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                  <text>3G - The Sunday Times -Sentinel. Sunday, May 2, 1976

Dateline 1776 -

There's some surprises left
in senior citizens ·of Ohio
.

Williamsburg, Va., May

,;

t

•

'

COLUMBUS
A
preliminary analysis or the
fi rst 1,128 qu estionnaires
.received in conjunction with
th e
Golden
Buckeye
Program, indicates soin e
startling statistical infonn ation about the stale's
elderly , Martin A. Janis,
Director of the Ohio Commission on Aging , said today.
The Golden Buckeye
Program, coordinated by the
Ohio Commission on Aging, is
the first discount program of
its kind in lhe nation offering
statewide discounts at reta il

GALLIPOLIS· CITY MANAGER Dick Mi lls at the Gallia County Emergency Food
Pantry after Thursday night's open house. He !otind there was still a great need for food
items or mon ey. All items may be brought to loca l churches or checks sent to them. For
further information concerning the way one can be involved, call 446-1030.

Heck's opening I 0 new stores
Char lesion - Advising
shareholders at the Heck's,
Inc. 1NYS!l i annual meeting
here Saturday that calendar
1976 '·should be an excellent
ye ar "

fo r

th e

regional

- - - - - - - -- -

YOUr
GOOd
NeigHBOr
CARROL K. SNOWDEN
24

Slate Stree t
Gallipolis

Phon e 446-Q290

1

Home 446-4518
See him for al l your fam1 ly

insurance needs.
(1kBA
Cood N•ighbor,
Star. Fa""
Is Tharr

re ta il er , Chairma n Ft'e d

Haddad said "the com pany's
growth will be powered by
one of the most ambitious
store opening prugrams in

Heck's history."
A total of 10 new stores is
slated for opening thi s year,
he told shareholde1·s, and
added that another eight to 10
open i n~s ;Ire scheduled for
the following year, "giving
the company two back-tohack years of store expansion
tha t will add materially to the
company's reta ilin g space. In
1976, alone." he pointed out,
"we expect to increase our
sell in g space by nppr oxunatcly 25 percen t, ·
which should be an important
plus tn giving Heck's its
seven teenth record ycm· in
197ti."
Ear ly the Hec k's cluef
executive reported that the
co mpan y had achie ved
record 1·esults for the fi rst
quarter ended March :11 , 1976.
For the period, ne t income

advanced 105 percent fr om
!r-I SI.I Ut.tHI

the yet'l'r-(!arlier quarter on a
~a in in sales . First
qLlart er ne t amount ed lo
25 percent

State Farm ln1urance C~;Jmpan . es
Home Ol llces : Bloommgton , ll lmois

p 7302

$452,600, equal to $.15 per
share , compared with net

income of $220,500, or $.07 per

Big May Sale!
Save up 10 96%

ofthefeeon

Checks
in May.

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

share in th e fir st three
months of 1975. Sales for the
rece nt quarter totaled
$37,815 ,000 up fr om $30,252,900 in the corresponding quarter ended
Mat·ch 31, 1975.
Elaborating on the company's store o~enings for
1976, the Heck's chairman
said he expec ts to end the
year· with a total of 54 stores,
up from 44 at December 31,
1975. Two major stores have
·already been opened this

merchants and stat eoperated facilities for senior
citizens.
Those applying for the
Golden Buckeye Card are
asked to voluntarily complete
a 4:kjuestion, eight-category,
confidential questionnaire
when they make application
for .the discount card .
The questionnaire asks for
the person's age, sex, and
c~unty in which they live. No
other identification is asked.
The respondenl is asked to
circle the numbers in the
eight categ ories which most

more lhan 20 years.
- 55 percent need no major
repair$ to their homes.
- 22 percent live in rental
homes.
- 66 percent have a valid
Ohio driver 's license.
- - 87 percent are registered
to vote.
- 61 percent voted in tlie
last election.·
- 60 percent receive their
informat'ion throu gh
television.
- 79 percent receive their
.information through new~,
papers.
- 63 percent receive their
information through radio.
- 51 percent watch
television between 7 and 9
p.m.
Only those Ohioans, '65
Gallia County Clerk- of adequately staff the office, years and older, are eligible
Co urts, urged persons and consequently, workload to apply for the Golden
planning overseas vacations backlogs are developing as Buckeye Card .
to be patient since the "Pass- predicted. It is presently
" Jn[orniation from more
port Rush Season" is here. impossible for us to issue than 15,000 questionnaires is
In her letter, Mrs. Knight passports within the ideal currently being fed Into a
stated, "Each year, In the · two-week period. Backlogs computer and will be used by
spring and early swnmer vary in the National Office the Ohio Commission on
months, we experience a and the Agencies, but in some Aging and local agencies on
sharp increase in passport instances, it may take from aging to plan future
application volume. as four to six weeks to process programs for the elderly,"
American citizens prepare passport applications.
Director Janis said .
for overseas vacations. I feel
"We attempt to process
"More than 50 percent of
certain you are aware that vie first those applications which those applying for the-Golden
are presently in the midst of show an imminent departure Buckeye Card are voluntarily
the ~~ Passport Rush Season." date. Therefore, it is very completing the questionThe Department of State important that an accurate naire. Through the progr~m .
has denied the Passport de.parture date be shown on Ohio will have the largest
Office sufficient funds .to the application ." ·
bank of documented in-

year. They are new units in
Oakland, Md. and Princeton,
W. Va . Three new stores are
slated to open on one date,
May 10, in South Hills, South
Boston and Pulaski, all in
Virginia. Other new units
scheduled for this year
include stores in Moundsville, W_ Va., Prestonsburg,
Ky ., Summersville , W. Va ., Galaxie,
Va .. ahd a new store in Oxford , N. C., Heck's first store
in North Carolina.

-

Amount of
Tronlm
Checks

us""

$5,000

$50 00

'"
$2 00

2.500

25.00

2 00

Q2%

1.000

10 00

2 DO

80%

500

5.00

2 00

60%

...

'

May

YOU
SAY I

-

Q6%

Offer good.1- only 1n U S and Puerto lko- ond end~ Moy 31 , 1976.
You save a lot when you buy F1 rst Notiona l Ci ty Tra ve lers
Checks r1gh1 now during the Big May Sole. U se them
whenever you go on voca tion.
And 1f they get lost or stolen you'll save time, too.
Because First Notional Ci ty Travelers Checks con g1ve you
o refund on -the-spot o f 45,000 I&lt;Xol ions worldwide.
Thousands more places lhon any other lro&gt;Je lers check .
Even if you r vaca tion is mon th s a way, buy Fir st
Na tional City Travelers Checks 1n May.
They're accepted all over the w orld .

Pomeroy, Ohio

'

~at...

•[\.

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

'

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

'

(
Q

ROAD RALLY wmNERS - Frarik Case, Cheshire,
won first place in the Pomeroy-Middleport U011s Club
first annual Road futlly staged Sunday. From the left are
Bill Nease oft he Lions Club presenting Ute trophy to Case,
with Bob Buck, second place winner, and Chuck Bartels,
third place winner. Buck and Bartels received plaques.

VAUGHAN HONORED
- L B. Vaughan, 290\'z

Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy, ·
Friday was presented a
handsome service pin and
cllatlon for 21 years of
loyal, dedicated service as
dispatcher for the Ohio
Slate Patrol al Its GalllaMeigs Post by Capt. R. C.
Wilson, commander of
Division 9 In Jackson on
behalf of Col. Frank Black·
stone, slate commander. In
his hometown, Vaughan
puts In extra hours as
juvenile officer and extra
policeman, and Is a
member of the emergency·
rescue squad.

VOL. XXVIII

formation on the status and
needs of its elderly of any
stale," Janis said.

REGULAR 14.00

WOMEN'S ANGEL TREAD
SALE PRICE .
AT 162

MRS. ESTHER KISSELL recaliB some 50 years ago a
gigantic pageant was staged at the Rock Springs Fairgrotinds
to mark a historical event. A business firm staging the event
provided costumes and settings for the pageant. Mrs. Kissell
wonders if anyone has any information at hand about it,
perhaps, a newspaper account. She alsil wonders if anything
similar is being prepared in observance of the bicentenniaL
REGISTRATION FOR THE MEIGS COUNTY American
Legion Baseball Team gets underway at 2 p.m. today at the
Drew Webster Post 39, American Legion, Home.
.
The team has a tentative 34 game schedule outside of
tournament play lined up this season. Coaches are George
Nesselroad and Charlie Hamilton. Eligible players are those
who will not hav.e attaine&lt;ltheir 19th birthday before Aug. I,
1976. Players must pay a $5 fee, not refundable, upon
reg istration. The team is sponsored by Drew Webster Post and
F'eeney-ll€nnett Post 128, American Legion, Middleport.

Style AT 162-as pictured.
Velour ribbed scuff, hard
sole, color blue, pink, white

Style AT 163-As pictured,
double knit, ballerine hard
sole! cerise turquoise, white .
Sizes Small, Medium , Large,
Extra large ·

AT 163

•

at

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

SAlJSBURY, RHODESIA - RHODESIA HAS BEGUN
calling up its civilian reserves, launching a massive military
offensive to wipe out the escala ling black guerrilla insurgency.
The reservists - both black and white - started putting on
their uniforms Stutday in a mobilization that could swell
Rhodesia's field forces to 55,000 troops and police, an
elevenfold increase over the current S,OOO-man army. The
move took Rhodesia closer to a full war footing than any time
since minority white settlers opposing black rule in the former
British colony declared unilateral independence in 1965.
"

LABOR DISPUTES HAVE HALTED CONTINENTAL
TRAILWAYS buses serving all or part of nine Southern slates,
the United PIJI'Cel Service in 13 Midwest states, the Big Four
tiremakers and some of San Francisco's city services.
No progress was reported Sunday in strikes by nurses at a
-WlUimailtlc, Conn., hosjjital, beer bottlers'at'Anheuser.Busch
Co., workers at a nuclear reactor on tbe Hanford Reservation
In Washington or technicians and newswrilers at the National
Broadcasting Co.
No negotiations were scheduled toward ending a strike by
1,000 members of the Amalgamated Transit Union against 5
divisions of the nationwide Continental TraUways bus system.
The walkout that began Saturday idled buses in eastern Texas,
Louisiana, Mississippi, .Alabama, Tennessee, Georgia, and
jlarts of Kentucky, Arkansas and Missouri.

;:;:;::·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·::;.;:;.;.:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:=·

Make E/betfelds In Pomeroy

1

Your Mother's Day Gift Headquarters
You'll find a fine selection .

of Mother's Day gift ideas on every
'

Furnishings Annex and the Mechanic

LUCASVIlLE, Ohio (UP!) and Corrections said today.
- Striking guards .at the
"Only about six or seven
Southern Conectional guards showed up last night
facility again late Sunday at the 10 o'clpck shift," safd
ntght blocked entrances to Ashley. "It looks like about
the Institution with cars, a the same situation this
spokesJDan
jor
the morning .''
Department of Rehabilitation
Ashley said the prisoners

..

Iii! .

..

to stop Carter rush

CLEVELAND ( Ui'l J Morris Udall said today he
was in the race for 'the
De1110cratlc , presidentlal
nominatioo "all the way" and
said his major priority now is
to try and head off any
·"stampede" for former
Georgia governor Jimmy
CarterUdall began bis se(,'!)nd llay
of campaigning for the Ohio
June 8 primary here with
visits to Lakewood High
School and Cleveland Slate
University prior to a news
conference.
The Arizona congressman
sal&lt;! he felt biB Cllmpaign is

iJiJ

"finally"""beginning to 'cut
into Carter's popularity with
· black Democrats.
·
H elected, Udall 'said he
"would get rid" of Secretary
of State Henry Kissinger.
" I think his time has
passed, although history will
say Nixon and Kissinger were
· right to go to China and build
better relationships with the
Soviets," said Udall. "But
they got taken a couple of
times." ·
·
Udall said Sunday night it
had taken him six months to
get Carter "one-&lt;Jn-&lt;Jne and
now we're gonna try to put
him away."
·

WASHINGTON- REP. LES. ASPIN, D-Wis., says the
Navy's new F14 Tomcat fighter "is so plagued with problemS'
lhat on any particular day only a quarter of the aircraft are fit
for action.
'"The Navy has spent $20,4 million for each of these planes,
yet they are terribly unreliable," he said. Quoting Navy
Department data, he said problems with the Tomcat's TF30.jet
engine, "have already been identified as the probable cause of
six accidents." Aspin said a 7th Tomcat was shot down by one
of Its own missiles while undergoing tests." ·
·The Pentagon responded that "the Tomcat has
consistently met 80 per cent or more of its operation commitments," and is a "highly capable and complex system which
provides the Navy a quantwn jwnp in performance over its
predecessors.''
LOS ANGELES- SCHOOL BOARD PRESIDENT Robert
Docter says entire families sometimes join their children at
student breakfasts served at schoolS in poorer parts of town, . MOSTIMPROVEDPI.AYERHONORSwent to Terri .
and he doesn't mind. "It is not uncommon in poverty--area
Russell. At her side Is Pat Wood, president of the Band
schools to see parents daily come to the schools with tod&lt;jlers
Boosters.
and then the whole family eats breakfast with the school--age
youngsters in the cafeteria," Docter said during the weekend.
"I'm proud of school personnel who look in the other
direction when this happens." Docter told a health conference
that city school cafeterias serve 100,000 breakfaSts and 250,000
lunches a day. " In poverty areas, the school district Is the ,
major food distributor," he said.
·

Local news, in briefs

Be sure to Ship the Main Floor
Notions Department for Hallmark
Mother's Day Cards and Gift Wrap

The Middleport E-R squad
transferred Nettle Swisher
from VMH to the HMC ai 7:07
p.m. Saturday. At 11:11 p. m.
s...day, the squad went to 342
Beech St. for Marsha
Harrison, who was having
difficulty breathing. She was
taken to PVH.

