtvers mvolved m an auto

Fields attending convention

I"

Blanton n a letter to
Carter sa d the task of
guardmg Ray was made
cliff cult by a 1970 federal
court order callmg Ray s
soia! on from other priSOners
undue punishment
Since that tune Ray has
made three attempts to
escape Cons dermg that
James Earl Ray was

Audtlortum Mrs Ftelds will
he attendmg WCG Depart
mental Conferences and the
annual assembly wtil be held
on Frtday morning with the
theme One m Heart One rn
Purpose
Chatrwoman wtU be Betty
Lewts
Nat onal WCG
prestdent
Prelude 77
Program
m
Warner
Audttonum wtll feature
Doug Oldham and the
Mrs
F amtiy Reumon
Ftelds ts state Prestdent of
West Vtrgtma Women of the
Church of God

ace dent subJect to the same
f nanctal responsbilittes as
adults
Veteran senators patd
trtbute to the late Thomas E
Bateman rehred Senate
clerk who dted last week at
age 61
A resolution was adopted
unan mousiy
descr bing
Bateman as an exemplary
pub! c servant wbo spent
roughly 5~ years m the
employ of the Senate
Throughout hiS servtce as
Senate clerk Tom Bateman
was noted for hts tough
efhctent admtntstrattve
methods
whtch
were
tempe~ed by hts warm
frtendly manner toward all
those m his assoctation the
resolutton read
His unparalleled record of
servtce h s unwaver ng
devotion to duty hiS supreme
wtsdom
and
h1s
trreproachabie reputation for
honesty and mtegrtty wtll
remam as a monument to a
ltfe whtch mamfested those
v rtues we all seek to
emulate
Senate President Pro Tern
pore Oltver Ocasek 0-Akron
srud Bateman who began as
a message clerk m 1919 and
rettred in 1971 was m the
Senate longer than a~y
human bemg ever stayed l!l
thts chamber
Ocasek satd Bateman was
a tough taskmaster but ac
that
hts
knowledged
admmiStratlon of the Senate
helped make tt the august
body we know today supertor
to no one but equal to
anyone
The tone he set was above
satd
Sen
reproach
Theodore M Gray R
Columbus
who
knew
Bateman longer than almost
anyone m the Senate He
was a father to us agreed
Sen Anthony 0 Calabrese
~eveland

The
Senate Finance
Committee put off further
constderation of the $13 2
btlhon
general
state
appropr18tion for 19711-'111 until
Wednesday
when
amendments Will be taken
'!be amending process was
to have begun Monday mghl
but Sen Harry Meshel DYoungstown srud cornmlttee
members
asked
for
addttionai time to prepare
the r suggested changes
The Rules Committee sche
duled a Wednesday floor vote
on the other half of the budget
- a 500-page language bill
detatltng spendtng
requtrements
for
the
appropr alton
The House was to
reconvene at 11 a m today
and the Senate at 1 30 p m

convtcted of murdertng a
ftgure
of
nallona 1
prommence that he was an
escapee from a Mtssourt
state priSOn at the tune of thiS
murder that he has made
one escape from behind walls
l!l Tennessee and attempted
two others and considermg
the unmense cost to the
taxpayers of Tennessee of hiS
escape and capture and that
we are hampered by a federal
court order rn our elfort to
secure thts priSOner I am
requestmg that the federal
government accept custody
of James Earl Ray Blanton
Satd
Blanton satd the escape
cost the state about $178 000
mostly m overtime for law
enforcement offtcers

Federal PriSOns Director
Norman Carlson satd federal
prisons are holdmg about 200
state convtcts most of them
management problems
but he had no tdea where
Ray could be put
Some ctvil rtghts leaders
and former associates of
King who was slam by a
sn per at a Memphis motel on
April 4 1968 agreed wtth
Blanton s request for federal
safeguarding of Ray rn hopes
he may someday reveal new
mformatton
on
the
assassmat on
The Rev J E Lowery of
Atlanta acting SCLC head
srud I think Mr Ray ought
to go to a federal pnson
where
secunty Is no
problem

Celebrities 3 off pace
DAYTON Ohto (UP!) Former Prestdent Gerald
Ford and hts partners
comedtan
Bob
Hope
sportscaster Joe Gartgoha
Gov James Rhodes and Cy
Laughter were three off the
pace after the first day m the
celebrtty Bogte Buster golf
tourney
Ford s group ftred a best
ball 63 Monday over tbe
Nahonal Cash Regtster
course
The
tourney
concludes Tuesday wtth 18
boles of play on the NCR
north course

Proceeds from the tour
nament which ts sponsored
by the Laughter Corp
Dayton go to the Multiple
Sclerosts Fund
Also parttctpatmg were
Cincmnati Bengals General
Manager Paul Brown Chuck
Fatrbanks coach of the New
England Patrtots smgers
Glenn Campbell Bobby
Goldsboro and Charlie
Pnde
bandleader Les
Brown comedian Foster
Brooks and sportscasters
Pat SUmmerall and Tom
Brookshire

based on 25 a ba s
Nat on a League
G

AB H

Pet

o Ch

54 9

0 366

Pa ke P

54 22

79 35?

T

Mmph v S L
Van n e M
Luz ns k Ph
S ot S L
s ene t P
Temp n s L

48 26 43 34
206 70 340
49 88 64 340
49364533
53 98 65 328
52 224 72 32

Mo a es Ch

52 B

so

60 32

s mmons S L
52 9 6
Ame can League
G

AB H

3 9
Pet

ca ew M n

56 23'2 90 388

F Sk 80S

55 92 67 349
43 63 56 344

Ba o To
Bos ock M n
s ng n Sa
Poquet KC
Bu eson Bos
Sodrh m Ch

54
48
43
52
48

209 69
6 55
54 50
220
2 55

330
329
325
323
320
Fa v To
45 so 48 320
Munson NY
53 2
67 J 8
Home Runs
Nat ona League Bu oughs
A
5 Fos e
C: n Cev and
Sm h LA 4 Luz nsk
Ph

betng fatrly well informed
about candtdates and ISSues
We would all like to see voter
parttctpation reach such a
high leveltn thts country but
there IS no parttcular prtde m
having a large voter par
tictpatton if we fmd that the
electton ilself was tainted
wtth fraud
The concept of this btll that
once registered l!l any par
ticular locatton one remams
a registered voter In
defrnttely wtthout requll"ed
automattc purgmg of the
voter lists to elurunate those
not votmg for a period of
years leads to the carrymg
on voter rolls of persons long
removed from the com
mumty or deceased This
then is an open mvltation to
those who might seek to
abuse our election process to
send individuals into the
polling place to vote for those
regtstered persons who are
no longer in the corrunumty
All of the penaltteo for vote
fraud won t solve the
problem No mdlctment
conviction fine or im
prlSOnment can cleanse a
fraudulent election The votes
have been cast and whether
on the votmg machme or in
the baUot box they aU look
alike You can t sort them
out the clean from the
tamted
And a little fraud can go a
long way in an electton Less
than one fraudulent vote per
precinct could have changed
both the last gubernatorial

CINCINNATI {UP! ) - Cin
c nnall ptlcher Woody
Fryman who clatms he
always keeps h s swtcase
packed says he s not as
proud as Tom Seaver of the
New York Mets
When I told the Reds I
wanted to be traded I said it
wouldn t make any difference
to me whether it was to a first
or last place club said the
37 year-&lt;&gt;ld lefty Monday
rught
And he added tongue in

cheek I told them mooey s
no problem that if I was
traded the club I went oo
wouldn t have to agree to
renegottate my contract
Fryman s
best
performance of the season
left hun m a jovtal mood even
though tl was rebel pt~her
Pedro Borbon who wound up
wtth the vtctory when Danny
Driessen s lead-&lt;&gt;ff homer tn
the nmth mnmg beat the
PhiladelJitta Phils li-4 m
Monday night s sertes

Amer can League z sk Ch
and Hse Mnn 5 Rce Bos
Bonds Ca and G oss Oak 4
Runs Batted n
Nat onal League Cey LA 52
Burroughs At 50 Ga vev LA
9 W n e d SO 47 Foste C n
46
A mer can
League
Hse
M nn 54 Rud
Ca 47 z sk
Ct:l
43
Hobson
Bos and
Munson NY 4
Stolen Bases
Nat onal League
Tave as
P
27 Mo gan C n Cabe
and Cedeno Hou 22

By FRED McMANE
UPI Sports Writer
It has always been Tom and
Jerry and as long as Tom
Seaver remains wtth the New
York Mets Jerry Koosman
wtll always be second
banana
But maybe Koosman s
time is commg for center
stage A trade of Seaver to
the CmctMatt Reds seemed

umnrnent as the Mets seek to
unload their unhappy pt~her
before Wednesday mght s
rmdntght tradmg deadline
l really don t know what s
gmng to happen
satd
Seaver
The matter s
str ctly up to the Mets now
I ve had a conversalton wtth
the Reds and tf a trade ts
made I will go
The trading of Seaver cer

Sports transactions
Spo tsTTransac-t ons
By Un ted Pf'"ess InterneT ona
Sund.-y
P o Footba
M nneso a
S gned Qua e
ba k Tommy Kf'"ame,. of R ce
he
No 1 d aft cho ce o a
h ee yea
on a
Baseba
S
Lou s
Announ ed a
on act ag eemen has been
eached w h ca ch e
Te v
he
No
d a
Kennedy
ChO

as
he

e

Monday
Basebal

Sat mo e

handed

T aded
gh
e eve Dyar M I ef'" o

ohnny

Today's

Sport Parade
By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sports Editor

Lopes LA

20
Amfr can League Remy Ca
22 Pa ek KC 7 Norr s c ev
6 Bonds Ca 5 R ve s NY
3
P tch ng
Most V ctorles
Nat onal League R Reusche
Ch
and Forsch
S L 82
Rhoden LA and Ca on Ph 8
3 Roge s M 8 4 Bu S Ch
85
Amer can League Tanana
ca 02 Ryan ca 95 R May
sa
8 5
Cas o
M
72
Ga v n To 7 3 F gue oa and
Tor ez NY 7 5 Pa me
Ba t
and August ne M 7 6
Ea ned Run Average
(based on 6l nn ngs pitched)
National League Cande af'" a
P
99
Rogef'"S M
2 14
Hough LA ~ 42 Su on L A
2 75 Nof'"man C n 2 77
Arne,. can League Tanana
Ca 1 85
T drow NY
86
f=l v even Tex 2 (17 Ryan Cat
2 32 F guef'"oa NY 2 60

NEW YORK (UP!)
Rod carew could become a rml
lion8lfe JUSt like that No trouble at all
The way he handles a bat the way he wtns the Amer can
League batting title year after year all he d have to do s
notify the Mmnesota Twms he wants to be a free agent when
his contract ts up and tbe other clubs would fall all over
themselves offermg hun btg money
Reggte Jackson tooling around m a fancy Rolls Royce told
Carew he should ve become a free agent and made millions
like he did Rod Carew tsn t mterested m that Not that he has
any grudge agamsl money Its sunply that he s satisfied wtth
the money the Twms are paytng hlm
Carew gets somethmg hke $170 1100 a year from the Twms
which tsn t anythrng like the $400 1100 Joe Morgan IS drawrng
from the Reds or the $333 1100 Steve Garvey ts making w th the
Dodgers but he s not ktckmg at all even though he IS
practically lappmg the fteld rn a btd for hts stxth Amertcan
League batting crown
!thought about tt all and looked at tt from every possible
aspect he says talkmg about his tltree year contract wtth the
Twms which has another year after thts one to run
No one pressured me moo s gning or held a gun to my head
I feel! have to be a man of my word Maybe I could ve made a
lot more money elsewhere but I m happy here and I m
saltsfted It s like a family and I honestly enJOY bemg wtth the
Twins

and prestdenttal elections in
our state But our concern is
not just for statewtde electtons Thousands or millions
of dollars of rnvestment can
tum on zoning elections or
local optton tssues to
determine the sale of liquor
mvolvmg only a relatively
few people In a couple of
precmcts We should not open
the door to the temptation to
tamper With such elections by
bringing tn outsiders to vote
in the name of those on the
rolls
Becauae of the concern of
election officials in both
political parties I understand
that an effort is underway to
take these election law
changes to Ohio s voters in
public referendum
Will this new registration
procedure If It standa really
encourage more people to
vote • I think most people who
do not vole avotd elections
because they have lost
confidence in the political
process It s foolish to think
we will engender more in
terest in those cttlzens and
encourage them to vote If
they read and hear of
widespread allegations of
voter fraud u the result of a
new electton process
Nothing could more ef
fectlvely dlmtnish their
confidence in the process any
more The abuae of the
privilege of voting by anyone
dlrnlnishes that privilege for

us au

opener
The Fryman the Phill es
faced was a mu ch more
aggresstve pitcher than the
Fryman who was relegated oo
the bullpen back on May 9
When yo u re throwmg
good
you r e
always
aggresst ve satd Fryman
And I was throwmg good
lomght
A crowd can pep you up
too added the veteran Red
southpaw who turned the
fans Jeers mto cheers by

Mets trample Braves, 7-1

and W nf e d SO 3

Kuzless
GAMBLE NOT
REFORM
The controversial measure
passed by the General
Assembly last week per
mtttrng rnstant registration of
voters on elecbon day and
permanent regtstration bas
real potentiBI stgmhcance In
Ohto electtons
Labeled elecbon reform
many uf us feel the measure
could mvtte vote fraud and
confuston The measure
should not have been a
pari1S8n one because we
should all he concerned both
for making the electton
process as open and available
as posstble and also he
equally concerned with
preservmg the integrity of
the election process
Republicans opposed the
measure because of the real
threat of fraud and possible
oonfuaton at electiOn polling
places caused by large
numbers of unregistered
voters showing up to vote
without any protecttve
method to vertfy thetr
restdence Many of the
witnesses appeartng against
the btll m the House com
mittee were Democrats
At the close of the Korean
conflict while I was serving
m the Army m Japan I was
unpressed by the fact that 85
percent or more of the
Japanese voted m thetr
elections Obvtously they
prtzed their right to vote and
the high literacy rate among
the Japanese led to their

Fryman happy after
effort against Phillies

Some other ballplayers may th nk Rod Carew has rocks m
his head but I don I He has what so many other players don I
have peace of mmd Hetsn t looking around all the tune to see
wbat others make and tt s not eating htm mstde knowmg he
tsn t the highest patd player That 1sn thiS overall aun
He d much rather be acknowledged the best httter m the
game and whether he s aware of tt or not he probably has
achieved that goal already
Take a look at where he IS rtght now His 388 batting average
IS the best m both leagues By far In hts own league hts closest
pursuer Bob Bailor oflhe Toronto Blue Jays is trailing hun by
44 pomts Carew wound up the Twms latest road trtp With a
homer trtple and a smgle Sunday m a 6-1 vtctory over the
Yankees
I really want thts one he says talkmg about wmrung hts
stxth batting title I m gonna make them chase me thts time
Let them catch me for a change The one thing l want to do IS
wm tim good fashion after all that mess last year
The mess he refers to had nothing to do wtth hun
It has to do wtth a charge Kansas City s Hal McRse made
agamst MtMesota Manager Gene Mauch followrng last
season s fmal game against Minnesota
McRae accused Mauch of keepmg hlm from WlMl!lg the AL
hatting IItle by mstructing the Twms to favor Kansas Ctty s
George Brett whenever they could on balls hit by hlm Brett
finished first wtth 333 McRae was second wtth 332 and
Carew who had seven htts m his last 12 tunes up Wll£ thtrd
wtth 331
What McRae satd was a bunch of seaweed Carew says
Gene ts too much of a class person ever to do anythmg like
that George deserved to wm the title He s a good h Iter he
had a tremendous year and I think he seven gliMa:'lii'tprove as
a httter
Carew s lifettrne ba ttmg average of 328 ts the best m the
Amertcan League best m both leagues m fact Hts htghest
average ever over a lull year with the Twms was 364 three
years ago If anyone around now ts capable of ever htlllng 4QO
11 s Carew but if you ask hun about the posstbtlity he says I
don t think about tl Under the rtght c rcumstances someone
can do tt
A second baseman for most of hts 10 years wtth the Twms
Carew now ts domg a good JOb defenstvely at ftrst base for
them
Gene {Mauch) ts the only one who has ever gtven me credit
for my defenstve abtbty says C a r e w apprectaltvely He
giVes me conftdence when he lets me know he feels I can do the
JOb With my glove No one has ever done that wtth me before
He doesn t pull me out of there or DH me tf I m ever n a h tting
slump
That s one Gene Mauch scratches his head over
When rn hell he asks 'was Rod Carew ever m a h tting
s1Wf1P• That s something I must ve mtssed
~

latniy
would
elevate
Koosman to No I status-a
pos t on he has never enjoyed
durmg hts 10 years w th the
Mets
A perfect example of
Seaver s tmpact came
Monday rught alter Koosman
turned m a four-tnt 10.
sir keout performance and
also smgled m a patr of runs
m the Mets 7 I trtumph over
the Atlanta Braves After the
game reporters cornered
Seaver to ask about h s status
wtth the Mets
When the press fmaUy got
around to Koosman he gave
them the brushoff
I ve already given out my
rntervtew srud the 33-year
old left-bander You have
your JOb to do I ve done
mme I talked With the one
reporter who came over here
when l was ready Now l
have nothing more to say
Koosman d dn t appear to
he angry and ndtcated that
his teammates had pressured
him mto snubbmg the news
medta for gomg to Selver
ftrsl
You saw t all he satd
There s nothmg to say
anyway
Koosman didn t allow a h t
until the ftfth tnnmg when the
Braves got two of thetr four
smgles anJ thetr lone
unearned run Hts two-run
smgle came m a four-run
etghth when the Mets were
atded by two Atlanta errors
In the only other scheduled
NL act on Cincmnatt edged
54
and
Phtladelp a
Montreal mpped Houston 3 2
Expos 3 Astros 2
Rehel pttcher Joe Kerrtgan
came on m the etghth mmng
and p tched out of a bases
loaded Jam to preserve a
vtctory for the Expos over the
Astros Kerr gan took over
after the Astros had scored
twice on Jose Cruz two-run
homer and put runners on
first and second With one out
Santo Alcala 2-3 hurled the
first 7 1 3 mrungs for the
Expos to wm his ftrst game
smce bemg traded by
Clncmnati
Rangers 3 Indians 0
Solo home runs by Juan
Ben quez
and
Bert
Campanerts backed the four
hit pttchmg of Bert Blyleven
and carr ed the Rangers to
VIctory over the Indians
Blyieven struck out stx and
walked only one n gammg hts
Sixth Vtclory n 13 dec SIOOS
and 33rd career shutout
Denrus Eckersley suffered
his ftfth loss rn 11 dec s ons
Royals 8 Yankees 3
George Brett hit a two-run
homer and Darrell Porter
drove m three other rtms wtth
a smgle and double to spark
the Royals tnumph over the
Yankees Paul Splillorff went
ftve mrungs to ga n h s fifth
v ctory m ntne dects ons
while Mike Torre"&lt; took hts
fifth loss aga nst seven
vtetortes
Red Sox 5 Wblte Sox 4
Carlton Ftsk s bases loaded
smgle to deep center f eld
wtth one out n the lOth mnmg
scored Rtck Burleson to gtve
the Red Sox thetr fifth v ctory
tn a row and move them one
half game ahead of the
Yankees m the AL East
Rtchte Zisk htt a two-run
homer for the Whtte Sox to
take over the major league
lead wtth 16

