<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="15631" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://66.213.69.5/items/show/15631?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-04T01:04:06+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="48753">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/ab2241bc542c9ff31ee801d84718808c.pdf</src>
      <authentication>2b421596eedcd02c08bab12e36cf7bae</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="50101">
                  <text>I

I
'

•

'

'

I.

.

'

'.

.

....

:.,.

Hechler
holding·
for ban

.'. .
'

-

BRADBURY PUPILS under the instruction of Miss Susan Ornstei~ use magnifying
glasses to study normally "unseen" inhabitants of soil in a class on soli and water conservation.

JOHN ANDERSON, A MEMBER of the Meigs Local School District's teacher corps,
instructs a group in kinds of campfires and other rules in fire safety.

TRYING THEIR HANDS at tying knots and lashing
on trees in the woods of Canter's Cave camp were these
· students of Bradbury School.

.

RIEBEL AND MAJ. GEN. HARTINGER - Eastern
Local School District Supt. John Riebel, left, and Major
. General James V. Hartinger, formerly of Middleport,
chat following the Sunday evening commencement at
Eastern High School. Gen. Hartinger was speaker.

93 pupils of
.f

.··

•.

General offers student guides

Bradbury have

'-

·~-

1

An address by Major
General General James V.
f
Hartinger, comma,0dant d
. the Air War College at Air
University, Max \.veil Air
Force Base, Ala., and the
naming of the 10 top scholars
highlighted annual commencementexercises Sunday
night at Eastern High School.
. In his address, which was
brief but effective, Gen.
d
Hartinger, a native of Mi •
dleport, set up three prmciples for graduates to follow
in order to meet with success
as they go into chosen fields
of endeavor.
· He urged the grads in the
first place to educate
themselves thoroughiy to do
the job they want to do,
llrging them to dedication to
the job. ·
Secondly, he \U'ged them to
accept responsibility at all
times with enthusiasni as a
stepping stone to success.
Thirdly, Gen. Hartinger
advised graduates to "treat
·
d
peciple right." The rewar s
will· be undying loyalty and
support from associates and
co-workers if the third
principle is followed, Sen.
Hartinger said.
The general became
personal at times in his talk,
recalling early days 10
Middleport when his family
had "less than least."
He said he went to work
when a high school student as
a pop bottle sorter in his
spare time lor 10 cents an

stu_d y in camp
SEATED IN THE SHADE of a kind, old tree, Bradbury students take instruction from John Costanzo, Meigs
Local teacher corps member, on rna th.
Ice three inches thick will
support one man on foot . 7 and a
half inches will hold an
autom obile and one foot of ice
will sustain a truck .

Holi4.aJ
with Care

·:.
/

--

I

/

View from the Statehouse

24 State St.
Gallipolis
446-4290
Home

446-4518

b1e A Cood Neighbor,

Siare farm Is There.
STAll IAIM

Home Oltius:
Bloomington, Illinois

~

IT WAS TIME TO stretch out on their upper bunks during rest time following five and a
half hours of classes. The bunk time from 3:30 to 4 p.m. each day was required to give the
pupils, a chance to rest before evening activities.

Carrol K.
Snowden

A

Insurance Companin

\

~.

Have a very enjoyable holi·
d~y. If your famlly holiday
plans include some driving,
make sure all of you are here
lor the many holldays yet to
come. PLEASE DRIVE WITH
CARE.

Sttfe Fa1m

/

IHSIJUNC~.

'

By Rep. Ron H. James
COLUMBUS - Al though
the Ohio Senate now has the
budget bill, H. B. 155, for
consideration,.I want to make
a comment about the shape of
the bill as it passed the House
on May 13, 1975. The comment goes toward clarifying
the use of fac ts and figures in
any discussions about the
budget.

SUNDAY GALA BUFFET
,

I

12

TIL 3 P.M.

Steamship Round of Beef......*4.50
Baked Whole Ham
c~~~~~E1~

Roast Turkey &amp;Dressing

HALF PRtcE
Salads - jello Molds - Fruits
Assorted Pies &amp; Cakes

EAT ALL YOU LIKE!

MONDAY

5 TIL 10 P.M.

Southern Fried Chicken ..........•2.65 .
Biscuits, Vegetable, Mashed Potatoes

Homemade Baked lasagna, .... ~2.65
Meat sauce, Garlic Toast.

Broiled Sirloin Butt Steak....... '3.25
Baked Potato, Vegetable
All With Salad Bar

FRIDAy

Golden Fried Shrimp ...........·.. 13.3$
Ocean Perch Fried in Beer Batter
French Fries - Cole Slaw &amp; Tartar •2 65
Sauce. All With Salad Bar

•

~-

GALLIPOLIS
446-0090

Mel Ray Entertains Nite(y

Paddle Wheel Lounge
I.
~

- '" . ..·---·-· ~·

TERRARIUMS MADE OF MATERIALS gathered at
the camp site decorated dining tables for the camp. Here
pupils assemble terrariums under the direction of Miss •
Jean Parsons, staff member.

the trip also, were in charge of the kitchen.
Each day two mothers of some of the campers Ira veled to
the Jackson camp to assist in serving meals. The food for the
most part was prepared before camp got underway by cooks at
the Bradbury School and frozen. Anurse treated a few bruises,
small cuts and some poison Ivy.
Friday morning the buses brought the young campers
back to their school and they were excused for the rest of the
day.
W)ille the week was a new experience and \In educational
one for most ofthe youngsters, parents who were left in "peace
and quiet" for the week hoped inwardly that the kids )]ad also
learned that "there's no place like home."

.

Valley hankers observe institute's 75th ·year

POMEROY - Maxine American Bankers Assn., has about AlB courses
Often times, political op- troversial features of the bill,
Thursday night are Mike ·
ponents debating the budget a feature which remained a Griffith, Pomeroy National bee n a closely bound professional enrichment, AlB Post, First Bank, Marietta,
will use figures and per- part of the bill by only one Bank employe and the first fraternity of bankers who, at certification and college president ; Jay Schlag,
centages in an effort to make Senate vote, is that which will woman to hold an office in the the same time, worked to accredition . Roger Lewis, Community Bank, Parkersa point ·favorable to their permit property tax bills to Ohio Valley Chapter of improve their own knowledge division chairman of business biu-g, vice president, and
American Institu te of and help others do the same. programs,
respective positions. I have increase automatically as
Parkersburg Larry Holdren, Wood County
always been suspicious of the property value increase . Banking, presided at the
Mrs. Griffith said that the Community College , com- Bank, Parker's burg ,
use of · percentages in Supporters of the new school chapter's 39th anriual dinner goal of the Ohio Valley mented on the degree secretary-treasurer.
debates, because no one is foundation formula argue meeting held at the Elk's Chapter this year has been to program available through
Attending
from
the
clear as to how the per- that this is an essential Club in Parkersburg Thurs- bring banking education to the college with AIB.
Pomeroy National Bank were
centages were derived. When feature of the bill if the new day night.
more people through AlB.
Joseph ' Lester,
vice Edison Hobstetter, Dennis
Some 260 area members of This goal has been realized as ·president of the Ohio National Keney, Richard Poulin,
arguments are heard on this formula is to remain properly
subject, try to learn the funded. I disagree with the the American Institute of the chapter had 360 students Bank, Columbus, and Marilyn Wolfe, Joan Wolfe ,
source of figures used.
provision . I still believe that Banking organization 's this year, compared to 248 associate councilman for Ronda Dempsey, Linda
ABOUT TH~ TIME the millage should be "Rolled- · 260,000 members strong
last year. Classes were of- District XII of the AlB, Spencer, Cheryl Abbott, Mr.
Ohio House sent the budget Back" · when valuation in- attended the Thursday night fered in Athens for the first brought greetings from the and Mrs. Charles Griffith,
event. The · members are
bill to the Ohio · Senate, the creases.
year and this contributed national office .in this 75th and from the Rutland
Senate sent to the House Am.
Before any final decisions celebrating the institute's greatly to the increase.
anniversary year and ' Branch, William Hobstetter,
Sub. S.B. 170, a bill proposing are made in the House 75th anniversary year.
The Ohio Valley Chapter is complimented the chapter qn Norma Sue Jeffers, Joan
President Gerald Ford has
some very important changes regarding future pr~perty lax
affiliated with the Parkers· the great increase in May, Kathy Stewart and
to the method in which state . bills, I can assure you that declared the week of May 25- burg Community College so a enrollment.
-Ruth Ann Graham. Tom
dollars are distributed to thor ough hea rings and 31, National AlB We~k. From
student has a three-fold
New officers of the Ohio Wolfe attended from the
Ohio's primary and secon- discussions will occur first. the first year, 'the American
reason to be enthusiastic Valley Chapter elected Racine Home-Nation'al Bank.
dary school districts , a
There are other features of Institute of Banking, the
method officially referred to S. B. 170 which have educational division of the
as the "School Foundation generated
much
conFormula."
sternation . In later news. The proposed changes in le tters I will explore the
the formula are basically complete details of the bill. of Mr. and Mrs. Allan Taylor
designed to get more state
recently were Owen Taylor,
dollars more equitably to
Mr. and Mrs. Burl Taylor of
Ohio's schools.
Seville, Mr. Taylor returned
Although S.B. 170 passed
home with them. Also Mr.
the Senate on May 14, 1975 by
and Mrs . Frank Hudson, ,..
.
a 26-1l vote, the apprent
Melvin Circle of Wor- Racine,
Mrs.
Shirley
overwhelming vote Of ap- thington· and Mr. and Mrs. Stephenson and baby, Mr. ,.. Elberfelds are open every weekday 9:30 to 5 p.m. :
,..
proval does not indicate the James Circle of New Hav~ and Mrs . Shelby Pickens and
controversy whi9h has ·were at the home of Mary family of Pomeroy, Mrs. :
and on Fridays and Saturdays 9:30 to 8 p.m.
·:
,..
.
surrounded this bill.
Circle over the weekend.
Pauline Rose, Mrs. Edith
One of the most conThose calling
the home Bickers and sons, Racine, R. : Shop the Main Store, the Warehouse on. Mechanic 11-·
,..
D., Mr. and Mrs. Leo Taylor
and sons of Racine R D. and :
Stre~t and the Home Ful'nlshlngs Annex.
:
Harry and Floyd Richards of
West Virginia.
:
May and June Graduation Gifts • Father's Day ·:
,..
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Earl
Johnson , Sheryl · LeAnn and ,..
Gifts· Special Occasions. ..
,..
Patrick called at the home of
Mr. ·and Mrs . Douglas '~
It pays to read Elberfelds Advertisements
Johnson recently.
It
William Carleton of Racine It
and take advantage .of the sales at ElberfeldS:
called · at the home of Mrs.
Deari
Brinker . Sunday
evening.
There were 19 present for
'
Sunday School on May 18.
Tonja Salser of Corcas was
a guest 9f Rebecca Lee
Tuesrlay
evening.
•
.
I

!.

.

MEMORIAL DAY

,.. .

By United Press lnlernallonal
.
.
wASHINGTON_ PRESIDENT FORD goes on naho~wtde
ieJevlslon tonight to amounce that he has run out of P~tie~ce
with the Democratic-controlled Congress on ~ner~ leglSlahon
811d will impose some actions of his own, mcluding another
in llim rtfees WhiteHouse sources said the President,
:::':::e
of
action, bas
to add $1 to
. ihe duty on each barrel of Imported crude oil starting Ju~ 1, a
move that will force gasoline stations to raise thetr prtces ljl
the nation's motorists. .
.
Officlalssaldthetarlffhikewould boostgasolineprlcesby
8bout 1.5 cents a gallon. The President's 8:30 p.m. EDT
ech which was officially described as an
of
spe ,8 '••ener rogram in the absence ofany congresswnal
, com:' the United States attempts to rally support
.!!!; on, t'he ' ll-consumlng countries to join together to avert
amongo
ro
worldwide energy
shortages.

a~sen: cong~essional

Fo~d

.:

AAA FOURTH ANNUAL HAWAJ'I TOUR

Our own fun-filled tour of this Pacific

Paradise. YISit four islands :- 1~ days

..

•

..

iEiberfelds In Pomeroyi·
~*****:********,****~******~*******************tt~.
'

' • ' ,,r '-:

:::m

,..

•

.

'

LUMB.US - OIDO YOUTH COMMISSION Director
K Willis has urged the state's juvenile courts to
young persons to commission facilities for certam
off nses because state juvenile institutions are
ded Wll11s 1n a holiday w~kend
.
r
e .
dangerously ?vercrow ding.
ld become crittc'al by midlllatement satd overcrow
cou
.
t
IUIIUIIer ~ the state's juvenile crime continues at tts presen
''alarming" rate. ·
; H · said it was becoming "very difficult for the
~on to do a, good job." Young persons charged with
" .
offenses" such as truancy, running away from home,
status
rlminal aCtivities must be kept out of the In·
or other non-cleased 81 soOn 8s possible to allow for the steady
stltutioiiB or re
ers Willis said .
Influx of more serious offend ' .
. . f ility the
The director said the commission's prlRlBry ac
'
Falrfi ld School for Boys near Lancaster is severely overe ·
d there are near 1 100 boys at the school populated. Hetimessal the commissl~'s suggested ideal total
rear~t~~
·
capacity for tbat Institution.

tenclng

,..,..

· 13 nights - escorted from Columbus.
Call ~99 for
details and reseJVations.

!s

W~

:

~ciiled

announcem~nt

.

.

,..

the Armed Forces.
In closing, Gen. Hartinger
stated that jobs and work
today are more difficult due
to the complicated equipment
and the complexities of life .
However . he stated that
young pe~ple "will make it"
because they are more mtelligent and better trained
than ea,rlier generations.
C. A. Gooding, principal,
presented the top ten scholars
with Marylu Mills named
the valedictorian and Mandie
Rose, the salutatorian. They ·

VOL. XXVII

st~p

·
. M d these dedicated members
WITH MOST EVERYONE ELSE enjoyin~ h~l~·':f:ue;~rta!~re traveling to a number
of the firing squad of Feeney-Bennett Post ~omo the :eft are Sam Clark, sergeant-at-arms;
ceremonies to pay trtbute to the war dead. F
J h Fultz Charles Edwards, Carl
1
r:ng a~d Walter Bunce, chaplain.
Sheridan Russell, Dale Sisson, Stanley Sear
Moodispaugh, Henr~ ~atwort)ly EM~r~m :r?c~~ president; Edith Spencer, Freda Clark,
Members of the awuliary, Mrs. ar e~ n ' t the monument next to the Middleport
Alma Newton, and Lelah Weatherby plac
owers a
lfe who lost two sons in the armed
Post Office in honor of Gold Star Mo~ers. Mrs. Lena Wo ' were Marc Fultz and Velvet
forces, attended. Buglers for the Mtd~epodt~ P~gt i~o~~:~ squad on the cemetery visits.
Swisher. Cub scout Pack 245 accomparue e
·
·

"i.e:

•

at y

enttne

Devoted To The Interests uf The Meigs-Mason Arell
POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
TUESDAY, MAY 27, 1975

NO. 30

PRICE 15'

Oil users
given plan
B RICHARD H GROWALD
YPARIS ( UPI) •- Secretary
of State Henry A. Kissinger
,wuay
__,
ou tlined a '•J trillion
-program to save oilconsuming nations from
· disaster· caused by energy
shorta es. He also offered a
to oil-producing
nations to provide world
coo ration on fuel problems.
s!atement to the InEnergy Agency
confere~ce . of I~ . otlconsummg mdustrtahz~d
nations was a maJor shift m

compr~mise

J"

tern~tional

E-R unit

squad was kept busy with
calls over the w~ekend. .
Saturday eve~mg, the unt!
took Mrs. HaUte Fredenck,
overcome wtth heat, to
Veterans Memorial Hospital
and Mary King t? Holzer
Medical Center wtth chest
pains at 7:30p.m. At 11 p.m.
Minme Johnson, East Mam
st., a medical patient, w_as
taken to Veterans Memonal
Hospital.
At 9:50 a.m. Monday,
Daren Roach, 7, Lasley St.,
was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospt·t a1 a Iter
being bitten by a dog . The
squad ·treated six band
members
during
the
Memorial Day Parade who
were overcome by heat.

U.S. economic policy, and he
to ld d e1egates ' . "Our interdependence wtll make. us
thriveh together
or dechne
,
tog~! ~r.
n
Ktssmger called 0 lEA
members to set up commtsstons to study the
of
matert~l pro uc 10 ~ an
marketmg to beneht underdeveloped countnes as
n gby n
0
~eviousl the United States
had dem:~ded this be kept
apart from the energy crisis·.
THE AcriON WAS IN POMEROY Monday morning
His plan for freeing the 18
when Drew Webster Post 39, American .Legion, sp?nsored
cOuntries from dictation b_y
the annual Memorial Day Parade and sernces. A
Arati and other oil-producing
highlight of the parade was a salute to the war dead by the
nations included : cutting oil
post's firing squad at the CivU War monument next to the
imports by four million
courthouse. The squad was under the co~and of .Edgar
barrels a day by the end of
Van Inwagen, Sergeant-at-arms. Taking part m the
1977; spending perhaps . $1
parade through downtown Pomeroy were the bands of
trillion by 1985 in developmg
Meigs and Eastern High Schools, Girl and Boy Scouts,
their own energy sources;
pushing nuclear power, and :::;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::.
finding new sources of fuel.
Thursday through
Kissinger also offered a
Saturday, fair Thursday
compromise to restart
and a chance ol showers
cooperation talks with the
Friday and Saturday.
A tentative schedule of use
Arab-domina te d oilHighs will be in he mid 70s of diamonds at Middleport
producing nations following
to mid 80s. Lows will be In Park has been announced by
the collapse last month of the
the 50s and low 60s.
Park Director Jon . Rothgeb.
first such meeting.
Little League games will be
Kissinger said the oilplayed
on l'!londays and
producing nations have
Thursdays
. at 6 p.m. Pony
warned that oil-conswning
League games will he on
nations can expect a sixth
Tuesday
and
Friday
Clear and cooler tonight,
hike in a year in the price
evenings.
they pay for imported oil. He lows in the 50s. Sunny
Girls and women's softball
called it unjustified. He said Wednesday, highs ne~r .so.
it shows how oil-importing Probability of prectpttatton will he scheduled on Wedcountries will remain at the . 10 per cent today' near zero nesday and Friday evenings
mercy of the oil-producers per ceJlt tonight and Wed· and Sunday afternoons.
Practices should be held in
unless they act now.
nesday.

pro~ler_ns

d~~~n:~~

Johnson at

r'jul~~mg ra~

!~~ ~~:

.. .
Brownies and Cub Scouts, antique cars, fire equipme~t of
the deoartments of Pomeroy, Middleport and Racme;
Meigs High cheerleaders, the baton corps of Mrs. J~dy
Riggs, dignitaries, and the Poppy group_ of the Legwn
Auxiliary. Following the parade, the partictpa~ts m~ved
to Beech Grove Cemetery where W. R. DaVIS, rettred
lieutenant of the Ohio State Patrol, formerly of Pomeroy'
delivered the Memorial Day address.

Day use of park scheduled

Weather

S~uthe~n

the mornings, afternoons or available for scheduled
on Saturdays whenever games.
Managers of girls and
possible. Evening practices
should be scheduled with the women's softball teams are
park director so there wtll he asked to meet with the park
no conflict in the use of director on Wednesday, June
4at 4p.m. to set up a schedule
diamonds.
All make-up games must be of games and" make
scheduled through the park arrangements for use of
director to make sure . that a equipment which is needed
diamond is avatlable . for these teams.
Basketball and tennis will
Cooperation is asked from all
Little League and Pony be scheduled through the
League managers to insure park director with the court
- (QlnUnued on·(Nile 12)
that diamondsare always

High

Evans, president of b?ard of
RACINE - ' 'Give justice to ded.
education; benedtclton by
Johnson
spoke
to
the
60
others love mercy and kindness, ~nd walk humbly with graduates and over 500 Vicki Wolfe, and the
your God" llosworeth (Bos) persons .who attended the recesSiOnal by the band.
Johnson, WSAZ-TV news exercises.
Seniors are Mary Ann
The processional, "Pomp Andrew , Deborah Kay Ardirector told the graduates
at southern High School in and Circumstance" was nott, Ronda Jean Ash,
Rhonda
Elaine
Bales.
commencement exercises played by the hi.gh school Timothv
WPnrfP.II Bt:!ntz,
band under dtreclton of Joy ·. VIrginia Hope Bird Wolfe.
Sunday night.
"You are part of this school Bigler. The invocation was Mary Cathryn Black, Haro~d
Lee !llack, Howard Leslce
US'-OIDO'S RATE OF 'UNEMPLOYMENT on and will always be. Yo11 will given by Jeannie Seller. The Black, Megan Christine
COLUMB
.basis during April was 9 per cent be 8 part of this colllffiunity. · band , offered another · Brown , Donald Ed~ard
a saasonally-«djust~t
Iii March, the Ohio BureaU. of Em- . Your parents and the l.ax- selection, "Allegro, Adagw Bush •. Jeffrey Wayne Ctrcle,
4
Wesley David Clark, Timothy
ccmpared to 9. per.;....;.....,. M
. onday The Bureau also said the • P!IYers of this dis-~tct ~av~ and Alleluia."
Ray
Cundiff,
Howard
"' )'ment Services r"~""·
The salutatory address was Raymond
fed you to thts powt,
Ervin, Jr., James
~loyment situation ln. the Buckeye State should lqiprove gpoon
given by Glenn Simpson, the · Ray Ferrell. Michael . An Johnson said.
- - the nut few months.
·
1aimin
valedictory address by , thony Fleming, Glenda D1ane
..
After
you
have
tested
your
v•~..
out 11 Wlll'k one week or longer, c
. g
Forester.
Susan
Diane
'
"'nona
gui8r Ohio unemployment Compensation wings you will look back here Stephanie Ord.
Gooch, Monty Rae Hart,
Jeff Circle, vice president Mary Christine Hawk,
benefits under re I 252,000in April- d.JWD4.1 per ceiJt from and see if this isn't '\'here you
of
the class, introduced Mr. Timothy Lee Hilt, Robin Ann
belong.
The
people
ha.
v
e
~.:..bv::g:;rlpet from April, 1974,'' .the Bureau said. sacrificed for you. You have . JohnsQn.
Hubbard. David Eugene
.... ~
ts. monthlY report said :1ur1n1 the first four
Huddleston. Steven Ray
Presentation. of the class Hupp. Daniel Paul Huston,
1be
paid under the Unemployment Com- been filled with a product and
mon
Ia . totaled $2111 m!Ulon. This com- you have no right to walk was by Bobby Ord, Janice Earline Imboden,
pepsation.
wlllion In the correspond~ months of 1974, the away, . and don't place superintendent; presentation · Rober I James Johnson,
paredwltll$86m
yourself on a shelf," he ad- pf diploma .~ by Gary Denms
~u ,rid.
•
r_
,
f' 1 •
'

::eo:~: ~ellis

l

•

e

r;;;:"':~i;=nri;i~
~~!!!!~.
~

~Eiberfelds In Pomero i

Carmel News,
By the Day

hour.
"! became the best pop
bottle sorter in Middleport,"
the General commented as he
pointed out that sometimes it
isn't the job, but how the job
is attacked that counts. He
recalled later being assigned
to the
Pentagon
in
Washington, D. c., and felt
that was only a temporary
situation. It turned out to be a
that
ton for years and
job
wen
.
he won high promoltons
during those years.
Gen . Hartinger stressed
that graduates enter life and
.work with enthusiasm. He
touched on the Air Force and
the need that Service has for
graduates. The Air Force
offers development of skills,
educational opportunities and
travel, he said.
He remarked that defending orie's country is an
honorable profe5sioR&gt;. He also
cited the changing attitude of
people, sometimes toward

. ..................·.··············:·:·:·:-:..·:-.=~:.~

it"'***********"***'******************************~

at

5 TIL 10 P.M.

.·~

By Bob Hoeflich
CANTERS CAVE - It used to be "reading, writing and
'righmetic- taught to the tune of a hickory stick."
Whether you agree or not, the concept of education today
has changed. Not only has the curriculum been broadened, but
all sorts of innovations are being usetl':to enhance the learning
process.
One such innovation took place last week at the
Bradbury School - a school for fifth and sixth graders onlywhich, you might sa:,o, was moved to the picturesque Canter's
Cave 4-H Camp near Jackson for the week.
Some 93 pupils, accompanied by a staff of 15 adults, left on
three schoof buses Monday morning for the camp. The rainy
weather of a week ago changed into sunny, dry weather to
provide a marvelous camping situation.
. · However, camping Bradbury School style is not a case of
everyone doing his or her thing. No, Sir!
Students were in classes 5¥.! hours a day working on a
study peg which included a botany nature hike, conduc~ by
Paul Smart a retired Middleport bank prestdent; math m the
out-of -{!oor;; language arts in nature ; interdependence of
living things; conservation of water and soil, and camp skills.
After the classes there were little craft sesswns on a
varied subject areas, and at night, special activities including
showing of old movies, folk dancing, singing around the camp
fire, and even some surprise features.
:
Staff members of the Bradbury School were joined by the
outstanding young people of the Teacher Corps Program of the
Meigs Local School District to help in the instruction during
the week. Mrs. Paul Smart, mother of the principal, Mrs.
Phyllis Hackett, and Mrs. Helen Miller, mother of Mrs. Betty
Fultz, a former teacher at the school who, by the way, made

CHARLESTON, W. Va.
(UP!) _Rep. Ken Hechler,
0-W.Va., says an outright
ban of the controversial
surface mining industry is
the "only realistic approach"
to sparing the land from
..
abuse and its people from
''exploitation.''
Hechler said in a statement
Saturday that · many w~
share his views on stnp
mining are "upset" because
he plans ·to help sustam
President Ford's veto of the
new
surface
mining
legislation.
Hechler labeled the
measure useless, however'
saying it wasn't as stringent
as laws in Ohio and Pennsylvania, but rather was
"shot through with loopholes,
STUDENTS HONORED - Marylu Mills, left,
built-in
delays and weak
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Mills, Route 3, Pomeroy'
enforcement
provisions."
was named valedictorian and Mandie Rose, dllugh.ter of
"
If
the
pending
bill is
Mr. and Mrs. John Rose, Lon~ Bottom, salutatorta~ of
enacted,
West
Virginians
will
Eastern High School's graduatmg class Sunday evemng.
continue to suffer mountaintop removal, dumping of spoil
from the .first cut downslope
and the devastation of steepslope mining where the law ?f
gravity increases the certam
received trophies.
. Rebecca Sue Root, Karen Lee damages," Hechler declared.
Hechler said he vigorously
The other top 8 students m Reed, Regina Dianne Kimes,
(Coi!Unued on page 12)
(Continued on page 12)
the order named were

withRoss
the
BIGH NIGHT- Two of Southern High Schoo l'8 gra duaUng seniors1are
Mr shown
and MnJ
0
guest speaker, Bos Johnson o~ WSA'lrTV! le~ :~:-~=~~~ daughter of ,.;., and
Stewart, Minersville; center~ Johnson, tud a~ eceived their dlplomaa Slturday night at
Mrs. Arthur Arnott, Rt. 2, Racme. Sixty s en r
·
.
Southern High in Racine.
"
~
\'

fl.

..

'

'

�-. -

.

.. . . .

...

. .

~.

3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, May 'n, 1975

2- The DaUy Sentinel., Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., IJ'uesday, May 'n, !975

Television LogwiN AT BRIDGE
FRIDAY, MAY 23, 1975
4·30--Sewltched 3; Merv Grlflln 4; Mod-Squad 6 ;
Mickey Mouse Club 8; Bonanza IS ..
s oo-FBI 3; Andy Griffith 8; Mister Rogers 20,33;
,
Ironside 13.
5·30--News6 ; Beverly Hlllblllles8; Hodgepodge Lodge
20; Get Smart 15; El~ . Ca. 33.
6 co-News 3,4,8, 10,13, 15; ABC News 6. Elec. Co. 20;
Catch·33 33.
6 30--NBC News 3,4, 15; ABC News 13: Bewitched 6:
CBS News 8,10; Zoom 20,33.7:1)()-Trulh or· Cons
3,4; Bowling for Dollars 6; What's My Line 8: News
10: Name That Tune 13; Untamed World IS : Antiques 20: Lilias, Yoga &amp; You 33.
7.30--Hollywood Squares 3,4: Let's Make a Deal 6;
Buck Owens 8. New Price Is Right 10; To Tell the
Truth 13; Car and Track IS: RFD 20: Car Care 33 .
8 oo-Adam-12 3,4, 15; Happy Days 13;, Garner Ted
Armstrong 6; Good Times 8, 10; The Way II Was 33;
Music Project Presents 20.
8 30--Movle " Punch and Jody" 3,4,15; ABC Theatre
6,13: Mash 8,10; World Press 20; Nova 33.
9.oo-NBA Play.Off 8,10.
9·30--Woman 20; Saga ot Western Man 33.
10 co-Kentucky Electlon Returns 3: Pollee Story 4, 15;
News 20.
10 ,30--Police Story 3; The Naturalists 33.
11 co-News 4,6,8,10, 13, 15; ABC News 33.
.-_
11 ·30--News 3; W1de World Mystery 13; Jo~nny
Carson 4.15; FBI6; Movie "Marc 7" 8: Movie The
-. Last Winter" 10: Janak\ 33.
12:1)()-Johnny Carson 3
12·30--Wide World Mystery 6.
l ·llO-Tomorrow 3.4, News 13.
WEDNESDAY, MAY 28, 1975
6:co-Sunrise Seminar 4; Summer Semester 10.
6· 25---Farm Report 13.
6:30--Five Minutes to Live By 4: News 6; Bible Answers 8; School Scene 10; The Story 13.
6· 35---Columbus Today 4.
6: 45---Morning Report 3: Farmtlme 10.
7 ()(l-Today 3,4,15: A. M America 6,13; CBS News
8, I 0.
I
10
8:1Xl-Lassle 6: Captain Kangaroo 8: Schoo les ,
Sesame Street 33
8.30--Big Valley 6; Popeye 10.
8 55---Chuck White Reports 10.
9:oo-A .M. 3: Phil Donahue 15, 4; Lucy Show 8;
Captain Kangaroo 10; Morning With
D. J .
13;Walsh's Animals 33.
9:30--Not For Women Only 3; Dinah! 6; Galloping
Gourmet 8; New Zoo Revues 13: Changing Rhythms 33.
, "
JO ·oo-Celebrlty Sweepstakes 3••'\-15; ·''ltA:iJ •
· 1, 10;
Dinah! 13; You Owe II_To rourse
,
10 30--Wheel Of Fortune 3,4, IS; Gamb\18,10; Mulligan
Stew 33
11 .llO-High Rollers 3,4, 15; One Life to Live 6; Now You
See It 8,10; One Of a Kind 33.
11 . 30'-Hollywood Squares 3,6, IS; Blankety Blanks 13;
News 4; Love Of Life 8,10: Music Project Presents
33.
0
11 :55---Graham Kerr 8; Dan Imel's World I . ,
12:1l0-Jackpot! 3,15; ·Password 6, 13; Bob Brauns SOSO Club 4: News 8, 10; Mister Rogers 33.
12 :30--Biank Check 3, 15. Split Second 6,13: Search F?r
, Tomorrow 8,10: Electric Company 33.
12 :55---NBC News 3,15.
1: ~News 3; All My Children 6, 13; Phil Donahue 8;
. Young and the Restless 10; Not For Women Only
IS; Zoom 33.
D I
1:30--Days Of Our Lives 3,4, 15; Let's Make A ea
6, 13; As the World Turns a, 10; Mulligan Stew 33.
2:1)()-$10,000 Pyramid 4,6,13; Guiding Light 8,10; The
, Way II Was 33.
2:30--Doclors 3,4, 15; Big Showdown 6, 13; Edge Ot
Night 8, 10; Saga of Western Man 33.
J:llO-Another World 3,4,15: General Hospital 6,13;
Rona Barrell 8,10; RFD 20.
3 JO--One Life to Live 13; Lucy Show 6, The Way It
Was 20; Erica 33.
3, 45-Theonle 33
4:1l0-Mr Carton 4: 'I Dream of Jeannie 4; Somerset
15, Gilligan's Island 6: Tattletales 8; Sesame Street
20,33, Movie "That's My Boy" 10: Mike Douglas

'

Expert's discard fools South
spade But the key and winning
discard was the card West jettisoned on the last club He
hung ori to the useless siK ~~
diamonds and threw one of hcs
good hearts
Now South led a spade.
fmessed the jack. cashed dummy 's ace of spades. noted the
fall of the queen from West.
thought a whcle, counted the
hand carefully and came up
wcth an ongmal holding ol three
spades m the West hand. Clearly the third spade was the 10
spot so South led a spade to his
kmg for hcs eighth and last
trick.

NORTH
.AJ4

.75

• Q7 3 2

• AJ 5 4

Alfred
Social Notes
Sunday School atlendance
nn May 18 was 52 with, uffe rcn~
$24 .66. Howard
Flanders, Eleanor Boyles
and Nina Robmson were
appocnted
on
the
program
Homecoming
commit lee .
Worship services were held
at 11 w1th Nina Robinson
leadmg opening services and
Rev . Meece speaking from II
Cur 6:16-18, 'What Is Your
Witness to God and Jesus
Christ in the Community and
the Home ''. Attendance at
this service was 25, offering
$21.34 and $17.00 cn pledges.
The Wednesday afternoon
Bible Study at the Burke
home here was well attended
at was the Wednesday
evemng service at the
church.
·. The friends here of Nelle
Winters Radekin of Belpre
were sorry to hear of her
untimely death this 'past
week. Mr. and Mrs. Chas. D
Woode Nina Robinson and
'
Clara Follrod
from here and
Mr . and Mrs. Clarence
Neutzling of Long Bottom R.
D. called at the Spencer
Funeral Home at Belpre
Sunday evening.
A group of relatives and
friends helped celebrate the
wedding anniversary of Mr.
and Mrs . Lee Henderson at
their home in Athens and also
the bcrthdays' of Mrs. Henderson and her granddoughier, Linda Williams, on
Sunday, May 18. At lending
from here were Mr. and Mrs.
Clarence Henderson, Nina
Robinson and Clara Follrod,
Mr . and Mrs . Sherman
Henderson and Pamela,
Harold, Susan and Sharon
Henderson and Garner
Griffin, Alfred; Mr. and Mrs.
Carleton Follrod and Chuckie
of Pomeroy and Mr. and Mrs.
David Williams and Aaron of
Belpre, and three neighbors
uf the honored couple. A
potluck dinner was enjoyed.
Mr. and Mrs. Clair Woode
and Conni of Circleville
visited Mr . and Mrs. Chas. D.
Woode, the William Carr
famcly and Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Whcte over the
weekend.
Recently visiting Iris Carr
have been the Clair Woodes of
Circleville, Henry Penns of
Hillsboro, Rev. and Mrs.
Meece of Tuppers Plains, Mr.
and Mrs. Ernest Taylor and
Genevieve Guthrie.
Mrs. Emma Findling
suffered a fall-at her home
recently bruising her up
badly.
Howard Flanders, Young
Adult Class teacher here, was
honored on his birthday with
a class birthday dinner at the
home of Mr. and Mrs.
ftichard Spencer on Sunday
at thecr home in Tuppers
~ Elains.-.

Energy plan up
for Senate vote

mittee, where it will receive use of energy and discovery
.1086 5
its first hearing Wednesday of alternative sources, In·
cluding coal conversion, solar
• 10 6
•Y. QJ 843
morning.
energy,
use of solid wastes,
• 9 8 54
t A 10 6
Meanwhile, the Senate
•
10
8
7
.93
Energy and Environment and ' energy curtailment and
SOUTH (D)
Committee, chaired by pricing.
• K 97 2
The Senate is to vote
O' Shaughnessy, has
• A92
on House-passed
Tuesday
scheduled a hearing Wedt KJ
.KQ62
nesday morning on House- legislation designed to clean
passed legislation up the 1972 strip mine law
Norlh-8oulh vulnerable
authorizing
the
Ohio from the point of view of coal
Development Fionancing mine operators.
South ·
West Norlh East
The measure loosens
Commission to lend revenue
•
bonding
and paperwork
bond money for construction
INT.
and provides
requirements
3 NT. Pass
Pass
2.
ol coal gasification plans and
The
biddmg
has
been
I&gt;ass
development of mining tech- for a three-year mining
permit and a one-year
nology .
Opening lead - K •
West
South
' The Rhodes administration li.cense ' rather than tbe'
claims the Democratic current annual permit
'r" . l •
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
energy
proposals
are renewal.
Pass I t
Pass t •
The House has scheduled a
See cf you can figure how ex- Pass 2 •
Pass 2 •
inadequate to meet "urgent"
floor vote Wednesday on a bill
pert South managed to ~o down Pass 3 •
Pas~
?
needs.
You. South, hold ·
at three notrump We II gcve
The governor has said a increasing the maximum
you one clue. East and West .KQ985.AtA4.A9876
hrand new agency is needed weight for trucks on Ohio
What do you do now?
were also eKperts.
to make grants and loan highways from 78,000 to
A - We slightly Javor a pass
Now for the play. South held
here, but would not criticize a cue
off twice with his ace of hearts
money
to
encourage 80,000 pounds, and the
He dcscarded a dcamond from bld of three hearts.
development of fuel sources. maximum length of tractordummy and East dropped hcs
He says tbe Democratic bill trailer riga from 55 to 60 feet.
TODAY 'S QUESTION
four of diamonds .
The House Insurance ComYou do bid three hearts and your
merely calls for revamping
Then came four rounds of partner
b1ds three notrump What
mittee
is to meet Tuesday
the Ohio Development
clubs. East got rid of another do you do now?
afternoon
to take up a pair of
Center, which is not enough.
dcamond on the fourth club. He
Answer Tomorrow
major
bills
reported out of
could do thts with no worrces
Meshel said during the
because West had thrown the 10
weekend that the Democrats' subcommittees 13st week.
of dcamonds on the third one.
One bill provides for noEnergy Development Center
East's two diamond dcscards
fault
automobUe Insurance, a
will do everything the goverwere important since he could
nor's bill does, and I think' the proposal which cleared the
not have afforded to throw a
House last year but became
Republicans will buy it."
JJWJ~M®IJ,J eor.rdlJ fiiMII , He said the center would hung up in the Senate.
The other is a medical
have revenue bonding p~ers
Ut~~tramble these four Jumbleo,
malpractice
insurance
to help with construction of
one letter to e~h square, to
reform
bill
designed
to
form four ordl nary words.
coal gasification plans and
reduce
the
number
and
7\.TeWS 7\.TOfeS refineries, o~. storage. and amount of claims and lower
1l (
1 14
leasing facilities to pnvate
malpractice insurance
industry or utilities.
Meshel predicted tbe bill premiums.
Mr . Charley Baun of
Meshel said the HouseAlbany was Sunday evenmg would clear tbe Senate easily
passed
$10.7 biUion budget
visitor of Mr. and Mrs. and receive its first House
will
be
sent to a subEugene Hanmg and family. hearings next week.
committee
after this week's
The measure Is designed to
Mr. and Mrs. Lewis West of
McArthur were Sunday encourage development of hearings by his Senate
visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Fred new concepts in t~e efficient Finance Committee.
ISEMQUOI
Tuckerman.
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Fouch
and family of Huntington
were weekend visitors of Mr .
and
Mrs. Jack Elam, Bill
ECTIPP
Now orranre the circled letten
to fonn the aurprile -•er, u
and Carolyn.
.
.
_
oupeoted b1 the above uriGon.
Mr . and Mrs. Eugene
WASlllNGTON - (NEA) - Dr. Henry Kissinger's
Haning and family were
usefulness
is over. As secretary of state. As negotiator. As
Sunday evening visitors of
.
.CAMwen lo.aorrow)
Mr . and Mrs. Roger Brown foreign policy analyst. ·
He has wit, energy, charm, confidence and a way w_tth
luablee• CARGO MINUS BA(SAM POISON
and family.
Ye11erda7'•
· ·
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Fouch words. But he is so egocentric he is unwilling to call for adVIce
\ An.wn: Onr oft~n htan a pood one on an-wrnf
and family were Sunday in areas in which he is ignorant.
at IDOI'k-"MORNING"
He is an expert on dlplomaUc and power Intrigue In the
visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Europe
of a century or so ago. But he has demonstrated he----.~
Darnell.
knows
nothing
of the military and diplomatic strategy of the
4 :3~Bewltched 3: ABC Afterschool Special 6; Merv
·Mr. Li'ncoln RusseU and Iva
- Griffin 4; Mickey Mouse (lub 8; Bonanza 15.
Johnson visiled Mrs. Mae Communist world of tbe 1970s.
by THOMAS JOSEPH
S:llO-FBI 3; ABC Afterschool Special 13; Andy
Russia, China, VIetnam and their associates are in to the hilt
Pickett at the reception at
3 Expiation
ACROSS
Griffith 8; Mister Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33.
in
virtually every current and projected crisis in hhe world Burlingham
Woodman's
t Shoe shade
1 Lariat
S:30--News6: Beverly Hillbillies a; Hodgepodge Lodge
in the Middle East Mrica, Latin America, Southeast and
Hall Sunday afternoon.
5 Canine
6 Relax
20; Get Smart 15; Electric Company 33.
Southern
Asia, Western Europe. And the USSR is building
Mr.
and
Mrs.
William
utterance
6:1l0-News 3,4,8,10, 13, 15, ABC News 6: Electric
12 wds.)
forces
which may equal or exceed ours.
strategic
Russell of Minersville visited
Company 20: New Music In Bross 33.
11 Sacred
- 6 " Two
Thus
the
security
of this country and of those allies with
6:30--NBC News 3,4,15; ABC News 13; Bewitched 6;
Women"
Mrs. Bertha Russell Sunday
setting
CBS News News 8, 10; Zoom 20,33
which our survival is interwoven, depend .on our having as
Oscar
evening.
12 Egg-shaped
7·1)()-Truth Or Consequences 3, Bowling for Dollars
secretary
of state a man intimately familiar with th.e ins and
winner
13 Last long
Sunday evening visitors of
; 6; What's My Line? 8: News 10; Country Music
7
Divisible
outs
of
thinking
in Moscow, Hanoi, Peiping, Lisbon,
(3 wds.)
Mr. and Mrs. James Reeves
Jubilee 13; Area Mayors' Report 15: Feeling Good
Answer
Yesterday's
by
2
15 Actress
were Mr. and Mrs. Robert Pyongyang and Phnom Penh.
20; Know Your Schools 33.
,
8
Hebrew
Todd
But we shall never know, so long as Kissinger is at tbe State
Reeves , Bryan of Middleport
7·30--Pollce Surgeon 3; Name That Tune 4: Lets
23 Bound
35 Seaweed
letter
16 Write
Department,
what blunders he will commit out of ignorance,
· Make A Deal 6; Wilburn Brothers 8; Book Beat 20;
derivative
and Mr. and Mrs. Charley
24 Italian
17 Gennan cc ty 9 Colorado
The Judge 10: To Tell The Truth 13: North to
or what agreements he will make based on flawed analysis.
36 - Pendleton
Smtih.
bell
Indian
20 Exasperate
Canada 15: Episode Action 33.
Mr. and Mrs. Doyle Knapp, For it is now clear he is so specialized in his knowledge of
town
37 Scotch
a:oo-Little House on the Prairie 3,4,15; That's Mf
23 "Toujours
10 Apiece
•• Maple
uncle
Kail, Kevin and Charles, history he is baffled by political systems and strategies not
Mama 6,13; Tony Orlando and Dawn 8, 10; Feeling
14 In force
""
"
were Sunday visitors of Mr. employed in Metternich 's Europe.
38- Johnson
Good 33; Great Performances 20.
18 Additional
genus
%5 Bowfin
The difference between Communist tbinking and our own iS .
8:30--Jacques Cousteau 6,13; The Bolero 33.
and Mrs . Lou Osborne and
19 Press for
'n Grassland 39 Never
26 Rome
9:1l0-Lucas Tanner 3,4,15; Cannon 8, 10; Place For No
illustrated
by a conversation I once had with Nozaka Sanzo,
family of Pomeroy.
payment
31 Succinct
(Ger.)
12 wds.)
Story 20: Masterpiece Theatre 33.
alias
Okano,
then head of Japan's Communist party. I had
By Clarice ADen
Mr. and Mrs. Paul McElroy
20 Aping
32 Minus
40 Clay
28 "Rule
9: 30--PIIot 6.
Miss Lucille Smith has were Saturday and Sunday known him in Yenan, North China, when that village was Mao
21 Ceremony 34 Dolphin
molding
Britanma"
10·.oo-Petrocelll3,4, 15: Baretta 6,13: Dan August 8, 10;
composer ,.·2_2-,Dr;-a_n-rnyi---!T""T&lt;'-genus L"";;--ripl"lateq-liiil returned home from Akron visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Carl Tse-tung's headquarters. "You Americans think of war as war
_ ·News 20; Family At War 33.
and peace as peace," he said. "We tbink"of peace as an ex1
29 Squirrel
alter spending several weeks McElroy of Colwnbus.
-"'- 11 ·co-News 3,4,6,8, 10, 13, IS; ABC News 33.
11 ;30--Johnny Carson 3,4,15: Wide Worl~, Special 13.
monkey
there helping with the care of
Mr. and Mrs. Bill McElroy, tension of war. We believe it is right and necessary in peace to
F B1 6; Movie "Joy House" 8; Movie Back From
30 ExcavatiOn
her sister, Mrs. John Reuter. Jeff and Joey, were Friday employ the same deceptions, lies and tricks used in war to
Eternity" 10: Janaki 33.
·
Mrs. Reuter underwent and Saturday visitors of Mr. obtain our objectives."
31 Papal crown
12 ·30--Wide World Special 6.
Despite
what
he
has
written,
Kissinger
finds
this difficult to
32 Bulgarian
surgery at an Akron hospital and Mrs. Carl McElroy of
1:oo-Tomorrow 3,4; News 13.
com
believe - incredible, considering that the fate of the
and her son, George, had also Colwnbus.
33 Aunt (Sp.)
agreements
signed with Communists in Laos, North Korea and
been quite ill.
smoothly today, you and your 36 Perpetual
in
North
Vietnam
irl 1954, are knowp to everyone who has
Mr. and Mrs. Charles
mate will have to decide who (2 wds )
Asia
in
modern
times.
studied
Eichinger and Suzannah of
the chiel honcho Is. ll's no day U Gather
One proof of Kissinger's inability or unwillingness to face
Columbus were weekend
for committee rule!
4% Ancient
The Dailv Sentinel
reality
lies in his pact with Hanoi on South Vietnam, a treaty
guests of Mrs . Opal Eichinger
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-NoY. 22) Greek
which
duplicated
the weakest and worst features of the
DEVOTEi&gt;TO
THE'
and family. '
It's not like you to make ex- colony
INTEREST OF
MEIGS-MASON AREA
Mrs. Etta Will, Mrs. abovementioned aborted agreements.
cuses to shirk responsibility, 43 Nervous
Bernice Bedll 0101 but that's just what you're apt
Additional proof lies in tbe SALT I and Vladivostok unCHESTER
L.
TANNEHILL
Audrey
Rowan, Mrs. Robert
Actor
Exec. Ed.
44
For
21, 1171 to do today. Watch II!
derstandings,
so filled with loopholes as to be meaningless in
Buchanan
ROBEC~Ia~i~t,.LtCH
Berry,all of Belpre, and Paul
ARIES (M•rcll at.Aj)rtl11) Be
restricting
tbe
Russians, yet binding on the United States in
careful You could miscalculate IAQITTARIUI (Now. 23-Dec.
Published daily except WcllofTexascalledon Denzel
crucial ways,
th1ngs today. This would 21) You're still unrealistic
. ,saturday
by The Ohio Valley Cleland and Clarice Allen
DOWN
Publishing Company, 1,11
depnve you •of a goal you're regarding how you manage
Witness too Kissinger's secret negotiations for a cease fire
-+-+--1 'Court
St., Pomeroy, O~fo Monday,
t1nanc1al resources Some form I Indian
var'i anx1ous to realize.
45769 Bu'slness Oft1ce Phone . 1
compromise govenunent In Saigon. The men from Hanoi
and
musical
of loss Is likely unless you
992 2156 Editorial Phone 992Mrs. Letha Wood was a
TAURUS (April 20-M-, 20) change your ways.
21 ~~-cond class postage paid recent Sund\ty dinner guest of led him around and around the mulberry bush, n¢ once, but
composition
Double-check your sources to
2
North
~~ Pomeroy, Ohio .
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Wood. time and again, Hanoi's strategists asked for the r~nation of
make sure lnlormatlon from CAPRICORN (D•c. 22·J•n.
Carolina
• National___ artvort_;SI_ n~ .
Friends here were sorry to President Thleu. That accomplished, they upped their
others Is valid. You may be a 11) A person who's seeking
representa'tive
Wafl(j
.
.
b1l on the gullible side today. your advice will not be helped It
college
Grlftlth
Comftany,
Inc,
hearofthefcre
that destroyed demands, called for Thieu's su~ssor to resign In '1avor of
you sugaracoat your words.
· ~Nt+~~~~ ~~:..'~:;rl.,~vti; the new trailer home of Mrs. Gen. Duong Van Minh. That accomplished, they asked the ,
GEMINI CM•y 21-June 20) Tell lito him hard and straight.
Your best course again today is
N.v 10011. _
Grace Gwnpf at Coolville removal of all Americans.
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:
10 stay at arm's length !rom AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 11)
Subscription \ rares:
ha
Once that was agreed they asked for the dlsmanutng of
A x- Y D L I A A X ll
Delivered by carrier where · recently, Mrs. Gwnpf
d
situations that are not your The buck stops with you today.
South
Vietnam's mililary structure, then Its administrative
available
75 cents per week; moved from Chester to her
Is 1. 0 N G F E I. L 0 W
1
direct concern Your advice wtll If you made a mistake or an
8y Motor Route wher'
be ne1ther welcome nor need- ovorslght, you'll gain respect
service
not · new home three weeks before structure, then the disarming of Saigon's military forces and
One letter Simply stands for another. In this sample A io carrier
iovallab\e , One month, SJ .25 . 1 the fire
police. When one demand was met, another was added- all to
ed.
_ by admitting It, even though ll's
.
u..ed for the three r;s, X for the two O's, etc. ~ingle letters. !BY mall in Ohio and W. v~ .• :
diHicu\1
·
Year, sn 00; s,x
Mrs . Opal Hollon has Kissinger's complete bewildennent, despite the fact that tbese
CANCER (Junt 21-.luJr 22)
aposlrophes, the length and formation of the \\Ords are all One
months ,
S11 .50,
Three
. .
,
Tread softly today in areas PISCES (Feb. 20Marall 20) hmts. Eoch ~ay the rode letlcrs arc d11ferent.
months , S7 oo E!se"'lhere - returned home from a ycs1t salami tactics are standard Communist procedure.
where your reputa1ion or lm· Though you have a strong
Such a secretary of state ill capable of making deals pelf
~26 oo year ; Six ml!'hths
'th
M
d
Mr
Willi
S!J.SO. three months, S7.50 WI
r. an
s.
am
CRYPTOQUOTES
age are on the line . A crav~ng to buy something new,
Subscrlpt\on pr~ce Include• _ Krackomberger, Perth manently Impairing U.S. security.
thoughtless move will leava a restating the urge will make II
Isunday Times -Sentinel.
Ambo N J
( IIIEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSI'i.)
poor luling lmpresaion.
euier later when peymanta H u B
1'\ZIIIlHLV L.:.,.! __:.
I Z I.
'
yI • •
l'UCD
.\ I S ('
come due
LIO (July IS-Aug. 22) A task
Yl.l\lllllL
you 've been pollponing
KIIUO
IISVI.Z
'
because you thought It woutcl
~ ~
be a snap wtll be tougher lhe
v u u w II 1; 10 OHI. PWl' IS V V T [).
longer you put \I otf. Do It now.
VIIIQO (Aug. IS- . . . 22)
M., 2l, 1171
z 1. 1·: I Z \' B H I 0 TD 10 OHI.TZ
You're prone to take rltks to- You'll play a more meaningful
day with th1ngs that aren't role this vear In managemenl
1·: U L 0 ll.l , . ·I&gt;
t\ U 0 H I. Z
yours. A friend wtll be angered of the aft airs of others . K '1 L 0
It something he values Ia ruin- . Substantial rewards wt\1 come • Yesterday's Cryploqunt~: ONE'S LAST YEARS ARE LIKi
ed
to you if your job is well done. THE ~'INAL CHAPTF.R OF A VFJRY EXCITING NOVF.I .. tl'fEWSPA.PER ENTERPRISE ASSN' I 1.101'\EI. CUUTIS
LIIRA (lepi.IS-Oot. 2J) Wyou
(t) 197!' 1&lt; /Ji~ t'f'atur.-s Syntliuh• . lqr )
want YD'f household If run
EAST

WEST

.Q,

'

tJ I

I K)

t
III n

=~llrill~ti~III~ISI~IIIS1~WII~--~SI ( UXllJ

Cl

~

r~~~~a;:·~;~;I;;~ii·;P;;&gt;.~~;~·~ By Hel~-n - and Sue Hottel

·:

By LEE LEONARD
UP! Statehouse 1\eporter
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
Ohio Senate is to vote Wednesday on the majority
Democrats' alternative to
Gov. James A. Rhodes'
proposed Ohio Energy
Development Authority,
providing incentives for gas
drilling, coal gasification, oil
storage and other energy
conservation and 'development measures.
The bill, sponsored by Sens.
Harry
Meshel,
DYoungstown, and Robert E.
O'Shaughnessy, [).Colwnbus,
would expand the currently
operating Ohio Development
Center, divert its efforts
toward energy programs and
provide it with an extra $'rl
minion.
Rhodes last week told
legislators meeting in joint
session they must approve his
Energy Development
Authority or risk losing
thousands more jobs in Ohio
because industry woul~ not
be able to convert to coalfired boilers by next winler .
Rhodes' bill, introduced by
H011se Republican leaders
May 7, is in the House Energy
and Environment Com-

'

.--

--•
•

.,
''

"

..
.