Meigs
hand
is· honored

· to the Rac ine Fire Dept., Box
184, Racine. Checks are to be
made payable to the Racine
Volunteer Fire Dept.,
Meigs High School and its
designated tor " Fireworks band booster organization and Jeni Grate, junior. The
most improved player award
Fund." If no more money is
donated there will be no honored the 1975-76 Marauder went to Terry Russell.
fireworks display July 4th. Band Saturday night at the
· Members ot the band ln .
were :
annual banquet in the traduced
Freshmen - Car in Bailey ,
SYRACUSE - A meeting cafeteria .
Jana Burson , Jul ie Byer,
The Pomeroy E-R squad af the Syracuse-Minersville
Char les , Laurel Cole
was called to village hall at Baseball Boosters wilt be
Musicians were introduced Tammy
Jeff Dan iels, Pa tty Over ,
9: 12 p. m. Saturday for Job
he ld at 7:30p. m. Tuesday at by Dwight Goins, director, Beverly F au.lkner , Susie
Prater, 14, Pomeroy, who had the Municipal Building In and Randy Hunt, assislan t Gr
anda! , Beverly Hoffman ,
been brought there Ill. The Syracuse.
Jamie
,
M a ry
director , presented awards. Johnson . KJohnson
squad took him to YMH. At
evin l&lt;lng , Keith
The John Phillip Sousa Krauller , D iana Lee , Terry
7:38 p. m. Sunday the squad
l. Jo McKinn ey,
was called to Mulberry Ave.
award w~nl to Uas Thomas, ' McDanie
Pam Mees , Shari M itch , Lisa
for Nellie Eblin, who had
Clearing and cold tonight,
,
St"1errl
Osborn e,
severe chest pains. She was chance of scattered frost. Dina Pratt, arid Kim Jones. Mash
The awards were provided by Stephan le Radford , Rhonda
taken to HMC..
.
t er , Don Ri chmond ,
Lows in the mid 30s. Sunny Kermit Walton of New York Reu
David Riggs, Dolli e Rou sey ,
RACINE - Latest con- and warmer Tuesday, highs Clothing House.
·
Li sa Scaggs , Maridy Sisson ,
Smith , Nancv
frlbutors to ·the fireworks · in the 60s Probability of
"Opt
standing
Per- Kathleen
fund Of the Racine Volunteer precipitati1•r. 20 per cent formance " awards went to Smith . John Story , Dorset
Thomas , Janet Van Vrlinken'.
Fire Dept. are Mr . and Mrs .
David Zirkle and Harold M. today, near zero per cent Kevin King, . freshman ;
(Continued on page 2)
Smith. Donafllll1's may be sent . tonight, 10 per cent Tuesday. Lliw-a Hoover, sophomore,
1

'THE FINAL SHOWING OF THE SPORTS display at the
Meigs Museum, Butternut Ave., Pomeroy, will be from 2 to 4
p.m. today. Pictures of various sporting events over the past
years dating back to the early 1900s. Many sport items from
the past and presenf are also included.

Main Store, Annex and Warehouse
open Weekdays and Saturdays 9:30
to s, Fridays 9:30 to 8 p.m.

MARGI': GOETT IS HOPING friends will respond to a
request fur a card shower for her grandmother, Mrs. Mary C.
Hoffman, Box 31, Chester. Mrs. Hoffman, who has just been
returned home from St. Joseph Hospital, Parkersburg, will he
65 on Thursday .

'

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY
v,

•
I .

Weather

.....

r· ; I,

,_

COLUMBUS (UP1) - Gov. James A. Rhodes today named
Kewgylr Aggrey, 67, as his director of the state Department of
Public Welfare to succeed Raymond McKenna, whose
nomination was rejected last week by the Ohio Senate.
were being fed ~reakfast hunger strike was scheduled
Aggrey has been Cleveland Diatrict Manager for the
today and it was n.ot to end Sunday.
depar!Jnent since 1963.
inunediately determined how
The guards went on strike
Rhodes, at a morning news conference. said McKenna would
many remained . 011 a hunger to back demands for more remain as deputy director.
·
strike.
correction officers and
"Ray McKenna will be chl!'f deputy," said Rhodes. '"Many
Superintendent Arnold improved security in the of the responsibilities will fall' on him. You have to have a good
Jago said·Stlnday most of the facility .
deputy."
nearly 1,000 prisoners who
Jago said Sunday there was · Rhodes, who said he expected the Senate to reject McKenna
started the. hunger strike to about the "normal number of as head of the department, pledged some time ago that
personnel inside" including whoever was the director, McKenna would continue to "run"
guards held over and the department.
augmented
by
extra
Rhodes also said McKenna million suplemental appro40 went to the dining hall for personnel and other help, to
would release a "white priation to the department to
maintain normal operations paper" within the next few
at the maximwn security days detailing what steps fund the program.
The legislature is not scheprison in Scioto tounty.
could be taken to remedy the duled to return to the Capitol
fiscal problems with state for a full sessl011 until June 9,
Medicaid payments.
McKenna originally said
Last week, Rhodes ordered major cuts would have to be
a two-week freeze on any cuts made May 1 In Medicaid
in the payments. ')'op payments because of the lack
legislative Republican of&lt; funds . Rhodes' order
leaders introduced a blll laat delays those cuts until May
week authorizjng 8 $128 15.
'
NEW YORK (UP!) - Last ponies, which broke all sorts
A8Jlrey Is a graduate of
year, lhe SOO largest corpora- of records in 1974 but ran Into :::;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::·l::::::::::::::::.::::::::::::::;::
Otterbein
College and has
tions in the United States big trouble last year," the
attended
Western
Reserve
Make-up
days
set
suffered 'the biggest overall magazine said.
and
the
_
Ol)ip
. Stale
'
decline in profits in 17 years,
"The group's earnings fell
Make-up '\Jaya made
(Continued
on
page
8)
with a drop of 13.3 per cent, by 2ii per cent and accounted .necessary through bomb
Fortune ~gazine reported. · for more than half of the 500's threats al ·the t¥elgs Local
Fortunels current issue overall profit decline," Junior and Sehlor High
carries its annual list of lhe Forbes reported.
Schools have been set by
lop 500 companies and their
Total sales of the 500 were Supt. Charles Dowler.
financial performance in $865 billion, a jump of 3.9 per
Allhe junior high, three
1975.
cent ov.er 1974 sales, the
days
must be made up.
"The results were mostly report said.
These
will be on May 8, 15
.dismal; gripped by recession,
"Tobacco did best of all,"
and
22,
all Saturdays. One
the corporations suffered the the magazine said, "with a
There will be a pretty baby
day
must
be made up allhe
most severe earnings drop in median increase of '16.3 per
contest at 10 a.m.' Saturday,
senior
high
S(hool
which
17 years," Fortune said.
cent because of cigarette
July 3, at the Middleport
wiU be Saturday, May 22.
Profit losses were "heavily increases and the expansion
Community Park 8S' a part of
concentrated in the oil com- of the low~ar market."
the Railroad Days Observance.
Entrants need not be
residents of Meigs County,
Judging will be dlvl.ed by age
groups as follows :
Group one - birth to three
months.
Group two - three months ,
to six months .
Group three - six months
to one year.
Group low- - one year to 18
months.
Group five :.... 18 months to
two years.
Group six - two year&amp;
Group seven - three years.
There will be an entry fee of
50c . En try forms will be
available in the newspaper
and at area businesses
beginning two weeks before
the festival. One girl and one
boy will be selected as first
place winner In each age
group. Each child will
receive a ribbon for entering
JOHN PIDILIP SOUSA AWAROO went to tine memben ~the Metp Hfch Band ].,the contest.
Dina Pratt, Lisa Th0)08s (Dwight Goins, director) and Kim Jones.
' '
For more information, call
(814) 992-2505 during the day
and 992-3189 after 5:30 p.m.
An old lime llddler's
contest will provide en.
tertainment Saturday night
at the railroad days festival ;
First place will be $100 plus
a trophy; second prize Is $50
and the third place winner
will get $25. 1
.
Each contestant will play
three tunes - a hoedown, a
waltz and a fiddler's choice.
.Th~re will be no trick fiddling
sucl1 as tlieOi'tiifge l:!lossom
Special or the Mocking B1rd.
Tunes should n'ot be
modern or improvised. Each
contestant may have no more
than two accompanists. A $2
entry fee ia required.
The old time fiddlers
.contest will get underway at 6
p.m. Saturday, July 3 at the
Mld\lleport Community Park.
For more information, write
the Railroad Days Festival
\
Committee,
P. 0. Box 148,
THREE. ME~BERS OF THE BAND receiving trophies for "outstanding
Middleport,
Ohio
45780 or call
~rformances" were, 1-r, Kevin King, freshman; Jeni Grate, junior, Randy Hunt; assistant
(614)
992-21i06
during
the day
director) and Laura Hoover, sophomore.
or 992-318911fter 5,30 p·.m.

l r,,,, ii,:,;;,, , u:J':'I'i'' '; :;:;,,,,,1r11.~~a~:~:~~~!!~~~l::~:~o::

NEW YORK- FREEDOM OF PRESS RIGHTS under the
Constitution are being challenged by every branch of government, aceording to the government affairs committee of the
American Newspaper Publishers Association.
"So constant and pervasive was the onslaught that
, , Federal Judge Harold R. Medina felt compelled to exhort the
press to 'fight like tigers' to preserve those constitutional
rights," the committee said in its report to the 90th annual
ANPA convention opening today at the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel.

Street Warehouse.

Welfare's new
chief is named

MONDAY, MAY 3, 1976

e

floor of the ·main store, Home

BLACKBERRY FORK, Ky. &lt;UPI J - It Leonan,t and Joseph McCoy, wealthy coal
was only a handshake, but a f,'llntury ago, operators from Phelps, Ky ., and descendthe two men have exchanged gunfire In lieu ents of the original McCoys.
of friendship.
Ironically, the m011wnent was carved Md
Making lhe historical gesture were WUUs erected by Henry D.. Hatfield o! Sarah Ann,
Hlltfield and Jim McCoy, aging descendants Logan, W.Va.,a grandson of Devil Anse,lhe
of the patria rchs who once commanded former Confederate captain and clan leader
their families .with military-like fashion in whose lifN lte statue stands at hls graveslte
America's most publicized feud .
at Sarah Ann.
It was in the lHte 1800s that the two
"!thought it was wonderful that we could
families. batt1ed each other in · their own all get together," said Henry Hatfield.
"war between the states."
He said the McCoy descendents "treated
And Saturday, the feud was recalled again us like mernhers of the family ."
when Hatfield and McCoy met at the foot of
The monument bears the names of
a monument dedicated to six of the latter's Tolbert , Ala fair, Calvin , Pharmer,
ancestors.
RandOlph Jr ., and WliUarn McCoy, chlldren
Willis, 88, the only living son of Devil Anse of Randolph McCoy who were killed in the
Hat(leld, and Jim, 91, nephew of Randolph .feud . Randol pi) was lhe leader of the McCoy
McCoy, met in the rain-soaked mountains of clan of Pike llounty. The Hatfielda were
eastern Kentuc~y Saturday to join hands In from Mingo County, W.Va ., on the opposite
an official and final lhlce.
side of the Tog River.
The two men were among a crowd of
The Inscription on the monument notes
about 100 who attended the dedication of a that six members suffered "uni!Jnely
$8,000 monument provided by brothers
(Continued on J)age 8)

en tine

a

Special Bargain
MONDAY Day. Sale prices on Women's
dresses, blouses, sportswear,
ideal Mother's Day Gifts. Sale
ends Mond
S p.m.

GAYLE PRICE, PORTLAND AREA HISTORIAN, sends
along a note of legend from his area :
" In section .35, Olive Township, there is an old cave that
tells a tale.' Riley Pigott, who owns land in this area, relates
that 'Old Man Pigott' told him thai in 1854 when he came to
Shade River country; he found ari old man living in the cave
and the old man was manufacturing furniture. A table made
by this old man was in the possession of Hazel Johnson for
many years but burned when the Johnson home was destroyed
by fire a few· years ago.
"Old Man Pigott further related that when he came to the
cave there was a huge oak blown down over it and lodged in l/Je
rocks covering the cave. Riley saw the tree In 1900. Achurik of
this sainetree remains at the foot of the cave and may be seen
today.
"Old Mr. Pigott said that Indians traveting up and down
Shade River used this cave for shelter. Riley said that when he
lived on this property his cattle would go into the cave to get
out of the storms. A trickle of water continually faUs over the
cave and Riley said he has never known "the trickle to stop;
hence the name 'Fail Rock ." Riley stated that school children
in the old days were able to find useable school slate in the
bottom of the cave ."

NO. 11

BY UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL
ci:EVELAND - UNITED RUBBER WORKERS union
pickets stopped salaried personnel from entering ab011t 15
strikebound rubber planls lp the Akron area early today.
The pickets grouped at the main gates and entrances to the
plants but there were no inunediate reports of any Incidents,
authorities said. The URW members, who average about $220
a week in straight time, begin collecting $35 a week in strike
benefits Wednesday, but a union spokesman saia today "if we
have to stay out without any m011ey at all we will."

•

·I t(·

Case alsp received a U. S. Savings bond. To win drivers
solved riddles directing to fixed pofnts in the county, and
were penalized for speed and lateness. Case is a member
of the MGM Corvette Club, which he said, will make a
contribution toward expenses of the event.

e

~

POMEROY - G. H. Martin, formerly of the Pomeroy area
and a Iong{iine attorney-at-law, Fori Lauderdale, F1a., is
making big plans to return to Pomeroy for the annual reunion
of the Pomeroy ,High School Alwnni Assn. •
Several years ago Mlu-tin returned to a reunion and staged
a pleasant luncheon for his classmates and their spouses at the
Trinity Church. This year, Martin also is planning another.
dinner for his group on Saturday afternoon, May 29. A classmate, Mrs. Carrie -Neutzling, who has had health problems
recently, will make local arrangements on Martin's hehalf so
that ail will be ready when he gets in from Fort Lauderdale.
Althoogh he has been gone many years, Martin has never
lost his enthusiasm for Pomeroy, and has been quite generous
in his gestures locally over the years.

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Wednesday through
Friday, fair and warmer
Wednesday apd a chance of
showers Thursday and
Friday. Hlghs·will be In the
upper 60s and 70s. Lows
Wednesday wlll be in the
lower 40s but warming lo
the lower 50s by Friday
morning.

,:::l:

Of the Bend .; - ·
ll_y /Job lloefl ich

·inspection of the Norlolk Portsmouth area to check
' any Tory moves on the
VIrginia
co a s t.
A local newspaper
reported thai the houses of
three "noted and disaffected persons" bad been
destroyed and the properly
of Tories confiscated.

I

ELBERFELD$ ,IN POMEROY

THE CNIC PARTICIPATION Committee of the
Middleport Business and Professional Women's Club recently
took on the job of conducting a cancer fund drive In
Middleport. Joined by others, the drive was quite successful
and the committee e:dends thanks to the workers and
contributors in the activity.