~
BASEBALL

Seaver deal by Mets must be
made before midnight Wednesthly

By DAVID MOFFIT
UPI Sports Writer
By un ed P ess n erna ona
ATLANTA (UPI J - The 11
N a ona Leagu e
Ea
year mamage of Tom Seaver
W L
PC
GB
and the New York Mets
36 9 655
Ch caqo
J2 n
593 J
P Sb&lt;lh
apparently s breaking up
3314594
rackmg up 10 str keouts $ Lou s
because of trr econ !able
J "Jfj 5.114 ~
Ph
a
before lifted for a p nch httler Mon ••
differences bet ween the ace
1S 3 446
?5JJ,Q
1
m the bottom of the seventh New Yo k
p tcher and Mets boss M
w est
w1th the Reds leadmg 4-3
W L
P t GB Donald Grant
All 10 of Fryman s Los Ang
Jil 1
644
The Mets are tty ng to
30275267
strtkeouts a season htgh for a Cn
ma ke a deal w th the
San D egc
27 36 429 3
Reds p tcher came after a Sa n F a n
?5 J.t 424
'J
,Cmcmnati Reds before the
24 36 400 4
Gary Maddox double a Hous en
Wednesday mulnight trade
39 36
sacrtff ce a run-scormg wtld A an aMondav 12
s Res.u Is
deadhne and the 32-yearold
pttch and a Mike Schmidt New Yo k A an a
rtght-hander says f they are
ea 3 HoUs on 2
homer gave the Ph Is a Ul Mton
C n nna 5 Ph ade ph a 4
successful l w ll go
lead n the top of the ftrst
Today s P obitble P t che s
S.. that there can be no
A T mes E DT
lMtng
mtsunderstanding
regarding
w Yo k
Tod d 2
George Foster s 14th homer A Ne
an a Leon 1 7 JSpm
Tom Seaver and h s
Mon ea
Bahnsen
a
of the season commg wtth
on Andu a
3
8 35 assoctation wtth us we wtsh
Ken Griffey and Joe Morgan pHous
w announce we do not and
m
on base n the bottom of the
Ph ade ph a
Kaa
a
never have wanted to trade
C nc nna
No m a n 6 2
8 05
ftrst rnrung qutckly wtped out pm
him sa d Grant the Mets
the Phtls 2-0 lead
P sbu gh
Roo ke
54 a board cha rman
Tra ling 3-2 the Phtls t ed Los Ange e&amp; Su on 2 0 30
In
an
hou rlo ng
the score m the fourth on p m
CM cago Bonha m 6 5 a San oonversalton wtth me last
Jerry Martm s bases loaded D ego G n 11 4 0 p m
Tom was as ked
S Lou s Fo scM 8 2 a Sa n Fr day
sacrif ce fly
sev~a
l
t
tmes
to remam w til
F an sco Ha ck 5 5
0 35
Steve Carlton the Ph is ace pm
the Mets under the terms of
lefty depa r ted w th an
h s contract and reg~ster his
aching back after the Reds
des re to stay Grant sa d
went ahead 4-3 rn the s xth
Monday mght But he stead
lMtng
fastiy refuses to do this unless
Wtth one out Morgan
we are w llmg to renegottate
s ngled to cente stole second
(the three year $225 000-a
A me
contmued to thtrd on catcher
G B year contract Seaver s gned
Pc
L
T m McCa rve r s thr ow ng
last year )
5 9
error and came home on a
26 56
As a hve and 10 year
544 2
Carlton wtld p tch
n
an
t s hts dec ston to
B
I
3
The Ph is I ed U e score
29
53
make He can accept or turn
when Greg Luz nsk tr pled
3
436 8
dcwn any trade that s
4 B 9
home Larry Bowa m the
offer\'d This not only makes
e ghth to set the sta ge for
Pc
G B t d If cult to negotiate
t
586
Dr essen s gamew nmng M nn
also
leaves
us
no
alternattve
544
ogo
co
homer
509 4
Ca
but to grant htrn his request
500 5
T exas
make the best deal we
and
5
Kan C y
49
482 6
can
Oa "- And
s
We are st i1 trymg sa d
but have not
Gra nt
completed a saltsfaerory deal
at this ttme
Seaver sa d Monday mght
• that he and the Mets have
been at odds a bout a year
and a hal! that s all
There s more m th s th ng
than dollars I on!) know l
can t be happy playmg for M
CINCINNATI {UP! )
Donald Grant l can t go nto
Any offer m the world
a the who e h stor) of thts
wont pe rs uade Rawly
thmg but I just can I be
Eastw ck to s gn a contrac,t
• 0 happy playmg for hun
w th the Cincmnat Reds
Could l be ha ppy playmg
says the Nat onal League s
n Cmcmnatt I really don t
F reman of the Year n
know what s go ng to happen
1976
They sm le at me to my
fa ce and st ck a knife n ny
back sa d Eastwtck 26
who comb ned an 11-5 record
w th a 2 08 ea rned r un
average 1ast seaso n
Eastwt ck ment oned as
part of a poss ble trade w th •
the New York Mets fo r
p tcher Tom Seaver also satd
usually leveled at the USGA
By MIKE RABUN
he bel eves Reds manager
for
do ng whatever dastardly
UP!
Sports
Wr
ter
Sparky Anderson won t g ve
deeds
t has done to the layout
TULS
A
Okia
UP!
)
If
htrn the work he needs to be
w
I host the Open
hat
there
were
not
1
000
peo
ple
eff ecttve beca use he s
champ
onshtp
On th s
attendin
g
swarm
ng
around
playmg wtthout a contract
occas
on
t
s
the
heav ly
The fan s must be stup d tf to last m note deta is and f
sco
rch
ng
hot
wooded
they don t see what there were no te lev1s on
Southern
H
lis
Country
Club
towers r s ng a bove almost
management s domg to me
ever
y tree and f the crowds course
he charged
What adject ves are left to
were
not already huge t
Reds General Manager
descr
be South ern H ils
would
be
hard
to
tell
that
the
Dtck Wagner satd he was
srud
former
Open champ
US
Open
was
about
w
begm
surprtsed by Eastwtck s
Hale
Irw
n
m
what turned
seems
happy
Ever
ybody
remarks
He s rntell gent
to
be
a
typ
cal
comment
out
Oh
there
are
compla
nts
enough to know that you take
It
sa
go
rgeous
place
to play
about
the
weather
whtch
the good w th the bad l don t
golf
om
ses
to
p
oduce
near
100.
p
comprehend what he s say ng
It sa very fat go f course
degr ee tempe r atures all
about be ng krufed
to
hold
the
Ope n
week
But
t
was
Jus!
as
hot
The reliever was booed by
champ
onsh
p
on
echoed
some n the crowd of 42 000 at for last week s to ur stop m
Masters champ Tom Watson
R verfront Stadium Sunda y Memphis
They have taken a super
Th S Of COW"Se S the ltrne
when he gave up three runs m
golf
course and done very
the nmth mn ng of the f rst of yea r when vtle words are
title
111th tt Sometunes they
game of a doubleheader wtth
screw
up a course like
an
the Montreal Expos The
th
ey
d
d
at
W nged Foot
Reds won both games and
(where
lrw
n
won
m 1974 )
Eastw ck returned to the
but thts one ts very fa r
mound m the second game to
And lrom M Jler Barber
pttch f ve scoreless mrungs
wh
o sweated th ough a
Anderson also den ed East
pract
ce round Monday
BIRMINGHAM
Al a
w ck s charges say in g
It
s a ve ry n ce go lf
(UP! ) Gene Bartow head
Does anyone th nk I a n t
cou
se
What mo e can you
gonna fteid my best team or basketball coach of the UCLA
say
Brums fo two seaso ns w !I
use my best p tchers
The bu k of the !53-man
develop an athlet c program
that w il tee off n the
f
eld
at th e Umvers ty of Alabama
7th
a nnu a l champ onsh p
n B rmmgham according to
was
m town Monday and
UAB Pres dent Dr S
put
n an appearance on
most
R chardson Htll Jr
th
e
6
87~yard
par 70 course
Bartow s acceptance was
lnte nat ona L eague
Among
the
m ssmg was
Un ted Press Inter n at ona I
to oe announced at a ~ a m
W l Pet GB news conference on the UAB three-tune wtnner Jack N ck
Pa w tucke
35 9 648
a us who played th ee rounds
campus roday
Cha eston
3 2 6 8
he
re n a two-day span last
Gene
w
!I
serve
as
a
thlet
c
R chmond
28 23 5•9
Rochester
30 27 526
director and head coach of week and therefore was one
T dewa e
25 26 490
the UAB basketbail team we of the ones who d d not I ave
Sy acuse
24 30 444
hope to field durmg the 19711- to endure the sultry heat
To edo
23 36 390 4
which c tmbed nto the 90s
79 seaso n Htil sa d
Co u m bus
8 35 340 16
The long range forecast fo
Monday s Re s u ts
Bartow has completed two
Co u m bus 2 Paw uck e 3
Opeo
week called for more of
seasons at UCLA durmg
R chmond 2 To ed o 0
the
same
clear to partly
wh ch t me he comp led a
Cha es on 4 Rochestc 3 0
cloudy
sk
es
temperatures
m
ecord of 28 w ns and fo u
nn ngs
the
90s
poss
bly
rangmg
to
100
T dewa ter 4 Sy ac use 2
osses n 975-76 and 24 w ns
and f ve losses m 1976-77 H s degre s a nd onl y th e
UCI.A team won the Pac ftc-&lt;1 sl ghtest cha nce of a n
occ a s o na l a ft e rn oo n
t tie bn h }ealS
thundershower

The matter ts str ctly up to
the Mets now I ve had a
conversat on w th the Reds
and tf a trade IS made l will
go
It has been reported that
the Reds seve n games
behind Los Angeles n their
slowed up b d for a third
stra ght world champtonsh p
have offered three players m
trade fo r Seaver - rei ef
p tcher Rawley Eastw ck

M11 0 r LUfJUe SU11nel ng s

•

ullltty mftelder Doug Flynn
and AAA hrst baseman Dave
Rever ng who ts hitting
around 340 at lndl81lapohs
It s stili talk we haven t
agreed on anything satd
Mets Manager J oe Torre I
don t think we ve had a fall"
enough offer for the best
ptlcher in baseball Th\ only
thmg that has been agreed on
IS that Tom Seaver may he
traded

H orse show set
Saturday night

,."

,

Eastwick
washed up
in Cincy

Crowd begins arriving
ln Tulsa for U. S. Open

TUP PERS PLAINS The
Bar 30 Horse men w !I
sponsor an approved Ohto
Va ll ey
Horse
Show
AssoctattOn horse show on
Saturday n ght June 18 The
show w ll he held ram or
sh ne Seventeen ha iter
classes will hegtn at 5 p m
and 32 performance classes
w 11 begm at 7 p m The judge
for the show IS Robert
Patr ck from Ashv lle Ohto
There w 11 he a food stand
and a tack stand on the
grounds For furth er n
format on contact J R
Kennedy n Tuppers Plains
Ohto at 667~72 The show
w ll be staged at the Bar 30
grounds near Tuppers
Plams Hate c a sses w
nclude
Reg Qua le ho se J
M.ares 3 yeaf'"s and unde
Reg
Qua te horse S
M.a es 4 yrs and ove
Qua te ho se J
Reg
Ge d ngs 3 y s and unde
Reg
Qua e ho se Sr
Ge d ngs 4 y s and ovef'"
Reg
Qua e rh o se Jr
Sa on s 3 yrs and unde
Reg
Qua e h o se Sf'"
S a ons 4 y s and o ver

Reg Appaloosa Ma es any
age
Reg Appa oosa Geld ngs
any ag e

Reg Appaloosa Sta I on s
any age
No n Reg
St oc k Ho se
Ma es any age
Non Reg
St oc k Ho,.se
Ge d ng s an y age
Wes
Pony
unde
48
(f'la es and ge d ngs any ag e
West ern Pony 48 1o 56
nc ud ng
ma re s
and
ge d ng s any age
Show m a nsh p und e r
4
yea s
Show mansh p
4 h u 8
yea s
We st
Wea n ng
and
Yea ng Faa s
976 977
Reg ste .ed Eng sh Ha te

Pe Ia ma n ce C a ss es Beg nn ng at 7 p m DST
F ve
bbon s and p ze
money S8 S6 S4 l!!ll nd S2 Ent y
Fee S2 OQ lead n Pon y entr y
f ee - $1 SO

lead In Pony o be udged

Open

Spott ed

P ea s u ,.e

HOI'"Se

Lad es Ba f'" el Ra ce open

Wa k T at C a ss ope n
pony 56 and under r de r 8
y s and unde
Ba eback Horsemansn p
open
T ophy and
bbon s

only!

Eng sh F ve Ga ted Ho se

Open Pleasu e Horse
Dash fo

Cash open

West P easure Pony under
4Sss r der 12 yrs and under
Non Reg

Wes

Pleasu e

Horse

J P easure open
der 8
yrs and under no stal ons
Eng sh 3 ga ted Ho se (fu
mane and ta I)
Wes Hotsemansh p r der
unde

4 yf'"S

ho ses

or

pones {Trophy and r bbons
on1y
Flag Race open
F gu e 8 Barre Race open
Eng sh

P easu

e

Horse

h u n sea

West Re n ng Class Open

West Pleasuf'"e Pony 48 Q
56
ncl
de
6 y s and
under
Eng sh Equlta t on de 8
Y ~""S and under
roph y and
bbons only
Wa k Trot Ho se open
der 8 yrs and unde
Juven e Ba re Ra ce
de
6 y s and unde
West Ho semansh p 4 8
y s horse s o pan es t oph y
and bbons on y)
Cone Race
Reg
Q ua
e ho se

P eas u e

Egg and Spoon Open
Open Reg P Ho se ' y s

and under
Eng sh P easu e Ho se
Reg Appa oosa P easure
Horse
West Horsemansh p ov er
8 yrs hof'"ses on y
Ba e Race open

Open Tra I Class

Results, line scores
Mao League Resu ts
By Un ed P ess lntef'"nat ona
Na ona League
N Y
000 300 0409
A an a
000 0 0 000
4
K o o s m a n and S ea rrs
N ek o Cam p 8
K ne 8
and Co e W Koosman 56
N ek o

Ame can League
nn ng s

4 0 2

9

Texas

000 02 000

3 60

000 000 000 0 .s 0
B y even and Sundbe g E k
e sey Monge 7 Ke n 8 and
Fosse w B y e en 6
E ke s ey
6 5 H Rs Texas
Ben qu ez 4 Cam pane s 2
C eve

Bartow going
to AJabama

TIME TO
RE-EVALUATE YOUR
INSURANCE COVERAGE

Giants put Reds down by 10 to 3
Powell s G ants downed the Ja ck Howett an d Gr eg
Taylor
vts tmg New Haven Reds 10
For the Reds R chardson
3 Mark Boyd got the w n as
he and J ohn McK nney and Thompson combined to
fanned mne and walked f e st Ike out three an I walk s x
Randv Stc va rt got ~ tr pie 1 hompso ed the I tiers with
and Royd a doubt t ea tl e t w s ng e " le Ed~&lt;ards
hltt 1 an I Brett K n got Rrad e) Ba •o and S ott
two s ogles Other get g ea li had e h t
ll cds
000 030 3 6 2
s n es were n: chard na
( Hn
"'II I 10 93
Sean Dotdge M K

@§?
DOWNING CHILDS
INSURANCE AGENCY, INC.
,

M1ddleport 0

-

•'

992 2342

�4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, June 14,1977

SUPER

5- The D&amp;Uy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, June 14, 197'1

lllliEST SAVIIIIS 1• TOWill

MARKET
OPEN DAILY
9 TO 10

SUNDAY
CORNER MILL &amp; SECOND ST.

10 TO 10

MIDDLEPORT. 0.

We Accept Federal Food Stamps - We Reservet he Right To Jmit Quant.lies

STORE HOURS

IT'S A HONEY

1- '

FA SAL

McHaffie, Dave Talbott, );;·uce Johnson, and Kevm
Teaford. Absent were Danny Pickens and Johnny
Pickens.
;~:~:f::».::::».:.-::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::;:;;:;.:::~:;:::::·:::::~:=~::::::::::::::::::::::,

t
rt

Five graduates of the 1973 class of Meigs High School
met again for graduation this spring at Rio Grande
, College when they received another diploma. They are,
front, Ito r , Paula Whitt, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert
· B. Morris, Pomeroy; Mindy Young, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Wilbur Young, Route I, Middleport; Jyl Zirkle,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Lowell Beaver, Middleport ;
back, i to r, David Gerard, son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Gerard, Middleport, and George Arnott, son of Mrs.
Edgar Anott, Middleport, and the late Mr. Arnott.

. ::·::::::::::::::::

News Notes ·.]':

By Alma MarshaU

'\\:

LETART - Rev. and Mrs. Tim Allen were honored at a
reception recently at the home or Mr. and Mrs. Jack Pickens,
Letart, W.Va. Rev. and Mrs. Allen will move to Huntington,
where he will serve as pastor at Christ United Methodist
Church in Huntingtoo. Rev. Allen was psstor at Graham
United Methodist in Letari before being reassigned.
Acake was baked and decorated by the hostess, Mrs . Jack
(Ruth ) Pickens, for the occasion.
The United MethOdist Women presented Mrs. Tim
(Carolyn ) Allen a gift and the church ai:ID presented one to the
Rev . Allen.
Refreshments of cake, punch and nuts were served.
Attending were Paul and Mary Bumgardner, Albert and
Erma Roush, Alice; Mrs. Ada Clarke, Miss Anna Allen, Mrs.
Esther Roush, Mrs. Esther Brown, Mr. Bobby Ray and
Carolyn Grinun, Robbine and Shane ; Mrs. Brenda Merritt,
Mrs. Mary Ann Richards, Jack and Ruth Pickens, Beverly ,
Usa and Stephen.
MASON - Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Ross are announcing tile
· birth of a daugh.ter, Amy Renee, on Sunday, May 15, at Holzer
Medical Center HospitaL She weighed 6 pounds, 91'..ounces.
Mr. and Mrs . Ross are also the psrents of a son, Shawn,
age 3. Maternal grandpsrents are Mr . and Mrs. Charles
Yeager, Mason; paternal grandmother Mrs. Betty Ross and
great.grandpsrents, Mr. and Mrs. L. E. Piersall, Pl. Pleasant,
and Mrs. Rhoda Yeager, M:ason.

.
e
'
.
s
Tom Clark dl
WAS!flNGTON "(UP!)
Re tired Supreme Court
Justice Tom Clark died
Sunday night in his sleep at
the New York City home of
his son, former U.S. Attorney
General Ramsey Clark, the
Supreme Court annoimced
today. He was 77.
Clark was servin~ on the

Mason County

NEW HAVEN - The Jr. OUAM of New Haven is planning
their annual baseball excursion. This year they are going io
Pittsburgh, for a doubleheader with Philadelphia on July loth.
Bus pickup will be at Mt. Alto at 7 a. m. on July loth.
Tickets are on sale at Gregg's Market, New Haven,

MASON- The Young Adult Sunday School Class of Mason
bench of (he 2nd U. .~. Circuit
·United
)il:ethodlst Church will hold an old fashion social on the
Court oi Appeals. He.has been
church
lawn, Saturday, June 18from 3:30p.m. until dark.
serving in U. S. district and
Everyone
is welcome. Came and e~joy all homemade
appellate courts ever since
goodies
and
they
include homemade soup, ice cream,
his retirement from the
homemade
cakes
and
pies. Sandwiches and pop will also be
Supreme Court In 1967 .after
sold.
If
inclement
weather
prevails it will be held In the church
18 years' service.
basement
.
fie stepped down because
President Lyndon Johnson
LETART - A picnic was held on Sunday, June 5 at the
appainted Ramsey Clark to
home
of Joseph Kay and his sister, Mrs. Mina Johnson , Letart,
the Justice Deportment post.
Rt.
I.
Chief Justice Warren
The group enjoying the outing included Mr. and Mrs. Bill
Burger said the elder Clark
Cullen,
Johnny Bill, Terry, Florence K. Cullen, Mr. and Mrs.
has "literally 'ridden circuit'
David
Kay,
Mr. and Mrs. David Dewhurst, Danny, Bobbie and
as the justices did in the first
Cindy
Stuart,
Roy Roush, Van Roush, Mr. and Mrs. Marcus
century of the court."
Weaver,
Mr.
and
Mrs. Aaron Weaver and Brenden; Mildred
"He Is the only man ever to
VanMatre,
Mr.
and
Mrs. Jerry Scott and Matthew, Ralph
sit as a judge in every cir·
Rottgen,
Rev.
and
Mrs.
Bobbie Woods, Greg and Eddie, Mrs.
cuit, ' ' Burger said.
·Steve Carpenter and Chris, Mr. Kay and Mrs. Johnson .

june meeting of women held

BILL HUBBARD
MASON, W. Va.
Airman William L, Hubbard, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Devillo W. Hubbard of
Maosu, W. Va., has been
assigned to Lowry AFB,
Colo., after completing Air
Force basic training.
Airman Hubbard will DOW
receive spedallzed
training in lbe muolllous
and weapons maintenance
field. He Is a 1!171 graduate
of Wahama High School.
Bls wife, Sandra, I• lbe
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Martin Stanley of Mason,
W.Va.

THE DAILY SENTINEL
D£V01EDTOTHE

INTEREST OF
MEIGS-MASON AREA
a-JESTER L t ANNEHJLL
El:er. Ed.

ROBERT HOEFLICH
Cli)' EdUor

Publilhed daily e:u .-ept Saturday
by ThO Ohio Valley l'ub!ishlng Comany, lJl Court Sl, Pumeruy, otUo'
15769. Busl!l"' Office l'hooe m.
21~. Editorial Phone Wl·2157.
Second ci.Mss posUtge pHid .al
PooleriJy, OtUo.
NaUonal

advertiaffitl

represen-

lative Ward • Grllfllh Company,
Inc,, Bott.ineiiJ and GaUaglM!r Oiv.,

7S7 Third Ave•• New York, N.Y.
10017,
Subm.-ripUon rates: OeiJvel'l!d by
CHrrier "·here Hv.oillMble 76 cenu per
week. By Motor Route where C¥ rrier
servlce not available, One month,
SUS. By mall in 0100 Mnd W. VI.,
Q1e YeJI.t, b2.00; Six monthl,

fJI .50; Three month~, 17.00;
El.kwhere 121!1.00 year ; SIX monlha
tl3.50; Three mbnths, S7 . ~ .
· SUbacllpLion J.1rice includell ~Y
1'11n...sentinel.

~

NEW HAVEN, W. Va. The New Haven Women of
the Church of God held their
June meeting In the
missionary building with
Roberta Maynard and Patty
Maynard hostesses. ·
The meeting opened with
the members singing "River
of Peace." Devotions were
led by Ira Capehart with
prayer led by Orpha Fields.
Stewardship Director, Patty
· Maynard, received the
Penny-a-Day Calendars. It
was reported that $27 had
been received for the
Spiritual Birthday Offering.
Finance director, Sarah
Gibbs, received the blessing
cups. She reminded members
to turn in their recipes for the
local and state cookbooks.
Members also voted to
purchase a hook for the WCG
Ubrary.
Flower Chairman ,
Margaret Dodson, reparted
that flowers had been sent to
.a member in the hospital. It
was announced that the July
hostesses will be Fay Carpenter, Rena Johnson, and
Pansy Fry.
· An
Interesting
and
challenging ·program was
presented by Stewardship
Director Patty Maynard. The
theme was " Taking Charge."

