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                  <text>Man shot
in Danville

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A Danville man , James
Kunath, age not known , was
in good condition today at
Holzer Medical Center
recovering from a gunshot
wound in hi s &gt;iomach.
Sheriff James J. Proffitt
and county prosec utor Ri ck
Crow investigated the
shooting and a fire following
it that flattened Kunath's
nearly finished new A-frame
residence.
The sheriff said that when
he and Crow arrived at the
scene James Kunath (Rt. I,
Langsville), was in the
Pomeroy Emergency Squad
vehicle on its way to Holzer
Medical Center.
The sheriff reported that
Kunath said he heard a noise
outside of his home and
walked outside and someone
pointed a gun into the right
side of his stomach and shot
him and then fled. Kunllth
walked from his residence to
the Smith residence to
summon help after he had
been shot .
According to Sheriff
Proffitt, the Kunath home
was destroyed by fire .

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If you are currently a cable customer and sign up for the mCNie channel now through
Ju~

31, it will cost $10 (Plus Tax where applicable) for the installation and the first

month's service. You save $12.50!

COMPETE FOR QUEEN- One of these seven beauties will be crowned 1977 Regatta
Queen at ceremonies to follow Friday night's parade. Front, 1-r, are Rhonda Hudson, Jeri
Faulkner, and Joyce Bing; second row, Traci Weese and Debbie Holsinger, and third row,
Niese! Duvall and Brenda Lawrence, The "coronation" will be held on the stage at Lynn and
Main Sts. in Pomeroy where previous queens, visiting festival queens, and last year's
Regatta Queen, Merri Ault, will also be introduced . The parade begins on Second St. in
Middleport at 6 p. m.

.

If you are not now a cable customer and sign up for the movie channel now through
Ju~

You save $14.50!
The

month~

VOL. XXVIII

NO. 44

en tine

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

THURSDAY, JUNE 16, 1977
'

charge for the miMe channel is just $8.50 (Plus Tax where applicable)
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and thafs less than

3()4

a day!

OFFER LIMITED TO AREA CURRENTLY :;:ERVED BY POINTVIEW
FUTURE OLYMPIAN - Scot Gheen, son of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Gheen, Middleport,
shows off just a few of the many plaques, ribbons and trophies he has won in track and field
during the past several years. Holding the trophy he received for "Outstanding Nine Year
Old" at the recent M-G-M track and field meet, Scot also displays ribbons he won in
individual events and prizes he was awarded in last year's competition. Scot is a member of
the Middleport Cub Scout Pack No. 245.

WE EVEN SUpPLY THE POPCORN! .
PRIZES FOR CHILDREN'S CASTING DERBY- A casting derby for youngsters will
he held Saturday at 10 a, m. Those participating are to meet at the Grace Episcopal Church
with age groups, 6 through 10 and 11 through 15. Each child will be awarded a prize,
however. Shown with the prizes are Ted Dean, educational of!lCer of the Div1s1on of Wild
Ufe Athens who wUI assist with the derby, Barbara Chapman, secretary for the Pomeroy
Ch.:nber of 'eommerce, and Andy Lyles, "Meigs Co.JUltY Game Warden who will also be on
hand to assist with the morning's activities.- sponsors for the derby are Roy~! Crown
Bottling Co., Middleport, Goessler's Jewelry, Pomeroy, and Moore's Stores, Pomeroy.

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Brewer
guilty '

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A Service of PoinTView Cable TV
(304) 675·3398
(614) 992·2505

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By Ualted Press international
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BELLAffiE, OHlO - JOHN BUZEK, PRESIDENT of
District 6 of the United Mine Workers union, says factionalism
in the UMW must end and he urged miners to form a "united
front" behind re-elected UMW President Arnold Miller.
"We're going to have to get behind Miller, you better believe
it," said Guzek Wednesday. "The miners always have and I
am sure they will. These men are going to get behind the
people they voted in.
"We are going to need a united front with that contract
coming up," said Guzek in reference to the UMW contract to
be negotiated with the coal industry this year. Miller defeated
International Executive Board member Lee Roy Patterson
and Harry Patrick, secretary-treasurer of the UMW for the
union presidency.
.
However, in Guzek's district, with about half of the locals
reportirig, Patrick had 3,456 votes to 2,592 for Miller and 1,267
for Patterson.
NEW YORK - EXPERIMENTS WITH MicE at SloanKettering Institute for Cancer Research have turned up a
possible pius for the controversial drug Laetrile - it won't
cure breast cancer bot it appears to keep it.from spreading
into the lungs in 8 out of lOcases.
·
Dr. Robert A. Good, president of the institute, Wednesday
released a review of research with Laetrile lly Dr. S.
Kanematsu Sugiura -a Sloan-Kettering scientist for 60 years.
He said .work with mice cannot be used to evaluate the alleged
pain.;elieving qualities claimed by Laetrile promoters, or
affirm the nutritional therapy they say is part of their attack
on cancer. But release of the repoct was coupled with a
recommendation that field trials be started on human cancer •
victims.

REDUCED PRICE INSTAllATION IS FOR SINGLE SET, SIMPLE HOOK UP. ADDITIONALCHARGES
MAY BE MADE FOR MULTIPLE SET CONNECTIONS, UNDERGROUND, FISHING WALLS, WALL
PLATES OR OTHER SPECIAL SERVICES.

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B
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f1 ~ ews. . .zn rze1S\\!
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$20 (Plus Tax where applicable) for the installation and the first mooth's service.

BLOODMOBILE
VIsit the Bloodmobile at
the Pomeroy Elementary
School on Monday, June 20,
between I and I p. m.
Someone will be glad you
did.

VOTES TABULATED- Judges for the 1977 Regatta Queen contest reviewed final votes
Wednesday night after interviewing each contestant individually . Seated, 1.;, are John
Baker a restaurant owner of Belpre; Nancy Telle, wife of Veterans.Memorial Hospital
surg~n Dr. Lewis TeUe, and John E.M. Kerr, owner and manager of WMPO radio station.
Looking over the judges shoulders are Bill Quickie, who has devoted much time and effort to
the Regatta program (such as the local boat races, the model boat competition,. and the
queen coo test), and Ted Reed, president of the Farmers Bank where the interviews were
beld. Also present rut not available for the picture was Merri Ault, 1977 Regatta Queen.
Tonya Davis is director-chairman of the Queen Contest.
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31, you'll get U other channels in addition to the, movies and it will oo~ cost

Kunath is confined at Holzer
Medical Center. The lire and
shooting are under intensive
investigation.
Meantime, Pomeroy Fire
Chief Charles Legar reported
that Ute ll.unatn home was
leveled when the Pomeroy
Fire Department arrived on
the scene along with the
Pomeroy Emergency Squad.
Chief Legar said that
Kunath was at home alone
when the incident occurred,
his famUy reportedly attending a meeting at a church
at the time .
At this time there is oo
indication as to the cause of
the blaze. However, an arson
investigator from the state
fire marshall's office arrived
in Pomeroy at mid·morning
today and he and Chief Legar
planned to visit the scene
today·.

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Terry Brewer, Portland,
was found guilty on two of
three counts In a jury trial
held this week in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court.
Brewer was sentenced
from one to 10 years on
charges of extortion and
making menacing threats. On
a charge of arson he was not
found guilty,
A jury of seven women and
five men deliberated four
hours and 50 minutes before
returning
a . verdict .
Prosecutor· for the State of
Ohio was Rick Crow.
Attorney for Brewer was
Charles Knight. Prosecutor
Rick Crow said that the term
will run concurrently.
Serving on the jury were
Beverly Wickline, Roger
Frecker, Betty Wagner,
Janice Reuter , Don Johnson,
Cathy King, Yvonne Young,
George Glaze, Jr., Ora Jean
Holter, James Gilmore, Earl
Mossman, Juanita Bruescr
and Martha Lee, alternate.

Late ·breaking news .

Ribbons, trophies won in
track &amp; field by Gheen, 9

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WASHiNGTON-(UP!)- The oh3irman of the president's
cancer panel said today specialists appear on the threshold of
major new advances in the treatment of most cancers in
adults.
Benno C. Schmidt said in testimony prepared for a House
subcommittee reviewing the nation's anticancer program that
early results of clinical tests using a combination of surgery or
radiation and drugs to treat cancer appear very enC..'uragirtg.
"We are In fact making very substantial progress in our ability
to help the cancer patient," he said. "Diagnosis is getting
better all the time in practically every area and enormous
progress is being made in cancer trea.tment."
DETROIT (UP!) - If there was any doubt that prices on
1971Hnodel cars were going up, General Motors Corp. dispelled
it Wednesday with the announcement that its new fall models
may cost as much as 6 per cent- $370- more.
Industry executives have said price increases were
inevitable and financial analysts have pegged them at between
$300and $350 because of higher labor and material costs.

LAKESIDE, Ohio (UP!)- West Ohio United Methodists
boosted their ministers' pensions, approved a new camping
concept and concurred with a merger of its campus ministry in
Columbus tO the local church.
At a general session Wednesday, 2,736 delegates voted to
establish three camping-retrea~ centers in southeastern,
southwestern and northwestern Ohio and the hiring of three
full time program managers for the centers. The new centers
will be located at Camp Otterbein near Logan; Camp Wesley
north of Bellefontaine or a new location In Northwestern Ohio;
and in the Cincinnati-Dayton area.
The plan calls for year.;ound use of the center and satellite
camps to serve persons of ali ages. BeH said CaJ):Ip Cartwright
near Dayton and Camp Asbury near Rio Grande will be
ASK TO WED
satellites
in those regions . Other present camps now being
Marriage licenses were
evaluated
are Miami at Germantown, Shroske in the Toledo
issued to Terry Lee Sayre, 20,
area,
Sabina
at Sabina and Todimeca near Norwalk.
Rutland, and Sharon Lynn
Bing, 20, Pomeroy; Ray Cox,
COLUMBUS ( UPI) - The Ohio Senate Finance
211, Middleport and Charity
Committee
late Wednesday night added at least $75 million to
Patricia Amos, 19, Cheshire;
the
House-passed
version of tbe state's two-year budget and
Dennis Ray Dodrill, t8,
prefll!red
to
add
another
$30 million for public welfare before
Vintoo, and Ginger Yvonne
(Continued on page 12)
.Camden, 16, Bidwell:

Scot Gheen, 9, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Frank Gheen, Grant
St., in Middleport, may just
he a serious contender for the
1984 Olympics if he retains
his interest and skiU in track
and field events.
Having just completed the
fourth grade at Middleport
Elementary, Scot recently
won a trophy for the "Outstanding Nine Year Old" in
the 1977 Meigs - Gallia Mason Cub Olympics .
Placing first and receiving
blue ribbons in the standing
broad jump, the running
broad jump, the marathon
(two laps around a regulation
size track), and the high
jump, he also placed second
in the 100 yard dash and third
in. situps and · the softball

throw.
Last year at the same meet
Scot won the "Outstanding
Eight Year Old" trophy, six ·
blue ribbons, one red and one
green. He also won awards in
the Joo-yard dash , the 5G-yard
dash, the broadjump, one
red, and one green.
He also . won first place
awards in the 100 yard dash,
the 50 yard dash , the
broadjump, and the 200 yard
relay during the past two
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EXTE;NDED OUTLOOK
Saturday
through
Monday, warm and humid
with a chance of showers
each day. Highs wiU be In
the 80s and lows wm be In
the 60s.

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years at the Middleport
Elementary School Field
Meet.
In addition to his track and
field achievements, Scot is a
pitcher and catcher for the
undefeated Middleport
Mustangs peewee baseball
team, co-champs of last year.
SCHOOL ENTERED
The sheriff's department is
investigating a breaking and
entering at Meigs High
School Wednesday at ai)'
proximately 11 :35 p. m .
Entrance was · gained by
breaking a · window with a
brick. The person or persons
fled the scene upon the
arrival of the night janitor.
The Incident is under in. vestigation.

WASHINGTON - INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTION Is
growing fast enough to provide increased job opportunities for
many of the unemployed and June graduates, according to tbe
Federal Reserve Board .
The hoard said Wednesday industrial production surged
1,1 per cent in May for the fourth consecutive monthly gain.
Leading the way were producers of iron, steel, consumer
produqls and business equipment . The jump in the output of
mines, factorie·s and utilities outstripped the 0.8 per cent
increase in April and was a solid signal that the economy is
expanding enoogh to create new job opportunities.
CINCINNATI - PUBLIC SCHOOL OFFICIALS in
Cincinnati are facing the grim prospect of shuttiflli down the
system'sscboolsforeightweeks this fall, following the narrow
rejection of a $13.4 million school tax levy proposal. Tbe levy
lost by a margin of 2,444 votes - 37,476 to 35,032. A low turnout
of voters Tuesday spelled doom for the 5.94 mill levy, the
mea~ure's supporters said.
School board officials raised the possiblHty of putting tbe
same levy to voters on the November general election ballot.
With a larger turnout nearly certain in November, the levy
would have a better chance of approval, they believe . "We
can't make ·any cutbacks," said city school hoard member
Edward Geers. "If we cut hack any more programs, we'll be
nothing but a babysitting service ."
COLUMBUS - MAY REVENUE COLLECTIONS boosted
the state's to"taJ for the first II months of the fiscal year to $3.2
billion - .exceeding last year 's figure by $356 million, or 12.3
per cent, State Treasurer Gertrude W. Donahey reported
Wednesday.
It was a gain in revenue collections of $60 million, or 2 per·
cent, since the April figures were released, Mrs. Donahey said.
Majoc gains · from the 1975-76 tax year were in sales tax
collections, up by $120miUion or, 11.9 per cent for the II -month
period ; personal income ta~ coliections, up by $106.6 million,
or 20.7 per cent; and corporation tax revenues , up by $75.6
mi:lion, or 23.9 per cent.
WASHINGTON - BY A 00-2 VOTE WEDNESDAY !be
Senate passed an amendment introduced by Sen . John Glenn ,
D.Ohio, that would rule out foreign aid to Vietnam, Cambodia
and Laos.
The amendment also forbids reparations to Vietnam. It
was added to the International Development Assistance ACt,
which authorizes foreign aid payments .

Students in health to run screening program
life in Meigs County will
decide to practice in rural
America.
ln order for this program to
succeed, the support of the
community is needed . More
volunteers are needed to help
out with transportation and
with assistance at the clinic
in such areas as taking
medical histories. All persons
able to volunteer should call
one of the staff of the Retired
Senior Volunteer Program at
992-7884 .
There will be no charge for
any of the services offered,
in rural areas : it is hoQed except a minimal charge of
these students through their blood test s if they are
involyement ir community desired. Servires to be of·

. The Multiphasic Health
Screening Clinic for .Meigs
Couptians of all ages at Meigs
Junior High School in Middleport July 18-2t is in its
final stages of planning.
Six students in various
health fields will be spending
seven weeks in Meigs County
starting June 23 to help run
the screening program .
These students during these
seven weeks will get
acquainted with Meigs
County and rural life. There
is a great need for physicians
and other medical personnel

'·

fered include testing for
he a ri ngJ speech, vision,
tuberculosis , high blood
pressure and urinalysis, and
a dental screening. Services
wiU be available for giving
inoculations to children. It is
asked that records of
inoculations be brought to the
screen clinic.
Results of all the tests will
be sent to the family
physician for inclusion in the
person's medical record . If
any of the tests indicate the
person should see a physician
he will be advised to do so as
soon as po ssib le . Health
counseling wiH be available

to everyone. All those in·
terested are urged to mak e
reservations by calling the
senior Citizens Center 9937886. A ·minimum of 800 .
persons will be screened.
Health Edu c ation
Programs are being piaMed
in the various communities in
Meigs County to inform
persons not only with the
benefits of the multiphasic
screening clinic, but also of
the several areas of health
awareness . The health
educational program s will be
held during the first two
weeks of July . In addition to
the students speaki ng to

individual groups and
organization s .there will be
commun ity-wide pres entation at Mt . Union Baptist
Church and REACT. More
organizations are needed to
host additional communitywide presentations.
Any ch urch or organization
interested in hosti ng a
community presentation or
who would be interested in
the
medi ca l
students
speaking to their own individual group , should
co ntact E. J oyce Miller,
Coordinator, at 992-7580 or
Jan Shoots, Senior Citizens
Center 992-7311.

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2 _The Daily Sentuli'l, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .•Thursd~y. June t6, 1917

Reds obtain Cy Young Award winner Seaver

Democrats facing spending problems
By LEE LEONARD
UP I Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS t UPll _
Majority Democrats in tlli'
Oh o General Assemblv may
ha~e to ba ck off ·some
co ntroversial spendtng
requirements imposed on the
administration ofG ov . James
A. Rhodes if they are to put
the full 1978-79 stale
operating budge t into effect
by the start or the fiscal
period July I.
M t· n o r 1· 1 }' Senate
Re ublicans
used
a
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parltamentary del tee
Wednesda~ to blo.:k an l'Jller·
!!enc· ~ clause on a btll
co n ta Jn I ng
pendIng
dtr&lt;ellves, some of them
obJecUonable to the GOP.
Th b1ll · passed and
e
"as
ld
sent to the House, !"'t wou
oot take effect until 90 days
after tt JS Stgned by . the
go•·eroor . In the meanttrne,
there would he no language to
dtrect
spendmg
or
appropriations for schools,
welfare, mental h&lt;alth,
hi h
du ti'
d ~h
g er e ca on an "' cr

Veteran teacher
takes retirement
Mrs. Dorothy Barnes
Woodard . Langsville , has
retired after teaching first
and second grades in Meigs
County schools for th.e past
35'7 years.
For the past 17 years she
has taught first grade at the
Pomeroy schools, first at
Sugar Run and then at the
Pomeroy Elementa ry School,
and prior to that one-half
yea r at Syracuse and 18 years
at Rutland.
Agraduate of Rutland High
School, Mrs. Woodard holds a
bachelor and master of
elementary e du c at ion ·
degrees · with majors in
reading instruction from Ohio
University.
6he is a member or the Ohio
Education Association. the
N:a tiona 1 Ed u c ation
Association and Unified
Afftliates of Delta Kappa
G)lmma , International
Honorary Women Teachers'
Society , Ameri ca n
A~sociation of University
Women,
Middleport
Pomeroy Area Branch, the
Oltio Council of International
Reading Association , Ap·
pilachian Reading Council of
tlte Athens area ; Ohio
Aj;sociation of Early Child·
h~od Education , Jennings
SCholar Alumnus of Ohio
U11iversity and a past ·
piesident of the Meigs County
Ejlucation Association.

,lt~~~~!~;:o~~:a~~

o{the Order of Eastern Star,
·and a member of Trinity
dturch, Pomeroy.
:Last_August Mrs. Woodard

next ""e•;
,
In e!fed, the Republicans
That measure has alreadl
1(3\'0 thetr Demoerallc _col·
been approved br U1e House,
lea !lUes two options: either b&lt;Jt ttwtll ha•e to.be returned
remn••e the points of for coomrrence '" changes.
contention or go without
It isauwmatically effective
di
~&gt;hen signed b) the go•·ernQr
normal go••ernmenl spen ng b&lt;J
.
d
d
"'"ndates until the end of . t coo 13 li\S on1y o11ar an
September.
tittl e spendmg language.
"We may have to take the
Senate Mtn or.t ty ~ade~
gutty stuff that we need I(&gt; ~~t chael . J .. Malone) , R
operate the state by July 1 Cmcmnau, satd spllttmg the
and put it in an emergency budget ~to lanllUage and
bill . and lake the rest that we ~oney btlls was " htghly
want to slick the governor trregular tf not u.nco n·
. .
t't t'
..
with and pass tt m a ,normal s ' u tona1.
' II "
'd ·s . t
Maloney accused the
90-day bt , ~at
ena e De
r di .d. tl
President Pro Tempore
mocrats 0 • Vl mg "'
Oliver Qcasck, ·DAkron .
budget w depnve Rhodes of
item-ve to
power
ove r
.
d
af
d
Ocasek concede
ter .ts·
.
.
.
cussing the problem wtth spend tn g dtrecltves . A
overnor can item-veto dollar
.
House Speaker Verna I G. g
Rille Jr .. DNew Boston, late amounLS in an approprialtons
Wednesday that chances are bill but must •·eto or accept
' · ·
language bills in their
poor for ga trung the two·
.
thirds ma )'o rity required to enltrety.
" It's your move 11 he chalmake
~he
.393-page lenged the Dem'ocrats as
" lenguage '
btl!· h an Republican senators at fi rst
emergency · wtt
out
h
a cce pted the emergency
a c co m m od a t In g t e
.
Republicans.
cia~ and then voted agamst
Among
the
more the b1Il.
·a1 ·
· th b'll
Once the emergency clause
controverst 1tems m e 1
b'll
were provisions giving the was. approved ,_ the
1
state auditor now Democrat reqwred a two-thirds vote w
Thomas E.' Ferguson, the pas~. Republicans withheld
final say ove r state thetr votes and the 21
accounting systems used by Democraltc senators coulq
the

adm inistrati on, .and

requiring the Ohio Highway
Patrol to use non-highway
funds lor investigating
crimes and guarding the
governor and state property.
Ocasek candidly admitted
·
he was caug ht by surpnse
when the GOP senalllrs at
first voted ror the emergency
clause and then failed to help
with the 22 votes needed 00
MRS. WOODARD
the bill as an ·
pass
qui ckly
and her husband, Alhert, em;;~~".:~ a Is
moved from Pomeroy to the caucused, removed the
Langsville community. She emergency and passed the
has two children, Irene L. bill as a regular 9(Hiay
Barnes, a . teacher of home measure on a 21·12 partyline
.
economics
at
Gallia vote.
The " language" bill
Academy High School,
Gallipolis, and Morton L. · co ntains accounting ·and
Barnes, a cefarnic technician spending procedures for the
with Logan Clay Co. in Brazil, new two-year appropriation .
Ind. He is married to the It also includes the school
formula
and
former Vicki Manley, Mid· subsidy
dleport, a sophomore at Saint spending language for state
Mary's of the Woods College programs which must . he
carried out immediately as of
it} Terre Haute, Ind.
In commenting on her July 1.
The bulk of the money is
recent retirement , Mrs .
contained
in a tl3.2 billion
Woodard describes her
appropriation
which the
teaching years as a rewar·
s.·nate
Finance
Committee
ding part of her life with
was
to
approve
today· and
happy teacher and student
send
to
the
floor
for a vot•
associations.

Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.

COLUMBUS (UPI)
Members of the Ohio House
and
Senilte . Energy
o t w e a t e r p r e c a u t i O n 8 committees were told
Wednesday
that . coal
gasification and fluidized bed
l!yLawrence E. Lamb, M.D. potassium whl ch ts also im· combustion will provide the
portant. Milk has about the twin technologies to give Ohio
DEAR DR. LAMB - My same salt content as the a continued, healthy market
children are members of a healthy human body. Then for its high..sulfur coal.
baton marching unit. We go salt will also he available in
Sales of coal.mined in Ohio
to a lot of towns during the foods and salt can he added to · have slumped over the past
summers. Sometimes it is an the food.
four years, chiefly due to the
all-d;ly session we have drill
The scheduling of activities declining market for high·
competition in the morning- is
important . sulfur coal because or more
say about 10 to 11, then wait Since early morning com· stringent sulfur oxide
until maybe 2 o'clock or even petition is o\•er by 11 emission standards.
laterfor the parade to start. . a.m. and the parades do not
Coal gasification and
Some of the parades are s t a r t
u n ti I
art e r fluidized bed combustion are
rather long and sometimes il 2 p.m., the amount .of ex· two methods which cleanly
gets terribly bot. We would posure during the hottest part convert the energy within
like to know if we should of the day is limited. I would
coal.
allow the children to eat recommend that the children
Officials of the Continental
much while waiting lor the get out of the sun and into a Oil Co. and Baheock and
parade. Also how much comfortable environment Wilcox,
Ltd .
brie(ed
should they be given to drink between the morning and af· memhersofthe committee on
on super hot days? Should ternoon sessions. That will the two techniques, both of
they drink before or alter the give the body a chance to which might be utilitzed in
parade?
eliminate any heat build-up pilot projects in Ohio.
We have several drummers that has occurred before the
Jimmie R. Bowden, vice
who carry very heavy drums afternoon parade begins.
president of the Continental
and after the parade their
All those who work in very Coal Development Co., a
shirts are always soaked. hot environments would he subidiary of Continental Oil,
S&lt;Jmetimes after the parade wise to cool off during the asked lawmakers to amend
we have trouble keeping noon of the day and do their current law and allow the
them out of the water. Also work later. This also applies "roll-in pricing" of synthetic
what do you suggest aboul to home gardeners.
natural gas which might he
salt tablets for this age
There is a difference het· cori'verted from coal at a
group? They are between 4 ween salt loss, water loss and proposed Noble County
and 17 years old.
heat stroke. To give you more g&amp;sification plant.
DEAR READER- Let me complete information on
Conoco officials said that
say at once that you should these and how to cope with current Ohio gas pricing law
not restrict how much water the heat 1 am sending you The might prevent the company
the children want to drink. Health Letter numher 7·12, from rerovering the cost of
Some coaches usedto dothis Hea t Stress: Cramps, producingthegas,whichwill
to athletes and it is exactly Exhaustion, Slrokes. Others · ~"retailed through East Ohio
lhe wrong thing to do. It can who want this information Gas Co. pipelines by 198&gt;.
mntribute to developing heat can send 50 cents with a long,
"The proposed Ohio plant is
slroke. Let them drihk water stamped, self-addressed e.n· , in competition with a parallel
before, after the parade, and velqpe lor it. Of course project in lllinois, " said
if it is a very hot day they can dressing-mol helps too, 'but l!o'wdell, estl!nQting that the
drink along the parade route I'm not sure what you can do plant could produce up to 60
if that can he arranged.
in this regard lor parades.
million cubicfeetof gas a day
taking salt tablell usually
You should allow the within eight years .
does more harm than good. c-hildren to eat normally al
" It is absolutely essential
This is particularly !rue if noon between sessions. The that the Ohio legislature
water is restricted. They meal should include plenty of enact legislation to meet the
should get sail but a better cool hquids - such as iced tea federal Energy Research and
way IS to have. them dri11k or lt:uwnodc.
Development Administration
plenty or water and also drink
Dr. Lamb wtU answer criteria regarding ... rate
at least a quart or Jow·fat represen tative letters of structure," he added .
milk or' fortified skim milk a general mteresl in In•
''The lllinois project musl
day plw; a couple of !HJunc'&lt;: mlwnn. Write to him iu ca re have, and is expected to
glasses of orange juice. The d this newspaper, P.O. Box obtain, a similar expression
orange juice won't provide 1551, Radio City Stillion, New from the State of Jllinois."
sodium ilalt but it will provide York, NY 10019.
Bowden estimated that

h

•

not

muster

the 22

v.otes

n ecessary lor tw ot htrds
approval.
. Debate lasted lor more
th an two hours on the
"language" bJil before the
GOP pulled tts
rare
maneuver.
Aside fr om th e scho.ol.
subsidy formula, the bill
co ntains lan gua ge writin g
state
budgetin g
and
accounting procedures into
permanent Jaw and giving the
stale auditor and Controlling
Board, now dominated by
Democrats, stronger voices
in state spending policies.
It is designed to increase
administrative
accountability
to
the
legislature, and J&gt; classify
spectal accounts containing
federal funds which are l'Ur· 1,
rently spent without direction
from the General Assembly.
u also contains a ~ew
provision accelerating corpo·
rate reimbursement of state
income tall' withholdings.,
,providing an extra $43 million
for use during the next
biennium .
Four
!! e pub I i can
amendments were . 'knocked

Ohio's ·coal will
have future use

HEALTH
H

1..

pm~rams.