'

,,

"

,.,

.,

''

,,

''
'v

Pomeroy , Ohio , Case No
15 ,809 ,
Paulrne
Ward,
P l aintiff, vs Alfred E Ward,
Defendant. a complaint tor
drvorce and other relref has
been filed against yo u You
are requrred to answer the
Complaint within twenty eight
days after the last publ rcation

'"
•u

"

Larry Spencer ,
Clerk of Courts ,
Meigs County , Ohio

By · Nellre M Brown
Chref Deputy

151 20,

W•••od•J M.,

1

(I)

y our
Birthday

•

6

16) 3, 10, 17 , 24 , 6tc

"'
.,
"'
,,

-·••
•

•

•
,

•

,

••

'

'Old Grads' attend 57th reunion

,
Jconcluded the banquet.

Jean Ztrkte , deceased , late of

A dance was held in the
Pomeroy Junior High School
auditorium following the
banquet with music being
provided by the Sound Investment,
Out-of-county alumni
returning for the alumni
reunion were :
Rev . Waid Radford,
Beaver; Hugh Clifton,
Atlanta, Ga.; Janice Ewing
Gatkie, Pontiac, Mich.;
Lucille Swackhammer.
Mason, W. Va. ; Thelma
PhiUips McMurray, Mason;
Dr. John Lutz, William Rees,
Charleston, W. Va.; Erma
Thompson Roush, Hinton, W.
Va.; Maxine Jenkinson
Russell, CrooksviUe; PJarles
Winebrenner,
Marietta;
Branch Fleming, Fort
Lauderdale, Fla.; Evelyn
Qualls Woolfolk, Huntington,
W. Va.
Stanley Houdashelt,
Dallas, Tex.; Wilhelmina
Smith Maier, Montclovia,
Ohio;- Audra Delay Thompson, New Albany; Roland
Spencer, Columbus; Martha
Hoffner Chain, Findlay;
George Joachim, Galion; Dr.
C. B. Graber, Charleston, S.
C.; Paul Clifford, Gallipolis;
Sidney Leifheit, Colwnbus;
Madeline Pickett Fleming,
Fort Lauderdale, Fla .;
Evelyn Pickett Scott,
Colorado Springs, Colo.;
Beatrice Stelzer, Colwnbus;
Hazel -Holter Wynkoop,
Columbus; · Thomas Smith,
Columbus; James E. Gmther, Middletown.
Delmar Hamm, South
Webster; Zeb Howard,
Detroit, Mich.; Harold
Heilman, Bellefontaine;
Charles Pickett, Fort
Lauderdale, Fla.; Annabelle
Lewis Houdashelt, Gallipolis;
Robert Jay, Columbus;
Peggy Story McDonald,
N-e-l~onville;
Lucille
Genhecmer White, Columbus; Elaine Yolmg Rogers,
Nelsonville; Agnes Spence
Rose, Little Hocking; Charles
White, Columbus; Eunice
Hill Jones, Columbus; Louise
Dalley Kelly, Columbus;
John Weeks, ,Gallipolis;
Eleanor Smith Walter,
Toledo.
,
Da Mae Bowers, Etna,
Ohio; Ann Foster Cottrill,
Carroll; Frankie Wipple
Ruschel, Columbus; Ernest
Bowers, Etna; Betty Thomas

Me tgs County , Ohio

are ' required to
cla rms w tth sard
fiducrary wrthrn tour months
Dated thrs 14th day of May
Credttors

file

the tr

197 5

Manning D Webster

Judge

Cour t of Common Pleas,
Probate D rvis ion

15) 20 .

27

16) 3, 3tc

PUBLIC NOTICE

To: Alfred E Ward , address
unknown , whose last known
address was Route 1, Or~ent,
Ohio .

In the Common Pleas Court
last k.nown pl ace of residence · of Mergs County, Ohro,
is Col urn bus, Ohio, and whose
Pomeroy , Ohio , Case No .
exact address is unknown, is
15 ,809,
Pauline
Ward ,
hereby notified fhat on •he 4th
Plaintiff. \IS Alfred E . Ward,
day of October , 1974, Pau l E
Defendant, a complaint tor
Garnes , being plaintrff fried
divorce and other reltef h'as
his complaint against her as been f il ed against you You
defendant in the Court of
are required to answer the
Common
P l eas.
Mergs
Complaint within twenty -erght
County, Ohro , Case No 15 ,669,
days after the last publication
praying for divorce from said
Dorothy .Ann Gar n es on the
Larry Spencer ,
grounds of gross neglect gt
Clerk of Courts ,
duty and extreme cruelty ,
Meigs County. Ohio
said cause wrll be for hearrng
2 day of July . 1975
By Nellie M Brown
PaulE Garnes, Plarnhff
Chref Deputy
J . 8. O' Brien. Attorney
tor Plarntitf.
15) 20, 27 (6) 3, 10, 17, 24, 6tc
15) 13 , 20,27 : 16 \ 3. 10, 17 , 6tc

1:-:-+-l-+--+-

G~t=l

27

LEGAL NOTICE

,

Astro-

~er

Dorothy Ann ·Garnes , whose

OJ.ester

News Notes

. Pomero11 Hiah

300 Pomeroy High
·=
School graduates attended
. the banquet at the 57th AnNewDealforTheaten?
nual Reunion of the Pomeroy
Dear Helen and Sue:
Alumni Association held
Why don't movie houses charge by the quarter hour? ~aturday night at the
You'd get your hand stamped with !he time you came in the Pomeroy Elementary' School
!healer; then, on the way out, you'd pay for specific time spent
Recognition of class
watchmg the film. So, if you hated it, you'd get out! or under 50 reunions, presentation of
cents, and if you loved it, you could stay fortwo showings and gifts to the oldest raduates
pay double the fuU admission price .
and election of new officers
This would accomplish several tbings: It would discourage were features of the banquet.
freeloaders who spend all day in movie houses, and it would Joseph Struble was master of
show distributors which films are popular, and which just ceremonies.
. draw because they're advertised so much.
Mrs. Helen Leifheit, class
Moreover, it might bring more people into the theater- if of 19!2, was the oldest
they knew they wouldn't be stuck with the full tw().hour price graduate present and she was
on a film they hate.- KARL FR\)M CARMEL-BY-THE-SEA presented with a ceramic
graduat.e, as were Asa
Dear Karl:
Hoskins and Waid Radford of
Your idea and my idea should get together. Next door to the class of 1916.
your "meter-theater," let's build a restaurant for dieters that
Recognized were members
charges by the calorie. Like for instance, a sandwich with of the classes of 1920, 55th
mayo would cost more than one without, and a milk shake reunion ; 1925, 50th reunion ;
could be priced out of sight. - SUE
1930, 45th; 1935, 40th; 1940,
NOTE FROM HELEN: The combo sounds like a winner. 35th;' 1945, 30th; 1950, 25th ;
And we could call the restaurant, the "Weigh!air Inn."
1955, 20th; 1960, 15th; and
+++ I
• 1965, loth.
Rap:
Offccers elected for the
My mother is Catholic and my Dad was Jewish, but did not 1976th reunion were Mrs. Lila
practice it. While I was growcng up, we never "pushed" our Mitch, president; , Mrs.
particular faiths.
Marlene Wilson, first vice
But since my Dad died, Mom has yanked out all her president; Mrs. Carol Ann
shrines, statues, holy water, crosses, pictures, etc., so that our Kennedy, second vice
house looks like a church.[ suspect she was a closet nun durmg president; Mrs. Linda
her married years.
Mayer, Secretary-treasurer;
Since I'm not particularly religious, this disturbs me. I and Mrs. April Smith,
won'thave new friends in our house because I feel tbese things assistant secretaryare a reflection on me. I'm self-conscious, as they say ''what I treasurer.
' am," when I'm not.
Elected to the executive
I wish my mother would confine her displays to her room. committee were. Gene Mitch,
If she wants to pray to a broomstick, !bat's her business, but Don Mayer, Ken Harris, Mrs.
why impose it on me? She isn't into discussion- just stomps Patricia Young, Phillip
out with hurt feelings . What would you suggest?- "16" FROM Ohlinger, and Sue Seelig.
TENNESSEE
During a brief business
session, it was voted to In"16" :
crease the price of tickets
Think on it this way: If a new friend invited you into HER from $4 to $5 for the 1976
borne, would YOU turn her off just because tbe decorations reunion. Aproposal to change
spotlight a particular religion? If not, tben why worry about the by-laws to permit alumni
others' reactions to something you probably can't change? to take guests to the banquet
Your friends will understand - perhaps with tbe help of low- was turned down by a vote of
key explanations- that these shrines, etc ., are your mother's those attending.
comfort. There's no need for apologies or embarrassment. The invocation was given
SUE
by the Rev. Mr . .Radford,
+++
foUowlng the pledge to the
"16":
flag, the national anthem,
l'd' guess tbe conflict goes deeper than simple eqtbarrass- and the "Purple and White",
ment over what your friends will think. Your mother's display witb'Mrs. Carrie Neutzling at
of Catholic symbols says loud and clear, "I want you to accept the piano. The ham dinner
my religion!" and since you evidently don't, they make you was served by the Bethel 62,
feel guilty .. so you'd rather not see them .
International Order of Job's
When and if you become comfortable witb your OWN Daughters. Tables were
reUgious attitudes, then your mother's beliefs should no longer decorated with flower
worry you. - HELEN
arrangements made by the
Winding Trail, Pomeroy, and
PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE OF
Wildwood Garden Clubs.
APPOINTMENT
To . Alfred E Ward . address
Case No. 21522
A necrology report was
unknown , whose last known Estate of JEAN ZIRt&lt;LE
jlosted
during the evening.
address was Route 1. Or ren! , Deceased .
Ohio .
Nol tc e is hereby 9111en that The Rev. John Bryant had the
Danny S Zirkle of Pomeroy ,
and group
In the Common Pleas Court Ohto . has been duly appotnted benediction
of Mergs County, Oh ro , AdminiStrator of th e Estate of singing of the Alma Mater

Wolfpen

Is Kissinger the man
fo.r our season?

"

We Hold These Truths ...
A Chronicle of America

1t--,

May, 1775: ,
The montb sees a transformation In the attitude of New
York. On March 10, James Madison could write from
orange Virginia, that "in New York, they insult the whole
Colony' and Continent with impunity!" Indeed, on
February 17 the New York Assembly voted I~ aplnst
even thanking New York's deteaates to the First C~llnen- ,
tal congress, on February 23, the ASIIembly voted 17-9
against naming ,delegates to the Second Continental
Congress. But Lexington and Concord did much to dilute
New York's strong loy,allst sentiment. On May!, a Commlttee of 100 Is established to preserve "American llberty"; theCommltteeur(leseverymantoacqulreamuaket
and to tralnhlmaelflnltsuse. On May IOMylesCooper, the
torypresldentofKing'sCollqeinNewYorkClty,narrowly avoids being tarred end feathered by a mob; hlaeecape Is
uallted by estudent, committed to the colonial cause, by
the name of Aleunder Hartllton. ,On May 17, the Provln·
dal conares• asaumes the f!Jncllons of aovemment, auballtullngltaelfforJhelnactlveNewYorkAisembly. And on
May 29, the provincial CoJ18resa orden all citizens to sip 0
the Continental Anoclatlon.

Polly's PoinTar"
BY P&lt;ILLY CRA~ER

Machine oil saves
typewriter ribbons
POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - Does
anyone know a remedy for
prolonging the ·leglbUity of
ribbons on typewrilers•
I use that "ring" of the pull
tab from beer cans for
hanging small wall plaques I
make. Bend the flexible
metal part in under the ring
making a snap like loop and
then slide a nail through Ibis
loop for added strength when
hanging wger plaques. MRS. R.L.A.
DEAR MRS. R.L.A.
Many years ago we bad the
following Pointer for a
"cure" for fading typewriter
ribbons: "Machine oil applied on an old typewriter
ribbon wm renew the dried
out Ink."- POLLY.

DEAR POLLY- When you
are ready to store your storm
wiridows check to see If they
can be left on for Insulation
against the swnmer heat.
This is a great help for houses
that are air conditioned. This
also solves a storage
problem. MRS. C.B.S.
DEAR POLLY -'- We
women who work in a bank
are making clowns for a ,
chUdren's party with empty
adding machine spools such
as Mrs. c.s. has. They also
would provide a use for leftover knitting yarn such as
Elva has and wanta to use .
Previously we used those
packaged candles with holes
~ !!!_the middle for tbe body so
i those with leftover yarn and
( no spools could make that
., substitution. The spool, or
candles, make tbe body, a
il styrofoam ball about I \lo
inches acroi!S is the head and
the clown hat Is from a paper
cup. ·The face has a round red
A' bead for the mouth and
-By Roo• Motkenzlollld Jotf MocNolly.
diamond-shaped sequins with
bead centers for the eyes . '1'~

$

i

f

L.---------....
--:--------;::
.,

start roll yarn around a six·
inch cardboard about twelve
times. Take piece of yarn
about 12 inches long and tie
this clwnp of yarn through
the middle and run rest of
yarn length up through the
spool and tie around the
middle of another yarn clwnp
for arms and then through the
styrofoam and cap and fasten
around more yarn that will be
cut to make a pompon for the
top of the pointed clown hat.
This yarn can be pushed
through with a cr~het needle
and it holds all together. Tie
off arms and legs so loose
ends simulate hands and feet.
- THE WOMEN OF N. C.
BANK.
DEAR POLLY - My Pet
Peeve is with the maU order
sales organizations that use
the "negative option" plan .
,You sign up for membership
in a club that sends you books
or records on a regular basis
unless you notify them within
a specific period that you
want to discontinue forthcoming issues. They take
advantage of our forgetfulness or neglect In sending
this. Sometimes even when
the negative card is sent, the
next volwne or recoril still
comes. When contacted they
say your card was not
received. I am sure there are
many others who agree with
me. - SHIRLEY.
, DEAR POLLY -I always
had a problem when baking
co·okies. The first cookie
sheet full had a te'!Ciency to
bake too hard on the bottom.
Now I have learneq from
experience to preheat my
cookie sheet and I pre.lteat
the oven and this works
great. It is already hot so the
cookies do not take as long to
bake and are not overdOne on
the bottom . - PEAR!., E.

II ,

Grant, Crooksville; Gene
Yeauger, Enon; Bernard
Grueser, Trenton; Donna
Grueser Stanley, Trenton;
Betty Genheimer . Knight,
Point Pleasant, W.Va.; Rhea
Ann Gears Lozier, Princeton,
N. _Y. _
Joyce Williams o n
Richards, Colwnbus; Mary
Clcfford
Lloyd,
McConnel svclle ;
Maril yn,
Swatzel Burgan, Toledo; Dan
West, Dover ; Shirley Wipple
Pohng, CC&gt;lumbus;
Jo
,Snowden West, Dover; cvan
I Shwnate, Mansfield; Eugene
'Story , Marysville ; Nancy
Jacobs Hanold, Colwnbus ;
Delores Kitchen Bashore ,
New Carlisle.'
Carol Louks Taylor,
Gallipolis; Harley Mossman,
South 'Milwaukee, Wise,;
Marlene Brown Rinehart,
Albany; Barbara DeWitt
Thomas, Farrmont, W. Va.;
Donna Wildermuth Nibert,
Gallipolis; Bill Hysell,
Cnlumbus; Ray Chasteen,
Cincinnati; Sharlee Newnan
Whittle, Worthington; Mary
Donna Hensley, Colwnbus;
Bridgett Ruschell, Columbus; Marilyn Grueser Quinn,
Whitehall; Dorothy Taylor
Ingles, Yorkville, Ill.;
Michael Ohlmger, Albany;
Erlene Renshaw Bumgardner, Mason, W. Va .
Ann Icenhower Barmtz,
Belpre; Thomas Brown, Port
Clinton; Gary Barnitz,
Belpre; Charles Kitchen,
Mason, W.Va.; Fred Brown,
Columbus; Mark Grueser,
Shade; Howard Parker,
'Morgan Ccty , La.; Rose
Hysell Haggy, Springfield;
Janice Thomas Steele,
McArthur; John Bryant,
Vinton; Mike Roberts,
' Newark; Linda Chapman
Stalnaker, Gallipolis; Edna
Carman Stalder, Athens;
David Brown, Columbus.
Sharon Van Cooney Saltz,
McArthur; Nancy Skinner
Grueser, Shade; Terry
Ohlinger, Philco; Ruth Ann
Edwards Parker, Morgan
City, La.; Mike Werry,
Belpre; Charles Taylor,
Newark; Jane Douglas
Daggett Wierton, W. Va.;
Keith Whaley, Shade; Danny
Smith, South. Point; Olita
Carpenter Carroll, Cincinnati; Jennifer Crew
Brown, Columbus; Fred
Sisson, Galion; Thurma
Vaughan, Pittsford, N. Y.;
Bre11da Potts Hoffer, Andrews Air Force Base,
Maryland; Charles Baxter,
Belpre; Patricia Fultz,
Ashtabula; Mickey Menchini,
• Nitro, W. Va.; William J.
Sayre , Columbus; Barry
Boyer, Malta; Pam O'Brien
McClanahan, Kettering;
Ruetta
Wells
Collins,
Columbus; Susie Casper

Smith, South Point; Harley
Hendricks, Point Pleasant,
W. Va.; Carolyn Parker
Ferrell, Carpenlersville, IU.;
Su5anne Arnold Fitzgerald,
Kansas City, Mo. ; Borlnie
Smith, Mineral Wells, W.
Va .; Carla Will Werry ,
Belpre.
·
Dr. Thomas McGowan,
Chtcago, IU.; Frank Porter,
Relay, Mich.; Patricia
Buffington Thompson,
Athens; Jonnie Sue Thompson Kinney, Columbus; Joey
Gilmore, Chicago, Ill.; Tom
Ebersbach, Columbus; Jane
Well MitcheU, Millwood, W.
Va.; Jerry Well, Shade;
Pamela Hayes Holcomb,
Lithopolis; Gwendolyn
Pickett Roach, Texas; Jean
Casto Chapman , Parkersburg, W. Va.; Edward

Lett wUer, Se WI'ckley, Pa .; Mary Goodwin Bartels of
and William Bartels and Stevensville, Mich.

'

'

"'

FOR THE
PROTECTION
YOU NEED- .

v v

·'

Play it oafe ant mre.
It may be time to
have your presen11
policy updated .

.

let's folic Soon

'

DALE C. WARNER
992-2143
102 W. Main

'

v

"

Pomerov

about economy
'75Pinto

-

' '

Below Rabbit

•

m.p.g.

See your Ford Dealer

®

"

"

,'

..

--.....--·
,

. •"•

.

,.

- ~·

"" ~
'

.

.-'

,; •II

n H ll

.. 1\

~,

.,....

··~''

• F\llEI:.:~
• STEEl£ClS
e SUM D
r Ul[l
• ncUUIA Cl"'"
• SEt -\ll "ll'fl
l\MEI
ER
• PGO~frMCE l
• SAh-"

r v lf

l . .. I

)'-'Ill

tuo s..~~on~ st.
Ml-•• 111111. 0111o P1t111 ..... y•r ..,...ontott•• call.
1ullllonfond tllore Is no ollltptlen

I
1
I

NMM----------------··
-I ....

~nK·--~--------~=---City
Sfihl_l
....:.... .. ' lip_.•

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1111!.
'

,

�-. -

.

.. . . .

...

. .

~.

3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, May 'n, 1975

2- The DaUy Sentinel., Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., IJ'uesday, May 'n, !975

Television LogwiN AT BRIDGE
FRIDAY, MAY 23, 1975
4·30--Sewltched 3; Merv Grlflln 4; Mod-Squad 6 ;
Mickey Mouse Club 8; Bonanza IS ..
s oo-FBI 3; Andy Griffith 8; Mister Rogers 20,33;
,
Ironside 13.
5·30--News6 ; Beverly Hlllblllles8; Hodgepodge Lodge
20; Get Smart 15; El~ . Ca. 33.
6 co-News 3,4,8, 10,13, 15; ABC News 6. Elec. Co. 20;
Catch·33 33.
6 30--NBC News 3,4, 15; ABC News 13: Bewitched 6:
CBS News 8,10; Zoom 20,33.7:1)()-Trulh or· Cons
3,4; Bowling for Dollars 6; What's My Line 8: News
10: Name That Tune 13; Untamed World IS : Antiques 20: Lilias, Yoga &amp; You 33.
7.30--Hollywood Squares 3,4: Let's Make a Deal 6;
Buck Owens 8. New Price Is Right 10; To Tell the
Truth 13; Car and Track IS: RFD 20: Car Care 33 .
8 oo-Adam-12 3,4, 15; Happy Days 13;, Garner Ted
Armstrong 6; Good Times 8, 10; The Way II Was 33;
Music Project Presents 20.
8 30--Movle " Punch and Jody" 3,4,15; ABC Theatre
6,13: Mash 8,10; World Press 20; Nova 33.
9.oo-NBA Play.Off 8,10.
9·30--Woman 20; Saga ot Western Man 33.
10 co-Kentucky Electlon Returns 3: Pollee Story 4, 15;
News 20.
10 ,30--Police Story 3; The Naturalists 33.
11 co-News 4,6,8,10, 13, 15; ABC News 33.
.-_
11 ·30--News 3; W1de World Mystery 13; Jo~nny
Carson 4.15; FBI6; Movie "Marc 7" 8: Movie The
-. Last Winter" 10: Janak\ 33.
12:1)()-Johnny Carson 3
12·30--Wide World Mystery 6.
l ·llO-Tomorrow 3.4, News 13.
WEDNESDAY, MAY 28, 1975
6:co-Sunrise Seminar 4; Summer Semester 10.
6· 25---Farm Report 13.
6:30--Five Minutes to Live By 4: News 6; Bible Answers 8; School Scene 10; The Story 13.
6· 35---Columbus Today 4.
6: 45---Morning Report 3: Farmtlme 10.
7 ()(l-Today 3,4,15: A. M America 6,13; CBS News
8, I 0.
I
10
8:1Xl-Lassle 6: Captain Kangaroo 8: Schoo les ,
Sesame Street 33
8.30--Big Valley 6; Popeye 10.
8 55---Chuck White Reports 10.
9:oo-A .M. 3: Phil Donahue 15, 4; Lucy Show 8;
Captain Kangaroo 10; Morning With
D. J .
13;Walsh's Animals 33.
9:30--Not For Women Only 3; Dinah! 6; Galloping
Gourmet 8; New Zoo Revues 13: Changing Rhythms 33.
, "
JO ·oo-Celebrlty Sweepstakes 3••'\-15; ·''ltA:iJ •
· 1, 10;
Dinah! 13; You Owe II_To rourse
,
10 30--Wheel Of Fortune 3,4, IS; Gamb\18,10; Mulligan
Stew 33
11 .llO-High Rollers 3,4, 15; One Life to Live 6; Now You
See It 8,10; One Of a Kind 33.
11 . 30'-Hollywood Squares 3,6, IS; Blankety Blanks 13;
News 4; Love Of Life 8,10: Music Project Presents
33.
0
11 :55---Graham Kerr 8; Dan Imel's World I . ,
12:1l0-Jackpot! 3,15; ·Password 6, 13; Bob Brauns SOSO Club 4: News 8, 10; Mister Rogers 33.
12 :30--Biank Check 3, 15. Split Second 6,13: Search F?r
, Tomorrow 8,10: Electric Company 33.
12 :55---NBC News 3,15.
1: ~News 3; All My Children 6, 13; Phil Donahue 8;
. Young and the Restless 10; Not For Women Only
IS; Zoom 33.
D I
1:30--Days Of Our Lives 3,4, 15; Let's Make A ea
6, 13; As the World Turns a, 10; Mulligan Stew 33.
2:1)()-$10,000 Pyramid 4,6,13; Guiding Light 8,10; The
, Way II Was 33.
2:30--Doclors 3,4, 15; Big Showdown 6, 13; Edge Ot
Night 8, 10; Saga of Western Man 33.
J:llO-Another World 3,4,15: General Hospital 6,13;
Rona Barrell 8,10; RFD 20.
3 JO--One Life to Live 13; Lucy Show 6, The Way It
Was 20; Erica 33.
3, 45-Theonle 33
4:1l0-Mr Carton 4: 'I Dream of Jeannie 4; Somerset
15, Gilligan's Island 6: Tattletales 8; Sesame Street
20,33, Movie "That's My Boy" 10: Mike Douglas

'

Expert's discard fools South
spade But the key and winning
discard was the card West jettisoned on the last club He
hung ori to the useless siK ~~
diamonds and threw one of hcs
good hearts
Now South led a spade.
fmessed the jack. cashed dummy 's ace of spades. noted the
fall of the queen from West.
thought a whcle, counted the
hand carefully and came up
wcth an ongmal holding ol three
spades m the West hand. Clearly the third spade was the 10
spot so South led a spade to his
kmg for hcs eighth and last
trick.

NORTH
.AJ4

.75

• Q7 3 2

• AJ 5 4

Alfred
Social Notes
Sunday School atlendance
nn May 18 was 52 with, uffe rcn~
$24 .66. Howard
Flanders, Eleanor Boyles
and Nina Robmson were
appocnted
on
the
program
Homecoming
commit lee .
Worship services were held
at 11 w1th Nina Robinson
leadmg opening services and
Rev . Meece speaking from II
Cur 6:16-18, 'What Is Your
Witness to God and Jesus
Christ in the Community and
the Home ''. Attendance at
this service was 25, offering
$21.34 and $17.00 cn pledges.
The Wednesday afternoon
Bible Study at the Burke
home here was well attended
at was the Wednesday
evemng service at the
church.
·. The friends here of Nelle
Winters Radekin of Belpre
were sorry to hear of her
untimely death this 'past
week. Mr. and Mrs. Chas. D
Woode Nina Robinson and
'
Clara Follrod
from here and
Mr . and Mrs. Clarence
Neutzling of Long Bottom R.
D. called at the Spencer
Funeral Home at Belpre
Sunday evening.
A group of relatives and
friends helped celebrate the
wedding anniversary of Mr.
and Mrs . Lee Henderson at
their home in Athens and also
the bcrthdays' of Mrs. Henderson and her granddoughier, Linda Williams, on
Sunday, May 18. At lending
from here were Mr. and Mrs.
Clarence Henderson, Nina
Robinson and Clara Follrod,
Mr . and Mrs . Sherman
Henderson and Pamela,
Harold, Susan and Sharon
Henderson and Garner
Griffin, Alfred; Mr. and Mrs.
Carleton Follrod and Chuckie
of Pomeroy and Mr. and Mrs.
David Williams and Aaron of
Belpre, and three neighbors
uf the honored couple. A
potluck dinner was enjoyed.
Mr. and Mrs. Clair Woode
and Conni of Circleville
visited Mr . and Mrs. Chas. D.
Woode, the William Carr
famcly and Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Whcte over the
weekend.
Recently visiting Iris Carr
have been the Clair Woodes of
Circleville, Henry Penns of
Hillsboro, Rev. and Mrs.
Meece of Tuppers Plains, Mr.
and Mrs. Ernest Taylor and
Genevieve Guthrie.
Mrs. Emma Findling
suffered a fall-at her home
recently bruising her up
badly.
Howard Flanders, Young
Adult Class teacher here, was
honored on his birthday with
a class birthday dinner at the
home of Mr. and Mrs.
ftichard Spencer on Sunday
at thecr home in Tuppers
~ Elains.-.

Energy plan up
for Senate vote

mittee, where it will receive use of energy and discovery
.1086 5
its first hearing Wednesday of alternative sources, In·
cluding coal conversion, solar
• 10 6
•Y. QJ 843
morning.
energy,
use of solid wastes,
• 9 8 54
t A 10 6
Meanwhile, the Senate
•
10
8
7
.93
Energy and Environment and ' energy curtailment and
SOUTH (D)
Committee, chaired by pricing.
• K 97 2
The Senate is to vote
O' Shaughnessy, has
• A92
on House-passed
Tuesday
scheduled a hearing Wedt KJ
.KQ62
nesday morning on House- legislation designed to clean
passed legislation up the 1972 strip mine law
Norlh-8oulh vulnerable
authorizing
the
Ohio from the point of view of coal
Development Fionancing mine operators.
South ·
West Norlh East
The measure loosens
Commission to lend revenue
•
bonding
and paperwork
bond money for construction
INT.
and provides
requirements
3 NT. Pass
Pass
2.
ol coal gasification plans and
The
biddmg
has
been
I&gt;ass
development of mining tech- for a three-year mining
permit and a one-year
nology .
Opening lead - K •
West
South
' The Rhodes administration li.cense ' rather than tbe'
claims the Democratic current annual permit
'r" . l •
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
energy
proposals
are renewal.
Pass I t
Pass t •
The House has scheduled a
See cf you can figure how ex- Pass 2 •
Pass 2 •
inadequate to meet "urgent"
floor vote Wednesday on a bill
pert South managed to ~o down Pass 3 •
Pas~
?
needs.
You. South, hold ·
at three notrump We II gcve
The governor has said a increasing the maximum
you one clue. East and West .KQ985.AtA4.A9876
hrand new agency is needed weight for trucks on Ohio
What do you do now?
were also eKperts.
to make grants and loan highways from 78,000 to
A - We slightly Javor a pass
Now for the play. South held
here, but would not criticize a cue
off twice with his ace of hearts
money
to
encourage 80,000 pounds, and the
He dcscarded a dcamond from bld of three hearts.
development of fuel sources. maximum length of tractordummy and East dropped hcs
He says tbe Democratic bill trailer riga from 55 to 60 feet.
TODAY 'S QUESTION
four of diamonds .
The House Insurance ComYou do bid three hearts and your
merely calls for revamping
Then came four rounds of partner
b1ds three notrump What
mittee
is to meet Tuesday
the Ohio Development
clubs. East got rid of another do you do now?
afternoon
to take up a pair of
Center, which is not enough.
dcamond on the fourth club. He
Answer Tomorrow
major
bills
reported out of
could do thts with no worrces
Meshel said during the
because West had thrown the 10
weekend that the Democrats' subcommittees 13st week.
of dcamonds on the third one.
One bill provides for noEnergy Development Center
East's two diamond dcscards
fault
automobUe Insurance, a
will do everything the goverwere important since he could
nor's bill does, and I think' the proposal which cleared the
not have afforded to throw a
House last year but became
Republicans will buy it."
JJWJ~M®IJ,J eor.rdlJ fiiMII , He said the center would hung up in the Senate.
The other is a medical
have revenue bonding p~ers
Ut~~tramble these four Jumbleo,
malpractice
insurance
to help with construction of
one letter to e~h square, to
reform
bill
designed
to
form four ordl nary words.
coal gasification plans and
reduce
the
number
and
7\.TeWS 7\.TOfeS refineries, o~. storage. and amount of claims and lower
1l (
1 14
leasing facilities to pnvate
malpractice insurance
industry or utilities.
Meshel predicted tbe bill premiums.
Mr . Charley Baun of
Meshel said the HouseAlbany was Sunday evenmg would clear tbe Senate easily
passed
$10.7 biUion budget
visitor of Mr. and Mrs. and receive its first House
will
be
sent to a subEugene Hanmg and family. hearings next week.
committee
after this week's
The measure Is designed to
Mr. and Mrs. Lewis West of
McArthur were Sunday encourage development of hearings by his Senate
visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Fred new concepts in t~e efficient Finance Committee.
ISEMQUOI
Tuckerman.
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Fouch
and family of Huntington
were weekend visitors of Mr .
and
Mrs. Jack Elam, Bill
ECTIPP
Now orranre the circled letten
to fonn the aurprile -•er, u
and Carolyn.
.
.
_
oupeoted b1 the above uriGon.
Mr . and Mrs. Eugene
WASlllNGTON - (NEA) - Dr. Henry Kissinger's
Haning and family were
usefulness
is over. As secretary of state. As negotiator. As
Sunday evening visitors of
.
.CAMwen lo.aorrow)
Mr . and Mrs. Roger Brown foreign policy analyst. ·
He has wit, energy, charm, confidence and a way w_tth
luablee• CARGO MINUS BA(SAM POISON
and family.
Ye11erda7'•
· ·
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Fouch words. But he is so egocentric he is unwilling to call for adVIce
\ An.wn: Onr oft~n htan a pood one on an-wrnf
and family were Sunday in areas in which he is ignorant.
at IDOI'k-"MORNING"
He is an expert on dlplomaUc and power Intrigue In the
visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Europe
of a century or so ago. But he has demonstrated he----.~
Darnell.
knows
nothing
of the military and diplomatic strategy of the
4 :3~Bewltched 3: ABC Afterschool Special 6; Merv
·Mr. Li'ncoln RusseU and Iva
- Griffin 4; Mickey Mouse (lub 8; Bonanza 15.
Johnson visiled Mrs. Mae Communist world of tbe 1970s.
by THOMAS JOSEPH
S:llO-FBI 3; ABC Afterschool Special 13; Andy
Russia, China, VIetnam and their associates are in to the hilt
Pickett at the reception at
3 Expiation
ACROSS
Griffith 8; Mister Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33.
in
virtually every current and projected crisis in hhe world Burlingham
Woodman's
t Shoe shade
1 Lariat
S:30--News6: Beverly Hillbillies a; Hodgepodge Lodge
in the Middle East Mrica, Latin America, Southeast and
Hall Sunday afternoon.
5 Canine
6 Relax
20; Get Smart 15; Electric Company 33.
Southern
Asia, Western Europe. And the USSR is building
Mr.
and
Mrs.
William
utterance
6:1l0-News 3,4,8,10, 13, 15, ABC News 6: Electric
12 wds.)
forces
which may equal or exceed ours.
strategic
Russell of Minersville visited
Company 20: New Music In Bross 33.
11 Sacred
- 6 " Two
Thus
the
security
of this country and of those allies with
6:30--NBC News 3,4,15; ABC News 13; Bewitched 6;
Women"
Mrs. Bertha Russell Sunday
setting
CBS News News 8, 10; Zoom 20,33
which our survival is interwoven, depend .on our having as
Oscar
evening.
12 Egg-shaped
7·1)()-Truth Or Consequences 3, Bowling for Dollars
secretary
of state a man intimately familiar with th.e ins and
winner
13 Last long
Sunday evening visitors of
; 6; What's My Line? 8: News 10; Country Music
7
Divisible
outs
of
thinking
in Moscow, Hanoi, Peiping, Lisbon,
(3 wds.)
Mr. and Mrs. James Reeves
Jubilee 13; Area Mayors' Report 15: Feeling Good
Answer
Yesterday's
by
2
15 Actress
were Mr. and Mrs. Robert Pyongyang and Phnom Penh.
20; Know Your Schools 33.
,
8
Hebrew
Todd
But we shall never know, so long as Kissinger is at tbe State
Reeves , Bryan of Middleport
7·30--Pollce Surgeon 3; Name That Tune 4: Lets
23 Bound
35 Seaweed
letter
16 Write
Department,
what blunders he will commit out of ignorance,
· Make A Deal 6; Wilburn Brothers 8; Book Beat 20;
derivative
and Mr. and Mrs. Charley
24 Italian
17 Gennan cc ty 9 Colorado
The Judge 10: To Tell The Truth 13: North to
or what agreements he will make based on flawed analysis.
36 - Pendleton
Smtih.
bell
Indian
20 Exasperate
Canada 15: Episode Action 33.
Mr. and Mrs. Doyle Knapp, For it is now clear he is so specialized in his knowledge of
town
37 Scotch
a:oo-Little House on the Prairie 3,4,15; That's Mf
23 "Toujours
10 Apiece
•• Maple
uncle
Kail, Kevin and Charles, history he is baffled by political systems and strategies not
Mama 6,13; Tony Orlando and Dawn 8, 10; Feeling
14 In force
""
"
were Sunday visitors of Mr. employed in Metternich 's Europe.
38- Johnson
Good 33; Great Performances 20.
18 Additional
genus
%5 Bowfin
The difference between Communist tbinking and our own iS .
8:30--Jacques Cousteau 6,13; The Bolero 33.
and Mrs . Lou Osborne and
19 Press for
'n Grassland 39 Never
26 Rome
9:1l0-Lucas Tanner 3,4,15; Cannon 8, 10; Place For No
illustrated
by a conversation I once had with Nozaka Sanzo,
family of Pomeroy.
payment
31 Succinct
(Ger.)
12 wds.)
Story 20: Masterpiece Theatre 33.
alias
Okano,
then head of Japan's Communist party. I had
By Clarice ADen
Mr. and Mrs. Paul McElroy
20 Aping
32 Minus
40 Clay
28 "Rule
9: 30--PIIot 6.
Miss Lucille Smith has were Saturday and Sunday known him in Yenan, North China, when that village was Mao
21 Ceremony 34 Dolphin
molding
Britanma"
10·.oo-Petrocelll3,4, 15: Baretta 6,13: Dan August 8, 10;
composer ,.·2_2-,Dr;-a_n-rnyi---!T""T&lt;'-genus L"";;--ripl"lateq-liiil returned home from Akron visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Carl Tse-tung's headquarters. "You Americans think of war as war
_ ·News 20; Family At War 33.
and peace as peace," he said. "We tbink"of peace as an ex1
29 Squirrel
alter spending several weeks McElroy of Colwnbus.
-"'- 11 ·co-News 3,4,6,8, 10, 13, IS; ABC News 33.
11 ;30--Johnny Carson 3,4,15: Wide Worl~, Special 13.
monkey
there helping with the care of
Mr. and Mrs. Bill McElroy, tension of war. We believe it is right and necessary in peace to
F B1 6; Movie "Joy House" 8; Movie Back From
30 ExcavatiOn
her sister, Mrs. John Reuter. Jeff and Joey, were Friday employ the same deceptions, lies and tricks used in war to
Eternity" 10: Janaki 33.
·
Mrs. Reuter underwent and Saturday visitors of Mr. obtain our objectives."
31 Papal crown
12 ·30--Wide World Special 6.
Despite
what
he
has
written,
Kissinger
finds
this difficult to
32 Bulgarian
surgery at an Akron hospital and Mrs. Carl McElroy of
1:oo-Tomorrow 3,4; News 13.
com
believe - incredible, considering that the fate of the
and her son, George, had also Colwnbus.
33 Aunt (Sp.)
agreements
signed with Communists in Laos, North Korea and
been quite ill.
smoothly today, you and your 36 Perpetual
in
North
Vietnam
irl 1954, are knowp to everyone who has
Mr. and Mrs. Charles
mate will have to decide who (2 wds )
Asia
in
modern
times.
studied
Eichinger and Suzannah of
the chiel honcho Is. ll's no day U Gather
One proof of Kissinger's inability or unwillingness to face
Columbus were weekend
for committee rule!
4% Ancient
The Dailv Sentinel
reality
lies in his pact with Hanoi on South Vietnam, a treaty
guests of Mrs . Opal Eichinger
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-NoY. 22) Greek
which
duplicated
the weakest and worst features of the
DEVOTEi&gt;TO
THE'
and family. '
It's not like you to make ex- colony
INTEREST OF
MEIGS-MASON AREA
Mrs. Etta Will, Mrs. abovementioned aborted agreements.
cuses to shirk responsibility, 43 Nervous
Bernice Bedll 0101 but that's just what you're apt
Additional proof lies in tbe SALT I and Vladivostok unCHESTER
L.
TANNEHILL
Audrey
Rowan, Mrs. Robert
Actor
Exec. Ed.
44
For
21, 1171 to do today. Watch II!
derstandings,
so filled with loopholes as to be meaningless in
Buchanan
ROBEC~Ia~i~t,.LtCH
Berry,all of Belpre, and Paul
ARIES (M•rcll at.Aj)rtl11) Be
restricting
tbe
Russians, yet binding on the United States in
careful You could miscalculate IAQITTARIUI (Now. 23-Dec.
Published daily except WcllofTexascalledon Denzel
crucial ways,
th1ngs today. This would 21) You're still unrealistic
. ,saturday
by The Ohio Valley Cleland and Clarice Allen
DOWN
Publishing Company, 1,11
depnve you •of a goal you're regarding how you manage
Witness too Kissinger's secret negotiations for a cease fire
-+-+--1 'Court
St., Pomeroy, O~fo Monday,
t1nanc1al resources Some form I Indian
var'i anx1ous to realize.
45769 Bu'slness Oft1ce Phone . 1
compromise govenunent In Saigon. The men from Hanoi
and
musical
of loss Is likely unless you
992 2156 Editorial Phone 992Mrs. Letha Wood was a
TAURUS (April 20-M-, 20) change your ways.
21 ~~-cond class postage paid recent Sund\ty dinner guest of led him around and around the mulberry bush, n¢ once, but
composition
Double-check your sources to
2
North
~~ Pomeroy, Ohio .
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Wood. time and again, Hanoi's strategists asked for the r~nation of
make sure lnlormatlon from CAPRICORN (D•c. 22·J•n.
Carolina
• National___ artvort_;SI_ n~ .
Friends here were sorry to President Thleu. That accomplished, they upped their
others Is valid. You may be a 11) A person who's seeking
representa'tive
Wafl(j
.
.
b1l on the gullible side today. your advice will not be helped It
college
Grlftlth
Comftany,
Inc,
hearofthefcre
that destroyed demands, called for Thieu's su~ssor to resign In '1avor of
you sugaracoat your words.
· ~Nt+~~~~ ~~:..'~:;rl.,~vti; the new trailer home of Mrs. Gen. Duong Van Minh. That accomplished, they asked the ,
GEMINI CM•y 21-June 20) Tell lito him hard and straight.
Your best course again today is
N.v 10011. _
Grace Gwnpf at Coolville removal of all Americans.
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:
10 stay at arm's length !rom AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 11)
Subscription \ rares:
ha
Once that was agreed they asked for the dlsmanutng of
A x- Y D L I A A X ll
Delivered by carrier where · recently, Mrs. Gwnpf
d
situations that are not your The buck stops with you today.
South
Vietnam's mililary structure, then Its administrative
available
75 cents per week; moved from Chester to her
Is 1. 0 N G F E I. L 0 W
1
direct concern Your advice wtll If you made a mistake or an
8y Motor Route wher'
be ne1ther welcome nor need- ovorslght, you'll gain respect
service
not · new home three weeks before structure, then the disarming of Saigon's military forces and
One letter Simply stands for another. In this sample A io carrier
iovallab\e , One month, SJ .25 . 1 the fire
police. When one demand was met, another was added- all to
ed.
_ by admitting It, even though ll's
.
u..ed for the three r;s, X for the two O's, etc. ~ingle letters. !BY mall in Ohio and W. v~ .• :
diHicu\1
·
Year, sn 00; s,x
Mrs . Opal Hollon has Kissinger's complete bewildennent, despite the fact that tbese
CANCER (Junt 21-.luJr 22)
aposlrophes, the length and formation of the \\Ords are all One
months ,
S11 .50,
Three
. .
,
Tread softly today in areas PISCES (Feb. 20Marall 20) hmts. Eoch ~ay the rode letlcrs arc d11ferent.
months , S7 oo E!se"'lhere - returned home from a ycs1t salami tactics are standard Communist procedure.
where your reputa1ion or lm· Though you have a strong
Such a secretary of state ill capable of making deals pelf
~26 oo year ; Six ml!'hths
'th
M
d
Mr
Willi
S!J.SO. three months, S7.50 WI
r. an
s.
am
CRYPTOQUOTES
age are on the line . A crav~ng to buy something new,
Subscrlpt\on pr~ce Include• _ Krackomberger, Perth manently Impairing U.S. security.
thoughtless move will leava a restating the urge will make II
Isunday Times -Sentinel.
Ambo N J
( IIIEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSI'i.)
poor luling lmpresaion.
euier later when peymanta H u B
1'\ZIIIlHLV L.:.,.! __:.
I Z I.
'
yI • •
l'UCD
.\ I S ('
come due
LIO (July IS-Aug. 22) A task
Yl.l\lllllL
you 've been pollponing
KIIUO
IISVI.Z
'
because you thought It woutcl
~ ~
be a snap wtll be tougher lhe
v u u w II 1; 10 OHI. PWl' IS V V T [).
longer you put \I otf. Do It now.
VIIIQO (Aug. IS- . . . 22)
M., 2l, 1171
z 1. 1·: I Z \' B H I 0 TD 10 OHI.TZ
You're prone to take rltks to- You'll play a more meaningful
day with th1ngs that aren't role this vear In managemenl
1·: U L 0 ll.l , . ·I&gt;
t\ U 0 H I. Z
yours. A friend wtll be angered of the aft airs of others . K '1 L 0
It something he values Ia ruin- . Substantial rewards wt\1 come • Yesterday's Cryploqunt~: ONE'S LAST YEARS ARE LIKi
ed
to you if your job is well done. THE ~'INAL CHAPTF.R OF A VFJRY EXCITING NOVF.I .. tl'fEWSPA.PER ENTERPRISE ASSN' I 1.101'\EI. CUUTIS
LIIRA (lepi.IS-Oot. 2J) Wyou
(t) 197!' 1&lt; /Ji~ t'f'atur.-s Syntliuh• . lqr )
want YD'f household If run
EAST

WEST

.Q,

'

tJ I

I K)

t
III n

=~llrill~ti~III~ISI~IIIS1~WII~--~SI ( UXllJ

Cl

~

r~~~~a;:·~;~;I;;~ii·;P;;&gt;.~~;~·~ By Hel~-n - and Sue Hottel

·:

By LEE LEONARD
UP! Statehouse 1\eporter
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
Ohio Senate is to vote Wednesday on the majority
Democrats' alternative to
Gov. James A. Rhodes'
proposed Ohio Energy
Development Authority,
providing incentives for gas
drilling, coal gasification, oil
storage and other energy
conservation and 'development measures.
The bill, sponsored by Sens.
Harry
Meshel,
DYoungstown, and Robert E.
O'Shaughnessy, [).Colwnbus,
would expand the currently
operating Ohio Development
Center, divert its efforts
toward energy programs and
provide it with an extra $'rl
minion.
Rhodes last week told
legislators meeting in joint
session they must approve his
Energy Development
Authority or risk losing
thousands more jobs in Ohio
because industry woul~ not
be able to convert to coalfired boilers by next winler .
Rhodes' bill, introduced by
H011se Republican leaders
May 7, is in the House Energy
and Environment Com-

'

.--

--•
•

.,
''

"

..
.

'

,,

"

,.,

.,

''

,,

''
'v

Pomeroy , Ohio , Case No
15 ,809 ,
Paulrne
Ward,
P l aintiff, vs Alfred E Ward,
Defendant. a complaint tor
drvorce and other relref has
been filed against yo u You
are requrred to answer the
Complaint within twenty eight
days after the last publ rcation

'"
•u

"

Larry Spencer ,
Clerk of Courts ,
Meigs County , Ohio

By · Nellre M Brown
Chref Deputy

151 20,

W•••od•J M.,

1

(I)

y our
Birthday

•

6

16) 3, 10, 17 , 24 , 6tc

"'
.,
"'
,,

-·••
•

•

•
,

•

,

••

'

'Old Grads' attend 57th reunion

,
Jconcluded the banquet.