She also had each member
fill out a check list on taking
charge of their lives in
varto110 ways.
Attending were Sarah
--------NOW YOU KNOW
The flrat bomb dropped by
a Russian aircraft when the
U.S.S.R. attacked Finland on
Nov. 30, 1939, ~red a direct
hit - on the Soviet Legation
in Helsinki. t·

Gibbs, Margaret Dodson,
Grace Cunningham, Sue
Erwin, Bonnie Fields, Iva
Capehart, Roberta Maynard,
Orpha Fields, Iva Capehart,
Susie Wolfe, Patty Maynard,
Norma Greene, Eleanor
Davis.
NEW HAVEN - Mrs. Roy
Jones, Mrs. Phil Batey and
Mrs. Tom Hoffman were
hostesses at the June meeting
of the Nehaclima Garden
Club held at the New Haven
Public Library.
The meeting was called to
order by the president, Mrs.
Roy Jones. She also was in
charge or the devotionals.
Orpha Fields led in prayer.
Athank you letter was read
from the American Land
Trpst for the local club's
contribution to the fund.
Orpha Fields and Lois
Bumgardner were appointed
to co-chairmen of the
progressive dinner to be held
in August. Sally Clark was
appointed to serve as
chalnnan of the Nehaclima
Garden Club Memorial Park.
It was announced that the
July meeting would be a
workshop held at the
Memorial Park and that a
wiener roast would be held
following the workshop. It
will begin at 8:30p.m. and all
members were urged to
attend and bring their
working tools.
A letter was read for
memb!lrship ' into the club
from Mrs. · Maxine Thompson.
A very lntereating program
was pre~ented by Randy
Lowe, pharmacist of the
Village Pharmacy in ·New
Haven. He spoke onlover-the-

MON. lHRU SAT. 9 AM TO 9 PM
SUNDAY 11 AM TO 6 PM

p-:.

Beegle, coach, Steve So uder, Debbie Bryant, Robe~t

PORTLAND U'ITLE LEAGUE team members and
coach. Front J.r, Jeff Connolly, Steve Teaford, Dave
Bryant, Troy Ward and Wade Coonolly; back, Marvierie

counter · drug• for Minor
Burns and Sunburns;
Athletes Foot, and Insect
Stings and Bites.
The door prize was won by
Mrs. Pauline Miller.
others attending besides
the hostesses, Mrs. Jones,
Mrs. Hoffman and Mrs.
Batey were Mrs. David
Fields, Jr ., Mrs. John
Thorne , Mrs. Michael
Merritt, Mrs. Mel Clark, Mrs.
David Russell, Mrs. John
Campbell, Mrs. David
Simonton, Mrs. James W.
Roush , Mrs. Danny Harbour,
Mrs.
Douglas
Miller,
members and guest, Randy
Lowe.

(FORMERLY BIG JIM'S)

U.S.D.A . CHOICE
"

39

BUCKET
STEAKS
FRESH &amp; LEAN
GROUND

407 PEARL STREET • ON THE CORNER
CARRYOUT SERVICE
WE GLADLY ACCEPT FEDERAL FOOD STAMPS

II

GROUND
CHUCK

LB.

LB.

BEEF

LB.
5 LBS. OR MORE

89~

FRESH LEAN

E

U.S.D.A. CHOICE GRADE .A

TOP ROUND STEAK ................... ,~.. 1 1"

DECKER
WIENERS

·~ 99;

SPLIT FRYERS

Pound

BEEF CUBE STEAK ...................... ,~,., 11"

USOA. Chok•

BONELESS RUMP ROAST ........ ·~... 1"
1

AIIMOUIII STAll 41o I POUfirfO I

'

. . . 4J~

DINNER BELL CHOPPED SYEAI S ....;...,... s1"

Jt

CHII"~ID

DUCKLINGS ... ·········'~'"' 99•

CHOPPED HAM ........~ ... s1

Afllfiiii0U fl 10to 14 P'o11nck

Ho\AVliT

1

11'

69• SMOKED SAUSAGE ':;;- s14'
$ J
CLAUSSEN PICKLES '~;.s 1" OCEAN PERCH ......:...,..... 1 '

WHOLEO&lt;Hof!Lf

SNOWHITE

SUPERIORS
All MEAT

POlliO

WIENERS

SUPERIORS

79~B.

BROUGHTON'S

MOUNTAIN
FRESH

LB.

79~

P'EPSI COLA

GRADE A
MEDIUM

SLICED
.
.BACON

,

WESTERI CAJITALOUPIS '""' 59'
LARGE SWEET NEW

•

CALIFORNIA PLUM'S;......... u . 69•
lAROIE SWEET ILI CINO

YELLOW OIIQ-.s •."...~.,;3
. ..... 69'
I
.,

"WEll. FIUEO TfND!ft SOIJTHIMI

T

:5~=

.

FRESH CORN ....................

KRAFTS .••

79'

_
P LAZA
SALE DA TIS IUNE 15 thru 18th, 1977
"In fairness to

EGGS
DOL

POLISH
SAUSAGE

SWUTTHICK MEA TED

~159

Lb.
Bag

CARDINAL

BUnON MUSHROOMS ..... " · 99•

U.S. No.1 ALL PURPOSE

16 Ol

fiT'S N.EW I)

49~

all

our customers , we

KRAFT MUSTARD ................... .'~;:•: 59•

BnS.

KRAFT GRAPE JELLY .................. · ~;:•

2% MILK .................... ~.~~ .. $1 39
BROUGHTON

HOMO .MILK............. :~.~~-~.. 79~

16····
Cans ~I

PEAS

KRAFT CREAMY CUCUMBER ..... :;;:.~ 49'

16-oz.
Cans

KRAFT I 000 ISLAND .. ..... ... . :;;.~; 49•

$1

32....
lottie

KING SIZE

B.B.Q. SAUCE ..................... ~!;&lt;;~ 59'

TIDE

DUNCAN HINES

CAHEMIX
Urni1 two with coupoo and

··~rto l

HEINZ UICHUP ~

Lb .
Bag

'

Limit onl

110.0(1 pureh•H t xclucting

I

coupoo

uo oo.,...,,..••'- '."'
"""-""'
~

...... w""' - .,....."l..d~-oor.
o............ " ,.. - ·

110.00 purchiH 11u;; ludlnu
bflr, wif'HI ud ciglrlttM .

b811r, wina 1nd clg1r1tt11.

DOG
Z5LB. SJ69
FOOD ..........•..•.•....•...•BAG
........

.5

""•'44;

· 18%-oz.
, Box

G REER

'

89'

'BANANAS

5

LBS.

•1 00

HIGHLAND
MEADOW

INSTANT
COFFEE
99
Big ~
14-oz.

PAPER TOWELS
JUMBO ROLL

Jar

8-16

oz.

BOffiES

49~

ARMOUR PonED MEATS ............. 5 ~;-::;

Vj

- ·" ...

tAAOINAl \U"

1
CASTLEBERRY HOT DOG CHILl .... 3 •g;:: 89•

~I} STORES •

BUY ONE GET ONE
FrH with purc"-t&amp; of one 7
It regule t price.

01 .

''•
•

ber

SWEU SUE BONED CHICKEN .. ~......... ~;·;.

59•

SWEET SUE BONED TUllEY . ..... ~:;

65'
99•

RE GULAR OR THIN

PRINCE SPAGHml .............................. ';~:

PALMOLIVE...................!!;,~ 59c

r

b&lt; ...............
-·· •
-.
J

KLEENEX

IHEAL'tH &amp; BEAUTY AIDS I

•

'0

FACIAL TISSUE

200-ct.
Box

I

FOOOSIOIIIS fl{eliJ;;tei~l

GOLDMEDAL \

.._.::&gt;

BOUNTY CANDY BAR
PRINGLES TRIPLE PACK .................. •:;;• s1°'

liqu id 10• Off U.b•l

DR. PEPPER

1

FLOUR

u-·---..l
I IOOOI!MC!ttoW •• • . . .

""':·1"""'
- ~"""Mt
o,.. rAill*l ~ ~a.-.,

- - . · - •••

~
39~ ~.. ..
&amp;:Lb.

..,.. .,.,. tl, ,.,,

~

CAII D'IIfiiAL ltQ\'II l l lUI llOJtl'

:::;

00-00.00

_

DIET RITE

O· CO N

•

ANT&amp; ROACH AEROSOL';:
.ltUIUR

COLA

V- 8, aulomalic,
power steering, air.

THURSDAY ONLY

R.C. COLA
8 16 OL BOffiES

$109

VANILLA WAFERS .............. .',!,;;:

8-16 OZ. BOTILES
12-oz.
Pkg .
Un... w~tM

89~

B•nquat

I

HOMOGENIZED MILK ................... ~~.

$

59'

[fROZEI FOOD SPECIALS I

~ KRAFT GRAPEFRUIT JUICE ........... ~;::,; 99•
~
SOUR CREAM .....
~• MRS. FILBERTS MARGAIIIE ....... ~,;, 49•
...... ••"
PIHLADELPIIA CREAM CHHSE .. :0";. 49• HALF &amp;HALF 2 ;::
CARDINAL

99•

n

1

FRIED
CHICKEN

I. . .

49•
ONI ,IAUIAOI OR CHEfSE
.
IENO'S PIZZA ................... :~ ~:··&amp;9'
79• POPSICLES ..................... ............ .'~~~· 79'
MIP'iTY HIOH ·CHOC'OLATI OR LEMON

'

CREAM PIES ............ ...... ·~~· 6 :

, Umit one with

~oupon

a.

Ill

~

c
...
J3tlllillttl:l
GELATIN ........ ,...~ ~
_,u;::;""·~·;;;,;"
' ~";."::"., .•····
~
loxea
•

Sr OA! S ~ci~~tAI FOOD STORIS

8 9C

~

.......... ,. ''"

.:.l ii i!IIHM """'" l llll ITOfiU

COCACOLA

~

CAAOIH.t.l ~II"

STORE S

'

fJ

u
c
...

~

10' Off LAIIll

NATURE VALLEY GRANOLA .....,...':;:• 49•

Ill

~ u

8eg

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72 CHEVY
IMPAlA 4 DR.

Open Evenings '1116 ,00
·
Til s p.m. s.t.

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99•
HEINZ KOSHER.SPEARS ..................... 'j;~· 79'

INSECT AEROSOL .'~ s1"

Pomeroy

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HEINZ SWEET PICKLES ....................... 'j;~·

CHIMA FOAM PLAnERS •:;: 49•

GMAC FINANCING

·Godl•

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CARIIATION COFFEE MATE ....... .... ' ~;':' s1"

USED CARS

992·S342

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q,O SI OIIES

CHIMA FOAM PLATES . .. . '~;;• 49•

Way of Doing Business

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~At llUl SfOJIII

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APPLESAUCE ..................... ) 'g;::

li(allljlllaJ:I

sroR£S • CAADINAt fOoosroRrs

LYSOL SPRAY .............. ...................... .';;-:; J1"

You' ll Like Our Quality

69;

Krart Smo!.tv. Hot, Ono in or Pl1in

REG. 12.69

PACE SETTER

KRAFT
MACARONI&amp;
. CHEESE

59•

KRAFT CATALINA DRESSING .;:;;. 99•

VALLEY BELL

69'

KRAFT CARAMELS . . . .. .................. •;;;:

rese rve the right to limit quantities .

THIS WEEK'S SPECIAL

•1295
Karr &amp; VanZandt

Po "ood

Hln•

TURKEYS ..... .. ......... ,."..

HORMEL HAM PAniES .... ',!,;;~·

______

59'
.._FRYER QUARTERS .....".. 49'
....
FRYER QUARTERS ..

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Mae Spencer- vacations ~~

POLLY·s POINTERS
Polly Cramer
DEAR POLLY-I would pliers as hot glass is very
like the recipe for starching fragile . He found this work.t'&lt;l
rufned doilies with sugar.- well with telephone Ill·
sulators. - POLLY.
HELENG .
DEAR POLLY - The
DEAR HELEN G.-I have
never had a definite Pointer in your colwnn about
recipe.One just makes a thin removing paint from the
boiled syrup with sugar and hands with turpentine or
water. Cool and immerse kerosene is true but either of
doilies one at a time, wring these may irritate the skin.
uut excess syrup and then The same result can be obshape as desired and leave to tained by using baby oil. It is
dry. Perhaps some reader kind to the skin and more
can give us the quantities in a pleasant to smell. We always
keep a hottle even though
more exactform. -POLLY.
there
has been no baby
DEAR POLLY - My Pel
around
for 2D years.
Peeve is with the pockets \bat
.CHARLES.
most clothing manufacturers
put in men's work pants. We
pay from fifteen to twenty
•.
dollars for each pair of such
pant.s and after three weeks
of wear the pockets are of no
use at all. It's as if the
rna !erial used for them is
a~nosl like cheesecloth. The
Mrs. Dayton Spencer and
pant.. are well made but the Mrs . Waid Spencer were
pocket.. come apart . - MRS. hostesses for a dinner honorG.F.
ing Mary DeGroot and
DEAR POLLY - I have daughters, Laura, Leona and
made good use of the side of Henrietta, Fountain, Colo. at
my refrigerator that stands the weekend home of Mr. and
out away from the wall . A Mrs. Dayton Spencer.
large hook was put in the wall
Those attending were Mrs.
LANGSVILLE Miss school in Cleveland where she and a ll of my a ppliance cords
Mae
Spencer and Vance, Mr.
Theresa Starr, 13, daughter received
awards
for hang on it. They are easy to
and
Mrs.
Elson Spencer and
of Mr. and Mrs. Sandy Starr, citizenship, scholarship, get to and not all mixed up as
John
Henry,
and Larry
Langsvllle, has been selected tutoring and was a student they might be in a drawer. Spencer
of
Racine;
·Mr. and
as one of the finalists in the council representative. Her JEAN.
Lowell
Bing,
Mr. and
Mrs.
United Teenager Pageant. ambitions are to become a
DEAR POLLY - Kim Mrs. Mike Bing and Randy,
The pageant will be held model and ·work with' han- wanted to kilow how to
at the Sheraton-Columbus dicapped children. She has crackle ash trays or marbles Mr. and Mrs. Harry Spencer
Hotel, Columbus, July 8, 9 modeled for the Zayre to make candle holders. and Keith, Mr. and Mrs. Ron
Spencer, Trisha and Donnie,
and !D.
Department
Store
in Place the marbles or ash
Theresa attends Meigs Cleveland. She will be trays in a 400 degree oven Dayton Spencer, Waid
Junior High School and sponsored by the Racine and leave for 10 minutes, Spencer and Ray. The even·
ing was spent visiting.
previously attended grade Home National Bank.
remove and plunge into ice
water. Protect your hands as .D•nu~uhter
the pieces will be very hot.
u ~•
''"
Remove and dry thoroughly.
We use a strong glue to stick
RUTLAND- Mr. and Mrs.
them together. My son used Michael Nicholson are ansix ash trays for his. The first nouncing the birth of an eight
RACINE--Eighty - five seven . visiting worthy was placed upside down and pound, two ounce daughter,
members and guest.s attend- matrons and seven visiting the second was glued on right Bridgil Dawn on May 31. The
ed the aruJUal inspection of worthy patrons, past matrons side up. Then one was glued . Nicholson&amp; also have a son,
Racine Chapter, Order. of the and past patrons of Racine to each side fitting to the top · Ryan Michael, 3. GrandEastern Star, held Thursday Chapter, honored mason, of the second ash tray. They parents are Mr. and Mrs.
are beautifuL we use square Ernest Nicholson, Salem St.,
night at the Racine Masonic Dale Smith of Pomeroy.
candles
and found the while Rutland, arid Mr. and Mrs.
Lee Lee, Addie Norris, and
Temple.
or
clear
ones prettier than George Grate, Main St. ,
Inspecting officer was Mrs. Carroll Norris received their
the
amber.
'
Rutland. Great-grandparents
Sylvia Midkiff, deputy grand 25 year pins. They were
Pyramid
paper
weight.s
are
are
Mrs . Bertha DuUon,
matron. Presiding officers presenfed these by Mrs.
pretty
when
made
of
crack!Route
4, Pomeroy, and Mrs.
were Lillian Weese, worthy Chlorus Grimm, worthy
ed
marbles.
Place
and
glue
Alice
M.
Fout, Marion.
matron, Ralph Webb, worthy , matron in 1952 when they
patron; Naoma Brinker, were initialed into Racine marbles on a two-inch square
associate matron ; Jesse Chapter.
of plywood and continue adL
coup~
Brinker, associate patron;
Initiation was exemplified ding and gluing until you end
Opal Diddle, secretary; Bar- for Traci Weese and Crestlyn up with only one marble on
Mr. and Mrs. Roy R.
bara Dugan, treasurer; Don· Hill. White Bibles were top . Also earrings and
Guilky,
Rt. 1, Middleport, are
na Johnson, conductress; and presented to· them by Lillian necklaces can be made with
announcing
the birth of their
Louise Stewart, pro-tem Weese, worthy matron. Mrs. crackled marbles. The chain
associate conductress.
Mindling and Howard Shull for the necklace and parts for first child, a son, born, June~
Introduced and welcomed complimented the officers earrings can be bought at at Pleasant Valley Hospital.
The baby weighed 6 lba., 7
by the worthy matron were and expressed their thanks to some variety stores. - LIBoz. and was 18 and one-hall
Roberta Mindling, past grand the worthy matron and wor· BIE.
inalron ; Howard Shull, junior thy patron. Mrs. Midkiff also
DEAR READERS - Linda inches long and has been
past grand patron; Mrs. spoke briefly following her in- wrote that she "fried" her named Robert Earl.
Maternal grandparents are
Midkiff, deputy grand spection. .
marbles in a frying pan until
Mrs.
Delores Powell, Midmatron ; Pal Wilson, grand
Red roses were used in the very hot and then put the the
dleport,
and the late Earl
representative to Kansas; decorations . . Each of the ice water while hot so they
Powell.
Paternal grand- ,
Mary Shull, grand represen- grand officers and chapter of· crackled. She used airplane
parents
are
Mr. and Mrs.
tative to Oklahoma; Gracie fleers were presented a rose. 'glue to attach the marbles to
Herschel
Guilkey,
MidWilson, grand page; Lewis Other guest.s received rose glass. Sam puts the glass ash
dleport,
and
paternal
great·
Schoenian, grand aide ; Loet- replicas. Refreshments were trays in a 500 degree oven for
ta Hayes, district president; served by ' Martha Lou . thirty minutes, removes and grandmother is Clara Gullky.
Mary Wooley, district vice Beegle, Inez Carson, and drops in ice water. He sugpresident; .and Louise Crestlyn Hill.
gest.. handling the hot glass
POSTPONED
Stewart, district secretary;
· with Qven mills or pot holders
A meeting of the Busy Bee
and to put a padding in the
~
•
•
container with ice water. He Class of the Middleport First
Baptist Church scheduled for,
Thursday night has · been
.
,;. L . . ·1a. &amp;~· postponed until next week.
The meeting then will be a
Plans have been completed form tne ceremony.
covered
dish dinner at 6 p.m.
for the wedding of Jeanie
Maid of honor for her sister
at the home of Mrs .
Schneider, daughter of Mr. will be Cindy Schneider, and
Rosemary Lyons. Members
and Mrs. Gene . Wolfe, the bridesmaids , will be
are
to take their own table
Pomeroy, antl RoDer\ Peggy O'Brien· and Mary
service.
Schneider, Lawrenceburg, Boggs, sister oflhe groom.
Best man will be the
Ind., and Jeffrey Boggs, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Lionel Boggs, groom's brother, Jimmy
TUESDAY
LUNCHEON PLANNED
Middleport.
Boggs, and the ushers will be
FELWWSHIP meeting at
The wedding will be an Larry Gladwell and Steve Dexter Church of Christ
Women of Trinity Church
event of Saturday, June 18, at Schneider, brother of the Tuesday 6:30 p.m. followed will serve a luncheon of soup,
2p.m. atlhe Pomeroy Church bride.
by ice cream social and sandwiches, pie, cake and
of Christ. Pre-nuptial music
Guests will be registered by recreation. Public invited. coffee both Friday and satur·
by Mrs. Carrie Neulzling will Rita Jean Hughes, the bride's Plans for Bible School will be day beginning at 9 a.m. In
begin at 1:30 p.m. Pastor aunt. A reception will be held made.
conjunction with the lunRichard Evanson will per· following the ceremony.
MEIGS COUNTY Better cheons, a quilt show will be
Livestock Dairy 4-H Club held both days.
Tuesday, 8:30p.m. borne of
Stephanie Radford.
WINDING Trail · Garden through Saturday night at
7:3D each evening. The Rev.
Club, 8· p.m. Tuesday at the
Thereon Durham, evangelist,
home of Mrs. Pat Thoma.
will be speaking and there
Roll call will be a ruse
will be special music. The
specimen. Program will be
public is invited.
on homemade container~ by
Linda Lambert. "Roses
THURSDAY
Speak of Love" will be the arROCK SPRING BETTER
rangement of the · month HEALTH CLUB, 1:15 p.m.
theme.
Thursday allhe home of Mrs.
POMEROY Meigs Chapter Phyllis Skinner with Mrs.
53
Disabled
American Nancy Grueser to be hostess.
TUESDAY, JUNE 14th
Veterans will meet at 7:30 Mrs. Judy Humphreys will be
Tuesday at the chapter home program leader, and Mrs.
6100 PM to 10 PM
on Butternut Ave.
Ethel Grueser, Will c-onduct
LAUREL CLIFF BETTER the contest.
Get Acquainted with our New Staff
HEALTH CLUB, 7:30 p,m . . MAGNOLIA CLUB, ThursTuesday nigh\ at the home of day, home of Miss Bernice
Mrs. Jean Wrigt&gt;~
Ann Durst, 7:30 p.m. White
A SMOGRASBORD DINNER:
DISABLED American
ROSE GARDEN CLUB,
Veterans,
Chapter
53,
ALL YOU CAN EAT FOR 13.25
Tuppers
Plains, will hold its
Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. at the
annual
picnic
for members
Coffee Free with your Meal
DA V home on Butternut Ave.,
and
their
families
at the
Pomeroy.
home
of
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Fluyd
Compliments of
WEDNESDAY
Slout,at6p.m. Thursday. '
EASTERN HIGH SCHOOL
REVIVAL at the Fairplay
DAN &amp; RANDY
BAND
rehearsal, 7 to 8:30 in
Chapel, located on Meigs
the
high
school band room in
County Road I off Stale Route
preparation
for the regatta
325 near Danville or State
parade.
Route 124 near Salem Center