•

syn[hetic
natura_! gas
produced at the Noble County
facility would mst "at least"
$4 a thousand cubic feet,
based oo 1975 figures .
Conoco Coal Developm~nt
was awarded a $24 million
federal grant last month lor
the design phase of the Noble
County plant, which is
expected to supply about 6
per cent of the total daily
requirements of East Ohio
Gas Co. customers when it
reaches full production
capa'city,
The other briefing by Bab·
coek and Wilcox, Ltd., of
Renfrew, Scotland, showed
how fluidized bed combustion
can burn high-6UI.fur coal and
still meet state and federal
sulfur oxide emission limits.
· Gov. James A. Rhodes said
earlier this month he wants
four fluidized bed combustion
systems to be installed in
Ohio with public funds to
prove the reliabi"•y of the
teclmology.
Several state legislators,
officials of Ohio industries,
and executives of major Ohio
coal companies, recently
returned from Scotland

dnwn un partyline votes

helr.-e the final vote.
Sen Paul E Gillmor H·
Port(:lint&lt;•n,c;,;n plained .that
splittin ~ the budget "violates
f he
t f nd·
tal
oneh~: 1 thmos u ·~~en of
rtK
e separa n
P'"• ers among the branches
of gove rnment and the
s •stem of checks and
t1.tances."
Gillmor said til e measure
"evades the irit of the Ohio
Con itulton''?' which sa ·s a
bill ~an deal with ont/ one
b'
. .
su Jec 1 un 1ess 11 IS an
.
. , . Th I guage
appropna ton. e an
bill deals with a variety of
b'
su .. JecLS .
We have exhausted every
conceivable means
of
.
. b'll ..
.d
correcung thlS t , sat
1 · g
otion
ioMa1on~\ afte
b ~ ~st~. .F~ance
Cosen . ' af o
r
mmtttee or mcorpora ton
into the money measure.
"
There are no avenues open
to us. This is nolhin g more
h
· 1 t'
t
dI an· a thmampu
· na JOn1 hiso

By FRED DOWN
UPI Sporn Writer
NEW YORK (UPI) - Tom
Seaver, tile New York Mets'
th.ree-time Cy Young Award·
wtnner and the key man in
their "miracle" 1969 pennant
victory, switched uniforms
lllday in a deal that could
make tile Onctnnati Reds the
first National League team in
more than 30 years to win
tllree straight pennants.
Seaver, a four-time 2().
game winner who has heen
feuding with the Mets' front
office llince he played a
leading role in the 1976
players' strike, went to the
Reds Wednesday night in
exchange for pitcher Pat
Zachry, infielder Doug Flynn
and minor league outfielders

L' -

epnve

e gover or . o

veto power."
Both the Senate and House

.

were to reconvene at I p.m.
today
·

l!y J.R. KIMMINS
COLUMBUS (UP! )- After
90 minutes of debate - and
over objections that the bill
wouid 'further erode local
control of schools - the Ohio
House Wednesday sent to tlli'
Senate a bill requiring that
the tenure of aU public school
teachers be based on periodic
evaluations.
The bill also requires
principals and assistant
principals to be evaluated on
a set of standards to he
adopted by March 1, 1978, by
all 617 school bo11rds in Ohio .
The bill, sent to the Senate
on a 5!1-39.vote, qutlines live
different . types of contracts
under which teachers may he
hired. ·
Aft~r
three
years
experience and if a teacher .
completes 18 semester hours
of related college~evel work,
a teacher could be given a
·:continuing contract"_ and
ftred only after a series of
jjdue processn hearings.
Ateacher employed for less
than thr'ee years would he
given a "probationary con·
tract" and authorized to
follow various bureaucratic
steps if he or she is fired.
Principals and assistant
where they toured a large
B&amp;W fluidized bed boiler.
In
fluidized
bed
combustion, high..sullur coal
with

a

limestone and "blown " into
hearth where it is burned at
850 degrees centigrade.
Water is circulated in pipes
buried in the boiler and
turned into steam .
Officials of B&amp;W, Ltd., said
their industrial-size pilot
boiler has been in ope ration
for 5,000 hours with no major
problems.

principals would be given
three·yea r contracts initiallY,
which could he renewed for
between two and 6 ve years
thereafter.
Rep. Norman A. Murdock,
R·Cineinna ti .- ca lled the
leg islation an " instant
tenure" bill which he said
"'was one step along the way
of cutting · control of
people ...over their schools:"
"Schools are not meant to
protect educators at any
level,'' added Murdock, who
said the bill protects teachers ·
"at the expense of children
and their education."
The bill gathered the
supporl of 53 DemocraLS and
six Republicans only after it
was amended on the floor by
its chief sponsor, Rep.
Michael Stinziano, D·
Columbus. to . slightly aIter
the ''due process" hearings
for principals and assistant
pr1ncipals.
Objecti ons
over the
protection given these
middle~evel administrators,
who Stinziano s~id neither
formulate nor carry out
policies of the school board,
prompted disgruntled Democrats and Republicans to
send the bill back to the
House Rules Committee last
week while changes could be
worked out.
Only a few school districts
now evaluate teachers. Stin·
ziano said last week that the
bill, strongly endorsed by the
Ohio Education Association,
would "protect good teachers
from being dismissed for
arbitrary reasons which are
wtally unrelated to the class·
room' ' and would ''protect
the student from bad
teachers. "
Controversy over the bill

OE\'MED TO TilE
INTEREST OF
MEIGs-MASON AREA
CHESTER L. T ANNEIIILL
Exn-. Ed.
ROBERT HOEFUCH
(."tty Editor
Published da!ly excepl Saturilil)'
by TIM: Otuu \l~tUey Publishtng Com·
Wl)'.

ill Courl St ., P()llltroy. Otuo

45i69. Business Offil:e Phone 992·
2156. Edit brial Phone 992·21$7.
· Set·ond dass j)«::t.agt! paid &lt;~.l
Pomeroy, Oluo.

Nal1onal advertising r ~pr~ n­
l.l:llive W11rd - Griffith Comp;my,
(nc .. Bottinelli ·and GH llagher D1V.,
i5i Thin! A~·e,. New York, N.Y.
10017.
Subscriplion rates : ~ li ve red by
c~rrier ~· here !l\'l:lilHb1e i~ l'ents ~r
week. By Motor Route where carrier
service not ~vailabl~. One month,
S3.2:5. By mail m Ohio and W. V~:~ .,
One Year, $22.00 ; Six rnonlhs,
IJ LSO; Three mon ths, $7.00 ;
Elsewhert! $26.00 year ; Six month:i
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Subscription pr iCe UlciUdes S~mdcty
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FOR SAFETY SAKE
OUR MAIN LOBBY
Will Q.OSE AT 3:00 P.M.
AND OUR DRIVE-IN WINDOW
AT 5:00 P.M.
FRIDAY; JUNE 17th

~Farmers Bank
a eec

POMEROY, OHIO

crossed party lines. Assistant
Majority Floor Leader
Patrick A. Sweeney , D·
Cleveland, was among nine
Democrats who joined 30 of
the 36 Repubicans present on
the floor to vote against it.
Rep. John E . Johnson, D·
Orrville, oflered two amend·
ments · one was defeated on a
tie vote and the other, which
delayed tile effective date of
the bill until the fall of 1979,
carried on a 58-39 vote.
Johnsonsaid the bill raised
the · "grizzled spectre" of

lifetime tenure for teachers.
" It is my opinion that we do
not need to grant somebody a
contract for life , for good
behavior," said Johnson.
Stinziano said he would
ur ge the Senate to remove the
Johnson amendment which
delayed the effect of the
bill.
Stinziano said the other
parts of the biU remained
"generally intact" and that
he was not disappointed by
the three other changes made
on the House floor .

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Diego Padres for infielder
Bobby Valentine and pitcher.
Paul Siebert and, in a lesser
deal, acquired outfielder J o.&gt;l
Youngblood fr om the St .
Louis Cardinals for shortstop
Mike Phillips. The Reds in
turn swapped their unsigned
relief ace Rawly East wick to
the Cardinals lor minor
league pitcher Doug Capilla.
Those deals overshadowed
lu~ious last-minute trading
activity by other dubs in
whi ch Pittsburg:, sent
Ed Kirkpatrick to
outfielder
TOM SEAVER
Texas for infielder Jim
Fregosi, the New York
Steve Henderson and Dan Yankees got ca tcher-first
Norman.
baseman Cliff Johnson from
The Mets then traded the Houston Astros for minor
moody and unsigned slugger league shortstop Mike
Dave Kingman to the San Fischlin and minor league
pitcher Randy Nieman and
MIKE CALDWELL
the Oakland A's purchased
outfielder Willie Crawford
from the Astros for an .
undisclosed sum.
Auerbach.
In lesser deals, the Reds
"The Reds will show people
traded relief pitcher Mike how great Seaver is," comCaldwell to · the Milwaukee mented Manager Sparky
Brewers lor minor league Anderson of the Reds. "He's
pitcher Rich 0 'Keeffe and the greatest. His statistics
minor league infielder Gary are incredible and the guy is
Bailey was his first since 1975 Pyka and bought minor
Rick
when he was still wearing a league infielder
Montreal uniform. And that
season he stole only four.
Rose's base hit, his third of with a man on.
the night, climaxed an uphill
After lour irutings, Randy
Spectators at Syracuse last
battle by the Reds who by l.er~h. the Phils' rookie lefty, night witnessed two fine
winning managed to stay owned a 7·2 lead.
pitching performances as the
within seven games of Ute Los
Surprisingly, one of those Meigs American Legion split
Angeles Dodgers.
· two Red rWls came on a third
doubleheader with visiting
"Man 1' 1 exclaimedRose, " I inning homer by Hume, the . aAthens,
losting the first game
stu'e didn't think we'dhave a rookie right hander.
2-&lt;1
but
taking
tlte second 4-1.
chance to win that game. The
Hume hardly had time to
Athens
hurler
Kevin Golds·
way those Phillies came at us get excited by the homer as
berry
threw
a
four-hitter
at
swinging those bats in the the !'hils jumped on him for the local boys in that first
first inning, I thought they two runs in the top of the game as he went the distance,
might wind up scoring 50
fourth inning. One came on fanning just one but walking
runs."
Luzinski's 14th homer of the no one. Meigs' Terry Wall
The Phils scored four runs season. Singles by Hebner, took the loss although he had
in the first and rou('ld Gary 'Bowa
and
Sizemore excellent control, fanning
Nolan as both Mike Schmidt
(Continued on page 5) .
three and walking just two.
and Riehle Hebner homered
~

.

Rose just had
to get a hit
CINCINNATI (UP!) - As
Pete Rose saw It, he had no
alternative,
"After Bob Bailey stole a
base I had to get a hit," said
the Cincirutati Reds' three·
time batting champ, whose
two-out single in the lOth
inning Wednesday night
scored pinch runner Champ
Summers to give the Reds an
8-7 victory over the
Philadelphia Phils in the
finale of a three game set.
Bailey, pinch hitting for
Pedro Borbon, had rifled a
tw!K&gt;ut single to center off
Phfllie lefty Torn Underwood.
It was minutes later that
Bailey swiped second to set
the stage for the game .
winning hlt by Rose.
The Phillies were so
startled by Bailey's dating
dash that both shortstop
Larry Bowa and second
baseman Ted Sizemore failed
to cover the bag.
But tben, the Phils had
every real!(&gt;n to be surprised.
Because the stolen base by

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RIVERSIDE

THE DAILY SENTlNEL

DUE TO THE
BIG BEND REGAITA AND

t

T.SHIRT FOR SALE - Hoping to take advantage of today's !-shirt P?pularity during
Big Bend Regatta Weekend is the Meigs Unit of the American Cancer SocLety· The SOCJe~y
will offer a mouse t-shirt for children at $2 and a frog t-6hirt for adults at $2.50 at the umt s
booth which will he located on Lynn St. Modeling the shirts are front , T~rey Newsome and
back from left to right , Melanie Bailey, Rodney Newsome and Brenda Batley .

House approves tenure bill

is crushed, mixed

The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, June 16, 1977

.....

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~~~~ - ~ -

~: ,~~
· · .. ·
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composting, hauling, leaf
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Those are some of the
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PAT ZACHRY

RAWLEY EASTWICK

a great per.former. 11

deal will have to prove

"There is no way for us to
he happy about the deal ,"
said Met Board Chairman M.
Donald Grant. " I'm very
satisfied with it, however,
under the circwnstances. The

itself. "

"We didn't want to trade
Tom," said McDonald. "But
it got to such a situation
where he was totally
unhappy. I think Tom would

DOUG FLYNN
have continued to pitch as
well as he could but his
attitude would have been
bound to have affected him
and the rest of the club."
The Mets' most important
acquisition appears to be

Henderson, a 24-year-old oUt·
fielder wbo was leading the
American Association with a
batting average close to .370.
Mets' Manager Joe Torre
admitted the Seaver deal
would oot he popular with
New York fans .
"People aren't going to like
this deal," he said . " We are
trading the !Jest pitcher in
baseball . But he wasn 't
happy
here and we had Ill
Saturday, Folgestrom and.
make
the
deal. You've just
Mike Triplett will do the
got
to
look
at
it for what these
pitching.
kids
will
do
to
help us in the
A
000 000 0--1 1 I
next
few
years."
M
200 002 x-4 7 I

Legion splits two with Athens

Deal ·for Seaver
.· taken in stride
set as a cond1t10n for
By ROBERT SANGEORGE leaving," he joked.
acquiring
him.
Anderson took note of the
CINCINNATI (UP!) - The
utility
infielder Doug
thought of Tom Seaver high expectations which are
F1ynn,
who
.saw only spot
Seaver
to
coming to Cincinnati may ·preceding
Reds, .admitted
seem like a dream come true Cincinnati, as ,fans rub their duty with the
1
he
was
'
.really
excited "
hands
in
anticipation
of
him
for Reds fans.
•
But many players, even pitching for the Reds at about going to the Mots. "I'm
those involved In the Riverfront Stadium. " He glad to be g0ing to a place
Cincinnati Reds-New York won 't win every game . where I can play every day."
The Reds also gave the
Mets trade, took the big deal nobody can. But I'll tell you
Mets
outfielders Steve
something - he'll win a
in stride.
Henderson
and Dan Norman
Some players were bunch of them ."
of
their
Indianapolis
rarm
The manager said he
reluctant to talk about the
Henderson
recently
was
club.
swap, sil)ce the men leaving already is planning to start
Player-of-the-Month
named
the team in return for Seaver Seaver once in the upcoming ·
are their friends. The Reds four-game series with the in the American Association
gave up pitcher Pat Zachry, division-leading Los Angeles for the month of May.
infielder Doug Flynn and two DOdgers. Anderson joked that
minor leaguers to get tile ace the news of the trade must .
have made the Dodgers take
hurler from the Mets.
medication
for coltective
Possibly the most exCited
upset
stomachs
.
person in a {;incinnati
Undressing
in
the
uniform Wednesday night
was manager Sparky clubhouse, Zachry told
Anderson "The Reds will reporters tersely, "I have
show people how great he nothing to say ." Zachry was a
replacement in the trade for
(Seaver) is," he said.
"When he's playing on a reliever Rawly Eastwick.
defensive · club like ours, Eastwick had announced he
some of those 'sneakers' wouldn't sign a contract with
won't be getting through the any team to which he was
infield. He'll have some traded, which the Mets had
people behind him who can

really move."

••He's the greatest,'.'
Anderson declared. "His
Slats are incredible. And the
guy is a great.perfonner .- he
swings
a bat well, he's a good
1
bunter."
Third baseman Pete Rose
204 Condor St.
said he believed the Reds
Pomeroy, Ohio
were able to get Seaver
Phone 992-2975
because "of all the teams
OPEN
..
bidding for him, we had the
9-5 Mon.-Fri.
most to give up in return. I
just hope he pitches for us
9 til Noon Sat.
like he did with the Mets. "
Pitcher Jack Billingham
perhaps captured the mood of
many players when he said,
"We're gelting Tom Seaver,
who is supposed to be the best
pitcher in the National
League. But we'regiving up a
lol of teammates. I've never
come in a clubhouse after a
game, and so many bodies
had changed.''
, ''When something like this
~ Chaim af the !'Ins, happened before, I w_as
always one of !he bodlPs

GRAVELY
TRACJOR SA FS

Athens got both its runs in Meigs split the doubleheader.
the early innings. In the Baird struck out 11 Athens
second frame, Art Chonko batters and walked jUst
singled with one gone, stole three, and the only hit for the
second, and scampered home visitors came in the sixth
on a base hit by AI Green, when Jeff Bush, the losing
giving the visitors a 1.0 lead. pitcher, tripled and scam·
They scored their other run in pered home on a sacrifice fly
the third when John for the only run.
Schanzevmach drew a walk · Meigs got all the runs it
Md promptly stole second. needed in the first inning by
He went to third on an error scoring two times on a single
on the throw. The next batter by Wall and a home run to
drew a walk and the pair center field by Hamilton.
pulled orr a double steal for Hamilton has now ten hits in
the run .
his last thirteen at bats. He
Two line defensive plays by helped Meigs get two more
the crew of Coach Charlie tallies in the sixth to put the
Hamilton kept the visitors game away.
from pulling away. In the
In that sixth, Hamilton
fourth inning, Athens had a singled and stole second.
man on second with the Davenport then doubled him
batter cracking a single to home, and after advancing to
left. Kelly Winebren ner got to thtrd, Davenport scored on a
the ball in a hurry and threw sacrifice fly by Gary Swain.
a bullet to nail the runner at Hamilton .led the hitting with
the plate. In the sixth. his homer and single, and
rightfielder Homer Smith got Tim Carmen had a double
a chance to do the same and single. Besides Daventhing, and another Athens port's hit, Wall and Mark
runner found him.elf out at Mitch had a single each. Busll
home.
was tagged with the loss,
First
sacker
Brian fanning one and walking two.
Hamilton once again led the
Meigs is now 6-7 and hosts
Meigs hitters as he socked a Ashland, Kentucky at
double and single while Syracuse in a double-header
Winebrenner and Mick atl p.m. Saturday. Wall and
Davenport, got the other Baird will be on the mound
Meigs hits, a double and for the locals, and when
single, respectively.
Meigs travels to Wellston
A
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�5 ·The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursclay, June 16, 1977

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

4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, June 16. 1977

•

Sports transactions
By Un1IC"d Pr e'}.~ l ntrrnahonal
Wednesday
Baseball
P lttsbtHQtl
"Traded uftf,tv
oulflrlder Ed K1rkpalritk lo
Tcxil'&gt; lor rf'serve 1nlielder J1m
rrf'Qosi
Co!tliiQrn ia
Siqned riqhl
handed p 1tcher s Joe BlylevEm .
Ricky Sttrer . Oouq Thompson .
Si eve Trumbaver and Monle
MenoenhaH , lctl hcmded p1t ch
crs Gcorqe lucke,.- Jirn Vallone
and Mark M iller and sho rt s top
Mclltin Quarles . all selections in
thE" tr ee agrnt ttraft
Oa kland
Purchased out
fielder Willie Cra wford from
the • Hou"Jion Aslros for an
undisclosed amount Qf cash and
~ola outfielder Dennis Walling
to the Astros ' Chartesl on tarm
cl ub 1n 1

Trade Seaver? Impossible, Inconceivable, but they did!
as losing an entire team . But it's
close.
It was Seaver who carne to the
hapless Mets as a rookie in 1967 and
gave them respectability .
It was Seaver who pitched the 1969
Miracle Mets to .a pennant and
World Championship - and another
pennant in •!973.
11 was Seaver who helped lUI the
seats at Shea Stadium as the team
went into decline while across the
river, the new owner of the Yankees
spent millions to make that team a
power again.
. It was Seaver - lour-time 20 game
winner, three-time Cy Young Award
winner , a certain Hall of Farner who they called "The Franchise."
The trade culminated a long feud
with M. Donald Grant, the Mets'
board chairman and a serious
contender in any poll lor " Public
Enemy No. 1" among New York
sports fans .
Grant was pounced on by editorial
writers earlier this year for his role
In a dispute over playing Mghts at ·
Shea Stadium that nearly drove the
New York Jets football team to New
Jersey.

Editors note : The author of the
follow tug commentary described
himself as a HMets' f8n from their
Inception In 1962 until a lew hours
ago ."
. By WILLIAM GOLDSCHJ,AG
NEW YORK ( Ulli ) - The
DOOgers leave Brooklyn ? Inconceivable, New Yorkers cried after
the 1957 baseball season. But the
beloved "Burns" looked at the
bottom line, left Ebbets Field and
went west to Los Angeles.
The Giants abandon Manhattan?
Impossible, New Yorkers insisted
that same year . But the Giants took
their young centerlielder - a guy
named Willie Mays - from the Polo
Grounds and relocated to San
Francisco.
Wednesday night , Tom Seaver
went the way of the Dodgers, the
Giants, several dozen corporate
headquarters, a few hundred
garment factories , and the J ohnny
Carson Show. The Mets' superstar
pitcher was traded to the Cincinnati
Reds for four players, and New York
lost another prime municipal re-

source.
For New York , it was not the same •

Middleport
Pony team
goes 4 _0
In Pony League action,
Middleport went t 0 4-0 by
downing the host Pomeroy
A's 15-3. Britt Dodson got the
win with some relief help
from Dave Kennedy . Bill
Elkins was the big hitter as
he socked a triple and single.
Roger Carson had a triple
and double .
Jerry Fields was tagged
with the loss, and he, Ricky
Allen, and Harvey Whitlatch
combined to fan seven and
walk nineteen. Fields got the
only A's hit, a single.
The Pomeroy Royals
downed host Syracuse 8-2 as
Tom Owens got the win;
allowing just two hils, Ianning sixteen, .and walking
lour. Ron Cullurns socked a
triple for the winners, and
Cliff Kennedy got three
singles while David ·Kennedy
got two.
Chris Hupp took the loss as
. he and Ronnie Davis fanned
eleven and walked three.
John Davis got the only two
Syracuse hits, both singles.
Don Russell and Shawn
Fields combined to toss a
three-hitter as Mason downed
bost Rutland 7·1. They fanned
six and walked three. Fields
and Todd Kitchen each had
two singlea and Billy Weiss
socked a triple.
Bob Williams took the loss,
fanning live and walking
three. David Davis, Matt
Weaver and Troy Brooks
each had a single to account
for Rutland's hits.
-E astern was the only home
team to win as they came
from behind to whip Racine IJ.
4 and raise their record to 3-1.
Four Easern pitchers, Brian
Bissell, Mark Norton, Greg
Wigal and Dan Spencer,
combined to strike out nine
and walk eight. Bissell, Gene
Cole, Wigal, Spencer and
Steve Little each had two
hits.
John Pape and Kent Wolfe
combined for Racine to fan
two and walk four while
yielding thirteen hits. John
Pape had a triple and two
singles while Jonathan Rees
had a double and single to
Iea d the h1'tt'lng:.
YOUTH LEAGUE
.
,
In Little League action,
T
PI in N 2
uppers a S o. came
back to down host Tuppers

He and Seaver clashed over the
pitcher's $225,000 a year contract about half of what some other
ballplayers are earning these days
- and the Mets ' failure to bid
seriously lor free agent talent.
Seaver said he loved New York but
could not stand working for Grant
any longer. He asked to be traded.
As a trade appeared inuninent,
fans jammed the Mets' switchboard,
begging them to rea ch a
compromise. A judge offered to
mediate the dispute but wa s
rebuffed .
The Mets Wednesday night also
traded occasional slugger Dave
Kingman to San Diego, but he and
his .209 average and strikeouts In
clutch situations will not be greatly
missed.
The Mets also traded utility
infielder Mike Phillips to St. Louis.
But Phillips is one of those players
you wouldn 't know without a
scorecard.
But Seaver. Trade Seaver? The
heart and soul and pride of the Mets,
the perennial all star.
Inconceivable!
Impossible!
But they did it.

Ci

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OUR SPECIALTY
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Anyone of 100 players
ld
.
U
S
O
con wm . • . • pen
Plains No. I by 16-9. Tom
Evereit, J . Bauman, Brian
Well and M. Riddle shared
the mound duties for the
winners while Don Spurlock
went all the way lor the
losers, Jay Carpenter and J.
Davis socked homers for the
winners and Riddle had a
tMple and single.
The Rutland Dodgers won
two games recently. They
whipped. the host Wilkesville
Pirates 7-1 and the visiting
Middleport Indians 15-4. In
the Pirate game, Craig Bolin
was the winner with eight
walks and six strike outs.
Healso had two hits. Knox
was the loser, walking seven
and fanning eight. D. Markin
had the only hit for the
Pirates, a single.
In the Indian game, Jlolin
was again the winner, fan-nlng eight and walking live.
Mike Willford Jed the hitting
with three hlts while Bolin
Shawn Eads, Doug Priddy
and Eddie Bishop each had
two hits.
For the Indians, Follrod
took the loss as he and
Cremeans fanned six, walked
seven, and gave up 13 hits.
Jim Farley had a triple and
double and Allen King had
two singles to lead the hitting.

The Pomeroy Yankees kept
up their winning ways as
they downed the Pirates B-0
on a no-hitter by Roger
· Ko~alchik . The winning
pitcher fanned sixteen and
walked six as teanunates
Rhett Milhoan and John
Aeiker each had tw.o hits.
Todd Fife took the loss,
faruting eleven and walking
ten. He gave up eight hits.
Pony Standlngo
W. L
4 0
Middleport
4 0
Pomeroy Royals
3 I
Eastern
2 2
Mason
Syracuse
2 2
I 3
Racine
0 4
Pomeroy A's
0 4
Rutland

By MIKE RABUN
UPI Sports Writer
TIJLSA,Okla. (UPI) - The
oldest and most prestigious
golf tournament in the United
states opens today and the
people who run it are still
trying to grow grass.
Just how well they succeed
may determine who wins the
U.S. Open and all the acclaim
that
goes
that
that
achievement.
"There ate 153 people here
and any one of 100 of them
oould win it,'' said Arnold
Palmer, who captured this
tournament 17 years ago and
has come close several times
since. "But whoever wins it
will have won on a
magnificent golf course."
The 6,873-yard, par-70
Southern Hills Country Club
course, "ambling between the
stately trees and oveFmurky
cre.:ks, has ~een universally
pratsed thts week as a
splendid test of golf.
And the praise has been
forthcomi_n~ chiefly be~use
the trliditionaUy . tenactous
rough carefully nurtured by
the USGA has made only a

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BELOW THE JONES BOYS'
IN POMEROY

NORTH SECOND AVENUE
MIDDLEPORT. OHIO 45760
p
: 992-7161

• SALE •
CARPETS

7
14
15
1.5 1,
18

w.

Boston

L

Pet . GS

34 '24 .586
35 26 .574
n 21 .5A2
30 32 ...48.4
26 3 1 ..456
24 31 .436

New York

aa111mr t
M i lw
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Clevetnd
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71 1

81 1

23 34 .404 !01 1
West
w. L Pet. GB
35 25 .583

M inn
Chicago
31 27 .534 3
Texas
'29 27 .518 4
Call i
'29 28 .509 4 1,-,
Oakland
28 JO .483 6
Kan Ci ty
28 JO .483 6
Seatt le
26 38 .406 11
Wednesday ' s Results
Te)CiiS 6. Clev eland 0
Minnesota 3, Ca l if ornia 2
Detroit 9, Toronto 0
Mi)weukee 6, Baltimore 2
SeaTtle 6. Oakland S, 11 inns .
Todav's Probable Pitcher s
1 All Times EDT)
Oakland lLangtord 4-4) at
Seattle !Abbott '2 6L .4 :35p .m .
Milw3•Jkee (August ine ] .7) at
Baltimore ( R . May 8-SJ. 7: 30

Mon treal 2 , Houston 0
Cinci 8, Phila 7, 10 i nn ~·
los Angeles 10, Pittsbu f':,gh 1
Chicago 2, San D iego o ·
St . lo u is 9, San F ran c isco 6
Today •s Probable Pitchers
(All Times eon
St. Louis ( Denny 7-ll at san
Frar1cisco (Barr 7-SJ. 4:05p .m .
Houston {Mc laugh l in 11·3) a t
New York (Swan 3·51-t 8:05 P-!11 · p. m ..
Pitfsburgh (Candelaria 7.21 r g~t ___ Ch!ca go (Stone 6.5) at Boston
Lo s: Ange les IRau 6-rr,--1"D"!':fO fl"Th nt 4-4 ), 7 : 30p .m .
p.m.
.
To ronto
(Ga ,.-vln
7-3)
at
Ch icago ( Burris 8·5) at San Detroit (~l dryc h 2-2). 8 p .m .
Diego (Jones 4-7) , 10 p .m .
Kansas Ci t y (Leonard 4-6) at
Friday's Games
New ':fOrk ( Gu idry 4-2) , 8 p .m .
Ci ncinnati at Montreal , n ight
~al1 fornla
~ Ryan
9-5) at
Houston at New York, night
M1nnesota ( Zahn 6-4) , 8: 30 p.m .
Atl anta at Philadelptda, night
Friday 's G~mes
Chic ago at Los Ange les , night
Se_attle at Texas , n•~ht
.
St . Loui s at San Diego, night
M.nnesota at ~an C•ty_. n1ght
Oakland at Ch 1cago , ntght
Pitts bUrgh at San Fran. night .
Cali forn ia at M ilwa ukee , night
Detroi t at Cleve l and, 11ight
N ew York at Bo st on , ni ght
Balt imore at Toron to, night

SEATTLE (UP! ) - Two
brothers are ready to go into
business with hundreds of
winning tickets on Triple
Crown winner Seattle Slew .
Mark and Dave Mitchell
say they have "thousands of
tickets" from the Kentucky
Derby·and as many as 1,700
tickets from Belmont.
So far they have only 900
winning tickets from Preakness, but once they have
more they plan to sep the set
of three, suitably framed , for
$500 apiece.
Of course they don't expect
to sell many sets right away.
" We'll just rathole them for
five or six years, then bring
them out,•' said Mark. ·

Hy iiiLL MADDEN
UPI Sports Writer
. Amid the chaos of eleventhbour trades involving such
National League pitching
notables as Tom Seaver and
Rawly Eastwick, a couple of
far less heralded hurlers
quietly continued along as the
league's top winners by
chalk ing up their ninth
victories.
Rick Reuschel, the Chicago
Cubs ' journeyman rightbander hurled a fourohil , ~
victory over the San Diego
Padres to improve his record
to 9-2 Wednesday night, while
the Los Angeles Dodgers'
Rick Rhoden coasted to a IG-1
victory over the Pittsburgh
Pirates.
"This is the best defense

losses.
Steve Garvey slammed his
fourth home run in as many
games and the Dodgers
scored seven runs in the si xth
inning to give Rhoden a nice
cushion. Dusty Baker 's
bases-loaded single was the
key hit in the seven-run
inning.
Elsewhere in the NL, New
York edged Atlanta , 3-2,
Cincinnati
outlasted
Philadelphia , 8-7, in 10
innings, Montreal blanked
Houston, 2-0, and San
Francisco pt~t away st . Louis,

I've ever had, " explained

winning run on an infield out

MILWAUKEE (UP!) The Milwaukee Brewers
Wednesday night announced
th ey ha ve acquired lefthanded
pitcher
Mike
Caldwell from the Cincinnati
Reds in exchange for two
minor league players .
Caldwell, 28, has a six-year
record of34-{i0 and pitched lor
San Diego, San Francisco and
St. Louis prior to joining the
Reds last year.
In return , the Reds got
infielder Gary Pyka, 21, and
le ft -hat\dep pitcher Rich
O' Keeffe, 19, from the

Brewers'

AA

team

in

Holyoke, Mass .