Farmers
Bank

"

3 - Gen. Ik completed aa

II

·JENNI·FER LOHSE, ONE OF Meigs County's most
talented people, is busy preparing a program of music and
folklore which she hopes to present to schools ap~ other
functions.
The program includes Jennifer on the dulcimer, auloharp,
hanjo and fiddle and she entwines the music with old~lme
mountain lore, ghosilore, customs, superstitions and "tall
tales." Sounds good, •h?

SEE HOW MUCH YOU SAVl

closely renee! their answers.
The categories ask for
infonnation on · the person's
background, housing, llj!lghborhood , transportation,
health, in me , em/&gt; yment
and education, an ctivities.
From the initial 10,000
questionnaires ,leceived by
the Ohio Commission on
Aging, a preliminary
analysis of the first 1,728
·responses shows that :
- · 74 percent arc living in
their ·own homes.
- 46 percent have lived in
the same tteighborhooel for

Passport Rush runs heavy
WASHINGTON, D. C. •' ranees Knight, director,
Passport Office, U. $.
Department of State, in a
letter to Mrs. 'Louise Burger,

Oldsters Willis Hatfield, Jim McCoy
seal end ·of the feud with handshake

F~!r:~~~~:;;;a~~?r~!

'75 profits off

Festival to
give .babies
and fiddles

'

�3- The DatlySenhnel, Mtddleport-Pomero) 0, Monda\, Ma) 1, W76

2- The Oath Sentmei,Mtddleporl PomeroJ 0 Monday, May J,

Jones hungry to, make it big

Ford thinks

By BILL MADDEN
UPI Sports Writer
Although Randy Jones
couldn't be happier m San
Otego, he can't watt to get to
New York
Jones, ace of the San Otego
Padres ptlchmg staff,
became the rna )Or leagues'
top winner Sunday by
stoppmg the Pittsburgh
Pirates 4-2 on stx htts and JUSI
85 pttches It was Jones' ftfth
wm tn six dectstons, but
there's still at least one world
the Padre southpaw knows he
has yet to conquer- " The Btg
Apple"
"New York is where tl's
at," Jones satd last year after
bemg nosed out by the Mets'
Tom Seaver for the Nattonal
League Cy Young Award
"It's where reputattons are

he's safely
out front
Uruted Press International
The mere Iwo da) s
separatmg the Texas vottng
Saturday and four prunanes
Tuesday robbed most acttve
candtdates of thetr normal
weekend rest
Ronald Reagan headed for
lndtana even before the vote
totals showed he had bhlzed
Prestdent Ford
96
de legates to none - m the
Lone Star state
Ford also mmed for
Hooster votes to head off a
potenti al triple -header
Rea gan wm Tuesday m
Alabama Georg ta and
lndtana
On the Democratic Side
Jtmmy Carter also stomped
Indtana a!Utough hrs only
maJor opponent Utere Henry
Jackson, wtlhdt ew Saturda)
as an acttve campargner
Carter sard he was
surprtsed at the srze of
Heagan s WID ID Texas, and
when asked whtch he would
rather face m November he
satd Whrchever one ts
chosen
I feel sure the
Democrats can WID wath me
at the head of Ute hckel
Ford Oew to Ft Wayne
Sunday afternoon for two
appearances and a televtston
mlervtew a nd scheduled
several appea rances m
lndtanapohs Monday bef01 e
flymg on to Alabama
At the alfporl, Ford was
asked to respond once agam
to Reagan s charges that the
cu rrent negottallons wrlh
Panama 10uld lead to a
gtveaway' of US control
over the cana I
In answer Ford held up a
transcrtpl of remarks by Sen
BarrJ M Goldwater RAm ,
durmg a Sunday televtswn
appearanc'f (NBC-TV's Meet
the Press ), and quoted
Goldwater as savmg "I have
to support Ford's postlton on
at and I Utmk Reagan would
too if he knew more about tl '
Reagan ts Ute favonte m
Alaban1a and Georgaa , whrle
polls show Ford m front but
Reagan gaamng m !ndtana
The Dtslnct of Columbra rs
the fourth primary Tuesday
- the hrst but not the last
mulhpnmary day of the electwn )ear There are 16 slated
for May, wth stx of them on
the fmal Tuesday - May 26
Moms Udall
crt ss
c r oss tn g Co nn ec ltcut
contmued to descnbe hunseU

as the only vtable alternative
to Carter He satd he has a
good chance rf hts party wrll
Just avmd proclarmmg a
w1nner while the ballgame ts
only half over

AstraGraph
~

Bern•ce Bede Osol

•'•
•
•

..

TAURUS (April 20-May 20) A
pro duc t1ve da'/IS 1n the offmg
You re no t likely to be d1s
couraged regardless ol the
odds Thmk WIN an d you w1U
GEMINI (Moy 21-June 20) In
bus ness ma tters today play
your hunches Don I lttke a
fooli sh flyer bu t 11 yo u th mK
you re on to somethin g good
check 11 ou t

Mator League Standmgs
By Un.ted Press lnlernahonal
NatuJnal League
East
W L Pet GB
X PhlladelphiBll 6 647
New York
14 8 636
Ch 1cago
11 11 500 2 1
Pittsburgh
9 9 500 21 1
Sf LOUIS
B 12 400 .:1 1,
Montrea l
7 12 368 5
x games behind
ba sed on
Ph 1ladlphla
West
W L Pet GB
Cmc1nna!l
11 8 579
Los Angeles
12 9 57 1
Houston
12 11 522
Sa n D1 ego
10 11 d76
San Franc1sco B l2 400 3 'J
A tlanta
B 12 400 31 ,
"" Saturday s Result s
San Franc1sco 3 Ch1cago 1
Houston at NY ppd rain
C•n 6 Montreal 1 tw111ght
Philadlphla 3 Atl o 1st
Ph lladlph1a 4 Atlanta 2 2nd
LA d Sl LOUI S 3 10 11'1n1ng s
Pittsburgh 10 San Diego 6
Sunday s Results
Ph 1ladelph1a e Atlanta 2
Houston 5 New York 4 l st
New York 7 Houston 4 2nd
Montreal 8 C1n 4 16 1nn
"' los Angeles 3 St LOUIS 1
San Diego d Pittsburgh 2
~ Ch1 6 San Fra n 5 14 mn 1st
Ch1 6San Fran 5 limn 2nd
(No games today )
Tuesday s Games
Lo s Angeles at Ch 1cago
San Diego at Montreal n1ght
CmcmnatL at New York n1ght
Houston at Ph iadlph1a n1ght
, san Fran at P ttsburgh n1g hl
,. St LOUIS at Atlanta n1ghl

LEO (July 23 Aug 22) Though
you II be l(lStr ument at m bnng
1ng someth mg ol mportance
o!l today let one who only 11ad
a small hand 1n 1t taKe the
bows
VIRGO (Aug 23 Sept 22)
Plans we ll la1d toda y shoul d
later produce very des1rab e
resu lts Look toward to morrow
hopel ully Bu1ld strong loun
dat1ons now
LIBRA (Sept 23 Ocl 23) Bold
measures ma y be ca ted tor to
day 1n o rder to ac h eve your
rum s Set defm te goals Str ve
tor exce llence
SCORPIO (Oct 24 - Nov 22!
Partn ership S1tuat1ons should
prove e;-&lt; tr emety favorabl e to
day espeCially f yo u re the l1rst
t o s hOV'I \ w 1H1 n gn ess t o
cooperate! ~
SAG ITT ARt 5 (Nov 23 Oac
21) Jomt V' ntures and com
merc 1al de:ltmgs took 1ke two
areas you tshould be able to
ga ~r from)loday S tay on your
toes
CAPRICORN (Doc 22 Jan
~9) Som eone you know pur ely
soc1a lly m ay be lUSt th e person
you ne e d to he l p sW1n g
so mething Important today
So ICit hi S ai d
AQUARIUS (Jan 20-Fob 19)
Tak e pr de 1n what you do Be
helpl ul wh er ever yo u can
There Wi ll be b g retu rns lor
smcere serv1ce rend ered to
day

Dear Srr
Many ttmes I have observed dtfferent happemngs tn Metgs
County and Pomeroy aty Hall that I dtdn'l exactly approve of
but the one Utat puts the tcmg on the cake concerns the so
called sealed btds on a motorcycle - property of the Vtllage that was no longer needed I, betng a ctllzen of Metgs County,
dectded to brd on srud vehtcle I phoned lhe councr~ clerk and
was tnformed thall should put my btd m wntmg addressed lo
Crty Hall, Pomeroy c-&lt;&gt; the Clerk , and also wrtle sealed bid on
the front of lhe enevelope which I dad at least ten days pnor to
the btd opemng date On the btd openmg dare (4-19-76) there
were four 14) btds m, mme not Included After so many calls to
councrlmembers ofwhrch one \\as wtth the mayor at the time,
and all stated thai rnJ brd was never presented al the Councrl
Meelmg , one counctl member stated that he was at the other
end of the table and knew nothmg about the brd openmg The
counctl clerk told me on the phone that I had no btd m but by a
stroke of luck, or one m a thousand chance Ute winnmg btd was
JUSt ftftJ cents (50c) over my btd Now I ask who would btd
JUSt ftfty cents to cutout the htgh btdder m any sealed bid?
Now here's the clunax, stx days after lhe btds were opened
the clerk JUSt happened to find my btd m her desk drawer, she
didn't kno" how tt got there and after my questtomng about
post mark dates she stated that she diSposed of all envelopes
but the wtnnmg btdder who rs closely assoctated wtth Village
offtctals never matled hts btd, he merely handed 11 lo the
Mayor; w_llich I'll grant ts ver) proper, bull have to say the
tumng was perfect I m not a gambler put I'll say odds on a
fifty eent btd 1sealed) would be about one 111 a thousand
In closmg I thmk that I was pegged as a dumb dolt !rom
Shade Rouoo I (Darwm area) not connected to the mner
ctrcles of Pomeroy and therefore was handed a snow JOb I can
assure anyone concerned !hat tf ever anything comes up for
brd m Pomerov I wtli personally brmg my btd to counctl
meetmg and wall stand by unltl all btds are properly disposed
of - Ebner F Batley Aprtl 30, 1976

Dear SIC
On May ISthe Metgs County Chapter of the Ohio Assocrallon
for Retarded Ciltzens wrll agam sponsor a Htke-Btke The
proceeds wtll be used for the benefit of Retarded Ctltzens m
Meags County, the Staoo of Ohto and on the nattonallevel
Each nder partrcrpatmg wtll neell a sponsor, and the sponsor
ts asked to pledge any amount he chooses lo be patd on a per
mtle basts or he may pledge a flat amount
I..a styearover$1,500was raased for use m Metgs County and
we have set a goal of $3,000 for thts year's event If at all
possible please sponsor a rtder for this worthy cause If you
cannot fmd a nder but sttll wtsh to sponsor someone please call
me at 985-4412 Jesste Mrght at742-3089, Rea Roush at 992-3232
or Rack Crow at 247-3737 as we have rtders who need sponsors
The Htke-Btke wdl begm at 10 a m on Saturday, May 15,
Rally Pomt ts behtnd lhe Semor Ctltzens CM,ter If you have
any questtons please,ca ll any of lhe above numhers
Henry
Cleland Jr Hake Btke Charrman

•

I

FOURTH GRADE - Front, I -r, Dewayne Dowell, Charles Smtih, Rhonda Smtth ,
Rrchard Htll Katrma Snodgrass, second row, James Bush, Edward Coffman, KeVIn
Curfm an Terry Bell, Randy Werry, back row Becky Johnson, Jtmm) Cleland Teresa Htll,
Sherrt Bell, Laren Wolfe
PISCES (Feb 20 -March 20)
Ge t •n touch w1th a lnend that
you ha ven t seen too much of
la tely He may have some plea
sant t1dmgs today

Your
Birthday
May 4 1976
Lady Luck may take a hand n
help1ng you advance mterests
mportan t to you th1s com 1ng
yea r Take max1mum advan
ta ge o f yo ur bre ak s wh 1le
yo u re n thi S fortunate cycle

b d
Me:tgs an
0

(Continued from page I)
Lon Wood
SOP~OMOR ES
R 1ta Bal ey Cathy Blaell
nar Rory Col e Cmdy Dorst
Jen F aulkne r Anne F 1l ch
Tern F1 fe Becky F r y Tr.na
G1bbs Peggy G•rolam l Carl
Gheen Chnst1 Hess Laura
Hoover
Kathy Howard
Rhonda Hudson Sue Ken
nedy
Pau l a Kloes
K1m
K ra ulter Jun1or McDan ets
C1 nd y
M c K 1nn ey
Jon•
M ur r ay Pam Power s R~ndy
Ro ach Nlla Rusc he! Mark
St at er 0 ane Srnllh Pa1ge
Sm1lh
Me lody Snou ff er
Stev e Stou t Ve lvet Sw1she r
Teresa
Taylor
Te resa

SECOND GRADE - Front, Ito r, Kellt Rtzer, Melillsa !hie, Brad Robmson, Tina
Forester, second row, Rebecca Van Meter, Lort Adams, Mandy Hill , Ja) Bosttck, Brad
Holsmger, Mtke Johnson, TonJa Cummms

Cultural arts contest
concluded in Racine
Under the sponsorship ol the PTO, a cultural arts coolest
has been concluded ln the Racine Elementary School. Red
and blue ribbons were awarded to a number of students in
each grade for the1r work In art
The accompanymg pictures by Bob Hoeflich are of those
winners

VanMete r Sa lly Wa l ters Joe
Watkms
Jennif er
W se
Susan Wr~ght
JUNIORS
Ke1th Baley Cher y l Barn
hart
D arlen e
Barrett
Debb•e B.r chlleld
Brenda
S1s hop
Mary Blae ttna r
Tere sa
Brown
Br uce
Bumga rdn er
Ke ll 1e Bur
delle Carol vn Charl es Mark
Dav1s
Rob1n D ew h urst
Barb ara Doug la s Opa Over
Paula E1chmger
Te r esa
E ll s Tr 1na Fau l k Theressa
F 1sh
Becky Fu lt z Sand y
Garnes
Je n
Gr ate
K1m
Gru eser Kat h y Ha ley Beth
McKn1ght V1ck e M ght
T ammy Mossman
Pam
Offe nb erger
O e bb e
Osbo r f).e
Fa th
P err~n
Marga r et Pro v mce Darrell
Puckett Trud y Roach Suzy
Samue l s M e lody ScBggs
K1m Sebo Debb1e Ta ylor

•

Becky
Thomas
S he rr~
V1nmg June Wamsley Pa tty
Warner
Bever ly Wilcox
Teresa W ilderm u th Danny
Will
SENIORS
Oeb1 Ba1 ley Brenda Bolin
Chr1 SI 1
Bur so n
Jac k 1e
Carsey
Dav id Co le Tma
Duff y
C1ndy Eads
Scott
Frase r C1 nd y Glaze Cr ystal
Glaze Ju l1 e Hamm Tam 1
H offman V1c k 1 Hoffman
Andrew Hoov:er Desi Jeffers
Kim Jones Mona K 1ng
Chery l
Le hew
Esther
Lowery R1 ck Ma co mb er
V1 ckl Mantey Barn es V1 Ck 1e
Moore Carm el Murphy Pam
Nl cmsky Vaughan
K1"1
Ohlinger Terr i Owens 0 na
Pratt Judy Radford Dav e
R1dgway Mary Ru sch e!
Terr 1 Russell
Tammy
Scho ono ve r Ang1e S1ss on
L1sa Th omas Jan1ce Young

._
•
.,.....