Di
nner party held

at Spence.r 's

Theresa Sta"

Miss Theresa Starr
selected for pageant

bo-

OES inspection held

Son, born to

Schneiderweddtngp/anned ;;7.:.~~~\Qpickupwith.~e

soc•IaI

Calendar

GRAND OPENING NIGHT

BLUE &amp; GRAY RESTAURANT

Mrs. Mae Spencer and dut1ed toto the Na\I"!'al
Var~&lt;:e have returned follow- Honor Socretr All three grrls
ing a vacation in Colorado. recerved h1gh schola slrc
Mrs. Spem..•er went especially awards. .
.
for the high school graduation . Followmg G;nl's gradua·
of her granddaughter, Gail lion, Mr . and _Mrs. DeG root
DeGroot. Mr . and Mrs. Tom entcrtamed w1th a party m
Spencer and Jared took Mrs . her honor.
Spencer and Vane'!! to Boon·
On May 29, Mrs. Spencer
ville, Missouri where Mr. and attended the baptrsm of her
Mrs. Lawrenc-e DeGroot met youngest gra nddaughter,
them.
Henrietta DeGroot, and on
While at Fountain Mrs. June 1, the band concert in
Spencer attended the' school which Henrietta participated.
athletic awards program
Mrs.
DeGroot and
where Gail, Laura and Leuna daughters accompan ied Mrs.
DeGroot were presented Spencer and Vance back to
track letters . Both Leona and Ohio where she attended the
Laura participated in the Chester Alwnni dinner and
state mile relay team com- also the annual Spence~ Reupelition, with Laura receiv- ruon. The DeGroot family le.rt
ing the most dedicated Monday for . northern .Ohio
award. Their parent.s receiv· where they w~ll VISit relatives
ed the most '' loyal fans " before returnmg to Colora,do.
award. Laura was earlier in-

Boyd Ruth and DAR
talk soil conseroation
Soil erosion and reclamation was discussed by Boyd
Ruth, district conservationist
for Meigs County, at the Fri·
day night meeting of Return
Jonathan Meigs Chapter of
the Daughters of the
American Revolution.
The meeting was held at
the home of Mr. and Mrs .
Thereon Johnson and in addi·
lion to Boyd's talk was
highlighted by a memorial
for longtime member, Mrs .
Francis Klein, and the installation of the 1977-78 officers .
A graduate of Ohio Siate
University, Boyd noted that
he had been in Meigs County
two years and that his job
consists of working with local
farmers as they · request
assistance. He said that the
conservation district was
organized in 1943 and noted
that the current officers are
Rex Shenefield, president ;
Dave Gloeckner, vice presi·
dent; Roy Miller, secretarytreasurer ; and Joe Bailey, a
member of the board.
There~n Johnson is the immediate past president. He
;Uso talked of the work of
Reid Young in conservation
programs in Meigs and Gallia
Counties.
. Ruth showed two series of
slides, the first dealing with
the ,dust bowl days of the 3D's
in the Great Plains states, the
CCC camps and conservation
projects started under
Roosevelt, and the second
showing Meigs County farming areas, soil erosion and
reclamation programs, and
protective cover plantings.
He noted that slippage can
be detected before building
takes place and suggested
that anyone interested in this
information should contact
the Conservation Office.
In talking of the CCC program, Boyd noted that
thefederal government is
moving toward similiar work

programs and spoke of the
advantages these would offer
Meigs County in reclamation
of hundreds of acres of aban·
doned strip mining and
gravel pit areas.
Mrs. Paul Eich read a
tribute to Mrs. Klein which
had been written by Mrs.
Clara Lochary. Also read was
a letter from Mrs. Carla
Klein thanking the chapter
for the service and the
memorial.
Installed were Mrs. Eich,
regent; Mrs. Gene Yost, vice
regent;
Mrs. Emerson
JOnes, recording secretary;
Mrs. Vernon Weber, corresponding secretary; Mrs.
Pearl Mora, treasurer; Mrs.
Nan Moore, historian ; Mrs.
James Brewington, librarian.
Mrs. Johnson displayed a
bicentennial award which the
chapter received for their
participation in event.s of '76.
Mrs. Eich announced a
workshop in Columbus on
geneology, Thursday, and a
trip to Waldsclunidt House on
Aug . 3 l;lt which time she will
present the e~\graved mug
from the chapter to be placed
in the restored tavern. She
also announced ·the Southeast
and Southwest meeting to be
held Sept. 2D and 21 at Salt
Fork Lake.
It was announced that
subscriptions to the state arid
·national magazines are to be
made with Mrs. Lochary. A
program committee of
Lucille Smith, Mrs. Dale Dutton, Mrs. Lochary, Mrs.
Moore, Mrs, Mary Elizabeth
Morris, Mrs. JonesMrs. Yost
and Mrs. Eich was named
and will meet on June 21 allD
a.m. at Mrs. Eich'S home.
A picnic dinner preceded
the meeting. Mrs. Roberta
O'Brien and Mrs. Morris,

new members, were welcom.ed, along with guests, Mr.
and Mrs. Ruth and daughter,
Thereon Johnson, Heidi
Ashley,and Emerson Jones.

Syracuse cubs win race
SYRACUSE--Seve ra 1
members of Syracuse Cub
Pack 242 participated in the
MGM Cub Olympics held
Saturday at the Gallipolis
State Institute.
The Pack won second place·
in the relay race. Taking
places in competition ,for individuals were Jeff Frank,
second in the running broad
jwnp for eight vear olds, and

third in the marathon for
eight year olds; Bobby Ritchie, third in javelin for eight
year olds; and Greg Michael,
second in the modified
pushups for 10 year olds.
Others allending were
Brian· Freeman, David
Ebersbach, Mr. and Mrs.
Larry Ebersbach and Chris.
All of the boys received ribbons for participation.

Trinity Church class meets
Final plans for regal~
ll was reported that Maude
weekend refreshments to be Grueser will undergo eye
served at Trinity Church surgery this week. It was
were made during a meeting decided to cancel the July
of the Happy Harvesters meeting. A picnic will be held
Class at a meeting Friday 'in August at the home of Mrs.
Phillip Meinhart. The birthnight in the social room.
Serving by Trinity women day song was sung for
will begin at 9 a.m. on Friday members having June birand Saturday with soup, thdays. A gift was presented
sandwiches, pie, cake, coffee to Mrs. Ernestine Burnell
and cold drinks to be served who with her family are leaving the conununity. The
throughout the days.
Miss Erma Smllh opened benediction and singing of
the meeting with a thought "God Be With You" closed
for the day followed by devo- the meeting:
tions. The group sang "Are
During the social hour,
You Able" and Miss Smith games were played with
read scripture from Hebrews prizes being won by Stella '
ll, l-ID. There was a short Kl~, Mrs. Burnell, and Mrs.
meditation on faith, a prayer Philip Meinhart. Mrs. Rose
and group singing of "My Ginther and Mrs. Ada Holter
Faith Looks Up to Thee." served refreshments of cake,
Mrs. Freda Duffy was at the salad and coffee from a table
decorated in the spring motif.
piano.
. .... .
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•

MASON FURNITURE

i

Generation Rap

~

PRICES GOOD THROUGH SATURDAY, JUNE 18, 1977 _

~

By Helen and Sue Bouel

WE ACCEPT FEDERAL FOOD STAMPS

The Never-EIIdlug Complaint ...
Rap :
. ~
I know you get many letters on in-laws, but mine takes the .
cake.
My m&lt;J\her-in.Jaw never comes to our house unless she has
a new car or dress to show off. We visit her and " Dad" so
can see her little granddaughter, but she seldom pays attention
to her - just buys her $50 outfits, which aren 't exactly what a
3-month-old needs.
.
Then she turns around and borrows money from ys. So
we're actually paying for gifts we can't use. (She "forgets" to '
repay.)
:
She gossips about people we like. She competes with me.
for her son's affection. She blames me for not taking care of•
her darling boy.
•
One good thing: my husband is 100 per cent on my side. So,~
of course, he is dinged too - for being ungrateful. Her friends.
gel an earful about us.
•
· She hides all this from my father-in-law, and we wouldn't
tell him of her mean side, naturally. Dad's a real doll- none
better.
Wbat to do? - HELP
•

OPEN MON. THRU SAT. 9 A.M. TO 9 P.M.

she:

OPEN SUNDAY 9 A.M. TO 6 P.M.
QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED

CENTER CUT

PORK CHOPS
LB••

Dear Help :
Now honest, you haven't got it so bad! What's one
backstabbing mother~n.Jaw weighted against a great husband
and a fine father~n.Jaw?
When your man takes your side, three-lourtha of the battle
is already won. - HELEN AND SUE .

,39

EXTRA THIN CUT

BREAKFAST

+++

LEAN &amp;

PORK CHOPS '

Dear Helen and Sue:
We've been married four years, and I've tried to be a good
daughter~n-law. But all I get is ba&lt;knouthed.
My husband's father has a drinking problem. Everytime
he goes on .a bender, John and I are blamed for it by his
mother. He has borrowed money from us wben we couldn't
spare it. We didn't reaUze he was going to buy booze with it.
Then his wife calls me every dirty name in the book, as if we
poured the liquor down him. If he comes to our house for a
quiet hour or two, we're in trouble with her. John loves his Dad
and wants to help; we're only heaped with guilt.
Should kids be blamed for their parent..' problems? D.WJ.

JUICY

.,49

ENGLISH
SPARE RIBS LB. $} 29

LB.

Dear D. :
No!
You and John should have a straight-out talk with his
mother, letting her know you will no longer asswne.
responsibility for what may very well be her fault.
I'd guess she is shifting blame because she doesn't kilow
how to face her problem realistically. Ger ber and your fatherin-law to an alcoholism clinic, and the family rift may begin to •
heal. - HELEN .
·;;;

+++
A WORD FROM SUE: And don'llend "Dad" any more •
money! Because John loves his father, he's too soft a .touch7'
This man needs strength, not sympathy!
·:
All of you would benefit from visits to AI Anon, where·
families of alcoholics learn how to cope;

-

..

Sewing club meets
Mrs. Lucy White of Fairview Heights , Pomeroy,
hosted a meeting of the SewRite-Sewing Club Wednesday
night.
.Mrs. Pandora Collins
presided at the meeting with
Mrs. Carolyn McDaniel giving the treasurer's report,
and Mrs. Evelyn Gilmore, the
secretary's report. The
mystery prize donated by
ZONKER TO SPEAK
PORTLAND
...:. , The
Reurganized C!lurch of Jesus
Christ of Latter Day Saints is
announcing that Sam Zonker
is here for the week of June
13-19 and will speak at 7:30
each evening and at 9:30 and
10:30 services on Sunday. He
is a patriarch evangelist and
. visits the Portland-Racine
branch every year. All interested friends are invited.

BARBECUE SPECIALS

•

Mrs. Ann Browning was ,
guessed by Mrs. Martha Hoff-;
man who will furnish the next
one. Games were played with "
prizes going to Mrs.
McDaniel, Mrs. Gilmore, and :,.
Mrs. Barbara Mullen. Next •
meeting will be held at the
home of Mrs. Joanie Hoff.
man. Others attending ·were ,,
Mrs. Betty Wehrung, Mrs.
Nellie Boyer, Mrs. Flo
.Strickland, and Mrs. Lenora ·
McKnight.

VBS to be held

SPLIT FRYERS ..............L~;.49~
LEGS &amp; THIGHS...·........~·. 79~
MEATY BR.EASTS.......•• ~~-99~
SUPERIORS

BACON ..............•....1•2.??:!.~~-.. 99~

•

HARRISONVILLE-Daily
vacation Bible school will be.
beld June 19-June 26 at the:
Harrisonville Presbyterian
Church located on Route 143·
in Harrisonville. Classes will·
be held from 7:30 to 9 p.m."
each evening.
••
The adult class will be·:
taught by the Rev. Ernesl- :
Strickland of Athens, whil&amp;
the children and youth"
REVIVAL
classes will be taught by M~
·KENO -The Keno Church Strickland and · daughter,;; •
of Christ will hold a revival Rebecca. Theme will
Friday, Saturday and Sunday '.'Words of Faith." The schOQl. •
at 8 p. m. with Seve Hill from will conclude with a picnic o!f ~
Kentucky Christian College the parsonage lawn at 6 p.m. "'
as evangelist and Scott Sunday, June 26. The public is "
Bryant of the college as song invited to attend.
~
leader. Geurge Pickens, host
..
•
pastor, invites the public.
•
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'
'·
1·:,;

SUPERIORS

JUMBO WIENERS ••••••••••••~- 79~
CHUNK

BOLOGNA ............ ~~: 39~
HERSHEY'S
MILK CHOC. OR REESE SNACK SIZE

be·:

VBSPROGRAM
REEDSVILLE The
Riverview
Community
Vacation
Bible School
program will be at 8 p. m.
Friday at the school. A
documentary of the school
activities will be presented
with a fellowship hour to
follow. Cookies and punch
will be served and crafts will
be displayed.

'

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2. Home Insurance
3. Mobile Homos
4. Health Insurance

s.

Life Insurance
6. Boat Insurance

7. MOtorcycles
a. Jewelry and Other
Valuables
9. Business Padc:age
Policies
10. Liability Insurance
11. Farm Insurance

CT $}lg

PEANUT BUTTER CUPS••••• ~.
GOLDEN ISLE

$}Sg

·

-

PEANUT BUTTER ••••~~~-~~·.!~~ ..

-.....

BETSY ROSS FULLY BAKED

PAN ROUS •••••••••••••••••• ~~~~ 49e

~

••

•
••

.......

NEW FROM SCOT TOWEL

·

LGE.

JOB SQUAD TOWELS •••••• ~~~~.49e

~

~

...
M

'

I~.;
p
1'.:

•

REUTER-BROGAN ~

20

COUPON

COUPON

SAVE

35~
NO. 305

FOLGER'S COFFEE

COUPON

BOUNCE

WITH COUPON ON PURCHASE
OF 1-LB. CAN

j

W/C

~ '

'

'

'

V,

•

'

·SPRAY STARCH

BATHROOM TISSUE

(LEMON)
W/C

NO. 205

49t

COUPON

SOFT WEVE

EASY ON

FABRIC SOFTENER
60 CT.
BOX

r;;; -:-:-.-;--, • :-. --:~

I· . . . . . . . . . I

W/C

j. :

.

4

ROLLS

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

FRIDAY UNTIL 8 PM

REUTER-BROGAN INSURANCE SERVICE

773-5592

Herman Grate

w. va.

•••••••••••••••••••••••••

"The Insurance Store"

. . ......·~ ·

.

· - - ~·1

~-:.A~
- - -------.I

COUPON

Put your auto, home, health

Some Of Our Other Ser11ices :
Copy Service . Notary Service . ,ear Leasing Se•vlce

MASON FURNITURE
Mason,

PACKAGE POLICY -

and life insura.nce into ONE policy. Save money and
_
have one prem1um due date for all your insurance.

·~

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

'

Mon., Tues., Wed. &amp; Sat. -8:30til5:00
THURSDAY TIL 12 NOON

W/C

Coupon Expires June 18, 1977
TWINCITYGAT EWAY

"If You Have It, We Can Insure It"

STORE HOURS

79e

SPAGHETTI SAUCE
NO. 155

29 Ol JAR

79~

KEEBLER C. C. BIGGS

MRS. FILBERT'S

GOLDEN ISLE FROZEN

COOKIES

MARGARINE

ORANGE JUICE

NO. 105
W/C

~fer Expires June 18, 1977
. TWIN CITY GATEWAY

Wh Ol PKG.

sge

W/C

Coupon Expires June 18, 1977
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

LB~ BOX 49~

W/C

Coupon Expires June 18, 197-7
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

6

6 oz.

CANS

89e

W/C

Coupon Expires June 18,. 1977
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

�8 - The Dally Sentinel. MtddletJOrt-Pomeroy, 0 , Tuesday , June 14

I~ Wvrds o1 Um!er

c-... h

100

ChtU~t'

150

2 da~ s

adu) :.

IOJ
'"'

6 llu) ~

...
liS

22&gt;

;li)

Eadr wvr\1 uv~r llw mim n' UIII 1 ~
won.b ili' 4 t eut..-1 ~· wunl ~r d11y

Ad;, fUIIIUllg ol/~tr UiiUI CUILSa'UliYt•
dills ~o~orll ~ d\O:Ir gt.-d ill U!!:! I dct)

rat\

lu mcmm), U.riJ of Tlt~t n~s t~J)I,l
OO!Iua r)' 6 l't.'lll.'l Jkr wurt.l , $J 00
lllUlUnurn Cash 111 ad\'Milt.e

Mvb11t Hume t.Orles :md Yard Sl:l les
ure il(ttPll:tl uul) ~o~o rth l'asll wrlh
\,wder :IS ccnl char~e for aW em I')'·
Ul.l( &amp;x Nwnlkor ln C&lt;ut uf Th~:~ &amp;n

lind

Th~·
Lo L'dll

Pul,lh.'ihl.'r 1\ st' l &gt;'t'l:i LhJO r~ ll
ur tl;'/q:t illi) ad:s Un•m1.-d 0 t,.
J!tt'liiJm.ll TIt! Pullh.shu 1111ll nul lA
respo~r s 1Uh.• fur murt tlu.n unl 11\i.:ut·

In Memory

J'iotices

IN MEMORY of Jam es F Oa dcy PIANO Ll;SSONS ch•ldrem and
who dted 8 yeor:. ago on 1he
oduhs
Mn
Ho rvev
Von
13 th o l J une He IS sad ly mtssed
Vron ken 99'1 1270
by h ts wtfe and cht ldren
LOOKING FO R good home for
lrmned female pup 7 a mos
old Part German Shepard
Card of Thanks
block ond hw
good w1t h
ch ildren
H tnteres ted coli
THE FAMILY 01 £urm:e (Shumway )
99'1 336 1 or the Hurno ne Soctely
Sprague w 1s h to express '"'etr
o t991· 7680
s•ncere apprec tol•on of ktnd
ness and love shown her wh de REWARD OFFE RED tor tnl ormo
a pat ten! '" Arcod1o Nu rs mg
li o n teodlng to th e recovery Q!
Home and o t the tuTu::t of her
Iorge female Hound whtte wtlh
death Tha nks to Rev I hornos
block patch over left eye
sin ger s ,
pton1 st
and
Weortng block studded collar
pallbearers God bless you
Phone 992·7735
everyooe

Dar ts and Fronk Mtller
Howard ond Hazel Shumway
Jane Hun ter

lt.'dUL~ I L ilJII

Phuuc !i!f2·215ti

Help Wanted

NOTICE

lOCAl IN$URANCE agency needs

CONCRETE WORK Paflos steps
wa lk s and driveways Phone
997 2244

NEW SUMMER Hours for Seldom
Res • Cerornl&lt;;s, Tupper$ Plorns
Cl as ses on Tuesdoy 9 hll 12 I 4
and 7 10 Weds J . JQ Wtl l
resume regular houni In the
loll

someone to represet;'lt them on

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES
Muud&lt;1 )
Nwn VII Sill Urtl&lt;ly

Tw sd ,,
thr u Fr1U"v
4PM •
lht•tl&lt;~y ~fu 1 ~ puUlu;aliL

Swrd11y

H' M

frll.lliy J:l ft CI IIt;Oil

on established terrtlory G ood FAIR TIME ts Just Around the Cor
ner
Con ta ct Dtck. Roberts 1
wages , e:Mcellenl bentftls 11
(614
)
446
7612 lor Advert1s1ng
you con mee t people don ' t pass
Spec talt tes He who hestto tes
t~us up
No e~eper ten c e re
does wtlhout
qutt ed only th e Will to work
Send resume to Bd .oo: bTl
Po!:fmroy Oh 45169
SOMEONE TO put up hoy Phone

949 2531

RONALD D THOMAS.

whose l ast known address rS
2012 Cleneay Avenue, Nor

wood . Ohro. and whose exact

address rs unknown

TO Karen L Thomas . whose
fast known address rs 2012
Clene sv Aven ue, Norwoo d,
Oh i o, and whose e)(act ad

dress rs unk nown
You are hereby notlfred
that you have been named
defendants rn a legal action

I

entit le d
Athens
county
Savmgs &amp; Loan vs Ronald 0
Thomas. et al This actron has
been assigned No 16,363 In
the common Pleas Court
Mergs Co unty , Oh io
Th e object of thrs complaint
Is to acquire
judgment
against Ronald 0
Thoma s
and Ka,..en L Thomas in the
am ount of $18.382 18 plus
rnterest and costs, and for