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Celebration
.
Rose
m. Hartford Cooti nued from page 3
accounted for the other run.
Lerch departed with a sore
•
back
after Rose and Ken
Saturday
IS
Griffey led off the Reds'
HARTFORD, W. Va. - The
annua l West Virginia Day
celebration at the Hartford
Community Center will be
held Saturday, June 18,9 a .m.
to 5 p.m .
Activities taking place
throughout the day include a
bicycle parade, watermelon
eating con test , horses hoe
pitching, table tennis and
other games. Food will be
served all day and there will
also be a flea market.
Highlightin g the schedule
wiil be guest speai&lt;er Ja ck
Burdett , who will dedicate
the newly constructed
historical monument.
Persons attending the
celebration will be invited to
register their names which
will be enclosed in the
monument's time capsu le to
be opened in 50 years.
Mildred Chapma n Gibbs
will be a specia l speaker for
the day on the history of th e
dedication area.

Mets 6, Braves 5:
The Mets came out winners
against the Braves when
Bruce Boisclair scampered
home from third with the

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By MIKE TULLY
UPI Sports Writer
Frank Tanana didn 'l learn

painful refresher coW"se.
"When you make a bad
pitch to a great hitter like
Rod Carew, you'll gel hill'\

any new lessons Wednesday
itight, but his encounter with
Rod Carew amounted to a

every time ,t' Tanana said
after Carew's seventh -i nning

Results, line scores
Major League .Stanclings
By United Press .International

National League
102 020 010-

6 10 0

NOW s24.95

LOS ANGELES ( UP! ) The · Los Angeles Dodgers
wanted three-time Cy Young
winner Tom Seaver, but they
also fee l his trade to
Cincinnati won't hurt Los
Angele s' chan ces for th e
pennant.
When asked how Seaver's
trade will affect the pennant
race, Dodger Manager Tom
. Lasorda replied , u. .• We
always feel we can beat
teams we meet and I'm not
going to say Cincinnati can
beat us now, (although) I
can't predict the future."
SCIOTO OOWNS
COLUMBUS (UP! I -

0 K

Ma c grabbed the early lead

an~ moved ou.t to a 9-leng th
vic tory over Columbia Culver
in the featured eighth ra ce at
Scioto Downs Monday nig ht.
The wi nner , driven by Jim

Ia 15), Moff itt (6). Cor nutt (9)
and Hill. W..;.....Urrea , 2-3. L -+Moff i ll. f. 4. H Rs -'St . Lou is,
Simmons ( BJ; San Francisco,
Hill lJJ ,
American League
Texas
, 02 1 001 002- 6 B 1
Cleve
ooo ~
4 1
Marsha l l.
Devine (8 ).
Know les (9J and Sundberg ;
Bibby , Hood ( 6J. Kern (9 ) an d
Fosse . W - Marsha i L 1 0. L ~

ooo ooo

o

triple sparked Minnesota to a ·
3-2 victory over the Ca lifornia
Angels .
With Tanana and Dave
Goltz locked in a 2'2 duel in
the seventh, Carew, a .388
hitler , stepped up against
Ta nana ,
th e
majors'
winningest pitcher. Carew
tripled to right and later
scored on Craig Kusick' s
sacrifice fly, dealing Tanana
his third loss in 13

Bibi;&gt;y , 5-4

Culver paid S3.40and $3.40 fo r

Ohio Tim es

Middleport Book Store
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

FRIDAY AND SATURDAY
JUNE 17th &amp; 18th

STOP BY AND LOOK AT OUR

"BARGAIN TABLE"
- Texas Western
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- Stephens Jeans
- Denim Shirts
- Work Shoes
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g~~ -

the end of the Reds' fourgame winning _strea k when
Foster stepped to the plate
with two out in the ninth.
Then, with the count three
balls and no strikes, Foster
got just what he was looking
for - his pitch.
And the soljlld of Foster's
bat meeting the ball was
followed by the roar of the
crow d. The game-tyi ng
hom er was Foster 's loth of
the season . And the three
RB!s the Red sl ugger picked
up during the night gave him
27 in his last 21 games,
booosting his season total to
49.
One inning later the Reds
had their 14th victo ry in their
last 18 games and a five-

Hawaii, which never yel has

hosted an NFL regular
season or post-season ga me
before.
Because of the live hour
time difference fr om New
York, the game in Hawaii
may begin as early as 11 a. m .
local time to accommodate

national television.

victory since 1969 and Dave
May and Jirrl Sundberg each
droVe in two runs as Texas
completed a three-game
swee p. Marshall allowed
UJree hits in seven innings.

the initial cha rge of a
defensive lineman ; and made
it illegal for a back who lines
up inside a tight end to move
to the outside and then back
inside again to crackback
below the waist.
Other changes agreed upon
were that the coin toss may
be held at any time within
three minutes or kickoff; an '

offensive Jineman who takes
a two-point stance must have
some part of his body (which
could include his head ) within
one foot of his end of the ball
to be lcgalJy on the, line of
scrimmage; any shoe that is
worn by a player with an
artificial limb must have its
kicking surface conform to
that of a normal kicking
shoe; and if the kickers foul
during a punt before
possession changes and the
receiver is foul ed after

Rozelle also announced
that the NFL owners, who
completed their annual possession changes, penalties
meeting Wednesday af- will be offset and the down
ternoon , agreed to several replayed.
Another issue agreed upon
rules changes.
The owners clarifi ed by the NFL owners was that
restrictions on offe ns iv e voting for the Pro Bowl wou ld
blocking to include the use of be held on the Monday before
hands and arms in contacting the last regular season game
an opponent above the and that there would be two
shoulders; made it illegal to votes for each club,. one from
strike an opponent above the . the coach and one ·collective
shoulders (head slap ) during vote by the team.

WE ARE JUMPIN'
LIKE FROGS
TO SERVE
YOU!

HELLO

game winning streak.

IN THE RACE TO BRING YOU OUR

Brewers 6, Orioles 2:.

Don Money 's two- run
homer and Steve BrYe 's tWorun double keyed a six-run
second inning. Jim Slaton
earned the vic1ory with relief
help from Sal Hinds. Ken
Singleton slug ged his eighth
homer of the season for
'Baltimore.
Mariners 6, A's 5:

FRIDAY &amp; SATURDA

· JUNE 17 &amp; 18

RECEIVE 20% OFF OF
YOUR ENTIRE TOTAL
BILL DURING TitiS SALE
HOP ON IN FOR SOME,GREAT SAVINGS

ON THE T
IN
MIDDLEPORT

$3.60.
The

Kiss, returned

ninth

ra ce trlfecta
com b ina ti o n of 1-2-7 wa s
worth $417.00 and the 1 J ·

A crowd of 5,092 wagered

$308,056.

BRAS

GIRLS SLIPS

VISOR HATS ·

25~

25~

so~

ZIPPERS

BOYS
UNDERSHIRTS

THREAD
s~SPOOL

25~
MEN'S

WORK CAPS

75''.

FINEST IN LEATHER SINCE 1879

DAN'S
MJDDLEPC~T

OPEN 9-S MON .-SAT.
CLOSED THURSOAY
AfTER~

1"

25~
WITH BUILT
PILLOW

$~
DON ' t FORGET

BOYS SHIRTS

FATHER'S DAY
SUNDAY
JUN 19th

$}00

RED ,
LADIES
BLACK OR GREEN

STUFF BAG

ASSORTMENT

. SllES
6· 16

Parkinson , cove r ed th e mile

in 1 ~ 59 2-6 and r etu rned SS .OO ,
S3. 40 and SJ.OO. Col umbia

second and the show horse ,

99MILLSTREET

Anderson was visua1izing

Juan Bernhardt and La rry
Milbourne. sin gled home runs
Mntral
0 10 000 100- 2 7 l
in the bottom of the lith alter
( II inning s)
decisions .
000 000 000- 0 4 1 Oak l and
Hou s1on
"
I
just
didn
't
have
the
big
the
bad taken a 0-4 lead in
Bro.wn anQ Ca rt er ; Ri cha rd ,
ooo 0 10 11 0 n-.. 5 12 o pitch when I needed it the A's
Pentz ( 8) and Fer guson . W - · Seattle
top of the i lth 9n Jim
Brown , 4·4. L - Richard, 5-6.
2.00 000 100 1 2 ~ 6 12 2 tonight," said Tanana .
Tyrone's pinchohit single to
Norri s, Lacey {7) , COleman
score
Larry Lintz. Carlos
( 10 innings)
California reached Goltz
( 10). Tor realba (I OJ. Gi usti ( 11 l
Ph i la
410 2000000- 7 151 and (:Jewman ; Montague, Romo for two runs in the first on
Lopez
'
two-out homer had
Ci nc i
002 000 401 1- 8 17 0 (2), Ke ki&lt;h (8) a nd Stinson,
tied
the
game lor Sea ttle in
RBI singles by Joe Rudi and
L erch, Ga rber (7) , Under - Jutze. W- Keki&lt;h , 4-1. L Wood .( 101 and Boone ; Nolan , Torre al ba , J. J. HRs - Oakland, Tony Solaita.
the lOth afi er Matt Alexander
H ume ( 1}, Murray (4l. Ca ld · M c Kinney
(5) ; Sea ttl e, Ru .
In other AL games, Detroit raced home from third on
we l l (6 ). Borbon (9 ) and Bench . Jones (lJJ. St inson (3) , L opez
Pl umm e r (10) . W - Borbon , J .J . (7) .
blanked Toronto, 9-(), Texas Wayne Gross' J:&gt;-foot dribbler
L ~ Und e rwood , 3·2. HRs- Ph ila ·
zipped Cleveland, 6-0, Mil- in ·the top of the inning.
delphia , Sch mid t (14), Hebn er
Ca l i f
200 000 000- 2 9 0 waukee rapped Baltimore, 6(5 ). Luzinski ( 1.4 ) ; Ci ncinnati,
Minn
110 000 l Ox - 3 6 1
Hume (1) 1 Fos ter (15).
and Seattle nipped
Tanana and Humphrey; Goltz 2,
and Wynegar . W- Gti llz , 6-4. L ·oakland, 6-5, in 11 innings.
Ptsbgtl
000 000 010- I 9 2 - Tanana , 10·3. HR -Minneso ta.
Los Ang
011 007 IOx - 10 n 0 Sm alley (3 )
Tigers 9, Blue Jays 0:
Jones, Fors ter (6L Dem erv.
Ben Ogilvie's three RBI
(7) and Dyer 1 Rhoden , Garman Tronto
000 000 ooo....,. 0 52
( 9) a nd Yeager W- Rhoden , 9,
backed
Fernando Arroyo 's
Del
4100 21\0x -,- 9130
J ; L - Jones , 2-2. H Rs- Los
l e m a n c z y k , Bruno ( 1J, first major league shutout.
f1~~eles , Ga rvey 1131. Baker DeBarr (61 and Ashby ; Ar royo Arroyo scattered five hits and
and May . W- Arroyo , 5 3. l Lemanczyk , 4-6. HR - De troit. cruised after Detroit scored
Oglivie ( 10).
four times in the first inning.
San
DgO
000
000
0000
-4
0
Chicgo
000 101 000- 2 8 0
R. Reuschel and M itterwald ; Mil w
060 000 000- 6 9 0 Oglivie drove in a run with a
Owchinko , Spillner (6J. Saw ye r
Salt
100 100 000- 2 7 0 firstinning sacrifice fly and
(9) and Davis, Roberts (8) . W Slaton . Hinds (8) and Haney ;
Reusche l , 9-2; L - Owchinko . 1· F lanagan, McGregor (2 ) and homered in the fifth .
I.
Rangers 6, Indians 0:
Dempsey . W- Si aton . 5-6 . L Flanaga n , 2-6. H Rs --- M i l ·
Mike Marshall recorded his
St .L
000 600 300- 9 14 3 waukee , Mo n ~y (10 ). Baltimore,
San F ran
022 020 000- 6 9 2 Si ngleton (8 ).
first Amer ican l. eagu~

nightly double paid $111.60.

OPEN FRIDAY&amp; SATURDAY9:otA. M. T07 P . M.

seventh inning with singles.
And before relief pitcher
Gene Garber retired the side,
the Reds had four runs and
the !'hils a, 7-6, lead.

The Los Angeles Coliseum
will host the Pro Bowl on
Monday /light , Jan . 29, 1979
unl~ss the NFI. decides to
cljange 'from the Monday
night broadcast to Sunday
afternoons by that time. The
1980 Pro Bowl will be held at .
tl)e :-,o,ooo seat Aloha Stadium
in Hpnolulu on Sunday, Jan .
27. 1980.
Next January's Pro Bowl
will be at Tampa, Fla.
" We're just deli ghted ,"
said a s pokesman from

Carew's triple keys Twins' win

Falcone, Carr-o ll (3 ), M etzger
(4&gt;. Urrea (5) and Simmon s ;
Knepper . Williams (4). Heaver .

12Xl2 ROOM INSTALLED ................. ONLY 1103.20
12Xl5 ROOM INSTALLED ................. ONLY 1129.00

NEW YORK (UP!) - Fun
in the sun was the order lor
the day as Los Angeles and .
Honolulu were selected
Wednesday as sites lor lh~
1979 and 1980 Pro Bowls
respectively , Nationa l
Football League Commissioner Pete Rozelle an-

FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY • JUNE 17th &amp; 18th

RUBBER BACK SHAG
6 ROLLS
IN STOCK ·.

liTTLE AMBASSADORS
1 LB. $4.l5 .zLBS. $L85

SQ~

COMMERCIAL
CARPET

'1 0 95 EACH

Honolulu and LA selected

nounced .

~-

A tl an ta
000 120 200--5 6 0
Matla ck, Apocdada (7 ), lock
wood
(9 ) ;;~ nd
S tear n s ;
M claughlin , Collin s (5), ·K l i ne
(6), Ca pr a (8) , Camp (8) and
Pocoroba . W- ARodaca, 2 · ~ . ~ ­
j:apra. 1-7. HRs- N ew York ,
Boisclair {2) ; Atlanta , Bur .
roughs ( 16&gt;. Gaston (l ).

REGAnA ·

1

· ::;:;:; :;:;:: ::::::: :.:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::::::::::::::::::::~:·

Reuschel of his sudden in the eighth inning . Boisclair
success this season .
also had a two-run homer .
It was Reuschel's firs t Giants 9, Cardinals 6:
shutout, but he has nowgone
Four Giant players each
26 consecutive inn in gsc: drove in two runs including
without a llowing an earn~: Keitli..J:I.ernandez who had a
run . He struck out nine, '" seoe(•th-inning double. Ted
walked one and allowed only Sirruilons had three hits and
one Padre as far as second two RBI for St . Louis, while
base. He got the only run he Garry Templeton .snapped a
needed in the fourth inning 6-6 tie in the seventh with an
when Gene Clines led off with RBI single .
a triple and came home on an Expos 2, Astros 0:
infield out by Bill Buckner.
Jackie Brown scattered
Meanwhile, the Dodgers, four hits for his first National
who lost out in the bidding for League shutout while Wayne
Seaver! can at least hnd Garrett arid Gary Carter
solace m the steady pitching each drove in a run for
by Rhoden , who spaced eight Montreal. Brown 4-4 struck
hits in eight innings en route out four and walked ihree .
to ~is ninth win against three

N .Y .

WITH

Open Nlghlslil9
.. ..

1
1

26 3.4 ..433 13'
West
W. L
Pet . GB

40 21 .656
Ci nci
32 27 .542
San Fran
26 35 .426
Sa n Diego
27 38 .41 5
Houston
25 37 403
Atlanta
23 40 .365
Wednesday's Results
New York 6, Atlanta 5

DAD HAPPY

112 E. MAIN

51 2

31 28 ,5'25 8
26 32 A48 12'

Los Ang

804 WEST MAIN STREET

3 ROLLS IN STOCK
WITH HEAVY THICK
PADDING

BETTY OHLINGER
102 E. MAIN
POMEROY, OHIO

Eut

NiiJitionat League
Chic ago
Sl . Louis
Pittsbgh
Phil a
Montr eal
New York

NEW YORK (UPI ) - The
New
York
Yankees
Wednesday night atoquired
catcher-first baseman Oiff
Johnson from the Houston
Astros in exchange for a pair
of minor leaguers, shortstop
Mike Fischlin and left handed
pitcher Randy Niemann .

Amer l ca11 League

Pf"en International

19

~JUIE11!WI

Marguerite's Shoes

STANDINGS Reuschel, Rhoden
keep on winning

es

ew

I

:-:·: :-:·:·:-:·:·:·:·:·:·:-:-:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:=::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;

•--·--~·-----...:

ITCHY,
BURNING TOES!
EASE FIERY PAIN

lN ONE HOUR or your 79c buk.
AppiF qukk·dry in• T· 4·L. atronr
fun•h:lde, to quiet lt~h, burn Jn
MINUTES. Altu flne · lor •weaty.
od•ra•u feet. Try it for ... PPY re·

!

r-~· -----~-l

•

eport

1

....,_..,GEN

token ·appearance, growing
sli ghtly more than three
inches tall.
Less than 24 hours before
Dennis B. Tizani of Madison ,
Wis., was scheduled to hit the
first ball of the tournament at
7 a .m . CDT, members of the
USGA staff began spraying
"giberillic acid," over all 30
acres of the Southern Hills
rough .
·
The potent fertilizer is
designed to elongate plant.
roots and promote speedy
growth and just how well it
works Is a matter of opinion .

!.

Caldwell ro the M ilwaukee
Brewers
ror m1nor
teague
Pil cher
R1Ch O'Keefle and
m•nor teaqvt' •n l 1elder Gary
Pvka , purchasect mtnor league
ut•\lly '" ' ' tder Rick Auerbach
N ew Yorlr. Mels
Traded
P•lcMr Tom Seaver to lhe
Cmcinna t1 RedS tor pitcher Pa t
Za ch ry , tnfielder Doug Flynn
and r111nor league ouu lelders
Steve Henderson
and
Dan
N or m a n ; lraded outt,elder
Dave- Kingman lo San 0 1eQO for
•n f ielder Bobby Valentine and
IE.&gt;ft handed pi tcher Pau l Sie
bert ; 1raded shortstop M ike
Phillips
to the
Sf.
Louis
Cardinals for ou rt ielder Joel
Youngblood .
New York Ya nkees Ac
qu~red · catcher first
basemen
Cliff Johnson from ttle Houston
Astros for m inor league short ·
stop M ike
F ischlin.
m inor
league
left handed
p itcher
Randy Nl emann and a ptaVer
to be named later .

IN

SLIPS

$1.00

I RACK

MEN'S SHIRTS
KNIT
BAN LON

$2()()

OPEN FRIDAY
AND SATURDAY
TILL 8:00

�6- The Daily Sentinel, Middle}Xlrt-Pomeroy, 0., Thw·sday. June 16. 1!'77

7 - The Daily Sentinel, Mlddle}Xlrt·Pomeroy,O., Thursday, June 16, 1917

Life-Lites project underway

Contract talks coming soon

The State of Ohio has
start ed a new highway
prog r am
acrord!n,g
to
Di vis ion
10
H1 gh w&lt;1y
Di rector . Glenn Smith of
Galli}Xllis.
The project will consist of

By ANIJREW r.ALLAGHER
CHAHU: STON , W. Va .
1UPI t - Showing no signs of
strain rrom a bitter campaign, rc·dected United Mine
Workers President Arnold
Miller says he is ready to
tackle the coal industry.
fn the aftermath of the
Tuesday election , los~r Harry
Patri ck , 47 , indicated he
might step down as UMW
secretary treasurer ,
And Lee Roy Patterson, 42,
of Madi$&lt;Jnville, Ky., who
came in second in the threeway race, ha:S made no
comment on his earlier threat
to file s uit to overt urn the
elef.1.ion . Patterson orfered a
grudgi n g
concess io n
statement and then went
. shoppin,::: for a new &lt;"fir .

marking numerous highwa ys

lik e airport runways. Before
the snow fli es, contractors

are ex-pectM to have most of
the ha.lf · milliun rcflec t J\'e
ma rkers in~talled in high
al'Cident frequency a rea .
The ma rk e rs will also
become pa11icularly valuable
UJ rain and on foggy nights.
Ac cor di ng
to
ODOT

Directo r Da vid L. We1r,
traffi c enginee rs
identifi ed nearly

have
J, OOO

specific loc ations where the
markers will be in&gt;talled .

Those areas include curves,
approaches to bridges, intersection a reas, approaches
to stop signs, areas from
which turns are m8de and
separations between traHic

lanes.
·
Life-Lite-locations in Meigs
CountY a re {route, location

LIGHTS SHOW.TilE WAY - When white lines lose their reflecti\;ty or wear out , and
when it 's rainy or foggy. the raised reflective highway marker will guide motol"ists on rural
Ohio roads brightening th e paU1 through the darkness.

SR 346 and SR 689 l'f, mile
'3 and SH 681 S. Darwin.
US 33, interchange . Jet. US ca~t of Vinton County .Line.
name) :
SR 684, intersection , Jet.
:13 and SR 7 and 124.
SR 7, intersection , Jet. SR 1
SR M4 and SR 692 Pageville.
SR 124. intersection, Jet .
and 124 .
SR 124, Night Accident
SR 124 and SH 325 Hanesville.
SR 7, intersection, J et. SR 1
SH 124 , intersection, J et. Area , East of Syracuse C. L.
and SR 143 .
SR 124, Night Accident
SR 124 and SR 338 Great
Bend . .
Area. West of CR-5 .
SR 1, 2 to 4 Lane. North of
SR 124, intersection, Jc1.
Pomeroy '4: mile. S . F iv e
SR 124 and SR 338.
SR 124. intersection, Jet. Points.
SR 7, 2 to 4 Lane, Pomeroy
SR 124 and SR 338.
Dvpass.
SR 124, intersection, J et.
US 33, 2 to 4 Lane , South of
SR 124 and SR 248 Long
Da rwin.
Bottom .
US 33. 2 to 4 Lane, South of
SR 124, intersection, Jet.
SR.124 and SR 681 Reedsville. Jet . US 33 and SR 1 and 124 .
US 33 . Curves, Jet . US 33
SR 143, inter section, Jet.
and
SR 7 and 124 to Pomeroy
SR 143 and SR 684 Harrisonville.
c. !..
By MILTON RICHMAN
US 33, Curves, South of
UP! Sportl Editor
.. . SR 143, intersection, Jet.
Darwin.
SR 143 and SR 692.
SR 346, intersection , Jet.
NEW YORK ( UP!) - One evening earlier th is season, Larry
Hisle did a couple of things that were completely ou t of
character for him .
·
The fir st thing he did was come up with a runner on third
base , an important one for the Minnesota 'IWins, and faiJ t o
drive him in. Larry Hisle doesn 't do that too often .
The S un be~ms 4-H Club ha s conducted a Tag Da y in
He then went into the walkway leading from the Twins ' held two meetings recently. Tu pper s Plains. For refr es h ~
dugout in Bloomington ar.d slarruned his bat against the wall so At the May 27 meeting ten ments the members ate the
har~, he tnipp"J ; ome of the pa mt off the wall. Nobody saw
members and one advisor food they had prepared . Th e
k...rn do it, which was just as wd' , L-c•.:ause even if theY had, attended and at th e June 9 next meeting will be on June
they wouldn't believe it. Larry Hisle NEVER does anything .meeting seven members and 16 at the home of Mrs .. Ritchlike that.
two advisors were present. ie. ~ Conn ie Stout.
"Right at the time, I was disappointed I didn't produce, bUt
T HE HI LLBILLIES 4·H
Bu si'ness disc usse d in •ouon I went home from the ball park that night I wid myself cluded dates for a pizz a Club met June 9 at the
uanging'my b• t "~"in.;t the wall like that hadn't'a~complished party, a picnic at For~ed Run McGuire h ome \l{ith 11
i t"dng, ' t ha Bai;i. · · 11i.bdn tt help me at all .''
members 1 three advisors and
and a Fondu e Party.
Larry Pi• le has been in the big leagues nine years now and
For their project lesson one visitor in atten dance . The
no One has ever SE"-t'n him lose his temper. No one has ever even each m ember takin g a group discussed Tag Day ,
heard him raise hi ~ \'uice (he always speaks just barely above C&lt;loking project brought a talked about clothing judging
a whisper), but ther e is no real need for him to shout or carry dish that they had prepared an d were told the dates of
on. Not the way he plays ball.
.
and the gi rls with sewing King a nd Queen contest.
He does it without.any fuss or fanfare, and with next to no projec ts
Da lla s McGuire talked
brou ght their
publicity, either ; because he never pushes himself into the material.
about gun sa fety and showed .
forefront. Yet he's right there at the top of all American
Instead o£ recre ation the some differeni kinds of guns.
League hitters with 56 runs batted in, very cl6se ro the top in mem.be rs went out and They a lso had some ta rget
home nms with 15 and he has nothing to apologize for with his
.311 batting average either.
The rest of the Twins ca n't fi gure why their easy-to-talk-to, signed Ius contract yet, but the J().year-&lt;&gt;ld Ohio-born
hard-hitting left-fielder doesn 't get mor e publicity, a nd it outfielder doesn 't sound like he has any desire to leave the ball
bothers some of them tliat he doesn 't. It doesn 't upset Hisle, club.
though.
" I love it here," he ·says.
" I guess I'm like any other hwnan being in that I like
Minnesota Manager Gene Mauch likens Hisle to Jackie
credit," he confesses. "But ! Suppose you'd say I'm old - Jensen, who played the outfield for the Yankees , Senators and
fashioned. If I honestly had m y wish, I'd prefer rriy name out of Red Sox through the '50s.
the paper rather than in it. To .me, when any of my tearrunates
"Any time J ensen would do something outstanding on the
come over after a game, shakes my hand, and say~ ' Larry, you ball Held, he 'd never get carried away by it,'' says Mauch .
dld a good job ,' that makes my day."
"Same way with Larry . But if he didn't do an}thing, it would
When Hisle first came up with Philadelphia, everyone in hurt Jackie, and when he doesn' t do anyth ing, it hurts Larry baseball saw him as another budding superstar. He hit 20 sometim es a little too much ."
homers his first full year with the Phils in 1!169, but when he
Strictly on his own , witho ut being aware Mauch makes the
managed only half that many and his ba tting average nose- same comparison, Griffith also says Hisle and ' Jensen are on
dlved more than 60 points the following season, most of those the same order .
·
who were hailing him only the year before quickly began
"Jackie was more temperamental , though . He'd Oy off the
writing him off.
roost once in awhile. Hisle doesn't. He's just a ballplayer who
calvin Griffith , the Twins' owner, wasn 't among them .
plays the game without bothering anybody.''
11
1 remember the first time I ever saw Hisle," he says . ·~ It
Except the other team.
was in an exhibition game his first year up with Philadelphia
and he hit a ball so hard and so far, I said if I ever get a chance
to get that man, I will."
Griffith didn't forget. He was the one who pushed for the
Twins to get Hisle after the Phillies traded him to the Dodgers
and the Dodgers dealt him to the Cardinals. The Twins got
Hisle from the cards during the winter of 1972.
" He 's unique," Griffith says. " I'm not only talking about
him as a ballplayer, but as a human being. You have to be
proud to have a man like him on your club. He's a genuine
person and never says anything detrimental about anybody ."
The Twins' boss says this about Hisle even though he hasn 't
type , and location road

SR 7, intersection, Jet. SR 1
and SR 248 Chester .
SR 7, interse&lt;'lion .. Jct . SR 1
and SR 681 Tuppers Plains.
US 33, intersection , Jet . US
33 and SR 681 N. Darwin.
US 33, intersection, Jet . US

Sport Parade

Meigs 4-H Club News

Two persons were injured
in two of five traffic accidents
investigated Wednesday by
the Gallia-Meigs Post State
Highway Patrol.
The first occurred at 11:20
a .m. on S~ 143, near Ca r·
penter where a tru ck
operated by David Nolan, 23,
Rt. 2, Patriot , went left of
ce nter causing a pick-up'
truck operated by Rodney
Howery, 35, Rt. 3, Albany, Jo
go off the right side or the
road and roll down an em·
ba nkment .
There was minor damage
to Nolan's semi sin ce it
struck a bridge a hutment
after the initial contact.
truck
wa s
Howe ry 's
demolished . Howery was
tak en to Vetearns Memorial'
Hospital for treatment of
minor injuries. Nolan was
charged with driving left of
center.
Ted Bailey , 37, Rt. I,
Galli}Xllis, was charged with
DWI following an unusual
accident ~t 12 :50 p.m. on SR 7
·pra c.t ice . Mike McG uire gave
a demonstration on hand and
power tools and showed his
project he is working on ;
Mark .McGuire s howed parts
of trees and products from
trees for his Exploring our
Forests PI'Oject .
The McGture family served
refreshments-:--to th e mem~
bers. The next meeting will
be July 5 at 2 p.m. at the
Na pier home. - Opal Dyer.
THE FIVE POINT Star
Stitchers J .L.'s met on June 6
at the home of Mary Mora
with 13 members and 3 advisors in attendance.
The members discussed
thei r trip to Cincinnat i,
decided to be in the variety
show at Middleport on Thurs·
day, June 16, and. to have a
Ooat in the Regatta Parade.
Mrs .- Donald Mora and
Mary served refreshments to
th e members. The next
meeting will be July 5 at
Forked Run State Park. This
will be a potluck picnic for
members with swimming and
hiking for recreation .Carolyn Bowen.