!

..
•
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~-&gt;

FIFTH AND SIXTH GRADES - Front, I tor, DaVId Salmons, Davtd Dowell Usa Allen,
Becky Lee, ali fourth graders, second row, Scott Fredertck Laura Wolfe, Pete Robmson,
third row, Brtan Cleland, Meltnda Salmons, Debbte Rose, Patrtck Johnson, back row, Ktm
Follrod, Cmdy Cross, Lort Powell, Rtta Sloter A stxUt grade wtnner not present was Jay
Rees

Kissinger relaxes midst Kenya's wild beasts
KEEKOROK, Kenya(UPI)
- Secretary of State Henry
A Ktssmger look today off
from formulatmg a new
Afrtca pohcy and tackhng
global economtc problems to
see some of the world's last
remammg grea t wtldhfe
herds
Ktssmger , relaxmg after a
stx-nahon Afrtcan tour, flew
to this sprawhng west Kenya
game reserve and durmg a
two hour dnve 111 an open
roofed Jeep saw herds of
thousands of buffalo, zebra,
gtraffe, and antelope as well
as a !ton kril
' Do some of !hose lions
remmd you of anyone you've
been negottatmg wath recently,' a newsman qutpped to
Kissinger as a pride of 12
ltons prowled close l&lt;l has
vehtcle
"t'm not afrard of wtld
anunals " Kissmger parrted
'I've got 17 of them on my
plane" - a return qwp about
journahsts accompanymg
him

Ktssmger arraved m
Natrobt Sunday ntghl ,
effechvely wmdmg up hts
deliberations With the leaders
of SIX eonlmental countrtes
whtch wtll form the basis of a
new Afrtca policy for the
Umted Sta tes
After hts one-da) break tn
the rolling mlle-hrgh htlls of
th e Masa t Mara game
reserve here, he returns
Tu esda) to talks wtth
delegates atlcndm~ the U N

•
I

U1e mnth to complete their added a 2·ttm homer m th e
rout of AUartiJJ It was the mnth Ill e.1rn the M&lt; ts 11 spht
Pht!hes' seventh con secutlv~f the1r doubleheader with
road VIctory and the Braves Houston The Astros won th~
seventh stratght loss
opener belund J R Rtclutrd
Mets f, 7, Astros 5, 4
14-1 )
Del Unser capped a four- Cubs 6, 6 Giauts 5, 5
run stxth mmng wt!h a runRandy Hundle) s ptnch lui
sconng smgle and la ter sac nhce fly with the b,L~es

Conference on Trade and
Development m Natrobt and
dehvers a major pohcy
speech Thursday before
lea Vlng Afnca
Ktsstnger, dressed m a
bush jacket borrowed from
U S Ambassador Anthony
Marshall and a floppy safart
hal wtUt leopard skm lrtm,
was accomparued by Sen and
Mrs Abe Rtbtcoff, [).Conn ,
and Sen Jacob JaVIts, RN Y on his game run whtch
was nnged wtlh heavy
securtty
The enbre park had been
closed to Vlsttors for several
days before hts vtstt Troops
patiolled all access roads
As he landed at thas
luxurwus lodge m the center
of the reserve, Kissmger was
gtven a dental cast of a male
baboon by a Harvard
untverstty student domg
anunal researcfi m the area
Constantly during the
drtve , Ktssmger halted hts
Jee p and potnted m
aslomshment as startled
gazelle leaped 15 fee t mto the
arr m front of him Hyena
stalked tn the bush a few feet
away at one stage and herds
of buffalo wallowed m muddy
holes
Ktssmger scheduled a
second, prtvate game run this
afternoon and tne mghl at a
ga me lodge here before
returnmg to Natrobt Tuesday
to host • luncheo n for
delegates from the " less
developed n,11 1,ns of Ihe

world attending the UNCTAD
conference
Asemor U S offtctal Sunday
sard Amertcan multinabonal
comparues are expected to
rests! at least some sechons
of Ktssmger s new Africa
policy
The offtctal, traveling
aboard Ktsstnger's Boemg
707 also satd the secretary
felt deep concern over lhe
weekend vtclory of former
Culiforma Governor Ronald
Reagan m the Texas
prunary
He satd the wm could
damage the Ford admimslra·
bon's overall foretgn pohcy
by forcmg 11 to become more
conservattve
Kassmger flew from
Senegal to Naarobt Sunday
mght on the last stop of has
six-nation Afrtcan tour
HIS talks wtth the leaders of
Kenya, Tanzama, Zambta,
Zatre, Liberta and Senegal
will form the basts of what he
termed a "new Afrtca poltcy"
lo be shaped wtth Prestdent
Ford when he returns to
Washmgton
KlSStnger scheduled a VISit
to the Masat Mara game park
tn Western Kenya today and
wtli cap hts trtp wtlh a major
speech Thursday before the
U N Conference on Trade
and Development
The semor US offtctal
aboard the Ktssmger fltghl
Sunday satd the secretary
expected strong reslSt~nce
from Am e n can bas ed

multmat10nal corporattons to
several sections of hts
proposed Afrtca policy
Spectftcaliy, th~ offacaal
satd, US busmessmen wtll
oppose a Ktssmger proposal
to repeal the SO-{)a!led Byrd
Amendment, which allows
the United States to unport
chrome from Rhodesta
desptte a worldwtde U N
embargo on such purchases
The
offtctal
satd
multmattonal corporattons
must realtze !bey coUld face
retaliatory
measures,
mcludmg posstble expropnalwn of their holdings,
unless they respect the VIews
of Afrtcan governments on
the Rhodestan tssue
Ktssmger rejected the postlion of Tanzaman Prestdent
Julius Nyerere and other
Afrtcan leaders who say
guerrtllas must ftght a war to
topple the whtte tnlnortty
regune of Rhodesian Prune

PUBLIC NOTICE
To be sold at Public Auct1on
at Chester Oh10 by Tru st ees
of Chester Twp Me1gs Co
May 22nd at 10 o clock AM
Two Ford Dump Trl.(cks as
IS With Til les
On e tQ 6t Ser al No F60 CH
200731
On e IQ66 Scr al No F 61 CE
9 17718
one Horne L ll e R1cl1ng
M ow er
S Lawn Pu sh Mowers
All sal es will be cash
c1c1 k Chester Twp
1cdcr ck M Tuttle
j

I l

I 0 l rr

Mtruster Ian Smith
He satd the Uruted States
would not supply weapons to
black hberation movements
but stressed US support for
the peaceful establishment of
black rule m the breakaway
Brtltsh colony
The
semor
offtctal
travelmg wtth Kassmger sard
the poltcy - and U S foretgn
poltcy m general - could
sufler serious setbacks
because of the Reagan
prunary vtctory m Texas

He satd further Reagan
trtumphs may force Ford mto
a more conservative stand espectaliy toward the Sovtet
Umon - whtch could prolong
negollallons on a , new
strategac arms agreement
mto 1977, or cause them to fall
altogether

s

a

By CHRIS TURKEL
UPI Sports Writer
Bob McAdo and the Buffalo
Braves won the first half of
thetr match Sunday wtth
Boston, but Chartie Scolt and
Ute CelhC&gt;J won the second
half the game and the NBA
Eastern Conference
semtftnals
Buffa lo led 55 50 at
halft tme, thanks to 19 pomts
by McAdoo, the four-time
NBA scormg champ Bill
McAdoo ran out of gas after
the mtermasston and a firedup Scott scored mne slratght
pomts mtdway through the
fout th quarter as the Celttcs
won 104-100, e!irmnatmg the
Braves four games to two
In Sunday 's other NBA
ga me, the Golden Sta le

so

L---------~ 141 26 !51 3 21c

•

(1st game 14 mn1ngsl
2JO 000 000 01 6 14 I
SF 001 012 001 000 00 ~ 5 15 0
Lamora Know es \I! Gar
man (9) Frallmg (12) and
Hundl ey M1tterwald {9) Mon
tef usco w II ams (6) Moffl lt
(7) Heaver to (9) Lave ll e [ 10)
and Hill Sadek (9) WP Fra ll lng ( 1 OJ LP Lavelle (0 H
H RS- Ch 1cago Cardenal ( 3l
San Franc1sco Thomas (2)
H&gt;ll I 1 I

Ch 000

j 2nd Gamel
Ch1cago
0020 1001 1 01 6 92
San Fran 100 101 002 00- 5 13 0
P
Reuschel
Crosby (6)
Schultz
(6)
Garman
(7)
Knowles (9l R Reuschel ( 11 1
0 Acqu1sto
and M lter wald
Heavert o {5)
Wil liams (6)
Moff11! {7) Mmton ( 10 ) &lt;1nd
Rader WP- Knowles (2 1l LP
- M 1nton (0 2) HR - Chlcago
Summer s ( I I

Phola

040000004 660
000 000 200 2 7 2
Ka at Underwoo d ( 7l Ga rb er
(9) and Boone Messersm1lh
Dal Canton (81 Sosa (8 )
Oevme (9) and Carrel WP Kaat (2 1) LP - Messersm th
to 21

Amenqm League
East
W L Pel GB
Milwaukee
9 4 692
New York
10 5 667
Detro I
8 6 571 l 1 2
Cleveland
8 8 500 21 1
Ba l t1m or e
7 10 412 4
Bost on
6 9 400 4
West
W L Pet GB
Texas
11 6 647
Oakland
10 9 526 2
7 7 500 21 ,
Kansas City
6 9 400 4
Mmnesota
Ch lcago
5 8 385. a
Califorma
7 1J 350 51 :~
Saturdays Results
Callforma 6 Cleveland 1
Oet ro 1t 10 Ch cago 1
Mmneso ta 9 Mi lwaukee 5
t&lt;;an City 4 NY 1 n1ght
Texas 7 Boston 1 mght
Oakland at Ball ppd rain
Sunday s Results
Oakland 6 Ball 1m ore 2 lsi
Balt1more 4 Oa kland 3 2nd
Cleveland 12 Cal1f J 1st
Calif 5 Cleveland 4 2nd
Kan C1ty 2 NY 1 11 1nnmgs
Texas 6 Bos ton J
De tro 11 at Ch cago 2 ppd ram
M ltwkee 1 Mmn ppd snow
showers
Monday s Game
(All Times EDTl
Cleveland &lt;Eckersley 2 2l at
Oakland ( Bahnsen 1 0) 11 00
&lt;only game scheduled)
Tuesdays Games
Cleveland at Oakland n1ght
New York at California n1ght
TU:as at Milwaukee n1ght
M innesota at Detro1t n 19ht
Chicago at Ba1t 1more n1ght
Kansas C1 ty at Boston n1ght

"!(lsi Gam et
000 040 001- 5 11 1
Houston
010 201 OOQ-- 4 9 0
New York
Ha rd y (9) and
R1chard
Johnson Lol1th Apodaca (5)
and Hodg es WP- R1c hard {4
II LP- Apodoca I I II ~R ­
New York Kr&amp;n epool j2 )
( 2nd Game)
000 00 1 030- 4 11 0
Houston •
New York
010 004 02x- 7 10 1
Rondon Barlow (6) Gr1ff n
(7)
and Ju tze
Koosman
Lock wood (8) and Gr ot e WPKoosman (2 1) LP - Rondon (0
I) H RS- New Yor k
Garrett
Ill Unser Ill
( 1~ IAniHQS)
Man !rea l
100 000 Il l 000 000 , _ , 16 0

Con

4 10 1

0 10

ooo 300 000 ooo 0-

F r yman Murr ay (7) Warth
en (9 ) Granger (9) Stanhouse
(13) and Cart er
Billingham
McEnaney (8) Eas1w1ck (8 )
Zachr y ( 11 )
Borbon (10)
Darcy ( 14) and Ben ch Plum
mer ( 11 ) WP - Stanhouse (2 OJ
LP- Da rcy ( 1 3) H RS- Mon
trea t Carter (2)
C nc1hnat.
Rose ( 1)
Amencan Lea gue
Milwaukee at M1nn ppd snow
Oetro11 at Chicago 2 ppd
(I st Game)
Oakland

Standmgs
Averages
Re~ults

(2nd Gamel
Oakl and
030 000 000- 3 7 2
Ballimor e
200 002 OOx - 4 7 0
Norr1s Abbot! ( 1l L1ndblad
(6 ) Fmg er s (8) and Han ey
Cu ellar
Gar and
(2)
and
Hendncks WP - Gar and ( 1 0)
(0 I )
HR - Bal
LP- Abbot
t1mon~ Gr~ch ( l l
(1st Ga mel
Ca 1forn1&lt;1 011 010 000
3 9 &lt;1
Cleveland 01104 1 nx - 12 10 0
Hassler Dunnmg (5) Monge
(9) and Et chebar r en Brown
Bu skey (7) and Ashb y WP
Brown (2 Ot LP- Hassler (0 31
H R S- Cal forn •a Torres ( I J
Clevel and Be ll (1 1 Carty (2)
(2 nd Gamel
Ca l ifornia
300 101 000 - 5 8 0
003 000 0 0- 4 12 1
Cleveland
K rkwood Brewer (5 1 Drago
8 bby
(9l and Herr mann
Hood 11) Kern (4\ LaRoche
( 7) and As hb y WP- Brew er (2
OJ LP Hood (1 t)
( 11 mnmg sJ
New Yor k 010 000 000 00 - I 9 2
Kansas Cty 000 000 001 01- 2 J 1
May L yle (9l and Munson
Leonard M cClur e I ll) Bird
(Il l and Martmez Stm son (91
WP Bird (1 Ol LP- L yle (2 I I
Bos ton
OO J 000 000 - 3 7 I
Texas
000 012 03x - 6 11 0
T1anl House (8) and FISk
Perr y ( J 2 l and Sundberg El liS
(8} LP - T1ant ( J i ) HR SBos on Car bo (2) Evans {J J
Texa s Burrough s (5th ) Har
gr ove (2) Gneve (5)