Jean Ztrkte , deceased , late of

A dance was held in the
Pomeroy Junior High School
auditorium following the
banquet with music being
provided by the Sound Investment,
Out-of-county alumni
returning for the alumni
reunion were :
Rev . Waid Radford,
Beaver; Hugh Clifton,
Atlanta, Ga.; Janice Ewing
Gatkie, Pontiac, Mich.;
Lucille Swackhammer.
Mason, W. Va. ; Thelma
PhiUips McMurray, Mason;
Dr. John Lutz, William Rees,
Charleston, W. Va.; Erma
Thompson Roush, Hinton, W.
Va.; Maxine Jenkinson
Russell, CrooksviUe; PJarles
Winebrenner,
Marietta;
Branch Fleming, Fort
Lauderdale, Fla.; Evelyn
Qualls Woolfolk, Huntington,
W. Va.
Stanley Houdashelt,
Dallas, Tex.; Wilhelmina
Smith Maier, Montclovia,
Ohio;- Audra Delay Thompson, New Albany; Roland
Spencer, Columbus; Martha
Hoffner Chain, Findlay;
George Joachim, Galion; Dr.
C. B. Graber, Charleston, S.
C.; Paul Clifford, Gallipolis;
Sidney Leifheit, Colwnbus;
Madeline Pickett Fleming,
Fort Lauderdale, Fla .;
Evelyn Pickett Scott,
Colorado Springs, Colo.;
Beatrice Stelzer, Colwnbus;
Hazel -Holter Wynkoop,
Columbus; · Thomas Smith,
Columbus; James E. Gmther, Middletown.
Delmar Hamm, South
Webster; Zeb Howard,
Detroit, Mich.; Harold
Heilman, Bellefontaine;
Charles Pickett, Fort
Lauderdale, Fla.; Annabelle
Lewis Houdashelt, Gallipolis;
Robert Jay, Columbus;
Peggy Story McDonald,
N-e-l~onville;
Lucille
Genhecmer White, Columbus; Elaine Yolmg Rogers,
Nelsonville; Agnes Spence
Rose, Little Hocking; Charles
White, Columbus; Eunice
Hill Jones, Columbus; Louise
Dalley Kelly, Columbus;
John Weeks, ,Gallipolis;
Eleanor Smith Walter,
Toledo.
,
Da Mae Bowers, Etna,
Ohio; Ann Foster Cottrill,
Carroll; Frankie Wipple
Ruschel, Columbus; Ernest
Bowers, Etna; Betty Thomas

Me tgs County , Ohio

are ' required to
cla rms w tth sard
fiducrary wrthrn tour months
Dated thrs 14th day of May
Credttors

file

the tr

197 5

Manning D Webster

Judge

Cour t of Common Pleas,
Probate D rvis ion

15) 20 .

27

16) 3, 3tc

PUBLIC NOTICE

To: Alfred E Ward , address
unknown , whose last known
address was Route 1, Or~ent,
Ohio .

In the Common Pleas Court
last k.nown pl ace of residence · of Mergs County, Ohro,
is Col urn bus, Ohio, and whose
Pomeroy , Ohio , Case No .
exact address is unknown, is
15 ,809,
Pauline
Ward ,
hereby notified fhat on •he 4th
Plaintiff. \IS Alfred E . Ward,
day of October , 1974, Pau l E
Defendant, a complaint tor
Garnes , being plaintrff fried
divorce and other reltef h'as
his complaint against her as been f il ed against you You
defendant in the Court of
are required to answer the
Common
P l eas.
Mergs
Complaint within twenty -erght
County, Ohro , Case No 15 ,669,
days after the last publication
praying for divorce from said
Dorothy .Ann Gar n es on the
Larry Spencer ,
grounds of gross neglect gt
Clerk of Courts ,
duty and extreme cruelty ,
Meigs County. Ohio
said cause wrll be for hearrng
2 day of July . 1975
By Nellie M Brown
PaulE Garnes, Plarnhff
Chref Deputy
J . 8. O' Brien. Attorney
tor Plarntitf.
15) 20, 27 (6) 3, 10, 17, 24, 6tc
15) 13 , 20,27 : 16 \ 3. 10, 17 , 6tc

1:-:-+-l-+--+-

G~t=l

27

LEGAL NOTICE

,

Astro-

~er

Dorothy Ann ·Garnes , whose

OJ.ester

News Notes

. Pomero11 Hiah

300 Pomeroy High
·=
School graduates attended
. the banquet at the 57th AnNewDealforTheaten?
nual Reunion of the Pomeroy
Dear Helen and Sue:
Alumni Association held
Why don't movie houses charge by the quarter hour? ~aturday night at the
You'd get your hand stamped with !he time you came in the Pomeroy Elementary' School
!healer; then, on the way out, you'd pay for specific time spent
Recognition of class
watchmg the film. So, if you hated it, you'd get out! or under 50 reunions, presentation of
cents, and if you loved it, you could stay fortwo showings and gifts to the oldest raduates
pay double the fuU admission price .
and election of new officers
This would accomplish several tbings: It would discourage were features of the banquet.
freeloaders who spend all day in movie houses, and it would Joseph Struble was master of
show distributors which films are popular, and which just ceremonies.
. draw because they're advertised so much.
Mrs. Helen Leifheit, class
Moreover, it might bring more people into the theater- if of 19!2, was the oldest
they knew they wouldn't be stuck with the full tw().hour price graduate present and she was
on a film they hate.- KARL FR\)M CARMEL-BY-THE-SEA presented with a ceramic
graduat.e, as were Asa
Dear Karl:
Hoskins and Waid Radford of
Your idea and my idea should get together. Next door to the class of 1916.
your "meter-theater," let's build a restaurant for dieters that
Recognized were members
charges by the calorie. Like for instance, a sandwich with of the classes of 1920, 55th
mayo would cost more than one without, and a milk shake reunion ; 1925, 50th reunion ;
could be priced out of sight. - SUE
1930, 45th; 1935, 40th; 1940,
NOTE FROM HELEN: The combo sounds like a winner. 35th;' 1945, 30th; 1950, 25th ;
And we could call the restaurant, the "Weigh!air Inn."
1955, 20th; 1960, 15th; and
+++ I
• 1965, loth.
Rap:
Offccers elected for the
My mother is Catholic and my Dad was Jewish, but did not 1976th reunion were Mrs. Lila
practice it. While I was growcng up, we never "pushed" our Mitch, president; , Mrs.
particular faiths.
Marlene Wilson, first vice
But since my Dad died, Mom has yanked out all her president; Mrs. Carol Ann
shrines, statues, holy water, crosses, pictures, etc., so that our Kennedy, second vice
house looks like a church.[ suspect she was a closet nun durmg president; Mrs. Linda
her married years.
Mayer, Secretary-treasurer;
Since I'm not particularly religious, this disturbs me. I and Mrs. April Smith,
won'thave new friends in our house because I feel tbese things assistant secretaryare a reflection on me. I'm self-conscious, as they say ''what I treasurer.
' am," when I'm not.
Elected to the executive
I wish my mother would confine her displays to her room. committee were. Gene Mitch,
If she wants to pray to a broomstick, !bat's her business, but Don Mayer, Ken Harris, Mrs.
why impose it on me? She isn't into discussion- just stomps Patricia Young, Phillip
out with hurt feelings . What would you suggest?- "16" FROM Ohlinger, and Sue Seelig.
TENNESSEE
During a brief business
session, it was voted to In"16" :
crease the price of tickets
Think on it this way: If a new friend invited you into HER from $4 to $5 for the 1976
borne, would YOU turn her off just because tbe decorations reunion. Aproposal to change
spotlight a particular religion? If not, tben why worry about the by-laws to permit alumni
others' reactions to something you probably can't change? to take guests to the banquet
Your friends will understand - perhaps with tbe help of low- was turned down by a vote of
key explanations- that these shrines, etc ., are your mother's those attending.
comfort. There's no need for apologies or embarrassment. The invocation was given
SUE
by the Rev. Mr . .Radford,
+++
foUowlng the pledge to the
"16":
flag, the national anthem,
l'd' guess tbe conflict goes deeper than simple eqtbarrass- and the "Purple and White",
ment over what your friends will think. Your mother's display witb'Mrs. Carrie Neutzling at
of Catholic symbols says loud and clear, "I want you to accept the piano. The ham dinner
my religion!" and since you evidently don't, they make you was served by the Bethel 62,
feel guilty .. so you'd rather not see them .
International Order of Job's
When and if you become comfortable witb your OWN Daughters. Tables were
reUgious attitudes, then your mother's beliefs should no longer decorated with flower
worry you. - HELEN
arrangements made by the
Winding Trail, Pomeroy, and
PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE OF
Wildwood Garden Clubs.
APPOINTMENT
To . Alfred E Ward . address
Case No. 21522
A necrology report was
unknown , whose last known Estate of JEAN ZIRt&lt;LE
jlosted
during the evening.
address was Route 1. Or ren! , Deceased .
Ohio .
Nol tc e is hereby 9111en that The Rev. John Bryant had the
Danny S Zirkle of Pomeroy ,
and group
In the Common Pleas Court Ohto . has been duly appotnted benediction
of Mergs County, Oh ro , AdminiStrator of th e Estate of singing of the Alma Mater

Wolfpen

Is Kissinger the man
fo.r our season?

"

We Hold These Truths ...
A Chronicle of America

1t--,

May, 1775: ,
The montb sees a transformation In the attitude of New
York. On March 10, James Madison could write from
orange Virginia, that "in New York, they insult the whole
Colony' and Continent with impunity!" Indeed, on
February 17 the New York Assembly voted I~ aplnst
even thanking New York's deteaates to the First C~llnen- ,
tal congress, on February 23, the ASIIembly voted 17-9
against naming ,delegates to the Second Continental
Congress. But Lexington and Concord did much to dilute
New York's strong loy,allst sentiment. On May!, a Commlttee of 100 Is established to preserve "American llberty"; theCommltteeur(leseverymantoacqulreamuaket
and to tralnhlmaelflnltsuse. On May IOMylesCooper, the
torypresldentofKing'sCollqeinNewYorkClty,narrowly avoids being tarred end feathered by a mob; hlaeecape Is
uallted by estudent, committed to the colonial cause, by
the name of Aleunder Hartllton. ,On May 17, the Provln·
dal conares• asaumes the f!Jncllons of aovemment, auballtullngltaelfforJhelnactlveNewYorkAisembly. And on
May 29, the provincial CoJ18resa orden all citizens to sip 0
the Continental Anoclatlon.

Polly's PoinTar"
BY P&lt;ILLY CRA~ER

Machine oil saves
typewriter ribbons
POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - Does
anyone know a remedy for
prolonging the ·leglbUity of
ribbons on typewrilers•
I use that "ring" of the pull
tab from beer cans for
hanging small wall plaques I
make. Bend the flexible
metal part in under the ring
making a snap like loop and
then slide a nail through Ibis
loop for added strength when
hanging wger plaques. MRS. R.L.A.
DEAR MRS. R.L.A.
Many years ago we bad the
following Pointer for a
"cure" for fading typewriter
ribbons: "Machine oil applied on an old typewriter
ribbon wm renew the dried
out Ink."- POLLY.

DEAR POLLY- When you
are ready to store your storm
wiridows check to see If they
can be left on for Insulation
against the swnmer heat.
This is a great help for houses
that are air conditioned. This
also solves a storage
problem. MRS. C.B.S.
DEAR POLLY -'- We
women who work in a bank
are making clowns for a ,
chUdren's party with empty
adding machine spools such
as Mrs. c.s. has. They also
would provide a use for leftover knitting yarn such as
Elva has and wanta to use .
Previously we used those
packaged candles with holes
~ !!!_the middle for tbe body so
i those with leftover yarn and
( no spools could make that
., substitution. The spool, or
candles, make tbe body, a
il styrofoam ball about I \lo
inches acroi!S is the head and
the clown hat Is from a paper
cup. ·The face has a round red
A' bead for the mouth and
-By Roo• Motkenzlollld Jotf MocNolly.
diamond-shaped sequins with
bead centers for the eyes . '1'~

$

i

f

L.---------....
--:--------;::
.,

start roll yarn around a six·
inch cardboard about twelve
times. Take piece of yarn
about 12 inches long and tie
this clwnp of yarn through
the middle and run rest of
yarn length up through the
spool and tie around the
middle of another yarn clwnp
for arms and then through the
styrofoam and cap and fasten
around more yarn that will be
cut to make a pompon for the
top of the pointed clown hat.
This yarn can be pushed
through with a cr~het needle
and it holds all together. Tie
off arms and legs so loose
ends simulate hands and feet.
- THE WOMEN OF N. C.
BANK.
DEAR POLLY - My Pet
Peeve is with the maU order
sales organizations that use
the "negative option" plan .
,You sign up for membership
in a club that sends you books
or records on a regular basis
unless you notify them within
a specific period that you
want to discontinue forthcoming issues. They take
advantage of our forgetfulness or neglect In sending
this. Sometimes even when
the negative card is sent, the
next volwne or recoril still
comes. When contacted they
say your card was not
received. I am sure there are
many others who agree with
me. - SHIRLEY.
, DEAR POLLY -I always
had a problem when baking
co·okies. The first cookie
sheet full had a te'!Ciency to
bake too hard on the bottom.
Now I have learneq from
experience to preheat my
cookie sheet and I pre.lteat
the oven and this works
great. It is already hot so the
cookies do not take as long to
bake and are not overdOne on
the bottom . - PEAR!., E.

II ,

Grant, Crooksville; Gene
Yeauger, Enon; Bernard
Grueser, Trenton; Donna
Grueser Stanley, Trenton;
Betty Genheimer . Knight,
Point Pleasant, W.Va.; Rhea
Ann Gears Lozier, Princeton,
N. _Y. _
Joyce Williams o n
Richards, Colwnbus; Mary
Clcfford
Lloyd,
McConnel svclle ;
Maril yn,
Swatzel Burgan, Toledo; Dan
West, Dover ; Shirley Wipple
Pohng, CC&gt;lumbus;
Jo
,Snowden West, Dover; cvan
I Shwnate, Mansfield; Eugene
'Story , Marysville ; Nancy
Jacobs Hanold, Colwnbus ;
Delores Kitchen Bashore ,
New Carlisle.'
Carol Louks Taylor,
Gallipolis; Harley Mossman,
South 'Milwaukee, Wise,;
Marlene Brown Rinehart,
Albany; Barbara DeWitt
Thomas, Farrmont, W. Va.;
Donna Wildermuth Nibert,
Gallipolis; Bill Hysell,
Cnlumbus; Ray Chasteen,
Cincinnati; Sharlee Newnan
Whittle, Worthington; Mary
Donna Hensley, Colwnbus;
Bridgett Ruschell, Columbus; Marilyn Grueser Quinn,
Whitehall; Dorothy Taylor
Ingles, Yorkville, Ill.;
Michael Ohlmger, Albany;
Erlene Renshaw Bumgardner, Mason, W. Va .
Ann Icenhower Barmtz,
Belpre; Thomas Brown, Port
Clinton; Gary Barnitz,
Belpre; Charles Kitchen,
Mason, W.Va.; Fred Brown,
Columbus; Mark Grueser,
Shade; Howard Parker,
'Morgan Ccty , La.; Rose
Hysell Haggy, Springfield;
Janice Thomas Steele,
McArthur; John Bryant,
Vinton; Mike Roberts,
' Newark; Linda Chapman
Stalnaker, Gallipolis; Edna
Carman Stalder, Athens;
David Brown, Columbus.
Sharon Van Cooney Saltz,
McArthur; Nancy Skinner
Grueser, Shade; Terry
Ohlinger, Philco; Ruth Ann
Edwards Parker, Morgan
City, La.; Mike Werry,
Belpre; Charles Taylor,
Newark; Jane Douglas
Daggett Wierton, W. Va.;
Keith Whaley, Shade; Danny
Smith, South. Point; Olita
Carpenter Carroll, Cincinnati; Jennifer Crew
Brown, Columbus; Fred
Sisson, Galion; Thurma
Vaughan, Pittsford, N. Y.;
Bre11da Potts Hoffer, Andrews Air Force Base,
Maryland; Charles Baxter,
Belpre; Patricia Fultz,
Ashtabula; Mickey Menchini,
• Nitro, W. Va.; William J.
Sayre , Columbus; Barry
Boyer, Malta; Pam O'Brien
McClanahan, Kettering;
Ruetta
Wells
Collins,
Columbus; Susie Casper

Smith, South Point; Harley
Hendricks, Point Pleasant,
W. Va.; Carolyn Parker
Ferrell, Carpenlersville, IU.;
Su5anne Arnold Fitzgerald,
Kansas City, Mo. ; Borlnie
Smith, Mineral Wells, W.
Va .; Carla Will Werry ,
Belpre.
·
Dr. Thomas McGowan,
Chtcago, IU.; Frank Porter,
Relay, Mich.; Patricia
Buffington Thompson,
Athens; Jonnie Sue Thompson Kinney, Columbus; Joey
Gilmore, Chicago, Ill.; Tom
Ebersbach, Columbus; Jane
Well MitcheU, Millwood, W.
Va.; Jerry Well, Shade;
Pamela Hayes Holcomb,
Lithopolis; Gwendolyn
Pickett Roach, Texas; Jean
Casto Chapman , Parkersburg, W. Va.; Edward

Lett wUer, Se WI'ckley, Pa .; Mary Goodwin Bartels of
and William Bartels and Stevensville, Mich.

'

'

"'

FOR THE
PROTECTION
YOU NEED- .

v v

·'

Play it oafe ant mre.
It may be time to
have your presen11
policy updated .

.

let's folic Soon

'

DALE C. WARNER
992-2143
102 W. Main

'

v

"

Pomerov

about economy
'75Pinto

-

' '

Below Rabbit

•

m.p.g.

See your Ford Dealer

®

"

"

,'

..

--.....--·
,

. •"•

.

,.

- ~·

"" ~
'

.

.-'

,; •II

n H ll

.. 1\

~,

.,....

··~''

• F\llEI:.:~
• STEEl£ClS
e SUM D
r Ul[l
• ncUUIA Cl"'"
• SEt -\ll "ll'fl
l\MEI
ER
• PGO~frMCE l
• SAh-"

r v lf

l . .. I

)'-'Ill

tuo s..~~on~ st.
Ml-•• 111111. 0111o P1t111 ..... y•r ..,...ontott•• call.
1ullllonfond tllore Is no ollltptlen

I
1
I

NMM----------------··
-I ....

~nK·--~--------~=---City
Sfihl_l
....:.... .. ' lip_.•

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1111!.
'

,

�-· ...

.

-

........

.J
' .,

I,

"I

" - •ne uauy Se;1tinel, Middleport-Pomeroy . 0 .. Tuc"day, M;1y 27, 1!175

..

Maron Q)unty

News Notes. ~

!
Mrs. Vicki Keefer, Mason County Extension~
By Alma Marshall

••
:•
:
:
•
:
•
•

•

•
:.
•
:
:
•

.
,=·· :

•
:
•
:
•
:
:
:

•
:
:
:
:
•:•
•
•'
••
:
:
:
:
:

AFI'ERNOON eL.ASS-6ftlWUA'I'fi:s-:... Kindergarten gra'duates of the afternoon class,
frant;1.,., are Kelly Holman, Tracy Holman, Tyler Hart, Tina Smith, Jeff Nelson, Ronnie
Shamblin , Regina Eblin, and Mark Smith; second row, Tammy McFarland, Christy Farley,
Teresa Little, Debbie Murphy, Traci Miller, Tammy Cremeans, Donald Stein, and Michelle
Stevens; third row, Mary Jones; Alien Maynard, La Lenya Hankla, Cindy Riffle, Michele ·
Zirkle, J. R. Kitchen, Shane Engle, Donna Manley, Kristi Richmond, Chuckie Neal, Darrin
Drenner, Jeff McMahon, Bryan Reeves, Tony Mohler, Rhonda Rathburn, Darla Hawley,
Shannon Hindy, and Kurt Doss.

Marigolds are
planted by
garden club

The Poet's Corner

Graduation Day 1s a very
special time - for tots and
teenagers alike .
And so it was with the
Middleport kindergarten
children Friday night when
they donned cap and gown for
their graduation day !pictures at left 1.
Mrs. Mary Rose , teacher ,
and Miss Marge Riggs, a
student teacher. led the
processional. The invocation
was given by Mr . Jeff Ranson, Bradbury Church of
Christ minister, and Miss
Janis Schmoll, team leader
with the Meigs Teacher
Corps, gave the address.
Music was provided by
Mrs. Gladys Foley , vocal
music teacher in the Meigs
Local School District, and
Robert Morris, principal,
presented the diplomas. A
reception for the graduates
and their parents was held
following commencement.

On ly by May1ag, I he dependability people.

.· PRICE PLUS RED CARPET SERVICE

Why settle for less than

rfa111ous
0

FUNMEALl ..
Fun Tray.

8 1g Shel "
Reg. French Fries .
Tu rn ov er &amp;
L arge Sol! Or in!&lt;

MAVTAG

!

.. :tia.but

FOR KIOS -

ADUlT MEAl

Funburge r
Reg . Frenc h Frres ,

Surp r1 se Pm e,
Reg So ft Oti nk &amp;
a Sweel Tr eat

famous M.aytag qualitycosts less to own ...

Ave,

worth more when
you trade

Greater Capacity, Faster
Wash ings . , . ~ uare tub

Wate r Stays Hotter longer ..

with c:one -s• aped bot-

const ruct iO n sa vo

Doub le -wall squarc- tuh

MAYTAG Big Family load
Washpowere AUTOMATICS

~o ap .

wa ter and work. Spl ash
crown keeps water on' fl oor.

House Paint Buy!

• Automatic water _levet ·cantrol saves water,
dete rgent • Power Fin Agita tor • Permanent Press Cycle • Li nt filt er • Pe rfo rated
wa sh-basket gets dirt away from clean
cloth es • Ful l Time Safety Lid-action stops
in sec ond s when lid iS opened .

Height ... Adjust-

MAYTAG Halo-of-Heat• DRYERS·
all with Permanent Press Cycle ...

ab le legs. Se t
washer at height
mos t co mf o rt·

10 Position5 for Wringer ...

Chief

SwiJlgs freely- and locks in
any of 80 po sition ~. E xtr a
laJge ro lls-one firm , one
!lexible -- ge t o ut more

CHICAGO

Self-Priming

PRIMING

· ···~#.-

able for yo u. Adjust to uneve n

• No Hot Spots! Gentle ,
even heat, surround

tloors.

cycle • Fine Mesh lint filter • full opening safety
door • Electronic· Control
- automatically shuts off

clothes • Permanent Press

E2LP

mo1stu re.

when proper dryness has

been reached.

GYRAFOAM washing action . .
faster, cleaner washings. without
wear and tear on clothes. Safe pu sh·
button control. ·

Aluminum tu b ... won't ru st.
rot, chip -or peel. Sedimen t trap
to cap ture dirt. Handy hin ged table lid
serves as sort ing tray.
WARRANTY

HOUSE
PAINT

LATEX

AUT OIIAI IC WU~[~ &amp; OUU

~

• • •

Brings Lower Prices!

~ssembty

f.r.. rfll'._n,.rl tl ~·m Ifill Ill! ,. u b
r~l •' " ••111 11 • ruu11 ot """"" ne

llkr rtQ-;oe&lt;l tor '"lllllllrt~~~ ol ~~~ 11
lr~• Ill' 0111' Y
U' ~"" ~ lie ot po.rrcll11~
11\frul'or IJ!w 11 e•lrl

Gibson

tant

MOORE'S

·You can have a complete portable
laundry almost anywhere you live·

Only 3 to Sell AI
This Price

eek

ibson

14 CU. ft.
Frost Free '33995

w-r

18.6 CUBIC FEET

Ice Kit

Check prices anywh.ere on . this 1S.6
cubic foot side-by-side Gibson .with 10
year compressor warranty. You will
find this to be an outstanding value .
White, gold and green . No extra charge
for color.

124 W. MAIN-POMEROY

Regular $549.95
Trade $100.00

unusual Offer

Instant
Ice Server
and 2 Flexible
Ice Trays

tor only

95

when you see the new
Gibson refrigerators
With the SILver LininG .
that saves

Model 83-1 039

~Regular

: Petitions to stop ban on religions

·D&amp;D MEAT

on ITtiiJSmrss,~n

Get this

Reg. $9.60

THE FARMERS BANK
AND SAVINGS CO.

5 vea1 cabmet wanamv
2 yeaT~ gn
com~lete wa~htT 5 '(!aT~
.Jya TIIS! lUSt

AMERICAN HARDWARE

6DAYS
A WEEK

"I

Ta ilored to Your

LATEX

.OPENe

MAYrAG'DollarW..~

PT. PLEASANT
2325 Jack&gt;on

Members of the Winding The shadows lengthen with twilight
•• 11ling.''
. Trail Garden Club met at the And r feel the evening breeze,
:
She said persons should write individual letters if they have Meigs County Infirmary civic As it gently blows around me
: a complaint. This can be done by writing the program director planting last Tuesday night to While a whip-jioor-will calls from the trees.
: or general manager. ·She stressed that parents should be plant marigolds around the
: "picky" ahout the shows they watch, especially with children flag pole arid install a· new The frog calls out to his partner
bird feeder,
: viewing them.
From the pond below the spring;
Assisting the club members While the owl starts hls evening's journey
•
Mrs . . Ebner Grueser,. president of Mason County
•• Homemakers Council, welcomed guests and members. Group were Charles Legar, John
•• singing was accompanied at the piano by Mt:s. Otis Randolph. Terrell, Chuck Legar, Gene And his call throngh 'the valleys ring.
:
Mrs. Ollie BrowniJ)g, vice president, presented the Mitch, Rick Collins and Susie The wild plum and crabapple blossoms
: devotionals, Proverbs 31 : 10.28 verses, and a reading, "Debra Thoma . Club members Spread their sweet perfume in the air;
working were . Mrs . Wilma And I vision th,e wild flowers blooming
: the Lady is a Leader/' and closed with prayer.
Terrell,
Mrs. Robert Lewis , In woodlots and meadow lands fair.
: . Other guests taking part in an interesting program were Mr.
Mrs.
Alice
Thompson, Mrs .
• and Mrs. Marty Reynolds of Reflection's Beauty Salon, Pl.
: Pleasant. He cut his wife's hair 1n a carefree easy style and Pat Thoma, Mrs . Nancy
from the noise of the, city,
•• blow-&lt;lried it. He pointed out the improvement in permanents Collins and Mrs·: Mildred Away
In the country, at close of day;
: which take only six minutes to process. With the use of a Deeth.
When the world seems ·at peace around me
• blower 650 watt heat and round brush, and hair sl!ghtly damp,
Mother Nature's sounds are good pay.
HERE ON HOLIDAY
an attractive hair style was the final result.
Mr. and Mrs . Jack
Mrs. Reynolds (Christie), using Carolyn Litchfield as a Whittle of Worthington Yes, it's Springtime again in the country,
model, cut and styled the hair for all to see.
spent the holiday weekend And the sounds ring loud and clear;
Maxine Kinnaird of La Marce Beaukty Salon; using Carolyn here with her parentS: Mr. Living near to God and His wonders
Pickens as a mndel, showed how to apply cosmetics correctly and Mrs. Charles Neuman, Is a privilege I hold dear.
· to give a desired effect.
-Mrs. Mendal Jordan, Rt, 3 Albany.
Minersville.
•
Roberta Asbury, Extension Agent, 4-H showed five ver~ sions in using scarfs to enhance the beauty of a garment. Mrs. Pickens, and served to 19 persons.Mrs. Michael Merritt,
IN DEFIANCE
: Lucy Cullen, modeled the scarfs.
decorated the refreshment table with a floral arrangement of
Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence
; At the opening of the meeting Mrs. Vicki Keefer gave the irises. . . . ·
'
Baughman and son, and Mr.
: treasurer's report during the absence of Mrs. Jess Brown.
The Bartrams and Mrs. Wyatt were presented gifts by .the and Mr . and Mrs. William
' Mrs. Harry Staats gave the secretary's report.
Graham United Methodist women.
·
Fred Smith, Middleport,
•
Mason CoWlty BeUe, Mrs. Ray (Edith) Fox, was introduced
Attending were Rev. and Mrs. Bartram, Mrs. Wyatt, Esther spent the weekend in
• by Mrs. Grueser. She will represent the county as their BeUe at Brown, Anna Allen, Nessie Moore, Erma Roush, Albert Roush,
Defiance visiting Mr. and
, the Folk Festival in Glenville.
Ottie Bumgarner, Ruth Pickens, Usa Pickens, Brenda Mrs. Tom Spires and son.
. A candlelight memorial service was given by Mrs. Harold Merritt, Jane Wyatt, Mary Ann Richard'l, Anna Bumgarner,
Lewis.iii memory of the late Mrs. Martin Ohlinger, Mrs. Olga Esther Roush, Ada A. Clarke, Mrs. J. R. Marshall and Rev.
Roush, Mrs. Otmer Roush, Mrs. Mayme Hutchinson, Mrs. Mrs. Achsah Miller.
• Hugh Barr, Mrs. Abigail Thompson, Mary Zerkle, Jess
Rev. Bartram has been pastor of Letart charge which in; Brown and Homer Johnson. Others serving on the Memorial cludes Bachtel, Graham, Letart and Broad Run, for the past
: Book Committee are Mrs. Girard Fowler and Mrs. H. E. three years. The Bartrams plan to attend M11rshall University
' Beckleheimer.
this fall.
The guests '!l'ere presented gifts on behalf of the Extension
THE REV. MRS. ACHSAH MILLER has returned to her
' Homemakers Council.
'
home in New Haven after visiting her daughters and their
during May only
Mrs. Grueser thanked the Spring LWlcheon Committee families in Wetzel County. They ~re Mrs. Gary Nichols and
composed of Mrs. Earl Ingels, Mrs. Aaron Fowler, Mrs. Joyce Mrs. Bill Shirk.
Even if your trip is months away
MASON - Dr. Thomas B. McGowan must be one of the
Clifton and Vicki Keefer, Extension Homemakers Agent; table
buy from us in May and save up to $481
favors by the Anne Bailey, Camp Conley and Pleasant Clubs; proudest fathers, with a son, Dr. Thomas (Tommy)
McGowan;
a
daughter,
Dr.
Katherine
(Kay)
McGowan
rrogram covers, Helping Hand and Mason; Name Tags,
following in his footsteps, .and another daughter, , Celine,
Avalanche and Letart Extension Homemaker Clubs.
' .Prizes were awarded to several holders of lucky numbers. graduating a few weeks ago from George Washington
Up to $5000 worth of
Attractive pillows were displayed that will be given at t~ University, Washington, D. C. where she received her Masters
·
First Nati9nal City
'National Homemakers Extension Conference in 76 at Degree in Special Education.
Dr. Katherine (Kay) McGowan was among 1S4 students
;Morgantown to some of the leaders. A buffet IWlcheon was
Travelers Checks
·served at noon.
. graduating on SWlday, May 18th from Tufts University School
: LETART, W. VA. - Rev. and Mrs. Milton Bartram arrived of Medicine. Her father attended the graduation exercises. Dr.
for a fee of just $2
McGowan
will
intern
·
at
New
England
Medical
Center
' at Graham United Methodist Church on Sunday afternoon lor a
~~
~rty for Mrs. Charles Wyatt who will be moving from the Hospital, Boston.
His son, Dr. Thomas (Tommy) McGowan, also a graduate of
•area. Mrs. Wyatt arrived thinking she was attending a goingAmount of
Tufts
University School of Medicine1 is interning at NorTravelers Usual . May
' away pllrty for the Bartrams, who will be moving to HunYOU
C!lecks
lee
tee
SAVE
: tington, As It turned out; it was a party for all tbree, who were thwestern University Center in Chicago, and has a residency
there.
·
$ 300
very much surprised.
s 3.00 $2.00 $ 1.00 Wherever you travel ... or
: Two cakes, decorated _:Rith,roses were made by Mrs. Jack
5.00 .
500
if you keep money at home ·
2.00
3.00
1,000
10.QO
2.00
8.00 or at work ... the best way
2,500,
25.00
2.00
23,00
to protect your money is to use
• Meigs
1..ounty
Utrl founded on religious prin5,000
50.00
2.00
48.00
First National City Travelers Checks.
Scouts , toda~ initiated ciples, allllwe feel it would be
an aclton tn . oppost- of great hindrance to our
If they're lost or stolen you can get an on-the-spot refund
,lion to an attempt in counlry's well being, as well
at over 35,000 refund points in the U.S. and overseas.
'Washington to ban all as a deprivation of our perThe most elrtensive refund service in the travelers check
!religious broadcasting from sonal rights to continue in the ,
business. They're honored world-wide in millions of places.
,radio and television.
religious activity of our
~st time to buy them is during May. Offer ends May 31st.
choictl if this type of
Now
you
can
have
all
your
fall
and
winter
: Nearly 100 petitions were programming Is ciiscon- .
garments dry cleaned and stored free of
. :PlaCed in business houses tinued."
charge until needed later.
•over the county for
~ignatures. The petitions will
' Bring them In NOW. then pick up later end PAY
. he niailed by Mrs. Pa't
ONLY the ciMnlng charge.
J'homa, Meigs County service
unit chairwoman' to the
appropriate officials in
INSURED FUR STORAGE
Waahington. Residents are
Pomeroy, ·Ohio
For
All
Your
Furs
Aval18ble
!Wre
utged to sign the petitions
1
which read as follows:
MON. thru SAT.
40,000.00 Maximum Insurance
: "This is a petition in
for Each ·Depositor
lelutation to the attempt in
Washington, March 17, to 1ry
to ban all religl0111 ll'ot~d­
830 E. Main
~~~ting from radio and
·E. 2nd
Pumeroy, Ohio
ff2·5421
POMEROY
televlalon. Our . coun,try was
I
,; ,
·'

______________ ,

~-----

let. Per fect for apart ments and mobile homes, especially with
STACK- RACK (optional, extra). Size-up, the Porta-Pair today.

tom holds mo re water
and clothe•-

SELF-

\'

Porta Wa s ~c r, Po rt a-Dryer- th at's ihe exdusi\le Maytag PortaPair! It 's a complete portable laundry in half the space. ~o
installation . Just plug into any adequately wired ~15 -vo lt out-

SPRlNGIIME lN 'TilE COUNTRY
Hearing the sounds ·of springtime,
As I stand in the yard 'neath a tree;
Pausing from daytime labors,
Great blessings come to me.

-

~

thats APARTMENT-PERFECT!

for tots too ·
MORNING CLASS GRADUATES - .Left to right are children of the morning kindergarten class, front, Kim Stewart, Scott Polcyn, Michael Lewis, John Paul Fink, Rita
Gaspers, Jason Bush, Wendy Barker, Julie Hysell, Lester Stewart, Crystal Manley,
Charlotte Elkins, Debra Snyder, Belinda Hadsell; middle row, Jeff Hood, Eddie Patrick,
Lesley Spencer, Erica Kessinger, Kim Deem, Usa Lemley, W. T. English, Usa Whittington, Teresa Whittington, and Tim Durst; and third row, Jay Mees, Bryan Ingels, David
Hendricks, Tracy Scholderer, Terri Sprouse, Ifsa Manley, David Deem, and Donnie Bunce.

PORTA-DRYER

Heres a c9mplete portable laundry

special time

..
~

PORTA-WASHER

W a n t M O R E fo r y ou r MONEY ?

Graduation

~

MASON Homemakers Agent, taught the lesson on "Metric system:
USA," when the Mason Homerrll!kers met Tuesday everung at
the home of Mrs. George Carson.
She eJPlained the basic reason that the United States is
going to the metric system is that we are losing so much money
each year. She stated that we are losing $600million in trade by
not being on the system and 90 percent of the world's
populatim is on the metric system.
The Iilternational System of Units (SI ) will one day be
mostly metric. We are already using three SI units: the second
(s) to measure time, aniphere ( A ) to measure electric current,
and the candela (c) to measure light intensity. As we go
metric, ·we will become familiar with the meter (m) ·to
measure length, the gram (g) to measure weight (mass ), the
liter (!) to measure liquid (volume ), and Celsius (C) to
measure temperature.
Metric conversion cards were given to all club members.
These were supplied by the US Dept. of Commerce, and the
lesson leanet, "Metric System : USA" was supplied by the
Cooperative Extension Service, West Virginia University,
Center for Extension and Continuing Education.
Mrs. Dorothy ~een, presided at the opening of the meeting.
Following the pledge to the flag, Mrs. Elmer VanMeter
!i'esented the devotionals, Psalm 148; and a reading, "Voice in
the Morning." Thought for the day and closed with prayer.
Mrs. Roberta Young reported on plans for serving the
Wahama High School alwnni banquet and assigned workers
for Friday and Saturday.
The club members made tentative plans to go to the
Mountaineer for dinner in JWle.
The group discussed making pillow tops for the National
Homemakers Convention in 76.
Refreshments were served by Mrs. Carson to Mrs. Keefer,
Mrs. Uoyd Williams, Mrs. Laura Johnson, Mrs. Lawrence
Roush, Mrs. Dorothy Queen, Mrs. Landon Smith, Mrs. Roberta
Young , Mrs. Helen Williams; Mrs, Laurene Lewis, Mrs.
Matilda Noble, Mrs. Edison Weaver, Mrs. John' Roach, Mrs.
Cecil Smith, Mrs. Elmer VanMeter, Mrs. J. R. Marshall. .
POINT PLEASANT- Debbie Thomas of WSAZ-TV was a
guest speaker at Mason County Extension Homemakers
Spring Luncheon on Thursday, May 22 at Moose Hall in PI.
Pleasant.
Debbie, a graduate of the University of Illinois, was intrnduced by Vicki Keefer, Mason County Home Demonstration
Agent. In keeping with the theme of the luncheon,
"Homemakers Alive in 75" , she stressed the value of the
housewife. She said the U.S. Dept. of Lahor discussed that the
average housewife spends 99\2 hours a week at her job. A
husband trying to replace the homemaking service on a hirf:d
basis would cost him over $10,000 a year.
The homemakers asked Miss Thomas many questions. In
referring to TV, she said: "We owe you. quality pr.ogram-

~ ~$

'.··.

4- The Daily Sentine!, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, Ma~ '!1, 1975

.

~Trade

$599.95 .
$100.00

18.6 Cu. Ft. Frost*Ciear
Foodmaster
This 18.6 cubic foot has adjustable
shelves and many other. fine features .
White, Gold and Green
No extra charge for color.
Mol;fel 83-1059

A FULL
SlRVICt
LV\NI&lt;

MAY SAVINGS SALE ENDS SATURDAY, MAY 31
Gibson's new loam insulation is called the "Silver Lm·
lng" because it helps you
save in so many ways.
Thinner walls save space 1n·
, side, the efficient cold barrier saves ' on energy, and

Robinson's aeaners

'
'·

.'

it's so tough that it'll save
your investment lor years.
See it and save on this ooo·
ular model ... R1£g. $499 .95
· Your Trade $100.00

SALE $399.95
. II&gt;

MASON FURNITURE
HERMAN GRATE

MASON, IN. VA.
'.

�-· ...

.

-

........

.J
' .,

I,

"I

" - •ne uauy Se;1tinel, Middleport-Pomeroy . 0 .. Tuc"day, M;1y 27, 1!175

..

Maron Q)unty

News Notes. ~

!
Mrs. Vicki Keefer, Mason County Extension~
By Alma Marshall

••
:•
:
:
•
:
•
•

•

•
:.
•
:
:
•

.
,=·· :

•
:
•
:
•
:
:
:

•
:
:
:
:
•:•
•
•'
••
:
:
:
:
:

AFI'ERNOON eL.ASS-6ftlWUA'I'fi:s-:... Kindergarten gra'duates of the afternoon class,
frant;1.,., are Kelly Holman, Tracy Holman, Tyler Hart, Tina Smith, Jeff Nelson, Ronnie
Shamblin , Regina Eblin, and Mark Smith; second row, Tammy McFarland, Christy Farley,
Teresa Little, Debbie Murphy, Traci Miller, Tammy Cremeans, Donald Stein, and Michelle
Stevens; third row, Mary Jones; Alien Maynard, La Lenya Hankla, Cindy Riffle, Michele ·
Zirkle, J. R. Kitchen, Shane Engle, Donna Manley, Kristi Richmond, Chuckie Neal, Darrin
Drenner, Jeff McMahon, Bryan Reeves, Tony Mohler, Rhonda Rathburn, Darla Hawley,
Shannon Hindy, and Kurt Doss.

Marigolds are
planted by
garden club

The Poet's Corner

Graduation Day 1s a very
special time - for tots and
teenagers alike .
And so it was with the
Middleport kindergarten
children Friday night when
they donned cap and gown for
their graduation day !pictures at left 1.
Mrs. Mary Rose , teacher ,
and Miss Marge Riggs, a
student teacher. led the
processional. The invocation
was given by Mr . Jeff Ranson, Bradbury Church of
Christ minister, and Miss
Janis Schmoll, team leader
with the Meigs Teacher
Corps, gave the address.
Music was provided by
Mrs. Gladys Foley , vocal
music teacher in the Meigs
Local School District, and
Robert Morris, principal,
presented the diplomas. A
reception for the graduates
and their parents was held
following commencement.

On ly by May1ag, I he dependability people.

.· PRICE PLUS RED CARPET SERVICE

Why settle for less than

rfa111ous
0

FUNMEALl ..
Fun Tray.

8 1g Shel "
Reg. French Fries .
Tu rn ov er &amp;
L arge Sol! Or in!&lt;

MAVTAG

!

.. :tia.but

FOR KIOS -

ADUlT MEAl

Funburge r
Reg . Frenc h Frres ,

Surp r1 se Pm e,
Reg So ft Oti nk &amp;
a Sweel Tr eat

famous M.aytag qualitycosts less to own ...

Ave,

worth more when
you trade

Greater Capacity, Faster
Wash ings . , . ~ uare tub

Wate r Stays Hotter longer ..

with c:one -s• aped bot-

const ruct iO n sa vo

Doub le -wall squarc- tuh

MAYTAG Big Family load
Washpowere AUTOMATICS

~o ap .

wa ter and work. Spl ash
crown keeps water on' fl oor.

House Paint Buy!

• Automatic water _levet ·cantrol saves water,
dete rgent • Power Fin Agita tor • Permanent Press Cycle • Li nt filt er • Pe rfo rated
wa sh-basket gets dirt away from clean
cloth es • Ful l Time Safety Lid-action stops
in sec ond s when lid iS opened .

Height ... Adjust-

MAYTAG Halo-of-Heat• DRYERS·
all with Permanent Press Cycle ...

ab le legs. Se t
washer at height
mos t co mf o rt·

10 Position5 for Wringer ...

Chief

SwiJlgs freely- and locks in
any of 80 po sition ~. E xtr a
laJge ro lls-one firm , one
!lexible -- ge t o ut more

CHICAGO

Self-Priming

PRIMING

· ···~#.-

able for yo u. Adjust to uneve n

• No Hot Spots! Gentle ,
even heat, surround

tloors.

cycle • Fine Mesh lint filter • full opening safety
door • Electronic· Control
- automatically shuts off

clothes • Permanent Press

E2LP

mo1stu re.

when proper dryness has

been reached.

GYRAFOAM washing action . .
faster, cleaner washings. without
wear and tear on clothes. Safe pu sh·
button control. ·

Aluminum tu b ... won't ru st.
rot, chip -or peel. Sedimen t trap
to cap ture dirt. Handy hin ged table lid
serves as sort ing tray.
WARRANTY

HOUSE
PAINT

LATEX

AUT OIIAI IC WU~[~ &amp; OUU

~

• • •

Brings Lower Prices!

~ssembty

f.r.. rfll'._n,.rl tl ~·m Ifill Ill! ,. u b
r~l •' " ••111 11 • ruu11 ot """"" ne

llkr rtQ-;oe&lt;l tor '"lllllllrt~~~ ol ~~~ 11
lr~• Ill' 0111' Y
U' ~"" ~ lie ot po.rrcll11~
11\frul'or IJ!w 11 e•lrl

Gibson

tant

MOORE'S

·You can have a complete portable
laundry almost anywhere you live·

Only 3 to Sell AI
This Price

eek

ibson

14 CU. ft.
Frost Free '33995

w-r

18.6 CUBIC FEET

Ice Kit

Check prices anywh.ere on . this 1S.6
cubic foot side-by-side Gibson .with 10
year compressor warranty. You will
find this to be an outstanding value .
White, gold and green . No extra charge
for color.

124 W. MAIN-POMEROY

Regular $549.95
Trade $100.00

unusual Offer

Instant
Ice Server
and 2 Flexible
Ice Trays

tor only

95

when you see the new
Gibson refrigerators
With the SILver LininG .
that saves

Model 83-1 039

~Regular

: Petitions to stop ban on religions

·D&amp;D MEAT

on ITtiiJSmrss,~n

Get this

Reg. $9.60

THE FARMERS BANK
AND SAVINGS CO.

5 vea1 cabmet wanamv
2 yeaT~ gn
com~lete wa~htT 5 '(!aT~
.Jya TIIS! lUSt

AMERICAN HARDWARE

6DAYS
A WEEK

"I

Ta ilored to Your

LATEX

.OPENe

MAYrAG'DollarW..~

PT. PLEASANT
2325 Jack&gt;on

Members of the Winding The shadows lengthen with twilight
•• 11ling.''
. Trail Garden Club met at the And r feel the evening breeze,
:
She said persons should write individual letters if they have Meigs County Infirmary civic As it gently blows around me
: a complaint. This can be done by writing the program director planting last Tuesday night to While a whip-jioor-will calls from the trees.
: or general manager. ·She stressed that parents should be plant marigolds around the
: "picky" ahout the shows they watch, especially with children flag pole arid install a· new The frog calls out to his partner
bird feeder,
: viewing them.
From the pond below the spring;
Assisting the club members While the owl starts hls evening's journey
•
Mrs . . Ebner Grueser,. president of Mason County
•• Homemakers Council, welcomed guests and members. Group were Charles Legar, John
•• singing was accompanied at the piano by Mt:s. Otis Randolph. Terrell, Chuck Legar, Gene And his call throngh 'the valleys ring.
:
Mrs. Ollie BrowniJ)g, vice president, presented the Mitch, Rick Collins and Susie The wild plum and crabapple blossoms
: devotionals, Proverbs 31 : 10.28 verses, and a reading, "Debra Thoma . Club members Spread their sweet perfume in the air;
working were . Mrs . Wilma And I vision th,e wild flowers blooming
: the Lady is a Leader/' and closed with prayer.
Terrell,
Mrs. Robert Lewis , In woodlots and meadow lands fair.
: . Other guests taking part in an interesting program were Mr.
Mrs.
Alice
Thompson, Mrs .
• and Mrs. Marty Reynolds of Reflection's Beauty Salon, Pl.
: Pleasant. He cut his wife's hair 1n a carefree easy style and Pat Thoma, Mrs . Nancy
from the noise of the, city,
•• blow-&lt;lried it. He pointed out the improvement in permanents Collins and Mrs·: Mildred Away
In the country, at close of day;
: which take only six minutes to process. With the use of a Deeth.
When the world seems ·at peace around me
• blower 650 watt heat and round brush, and hair sl!ghtly damp,
Mother Nature's sounds are good pay.
HERE ON HOLIDAY
an attractive hair style was the final result.
Mr. and Mrs . Jack
Mrs. Reynolds (Christie), using Carolyn Litchfield as a Whittle of Worthington Yes, it's Springtime again in the country,
model, cut and styled the hair for all to see.
spent the holiday weekend And the sounds ring loud and clear;
Maxine Kinnaird of La Marce Beaukty Salon; using Carolyn here with her parentS: Mr. Living near to God and His wonders
Pickens as a mndel, showed how to apply cosmetics correctly and Mrs. Charles Neuman, Is a privilege I hold dear.
· to give a desired effect.
-Mrs. Mendal Jordan, Rt, 3 Albany.
Minersville.
•
Roberta Asbury, Extension Agent, 4-H showed five ver~ sions in using scarfs to enhance the beauty of a garment. Mrs. Pickens, and served to 19 persons.Mrs. Michael Merritt,
IN DEFIANCE
: Lucy Cullen, modeled the scarfs.
decorated the refreshment table with a floral arrangement of
Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence
; At the opening of the meeting Mrs. Vicki Keefer gave the irises. . . . ·
'
Baughman and son, and Mr.
: treasurer's report during the absence of Mrs. Jess Brown.
The Bartrams and Mrs. Wyatt were presented gifts by .the and Mr . and Mrs. William
' Mrs. Harry Staats gave the secretary's report.
Graham United Methodist women.
·
Fred Smith, Middleport,
•
Mason CoWlty BeUe, Mrs. Ray (Edith) Fox, was introduced
Attending were Rev. and Mrs. Bartram, Mrs. Wyatt, Esther spent the weekend in
• by Mrs. Grueser. She will represent the county as their BeUe at Brown, Anna Allen, Nessie Moore, Erma Roush, Albert Roush,
Defiance visiting Mr. and
, the Folk Festival in Glenville.
Ottie Bumgarner, Ruth Pickens, Usa Pickens, Brenda Mrs. Tom Spires and son.
. A candlelight memorial service was given by Mrs. Harold Merritt, Jane Wyatt, Mary Ann Richard'l, Anna Bumgarner,
Lewis.iii memory of the late Mrs. Martin Ohlinger, Mrs. Olga Esther Roush, Ada A. Clarke, Mrs. J. R. Marshall and Rev.
Roush, Mrs. Otmer Roush, Mrs. Mayme Hutchinson, Mrs. Mrs. Achsah Miller.
• Hugh Barr, Mrs. Abigail Thompson, Mary Zerkle, Jess
Rev. Bartram has been pastor of Letart charge which in; Brown and Homer Johnson. Others serving on the Memorial cludes Bachtel, Graham, Letart and Broad Run, for the past
: Book Committee are Mrs. Girard Fowler and Mrs. H. E. three years. The Bartrams plan to attend M11rshall University
' Beckleheimer.
this fall.
The guests '!l'ere presented gifts on behalf of the Extension
THE REV. MRS. ACHSAH MILLER has returned to her
' Homemakers Council.
'
home in New Haven after visiting her daughters and their
during May only
Mrs. Grueser thanked the Spring LWlcheon Committee families in Wetzel County. They ~re Mrs. Gary Nichols and
composed of Mrs. Earl Ingels, Mrs. Aaron Fowler, Mrs. Joyce Mrs. Bill Shirk.
Even if your trip is months away
MASON - Dr. Thomas B. McGowan must be one of the
Clifton and Vicki Keefer, Extension Homemakers Agent; table
buy from us in May and save up to $481
favors by the Anne Bailey, Camp Conley and Pleasant Clubs; proudest fathers, with a son, Dr. Thomas (Tommy)
McGowan;
a
daughter,
Dr.
Katherine
(Kay)
McGowan
rrogram covers, Helping Hand and Mason; Name Tags,
following in his footsteps, .and another daughter, , Celine,
Avalanche and Letart Extension Homemaker Clubs.
' .Prizes were awarded to several holders of lucky numbers. graduating a few weeks ago from George Washington
Up to $5000 worth of
Attractive pillows were displayed that will be given at t~ University, Washington, D. C. where she received her Masters
·
First Nati9nal City
'National Homemakers Extension Conference in 76 at Degree in Special Education.
Dr. Katherine (Kay) McGowan was among 1S4 students
;Morgantown to some of the leaders. A buffet IWlcheon was
Travelers Checks
·served at noon.
. graduating on SWlday, May 18th from Tufts University School
: LETART, W. VA. - Rev. and Mrs. Milton Bartram arrived of Medicine. Her father attended the graduation exercises. Dr.
for a fee of just $2
McGowan
will
intern
·
at
New
England
Medical
Center
' at Graham United Methodist Church on Sunday afternoon lor a
~~
~rty for Mrs. Charles Wyatt who will be moving from the Hospital, Boston.
His son, Dr. Thomas (Tommy) McGowan, also a graduate of
•area. Mrs. Wyatt arrived thinking she was attending a goingAmount of
Tufts
University School of Medicine1 is interning at NorTravelers Usual . May
' away pllrty for the Bartrams, who will be moving to HunYOU
C!lecks
lee
tee
SAVE
: tington, As It turned out; it was a party for all tbree, who were thwestern University Center in Chicago, and has a residency
there.
·
$ 300
very much surprised.
s 3.00 $2.00 $ 1.00 Wherever you travel ... or
: Two cakes, decorated _:Rith,roses were made by Mrs. Jack
5.00 .
500
if you keep money at home ·
2.00
3.00
1,000
10.QO
2.00
8.00 or at work ... the best way
2,500,
25.00
2.00
23,00
to protect your money is to use
• Meigs
1..ounty
Utrl founded on religious prin5,000
50.00
2.00
48.00
First National City Travelers Checks.
Scouts , toda~ initiated ciples, allllwe feel it would be
an aclton tn . oppost- of great hindrance to our
If they're lost or stolen you can get an on-the-spot refund
,lion to an attempt in counlry's well being, as well
at over 35,000 refund points in the U.S. and overseas.
'Washington to ban all as a deprivation of our perThe most elrtensive refund service in the travelers check
!religious broadcasting from sonal rights to continue in the ,
business. They're honored world-wide in millions of places.
,radio and television.
religious activity of our
~st time to buy them is during May. Offer ends May 31st.
choictl if this type of
Now
you
can
have
all
your
fall
and
winter
: Nearly 100 petitions were programming Is ciiscon- .
garments dry cleaned and stored free of
. :PlaCed in business houses tinued."
charge until needed later.
•over the county for
~ignatures. The petitions will
' Bring them In NOW. then pick up later end PAY
. he niailed by Mrs. Pa't
ONLY the ciMnlng charge.
J'homa, Meigs County service
unit chairwoman' to the
appropriate officials in
INSURED FUR STORAGE
Waahington. Residents are
Pomeroy, ·Ohio
For
All
Your
Furs
Aval18ble
!Wre
utged to sign the petitions
1
which read as follows:
MON. thru SAT.
40,000.00 Maximum Insurance
: "This is a petition in
for Each ·Depositor
lelutation to the attempt in
Washington, March 17, to 1ry
to ban all religl0111 ll'ot~d­
830 E. Main
~~~ting from radio and
·E. 2nd
Pumeroy, Ohio
ff2·5421
POMEROY
televlalon. Our . coun,try was
I
,; ,
·'

______________ ,

~-----

let. Per fect for apart ments and mobile homes, especially with
STACK- RACK (optional, extra). Size-up, the Porta-Pair today.

tom holds mo re water
and clothe•-

SELF-

\'

Porta Wa s ~c r, Po rt a-Dryer- th at's ihe exdusi\le Maytag PortaPair! It 's a complete portable laundry in half the space. ~o
installation . Just plug into any adequately wired ~15 -vo lt out-

SPRlNGIIME lN 'TilE COUNTRY
Hearing the sounds ·of springtime,
As I stand in the yard 'neath a tree;
Pausing from daytime labors,
Great blessings come to me.