FRIDAY AND SATURDAY
JUNE 17th and 18th

INClUDES A GROUP OF
GIFT ITEMS OF CERAMICS,
NEEDLEWORK &amp; JEWELRY
ALSO A GROUP OF JUNIOR
AND MISSES SLACKS,
SWEATERS l TAPES REDUCED

40%

TO

45%

CANVAS KEDS
AND lACROSSE

. SSOO PAIR

'3.00

GROUP

PAIR

GROUP

MEN &amp; WOMEN'S

MEN'S SHOES

CANVAS SHOES

'3"

S500PAIR ,

CHILDREN'S SHOES
AND SANDALS

'3"

PAIR

---~
20% off on Father's Day Gifts excluding sale items

205 N. 2nd AVE.
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

•

heritage house

TOP- LEMON DR

REG .

DISH
DmRGENT

72$

Quart Bottle

PLAYTEX BABY
NURSER ~IT
REG.
.IB .95

$595

LAWN
SPRINKLERS

STRAWBERRY
PRESERVES

_$249

REG.
SJ.SO

Ali
SUNGLASSES

20% OFF
ALL

HOT TOP

LATHER
DISPENSER

CANDLES
1fz PRICE

'12"

VILLAGE PHARMACY
Middleport, o..

271 N. 2nd
992 -5759

Platform Rockers

• aoo

• aoo

'14

.
K.D.

9xl2 ROOM
SIZE CARPETS

•saoo

Social
Calendar

TROPICAL BLEND
SUNTAN LOTION

57 .4.5

32"X32"X9"
WALNUT FINISH

w·., ooot me : ::u ::u.s.·sys···

74e

REG .

REG.
$14.99

"I Am Talking to Myself.
What Am ·I Saying?" was the
program toplc presented by
Mrs . Allen Eichinger at the
Tuesday night mee!ing of the
Pomeroy United Methodist
Church Women at the church.
The program material was
taken from the UMW
program book written 'by
Beth Bishop. lis purpose was
to examine the process of
talking to one's self, to
encourage development
of
thls
abillty
In
order
to
heighten

SMUCKERS

SOFA BEDS

PAIR

ET CETERA BOUTIQUE
"GIF'iS AND JEANS SHOP"

FRIDAY AND
SATURDAY
JUNE 17th &amp; 18th

FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY

91

LANGSVILLE - Mr. and
Mrs. Donald Barnett Sr. held
open house Sunday, June Sin
honor of their son, Donald Jr .,
a recent graduate of Meigs
High School.
A buffet luncheon was
served to the guests also a
ca ke
Inscribe-d
" Congratulations to Donald."
Attending were Donald 's
sis sisters : Mrs. Debbie
Hazlett, Mn. Martha Elliott,
Mrs. Claudia Smith, Mrs.
Naomi Marhoshi of Lorain,
Mrs . Sandra McAvena of
E lyrta, Mrs. Donna Campbell
of Roanoke , Va. , a friend ,
Cedric Arnold, also of
Roanoke, Va., his grandporents, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur
Cain of Vinton and aunt and
· uncle, Mr. and Mrs . Vernon
Eppley of Clearwater, Fla.
other relatives were Mr.
and Mrs. Cliff Callihan of

LINOLEUM RUGS

THURSDAY
MIDDLEPORT
Child
Conservation League potluck
plcnlc at roadside park going
north on Route 33 at 6:30
tonight for members and
famllies and ptospec ti ve
members and families . .
ROCK SPRJNG BETTER
HEALTH CLUB, 1:15 p.m.
Thursday at the home of Mrs.
, PhyUis Skinner with Mrs.
Nancy Grueser to be hostess.
Mrs. Judy Humphreys will be
program leader, and Mrs.
: Ethel Grueser, will conduct
the contest.
MAGNOUA CLUB, Thurs·
: day, home of Miss Bernice
· Ann Dursi, 7:30 p.m. White

Monda v thru Thursday

&amp;

Clothes Hampers

AM.fM RADIO, TAPE PLAYER,
RECORD CHANGER CABINET

AIRUNE REGULATION
COLUMBUS(UPI) - After
a week to think about it, the
Ohio House Wednesda y
reversed itself and adopted a
resolution asking Congress
not to lessen the federal
government's regulation or
the domestic airline industry.
One JWJe 7, the resolution
was defeated because less
than SO representatives voted
· for it. Rep . Ike Thompson , DCleveland,
mo ved
to
" reconsider" the defeai of his
. resolution and Wednesday,
convinced 54 of his colleagues
to approve it.
The only change in the
resolution
was
the ·
substutition of "chairman "
for "director" in a referen ce ·
to the Federal Aviatio n .
Administrati-on . Rep. William
G. Batchelder, RMedina,
pointed out there is no
~~director"· of the FAA, but
Ulere is a "chairman .·:
Forty
representatives
voted uno" the second time

brand new I00 per l'E!nt cotlun
bedspread. I have tried
vinegar, lighter fluid and
kerosene to remove it and am
sure that by now the stain is
set. ! have thought about
dyemg the s pread but am not
sure il would work aS the
sla ms turned white after the
bpread was washed. - MARY

M.

1 buy who!~ chickens as
they are cheaper an&lt;! put half
of the cut up pieces in the i&gt;ot·
tom of u bread wrapper, give
the bag a couple of twists to
divide it and then add the rest
of the chicken. Either a whole
or half chicken is then easily
available.
Sort raw fruits and
vegetables promptly. Use first the things that are the most
perishable and perhaps not
quite as fresh looking as
others. I open plastic bags of
potatoes and think they keep
better when dryer. Cabbage,
c't!lery, etc. will keep for days
if one manages the moisture.
I put them in bread wrappers
and leave the ends open. If he' ; slllr t to get too dry I
moisten them a bit and close
the end of the bag more. ff
food gets too damp I trim it,
put it in a dean bag and open
the end more .
I even put raw peaches, apple sauce, t:ooked· noodles ,
etc. in bread wrappers in
meal-sized amounts, with
twists in between. The same
goes For sausage , Hnk
fashi on , and then freeze. You
can then remove just the
amount needed and get it
ready for cooking much
quicker than when in a
regular conta iner.
Lastly - do not be too " persnikity " · to eat leftovers.
Yours· for cheaper grocery
bills. -LEONA.
Polly will send you one of
her s igned thank-you
newspaper coupon clippers if
she uses your favorite Pain~
ter, Peeve or Problem in her
co lumn . Wr ite POLLY'S
POINTERS in care of this
newspaper.

Pickens. In regular business
a social evening to· be held at
the church on July 10 was
disc ussed, the purchase of a
television antenna for the
parsonage was approved, and
plan s for Va cation Bible
School June 20-24 were made .
·A new name for the class
was discussed after which it
was decided that members
should bring suggestions to
DINNER HELD
the next meeting August I~ at
. Mr. and Mrs. Allen Downie the home of · Katherine
and children Debbie and Russell. ·
Devotions were given by
E lizabeth hosted a birthday
Dan
Harrison who read I
dinner honoring Mrs. T. A.
Peter,
I: 22-24 and discussed
Downie Wednesday ni ght. T.
"Our Common Goal
the
topic
A. Downie also attended.
in Christ."
Attending the meeting were
the minister and his wife,
CANCELLED
Gaile and Karen Mraz; Terry ·
A meeting of the Past and Tammy Pickens, Dan
Matrons of Evangeline Harrison , Guy Ruby, Donna
Chapter Order of the Eastern Kay Hysell, Larry, Bonnie
Star, scheduled for next week and Scott Pickens , Nancy and
has been cancelled. Next Carol Morris , Katherine
meeting will be held on the Russell, Linda Blake, Herbie
third Friday of July at the Noel, Etta Mae Ellis, Betty
home of Mrs. Rosemary . Will, Lenore Marlin and
Maggie Hoying.
Lyons.

The Young Adult Class of
the Bradford Church of Christ
met recently at Fort Meigs .
President. Nancy Morris
opened the meeting with the
Secretary' s report given by
Linda
Blake and the
treasurer's report by Larry

.•1o••

The Youth Dept. of the
Middleport United Pentecostal Church sponsored a
wiener roast and cooko ut
Friday evening at the Carl
Nottingham farm outside of
Chester . Following the
wiener ro ast , a wagon ride in
the country was enjoyed.
Attending th e cookout were
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Kelly,
Jenell , Tommy and Lori
Kelly , Mr . and Mrs. Danny
Richards , Mt, and Mrs. Roy
Nort hup , Christin~ , Kevin
and Paul NorthuP. Mr. and
Mrs. David Acree. Aaron and
Stephanie Acree; Mr. and
Mrs . William Van . Meter,
Mr~. Joyce Sauters, Charles,
Tim, J oy and Cherri Sauters,
Mrs. Amanda Eastman, Mrs.
Theresa Shaffer, Mrs. Edie
Zirkle, Michelle and Pamela
Zirkle, Mr. and Mts. Carl
Nottingham, Carla , Ed , Jeff
and Jason Nottingham, Mrs.

BIG SOUND IN A COMPACT
REG. 1249.95

SALE $18r

. Special Sal_e Price• on Frigidaire and_Admiral
1arat1~n. Freezers"

MIDDLEPORT, O.

••

Women's Sandals
1 Group Values to 110.99 ....... NOW 11 &amp; 13.00
1 Group Values to 112.99 NOW 15.99 to 110.99

1 Group Values

to 118.99 ........ .... NOW 18.00

1 Group Values to 120.99 ...... -... .. Now '5.00
1
Values to 122.99...... .... NOW 110.00

BAND PRACTICE
RACINE-A p radice fo r
the Southern Local High
School Band will be held from .
5 to 6:30p.m. tonight.
SELECTED

1 Group Values to sg,99 ............... NOW 16.00
1 Group Values to 17.99 ........ ..... NOW '5.00

RACINE-New majorettes
for the Southern Local High
School Marching Band have
been selected. They are Cindy . Patterson, Barb ·Theiss,
Crista Beegle, Carol Morris,

\'iiii

Cindy Warden, and Carrie
Ginthe r.

THE SHOE BOX
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

LADIES

COITON DRESSES
Reg . $12 .95

SALE

REDUCED 30%
LADIES
SPORTSWEAR .

LAD IES . SIZES 6 fo 20

by Cata lina , Jant ze n :
Codt:lington and Lori Lynn

ALL WEATHER
· COATS
REDUCED 30%

LOOK FOR 2 SPECIAL RACKS
OF SAVINGS DURING OUR

t,

MEN'S JUMP SUITS
REDUCED 30%

PRICE
AT

BIG
DISCOUNTS

lARGE VINYL
RECliNERS

%PRICE
FEDDERS 5,000
BTU AIR
.CONDITIONERS

16999

5

REG. $30 to $38

SALE PRICED •21 TO '26.60
1 LOT MEN'S

MEN' S

LEISURE SUITS .
REDUCED 20%
REG . 544 .00 to $90 .00
1

SALE PRICE 35.20 to

SUITS &amp; SPORl COATS
Reg . S40 fo S90

SALE 120 TO 145

SPORT COATS
Summer and Year Around

REDUCED 20%

MEN'S PANTS
DRESS &amp; .CASUAL

REDUCED 20%
MEN ' S

MEN ' S WHtTE .

MEN 'S

PAINTER PANTS
REG. St 1.00 PR .

SALE $7.95 PR.

Windbreakers and
Lightweight Jackets
REDUCED 20%

SHOP AND SAVE NOW DURING OUR _REGAnA
WEEKEND SALE

If

,-ou

lll\e

BAHR CLOTHIERS
N. 2ND AVE.

Fr0Q1 , atlck OUI
your long ue

Middleport, o.
STOP IN AND SHOP OUR NEW
ELRY DEPT.

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

J

I

1 Group Values to 117.99............ NOW 18.00
1 Group Values to 110.99 ........... NOW 16.00

• I

106 N . 2nd Ave.

MIDDLEPORT, CJ.

Women's Dress &amp; Casual Shoes

FRIDAY AND SATURDAY

INGELS FURNITURE

WESTERN AUTO

JUNE 17 &amp; 18
BROKEN SIZES '
NO RETURNS

LADIES
BWUSES
REDUCED 20%
LADIES DRESSES
HALF SIZE MISSES
by Berkshire, Hobnobbe r &amp;
City Scene

REDUCED
I RACK
LAD t E S
PANTSUiTS .
DRE SSES.
SLACKS ,
SHOR TS , BIB SHORTS &amp;
BLOU SES.

REDUCED UP TO 60%

'FURNITURE

ANO MANY OTHER ITEMS

oF SHOEs

FRIDAY AND SATURDAY

· PANTSUITS, SKIRTS
AND JACKETS

I

All lAWN

ALSO GREAT SAVINGS ON POOLS SWING SETS - FANS : BARBECUE GRILLS BICYCLES

'Sidewalk 'Sale

Ca rol Craft, Jeannine,
Robbie and Debbie Craft ,
Mrs. Thelma Farnsworth,
Jimmy, David and Danny
Fountain.

LADI&lt; S

I

1/2

DURING THEIR ...RED TAG DAYS"
MANY GREAT ITEMS
FOR FATHER'S DAY GIVING

with one stunnln~ theater s uit
- a black jacket with hand·
pa inted flower s in muted
co lor s . He liked paisley
shi rting for blo uses and shirts
with hMdsome brown tweed
suits , smocked yokes, and
smocking at hip leyel on

Youth enjoy cookout

,I

ENI) TABLES

WESTERN AUTO

s killed seamstresses can do .
with patte rns fr om the
originals.
Most of the lin e-for-line
copies were m or e co nservative than far out , but at
lea st the patte rn people
showed some of them in sizes
14 and up, larger than •
model's size 6 to 8 figure.
Styles featured the major
trends for fall . There were
tailored suits with vests ;
mixture of patterns, wit h
s t ripes
combined
with
florals; blouson or bloused
tops with drawstring at the
hipline topping slim skirts ;
full , ci rc ular skirts with
narrow fitt ing jackets ;
turtlenecks tu cked under
almost every pullover jacket
or shirt ; ponchos ; tunic looks
and jumpers with complete
dresses beneath .
Evening wear produced a
little more razzle-dazzle with
slit-to-t he-th igh skirts and
billowing silhouettes.
Each day this week and
next, the visiting reporters
are seeing at least four ·
collections from individual
New York manufacturers.
One of the stars Wednesday
wa s the Egyptian-born
Rizkallah for Don Friese of
New York.
. Rizkallah used lots of black
and navy velvet, plain or -

REDUCED 20%

COFFEE &amp;

FRIDAY AND SATURDAY
JUNE 17th &amp;18th
SHOP

49N. 2ND

'

POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - My son
got model ca r glue on his

By I:Av PA ULEY
UPI Senior Edilor
NEW YORK (UP! 1 - Du
Pont, which manufactures
syntheHc fabrics. and Vog ue
Patterns, which turns out
copycat blueprints of th e
highest fa s hion originals
from Paris, London and New
York, have a message for the
American women : Sew it
yourself and save.
The two finns are staging a
two·week fa s hi on show
designed to prove the point.
The home sea mstress can
produ ce a design from
Christian Dior , for a C&lt;\Ot and
coordinated dress, for around
$72
including
pattern,
notions, lining and interfacing.
If she bought the Paris
or iginal , it would cost $1 ,100.
Sewing patterns have come
a long way from the once hohum designs with th e
fi•!li-ative
label
"homemade " written all over
them. Now it 's chic to check
the patterns and fabri c
departments and select your
own Paris, New York or
London design offerings .
A presentation Wednesday
afternoon , as part of the twoweek look at fall and winter
fashions for reporters from
around the nation, showed
what skilled and not-so·

Friday &amp; Saturday, June 17th &amp; 18th

Saturday 9:30 to S

Friday9 : 10io8

Glue sl4ins bedspread

Bradford adults meet

•a••

OPEN

N. 2ND AVE .

Polly Cramer

DEAR MARY - I preswne
the spread is some color and
dyeing seems to be your only
recourse. But I think you
should use color remover on
the entire spread before
proceeding with the dyeing or
you may end up with the spots
the sensitivity of one's being lig hter. Follow the
leelings, and to grow in un- diret·tiorts on both the color
derstanding of the feelings of remover and dye as they are
self awareness affirming self given on '.he boxes. _ POLLY.
DEAR POLLY - I want to
dignity and worth and af·
!inning the dignity and worth tell those who do macrame
in others.
. , that the wooden spools the
A discussion period Mth thread comes on make pretty
questions and . answers " beads" for hanging planfollowed Mrs. Eichinger's ters . They can be left as is or
presentation . She also shared be painted or varnis hed. a humorous poem entitled LORRAINE.
" What is a. Father? " and had
DEAR POLLY - I would
prayer·
like to pass on some of my
Mrs. Gera14 Wildermuth food, money, time and !emhad charge of the meeting per savers. Buy in quantity
and anno unced a school of and things that are on sale ·if
Christian Missions to be held possible. Divide meat into
at Ohio Northern University useable sized portions (hamat Ada July 10-14 . Mrs. burger patties, ham slices,
Robert Warner is planning to etc.) and spread out in plastic
attend.
bags or on trays to freeze unThe meeting closed with til dry enough ro pa ckage
the reading of a prayer , " Let compactly without them
Us Be Thankful" with sen- s ticking
together.
Any
tence prayers from th e desired amount is then easily
group.
available. This also works
.Mrs. V . D . Edwards and with green beans, peas and
Mrs: T. A. Downie served serving sized toppinos of
re£reshrnents .
whipped cream.

• ROSE GARDEN CLUB,
' Tuppers Plains, will hold its
annual picnic for members
and their families at the
·home of Mr . and Mrs. Floyd
;stout, at6 p.m. Thursday.
• EASTERN HIGH SCHOOL
·BAND rehearsal, 7 to 8 :30 in
the high school band room in
preparation for the regatta
,parade.
' WOMEN's ASSOCIATION
Thursday night at the Middleport
First
United
' Presbyterian Church, 7:30
·p.m . Mrs. Walter Waddell
will give the devotiorui . Pro·
gram will be " ! Love to Tell \aroWld.
the Story" by Mrs. Velma
Rue and Mrs. Mildred Karr.
Hostesses will be members of
located near Carpenter,
· Group 3.Fathers Soc Sent
Sunday.
Basket dinner at
FRIDAY
noon,
hymn
sing at 1:30 p.m .
CHURCH of Christ at Keno
Pastor,
Rev;
John Elswick.
revival, Friday through
Freedom
Gospel
REVIVAL
Sunday, 8 J).m. each evening
with Steve Hill, Kentucky Mission at Bald Knobs now
· Christian College, evangelist, through Sunday, 7:30 p.m.
and Scott Bryant, also from nightly. The Rev. 0 . G .
Kentucky Chr!stllm College, McKinney, Pastor . Public
as song leader; public in· invited.
MONDAY
vjted.
FRATERNAL Order or
Eagles Aerie 2111 Monday 8
SUNDAY
HOMECOMING service at p .m . All members urged to
Mt. Unlon Baptist Church, attend.

CONSOLE STEREO
ONLY 39" WIDE

Ewington , Evelyn Denny of
Vinton. Mr. and Mrs. Dorsey
Parsons of Apple Grove,
Gladys Sayre of Wilkesville,
Mrs. Mildred Strausbaugh
and Cindy of Wilkesville, Mr.
and Mrs. Leo Sayre and
rlaughter Tricia of Proctorville .
others attending were Mr.
and Mrs. Carl Gorley, Dena
Hof£man , Mr . and Mrs.
Charles Neutzley , Caro l
Jean , Cheryl, Cathy and
Charles, Jr ., Esther Kennedy
and Sally, Joann Council and
Paul, Gladys McGee and
Carol, Mr. and Mrs. Harold
White, all of Langsvill e, Mr.
ant! Mrs . David Dunkel ,
David, Jr ., Josh and
J eanett-e,
Pam
Davis,
Beverly Spires and Tinuny
Bob and Karen Brown and
daughter , Crysta l, all of
Salem Center .

UMW examine talking to self

at Save More Service Station.
State troopers said Bailey's
car turned around strikin g an
auto owned by Etmer Doan ,
41, Point Pleasant, knocking
the Doan car into a gasbline
pump. James Doan, 13, a
passenger in the Doan car
compla ined of minor jnjuries.
There was minor damage.
No one wsa injured or cited
in a collision at 2:05 p.m. on
Poplar Ridge Rd . in Cheshire
Twp . where cars driven by
Ray Lemley . 65 , Rt. I,
Gallipolis and David Fowler
23, Galli}Xllis, s ideswiped on a
sharp curve. There was
minor damage .
Mary Bowen, 55, Rt . 3,
Pomeroy, was cited to Meigs
County Court for failure to
:;top within the assured clear
distance following an accident at 4:45 p.m. Wed·
nesday on SR 7, one mile
south of SR 124.
The patrol said the Bowen
car slid into the right side of
an auto operated by Cynthia
Bacon, 23, Rt. 3, Pomeroy.
There was moderate damage
to both cars.
A three-vehicle accident
occurred at 6:30 p.m. on SR
160, at CR 43 .
State troopers reported an
auto operated by Donald
Taylor, 17, Rt. I, Ewington,
attempted to pass a car
driven by Barbara Hunt
Dunn, 22, Rt . I, Ewington ,
The Dunn car was forced off
the right side of the roadway
into an auro owned by Sidney
Harless, 53, Rt . I, Ewington.
There wsa minor damage. ·
Taylor was charged with
failure to . sig nal when
passing.

GROUP

ALL SUMMER
PURSES
1h PRICE

the umon 's third-ranking
officer . " I'll go back for
awhile, anyway, to get the
reeling ," he said.
In Kentucky, Patterson
conceded he had "very little
choice "
in
tendering
cungratulations to Miller: He
remained closed·mouth on
his oft-voiced threat to attempt to overturn the election
because of the structure of
the ballot.
Campaig n spokesman
Chuck Baker said Patterson
plans a "little vacation" and
will talk with his rwming
mates next week about
challenging the outcome.
11
He's still an international
executive board member and
serves till this fall,' ' said
Baker. "He says he'll go back
into the mines."

9X12

GROUP CHILDREN'S

WOMEN'S SANDALS -

strikes _ 11 matter he wants
to take up in the next cuntract
negotiation s and the. union
consti tutional CQnvention .
11
Yes , absolutely, " the
chain-smoking Miller said ,
when asked if he 's ready to
negot iate immediately with
the coal industry on a new
three-year pact.
From a Fairmont motel
where he watched his defeat
Tuesday night, Patrick said,
" I may resign before
December ," adding that the
campaign has left him $25,000
in debt .
The new UMW off icers are
sched uled to take office in
late December.
Patrick said he plans to
return to Bethlehem Steel
Co.'s No. 43 Mine at Barrack·
ville, when he steps down as

Two injured in
five accidents

FRIDAY &amp; S~TURDAY, JUNE 17 &amp; 18
1 GROUP

As the electwn totals
t ontinued to trickle in rrom
the 21 UMW dis tri cts
nationwide. unofficial IUPI)
resu lts gave Miller 48,407
votes wi th 70.5 per cent of the
locals reporting . His op}Xlnents had a combined total
of 66,511 .
" I still think when all the
ballots are in, I'll have a
majorit y of the membership ," said Miller, 54, a
disabled
former
West
Virginia coal miner, at a
victo ry news confe rence
Wednesday .
In response to criti cism of
wildcat strikes that have
plagued the union, Miller said
he doesn't have the authority
to deal effectively with the

Haute couture comes
POLLY·s POINTERS from Paris, from you

Donald Barnett honored

separates a nd dresse!\.
Another designer, Paula
Saker , featured S}Xlrtswear,
most ly separates. Hers were
"investment clothmg"
the
cla ssics in beautiful , often
m uted color s that wil l wea r
and wear without looking
dated .
In jewelr y, Kenneth Jay
Lane pulled rope tricks with pea rls.
He also had an answer to
the one-ea m ng-lost dilemma. Wear a siimlar shape but
in anolhcr color for a pair.