N BA Pl ayo ff Sta ndingS
By Umted Press tn1 ernat1ona1
(Western Fmals Best of
Seven)
Golden State lea ds Phoenl)( 1 o
May 2 Golden State 128 Phoen1 x
103
May 5 at Golden Sta te
May 7 at Phoen 1x
May 9 at Ph0en1 x att
)( May 12 a1 Go lden Sla te
x May 14 at Ph oen1 x
:.: May 16 at Gol den Stat e
Sem1flnal s- 8esl of
Seven
Boston beat Bulfalo 4 2
Apr I 21 Boston 107 Bu ffalo 98
Apr 1123 Boslon 101 Bu ffalo 96
Apr I 25 Bufla lo 98 Boston 93
Apr I 28 Buffa lo 124 Boston 122
Apr I JO Boston 99 Bu lfalo 88
May 2 Boston 104 Buffalo 100
Cleveland beat Wash 4 3
Apr I 13 Wash 100 Cleveland 95
Apr I 15 Cleve land 80 Wa sh 79

Apn l 17 Clevela nd Bi Wash 76

Apr 1 21 Wa sh 109 Cleve land 98
Apr t 22 Clevela nd 92 Wash 91
Apr il 26 Wash 102 Cl eveland 98

Ol

April 29 Clev eland 87 Wa sh 85
x f necessa r y

NHL Playoff Standmgs
By Un1ted Press 1nternat1onat
( Sem1fmalr- Best of Seven\
Montreal lea ds NY Islanders J
0
Ap ril 27 Montreal 3 NY I stan
ders 2
Ap nl 29 Monlreat A NY tstan
r a1n ders 3
Ma y 1 Montreat 3 New York 2
May 4 at New York
x May 6 at Mont r ea
x May 9 at New York
x May 11 at Montr eal

of

ANOTHIR
GOOD BUY

n 11 r

Hu sellu

wtlh the \\t mlmg ( ubs 1 un m

the l ith mut ng of IIH•
mghtcap In the opener Jose
C.mlcnal's stxth lut of the
ga me, a S ln~lc scorrd
llosello from second With 111 0
out m Ute 14th

Warraors ran the Phoemx
Suns mto the ground as Htck
Barr) scored 38 pomts to gtve
lhe
dcfendmg
lea gue
champ rons a 128-103 vtctor)
and a 1-0 lead m the Western
Cunference finals
It was the second hme m
three years that lhe Celttcs
had gotten past the Braves
mto the Eastern Conference
playoff fmals I he best-&lt;&gt;!·
seve n tr tle senes beg10s
Tu esday mght 111 Bos ton
whet e the Celttcs wrli go
agamst the Cenh al Dtvrston
ch am pt o n Cleve land
Cuvahers
Scott look over after
Buffalo's Randy Smtlh who
was guardmg htm, prcked up
hiS ftfU1 personal foul
That's Ihe only way ) ou
can stop McAdoo,' satd
Boston Coac h Tom Hemsohn
JUSt watt tali he gets llred
from shootrng I thought
Rand) Sm rth , wtth the fouls,
was btg factor He had to
gua rd Charhe '
Buffalo enJoyed mne-pomt
leads three ttmes m the lhtrd
quarter, but Jo Jo Whrte 's 11
pomts helped Boston t'Ut the
deft crt to one, 78 77, after
Utree quartllrs Baskets b)
Whrte and Scott put Boston on
top for good
Scott flmshed wath a game
high 31 pomts, Whtte added 23
and Boston got 14 aptece from
John Havltcek and Paul Stias
Don Nelson added 10 m a
reserve roll as did Dave
Cuwens
McAdoo led the Braves
wtth 28 pomts Smtth had 24

May 2 Ph ladelph a 5 Boston 2
May 4 at Boston
May 6 at Philade lphia
x. May 9 at Bos ton
x May 11 at Phdad etph a
x. 1f necessar y

rqHt

c~ rd m d

VC\Jiet\

)U illpC' l ~

HSSISt s

1 he second g.mte or the
besl-&lt;lf·seven sm •es wtll he
pia) ed here Wedn esda) ntght
wrth the th trd and fourth
games Sll rtchm g to th e So ns
home co ml Fnd,t\ and
Sunda y
In the ABA the IJI&gt;sl-&lt;~f
seven chrLmpwnslup sci Jes
wrll resume ruesday wrth
New York at Denver fm the
second game Tile Nets !e,1 d
1-0 after be,ttmg the regular
season champ Nugget s 12().
118 Sat urday on n. nvll s
home cout t

SP OH1'S CALEND&lt;\H
Monday, May I - Haseb.111. Soulhrt n ,, t
Symmes Valle}. Kyger Ct cek .1t Eastern
luesda y, May 4 - Baseball l: astclll ,at
ll.tmt.ln It ace. Southern at ll .annan U l I o l! .tll
.tt M!'t gs hack SEOAL Meet m Ath eu s Mctgs
guls at Galhpolls la nd Wavctly l
Wednesday May 1- Baseba ll , Ai!'X&lt;ttHII't ,r!
southet n ( Scchonal ~a mel
l'h ursd,Jy Ma} h - R,aseba II l' ,asle t n .1 t
Southctn [&gt;t Pleas.lllt at Metgs h ,1ck, Sout hc tn
1-(trls at ~1ctgs
1'1 tda y, M.1y 7 Baseba ll , Soulhct n ,at
\l cxa ndct , .Jackson a t Metgs, II I at L.astc t n .
h ,ar k Metgs boys ,tt Clullc aoth e

Logan sharp as Archie
COLUMBUS (UPI ) - It tegulars
and
gtves
appears Ohto Sta te footba ll mdrcahons of bemg be tter
Coach Woody Hayes tsn t tha n last yea1 It held
gomg to have any trouble reserves lo three first downs
frllmg s pots vacated by and mtnus three ) a rds
gradualton
rush mg
Jeff Logan, a Jumor !rom
The reserv es comp le ted
North Canton gamed 174 three of 10 passes fm 26
yards m 30 carrtes Saturday yards The regulars had 401
as the regulars blanked the yards rushmg and 63 more
reserves 47-0 m the annual on passes
sprmg scrunmage He ts a Haves sard he was ple.tsecl
candtdate to replace two-ltme wrth Logan s pcrtormance
Hetsman Trophy wmner
' He dtd a pretty good JOb
Archie Griffm
He has been dotng tha t all
Rod Jerald, lookmg to suc- spnng,' the coach satd
ceed Corneltus Green at
And Jerald does a pr etty
quarterback, ptcked up 60 good JOb althou gh we're
)ards m 15 carnes and added pro tecltng ham and .Jun
another 45 yards m the al£ by Pasanta,' he added
completmg three of ius erght
Defens• ve coor dmatoa
pass attempts One of hts George Htll satd generally
aenals was a 16-yard scortng we ve had a ftne sprtng and 11
pass to new spltt end Herman looks hke we ve got some !me
Jones
depth We ve got the fm est
Then there's returning full starters returnmg smce I've
back Pete Joh nson last been here ''
year's leading scorer m the
nation He scored four tUlles
m the scrtmmage, whrle
sca mpenng for ll8 yards tn
26 carrtes
The defense returns seven

•

•

wzns zn
Michigan
\{ro Gr.rndc Colle ge s
Be rn 11 ri 1 tlle) won the mrle
t dCC 111 ram; cold weather m
the R.ts!etn Mtc lngan Relays
Sutw da1 ,,nm noon wtth a
LUnC ol 4 10
He h1ul qu •It fred em her
thts )Oil bv ru uung a 4 06 Ill
Ius hco~ l It "" ' nne of the
Hltm Ct ltm c.s among the
q u&lt;~h flc r s,

so Ius wtnnmg
Saltu t\,t y u d S even more
unpm I ml as llc \\as runntn g
lgcuns l sum u uf I he
hlp 4 nnnut e nulm s

'"

ONLY

net liOn s

I tll ty 1s undefeated 111 the
nulc llns yca1 havmg won
the Ol11o StdlC 11clays and lhc
M,u sl\.tll ltlvrtaltOihrl
Ollwr Hw G•unde 1 unncrs
11ho dtd not place Saturday
wer e fohn Anderson 4 28 .md
John Clm1c. 4 29
Brll ( mfu•l ct 1 an In the 6
mtle " cui

H ayes

h0 ldS

football is
best class
CAMBHIDGE Ohto I UP!)
Ohro Slate coach Woody
llo~1 es sa) s football ts the
most nnporlant sUbject' hrs
pl,t)CIS wrll take durmg thetr
college cat eers
ll.t\ es 11 ho addressed the
unn twl sprtng meetmg
Saturd,ty of lhe Ohto UP!
Edrtm s Assocral!on at nearby
Salt Fork State Par k, hsted
four !lungs wh tch he satd
football teaches
You learn to work
HdJ es told the gathermg or
edtlors mtd !herr spouses It
IS hat d, grmdmg du ty,
smelly 11 ork Number two
you lea rn to work together
Number three you learn that
worktng together always
makes you greater Ulan you
thought you could be and
numbe• four on every play
you have about a twentieth of
a second to make a dec aston "
Th ere .tre too damn many
people 111 tht s world who
c.mnot make dectstons And tf
you • e gurng to play foolall,
vou '1c gmng to make
deciSions on every play," he
cont•nued
f respect this sport," satd
1la) es wl10 rs startmg has 26th
seaso n as Buckeye head
coach ' People ask me why
I ve stayed so long Because I
!rnd too many of my fne ndsl
when thcv leave rt, regre
havrng left 1t '
Bud Wllktnson (former
Oklahoma coach) told me
years ago and told me agam
out on the West Coast at
Clurstmas ltme He satd,
Woody, don't grve 1t up "
'Do you thmk he enJoys
sttltng up there m the press
box the way he did coaching
football,' Haye~ asked,
refernng to Wtlkmson's
pos\lton as a TV network

By FRED DOWN
I he\ Baltunore Onoles
UPI Sports Writer
defeated Ute Oakland A's 4-3
Jeff Burroughs of the Texas ,,fter u 6-2 loss, the Kansas
Hangers appears once agam Ottv Hol als beat Ure New
to be the 'Mr Amenca ' of York Yankees 2 1 tn II
1974
mmngs, and the Culi!ormn
'I he muscular oulltelder, Angels topped the Cleveland
who won the Amen cun lndr.tns 5-4 .tiler ,, 12-J defeat
I cague s Mo st Vnluable 111 other AL gam es
Player Award at the age of 2:! Mt!wauk ee at Minnesota and
m 1974, expenencL'&lt;I u lust Dctr otl al Ciucugo wer e
1ear Ul 1975 when Ins batlt ng pos tponed because of
av erage plummctted 76 mclemcnt wcnthet
pomts from 301 lo 226
Orioles Z-4, A's 6-3
B11rroughs
ntcknamed
lltll) Wtlilams hit the 416U1
Mr Amenca ' by In s
homer
of his cureer und Joe
teammates in 1974, hus
Hudt
al$0
hurnerc~l m tire flfsl
levelll&lt;l' off Ins swmg tins
' ea son redu ced Ins stnke- game as Vtda Alue pllclll'd n
ouls and sttll hil~ balls over seven )utter for his second
the hottzon beca use of hts Vlctorv for Ute A s Reggre
great strength He s mude J,u kson drove m Ure IJ tng
run 111 hts thtrd plate
mght hits m has last 10 at
appear
nnce ,,s art Oriole und
bats hus u 308 bultmg
Ken
Singleton's
sncriftL'Il OJ
Hverage, ha~ hve home1 s und
drove
In
lhc
winning
run fot
knocked an 14 runs , sparki ng
llltlhmore
In
the
saxth
!mung
the Hangers to U1elr ear ly
of
the
second
game
season tWOiJame first pluce
Ro)als 2, Yankees I
lead tn the AI West
Hudy May pllched n no
Bill roughs
thr ee run
hllle•
wttt! Amos Otts led off
homer - each of his !.tsl
the
nmlh
wJih n double nnd
tin ee homers hu ve bee n "lth
was promptly 1eltevcd b)
two run ners on base snapped a 3-3 lie In the e\ghtlt Sparky Lyle 'i,1e Roy,tls
mmng Swtday and hfted Ihe scored the wmnlng run off
Hangers to a 6-3 victory over Lyle m the lith
Indians 12-4 , Angels 3-5
the AI champion Boston lled
Hrco Curly s two-run
Sox It wus the Rangers
homer
and a solo shot by
fourtlt stratghl wm over the
Buddy
Hell were the big
ned Sox and they dealt I uts
blows
or
11 JQ.lut attack whtch
fta nl hts first loss after three
earned
the
lndlnns to lhelf
vtclories
ftrst
ga
me
vtclor
y Bobb)
GaJIOr d Perry survav ed
Boiiils
drove
m
two
tuns in u
car!J troubles, retlfed 19 of
lhr
ee-l
un
ru
st
inmng
and
the lust 21 batters und wound
,Jerry
He
my
drove
In
two
up prtchlng a sev en~lllte r (01
1 uns to lead the Angels In the
the Hangers whrle strik10g
out fiv e and walking none lie second ga me
has won three games and lost , - - - - -- - - - two this seuson
The Red Sox took a 3-0 lend
10 the Uttrd lnmng on a solo
homer by Dwight Evans and
a two-run shot by Bernie
Carbo fom Grteve homered
10 the ftflh for the Rangers
ftrsl run and Mtke Hargrove
lut a t11orun homer m the
stxth to lte the score at 3-.1

''9Perationsand
hOspital rooms cost
a lot more
than you think!'
BIU. FLETCHER

ABA Pl ayoftf Stand1ng s
Bv Un1tcd Pre ss lntcrn at•oni'll
( F1nrtl s- 8ost of Seven)
N ew York l eads Denver 1 D
Ma y I New York 170 Den ver

1258
Powell St
Middlepo rt
PH 992 1155

liB

May ta t Denv er
May 6 at New Y10rk
May 8.11 New York
x May 11 at Dtn vcr
x Mfly I J at N w York
x May 16 at 0 nver
x If necessar y

Mv great, gr P.al friend at
Bowling Green, Doyt Perry,
was never happy afler he quit
coaching," Ha yes satd 'And
hts record was greater than
any of us ever had "
The OSU coach satd
believe m young people I
believe m good, young people
"ho are wtlhng to go out and
try, and make mtstakes - nol
smoke marijuana and sit and
look at their foot for an hour "

See rne for State Farm
hospital surg1cal insurance.