.i

foreclosure of mortgage on
t he follow i ng descrrbed real

estate

Sa rd real estate be i ng
situated m the Village or
M rddleporL county of Meigs
and State of Ohio .
Bemg Lot 21 In said v!llage
located on Second Street be
tween Rutland and Walnut
St reets Also all the r tght tlrte
and tnterest '" and to the six
tnch strip of land and t he
party wall therein off of the
north S1de of Lot 22, also In
sa1d vtllage of Middleport ,
said str1p of land adtotnlng
and betng cont iguous to said
lot No 21
You are required to an
swer the complaint within 28
days after t he last p~.;blfc:atlon
of thi s notice , which wil l be
published once et~ch week for
six consecu ftve weeks The
last publ ica tion w ill be made
on June 28 and th e 28 days for
answer will start on that date
In case of your failure to
answer or otherwtse respond
as requlf" ed by the Oh 1o Rules
of Civ il tl .. ocedure tudgment
by default will be rendered
agamst
you
for
relief
demanded on t his complaint

LARRY E SPENCER

Clek of Courts
Common Pleas Court
MetgS County, OhIO
Pomeroy , Ohio "'5169

15 l 24 , 31 l6l 7, 14, 21. 28 , 6tc

LEGAL NOTICE
TO · RONALD 0 . THOMAS ,
whose lest known address Is
2012 Cleneay Avenue, Nor
wood, Ohio, and whost tlCact
address Is unknown
You are hereby notified
that you have been named
defendant In a l~al acton
entitled Pomeroy Cement
Block Company vs Ronald D
Thomas, dba All Weather
ROQflng &amp; Construction , et I I
This ectlon has been assigned
No. 16,402 In the- Common
Pleas C.ourt, Meigs Count.,,
OhiO.
The ob(ect of th l a complaint
Is to ecQtllre ludoment
egoelnat Ronald D. Thomas,

dba All Woathtr Roofing &amp;
Conaf'ructton and Ronald o ,

Thomas In tht emount of
12,661.05 plus inttrtst and
casu.
You are required to answer
this complaint within 21 days
after the last publication of
this notice. which will be
ptlbUshtd once eaeh week tor
sllC constcuflve weeks The
last publication Will be mede
on June 21 and the 21 d1ys for
answer wlllttart on that da t e
In cast of yovr rallure· to
ans~er or otherwise respon11
as required by the Ohio Rules
of Civil Procedure ludgment
by dtflult wilt be nndered
age intt you
for
relit'
demanded in thlt comptalnt

LARR'v E. SPENCER

Clerk of Courh1
common Plen Court,
Mtlgs County,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45169

m 2&lt;. 31 16l

7, 1&lt;, 21 . 21. 6tc

J. lttt.auar.
-·Unlkd
- Pres• llllt1'1181looal
Tt.~:

Today iB Tuesday, June 14,
the !65th day of 1977 with 200
to follow.
'lbe moon IB apJI'O&amp;ehing
Ill new phalle.
The morning stan are
Mercury, Venus, Man and
Jupiter.
'lbe evening star II Saturn.
Thoee born m thil date are
llllder the lign Gemini.
American novellst Harriet
Beecher Stowe, author of
"Uncle Tom's Cabin" waa
TWII'
•811. 1blB is
G~ .
arry 's $8th

«

birthday.
On th1l day In biltory:

••

•
'

In 1771, the u.s. Army was
foanclad. Cvng~W~8uthorlzed

Camping Kquiproent

COLONY travel traders
cus tom mode MAPLE LEAF
tandems lb up CRICKET truck
campers special ot CODNE R s
CAMP ERS
Rotnb ow Rtdge
Open eventngs Toke Me•gs 28
o r 32 to Bo sh on Owner Robert
Codner Lon g Bottom Oh to

SWISS

TR~CfOR

TRAILER dnver
25
yeors mm tmum ag e 3 years
e)(perlence Must pass I C C
requ• remenh
Mtnlmum
guarantee ol S I SO week ly
Phone 992 6666

proposal s w tll be
by the Vet erans
Memor~ al Hospital , Metgs
Coun ty , OhtO, a t th e Ve t er ans
Memortal
H ospita l,
Pomeroy , OhiO until 12 00
N oo n , Eastern
Oayltght
Savings Time
Wednesday
June '19, 1977 e nd at the time
wtll be opened publtclv and
read , f or the f u rntShtnQ of all
l abor and materta l necessary
for the Remodel o f the In
tens l ve Care and CoroMary
Care
Unit s,
VeteraMS
Memorial
Ho spttal ,
Pomeroy , Ohi o All work
shall be done accordtn9 to t he
draw tngs and speclftca t tons
as prepared by Hayes 1
Donaldson , Wittenmyer &amp;
Partners , Archite ct s , 601
EtQhth Street, Portsmouth ,
Ohio .
Separate pro posa l s wilt be
rece iv ed lor General Work ,
Electrical work . Plumbmg
work . Heatmg, Ventllatmg
and Air Condtflontng Work.
Proposals shall be sub
miffed on Proposal Form
contained
tn
t he
spec ificat i On s and other
contract documents, whtch
documents are on ft l e at tile
Hospital and at tile office of
the Architect , and are
available to all prospecttve
bidders durmg regular offtce
hours unt tt the c l osmg of b tdS
One complete set of bid
documents , for the purpose of
blddln9 , may be obta ined
from Hayes , Donald son ,
Wittenmyer &amp; Partners ,
Arc:hltec.t , 601 Eighth Stree t,
Portsmouth 1 Ohto
Upon
depos i t of Fifty {$SO 001
Dollars, which depo sit wtll be
refunded upon return of bid
documents m ~ood cond l f ton
wtthln a pertod of fift een ( 15)
days alter opening of bids
Contract documents will be
mailed
COLLECT , upon
written request and deposit
sub miffed
All proposa ls mus t be
accompanied by a B i d Bond
bound In th e specificatio ns
and executed by a b ondmg
company lic ensed by the
State of Ohto payable to t he
order of the Owner in an
amount not less than fiv e (S
pet . ) percent of the amount o f
the bidS . The bond or check
shall be forfeited If the b tdder
ta tiS to enter into a contrac t
with said Owner The bonds
or checks of the three lowes t
bidders will be 11eld untt l tl1e
execution of the contract a'nd
the furnish i ng of the required
performance bond, alter
whtch they will be returned
on demand The checks of
other bidders wtll be returned
on demand after the b i ds are
canvassed
A performance bond and a
labor and matertat paym ent
bond , both of 100 per cent of
the amount of the contract
with satisfactory $urettes'
will be required from the
successful bidder s for the
faithful performance of th e
work for each co ntr ac t
awarded
Bids sha II be subm ttt ed to
the Owner only upon the
plans and specif ica ti on s that
have been obtained from th e
Office of the Arc11itect
ThiiHtght IS reserved by the
Owner to re1ect any and all
bids, and no btdder may wtth
draw h is btd for a period of
Sixty 160) days
By Order of the
Meigs County Hospital
Com m lss•on and
Veterans Memorial H osptfal,

Sealed
rece i ved

Inc

Pom eroy, Ohto

(5) 31. (6 ) 7. 14, 21 . 4tc

the recruitment of iil comps·
nles of riflemen to serve one
year.
In Jm, the , "Star and
stripes" became the national
flag .
In
!951,
Wisconsm
ltepublican Sen. Joseph
McCarthy charged Defense
Secretary George Marshall
with havmg
"common
cause"
with
Russ1an
Communist leader Josef
stalin during World Wat IT
In 197:l, Jd&gt; Stuart
Magruder, a Pr~drnt Nixon
election off1e1al, "-'1Li1::d that
he, John Mttchell, H.R .
Haldeman and John Dean
were involved in the
Watergate bugging plot and
subsequent
cover- up

attemDt.
A thought for the day ·
~ novellst Miguel de

Ollrvantes said, "Let every
man

mind

buslneM '' ..

his

own

l.rn;t and Found

For Sale

LOSI MEIGS class nng lnittals
MlP lo\1 tn vm•c•tr of Ro yal
Oak Pork Reword offered
Phone992· 31 -4 1 or99136Q2

COAL . lt mestone ond colctum
chlonde ond calctum brtne lor
dust con trol and ipectol mnong
salt for formers ElCCalsta.r Salt
Works Motn Street , Pomeroy
Oh•o or phone
3891

FOU ND IN Portla nd area
Pechgree Collte block brown
and whtte temole Owner moy
&lt;::oll843 3009 or 992-7b80
FOUND FEMALE Beagle block
ton and whtte weonng block
co llar Phone 992 379b, F11;her
St Mtddleport

-

- --

WIDE 8 foor p1ck up Bed . nice ECONOM Y TRACTOR wtth all ot
condthon
Phone 985 355A
tachments . Ltke new oskmg
Harold Brewer Long Botto m
$2150 Phone (bll) 698 3290
O~uo

985 3323 $2200

1953 FORD PICKUP V 8
$6.49 Phone 992-368-4

tlc;tb~d
9 a m

ttll5pm

1940 PACK ARO Coupe , $995
Phone 992 3684 9 o m 1111 5
--~-

pm

197b FORD F250 4 wheel drive
Phone 142 2590

742 2050

CASH potd for al! makes and
models of mobtle homes
Phone area code 614 -423-953 1
RANGE PINE dmmg room tabl es
~----wlfh -4 chotrs and on old cher ry
TIMBER , Pomeroy Forest Pro ·
buffet Phone 992 5154
ducts Top pnce for stondmg
sow ttmber Ca ll 992-5965 or ONE REGISTERED Jersey family
Kent Hanbt_!_ ~570
mtlk cow, now m1lktng 2 years
old one regt steredNub1an Btlly
COINS CURRENCY to:,:k::_
en_s_ o_ld
Goat
1 yeor old
Phone
pocket watches and chotns
stlver and gold We need 191).4
and older sliver coins Buy . sell
or trade Call Roger Wamsley

3290

---=

1972 FORO Von Econohne 200 In
stde f1kod up Po st Eastern Htgh
School ot top of hdl Phone

7.2 2292

R

GOOD RICH Tap sot I Cha-;les
Hotf teld Backhoe Serv1ce
Phone 742 2008

COAL AND W ood co ok stove red
ttck hound 1 rear old Btr
dhouses Ptcn tc tables Phone
985-&lt;412&lt;4
trotlor 14 horse power Sears
engine and one two -speed
l rolltng motor $550 Phone
7.42 2315

GIANT 4 FAMILY ya rd sole June
13 through 17 l o ts of mce
clothing of oil St'les but cheap
pnces
onhque 1eweler}
clothes dryer, lot:. of mtsC
1lems . Home of Frances Ktng
K1ng Rtdge Road Watch for.
stgns m Harnsonvtlle and
__Pagevtlle

YARD SALE ot torner of Mulberry
and South Second , Monday thru
Th ursday 9 lt/1 5, fnday 9 ttll
4 Mtddleport
YARD SALE Weds and Thursday
Clothin g curtotns etc behtnd
post olftce In Long BoHom at
Tom Haymon s

We

GARAGE
Weds Thursday
and Fnday June 15 11th 109
Spr~ng Ave , Pomeroy
Old
dresser , cool
stove
cosh
reg tster and mtsc tlems
YA RD SA LE storttng noon 14th,
and oil doy JSth. 16th Ed Mtller
restdence Cherry St Rac1 ne
Phone 949 2361

RISING STAR Kennel Boordmg ,
Indoor-Outdoor runs groomtng
oil breeds , clean sonttory
fac1lt ttes oe 3b7 7112 Cheshtre.

-

Phone (61 • 1367 0291

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

~OOF

HOLLOW Buy sell trade
or trotn horses RUTH REEVES ,
lr~ne r Phon !_(61~ ) 698 33..90

AKC SHETLAND -.;heep dogs.
(Min ) Colhes 2 femoles 7
weeks ol d Shots ond wormed

Phone

(b14)

367·0292

or

36'71 12
MEIGS COUNTY Humane Soc~aty
Ant mol Core ltne , 992·7680 or
afle r o- p m Cjl02 5 ~27

----

~

FOR ADOPTION . abonded 3
week old mal&amp; Sponte! puppy ,
needs spect al care Humane
Soct efy 992·1b60
MOTHER CAT and
Phone 992 3090

5 ktttens

-

--

FEMALE PART Get man Shepherd
to g1ve away to good home
around 18 months old Block
~ ·hone

992·3361

v•ry good with
housebroken, Phone

,Q ,
~• utdren

992-707• or 992 ·~65 $50

-~

A loca I contractor
Phone 949-2801
or 949-2840

SIDIIIC-SOI'fiTT
J!l!lliiUIIIIJIIGS _

LARRl,,~~~~DER

Free Est iJnates

No Sundoy Coils PltoH

ynur water

ELECTRO LU X SWEEPE~S Com
p letely
re bui lt wtth or
to chments Only $32 50 cash or
terms Phone 992·514b
TWO FLOOR gos furnaces for
sale Phone 992 5501

$ 1&lt;

~

~

_...._______ -~---

s~

fl 3

000 Phone 992 55a9

-~-

EXPERIENC~~

SWAIN'S

..__

PARTS • LABOR
GUARANTEED

8 WEEK old ptgs , $25 eact1 Phone

town, 1 room brick. with -4

BDRMS, full basement
CALL TODAY 525,000.00
JUST LISTED - Thos 2
BDRM frame home has all
the requirements for
m1lk house ALL FOR
$15.000.00.
SPL1T ENTRY - ThiS 1
yr . old home has 3-4
Bdrms., rec. room, utility,
nice k1lchen &amp; 1 acre A

GOOD BUY AT $37,500.00
COOKS DELIGHT - The

Pomeroy Landmark

kitchen

9. _JackPhone
W car:sty, Mgr.
Ail.
992 2111

1973 GREMUN factory atr , auto
loan value, $1000. 1972 Hondo
350 Elect start, excell&amp;nt con
dltto n One 30 gallon and one 5
gallon aquonum ond ace. both
$50 Female poodle , 3 years
old e~~:cellent wtth ktds , whtte
and has papers, $35 See oil at
620 Laurel St , Mtc;l dleport

PET CLIPPERS. SlO 8as:.:sc.fc,
.-h~ln~g
~ad
_$~15 Phone742-2050

TWO ANTIQUE Ker wind pock-;f
watches very old Best offer

7412050.

.

Ff":'!: SALE
r•u!W c...o up warer sof teners, model VC-SVI .

Only $279.fS

Save uo 00 on a new
Hotpolnt Refrigerator,
1 New 20 cubiC ft.
Che-st Freezer
Ul9.95
Now In stock, complete line
of bulk gardtn seeda.
I Good McCullough Chain
Saw
$65
1 Good Used Poutan Chain
SIIW

MAIN
POMEROY. 0.
JUST LISTED - Exactly
what you have been looking
for 12 acres, close to

country living, 5 acres,
garden , fruit trees, barn,

$69 .95

sso

1 Good Used Unlco
Dryer
110 00
1 Good Use~ G E Dryer $8$

I'DIIIerDJ Landmatt
ICk W. ClriiY, Mt~

l'ftono "2·21t1

--

--

RATES

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

Reedsville. 0 . Ph . .&lt;79-6250
5 27 TF C

SMALL form for sols 10 ~1. down ,
owner hnonced MonrCle County W Va Phone (304) 172-

3102 or (304) 772-3227

COUNTRY farmland wtth seclud~
ed woods , water and good access 1n Monroe County W Vo
Sl 000 down , call (304) 712

acres level lond loco led at
Tuppers Plo 1ns on Oh•o Route

7. Phone (bl•l 667·b304

----

NEW 3 bedroom house, budtf 1n
k ttchen both and 1.1 Phone
742· 2306 or contac t Mo iO 8 Hutchtson Rutland Ohm . - - ~--- ---

VA FHA 30 yr fmonetng Ireland
Mortgage 77 E Store Athens.
~one (61.tf)59~30Sl _____

s
'•

. ''

Superior
Steam Extraction

in

this

southern

style home has everyth lng
plus 2 baths on the 1st
floor . 2 baths on the second
floor, Ictal of 5 bedrooms.
good location. ONLY
$2.,000.00.
WHITE ELEPHANT - 12
rooms , 3 kitchens, 2 baths,
all brick 2 story home,
several fireplaces, live in tf
or buy to rent ASK 1NG

$20.000.00
6'¥• ACRES - Close to
Pomeroy . This 3 Bdrm .
frame Is ready to move
mto. 3 acres fenced with
barn for animals Secluded
&amp;
beautiful.
ONLY

$19,200 00
GOOD OLDER HOME The hardwood floors and
trim m.;rke this 3 Bdrm
home really distinctive .
Din ing
room .
bath.
basement. fireplace .
CHEAP AT 512.500.00.
ON THE RIVE,R - 3
Bdrms., bath, basement,
own water, 2 fireplaces

FISHERMAN' S
PARADISE. $7,300 00
WE HAVE BUYERS FOR
YOUR PROPERTY (LIST WITH US I.
HENRY E. CLELAND
REALTOR
Hank, Kathy &amp; Loono
Asooclotu
992-225J--IIS-41T2
"2-2561

10 .3G-- Biack Perspective onthe News 20
11 :DO-News 3,.,6, 8, 10, 13,15, Mac Neil-Lehrer Report

33.

Young's Clrpetins

CAPTAIN EASY
f;~IP~ING

Young's Carpeting

Nab1i Summ1t ROlld
Rt I
Middleport, o.
992-5724
IComplefe
Sales
and
·Service and Supplies

NEW COMPANY • Btg Bend
Developers Finest in remodel tng
pointing and concrete
work Interior and el(l&amp;r'lor
free
estimates
Phone

992 3573

EXCAVATION · COMPLETE septic
systems Sprtngs developed
All work 1s guaranteed Brod
Lew ts, phone 742·2-451

3 A.ND -4 RM furnished and unfurntshed opts. Phone 99:25-o~

one down and 2 up, one
furnished and has a 3 car

garage

All

In

good

condition for $17,500.

MIDDLEPORT
Enormous tam

lly home

with 5 bedrooms, 3•12 baths,
large rec. room with bull!·
In bar. 2 wood-burning
fireplaces, all on a
beautifully landscaped lot
with shrubbery. Good
neighborhood.
AppOintment only.
COUNTRY HOME - 3
bedrooms, bath. fuel ol I
furnace, fu!l basement.
carport and garage on 2
acres. 525,000
DEXTER
Business
building 30' x40' Wtll sell on
land contract. Only $5,500.
MIDDLEPORT
Conveniently located, 2
bedroom frame home .

Bath, gas healing and clly
water Want only $11 ,000
for quick sale
8 ACRES - 4 bedroom
house, modern bath,
natural gas .F.A. furnace,
nice kitchen. outbuildings
and near town for 520,000.
WE HAVE SEVERAL
BUILDING LOTS AND
ACREAGE. WHAT DO
YOU NEED? MAKE
YOUR
INVESTMENT
NOW
Gordon B. Teoford
Htltn L. THford
Atsoctates

MOVIE CHANNEL 4 5 ~nd 9 p m - Funny Lady
7 and 11 p m - Harry and Walter
CHANNEL 56 30 p m - Testimony Time
7 00 p m - Paul Gaudino Family Fitness
7 30 p m Home D lgest
B 30 p m - Daytime

6 4s-Morn1ng Report 3

6 so-Good Morning . Wesl Vlrglnoa 13.
I oo-Today 3.4.15. Goad Morning America 6.13. CBS
News 8. Chuck While Reports 10
7 05-Porky P1g 10
7 3o-Schoolles 10
8 OD-Howdy Doody 6, Capt Kangaroo a, JD, Sesame
St 33
B 3Q-Big Valley 6
9 oo- A M 3, Phtl Donahue 4,13,15, Andy Groftllh a,

Corpot-Lino.•TIIo
Plione Mlkt Young ot
992-2206 or 992·1630
2-23"I mo.

•'

'

M1ke Douglas 10, Ch1ldhood 33
1
9 3D-Cross Wtts 3; Edge of N tght 6; Concentration 8

"'

Alillnment,
wheel
balancing,
tune-up,
brake work, minor
repair.
Bthlnd KUfoond Grode
School. Evening work by
oppoinTment. Ph. 742-2005.
6·5·1 mo. Pd.

10 OD-Sanford &amp; Son 3,4, 15, D tna h 6, Here's Lucy 8, 10(
M1 ke Dqugla s 13; Lowe ll Thomas Remembers 33

A TREE

...•

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

,.,

BRADFORD. Auctioneer Complate Sar\llca Phone 949-2&lt;467
or 9&lt;49-2000. Roc me, Ohto, Critt
Brodlord

AND LEFT
HtW! THERE
ALONE--

1l'S OLP •zA~tE.'f •l
HE WA5 UP A TRE E

OVER !IXTY PATIENTS
HAVE GONE INTO HIS

LOOt&lt;IN' OVER lH'

PI.ACE 50 ~R TODAY-·
WHAT A IMC.td!:T! W~AT
NOW, MACT

NE VE~

lEAVE ANY
OF THE PATI EN rS
ALONE IN Tlif. YARD'

1HEV'Rf NEVER

WAlL· .. I PULLED HIM
DOWf'rl- I DON' T
THINK ANYBDO 'f'
SAW HIM -

"f

SAFE E'(CEPi
LOCKED JN TliEIR

I KNOW,
CHtEI- CHEE 1
i' ~

SORRY 1

ONE BEDROOM furnished opart
ment m Middleport
Coil

992 5-o~ ar 992 3129
2 BEDROOM MOBILE home tn
Rocme area Col/ 992-5856

I ao-Gong Show 3, All My Children 6,13 , News B.
Young &amp; the Restless 10, Not for Women Only 15,
Nat1onal GeographiC 33

Sweepers, roosters , 1rons, all
small appliances Lawn mower
next to State Htghwoy Gor.
on Route 7 Pl1one (blA) 985·

3825

•

•

,WT OJfA Ht:R!: .. TH~ 'S
100 MORt: .:;rORK 1\1Af.l THm;

I 1Jl.P l.{OlJ,TI\~ ?TORK

0\-1 111~ ~!'~Bl- f.lOW , flOW
Dl DI &amp;e;T fU;;f&lt;!7 ~

BROU01-\T L(OIJ.