'

�~t\t&gt;

D:uly St·ntmel. 'hddlE-po rt~Pumt·ro~

0.,11uu-~l,t~

.Junt•l6,

~r·:·:·:~::=:~===:::::=:=:=:::::::::::::;:::.:;:::::-:·:·:·:·:·=·~=:::::::::::::::::::::::=:=:::::::::::::::=:=:=:::::====-=·:-:;:::;:·:-:-:-~ili

Bible school planned
\' iH\ltillll

1Jiblt1

!)Chikll WliJ

( ;thll&lt;lrl' and

ht· hdtl at tht• t-'•urcl l'hff
I· n•t• 1\lC'thtt&lt;hst Churd1

Ht•~uHwr

thruugh tPf'IIS t1re 10\' ll P&lt;I
1...1rd Jesus Tf:1ch Me '' IS
thl' Biblt• School theme m
da~!'il'S fnr Pach ag(' gnmp. A

progran1 and di5play of
hallrt&lt; r&lt;~ft&gt; w1ll be presented
Stmdt~~

·nw

frien ds

nq.;ht, Junt• 26 &lt;.It i:JO.

llibk School

st ~ff

in-

1mh·s th~.~ Hcv. and Mrs.
1· lu}ll Shun k , C()·direttu rs ;
·c~nth

tNu-her!;. M1ke and

~l1uron

Wnght and Sandy
Workman· Jumor teachers,
.1r~

Slurle) Fnrnd ~111d "vvrs.
l'altv .Johnson; Primary
tt'a&lt;"h•:n:
~trs.
Don na

l

Ill

l'l~Jrk ·

'1\·~ldw r ~.

j[:

Helen Help

US • • •

lly 1-lt·lt'll Bot h-I

'!II

)[l

Scarbt•rr};
Nur 'i(' l'~
tPa c·hf&gt;r"i, Mrs. Jt.)an Wnght.
1\h gu\ IS awa) at co ll~~e but comes home every weekend. I
Hnd Mrs. Ida Mar Manm
l1ke ·lmu·u lot. l.ml c~n ' t take his dress c.:ode. We've been dating
M rs. Darla Hi:IY. ley w11J scrvt·
t\~U \l'ii i"S.
as p1amst. Mrs AI:Hluw
J,;,, bnngs only what he wears· old jeans and a fade-d shirt.
Baker and Mrs. Ann M;1sh
llow can you go to a fancy place like that ' Besides, by Sunday,
\\Ill serve rcfrl'Shment!;. Mrs . t11cy C;jrt·n 't the cll•&lt;Jnest.
Kuren b"tanley lind Mis s
Whfll do my neighbors think when they see the Sit iiiC duthcs
01 \IIW Smith
will
;:u•t
on turn fw· tl1rrc days? He has other outfits. !Jut likes to travel
as sec retary and trNis~
light
urrr of the B1ble School.
1lo11 do I tell him without hurting his feelings that he shuuhJ
Sht•rri Clark \\.Ill ~ervt·
&lt;il'l'S.' hettel' fur his chick'! Or should I get my mother or
as
a
help('r
wh rrC'
brotiJer to tell hn11'! - HUMILIATED
ncerled . Those wishing to
IIUMILIATF:D :
registrr should do so ImYour brot)1er might get the point across, that is if he and Jon
mediately by &lt;a lUng the Rev.
arc on good terms.
Mr Shook, telephone 992But 1f you've been going together two years, and still can't
5~26 .
lll«ke a small suggestion, tell us whlit do you talk about? ·
llfo:LF:N AND SUE

h' 1l 10 :1.rn J\11 &lt;' hlldn.·n
1ntl ~ UllfH! peu pll~ th n•t1

pnnmts nnd

.Jo)

'I n;
Shnrnn Folme-r. :\1rl). Lmda
Fos1rr 'a nd Mrs. KHth ~

l1t&gt;nda~ through F'nda~,
Tum• 20 throu~h June 24 from

f11f

\-1r~

Ill,"";'

ro Club meet:,-

D"AH HELEN AND SUE:
1 use my bike for pleasure and ride in the city because out in
Lht' c·ountry dogs nm loose. I min d my own business, don 't

VBS to begin

\t a meeting of the UFO
lob uf South Bethel United
\1et hndist C'hurrh Tuesday , a
thank you note was read f;om
tht• H.oush fam ilv for a conlrihutiOn lo the C~hnsti Smith

wear LHkinis, etc.

Vacation Bible School is
schedu led at the Middlcpo11
1-'rcl) byterian Church to begin
~~ 9 a . m . Monday. June 20.
Classes will tJc conducted
daily from 9 to 11 :30 a_ 111.
Classes are being designed
for children of all age gt·oups.
All children of the area are
invited to attend . A public
recognition se rvice for

und

Members also made a
dnn&lt;JtiOn to Carolyn Nutter

luhnsoll . The meeting opened
praying t11c Lurd' s
Pr,1yer. Office rs' reports
Wt'rl' gtvC'n. Present were
?~o rnw Hawthorne, Lila Van
t)J

stud ents,

tea chers

Su wh) must I be the victim or honkers a nd whistlers? I'm
btktng along· in my cut.. off jeans ~nd a truck driver blasts his
hom. 1'111 so sta rtled I fall off and things gel pretty bloody. Or
scve ntf guys m u co r let out wolf whistl es. Tt happens all the
lunc.
Must males show off this way?· TAM!
DEMHAM I:
· ~omc 111alc:::; - juvenile types who think they 're muy macho
I1&lt; &lt;Ve this compulsion to wolf-ca ll pretty girls. Too bad they
don'tsave it fot• " Dragging Main" on Friday nights · where the
action works bot h ways.· SUE
·
HAP :

an d

parents has been set for
Friday, June 24 at 7:30 p. m.
at the church.

Metrr, Iva Upton, Wilma
Bvers and Ada Van Meter.

I 'rn 16, my cous in Laura is 15. Ever sin&lt;:e we were babies,
our folk s have been visiting back and fo1th . We always shared
the same bedroom. Our parents still think of us as little kids.
Over the yea rs we played some boy-girl games, a nd finally
they w.ercn 't so innocent. What could you expect '!

· "NOTICE"

Now· my cousin wan is us to go togethel' openly . She $.:1YS if I
won't,
she ' ll
tell
he r
Mum and Dad I was the aggressm·. What an explosion that
would make in our two families!
I don't want any more of this, and I sure don 't want to date
L&lt;IUra. What ca n f do ?- LfTERALI .Y KISSING COUSINS
LKC:
ff you really think Lau ra will blackmail you, then the on ly
thing to llo is- confess first. Let her know you plan exactly that
ami we think she'll stop harassing you. - HELEN

IN COOPERATION WITH THE .
VILLAGE POLICE, THE REGAITA
PARADE COMMIITEE, AND IN THE
INTERESTOF SAFETY TO
PEDESTRIANS

A WORD FHOM SU E : Laura wants a boyfriend, not an
enemy. It you call her bluff she won't tattle_ After all, at least
lml f of the fam ily will probably blame her more thlin you. I And
remen~be r :

WE WILL NOT BE OPEN
FRIDAY NIGHT, JUNE 17th
FOR OUR USUAL
5 TO 7 BANKING HOURS

Alfred Social Notes
Sunday School attendance the death of Clara O'Brien of
. on June 12 was 49, the of- Columbus, 0 . recently . She
fering $25.35.
had bene hospitalized for
Worship sen:ices were held some time. She was Cla ra
at 10:45 wi th Charles Guthrie, born and raised in
Dom iga n speaking from the Alfred area and a
·Mark 13 on " Waich, Wait and member of the Orange
Pray." Attendance was 40. . Christian Church here.
Rev. Thomas and the
Weekend guests of Mr. and
delega te, Thelma Henderson, .Mrs. Wilber Parker were Mr.
are attending Conference this and Mrs. Eric Parker and
week at Lakeside, Ohio.
Randy of Camden, Mich. and
Dai ly Va cafion Bible Mr. and Mrs . Rupert
School will be held at the Schrader of Frankfort,
church here beginning June Kentucky.
20·25 fr om 9 · 11 :30 a.m., with
Mr. and Mrs. John Hayes of
Thelma Henderson , director. Chester, 0. , called on Mr. and
A picnic lunch will be held at Mrs . Ch.a rl es D. Woode
noon on Friday , June 24, and Sunday afternoon.
closing pro gram, friday,
Cathy Follrod and Nina
J une 24 at 8 p.m.
Robin so n attended
The U.M.W. will meet on graduation exe rcises at
Tuesday evening, June 21 at Ma rietta High School w})ere
the home of Florence Spencer Vicki Swartz, daughter of
at 8 p.m., with Osie Mae Gerald and Norma J ea n
Follrod having the program. Swartz, was a graduate.
Word has been rece ived by
relatives and fri ends here of

"THE

"-1'\-6 .

separate bedrooms! )

1Got a problem] Or subj ect for discussion, tw&lt;rgeneralion
style? Direct your questions to either Sue or Helen Bolte! · or
buth, if you want f:t combination mother-daughter answer - in
ca re of this newspaper.)

FRIENDLY BANK"

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
Member Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation

DEPOSITS INSURED TO $40,000 .

MAN CHARGED
WRAIN , Ohio (UP!) Elviro Marrero , 41 , fa ces
arraignment toda y on
charges he killed his ex-wife ,
Myrna, 36, during a fight
concerning her boyfriend
Tuesday night.
Police said the woman was
found dead in the Iron l seat of
her car parked on a city
street.

HIS GIHS ARE COMING

ACE
HARDWARE
Meigs Plaza :

1

DADWOULD
.LOVE ACB RADIO
FROM OUR RADIO SHACK
10-4?
COMPLETE .SELECTION
OF TOOLS FOR
THE HANDY DAD

EVERY MAN
WANTS ACASE
KNIFE-SEE OUR
FULl LINE
FISHING AND '
SPORTING GOODS
&gt;

FOR THE OUTOOORMANS

DON'T MISS OUR DAD'S DAY SALE
(FORMERLY BIG JIM'S PLAZA)

•

.. ~ Pl-AZA.
409 Pearl Street
Middleport, Ohio

PARK PLANNED
MIDDLETOWN , Ohio
(UP!) - The development of ·
a 32-acre commercial park
has been approved by the
Warren CoW1ty Commission.
The pro ject will be located
east of l-75 on Ohio 122, near
Middletown.
Burton Bongard, president
East
of
Middletown
Development eo _, developer
of the project , said about a
dozen of the project's 21 lots
have been sold to retailers
and other operations.

Two churches join forces for VBS
Tltt·

Hutlaml

IJ;uly
V&lt;u·alwll lhhil' Sdutul, &lt;J JU!nt
dfurt 1Jf tht.· Hutlaml l 'ilu rd•
"' Chn:-;t (tile! lht: Hutlttnd
Lhllh'd Mdluxltst ('hul'til.
\\Ill bt: tJl'ld at llll' M•.:llulli1:-.t
c'hurt'll, .fum· 20, ll , 22, ~~~~~
a•~tlill.li::W lu
p . lll. C~lt:ll l'VClllll~ , 'I'll~

:!:1, a1u l .June 27
8::30

I HIIHil'llUl11 111£1 li Ull.i::tl 111:1lt '1'1 aJ

fru111 the Standard Pu!Jllslung
C'o., with tht• thcliH.' '" l ;onl
,Jt·sus, Tcaeh "Me" will be
used.

There w1ll he classes fur
liHJSl' children ages thrL'C
thruugh thusc ('Utn pletmg: the
lllnth g: ra&lt;.le. Bible lessons,

t 't~-thrt&gt;t:tors

fur lJH: Bible Hlld Jocm May,

JUIIIOr~; the

M:IHMtl an • Mrs Hcud H11l lh:v. Mr. SmlthaiJ(J

and Mrs. Fil)

~ut'r.

J.:ath

1'\ (.'riiiiJ:.: the W01"!1hip Sl'l"\' ll'C

\\llllndudt• &lt;-1. .sptx•wl fl'alure .
Thcst.• WI/I Uc pn~senlt•d by

Sharo11 Btcwcut

e~nd

Beekv

Glaze, d puppet shuw, 0;1
Mom.Jay 1 the Hev. Dt•ru11~

Smitb, Tuesday ; Mrs. llilt,
wt Lh &lt;.1 £lanuclgrC1ph pre:;t:n·
taiwu, Wednesddy; Mrs.
Amos Tillis, a JniSSI0/1(11")', on

Thursday, and the Hcv.
Wilbu1· H.ilt, pastor uf the host

Euward•. youth

Milr~O:trd

Dorm~ Wel~r. Jane WJ!)t'
ami l':llen R1cc will have
charge uf cr~ft projt-'t'lS and
mus1c durin!{ the week. Mr~.
Huth Erlewine, Mrs. Myrv11le
Rrown, Mrs. Janet MtJrrJs,
and Mrs. Marie Birchfield
will handle refrestunents.
Among those wl1o will be han·
dhng transporta tion a1·e
Catherine Colwell , Margaret

diUn:h , on June 27.

· - 'The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, June 16, 1m

Clifford named of labor council

Pur.sons, Janet WJihamson,
the ltev. Mr. H1ll, and Harold
Sauer. Others dass helpers
(Jnd tram~purt.atiun providers
w1ll be announced later.
A fwal planning session for
tht' schO\ll w1ll be held at 2
p.m. friday at the Hutland
Un1ted Methodist Chu rch,
and the directors request thlit
a II worker~ be present.
Children 111 need of Iran·
sportation are asked tu ca II
Mrs. W1se, 742-2131; Mrs. Hilt,
7422635. or Mrs. Sauer, 742·
2301.
On the final night of the
B1ble school, a program will
be given by the children,
craft items will be on display,
and &lt;Jn indoor picnic will be
lleld for all of the children

Communication Workers of
America (CWA ), AFL-C!O,
today announced the appoint·
ment of Michael Clifford as
director of newly formed
Council «40 in Columbus.
Clifford, his wife Dora, and
their three children reside in
Gallipolis.
At 35, Clifford has over 11
years experience in the
public sector and five years
of concentrated experience in
organization
and

representin g publi c em·
ployees.
CW A, the fastest growing
public employee labor union
in Ohio fanned Council «40
to better serve its public
sector members.
CWA also has Co~ll 4455
under Herschel Sigal's
direction. Concernlnc IU new
position Clifford uld:
"In the twlll&amp;ht _before
collective ~rplnlng comes
on the pallllc sector, I've
committed myself to the
Union offering the best
repreaentation for Ohio
Frldoy, Juno 11, 1177
(lllllic employees."
He was previously field
representative for Ohio Civil
Employees
Bernice Bede Osol Service
Association, the organization
that
has
encountered
pressing financial dlfflcuhies
in recent months. It has also
beein in a state of constant
reorganization for over a
year.
Juno 17, 1977
In his previous lissigrunent,
Some mysterious circumstances
Clifford
represented over half
could enliven your material
or
Ohio
including Southeast,
potentia l this year . However.
there is a posslblllty you might Southern and Central sec·
be a ll"le too extravagant.
lions.
A native of Pomeroy, Ohio ,
QEMtNI (Miy 21·Juno 20)
Allocate funds at 11and today so he was formerly affiliated
as to give you the best return . In· with the Ohio Department of

'!'he sl&lt;lff consisL~ of Lois Receives degree
Walker , Teresa VC:IH Meter.
Otterbein
College
cn.t fl prujet"t~, wor!:ihip scr· and Mary Colwt:!ll , be~=;inncrs:
graduated 215 seniors Sunv1ccs ;md re~:rcatiun will 1-&gt;t! Marjorie Hke and Kelly
day, June 12, JJ :30 a. m. in
incl uded eath session, and Bruwn, primdry ; Hazel Hilt. the third commencement
there will be an offering Joy Sauer, ~md Carla Brown,
wken each day for a loc~l middlc1·s ; Janet Williamson held in the school's 2-year-old pr es~ nl.
Rike Physical Education home 1nisswn.
Recreation Center,
Dr. Sherwood L. Fawcett,
of
Battell e
president
Memorial ln ·s titute ,
BY CLARICE ALLEN
Dodson and Mr. and Mrs. Co lumbus, deliv ered the
The sixt h grade class Errol! Conroy and attended co mmence ment' address,
"Not a Havin g and a
retumed home Sunda y from the Alumni banq uet.
a three da ys tr ip to
Roy Betzing , Pom eroy, Resting" and was awarded
Washington, D. C. Class called on Mrs . Letha Wood an honorary Doctor of Laws
members from here making and Mrs. Freda Miller and degree. An area student
among
the
gra duates
the trip were Linda Thoma, Lenora Betzing, Sunday.
John Ridenour, David Gaul,
Mrs_ Lucy Gaul, Sumner, awarded bachelor degrees
Andrea Batey, Beth Teaford, spent Sunday with Mr. and was Donna Ruth Francis,
da ughter of Mrs_ · Ruth
Roger Bisse ll , Melissa Mrs. John Wickham.
Francis,
16 Anne St.,
Thomas, Nathan Boatwright,
Mrs- Don Williams and
Reva Persons. Mothers from daughter Deanna and Hilda Pomeroy.
here going were Mrs. Weber, Columbus, spent the
Richard Ga ul, Mrs. James weekend with Mr. and Mrs.
Ridenour and Mrs. J ohn Ra lph Keller, Joining them
Teaford.
for Sunday dinner were Don
Mrs. Opal Eichinger, Don Willi ams
and
Da vid ,
and Laura, and Miss Jan Columbus and Mr. and Mrs.
Wilson were overnight guests Roger Keller and sons, local.
Mrs. Arth ur DeTray spent
of Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Eichi nge r and Suzanna h, · the weekend in Goldsboro, N.
Columbu s. They attended C., with her daughter , Alice
commencement exercises at and ramlly. '
'
Ohio State Univ ers ity on
Clarence Wolf is a medical
Thursday morning. Dennis pa tient at a Parkersburg
Eichinger was a member of hospital.
the graduating class. Others
from here attending were
Tim Baum, Jim Amsbary,
Alan Duvall, Randy Young,
Alan Holter and Mrs. Tom
Nice. They were guests for
lunch at the home of Mr_ and
Mrs. Cha rles _Eichi nger after
the graduation.
A fa rewell party hon oring
Mr _ and Mrs_ Elmer
EriCa Johnston who will be
Adams, Ca nton, visited on
Monday with Mr s. Buel . moving to Ca lifornia later
SEE US FIRST AND COMPARE OUR
this month, was hel d Tuesday
Ridenour_
PRICES. QUALITY MATERIAL AT
Mr . and Mrs. Denver night by the Pomeroy Reuler·
Brogan
te
e
ball
tea
m
REASONABLE PRICES.
Curtis, Mt . Hope, W. Va _were
following
a
double
header
recent visitors of Mr. and
against the New Htt ven M's
WE
CASH&amp; CARRY
Mrs. Hobart Newell.
and
the
New
Haven
A's.
DELIVER
PRICES
Mr. and Mrs. Willard L&gt;ng,
A baseball hal ca ke and
Akron, spent severa l days
baseball field cake made by
with Mr. and Mrs. Errol!
Karen Sloan were se1ved
Conroy and Mrs . Alice
with ice cream and koola id to
Dodaon.
D. D. Cleland, Columbus, U1e team members anJ their
families.
ca lled . on Denzel Clela nd,
Team members attending
Wednesday. ·
·
were Terr·y Newsome,
Allen Weber, Ak ron, spent Jeramy Hysell, Rudy Kaldor,
a few days with Mr. and Mrs. Angie Sloan, Dwayne JohnRalph Keller.
son, Robbie Hawk, Billy
Recent visitors of Mr. and Brothers, Artie Hunnel , Sue
Mrs. John Hayes were Mr. Ellen Fry, Mike Wi ll, Wesley
and Mrs. Roy Paff, Roanoke, Youn g, Mark Corsi, Decker
923 S. Jrd Ave.
Middleport, 0 .
Va., Mr. and Mrs. Kinner Cullums, J ay Hwnphreys and
,
992-2709or992
-6611
Watkins and Miss Geneva Erica . Not presen t were Mat·
Norris, pt , Pleasa nt, W. Va., thew.Gi bbs and Mark Cor bitt.
Open : 7 : 00 to 5: 00 Mon . thru F.r i.
Mr. and Mrs. Erroll Conroy Charle's Hysell is the coach of
7:00to3:00 Saturday
· and Mrs. Rose Gi nther, local,
the team which has won six
Gera ld Violet; Tuppers games and lost one this year.
~--------------------~---------·--------_.j
Plains, Mr. and Mrs. L&gt;well
Zigler, Florida, Mr_ and Mrs.
George Zigler, Hemlock
. Grove, Mr. and Mrs. Herman
C3rson, Bashan, Carl Duckworth, Syracuse, Mr. and
Mrs. James Guinsler,
Has expanded their Hallmark section so they have the largest selection
Pickerington, Mr. and Mrs_
Myron Kinsey and Lucy
in the area. Former~ 16 fee~ expanded to 56 feet. This expansion
Scolieri, Columbus_
Dr. and Mrs. Billy Robert
Allen and Cletus All en,
Co lumbus, wer~ weekend
guests of Mr_ and Mrs.
Clayton Allen and attended
the Chester Alumni banquet.
Allen Weber, Akron, joined
them for Sunday dinner.
Mrs. Alice Ferguson,
Huntim gton , spent the
weekend with Mrs. Alice

Chester News Notes

ASTRO•GRAPH

Have A
Problem?

~~lOOJ[]

\i)'illOWJlct1m)1

CALl
CRISIS LINE

992-5554

.dulging In eldre\'agant whims
would be rather foolish. lt you 're
havi ng trouble finding a career
send for your copy of AStra*
Graph Letter. Mail 50 cents for

.each and a long. self~addressed.
stamped envelo pe to AstrOGraph, P.O. Box 489, Radio City

and

Station, N.Y. 10019 . Be sure to
specify your birth sign . ·

CANCER (Juno 21 -July 22)

building materials

Before extend ing invitations to
come. to a happening at your
house, be sure to consul.t your
mate . He or she may have other
plans .
·

LEO (July 23-Aug. 221 What may
not appear to be logical at first

Going away
party held for
Erica johnson

glance today could be your best
course of action , Overanalysis
might cause you to scrap an am ~

bitlous plan.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 221 Share

your wisdom , e~~:perience fi nd
advice with a friend ·who migh!
s eek your counse l today.
However, think twice before

.·BUILDING OR REMODELING?

opening your wallet

LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Be
decisive and a person o f acUon
tod ay In a si tuation that co uld

wealth of experience In
negotiations, representation
and recruiting. They cited his
knowledge o.f governmental
systems and awareness of
Public Employee problems
oo all levels as an exciting
attribute to tbe International.

Houses on nine
more roads get

PARK RESERVED

new numbers

SATURDAY, JUNE 18th

SPRINGFIELD,

of a person wh ose merits are
well J.:nown to you if you hear
something derogatory about him

'%,

Maybe it's because they think
of him as a salesman instead
of the friend he can be.

FOR

James Page,
project
engineer for Fleming, Page,
Stolte, Inc., has announced
houses on the following roads
have received new house
numbers :
Jr. Ward Road ( TR 47),
Hutton Road (TR 179), SR
689, Old State 346 fCR 55),
Williams Run Road (TR 333),
Legion Road ( TR ~3 ),
Montgomery Road (TR 21 ),
Malloons Run Road (CR 8)
and Coy Hill Road (TR 458 ).

You won't find any salesmen at o ur agency .
We 're insu rance agents , professional pe ople
wh o specialize in your 1nsurance needs. If
you have any question a t all regarding Insurance. drop in and ask us . We won 't try lo
sell you a thing.

SUMMER OUTING
OF

OP.EN TO PUBLIC AFTER 5 PM

Davis Insurance Service

CAMDEN PARK
CLOSED

EVERY MONDAY
HOLIDAYS

EXCEPT

992-5120
114 Court St.

Pomeroy , 0 .

4 HOURS OF MADNESS
PRICES GOOD
FRIDAY NIGHT ONLY
8 P.M.· 12 P.M.

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

eFREE SAMPLE COCA-COLA
eFREE COFFEE

298 SECOND ST.

Ohio

,)&gt;,_

POMEROY, 0.

eFREE DONUT

NO SALES TO QEALERS
'

QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED

p---------1

or her today.
IIAGITTARtUS (Nov. 23·010.
21) Subs tant ial ga ins are

VALLEY LUMBER &amp;
SUPPLY
CORPORATION

probable today in work that Is a
labor of love . Where you are I n ~
different, your return s wlll be
likewise .

iff

CAPRICORN

(Doc. 22-Jan.
Be attentive today to those of
proven loyalty , rathe r than cater
to someone of rarik who may
turn out to be a foul ball.

SIMON'S
GIFT CENTER
NOW OPEN
IN OUR NEW
QUARTERS

AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Fob. 11)
Domest.+c matters should take
precedence today over your outsid e interests. Tending to those
under your roof should be your
prime concern.

PISCES (Feb. 2D·Mirch 20) Today you're highly appealing to
members of the opposite se.lt A

DUTTON DRUG STORE

little harmless ttlrtation won't
hurt you. but don't overd~ n.

ARIES (Morch 21-Aprll 11)
You're very protective of those
you love tod ay - your fa mily in
particular - and you'll take any
measures to guard the ir in~
terests. They may decry your
tactics.

FRESH

FLAVORITE

INSIDE THE
PICK·A·PAIR

OPEN

11:00-4:30

Keep Kissi ng

BREAD

MONDAY
thru
SATURDAY

Frogs-you can
sill( find an

GROUND

·BEEf.-.......... ~·. 59e·

16 oz.
LOAVES

TAURUS (April 20-Moy 20) You
can be a whiz at artistic Or
creative pursuits today, provided
you're not encumbered by unimaginative ~sslstants . Don't let
them get In your way.

GOODVALU

WHOLE

ICE CREAM

!NEWSPAPER ENTER PRI SE ASSN 1

WATERMELONS

VAN. &amp; CHOC. ONLY

Cannel News,
By the Day

Mr. and Mrs. Russell
Harris and Deann, Mr. and
Mrs. Mark Thompson, all of
Xenia, Ohio visited at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Homer
Circle during tbe weekend.
Mrs_ Naomi Archer and
daughter of Athens were
~uests of Walter and Eva
Archer on Sunday.
I"!orence Circle is visiting
VISITED
at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Uoyd Jenkins Larry Circle and family in Ft.
and son, Luther, spent the Lauderdale, Florida.
weekend in Indianapolis with
Russell Harris , Wav ie
their son, Kenneth and and Verna Circle visited
family. Kenneth has recently other relatives, Dorothy
been ill.
Harden and family, Harold
Circle and family and Carl
CALENDAR FOR SA I.E
Circle and family, Walter and
RACINE ;_ A community Eva Archer .on Sunday.
events ca lendar is being sold
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Earl
· by the Racine J unior High Johnson visited with his
Athl eti c Rooste rs. The parents, Mr . and Mrs.
· calendars record events of Douglas Johnson of Racine on
the school and community. Sunday evening.
Orders wi ll be taken before
Mr. and Mrs. James Circle
June 30 and may be placed by of New Haven, W. Va , were at
telephone to 949-2082, 949-2449 the home of Mary Circle on
or 949-2728.
Sunday.

Why do so many people
avoid talking with
an lnsur•nce Agent?

UNTIL 5 PM

CRAFT CRASHES
CINCINNATI (UP!) - A
fly ing instructor and a
student were slightly injured
when tlleir helicopter crashed
Wednesay afternoon at
Lunken Airport .
The student, James M.
Lamb, 33, Farmersville, and
the instructor, Stewart
Hamilton, 30, Mariemont,
were both treated at the
scene for cuts and bruises.
RAPIST JAILED
(UPI ) - Charles Eric Speer,
Springfield, was sentenced to,
seven to 25 years in the Ohio
Reformatory in Mansfield
Wednesday for the rape last
December of a 10-year-old
Springfield girl.
Speer, who pled guilty in
May, was sentenced by Clark

year's 150 motorcycle deaths
occurred in singl&lt;&gt;-vehicle accidents, in which the cyclist
lost l'Ontroi of the t'Ycle and
struck a fixed object, he said.
"Since their vehicles can't
provide
much
injury
protection in even a lowspeed crash , it is vital titat
cycyiist• be absolutely
alert," he said_

County Common Plea$ Court
lead lo a profll. Vacillallng al .a Judge Gerald L&gt;rig. Speer
crucial moment could be a mls- was being held in the Cla~k
take.
Co unty jail without bond
SCORPIO (Oct. 24 - ~ov. 22) . pending a
psychiatric
Judge for yourself the character examination.

lhGAL

lB.

.

'•

GREAT SELECTION
OF

MINO

-

STANLEY
•BIRTHDAY CARDS

•TliANK YOU CARDS

•ANNIVERSARY

•COORDINATED PARTY SUPPLIES
•LARGE ASSORTMENT OF GIFT
WRAP FOR AU OCCASIONS

•CONTEM PORARY
•HUMOROUS
•INSPIRATIONAL CARDS

•BRIDGE TAUIES AND scORE
PADS

•INSPIRATIONAL BOOKLETS

•AND MANY, MANY OTHERS

BLACK &amp;.DECKER P&lt;nNER

32

oz.

TOOLS - DRILlS, CIRCUlAR SAW,

DUTTON DRUG CO.

MOORE'S

MIDDLEPORT, 0,

I

SPRITE

BAG

SABER SAWS, ETC.
122 N. 2ND AVE.

or

5 LB.

AND

.