We offer a II mechantcs work !Ires tuneups brake tobs
otl change · major
overhauls minor lransmtsston repatr?
Hours 8 to S Monday through Saturday
except Thursday 8 to noon

ROY LYONS
TRAINED MECHANIC

an&lt;~ l yst

•

GAULS SHAKE HAYEN

9x12 LINOLEUM

RUGS

USlMII)

Lost year ends
for Burroughs

US-ITS OUR

BAKER'S
BUDGET SHOP

•911

1s

n•spo nsl blt for rrportlng
rt•f\uUs

From

Room Size

h ,

of

rm

2r. pomts 111 lhe ftrst half to
gtve the Wa1rwr s ,, 58-48
h,r\fllme lead I he all pr o
forward sar d he shot
errallcally m the Det1 oat
senes so he decrded to It 1
and go to the bds kel m ~) r c
today
'Phoemx doesn I have lite
shot blocker th at Dell ott h,ul
m Bob !.mter so tf lou can
get msrde 011 the Suns, 1on
haved good chance to scor~
he satd
Phoenrx commrl te d 30
turnovers m Ihe game and
ytelded 15 stea ls lo Golde n
State Barry had SC\Cil or
those steals, se ven rehoturds
and Lht ee

t

st.ltll'i tH s forms

IIH hum&lt; h .un

~

Erme DrGr e~ono lh ,md lim
McMtllan 12
Golden Slate not espcct.tll)
happ) ope mn g th e conference
fmals on ly 40 hour s aftrr "
grueltng ovcrltmc vtd tll)
ov er Detrort pr aclrcaliy blt•11
the Stills off the com t
Burr) lut a
dJ lVCS and long

SUlt~itJ V ('

11 ls h111g n suits of thdr
MUIIItl t'r h.l ~l hull gamrs to
·'Jllll'ur In th r ~entilu I,
jJit '"' stop b1 th t Sentinel
ufrut• 111111 pu k up stand-

Rio ace

Eastern

Ptuladelph•a lea ds Bost on 2 1
Aprr l 27 Boston" Ph1ladelph1a 2
Apnl 29 Ph1l adtph1a 2 Boston 1

Sentinel

so.

100 000 000 - 1 9 1
St LOUIS
Los Ange les 000 100 1lx- 3 10 0
M cGlothen Hrilbo sky (7 J
Fr se ll a (8) and S•mmon s Rau
(dOl and Yeager LP M cGio
then (2 3) HR - Los Angeles
Gar vey ( ll

All anl a

pm
uo

NOTICE ON FILING
OF INVENTORY

The State of Ohto
MtHgs
County Court of Common
_ _ _,:__ _ _ _ _-i Plea~~; PrnhatP n.v' ""'"
r
1 To th e Trustees of the
j Trust estate to sl,l ch of the
fotlowmg as are r es dents of
Dai~
th e St ale Of OhiO VIZ - lhe
DEVOTE 0 TO THE
survlv ng spouse the next of
INTEREST OF
kin the benet c1artes und er
MEIGS MASON AREA
th ew It and to the attorney or
CHESTER L TANNEHILL auorneys represen t 11'19 any of
Exec Ed
the aforementiOned persons
ROBE~T ~OEFLICH
In the Matter ot the
Ctty Edttor
Trusteeship crealed by Item
Published dally excep t Three of the Last Will and
Sa l urday by Th e Oh1o Testament of Constahce B
Valley Publi Shing Co m
Shields Deceased Pomeroy
panv
111
Court St
Ohio R D
Sal isbury Town
Pom er oy
Oh lo 45769
Ship No 216 7•
Business Off1 ce Phone 992
You are hereby notif ied that
2156 Ed1tonal Phon e 992
the Inv entory of the Trust
2151
sec ond class pos.t age estate of the aforementioned
pa1d at Pomeroy Ohi!o
deceased late of said Countr.
Nat onat
ad ve rll siij g .. was fi led 1n lhis Court Sad
re p rese ntativ e warlt
Inventory Will be tor hear ing
Gr l ffil h Company I n c
before thIS Court on the 7fh
Boltlnelll &amp; Gallagher Dlv
day of May 1976 al 10 00
757 Th1rd Ave New York
o cl ock A M
N Y 10017
J
An y person desiring to file
Su bscr1ptlon
rat es
De l1veree1 by carrier where 1 except1on s thereto must file
available 75 cents ~r ~ them at least five days pr~or to
wee k
By Motor Rout e 1 the date se t for hear i ng
where ca rr~er service no t I
iJV81Iab le
0(l e mon th
GI Ven under my hand and
IJ 25 By mall In Ohio and
of sa1d Court this ?1rcl
w Va One Year 122 00 ds.:al
ay of April 1916
x montlis Sll
Three
months S7 00 Elsewhere
Manning D Webster
S26 oo year
51)( months
Judge
S\3 50 three months S7
Subscription price Includes
Sunday T1mes 'SenllneJ
By Ann B Watson
Deputy Cltrk

The

~

-

Mator League Results
By United Press International
National League
P1tts
000 000 101- 2 6 0
San Diego
000 DOll OOx ol 10 1
Med1ch Teku lve (6 1 Her
nandez (7) G1ustl (8 ) and
Sangull ten
Jones ( 5 l l and
Kendall LP- Medlch (I 3) HR
- san D1ego Rader [ I l

lu,tded scm C&lt;l

Celtics hold off McAdoo
•
m
2nd half, win 104-100

the SCOREBOARD

CANCER (June 21-July 22)11
yo u nee d a spec: 1al ta vor from
an ntt uen!lal rn end th1 s IS a
good day to approa ch h m
Don t go through middlemen

Hike-Bike event needs sponsors
•

made"
Someone was qmck to pomt
out to Jones Sunday that hts
next start will be m New York
agamst the Mets
'OUtstandmg," he satd "!
can't watt to get there I love
that town It 's a great
baseball ctty and I'd ltke to
make up for the dtsappomting
way I pitched there last year
I know that probably had a lot
to do with my losmg the Cy
Young Award I dtdn't
tmpress the New York
wnters too much "

ARIES (March 21 April !9)
The aspec ts sl!ll tend to favor
you 1n areas that c ou l d
p od uce gams espec 1ally
wh ere la m ly matter s are In
volve d

A bout so-called sealed bids

•

FIRST GRADE - Front row, I tor, Matthew Jewell, Marty Maynard, Tammy Wolfe,
Lee Richards, Lisa Pape, second row, Rya n Cleland, Dtana Stmpson, Wendy Wolfe,
Tammy Theass, Rachael Retber , back row, Damon FISher, Juamta Fredenck, Kevm Clark ,
Harold Rose and Donald Parsons.

For Tuesday May 4 1976

Letter to the editor

'

THIRD GRADE - Front, I to r, Tony Frederick, Kevin Dugan, Sandy Deem, Sheny
Sayre, second row, Rodney Beegle, Deborah Holter Barbara Rose, Melody West, Sandra
Harden, back row, Marl8no Wagner, David Powell, Lots !hie, Alan CriSp, Sean Riffle

The Padres gave Jones all
the run support ~ needed
wtth a four-run stxth mrung
highhghted by Doug Rader's
three run homer
Elsewhere m the Natwnal
League Sunday, Los Angeles
put away St Louts 3-1 ,
Phtladelphla romped over
Atlanta 8-2 Montreal downed
Cmcmnati 114, New York and
Houston spht a doubleheader,
the Astros wmmng the opener
5-4 and Ute Mets commg back
m the ntghtcap 7-4, and
Chtcago swept a pall' of extra
mmn~ ~ Vletortes over San
FranCISCO
Dodgers 3, Cardinals I
Pinch httter Btl! Buckner
latd down a perfect bunt to
score Soove Garvey wtlh the
go-ahead run m the seventh
lnnmg as Dodger southpaw
Doug Rau won hts fourth
game wtthout a loss
Expos 8, Reds 4
Barry Foote banged out a
bases-loaded smgle wtth two
out m the 16th mmng and
Pepe Mangual followed wtth
a two-run double to gtve the
Expos thetr marathotr\VIn
over Cmcmna ti
Phlllles 8, Braves 2
Mtke Schlmdt 's t" o-run
double off loser Andy
Messersrmth capped a fourrun second mnmg and the
Phtlhes scored four more m

111\Sf RAI I ( ()AlliE
NOrf
An)
• uJu h,
tt•,am

CHESTER, OHIO

ST. RT. 7
Play it oafe and sure
It may be time to
have your preoent
pohcy updated.

All during the month of May '76 Jake and Mid wtll be
offenng speetals on dtfferen1sandwlches, baskets and
dmners The 'Sptrtl of '16" special will run all month
Door pntes for those 14 years or under and 16 years or
over Reglsfratlon wtll begrn on May lsi and end May

Let's Talk Soon

DALE C. WARNER
992 2143

102 W Mam

Pomeroy

31st wtth drawmgs at 9 oo p m You need not be present

to wi n

USAF Recru11mg Otlo ce
221 N Columbus Rd
Athens, OH 45101
PH 593 6122

....____.

Mony many thanks to all who have mad e ourS y ears
m bu smess very spectal to both of us

"Spirt! of
76 Spectal"

Reg. Hot Dog,
Sauce, F.F.,
Small
76~
Drink

Jake &amp; Mtd Gaul

-----· -~------------'

�3- The DatlySenhnel, Mtddleport-Pomero) 0, Monda\, Ma) 1, W76

2- The Oath Sentmei,Mtddleporl PomeroJ 0 Monday, May J,

Jones hungry to, make it big

Ford thinks

By BILL MADDEN
UPI Sports Writer
Although Randy Jones
couldn't be happier m San
Otego, he can't watt to get to
New York
Jones, ace of the San Otego
Padres ptlchmg staff,
became the rna )Or leagues'
top winner Sunday by
stoppmg the Pittsburgh
Pirates 4-2 on stx htts and JUSI
85 pttches It was Jones' ftfth
wm tn six dectstons, but
there's still at least one world
the Padre southpaw knows he
has yet to conquer- " The Btg
Apple"
"New York is where tl's
at," Jones satd last year after
bemg nosed out by the Mets'
Tom Seaver for the Nattonal
League Cy Young Award
"It's where reputattons are

he's safely
out front
Uruted Press International
The mere Iwo da) s
separatmg the Texas vottng
Saturday and four prunanes
Tuesday robbed most acttve
candtdates of thetr normal
weekend rest
Ronald Reagan headed for
lndtana even before the vote
totals showed he had bhlzed
Prestdent Ford
96
de legates to none - m the
Lone Star state
Ford also mmed for
Hooster votes to head off a
potenti al triple -header
Rea gan wm Tuesday m
Alabama Georg ta and
lndtana
On the Democratic Side
Jtmmy Carter also stomped
Indtana a!Utough hrs only
maJor opponent Utere Henry
Jackson, wtlhdt ew Saturda)
as an acttve campargner
Carter sard he was
surprtsed at the srze of
Heagan s WID ID Texas, and
when asked whtch he would
rather face m November he
satd Whrchever one ts
chosen
I feel sure the
Democrats can WID wath me
at the head of Ute hckel
Ford Oew to Ft Wayne
Sunday afternoon for two
appearances and a televtston
mlervtew a nd scheduled
several appea rances m
lndtanapohs Monday bef01 e
flymg on to Alabama
At the alfporl, Ford was
asked to respond once agam
to Reagan s charges that the
cu rrent negottallons wrlh
Panama 10uld lead to a
gtveaway' of US control
over the cana I
In answer Ford held up a
transcrtpl of remarks by Sen
BarrJ M Goldwater RAm ,
durmg a Sunday televtswn
appearanc'f (NBC-TV's Meet
the Press ), and quoted
Goldwater as savmg "I have
to support Ford's postlton on
at and I Utmk Reagan would
too if he knew more about tl '
Reagan ts Ute favonte m
Alaban1a and Georgaa , whrle
polls show Ford m front but
Reagan gaamng m !ndtana
The Dtslnct of Columbra rs
the fourth primary Tuesday
- the hrst but not the last
mulhpnmary day of the electwn )ear There are 16 slated
for May, wth stx of them on
the fmal Tuesday - May 26
Moms Udall
crt ss
c r oss tn g Co nn ec ltcut
contmued to descnbe hunseU

as the only vtable alternative
to Carter He satd he has a
good chance rf hts party wrll
Just avmd proclarmmg a
w1nner while the ballgame ts
only half over

AstraGraph
~

Bern•ce Bede Osol

•'•
•
•

..