5132
EXCAVATING, d;;;;,-, - bockh;_;;

..,

•---"-'---

MOBILE Home Repotr
Elac ,
plumbmg and healing Phone

HEIGHTS, LUSURY LIVING IN
,
NEW 2 BEDROOM APTS
992-5858.
TASTEFULLY DECORATED, KIT·
CHEN APPLIANCES FURNISHED. HOWERY AND MARTIN Ex·
FULLY CARPETED STARTING
cavotmg
septic systems, .::_
AT $117 PHONE 992·1&gt;365 SYBIL
dozer, backhoe, dump truck,
AND JIM WOOD, MANAGERS
,;
hmastone, grovel, blacktop
APT 10
• povmg, Rt 143. Phone 1 (61_. ~ -~,
9913090

il I

-.

•

--

HARRISON'S T V Repolr Serv 1ce
Colis 'I/6 Sycamore Sf , Middleport Phone992·2522

WILL 00 Boby sttttng tn my home,
onr
s11ift
Con
furnish
references. Phone 992-7903

1972 FLEETWOOD mob1le home,
I -4x65 3 bedrooms l'h both
unfurntshed
d1shwashsr:
washer and dryer, underptn•
mg Pl1one 667 6385 after 5

"'

j\

;;!.

"'

7&lt;09
SEWING ALTERATIONS ·
Uphol•ter1ng,
drape~

,

1

reasonable 572 South Third
Ave. , Mtddleport
Phone

1&lt;4 x 60 MOBILE HOME Front
porch , bock patto on 2 Yt acres
w1th new born Phone 773·5233
(Fiatwood orea)

PIANO TUNING by Electronic· ,.._ '
Comportson
Accurate .
"
Reasonoble992 3?18
..- ~

Park. Phone 992·5590.
2 BEDROOM Troiler, unfurnished ,
100 &lt;~~50 corner lot 1 block from
Syracuse Recreation Pork
$7,500 lot and !roller Phone
992·71~

\

"-------

:

TWO BEDROOM troller BroWn's
Tra1lfi Court
Adulh. only.

I-IA5-0CE/IJ ~

C

money

:
~

:
•

92 in the Country

Yesterday"s Answer
8 Premartllll 24 Defroot
bash
25 Supply
( 2 wds )
w1th gas
9 Famous
26 Hunter
F1rsl Lad y 28 Specter
10 Sofa
29 Bay
16 "
try
wmdow
- souls '
30 Speechtfy
19 Strmgy
35 Late
22 Pretense
Mr Cole
23 Oregon City 36 Sohc1t

m m

T estimony Time
Paul Gaudino Family Fitness

-

m - Specia l Edll lon
m -

Movie

"Topper Returns"

10 00 p m - 700 Cl ub

lrJt~f.'\(t ~'if ~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

~ ~ ~~ "'

by Hann Arnold and Bob Lee

Unscramble 1hese four Jumbles
on e letter to each square to form
fou r ordtnary words

t

BITHA

'"' -r ·•· .....

~~

• GoSH, WINNIE1 .I 5URE
C:OAPPRECIATE )'OUR

mwor.;K

BUT .I HOPE .I'M
NOT 1/JIIPOSIN/S ON
YOU. I tv\SAN1YOU 'RE
NOT JUST MAKING
A JOB FOR ME t
ARE YOU?

NOT
AT ALL 1 P.&gt;IRDI::

WE fJAVE MOR'\\ORI( !HAN WE
CAN HANDLE
RIGHT NOW/

IN FACT, IM TRYING 70

CDAA uAUNT 11 BESSIE

OUT OF RETIREMSNT
505~S CAN I&lt;UN
OUI&lt;. SA LON FOR.

I THE T-IZEE
OF US. REUNIT!OD
,AGAIN I IT 1 LL ~E
UK:: OL:lll W:S t
WONT •T7

GOLLY

~

US'

TD

Answer here.

Now arrange the Ctrcled letters 10
form the surpnse answer as sug
gested by the above ca rtoon

[XI IJ A l
11

[

rrx D"!
(Answers tomorrow)

Yesterdays

I

Jumbles LURID TULLE WIDEST BUTION
What two la wyers wlth rapler·llke
minds lough1- A DUEL OF WITS

Answer

BRIDGE
II

• K7 3
• KJ 96
t KJ 7
•Q 10 2

WEST
6Jl098 52
• 762
tBI

EAST
64
• 83

tl06532
6AJ 9 74

• 86

SOUTH (D)
6 AQ 6
• A Q 10 I

tAQ9
6 K 53
North-South vulnerable

We1t

North East

Pass 3•

I, 0 N G F E I. 1. 0 W

URY

QK

LZU

C QHZ

LNRTYMYAYSU

QK

ALVTSF

ETKY

L ALDUYZGTYNY

ETKY

BTEKYZW

L

GYUYZDQS

Yesterday's Cryptoquote: THE WAY TO STOP FINAN CIAL
JOY-RIDING IS TO ARREST TH E CHAUFFEUH , NOT THE
AUTOMOBILE - WOODROW WILSON

0

'

j
KI

EN6LISHMAN.

tHERITH

J

Pass
Pass

6•

Pass
Pass

play Start by playing three
rounds of trumps . Then cash
your spade. and diamonds to
come down to a four~ard en·
dmg Meanwhile, If you have ·
counted you will know that
West IS holding two spades
and two clubs while East Is
holding four of the hve clubs
he started wlth
Now you lead a club toward
dummy and rise wlth the
queen East takes his ace and
leads the suit back whereupon
you duck . This line wins un·
less West'• two clubs were
jack-small

South
2N T

4.
Pass

Opemng lead - J •

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Just look at your hand and
dummy and plan your play at
any heart contract It looks
simple enough unless trumps
break &amp;-0, but we will tell you
about trumps They break 3·2
like mce trump suits •hould.
Now the ent1re play I• In the
club suit If you lose one club
trick you make SIX , If you lose
lwo , you make five . Offhand
It looks as If there 1s a simp!~
hne of play Just lead a club
from dummy, play your kmg
and later on try a hnesse for
lhe Jack w1th dummy's 10.
There is a better line of

A Montana reader wants to
know what we reb1d 1n stan·
dard American after our
partner ha• raised us from
one to three spades. We hold·
6AQuutx•AKx6KJx

We go rlghtlnto Blackwood
wtth every Intention of bid·
ding Six If partner shows us
one ace If he shows two aces
we will ask for kings wlth five
notrump
(Do you nave s quesrlon for
the 9XP9rts? Wrlt9 " Ask th9
Jacoby s" c ere ol tht s
newspaper The Jacollys wm
answer rnd1vtd!ls/ qussrtons ' '
stamped , s elf-addressed
envelopss are encloslld The
most lnterestmg questions wm
be used m rhls colum n and wlfl
receive 'op /es
JACOBY

o,

MODERN )

191'7 Km&amp; Fuluru Syndu~.&amp;. lt- lnt:

"~RNEY

: ·;

MAVJ .. IT'S

I

HIGH TIME

:

•
:

•• •
: 7 PM - WMPO • 92.1 FM : '

.•

6-1+

WHAT ::&gt;HE SAID
AFIEJ&lt;: A PATE
Wl'TH A lii'LEI7

NORTH

LZU

•

...__

Your best ahot In clubs

( RYPTOQ UOTES
URY

r ]

Oswald and Jim Jacoby

DAILY CRYPTOI! UOTE - Here's how to work it:
AXYOt.Bi\i\XR

1975 HOlL'fPARK 14)(65, Com·
;
pletely fumlshed , underpinning .... J
1
ond owning P11one 7-42·2169.

SWAP SHOP

Channel 5 6 30 p
7 00 p
7 30 p
8 30 p

I KJ

palaces
36 Operatic
treat
'!I Outburst

Phone 992·3324

LISTEN TO THE

MOVIE CHANNEL 4 -

INKELT

hml s EMh day I he r ude le tl c rs are differe nt

TAKING M E MCK

BUY, SELL OR TRADE?

3,4

5 and 7 p m - Family Plol
9 and 11 p mm - Godfather II

KJ

One lett er simply st.1 nds ror :mother In t hi s sample A is
u sed for the three I.'s X for the two 0 s. t't(' Sm glc lett e r s
apost r ophes, the lengt h and fur matwn of the \W rds are all

"

'

•
:
••

.•

'lbLJ Ol-D

Vvt?LJL.D You
LIKE To STAY
WIJH ME

IT lXJE5 /£411~
AI ~~f~i;J

1

...,

.....................•.•.••
:

=""'·

; c

"'

WILL CARE for elderly women In
our home, Trotned and expertencad Phone 992-7314.

oo- Tomorr ow

2 1G--News 13

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

Is

PIANO TUNING Lane Oantels 12
yeors of servICe
Phone

1971 REBEL MOBILE Home, 12 lC
b5 , central olr, porttollr fur·
nlshed set up tn Mobile Home

tr
11

KENNEL- FIRE~

TQ'\Jl6HT '2

_e. m.

6 ROOM tro1lor alum1num poho
ond underptnnlng tn good con·
d1tton B1rch panelling on m
side Good as new, hos to be,
moved Phone 2&lt;41 2252

direction
39 Spnng tune
highlight
40 Sporls«lStcr
Rote
DOWN
I Borders on
2 Cap
3 Premantal
pa rlles
(2 wds )
4 Suffixes
mea run g
" little '
5 E lectrical
UIIII
6 Best-selling
toys
7 Medieval

992-6306
992-2082

12 4Q-Mystery of lhe Week 6,13
1

LILA~==~--~~if{~~~?:~5f~~f(S~f()lnr~~~~~~~~~~hS~~4;~:;~=;~------,
abbrevi~
~'
WHY
GGT'OLJ-r "'' •vr:=
EFFr"!F'
"'=~7-t&gt;LJT::..J
lion
LDVEi.S CO\'\PANY
r = .., )
~"".-:1-J
L.l=tv
34 Sporls
' - " , . , 1 ..,.

Will do odd jobs, roofmg, pointing, gutter work Phone 992- ....,

38 Proofreading

was one

•

and dllcher. Charles R Hat
field,
Bock Hoe ServiCe
Rutland, Oh1o Phone 742·2008 '

ACROSS

12 Coaches'
l'Oncern
13 ·Exodus"
author
14 Vote of
approval
15 Actor
De C(l'sta
16 Brooks of
romedy
17 Panama 18 They
gape
20 Opposite
of WSW
21 One and
only
22 Plum
for gm
23 Snakes
24 God or
lhWider
25 Pale
26 Burn
-nww 11
area
28 Warren
Beatty
film
31 Ttl!
32 Slammer
33 Tunetable

i5ASAt.JD4 CL.AL6!

SEWING MACHINE Repairs ser
vice all makes 992·228.4 The
Fobrtc Shop ,
Pameroy
Authorlz&amp;d Stnger Soles and
Servtee. We sharpen Scissors

698-7331

12 oo-Movle '' D l me with a H alo" tO, Janakl 33

. , ., . u ...... .......

I PT1est
5 Sun-dned

bricks
II Lahr

BORN LOSER

Aj;,rt

Phone

B 30-Marllyn McCoo &amp; Billy Dav is Jr 8.10
9 00-3 Girls 3 3,4,15. Baretta 6,13, Movle "Ca rrie" B.
Theater In America 33, Movie "Scarecrow" 10. At
The Top 20.
10 00-Kingston: Confldenllol 3,4,15 , Charlie's Angels
6.1 3. Ne..-s 20.
10 3Q-(n Search of the Real America 20.
11 oo-News 3.4.6,B.10. 13.15. Mac Nell Lehrer Report
33. Monty Pylhon's Flying Circus 20
11 .3Q-Johnny Carson 34.15. Rookies 6,1 3. Columbo a;
Mary Hartman 10. ABC News 33

by THOMAS JOSEPH

Will do roohn~ ~onstrudion
' '
AVAILABLE AT Rtverslde
plumbtng and heotlng. No 1ob 1 ~
ments one bedroom , $105 per
too Iorge or too small Phone ·~ 1
month 2 bedroom $138 per
"1·2~B
'
month Phone 992 6098. Equal
' 1'
CARPENTER
,
floormg,
ce7~~9,
.,
1
Houstng Opportuntty.
VILLAGE GREEN:::A"C"PT::;.:S~M
:__UL-B-ER_R_Y ponelmg Phone 2759

-4 BEDROOM and both

• 0Q-$2tl,OOQ Pyramod 6,13, 2 30-Doclors 3,4,15; One
LrfeloLive6,13, Guiding Lrght 8,10; Book Beat 33
3 OQ-Anolher World 3,4,15, Allin The Family 8, tO, On
Agmg 20, Bit Woth Knll 33
3· 15- General Hospital 6,13
3 30-Mafch Game 8,10; Lilias Yoga &amp; Yov 20· Erica
33
•
4 00-Misler Cartoon 3; Gong Show &lt;.15. New Mickey
Sesame Sl 20,33; Movie " Son of Slnbad" 10. Dinah 13
4 Jo-My Three Sons 3; Star Trek • · Emergency One
6; Parlrldge Family 8. Hogan's Heroes 15
S.OQ-Big Valley 3. Brady Bunch B. Mister Rogers'
Neighborhood 20.33; Emergency One 13. Mission :
lmoosslble 15 .
5.30-Adam 12 4, News 6, Family Affair 8; E!ec Co.
20,33
6 oo-News 3,4,8,10.1 3.15. ABC News 6. Zoom 20,33.
6 3o-NBC News 3.4,15, ABC News 13. AndyGrlfflth 6,
CBS News B. 10. Vegelable Soup 20. Lilias Yoga &amp;
You 33
7 oo-Trulh or Cons. 3. To Tell the Truth 4 ; Liar's Club
6. News 10. To Tell the Truth 13 . My Three Sons 15,
Consumer Survival Kll 20. People &amp; Places 33.
7 Jo-Dolly 3. s 100,000 Name Thai Tune 4, Match
Game PM 6 . 525,000 Pyramid a. Mac Neil-Lehrer
RepOrt 20,33, The Judge 10. Break the Bonk 13.
Wild Klnqdom 15 8,00=
8 ()I)-Grizzly Adams 3,4,15, Donny &amp; Marl&amp;6.13. Good

~

'

~=-_::::~~::__
ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR _ •

m

10 3Q-Hollywood Squa res 3,4,1 5, Price ls Right 8,10,
Walsh 's Animals 33
11 ·00-Wheel of Forlune 3,4,1 5, Happy Days 6.13. Bll
Wllh KOII 33
11 Jo- lt's Anybody's Guess 3,4,15, Family Feud 6.13.
Love of L1fe 8,10. Eroca 33
II 55-CBS News B. Ms Flxlt 10
12 OQ-News 3.4.6.10. Shoot for the Stars 15, Divorce
Court B Midday 13, Forsyte Saga 33
12 3Q-Ch~eo &amp; the Man 3,15, Ryan ' s Hope 6,13, Bob
Braun 4, Search for Tomorrow 8, 10

ROO MS-

I Jo-Oay~ of Our Lives 3,-4,15

Times 8, 10, Nova 20, 33

Consultation

6 15-Farm Report 13
6 2Q- Not For Women Only 13
6·3Q-AG USA 4 , News 6, Summer Semester a.
Chnstopher Closeup 10

ALLEYOOP

~~----

r 1111,

large llving 1 hot water
hea l, on corner lot with ;
car garage.
BRICK - 3 apartments.

I IQ-News 13

WEDNESDAY, JUNE 15, 1977

and all types of general repair
Work guaranteed 20 years eJOt:
penance. Phone 992 2&lt;409

1U

room s, 4 bedroom o;

KIDNAPER$ AI&gt;JD
!niLL ~~E M&lt;KEE!

6 oo---Summer Semester 10

REMODELING, Plumbing heahng

and on level lot $35,000.
BABY FARM - 2'1• acres

lot Just $5,000.
MIDDLE,fOQRl'

News 33
12 DO-Movie "Secret of the Incas" 10; Janakl 33
1 oo-Tomorrow 3, "'

Route l, Pomeroy, 0.

,

basement, 2 car garage,

electric, and nice corner

Caller" 6,13, McCloud 8; Mary Hartman 10; ABC

YOU REALLY THIIIIK.
')'OU CAN CON THE

9 30 p m -

FRONT END
ALIGNMENT

STUCCO - 9 rooms, 3
bedrooms, 2 baths. Kitchen
has stove and refrigerator.
Coal
furnace,
full

bath, and two outbulldlngs.
Olly $9.500.
TUPPERS PLAINS - 8
room frame house on Rt. 7.
T P. water available.

I'II~~S

..

2 BEDROOM HOUSE, Locust St , COUNTRY Mab1le Home Pork , Rt
$14 ,500 Phone
Mtddleport
33 ten mtles north of Pomer.oy EXCAVATING , dozer loade-;;1d
991·3&lt;36 and 992-524a
Large lots with concrete patios
bock11oe work. dump trucks
Sidewalks. runnen and off
N~ house tor sole 3 bedroom I
ond lo·boys for hire. w1ll halll
street parking Phone 992 7&lt;479
l 'It both, rec
room ond
hll dirt to sod, ltmestone ond
goroge
lee Construction, FURNISHED APT Adults only, no
grovel. Call Sob or Roger Jef
~p-hone 992 3454 Or 44b·95b8
fers, day phone 992·7089
pets Phone ~2·3874 , Midntght phone 992 3525 or 992:
dleport

In Rutland TownshiP- Has a
4 room stucco house with

IN

FROM THE ~EAI..
llAPJSOM MOI&gt;JEY
TO COVER TtiiS
cur•UP PAPE R~

Carpet &amp; Upholster.y
Phone Mike Young
At
992·2206 or 992·7630
"Tllll Orlglnetoro
Not Tho tmltotors"
2·23-1 mo.

DUGAN'S

992·2492

TEAFORD(B

11 3Q-John ny Carson 3,4, 15; Movie "The Secret N lght

Routt 3, Pomeror, 0.

Ph. t!Z·217~4---...!.~!J

REDUCED AGAIN 3 bedroom l '/1
both bt level 1 mtle north of
Ftve Pomt , $42 500. Phone
145 ACR ~ FARM 7 room house tn
Rutland Lots of pnvocy. Phone
7&lt;42 3057 after 6 p m or on
weekends

TUESDAY. JUNE 14,1971
8 oo-Baa Baa Black 5heep 3.&lt;.15. Happy Days 6, 13.
Family Holvak 8.1 0. Nat10t1al Geographic 20,33
8.30-Laverne &amp; Shrrtey 6.13
9.0Q-Pollce Woman 3.•.15; Rich Man. PoorMan 6,13 ,
Mash 8. 10. In Search of the Real America 33. Oasis
In Space 20.
9. 3o-&lt;lne Day at a Tlme 8,10, Best of Ernie Kovacs
20.33
IO .oo-NBC Reporls 3,4,15. Kalak 8,10. News 20. AI
The Top 33.

T

3101 or (304) 772-3227
Co~mercto l p;operty- app~l7

949 2B57

ONLY

s...
0

Installation, samples
brought to your home
with no charge._

- I t lito •lliloltlioolot

REASONABLE

HOLDS ! HE EMPTIED
HIS GUN, HOPING
TO KILL

Free Estimates

Service
F-llto .......

VIRGIL B. TEAFORD, SR.
REALTOR
216 E. Second Street
Pomeroy. Ohio 4S76P
Phone 992-3325

COMPLETE PEAVEY P A System,
Fender guttar, jOZZ master wtth
case Phone 992 7256

C B Mob tie T ; ansce1ver
co mplete w1th, weather
proof PA speaker , 2 way
base loaded CB antenna ,
for roof top or trunk mount
Power cord, coax , antenna
cable and all hardware
Included

Radiator,..-~

Automatic
Transmission Service

RE~lTOR

ROBYN WV-23

6· 13-1 mo.