COCA-COLA

SUGAR

TOOLS

124 W. Main

'

Mental Health and Mental
Rdardalion at Gallipolis
State Institute. His education
includes lonna! training in
Labor relations at the Ohio
State University.
CW A officials noted Clifford 's remarkable record and

l'YCLISTS WARNED
CO I.UMDUS I UPI)
" Driving too fast for
l'ondihons and driving under
the Ulfluence are extremely
dangerous for anyone, but
they are downright suicidal
for motort'Yciists," said State
Highway Safety Director
R o b er t C hiaramonte
Wednesday .
About 40 per cent of lo.st

'I

Smile,
a Frog
loves you

Guess The Winning Distance In Saturday's Sr.
•

Division Frog Jump and Win '50 Gift Certificate

992-2848

•

'

�2: 1()-... News tJ .
MOVIE CHANNEL 4 5 and 9 p.m - Diamonds

10 - T N&gt; Dally Sentmel, MtOdleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., ThW'sday, June 16, 19n

Noti~s

IJ\\ . rtbur L1 r~lt'1

llwr,.:o

l d'-h

z,

ldiil

~~~

I

!d.t~~

1~1

.I tl.r~:-.

\&amp;\

titln\'o

h ill

~~·
n)

n ..

~.a.h lolt•H i il\1'1

tho• lllll lll!'IJlll IS
r, t tt•r r ,... , " urtl I'd d.,a

~.u1b
Ad, IU!IIIIIlj! 11lht l 11\;&gt;lll&lt;\IL!.t~Ul"t

ti.J\' 1111l bt• dkll).!t'fl idl tltt I rl,u
rJtt•

lrr

t.rnluf rtwuk .. ·•nd

llllllllol\

Ot!llU.U\

b tt'lllt&gt; fk:l

"" "'d

$ 1110

llllllllll lJJll l il '&gt;hllloll.hd!ll t'

\1 ullllt• ll t•l ll t'

~! I t•::.

.md Yoil tl ~.a lo·~

oll t .tHt' j1l t•tf tliLh ~ lllt hl!ih \Ui h
r&gt;l tit•! .!5 H'lll l h.:llj!t' fm .. d~ t'oill \
Uti! Hu'\ :-lwuOt 1 In ( .tr t' vf Tltt' St·n
lllltl

rht• PuiJh'!&gt;ht• r rt·~· · H'" liM I ij.!lll
h•l liHt• l lt'lt't I .tilt .ttb d tt rut•d tlb-Jt'dll~J.IJ 1 tt l 'ul!h,lrt•r 14 tlltttr1 ill•
lt'V&lt;•tNIJh· fo&gt;t mt•lt llkJnuntrrtt&lt;•r
I I'Ll 111,\'1 [ l•'ll

Phuur •t&lt;r!-ll olll

NOTICE
WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES

C:ard o rThank s

:-JtiiJ II Ull SdtUI d.l~
lllt' ~ ii~H

adu lts
M rs
Harvey
Vronk en ~2 2270

Von In e nd ~&gt;

ne •ghbo t '&gt; and the
lor rherr he lp 1n
sno
rc
hrnglo1
ou1
doughtor
Koll 1e
CONCN£1 i: WORK PotiQS stepo;. ,
walk s end drrvewoys Phone Jane A spe&lt; •ol 1honlc!i to ltm
~mtth who found her I honk yo u
t:W2 -'1144
eornerg ~•,C 'f ~;quad

N ~W

SLIMMER Ho urs for Seldom
Re st Cerormcs Tuppers Ploms
Clones on Tuesday c;l 111112 1 4
ond 7 10 Weds 7 10 W1ll
1esume 1egulo1 hOIHS 111 the
loll

FAI R TIME 1s Just Around the Cor
flC( • Contact 01ck Roberts I
(61 4i ) 446-7612 lor Advertts1ng
Spec1ol t.es He who he51 lo tes
does ..,.r thou t
ANYONE OUM PINC gorboge or
runk
011
my form along Brrm1nghom Rood
or
Pl a nts ,
Oh.1o w 1ll be prosecu ted to the full
evtent
of
the low
S1gned Joy Hall J r
THE MEIGS Co . f1s h an d Game
A ssn
wllf hold on rmportont
mee trng Frrday June 17 ol 7 30
p m to m o~ e plans for the f1sh
derby for childre n The meetmg
wrl l be he ld at the new cl ub house
on Shade Rrve r Rood

~PM

REGATTA SUNDAY,
JUNE 19

Swrd;n
~PM

r r rth•} A let U\UJII

MEIGS COUNTY , OHIO
IN
THE
MATTER
OF
SETTlEMENT
OF
AC
COUNTS ,
PROBATE
COURT, MEIGS COUNTY ,

OHIO

Accor,mts and voucher s of
the
followrng
named
fidu ciaries have been frleq in
the Probate Court , Me1gs
County , Ohro, for approva l
and settlement
CASE NO 21637 First and
Fmal Account of Mabie
Moore , Admrnlstratrrx of the
Estate of Mary Parker ,
Deceased
CASE NO
21119 Thrrd
Annual A c count ot Verlrn
Howery , Trustee o t the Trust
Created by I tem Second of
the Last Wrll and Testament
of Eddie
Lou
Howery ,
Deceased
CASE NO
21189 Third
Annual Ac count of Charl es W
Nichols , Guard ran of Dorothy
Edmundson , an rncompetent
person
CASE NO 21958 First and
Frna l Account of Phyllis E
Harr rs, Admlnrstratr l x of the
Estate of William F Harrrs ,
Deceased
CASE NO 21974 Fi r st and
Frnal Account of Gladys
Barton, EJICecutrriC. of the
Estate of Ruth E Barton,
Deceased
CASE NO 22 118 Thfqj and
Frnal Ac count of Robert J
Lew i s , Guardian of the
Guardia n ship Esta te llll1an
Stiefi
Unless exceptions a r e flied
1hereto, sard accounts will be
for hearing before sard Cour t
on t he 1Stt1 day of July, 1977,
at which time sard accounts
wltl be cons tdered and con.
t1nued from day to day unt1l
frnal!y disposed of
A.nv person Interes ted may
file written exceptrons to sa1d
accounts or to mailers
pertarnmg to the eKecutlon of
the trust , not less than frve
days prior to the date set tor
hearrng

TAU. TIMBERS
NITE CLUB
~

~--::=---

?

LOCAL INSURANCE agency needs
someone to represent them on
on establ rshed terrrtory Good
wages eJO:ce llent benrfrts If
you con meet people don t pass
thr s up No eJO:penence re
qurred only the wrl! to work
Send resume to Box 672
-~!__~h . 45769
TRA CTO R TRAILER drrver , 25
years mrnrmum og~ 3 years
t?Kperrence Must pau r.c C
requ1rements
M~riimum
guarantee of $150 weekly .
Phone 992-6666
GROUP OR Orgonrzaflon to
delrver hondb1lls , Phone 992
6194

PROBATE D I VISION

MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
(6) 16, ltc

PUBLIC NOTICE
PROJECT
SYRACUSE
TENNIS COURTS
OWNER
SYRACUSE

CITY

OF

Bids will be public l y opened
and read aloud at 12 noon
trme on June 30, 1976 for the
Syracuse Tenn•s Cour ts
project Brd openrng wrll bern
the Syracuse Clfy Building,
Syr;:~cuse , Ohio Brds may be
ma i led to the attentron of
Mayor
Herman London ,
Syracuse City
Burlding ,
Syracuse, Ohio
Plans and specifications
are avarlabte at the Crty
Burldrng, $10 00 depos1t, non
refundable
to
the
non
successful brdders AI! bids
must be rn a plarn sealed
envelope marked BID FOR
SYRACUSE
TENNIS
COURTS. Each brdder must
have the name of h 1S com
pany on the outsrde of ~he bid
envelope Each b 1d must be
ac c ompanred wrth a
10
percent b 1d bond or certrfred
check f or 10 percent of the
total bid
The success ful
bidder wrl! be requ i red to
obtarn a performance bond
for 100 percent of the fata l
contract
No brdder shall
withdraw hrs bid for a perrod
of 30 days from the brd
openrng date .
Partrcu la r atlentron 1S
noted
to
the
Federa l
Prevailrng
Wage
Scale ,
whrch must be followed on
thrs prolect
The successful brdder must ·
proceed with the work w 1thrn
two weeks of srgnrng
a
centrad wrth tile Cl fy and be
completed in thrrty (30 )
worktnO days, exceptions
being str.kes , weather , or
acts of God
The successful b1dder must
obtain Ohro Workers Com
pensat1on and pay all other
state , Federal and local taxes
requ rred by law
Herman H London
Mayor
(61 16. 23 . 2tc

Classified Ads

brtng you
extra cash

for
shopping sprees

NOTICE OF
APOINTMENT

Case No. 22126
Edgar E
Mitch

Case of
Deceased
Notice Is hereby ;~lven that
Lena
K
Nessel roa d of
Pomeroy , Ohio , has been duly
appointed admlnJstratrlx Df
the Estate of Edgar E. Milch ,
de ceased, late of Meigs
CountY, Ohio
Creditors are required to
f ile the1r c la ims w1th said
f rducrary - withrn
th ree
months
Datecr 1hts 27th day of May
19 77
Manning D Webster
J udge
(6} 2, 9, 26, 3tc

NOTICE OF

APPOINTMENT
Case No 22,131
Estate ot INA HOBACK
Deceased
Notice Is hereby grven that
Betty Brlckles of 109 K rneon
Dri ve, GalliPOlis, Ohio , has
been duly appornted Ad
mrnrstratr.x of the Estate of
Ina Hoba ck, deceased. late of
Racine
Vtllage,
Meigs
County, Ohto
Cred1t ors are required to
frle therr c la rms with sa1d
f t duc rary
withrn
th r ee
months
Dated thrs 31st day of May
1977
Mann i ng D Webster
Probate Judge of
sard Coun ty

(6 ) 2, 9, 16, 3tc

NOTICE TO BIDDERS
REPAIR OF

Jr,J7b F- 100 PICKU P V 8 01r p s ,
p b Ran ger llllerro• topper
automatiC 10 000 rndes Phone
742 .1050

BLA CK POODLE los t, 2 years old,
WL'O II flQ choc k vr cho u1 no tog
Boy!l pe l Contoc t Ronald Lon ·
doker o! Kapple s Pennzo1l

1974 GM C PICKUP w •th topper .
Phone 992 3288

Professional Sen"ices
NEW COMPANY · Brg Bend
Devel opers Frnest rn re model
1ng
po1nfin g and concrete
war ~
lnteno r and ex ter1or
F ree
e s t1 m o tes
Ph o n e

992 3573

Foresl Pro
for stond1ng
99 2-5965 or
B570

OlD FURNITURE ice boxe s bross
beds
etc
c omple t e
households Wr1te M D Mrller
Rt 4 Pomeroy Ohro or col!

992 ·7760.
WANTED
CHIPWOOD Poles
Mov drometer 10 rn ches on
largest end $8 per ton bundl
ed slobs $6 per ton Delrvered
lo Oh to Pollet Company , Rl 2
Pomeroy ,
Oh10
Phone

902 2689

IF YOU ha"'e o serii•Ce to offer
wont to buy or sell someth1ng
ae lookmg for work
or
who+ever
you II get resu lts
foster' wrth a Senl1nel Wont Ad

-- ---

YARD SALE lots of boys and
mens clothrng
curtarns
bed spreads krtchen table and
chorrs Start Jone 20, 21. 22 ,
10 00 trll 4 00 567 North Front
~Mrdd_l_eporf: Oh.!_o____ _
GARAGE SALE, Friday qnd Satur·
day q trtl5 County Rood 28 off
Rt 7 South of Tuppers Plarns
Rrggscrest House and Develop·
ment orr condltroners bicycle
games drapes and m1sc rtems

-

-·---

YARD SALE 9 00 tiltS 00 Sotur·
day June 1B 5 mrles north of
Hamsonvrlle on Stole Rt 143
Watch for stgns. Good Jewelry,
avon
bottles
furniture ,
clothrng_and gl~ssw~~e

-

-

PEEK A· POO very good wi th
ch1 ldren housebroken Phone
992 7074 or
3t165 . $50.

m

REG TREEING Walker female
coondog 6 yrs old Phone 9c;l2

3068
6 FREE KITTENS Phone 742 3()t)3

'

us

test

your

wat~r

Free

BISSEll SIDING CO

Pomeroy Landmark
~ Jack W. Carsey, Mgr

A local contractor
Phone 949-2801
or 949-2860

complete wrth weather
proof PA sp eaker, 2 way
ba se load ed CB ant en n a ,
tor roof top or trunf!. mounf .
Pow er cord , coax , antenna
cabl e and all h a rdware
rnclud ed

1ASTEFULL Y DECOR ATED KIT
CHEN APPLIANCES FURNISHED

FULLY CARPETED

STARTING

AT$117 PHONE9c;I26365SYBIL
AND JIM WOOD MANAGERS
APT 10

Phone 992 2181

1973 GREMliN factory o1r ~ auto
loon value $1000 1972 Hondo
350 Elect start ell::cellenl con
dll1on One 30 gallon and one 5
gallon oquarrum end occ , both
$50 Fema le poodle 3 years
o ld eJO: cellent with k1ds whrte
and hos papers $35 See oil or
620 Lour el St Mrddleporf

TWO ANTIQUE Key w1nd pocket
wotche s very old Best offe r
742 2050
KRAUT CABBAGE $1 bushel Cut
your own James Hrll Form

p_..,

Ph 992·2174

_

"

7~09

992 630!&gt;
' 992 2082

-

PIANO TUNING by ElectronlcCompo rr son
Accurate
Reasonable 992 3718
Will CARE lor elderly women rn
our home , Trorn ed ond eJO:
perrenced Phone 992 73 14

CAN GOODS
Slricklv wholesale lo all.
No1 less1 1ha n Va case

•

Miller Produce
&amp;
Garden Center
1210 Washington Blvd.
Belpre,

Ohio

AlilJnment,
wheel
balancing,
lune·up,
brake work, minor
repair.
Behind Rutland Grade
School. Evemng work by
appomtment. Ph. 742·2005.
6 s 1 mo Pd.

NEW 3 bedroom house 2 baths
' o il elec 1 acre Mrddleporl
close to Rullond Phone 9Q2
7481

Commere~ol

properly opprox 17
o cres level land located ot
Tuppers Ploms on Ohro Route
7 Phone (614 ) ~7 bJO~"----,.-

NEW 3 bedroom house bu1lt· rn
k1tchen bath ond 'J, Phone
742 2306 or contact MriO B Hut ·
ch1son Rutland, Ohio
----'~~

VA -FHA, 30 yr frnancmg Ireland
Mortgage 77 E Stole Athens

2V ft METAL br sploy Gonddos
Sw1sher and Lohse Pharmacy ,

145 ACRE FARM 7 room house rn
Rutland lots of pnvocy Phone
742 3057 after 6 p m or on
weekends

14 2 cu ft never used , $300 - - - - - - - - - - - - ,
Phone 992 2605
:-

3290

1975 KAWASAKI125 Mot-;-;ross
new knobby trres exce llent
condt lron $350 Ca ll after 5
p m , 992 3219

TRAN

SPRING GARDEN Supplies Cob
SPORTER Van 53495 Phone 949boge
cou l1flower
broccol r 2739
and
head lettuoe plants
yellow , whtte and red on1on
se ts onton plants Kennebec .
cobb ler, Ka tahdin , Red Pontroc
ond Red Lo sodo seed potatoes
Bulk garden seed9 poltrng soi l
N ew CoOp water sofpeal moss lrurt 'trees and rose
teners , model VC-SVI.
bushes
Mtdway Market
Only $279.9.5
Save SSO 00 on a new
Pomeroy
Oh 10
992 2582
Hctpoint Refrtgerator
Bobs Market , Meson, W Vo
1 New 20 CUbiC ft.
(304) 773 5721
Chest Freezer
Sl19 95
Now 1n stock, complete line
1-42 rn cost rron krtchensrnk , 1
cf bulk garden seeds
basrn and I drorn board hong
1 Good McCullcugh Chain
on wall type whrte I 3 burner
Saw
S65
• _ga! , hot plate Phone 992-572 •
1 Good Used Poulan Charn
Saw
550
ECONOMY TRACTOR w1 th all at·
1 Good Used Unrco
tochmfj!nls Lrke new oskrng
Dryer
S80.00
S2~SO._~h_?ne ~6 ~4) 698·3290
1 Good U sed G E. Dr yer SIS

FOR SALE

GOOD RICH Top soil Charles R
Hotfr e ld Backhoe Ser'lr ce
Phone 742 2008
c6AL AND Woad cooksto;e red
trek hound , 1 yeor old Brr
dhouses Pr cnk tabl es Phone
985 412-4

Pomeroy Landmark
• • Jack w. carsev. Mg,
1Alliiil: Phone 992·2181

14 FT ALUMINUM Boss boot w1th
1ro1lor 14 horse power Sears
eng1ne and one two speed
lrollrng motor $550 Phone

742·2315
KAWASAKI 175 · drrt b1ke $400,
Suzukr 72
street b1ke $750.
Coli 949 2463 evenmgs alter 6

pm
HOOVER UP RIGHT sweepers
1977 models On ly $22 ca~h or
terms Phone 992 -5146

ElECTRO·LUX SWEEPERS

Com

pletely
rebuilt
w1th ol
tochments. Only $32 50 cash or
terms Phone 992 5146
TWO FLOOR gos lurno&lt;:es for
sole Phone 992 5501
RANGE PINE d1n1ng room tables
wrth 4 cho1rs ond an old cherry
buffet Phone992 5154

RIGHT~ THREE
MILLIOJJ APIE.Ce
AND WE 5T1L~
WIND UP RUNNIN6
MeKEe INDUS-

ALPHA 10 EASY...
HER5 ARE YOUR

10 oo-Streets of San Franci sco 6, Barnaby Jones 8;

News 20. At The Top 33.
11 Oll-News 4,6,8, 10.13, 1S.3. MacNeil Lehrer Report

J3.
11 3()-Jolmny Carson 3,4,1S. SWAT 6,1J. Kojak B:
Mary Hartman 10; ABC News 33

2 BEDROOM HOUSE Locust St
Mrddleporf
$14 ,500
Phone
992 3436 and 992 5248

New house for so le
-

3 bedroom 1
I 1h both
rec:
room and
garage
lee Cons tru ctron
phone 992 3454 or 44b 9568

2 BEDROOM HOUSE , Iorge lrvrng
room , modern full srze bose·
ment , burlt rn garage on
l 'lt acres. C1ly water gos h1gh
ground , good ne1ghbors Phone
949 2635
NEW HOUSE for sole 3 bedroom
1't, bath
rec
room , and
garr;Jge
lee Constru cflon
Phone 992 3454 or (bl4 }
446-9568

1975 SHU LTZ 12:.:60 Mobile home
wrth cement porch and awnrng
Ttle block garage
cellar
bulldrng 'w1th utility room
overhead on 2 " , acres of lond
lo cated
nt-or
Longsvrlle
S\4 bOO Phone992 5589

16 ACRES iond on Krngsbury Rd 3
mrles f rom Horrisonvrlle Has
complelely furnrshed 12~50
mobtle home 1ncludrng washer
and
dryer
and
orr condllronlng Lorge pond , spr
rng and well newly burl! 20v36
garage and 24x48 concret e 5 HOOM HOUSE l both 2 pof'
chos one Screened garage and
floor shed Pnced ot $15 ,000
cor port gos furnace Walk 1ng
Phone after 5 p m 992 52b4
d•stop ce to town ond to sc hool
COAL FURNACI:: /Jhone 367 7652 Coil oilerS 992 3488

Nobtl Summtt

3, Pomeroy, 0.

Carpet &amp; Upholstery
Phone Mtke Young
At
992 -2206 or 992-7630
''The Ongtnators
Not The lmttators"

2·2J I mo.

HOMESITES for so le 1 acre ond
up M1ddleport, lieor Rutland

Coli 992·7481

' REALTOR

VIRGIL B. TEAFORD, SR.
REALTOR
216 E Second Street
Pomeroy, Ohto 45769

plus 2 baths on the lsi
floor, 2 baths on the second
floor . total ol s bedrooms.
good

lo catron

ONLY

has stove and refrigerator
Coal
furnace,
full
basement, 2 car garage,
and on level lot $35,000

BABY FARM - H&lt;. acres
In Rutland Township. Has a
4 room stucco house with

outbuildings.

B

room frame tlouse on Rt 7,
water- available,
T P
e lectric, and nice corner

10

acres. 525.000.
DEXTER
Business
building JO'x40' Will sell on
land contract. Only $5.500
MIDDLEPORT
Conveniently located , 2
frame

home

Bath. gas heating and cltv
water Want only Sll,OOO
lor quick sale
8 ACRES - 4 bedroom

REMODELING, Plumbrng. heafrng
and all types of general repotr
Work guaranteed 20 years ex
penance. Phone 992 2409.

7A2·2348

Hank , Kathy &amp; Leona
Anoci1tes

992-2259-985·4112
992-256,

was-A BIG DRAW

ACROSS
DOWN
I Riot pollee
I "- are
weapon
called "
5 SOuth Sea s
2 Medictnal
'tsland
herb
8 Indonesta n
3 Famed
tsland
lrtgale
9 ' 'Head
launched
gardener"
tn 1797
J
t3 Naught
4 Prior 10
Yesterday's Answer
t4 Not
s Mtstreated
27 Pounce on
12 Atonuc comp leted
6 Patd a
(2 wds)
18 ·European
15 "Da," tramhasty call
rlver
29 Avmds
Ia ted
( 2 wds )
31 Trade
16 Snooze tune 7 Key·shaped 19 Sheep ttck
33 Anagram
m Sonora
10 Fatrnus
21 Most
of name
senous
17 Memento
Slle tn
34 G I.
20 Detecttve
" The Hub" 22 Thin scale
Joe's
or· layer
Is! )
(2wds )
Boswell
23
Be
needy
21 Soared
11 Pacl
36 Alfonso's
25 Held a
23 "I - Dance "
between
queen
heanng
I 1935 song )
nattorn
24 Deserved
25 - Donungo
26 Astan
b----+- +--+-

MOBILE Home Reparr
Efec ,
plumbtng ond heotrng Phone

YO'JR BEING
Fli&lt;£D-

992.S858
Ex-

Prof plays all the angles
16

• J 8;

• Ql

• 10 9 8 6 5 3

·lle~e', how t o

11-:: P~A~T i $

ouT •:-&lt; THo

1~00'~­

DOCK&amp; NOW , I'.&gt;I\?Dic
WENE£0 TRA'IS -

Pork

$7 500 loo ond troUer Phone
.992 7t::C3A
= =-c-:--- - -

10 'DRc::T A50Ui

OIL(.. • .PoF-:-r.&lt; ~=
A':"CID~NT J-; ::_

TO ~AU NT YCU 50ME T I":':'C 0\c ::' 'i YC U

WAS IN&lt;'

PORTAII CN TO
GET TO IT I

L::AST EXPECT
IT 10

992-5001

MASON FURNITURE

JW

Welt

North Ea!lt

South

Pass

3.

Pass

Pass

Pass

Pass

••

NWMADAKK

K H E G - By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

The student gasped when he
NVXA saw the Professor go up wtth
dummy's ace of spades at
V P W G E trick one Here was a Simple
NWMADAK~
CT WF J
hand with success sure if
DGSA etliter of two finesses were goPWWENA
SDVHTA
E NA U . mg to work . But here was lite
Yesterday's Cryptoquote : WHAT WE HAVE DONE IS THE great expert refusing to take
one of them'
ONLY MIRROR BY WHICH WE CAN SEE WHAT Wi', ARE
The Professor led a club to
THO'&gt;IAS CARLYLE
his ace at trtck two, cashed
(11977 Kin&amp; Fu~ures Synd1ut.e, Inc
his ace and king of diamonds,

VEHWJK.

WJOO

UAJ

FNW

"~RNEY

STORE HOURS

CALEB!! WHAR'S \/ORE

Mon., Tues., Wed. &amp; Sat.- 8:30 tiiS :OO
THURSDAY TIL 12 NOON
PRO
SHOP

l{ES.SIR ..
WE WANT
TO BE
I

WE THINK WE'RE H16HLt(
SUITED FOR THE JOB

WE'RE NOTLAN. NOR 5
UNRELIABLE NOR "
DISCOURTEOUS .
~

I.

Opemng lead - 5 •

CRYPTOQUOTES
VTA

"A Q6

East-West vulnerable

u sed for the three L s, X for the two 0 s, ttc Sin gle Jctters.

EN ATA

.74
• A J 10 S 5 I

I. 0 N G I' E I. I . 0 W

One l e tter s1mp ly st.rnd s for a nother In 1hts s,un p le \ ts

YOU Ni:\'!:R. REALLY
~R:SET 1 51RJ •:= I T4E:
M:'MCRV C0 &gt;\ ::5 ;;ACK

•Q

SOUTH IDI

tAK

wot k 1l:

a postrophes, the length ,md form.lt lOn of the '&gt;':Ords nrc all
htnts Ear h d av the ('Ode lett ers ar e dtfTerent

Mason, W. Va.

.1086 532
•KI0 74J

AXY D L R A AX R

992·2S22

EAST
• KJ 9

WEST

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE -

HARRISON'S T.V Reparr. Serv1ce
Calls
Sycamore St , Mrd-

Herman Grate

" House ol 1,000 Dolls" 8, Mary Hartman 10; ABC
News 33
12 oo-Barella 6, IJ, Movie "Man •n the Middle" 10;
Janakl 33.
1 OQ-Modnlghl Special 3,4,15
1.10;-lronslde 13.
2.10:-News t3
2 JO:-News 3
3·oo--Movle " Do You Love Me'" 3
4 3D--Movie "Kentvcky Moonshine" 3
6 DO-FBI 3

NORTH
"AQ
.. 9 2
tJ72
•K9B732

is

MASON FURNITURE

11 oo-News 3,4.6,8,10,13.1S . Monty Python' s Flying
Clrcus 20; Black Perspective on the News 33 .
11 Jo-Johnny Carson 3,4, lS, U S. Open 6, 13. Movie

Oswald and Jim Jacoby

698-73Jl

FRIDAY UNnL 8 PM

10 3Q-Woman 20.

BRIDGE

35 Slack off
(2 wds)
36 TV award
J7 Frank d
lite Cahl.
Angels
38 Chrtstmas
39 Ca ll for
attention
40 Mrs
Ltndbergh

covot rng , septic systems,
dozer, backhoe dump tl'llck
lrmestone
grovel, blacktoP
povrng, Rt 1.43 Phone 1 (614)

Recreotron

Showcase 33
9 3o-Qulncy 3,4, 15; {'lovle "Jenny" 6,13 . Movie
"Battle for the Planet ol the Apes" B, 10. Oasis In
Space 20
10 .0C&gt;-News 20. Firing Line 33

g~veaway

I HEARD ABa.JT

Syracuse

9 co-Lowell Thomas Remembers 20, Documentary

Thursday. Jvne 16

~Ga~swuon ~~--+--+--+-­

1970 MONTEREY Mobile Home 12
I( 60, 2 bedroom plus ut1lrty r~m
, ____A_s_so_c_la_t_e_s_ _ __J and 150 h fence. Underprnnrng
•.
_and It res rncluded , $3800 Phone

773-5592

What the cartoomsts' annllal sh1ndtg

29 Boul
30 Actor, Cook, Jr

.Gordon 8 . Teaford
Helen L. Teaford

3

WE HAVE BUYERS FOR
YOUR PROPERTY !LIST WITH US) .
HENRY E. CLELAND
REALTOR

MAKE

Answer

GIBBON

campaigner

CARPENTER , floonng
carting,
_E_Onehng Phone 992·2759

YOUR
NOW.

INVESTMENT

I

DRUDGE

nver

ULABNER

MARTIN

10

1 :3()-Days of Our Lives 3,4, lS, As The World Turns
B.IO.
2 01)-$20.000 Pyramid 6.13; Een Festival 33
2 3o-Doctors 3,4,15. One Life lo Live 6,13 . Guiding
Light 10.
3· 01l-Another World 3,4,15. All In The Family B. lO ;
Crockett's Victory Garden 20. Bit With Knit 3J
3· 15-General Hospital 6.13 .
3 3()-...Match Game8,10; L1llas Yoga &amp; You 20; MD J3
4 oo-Mister Cartoon 3, Gong Show 4, 15. New Mickey
Mouse Club 6; Lucy Show 8; Sesame St 20.33,
Movie "Gunllghters of CasaGrande" 10 ; Dinah 13.
4: JO-My Three Sons 3; Slar Trek 4; Emergency One
6; Partridge Family B, Hogan' s Heroes 15
5 oo-Big Valley 3; Brady Bunch B. Mister Rogers·
Neighborhood 20.33 ; Emergency One 13: Mission
I mposslble 15
5:3()-...Adam 12 4; News 6, Family Aflalr B; Elec. Co.
20,33
6 . ~News 3,4,8.10,13.15, ABC News 6; Zoom
20.J3.
6 3o-NBC News 3,4, 15. ABC News 13; Andy Grllllth 6.
CBS News 8,10; Vegetable, Soup 20, VIlla Alegre 33.
7 ()()-Trulh or Cons. 3; To Tell the Truth 4; Liar' s Club
6; s128.000 Question 8; News 10; To Tell the Truth
13. My Three Sons 15. Ohio Journal 20; Black
Journal 33
7· JO-Pqrter Wagoner 3 ; Gong Show 4; Candid Camera
6, Treasure Hunt 8; MacNeii ·Lehrer Report 20.J3;
Andy Williams 10; Name That Tune 13; Pop Goes
the Country 15
B oo-Sanford &amp; Son 3,4, 15; Movie "Star Spangled
Girl" 6.1J. Mov•e "The Prince ol Central Park"
' B,lO
8·J()-Rocklord Flies J,4,15, Wall Street Week 20,33.

27 Soldier
or yore
28 Old

WILL do rooftng , constru~
plumb!ng and healing No 10b
too large or too sm all Phone

Pomeroy Th1s 3 Bdrm
frame ts ready to move
into. 3 acres fenced with
barn for animals. Secluded

NEED?

GASOLINE ALLEY

EXCAVATING, dozer backhoe
ond d1tcher Charles R. Hat
freld , Bock Hoe Service,
Rutland Ohto. Phone 742 -2008

or buy to rent ASKING
$20,000 00
6'!1• ACRES - Close to

FISHERMAN'S
PARADISE. S7,JOO 00

TO CAI..l\T t.HIX.K

S2J2::·---.,.---~

Pork Phone91J2.5S90
2 BEDROOM Troller onlorntShed
100 x "'•o corner 1ot, 1 block from.

The hardwood floors and
tnm make this 3 Bdrm .
home really dtstinctive .
D1ning
room .
bath,
basement,
fireplace

HA\f TH~ R\0HT

EXCAVATING dozer. loader and
bockhoe work dump trucks
and to-boys for hlfe, wlll haul
frll drrt to sor l limestone and
grovel. Coli Bob or Roger Jef.
fers, day phone 992-7089,
nrght phone 992 3525 or 992-

WE HAVE SEVERAL
BUILDING LOTS AND
ACREAGE . WHAT DO

Bdrms, batt!, basement.
own water, 2 trreplaces.

f'~tl- I

SEWING MACHINE Reporrs ser
OJ rce oil makes 992-228.4 The
Fobrtc
Shop,
Pomeroy ,
Authomed Srnger Soles ond
Servrce We sharpen Scrssors

all brick 2 story home,
several f ireplac es. trve in 1t

CHEAP AT 512,500.00
ON THE RIVER -

i i.80-A-fbi.JfJD,ICC;,J'T

nk f\AVE' 1\lO fOUtJDS
OF GHARt..E'S

REPAIR -

1971 REBEL MOBILE Home, 12 ~
bS, central orr, porhally fur·
nrshed, set up tn Mobrle Home

beaulllul
ONLY
Sl9,200.00
GOOD OLDER HOME -

BORNWSER

Sweepers, toasters rrons, otl
sma ll appllonces Lawn mower
ne~C.t to State H1ghway Gorgge
on Route 7 Phone (614} 985-

AND

Yesterday s

MAGIC

by THOMAS JOSEPH

house,
modern
bath,
natural gas F.A. furnace ,
n i ce kitchen, outbuildings
and near town for 520.000.

&amp;

"fET, CHUCK7

BRADFORD
Auctroneer, Com
plete S&amp;rv1ce Phone 949 -2-i97
or 949·2000 Roctne Ohto, Crrtt
Bradford

HOWERY

IJ

~

· ~16-1

BOWERS

A[ XXXI

(Answers tomorrow )

Jumbles BYlAW

piece

RACINE CARPET
SHOP mo. ·

ELWOOD

Now arrange the wcled letters to
torm the surprrse answer as sug
gested by the above cartoon

OR HEARD
A~YTHING

3825

TUPPERS PLAINS -

YOU

Prmtanswerhere ·

NV"~!.~!

,-

bedroom

I v.t:\5 CI.JRtOUS,
SAME AS YOIJ ..
HAVE YOU Sfftli

THATr5 ELDEEN ~WA Lt. ~·
MUST !3E A REASON FOR
A WALL LIKE THAT-5PfKES - ~ i3ROKEN GLASS
OH TOp- -

Phone 992·332S
STUCCO 9 rooms. 3
bedrooms. 2 ba!hs. K1tchen

10 YOUR HEAD.

tJ

Phone 949-2814
9 a .m. to 5 p.m.

TEAFORD(B

THI5&gt; PLACE OF
WORSHIP COULD 00

\

gutters. We hang It, or do It
yourself. Special prlctt to
builders.

furnace, full basement,
carport and garage on 2

style home haS every thing

one

Mission

Documentary Showcase 33 .

b
. I I I _

GUTTER SERVICE
Continuous

Overseas

1 oo-Gong Show J, All My Children 6,13 , News B.
Young &amp; the Restless 10. Not For Women Only lS;

YAPNOC

114M West ~Min Street
Just Below the JonH
Boys' In Pomeroy. Ohio
Phone 992-2298
6-1S.I mo.

fireplaces . all on a
beautifully landscaped lot
with shrubbery
Good
neighborhood .
Appointment only.
COUNTRY HOME 3
bedrooms. bath, fuel oll

GOOD BUY AT 53),500 00
COOKS DELIGHT - The
krtchen an thts southern

a,·

6. 45-Mornlng Report 3.
b so--Good Mornlng , West VIrg inia 13
6 ss-Good Morning. Trl State 13.
1 oo-Today 3,4, 15, Good Morning America 6 ,IJ, CB S
News 8. Chuck White Reports 10
7 .as-Porky Pig 10
7 . 3()-...Schoolles 10
8.QO-Howdy Doody 6; Capt Kangaroo 8,1 0; Sesame
St . 33.
8 3()-...Big Valley 6
9·()()-A M J, Phil Donahue 4,13,1 5. Andy Grllllth B.
Mike Douglas 10, Childhood JJ
9 3()-...Cross·Wits 3. Edge of Nlgh1 6 , Concentration 8
tO oo-Sanlord &amp; Son J.4,15 ; Here's Lucy B. lO ; Mike
Douglas 13; Oasis In Space 33
10 Jo-Hollywood Squares J,4, 15. Price Is Righi B. lO.
Stud io See J3
11 QO.-Wheel of Fortune 3 , ~, IS, Bit With Knit 33
11 .3()-...ll' s Anybody's Guess 3,4, IS, Fam ily Feud 6,13 .
Love of Life 8,10, Erelca 33
11 ss-CBS News B. Ms Flxlt 10
12 QO-News J.4.6.10, Shoot lor lhe Sars 15. Divorce
Court 8, Midday 13; Forsyte Saga 33
12 3()-...Chlco &amp; the Man J, l5; Ryan' s Hope 6, 13; Bob

KJ K

CRAFTY LADIES
HANDICRAFT

large rec. room with builtin bar
2 wood -burning

Bdrms , rec room, utlltty.
nice kitchen &amp; 1 acre. A

6. 15- Farm Report 13.
6 20-Nol For Women Only 13
6 · 30--Columbus Today 4; News 6, Summer Semester

Braun .t; Search for Tomorrow 8, 10

SEE US FOR ALL YOUR
CRAFT AND ARTIST
SUPPLIES.
CLASSES OFFERED IN
DIFFERENT
CRAFTS.
OPE" 6 DAYS A WEEK,
10 :00 to 5:00

w1th 5 bedrooms, 3'h baths,

milk house ALL FOR
$15,000 00
SPLIT ENTRY - This I
vr old home has 3·4

byHenr1ArnotdandBobLee

6 oo-Summer Semester 10

4 10 I mo

Ph. H2·3Hl

Enormous family home

BDRM frame home has all
the
requirements
for
country llvmg , 5 acres,
garden, fruit trees, barn.

~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

R~d

Rl. 1
Middll!port, 0.
992·5724
Complete
Sales
and
Service and Supplies.

MIDDLEPORT

BDRMS. lull basement
CALL TODAY $25,000.00 .
JUST LISTED - This 2

3,4

Unscramble these four Jumbles
one letter to each square to lorm
lour ordrnary words

condtf1on for $17,500. ·

Exactly

oo- Tom or row

'i1' ft'ifNf ffi1l

3 apartments,
one down aod 2 up, one
furnished and has a J car
garage. All In good

what you have been looking
for 12 acres, close to
town, 7 room brrck, with 4

•