TAURUS (April 20-May 20) A
pro duc t1ve da'/IS 1n the offmg
You re no t likely to be d1s
couraged regardless ol the
odds Thmk WIN an d you w1U
GEMINI (Moy 21-June 20) In
bus ness ma tters today play
your hunches Don I lttke a
fooli sh flyer bu t 11 yo u th mK
you re on to somethin g good
check 11 ou t

Mator League Standmgs
By Un.ted Press lnlernahonal
NatuJnal League
East
W L Pet GB
X PhlladelphiBll 6 647
New York
14 8 636
Ch 1cago
11 11 500 2 1
Pittsburgh
9 9 500 21 1
Sf LOUIS
B 12 400 .:1 1,
Montrea l
7 12 368 5
x games behind
ba sed on
Ph 1ladlphla
West
W L Pet GB
Cmc1nna!l
11 8 579
Los Angeles
12 9 57 1
Houston
12 11 522
Sa n D1 ego
10 11 d76
San Franc1sco B l2 400 3 'J
A tlanta
B 12 400 31 ,
"" Saturday s Result s
San Franc1sco 3 Ch1cago 1
Houston at NY ppd rain
C•n 6 Montreal 1 tw111ght
Philadlphla 3 Atl o 1st
Ph lladlph1a 4 Atlanta 2 2nd
LA d Sl LOUI S 3 10 11'1n1ng s
Pittsburgh 10 San Diego 6
Sunday s Results
Ph 1ladelph1a e Atlanta 2
Houston 5 New York 4 l st
New York 7 Houston 4 2nd
Montreal 8 C1n 4 16 1nn
"' los Angeles 3 St LOUIS 1
San Diego d Pittsburgh 2
~ Ch1 6 San Fra n 5 14 mn 1st
Ch1 6San Fran 5 limn 2nd
(No games today )
Tuesday s Games
Lo s Angeles at Ch 1cago
San Diego at Montreal n1ght
CmcmnatL at New York n1ght
Houston at Ph iadlph1a n1ght
, san Fran at P ttsburgh n1g hl
,. St LOUIS at Atlanta n1ghl

LEO (July 23 Aug 22) Though
you II be l(lStr ument at m bnng
1ng someth mg ol mportance
o!l today let one who only 11ad
a small hand 1n 1t taKe the
bows
VIRGO (Aug 23 Sept 22)
Plans we ll la1d toda y shoul d
later produce very des1rab e
resu lts Look toward to morrow
hopel ully Bu1ld strong loun
dat1ons now
LIBRA (Sept 23 Ocl 23) Bold
measures ma y be ca ted tor to
day 1n o rder to ac h eve your
rum s Set defm te goals Str ve
tor exce llence
SCORPIO (Oct 24 - Nov 22!
Partn ership S1tuat1ons should
prove e;-&lt; tr emety favorabl e to
day espeCially f yo u re the l1rst
t o s hOV'I \ w 1H1 n gn ess t o
cooperate! ~
SAG ITT ARt 5 (Nov 23 Oac
21) Jomt V' ntures and com
merc 1al de:ltmgs took 1ke two
areas you tshould be able to
ga ~r from)loday S tay on your
toes
CAPRICORN (Doc 22 Jan
~9) Som eone you know pur ely
soc1a lly m ay be lUSt th e person
you ne e d to he l p sW1n g
so mething Important today
So ICit hi S ai d
AQUARIUS (Jan 20-Fob 19)
Tak e pr de 1n what you do Be
helpl ul wh er ever yo u can
There Wi ll be b g retu rns lor
smcere serv1ce rend ered to
day

Dear Srr
Many ttmes I have observed dtfferent happemngs tn Metgs
County and Pomeroy aty Hall that I dtdn'l exactly approve of
but the one Utat puts the tcmg on the cake concerns the so
called sealed btds on a motorcycle - property of the Vtllage that was no longer needed I, betng a ctllzen of Metgs County,
dectded to brd on srud vehtcle I phoned lhe councr~ clerk and
was tnformed thall should put my btd m wntmg addressed lo
Crty Hall, Pomeroy c-&lt;&gt; the Clerk , and also wrtle sealed bid on
the front of lhe enevelope which I dad at least ten days pnor to
the btd opemng date On the btd openmg dare (4-19-76) there
were four 14) btds m, mme not Included After so many calls to
councrlmembers ofwhrch one \\as wtth the mayor at the time,
and all stated thai rnJ brd was never presented al the Councrl
Meelmg , one counctl member stated that he was at the other
end of the table and knew nothmg about the brd openmg The
counctl clerk told me on the phone that I had no btd m but by a
stroke of luck, or one m a thousand chance Ute winnmg btd was
JUSt ftftJ cents (50c) over my btd Now I ask who would btd
JUSt ftfty cents to cutout the htgh btdder m any sealed bid?
Now here's the clunax, stx days after lhe btds were opened
the clerk JUSt happened to find my btd m her desk drawer, she
didn't kno" how tt got there and after my questtomng about
post mark dates she stated that she diSposed of all envelopes
but the wtnnmg btdder who rs closely assoctated wtth Village
offtctals never matled hts btd, he merely handed 11 lo the
Mayor; w_llich I'll grant ts ver) proper, bull have to say the
tumng was perfect I m not a gambler put I'll say odds on a
fifty eent btd 1sealed) would be about one 111 a thousand
In closmg I thmk that I was pegged as a dumb dolt !rom
Shade Rouoo I (Darwm area) not connected to the mner
ctrcles of Pomeroy and therefore was handed a snow JOb I can
assure anyone concerned !hat tf ever anything comes up for
brd m Pomerov I wtli personally brmg my btd to counctl
meetmg and wall stand by unltl all btds are properly disposed
of - Ebner F Batley Aprtl 30, 1976

Dear SIC
On May ISthe Metgs County Chapter of the Ohio Assocrallon
for Retarded Ciltzens wrll agam sponsor a Htke-Btke The
proceeds wtll be used for the benefit of Retarded Ctltzens m
Meags County, the Staoo of Ohto and on the nattonallevel
Each nder partrcrpatmg wtll neell a sponsor, and the sponsor
ts asked to pledge any amount he chooses lo be patd on a per
mtle basts or he may pledge a flat amount
I..a styearover$1,500was raased for use m Metgs County and
we have set a goal of $3,000 for thts year's event If at all
possible please sponsor a rtder for this worthy cause If you
cannot fmd a nder but sttll wtsh to sponsor someone please call
me at 985-4412 Jesste Mrght at742-3089, Rea Roush at 992-3232
or Rack Crow at 247-3737 as we have rtders who need sponsors
The Htke-Btke wdl begm at 10 a m on Saturday, May 15,
Rally Pomt ts behtnd lhe Semor Ctltzens CM,ter If you have
any questtons please,ca ll any of lhe above numhers
Henry
Cleland Jr Hake Btke Charrman

•

I

FOURTH GRADE - Front, I -r, Dewayne Dowell, Charles Smtih, Rhonda Smtth ,
Rrchard Htll Katrma Snodgrass, second row, James Bush, Edward Coffman, KeVIn
Curfm an Terry Bell, Randy Werry, back row Becky Johnson, Jtmm) Cleland Teresa Htll,
Sherrt Bell, Laren Wolfe
PISCES (Feb 20 -March 20)
Ge t •n touch w1th a lnend that
you ha ven t seen too much of
la tely He may have some plea
sant t1dmgs today

Your
Birthday
May 4 1976
Lady Luck may take a hand n
help1ng you advance mterests
mportan t to you th1s com 1ng
yea r Take max1mum advan
ta ge o f yo ur bre ak s wh 1le
yo u re n thi S fortunate cycle

b d
Me:tgs an
0

(Continued from page I)
Lon Wood
SOP~OMOR ES
R 1ta Bal ey Cathy Blaell
nar Rory Col e Cmdy Dorst
Jen F aulkne r Anne F 1l ch
Tern F1 fe Becky F r y Tr.na
G1bbs Peggy G•rolam l Carl
Gheen Chnst1 Hess Laura
Hoover
Kathy Howard
Rhonda Hudson Sue Ken
nedy
Pau l a Kloes
K1m
K ra ulter Jun1or McDan ets
C1 nd y
M c K 1nn ey
Jon•
M ur r ay Pam Power s R~ndy
Ro ach Nlla Rusc he! Mark
St at er 0 ane Srnllh Pa1ge
Sm1lh
Me lody Snou ff er
Stev e Stou t Ve lvet Sw1she r
Teresa
Taylor
Te resa

SECOND GRADE - Front, Ito r, Kellt Rtzer, Melillsa !hie, Brad Robmson, Tina
Forester, second row, Rebecca Van Meter, Lort Adams, Mandy Hill , Ja) Bosttck, Brad
Holsmger, Mtke Johnson, TonJa Cummms

Cultural arts contest
concluded in Racine
Under the sponsorship ol the PTO, a cultural arts coolest
has been concluded ln the Racine Elementary School. Red
and blue ribbons were awarded to a number of students in
each grade for the1r work In art
The accompanymg pictures by Bob Hoeflich are of those
winners

VanMete r Sa lly Wa l ters Joe
Watkms
Jennif er
W se
Susan Wr~ght
JUNIORS
Ke1th Baley Cher y l Barn
hart
D arlen e
Barrett
Debb•e B.r chlleld
Brenda
S1s hop
Mary Blae ttna r
Tere sa
Brown
Br uce
Bumga rdn er
Ke ll 1e Bur
delle Carol vn Charl es Mark
Dav1s
Rob1n D ew h urst
Barb ara Doug la s Opa Over
Paula E1chmger
Te r esa
E ll s Tr 1na Fau l k Theressa
F 1sh
Becky Fu lt z Sand y
Garnes
Je n
Gr ate
K1m
Gru eser Kat h y Ha ley Beth
McKn1ght V1ck e M ght
T ammy Mossman
Pam
Offe nb erger
O e bb e
Osbo r f).e
Fa th
P err~n
Marga r et Pro v mce Darrell
Puckett Trud y Roach Suzy
Samue l s M e lody ScBggs
K1m Sebo Debb1e Ta ylor

•

Becky
Thomas
S he rr~
V1nmg June Wamsley Pa tty
Warner
Bever ly Wilcox
Teresa W ilderm u th Danny
Will
SENIORS
Oeb1 Ba1 ley Brenda Bolin
Chr1 SI 1
Bur so n
Jac k 1e
Carsey
Dav id Co le Tma
Duff y
C1ndy Eads
Scott
Frase r C1 nd y Glaze Cr ystal
Glaze Ju l1 e Hamm Tam 1
H offman V1c k 1 Hoffman
Andrew Hoov:er Desi Jeffers
Kim Jones Mona K 1ng
Chery l
Le hew
Esther
Lowery R1 ck Ma co mb er
V1 ckl Mantey Barn es V1 Ck 1e
Moore Carm el Murphy Pam
Nl cmsky Vaughan
K1"1
Ohlinger Terr i Owens 0 na
Pratt Judy Radford Dav e
R1dgway Mary Ru sch e!
Terr 1 Russell
Tammy
Scho ono ve r Ang1e S1ss on
L1sa Th omas Jan1ce Young

._
•
.,.....

!

..
•
•
~
~-&gt;

FIFTH AND SIXTH GRADES - Front, I tor, DaVId Salmons, Davtd Dowell Usa Allen,
Becky Lee, ali fourth graders, second row, Scott Fredertck Laura Wolfe, Pete Robmson,
third row, Brtan Cleland, Meltnda Salmons, Debbte Rose, Patrtck Johnson, back row, Ktm
Follrod, Cmdy Cross, Lort Powell, Rtta Sloter A stxUt grade wtnner not present was Jay
Rees

Kissinger relaxes midst Kenya's wild beasts
KEEKOROK, Kenya(UPI)
- Secretary of State Henry
A Ktssmger look today off
from formulatmg a new
Afrtca pohcy and tackhng
global economtc problems to
see some of the world's last
remammg grea t wtldhfe
herds
Ktssmger , relaxmg after a
stx-nahon Afrtcan tour, flew
to this sprawhng west Kenya
game reserve and durmg a
two hour dnve 111 an open
roofed Jeep saw herds of
thousands of buffalo, zebra,
gtraffe, and antelope as well
as a !ton kril
' Do some of !hose lions
remmd you of anyone you've
been negottatmg wath recently,' a newsman qutpped to
Kissinger as a pride of 12
ltons prowled close l&lt;l has
vehtcle
"t'm not afrard of wtld
anunals " Kissmger parrted
'I've got 17 of them on my
plane" - a return qwp about
journahsts accompanymg
him

Ktssmger arraved m
Natrobt Sunday ntghl ,
effechvely wmdmg up hts
deliberations With the leaders
of SIX eonlmental countrtes
whtch wtll form the basis of a
new Afrtca policy for the
Umted Sta tes
After hts one-da) break tn
the rolling mlle-hrgh htlls of
th e Masa t Mara game
reserve here, he returns
Tu esda) to talks wtth
delegates atlcndm~ the U N

•
I

U1e mnth to complete their added a 2·ttm homer m th e
rout of AUartiJJ It was the mnth Ill e.1rn the M&lt; ts 11 spht
Pht!hes' seventh con secutlv~f the1r doubleheader with
road VIctory and the Braves Houston The Astros won th~
seventh stratght loss
opener belund J R Rtclutrd
Mets f, 7, Astros 5, 4
14-1 )
Del Unser capped a four- Cubs 6, 6 Giauts 5, 5
run stxth mmng wt!h a runRandy Hundle) s ptnch lui
sconng smgle and la ter sac nhce fly with the b,L~es

Conference on Trade and
Development m Natrobt and
dehvers a major pohcy
speech Thursday before
lea Vlng Afnca
Ktsstnger, dressed m a
bush jacket borrowed from
U S Ambassador Anthony
Marshall and a floppy safart
hal wtUt leopard skm lrtm,
was accomparued by Sen and
Mrs Abe Rtbtcoff, [).Conn ,
and Sen Jacob JaVIts, RN Y on his game run whtch
was nnged wtlh heavy
securtty
The enbre park had been
closed to Vlsttors for several
days before hts vtstt Troops
patiolled all access roads
As he landed at thas
luxurwus lodge m the center
of the reserve, Kissmger was
gtven a dental cast of a male
baboon by a Harvard
untverstty student domg
anunal researcfi m the area
Constantly during the
drtve , Ktssmger halted hts
Jee p and potnted m
aslomshment as startled
gazelle leaped 15 fee t mto the
arr m front of him Hyena
stalked tn the bush a few feet
away at one stage and herds
of buffalo wallowed m muddy
holes
Ktssmger scheduled a
second, prtvate game run this
afternoon and tne mghl at a
ga me lodge here before
returnmg to Natrobt Tuesday
to host • luncheo n for
delegates from the " less
developed n,11 1,ns of Ihe

world attending the UNCTAD
conference
Asemor U S offtctal Sunday
sard Amertcan multinabonal
comparues are expected to
rests! at least some sechons
of Ktssmger s new Africa
policy
The offtctal, traveling
aboard Ktsstnger's Boemg
707 also satd the secretary
felt deep concern over lhe
weekend vtclory of former
Culiforma Governor Ronald
Reagan m the Texas
prunary
He satd the wm could
damage the Ford admimslra·
bon's overall foretgn pohcy
by forcmg 11 to become more
conservattve
Kassmger flew from
Senegal to Naarobt Sunday
mght on the last stop of has
six-nation Afrtcan tour
HIS talks wtth the leaders of
Kenya, Tanzama, Zambta,
Zatre, Liberta and Senegal
will form the basts of what he
termed a "new Afrtca poltcy"
lo be shaped wtth Prestdent
Ford when he returns to
Washmgton
KlSStnger scheduled a VISit
to the Masat Mara game park
tn Western Kenya today and
wtli cap hts trtp wtlh a major
speech Thursday before the
U N Conference on Trade
and Development
The semor US offtctal
aboard the Ktssmger fltghl
Sunday satd the secretary
expected strong reslSt~nce
from Am e n can bas ed

multmat10nal corporattons to
several sections of hts
proposed Afrtca policy
Spectftcaliy, th~ offacaal
satd, US busmessmen wtll
oppose a Ktssmger proposal
to repeal the SO-{)a!led Byrd
Amendment, which allows
the United States to unport
chrome from Rhodesta
desptte a worldwtde U N
embargo on such purchases
The
offtctal
satd
multmattonal corporattons
must realtze !bey coUld face
retaliatory
measures,
mcludmg posstble expropnalwn of their holdings,
unless they respect the VIews
of Afrtcan governments on
the Rhodestan tssue
Ktssmger rejected the postlion of Tanzaman Prestdent
Julius Nyerere and other
Afrtcan leaders who say
guerrtllas must ftght a war to
topple the whtte tnlnortty
regune of Rhodesian Prune