4-10·1m~

Ph.ttl·ltll

1975 SHULTZ 12 x 60 Mob1le home
w tlh ce ment porch and owmng
Tde block garage
cellar
butld1ng wtth ut1hty room
overhead on 2'/, acres of land .-----------~
Locat ed
ne ar
Longsvtl le

5 FAMILY YARD sole starting Ju. ; HANGING BASKETS , pots , and
13 Clothes , old d1st',es, Shtrjey
geron tu m s
Cle l and s
Temple doll other dolls , boo~s
Greenhouse
G er o ld1 ne
pots ond pan5, beddtng lmens
Clelond Ractote Ohto
old ptefures, stands, lamp5, r-~-~--':_cc_-:_C._'-_-_-_-_-_-.,
sfone 1ors, 1ewelry, otr candt _
!toner bo)( es of mtsc 810 S
CB SPECIAL
2nd Street , M1ddleport 1
YARD SALE 257 Mom Street, Mid
dleport Weds ond Tt1ursday
June IS and 16th 10 00 AM
tdl 4 00 P M White un~forms
stze 14 Women s shoes stze
lON ond .t B Curtains, dtShes
women s clothes , SIZe 12 etc

WIIIIOIIS
AlUM IlUI

NEW 3 bed room house 2 baths ,
all elec I acre, Mtddleport
close to Rutland Phon e 992 7481

bedrooms, close to town
516 900 Phone 992 3684 , 9
a m 11115 p m

test

BISSEll SIDING CO

IE~\At(lil[lfl

HOOVER - UP -RI GHT sw;;;;;;1917 mode15 Only $22 cosh or
term s Phone 992-5146

HOUSE RANCH 1500

Let us
Free

f'IIIIIK'*I AYiiiiWI
l lo•n lftlOIIolll Ultlcs
SroiM
ltiii!IOIIU DOORS

HOMESITES for sale , 1 acre ond
up Middleport neor Rutland
Coli 992 7~81

-

c.._.,.-~~-

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
Siding ,
Storm
&amp;
Windows
Insulation.
• Call Professiona Is

Blown
Insubbon Services

_pm - - - - - PIGS 7 9 weeks old $30 each
Phone94q-2115

-

YARD SALE Tu es June 14 9o m
hll 9 p m and Wed Junu 15 9
o m ttl I 9 p m Clotr Bos o
restdence G reat Bend 2 mt
below Ravenswood Ferry .
Clolhmg of oil stzes lots of
boys sh1rts and 1eans Also lit·
tie gtrls dresses pants e tc Ktt
chen oppl ta nces and utenstls ,
dishes to rs bott les books
records good wheelch01r , lup
perwore, ond much more

TES

-

KAWASAKI 175 dtrf btke S-400
Suzukt 72
stree t btke $750
Call 9"'9 2463 , evemngs after b

-

Call992 2156

FREE E~TI

Television log for easy viewing

A . - A I..UCiER

8

'

Business Services

14 FT AlUMINUM Boss boot w1th

18 ACRES land on Kmgsbury Rd 3
mtles from Horrisonvtlle Hos
742 2331
com pletely lurntshed 12lC5Q
"
mobtle home tncludmg washer
OLD FURNITURE, tee boxes bra ss
and
dryer
and
a tr SYRACU SE VIE W at n\ler neat 3
beds ,
et c .
com plet e
bedroom house w1th 2 cor
cond11toning
Lorge
pond
spr
households Wnte M 0 Mil ler
garage on 6 'It ocre5 Front on
mg.
ond
well
newly
built
20)(36
Rt. 4 , Ponieroy Ohio or coli
both St Rt 124 and Snowball
garage
and
24
IC48
concrete
992 7760
Acreage would make
Htll
floor shed Pnce d at $1 5 000
beouttlul
wood sub d1vtston
WANTED
CHIPWOOD Poles
_Pho~e after 5 p m~~~ 5264
Storky Realtty
Phone Ron
Ma x d1ameter 10 tnches on
McDade 592 2419 or V1c Wolfe
larges t end sa pe r ton bundl COAL FURNACE Phone 367 7652
9.9 2286
ed slobs, $6 per ton Oel1vered RABBITS BREEbtNG does pe ts or
to Oh10 Pallet Company Rt 2 ~~ rs Phon_!~~ _
2 ,BEDROOM HOUSE Iorge ltvtng
Pomeroy
Oh1o
Phone
room modern full s1ze base
REDUCE
SAFE
and
fast
wtth
992 11&gt;89
men!
butlt tn garage on
GoBese Tablets &amp; E-Vap water
1 Y, ocres ctty water gas htgh
ptll s Ne l so~_D!ug
~
ground good netghbors Phone
V HULL Lone Star boat 15 If 50
949 2b35
h p motor, $600 Pfione (304)
IF YOU hove o servtce to otter
NEW HOUSE for sale 3 bedroom
773 5873
want to buy or sell somethtng:
1 '/1 both
rec
room
and
oe looktng for work
or
garage , lee Constru ction
wha tever
you II get results
Phone 992 3454 or (614 )
foster wtth o Sentmel Wont Ad
446 9568

=- ·. - ~=====~
·

•

99'

CAMPER
5600
Alio , horse
tro l ler, $450 Phone (614 ) b98

SPRING GARDEN Supplies Cob·
boge
caultflowef
broccoh
and head lettuoe plants
yellow whtt.e and red onion
Bi.ACK POODLE lo51 2 years o ld
seti . anton plonts Kennebec
wearing chocker chotn no tog
cobbler Kotohdtn Red Ponttac
Boys pet Contact Ronald Lon
and Red tosodo seed potatoes
doher ot Kapple s Pennzotl
Bulk garden seeds polltng sot I
p90t moss , frutt trees ond rose
=
bu shes
M1dwoy Market
Auto1Sal~
=
Pomeroy , Ohto , 992 ·2582
Bob 1 Market Mosan W Va
1970 FORO F250 p1ck up Camper
(30&lt;) ! 73.5721
spect ol
automatfc
Power
steertng, Power brakes , low I 42 tn cost iron---~
kttchenslnk , 1
m1lage ntce con dthon $1295
bas1n and J dram board, hong
Harol d Brewer , Long Bottom
on wa ll type wh1te, 1 3 burner
Ohto Phone 985 3554
gas . hot plate ..!_hone 992 57! 4

1976 F 100 PICKUP V 8 a~r p s
p b Ranger mtertor topper,
outomotlc 10 000 miles Phon e

LEGAL NOTIC E
TO BIODERS

LEGAL NOTICE

TO

-·.

Let The Want A.ds Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash

WANT AD
CHARGES
I tla)'

1~77

WE'LL 60 OVER TO THE
COUNTRY CLUS, AND

J065 AS CADDIES .
WE'LL MAKE A FORTUNE

I CAN'T TELL A PAR
FROM A BIRDIE, SIR . .

THOSE ARE f30WLING
TERMS. MARCIE .. OON'T
EMBARRASS ME!

1

:,
••

·~························· ~

••

•

·•

'

�10 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, June 14.1977

Last of five escapees is recaptured
PETROS, Tenn. (UP! ) Douglas Shelton, the last of
the five escapees who troke
out of Brushy Mountain Slate
Prison with James Earl Ray,
was recaptured t oday
'
authorities disclosed.
Officials said Shell{ln was
found in the same general
area where Ray was found ,
about eight miles northwest
of the prison.
Shelton was serving a !ISyear sentence for murder,
assault and grand larceny.

Head-to-head competition on water
offers exciting sport on Sunday

Meanwhile, Jack Kershaw,
attorney for James Earl Ray ,
said today he will file a
motion for a new trial within
60 days for his client,
recaptured early Monday
after escaping for :K.bours in
the rugged Cumberland
Mountains.
Kershaw said he has an
excellent picture of " Raoul"
but is not going to release it
immediately. Raoul is the
man Ray claims gave him
instructions to buy the gun ·

Kershaw , -who arrived at the state of Tennessee is able
that killed civil rights leader
Dr. Martin Luther King Jr ., Brushy Mountain State to take care of its own
in Memphis April 4, 1968.
Prison about 8 a, m. to meet prisoners,
Kershaw said he has had it with Ray, said he was not
"There are no grounds for
sure until he talked with his potting Ray in a federal
about two weeks.
"! will recorninend to my client whether Ray would prison. He is not even
client that the picture be talk with two investigators of charged with a federal crime
released soon but not before I the House Assassionations and he is not guilty of a state
file for a petition for a neW Committee.
crime, but that's another
trial."
" I'm going to sit and listen . matter," the Nashville
Asked how he came in I want to hear about those attorney said.
and
the
possession of the picture, rattlesnakes
He did agree with the
Kershaw responded: " By manhunt."
federal ruling that prevents
Kershaw said he disagreed Ray from being held in
sheer luck and investigative
.with Gov. Ray Blanton's solitary Clllllinement for long
lrililance ."
proposal that Ray be turned periods of time.
over to federal CUBtody.
"This would be cruel and
"It's very rare that I inhuman treatment The way
disagree with a governor and to solve this situation is that
agree with a federal court. no American is going to be
But this time I believe the satisfied until Ray is given
lly G"EORGE BOOSEV
Barbara Day discovered the the scene and the bodies, the governor is in error. I believe
hls day in court."
LOCUST GROVE, Okla. bodies at 6 a.m.
little girls were beaten to
(UP!) - In the early hours of
"I don 'I think he was being . death," an OSBI spokesman ·::r::::::::::::::=:::::::::::::.~:;:;:;:;::::::::::::::::::::::::~;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~::::::~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::;::::::~~
Monday morning the Girl selective of the girls," said . "There is some
Scout counselors at Camp Weaver said. "I think he was evidence
of
sexual
Scott began moving from tent being selective of the tent. It molestation of at least two of
to tent, awakening lhe was an end tent and the them.
occupants and telling them to closest one was W to 75 feet
"They are still in the
By Uoited Press bternallonal
pack immediately.
process of finding out just
WASHINGTON - SPEAKER THOMAS O'NEILL
away."
No, they wouldn't tell the
maintained hls silence today on the identity of three House
Oklahoma State Bureau of what we've got.''
girls why they were leavhg. Investigation authorities also
District Attorney Sid Wise, Republicans he said are thinking of switching to the
· Yes, they were being sent were gathering evidence in who joined investigation, had Democratic party, but Rep. John Buchanan, R-Aia. , emerged
home right away.
the slayings of Miss Farmer, a special reason for finding as a likely member of the trio,
A short time later, as the 10, of Tulsa; Miss Milner, 10, the killer. His two daughters
"It's unlikely that I am one of the three," Buchanan told
girls assembled and began of Tulsa: and Miss Guse, 9, of -about the same age as the UP!, but he would not deny he approached the Democratic
piling onto buses in one part Broken Arrow.
victims, had attended the leadership about a possible switch. Other sources aald Rep.
of the camp, law enforcement
camp.
Charles Whalen, R.Qhio, is one of the three, but his aides 9ay
"Apparently, from viewing
"It's a tragedy, but I have only that "Mr. Whalen has not categorically den(ed or
officers gathered in another
- around the covered bodies
the utmost confidence in the confinned that he will switch parties."
of Lori Lee Fanner, Doris
way this camp is managed,' 1
Asked why the Republicans would switch, O'Neill said
Denise Milner and Michele
he said.
"they felt they are closer to the philosophy of Jimmy Carter."
(Qlnlinued from page 1)
Guse.
The camp was closed im· Whalen has been a moderate to liberal Republican and
Authorities were sure two business be paid expenses mediately and the girls were Buchanan in recent years has not followed the fiscal
had been sexually attacked. rather than the pay increase. sent home to their parents. conservatism of his fellow southern Republicans.
All three had been beaten to However, Clerk-Treasurer
Chartered buses brought
death. They were zipped into Gene Grate said that he did the girls from the camp to the
WASIUNGTON- PRESIDENT CARTER has cleared the
their sleeping bags and left not believe that he could scouting
council way for travelers to fly the Atlantic at a cost of only $135 in one
· about IW yards from their legally pay such expenses headquarters in Tulsa early direction and $102 in the other . Carter signed his approval to.a
tent.
Monday afternoon. The girls British plan for no-frUll~ytratn" service linking New York
under that plan.
"It makes me pretty bitter,
Council voted to purchase were called from the buses and London, only four'""il"li5S after the Civil Aeronautics Board
very bitter," said Mayes three new radios for the fire one at a time and reunited recommended It as "a boon ... tilth~ traveling public."
County Sheriff Pete Weaver. department with the present with their parents.
Pan American World Airways and Trans World Airllnes,
"! feel like the investigation radios of the department to
Anxious mothers and although expressing surprise at Carter's quick action, said
will bring results.
hugged
their they will match dollar-for-dollar the cul-&lt;'ate service first
be given to the town. Cost of fathers
"!just don'tthink we have the three radios is not to daughters and in some cases proposed by Britain's Laker Airways. Skytrain tickets from
that many nuts in this exceed $1,000. The discussion. whisked them home, leaving New York to London will cost 65 per cent less than the present
area."
brought out that the depart· luggage and belongings normal economy class fare of $385 and 80 per cent less than the
Weaver said the girls had ment is not operating its bel)ind.
$659 cost of nonnal first class tickets.
'
been accounted for during an present radios on the proper
"The children who went
A CAB spokesman said llil! low-cost flights by aU three
11 o'clock bed check the night frequency but has had no home were not told what airlines can start 60 days after Laker files a formal tariff with
before. Cainp administrator choice in the matter.
hlippened," Mrs. Day said at the board.
·
the
~amp. "Not one child A bid on the teMiS court
not
even the next-door
MADRID, SPAIN- A POlL BY THE SPANISH affiliate
compet.:~ project, only one submitted
neighbors
- knew what of the Gallup organization today predicted the Marxist
'- with a price of $19,015, was
Socialist Workers' party will win Spain's first free elections in
rejected on the grounds that happened.
"This camp is 49 years old 41 years. The poU, published today by the conservative news(Continued from page I)
it is too high and the project
and there never has been an . paper Ya, said the Socialists, led by Felipe Gonzalez, has
Clarence and Iva Lawrence will be readvertised.
A discussion brought out incident other than a snake overtaken Premier Adolfo Suarez' Democratic Center Union
Portland graduated fro~
and were expected to get 28.9 per ~nt of . the vote ill
Southern ' High School this that revenue sharing funds bite."
·
She
said
the
camp
would
Wednesday's election.
spring. She played in the have been reduced slightly
remain
closed
the
rest
of
the
The Icsa-Gallup poll gave Suarez's middl~f-the...~d
band for six years and played because of a drop in the toW.
summer.
election
alliance 25.6 per cent of the vote, followed by the
basketball and volleyball. population. However, the
"Untll
they
apprehend
the
Conununists
with 5.8 and by the right-wing Poptilar Alllance
She was an .alumni' queen population is to be rechecked
person
or
persons
that
did
with
5.,7
per
cent.
'lbe poll was taken two days ago, Icsa-Gallup
candidate 'and was first by the Bureau of the Census.
this,
I
don't
feel
it's
safe
.for
said.
On
SWlday,
the newspaper El Pais published a poll by
runner-up in the Meigs Meantime, Mayor Fred
any
person,"
she
said.
showing that the Socialists were quickly
another
organization
County Junior Miss Pageant Hoffman · said that the
closing
on
the
DemOcratic
Center Union, which earlier surveys
winning the poise and ap- number of w~ter and sewage
had
shown
to
be
leading.
·
pearance, youth fitness and customers 1s up so the
Miss Congeniality awards. population should not be
WASHINGTON -THE CARTER ADMINISTRATION
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
She Is a Sunday school class down.
Thursday through Monday awarded Ohio $13,3 million to help the elderly and lowCouncil approved the
teacher and won the D.A.R.
Saturday,
a gradual income families pay high utility bllls incurred the past winter.
Good Citizenship award at report of Mayor Hoffman for
warming
trend
through the The U. S. CommWlity Services Administration said the grant
Southern High School. She May showing receipts of
period
with
1
cbance of would be distributed among 53,000 elderly and low-income
was a member of the school's $2,270.40 in fines and fees and
showers
about
Saturday. households.
· National Honor Society.
$169 In merchant police
Gov. James A. Rhodes had sought a grant of $90million to
Highs
will
be
near 80
TRACI WEESE, daughter collections for a total of
assist
up to 300,000 utility customers. The Ohio Department of
Thursday,
warming
to
the
of Don and Ullian Weese, $2,439.40.
Economic
and Conununity Develapment ·said It would set
upper
80s
or
lower
90s
Racine, graduated from
A communication was
guidelines
for di~butlng the money,
eligibility
Saturday.
Lows
wnt
be
In
Southern and Meigs High presented from the county
spokesman
for
the department said COWlty welfare
A
the
50•
early
Thursday
and
Schools this.spring. She was a auditor, Howard Frank, in
would
administer
tbe program. The maximum
departments
member of the Vocational regard to an increased In the lOs early Saturday.
payment
will
be
$250,
the
spokesman
said.
Industrial Clubs of America budget request from the
County
Health
and was treasurer of the Meigs
LAKESIDE, OHIO - A SUMMER SCHOOL for ministers
Cosmetology Club. She Department. The auditor
to
sharpen
their pastoral and admini.strative skllls and
belonged to the Future inquired as to what the
of ministerial education were urged Monday
stronger
support
Hmemakers of America, the village would agree to having
night in a report to the West Ohio Conference of the United
withheld from its budget for
concert, marching and pep
Cloudy tonight and Wed· Methodist Olurch. The recommendations came at the
bands, Trl·M. She was a class the health department. It was nesday, lows tonight to 60 and
officer and is · church voted to notify the auditor highs Wednesday in the upper organizing session of !66th armual meeting in the form of a
oompoaite report of 14 district auperintendonts who form the
treasurer. She won several that council approves the 70s.
Pro babillty
of Bi.shops Cabinet.
same figure as last year, precipitation 50 per cent
awards In cosmetology.
It alao called for ''more caring for people's prayer life,
$4,492.76, Clerk·Treasurer today, 20 per cent tonight and
more
emphasis upon discipleship training for the laity and
Grate reviewed the amounts Wednesday, ·
support for the five ehurch related colleges and
fuller
given the department from
14 hospitals and homes and two seminaries within
universities,
the village appropriation
MARTIN
GRADUATES
the
West
Ohio
boundaries."
over the past several years
Sergeant
Michael
R.
with last year being the
Martin, son o.f Mr. ~nd Mrs.
CHICAGO - RESEARCHERS AT GOULD INC., said
highest.
thru TUES.
Council discussed the Richard C. Martin of 5 Vine Monday they have developed a way to recycle more scrap
possibilities of the need for a St ., Jackson, Ohio, has rubber economically. A pilot plant will be set up in Cleveland,
KILLER FORCE
new pollee cruiser next year. graduated at QuanUco Ohio, by the end of the year, Gould Chairman W. T, Ylvisaker
II R"
Attending the meeting were Marine Corps Base, Va., said . The plant's output will he partly used by Gould's
Plus
Mayor Hoffman, Clerk· from the U. S. Air Force Elastometer Products Division.
Tire tread tests under field conditions indicate Gould's
Treasurer Grate, and technical training course for
SPECIAL
computer
programming recycled rubber can be used succeS8fully in tire retreada at
Councilmen King, Kelly,
DELIVERY
Dewey Horton, Carl Horky, specialists. The sergeant replacement leyela up to 30 per cent by weight. That's six
George
Meinhart
and graduated from high school times as much u .,.can be utilized Wider current recycling
"PG"
in 1968 and received a B.S. methods. The ltew process reduces scrap rubber to a fine .
William Walters.
degree in 1977 from St. Leo powder which makes it substitute better for virgin natural or ·
(Fla.) College, His wife, synthetic rubber, Present methods result In reclaimed rubber
Sandra, ls the daughter of losing many of the characteristics of virgin rubber so that
Mrs. Gladine Newlun of usually no more lhlln 5 per cent of reclaimed rubber Is used to
Chillicothe, Ohio. Mrs. make products which require maxlmwn rubber-like
Martin's father, Harold properties.
Newlun, resides at Rt. 1,
ReedaviUe, Ohio.
EDITOR NAMED
CHICAGO (UP!) - The
appointment of Gregory E.
Favre as managing editor of
TJY Our Delicious Strawbeny
the Chicago Daily News was
Shortcake, w~h or without
annoWlced Monday by James
Hoge, editor-in-chief of the
Whipped Cream.
Daily Nell'S and Chicago Sun·

Just about every weekend from
May to October there is outboard
racing within. driving distance. It's
usually head to head competition
equal to any type of amateur
professional racing.
It ranges from six minute sprints
on placid lakes to grueling 30-minute
marathons on more open water. ·
The competitors range in age from
their early teens to men in their 50s
and even 60s. The competition is
stricliy amateur except for some
support from factories to a few
teams in the Outboard Performance
. category. More often than not, it is a
family activity with dad or son
driving and the rest of the family
serving as pit crew.
The speeds range from 30 mph to
120 mph in the larger OPC classes.

Girl·Scout killers sought

If the above arouaed interest,
you will have an opportunity to see
this head to head competition on
Sunday, June 19, on the river in
Pomeroy.
Racing will begin promptly at 1
p.m. with the following classes
competing:
. Sport E, G Production, Sport G,
Family Sport, J Production, SJlirt
J . UJ, and SST.
Persons wanting to compete as
amateurs Sunday, bring your rigs, a
race helmet and a life jacket. There
will be plenty of help around to see
that your rig Is properly set up.
Spectators wanting an exciting
day for the family be sure not to
miss this chance to see first hand
what boat racing is all about. The
price is right too! There Is no ad·
mission charge.

fNews • . •in Briefs! ---------------------------1
! Area Deaths :·Driver

Middleport

•
SIX

~

Weather

MASON DRIVE-IN

DUE TO THE
BIG BEND REGATTA AND
FOR SAfETY SAKE
OUR MAIN LDBBY

WilL Q.OSE AT 3:00 P.M.

AND OUR DRIVE-IN WINIXM
AT 5:00P.M.
.FRIDAY, JUNE 17th

~FarmersBank
t

A

AA1

POMIROY, OHIO

~
ADOLPH'S
DAIRY VALLEY

Times.·

INII 'I

-

PODDS

MRS. JAMES FRENCH
Mr s.

l:verett

Ecker ,

She was the

r

last oi 10

Monday received word of the

children .
Surviving are her husband,
James French, also a former
resident of Gallla County; a

Mrs .

daughter. Mary of Fostoria

Fourth

Ave .,

Gallipolis,

death of her sister -In-law,
James

French

of

Fostoria .

A former Gallla County
resident, Mrs. French was

the daughter of the late
Hamilton and Kay Walters.

and a son, Jack French of
Bowling Green. Funeral

services will be held at 2 p.m.
Wednesday

from

Mann's

Funeral Home in Fostoria.