-

~

thats APARTMENT-PERFECT!

for tots too ·
MORNING CLASS GRADUATES - .Left to right are children of the morning kindergarten class, front, Kim Stewart, Scott Polcyn, Michael Lewis, John Paul Fink, Rita
Gaspers, Jason Bush, Wendy Barker, Julie Hysell, Lester Stewart, Crystal Manley,
Charlotte Elkins, Debra Snyder, Belinda Hadsell; middle row, Jeff Hood, Eddie Patrick,
Lesley Spencer, Erica Kessinger, Kim Deem, Usa Lemley, W. T. English, Usa Whittington, Teresa Whittington, and Tim Durst; and third row, Jay Mees, Bryan Ingels, David
Hendricks, Tracy Scholderer, Terri Sprouse, Ifsa Manley, David Deem, and Donnie Bunce.

PORTA-DRYER

Heres a c9mplete portable laundry

special time

..
~

PORTA-WASHER

W a n t M O R E fo r y ou r MONEY ?

Graduation

~

MASON Homemakers Agent, taught the lesson on "Metric system:
USA," when the Mason Homerrll!kers met Tuesday everung at
the home of Mrs. George Carson.
She eJPlained the basic reason that the United States is
going to the metric system is that we are losing so much money
each year. She stated that we are losing $600million in trade by
not being on the system and 90 percent of the world's
populatim is on the metric system.
The Iilternational System of Units (SI ) will one day be
mostly metric. We are already using three SI units: the second
(s) to measure time, aniphere ( A ) to measure electric current,
and the candela (c) to measure light intensity. As we go
metric, ·we will become familiar with the meter (m) ·to
measure length, the gram (g) to measure weight (mass ), the
liter (!) to measure liquid (volume ), and Celsius (C) to
measure temperature.
Metric conversion cards were given to all club members.
These were supplied by the US Dept. of Commerce, and the
lesson leanet, "Metric System : USA" was supplied by the
Cooperative Extension Service, West Virginia University,
Center for Extension and Continuing Education.
Mrs. Dorothy ~een, presided at the opening of the meeting.
Following the pledge to the flag, Mrs. Elmer VanMeter
!i'esented the devotionals, Psalm 148; and a reading, "Voice in
the Morning." Thought for the day and closed with prayer.
Mrs. Roberta Young reported on plans for serving the
Wahama High School alwnni banquet and assigned workers
for Friday and Saturday.
The club members made tentative plans to go to the
Mountaineer for dinner in JWle.
The group discussed making pillow tops for the National
Homemakers Convention in 76.
Refreshments were served by Mrs. Carson to Mrs. Keefer,
Mrs. Uoyd Williams, Mrs. Laura Johnson, Mrs. Lawrence
Roush, Mrs. Dorothy Queen, Mrs. Landon Smith, Mrs. Roberta
Young , Mrs. Helen Williams; Mrs, Laurene Lewis, Mrs.
Matilda Noble, Mrs. Edison Weaver, Mrs. John' Roach, Mrs.
Cecil Smith, Mrs. Elmer VanMeter, Mrs. J. R. Marshall. .
POINT PLEASANT- Debbie Thomas of WSAZ-TV was a
guest speaker at Mason County Extension Homemakers
Spring Luncheon on Thursday, May 22 at Moose Hall in PI.
Pleasant.
Debbie, a graduate of the University of Illinois, was intrnduced by Vicki Keefer, Mason County Home Demonstration
Agent. In keeping with the theme of the luncheon,
"Homemakers Alive in 75" , she stressed the value of the
housewife. She said the U.S. Dept. of Lahor discussed that the
average housewife spends 99\2 hours a week at her job. A
husband trying to replace the homemaking service on a hirf:d
basis would cost him over $10,000 a year.
The homemakers asked Miss Thomas many questions. In
referring to TV, she said: "We owe you. quality pr.ogram-

~ ~$

'.··.

4- The Daily Sentine!, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, Ma~ '!1, 1975

.

~Trade

$599.95 .
$100.00

18.6 Cu. Ft. Frost*Ciear
Foodmaster
This 18.6 cubic foot has adjustable
shelves and many other. fine features .
White, Gold and Green
No extra charge for color.
Mol;fel 83-1059

A FULL
SlRVICt
LV\NI&lt;

MAY SAVINGS SALE ENDS SATURDAY, MAY 31
Gibson's new loam insulation is called the "Silver Lm·
lng" because it helps you
save in so many ways.
Thinner walls save space 1n·
, side, the efficient cold barrier saves ' on energy, and

Robinson's aeaners

'
'·

.'

it's so tough that it'll save
your investment lor years.
See it and save on this ooo·
ular model ... R1£g. $499 .95
· Your Trade $100.00

SALE $399.95
. II&gt;

MASON FURNITURE
HERMAN GRATE

MASON, IN. VA.
'.

�' I ..

\

•

I

"
.

. TV for childre.n supported
Businesses and organizations Ia the service area of
Holzer Medical Center continue to support free televlslon
for children hospltaUzed In the Pediatric Unit at the
~~~.
~
Contributing for the montb of May was the First
· National Bank of GaiUpoUs, and the McGlnneu-stllllley
. Insurance Agency, Inc.ls respOJII!Ible for free televlslon In
: June for the children wbo are patients at Holzer (See
pictures at left).
The Pediatric Televlston Fund has been In exllltence
since October of 19'72. Earl Neff, a member of the original
Holzer Medical Center Vohinteer Service League Steering
Committee, who Is now the Vice President of the League,
. has been solely respoDBible for tbe ralslng of ail the funds
for this project slllce It began.
Any Individuals, busilleues or groups of the Holzer
area who wlsb to donate to thls worthy canse may do so by
contacting Earl Neff, 1113 Teodora Avenue ill GalUpoUs.

Xenia
donates
to fund

· · · · · · · · ···~~~~on~t~!~,~~o~~

',,,~· women

.tough
'

EARL NEFF RECEIVJ:S check from Marlin Kerns, executive vice president of the
First National Blink in GallipllUs.

- •• .

!' ...
..

~

II

II ,
Ii

;~

l

•.... Of

t

~ ill

_ ~ •·

i-

\.o;

.-

""*
• ,_.-'t

•

.. . .
1~ . ··•'
•;:.. .

••

,

TO GRADUATE$
Hrs . Mon.- Fri., 9to S

Sat. 9to8
Your Ttiom Mc._An Slore

HERE ON WEEKEND
Mr. and Mrs. Mike Ham·
mer, Columbus, were
weekend visitors of Mr. and
Mrs. Bob Hoeflich and Jayne,
High St., Pomeroy.

0

•

'

MAY SPECIAL

"I

·SPECIAL
FEDDERS ROOM
AIR CONDitiONER ;
,,

\

DON STANLEY SIGNS check for McGinness-Stanley Insurance, Agency, Inc. while
Helen Rife lind Earl Neff watch.

Portland, Letart Falls win games
Independent baseball the loss for Reedsville.
league action over the Tucker struck out 17 and
weekend resulted in Portland walked B.
dereating Pomeroy 16-6 and
The leading hitters for
Letart Falls downing Reeds· Letart were Gary Roush,
ville 13-1.
In the Portland-Pomeroy
contest, Ron Bachtel went the
The 1975 Summer Quarter
distance on the mound to pick will start on June 10 at
ui&gt; the victory. Leading the Gallipolis Business College.
attack at the plate for Port- Any prospectietive students
land was Bachtel with two · who have not already
singles, two doubles, a walk enrolled should contact the
and two RBis ; Greg Mid· business office now for indl~wart had four singles and formation and registration
two RBis; Red Wallbrown forms.
had two singles, a walk and
Gallipolis Business College,
five RB!s and Buttons Allen located at 36 Locust Street,
bad two singles, two walks, Gallipolis, offers one and twoand three RBis.
year diploma. courses in
'Letart Falls pounded out 12 General Office, Secretarial,
illts on their way to defeating Jr . Accounting, Business
Reedsville. Rusty Tucker Administration , and
went the distance of the Executive Secretarial. All
mound getting the victory courses are approved for
wh.ile Jack ,Rood was given veterans who
to

Monk Jenkins, David Hupp,
Fred Miller, Glen Tucker,
Ralph Ross, Junior Johnson,
and Tucker who each
collected singled.

LARRY POWELL, OWNER of PoweU's Super Valu
Store, W. Second S\., Pomeroy, presents Mrs. Virginia
Thomas and daughter, Mayrene, with a gift certWcate for
$1,000 in groceries given by the store as one of the Jrizes in
its anniversary observance. Mrs. Thomas will be permitted $200 worth of groceries for 50 weeks as her prize.
Mrs. Thomas resides on W. Main St., Pomeroy.

OFF ICE HO RS: 9:30 to 12, 2 to 5 (CLOSE
AT NOON ON THURS. )-EAST COURT

~;

Corabelle Russell, 76,
Pomeroy,
died Saturday at
advantage of their Gl Bill .
Holz~r.
Medical
Center.
Benefits.
A member of St. Paul's
Classes are c.onducted
Lutheran
Church, Pomeroy,
daily, Monday through
she
was
preceded
in death by
Friday, from 8 a.m. to I p.in.
Evening classes are also her parents, James and Mila
available and are held Disbro Stark, and one
Monday. Tuesday, and brother, Ed.
Survivor-s include a son,
Wednesday, from 6 p.m. to
9:30 p.m. Credits earned at Dr . James Russell, San
GBC are .transferable to Diego, Calif.; five ·grandseveral four-year colleges. chilctren, Melissa, Melody,
The Business College is Rebecc!' Belle, Jimmy. and
approved by the Ohio State
Board of School and College
Registration and maintains
a very active employment
service for graduates and
employers.

Oyde Adkins

died in Dayton

Anyone who has sex once,-j ust once. can get syphilis or gonorr~ea .
VD is spreading through our neighborhoods. H1ttmg people you d least
expect to get it. ·
.
·.
· .
.Even in "good" environments VD IS almost as com~on as the common
·&amp;ld. Finding tha! hard to believe is one of the reasons 1t s spreading so fast.
::,, So don't think it 's not your problem.
.
.• . .
•
Antibiotics cure VD and prevent 1ts spread mg. So 1ts 1romc theres so much
:
\i'o around when its so easy to prevent or cure.
:; If you're curious or confused, get information or a pamphlet at most

~ armaciesor a h \ ! f i l f i S n i i W i i i t

''Other

.

.

""'*
llntltaf ~~
lhll
1
. Soci1l Hea l'!h

n. 'ld

IIL;Ocud

A.noc:l1!ton

'i

ONLY

$99

'

•J,

·3 speed fan, full thermostat control, 110
volts. Just plug in.

INGELS ·FURNITURE
992·2635

MIDDLE~ORT

Eddy's schedule
POMEROY Mr . Eddy
Educator 's sch ~dule for week
of May 26·30 in Meig! County :
TUE S DAY -~ Salem Center
and vicinity , 9-11 : 30 a .m .
THUR SD.AY ·. Pomeroy
El e . ana vicinity , 10 a .m .. I :JO
p .m .;· Mulberry Heights , · 22: IS; Rt . lAJ Je t. 2:31) 3; Diehl ,
/~ tk i ns .
Rigg s.
J • JD 4 ;
Harr isonvill e Comm un ity , 5-

.S·J O;

Hysell

Run , 6 : 30 . 7 ;

Laurel Cl iff . 7 : 15-7 :&lt;1 5 ; Hiland ,

Lin e. "2": 45 -3: 15 ;. Silver Run,
J : JO .4 : G r avel Hill . 4 : 15 4 : 45 ;
WMPO , S 5 :30 ; B:radbury , 6
6 . 10 ; · JC t
12J ; 6 · JS 7 : B ;
· E nl e rpr is£',
7 : 30 8 :
fl.·, t:u· kc! , R ~ I)Sti. J5 .

Reuter-IUitM
INSURANCE
PH.'ft.SfiO

1117 Srcamore

Pwmeroy

-lfwecan't

)'OU, nobody

can. .

W~

.

'

I ;

Where is their
·. house
without.more
· energy?

''

.. ,

..

"·

,.

'.
'

''

I

Unless all of the new source~ of c~ean gas energy are made available soon .. your
dream house ... or your chtldren s . . . could be little more than a dream.
Of course, i[ you live in .a house ·Using natural gas now, you'll continue to get the
gas you need for the apphahces you're.using ... or their replacements. People' .
who already live in gas houses are lucky.
But America needs millions of new homes
Columbia Gas is working to ~elp
solve
the energy crisis through
,•c every year. And the home builders already have
Arctic exploration. The advancement
felt the effects of the gas shortage~ in many
of millions of dollars for rights '
areas of the country, l:milders can't get
to gas discovery has stimulated
exploration
and drilling activities in
natural gas for all the new homes that
the Arctic .. Commercially productive
, must be built. And that adds to the supply
wells have been found, H1110 pipelines
problems of the other forms of energy.
remain to be built and COlumbia is
parlicipa ling in their
'
It ·doesn't leave the new home buyer much
development,
choice and means he could pay more for
his new, non-gas home.
.

But, all forms of energy that America needs
-gas, oil, coal, nuclear - are in short
supply. And Americans should be·concerned
about that. You can help by learning more
about the energy crisis and supporting efforts
to provide America with enouah energy to
• meet all its needs, including new and
better housing.

1' J

'

•

••

•

· ~MBIACJAs ·

7 JJ
'

Gu Je·)lltdouo, pun -'11' ... 1110 It wlle!J.

I

.

•

1

•

'

I

I

,
·•. .
•

test.

'

'

99~

lOPM

·~·

FRESH &amp; LEAN

Ground From USDA Choice Beef

Fresh &amp; Lean

GROUND BEEJ

Fresh &amp; Lean

Ground Chuck Ground Round

09
lb.

59¢
FRUIT PIES ........................
49¢
~ PIE SHELLS ....... ~··················
8
9¢
DRUMSTICKS ........................
BANQUET .(Che,rry, Apple, Peach)

ea.

!.

PET RITZ

.

2 pak

.

NO_~IH_STAR

6

pak

SPECIAU SEAI.TEST

lb.

Fresh and Tender

. ••••••••••••••••••_.~.
lb 79e
"Baby Beef L1ver
Superiors
•••••••• .; ••• ~~ 79e
Polis~ Sausage,••••••• _
Superiors
79
e
(BY THE PIECE)
lb.
. oIoe:na
. .•....
B
·=·~~·· ...•...•••..•••..•..•
99e
Ham
Salad
••••••••••••••••••••••••
~b~.
Eckrich
WNCHEON MEAT
lb . $119
P
k
Smorgas a ··••·····················
Our Good Home Made .

.

r

ICE ·CREAM

INFLATION STOPPERI ARMOUR SA I.E

1/z gat.

Armour's Appian Way

12 ,12 oz.

PillA MIX ...... :.........~~-~ .....
"rmour's
"'
.

.

2-

g~

J

4 oz.

,BEEF STEW...........~.•ou~~~

••••

~

79

35
$1
VIENNA SAUSAGE..........
s·l $1
ARMOUR'S

oz.
cans .

ARMOUR'S

oz

POTTED MEAT.. ....... ~·····

0

. eans

15t/4 oz.

ARMOUR'S CORNED BEEF HASH ....... ;................ can

5

9~

i

;

SATURDAY ONLY

.WINCHESTER
LimE CIGARS

Thurs. Only

FAVORITE BREAD

RC

4 •1.00
lvs

carton

16 oz. bots.

for

only

8

$}19
PAK

u. S. GRADE A MEDIUM

EGGS

FOLGER'S
'

ftj.

"I could klcl! m~lfr,!'!tw
for not doing &amp;Orne~·"
she said. l'I did ~me
bicycling, but I guem( that
wasn't quite good eno~h ~ ·
Jrepare me for the 'tunnlng :
She said the running W!ISD't ;
really the hardest event on
' the test.
"I gueas you· Would, say it
': 1 aa c8l'l')'inl thai ecjjlpnent
:.. vp and down the ~." she
. laid. "'lbat stre!pler and
, 'l'fliCIIICitator trere heavy."
: :: 1b011e two .ltew weighed
about 36 pounda ~ach,
"But the ·off\cers wetet
- •alee," she said.,, "J'beY gan
• me 11m!! to llfl thole ltelll8,
then decide which grip I
• wanted before they started
: •~~m~ng me. I
''The olflcen were a1ao .
Dice when I tobll that driving .
·event," lbe jidded. "l was .
_' ' afraid I ~'I touch the
''" i-lala, bu~ the oHicer
·~.-~wed me Iii idjult the aeat
. . beh and tiverythinc ao I
:. would tie real ccmfwlable."
h
She .aid ber fiDIII7 hadn't
, . laid lOo· much either way
' about het dedalon to apply
" for police worll.

USDA
·CHOICE

CHEWING
GUM

Mrs. .Marsee said she,
appUed to IM!come a police
officer because "it is ex· .
citing, there's job se9:"'ity, , ,
more benefits, and places to e';
110:
'
"I'd Uke to work either in '·
juvenile with kids or in rllll')
. detaU, talking to women 8fte~··
.Ita occurred,"' she said. 1 :
"Mrs. Marsee is 5-4 ' ~
weighs 110 pounds. Sh_e ~~
110 prior lmow~edge Df1,*"

. ,'

Only

MIDDlEPORT

Wrigley's

dles."
'.

Featuring

Fresti Beef

She and several others who
completed the tesf felt they
llhould bave had a second
chance at the ruming.
. "We had three tries at all
the other events, why not give
us a second chance to run If
we wanted to, after It was ail
over?" she asked.
Mrs. Marsee, married in
early May, ret~ to her
job "with i!ldnned knees and a
garden under my finger- .
lj8lls."
•
· "I skinned my laiees going
over the fence," she said. "I
think I plowed up a prden ! '
crawling under those bur-.

..

'

•

:.:cept Ff!(lerlil Food Sb,mps
PHONE: 992·3.480
'to .

the test."

(J?fff

Hobson . 1 2:30; Meigs -Gallla

American

·'

Funeral services will be
held at 2 .p.m. Wednesday at
..... ..r:c_r
the Ewing Chapel for Clyde
D. Adkins, 75,.of Dayton, who
died Saturday.
Talk about nightA retired employee of
Rickles Department Stores, mares.
Dayton, Mr.. Adkins was a
You dreame~ your
member of the Scottish Rile dream house had beValley' of Dayton ·and Lodge
No. 7, F&amp;AM, Versailles, come a hot house. And
that you were badly
Ind.
He is survived by his wife, underirumred.
Frances Biggs Adkins, for.
Well •.• there's one
merly of Meigs County; two
sisters, Mrs. Leone Wagner, way to be sure you
Dayton, Ky., and Mrs. Flo lwn&gt;n'f be badly burned.
Porter, Hamilton, and a
Ge~ down to your
brother. Frank, Lsfayette,
Ind. '
.
. Burial will be in the Meigs
Memory Gardens. The Rev.
Clifford Smith will officiate.
Frienda may call a! Ewing
Funeral Home from' I p.m.
Wednesday until the time of
,the funeral. ·
'

Church . 8·8: 30.
r RIDAY
Pearl Street and
vi c inity , 9 :30 a .m .- 12 :30. p .m . ;
M iddlepor.t Library, 1-1 t30;

0

•

4,000 BTU

(gfr1

.

'

'

MOMS MABLEY DIES
WHITE PLAINS, N. Y.
(UP!) - Jackie ."Moms" ·
Mabley, the comedienne who
starred on the black night
club circuit for decades and
whose earthy humor won its ·
widest acceptance with TV
e
a t u r ayappearances in the late 1960s,
died Friday. She v;as 75.
Andy Russell; one sister,
Mrs. Raymond (Elmora)
Boice , Pomeroy; one broil~'"·
William Stark, Kansas City,
Kansas, and several nieces
and nephews.
Funeral services will be
Wednesday at 11 a.m. at the
Ewing Chapel with burial at'
Beech Grove Cemetery. The
Rev. William Middleswarth
will officiate.
.
Friends may call at the
funeral home any time.

Corabelle Russell of
Po m· e r o y di d s , d

Summer work opens June 10

BOOSTERS TO MEET
There will he a meeting of
the Syracuse-Minersville
Boosters Club tonjght at 7:30
at the Syracuse Municipal
Building,

BARTELS COME
Mr . and Mrs. William
Bartels of Stevensville, Mich.
were the holiday weekend
guests of her mother, Mrs.
l'(orma Goodwin, and David
Goodwin, Pomeroy .

SUPER MARKET. Open Daily 9 to 10 · .Sun~ 10 to 10.

.
COLUMBUS

(UP!) i aetng a track star isn't a
. qualll,lcatlon for a police
, officer, but some young
· : women who recenUy went
· ' · though the physical agility
~ thought so.
. •. ,l')!ey were required to run
' ~e", 440-yard dash In 90
. · 1econds; scale a slx·foot
:. chain-link fence in 60
. · iiconds; crawl under, jump
.,Yer and crawl under hurdles
.. In .25 seconds; crawl under
ttro hurdles in 25 seconds;
u .ab a stretcher and
· , rescuscltator and climb up
, . "~ down five steps three
·,. limes in 30 seconds; drag a
l~und sandbag 50 fee'. in
30 seconds; P.Ull a trigger
with an eight;J&gt;ound pull 48
· ' limes with the strong hand
· ' I!Qd 12 times .with the weak
.• I)Jnd in 6Q seconds; push a
"!~~ripped" car 20 feet In 25
pds; and back a police
cruiser through a '~" shaped
course in 30 seconds without
hitting. any of 32 pylons. ·
"' An applicant had to pass ail
~ents In order to go on to the
next step. Before reaching
#)e ~glllty test, the lippUcant
!!ad already been through the
written
civil
service
Bamtnatlon and had taken
the·physieal examination.
, A background check would
be conducted after the
. · • physical agility test for those
J,'lllllaining, before the appUcant could enter the police
.aCademy school.
" RecenUy, 23 women be· "
tween the ages of 21 and 32
· • -wentthrough the agility test.
Q!Jy one of them passed all
events.
v:. Andra Marsee, 21, a recepl!onlBt and PBX operator, .
',as one o( those who made it
·though ail events but one, the
·440-yarddash. She wasn't too
upset at not having passed
'.the running.
:. ·~ybe there will be judg"1 ,"
ment, ... she sal4 at; the con• '0
clusion of the teat, "H they
·have to hire so 111811y women,
·maybe they'll reconsider
:. '
Iince I was second In the
'.
running of those who finished

·:::::~:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:~;:;:::;:;:::: .;.~.:.;•••.•.•.·,1.:.:-·..,....).o:~~::r.;,i,i.l,l.l,l,~.:.;.:.::::::::::

''

.)

: 7- Tbe Dally Sentinel,, Middleport-P~eroy, 0 .! Tuesday, May 27 • 1975 · ·

to

acquaint the public for the need in ~ upporting
the 1.6Jmill tax !evy to be voted upo~ ~une. 3, t~
provide operatmg funds for the Mt.tgs Com
munity School which serves the r ardell of
the county:
. ·
•
Question: Why are the retarded
not taught in the regular school syst m? 1
Answer: These children ' are e luded
from public school because their nee~~ . re so
different from those of the maJor,. IY of
children. The classrooms are not equipped for
their needs·. the teachers of "regular" rooms
are not trained to cope with their pro~e!fiS
and certainly do not have the. time fo tlte
individualized programs that are neces ary.
Exlusion of the mentally retarded chi ren
from public school is done by law.
. 1 •
VISIT BLAKESLEES
Mr. and Mrs. Mel Circle
and children of Columbus
~pent the Memorial Day
weekend here with Mr. amj
Mrs. C. E. Blakeslee and\
Mrs . Mary Circle, Pomeroy .

___.................-

I

.

·,·.·,·.·.·,•.·.·,·,·,·,·,················· · ··:·:·:·:·:·:•:·:·;·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:•:·;·;·:·:·:·:·:;:;:;:~·:·:;:~J:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;~:::::::::::::::::;:~

·INSTANT
0

'

$

Fau,,.
·.

10 oz.

89

doz. 39~

s~~ouc/fra

' tOFFE~

wl'.

DRill/{

"Bt~

Friday Only

GOLDEN RIPE

BANANAS
'

5

lb•

'1.00

DIET RITE
FLAVORS

4

qts.

$}00

for

Plus Dep.

All Weel&lt; Price
-

PREMIUM SALTINES

CRACKERS
1-LB. BOX

49~ W/C

LtP1UT 1 COUPON PER CUSTOMER
Good On~ At Mark y· Store

Good 5126/75 m5/31175

ARMOUR'S MAGIC

DAD'S

SIZING

ROOT BEER .

20 OUNCE
59~ W/C
SPRAY CAN
Umit 1 i:an per customer · .
Good on~ at Mark V Store

16 oz. bottles

8

PAK

EXpires ·5mA7s

..

�' I ..

\

•

I

"
.

. TV for childre.n supported
Businesses and organizations Ia the service area of
Holzer Medical Center continue to support free televlslon
for children hospltaUzed In the Pediatric Unit at the
~~~.
~
Contributing for the montb of May was the First
· National Bank of GaiUpoUs, and the McGlnneu-stllllley
. Insurance Agency, Inc.ls respOJII!Ible for free televlslon In
: June for the children wbo are patients at Holzer (See
pictures at left).
The Pediatric Televlston Fund has been In exllltence
since October of 19'72. Earl Neff, a member of the original
Holzer Medical Center Vohinteer Service League Steering
Committee, who Is now the Vice President of the League,
. has been solely respoDBible for tbe ralslng of ail the funds
for this project slllce It began.
Any Individuals, busilleues or groups of the Holzer
area who wlsb to donate to thls worthy canse may do so by
contacting Earl Neff, 1113 Teodora Avenue ill GalUpoUs.

Xenia
donates
to fund

· · · · · · · · ···~~~~on~t~!~,~~o~~

',,,~· women

.tough
'

EARL NEFF RECEIVJ:S check from Marlin Kerns, executive vice president of the
First National Blink in GallipllUs.

- •• .

!' ...
..

~

II

II ,
Ii

;~

l

•.... Of

t

~ ill

_ ~ •·

i-

\.o;

.-

""*
• ,_.-'t

•

.. . .
1~ . ··•'
•;:.. .

••

,

TO GRADUATE$
Hrs . Mon.- Fri., 9to S

Sat. 9to8
Your Ttiom Mc._An Slore

HERE ON WEEKEND
Mr. and Mrs. Mike Ham·
mer, Columbus, were
weekend visitors of Mr. and
Mrs. Bob Hoeflich and Jayne,
High St., Pomeroy.

0

•

'

MAY SPECIAL

"I

·SPECIAL
FEDDERS ROOM
AIR CONDitiONER ;
,,

\

DON STANLEY SIGNS check for McGinness-Stanley Insurance, Agency, Inc. while
Helen Rife lind Earl Neff watch.

Portland, Letart Falls win games
Independent baseball the loss for Reedsville.
league action over the Tucker struck out 17 and
weekend resulted in Portland walked B.
dereating Pomeroy 16-6 and
The leading hitters for
Letart Falls downing Reeds· Letart were Gary Roush,
ville 13-1.
In the Portland-Pomeroy
contest, Ron Bachtel went the
The 1975 Summer Quarter
distance on the mound to pick will start on June 10 at
ui&gt; the victory. Leading the Gallipolis Business College.
attack at the plate for Port- Any prospectietive students
land was Bachtel with two · who have not already
singles, two doubles, a walk enrolled should contact the
and two RBis ; Greg Mid· business office now for indl~wart had four singles and formation and registration
two RBis; Red Wallbrown forms.
had two singles, a walk and
Gallipolis Business College,
five RB!s and Buttons Allen located at 36 Locust Street,
bad two singles, two walks, Gallipolis, offers one and twoand three RBis.
year diploma. courses in
'Letart Falls pounded out 12 General Office, Secretarial,
illts on their way to defeating Jr . Accounting, Business
Reedsville. Rusty Tucker Administration , and
went the distance of the Executive Secretarial. All
mound getting the victory courses are approved for
wh.ile Jack ,Rood was given veterans who
to

Monk Jenkins, David Hupp,
Fred Miller, Glen Tucker,
Ralph Ross, Junior Johnson,
and Tucker who each
collected singled.

LARRY POWELL, OWNER of PoweU's Super Valu
Store, W. Second S\., Pomeroy, presents Mrs. Virginia
Thomas and daughter, Mayrene, with a gift certWcate for
$1,000 in groceries given by the store as one of the Jrizes in
its anniversary observance. Mrs. Thomas will be permitted $200 worth of groceries for 50 weeks as her prize.
Mrs. Thomas resides on W. Main St., Pomeroy.

OFF ICE HO RS: 9:30 to 12, 2 to 5 (CLOSE
AT NOON ON THURS. )-EAST COURT

~;

Corabelle Russell, 76,
Pomeroy,
died Saturday at
advantage of their Gl Bill .
Holz~r.
Medical
Center.
Benefits.
A member of St. Paul's
Classes are c.onducted
Lutheran
Church, Pomeroy,
daily, Monday through
she
was
preceded
in death by
Friday, from 8 a.m. to I p.in.
Evening classes are also her parents, James and Mila
available and are held Disbro Stark, and one
Monday. Tuesday, and brother, Ed.
Survivor-s include a son,
Wednesday, from 6 p.m. to
9:30 p.m. Credits earned at Dr . James Russell, San
GBC are .transferable to Diego, Calif.; five ·grandseveral four-year colleges. chilctren, Melissa, Melody,
The Business College is Rebecc!' Belle, Jimmy. and
approved by the Ohio State
Board of School and College
Registration and maintains
a very active employment
service for graduates and
employers.

Oyde Adkins

died in Dayton

Anyone who has sex once,-j ust once. can get syphilis or gonorr~ea .
VD is spreading through our neighborhoods. H1ttmg people you d least
expect to get it. ·
.
·.
· .
.Even in "good" environments VD IS almost as com~on as the common
·&amp;ld. Finding tha! hard to believe is one of the reasons 1t s spreading so fast.
::,, So don't think it 's not your problem.
.
.• . .
•
Antibiotics cure VD and prevent 1ts spread mg. So 1ts 1romc theres so much
:
\i'o around when its so easy to prevent or cure.
:; If you're curious or confused, get information or a pamphlet at most

~ armaciesor a h \ ! f i l f i S n i i W i i i t

''Other

.

.

""'*
llntltaf ~~
lhll
1
. Soci1l Hea l'!h

n. 'ld

IIL;Ocud

A.noc:l1!ton

'i

ONLY

$99

'

•J,

·3 speed fan, full thermostat control, 110
volts. Just plug in.

INGELS ·FURNITURE
992·2635

MIDDLE~ORT

Eddy's schedule
POMEROY Mr . Eddy
Educator 's sch ~dule for week
of May 26·30 in Meig! County :
TUE S DAY -~ Salem Center
and vicinity , 9-11 : 30 a .m .
THUR SD.AY ·. Pomeroy
El e . ana vicinity , 10 a .m .. I :JO
p .m .;· Mulberry Heights , · 22: IS; Rt . lAJ Je t. 2:31) 3; Diehl ,
/~ tk i ns .
Rigg s.
J • JD 4 ;
Harr isonvill e Comm un ity , 5-

.S·J O;

Hysell

Run , 6 : 30 . 7 ;

Laurel Cl iff . 7 : 15-7 :&lt;1 5 ; Hiland ,

Lin e. "2": 45 -3: 15 ;. Silver Run,
J : JO .4 : G r avel Hill . 4 : 15 4 : 45 ;
WMPO , S 5 :30 ; B:radbury , 6
6 . 10 ; · JC t
12J ; 6 · JS 7 : B ;
· E nl e rpr is£',
7 : 30 8 :
fl.·, t:u· kc! , R ~ I)Sti. J5 .

Reuter-IUitM
INSURANCE
PH.'ft.SfiO

1117 Srcamore

Pwmeroy

-lfwecan't

)'OU, nobody

can. .

W~

.

'

I ;

Where is their
·. house
without.more
· energy?

''

.. ,

..

"·

,.

'.
'

''

I

Unless all of the new source~ of c~ean gas energy are made available soon .. your
dream house ... or your chtldren s . . . could be little more than a dream.
Of course, i[ you live in .a house ·Using natural gas now, you'll continue to get the
gas you need for the apphahces you're.using ... or their replacements. People' .
who already live in gas houses are lucky.
But America needs millions of new homes
Columbia Gas is working to ~elp
solve
the energy crisis through
,•c every year. And the home builders already have
Arctic exploration. The advancement
felt the effects of the gas shortage~ in many
of millions of dollars for rights '
areas of the country, l:milders can't get
to gas discovery has stimulated
exploration
and drilling activities in
natural gas for all the new homes that
the Arctic .. Commercially productive
, must be built. And that adds to the supply
wells have been found, H1110 pipelines
problems of the other forms of energy.
remain to be built and COlumbia is
parlicipa ling in their
'
It ·doesn't leave the new home buyer much
development,
choice and means he could pay more for
his new, non-gas home.
.

But, all forms of energy that America needs
-gas, oil, coal, nuclear - are in short
supply. And Americans should be·concerned
about that. You can help by learning more
about the energy crisis and supporting efforts
to provide America with enouah energy to
• meet all its needs, including new and
better housing.

1' J

'

•

••

•

· ~MBIACJAs ·

7 JJ
'

Gu Je·)lltdouo, pun -'11' ... 1110 It wlle!J.

I

.

•

1

•

'

I

I

,
·•. .
•

test.

'

'

99~

lOPM

·~·

FRESH &amp; LEAN

Ground From USDA Choice Beef

Fresh &amp; Lean

GROUND BEEJ

Fresh &amp; Lean

Ground Chuck Ground Round

09
lb.

59¢
FRUIT PIES ........................
49¢
~ PIE SHELLS ....... ~··················
8
9¢
DRUMSTICKS ........................
BANQUET .(Che,rry, Apple, Peach)

ea.

!.

PET RITZ

.

2 pak

.

NO_~IH_STAR

6

pak

SPECIAU SEAI.TEST

lb.

Fresh and Tender

. ••••••••••••••••••_.~.
lb 79e
"Baby Beef L1ver
Superiors
•••••••• .; ••• ~~ 79e
Polis~ Sausage,••••••• _
Superiors
79
e
(BY THE PIECE)
lb.
. oIoe:na
. .•....
B
·=·~~·· ...•...•••..•••..•..•
99e
Ham
Salad
••••••••••••••••••••••••
~b~.
Eckrich
WNCHEON MEAT
lb . $119
P
k
Smorgas a ··••·····················
Our Good Home Made .

.

r

ICE ·CREAM

INFLATION STOPPERI ARMOUR SA I.E

1/z gat.

Armour's Appian Way

12 ,12 oz.

PillA MIX ...... :.........~~-~ .....
"rmour's
"'
.

.

2-

g~

J

4 oz.

,BEEF STEW...........~.•ou~~~

••••

~

79

35
$1
VIENNA SAUSAGE..........
s·l $1
ARMOUR'S

oz.
cans .

ARMOUR'S

oz

POTTED MEAT.. ....... ~·····

0

. eans

15t/4 oz.

ARMOUR'S CORNED BEEF HASH ....... ;................ can

5

9~

i

;

SATURDAY ONLY

.WINCHESTER
LimE CIGARS

Thurs. Only

FAVORITE BREAD

RC

4 •1.00
lvs

carton

16 oz. bots.

for

only

8

$}19
PAK

u. S. GRADE A MEDIUM

EGGS

FOLGER'S
'

ftj.

"I could klcl! m~lfr,!'!tw
for not doing &amp;Orne~·"
she said. l'I did ~me
bicycling, but I guem( that
wasn't quite good eno~h ~ ·
Jrepare me for the 'tunnlng :
She said the running W!ISD't ;
really the hardest event on
' the test.
"I gueas you· Would, say it
': 1 aa c8l'l')'inl thai ecjjlpnent
:.. vp and down the ~." she
. laid. "'lbat stre!pler and
, 'l'fliCIIICitator trere heavy."
: :: 1b011e two .ltew weighed
about 36 pounda ~ach,
"But the ·off\cers wetet
- •alee," she said.,, "J'beY gan
• me 11m!! to llfl thole ltelll8,
then decide which grip I
• wanted before they started
: •~~m~ng me. I
''The olflcen were a1ao .
Dice when I tobll that driving .
·event," lbe jidded. "l was .
_' ' afraid I ~'I touch the
''" i-lala, bu~ the oHicer
·~.-~wed me Iii idjult the aeat
. . beh and tiverythinc ao I
:. would tie real ccmfwlable."
h
She .aid ber fiDIII7 hadn't
, . laid lOo· much either way
' about het dedalon to apply
" for police worll.

USDA
·CHOICE

CHEWING
GUM

Mrs. .Marsee said she,
appUed to IM!come a police
officer because "it is ex· .
citing, there's job se9:"'ity, , ,
more benefits, and places to e';
110:
'
"I'd Uke to work either in '·
juvenile with kids or in rllll')
. detaU, talking to women 8fte~··
.Ita occurred,"' she said. 1 :
"Mrs. Marsee is 5-4 ' ~
weighs 110 pounds. Sh_e ~~
110 prior lmow~edge Df1,*"

. ,'

Only

MIDDlEPORT

Wrigley's

dles."
'.

Featuring

Fresti Beef

She and several others who
completed the tesf felt they
llhould bave had a second
chance at the ruming.
. "We had three tries at all
the other events, why not give
us a second chance to run If
we wanted to, after It was ail
over?" she asked.
Mrs. Marsee, married in
early May, ret~ to her
job "with i!ldnned knees and a
garden under my finger- .
lj8lls."
•
· "I skinned my laiees going
over the fence," she said. "I
think I plowed up a prden ! '
crawling under those bur-.

..

'

•

:.:cept Ff!(lerlil Food Sb,mps
PHONE: 992·3.480
'to .

the test."

(J?fff

Hobson . 1 2:30; Meigs -Gallla

American

·'

Funeral services will be
held at 2 .p.m. Wednesday at
..... ..r:c_r
the Ewing Chapel for Clyde
D. Adkins, 75,.of Dayton, who
died Saturday.
Talk about nightA retired employee of
Rickles Department Stores, mares.
Dayton, Mr.. Adkins was a
You dreame~ your
member of the Scottish Rile dream house had beValley' of Dayton ·and Lodge
No. 7, F&amp;AM, Versailles, come a hot house. And
that you were badly
Ind.
He is survived by his wife, underirumred.
Frances Biggs Adkins, for.
Well •.• there's one
merly of Meigs County; two
sisters, Mrs. Leone Wagner, way to be sure you
Dayton, Ky., and Mrs. Flo lwn&gt;n'f be badly burned.
Porter, Hamilton, and a
Ge~ down to your
brother. Frank, Lsfayette,
Ind. '
.
. Burial will be in the Meigs
Memory Gardens. The Rev.
Clifford Smith will officiate.
Frienda may call a! Ewing
Funeral Home from' I p.m.
Wednesday until the time of
,the funeral. ·
'

Church . 8·8: 30.
r RIDAY
Pearl Street and
vi c inity , 9 :30 a .m .- 12 :30. p .m . ;
M iddlepor.t Library, 1-1 t30;

0

•

4,000 BTU

(gfr1

.

'

'

MOMS MABLEY DIES
WHITE PLAINS, N. Y.
(UP!) - Jackie ."Moms" ·
Mabley, the comedienne who
starred on the black night
club circuit for decades and
whose earthy humor won its ·
widest acceptance with TV
e
a t u r ayappearances in the late 1960s,
died Friday. She v;as 75.
Andy Russell; one sister,
Mrs. Raymond (Elmora)
Boice , Pomeroy; one broil~'"·
William Stark, Kansas City,
Kansas, and several nieces
and nephews.
Funeral services will be
Wednesday at 11 a.m. at the
Ewing Chapel with burial at'
Beech Grove Cemetery. The
Rev. William Middleswarth
will officiate.
.
Friends may call at the
funeral home any time.

Corabelle Russell of
Po m· e r o y di d s , d

Summer work opens June 10

BOOSTERS TO MEET
There will he a meeting of
the Syracuse-Minersville
Boosters Club tonjght at 7:30
at the Syracuse Municipal
Building,

BARTELS COME
Mr . and Mrs. William
Bartels of Stevensville, Mich.
were the holiday weekend
guests of her mother, Mrs.
l'(orma Goodwin, and David
Goodwin, Pomeroy .

SUPER MARKET. Open Daily 9 to 10 · .Sun~ 10 to 10.

.
COLUMBUS

(UP!) i aetng a track star isn't a
. qualll,lcatlon for a police
, officer, but some young
· : women who recenUy went
· ' · though the physical agility
~ thought so.
. •. ,l')!ey were required to run
' ~e", 440-yard dash In 90
. · 1econds; scale a slx·foot
:. chain-link fence in 60
. · iiconds; crawl under, jump
.,Yer and crawl under hurdles
.. In .25 seconds; crawl under
ttro hurdles in 25 seconds;
u .ab a stretcher and
· , rescuscltator and climb up
, . "~ down five steps three
·,. limes in 30 seconds; drag a
l~und sandbag 50 fee'. in
30 seconds; P.Ull a trigger
with an eight;J&gt;ound pull 48
· ' limes with the strong hand
· ' I!Qd 12 times .with the weak
.• I)Jnd in 6Q seconds; push a
"!~~ripped" car 20 feet In 25
pds; and back a police
cruiser through a '~" shaped
course in 30 seconds without
hitting. any of 32 pylons. ·
"' An applicant had to pass ail
~ents In order to go on to the
next step. Before reaching
#)e ~glllty test, the lippUcant
!!ad already been through the
written
civil
service
Bamtnatlon and had taken
the·physieal examination.
, A background check would
be conducted after the
. · • physical agility test for those
J,'lllllaining, before the appUcant could enter the police
.aCademy school.
" RecenUy, 23 women be· "
tween the ages of 21 and 32
· • -wentthrough the agility test.
Q!Jy one of them passed all
events.
v:. Andra Marsee, 21, a recepl!onlBt and PBX operator, .
',as one o( those who made it
·though ail events but one, the
·440-yarddash. She wasn't too
upset at not having passed
'.the running.
:. ·~ybe there will be judg"1 ,"
ment, ... she sal4 at; the con• '0
clusion of the teat, "H they
·have to hire so 111811y women,
·maybe they'll reconsider
:. '
Iince I was second In the
'.
running of those who finished

·:::::~:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:~;:;:::;:;:::: .;.~.:.;•••.•.•.·,1.:.:-·..,....).o:~~::r.;,i,i.l,l.l,l,~.:.;.:.::::::::::

''

.)

: 7- Tbe Dally Sentinel,, Middleport-P~eroy, 0 .! Tuesday, May 27 • 1975 · ·

to

acquaint the public for the need in ~ upporting
the 1.6Jmill tax !evy to be voted upo~ ~une. 3, t~
provide operatmg funds for the Mt.tgs Com
munity School which serves the r ardell of
the county:
. ·
•
Question: Why are the retarded
not taught in the regular school syst m? 1
Answer: These children ' are e luded
from public school because their nee~~ . re so
different from those of the maJor,. IY of
children. The classrooms are not equipped for
their needs·. the teachers of "regular" rooms
are not trained to cope with their pro~e!fiS
and certainly do not have the. time fo tlte
individualized programs that are neces ary.
Exlusion of the mentally retarded chi ren
from public school is done by law.
. 1 •
VISIT BLAKESLEES
Mr. and Mrs. Mel Circle
and children of Columbus
~pent the Memorial Day
weekend here with Mr. amj
Mrs. C. E. Blakeslee and\
Mrs . Mary Circle, Pomeroy .

___.................-

I

.

·,·.·,·.·.·,•.·.·,·,·,·,·,················· · ··:·:·:·:·:·:•:·:·;·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:•:·;·;·:·:·:·:·:;:;:;:~·:·:;:~J:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;~:::::::::::::::::;:~

·INSTANT
0

'

$

Fau,,.
·.

10 oz.

89

doz. 39~

s~~ouc/fra

' tOFFE~

wl'.

DRill/{

"Bt~

Friday Only

GOLDEN RIPE

BANANAS
'

5

lb•

'1.00

DIET RITE
FLAVORS

4

qts.

$}00

for

Plus Dep.

All Weel&lt; Price
-

PREMIUM SALTINES

CRACKERS
1-LB. BOX

49~ W/C

LtP1UT 1 COUPON PER CUSTOMER
Good On~ At Mark y· Store

Good 5126/75 m5/31175

ARMOUR'S MAGIC

DAD'S

SIZING

ROOT BEER .

20 OUNCE
59~ W/C
SPRAY CAN
Umit 1 i:an per customer · .
Good on~ at Mark V Store

16 oz. bottles

8

PAK

EXpires ·5mA7s

..