~~~~~ ]I}

BRICK -

JUST LISTED -

::l

9· 3()-Fish 6

1

car garage.

MAIN
POMEROY. 0.

·,

: ·~

of Unc ertai nty 20', 33

IN51~UC1 1 0NS--

lnsulaltOn Servtces
Ftntnc••l Awaitablt
Blowl'ltnto Wills I Atttts
STORM
WINDOWS &amp; DOORS

large living, hot water
heat . on corner lot with 2

$24.000 00.
WHITE ELEPHANT- 12
rooms, J kitchens. 2 baths.

ONE REGISTERED Jersey fom rly HOUSE RANCH 1500 sq It 3
mrlk cow now mrlkrng , 2 years
bedrooms , clo se to town
o ld , one regrsteredNub1on Brlly
S16 900
Phone 992 3684
9
Goat , 1 year old
Phone
om tdl5 p m

742 2292

$0 YOU
FIGUReD
We COUI..D
00 13U51NE.55
AND SPLIT~

lllftn -

rooms, 4. bedrooms, bath,

667·3737

VO LK SWAGON

THEIII lT TURNED OUT
WAS HAVIi-10
'(OU .5HAD0l'JED ,T00-·
AI-ID '{01.1 OWeD A
~OAN SHARK!

CARO~

FREE ESTIMATES

bath, and two
Clrfl)l$9,300,

:'i

12 O()-Movle " Before Winter Comes" 10, Janakl 33.
12. 4()--What•s My Line' A 2Sth Anniversary Salute
6.13. Movie " One Spy Too Many" 8

LARR~M'..~~!DER

J and 11 p m - Mother, Jugs a nd Speed

Coble Chonnel 5 6: 30p. m - Testimony Ti me
1:00 p m . - Paul Gaudino Fam ily F itness
1.30 p m - Happy Place
8 .00 p m - Slue R idQe ua r tet
8 30 p m - Cable Journal
9· 30 p m - Tole Pa lnl lng
10 00 p.m . - 700 Club
FRIDAY, JUNE 17, 1177

i:

7 J()-Hollywood squares 3,4; Oh io Slate Lottery 6;
Pr ice Is Right B; Mac Neii ·Lehrer Report 20.33.
Wild Kingdom 10. Nashville on the Road 13. Dolly
15
B· 01l-Fanlastlc Jovrney J,4. 1S. Welcome Back Kotter
b. ll . Waltons B.10. Tribal Eye 20 . Mas terpiece
Theatre 33.
8 Jo-What's Happening 6,13
9 oo-Movle " The JOOO Mile Chase" J.4,15; Barney
Miller 6. Hawaii F ive 0 8. Mo¥Je " The Barretts of
W•mpole Street" 10, Movie " LI ' I Scratch" 13; Age

Reedsville. 0 . Ph. 3714250
5· 27.TFC

2·29· 1 mo .

lot . Jus! ss.ooo
MIDDLE PORT

TWO MACH 60 G60 14 trr es two
Mach 70 F70- 14, fou r Crogor
wheels
$250
Phone (614)

197S

RATES

·----

SMALL form for sale 10•;. down
owner frnonced Monroe Coun·
ty W Vo Phone (30tl) 772

NEW G E Frost Free Refrrgerotor

CAMPER , S600
Also
horse
lra rler , $450 Phone (614 ) 698-

REASONABLE

ReaJ Estate for Sale~~

_phone (6 14 ) 59_2 ~5 1 .____

992·2955

COAL l1mestone ond calciUm
ch lorrde and colc rum br1ne for
dust control ond spec1ol m1Krng
sal t for for mers Excels ror Salt
Works Morn Street Pomeroy ,
Ohro or phone 992 3891

CAPTAIN EASY
liKE I SA¥· · 1 CLUED I ~ WHEN
)'OU ~OOSTED THE RAiol$01,\-· TO
CLIP T~E COMPANY FOR AN
XTRA 111\ILLI0'-1!

GUARANTEED

Phone Mike Young •' · ·
992· 22114 or 992·7630

Route

COUNTRY formlond wrth seclud ·
ed woods water and good ac
cess 1n Monrpe County W Vo .
$1 .000 down coli (3CM) 772 3102 or (304) 772 3227

CASE LOT

Wrll do odd JObs roo trn g porn
ling gurter work Phone 992

PARTS · lABOR

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

Young's tarpeting

3102 o! I 30•)_?J2.3~7 . c--,-.

Seriices Offered

Free Estimates

Superior
Steam Extraction

DUGAN'S
FRONT END
ALIGNMENT

. .,.._Jack W Carsey , Mgr

PET CLIPPERS $10 Bo ss f1 shrng
rod $15 Phon e 742 -2050

Jlfobil" Homes for Rent

Automatic
Transmission Service

AlUMINUM
SIDING-SOfFITT
CUTTEIISMNINGS

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.

ONLY

Pomeroy Landmark

VILLAGE GREEN APTS MULBERRY
HE IGHTS LUSURY LIVING IN
NEW 2 BEDROOM APTS

Route 3, Pomeroy, O.

WINDOWS

C B Mob i le Tr an sc erv e r

6il.

SWAIN'S

m~E'EIIT

2 BEDROOM MOBILE horne m
Rocr ne orca Coll992 5858
AVAILABLE AT Rrve rs rde Apart
me nts one bedroo m $105 per
month 2 bedr oom S 138 per
month Phone 992·6098 Equal
Housrng Oppo rl unrty

Young's Carpeting

(lrpt1-Lino.· T1le

CB SPECIAL
ROBYN WV-23

U9 ,9S

-~-

YARD SALE Cloronce Wamsley
resrdence June 15 and 16 beh1nd
post atfrce , Chffon W VA Follow
st~n~--~ocra~e , clothes , mrsc

l ei

279 •95

ONE BEDROOM furnu;hed oport
men!
1n M 1ddleport
Call
992 5434 or 9c;l2 31 29

Rt 581 01 Allred Phone 985 3504

-

Board of Educalron
of Meigs Local
School District
Jttne Wagner,
Clerk Treasurer
South Thrrd Avenue
Mrddleport , Ohro 45760

FURNI SHED APT Adults only no
pe•.
Ph one 992 ·3874 M1d
dle port

PIANO TUNI NG, lane Don1els 12
years of
servrce
Phone

--

Now Only ,

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
Siding,
Storm
Windows
&amp;
lnsu Ia Iion.
Call Professionals

.

noon 14th
and all day 15th, 16th Ed Mrller
resrdence Cherry St Ra&lt;:rf1Et
Phone 949 2361

2 FAMILV YARD Sale , Friday tmd
Saturday 17 and 18 Lots of
ch•ldrens
clothrng ,
fu rmtu re ,
qu1i1 , Don Wolkor, 5th Str eet
Roctne Ohio .

Pomeroy Landmark
&amp; cond1hon your
wa1 er and a Coop water
softener, Model UC XVI

3 AND 4 RM lu1ntshed and un
lu rn t ~ned
op ts Phone 992
5434

Upho ls ter1119
drapes
reoi onoble 572 South Th •rd
Ave
Mrddleporl
Phone

GARAGE SALE 4 1/t m1les west of
Tuppers Plorns Frrdoy end Sotur
dgy June 17 ond 18th on Stole

Let

~often

n
•.·.

THURSDAY, JUNE 16, 1977

SOFTENER7

F'or Renl

SEWING ALTERATIONS ·

3 FAMil 'f YARD Sale Thurs and
Frrdoy. JUSt off Rt 124 on Coun ·
ty Rood 12 y, mrle post
Longsvrlle Brrdge f1rst trader
on left Phone 742 2830

NEED A WATE R

EXPERIENCED
Radiator ,....,..-.-,
Service

and South Second Monday thru
Thursday 9 trll 5 Frrdoy 9 hll
4 Mrddleport

-starting

Business Services

Free Estimates
COMPLt:.ll:: P~A V H P A System
No Sunday Calls Please
SWISS COLONY tr avel l rorl er~
Fende r gu1 tor , IOU m aster wt th
6- 1J-1 mo
CO S&amp; Ph one 992 7256
L__ _ _ _ _ _,:__;;•:..:,.
~ ,;::,·;,:.J
·
cu stom mode MAPL E LEAF
tandem s 16 up CRICKET tr uc k
ca mpers spec1a l at COON ER s 8 W EE:K old p rg s $25 eoch Pho ne
949. 2857
CAMP ERS
Rambow R1d ge
O pen even1 ngs Tok e M e1 gs 28 HANC ING 8A S ~ E1S pot s and
or 32 to Bo sh on Owner Robert
geron 1ums
Clel a n d s
Cod ner l ong Bott om O h1 o
Creen h o u se ,
G e rald tn e
Cleland -fio cme , Oh!o

YARD SALE at corner of Mulberry
--YARD SALE

.:

Phone992 2181

TWO BEDROOM trader Brown s
Trorler Court Adults only
Phohe 992 3324

YARD SALE , Fnday and Saturday ,
at Rrggs Cres t Manor, 2 mrles
PARKING lOT
FOR
from Tuppers Plo1ns off Co 28
MEIGS LOCAL
Dresser, stereo lownmower
SCHOOl DISTRICT
baby rtems
toys , clothes ,
Sea led proposals wtll be
drshes mrsc rtems
received by the Board of
Educat1on of the Mergs Local
School Drs1rict of Mrddleport ,
Ot1ro at the Clerk ' s off1ce untr i
12 00 Noon on June 24, 1977
and at that trme opened and RISING STAR Kennel Boordrng,
r.ead by the Clerk tmmedJately
Indoor-Outdoor runs , groomrng
thereafter , tabulated and a
oil breeds , clean sonr tory
report thereof made by the
facJI1hes oe 367· 71 12. Chesh1re
C l erk to sard board at Its next
Phone (blA) 367·0292
meetrng
-- Description of Improvement HOOF HOllOW Buy . sell trade
loc ated at Meigs High Schoo l ,
or lrorn horses RUTH REEVES,
Pomeroy , Ohro
trorner . Phone (614) 69B ·3290
Specifications
are
as
follows ·
AKC SHETLAND sheep dogs .
1 To patch and seal
(Mrn ) Coll re s, 2 females 7
parkrng areas at the Me1gs
wooks old Shots and wormed
Hrgh SchOOl - approxrmatel y
Phone (614 ) 367 0292 or
16,000 SCI yds
367·1112
.
2 - To patch badly broken
"
areas
with
404 asphalt 1c
MEIGS COUNTY Humane Soctety
concrete
Anrmol 'Corelrne ~2-7680 or
3 - To c hip and sea l parking
oftet 6 p m • 992-5427
areas wrth fiS 3 and No 8
"
lrmestone ctlips
A certrfled check payab le to PEEK A-POO dog I v~ year old
House broken very good wrlh
the clerk treasurer o t the
chrldren
Coli 992 ·7074 or
above board of educatron or a
991·3Ab5
sat i sfactory btd bond executed
by the bidder and the surety
FOR ADOPTION obonded 3
company, rn an amount eQual
week old mole Spaniel puppy,
to trve percent of the brd shall
needs special co re Humane
be subm I fled wrth each brd
Sa rd board of educat ron
Society 992 7680
reserves the rrght to wa i ve
mformalltles, to a ccept or MOTHER CAT ond 5 k rtten s.
Phonem 3090
reject any and all , or parts of
any and all btds
FEMALE PARl German ~hepherd
No brcfs may be wlfhdrawn
to g1ve away 10 good home
for at lust th i rty (30} days
around 16 months old. Block
after the scheduled clostng
and ton Phone992-3361
ltme tor receipt of btds

(6) 6, 9 r 16, 23, 4tC

'

FO UND HMALt Beagle block
ton and w h1 1e wearrng blo( !.t
coll ar. Phone 9q2 3796 Frsher
St , M1ddleport

Coll992·21 56

Manning D Webster

J UDGE
COMMON PLEAS COURT

Lost and Found

COINS CURRENCY, tol.. ens old
pocket watches and charns
srlver and gold We need 1964
and older srl ver corns Buy sell ,
o r trade Call Roger Wamsley
74'1 2331

Rt. 7, Pomeroy , o.
...:;. :;:. :;'-_

t9;J FORO PI(KUP V f1 flatbed
Sb44 1-'ho nc '19'} .)684 9 o.m
11II S p •n

1976 FORD f- 250 4 wheel dnve
Phone 7" 2 2590

LOST LARGE DOG 1n K1 ngsbu1y
Rt 33 Roods1de Pa rk areas
long herr mos tly b lock wrt h
some whrt e Has a sash cho rn
co/l or
Phone Bud Wrlson
992 7283 o r 992 2126

~::

I f.in ~ORO Von h :(lnohne 200 In V HULL l onrt Sto1 boot I) It !lO
s100 !t oed up fJost Eastern H1gh
h p mo tcu $800 Phone (304}
!tchool ot !Qp ol IHII 1-'hone
77'J ')ij/ :J
9&amp;!1 3323 .\.1700

1940 PACKARD Coupe. $995
Phone 992 :)()ij4 ~ am . t•ll S
pm

TIMBER , Pomeroy
ducts Top prr ce
sowtrmber, Coli
K.ent Hanby , I 446

THE DESPERADOES

-

and M0110 b vm

CASH pard for all makes and
models of mobrle )lames
Phone or eo code 614 423 (,1531

Music Afternoon and
Evening by-

COMMON PLEAS COURT.
PROBATE DIVISION

~ugene

Wanted to Buy

FREE COOKOUT

IN THE

oil

..

tor .-,alP

EXCAVATION COMPLETE sepllc COUNTRY M abrle Home Pork Rt
systems
Sprrngs d eveloped
33 te n m•les no•th of Po me roy
All wo rk rs guarantee d Brad
Lo rge lots w1th con crete potros
Lewr s phone 1.4 2 2451
s1dewolk s runners and o ft
street pork 1ng Ph one 992 -7479

tin u FrH I, r ~
bdurt JlUbhl,!lll&gt;ll

Auto Salf'S

f'IANO USSONS , ch,ldr~s and Wt:. WOUlO l.lc r to thank a ll the

50 to bO Acre s of cro p land FOR
RENT
1n Rutland Ph one (5 13)
53 9-74i39

!l.lumlil}

IIHJ dil\

TELEVISION
VIEWING

Let The Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash

WANT AD
CHARGES

•,•:

MANNERS? HAVE YE FERGOT
HOW TO KNOCK?

----y---i
~

•

'•

'••
0

•,
0

'

noted the fall of the queen
from West. entered dummy
with a trump , discarded hts
last spade on the jack or
diamonds that had become a
lucky winner , lost the heart
fmesse but made hts slam
"How dtd you know that the

spade hnesse was wrong?' '
asked the student
"f dtdn't," rep !ted the
Professor " I couldn't lose the
hand if the spade fmesse was
on and by refusmg tt I gave
myself a s hght extra chance "
That is JUSt whal the
Professor had done Gtve
West the ktng of spades and
the hand ts cold Without the
queen of dtamonds droppmg
because, after rufhng out
dummy's Jack of diamonds ,
Soulit will lead a spade If
West holds the king he wtll be
caught in an end play

~Q~~
A Wyommg reader asks
what we open wtth
lto Axxxx ¥ KJx • Kx • AQx
We open one notrump We
have 17 htgh-card pomts and 53-3-2 distribution
( For a c opy or J A C OBY
MODERN send $1 to Wm ar
Bndge," c/o th1s newspaper
P 0 Box 489 Radt o C rty S taffon
New Yo rk N Y 100 19)

�12 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, June 16, 1977

Rutland phone
exchange will
be improved

Rhodes supports amendment
COLUMBUS cUP!) - The
office of Gov . James A.
Rh&lt;xles confirmed today the
governor supports a proposed
constitutional
amendment
that would abolish the sta le
school board and give local
voters control over their

MASON DRIVE-IN
Wed .• Thurs ., Fr i.
June 15-16- 17

HUSTlER SQUAD
II

R"

Plu s

state controls, and sees local

schools.
Barnes ,

conLrol as the an5wer ,·' said

chairman of Citizens for Good
Schools, which is sponsoring
U1e amendment, had said

Barnes.
Barnes' group is heading a
drive tu colleU307,000 signatures by Aug . 1 in an attempt
to place the amendment on
the November election ballot.

E.

Dennis

earlier

that

Rhode s

supported the amendment
when the governor was in

Bucyrus last week.
Rhodes at that time also
said the amendment would
t!liminate the problem of
state mandates made to

schools without state funds to
pay for them.
Barnes said this kind of
unsolicited support is charac-

Local news
in briefs

t.cri&amp;1:ic when a nyone under·

stands the amendment.
"Hll&lt;xles, just like many

TRIP WITH
THE TEACHERS

citizens, is concerned about
of
the
deterioration

" R"

educa tion
and
the
skyrocketing of taxes and of

NEW!

rote~

George Taylor , Pomeroy.
was senten ced recent ly by
CoUnty Court Judge Robert
E . Buck to 3JO days con·
finement In the coun t y jail
and f ined Sl , lOO and costs on
11 cou['lfs of slashi ng tire s
over M emorial Day weeken d,
accor ding to Carson Crow.
assis t ant pro secutor . The
sentence w i ll be served

The Big Bend Rega tta
Queen's Luncheon will be
held at the Midd le port
Mason ic Temple and not the
Meigs Inn as previously
reported . It wj l l be held
Friday 4 p . m . Servi ng w il l be
the mother s of the Meigs
Order of DeMolay .

ou r

fl.:nub le '&gt;0"1ngs We hove o

Absentee grade cards are

read y to be pick ed up at the
Meigs Juni or High School
from 8 a m . until 12 noon and
from 1 to 3 p . m . Monday