HOSPITAL NEWS
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admitted- Audris Arnold,
Pomeroy; Ronald Dailey,
Portland: Janette Lawrence,
Racine : Kathryn Evans,
Portland; Henry Price, Long
Bottom: Carl Gheen, Sr.,
Pomeroy : Sharon Riggs,
Rutland: Aubrey Sands,
Parkersburg;
Frances
Parsons, Racine ; Judith
Laudermilt, Middleport :
Maggie Chaney, Racine : Ella
Linehan, Belpre ; Billie Lou
Gilmore, New Haven; Nancy
Walker, Pomeroy ; Goldie
La~, Minersville; Esta
DIIJIOng, Middleport.
Discharged - Zuelelia

Smith, Theron
Marie Custer.

Durham,

Holzer Medical Center
(Discharges June 12)
Patricia Adleta, Richard
Baley, Helen Blackston,
James Bolin, Ruth Glass,
Russell Holland, Dorthy
Lowe, Dwight Unger and
Tracy Wllls.
(Births, June 12)
Mr. and Mrs. Samuel
Rousch, a daughter, Point
Pleasant: Mr. and Mrs.
Helson Thomas, a son, New
Haven; Mr, and Mrs. Larry
Wiseman, a. son, Jackson.

Local news, in briefs
The free cervica l cancer
clinic for Meigs area women

scheduled for Wednesday
from 12:30 lo 3:30 p.m. at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
has been postponed until

Wednesday, June

29.

There

Elderly couple

of Gallia killed
WELLSVILLE, Ohio (UPI)
- Three persons were killed
and one injured Monday in a
car-truck collision on Ohio 7 ,
south of here, the Ohio High·
way Patrol reported.
The patrol identified the
victims as JohnS. Baker, 72,
and his wife Rosebud of
Gallipolis, and Agnes Me·
Millen, sister of Mrs. Baker,
of Shadyside, all passengers .
in .a car driven by George R.
McMillen, 71, Shadyside.
. The patrol said McMillen
pulled out of Route 213 into
the path of a coal truck driven
by Frederick Mix III, 25,
Kensington, Ohio.

CHIEF'S REQUEST
Pamerjly Pollee Jed
Weblt,!ir !Ub residents on
Conddli "Street to please
remove all cars from the
street Friday from 6 p.m.
ta 8 p.m. due ta tbe Regatta
parade disbandlng there.

are a number of openings for

appointments for the June 29

clinic.

Those

who

made

appointments for this week

are asked ·to reschedule.

Numbers to call for those ·
wishing appointments are

992-3382 weekc;fays or 992-7531

from 1 to 4 p.m. on Tuesdays
and Thursdays.
Due to Big Bend Regatta
Weekend actl vi ties a meeting

of

the

Meigs

County

Democrat Central Committee will not be held this

month, The

scheduled
evening.

meeting was

for

Thursday

The Meigs County Unit of
the American Cancer Society
will sponsor a dance from
Satvrday from 10 p.m. to 2

a.m. at the Orchid Room, E.
Main St .. Pomeroy. Tickets
are being sold at Chapman

Shoes and at the local unit

office for $5 per couple
donation. Dress Is casual and
reside11ts 18 and over are
invited.

perform thai job.
Fred

~row ,

president, pres1dent,

Mr. und

•

•

enttne

at
VOL. XXVIII NO. 43

t'&lt;IIIUUendl:d

Mrs. Simon lor the fine efforts they have put forth in getting
th• river bank side deaned up.
Mrs. Simon further reported that George Carper and Don
Hubbard have donated flowers lo be planted along the side of
.the highway on the river bank side.
It was reported that pickup boats are still needed lor I be
boat races to meet Coast Guard regula~ons . Those who are
willbg to use their boats are to contact Barbora Chapman .

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

arc lo IIIL'et with Mrs. C.'rlsp later and discuss the possibility of
s.••-rci&lt;Jry, al the chambt•r office .
Als.• n&lt;-eded is a public address system . Thus far there are U&gt;e chamber sponsoring the directory .
On Thursday a variety show will be belli at the Meigs
40 cntries for the eat-thoo ~.be ht!ld Saturday at 3:30p.m. with
st&gt;11w rs to pay so much per hamburger. Tlk' event will be held Junior High in Middleport. Admission is $1 for adults and W
·
at Country Cousins. PrOI.-et.'ds will go to the Jayt'ees for their cents for children.
Nolan Amusement will offer rides Thursday from 6 p.m. to
mirj-nark ln Pomeroy.
The senior citizens orgaruzation hliS made a quilt and the !Op.m. for only $2 and Sunday afternoon from I p.m. to 5 p.m.
Attending were Crow, Barbara Chapman, Dale Warner,
money they receive from donations on the quill will be given to
the chamber for the cleanup of Pomeroy .
l.eo Vaughan, Bill Young , Joe Young , Vernon Weber, Bill
Bluegrass music will be featured Saturday beginning at 6 Gruescr, C. F. . Blakeslee, N. W. Compton, Ted Reed, Jack
p.m. on the stage atl.ynn Street. Mrs. Jack Crisp met with the Carsey, Jirn Frecker, Bill Mayer, Mrs. Crisp and Mrs. Paul
chamber in regard to a service directory . Crow and Blakeslee Simon.

WEDNESDAY, JUNE 15, 1977

Ll

-

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

1

I

James D. Jones.

Norman

R.

Smith,

Pomeroy, has recelv~ word

of the death of his brother,
Paul E. Smith of Huntington,
formerly of Pomeroy.
The Pomeroy Emergency

Squad was called to the

Victor Young residence, East

Main St.. at 4:29p.m. Monda y
for Nancy Walker who was
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital where she was

admitted.
At 6:56p.m. the squad went
to Welshtown Hill for Mrs.
Carol Gartin, a maternity
Mrs. Gartin In the emergency

ambulance. She and her baby
were taken to Pleasant

CASE HEARD
CINCINNATI (UPI) - Valley Hospital.
Federal attorneys have asked
the 6th U.S. Circuit Court of
Appeals to reinstate a mail
fraud Indictment against a
former Shelby County
(Memphis), Tenn., official,
Billy Ray Shilling, and his
FATHER'S
lawyer.
·
Shilling, a member of the
Shelby County Quarterly
SALE I
Court, was accused of
fraudulently representing
himself concerning the
purehase of a parcel of land
which had to be approved by
the quarterly court.

Joseph D. Wllls, 28, Ad·
dison, was charged with DWI
following an accident at 10:40
p.m. Monday on SR 7, south
of the Meigs County line.
The Gallla-Meigs Post.
State Highway Patrol said
Wills lost control of his car
which ran off the right side of
the highway through a
guardrall and struck a utility
pole. His car was demolished:
David E. Mllhoane, 23,
Tuppers Plains, escaped
serious Injury in a similar
accident on SR 681 in Meigs
County. The patrol said
Milhoane lost control of his
car ~ -iilft tbe -highway
and 1di 1 tree, then over·
turned. l'lis car also also was
demolished. Milhoane, who
suffered minor Injuries, was
charged ·with ·qoeckless
operation.
Ricky L. Harris, 21, Bid·
well, was cited to Gallipolis
Municipal Court for driving
left of ·center following an
accident at 3:40p.m. Monday
on Pine Hill Cemetery Rd.
eight tenths of a mUe south of
SR 160.
State troopers ssld Harris'
car collided headon with an
auto operated by Dorina F.
Folden, 19, Bldwelt There
was moderate damage.
Sherry. Sanders, 18, Ewington, was charged with failure
to yield the right of way from
a private driveway following
an accident at 7:20 p.m.
Monday on SR 160.
The Sanders car pulled
·from a private driveway Into
the path of an auto operaied
by Ira Mullins, 37, Jager, W.
Va. There was · minor
damage.
.In a weekend accident, the
patrol cited Mark S.
Crawford, 18, Rt. 2, Bidwell,
for
Improper backing
following
an accident
Saturday on SR 325, ·south of
Rio Grande.
Crawford's car struck an
auto operated by Arlie· P,
Hill, 83, Gallipolis.

ASK TO WED
Marriage licenses were
IBsued to Marvin Eugene
Althouse, 20, Rt. 2, Albany,
and BoMie Hazel McVay, 22,
Rt. 2, Albany; Charles Daniel
Jones, 34, Middleport, and
Margaret Ellen Jones, 30,
Middleport.

.
.
Free ClothtDg Day
The Gallia • Meigs Community Action Agency will
bold Its free clothing day for
low income persons on June
17 from 9 a.m.-2 p.m. The
clothing bank is located In the
old high school bulldlng In
Cheshire.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
DAY IS NEXT SUNDAY

MEN'S s15.95

GOlf JACKETS

sur'

Sizes S, M, L, XL - solid
colors. . slash pockets,
zipper

front,

Variety

charged

In Meigs County Common
Pleas Court Allee Jones was
granted a divorce from

case. A daughter was born to

CHARTERS APPROVED
. Gormley resigned.
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
Favre joined the DaUy
News six months ago as . state Board of Education
feature editor after serving Monday approved charters
as editor of the Corpus Christl for five nonpublic schools.
The schools are: East
(Tex.) Caller and Times,
Christian School,
Liverpool
Previously he was managing
East
Liverpool;
First Baptist
editor at the Dayton (Ohio)
School,
Elyria ;
'Christian
Daily News, editor of the
Howland
Christian
School,
Palm Beach (Fla.) Post when
the-newspaperwonaPulltzer Warren; Open Door Christian
Prize and neWI director of School, Elyria and Willo-Hlll
Olristlan School, Willoughby._
WPLG-TV, Miami.

'---------------.;_--J'

parade. Mrs. Paul Simon, who with her husband, are headin~
the cleanup campa1gn m Pnmcruy. vulunlt.-cn..&gt;d helpers tv

l

Favre will succeed Donald

~~ES~y
~
~
1J:: fllliJW Gl

Meigs County is ready for the Big Bend Regatta this
w~kend according to the Pomeroy Chamber of Commerre
which met Tuesday at noon at the Meigs Inn.
Jim Frecker, parade chairman, reported thai over tOO
e!Jirles have. been received for lhe Regatta parade to be held
f'r~day lea"!"g Middleport at 6 p.m . and proceed through
Pomeroy, disbanding on Condor Street
Frecker also repo~ted that entries .;.e stlU coming in. Tlk'
!"'rade wlll form at Middleport al approximately 5 p.m . with
Judgrng of WliUiers to be done before the parade starts
Frecker also said that at least four persons are ~eeded to
clesn streets rn both Middleport and Pomeroy following lhe

1

W. Gormley, effective July 1.

HRS.: 10:00 A.M. Iiln :00 P.M. Sun . Thurs. 10:00 A.M:
til12:00 P.M. Friday and saturday.
·
A(The Pomeroy Bend. Bridge

Siie-u·s

I

Over 100 units will march in parade

reglan

shoulder for comfortable
fit .
Sale prices. too, on men's shirts . men's dr.ss slacks.
fashion jeans · neckties - dress belts. Select Father's
Day gifts now.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

adding
new acts

.-

The Regatta variety show
committee has aimounced
additional acts lor the variety
show to be held Thursday at
the Mei~s Junior High School
auditorium in Middleport
beginning at 8 p.m. These
are :

CONSTRUCTION FOR THE RAVENSWOOD BRIDGE is well
underway by the Dravo COmpany of Permsylvania. A bridge spanmng the

Ohio River at Ravenswood has begun. Shown is one of tbe cofferdams at mid
chaMel. Another is being constructed near the West Virginia shore, south of
Ravenswood.

.· ·-I.ller. -sure
Co mmissioD'''i:~!~rit!~:~~~~~::. ·M
,

·

lair Monday and a chance
ol shower. saturday and

calling for '"~;:*·:,;:::: of victory
•
May
austerity

Austerity became the byword .when -Meigs County
Commissioners met Tuesday
night.
RiChard Jones, com·
missioner, swrunarized the
attitude of the commission in
the following statement:
"In view of the fact thatthe
mental retardatidn levy has
been defeated I feel it is
imperative to call upon all
segments of county govern·
ment to begin at once the
of an
implementation
austerity ·program con·
cerning county expenditures.
The actions of the Ohio
Legislature now make it

Arrests total31
during
in Middleport

mandatory that an adequate
Thirty-one .a rrests were
program for the mentally
made by the Middleport
regarded be enacted. .
"House Bill455 doesn 't say Police Department during
that county government can May, Police Chief J . J.
il it wishes or that it might, it Cremeans reports.
There were six arrests for
states and states very
driving
while intoxicated ;
definitely that county shall "
five
each
for speeding and
provide a program for the
disorderly
manner and two
mentally retarded.
each
for
assured clear
"The · county
com·
distance
and
disturbing the
missioners are charged with
was
one arrest
peace.
There
complying with the law, this
each
on
the
following
will mean appropriating the
• ' funds to enact the program. charges: wrong way on a one·
Cutbacks will need to be way street ; failure to yield
. made in many services now the right of way: ruMlng stop
sign; improper backing;
being provided.
"The time to look at this spinning tires: leaving the
problem is now. We must scene of an accident;
begin at once to curtail reckless operation; conspending. I call on all tributing to the delinquency
members of county govern· of a minor ; petty theft, and
ment !or their cooperation in trespassing.
The
department
in·
'
this endeavor."
vestigated
nine
auto
ac·
During the . meeting the
resignation of Martha cidents and the police cruiser
The great majority of folks Chambers as clerk was read was driven 5,041 miles during
using the services of the and accepted effective June the month. Parking meter
collections for . the month
Meigs Community Mental 15.
totaled $1 ,164.50.
A
motion
was
made
by
Health Center come wanting
to live more effective and Jones and seconded by James
meaningful lives, and are not Roush to extend the closing of Legion command
the tax books from June 20 to
~~mentally ill."
to Albert Roush
They are concerned about July 20.
Meeting with the ,com·
theoquality of their lives. This
Albert Roush was instatled
missioners
were county as commander of the
is one of the messages which
the center's Open House on engineer Wesley Buehl and American 1 Legion, FeeneySaturday, June 18, from 1-:i Dave Spencer. Buehl gave a Bennett Post 128, Middleport,
report of the road patching at the recent installation of
p.m., hopes to impart .
Along with this new quality· projects and stated that the new officers by Marvin Kelly.
of-living focus will be ' the new paving machine is
Other officers installed for
inclusion of a special "working very well." Buehl the 1977-78 year were Andy
his written Batey, first vice commander:
Women's Issues room during presented
the Open House. Women's recommendation on awar- Lewis tong, finance officer:
Issues is a newly emerging ding the contract for bridge 9· Henry Clatworthy, adjutant;
focus at the Center because of C29·20 to the Ohio Bridge and Walter Bunce, chaplain .
its felt need in tile com· Company.
Fish sandwiches were served
A report was received from by Middleport Fire Depart·
munity.
Parent effectiveness the architect on the inulti· ment members following the
training, LD tutoring , purpose building, stating that meeting .
relaxation
awareness plans are proceeding on
groups and assertiveness schedule.
Jones reported that he had
training are some of the other
TWO LOSE BOND
met
with ·Judge John C.
specialized areas the center
Two
defendants forfeited
Bacon
in
regard
to
installing
is moving into. •
bonds
in
the court of Pomeroy
outlets
in
the
jury
electrical
The publlc is warmly in·
Mayor
Clarence Andrews.
room.
Cass
Hindy
will
be
·
vited to attend the Open
are
Floyd Pullcns,
They
House. Special invitations employed to do the work it
PomeroY,
$350,
posted on a
have been sent to individuals was reported .
char~e
ol
driving
while in·
Attending were Henry
in the community in an effort
toxicated.
and
Charles
·to make known the Open Wells, Jones, and Roush,
Ruggics,
Sciotoville,
$30,
House. There will he movies co mmi o:s ioncrs, and Mary
po"\ed
on
a
speeding
charge.
Hobstel,,.r, acting clerk.
and refresttments.

Open House
announced
at MH center

I,

a

BELLAIRE, Ohio (UP!) - John Guzek, president of
District 6 of the United Mlne Worker~ union, said today that
with Arnold Miller apparently a.,;ured of re-election as UMW
president "it's time the mudslinging stopped,"
With 512 of 858 locals reporting nationwide , an unofficial
UP! tatlyshowed Miller leading with 35,478 votes, compared to
31,052 for Leroy Patterson and 22,051 for Harry Patrick, UMW
secretary-treasurer.
.In Guzek's district, however, wi\.!1 about half of the locals
reporting, Patrict had 3,456 votes to 2,592 for Miller and 1,267
for Patterson.
"J'm sure Miller will win
it," said Guzek. 11 There's no former Boyle supporter, has
doubt that he's best for the promised to challenge the
ootcome if Miller wins.
union .''
The returns obviously
Guzek also said he hoped
showed
big pockets of anti·
the bitterness of the camMiller
sentiment,
promising
paign would not carry over
more
unrest
within
the .union
into contract negotiation s
as
President
Carter
tries to
with the bituminous coal
expand
coal
production
to
industry scheduled to start
meet
the
nation's
energy
this fall.
Guzek said the turnout for needs.
the election in District 6,

Andrea and Kim Batey of
Chester, vocal solos. Eight
students from Meigs Junior
High School in an act are
Libby Walkings, Tina Miller,
Rhonda Southern and Nancy
Wallace, Middleport ; Connie
Smith, Barbara Whitlatch,
and Penny and TammY·
Miller, all of Pomeroy.
Tickets for the show will be
W cents for students and S1
for adults at the Meigs Inn
now or at the door 'Thursday
night. The variety show is
part of the Pomeroy ,
Chamber of Commerce's Big
Bend Regatta.

Volunteer units

called 41 times

LATEST "UNOFFICIAL" MEMBER of the Pomeroy
Police DepOrtment is Matthew Hawley. two and one-half
year-&lt;&gt;ld son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hawley, Pomeroy,
who is drawing attention of townspeople as he moves
through the town with his father who is the meter
patrolman. Matthew's very official looking uniform was
tailored for him at the Fabric Shop. Accessories of a gWl,
handcuffs and a night stick round put his outfit and a
search is now underway to locate a hat small enough lor
the new patroiman.

Comment, advice asked
'

The Middleport Fire.
Department answered a total
of 41 calls during the month of
May, according to the
· monthly report of Fire Chief
Middleport Mayor Fred
C. Robert Fisher.
Breakdown on the runs Hoffman today urged all
includes 34 first aid calls, one residents who are interested
mutual aid call and six fires. in the village sewage system
01 the 34 emergency medical to attend the public meeting
and ambulance calls, 19 were being bela Thursday at 7 p.m.
in town and 15 were out of · in the village council
town. Total manhours for chambers at City Hall.
emergency runs amounted to
Purpose of the meeting is to
163.3 hours with · 916.5 miles obtain comments and advice
being driven. On fire calls, rrom all concerned parties in
firemen put in 95.6 hours with. reference to a stud y ol
an average of 12 men making sanitary sewe'rage facilities
for the village qf Middleport.
each call.
The meeting is a part of the
&gt;tudy being conducted by the
Floyd G. Browne and Assoc.,
Ltd . Engineering firm. J . M.
1\ievil,
engineer of this firm,
Clea r tonight, patchy log
will
be
in charge of the
developing, lows in the low
meeting
.
60s. Cloudy, hazy Thursday,
Residents who do not have
highs in the mid 80s.
sewage
service in the village
Probability of precipitation
and
.
residents
whp do have
near zero pee cent today and
sewage
problems
in their
tonight, 20 per cent Thursday.

• Middleport meeting
m

Weather

area are especially urged to
attend so these areas will be
included in the overa ll
sewage plan ol the village.
The village has be~n
awarded a grant lor 75
percent funding of this Step 1
facilities plan to determine
what problems are being
experienced by the village
with the present system and
also to determine the most
ecomical way the village ca n
meet secondary treatment
requirements of the United
St a t es Environmental
Protection Agency.
All
comments
are
welcomed as this is the only
way village officials can
determine th e best plan
which will benefit all village
residents at the least cost to
ali.

••II

which covers Eastern Ohio

••

and the Northern Panhandle
of We•t VIrginia was "pretty
heavy" although exact
figures on how many miners
voted were not immediately
available.
Miller, 54, the reform
leader who ousted W. A.
"Tony" Boyle in 1972, was so
confident of being re-elected
after Tuesday's balloting that
he scheduled a victory news
conference later today.
His opponents, Harry
Patrick and Lee Roy Pat·
terson, also appeared to be on
the verge of conceding defeat
early today. But Patterson, a

vETO OVERRIDE
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Sen.
William F. Bowen, D-&lt;::incinnati, said Tuesday il would
"Jifobably be next week"
before he asked the Ohio
Senate to override Gov.
James A. Rhodes' veto of a
bill to elect Hamilton County
municipal judges from three
judicial districts.
Rhodes vetoed the bill last
Friday. It would divide
Hamilton County into three
districts. Five judges would
be elected fr om the city of
Cincinnati, five . from the
county exclusive ol the c1ty
and three would be elected atlarge from the cily and'
tounty.

\
FIRST FROG DERBY ENTRY - Clarence and
Jacqueline Fraley ol Columbia Township are the_first
persons to enter a frog in the Frog Derby, only one m the
United States, that will be staged at Me1gs Stadium
Saturday at 8 p. m. The frog has been named "Fraley's
Lol!,l(cr" . Owner is Clarence, trainer is Jacqueline, jnck'y

'

•J I '

is Clarence colors are orange and white, sire is Chain Saw
Sam and d~m is Chestnu\ Beauty . It is the only frog that
survives on sawdust and nitroglycerin. Shown are, 1-&lt;',
Clarence and Jacqueline Fraley and Fred Crow,
organizer oltheOhioSociety (or the Promotion of the Bull
Frog.
t

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