�8 _ The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, M~ y 'XI , 197o
9- The Daily Sentinel,_Middleport-Pomeroy, o., Tuesday, May 'XI, 197o

Glenville, Mifflin, Yellow Springs
capture 1975 state track ·crowns
COLUMBUS (UPI )
Summaries of Saturday's
finals In the 68th State High
School Track and Field
Championships:
Class AAA

By GENE CADDES
UPI Sports Writer
COLUMBUS (UPI)
Sparked by speedy Derrek
Harbour's 26-point performance, tbe Tarblooders of
Cleveland Glenville have
captured their third straight
Class AAA state high school
track title, their eighth In the
last 11 years and lOth overall.
Selected the top AAA performer in Saturday's finals at
sun-&lt;lrenched Ohio Stadium,
Harbout won the ~yard
dash in :47.3, one of seven
new meet records, finished
second in the long jump, tied
for second in the 220 and
anchored a fourth-place mile
relay team.
Columbus Mifflin was a
runaway for the Class AA
Iitle, and Yellow Springs
nabbed Class A laurels.
Of Glenville's winning 29
points, Harbour personally
accounted for 26. TrotwoodMadison and Mansfield
Madison finished lied for
second with 24, and Dayton
Roosevelt was fourth with 21,
If Roosevelt had won tbe
mile relay, the final event of
the day , and Glenville had
been shut out, the Dayton
school could have won the

Hills, 9:33.9. 6, Jeff Fauble,
Toledo Bowsher, 9:36.8.
Mile Relay
·
I, Cincinnati Princeton
(Bryan England, Fred Clear,
Preston
Byars,
Ron
Dls~ll8
Hawkins ),
3:19.8.
2,
I, Joe Johns, Colwnbus Cleveland John Adams lz3,
West, 167-9, 2, Bill Talbot, Dayton Roosevelt, 3:20.6. 4,
Sandusky, 16&amp;-9. 3, Byron Cleveland Glenville, 3:21.3. 5,
Cato, Lorain Admiral King , Akron Buchtel, 3:23.4. 6,
16&amp;-0. 4, Jim Bzdafka, Maple Toledo Macomber 3:26.6.
Heights, 162-5. 5, Doug UrClass AA
banski, Brecksville, 166-7. 6,
Shotput
Carl Garber, Gahanna
I,
Rick
Schlabach,
Lincoln, 160-0.
Uniontown Lake, 58-61&gt;. 2,
Long Jump
Brian Trocano, Brooklyn, 5&amp;1, Todd Bell, Middletown, 9%. 3, Jon Giesler, Wood24-21&gt;. 2, Derrick Harbour, more, 55-2%. 4, Steve HickCleveland Glenville, 22-5. 3, man, Port Clinton 54-4,._5,
Rayfus Campbell, Sandusky Joe Robinson, Paulding, 53-7.
Perkins, 22-3. 4, Tony 6, Jeff Kenziorski, Cadiz, 53-0.
Richardson, Chillicothe, 22Long Jump
21'. . 5, Jeff Phillips,
1,
Manuel
Glason,
Whitehall, 21-10,.. 6, Larry Columbus Mifflin, 23-3, meet
Whiteside, Colwnbus South, record ; old record 22-9,. . 2,
21-9%.
Gregg Searcy, Wyoming, 21Shotput
ll '-'• · 3, Randy Howett,
I, Tim Vala, Cleveland St. Brookville, 21~ ¥•. 4, Ed
Forney, Akron South, 21-4% .
~nalill8, ··00-10,., 2, Mark
5,
Jack Allen, Warsaw
Upaj, Bay Village, 511-8%. 3j
Riverview, 21-1'\1 . 6, Rob
Byron Cato, Lorain Admira
King 57~1&gt;. 4, Jeff Gloss,
Steussloff, Swanton, 21-01'•.
AmeUa1 5&amp;-9V.. 5, Bill Tablot,
High Jump
,
I, Craig Hunt, Ontario, 6-8.
SandusKy, 5&amp;-3%. 6, Robert
Thompson, Colwnbus West, 2, Eric Wagner, Lorain
55-91'•.
Brookside, 6-8. 3, Danny
120-Yard High Hurdles
Yohney, Urbana, &amp;-7. 4, Mike
I, Jeff Jenkins, Mansfield Gould, Bellefontaine, 6-8. 5,
Madison, :13.8, ties meet Clyde Shaw, Warrensville
record. 2, Martin Jackson, Heights, 6-8. 6, Dave ParSpringfield South, :14.0. 3, mley, Springfield Shawnee, &amp;- Waverly, 1:59.0.
Barnett Seabrook; Dayton 4.
220-Yard Dash
Roosevelt, :14.2. 4, Jeff Dils,
Two-Mile Run
.
1, Billy Washington,
Trotwood Madison, :14 .4. 5,
1, Bruce Smith, Martins Dayton Jefferson, :22.4. 2
Julius Feitl, Bedford, :14.5. 6, Ferry1 9:31.1. 2, AI McCallin, Mike San some, Columbus
Disqualified.
Canton Lehman, 9:35.2. 3, DeSales, :22 .6, 3, Brent
100-Yard Dash
Mark Warfield, Wauseon, Saunders, Gallipolis, :22.7. 4,
I, Jeff Phillips, Whitehall, 9:37.4 . 4, Dave Mosher, Bill Stepanek, Gilmour
:09.5. 2, Lamar Preyor, Canton Lehman, 9:41.6. 5, Academy, :23.0. 5, Peter
Trotwood Madison, :09.6. 3, Dave Grim, Tipp City, 9:43.8. Church, Columbus Mifflin,
Norman Warren, Cleveland 6, Keith Norris, Madeira, :23.0. 6, John Alexander
John Adams, :09.6. 4, Tyrone 9:43.8.
'
Bridgeport, :23.0.
Hicks, Warren Harding,
120-Yard High Hurdles
Mile Relay
:09.6. 5, Curtis White,
I, Dan Oliver, Wooster
1, Dayton Jefferson (Ed
YoWlgstown East, :09.7, 6, Triway, :13.9, meet record; Robinson, Tony Reese , Bill
Tom
Grafton,
Canton old record :14.5. 2, Wayne Washington, Mark Mattson),
McKinley, :09.7.
Mason, Columbus Mifflin, 3:23.1, meet record; old
One-Mile Run
:14.1. 3, Dale Miller, record 3:24.0. 2, Middletown
1,
Kevin
Ryan,
Cleveland
Ashtabula,
: 14.2. 4, Dan Madison,
, St. Joseph, 4:14.7. 2, Doug Stanley, Springfield
3:24.8 ,
3
Nor- Warrensville Heights, 3:26.1:
Slack, Centerville, 4:17.8. 3. thwestern, :14.5. 5, Mark Ipe, 4, Columbus Hamilton
Chris
Roberts,
Lima Jackson-Milton, ; 14.6. 6, Township, 3:27.0. 5, St. Marys
Shawnee, 4:19.6. 4, Rick Donald Vinson, Ironton, :14.8. Memorial 3:27.1. 6, Warsaw
Musick, Fairborn Baker,
100-Yard Dash
Riverview 3: 28.0.
4:20.0. 5, Stu Ensor, Medina ,
I,
Lonnie
Phifer,
4:21.4. 6, Carl Stempel, . Youngstown North, :09.8. 2, Class A
Athens, 4:21.4.
Brad West, Buckeye North, Pole Vault
8110-Yard Relay
:09.9 , 3, Mike Harris,
I, Doug Henshaw, Smith·
1, Toledo Scott (Mike Columbus . Mifflin, : 10.1. 4, ville, 13-9. 2, Jack Grubb,
Cortland, Ralph Warren, Peter Church,. Columbus Chillicothe Huntington, 1~.
Gary Volden, Billy Ray) Mifflin, :10.1. -5, Howard 3, Lee Gnagy, La Grange
1:28.7. 2, ,Columbus Unden Callaban; Delta, :10.1. 6, Billy Keystone, 13-3. 4, Matt Diehl,
McKinley,
1:29.0.
3, Washington, Dayton Jef- Irondale Stanton, 13-0. 5,
Cleveland John Adams, ferson, : 10.1. One-Mile Run Marty Belding, Patrick
1:29.1. 4, Dayton Roosevelt; '
I, Mark Tapee, Bexley, Henry, 13-0. 6, Martin Hoke,
I :29.1. 5, Columbus West,
4:19, meet record; old record Arcanum, 13-0.
1:29.6. 6, Cleveland John F . 4:21.3. 2, Rod Cook~ Warren Dlsc118
Kennedy, 1:30.2.
John F. Kennedy, 4:21.7. 3,
I, John Bodi, Toledo North~Yard Dash
Steve Hixson, Youngstown wood, 159-41. 2, Mike Lowe,
I,
Derrek
Harbour, Liberty, 4:23.0. 4, Steve Licking Heights, 151-3. 3, Tim
Cleveland Glenville, :47.3, CzurakkMarysville, 4:23.7. 5, Vogler, Covington, 143-2. 4,
meet record; old record :47.4. Chuc
Armstrong, Mike Risner, Wynford 1 143-2.
2, Lamar Preyor, Trotwood Youngstown Liberty, 4:25.4. 5, Terry Vogler, Covington,
6, Jeff Kline, Kansas Lakota, 146-3. 6, Mark Williams,
Ma~t :47.7. 3, Anthony
Blair, Alliance, :47.7. 4, Greg 4:26.4.
South Range, 14~1.
Fuqua, Mansfield Madison,
8110-Yard Relay
Two-Mile Run
:48.9. 5, Denardo Draper,
I, Colwnbus Mifflin (Peter
I, Brian Jonard, Caldwell,
Toledo Woodward, :49.0. 6, Church, Wayne Mason, 9:46.4. 2, Ed Carey,
Jeff Washington, Dayton Manuel Glason, Ed Brown), LaGrange Keystone, 9:49.3.
Wilbur Wright, :50.3.
I: 30. 1.
2,
Middletown 3, Torn Fries, Senec;a East,
Pole Vault
Madison, 1:31.1. 3, Minerva, 9:55.0. 4, Ed Wojchiak, Or1, Les West, Dayton Wayne, I :31.2. 4, Columbll8 Hartley, well
Grand
VallHerb
15-61'•, meet record; old I :32.1. 5, Dayton Jefferson, Gregory, New London, 9:58.8.
record 1~. 21 Steve Johnson, 1:32.5. 6, Shelby, 1:32.6.
6, Rich Bartholomew, South
Kettering Fali'IIIont East, 14440-Yard Dash '
Range, 9:58.8.
6. 3 Greg Chojnowski,
1, Monty Ward, Mount 126-Yard High Hurdles
Wickliffe, 1~. 4, (tie) Scott Gilead, :49.8. 2, Randy
I, Pete Westhaven Uberty
Henry, Elyria, and Jim Gandy, Akron Hoben, :49.8. 3, Center, :14.4. 2, Bill Motter,
McCracken, Groveport, 1~. Bowen Loeffler, Port Clinton, Lancaster Fisher, : 14.6. 3,
6, (tie) Ron Price, Lebanon,
:49.9. 4, Mark Madison, Roland James, Jamestown
Pete Wood, Medina, and Dayton Jefferson, :50.3. 5, Greeneview, :15.1. 4, Paul
Terry Kellhofer, Painesville Bill Stepanek, Gilmour McCarthy, Lowellville, : 15.1:
Riverside, 13-0.
Academy, :60.6. 6, · Lyiih 5, Rick Cline, Ashland
!~Yard Low Hurdles .
Collins, Cleveland Crestview, :15.6. 6, Tony
1, Jeff Jenkins, Mansfield Benedictine, :50.8.
Nabor, Ashland Crestview,
Madison, : 19.0. 2, Dave
166-Yard Low Hurdles
:15.7.
Norris, Youngstown UrI, Dan Oliver, Wooster
IOO-Yard Dash
.
suline, : 19.5. 3, Steve Triway, :18.9 (faster than
1, Mike Smith, Yellow
Lauferswell~r, Kettering
meet record, but disallowed Springs, : 10.0. 2, Jim
Alter, :19.7. 4, Richard becall8e of excessive wind). Hammonds,
Columbus
Kimbrough, Columbus 2, Manuel Glason, Columbus Wehrle, :10.1. 3, Tony Peyton,
Linden McKinley, : 19.9. 5, Mifflin, : 19.4. 3, Wayne Ucking Heights, :10.1. 4,
VIncent Moses, . DaytOh Mason, Columbus Mifflin, Darrell Thomas, Lorain'
Fairview, _:20.0. 5, Barnet
:19 .4. 4, ·Dan Stanley, Clearview, : 10.1. 5,, Daryl
Seabrook, Dayton Roosevelt, Springfield Northwestern Treft, Van Buren, :10.1. 6,
:20.2.
:19:7 . .~1 Eric Sto.ck, St. Mike Beverly, Frankfort
880-Yard Run
CunrSVUie, :19.7.
.
Adena, : 10.1.
1, Jay ·Miranda, Cleveland
8110-Yard Rua
High Jump
West Tech, I; 54.2. 2, Mark
1, John Anich 1 Akron
1, Larry Fortner, Lorain
BuUer, Toledo Rogers, 1:54.4. Hoban, I :56.8. 2, Brian Loux, Clearview, 6-5, 2, ,Jerry
3, Thomas Ash, Akron Oregon Cardinal Strilch, Belknap, Indian Valley
Garfield, 1:55.7. 4, Bob 1:57.9 . , 3, Bob Cummins, North, 6-2. 3, Carl Wells,
Buchannan,
Dayton Brooklyn, 1:57.9. 4, Mike Fredericktown, &amp;-2. 4, (tie)
Roosevelt, 1:55.7. 5, Jim Johnson; Wellston, 1:56.4. 5, Reese Snyder, Pandora
Rice, Columbus Northland, Glen 'Randall, Reading, Gilboa, Jeff Biggs, Dalton,
1:56.8. 81 • Brad Ranney, 1:58.8. 6, . M1ke Maple, and Johri Conley, New
Glhanna LlllColn, 1:56.9.
Zit-Yard Dasb
1, Tyrone Hicks, Warren
' I
Harding, :21.1. 2, · (tie)
Derrek Harbour, Cleveland
GlenvtUe and' Jeff Philli~.
Whi~T :21,1. 4, Lamar
Preyor, rotwood Madison,
:21.3. 5, M!J!e &amp;nlth, Middleto.wn, : 21.8. 6, Oscar
Sin
Columbus Linden
' :21.9.
~-----~-----------Run
1, Pete Kummant, Amherst
llteele, 9:11.4. 2, Bob Slater,
Oneland Helchts, 9:26.7. 3,
Hrs.: lO:OOA.M. Tilll:OO P.M. Sun.-Thur.
Bemle Weber, Cleveland St.
10: 00 A;M. Til12:00 P.M. Fri. &amp; Sat.
- 1tnatlut1 8:31.0. 4, Chris
McMuter, Columbus
... 992-2556
llroakhlven, 8:32.2. 5, John
W. MAIN
POMEROY,
Glld~ell, Fairborn Park

championship by one point. , in :19.8andthehighsin :14.4, in :49.7and finished second in
'lbe best Roosevelt could do was voted top performer in the 220 for 18 points.
was a third-place finish, Class A.
Columbus Wehrle, the
however, while the TarJeff Phillips of Whitehall, a defending Class A champ,
blooders, thanks to a fine strapping 6-2, 195-pound finished second with 24
anchor leg by Harbour, got junior, captured the AAA 100- points, followed by Frankfort
fourth.
yard dash. in :09,5 and Adena, Georgetown and
In winning its first state finished lied for second with Lancaster Fisher, all with 22.
title ever with an impressive Harbour in the 220 in a·
Both Class A relays were
54 points, Mifflin was paced thrilling three-111an finish won by Frankfort Adena,
by Manuel Glason, wbo won won by Warren Harding's which set a meet record of
the long jump with a record Tyrone Hicks. AU were limed I: 31.2 in the half mile.
leap of 23-3, finished second in in :21.1. Phillips also fmished
Other records were set by
the 180-yard low hurdles and fifth in the long jump to ac- Dayton Wayne's Les West,
ran a leg on the Cowpun- count for aU 19 of Whitehall's who won the AAA pole vault
chers' winning half-mile points.
with a jump of 1~1'.; Mark
relay team.
Yellow Springs' entire 34- Tapee of Bexley, who took the
Top performer in AA, point winning total came AA mile run in 4:19.0; and a
however, (voted by news from Mike Smith and John 3:23.1 by Dayton Jefferson -in
media members covering the Gudgel.
winning the AA mile relay.
meet) was Wooster Triway's
Smith captured the 100 in
Jeff Jenkins of Mansfield
D•n Oliver, who set a record :10.0 and was third In th.e 220 Madison tied the AAA meet
in winning the 120-yard high to account for 16 points. record with a :13.8 clocking in
hurdles in : 13.9. Oliver also Gudgel won the 440-yiU"d dash the 120-yard high hurdles.
surpassed the meet mark in
his 180-yard low hurdles
victory, but it was disallowed
because of excessive wind
velocity.
.
.
A distant second behind
The Meigs County Babe
Mifflin in AA was Dayton Ruth took two games from fifth, McKinney getting "the
win.
Jefferson with 35 points, fol- Pt. Pleasant Saturday.
Pt. Pleasant had three runs
lowed by Triway with 20 and
The first game-was 3 to 2 in and· six hits. For Meigs
Akron Hoban with 18.
favor of Meigs . with Jeff
Pete Westhaven of Uberty McKinney pitching all the County, Cundiff struck out
two, walked one. McKinney
Center, who also won both
way, giving up only three struck out one. Hitters for
hurdle events, taking the lows
hits, striking out II, and Meigs were Mankins, a
walking 4.
single; Pete Sayre, two
The hi t~rs from Meigs singles; S~ve Goebel, two
were Kenny Mankin, Charley singles, and Barry Marshall
Marshall,
Pe~ Sayre, Steven and Tim Kuhn , ·each a single.
Boston, 6-0.
One-Mile Run
Goebel, McKinney, Barry
SUNDAY GAMES
1, Pete Murtaugh, Ashland Marshall and Stan Moon,
The local Ruthians made it
Mapleton, 4:21.2. 2, Mike each a single.
four in a row by taking two
Becraft, Georgetown, 4:22. 3,
The second game Meigs games from Ripley Daniel
Webb Vorys, Columbus
_
Academy, 4:22.2. 4, Mark won 4 to 3. Tim Cundiff Boone Sunday.
In the first game Meigs
Shonebarger,
Lancaster starting on the mound, was
Fisher, 4:23.1. 5, Joe Latta, relieved by McKinney in the County won 5 to 2 with Jeff
McComb, 4:29.0. 6, Paul Stoll,
Edgerton, 4:29.0.
186-Yard Low Hurdles
American Leaglle
I, Pete Westhaven , Liberty
Easf
w. I. pet. g.b.
Center, : 19.8. 2, Roland
Boston
21 17 .553
James, Jamestown
Milwaukee
20 19 .513 11 1
Greeneview, :19.9. 31 Bill
Detroit
16 19 ..d86 21,..
Major League Standings
Motter, Lancaster F1sher,
18 22 .450 4
By United· Press International New York
16 23 .410 51 12
Cleve land
National League
:20.3. 4, Steve Dowell,
Baltimore
16 24 .400 6
East
Hicksville, :20.4 . 5, Joe
West
w. 1. pet. g.b.
Kinney, Cincinnati Country Chicago
w. I. pel. g. b.
23 18 .561
Day, :20.8. 6, Rick Cline, New York
25 17 595
19 17 .528 1't Oakland
25 19 .568
1
Pittsbur gh
20 18 .526 Jl ~ Kansas City
Ashland Crestview, :20.9.
M innesota
20 TB .526 3
Philad elphia 21 20 .512 2
~Yard Run
T e)( as
22 20 .524
3
St . Loui s
16 23 .410 6
1, Jeff Gray, 'Ashland Montr eal
22 22 .500 4
14 23 .378 7 California
Chicago
• 19 22 .463 51 '1
West
Crestview, I :58.4. 2, Webb
Monday's Resulls
w. 1. pet. g .b.
Vorys, Columbus Academy,
Chicago 4_Milwaukee 2
Angeles
2a 16 609
1:58.9. 3, Joel Payne, l,.os
Cleveland 9 California 3
Cincinna t i
26 20 .565 2
Cedarville, 2:_00.1. 4, Mike San Francisco 22 20 .524 4 Oakland 6 B~'' 5, 11 inns
Boston 7. Texa s 5
23 21 .523
4
Becraft, Gecrgetown, 2:00.3. San Diego
11
Detroit
6 Minnesota 2
Atlanta
21
24
.467
6
5, Pete Murtaugh, Ashland Houston
18 29 383 101 -1 Kan City 6 New York 5, 11 inns
Mapleton, 2:01.4. 6, Paul
Monday's Results
Walter, Sugarcreek Chicago 6 Allanta 0
New York 6 Los Angeles 3
Garaway1 2:01.5.
Cinc
i 4 Montrea l 3, 1st
~Yaro Relay
Cinc i 5 Montrea l 4, 2nd
1, Frankfort Adena (Mike Pittsburgh \0 Houston 2
Beverly, Mike Smith, Rick San Di ego 9 St . Lou is 6
Netter, Clark Gilmore) 1 Ph il a 1 San Fran o, 11 inns
1:31.2, meet record; ola
record I :31. 2, Ada . 1:31.9. 3, .
Columbus Wehrle, 1,:31:9. 4,
Columbus Academy, 1:32.3.
This Week's Specia I
5, Parma Byzantine, 1:32.4. 6,
Dalton, I: 33.0. ,
'
4411-Yard Dash
1, John Gudgel, Yellow
D
Springs, :49.7. 2, · Ray
DeLeon, Tlnora, :50.1. 3,
Dean Robinson, Cortland
USED CARS
Maplewood, :50.2. 3, Mike
Barney, Lancaster Fisher,
:50.8. 5. Don Snodgrass,
Caldwell, :51.1. 6. Tim
Huffman, Frankfort Adena
:51.4.
2211-Yard Dasb
I,
Ted
Hammonds,
Columbus Wehrle, :23.0. 2,
While with blue vinyl trim,
John Gudgel, Yellow Springs,
307
V-8 molor, std. trans ..
:23.0. 3, Mike Smith, Yellow
P.S.. P.B., radio. Real
Springs, : 23.0. ~ Darrell
sharp!
Thomas, Lorain t;!earview,
:23.2. 5, Roger Lyons,
Chillicothe Zane Trace, : 23.4.
6, Ray DeLeon, Tinora, : 23.5.
Mile Relay
' I, Frankfort Adena (Mike
You ' ll Like Our Quality ·
Beverly, Clark Gilmore,
Way of Doing Business.
Marvin Tyler, Tim HuffGMAC FINANCiNG
man), 3:26.0. 2, Montpelier,
992-5342
· Pomeroy
3:28.2. 3, Cedarveille1 3:29.3.
Open Evenings '1116:00
4, Cortland Maplewood,
Til5p.m. Sat.
3:29.7.
5,
Columbus
Academy, 3:30.0. 6. Ashland
·-·.

McKinney on the mound. It Marshall two singles, Pete
was his third win in four Sayre a double and Tim
games in two days. Kuhn, a single.
McKinney gave up only four
In the second game, Kenny
hits, fanned _9, and walked Mankin had a single, Charley
Marshall a triple, Pe~ Sayre
two.
In the .second game, Pe~ two singles, S~ve Goebel,
Sayre pitched a no-hitter, Barry Marshall,
Jeff
fanni.ng 12 and walking McKinney and Tim Cundiff
nobody, Only one man each a single.
reached base, and he got
The day made Meigs 4 and
there on an error.
0 in league play already. The
Hit~rs for Meigs in the next games will be a night
fivst game were Charley __ doubleheader with Post 140.

.,

'r

TRIO

,·
..
:

Organ, Drums, Guitar

NITELY

·i

!

TUES .. WED., .THUf!S., 1:30.

'
.:
:

· FRI.&amp;SAT .•.9:30-2:00

•

73 CHEV.

MALIBU
HT OOUPE

.'2595
Karr &amp; Van Zandt

victory.
"I figured I could strike
him out," said Messersmith,
who had an 11-game winning
streak over two seasons
ended. "Garrett usually
doesn 'I hit me very well."
"I just wanted to hit the
ball. hard and get It Into the
season.
outfield;" Garrett said. "As
With the score lied 3-3in the soon as I hit it I said 'The
· ninth inning, Los Angeles game 1$ over.' I felt it would
Manager Walter Alston gave be at least a sacrifice fly."
his undefeated ace a free
In other NI. games,
'
...
rem.
Chicago blanked Atlanta, 6-0,
He let Messersmith decide Cincinnati edged Montreal
whether he wanted to pitch to , twice, 4-3 and 5-4, Pittsburgh
pinch-hitter Wayne Garrett, a whipped Houston, 10-2, San
.263 hitter who had never Diego outslugged St. Louis, 9done well against him, or 6, and Philadephla nipped
walk him to fill the bases and San Francisco, 1-0, in 11 intry his hick with D.el Unser, a nings
.336 hitter who already had
·homered off him in the third
Inning.
· The choice seemed obvious,
even considering the advantage of a force at any
base. II dido 't take a
manager with more than a
score of seasons under his
belt to make the right
decision.
But the obvious begat the
second-guess as Garrett
homered on his fu-st swing
and gave lhe Mets. 11- &amp;-;~

William D. Childs

.

I

125 E. Main , ·

.

992-2171

~

ee so

WHEEL &amp; DEAL
ON

CUSTOM WHEELS
CARS an~ TRUCKS
OUR SPECIALTY

oo'lsr·I'T

Tt1EM

cosTL'f?

SoMEONE
WHO WILL
&lt;?OESTtON

DON'T
QUf&lt;STIOti

THE

!?EGO LATIONS

CLEA"

AIR.-

JV{."T

QUE TION

THE

P~ICE

polic( :. ,

. · P. J. PAULEY
307 Spring Ave., Pomeroy

PH. 992-2318

&amp;&lt;fsZJn.~O

. - I-

,:::..,~

Quite the contrary. It's a necessity ... your duty and our duty.
This nation is beginning to find
out that pollution control is expensive and one of the reasons
for inflation. And that it increases
the cost of electricity. Not jusC
pennies but hard-earned dollars
... year after year af.ter year.
That's the very reason we believe regulations must be questioned. Those who will be paying
those higher electric bills should
have a voice in how far they want
togo.
Of course when you do express
concern over what you know are
unrealistic air pollution laws that
make electricity cost more than
is necessary, you're bound to be
criticlzed.lt has happened to us . .
Some claim we don't care about ·
people. That couldn't be further

Jewelry Store

.Pomeroy, 0.

.....

We'd like you to join us in an
effort to have a simple amend"
ment to the Clean Air Act passed
to change the wording so that
each state, in the interest of the
people, could allow the continued use oftall stacks and
sensitive computerized ground
monitors. A proven system that
will meet the air quality standards where we Iive and breathe.

from the truth. If we didn't care,
we'd remain silent. We'd like to
think this country is still free
enough to speak out. _
When you hear that we wantthe
Clean Air Act amended that
doesn't mean we want to kill the
Act. It only means we want the
flexibility to meet the standards
of the Act in an Elqually safe way
that will cost you, our customers,
the least amount of money.
The way its wording has been
interpreted by E.P.A. we don't
have that flexibility, And that
means electricity will cost you
more.
.

~

Such a change will not only protect the public health, it will save
you money on the cost of tomorrow's electricity, help employ. ment and general economic
conditions.
Write your elected representatives in Washington. Let them
know how important amending
th~ Clean Air Act is to you.
·

Other costs of generating electricitY and your electric bills are
high enough right now without
hiking them higher by regula- .
tions that are too strict . . .
unnecessarily.

Do it now.
'

'

Ohio Power
Company
.

'•

.

This message not pvblished at. customers· expense. Paiq for by company stockholders.
'

Cowt St., Pbmeroy
' •;

.. .; ..

TO

WE WILL

W£ NI!EO

I'M
WITH

Services Each

Tues., Thurs., Fri . &amp; Sun
Al7:30 P.M.
Conducted by R. Stipp &amp;
L. Shilbred . A welcome
extended to all.

Tl'1ia hie insurance for your

Textured
goldtone
case and band.
Champagne dial.

_

savings with City loan. So You know we h011e to
be solid people to do business with. City loan
&amp; Savings. ~at makes us a different kind of
company mak~s us a better kind qf loan company.

HAVE

'5AV

IT

Services will be held at the
Home-Makers Club House,
Graham Cemetery.

child 1umps in value- but
premiu(l:l~ dori'l!. Aak 1
Nationwide agent abou~ the
Jti. . enite Eatete Builder

)

· When you can'! trust thihgs to go right. trust us lor ,.-..:.'-~1.0\N::::-:-:-::1

~!~~~o n~e~a~~~e ~=~~~~~t ~~~n you

8UT Vl.ll.V ,vEQy
f.lC P£11181 v £

SoME

Beginning Tuesday, May
a series of Non denominational
Gospel

27,

jump
on lite.

Trim
European
styling.
Bracelet with satin finish
alligator pattern. ·_ 17 jewels.
$85.00
..

'

.

COHTR..OL. IS
Hi.Ca98AR..y

DoES

. COLUMBUS (UPI) ·-The
pairings for the state high
school baseball tournament
here next week:
·
Class A at 9:30 a.m. Friday
Russia vs. Old Fort

Lucasville Valley vs. West
SalemNorthwestern
Claoa AAA at 1 p.m. Friday
Columbll8 West vs. Daytbn
Charnlnade
Parma
Senior
vs.
YoWlgstown Chaney
Class AAA at 4 p.m. Friday
Columbll8 St. Charles 'vs.
Hamilton Badin Medina
Buckeye vs. Bryan

a

Bulova

..

6andl P.M. --

.,

PoLLUTION

With the score tied 3-3 at
the top of the sixth, Hamiltllll
pounded eight of its 13 hits-in
the sixth to clinch the win.
Hamilton Badin took the
eariy lead, scoring four runs
in the first two innings of play
off Ironto ~ . starter Bob
Vaughn. The Tigers scored
one run in the third inning,
and tied the game in the sixth
on Jeff Brickey 's three-run
homer.
,
Bob Williams absorbed the
loss, his first in nine games
this season . Tom Tracy of
Hamilton Badin collec ~d the
win, moving his mark to 9-3 .
The loss ends the Iron ton
season at 20-8.

Give your kids

'

Here ·s an exc iting Interview
I recently overheard at a
space rescue site. " Captain ,
how does it feel to be the first
astronaut tO go to Mars? "
" Astronaut?
I 'm
no
astronaut . I'm realty an
InsuranCe man . I j ust do th is
as a hobb.y ." When you see
me, don't th ink of insurance ,
bvt When you th ink of in .
l)Urance , see me . I'm. an
insurance specialist , ready
to serve you .
- ·~

Ironton nine elimi-nated, 14-4

•

: By TODD NEMANIC
UPI Sports Writer
The New York Mets played
the game of "heads I win,
tails you lose" with Andy
Messersmith Memorial Day
afternoon and handed the big
Los Angeles Dodger righthander his first loss of the

-Fn::'30

v

'.

The Indians rapped out 13
hits and Charlie Spikes, the
first player ever · fined by
Robinson, responded by
slamming his first homer, a
key solo shot in the fifth when
the Indians led only, 4-3.
Fritz Peterson, who en-.
tered the game with a 6.91
ERA, .scattered seven hits
and went the distance to earn
his fourth victory In eight
decisions. He was the only
player not to sign the petition
because he had flown to
California a day early.
However, he said he supported the stand.
Red Sox 7, Texu 5:
Bernie Carbo hit a threerun homer and Dwight Evans
added a two-run blast to
power ·Boston over Texas.
Evans homered in the eighth
to break a ~ lie after Carbo
had given the Red Sox the
lead for the first time with a
three-run blast in the

ney's All American Racers Rutheriord, in a new Britishcrew from Santa Ana, Calif. built McLaren, was runnerup
"We have won a lot of races this time.
since our association started
For the sixth year in a row,
4,. years ago, we won a lot of the payoff for the 33 starters
money and Dan spent even surpassed $1 million. The
more. He gives me the finest total purse was aruiounced as
equipment and linking up $1,001,321 compared with last
with him was probably the year's $1,015,686--the largest
best thing that ever happened purse ever for an auto race.
to me In racing," Unser said.
Unser's take likewise was
"I wouldn't be surprised if not a record, mostly because
Dan comes up with a ·fine new · he led for only II of the 174
car for next year."
laps before the race was
Gurney confided he has a halted in a downpour ,
Formula 5,000 car on the . Younger brother AI received
drawing board which he more than $271,000 for winhoped will be ready to run ning the 1970 racing classic,
later this season. He In- leading. 190 of the 200 laps.
dicated the machine, if
Rutherford received $97,866
successful, would be .adapted and thlrd-place A.J. Foyt
for next year's Speedway took home $74,676.
race.
Gurney, twice runnerup
The car Unser drove to here before retiring from
victory in Sunday's rain- racing five years ago, said
shortened million dollar race once his crew coped with
was the S8ljie In which be some minor problems during
finished second to ~ohnny the race, they felt confident ·
Rutherford a year ago. Unser could win.

!

p

WHEN YOU SEE ME,
DON'' T THINK OF
INSURANCE •.. B!JT
WHEN YOU THINK OF
INSURANCE, SEE MEl

. Mick Childs

yOur nails." ,

e first choice
raduation Gift
r him and he

Crestvi~'!- ~:30.1.

'

By KURT FREUDENTHAL
INDIANAPOLIS, Ind .
(UPI) - Winning his second
Indiana polis 500 may make
dapper Bobby Unser one of
the wealthiest race drivers.on
record but he isn't about to
rest on his laurels.
Not only does he plan to run
the remainder of the United
States Auto Club's championship circuit this year in an
effort to defend his national
title, but he's already planning for 1976.
And so is Dan Gurney, his
boss who Is both owner and
builder of the famous Eagle
race cars that have won the
''500" here three limes, iwice
with Unser at the wheel and
once with Gordon Johncock.
"Dan has been a good
boss," Unser praised the
former race driver at
Monday night's victory
dinner at which he gjcked up
a check for $214,000. He will
split the money with Gur-

:

POME.ROY

carllialne · . ·
Trust as for mour to fl1·lt.

looks easy but you're so far
away from the game there.
There's nothing to do but bite

•

:; Garrett fo.ols Messersmith

-INN.

JOU can't trust.·

.

,.

Enjoy the Disti!lctivl!
Style ofthe ... .

Frank Sisty

Monday afternoon's game
and told them he appreciated ·
their action, but a better way
to show the.ir appreciation
would be to "go out there and
win the ball game."
''It was more or less a show
of solidarity," said Frank
Duffy, who had three hits in
an inspired 9-3 clubbing of the
Angels. "We signed the
petition because we thought it
was unfair to have Frank
. suspended. We didn't think
what he , did warranted that
stiff suspension."
Robinson was astounded by
the attempted boycott-and
proud.
"I was surprised," said
baseball's first black
manager. "It made me feel
good that they felt that
strongly. But I felt I couldn't
let them do it. It's not worth it
to sit out three games.
He watched nervously from
the broadcasters booth as
Coacli Dave Garcia managed
the club to victory.
"It was frustrating up
there," Robinson said. "It

Unser is still hungry

~

1

Adolph's Dai~ Valley

I

Columbus Mifflin 54;
Dayton Jefferson, 35;
Wooster Triway, 20; Akron
Hoban 20; Middletown
Madison, and Uniontown
Lake, 16 each; Brooklyn 14;
Canton Lehman 12.
Class A
Yellow
Springs
34;
Columbus Wehrle, 24; Frankfort Adena, Georgetown and
Lancaster Fisher, 22 eacJF·
Columbus Academy and
Liberty Center, 20 each;
Cedarville and Lorain
Clearview, 18 each; Ashland
Crestview, 15; Jamestown
Gr~envlew, Lagrange
Keystone and Licking
He1ghts, 14 each.

COLUMBUS (UPI) - Top
team scaring in Saturday's
68th annual boys State High
School Track and 'Field
Championships:
Class AAA
Cleveland Glenville 29;
· Trotwood Madison and
Mansfield Madison, 24 each;
Dayton Roosevelt 21;
Cleveland John Adams and
Cincinnati Princeton, 20
each;
Whitehall
19;
Cleveland St. Ignatius, 16;
Warren
Harding,
14;
Colwnbll8 Unden McKinley
and Columbus West, 13 eachi
Lorain Admiral King ana
Middletown, 12 each. ..
Class AA

Standings

.STRAWBERRY
SHORTCAKE ·

o.

Team scoring

By KEN ROSENBERG
UPI Sports Writer
On a day that most people
rallied 'round the flag, the
Cleveland Indians rallied
'round Manager Frank
Robinson.
And, if there's strength in
unity, the Indians may have
just begun to flex their
muscles.
Unhappy over a stiff threeday suspension and $250 fine
levied against Robinson by
· ' . American League President
..: Lee MacPhail for a shoving
Incident with Umpire Jerry
• NeudeckerMayl1,Cieveland
players Monday threatened
to boycott their three-game
. • series with the California
·.. Angels.
, , All the Indians either
. · signed or supported a petition
·' initiated by pitchers Dave
LaRoche and Tom Buskey,
" calling the suspension
"'• "unjust and unfair"
'
and
.·. offering ·to sit out Robinson's
: suspension ' 'to show our
disapproval."
However, Robinson met
with his troops before

Meigs· Ruthians 4•0 on weekend

I

Now Featuring

Indians won one

seventh.
figers 6, -rwiDa Z:
Dan Meyer hit a two-run
homer and Aurelio Rodriguez
SPRINGFIELD
Saturday afternoon, to defeat
drove In three runs with a
Hamilton
Badin
exploded
for
·
Iron ton 14-4, in the Ohio Class
homer and double to back
10
runs
in
the
sixth
inning
AA Region 8 baseball finals .
rookie ·vern Ruhle's sjx-hit
••
pitching as Detroit snapped
Minnesota's four-game
winning streak. It was
Ma. or League Results
Ruhle's fourth victory In five
Ph ila
000000000 01-· I 5 0
Bv United Press lnernational
Hal ic ki i 1 1J and Rader :
decisions.
National League
T wi tchell , M cG r aw (8) and
( 1st Gam e)
Royals 6, Yankees 5:
Boon e, Oates (8) . WP - M cGra w
Montreal
001 002 000- 3 8 2
Frank White's squeeze- Cin c inati
200 001 lOx- 4 9 0 IJ 21 .
F ryman (4 2 1 and Cart er ; more more more
bunt single scored Jim
Bi llingham , Norman i 6), Car
upi OS-27 02 : 17 a ed
Wohlford from third with one roll (7 1, M cEnaney ( 8) and
out in the 11th inning to lift Pl ummer . WP - - Carrol l (54)
HR - Jorgen sen ( 4t h I .
Kansas City over New York.
0043
The Yankees led, 5-3, en- {2nd Game)
zzczc u
v zyrlyd su
l
100 030 000- 4 12 o
result
s
S-27
tering the ninth but . the Montrea
Cincinat i
ooo 050 oo x-- 5 52
Renko ,
DeMota
(61
and 1st add results
Royals rallied for two runs to
American LeagUe
Foole ; Gullet!, Borbon (6) ,
011 00 0 002- 4 10 0
tie. Marty Pattin picked up . Eastwick (9 ) and Bench . WP- Ch ic ago
Mi l w
000 010 l OG-- 2 8 0
Gullett
(5
-31.
LP
Renko
(Q.J
l.
the victory with three innings
Ka at .
Gossage
(9 )
and
HR-- Bench ilOth l.
Downi n g ; Colborn (O .J J and
of one-bit relief.
Atlanta
000 000 000- 0 4 0 Moore. WP -- Kaa t (8 1) . HR sA's 8, Orioles 5:
a ( Jrd ), Dent ( l stJ. Dow ning
Chicago
ooo
os t oox ~ 6 6 1 Ort
(Jrd J.
Gene Tenace, wbo earlier
drove in four runs with 8
Harr i son , Thompson tt l,
vel and
220 01 1 003- 9 13 1
led Beard (61 and CorrelL Burr is Cle
single and homer, sing
16 11 and MHterwald . LP- Ca lifornia 000-300 000- 3 7 I
Pe ter son ( 4-4) and Ashby :
across the winning run with Harrison ( 3 3 ) . HR -- Trillo Tanana
. Dob son , Ki r k wood ( 6 ),
1
two out in the bottom of the llrd
Scott ( 7J and Egan . L Plith tO gjve Oakland its Win Los Angeles 100 000 200- 3 &lt; 1 T anan a (2-J J. HR ·~ S p i ke's (lstl .
,
New York
012 000 003~ 6 6 2
FINAL SVAC
over Baltimore. Tenace s
Messersmith {7 . 1) and Yea .
STANDINGS
winning hit followed singles . ger : Seaver 16-&lt;l and Grote.
HR s-· Un ser Drdl. Kran epoot
by Joe Rudi and - ..AngeI !!sll. Garret! 12ndl .
W L R OR
Mangual and dealt the
10 I 85 38
North Gallla
·
1 ht Houston
001 000 010- 2 5 1 Kyg_
6 3 55 41
e
i'
Creek
Orioles their fifth stra g
Plt!sbgh
on 031 40x- 10 13 o Symmes VaL
7 4 11 70
1
Richard , Granger {5), Sch er
3 5 A6 50
OSS.
man {7) , Crawford (7) , and Southern
3 6 52 59
White Sos4, Brewers 2:
May ; Kison (4-ll and M ay . L P Hannan· Trace
3 6 38 62
Bucky Dent and Brian - Richard l33l. HR- Starg ell S. Western
3 ' 8 37 47
Eas
tern
Downing hit consecutive ISihl .
homers with two out In the san Diego 100 100 203- 9 13 2
St _ Louis
002 04 0 000- 6 14 1
ninth inning to lead Jim Ka aI
Mclnlosh, Hardy 151, Toml in
YARD SALE SET
to his eighth victory and 161 , Greif ln. Frisell a 191 an d RUTLAND - The Rutland
Hund ley, Kendal! 171 : Gibson,
Chicago Over Milwaukee. Hrabosky
(7) , Garman
(9 1, softball ~am will hOld a yard
Kaat has DOW won 15 of his Sadec ki 191 and Simmons WP sale Wednesday and Thursf 11 -11 . LP- HrabOsky I 1last 16 deci-sions. Both -21.Grei
HR -- Smith ( 6th ) .
day, May 28-29 at the Gene
bomers 'came off loser Jim
Wisf!' residence, Salem St.
( 11 innings)
Colborn.
San F ran 000 000 000 00 - 0 4 2

'

�8 _ The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, M~ y 'XI , 197o
9- The Daily Sentinel,_Middleport-Pomeroy, o., Tuesday, May 'XI, 197o

Glenville, Mifflin, Yellow Springs
capture 1975 state track ·crowns
COLUMBUS (UPI )
Summaries of Saturday's
finals In the 68th State High
School Track and Field
Championships:
Class AAA

By GENE CADDES
UPI Sports Writer
COLUMBUS (UPI)
Sparked by speedy Derrek
Harbour's 26-point performance, tbe Tarblooders of
Cleveland Glenville have
captured their third straight
Class AAA state high school
track title, their eighth In the
last 11 years and lOth overall.
Selected the top AAA performer in Saturday's finals at
sun-&lt;lrenched Ohio Stadium,
Harbout won the ~yard
dash in :47.3, one of seven
new meet records, finished
second in the long jump, tied
for second in the 220 and
anchored a fourth-place mile
relay team.
Columbus Mifflin was a
runaway for the Class AA
Iitle, and Yellow Springs
nabbed Class A laurels.
Of Glenville's winning 29
points, Harbour personally
accounted for 26. TrotwoodMadison and Mansfield
Madison finished lied for
second with 24, and Dayton
Roosevelt was fourth with 21,
If Roosevelt had won tbe
mile relay, the final event of
the day , and Glenville had
been shut out, the Dayton
school could have won the

Hills, 9:33.9. 6, Jeff Fauble,
Toledo Bowsher, 9:36.8.
Mile Relay
·
I, Cincinnati Princeton
(Bryan England, Fred Clear,
Preston
Byars,
Ron
Dls~ll8
Hawkins ),
3:19.8.
2,
I, Joe Johns, Colwnbus Cleveland John Adams lz3,
West, 167-9, 2, Bill Talbot, Dayton Roosevelt, 3:20.6. 4,
Sandusky, 16&amp;-9. 3, Byron Cleveland Glenville, 3:21.3. 5,
Cato, Lorain Admiral King , Akron Buchtel, 3:23.4. 6,
16&amp;-0. 4, Jim Bzdafka, Maple Toledo Macomber 3:26.6.
Heights, 162-5. 5, Doug UrClass AA
banski, Brecksville, 166-7. 6,
Shotput
Carl Garber, Gahanna
I,
Rick
Schlabach,
Lincoln, 160-0.
Uniontown Lake, 58-61&gt;. 2,
Long Jump
Brian Trocano, Brooklyn, 5&amp;1, Todd Bell, Middletown, 9%. 3, Jon Giesler, Wood24-21&gt;. 2, Derrick Harbour, more, 55-2%. 4, Steve HickCleveland Glenville, 22-5. 3, man, Port Clinton 54-4,._5,
Rayfus Campbell, Sandusky Joe Robinson, Paulding, 53-7.
Perkins, 22-3. 4, Tony 6, Jeff Kenziorski, Cadiz, 53-0.
Richardson, Chillicothe, 22Long Jump
21'. . 5, Jeff Phillips,
1,
Manuel
Glason,
Whitehall, 21-10,.. 6, Larry Columbus Mifflin, 23-3, meet
Whiteside, Colwnbus South, record ; old record 22-9,. . 2,
21-9%.
Gregg Searcy, Wyoming, 21Shotput
ll '-'• · 3, Randy Howett,
I, Tim Vala, Cleveland St. Brookville, 21~ ¥•. 4, Ed
Forney, Akron South, 21-4% .
~nalill8, ··00-10,., 2, Mark
5,
Jack Allen, Warsaw
Upaj, Bay Village, 511-8%. 3j
Riverview, 21-1'\1 . 6, Rob
Byron Cato, Lorain Admira
King 57~1&gt;. 4, Jeff Gloss,
Steussloff, Swanton, 21-01'•.
AmeUa1 5&amp;-9V.. 5, Bill Tablot,
High Jump
,
I, Craig Hunt, Ontario, 6-8.
SandusKy, 5&amp;-3%. 6, Robert
Thompson, Colwnbus West, 2, Eric Wagner, Lorain
55-91'•.
Brookside, 6-8. 3, Danny
120-Yard High Hurdles
Yohney, Urbana, &amp;-7. 4, Mike
I, Jeff Jenkins, Mansfield Gould, Bellefontaine, 6-8. 5,
Madison, :13.8, ties meet Clyde Shaw, Warrensville
record. 2, Martin Jackson, Heights, 6-8. 6, Dave ParSpringfield South, :14.0. 3, mley, Springfield Shawnee, &amp;- Waverly, 1:59.0.
Barnett Seabrook; Dayton 4.
220-Yard Dash
Roosevelt, :14.2. 4, Jeff Dils,
Two-Mile Run
.
1, Billy Washington,
Trotwood Madison, :14 .4. 5,
1, Bruce Smith, Martins Dayton Jefferson, :22.4. 2
Julius Feitl, Bedford, :14.5. 6, Ferry1 9:31.1. 2, AI McCallin, Mike San some, Columbus
Disqualified.
Canton Lehman, 9:35.2. 3, DeSales, :22 .6, 3, Brent
100-Yard Dash
Mark Warfield, Wauseon, Saunders, Gallipolis, :22.7. 4,
I, Jeff Phillips, Whitehall, 9:37.4 . 4, Dave Mosher, Bill Stepanek, Gilmour
:09.5. 2, Lamar Preyor, Canton Lehman, 9:41.6. 5, Academy, :23.0. 5, Peter
Trotwood Madison, :09.6. 3, Dave Grim, Tipp City, 9:43.8. Church, Columbus Mifflin,
Norman Warren, Cleveland 6, Keith Norris, Madeira, :23.0. 6, John Alexander
John Adams, :09.6. 4, Tyrone 9:43.8.
'
Bridgeport, :23.0.
Hicks, Warren Harding,
120-Yard High Hurdles
Mile Relay
:09.6. 5, Curtis White,
I, Dan Oliver, Wooster
1, Dayton Jefferson (Ed
YoWlgstown East, :09.7, 6, Triway, :13.9, meet record; Robinson, Tony Reese , Bill
Tom
Grafton,
Canton old record :14.5. 2, Wayne Washington, Mark Mattson),
McKinley, :09.7.
Mason, Columbus Mifflin, 3:23.1, meet record; old
One-Mile Run
:14.1. 3, Dale Miller, record 3:24.0. 2, Middletown
1,
Kevin
Ryan,
Cleveland
Ashtabula,
: 14.2. 4, Dan Madison,
, St. Joseph, 4:14.7. 2, Doug Stanley, Springfield
3:24.8 ,
3
Nor- Warrensville Heights, 3:26.1:
Slack, Centerville, 4:17.8. 3. thwestern, :14.5. 5, Mark Ipe, 4, Columbus Hamilton
Chris
Roberts,
Lima Jackson-Milton, ; 14.6. 6, Township, 3:27.0. 5, St. Marys
Shawnee, 4:19.6. 4, Rick Donald Vinson, Ironton, :14.8. Memorial 3:27.1. 6, Warsaw
Musick, Fairborn Baker,
100-Yard Dash
Riverview 3: 28.0.
4:20.0. 5, Stu Ensor, Medina ,
I,
Lonnie
Phifer,
4:21.4. 6, Carl Stempel, . Youngstown North, :09.8. 2, Class A
Athens, 4:21.4.
Brad West, Buckeye North, Pole Vault
8110-Yard Relay
:09.9 , 3, Mike Harris,
I, Doug Henshaw, Smith·
1, Toledo Scott (Mike Columbus . Mifflin, : 10.1. 4, ville, 13-9. 2, Jack Grubb,
Cortland, Ralph Warren, Peter Church,. Columbus Chillicothe Huntington, 1~.
Gary Volden, Billy Ray) Mifflin, :10.1. -5, Howard 3, Lee Gnagy, La Grange
1:28.7. 2, ,Columbus Unden Callaban; Delta, :10.1. 6, Billy Keystone, 13-3. 4, Matt Diehl,
McKinley,
1:29.0.
3, Washington, Dayton Jef- Irondale Stanton, 13-0. 5,
Cleveland John Adams, ferson, : 10.1. One-Mile Run Marty Belding, Patrick
1:29.1. 4, Dayton Roosevelt; '
I, Mark Tapee, Bexley, Henry, 13-0. 6, Martin Hoke,
I :29.1. 5, Columbus West,
4:19, meet record; old record Arcanum, 13-0.
1:29.6. 6, Cleveland John F . 4:21.3. 2, Rod Cook~ Warren Dlsc118
Kennedy, 1:30.2.
John F. Kennedy, 4:21.7. 3,
I, John Bodi, Toledo North~Yard Dash
Steve Hixson, Youngstown wood, 159-41. 2, Mike Lowe,
I,
Derrek
Harbour, Liberty, 4:23.0. 4, Steve Licking Heights, 151-3. 3, Tim
Cleveland Glenville, :47.3, CzurakkMarysville, 4:23.7. 5, Vogler, Covington, 143-2. 4,
meet record; old record :47.4. Chuc
Armstrong, Mike Risner, Wynford 1 143-2.
2, Lamar Preyor, Trotwood Youngstown Liberty, 4:25.4. 5, Terry Vogler, Covington,
6, Jeff Kline, Kansas Lakota, 146-3. 6, Mark Williams,
Ma~t :47.7. 3, Anthony
Blair, Alliance, :47.7. 4, Greg 4:26.4.
South Range, 14~1.
Fuqua, Mansfield Madison,
8110-Yard Relay
Two-Mile Run
:48.9. 5, Denardo Draper,
I, Colwnbus Mifflin (Peter
I, Brian Jonard, Caldwell,
Toledo Woodward, :49.0. 6, Church, Wayne Mason, 9:46.4. 2, Ed Carey,
Jeff Washington, Dayton Manuel Glason, Ed Brown), LaGrange Keystone, 9:49.3.
Wilbur Wright, :50.3.
I: 30. 1.
2,
Middletown 3, Torn Fries, Senec;a East,
Pole Vault
Madison, 1:31.1. 3, Minerva, 9:55.0. 4, Ed Wojchiak, Or1, Les West, Dayton Wayne, I :31.2. 4, Columbll8 Hartley, well
Grand
VallHerb
15-61'•, meet record; old I :32.1. 5, Dayton Jefferson, Gregory, New London, 9:58.8.
record 1~. 21 Steve Johnson, 1:32.5. 6, Shelby, 1:32.6.
6, Rich Bartholomew, South
Kettering Fali'IIIont East, 14440-Yard Dash '
Range, 9:58.8.
6. 3 Greg Chojnowski,
1, Monty Ward, Mount 126-Yard High Hurdles
Wickliffe, 1~. 4, (tie) Scott Gilead, :49.8. 2, Randy
I, Pete Westhaven Uberty
Henry, Elyria, and Jim Gandy, Akron Hoben, :49.8. 3, Center, :14.4. 2, Bill Motter,
McCracken, Groveport, 1~. Bowen Loeffler, Port Clinton, Lancaster Fisher, : 14.6. 3,
6, (tie) Ron Price, Lebanon,
:49.9. 4, Mark Madison, Roland James, Jamestown
Pete Wood, Medina, and Dayton Jefferson, :50.3. 5, Greeneview, :15.1. 4, Paul
Terry Kellhofer, Painesville Bill Stepanek, Gilmour McCarthy, Lowellville, : 15.1:
Riverside, 13-0.
Academy, :60.6. 6, · Lyiih 5, Rick Cline, Ashland
!~Yard Low Hurdles .
Collins, Cleveland Crestview, :15.6. 6, Tony
1, Jeff Jenkins, Mansfield Benedictine, :50.8.
Nabor, Ashland Crestview,
Madison, : 19.0. 2, Dave
166-Yard Low Hurdles
:15.7.
Norris, Youngstown UrI, Dan Oliver, Wooster
IOO-Yard Dash
.
suline, : 19.5. 3, Steve Triway, :18.9 (faster than
1, Mike Smith, Yellow
Lauferswell~r, Kettering
meet record, but disallowed Springs, : 10.0. 2, Jim
Alter, :19.7. 4, Richard becall8e of excessive wind). Hammonds,
Columbus
Kimbrough, Columbus 2, Manuel Glason, Columbus Wehrle, :10.1. 3, Tony Peyton,
Linden McKinley, : 19.9. 5, Mifflin, : 19.4. 3, Wayne Ucking Heights, :10.1. 4,
VIncent Moses, . DaytOh Mason, Columbus Mifflin, Darrell Thomas, Lorain'
Fairview, _:20.0. 5, Barnet
:19 .4. 4, ·Dan Stanley, Clearview, : 10.1. 5,, Daryl
Seabrook, Dayton Roosevelt, Springfield Northwestern Treft, Van Buren, :10.1. 6,
:20.2.
:19:7 . .~1 Eric Sto.ck, St. Mike Beverly, Frankfort
880-Yard Run
CunrSVUie, :19.7.
.
Adena, : 10.1.
1, Jay ·Miranda, Cleveland
8110-Yard Rua
High Jump
West Tech, I; 54.2. 2, Mark
1, John Anich 1 Akron
1, Larry Fortner, Lorain
BuUer, Toledo Rogers, 1:54.4. Hoban, I :56.8. 2, Brian Loux, Clearview, 6-5, 2, ,Jerry
3, Thomas Ash, Akron Oregon Cardinal Strilch, Belknap, Indian Valley
Garfield, 1:55.7. 4, Bob 1:57.9 . , 3, Bob Cummins, North, 6-2. 3, Carl Wells,
Buchannan,
Dayton Brooklyn, 1:57.9. 4, Mike Fredericktown, &amp;-2. 4, (tie)
Roosevelt, 1:55.7. 5, Jim Johnson; Wellston, 1:56.4. 5, Reese Snyder, Pandora
Rice, Columbus Northland, Glen 'Randall, Reading, Gilboa, Jeff Biggs, Dalton,
1:56.8. 81 • Brad Ranney, 1:58.8. 6, . M1ke Maple, and Johri Conley, New
Glhanna LlllColn, 1:56.9.
Zit-Yard Dasb
1, Tyrone Hicks, Warren
' I
Harding, :21.1. 2, · (tie)
Derrek Harbour, Cleveland
GlenvtUe and' Jeff Philli~.
Whi~T :21,1. 4, Lamar
Preyor, rotwood Madison,
:21.3. 5, M!J!e &amp;nlth, Middleto.wn, : 21.8. 6, Oscar
Sin
Columbus Linden
' :21.9.
~-----~-----------Run
1, Pete Kummant, Amherst
llteele, 9:11.4. 2, Bob Slater,
Oneland Helchts, 9:26.7. 3,
Hrs.: lO:OOA.M. Tilll:OO P.M. Sun.-Thur.
Bemle Weber, Cleveland St.
10: 00 A;M. Til12:00 P.M. Fri. &amp; Sat.
- 1tnatlut1 8:31.0. 4, Chris
McMuter, Columbus
... 992-2556
llroakhlven, 8:32.2. 5, John
W. MAIN
POMEROY,
Glld~ell, Fairborn Park