&lt;;0111 ngs plan destgned lor you

through Fr iday .
Bi ll Da llas , son of Cham ·
paign County Supt. of Schools
and Mr s. George Da l las , of
St . Paris , graduated magna
cum laude from Bow ling
Green
Un ive rsity
last
Satvrday in annual com .
mencement exer cis es . He
Will ~t udy law at Ohio Nor ·
thern beginning fall term .

~~~~W A Home Bank
For
Meigs ·c ourtly

Filing

People

RACINE
HOME NATIONAL

·sANK
RACINE

OHIO

for

dissolut ion

Beverly tragedy blamed on

j

I'

.,

-

exchange. General Telephone
Co. of Ohio announced today.
The $126,000 addition will
serve the area . west of
' Rutland.
Portions of the new cable

sponsor.

Come tn .ond hnd out abou t ov r

•

vice improvement in the local

McElroy, J erome Cook,
Jewell
Curtis,
Dayton
Me Elroy, Frah ces Roush .
Gene
McElroy ,
Virgil
M c Elroy . Each one par t icipating mus t secu r e a

~&amp;WO~@~
~(1&amp;~~
tn&lt;r e o'&gt;ed eOrn't ng

RUTI.AND - t:on&gt;1ruction
is under way of a major cable
project for growth and ser·

scheduled for early 1978.
The Rutland exchange
serves 769 customers in a 86square-mile area or Meigs
County.

of

PAULA EICHINGER, dau~hter of Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Eichinger, Mulberry Heights, Pomeroy and veledictorian
of the Meigs High School senior class thia spring with
some 200 members, was awarded a $500 scholarship
Tuesday afternoon by the Women's Auxiliary of Veterans
Memorial Hospital. Miss Eichinger was selected by a
seven-member committee on the basis of scholarship and
her work at the hospital with the Candystrjpers. Pictured

Cloudy tonight, lows in the
mid 60s. Chance of showers
Mrs. Carol Kennedy was
Friday , highs to upper 80s.
·elected
president of the Meigs
Probability of precipitation
High
School
PAT (Parents
10 per cent today and tonight.
and
Teachers)
at an
30 per cent Friday .
orga n izatio nal meeting
Tuesday at 7:30 p. m. at the
high school. Mrs. Kay King,
Mrs. Dorothy Oliver, and
(Continued from page 1)
Mrs. Lila Mitch were elected
passing the bill out today.
vice-president, secretary and
The extra welfare money was to increase monthly aid to treasurer by the 24 parents,
families with dependent children by $12 for a family ot tour. Principal James Diehl, and
Majority Democrats pushed through 65 amendments during a two teachers present
31h hour committee meeting which lasted past midnight. An
Under the temporary
additiona l 25 amendments were expected to be dealt with chainnariship of Allen Lee
today, including Republican proposals.
King, the group also adopted
As the Democrats inserted their "laundry list" of changes a constitution which lists two
tn the t978-79 appropriation, they included spending reductions objectives:
of at least $14 million in various areas.
To provide ·a means of
communication between
MOSCOW (UPI)- American journalist Robert Toth was home and school.
told by the Soviet KGB secret police today that his questioning
- To
encourage
is over and he is free to leave the Soviet Union. Toth said KGB cooperation between parents
officials phoned him this morning with the news they were and teachers for !he bet·
done questioning him abOut accusations he gathered state terment of Meigs High
secrets and contacts with Soviet scientists and dissidents.
School.
"They called me and said I was no longer needed and I can
All adults interested in
go when I want," Toth told Western reporters. The veteran Los advancing these objectives
Angeles Times correspondent immediately went to the are invited to become a
Moscow visa office to clear the paperwork for his departure mell)ber by attending the
Friday at the end of a three-year tour of duty In Moscow.
September meeting and

Late break

an undisclosed amount of
cash.

beating the trading deadline,
obtained left-handed pitcher
Ken Brett from the Chicago
White Sox today in exchange
for pitchers Don Kirkwood

Chicago ' this year, was to
report to the Angels immediately.
Kirkwood posted a 1·0

HEAD LACERATED
T h e Middleport
Emergency Squad answered
a call to 186 North Sec'Qnd
Ave., at8:55 p.m. Wednesday
for Brownie Stewart who had
a head laceration. He was
treated by the squad and was
later tak.en to Veterans
Memorial Hospital by private
vehicle for further treal!"cnt.

and

·John

Verhoeven ,

Infielder John F1annery and

~as

6-4 fQr

record with a 5.09 earned run
average in . 13 apr}ear3nces

for California. Verhoeven and
Flannery both played for the
Angels' Salt Lake City farm
club in the Pacific Coaat
League.

4-H News
THE MIXED UP Hotshots
met on June 9 at the home of
Dorsey Jordan with 13
members, 3 advisors and one

visitor attending.
The group discussed taking
a trip to the Ford Museum
anJ how they would raise
enough mney to go. Each
member gave a report on
what he has accomplished so
far on his projects. Mrs.
Pansy Jordan and Virginia
served refreshments and for
recreation

PUT FATHER
ON A THRONE
OF HIS OWN

t.he members

played ball tag.
The next meeting will be at
the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Lloyd Sayre but no date was
set. At this time it is hoped to
have more infonnation on I
their trip to Ford Museum
and more done on the 4-H
projects. - Ralph Jordan.

RAIL BOARD
COLUMBUS (UP!) - One
state represe ntative and oile

state senator would be
appointed as nopvoting
members or the Ohio Rail
Transportation Board under
terms of a bill sent to the
Senate Wednesday by the
House.
· The bill, sponsored by Rep.
Arthur Wilkowski, D-Toledo,
would also require the board
to complete a statewide rail
plan by Sept. 30, 1977, and
would specify that all
employes of the bOard be
covered under state civil
service regulations.

paying $1 annual dues. The
Meigs High School PAT will
meet the second Tuesday of
each month, September
through May.
This group is similar in

purpose to another newly·
organized parent-teacher
group, the Meigs Junior High
School Parent-Teacher
Forwn, which will meet the
fourth Tuesday during school
months.

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admitted - John Hinkle,
Hartford; Karen Hood,
Mason; Clarence Wolf,
Chester; Ruth Priddy,
Langsville; Wilma Wells,
Hillsdale, Md.; Bessie Bam·
· hart, Pomeroy; Ada Whited,
Belpre; Rachel Cundiff,
Syracuse.
Discharged- Henry Price,
Sharon Riggs, Annetta
Evans, Kenneth Davis, Leona
Winnings, Melinda Spencer,
Maggie Gilmore, Ronald
Dalley.

Holzer Medleal Center
(Discharges JBDe 15)
Norman Bahr, Mrs. James
Birchfield and daughter ;
Paul Boegli, Barbara Brown,
Mary Cardwell, BIUy caudlll,
Leona Dower, Ben Eblin,
Nellie Eblin, Linda Flinner,
Denver French, Herbert
Grimm, Mrs. Blent Ha.rrill
and daughter, Betty Hutchison, Charlotte Johnson,
Wendell McCoy, Ethel' McPherson, Goldie McWillialllll,
Richard Maier, Frank
Meadows, Charles Molloham,
Susan Nelson, Charles
Neibort, Rebecca Peters,
Hallie Robertson, Robert
Schoffler Sr., Judy Shinn,
Mrs. Gleen Soles and son,
Donna Stobart, Audrey
Theobald, Kelly Thomas,
Mamie Wallar, Velma
Young.
(Births JIUle 15)
Mr . and Mrs. Charles
Price, a son, Jackson. Mr.
and Mrs. Thomas Vanco, a
daughter, Bidwell. Mr. and
Mrs . Eddie Canter, a
daughter, Thurman.

.Property
Transfer~
Sheila c. Reeves to Robert
Lee Reeves, Lot. Chester.
Everelf Michael , Mabel
Michael ·to Everetf Michael,
Mabel Michael. .63 acre,
Salisbury.
Russell Quillen , Velma
Quillen to Benjamin Boggess,

Zelphla Boggess, Parcel.

Letllrt. · · ~
Evelyn VIrginia Moore to

Tim Cundiff. Debbie Cundiff.
Lot 12, Crook's Add ..
Syr:acuse.
Miriam Suzanne Weaver
Kuhl, to Econollne Home
Insulation
Inc . Parcel..

Orange.
Mary · McAngus to James
D. McDougal, Patricia A.
McGOougal , Pomeroy .
Clarence
E.
Fraley,
Jacqueline Fraley to Harold

Clinton Oxley, Jr., Chartyo
Oxley, Columbus .

Roger E. Weaver, Cathy:

Darlene Weaver to Michael
L. Barr, Margaret Jean Barr ,

parcels. Sutton.
Lowell

Eugene

Greer ,

Mary Kathryn Greer to Roy
Proffitt, 55 acres,

Eber Roush to Syracuse
Home Util ities. right of way.
Sutton.
Marvin

Morris,

Exec.

VivJa·n E . Johnson, dec . to

Dallas Cleland, Geraldine
Cleland, porcet, Sutton .

Elberfelds In Pomeroy
AT THE INN
Famous Name Brar;ds like Bassett.
Berkline, Collins and Leisure Boy
Chairs .

"TIGRESS"
2GALS
FROM PARKERSBURG

REG. 1239.95

SPECIAL

THURSDAY_ 9:00·1 :00
FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY
10 TIL 2

REG. 1299.95

THE MEIGS INN

SPECIAL
HURRY! ONLY 12 RECLINERS
IN STOCK

·Father's Day Is Next Sunday
Special sale prices nowo.n many items for Father's Day Giving
Enllre stock of men's short sleeve shirts- sale priced. Included are
knit shirts, dress shirts and leisure shirts.
Save. too. on men's double knit dress slacks, ·men's fashion jeans,
&gt;1Y "
men's ties. summer weight jackets.
You'll finci excellent selections. You'll find well known brands- and
you'lllikethe savings in the men's department on the 1st floor.
And l!e sure to select Father's ·oay cards from the Hallmark Cards
.on the 1st floor. Gift wrapping paper, ribbon, bows to put it all
together.

992-3629

OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT TIL 8

POMEROY

RUTLAND FURNITURE

742-2211

Elberfelds In PQmeroy

ARNOLD GRATE
OPEN FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY TIL S PM
.
RUTLAND, OHIO

•

•

-

WA81UNGTON (UPI)- Daollll,ll ~aideD! Carler'a
forelp policy a double blow, lbe Senate hao refilled to
·~ admlaiJtratloa piau for South Koreu troop
wltbdraftl ud a Jlllrtlal llftlq of tbe trade embargo
agalnlt Cuba .
Tbe Seaate, wori&lt;IDIIIate Into the Dlgbt Tbunday, allo
rejected a Republlcu pl'OfiOI8I to demalld key
coaceolloao from Cuba u tbe price of reetortac fuU
diplomatic reeognltioa,
Carter waall to withdraw about 33,100 groulld troopt
frvm South Korea wltbla five yean, and autlclplltea
irnp&lt;ovement ID relatiOIIJ witll Cuba but basllldlcated luU
diplomatic recognltloa Ia some time away.
Tbe Senate )NIIIIed the ,1. 7 biWoa dollar Slate
Deparlmeat- U. S.lnformatioa Ageacy autborlzatltm bUI,
M-Zl, after addlag an ameDdment by Sea. Jolin Glem, J&gt;.
Oblo, forblddiDg tbe President to commit any funds for
reparatloDI to Vletaam. It defeated, tm a vote of 40 to 40, a
propooalto forbid the uae of funds even to negotiate on

VOL. XXVIII

reparatioDJ.
Tbe measure mw goe8 to a probable H0111e-&amp;.ute

conference where diHerencea wilb a Ho01e-paooed biD

•

\

NO. 45

•

g, panic

•

•

enttne

at

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Rural

mUll be negoliated."

• •

"Panic may have occurred at this time," the agency said.
The fire had built up intense heat before employes first saw
Sllloke in the zebra room, which was used for private parties. Although there were 10 exits, many of the Cabaret patrons
tried to jam through only two with the mosl difficult access.
Th~ agency "said employes used fire extinguishers to try to
One could be reached only by going through an area used by
control the fire. But the chemical extinguisher acted only to
further contain the flames unUI the heat became so intense employes and the other required the use of stairs or a ramp.
"The investigative team has concluded that the fire originatthat a "flashover" occurred and lire burst into the QPen.
The agency said a busboy warned patrons in the Cabaret ed in a ooncealed space within the zebra Room. The most
Room which contained an overcapacity Saturd'ay night crowd probable source of ignition waa electrical in nature " the
'
of about 1,000 persons to hell!" popular singer John Davidson. agency said.
It was the wocst nightclub r1re since 491 persons perished at
But the customers were "slow" to react unUI smoke poured
Boston's Coconut Grove in 1~2.
into the room from the main corridor.

e

FRIDAY, JUNE 17, 1977

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

Castro frogmen
aimed to raid
Nixon residence

•
hank IS

HOSPITAL NEWS

PERMITS
· UQUOR
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
Ohio House passed a · bill
Wednesday which would
allow municipal corporation,
t\lwnship
and
county
go~mrnents to object to the
issuance oi new retail liquor
COLUMBUS (UP!)- Wed· permits or transfer of
nesday's livestock auc tion :
existing permits.
Compared with last week
au-rent law allows local
slaughter steers 5().1 ·lower, governments tn object to the
slaughter heifers steady to 1 Ohio Uquor Control Commislower, slaughter cows 2·4.00 sion on renewal of liquor
lower, slaughter bulls 2 permits.
lower, vealer s 4-6 lower,
The bUl was sent to the
feeder cattle 3 lower.
Senate on a 9!Hl vote.
Slaught,er steers: Choice
and prime 2-4 900-1225 3840.35; choice 2-3 875-1200 37- JUVENILE nJEFT
COLUMBUS (UPI) - The
39; good and choice 2-3 9001300 35-39; good 2-3 800-14110 Ohio House passed a bill
Wednesday giving a crime
33.8S.;J7.50.
Slaughter heifers : Choice victim authority to sue the
and prime 2-4 900-1095 37- parents of a juvenile who is
38.90 ; few 39; low dressing 33- convicted of theft.
The bill, passed 57-36, was
35; choice 2-4 65().1225 38-39;
Sponsored
by Rep. Donna
. good and choice 2-3 650-11110
Pope,
R-Panna,
the wife of a
28.6C).37; good 2-3 1125-1075
Any
damages
policeman.
32.75-35.50.
sought
io
such
a
civil suit
Slaughter cows: Utility and
would
be
limited
to
·$5,000.
conunercial2-3 875-1600 22.85Mrs . Pope said the
27.60; individual 2 28; few 3-4
21-22; low dressing utility 4's legislation was designed for
9110-1330 21-23.10; cutter 1-2 victims of car theft.
800-1300 22.5G-25; canner 671). ·
1250 18-22.
. 29.2.
Hogs:· Barrows and gilts 50
Slaughter bulls : 1' s 1151).
1980 32.75-,'!7 ; 2's 1000-2110 'll· higher, sows 1.25-1.65 lower,
feeder pigs 1-8 lower,
31.90.
Bullocks : Individual barrows and gilts 1-3 201).240
standard I 1200 33.25.
44.25-45.00; sows medium and
Vealers: Choice and prime 1's 315-405 33.7$-35.50 bulk 34190'285 3646; 8().120 32 to 34.70; 1-3 315-640 35.46-37.50
38.50; low choice 14().200 37- oolk 36 .~ boars 151).210 3139; good 15().240 3Q.38; 71).!25 32; 'l/~ 26.8().28; feeder
pigs 1-3 20-35 17,5().24 ; 40-60
24-31.
Feeder cattle : Choice 31-33.50.
steers 320·475 33.50-37; 521).750
Sheep: Spring lambs
Jt39; good 325-480 30-34; 65(). steady, spring lambs choice
735 30.50-34.25; heifers choice and prime · 84-108 51-55;
30()..490 29.50-33; 2!1-33; · slaughter ewes lot good 150
good 3311-480 24-29; 501).720 24- 15.

Market Report

Brett goes to Angels
Brett, 28, who

at the presentation from the left are ScOtt Lucaa, hospllal
administrator; Mrs. Paul Eichinger; Miss Eichinger,
Mrs. Carrie Kennedy, auxiliary treasurer; Mrs. Jessie
White, president of the auxiliary, and Rhonda Dalley, who
is nursing advisor for the Candystrlpers. Miss Eichinger
has enrolled in the School of Nursing of Capital
University, Colwnbus.

Mrs. Kennedy heads PAT

Weather

WASHINGTON (UP!)- Faully electric wiring and "panic"
among patrons who failed to heed initial warnings led to 162
deaths at a suburban Cincinnati nightclub in the nation's worst
6re disaster in 35 years, the federal government said today.
The Natiooal Fire Prevention and Control Administration
provided the rU"st definitive information about the May 28 fire
at the Beverly Hills Supper Club in Southgate, Ky ., in an 11page preliminary report.
The agency said the fire "oomed for a considerable time" io
combustible ceiling tile and wood that was covered by
fireproof ceilinl tiles when the club was remodeled in 1972.

Double blow dealt Carter

also will repla('e existing
facilities for maintenance
reasons . Com pletion is

marriage in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court were
Henry Paul Price, Long
ANAHEIM, Calif. (UPf)Bottom a nd Na omi Ruth
Price, Long Bottom .
· The California Angels, jusi

HIS DAY IS SUNDAY .JUNE 19th

r

I

"'

NOW YOU KNOW
Although
Benjamin
consecul!ve ly .
Franklin is generall y
F ou rteen senior ci tizen s
credited with orga nizin g
will parti cipate in the Ea t- Americ.a 's rirst fire departThan to be he ld Saturday at
3: 30 p . m . at the Country ment, in !659 - 47 years
before Franklin was born Cousi ns Resta urant.
La test entr ies are Kermit Peter Stuyvesant levied a tax
M cEl r oy, Hazel Thomson,
Ctl fl ord Ch r isty, Geo rg ia · on the ci tizens of New Am·
Watson , Bill Watson, Irene sterdam for 250 buckets along
Busch, Wi ll ie Frecker, Ruth
with ladders and hooks.

I•

~

:,.

proposed

WASHINGTON (UPI) . Agriculture Department
experts
have
begun
preliminary studies which
WASffiNGTON (UP!) - cohneetion with a matter would have struck the Nixoo
may lead to a proposal for
Columnist Jack Anderson re- related to the "security of the home."
creation of a national rural
Although E~lnosa Booet
ported today that Fidel office of the President. "
development bank, an official
The Cuban, Lazara Eddy threatened lbe servant and
castro
plotted
in
1969
to
raid
told Congress Thursday.
Richard Nixon's vacation Espinosa Bonet, sought to his family in O!ba "with
"Secretary .Bob Bergland
home at Key Biscayne Bay, recruit a Cuban-American physical harm," said
has expressed interest in a
servant inside the Nixon Anderson, the man refused to
Fla.
rural development bank, and
According to Anderson, the compound to Install listening betray Nixon and reported
I am In the process of putting
Cullan premier's plan called devices and to provide the plot of U.S. authorities,
together some key issues that
for frogmen to blow up the drawings o( the security resulting in Espinosa Bonet's
should be considered in such
President's Florida houSe. provisions, Anderson said. ouster fr!im the United
a venture," Assistant ..
"Our intelligence sources States.
But the columnist said it was
Agriculture "Secretary Alex
not known If castro expected speculated that the raiders · "It should be empllasized,"
Mercure told a Senate
to stage the raid while Nixon would have sought first to Anderson wrote, "that the
subcommittee headed by Sen.
was there and kill him in the blow up the communications raid was a contingency plan
Dick Clark, D-Iowa.
complex Inside the Nixon and that no !mown attempt
TRICIA ADLETA (LEFT), ADMffiES the macrame
attack.
Mercure appeared before
items to be displayed and sold by ber students, Lois
Anderson said he learned compound/' Anderson wrote. was made to implement it."
the panel for a wide-ranging
Snyder (center) and Sandy Henderson (right) at Heritage
details of the alleged plot "Then, presumably. !hey
review
of
the
new
Sunday.
from "intelligence sources"
administration's plans for
after the State Department
promoting rural economic
announced· that a Cuban at ·
development.
the United Nations had been
Presl!lent carter already
THANK YOU, MERRI AULT!
asked to leave the country in
has indi,cated he will support
Tonya Davis, · Regatta Queen Chainnan and a
an urban development bank.
reprej!Cn~tlve of tbe Pomeroy Chamber of Conunerce,
Mercure, in statements
extended public recognition today and congratulations to
prepared for the hearing,
Miss Merrl Aull, 1976 Regatta Queen.
.
'
.
.
avoided
any
definite
Merri attended 15 festivals during her reign as Regatta
committment to a proposal
Queen to give the regatta festival the state wide publicity
explorers.
WASHINGTON (Ui:&gt;I)
for a companion bank for
It needs to attract people from everywhere.
Von Braun retired from the
Wernher von Braun, the
Merrl traveled many miles this past year to represent
rural areas. But he said he
A feature of the annual Sigma Phi Sorority, and a
German-born scientist whose National Areonautics and
Meigs County and made many new friends in the queens,
was putting a policy study on Heritage Sunday celebration matching grant from the Ohio
rockets rained terror on Sj&gt;ace Administration in 1972
their courts, and their associates thst,she met. She was
issues including how much at the Meigs County Museum American Bicentennial
London and sent Americans · to become vice president of
well accepted and well liked everywhere she went.
capital a new rural developSunda June 19 will be Advisory Commission.
to the moon, died of cancer or Fairchild Industries,
men! bank would need, what on
Y~
f '
From June 1976 to June 1977, Merri traveled more than
Tricia
Adleta's
art
classes
"ts . est
unve1lmg o the newly
the
colon Wednesday Germantown, Md . But he
. . sh ld the
1 mv men1po1ICies ou
.
.
was required of her aa Regatta Queen. She put her all into
will have a show of their
11 ed ~ear-pro j ecllon
morning, hospital officials remained as active as ever in
he
and
wh
rrisk
r
bl
ms
it
·
msta
Divers
were
to
begin
0
luHilllng the position, and a ,million thanks wouldn't be
promoting space.
w~uld facea
P
e
d1splay umt . T~e M~1~s drawing and painting and searching under water at the said today. He was 65.
enough to express Meigs County's gratitude.
Sources said vonB raun's
AI
M.
"d his County Locator Umt, as 11 IS crafts. Lois Snyder, Sandy Pomeroy levee between the
The sources said he died in
Thill county salutes you, Merri. Ault, 1976 Regatta
_so,
ercure sat • .
called, contains slides or Henderson, and Clara Riley, upper and lower parking lots nearby Alexandria (Va.) death was not disclosed until
Queen, on a job well done, for all your hard work, long
revtew would look _mto various scenes around Meigs all of Middleport, will today for an automobile Hospital after a long Uiness. this morning because
hoUI'B, traveling, and for being a girl everyone has been
possl.ble . alternahves County. These scenes are demonstrate macrame and
The funeral was Thursday members of his family
proud to have represent them and the Regatta festival.
!'_lcludmg. use of a smgle grouped by townships and will have Items for sale. They owned by Tom Walters of and attended by hill family requested
that
the
Tonya Davis, Queen Chainnan.
do'!:esllc. development each section is headed by a will also raffle a macrame Middleport.
information
be
held
Uiltil
they
and
a
few
close
friends.
Pomeroy Police said the
::::n :~~g both rural and bright!~ colored ·map of · the plant sling for the benefit of car driven by Walters went
Von Braun lived at a time could leave town.
the
museum.
·~-=-':=::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::;;;;;:;::::.:·:·::::;.;.:::.:·:·:::·:::·:·:::::::::::::·:·:·:::·:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~\~
Dr. Alan Lovelace, acting
when
.rocketry evolved from
.
Mercure also conceded that township represented.
into the river at 1:11 a.m.
Don
and
Tricla
Adleta,
of the National
adrnlnistator
A g r i c u 11 u r e . The vlsttor selects a shde
the
Friday . Walters escaped backyard experiments to a
Middleport,
wlll
demonstrate
Aeronautics
and
Space Ad·
means
of
Department's Farmers t1tle from an mdex and then
from the vehicle but the car standard
silkscreen
printing
and
will
ministration,
said,
"We feel a
Home Administration _ dials a number. The umt then
went under and out of sight. transportation. He was at tbe
have
original
3-(:olor
prints
or
originally created to serve automatically diSpl~ys the
Chief of Police Jed Webster forefront w~en rocketry deep sense of personaiioss at
~
the
Pomeroy
riverfront
for
By United Presolnternatlonal
low-income farmers and shde chosen. Thts new
said the vehicle could be in achieved status aa a tool of the passing of Dr. Wernher
VAN WERT, omo- REPUBUCANS in rural areas of other rural residents who display 1s expected . to be sale. Steve Koch, Harrison· water from 30 to 40 feet deep peace as well as a weapon of von Braun, one of the world's
Ohio ·believe they have been left out of the party decision- were too poor to qualify for especially popular wlth the ville, will demonstrate batik, in the area off the levee. A war.
ouistandlng pioneeers in the
making process, state GOP Chainnan Earl Barnes said Thurs- normal conunercial credit _ school groups that tour . the a cloth dyeing craft, and will vehicle which went into the
He led the team that field or space exploration ."
also have finished items river several years ago was developed the rocket that
Despite his falling health
day night. ·
may have become too · museum. .
.
displayed
and
for
sale.
earlier
The newly-named state chairman, speaking at a party cautious and conservative in
this year, von Braun
first
orbited
America's
The bas1c cabmet str~cture
never recovered, Chief
The
Meigs
County
Retired
continued
to encourage
meeting here, said efforts must be made to correct that belief. recent years.
satellite.
And
la
ter,
von
of the Me1gs Locator Umt was
Webster recalled.
Senior
Volunteers
(RSVP)
development
of advanced
He said he hopes to help rural Republicans overcome the
Braun
became
known
as
the
"Part of our overall construtted gratus by ~ev .
Walters has not been
feeling by talking directly with county party leaders and by strategy should renew Robert Haydo~, Pastor o ~e will display and demonstrate charged at this time Webster "father of the Saturns" that space technology which be
their crafts and sklllB in the said.
seeing that rural party members find leadership roles In the F M H A • s
launched Apollo moon was confident would continue
0 r i g i n a 1 Pomeroy Umted Methodist
(Continued on page 2)
Church . The fme cabmetry
to open new vistas for man in
party's central committee. Barnes, former Hamilton County
nd f" · h" g as
1t d
...and that means
space
while enhancing life oo
chairman, said he foWld the disgruntled party members on a charter
mts. m w comp e e
taking some cbances and a
tour of the state he began shortly after taking the party reins increasing our service by David Fox, Rout~ 4,
Earth.
Concerned about Jagging
last month.
capability
while
still Po~ero~. The aud1o . viSual
public
interest in space, von
..
I
...... _.,,_,,.,H,,... .,j
maintaining a reasonable ~gmeermg and eu~mpment
JOHANNESBURG, SOUTH AFRICA-Rio police fired loan loss rate "Mercure said. IS. by Vere Smtth Aud1o
Braun told Vice President
C.OESSLER
'
Vtsuals, Athens, Oh1o . The
Nelson Rockefeller April 21,
into crowds of black rioters raging through two black
that an active space program
townships outside lbe southern city of Port Elizabeth today, a ::::::::::::::::::::::::::,:,:::,:::·:·:-:;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::; design of the unit is by Don
was essential for the nation to
Adleta, the slide show by
senior police officer said.
FREE TONIGIIT!
Gerard Hilferty, both of A
retain its technological ·
Brig. J . Hugo said "rampaging mobs" set fire to a number
Fred Crow amoonced
leadership in the world.
of buildings in the Kama and Kwanobuhle townships and
Couple Designers, Mid·
Von Braun dreamed of
stoned vehicles. He said pollee "were forced to open fire ill today that free hot air
dleport.
The funds for the design
sending rockets to the moon
both townshipa" but had no details of casualtiea. Outside balloon rides wiD be ofwhen he was a teen-age
Johannesburg, in the huge Africa! suburb of Soweto where fered by lbe Falls City Air
and construction of the
astronomy
student
in
police shot and wounded nine rioters Thursday, riot police used Balloon on the Meigs
Locator Unit were donated by
tear gas today to disperse a crowd of stone-throwing youths. Football Field this evenlag
the American Association of
(Continued on page 2)
at 7:30 p;m., and pooslbly
University Women, the Ohio
WASHINGTON -THE HOUSE WAS HEADED today for at 7 a.m. Saturday morEta Phi Branch of Beta
a showdown over the explosive question of using federal funds niDg.
to finance abortions, and groups oo both sides of the emotional
issue were marshaling their forces.
Ar. It came from comn'llttee, a $61.3 billion bill to fund
Departments of Labor and Health, Education and Welfare
Continuing its regatta
SOUP FOR SALE
programs f~ the 1978 fiscal year starting Oct. 1 contained a
weekend · tradition , the
Ladies of the Trinity
library in Pomeroy wiD stage
ban on lunda for abortion "except where the life of the mother Church will be selling soup,
would be endangered if the fetus were carried to term."
its giant annual book sale
sandwiches, salads and
Middleport Village Council
Saturday when hundreds of
beverages today, Saturday
DUBLIN, IRELAND -EARLY UNOFFICIAL RETURNS and Sunday at the church. on April 11 authorized by
books will be on sale for 10
today indicated Former Premier Jack Lynch's Flanna Fail They are also sp()nsoring the ordinance the closing or the
cents each.
Middleport Municipal Park
opposition party would make substantial gains in Ireland's quilt show.
These books are ones that
at
11 p.m. each evening .
general election.
.
have been discarded from the
Signs have been posted in
It waa not clear if the Flanna Fail party would capture
library's collection over the
enoygh eeats to oust Premier Liam Cosgrave's two-party
the park to make everyone
years. They includ~ novels,
coalition, which sought to win an unprecedented second
aware
of
this
closing
time.
histories,
westerns, science
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Mayor
Hoffman
warns
that
coosecutlve term.
fiction
and
romance. This
Sunday through
this
ordinance
will
be
strictly
year
a
large
number of
Tue1day, a chance of
WASHINGTON -FORMER GULF on. executives were showers Sunday and
enforced and violators wlll be
paperbacks will also be on
ordered to testify in a congressional investigation in which the Tuesday and fair Monday. arrested.
sale. The sale will start in !he
oompany admitted membership in a secret International Hlchs will be ID the upper
Violation of this ordinance
basement of the Pomeroy
cartel to raise world uranium prices. Sources said L. T. Gregg, 70tl or mid 80s and lows will
is subject to a fine of up to
Ubrary at 9 a. m. and con·
THE GOESSLER BUilDING on Pomeroy's Court St. got a face-lilting Thursday in
ooe of those subpoenaed for the secood round of House raace from tbe mid 50s to
$1110. Any group or individual
tinue
to 5 p. m.
connection with a move in the town for restoration of the business section. The ooilding
Commerce subcommittee hearings today, was directly tbe lower 6lll. . .
in the park after 11 p.m. -must
Amateur
and professional
houses the Goessler Jewelry Store operated by Mr. and Mrs. N. W. Compton . At least three
Involved in the cartel's operations and attended ""cret ·
have written permission from
book
buyers
are welcome.
Pomeroy business buildings have been improved since lbe start of !he restoration program .
the Mayor.
It
~
(Continued on page 2)

Unveiling of new
~splay

unit set

Divers will

Rocket genius
von· Braun
dies
.

search for

sunken car

!News. . . in

Briefs\~

*

Book sale set
for Saturday

Middleport's
park closed
at 11 o'clock

"

.,

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