championship by one point. , in :19.8andthehighsin :14.4, in :49.7and finished second in
'lbe best Roosevelt could do was voted top performer in the 220 for 18 points.
was a third-place finish, Class A.
Columbus Wehrle, the
however, while the TarJeff Phillips of Whitehall, a defending Class A champ,
blooders, thanks to a fine strapping 6-2, 195-pound finished second with 24
anchor leg by Harbour, got junior, captured the AAA 100- points, followed by Frankfort
fourth.
yard dash. in :09,5 and Adena, Georgetown and
In winning its first state finished lied for second with Lancaster Fisher, all with 22.
title ever with an impressive Harbour in the 220 in a·
Both Class A relays were
54 points, Mifflin was paced thrilling three-111an finish won by Frankfort Adena,
by Manuel Glason, wbo won won by Warren Harding's which set a meet record of
the long jump with a record Tyrone Hicks. AU were limed I: 31.2 in the half mile.
leap of 23-3, finished second in in :21.1. Phillips also fmished
Other records were set by
the 180-yard low hurdles and fifth in the long jump to ac- Dayton Wayne's Les West,
ran a leg on the Cowpun- count for aU 19 of Whitehall's who won the AAA pole vault
chers' winning half-mile points.
with a jump of 1~1'.; Mark
relay team.
Yellow Springs' entire 34- Tapee of Bexley, who took the
Top performer in AA, point winning total came AA mile run in 4:19.0; and a
however, (voted by news from Mike Smith and John 3:23.1 by Dayton Jefferson -in
media members covering the Gudgel.
winning the AA mile relay.
meet) was Wooster Triway's
Smith captured the 100 in
Jeff Jenkins of Mansfield
D•n Oliver, who set a record :10.0 and was third In th.e 220 Madison tied the AAA meet
in winning the 120-yard high to account for 16 points. record with a :13.8 clocking in
hurdles in : 13.9. Oliver also Gudgel won the 440-yiU"d dash the 120-yard high hurdles.
surpassed the meet mark in
his 180-yard low hurdles
victory, but it was disallowed
because of excessive wind
velocity.
.
.
A distant second behind
The Meigs County Babe
Mifflin in AA was Dayton Ruth took two games from fifth, McKinney getting "the
win.
Jefferson with 35 points, fol- Pt. Pleasant Saturday.
Pt. Pleasant had three runs
lowed by Triway with 20 and
The first game-was 3 to 2 in and· six hits. For Meigs
Akron Hoban with 18.
favor of Meigs . with Jeff
Pete Westhaven of Uberty McKinney pitching all the County, Cundiff struck out
two, walked one. McKinney
Center, who also won both
way, giving up only three struck out one. Hitters for
hurdle events, taking the lows
hits, striking out II, and Meigs were Mankins, a
walking 4.
single; Pete Sayre, two
The hi t~rs from Meigs singles; S~ve Goebel, two
were Kenny Mankin, Charley singles, and Barry Marshall
Marshall,
Pe~ Sayre, Steven and Tim Kuhn , ·each a single.
Boston, 6-0.
One-Mile Run
Goebel, McKinney, Barry
SUNDAY GAMES
1, Pete Murtaugh, Ashland Marshall and Stan Moon,
The local Ruthians made it
Mapleton, 4:21.2. 2, Mike each a single.
four in a row by taking two
Becraft, Georgetown, 4:22. 3,
The second game Meigs games from Ripley Daniel
Webb Vorys, Columbus
_
Academy, 4:22.2. 4, Mark won 4 to 3. Tim Cundiff Boone Sunday.
In the first game Meigs
Shonebarger,
Lancaster starting on the mound, was
Fisher, 4:23.1. 5, Joe Latta, relieved by McKinney in the County won 5 to 2 with Jeff
McComb, 4:29.0. 6, Paul Stoll,
Edgerton, 4:29.0.
186-Yard Low Hurdles
American Leaglle
I, Pete Westhaven , Liberty
Easf
w. I. pet. g.b.
Center, : 19.8. 2, Roland
Boston
21 17 .553
James, Jamestown
Milwaukee
20 19 .513 11 1
Greeneview, :19.9. 31 Bill
Detroit
16 19 ..d86 21,..
Major League Standings
Motter, Lancaster F1sher,
18 22 .450 4
By United· Press International New York
16 23 .410 51 12
Cleve land
National League
:20.3. 4, Steve Dowell,
Baltimore
16 24 .400 6
East
Hicksville, :20.4 . 5, Joe
West
w. 1. pet. g.b.
Kinney, Cincinnati Country Chicago
w. I. pel. g. b.
23 18 .561
Day, :20.8. 6, Rick Cline, New York
25 17 595
19 17 .528 1't Oakland
25 19 .568
1
Pittsbur gh
20 18 .526 Jl ~ Kansas City
Ashland Crestview, :20.9.
M innesota
20 TB .526 3
Philad elphia 21 20 .512 2
~Yard Run
T e)( as
22 20 .524
3
St . Loui s
16 23 .410 6
1, Jeff Gray, 'Ashland Montr eal
22 22 .500 4
14 23 .378 7 California
Chicago
• 19 22 .463 51 '1
West
Crestview, I :58.4. 2, Webb
Monday's Resulls
w. 1. pet. g .b.
Vorys, Columbus Academy,
Chicago 4_Milwaukee 2
Angeles
2a 16 609
1:58.9. 3, Joel Payne, l,.os
Cleveland 9 California 3
Cincinna t i
26 20 .565 2
Cedarville, 2:_00.1. 4, Mike San Francisco 22 20 .524 4 Oakland 6 B~'' 5, 11 inns
Boston 7. Texa s 5
23 21 .523
4
Becraft, Gecrgetown, 2:00.3. San Diego
11
Detroit
6 Minnesota 2
Atlanta
21
24
.467
6
5, Pete Murtaugh, Ashland Houston
18 29 383 101 -1 Kan City 6 New York 5, 11 inns
Mapleton, 2:01.4. 6, Paul
Monday's Results
Walter, Sugarcreek Chicago 6 Allanta 0
New York 6 Los Angeles 3
Garaway1 2:01.5.
Cinc
i 4 Montrea l 3, 1st
~Yaro Relay
Cinc i 5 Montrea l 4, 2nd
1, Frankfort Adena (Mike Pittsburgh \0 Houston 2
Beverly, Mike Smith, Rick San Di ego 9 St . Lou is 6
Netter, Clark Gilmore) 1 Ph il a 1 San Fran o, 11 inns
1:31.2, meet record; ola
record I :31. 2, Ada . 1:31.9. 3, .
Columbus Wehrle, 1,:31:9. 4,
Columbus Academy, 1:32.3.
This Week's Specia I
5, Parma Byzantine, 1:32.4. 6,
Dalton, I: 33.0. ,
'
4411-Yard Dash
1, John Gudgel, Yellow
D
Springs, :49.7. 2, · Ray
DeLeon, Tlnora, :50.1. 3,
Dean Robinson, Cortland
USED CARS
Maplewood, :50.2. 3, Mike
Barney, Lancaster Fisher,
:50.8. 5. Don Snodgrass,
Caldwell, :51.1. 6. Tim
Huffman, Frankfort Adena
:51.4.
2211-Yard Dasb
I,
Ted
Hammonds,
Columbus Wehrle, :23.0. 2,
While with blue vinyl trim,
John Gudgel, Yellow Springs,
307
V-8 molor, std. trans ..
:23.0. 3, Mike Smith, Yellow
P.S.. P.B., radio. Real
Springs, : 23.0. ~ Darrell
sharp!
Thomas, Lorain t;!earview,
:23.2. 5, Roger Lyons,
Chillicothe Zane Trace, : 23.4.
6, Ray DeLeon, Tinora, : 23.5.
Mile Relay
' I, Frankfort Adena (Mike
You ' ll Like Our Quality ·
Beverly, Clark Gilmore,
Way of Doing Business.
Marvin Tyler, Tim HuffGMAC FINANCiNG
man), 3:26.0. 2, Montpelier,
992-5342
· Pomeroy
3:28.2. 3, Cedarveille1 3:29.3.
Open Evenings '1116:00
4, Cortland Maplewood,
Til5p.m. Sat.
3:29.7.
5,
Columbus
Academy, 3:30.0. 6. Ashland
·-·.

McKinney on the mound. It Marshall two singles, Pete
was his third win in four Sayre a double and Tim
games in two days. Kuhn, a single.
McKinney gave up only four
In the second game, Kenny
hits, fanned _9, and walked Mankin had a single, Charley
Marshall a triple, Pe~ Sayre
two.
In the .second game, Pe~ two singles, S~ve Goebel,
Sayre pitched a no-hitter, Barry Marshall,
Jeff
fanni.ng 12 and walking McKinney and Tim Cundiff
nobody, Only one man each a single.
reached base, and he got
The day made Meigs 4 and
there on an error.
0 in league play already. The
Hit~rs for Meigs in the next games will be a night
fivst game were Charley __ doubleheader with Post 140.

.,

'r

TRIO

,·
..
:

Organ, Drums, Guitar

NITELY

·i

!

TUES .. WED., .THUf!S., 1:30.

'
.:
:

· FRI.&amp;SAT .•.9:30-2:00

•

73 CHEV.

MALIBU
HT OOUPE

.'2595
Karr &amp; Van Zandt

victory.
"I figured I could strike
him out," said Messersmith,
who had an 11-game winning
streak over two seasons
ended. "Garrett usually
doesn 'I hit me very well."
"I just wanted to hit the
ball. hard and get It Into the
season.
outfield;" Garrett said. "As
With the score lied 3-3in the soon as I hit it I said 'The
· ninth inning, Los Angeles game 1$ over.' I felt it would
Manager Walter Alston gave be at least a sacrifice fly."
his undefeated ace a free
In other NI. games,
'
...
rem.
Chicago blanked Atlanta, 6-0,
He let Messersmith decide Cincinnati edged Montreal
whether he wanted to pitch to , twice, 4-3 and 5-4, Pittsburgh
pinch-hitter Wayne Garrett, a whipped Houston, 10-2, San
.263 hitter who had never Diego outslugged St. Louis, 9done well against him, or 6, and Philadephla nipped
walk him to fill the bases and San Francisco, 1-0, in 11 intry his hick with D.el Unser, a nings
.336 hitter who already had
·homered off him in the third
Inning.
· The choice seemed obvious,
even considering the advantage of a force at any
base. II dido 't take a
manager with more than a
score of seasons under his
belt to make the right
decision.
But the obvious begat the
second-guess as Garrett
homered on his fu-st swing
and gave lhe Mets. 11- &amp;-;~

William D. Childs

.

I

125 E. Main , ·

.

992-2171

~

ee so

WHEEL &amp; DEAL
ON

CUSTOM WHEELS
CARS an~ TRUCKS
OUR SPECIALTY

oo'lsr·I'T

Tt1EM

cosTL'f?

SoMEONE
WHO WILL
&lt;?OESTtON

DON'T
QUf&lt;STIOti

THE

!?EGO LATIONS

CLEA"

AIR.-

JV{."T

QUE TION

THE

P~ICE

polic( :. ,

. · P. J. PAULEY
307 Spring Ave., Pomeroy

PH. 992-2318

&amp;&lt;fsZJn.~O

. - I-

,:::..,~

Quite the contrary. It's a necessity ... your duty and our duty.
This nation is beginning to find
out that pollution control is expensive and one of the reasons
for inflation. And that it increases
the cost of electricity. Not jusC
pennies but hard-earned dollars
... year after year af.ter year.
That's the very reason we believe regulations must be questioned. Those who will be paying
those higher electric bills should
have a voice in how far they want
togo.
Of course when you do express
concern over what you know are
unrealistic air pollution laws that
make electricity cost more than
is necessary, you're bound to be
criticlzed.lt has happened to us . .
Some claim we don't care about ·
people. That couldn't be further

Jewelry Store

.Pomeroy, 0.

.....

We'd like you to join us in an
effort to have a simple amend"
ment to the Clean Air Act passed
to change the wording so that
each state, in the interest of the
people, could allow the continued use oftall stacks and
sensitive computerized ground
monitors. A proven system that
will meet the air quality standards where we Iive and breathe.

from the truth. If we didn't care,
we'd remain silent. We'd like to
think this country is still free
enough to speak out. _
When you hear that we wantthe
Clean Air Act amended that
doesn't mean we want to kill the
Act. It only means we want the
flexibility to meet the standards
of the Act in an Elqually safe way
that will cost you, our customers,
the least amount of money.
The way its wording has been
interpreted by E.P.A. we don't
have that flexibility, And that
means electricity will cost you
more.
.

~

Such a change will not only protect the public health, it will save
you money on the cost of tomorrow's electricity, help employ. ment and general economic
conditions.
Write your elected representatives in Washington. Let them
know how important amending
th~ Clean Air Act is to you.
·

Other costs of generating electricitY and your electric bills are
high enough right now without
hiking them higher by regula- .
tions that are too strict . . .
unnecessarily.

Do it now.
'

'

Ohio Power
Company
.

'•

.

This message not pvblished at. customers· expense. Paiq for by company stockholders.
'

Cowt St., Pbmeroy
' •;

.. .; ..

TO

WE WILL

W£ NI!EO

I'M
WITH

Services Each

Tues., Thurs., Fri . &amp; Sun
Al7:30 P.M.
Conducted by R. Stipp &amp;
L. Shilbred . A welcome
extended to all.

Tl'1ia hie insurance for your

Textured
goldtone
case and band.
Champagne dial.

_

savings with City loan. So You know we h011e to
be solid people to do business with. City loan
&amp; Savings. ~at makes us a different kind of
company mak~s us a better kind qf loan company.

HAVE

'5AV

IT

Services will be held at the
Home-Makers Club House,
Graham Cemetery.

child 1umps in value- but
premiu(l:l~ dori'l!. Aak 1
Nationwide agent abou~ the
Jti. . enite Eatete Builder

)

· When you can'! trust thihgs to go right. trust us lor ,.-..:.'-~1.0\N::::-:-:-::1

~!~~~o n~e~a~~~e ~=~~~~~t ~~~n you

8UT Vl.ll.V ,vEQy
f.lC P£11181 v £

SoME

Beginning Tuesday, May
a series of Non denominational
Gospel

27,

jump
on lite.

Trim
European
styling.
Bracelet with satin finish
alligator pattern. ·_ 17 jewels.
$85.00
..

'

.

COHTR..OL. IS
Hi.Ca98AR..y

DoES

. COLUMBUS (UPI) ·-The
pairings for the state high
school baseball tournament
here next week:
·
Class A at 9:30 a.m. Friday
Russia vs. Old Fort

Lucasville Valley vs. West
SalemNorthwestern
Claoa AAA at 1 p.m. Friday
Columbll8 West vs. Daytbn
Charnlnade
Parma
Senior
vs.
YoWlgstown Chaney
Class AAA at 4 p.m. Friday
Columbll8 St. Charles 'vs.
Hamilton Badin Medina
Buckeye vs. Bryan

a

Bulova

..

6andl P.M. --

.,

PoLLUTION

With the score tied 3-3 at
the top of the sixth, Hamiltllll
pounded eight of its 13 hits-in
the sixth to clinch the win.
Hamilton Badin took the
eariy lead, scoring four runs
in the first two innings of play
off Ironto ~ . starter Bob
Vaughn. The Tigers scored
one run in the third inning,
and tied the game in the sixth
on Jeff Brickey 's three-run
homer.
,
Bob Williams absorbed the
loss, his first in nine games
this season . Tom Tracy of
Hamilton Badin collec ~d the
win, moving his mark to 9-3 .
The loss ends the Iron ton
season at 20-8.

Give your kids

'

Here ·s an exc iting Interview
I recently overheard at a
space rescue site. " Captain ,
how does it feel to be the first
astronaut tO go to Mars? "
" Astronaut?
I 'm
no
astronaut . I'm realty an
InsuranCe man . I j ust do th is
as a hobb.y ." When you see
me, don't th ink of insurance ,
bvt When you th ink of in .
l)Urance , see me . I'm. an
insurance specialist , ready
to serve you .
- ·~

Ironton nine elimi-nated, 14-4

•

: By TODD NEMANIC
UPI Sports Writer
The New York Mets played
the game of "heads I win,
tails you lose" with Andy
Messersmith Memorial Day
afternoon and handed the big
Los Angeles Dodger righthander his first loss of the

-Fn::'30

v

'.

The Indians rapped out 13
hits and Charlie Spikes, the
first player ever · fined by
Robinson, responded by
slamming his first homer, a
key solo shot in the fifth when
the Indians led only, 4-3.
Fritz Peterson, who en-.
tered the game with a 6.91
ERA, .scattered seven hits
and went the distance to earn
his fourth victory In eight
decisions. He was the only
player not to sign the petition
because he had flown to
California a day early.
However, he said he supported the stand.
Red Sox 7, Texu 5:
Bernie Carbo hit a threerun homer and Dwight Evans
added a two-run blast to
power ·Boston over Texas.
Evans homered in the eighth
to break a ~ lie after Carbo
had given the Red Sox the
lead for the first time with a
three-run blast in the

ney's All American Racers Rutheriord, in a new Britishcrew from Santa Ana, Calif. built McLaren, was runnerup
"We have won a lot of races this time.
since our association started
For the sixth year in a row,
4,. years ago, we won a lot of the payoff for the 33 starters
money and Dan spent even surpassed $1 million. The
more. He gives me the finest total purse was aruiounced as
equipment and linking up $1,001,321 compared with last
with him was probably the year's $1,015,686--the largest
best thing that ever happened purse ever for an auto race.
to me In racing," Unser said.
Unser's take likewise was
"I wouldn't be surprised if not a record, mostly because
Dan comes up with a ·fine new · he led for only II of the 174
car for next year."
laps before the race was
Gurney confided he has a halted in a downpour ,
Formula 5,000 car on the . Younger brother AI received
drawing board which he more than $271,000 for winhoped will be ready to run ning the 1970 racing classic,
later this season. He In- leading. 190 of the 200 laps.
dicated the machine, if
Rutherford received $97,866
successful, would be .adapted and thlrd-place A.J. Foyt
for next year's Speedway took home $74,676.
race.
Gurney, twice runnerup
The car Unser drove to here before retiring from
victory in Sunday's rain- racing five years ago, said
shortened million dollar race once his crew coped with
was the S8ljie In which be some minor problems during
finished second to ~ohnny the race, they felt confident ·
Rutherford a year ago. Unser could win.

!

p

WHEN YOU SEE ME,
DON'' T THINK OF
INSURANCE •.. B!JT
WHEN YOU THINK OF
INSURANCE, SEE MEl

. Mick Childs

yOur nails." ,

e first choice
raduation Gift
r him and he

Crestvi~'!- ~:30.1.

'

By KURT FREUDENTHAL
INDIANAPOLIS, Ind .
(UPI) - Winning his second
Indiana polis 500 may make
dapper Bobby Unser one of
the wealthiest race drivers.on
record but he isn't about to
rest on his laurels.
Not only does he plan to run
the remainder of the United
States Auto Club's championship circuit this year in an
effort to defend his national
title, but he's already planning for 1976.
And so is Dan Gurney, his
boss who Is both owner and
builder of the famous Eagle
race cars that have won the
''500" here three limes, iwice
with Unser at the wheel and
once with Gordon Johncock.
"Dan has been a good
boss," Unser praised the
former race driver at
Monday night's victory
dinner at which he gjcked up
a check for $214,000. He will
split the money with Gur-

:

POME.ROY

carllialne · . ·
Trust as for mour to fl1·lt.

looks easy but you're so far
away from the game there.
There's nothing to do but bite

•

:; Garrett fo.ols Messersmith

-INN.

JOU can't trust.·

.

,.

Enjoy the Disti!lctivl!
Style ofthe ... .

Frank Sisty

Monday afternoon's game
and told them he appreciated ·
their action, but a better way
to show the.ir appreciation
would be to "go out there and
win the ball game."
''It was more or less a show
of solidarity," said Frank
Duffy, who had three hits in
an inspired 9-3 clubbing of the
Angels. "We signed the
petition because we thought it
was unfair to have Frank
. suspended. We didn't think
what he , did warranted that
stiff suspension."
Robinson was astounded by
the attempted boycott-and
proud.
"I was surprised," said
baseball's first black
manager. "It made me feel
good that they felt that
strongly. But I felt I couldn't
let them do it. It's not worth it
to sit out three games.
He watched nervously from
the broadcasters booth as
Coacli Dave Garcia managed
the club to victory.
"It was frustrating up
there," Robinson said. "It

Unser is still hungry

~

1

Adolph's Dai~ Valley

I

Columbus Mifflin 54;
Dayton Jefferson, 35;
Wooster Triway, 20; Akron
Hoban 20; Middletown
Madison, and Uniontown
Lake, 16 each; Brooklyn 14;
Canton Lehman 12.
Class A
Yellow
Springs
34;
Columbus Wehrle, 24; Frankfort Adena, Georgetown and
Lancaster Fisher, 22 eacJF·
Columbus Academy and
Liberty Center, 20 each;
Cedarville and Lorain
Clearview, 18 each; Ashland
Crestview, 15; Jamestown
Gr~envlew, Lagrange
Keystone and Licking
He1ghts, 14 each.

COLUMBUS (UPI) - Top
team scaring in Saturday's
68th annual boys State High
School Track and 'Field
Championships:
Class AAA
Cleveland Glenville 29;
· Trotwood Madison and
Mansfield Madison, 24 each;
Dayton Roosevelt 21;
Cleveland John Adams and
Cincinnati Princeton, 20
each;
Whitehall
19;
Cleveland St. Ignatius, 16;
Warren
Harding,
14;
Colwnbll8 Unden McKinley
and Columbus West, 13 eachi
Lorain Admiral King ana
Middletown, 12 each. ..
Class AA

Standings

.STRAWBERRY
SHORTCAKE ·

o.

Team scoring

By KEN ROSENBERG
UPI Sports Writer
On a day that most people
rallied 'round the flag, the
Cleveland Indians rallied
'round Manager Frank
Robinson.
And, if there's strength in
unity, the Indians may have
just begun to flex their
muscles.
Unhappy over a stiff threeday suspension and $250 fine
levied against Robinson by
· ' . American League President
..: Lee MacPhail for a shoving
Incident with Umpire Jerry
• NeudeckerMayl1,Cieveland
players Monday threatened
to boycott their three-game
. • series with the California
·.. Angels.
, , All the Indians either
. · signed or supported a petition
·' initiated by pitchers Dave
LaRoche and Tom Buskey,
" calling the suspension
"'• "unjust and unfair"
'
and
.·. offering ·to sit out Robinson's
: suspension ' 'to show our
disapproval."
However, Robinson met
with his troops before

Meigs· Ruthians 4•0 on weekend

I

Now Featuring

Indians won one

seventh.
figers 6, -rwiDa Z:
Dan Meyer hit a two-run
homer and Aurelio Rodriguez
SPRINGFIELD
Saturday afternoon, to defeat
drove In three runs with a
Hamilton
Badin
exploded
for
·
Iron ton 14-4, in the Ohio Class
homer and double to back
10
runs
in
the
sixth
inning
AA Region 8 baseball finals .
rookie ·vern Ruhle's sjx-hit
••
pitching as Detroit snapped
Minnesota's four-game
winning streak. It was
Ma. or League Results
Ruhle's fourth victory In five
Ph ila
000000000 01-· I 5 0
Bv United Press lnernational
Hal ic ki i 1 1J and Rader :
decisions.
National League
T wi tchell , M cG r aw (8) and
( 1st Gam e)
Royals 6, Yankees 5:
Boon e, Oates (8) . WP - M cGra w
Montreal
001 002 000- 3 8 2
Frank White's squeeze- Cin c inati
200 001 lOx- 4 9 0 IJ 21 .
F ryman (4 2 1 and Cart er ; more more more
bunt single scored Jim
Bi llingham , Norman i 6), Car
upi OS-27 02 : 17 a ed
Wohlford from third with one roll (7 1, M cEnaney ( 8) and
out in the 11th inning to lift Pl ummer . WP - - Carrol l (54)
HR - Jorgen sen ( 4t h I .
Kansas City over New York.
0043
The Yankees led, 5-3, en- {2nd Game)
zzczc u
v zyrlyd su
l
100 030 000- 4 12 o
result
s
S-27
tering the ninth but . the Montrea
Cincinat i
ooo 050 oo x-- 5 52
Renko ,
DeMota
(61
and 1st add results
Royals rallied for two runs to
American LeagUe
Foole ; Gullet!, Borbon (6) ,
011 00 0 002- 4 10 0
tie. Marty Pattin picked up . Eastwick (9 ) and Bench . WP- Ch ic ago
Mi l w
000 010 l OG-- 2 8 0
Gullett
(5
-31.
LP
Renko
(Q.J
l.
the victory with three innings
Ka at .
Gossage
(9 )
and
HR-- Bench ilOth l.
Downi n g ; Colborn (O .J J and
of one-bit relief.
Atlanta
000 000 000- 0 4 0 Moore. WP -- Kaa t (8 1) . HR sA's 8, Orioles 5:
a ( Jrd ), Dent ( l stJ. Dow ning
Chicago
ooo
os t oox ~ 6 6 1 Ort
(Jrd J.
Gene Tenace, wbo earlier
drove in four runs with 8
Harr i son , Thompson tt l,
vel and
220 01 1 003- 9 13 1
led Beard (61 and CorrelL Burr is Cle
single and homer, sing
16 11 and MHterwald . LP- Ca lifornia 000-300 000- 3 7 I
Pe ter son ( 4-4) and Ashby :
across the winning run with Harrison ( 3 3 ) . HR -- Trillo Tanana
. Dob son , Ki r k wood ( 6 ),
1
two out in the bottom of the llrd
Scott ( 7J and Egan . L Plith tO gjve Oakland its Win Los Angeles 100 000 200- 3 &lt; 1 T anan a (2-J J. HR ·~ S p i ke's (lstl .
,
New York
012 000 003~ 6 6 2
FINAL SVAC
over Baltimore. Tenace s
Messersmith {7 . 1) and Yea .
STANDINGS
winning hit followed singles . ger : Seaver 16-&lt;l and Grote.
HR s-· Un ser Drdl. Kran epoot
by Joe Rudi and - ..AngeI !!sll. Garret! 12ndl .
W L R OR
Mangual and dealt the
10 I 85 38
North Gallla
·
1 ht Houston
001 000 010- 2 5 1 Kyg_
6 3 55 41
e
i'
Creek
Orioles their fifth stra g
Plt!sbgh
on 031 40x- 10 13 o Symmes VaL
7 4 11 70
1
Richard , Granger {5), Sch er
3 5 A6 50
OSS.
man {7) , Crawford (7) , and Southern
3 6 52 59
White Sos4, Brewers 2:
May ; Kison (4-ll and M ay . L P Hannan· Trace
3 6 38 62
Bucky Dent and Brian - Richard l33l. HR- Starg ell S. Western
3 ' 8 37 47
Eas
tern
Downing hit consecutive ISihl .
homers with two out In the san Diego 100 100 203- 9 13 2
St _ Louis
002 04 0 000- 6 14 1
ninth inning to lead Jim Ka aI
Mclnlosh, Hardy 151, Toml in
YARD SALE SET
to his eighth victory and 161 , Greif ln. Frisell a 191 an d RUTLAND - The Rutland
Hund ley, Kendal! 171 : Gibson,
Chicago Over Milwaukee. Hrabosky
(7) , Garman
(9 1, softball ~am will hOld a yard
Kaat has DOW won 15 of his Sadec ki 191 and Simmons WP sale Wednesday and Thursf 11 -11 . LP- HrabOsky I 1last 16 deci-sions. Both -21.Grei
HR -- Smith ( 6th ) .
day, May 28-29 at the Gene
bomers 'came off loser Jim
Wisf!' residence, Salem St.
( 11 innings)
Colborn.
San F ran 000 000 000 00 - 0 4 2

'

�.

'

.,.

~

·~

.

.'

.

•

I

I

10 - The O.Uy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday , May 27, 1975

-

.

NOTICE TO
CONTR'ACTORS
STATE OF OHiO
DIPAIITMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION

For Fast Results Use .Sentinel Classified~
2SJGN7;0meroy \, Business Services

Notice

PlJE\ L IC
SALE .
Th c
househo ld QOOCIS c1nd effects
of the Es ta te Of Wi l liam
Ernest ~€' /lards . Dtxc.H ed ,
Contract hies Legoit Copy
·
w
i ll be solc1 r~t pub lic iiUC iiOn ·
• . · No . 75·219
at h is r cs id eilct' on Depot cAR P·6 NT-SR work
cei l ing ,
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
~ t reel .
Ru l llln d , O hio ,
po)neling , flooring , and
sealed proposals will be
comnwn cing at l :00 P M . on
~lectr i c wel d ing . etc . Phon e
recfiVei:l at the office of the
t rid ay , June 6. 1975 . Sn l c
9n 2759,
Director of the: Ohio· Depart it em s include . Ro c k e r .
ment of Transportation ,
5 ?0 61C
racl i o. sw i vel ro cker . Zenit h
Columbus. Ohio. unt il 10: 00
Television
.
f
oot
s
to
ol
,
A .M .• Ohio. Standard Time .
overstuffed cha ir , hideabed
Tuesday. June 10. 1975 , for
· so fa , couch , ta ble stool.
lmprGyements in :
P lumbing ,
lamp , dehumi d ifier , stand . REMODELI NG,
Melg1 and Vinton Counties,
heating and all t ypes of
end
table
,
J
piece
bedroom
Ohio , on various sections of
general
repa i r .
wa·rk
suite , night st and , dresser.
Sa Iss &amp; Service
19?0 CHEVROLET BELAIR
$1295
MEG · VIN · State Route 689,
guaranteed . 20 w::ears e ~~: .
c
hai
r
,
~ pie c e bedroom
by re-surfac ing With asphalt
4-door
,
V
-8
engine,
standard
tran
smission
,
r
adio,
one
992·3092
perience . Phone 992 2409.
sui t e.
s t and ,
k.i lchen
owner _
concrete.
5-1-ffc
ca
binet
,
gas
rang
e,
Phit
co
"At Caution Light"
Pavement Width - 18 fe et.
Chesttr, Ohio
Refr igera t or . table an d J
Rt . 7, Tupp e_rs Plains, 0 .
Prolect and Work Len gth 1974
CHEVELLE
MALIBU
CLASSIC
S389S
C
h
airs
.
Adm
i
r
al
39,019.2 feet or 7.39 m iles .
HT Cpe ,, 350 v.a, automatic tra11s .. power st eer ing &amp;
Refrigera tor , meta l ,ca binet.
Ptl. 915-4102
·Chain
"BAR GAIN S are
our
" The date set for c ompiE"t ion
pots, pan s nnd d iShes . 1
bra~ es, factor y air, tint~d glass, wheel covers , AM-FM
middle name " in d ean ,
of th is work shalt be as set
Precisi
chairs . stora ge shelf. rot a TOTAL elec tr ic 3 bedroom
"dd1o, less than 13,000 miles, red vinyl top, white finish .
u sed
furn i tu r e,
forth In the bidding proposa l. "
home , bui lt in kitc hen , f ull
ti ll er . bed sprinQS , schoo l
Home BulldiiiO.
a beautiful luxury mid-si ze car .
GUARANTEED
ap ·
Each b i dder ·shall ·be
Ground
basement and large lot .
des'-. . 2 k.e r osen(' heaters .
pl ia n ceS &amp; new f ur niture.
reQuired to til e w i th his bi d a
Ph one 992 3380.
Also Repairs On All
whee l , Qut l ers and spou t ing ,
certified check or cashier's
1972 DODGE DART 4 DOOR
$2345
Open 9-S Wed . lhrough SUn.
Rid i ng Tractors
5-22 -Mc
and mi sce ll a n eous hanQ
1ndGa'r ...,
check for an amount eQUal to
Local owner &amp; low mileage, good white-wall tires,
498 Locu st St .
Ph .: 667 ·3858.
tools , an d a I 96J Ramb ler
five per cent Of his bid, but in
5-15-1 mo
Middleport, Ohio
5-9-1
5-5-1 mo.
s_m _all V-8 e~gln e, po~er _steer:ing, _fa ctory air, go ld
Terrps of Sa l e : Cash . In th e
no event more than f i ft y
ftntsh,
blk
.
vmyl top, v tn y l mlen or tnm , radio. A clean
even
t
Qf
rain
th
e
sa
te
may
be
thousand dollars , or a bond for
car .
pos t pon ed . Edgar ~,e iJ ards .
ten per cent of tlis bid, payable
H ALL 'S SALVAG E , OLD RT .
1\dministra
l
or
of
!he
Es
tate
to the Director .
33 . POMERO Y, OH IO .
of Wi lliam Ernes t Se llards ,
Bidders must apply . on the
Sc rap bodi es with fra me and
Qeceas e d
Carnahan
proper form s, tor qual ific at ion
rear ends up to S16 . Sc r ap
1\uc t i on
Service ,
,\ uc
at ltast ten days prior to .the
No . ~ long , Sl . 10 hundred .
lioneers
date set for open ing b id s in
Sc rap No . llong , S1 .25 hUnd ·
OPEN EVES. 8:00P.M.
5
17
l!
c
accordance witfl Chapter 5526
re d. Motors unc l ean ed and
Ohio Revised Coae .
POMEROY, OHIO
On aluminum replacement
t ransmissions. Sl. 20 h und
and
Plans and spec i ficat ion s are
windows, siding, storm
r ed .
on file in the Department of THE GAZEBO Ar t and Craft
doors and windows, railing,
5-10 -tfc 197 5 FO RD Ranger L T , :1., to n
Automobile
Transportation and the ofrice
Supplies , 317 Ma in Street .
phone
Charles
lisle ,
..
.
-----* ~ ---- pickup 360 V8 4 speed . Pho ne
nex t door to the post offi ce in
of
the
Distr i ct
Deput y
Syracuse ,
Ohio.
Carl
Transmission
WAN
T
ED
:
O'ld
upright
H8 6233, Reed sv ill e.
Po int Pleasant , W . Va .
D i rector .
Jacob, Sales Represen c
p
ianos,
any
condit
ion
.
Repair
5 -25 31c
15550 . Bea d s. doll par ts ,
The Director reserves th e
tative .
Paying Sl O eac h Fi rs t floo r
f l ower suppli es , cra ft fur , 15
right toreie ct any and all bids .
on
l
y
.
Write
a
nd
give
John St .• Next To
i970 DU ST ER , copper wi t h
NEED A n ew hom e bu ill on
d i ff eren t bottle dol l s o n
dire c tion s to Witten Pi ano
black vi ny l interior , n ew
your l ot? Contac t MilO B.
display . m ac ram e . string
RICHARD 0 . J ACK SON
Grade School
Phone 992 -5682 or
Co .• Sox 188, Sa rd is, Oh io
Hu tc hi so n , Rutland , Ohio .
tire s, good cond i ti on, S950 .
art , decotiques. decor ative
DIRE CTOR
439 46 .
992·7121
Phon e 74 ?-3615 .
992-2549 Syracuse, 0 .
A lso 1959 Fo rd :.:, ton f la t
Rev . 8 -17 -73
paint ing su pplies . i ewelry
S-22 61p
bed . r ed w i th r ed interior , 8
findings . bump ch enill e ,
5-B-tfc
-------·----------5- 14-1 mo .
ply ti r es, $3 00 . Phone 9 ~ 9
lSI 27 , !6) 3. 21c
- - - ------- -- - - ~
san d sculpture . oi l pain
5-8-1 mo .
3690
lin gs , brushes . easels . 0 L D t urn iture, ice boxes
SERVICE
st
a
t
ion
and
garag
e
displays by loca l craftsmen
5-25 -3tc
brass beds , or com p le t~
in Rut land W ill f inan ce or
Friday , May 30, Harley
household s. Wr ite M . o
tease . Phone 742 -5052 .
1
197
0
INT
ER
N
A
T
ION
A
L
?
ton
Burns . woodca r ver . w i ll
Miller , R t . 4 , Pomeroy ·
5 14-26t c
demons tr ate his art at t he
truck . very good condit i on ,
'
Oh io . Cali 992 -7760.
NOTICE OF ELECTION
Blown
Ga
ze
bo
.
Come
visi
t
with
us
.
ext
ra
mo
unted
ti
r
es
.
Stan
d
ON TAX LEVY IN
10-7-74
a
r
d
t
ra
nsmission
.
Ph
o
n
e
S-25
-3tc
5
RM
.
H
O
U
SE
,
ba
t
h
,
2
Services
Insulation
EXCESS OF THE TEN
949 3500 .
.. -·- ·- - bedroom s, gas hea t, 550
MILL LIMITATiON
Blown
into
Walls
&amp; Attics
5-25 -l Otc
Sou t h Th i rd - Ave, Micl ·
NOTICE IS hereby given
_
STORM
BEAUTIFUL selection of
Pleasant
Ridge
-c, d l eport . Cal l 99 2-5078 .
that in pursuance of a
flowers, pots , baske ts and TR A ILER space for r en t in 1972 vw . Call 669 - ~242 .
WINDOWS &amp; ODORS
Resolution of t he Board of
S-23 l ip
sprays for Memorial Day .
Ohio
Pomeroy,
REPLACEMENT
-··
County Commissioners of the
Middleport . Ca l l 992 2625 .
5-2D-61p
Cli ff's Place , N . Sec ond St ..
WINDOWS
-·------·HOU SE for sa te l ocated on
PHONE 992-2823
County of Meigs , Pomeroy ,
-tf
c
4-27
Middleport .
197 3 FOR D F · 100 pick up , 6 c y l
Vine Str ee t in Racine . Tw o
ALUMINUM
Oh io, passed on the 25th day of
Condor
St.
Pomeroy . 0 .
5-4-tfc
stor y frame, thr ee bedroom.
autom at i c. 27 ,000 actual
Fe.,ruary , 1975, there Will be
SIDING.SOFFITT
O NE Duplex apt . in M id
- · - · - · - -- - ---.-- - -- -·-m
iles
,
l
ike
new
.
Phon
e
992
.
rece
ntl
y
r
em
od
eled
kit
chen
,
subm ltted to a vote of the
GUTTERS·AWNINGS
cl leport , I ho use in Pomeroy .
Reasonable Rates
3"11 96 after 6 p .m .
.
OPEN9a .m . to,p. m .
ga rage, f ir epla ce, 75 ac:re .
people of said County at a QUARTER horse at stud,
Cal l (304 ) 88 2-2050, coll ect.
Monday thru Saturday
Call 949 5114 any tim e fo r
Special ELECTION lobe held
5-21
-tfc
young son of " THE OLE
___, ____ _
5-22 -ff c -· - appoi ntme nt .
-- - j We will pick up .&amp; delivery .
in the County of Meigs , Ohio,
MAN, " AAAT , " a leading
cuse. Ohio .
1967
OLD
S.
an
d
1969
Pontiac
Special tow pnces on all
at the regular places of voting
TWO
bedroo;,ho~;-e;nd
5-13 -Btc
! ire of race and show hor .
992-3993
fo r sale . Don Sayr(', 632
mechanical work .
therein , on Tuesday , the 3rd
ses . Ran within l OOth of a
garage , 325 Spr ing Ave
4-10 -1 mo.
4 10 -1 mo .
Grant St ., Midd l ep·o rl. Ohio 1.7? A CRE S l and . and locus t
5-1-lmo . .
day of June, 1975, the question
second of AAA ti me before
Re feren ces . Phone 992 -7660 .
.157 60 .
pos ts . Also . 1965 Fo rd LTD ~­
of levying . in excess of the ten
he was 2. Official AA with an
5-22 lfc
Phone 742 3656 .
5 13 31p
mlllllmlterion. for the benefi t
89 speed i nde :., halter , - of Meigs County tor the
5-23 -52 tp
conformation , and best F URN . apt . 5 rooms ari d bat h ,
----- ------ -purpose of maintenance and
disposit ion . Fee $100 at fime
n i ce l arge v ard , ba th and 1 . ,
FO R SAL E or t r ade - good 2
operation or sthoots. work of services with li11e foal
390 So u th
Seco nd
St ., " 197·1 CB 360 HONDA mOtor
bedroom house wit h hard
shops and training centers for
guarantee . Ph one 992 -7888 .
less
t
han
a
year
old
.
cycle
Mi d d l e por t. a d u lt s only .
wood fl oor s, n ic e bath with
mtntelly retarded persons .
4-20 -26tc
Phone
949
.5992
after
5
p
.m
.
Phone 992 5262 eveni ngs .
tub, $8.000 .00 . Wil l trade for
Said tax being ; an ad ·
------------~S 25 31p
5 21 lf c
rural property . eit her small
ditlonal t.1X of . 1.6 mills to run
.
farm or in vi ll age
For
tor 10 rears at a rate not ex . CASH pa id for all makes and
TRA ILE R space , :1.1 mil e MEXICAN toma to p l a nt s
fur t her information ca ll 992 .
cee~ing 1.6 mills for each one
Air conditioning, plum models of mobile hb.mes .
organ
ic
ra
ised
,
very
swee
t
Racine. Ohio
north of Meigs H igh Sc hoo l
2186.
dollar of valuation , which
bing , heating, roofing ,
Phone area code 61 4 - ~23 ·
and de l ic iou s. Pho ne 992 .
on
old
Rt
.
33
.
Phone
992
294
1.
We Build tile Best and
amounts to sixteen cents for
1646
9531.
spouting, general sheet
5-23-Jtc
5 -15 - ttc
"\ - ·metill work .
each one hundred dollars of
4 · u .ttc
Repair the Rest.
5-25
-Jtc
.. - - .-. -· -- -- - ·-valuation, tor Ten years .
-- . - - ---- -··-·-· ~ - - -------_:_-.;,...,~
TRAILER
a
pts.
Phone
992
-Free
Estimates
-'jt\'inets InstalledThe Polls for said Election JUNK autos, complete aod
SIMM O N S' h id e a -bed and
5248 or 992 -3436.
will be open at 6 ;30 o 'clock
matching chair . Sylva n ia
Phone
949-5961
delivered to our yard. We
5-25 -12tc
A .M . and remain open until
cohlr ed T . V ., fl oor lam p ,
Calf Before 7:30A .M
pick up auto bodies and bu y;
- ------- ·-------Emergency 949·2211
7: 30 o 'clock P .M . Eastern
larg e br eak fas t se t and elec .
all kinds of scra p metals and
Or Afler6:00 P.M.
FOR
RENT
or
sale
,
12
rm
.
Daylight Savings T ime of said
he at er. A ls o. some antfqu e
iron . Rider 's Sa111 age , St.
or 992-5700
949.lt.n4
brick hom e in M idd l eport .
day .
f urn i ture . Phone 992-3953 .
Rt. 124 , Rt . 4, Pom ero y ,
unfurn i shed . Can be mad e
5·7· I mo.
. By order of the Board of
Ohio. Coli 992 -5468 .
5-21 -6fc
into 2 three
bedroom
5-4·1 mo ,
El"tlons , of Meigs County ,
- - -·· - 10 -17 -llc
apar
t
m
ents
.
Phon
e
99
2
3173.
Oh io .
SE PTIC T A Nf&lt; S clea n ed .
5 25 ltp CAMPER sleeps 6, stove and
refrigerator, g as an d ei ec.
Modern Sanitat ion 992 -3954
Edwin S. Cozart QUICK ,.,RINT by ma il from 5 RM . A PT . furn ished , one
light . Good condit i on Phone
or 992 -1349
camera -read y co p y . One
Chairman
9912941 .
9 18-tfc
ch i ld per m i tt ed ; J rm . ap t
:.
'
page S5 .55 firs t 100. Sl.l5
-.
5-18-7tc
f u rn ish ed , u tili ties pa i d
Dorothy M . Johnston
each additional 100. Send
CA R PE.T Install atiOn. $1.25John Shee ts , 3 m i les south of
'
3
ACRES
CLOSE
IN
I
copy
,
check
to
Le
T
.
Clerk
p e r yard . Ca ll R tchard
Mi dd lepor t on Rt . 7.
MODERN Wal nut style ste r eo
!51 6, 13, 20, 27 , 41c
TER SHO P PLUS , 72 W .
story frame home. 2 or 3
- -=-· .
Wes t, Phone 843 -2667 .
rad
io,
am
fm
,
4
speaker
S-25
6t
c
Un ion . Athens. Oh io. A lso ,
In Syracuse
bedrooms , balh , pari
S-4-26tc
-·------·--·
sound
sys
t
em
,
4
speed
iob printin g .
From the largest Tructc o-'r
Now
open
fo e season . Now
base
m
e
nt
,
own
water
aut
omati
c
changer
.
Balan
ce
PR~ itE - COn~ trUCti on--cO
4,29 -38tp COU N TRY Mobile Hom e
Bulldozer Radiator to the
available- most \l·arleties
$102-.29. Us e our budge t
system,
FA
furna
ce,
with
Roo t i ng , Spout ing , Ge min i
sm all~ s t Heater Core . ·
Par k. Rt . 33! ten miles north
NOtiCE TO BIDOER5
of vegetable plants &amp;
t erms . Call 992 -3965 .
tilt -in r ep lac emen t, win .
barn. $10,900.
of Pomeroy . L arge lo ts with
The
Board of
County
flowers plus potted flowers .
5-20
lf
c
Nathan
Biggs
dews
,
complete
remo.
d
eling
.
FOR
your
"O
il
O
f
Mink"
concrete. patios , si dew a lkS, -- - · - -·-· ----- - ---- --POMEROY ~ High on a
Commissioners . Meigs
OUR SPECIALTY over
Radiator
Specialist
Ph
one
742
-6273
or
(
304)
773
.
··
Cosmetics .
Phone
r u nner s a n d off stre e t USED A llis Chalmers round
County , Ohio , will receive
2,000 hang ing baskets o f
hill very private . 1'12
568 4.
park1ng . Phone 992 7479
BROWN 'S 992 -511 3.
sealed bids at ttleir Office i n
Petunia s. Ivy , Ge raniums ,
bal e r . Al so , two polled " acres . :: nice BR, bath.
s 9-261 p
'
12Jllfc
Vines , and Begonias .
the Court House , Pomeroy, -- --------~- ~~fc
He re ford bulls . breeding
-·~ -- -utility R., N. gas heat , air
Oh io , until 9:30A .M . on June
l'DP QUALITY AT
age . Call after 5 p . m . 985
·eXCAVA-T ING , fjo---zFr,
l , 1975 for the following
cond
.,
por
c
h
es,
garage
.
3 AN D 4 ROOM furniShed and
3538 .
LOWEST PRICES
Back
hoe
,
d
i
tcher
.
wa
ter
equipment to be used by th e NOW selling Fu ller Brush
unfurnished
apa rtm ents .
$13 ,000 .
992 -5776
5-22 -3t p
Ph .·992 -2174
PomeroY
l
i
nes
,
fo
ot
er
s,
drains
,
roads
Meigs County Landfill.
Phone 992 543 4.
Products, phone 992 - 3~ 1 0 .
and brush clean ing . No job ..,__ _ __ _ _ _ _ __ _,
4-17 -1 tno .
A
CHARMING
NEW
Minimum specifications for
l -24 -lfc
4-12 tfc 197 1 KAWA SAK I 500 , good
too
small
,
no
weather
t
oo
HOME
Just
5
miles
out
.
a used tractor with hydraulic ·- - - - - - - - - - - - - -- - -- ----condi t ion . Call 992 -7658 .
bad . Phon e Charles R . E LWOOD BOWERS REPAIR
blade.
..J t:f"l/C TANt&lt;S CLEANE D
Nice ki tchen w. Re f. &amp;
PR IV AT E m ee t ing room fo r
5-22 -3tc
- - Sweepers , toas ters, irons ,
Hatfield , Rt. 1. Rutland .
Trector Base wPight
Reasonable RATE S. Pho ne
any organ iza I ion ; phone 992
Range, 2 BR . balh . full
all
sma
ll
appliances
.
Lawn
Ohio
.
Phone
742
-6092.
. , 3975
4.46
-47 82 Ga ll ipoli s . J ohn
34,000 ! bs .
OUT on riew .Zig -Zag
CLOSE
basement . carpeted rec .
S-2-52t p mow er , next to State H igh .
Engine - Diesel 4 cylinder.
_
Ru ssell , own er .
3 11 -ttc
sewing
mach in es .
For
way
Garage
on
Route
7.
R., carport , W storage, 1
4 cycle ,... 160. h .p ., 825 cu . in.. TWO Chih uahua pupp ies - 10
4-9-tf c
Phon e 985 -3825 .
sew i n g st r e t c h fabri cs,
0 · &amp; D TR EE Trimm inQ, ~I}
turbo -charged, dry type air
weeks old and 2 Ch ihuahua A F»-l . lik.e new , 3 roQm s, w it h
------ -- ----~- -acre. $22,700.
buftortholes. fancy desig ns,
years e~perlence Insured ,
4-16-tt
c
l-a rg e bath , tabletop range ,
cleaner .
•
fema les - 2 yrs . and 3 yrs .
e tc . · Pa i nt
slightly
fre e es timates . Call992-305 7, - --·--- -----~ -- --WI LL tri m or cut tr eeS and
MOBILE HOME 1973
Transmission - power shift
old . Phone 742 -4465 .
large closet .· East Main St .,
blemished .
Choice
of
Cool \I ill e Phone ( 1J 667 . GENERAL - Repclir ! Clean up
shr ub bery ,
c l ear
out
14x70
.
furnished
also
has
With torQue divider .
Pomeroy . See to a ppreciate.
304 1.
S-23
-3tc
carrying
case
or
sewing
ba
sements
,
attics,
etc
.
and
haulin
g,
cutting.
Steering
Clu t che$
dish washer, 3 BR. 1112
Phone Gallipolis durin g day ,
- ·---· -· -·- ------ ---stand. $.49.80 cash or terms
Phon e 949 -322 1 or 7 4 2 · 4~41.
4-30 -tfc
w e lding ,
c arpentry ,
hydraulically acruated . o i l
J46 9699, evenings 446 -9539 .
balhs, 8x20 awning, $8.900 .
available . Phone 992-7755 .
--- ~ - ----- -- -----~plumbing , e l ec . masonry
5-18 -261c
COOled .
TWO At&lt; C Reg . Dachshund ,
4 10-tf c
Can
possibly
finance
58.
100.
a nd ge neral remodel i ng.
12-18
-tfc
S
EWING
MACHINE
,
Brakes - coniractlng band ,
male and female . r ed
-Call Skit -Pool 992 -5 126.
Re pair s, ser v ice , all makes
~OUTE 681 ~ 135 acres at
oil cooled .
Phone 742 -,.256 .
· 2 BEDRM . trailer . close to 1962- I NTER N ATIONAL- 240
992-218 4. The Fa bric Shop ,
s. 13-26t c
Undercarriage sealed
5-25 -Jtc
jus
t
$123
pe
r
ac
re
,
stores , school and sw im ,
tra ct or . gaso line ; 1972 No .
Pomeroy . Aut hor ized Sing er
tracks, hydraulic track ad . - - - - - - - - ------- --- - - m ing poo l . Call after 1 p .m .
12 Massey Ferguson hay
minerals.
close
to
E
XCAVA
TIN
G.
dozer
,
loader
Sa les and Se rvi c e . We
lusters , front idlers and
992 5914 .
bate r ; 19 73 Me Rotary
and back hoe work ; sep t ic ·
recreat ion .
sha rp en Sc issors .
rollers - lifet i me -lubr i cated ,
~c yt he. A l l thi s equip m ent i s
5-20 -6t c
tan ks
in stalled ;
dump
3-29 tic
!rack shoes 20" wide. frock
'r- t'.L.
- m excelle n t condit ion . See
tru cks and lo -bovs for h ire ;
gauge 78' '.
..._
lllr ~
HOW TO S ELL YOUR
A . H . Burbr idg e, Rt . 2,
w ill haul fi l l d irt , top so il ,
DOZER work , land c l ear ing
Blade - straight hydraulic
fRAI LER space , 1 m i le from
4 bedrooms, large
A lbany, Ohio aft er 4 p . m .
PR
O
PERTY?
LIST
IT
l imesto ne and gravel ; Call
by
t
he
acre
.
ho
urly
or
13' w i th hydraulic tilt cylin . 1965 MOBILE
hom e,
2
Pomeroy . Phone 992 -58 58 .
Bob or Roger Jef f ers . day
5-23-Jtc
der .
and modern kitchen,
WITH CLELAND'S .
co ntract . F arm
ponds ,
bedrooms ,
complete l y
S-2-tfc --- -.--- ---··
phone 992 -7089, n ig ht phon e
roads, .etc . L arge dozer and
ROPS Canopy with sweeps .
furnished', pr i cecl to se ll.
992.2259
bath,
Chester water
FERGU SON 30 t ra ctor l i ke
operator with over 20 year s , 992 -3525 or 99 2-5232 .
warran t y - 30 day , no hour
Phone (304) 77J -5826.
FuRNIS-H eD
th
e
day
·
i
r
was
new
.
Phon
e
2·
11
-ffc
lim II . .
district, new furnace,
ex p e r ie n ce . Pullins Ex S-21 -6tc
949 -5953
adult s only in Middtepor t.
cavating , Pomeroy . Ohio. - - - -- ---- ------~Trade'in - ( 1 ) Caterpillar
Phone 992 -3874 .
vinyl siding, storm
5-2J -6tc
Ph one 992 -2478.
·
cable .·Dozer end ( 1l Case
3-25 -tf c
- - - --- - --~ ---R
EA
D
Y
MIX
CO
NCRETE
W2~ Com_
p ac tor
12-19 -tf c
windows and doors, 1
8 ~ 38 MOBILE home , 2
WH I R LP O O L auto mati c
...
deli\ler ed r i ght t o yoU r
The Me igs County Com .
be_droom . John Sheets. 3
wash
er
,
good
cond
i
tion
3
acre
of ground. Good
proje
c
t.
Fest
and
easy
.
F
ree
B E D RO OM trailer , real
mlnioners may accept the
m lles south of Middleport on
S ~PTIC tanks and teach lines es timates . Phon e 992 -3284.
Phon e 99 2 -56 2 1 or 992-3901 :
nic e. Phone 992-3314 .
1owes1 bid or select the best
R l . 7.
garden. financing
· ~s t!"'ll ed . Also, field drain
Goeglein Ready M ix co .,
5·23 ·3tc
bid lor the Intended purpose ,
5-11 tf c
ttles . A-ll work guaranteed
5-25 -6tc
Middl eport , Ohio .
available.
Phone 949end reserve the right to reject
- · ----- ------·L ewis E xca vating , Rt . 1;
6-30 -lf&lt;;
anv or 111 bids.
5953.
3 RM and bath f urn ished apt .
Rutland
,
Ohio
.
Phdne
7~2
SELL your mobile home for
- --·-·-- ---- - ·----3742 .
Ut il i ties. paid , 356 North 4th
cash . 15 hom.es wanted , 1958
Martha Chambers ,
St ., Middleport , Oh io .
" ·24 -26tc
THIS IS IT - Over 4 acres.
thru 1972 models . Phone
Clerk .
5-11 -lfc
!614) 446-1425, Gallipolis.
15 1 20, 27, 21c
Wal
k
to
school
and
room
for
a
-· - ·------ - SHA LL OW Well s dug , spr ings
3-9·1811 12 • 52 MOBILE home in
pony . Like new inside home
~eveloped and ' cis tern s
20"-3112
HP
mstalled ,to approximately
Ches ter , Oh io . Completely
w ith cent r al air and heat . N i ce
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
18ft . L ew1s Excavating Rt
f urn ished Phone 985 -J826 .
The
Board of Co~ntr
fruit room, shower ,and wash
1, Rutland . Phone 742 .37 42:
Commissioners . Meig1s
5 23 -31c
room for the working man.
4- 24 -26tc
Countr. Ohio , will receive YARD sate , Su nday and
~ a(:"O~M~~,;~b/,; ho~-;.-308
Double garage, barn room and ---· - - ------~ ---~
22"-3'12
HP
sealtd bids at their office in
Monday , starting at noon .
Page _s t., m Middleport . S75
the Court House. Pomeroy,
cave for picnicking . Want just
Dav i d Haggy res i den.ce ,
Self- Propelled
d epo s1 t req ui red .
Ohio. until 9: 30A.M. on June
$23,500.00.
Happy Hollow towards
s . lJ .1fc
3, 1975 for .the following
R uttand .
ONE ACRE ~ Nearly lev~l
equipment to be usect by the
S-25 -llp
Mtlgs Counly Londflfl .
with extra nice 2 bedroom 3 BED ROOM houSe , walt ·.o
-· -·
Minimum spefications for a
/POMEROY ~AN01ifiiRK
mobile home . utility building ,
wall carpeting , larg e kit uHd tractor with hydraulic
9. jJ ack w
. . c;arsey, Mgr
chen and bath , utility room ,
concrete floor, patio, rural
bllde. · .
"BE DD(NG plants , pott ed dlt'dl ' Phone 992 -2181 ·
wash
room.
'~
acre ,
wat e r
.in ' the
cou-ntry .
plants, geraniums , azalea s.
Tractor Base weight
a lum inum Si d i ng, storm
lbs.
•p e tunf.as , por c h boxes . "
· - - - - - - - --..,.---' $10,000 .00.
BABY SI TTER , I or 2 days per
windows. storage _ building .
hang ing baskets , Cle land 's
Engine - Diesel ,. cylin~er ,
LOOK AT THIS - Large and
Phone
7~2 - 4601.
Will .
week . Phone 992-3853 after 5
Greenhouse.
Ge
rald
i
ne
CB
's
Ante
nnas,
fi
shing
bait
,
• cycle. 160 h.p ., 825 cu . in .•
p. m .
sac rifi ce for quick sale .
much
c
heaper
·than
a
new
Cleland , Racine, Ohio 4517 1
turbo ·Charoed. dry type air
fish.ing su pplies, guns and
5-25 -ltc
S·22-61p
cleaner .
S 1811c
am mo . tnd 1an Joe's Sports house . Hot water heat, full - · - - ------'~-~-- --- - -·Transmission ..-- power shUt
and CB's. 308 Page St
basement,
4 bedrooms,
CAMPIN G st oves , Propane
wlttl torque divider .
M idd iepor t.
·· family anc.J dining room , , 2 3 BEDROOM home on 4 acreS
fuel , bloodba i t, trout a bouts ,
Steering
Clutches
of Qrouna , full basement
'
5-18-301c baths, 2 porches. A real nice
sain'1on eggs , corn baHS .
hydraulically actuated , oil
fuel oi{ furna c-e , a .c .:
- · -- cooltcl.
.
dough balls , rod s, reels , GU N S A ND AMM O - Our older home . Only _$20,000.00.
· ~reeze wav and large garage
combos . sei nes , minnows ,
Brat" - contracting band .
'" the country but close to
s.u mmer sto ck
is now MODERN ~ 3 bedrooms,
buc k ets ~n d other item s for
off cooled .
.
·
tov-.:n . ·On hardtop road, 2.
a~r lv ing . R i fJes , sho tgun s . large bath, living 18x30, 7
the f isherman . Indian Joe- 's ,
Undercarriage - sealed
tra1ler setups included Cali
PIS t ol s, reloading equi p .
308 Page St ., Middleport·.
tracks, hVdrtuttc track ad 992 -76 49 after 4 p .m . or 992 .
sc opes, ammunitions , .22 enormous closets, 2 concrete
lvattrl , fronr · Idlers an·d
·1519 etny time for ap .
S-1B ·7tc
MAG h .p . S3 per box , $27 .50 porches, dry basement, gas
polntmen t.
·
- l ifetime -lubricated.
~~~;-:....._......-_,.. . - per car ton {5001 . 22 l .r .h .p. F.A. furnace, garage with
track lhotl 20" wide , track
IV7~ JSO 6 JO HN Deere dozer ,
S2 . 10 per loop . Get them
4.30-261c
v•uve 71".
6 rt . !;)lade, ca nape, 1,600
While thny las t Store Hour s shop, and . J;4 acres of land .
523.500.
lf1c:te -:- str•·lght hydrauliC
hours , good
condit i on .
eff ec tiv e May 19 . Monday .
$6,500 Phone 985 3594 ,
13' with h~drlullc tilt cylln '
Th _
u rsday 9 a:m . to 6 p.m ., . NEW LISTING 5 room Two NEW bedroom h·~rries
S, 14 -121p
f r•d ay and Saturday 9 a.m
~~~I car garage , carpeted,
house,
2
bedrooms.
bath ,
ROPS Canopy . wll~ IWttps .
lo 9 p .ni . VILLAGE 'GUN
or bank financing
small basement, all utiiitles.
Wlrr•nty 30 days, no
Phone. _7.42-3615 or see MilO
S HOPPE , 266 Mill Sl
ORD
ER
any
Ce
from
ind
ia
n
hour llmll .
Middleport.
·r
Hutchmson , Rutland .
front porch on good s treet in
Joe 's Sports and c G •s at 10
Trede-ln - fl) Colerpfllor
pet . above · cost and sh ip
Middleport
.
Only
56.000.00.
5-8-lfc ·
S-18 -30ic
D.f Clble Dozor ond Ill Case
ping . 308 Page St., M id .
, 1112• Compoclor
dleport .
HOUS E .in Rutland o0 MaiO.
BUY
IT
TODAY
AS
Tho Mtlll County Com .
St ., Will sell . cheap . Phone
S-18-301c
mltsloneu m•y •ccept the
742-5374.
TOMORROW
SOMEONE
- .. --lowest bid or selocl the btst
I CI&lt;".. HO \J~ E Ori Se con~ St . WILL. CALL 992-3325.
5·22-Jic
bid lOr tho lntandtcl purpost,
!' [D O ING P LANT S. polled BRdow
··nt own
Pomer oy .
p lants , gera n iums , azaleas .
erut rftft'vt the right to rtiect
Suit abl e for living quarters
J. LARGE tot$. rur'at· Water"
My or oil bids .
petunia $, po-rch bo x es ,
u p st airs , bus i n ess down .
ava i lable . Hard road , J
hang ing baske t s. Cleland's
offi ce o r hOm e . W i thi n
mites , from by .pan on
Greenhou se ,
Geraldine
.Mertha Chambe-rs.
wa l king dis tance of all
Lea d ing Creek Road . Phone
Ct.e iand . Racine , Ohio .
Clerk
stores . Call 997 3489.
(OIUm·bus, Ohio
M1y 16, 19H

11 - The_Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomerov. 0 ., Tuesday, May 27, 1975

.Employment Wanted

OF

WILKINSON
SMALL ENGINE

.QUALITY Motor Co.

KUHL'S
BARGAIN CENTER

I

lml 1111*111'5
Cordtluction Co.

tl lll~~. ,.. r ... , •• ''·' ""'
... ' " ' " ....... J

jl)

For Rent or Sale

CAPTAIN EASY
MY 5TAI&lt;5 ! 5 E E ~-5
liKE A 5 1ll Y PlACE
T' 8!' 5 WIN6 1N ' TH 15
TIME OF NloHT!...
WHY'5 HE DO IN' IT
D' Yl'l S UPPOSE!"

Room Addltlom

Wanted To Buy

lPOMEROY _MOTOR CO.

@)

Roger Hysell's
Garage

BIJ'i-TER .. OON'TII
WHO STAll. TED THIS
"FLYIN&lt;S" IJON5 EN'ioE,
ANYHOW~

HE SAID MRS. VA~
PEW Fl6t5ERED I'D

Ot.JL'i !
GIVE HIM A
TAKeOFF
IIJSTID!...OFl.
SUMPIN'
LIKE PAT:

N6ED A ANCHO!t T'
HOL.D ME DOWN
WHE~ I TRIED
TAKIIJ' OFF.,,

I GET KI~PA MI)(ED·UP
SOMETIMISS l

FOR FREE
ESTIMATES

Merle Norman
Cosmetics

lOlA'S
BEAUTY SALON

Real .Estate Fot Sale

V. V. JOHNSON
I AND SON, INC.

--

--------

HE Wl'l? TRYNI'l
e.LAZB:;'&gt;!
WHAT'$ t301N8 SHO W ME HOW T'
ON HE RE,
F ~'i OFFE~ T HEBRID6E ... GUE55
BUS TER ?
HE D.ID~' T F~AP
' HARD E~UF!

0. J. lAUDERMILT
ROOFING

------- - ------

For Rent

FREE ESTIMATES

Grand Opening

WoHe &amp; Ward
Garage

- - ----

FREE ESTIMATES

-

-· --------

----- ------------

Phone 992-7665

HElL

For Sale

Racine Plumbing
&amp; Heating

LARRY LAVENDER

NEIGLER
Building Supp~

......... _..

-"'" ......
- - ~·,

to~our -

tiJij)t 1l41 SLIP?

GLEN R.
Bissell

AWMIN'tJM &amp;
VINYL SIDING

--

FREE ESTIMATES

PH. 949-5184

-

--------------

NERR IS IN ANOn\ER
ME.NSION, AS '&lt;0ll
1'\-1EN HOW DID
'GET H!:R.E ?

-- ----

EXPERIENCED
Radlato
Service

.
Greenhouse

...

YOU WERE EXAJSED 10 A
P8:llliAR COMBINATION
OF NATURAL FORCES,
ALLEY!

Hubbard's

.

... EACH ON E OF

US JUST MP-

OR MEI"&gt;BE
TH' WRONG

PLACE AT
PENE.DTOSE
TH ' RIGHT
1N "THE RIGHT
T1ME! .
PtACE ~ THE 1
WRONG liME .

... R:&gt;R YEARS I

SO HOW'RE YOU
GONNA GET US
BACK T'WflERE

, , , BECAUSl! 'I ,

WORKED oN "TllE

WE CAME Ff&lt;OM,
MR. Pf?ESiDENT?r---.

r - - --1

UK!!' '(()U, .A.LSO

HAROWARE10
ACCOMPLISH

WAN'Tlro 10 GO

HOM!:!

THIS ...

-·-·------------,,

--

-

Pets for Sale

SMJTH NELsor..
MOTORS, INC.

-------

I

IIUIAI c;

it will replace
-the car as
we know it
todaLJ,Eve!

---------------

/

-

-------------

--- ---- -

--------------

M.....a. Homes

-----------------

COUNTRY
HOME

--- -

-GUESS WHAT I
BOUGHT FOR
YOU·!!- THE

BPirt·m;,;f:·

·n ·

------·------------------

-----

-------

-------- -------

YardS.

For Sale

'104.95&lt;1&lt;0)

Real Estate tor Sale

WMPO RADIO

I'M ONLY II
OLD rt-

I WANT TO BE'
THE: GRE:ATeor
ROCK MUSICIAI-J
IN THE:
WORL.D!T

1.-ASf" N!.lN8E:=R-~
IN

.'

..
IF 11-jiS KEEPS LJ P,
WE'LL HAVE TO RfO or!DER. FROM ATH ENA HAH ! IM:JN'T WINNIE WINKL£
. BE CfiU5HED WHEN SHE
13EFORE THE WEEK
· FINDS CENTR-&lt;\L CITY
1(7 UP !
FLOODED WITH MY

'

WHERE YOU CAN HEAR

'·

11-jE WAY~ I\IOIAEN
SW\PPED UP lti05E .
Df!ESS!$ 'lOUt&gt; THINK
THEY NEVER HE'AAD OF
11-jE RECE&amp;eiON !

AND AT TEN
OOI.LAI?S PROFIT

PER iHAT'8 NOT 1'1

6AO DAY'S WOI'lK1
I&amp;IT?

.

At 10:00 A.M. and 3:35 P.M~

------- ---- -

HELP

Weekcfays

-·-------- --

WANTED

rou....

--------------

$3.96 P.er HoUr

d....

TUNE TO WMPO 1390 RADIO
From 6:00 A.M. to 8:30 P.M.

OH sa.JRCEOF
ENDLESS W/SrxJW-

SO 1/'.HY' DID I PRE:GS A
MILLON RECQ&lt;DS CFMY

SWAP SHOP

----------------

..•

------------ - ---- --

Help Wanted

3•.ooo

'

TURF TRIM
MOWER

'72.90&lt;1&lt;0)

---- ---- -----

---·------- ---

,.

'FOLIES
6ERGE'RE: ~ 11

YOLJ GOT RC0&lt;.'5
IN 'JO'JR HEAC3

.

..

- - -----·- -- ·- ---- - --

-

---:;:------ -·-

4460677

---------------

Real Estate For Sale

-------------

Phone Gallipolis

!51 20, 27. 21c

•

..•

..

.• r

T 'IME FER
'lORE BATH,
HONEV POT

J

Full or Part Time

Expanding
needs
company
employees NOW.
Lots of overtime.

·••

.

.-742 3108.

5 IS lfc

•·'

'
'.

5 22 -31c

..
·.J

.·-

S-9-301c
,_.~-

•

'.

I WUZ TALKI(\,) 1
TO TH' HONEY POT
11\J TH' MIDDLE

GIT SET FER

A CRASH LANDIN~
JU6HAID·

I

I

:~

,

---.
I

I

..-','

,
__ .......',..
... ... _..... "'"·

,.. ...... ""': -~

.

.•

.•·'

....•·•
..,...,L
~·

I

•

'

�.

'

.,.

~

·~

.

.'

.

•

I

I

10 - The O.Uy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday , May 27, 1975

-

.

NOTICE TO
CONTR'ACTORS
STATE OF OHiO
DIPAIITMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION

For Fast Results Use .Sentinel Classified~
2SJGN7;0meroy \, Business Services

Notice

PlJE\ L IC
SALE .
Th c
househo ld QOOCIS c1nd effects
of the Es ta te Of Wi l liam
Ernest ~€' /lards . Dtxc.H ed ,
Contract hies Legoit Copy
·
w
i ll be solc1 r~t pub lic iiUC iiOn ·
• . · No . 75·219
at h is r cs id eilct' on Depot cAR P·6 NT-SR work
cei l ing ,
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
~ t reel .
Ru l llln d , O hio ,
po)neling , flooring , and
sealed proposals will be
comnwn cing at l :00 P M . on
~lectr i c wel d ing . etc . Phon e
recfiVei:l at the office of the
t rid ay , June 6. 1975 . Sn l c
9n 2759,
Director of the: Ohio· Depart it em s include . Ro c k e r .
ment of Transportation ,
5 ?0 61C
racl i o. sw i vel ro cker . Zenit h
Columbus. Ohio. unt il 10: 00
Television
.
f
oot
s
to
ol
,
A .M .• Ohio. Standard Time .
overstuffed cha ir , hideabed
Tuesday. June 10. 1975 , for
· so fa , couch , ta ble stool.
lmprGyements in :
P lumbing ,
lamp , dehumi d ifier , stand . REMODELI NG,
Melg1 and Vinton Counties,
heating and all t ypes of
end
table
,
J
piece
bedroom
Ohio , on various sections of
general
repa i r .
wa·rk
suite , night st and , dresser.
Sa Iss &amp; Service
19?0 CHEVROLET BELAIR
$1295
MEG · VIN · State Route 689,
guaranteed . 20 w::ears e ~~: .
c
hai
r
,
~ pie c e bedroom
by re-surfac ing With asphalt
4-door
,
V
-8
engine,
standard
tran
smission
,
r
adio,
one
992·3092
perience . Phone 992 2409.
sui t e.
s t and ,
k.i lchen
owner _
concrete.
5-1-ffc
ca
binet
,
gas
rang
e,
Phit
co
"At Caution Light"
Pavement Width - 18 fe et.
Chesttr, Ohio
Refr igera t or . table an d J
Rt . 7, Tupp e_rs Plains, 0 .
Prolect and Work Len gth 1974
CHEVELLE
MALIBU
CLASSIC
S389S
C
h
airs
.
Adm
i
r
al
39,019.2 feet or 7.39 m iles .
HT Cpe ,, 350 v.a, automatic tra11s .. power st eer ing &amp;
Refrigera tor , meta l ,ca binet.
Ptl. 915-4102
·Chain
"BAR GAIN S are
our
" The date set for c ompiE"t ion
pots, pan s nnd d iShes . 1
bra~ es, factor y air, tint~d glass, wheel covers , AM-FM
middle name " in d ean ,
of th is work shalt be as set
Precisi
chairs . stora ge shelf. rot a TOTAL elec tr ic 3 bedroom
"dd1o, less than 13,000 miles, red vinyl top, white finish .
u sed
furn i tu r e,
forth In the bidding proposa l. "
home , bui lt in kitc hen , f ull
ti ll er . bed sprinQS , schoo l
Home BulldiiiO.
a beautiful luxury mid-si ze car .
GUARANTEED
ap ·
Each b i dder ·shall ·be
Ground
basement and large lot .
des'-. . 2 k.e r osen(' heaters .
pl ia n ceS &amp; new f ur niture.
reQuired to til e w i th his bi d a
Ph one 992 3380.
Also Repairs On All
whee l , Qut l ers and spou t ing ,
certified check or cashier's
1972 DODGE DART 4 DOOR
$2345
Open 9-S Wed . lhrough SUn.
Rid i ng Tractors
5-22 -Mc
and mi sce ll a n eous hanQ
1ndGa'r ...,
check for an amount eQUal to
Local owner &amp; low mileage, good white-wall tires,
498 Locu st St .
Ph .: 667 ·3858.
tools , an d a I 96J Ramb ler
five per cent Of his bid, but in
5-15-1 mo
Middleport, Ohio
5-9-1
5-5-1 mo.
s_m _all V-8 e~gln e, po~er _steer:ing, _fa ctory air, go ld
Terrps of Sa l e : Cash . In th e
no event more than f i ft y
ftntsh,
blk
.
vmyl top, v tn y l mlen or tnm , radio. A clean
even
t
Qf
rain
th
e
sa
te
may
be
thousand dollars , or a bond for
car .
pos t pon ed . Edgar ~,e iJ ards .
ten per cent of tlis bid, payable
H ALL 'S SALVAG E , OLD RT .
1\dministra
l
or
of
!he
Es
tate
to the Director .
33 . POMERO Y, OH IO .
of Wi lliam Ernes t Se llards ,
Bidders must apply . on the
Sc rap bodi es with fra me and
Qeceas e d
Carnahan
proper form s, tor qual ific at ion
rear ends up to S16 . Sc r ap
1\uc t i on
Service ,
,\ uc
at ltast ten days prior to .the
No . ~ long , Sl . 10 hundred .
lioneers
date set for open ing b id s in
Sc rap No . llong , S1 .25 hUnd ·
OPEN EVES. 8:00P.M.
5
17
l!
c
accordance witfl Chapter 5526
re d. Motors unc l ean ed and
Ohio Revised Coae .
POMEROY, OHIO
On aluminum replacement
t ransmissions. Sl. 20 h und
and
Plans and spec i ficat ion s are
windows, siding, storm
r ed .
on file in the Department of THE GAZEBO Ar t and Craft
doors and windows, railing,
5-10 -tfc 197 5 FO RD Ranger L T , :1., to n
Automobile
Transportation and the ofrice
Supplies , 317 Ma in Street .
phone
Charles
lisle ,
..
.
-----* ~ ---- pickup 360 V8 4 speed . Pho ne
nex t door to the post offi ce in
of
the
Distr i ct
Deput y
Syracuse ,
Ohio.
Carl
Transmission
WAN
T
ED
:
O'ld
upright
H8 6233, Reed sv ill e.
Po int Pleasant , W . Va .
D i rector .
Jacob, Sales Represen c
p
ianos,
any
condit
ion
.
Repair
5 -25 31c
15550 . Bea d s. doll par ts ,
The Director reserves th e
tative .
Paying Sl O eac h Fi rs t floo r
f l ower suppli es , cra ft fur , 15
right toreie ct any and all bids .
on
l
y
.
Write
a
nd
give
John St .• Next To
i970 DU ST ER , copper wi t h
NEED A n ew hom e bu ill on
d i ff eren t bottle dol l s o n
dire c tion s to Witten Pi ano
black vi ny l interior , n ew
your l ot? Contac t MilO B.
display . m ac ram e . string
RICHARD 0 . J ACK SON
Grade School
Phone 992 -5682 or
Co .• Sox 188, Sa rd is, Oh io
Hu tc hi so n , Rutland , Ohio .
tire s, good cond i ti on, S950 .
art , decotiques. decor ative
DIRE CTOR
439 46 .
992·7121
Phon e 74 ?-3615 .
992-2549 Syracuse, 0 .
A lso 1959 Fo rd :.:, ton f la t
Rev . 8 -17 -73
paint ing su pplies . i ewelry
S-22 61p
bed . r ed w i th r ed interior , 8
findings . bump ch enill e ,
5-B-tfc
-------·----------5- 14-1 mo .
ply ti r es, $3 00 . Phone 9 ~ 9
lSI 27 , !6) 3. 21c
- - - ------- -- - - ~
san d sculpture . oi l pain
5-8-1 mo .
3690
lin gs , brushes . easels . 0 L D t urn iture, ice boxes
SERVICE
st
a
t
ion
and
garag
e
displays by loca l craftsmen
5-25 -3tc
brass beds , or com p le t~
in Rut land W ill f inan ce or
Friday , May 30, Harley
household s. Wr ite M . o
tease . Phone 742 -5052 .
1
197
0
INT
ER
N
A
T
ION
A
L
?
ton
Burns . woodca r ver . w i ll
Miller , R t . 4 , Pomeroy ·
5 14-26t c
demons tr ate his art at t he
truck . very good condit i on ,
'
Oh io . Cali 992 -7760.
NOTICE OF ELECTION
Blown
Ga
ze
bo
.
Come
visi
t
with
us
.
ext
ra
mo
unted
ti
r
es
.
Stan
d
ON TAX LEVY IN
10-7-74
a
r
d
t
ra
nsmission
.
Ph
o
n
e
S-25
-3tc
5
RM
.
H
O
U
SE
,
ba
t
h
,
2
Services
Insulation
EXCESS OF THE TEN
949 3500 .
.. -·- ·- - bedroom s, gas hea t, 550
MILL LIMITATiON
Blown
into
Walls
&amp; Attics
5-25 -l Otc
Sou t h Th i rd - Ave, Micl ·
NOTICE IS hereby given
_
STORM
BEAUTIFUL selection of
Pleasant
Ridge
-c, d l eport . Cal l 99 2-5078 .
that in pursuance of a
flowers, pots , baske ts and TR A ILER space for r en t in 1972 vw . Call 669 - ~242 .
WINDOWS &amp; ODORS
Resolution of t he Board of
S-23 l ip
sprays for Memorial Day .
Ohio
Pomeroy,
REPLACEMENT
-··
County Commissioners of the
Middleport . Ca l l 992 2625 .
5-2D-61p
Cli ff's Place , N . Sec ond St ..
WINDOWS
-·------·HOU SE for sa te l ocated on
PHONE 992-2823
County of Meigs , Pomeroy ,
-tf
c
4-27
Middleport .
197 3 FOR D F · 100 pick up , 6 c y l
Vine Str ee t in Racine . Tw o
ALUMINUM
Oh io, passed on the 25th day of
Condor
St.
Pomeroy . 0 .
5-4-tfc
stor y frame, thr ee bedroom.
autom at i c. 27 ,000 actual
Fe.,ruary , 1975, there Will be
SIDING.SOFFITT
O NE Duplex apt . in M id
- · - · - · - -- - ---.-- - -- -·-m
iles
,
l
ike
new
.
Phon
e
992
.
rece
ntl
y
r
em
od
eled
kit
chen
,
subm ltted to a vote of the
GUTTERS·AWNINGS
cl leport , I ho use in Pomeroy .
Reasonable Rates
3"11 96 after 6 p .m .
.
OPEN9a .m . to,p. m .
ga rage, f ir epla ce, 75 ac:re .
people of said County at a QUARTER horse at stud,
Cal l (304 ) 88 2-2050, coll ect.
Monday thru Saturday
Call 949 5114 any tim e fo r
Special ELECTION lobe held
5-21
-tfc
young son of " THE OLE
___, ____ _
5-22 -ff c -· - appoi ntme nt .
-- - j We will pick up .&amp; delivery .
in the County of Meigs , Ohio,
MAN, " AAAT , " a leading
cuse. Ohio .
1967
OLD
S.
an
d
1969
Pontiac
Special tow pnces on all
at the regular places of voting
TWO
bedroo;,ho~;-e;nd
5-13 -Btc
! ire of race and show hor .
992-3993
fo r sale . Don Sayr(', 632
mechanical work .
therein , on Tuesday , the 3rd
ses . Ran within l OOth of a
garage , 325 Spr ing Ave
4-10 -1 mo.
4 10 -1 mo .
Grant St ., Midd l ep·o rl. Ohio 1.7? A CRE S l and . and locus t
5-1-lmo . .
day of June, 1975, the question
second of AAA ti me before
Re feren ces . Phone 992 -7660 .
.157 60 .
pos ts . Also . 1965 Fo rd LTD ~­
of levying . in excess of the ten
he was 2. Official AA with an
5-22 lfc
Phone 742 3656 .
5 13 31p
mlllllmlterion. for the benefi t
89 speed i nde :., halter , - of Meigs County tor the
5-23 -52 tp
conformation , and best F URN . apt . 5 rooms ari d bat h ,
----- ------ -purpose of maintenance and
disposit ion . Fee $100 at fime
n i ce l arge v ard , ba th and 1 . ,
FO R SAL E or t r ade - good 2
operation or sthoots. work of services with li11e foal
390 So u th
Seco nd
St ., " 197·1 CB 360 HONDA mOtor
bedroom house wit h hard
shops and training centers for
guarantee . Ph one 992 -7888 .
less
t
han
a
year
old
.
cycle
Mi d d l e por t. a d u lt s only .
wood fl oor s, n ic e bath with
mtntelly retarded persons .
4-20 -26tc
Phone
949
.5992
after
5
p
.m
.
Phone 992 5262 eveni ngs .
tub, $8.000 .00 . Wil l trade for
Said tax being ; an ad ·
------------~S 25 31p
5 21 lf c
rural property . eit her small
ditlonal t.1X of . 1.6 mills to run
.
farm or in vi ll age
For
tor 10 rears at a rate not ex . CASH pa id for all makes and
TRA ILE R space , :1.1 mil e MEXICAN toma to p l a nt s
fur t her information ca ll 992 .
cee~ing 1.6 mills for each one
Air conditioning, plum models of mobile hb.mes .
organ
ic
ra
ised
,
very
swee
t
Racine. Ohio
north of Meigs H igh Sc hoo l
2186.
dollar of valuation , which
bing , heating, roofing ,
Phone area code 61 4 - ~23 ·
and de l ic iou s. Pho ne 992 .
on
old
Rt
.
33
.
Phone
992
294
1.
We Build tile Best and
amounts to sixteen cents for
1646
9531.
spouting, general sheet
5-23-Jtc
5 -15 - ttc
"\ - ·metill work .
each one hundred dollars of
4 · u .ttc
Repair the Rest.
5-25
-Jtc
.. - - .-. -· -- -- - ·-valuation, tor Ten years .
-- . - - ---- -··-·-· ~ - - -------_:_-.;,...,~
TRAILER
a
pts.
Phone
992
-Free
Estimates
-'jt\'inets InstalledThe Polls for said Election JUNK autos, complete aod
SIMM O N S' h id e a -bed and
5248 or 992 -3436.
will be open at 6 ;30 o 'clock
matching chair . Sylva n ia
Phone
949-5961
delivered to our yard. We
5-25 -12tc
A .M . and remain open until
cohlr ed T . V ., fl oor lam p ,
Calf Before 7:30A .M
pick up auto bodies and bu y;
- ------- ·-------Emergency 949·2211
7: 30 o 'clock P .M . Eastern
larg e br eak fas t se t and elec .
all kinds of scra p metals and
Or Afler6:00 P.M.
FOR
RENT
or
sale
,
12
rm
.
Daylight Savings T ime of said
he at er. A ls o. some antfqu e
iron . Rider 's Sa111 age , St.
or 992-5700
949.lt.n4
brick hom e in M idd l eport .
day .
f urn i ture . Phone 992-3953 .
Rt. 124 , Rt . 4, Pom ero y ,
unfurn i shed . Can be mad e
5·7· I mo.
. By order of the Board of
Ohio. Coli 992 -5468 .
5-21 -6fc
into 2 three
bedroom
5-4·1 mo ,
El"tlons , of Meigs County ,
- - -·· - 10 -17 -llc
apar
t
m
ents
.
Phon
e
99
2
3173.
Oh io .
SE PTIC T A Nf&lt; S clea n ed .
5 25 ltp CAMPER sleeps 6, stove and
refrigerator, g as an d ei ec.
Modern Sanitat ion 992 -3954
Edwin S. Cozart QUICK ,.,RINT by ma il from 5 RM . A PT . furn ished , one
light . Good condit i on Phone
or 992 -1349
camera -read y co p y . One
Chairman
9912941 .
9 18-tfc
ch i ld per m i tt ed ; J rm . ap t
:.
'
page S5 .55 firs t 100. Sl.l5
-.
5-18-7tc
f u rn ish ed , u tili ties pa i d
Dorothy M . Johnston
each additional 100. Send
CA R PE.T Install atiOn. $1.25John Shee ts , 3 m i les south of
'
3
ACRES
CLOSE
IN
I
copy
,
check
to
Le
T
.
Clerk
p e r yard . Ca ll R tchard
Mi dd lepor t on Rt . 7.
MODERN Wal nut style ste r eo
!51 6, 13, 20, 27 , 41c
TER SHO P PLUS , 72 W .
story frame home. 2 or 3
- -=-· .
Wes t, Phone 843 -2667 .
rad
io,
am
fm
,
4
speaker
S-25
6t
c
Un ion . Athens. Oh io. A lso ,
In Syracuse
bedrooms , balh , pari
S-4-26tc
-·------·--·
sound
sys
t
em
,
4
speed
iob printin g .
From the largest Tructc o-'r
Now
open
fo e season . Now
base
m
e
nt
,
own
water
aut
omati
c
changer
.
Balan
ce
PR~ itE - COn~ trUCti on--cO
4,29 -38tp COU N TRY Mobile Hom e
Bulldozer Radiator to the
available- most \l·arleties
$102-.29. Us e our budge t
system,
FA
furna
ce,
with
Roo t i ng , Spout ing , Ge min i
sm all~ s t Heater Core . ·
Par k. Rt . 33! ten miles north
NOtiCE TO BIDOER5
of vegetable plants &amp;
t erms . Call 992 -3965 .
tilt -in r ep lac emen t, win .
barn. $10,900.
of Pomeroy . L arge lo ts with
The
Board of
County
flowers plus potted flowers .
5-20
lf
c
Nathan
Biggs
dews
,
complete
remo.
d
eling
.
FOR
your
"O
il
O
f
Mink"
concrete. patios , si dew a lkS, -- - · - -·-· ----- - ---- --POMEROY ~ High on a
Commissioners . Meigs
OUR SPECIALTY over
Radiator
Specialist
Ph
one
742
-6273
or
(
304)
773
.
··
Cosmetics .
Phone
r u nner s a n d off stre e t USED A llis Chalmers round
County , Ohio , will receive
2,000 hang ing baskets o f
hill very private . 1'12
568 4.
park1ng . Phone 992 7479
BROWN 'S 992 -511 3.
sealed bids at ttleir Office i n
Petunia s. Ivy , Ge raniums ,
bal e r . Al so , two polled " acres . :: nice BR, bath.
s 9-261 p
'
12Jllfc
Vines , and Begonias .
the Court House , Pomeroy, -- --------~- ~~fc
He re ford bulls . breeding
-·~ -- -utility R., N. gas heat , air
Oh io , until 9:30A .M . on June
l'DP QUALITY AT
age . Call after 5 p . m . 985
·eXCAVA-T ING , fjo---zFr,
l , 1975 for the following
cond
.,
por
c
h
es,
garage
.
3 AN D 4 ROOM furniShed and
3538 .
LOWEST PRICES
Back
hoe
,
d
i
tcher
.
wa
ter
equipment to be used by th e NOW selling Fu ller Brush
unfurnished
apa rtm ents .
$13 ,000 .
992 -5776
5-22 -3t p
Ph .·992 -2174
PomeroY
l
i
nes
,
fo
ot
er
s,
drains
,
roads
Meigs County Landfill.
Phone 992 543 4.
Products, phone 992 - 3~ 1 0 .
and brush clean ing . No job ..,__ _ __ _ _ _ _ __ _,
4-17 -1 tno .
A
CHARMING
NEW
Minimum specifications for
l -24 -lfc
4-12 tfc 197 1 KAWA SAK I 500 , good
too
small
,
no
weather
t
oo
HOME
Just
5
miles
out
.
a used tractor with hydraulic ·- - - - - - - - - - - - - -- - -- ----condi t ion . Call 992 -7658 .
bad . Phon e Charles R . E LWOOD BOWERS REPAIR
blade.
..J t:f"l/C TANt&lt;S CLEANE D
Nice ki tchen w. Re f. &amp;
PR IV AT E m ee t ing room fo r
5-22 -3tc
- - Sweepers , toas ters, irons ,
Hatfield , Rt. 1. Rutland .
Trector Base wPight
Reasonable RATE S. Pho ne
any organ iza I ion ; phone 992
Range, 2 BR . balh . full
all
sma
ll
appliances
.
Lawn
Ohio
.
Phone
742
-6092.
. , 3975
4.46
-47 82 Ga ll ipoli s . J ohn
34,000 ! bs .
OUT on riew .Zig -Zag
CLOSE
basement . carpeted rec .
S-2-52t p mow er , next to State H igh .
Engine - Diesel 4 cylinder.
_
Ru ssell , own er .
3 11 -ttc
sewing
mach in es .
For
way
Garage
on
Route
7.
R., carport , W storage, 1
4 cycle ,... 160. h .p ., 825 cu . in.. TWO Chih uahua pupp ies - 10
4-9-tf c
Phon e 985 -3825 .
sew i n g st r e t c h fabri cs,
0 · &amp; D TR EE Trimm inQ, ~I}
turbo -charged, dry type air
weeks old and 2 Ch ihuahua A F»-l . lik.e new , 3 roQm s, w it h
------ -- ----~- -acre. $22,700.
buftortholes. fancy desig ns,
years e~perlence Insured ,
4-16-tt
c
l-a rg e bath , tabletop range ,
cleaner .
•
fema les - 2 yrs . and 3 yrs .
e tc . · Pa i nt
slightly
fre e es timates . Call992-305 7, - --·--- -----~ -- --WI LL tri m or cut tr eeS and
MOBILE HOME 1973
Transmission - power shift
old . Phone 742 -4465 .
large closet .· East Main St .,
blemished .
Choice
of
Cool \I ill e Phone ( 1J 667 . GENERAL - Repclir ! Clean up
shr ub bery ,
c l ear
out
14x70
.
furnished
also
has
With torQue divider .
Pomeroy . See to a ppreciate.
304 1.
S-23
-3tc
carrying
case
or
sewing
ba
sements
,
attics,
etc
.
and
haulin
g,
cutting.
Steering
Clu t che$
dish washer, 3 BR. 1112
Phone Gallipolis durin g day ,
- ·---· -· -·- ------ ---stand. $.49.80 cash or terms
Phon e 949 -322 1 or 7 4 2 · 4~41.
4-30 -tfc
w e lding ,
c arpentry ,
hydraulically acruated . o i l
J46 9699, evenings 446 -9539 .
balhs, 8x20 awning, $8.900 .
available . Phone 992-7755 .
--- ~ - ----- -- -----~plumbing , e l ec . masonry
5-18 -261c
COOled .
TWO At&lt; C Reg . Dachshund ,
4 10-tf c
Can
possibly
finance
58.
100.
a nd ge neral remodel i ng.
12-18
-tfc
S
EWING
MACHINE
,
Brakes - coniractlng band ,
male and female . r ed
-Call Skit -Pool 992 -5 126.
Re pair s, ser v ice , all makes
~OUTE 681 ~ 135 acres at
oil cooled .
Phone 742 -,.256 .
· 2 BEDRM . trailer . close to 1962- I NTER N ATIONAL- 240
992-218 4. The Fa bric Shop ,
s. 13-26t c
Undercarriage sealed
5-25 -Jtc
jus
t
$123
pe
r
ac
re
,
stores , school and sw im ,
tra ct or . gaso line ; 1972 No .
Pomeroy . Aut hor ized Sing er
tracks, hydraulic track ad . - - - - - - - - ------- --- - - m ing poo l . Call after 1 p .m .
12 Massey Ferguson hay
minerals.
close
to
E
XCAVA
TIN
G.
dozer
,
loader
Sa les and Se rvi c e . We
lusters , front idlers and
992 5914 .
bate r ; 19 73 Me Rotary
and back hoe work ; sep t ic ·
recreat ion .
sha rp en Sc issors .
rollers - lifet i me -lubr i cated ,
~c yt he. A l l thi s equip m ent i s
5-20 -6t c
tan ks
in stalled ;
dump
3-29 tic
!rack shoes 20" wide. frock
'r- t'.L.
- m excelle n t condit ion . See
tru cks and lo -bovs for h ire ;
gauge 78' '.
..._
lllr ~
HOW TO S ELL YOUR
A . H . Burbr idg e, Rt . 2,
w ill haul fi l l d irt , top so il ,
DOZER work , land c l ear ing
Blade - straight hydraulic
fRAI LER space , 1 m i le from
4 bedrooms, large
A lbany, Ohio aft er 4 p . m .
PR
O
PERTY?
LIST
IT
l imesto ne and gravel ; Call
by
t
he
acre
.
ho
urly
or
13' w i th hydraulic tilt cylin . 1965 MOBILE
hom e,
2
Pomeroy . Phone 992 -58 58 .
Bob or Roger Jef f ers . day
5-23-Jtc
der .
and modern kitchen,
WITH CLELAND'S .
co ntract . F arm
ponds ,
bedrooms ,
complete l y
S-2-tfc --- -.--- ---··
phone 992 -7089, n ig ht phon e
roads, .etc . L arge dozer and
ROPS Canopy with sweeps .
furnished', pr i cecl to se ll.
992.2259
bath,
Chester water
FERGU SON 30 t ra ctor l i ke
operator with over 20 year s , 992 -3525 or 99 2-5232 .
warran t y - 30 day , no hour
Phone (304) 77J -5826.
FuRNIS-H eD
th
e
day
·
i
r
was
new
.
Phon
e
2·
11
-ffc
lim II . .
district, new furnace,
ex p e r ie n ce . Pullins Ex S-21 -6tc
949 -5953
adult s only in Middtepor t.
cavating , Pomeroy . Ohio. - - - -- ---- ------~Trade'in - ( 1 ) Caterpillar
Phone 992 -3874 .
vinyl siding, storm
5-2J -6tc
Ph one 992 -2478.
·
cable .·Dozer end ( 1l Case
3-25 -tf c
- - - --- - --~ ---R
EA
D
Y
MIX
CO
NCRETE
W2~ Com_
p ac tor
12-19 -tf c
windows and doors, 1
8 ~ 38 MOBILE home , 2
WH I R LP O O L auto mati c
...
deli\ler ed r i ght t o yoU r
The Me igs County Com .
be_droom . John Sheets. 3
wash
er
,
good
cond
i
tion
3
acre
of ground. Good
proje
c
t.
Fest
and
easy
.
F
ree
B E D RO OM trailer , real
mlnioners may accept the
m lles south of Middleport on
S ~PTIC tanks and teach lines es timates . Phon e 992 -3284.
Phon e 99 2 -56 2 1 or 992-3901 :
nic e. Phone 992-3314 .
1owes1 bid or select the best
R l . 7.
garden. financing
· ~s t!"'ll ed . Also, field drain
Goeglein Ready M ix co .,
5·23 ·3tc
bid lor the Intended purpose ,
5-11 tf c
ttles . A-ll work guaranteed
5-25 -6tc
Middl eport , Ohio .
available.
Phone 949end reserve the right to reject
- · ----- ------·L ewis E xca vating , Rt . 1;
6-30 -lf&lt;;
anv or 111 bids.
5953.
3 RM and bath f urn ished apt .
Rutland
,
Ohio
.
Phdne
7~2
SELL your mobile home for
- --·-·-- ---- - ·----3742 .
Ut il i ties. paid , 356 North 4th
cash . 15 hom.es wanted , 1958
Martha Chambers ,
St ., Middleport , Oh io .
" ·24 -26tc
THIS IS IT - Over 4 acres.
thru 1972 models . Phone
Clerk .
5-11 -lfc
!614) 446-1425, Gallipolis.
15 1 20, 27, 21c
Wal
k
to
school
and
room
for
a
-· - ·------ - SHA LL OW Well s dug , spr ings
3-9·1811 12 • 52 MOBILE home in
pony . Like new inside home
~eveloped and ' cis tern s
20"-3112
HP
mstalled ,to approximately
Ches ter , Oh io . Completely
w ith cent r al air and heat . N i ce
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
18ft . L ew1s Excavating Rt
f urn ished Phone 985 -J826 .
The
Board of Co~ntr
fruit room, shower ,and wash
1, Rutland . Phone 742 .37 42:
Commissioners . Meig1s
5 23 -31c
room for the working man.
4- 24 -26tc
Countr. Ohio , will receive YARD sate , Su nday and
~ a(:"O~M~~,;~b/,; ho~-;.-308
Double garage, barn room and ---· - - ------~ ---~
22"-3'12
HP
sealtd bids at their office in
Monday , starting at noon .
Page _s t., m Middleport . S75
the Court House. Pomeroy,
cave for picnicking . Want just
Dav i d Haggy res i den.ce ,
Self- Propelled
d epo s1 t req ui red .
Ohio. until 9: 30A.M. on June
$23,500.00.
Happy Hollow towards
s . lJ .1fc
3, 1975 for .the following
R uttand .
ONE ACRE ~ Nearly lev~l
equipment to be usect by the
S-25 -llp
Mtlgs Counly Londflfl .
with extra nice 2 bedroom 3 BED ROOM houSe , walt ·.o
-· -·
Minimum spefications for a
/POMEROY ~AN01ifiiRK
mobile home . utility building ,
wall carpeting , larg e kit uHd tractor with hydraulic
9. jJ ack w
. . c;arsey, Mgr
chen and bath , utility room ,
concrete floor, patio, rural
bllde. · .
"BE DD(NG plants , pott ed dlt'dl ' Phone 992 -2181 ·
wash
room.
'~
acre ,
wat e r
.in ' the
cou-ntry .
plants, geraniums , azalea s.
Tractor Base weight
a lum inum Si d i ng, storm
lbs.
•p e tunf.as , por c h boxes . "
· - - - - - - - --..,.---' $10,000 .00.
BABY SI TTER , I or 2 days per
windows. storage _ building .
hang ing baskets , Cle land 's
Engine - Diesel ,. cylin~er ,
LOOK AT THIS - Large and
Phone
7~2 - 4601.
Will .
week . Phone 992-3853 after 5
Greenhouse.
Ge
rald
i
ne
CB
's
Ante
nnas,
fi
shing
bait
,
• cycle. 160 h.p ., 825 cu . in .•
p. m .
sac rifi ce for quick sale .
much
c
heaper
·than
a
new
Cleland , Racine, Ohio 4517 1
turbo ·Charoed. dry type air
fish.ing su pplies, guns and
5-25 -ltc
S·22-61p
cleaner .
S 1811c
am mo . tnd 1an Joe's Sports house . Hot water heat, full - · - - ------'~-~-- --- - -·Transmission ..-- power shUt
and CB's. 308 Page St
basement,
4 bedrooms,
CAMPIN G st oves , Propane
wlttl torque divider .
M idd iepor t.
·· family anc.J dining room , , 2 3 BEDROOM home on 4 acreS
fuel , bloodba i t, trout a bouts ,
Steering
Clutches
of Qrouna , full basement
'
5-18-301c baths, 2 porches. A real nice
sain'1on eggs , corn baHS .
hydraulically actuated , oil
fuel oi{ furna c-e , a .c .:
- · -- cooltcl.
.
dough balls , rod s, reels , GU N S A ND AMM O - Our older home . Only _$20,000.00.
· ~reeze wav and large garage
combos . sei nes , minnows ,
Brat" - contracting band .
'" the country but close to
s.u mmer sto ck
is now MODERN ~ 3 bedrooms,
buc k ets ~n d other item s for
off cooled .
.
·
tov-.:n . ·On hardtop road, 2.
a~r lv ing . R i fJes , sho tgun s . large bath, living 18x30, 7
the f isherman . Indian Joe- 's ,
Undercarriage - sealed
tra1ler setups included Cali
PIS t ol s, reloading equi p .
308 Page St ., Middleport·.
tracks, hVdrtuttc track ad 992 -76 49 after 4 p .m . or 992 .
sc opes, ammunitions , .22 enormous closets, 2 concrete
lvattrl , fronr · Idlers an·d
·1519 etny time for ap .
S-1B ·7tc
MAG h .p . S3 per box , $27 .50 porches, dry basement, gas
polntmen t.
·
- l ifetime -lubricated.
~~~;-:....._......-_,.. . - per car ton {5001 . 22 l .r .h .p. F.A. furnace, garage with
track lhotl 20" wide , track
IV7~ JSO 6 JO HN Deere dozer ,
S2 . 10 per loop . Get them
4.30-261c
v•uve 71".
6 rt . !;)lade, ca nape, 1,600
While thny las t Store Hour s shop, and . J;4 acres of land .
523.500.
lf1c:te -:- str•·lght hydrauliC
hours , good
condit i on .
eff ec tiv e May 19 . Monday .
$6,500 Phone 985 3594 ,
13' with h~drlullc tilt cylln '
Th _
u rsday 9 a:m . to 6 p.m ., . NEW LISTING 5 room Two NEW bedroom h·~rries
S, 14 -121p
f r•d ay and Saturday 9 a.m
~~~I car garage , carpeted,
house,
2
bedrooms.
bath ,
ROPS Canopy . wll~ IWttps .
lo 9 p .ni . VILLAGE 'GUN
or bank financing
small basement, all utiiitles.
Wlrr•nty 30 days, no
Phone. _7.42-3615 or see MilO
S HOPPE , 266 Mill Sl
ORD
ER
any
Ce
from
ind
ia
n
hour llmll .
Middleport.
·r
Hutchmson , Rutland .
front porch on good s treet in
Joe 's Sports and c G •s at 10
Trede-ln - fl) Colerpfllor
pet . above · cost and sh ip
Middleport
.
Only
56.000.00.
5-8-lfc ·
S-18 -30ic
D.f Clble Dozor ond Ill Case
ping . 308 Page St., M id .
, 1112• Compoclor
dleport .
HOUS E .in Rutland o0 MaiO.
BUY
IT
TODAY
AS
Tho Mtlll County Com .
St ., Will sell . cheap . Phone
S-18-301c
mltsloneu m•y •ccept the
742-5374.
TOMORROW
SOMEONE
- .. --lowest bid or selocl the btst
I CI&lt;".. HO \J~ E Ori Se con~ St . WILL. CALL 992-3325.
5·22-Jic
bid lOr tho lntandtcl purpost,
!' [D O ING P LANT S. polled BRdow
··nt own
Pomer oy .
p lants , gera n iums , azaleas .
erut rftft'vt the right to rtiect
Suit abl e for living quarters
J. LARGE tot$. rur'at· Water"
My or oil bids .
petunia $, po-rch bo x es ,
u p st airs , bus i n ess down .
ava i lable . Hard road , J
hang ing baske t s. Cleland's
offi ce o r hOm e . W i thi n
mites , from by .pan on
Greenhou se ,
Geraldine
.Mertha Chambe-rs.
wa l king dis tance of all
Lea d ing Creek Road . Phone
Ct.e iand . Racine , Ohio .
Clerk
stores . Call 997 3489.
(OIUm·bus, Ohio
M1y 16, 19H

11 - The_Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomerov. 0 ., Tuesday, May 27, 1975

.Employment Wanted

OF

WILKINSON
SMALL ENGINE

.QUALITY Motor Co.

KUHL'S
BARGAIN CENTER

I

lml 1111*111'5
Cordtluction Co.

tl lll~~. ,.. r ... , •• ''·' ""'
... ' " ' " ....... J

jl)

For Rent or Sale

CAPTAIN EASY
MY 5TAI&lt;5 ! 5 E E ~-5
liKE A 5 1ll Y PlACE
T' 8!' 5 WIN6 1N ' TH 15
TIME OF NloHT!...
WHY'5 HE DO IN' IT
D' Yl'l S UPPOSE!"

Room Addltlom

Wanted To Buy

lPOMEROY _MOTOR CO.

@)

Roger Hysell's
Garage

BIJ'i-TER .. OON'TII
WHO STAll. TED THIS
"FLYIN&lt;S" IJON5 EN'ioE,
ANYHOW~

HE SAID MRS. VA~
PEW Fl6t5ERED I'D

Ot.JL'i !
GIVE HIM A
TAKeOFF
IIJSTID!...OFl.
SUMPIN'
LIKE PAT:

N6ED A ANCHO!t T'
HOL.D ME DOWN
WHE~ I TRIED
TAKIIJ' OFF.,,

I GET KI~PA MI)(ED·UP
SOMETIMISS l

FOR FREE
ESTIMATES

Merle Norman
Cosmetics

lOlA'S
BEAUTY SALON

Real .Estate Fot Sale

V. V. JOHNSON
I AND SON, INC.

--

--------

HE Wl'l? TRYNI'l
e.LAZB:;'&gt;!
WHAT'$ t301N8 SHO W ME HOW T'
ON HE RE,
F ~'i OFFE~ T HEBRID6E ... GUE55
BUS TER ?
HE D.ID~' T F~AP
' HARD E~UF!

0. J. lAUDERMILT
ROOFING

------- - ------

For Rent

FREE ESTIMATES

Grand Opening

WoHe &amp; Ward
Garage

- - ----

FREE ESTIMATES

-

-· --------

----- ------------

Phone 992-7665

HElL

For Sale

Racine Plumbing
&amp; Heating

LARRY LAVENDER

NEIGLER
Building Supp~

......... _..

-"'" ......
- - ~·,

to~our -

tiJij)t 1l41 SLIP?

GLEN R.
Bissell

AWMIN'tJM &amp;
VINYL SIDING

--

FREE ESTIMATES

PH. 949-5184

-

--------------

NERR IS IN ANOn\ER
ME.NSION, AS '&lt;0ll
1'\-1EN HOW DID
'GET H!:R.E ?

-- ----

EXPERIENCED
Radlato
Service

.
Greenhouse

...

YOU WERE EXAJSED 10 A
P8:llliAR COMBINATION
OF NATURAL FORCES,
ALLEY!

Hubbard's

.

... EACH ON E OF

US JUST MP-

OR MEI"&gt;BE
TH' WRONG

PLACE AT
PENE.DTOSE
TH ' RIGHT
1N "THE RIGHT
T1ME! .
PtACE ~ THE 1
WRONG liME .

... R:&gt;R YEARS I

SO HOW'RE YOU
GONNA GET US
BACK T'WflERE

, , , BECAUSl! 'I ,

WORKED oN "TllE

WE CAME Ff&lt;OM,
MR. Pf?ESiDENT?r---.

r - - --1

UK!!' '(()U, .A.LSO

HAROWARE10
ACCOMPLISH

WAN'Tlro 10 GO

HOM!:!

THIS ...

-·-·------------,,

--

-

Pets for Sale

SMJTH NELsor..
MOTORS, INC.

-------

I

IIUIAI c;

it will replace
-the car as
we know it
todaLJ,Eve!

---------------

/

-

-------------

--- ---- -

--------------

M.....a. Homes

-----------------

COUNTRY
HOME

--- -

-GUESS WHAT I
BOUGHT FOR
YOU·!!- THE

BPirt·m;,;f:·

·n ·

------·------------------

-----

-------

-------- -------

YardS.

For Sale

'104.95&lt;1&lt;0)

Real Estate tor Sale

WMPO RADIO

I'M ONLY II
OLD rt-

I WANT TO BE'
THE: GRE:ATeor
ROCK MUSICIAI-J
IN THE:
WORL.D!T

1.-ASf" N!.lN8E:=R-~
IN

.'

..
IF 11-jiS KEEPS LJ P,
WE'LL HAVE TO RfO or!DER. FROM ATH ENA HAH ! IM:JN'T WINNIE WINKL£
. BE CfiU5HED WHEN SHE
13EFORE THE WEEK
· FINDS CENTR-&lt;\L CITY
1(7 UP !
FLOODED WITH MY

'

WHERE YOU CAN HEAR

'·

11-jE WAY~ I\IOIAEN
SW\PPED UP lti05E .
Df!ESS!$ 'lOUt&gt; THINK
THEY NEVER HE'AAD OF
11-jE RECE&amp;eiON !

AND AT TEN
OOI.LAI?S PROFIT

PER iHAT'8 NOT 1'1

6AO DAY'S WOI'lK1
I&amp;IT?

.

At 10:00 A.M. and 3:35 P.M~

------- ---- -

HELP

Weekcfays

-·-------- --

WANTED

rou....

--------------

$3.96 P.er HoUr

d....

TUNE TO WMPO 1390 RADIO
From 6:00 A.M. to 8:30 P.M.

OH sa.JRCEOF
ENDLESS W/SrxJW-

SO 1/'.HY' DID I PRE:GS A
MILLON RECQ&lt;DS CFMY

SWAP SHOP

----------------

..•

------------ - ---- --

Help Wanted

3•.ooo

'

TURF TRIM
MOWER

'72.90&lt;1&lt;0)

---- ---- -----

---·------- ---

,.

'FOLIES
6ERGE'RE: ~ 11

YOLJ GOT RC0&lt;.'5
IN 'JO'JR HEAC3

.

..

- - -----·- -- ·- ---- - --

-

---:;:------ -·-

4460677

---------------

Real Estate For Sale

-------------

Phone Gallipolis

!51 20, 27. 21c

•

..•

..

.• r

T 'IME FER
'lORE BATH,
HONEV POT

J

Full or Part Time

Expanding
needs
company
employees NOW.
Lots of overtime.

·••

.

.-742 3108.

5 IS lfc

•·'

'
'.

5 22 -31c

..
·.J

.·-

S-9-301c
,_.~-

•

'.

I WUZ TALKI(\,) 1
TO TH' HONEY POT
11\J TH' MIDDLE

GIT SET FER

A CRASH LANDIN~
JU6HAID·

I

I

:~

,

---.
I

I

..-','

,
__ .......',..
... ... _..... "'"·

,.. ...... ""': -~

.

.•

.•·'

....•·•
..,...,L
~·

I

•

'

�.J ...... ~ ....., ..,. .~..;. ........ --

........ ~

~""'

·- ~ -

. ~

...

' I

'
12:._ The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Poineio~, 0 ., Tuesday,"May 27, 1976

,,

Five· mishaps logged

FURNITURE STOLEN
Middleport poUce are investig~ting a theft Sunday
. night from the home of Harry
(Continued _from _JIIIe I)_
Sheriff Robert C. Har- and no citation. There was
'Moore, 598 S. Third Ave., being divided between the
tenbach's Dept. was busy heavy damage.
It y;as a busy Memorial injured in an accident at 10 one tenth miles west of where futnitwe was reported
Toilightthru
Thurs
.
ovef
the I1ol'd
two sports as the park
1
NOT OPEN
ay wee ken d
Sunday at I p.m. in Reeds- Day weekend for the Gallia- a.m. Monday on Rt. 7, six Bulaville .
. stolen from the porch.
director sees fit due to the
investigating five accidents. ville on First St. William D. Meigs Slate Hignway Patrol.
Officers said cars driven by
tenths
of
a
mile
north
of
Swan
demand
for each.
·
· Fri ...Sat., sun.
Two involved motorcycles · Justice, 20, Lincoln Heights,
Elaine M. Jividen, 20, Rt. 1,
, TWO ASSISTED
Twelve traffic accidents, Creek Rd.
·
Horse
shoes,
volleyball
and
iiu: ~;~~~:;'?;\He
that went out of control.
Pomeroy, backed a tractor including five in \Iillich seven
The Middleport E·R squad
The patrol said the animal Gallipolis, and Sarah A.
TOP OF THE WORLD
Satwday at 5 p.m. in into a fence owned by Wayne persons . were injwed, were ran into tbe path of an auto Sommers, 36, ·Rt. 1, answered two calls M~nday, various other activities wiU
be available to all who are
ITechnicolorl
Bedford Township on SR 681, Chevalier. There was slight investigated. There were no
Gallipolis, sideswiped on a one at 3:08 p.m. for DOrothy· interested. It Is hoped that
opetated
by
Larry
E.
Smith
Starring David Hartman
Donald C. Georges, Lock- damage to the fence.
. Reynolds, 353 N. Fowth Ave.
fatalities.
of Belpre. Smith suffered curve.
variotis new games can be
Walt ~~ey's
bowne AF Base, driving
At 3 p.m. Sunday In Bed·Officers cruising on area visible in juries. There was
William Justis, 20, Mid- who was taken to Pleasant
purchased
as soon as possible
WINNIE, THE POOH
east, failed to make a sharp ford Twp.on private property nighways made 83 arrests, 74
dleport, was cited to Meigs Valley Hospital, and the other
to
his
car.
moderate
damage
"•
these
will
be signed out to
and
AND TIGGER TOO
left hand twn, skidded off the at the junction of 681 and for traffic violations, issued
County Cowl for overheight for Harold Marshall, 271 N.
Dencil
F.
Niday
,
22,
individuals who wlll be
ITechnicolor)
road through a fence owned Cherry Ridge , Charles 75 warnings, and assisted 55
Gallipolis, was cited to vehicle following an accident Fowth Ave. who was taken to responsible for their return.
Rated "G" ' by Jewell Story, and stopping Sheppard, Whitehall, Ohio, motorists .
Municipal Court for turning Satwday on Rt. 248, five Holzer Medical Center.
The pool will open on June 1
• -Sh•o•w-•t.ar•t•s•at•7•:•00.;p~.m;;;;,. .I his car with
. its front end in a was riding a motorcycle on a
A deer was killed ahd the without due care foliqwing an tenths of a mile east of Rt. 7.
SQUAD BUSY
creek. There were no inJ'wies trail just off Cherry Ridge
at I p.m . .and will be open
driver of the car involved accident at 9:35a.m. Monday The patrol said the load on
RACINE _ The Racine E· daily from I to 6 p.m. Season
·when it went out of control.
on Rt. 7, seven tenths of a Justis' semi rig struck and R squad made three runs ticketa will be on sale all day
He was dragged a short
mile south of the Bladen- tore flown telephone lines over the holiday weekend : Satwday at the pool. Family
distance. Sheppard was taken
Mercerville Rd.
owned by the General Satwday at 2:30 p.m. to the ticketa are priced at $15 with
to Veterans Memorial
Officers
said
Nida
atTelephone
Company.
Jim Riffle residence to assist $2 additional for each child
(Continued from page I)
'
Hospital by private car where
tempted to make a left turn
Lela Robinson, Rt. 2, Racine, through high school age. High
he was treated and released. Marsha Sue Kimes, Deborah as an auto driven by
to Veterans Memorial school graduates will not be
At 3:40 p.m. Sunday in Lynn Boatright, Homer Willis Robert A. Pack, 22, of Crown
Hospital;
Sunday at 2:30p.m. admitted on family licketa,"
,Chgester Twp. on county road Delong, Jr., Vicki Lynn Gaul City, moved to pass. Annette
1ransporting Simon PaweD, but single season tickets will
125 Michael R. Elberfeld, Rt. and Louise Ann Newell.
(Continued from pa1e 1)
Portland; to Veterans· be available to them at $10
Cindy
Mae
Lawson,
Norma
The high school band
I, Minersville, driving a
Pack,
17,
Crown
·
City,
a
Elaine
Lehew.
Memorial
Hospital where he
directed by Charles Wills passenger in Pack's car
~ickup west, and Michael S.
Also, Ellis Earl McMillan, was treated and released, each.
Announcement of swimCheryl Ann Moore, .Jennifer
Globokar, Pomeroy, driving presented music for the
complained
of
minor
injwies
Lee
Mug
rage,
William
and
at
4:15
p.m.
taking
ming classes will be made
south -on township 85, didn't commencement and but was not treated. There Mitchell Nease. Nola Renee
see each other and collided at prayer was by Eldon Blake, was moderate damage to Neigler. Charles Roland Raymond Hartley, Racine, to when an Instructor has been
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
the intersection . There were pastor of the Eden United both vehicles.
Hendricks, Stephanie Lynn Riffle and Hartley were obtained.
Ord, Robert Lee Phillips,
Group or individuals inno injwies, no arrests, and Brethren Church. Diplomas
Monday
accident
Karen Sue Rhodes. Brenda admitted.
A
third
terested
in forming other
only medium property were presented by Dorsel occurred at 12:35 p.m. on Ellen
Rodberg. Cindy
organized
activities are
Larkins, board of education C t
damage.
.Jeannine Roush, Darrell Alan
oun
y
Road
26,
thre.e
ten!hs
Roush,
Glenn
Kelly
Roush,
asked
to
contact
the park
Sunday at 9:42 p.m. Bill member, assisted by John 0 .
of
a
m1le
east
of
Rt.
7
m
Me1gs
Tamara
Carole
Roush,
Terl
FISH
FRY
SET
director after June I or leave
McLaughlin , Rt. 3, Pomeroy, Riebel, Sr., local superin- County . The patrol said, Jean Findley Roush, .John
The Pomeroy Volunteer their names at the Mayor's
driving west on Eagle Ridge tendent.
Richard E. Drairi 18 Anthony Salser, Rebecca Kay Fire Dept. will sponsor a fish
.
· •
• Sams, Terry Lee Sayre,
office and they wiD be conSunday afternoon, the
on a motorcycle lost control
Parkersburg,
went
left
of
Jeannie
Diana
Sellers
fry
Satwday,
May
30,
from
10
in a curve. He suffered a annual baccalaweate was center and his car struck Donald Clayton Shaffer, Paui a.m. until 4 p.m. at the fire tacted.
Cooperation Is asked from
laceration in his arm and held for the class with another operated by Nancy J. Gle~n Simpson, David Morris
house. They will serve fish, all individuals and groups to
.
Smilh,
David
Kevin
Underwood,
minister
Eugene
knee . He was taken to
Arnold, 25, of Racme. There Snodgrass, Rhonda YaVone french fries and cole slaw. make this another successful
Veterans Memorial Hospital of the Tuppers Plains Chwch was moderate da\')age.
South, Steven Leonard Those wisblng delivery in
by the Pomeroy E-R squad of Christ giving the inAnother mishap occurred Ste.wart, .James Ralph Pomeroy may call 992-2883. year of recreation at the
park.
where he was treated and vocation and benediction . M d
Turner. Anna
Frances
on
ay
at
1:19
p.m.
on
Rt.
Weddle.
Helen
Faye
released.
Tbe sermon was given ~y tbe
35, two tenths of a mile from W!koxen, . Mickey Clair
Rev. Paul Knierim, pastor of Mitchell Rd. where an auto Williams, V1ckl Kara Wolfe.
SCHOLARSHIP GIVEN
;::!:Wn··'···· O:dO.tolb..
Pleasant ViUey
the Porterfield Baptist
Helen
Wilcoxen, daughter
driven by Dola Coucombe, 57,
DISCHARGES
M
.
....
Church. Music was by the
,
rs. of Mr. and Mrs. Martin
of Columbus, went off the
mixed chorus and the right side of the highway into Veterans Memorial Hospital Wayne Staats, son, Racine; Wilcoxen, · Racine, was
Saturday Admissions Mrs. Larry Rainey, Gallipolis awarded the lOth annual Paul
processional and recessional
a fence. There was moderate Lelah Robinson, Syracuse;
Ferry; Nellie Kinnlard, Point H. Carnahan Memorial
were played by Teresa Buckdamage. No charge was filed. Luther Minor, Vinton.
ley.
Pleasant ; · Janael Chipps, Scholarship of $500 at the
I
No one was charged in a
Discharges - Michael Will, Gallipolis; John Hoffman, Racine High School Alwnni
1975 SENIORS - Gregory traffic accident Sunday on
Lee Bailey, Robert D. BarWilma Tillis, Letitia Rea, Letart; Mrs. Harry Lipber. Mary Sue Barringer, Rt. 35, six tenths of a mile Shirley Roush, Jason Ward, scomb, Point Pleasant; Paul Association reunion Satwday
night. A graduate of Southern
TUESDAY
Frederick F. Bise. Myles west of Bulaville Rd. where
Oscar
Klein
,
Carl
Dan
over,
Br90kins,
_
qalllpolls;
Davey
Randall
Blake,.
Deborah
High
School, Miss Wilcoxen
RACINE American Legion
Lynn Boatright, Phillip an auto driven by Jerry C. Opal Duff, Juanita Moore, Reynolds, Middleport; Mrs. will attend Ohio State
Auxiliary 602 meets at 7:30 Anlhony Bowen. Bill E. Matthew, 20, Gallipolis, lost
Ripley; University.
p.m . at the post home . Buchanan. Anita Lynn control attempting to miss a Donald Eblin , Hayward Don Harouff,
Bissell,
Stev~n
Bailey,
Jr.
Thomas Willoughby, Letart;
Members are to turn in poppy Buckley. Kenneth Darrell parked car driven by Treva
Sunday
Admissions
Burke,
Connie
Sue
Dailey,
Terry
Jordan, Buffalo; Mrs.
IT'S FREE
money.
Cathy Darlene Davis. Homer L. Denny, 21, of Bidwell, Judith Bacon, Middleport; Dorsey Rotish, Letart; Mrs. · Free Clothing Day will be
PAST Matrons, Pomeroy Willis DeLong, .Jr ., Rebecca which had stopped to assist a
Marion Rizer, Mason.
Walter Chandler, Point held at the ·Salvation Army,
We are proud of the 1975 graduates
Chapter, 186, OES, 7:30p.m. Lynn Ebersbach. Elizabeth disabled car. The Matthew
Discharges
Carnie
Marie Edwards, Vicki Lynn
Pleasant; Mrs. Okey Van- 115 But_temut Ave., Thursat the home of Mrs. Sylvia Gaul.
from high school and college and we
Edward Euaene Gibbs, car went off the road striking Young, Lewis Smith, Orville mater, Mason; Mrs. Kermit day, May 29 from 10 a.m.
Midki£f, Hemlock Grove.
Timothy P. Gillilan. Phillip a sign. There was no contact Graham, LiSII Tillis, Charles
Beaver, son, Leon; Roy Bush, until noon . All area residents
encourage them to come to us with
BOSWORTH Council, Keith Griffin . Michael Ray be tween the two cars.
Boggess.
··
Mason; Chad McDaniel, ; who . need clothing are
i s,
Robert • Steven
Royal and Select Masters, · Harr
Melvin 0. Johnson, 57,
their financial problems. We have
Harr is , Frances Lucille
Monday Admissions - Gallipolis.
welcome.
will hold a special assembly Hawk , Doug Holsinger , Point Pleasant, was charged Diana Phillips, HarrisonNew Citizens, May 25 - a
helped many young people in business
Tuesday at 7:30p.m: at the Russell Ray Holsinger . with failure to stop within the ville; Raymond Hartley,
daughter
tO Mr ' and. Mrs.
Lee
Hunt,
Donald
Robert
CLUB TO MEET
Pomeroy Masonic Temple, to .Jacksory, Marsha Sue Kimes, assured clear distance Racine .
with our small business loans and we
Oscar
Click,
Cottageville;
The
Wildwood Garden Club
confer the Royal and Select Regina Dianne Kimes
following an accident Sunday
Discharges
Oscar
26,
a
son
io
Mr.
and
March
.will meet Wednesday at 8
Michael Eugene Larkins. ' in Kanauga. His car struck an
have an. excellent savings plan for
Masters Degree.
Mrs. Forest Jones, Galllpolis p.m. at tjle home of Mrs .
.James R. Lodwick, Max auto operated by Beverly G. Johnson.
futurE&gt; growth.
WEDNESDAY
Long, Eric S. Marcinko,
Ferry.
Edison Hollon.
JUNIOR American Legion Thomas A. Matheny, Mary Wears, 20, of Pliny, w. Va.
Louise · Mills, Linda Sue Betty G. Wears, 50, of Pliny, a
Auxiliary, Drew Webster · Myers,
LouiSe Ann Newell ,
Post 39, 7:3op.m. at the hall. Crai,g Douglas Reed, Karen passenger in the Wears
WALK-UP TELLER WINDOW AND
Mother-daughter banquet Lee Reed; Kipling Lee Reed. vehicle, had minor injuries.
AUTO TELLER WINDOW OPEN
Laine Roberts,
No one was injwed or cited
cancelled due to illness of Melody
FRI. EVENINGSSTo7 P.M.
Rebecca
Sue
Root,
Mandie
in
a two car accident Sunday
advisor.
Kay Rose, Steve W.
Shop Weekdays 9:30 to 5:00, Fridaysand Saturdays 9:30 to 8.
AMERICAN
Legion Rosebecr.y , Pamela Sue. on Brick School Rd. one and
.John H. Smith,
Auxiliary, Drew Webster Sams.
When You Visit, Park FREE
Terrence Allen Smith.
Post 39, 7:30p.m. at the hail. . Rhonda Lou Sovel, Timothy
Junior potluck originally · Mark Spen cer, Coy Bly
.Jr .. Douglas Bryan
"THE FRIENDLY BANK"
scheduled has been can- Starcher,
Taylor, Pamela Rose Taylor,
1-(m
celled.
Cindy Lou Thomas, Guy
POMEROY · Middleport Walker, .Jack 1&lt;. Wells,
Pli~~RGit
Lions Club, Regular meeting, Bonnie Lou Welsh, Gregory
Allan Winebrenner, Charles
noon, Meigs Inn.
A. White. Keith Owen Wood .
~INClNNA T1 .
OHIO Valley Commandery
24, Knights Templar, stated
" - . MIDDLEPORT.
conclave,
8 p.m. Pomeroy
-~ · OHIO
Masonic Temple. All knights
urged to attend.
(Continued fmn Jllge 1)
THURSDAY
opposes tbe bill, especially
XI GAMMA Mu Sorority when the new interior
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation · picnic,
For) Meigs, 6:30 p.m. secretary "is likely to be
Hosted
by losing attendants. Stanley K. Hathaway, a big
DEPOSITS INSURED TO '40,000
Culture report by Iris Payne stri~lning advocate while
A.AYTEX•
and Susan· Baer.
governor of Wyoming."
:..:-:-:-: &lt;·.-:·:·:·:··..:··-:-··:·,•:·· ··:·:·:-:·:···.·:·:·.·:· ·:··
"The fate of the strip
mining bill Is a classic lesson
in how the art of compromise
in Congress has been per"Hard work never killed
verted by the presswe of
anyone, only the thought of
well-financed energy lobbies,
it ,
fanning the hysteria of public
The "FRIENDLY ONES"
lear over energy shortages,"
'
at
the
POMEROY
Hechler said.
CEMENT BLOCK CO.
Hechler implored his colwork hard to .satiSfy your
Now famous Cross Your
every
need .
(JUST
leagues to concentraie on
Heart bra styling for
FRIENDLY NEIGHBORS
underground mining to meet
youthful shaping .. . with
WHO
APPRECIATE
America's future energy
YOUR PATRONAGE.)
smooth seamless cups
needs.
~-JLLNEWthat hold their shape for
"We have 10 billiori tona of
the
look that is naturally
low.;;ulfur, deep.rninable coal
you . Seamlessness
in West Virginia, about 10
plus Support!
times as much as can be
strlpJ:ted," Hechler said.
Available in Soft Cup and
o,
"Let's dig it."
Fiberfill : 32/36A,

Patrol·cites 83

MEIGS THEATRE

Hartinger·

GRADUATES

ARE
PEOPLE WITH SUCCESS
IN THEIR
EYES

I

I

./

Day use

· Johnson

Social
, Calendar

We want to help our
graduates to achieve
their goals.

ELBERFELDS IN. POMEROY

M.laSt...a
Seamless
with real

litbens /4ational tNc

support

Hechler

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

NEW!

CRoss'rouR HEART·

*

THE $

SEAMLESS
BRA

11

SEE IT NOW!

POMEROY CEMENT
BLOCK CO.

z·PIECE LIVING ROOM

e•

'

SUITE, 3 TABLES
AND 2 LAMPS

I

~*****************************'

i

PLUS. -•• ACOMPLfTE BEDROOM SUITE

.:•:

FOR ONLY

'

•

:
'

-

'

~

•

~

'

.

MASON, W. VA.

•••
•••
•
••

.

••

~

!MASON DRIVE-IN THEATRE

MIDDlEPORT, OHIO
l

TONITE

.

BAKER FURNITURE

!
i

DOUBLE FEATURE .PROGRAM

••
••
••
•
••

STOP IN TODAY AT

. I

J

.

i*

********************•*********~
•

32/38B,32/3BC

Council refuses to .act on .Craig resignation
BY BoB HOEFLICH
. How dcies one ge't relieved from duties as a MiddJl'port.
V1llage Council Member?
that is a question ;.hich may well be plaguing Mrs. Jean
c;ra•g wbo Monday night submitted her resignation the third
time and found other council members unwilling to accept her
wish to quit the group.
In an open letter which she read to council, Mrs. Craig said
that she considered it a privilege as well as a duty to serve in
public office. She said that she is a lilelong resident of Mid·
dleport and accepted a position on council in order to help
people. She stated that Middleport has many problems, but
other communities have many problems too and they are
being solved.
She said council members discuss at length numerous
problems and then they dismiss those problems which
"maybe" come up at a later meeting . Council should take
actions to benefit the majority of the people," she said, and she
added that she has, since serving on the body, voted her con•

victions. She urged council to become unified, because,
unless this happeris, the community will be "regressing." . .
Mrs. Craig commented that she does not feel that anything
worthwhile has been accomplished since she began serving on
council and urged council to accept her resignation and secure
''someone more qualified" for the vacancy. She asked that her
resignation be effective last night.
Mrs. Craig said that council seems to fail to "get it all
together" in acting for betterment of the town. She said that
she wan !a to see action - right or wrong - so that council can
see results of such actions, whether tbe results are positive or
negative.
Mayor Fred Hoffman, Councilman Marvin Kelly, Maintenance Supervisor Harold Chase and others urged Mrs. Craig
to continue serving on counciL
It all ended with eouncllfalllng to take any action what·
soever on Mrs. Craig's resignation. She said thai she twice
earlier had tried to resign but last night was the first lustanee
in which her resignation had been brought up before the

DEPARTMENT
SECOND FLOOR ..,

••,71 ......

~ELBERFELDS

IN POMEROY

.
.
Regular liuslness
Council worked on designating the expenditure of federal
revenue sharing funds for the remainder of 1975 through June
30, 1976.
There is $8,725 available in such funds for the period. Tbe
group designated the following expenditures : cemetery
maintenance, $1,500; police department, $1,700 earmarked on
a new cruiser, and $260 for police schooling; fire department,
$1,000 for hose dryer ; $500 for tbe community park, and $3,725
£or street maintenance.
The expenditures approved for the remainder of this year
from the above include $2J07 for streets, $260.for police school,
$1,500 for cemetery maintimance and $500 for 'tbe park.
Council failed to approve the recommendation of Mayor
Hoffman to appoint' Bob Fisher to the Board of Public Affairs
to replace Don Pearch who resigned. Mrs. Craig, Marvin Kelly
and Carl Horky voted against the appointment with council
members James Brewer and Allen Lee King voting af.

firma lively.
.
Council discussed a sewer problem on Lower Park St.
where sewage is running into the open, ~ccording to Chase.
Some 2,000 feel of -24-inch tile will be needed' to correct the
situation. He was Instructed to get cost figwes.
Chase also armounced that he plans to retire in January of
next year. He said that he has worked for the village over eight
years and in that time has had five days off - at tbe time of his
mother's death and .four days vacation time. He has accumulated sick leave at the rate of 15 days a year. He stated he
will accept payment for 120 days, either sick leave or vacation
time, and any other time off he has coming will be forgotten.
Council agreed with the 1211-plan and the ordinance and finance
committees will meet to work out details.
!Jw'ing the meeting it was reported that vandalism con-·
tinues on a rampage in the community,_particularly at the
park . Restrooms which were opened for the convenience of
park visitorS"have been heavily_damaged, the water fountain
(Continued on page 12)

W~&gt;.ather

Now You Know

Fair tonight, lows in the
mid 50s. Cloudy Thursday,
chance of showers, highs 80 to
85. Probability of precipitation is near zero per cent
today and tonight and 40 per
cent Thwsday.

VOL XXVII NO. 31

en tine

The cheetah, unlike ail
other cats, lacks sheaths for
retracti ng ils claws.

Devoted To The Interests uf' The fl'leigs-Mason Area
POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

PRICE 15'

WEDNESDAY, MAY 28, 1975

Gilligan· henchmen hit
by pay-pad indictment

'

.

Assistant Franklin County
Franklin County
"They were frustrated,
Prosecutor George C. Smith Prosecutor S. Michael Miller upset and emotionally inindicated indictments would said he did not seek jail volved," he said. "They felt
be handed down today in the sentences for those who ap- that they were needed to
case which was investigated peared in court Tuesday insure an honest recount, but
for three months by a special · because they "are not evil they had to have money to
Franklin County grand jury. people.
pay rent and buy food. Some
"They had no evil intent,~~ were ·on the brink of star"There will be some activity at the courthouse at said Miller. "No further vation and they did not have
8:30 this morning," Smith action will be taken against the resources to continue to
said. "That's all I can say at them."
work on the recount without
the present time."
Attorney Michael Schwarz- pay so they had their friends
· BABS WITTE chatted with D. Merrill Davis, retired ge,neral supervisor of music in
Franklin County Common walder, who represented two get them on the state
Jackson
City Schools, before she introduced him as speaker for Meigs High School CornPleas Court Judge Paul of the defendants, ·said, "this
mencemen~ exercises Tuesda~ night at the high school. Miss Witte is Senior Class president .
Martin ' Tuesday ordered tbe was not a wide ranging s~
suspended sentences on conspira~y and these people
misdem~anor theft charges
were not motivated by a
for 10 of the workers desire to rip .off money from
providing
they
make the slate of Ohio.
restiiuiion of" their state
·''This was an ad hoc ,
salaries, expected to total bungling, disjointed attempt
about $11,110.
to compensate these people
The lith worker, David for the work they did on the
Gosney, Reynoldsburg, . who recount," ' said
Sch·
was chief Of personnel in the warzwalder. "These are
Bureau of Motor Vehicles, young people who worked
COLUMBUS (UPI) .. "This is still a land of great forget, " to urge his audience you can to protect your
was given a suspended themselves to a frazzle in the Three of Colwnbus' largest
promise,
great opportunity to remember how they got freedom, " he wged.
sentence for tampering with campaign..They did not work auto firms, Bill Swad
Mos t of all, he said, not to
state pay records.
·
· for the state dwing the Chevrolet, In~.; Bill Swad and freedom. I congratulate where they were last night.
He said that when thinking fo rget the heritage of
Gosney was charged with campaign. They were ethical ChryslerPiymouth Co.; and you as you approach it as
backdating job applications. until the defeat.
Bill Swad Motor Sales, were young people. Approach it of the great land of America .dependence on divine .
sued Tuesday by state At- with confidence and with one must remember what guidance, and he quoted from
torney General William J. faith and it will come right our ancestors paid for our the Bible, " Lord, thou hast
Brown for using allegedly back to you," D. Merrill freedom . " Freedom isn't been our dwelling place in ali
Davis, retired supervisor of free. We bought and paid for generatlons. "
deceptive sales practices.
Babs Witte, president of the
The hiwsuit, filed in the Jackson City Schools, told the it with lives, tile freedom we
graduating cia...,, . led the
Franklin County Common graduating class of Meigs lake for granted."
Davis told the graduates seniors into the gymnasium
Pleas Court, charged the High School, tuesday night.
Speaking at the seventh not to believe the sayings, to
" Pomp
and
Cir·
Swad firms with using
:~':;:;:::::::::::::;:::::::::::::::::;:::::::::;~::::::;:::::~:::::: :::::::~::: ::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::.~
deceptive advertising and annual commencemen t Jl,s not what you know, it's cwnstance" played by the
By HELEN THOMAS
problems confronting us.
making misleading exercises at the high school, who you know ." or Meigs Hi gh School' Band
-"That the United Slates representations in connection Davis used a quotation £rom "Everybody's doing it,".
UPI White House Reporter
under the direction or Dwight
BRUSSELS ( UP!)
is convinced that detente with with
Goins. The band also p~rthe
sale
of Rudyard Kipling: "Be with
President Ford flew hete the East can only proceed on automobiles.
HBe as discriminating as
us yet, lest we forget, lest we
(Continued on page 12)
WASHINGTON - CONGRESS HAD THE RIGHT to freeze today on the first leg of a six· a founds lion of strong and
The suit also alleged the
wages of 65,000 Ohio state workers when wage-price.controls day Ew-opean trip with a secure alliance defenses.
companies were violating
-"That NATO . is the Ohio's Repairs and Services
were enacted, the U.· S. Supreme Court ruled Tuesday. The promise of unwavering
justices also ordered reconsideration of a lower court decision American support for "my cornerstone of U.S. foreign Rule by failing to provide
upholding Ohio's use of public fiJ!Ids to pay for aid to the NATO colleagues and the policy and has the un- written estimates when anwavering support ol the ticipated repairs exceed $25;
handicapped and other supplementar programs in parochial people of Europe."
He · said the Atlantic American public and of our failing to obtain the
schools.
The Ohio Civil Service Employes Association had filed suit alliance againsl communism Congress.
customer's authorization
-"And that our com- before' making additional
contending Congress did not have the constitutional righ~ to has stoOd strong for 26 years
Impose wage controls on state employes. The Cowl senrthe · and "detente with the East mitment to this alliance will repairs;
charging for
WASHINGTON (UP!) - add another dollar a barrel to had not acted on either his
the import fee on foreign legislative program or one of
parochial,aid case back to a special three-judge Ohio panel, can only proceed on a not falter.
unauthorized repairs; and
"Congress did nothing."
crude
oil as of June 1. He also its own during the 90 days he
dting Its ruling of last week that most of Pennsylvania's foundation of strong and
representing .that repairs
Again and again, ripping
program for church;elated schools Is Wtconstitutional.
were made when, in fact,
pages (rom a calendar of said he would ask Congress delayed imposing the higher
secure alliance defenses."
Ford and his wife, Betty,
they were not.
congressional inaction, for a gradual end to price import fee.
' 'The Congress cannot
HONG KONG - A CHINESE woman became the second . were greeted by Belgium's
Brown, in his suit, asked
President Ford repeated that controls on domestic oil along
with a windfall profits tax on dri'ft, dawdle and debate
woman ever to scale Mt. Everest Tuesday and the New China King Baudouin and Queen
titany Tuesday night.
the court to :
forever with America's
News Agency said it proved wrong "the reactiopary fallacy of Fablola and Secretary of
-Permanently enjoin the
He told the American oil companies.
The
President
also
set
a
60future ,'' Ford said. The
man being superior to women."
people "Congress has acted
State Henry A. Kissinger.
The Meigs county Com- companies from violating
levy,
the
first
ever,
for
closing line of his text said:
cent
NCNA said' the woman, identified only as Phanthog, a
only negatively" on his
Klss!nger arrived earlier to missioners meeting Tuesday Ohio's consumer protection
Cbinese of Tibetan birlh, reached the peak from the north help pave the way for the in regular s~sslon approved a laws.
energy proposals, that the imported refined petroleum "I will not stand here idly
slope along wit!\ eight Chinese men, also born in Tibet, President's first visit to resolution authorizing the
-Grant permanent injunc· .United States could have an products such as heating oil while the United Slates of
America runs o~t ?f gas." .
cllmallng an expedition that began two months ago. Mrs. Ewope as chief executive- village of . Wilkesville in lions
against
falsely
energy shortage overnight, and gasoline.
Ford
said
he
was
raising
,
The June I tariff IIICrease IS
Junko Tabei, a 3().ywearo()ld Japanese housewife, became the an ll,(i()().mi]e trip that will Vinton County to undertake a representing autos without that he had no choice but to
first woman to scale Mt. Everest earlier this month.
warranties will be'repaired at act himself where the the tariff on foreign oil now _ in addition to the f~ $1 per
carry him to Spain, Austria
and Italy and Include study leading to obtaining a discount while failing to nation's lawmakers had boosting the price of gasoline barrel levy Ford 1mpo~
federal funds for the pwpose
DmBLE'S RIDGE, ENGI,.AND - "IT WAS awful," meetings with Egypt's ·of
prices by 1.5 cents a gallon by Feb. !.
planning a sewage system. disclose at the time of the'sale failed,
August
--because Congress
Although the tariff incre~
Richard Wallace, said: "A terrible mess. The roof was · President Anwar Sadat and
that
the
autos
are
being
sold
In
a
14-minute
national
A portion of the proposed
Is
primarily designed to Illsquashed down so much you couldn't get inside." The York- . Pope P.aul.
he
will
telecast,
Ford
said
"as is."
,
Id
falls . M .
crease foreign oU prices by $1
'" elg•
Ford will address a North s u Y area
shire farmer witnessed the worst road disaster in British
-Enjoin the companies
County·
,
·
Salem
Center
area.
hiatory - the crash ·of a busload of women sightseers in the Atlantic Treaty Organization The commissioners will not from using advertisements
.a barrel, thus reducing im·
porta, Federal Energy Ad·
scenic C088tal countryside.
·
summit here
discuss the
which create the Impression
be
liable
for
any
.financial
ministration officials said it
'Ibe bus smashed through a stone parapet on Dibble's leftist move by Portugal's obligations to the prop&lt;ised that used cars being offered
Bridge Tuesday and plunged 25 feet to a field below, killing the governlnent.
for sale are new cars.
would
cause
similar
rise in
the price
of a"new"
domestic
"It is fitting that the pur-. project.
male driver and 31 women 111ssengers. A fleet of ambulances
-Grant an order requiring
Permission was given the de{enda~ts to reimburse
oil -{)il produced in excess of
· rushed the '14 surviving passengers to nearby ·Airedale pose Of my first trip to
Debbie Buck, chairperson of the March of Dimes In Meigs 1972 icvels - which sella at
Hospital rut doctors said many had severe injuries and were · Ewope as president of tbe Columbia Gas Transmission injured consumers and apUnited
Slates
is
participate
Corp.,
to·
install
·
a
four-inch
County,
said Tuesday tbe organization received $3,2:!Q.09 the fQI'Oign price now ' about
10
not expected to live.
point a master to detennine
during
in
a
NATO
swmnlt,"
.
said
gas
pipe
line
under
and
1974-1975
from com containers, mailers, the mother's $11.50a barrel.
'
the extent of damages caused
across
county
road
25.
march, businesses and school children.
The President proposed to
'111E REV. FRANCIS X. LAWLOR, WHO GAINED Ford in remarks prepared for
An animal claim for $1,017- by the defendanta' alleged
Ne,r
officers
for
the
coming
year
elected
at
a
recent
meeting
decontrol
the price of "clld"
nati01111l attention In hla etforta to keep blacks out of a ~til­ delivery on his arrival.
illeg!d sales practices.
'
"I
have
come
to
tell
my
was
paid
to
Rex
Cheadle,
Rt.
are
Mrs.
Buck,
county
chairperson;
Carol
Ad81l'.s,
vice
domestic
oU
-that produced
west Ollca1o white enclave, won a stumlng write-in victory in
The attorney general is also
3,
Albany,
for
the
loss
·
of
41
president;
and
Jo
Ann
Williams,
secrelllry-treasurer.
Mrs.
·
within
1972
levels and. ac- . ·
the dty's 5th District congreaalonal primary Tuesday.
NATO colleapes and the sheep. Attending were Henry deCking a ban cin advertise- Buck explained that 40 percent of the money collected stays counting for about 40 per cent
-· The 57-yearold Roman Catholic priest and former Chicago peilple of Europe:
W Its W rd
Our
d menta wh!ch talk of automo- ''TIIat our great alUance
e '
a en
s, an
alderman racked up 60 ~cent of the vote In hla write-in battle
biles whiCh are different from here in tile county to be used for those born with birth defects, of all U.S. production. This Is
Ollpected to increase gBIOiine
aaalnat Wlllilmn H. G. Toms, the only name appearing on the remair\s strong. To guarantee . B~rnard ' Gilkey' . com- the o'\es pictured in · for clinic purpoSes and educational purposes. .
t
it Ill
t miSSJOn,ers, and Martha newspapir advertisements or
The
target
now
of
the
National
FouJJ!ation
is
geared
more
to
prices by another nickel
' GOP b8llot. In Kentucky, Gov. Julian Carroll won his sll!te's •h
.,.a y a y, we mus Chambe
k
1
birth
defect
prevention.
within
two yean.
· rs. c er '
vigorously .· 9ddress the
television commercials.
p~torlal nomination overwhelmingly..
. '"
JJ, .
•-I
t
'.
COLUMBUS (UP!)- Five
former state employes who
were members of the
Recount Planning Com·
mittee for former Gov. John
J . Gilligan and the committee itself have been in·
dieted by a Franklin County
Grand jury in connection
with an investigation into
payroll padding during the
last months of the Gilligan
. Administration, it was announced today .
Franklin
County
Pr~tor George C. Smith,
sal!l.\he grancl jury indicted
the ilve former state .em:·
ployes on felony charges and
named William J . Bannon,
Bexley, the chainnan of the
Recount Planning Committee, in the indictment
returned against the COIIl·
mittee, but.did not ilame him ·
separately as an individual.
The Recount Planning
Committee was charged
with crlminalliabilly of theft
as an organization for
tolerating the alleged payroll
offenses of thOse individu.als
who were hired but did not
actually work for tlie slate
from November through
mid.January.
Smith said maximum
penalty on conviction Is five .

years in prison.
The five indicted on
charges of theft by deception
and the amount they
allegedly took were Richard
Sorge, Cleveland, $688 ;
Elaine Fortney, Cleveland
Heights, $859; Thomas
George, Lakewood, $1,032;
John Chiappetta, Dayton,
$1,032, all former employees
of tbe state Tax Department
· and Paul Walker, Troy,
$1,224, a former employe of
the Department of Motor
Vehicles.
The Recount Planning
Committee was ,charged
with tbe criminal liabiity of
theft as an organization.
The conunittee was formed to help in a recount of
votes after the Nov. 8
general election in which
Giiligan lost to Gov. James
A. Rhodes by less than 12,00
votes.
Ten former Gilligan campaign workers Tuesday were
given six month suspended
jail sentences after they
pleaded guilty to charges of
receiving pay for slate jobs
·they did not perform during
hte final months of the
' Gilligan adminsitration.
Another was sentenced for
tampering with records.

IJVews . . •in Br~ef~

ad 's
firms Amerzca: still
sued land of freedom

Ford pledges
role in NATO

1

•

Foreign crude fee up
· $1 barrel says Ford

w·ilkesviiie
getS ok.ay

and

FOUNDATIONS

co,uncll.

March Of Dl·mes
Pro, due. es $3,250"

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="764">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="11164">
                <text>05. May</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="50103">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="50102">
              <text>May 27, 1975</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="83">
      <name>adkins</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="275">
      <name>russell</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