PUBLIC NOTICE
To be sold at Public Auct1on
at Chester Oh10 by Tru st ees
of Chester Twp Me1gs Co
May 22nd at 10 o clock AM
Two Ford Dump Trl.(cks as
IS With Til les
On e tQ 6t Ser al No F60 CH
200731
On e IQ66 Scr al No F 61 CE
9 17718
one Horne L ll e R1cl1ng
M ow er
S Lawn Pu sh Mowers
All sal es will be cash
c1c1 k Chester Twp
1cdcr ck M Tuttle
j

I l

I 0 l rr

Mtruster Ian Smith
He satd the Uruted States
would not supply weapons to
black hberation movements
but stressed US support for
the peaceful establishment of
black rule m the breakaway
Brtltsh colony
The
semor
offtctal
travelmg wtth Kassmger sard
the poltcy - and U S foretgn
poltcy m general - could
sufler serious setbacks
because of the Reagan
prunary vtctory m Texas

He satd further Reagan
trtumphs may force Ford mto
a more conservative stand espectaliy toward the Sovtet
Umon - whtch could prolong
negollallons on a , new
strategac arms agreement
mto 1977, or cause them to fall
altogether

s

a

By CHRIS TURKEL
UPI Sports Writer
Bob McAdo and the Buffalo
Braves won the first half of
thetr match Sunday wtth
Boston, but Chartie Scolt and
Ute CelhC&gt;J won the second
half the game and the NBA
Eastern Conference
semtftnals
Buffa lo led 55 50 at
halft tme, thanks to 19 pomts
by McAdoo, the four-time
NBA scormg champ Bill
McAdoo ran out of gas after
the mtermasston and a firedup Scott scored mne slratght
pomts mtdway through the
fout th quarter as the Celttcs
won 104-100, e!irmnatmg the
Braves four games to two
In Sunday 's other NBA
ga me, the Golden Sta le

so

L---------~ 141 26 !51 3 21c

•

(1st game 14 mn1ngsl
2JO 000 000 01 6 14 I
SF 001 012 001 000 00 ~ 5 15 0
Lamora Know es \I! Gar
man (9) Frallmg (12) and
Hundl ey M1tterwald {9) Mon
tef usco w II ams (6) Moffl lt
(7) Heaver to (9) Lave ll e [ 10)
and Hill Sadek (9) WP Fra ll lng ( 1 OJ LP Lavelle (0 H
H RS- Ch 1cago Cardenal ( 3l
San Franc1sco Thomas (2)
H&gt;ll I 1 I

Ch 000

j 2nd Gamel
Ch1cago
0020 1001 1 01 6 92
San Fran 100 101 002 00- 5 13 0
P
Reuschel
Crosby (6)
Schultz
(6)
Garman
(7)
Knowles (9l R Reuschel ( 11 1
0 Acqu1sto
and M lter wald
Heavert o {5)
Wil liams (6)
Moff11! {7) Mmton ( 10 ) &lt;1nd
Rader WP- Knowles (2 1l LP
- M 1nton (0 2) HR - Chlcago
Summer s ( I I

Phola

040000004 660
000 000 200 2 7 2
Ka at Underwoo d ( 7l Ga rb er
(9) and Boone Messersm1lh
Dal Canton (81 Sosa (8 )
Oevme (9) and Carrel WP Kaat (2 1) LP - Messersm th
to 21

Amenqm League
East
W L Pel GB
Milwaukee
9 4 692
New York
10 5 667
Detro I
8 6 571 l 1 2
Cleveland
8 8 500 21 1
Ba l t1m or e
7 10 412 4
Bost on
6 9 400 4
West
W L Pet GB
Texas
11 6 647
Oakland
10 9 526 2
7 7 500 21 ,
Kansas City
6 9 400 4
Mmnesota
Ch lcago
5 8 385. a
Califorma
7 1J 350 51 :~
Saturdays Results
Callforma 6 Cleveland 1
Oet ro 1t 10 Ch cago 1
Mmneso ta 9 Mi lwaukee 5
t&lt;;an City 4 NY 1 n1ght
Texas 7 Boston 1 mght
Oakland at Ball ppd rain
Sunday s Results
Oakland 6 Ball 1m ore 2 lsi
Balt1more 4 Oa kland 3 2nd
Cleveland 12 Cal1f J 1st
Calif 5 Cleveland 4 2nd
Kan C1ty 2 NY 1 11 1nnmgs
Texas 6 Bos ton J
De tro 11 at Ch cago 2 ppd ram
M ltwkee 1 Mmn ppd snow
showers
Monday s Game
(All Times EDTl
Cleveland &lt;Eckersley 2 2l at
Oakland ( Bahnsen 1 0) 11 00
&lt;only game scheduled)
Tuesdays Games
Cleveland at Oakland n1ght
New York at California n1ght
TU:as at Milwaukee n1ght
M innesota at Detro1t n 19ht
Chicago at Ba1t 1more n1ght
Kansas C1 ty at Boston n1ght

"!(lsi Gam et
000 040 001- 5 11 1
Houston
010 201 OOQ-- 4 9 0
New York
Ha rd y (9) and
R1chard
Johnson Lol1th Apodaca (5)
and Hodg es WP- R1c hard {4
II LP- Apodoca I I II ~R ­
New York Kr&amp;n epool j2 )
( 2nd Game)
000 00 1 030- 4 11 0
Houston •
New York
010 004 02x- 7 10 1
Rondon Barlow (6) Gr1ff n
(7)
and Ju tze
Koosman
Lock wood (8) and Gr ot e WPKoosman (2 1) LP - Rondon (0
I) H RS- New Yor k
Garrett
Ill Unser Ill
( 1~ IAniHQS)
Man !rea l
100 000 Il l 000 000 , _ , 16 0

Con

4 10 1

0 10

ooo 300 000 ooo 0-

F r yman Murr ay (7) Warth
en (9 ) Granger (9) Stanhouse
(13) and Cart er
Billingham
McEnaney (8) Eas1w1ck (8 )
Zachr y ( 11 )
Borbon (10)
Darcy ( 14) and Ben ch Plum
mer ( 11 ) WP - Stanhouse (2 OJ
LP- Da rcy ( 1 3) H RS- Mon
trea t Carter (2)
C nc1hnat.
Rose ( 1)
Amencan Lea gue
Milwaukee at M1nn ppd snow
Oetro11 at Chicago 2 ppd
(I st Game)
Oakland

Standmgs
Averages
Re~ults

(2nd Gamel
Oakl and
030 000 000- 3 7 2
Ballimor e
200 002 OOx - 4 7 0
Norr1s Abbot! ( 1l L1ndblad
(6 ) Fmg er s (8) and Han ey
Cu ellar
Gar and
(2)
and
Hendncks WP - Gar and ( 1 0)
(0 I )
HR - Bal
LP- Abbot
t1mon~ Gr~ch ( l l
(1st Ga mel
Ca 1forn1&lt;1 011 010 000
3 9 &lt;1
Cleveland 01104 1 nx - 12 10 0
Hassler Dunnmg (5) Monge
(9) and Et chebar r en Brown
Bu skey (7) and Ashb y WP
Brown (2 Ot LP- Hassler (0 31
H R S- Cal forn •a Torres ( I J
Clevel and Be ll (1 1 Carty (2)
(2 nd Gamel
Ca l ifornia
300 101 000 - 5 8 0
003 000 0 0- 4 12 1
Cleveland
K rkwood Brewer (5 1 Drago
8 bby
(9l and Herr mann
Hood 11) Kern (4\ LaRoche
( 7) and As hb y WP- Brew er (2
OJ LP Hood (1 t)
( 11 mnmg sJ
New Yor k 010 000 000 00 - I 9 2
Kansas Cty 000 000 001 01- 2 J 1
May L yle (9l and Munson
Leonard M cClur e I ll) Bird
(Il l and Martmez Stm son (91
WP Bird (1 Ol LP- L yle (2 I I
Bos ton
OO J 000 000 - 3 7 I
Texas
000 012 03x - 6 11 0
T1anl House (8) and FISk
Perr y ( J 2 l and Sundberg El liS
(8} LP - T1ant ( J i ) HR SBos on Car bo (2) Evans {J J
Texa s Burrough s (5th ) Har
gr ove (2) Gneve (5)

N BA Pl ayo ff Sta ndingS
By Umted Press tn1 ernat1ona1
(Western Fmals Best of
Seven)
Golden State lea ds Phoenl)( 1 o
May 2 Golden State 128 Phoen1 x
103
May 5 at Golden Sta te
May 7 at Phoen 1x
May 9 at Ph0en1 x att
)( May 12 a1 Go lden Sla te
x May 14 at Ph oen1 x
:.: May 16 at Gol den Stat e
Sem1flnal s- 8esl of
Seven
Boston beat Bulfalo 4 2
Apr I 21 Boston 107 Bu ffalo 98
Apr 1123 Boslon 101 Bu ffalo 96
Apr I 25 Bufla lo 98 Boston 93
Apr I 28 Buffa lo 124 Boston 122
Apr I JO Boston 99 Bu lfalo 88
May 2 Boston 104 Buffalo 100
Cleveland beat Wash 4 3
Apr I 13 Wash 100 Cleveland 95
Apr I 15 Cleve land 80 Wa sh 79

Apn l 17 Clevela nd Bi Wash 76

Apr 1 21 Wa sh 109 Cleve land 98
Apr t 22 Clevela nd 92 Wash 91
Apr il 26 Wash 102 Cl eveland 98

Ol

April 29 Clev eland 87 Wa sh 85
x f necessa r y

NHL Playoff Standmgs
By Un1ted Press 1nternat1onat
( Sem1fmalr- Best of Seven\
Montreal lea ds NY Islanders J
0
Ap ril 27 Montreal 3 NY I stan
ders 2
Ap nl 29 Monlreat A NY tstan
r a1n ders 3
Ma y 1 Montreat 3 New York 2
May 4 at New York
x May 6 at Mont r ea
x May 9 at New York
x May 11 at Montr eal

of

ANOTHIR
GOOD BUY

n 11 r

Hu sellu

wtlh the \\t mlmg ( ubs 1 un m

the l ith mut ng of IIH•
mghtcap In the opener Jose
C.mlcnal's stxth lut of the
ga me, a S ln~lc scorrd
llosello from second With 111 0
out m Ute 14th

Warraors ran the Phoemx
Suns mto the ground as Htck
Barr) scored 38 pomts to gtve
lhe
dcfendmg
lea gue
champ rons a 128-103 vtctor)
and a 1-0 lead m the Western
Cunference finals
It was the second hme m
three years that lhe Celttcs
had gotten past the Braves
mto the Eastern Conference
playoff fmals I he best-&lt;&gt;!·
seve n tr tle senes beg10s
Tu esday mght 111 Bos ton
whet e the Celttcs wrli go
agamst the Cenh al Dtvrston
ch am pt o n Cleve land
Cuvahers
Scott look over after
Buffalo's Randy Smtlh who
was guardmg htm, prcked up
hiS ftfU1 personal foul
That's Ihe only way ) ou
can stop McAdoo,' satd
Boston Coac h Tom Hemsohn
JUSt watt tali he gets llred
from shootrng I thought
Rand) Sm rth , wtth the fouls,
was btg factor He had to
gua rd Charhe '
Buffalo enJoyed mne-pomt
leads three ttmes m the lhtrd
quarter, but Jo Jo Whrte 's 11
pomts helped Boston t'Ut the
deft crt to one, 78 77, after
Utree quartllrs Baskets b)
Whrte and Scott put Boston on
top for good
Scott flmshed wath a game
high 31 pomts, Whtte added 23
and Boston got 14 aptece from
John Havltcek and Paul Stias
Don Nelson added 10 m a
reserve roll as did Dave
Cuwens
McAdoo led the Braves
wtth 28 pomts Smtth had 24

May 2 Ph ladelph a 5 Boston 2
May 4 at Boston
May 6 at Philade lphia
x. May 9 at Bos ton
x May 11 at Phdad etph a
x. 1f necessar y

rqHt

c~ rd m d

VC\Jiet\

)U illpC' l ~

HSSISt s

1 he second g.mte or the
besl-&lt;lf·seven sm •es wtll he
pia) ed here Wedn esda) ntght
wrth the th trd and fourth
games Sll rtchm g to th e So ns
home co ml Fnd,t\ and
Sunda y
In the ABA the IJI&gt;sl-&lt;~f
seven chrLmpwnslup sci Jes
wrll resume ruesday wrth
New York at Denver fm the
second game Tile Nets !e,1 d
1-0 after be,ttmg the regular
season champ Nugget s 12().
118 Sat urday on n. nvll s
home cout t

SP OH1'S CALEND&lt;\H
Monday, May I - Haseb.111. Soulhrt n ,, t
Symmes Valle}. Kyger Ct cek .1t Eastern
luesda y, May 4 - Baseball l: astclll ,at
ll.tmt.ln It ace. Southern at ll .annan U l I o l! .tll
.tt M!'t gs hack SEOAL Meet m Ath eu s Mctgs
guls at Galhpolls la nd Wavctly l
Wednesday May 1- Baseba ll , Ai!'X&lt;ttHII't ,r!
southet n ( Scchonal ~a mel
l'h ursd,Jy Ma} h - R,aseba II l' ,asle t n .1 t
Southctn [&gt;t Pleas.lllt at Metgs h ,1ck, Sout hc tn
1-(trls at ~1ctgs
1'1 tda y, M.1y 7 Baseba ll , Soulhct n ,at
\l cxa ndct , .Jackson a t Metgs, II I at L.astc t n .
h ,ar k Metgs boys ,tt Clullc aoth e

Logan sharp as Archie
COLUMBUS (UPI ) - It tegulars
and
gtves
appears Ohto Sta te footba ll mdrcahons of bemg be tter
Coach Woody Hayes tsn t tha n last yea1 It held
gomg to have any trouble reserves lo three first downs
frllmg s pots vacated by and mtnus three ) a rds
gradualton
rush mg
Jeff Logan, a Jumor !rom
The reserv es comp le ted
North Canton gamed 174 three of 10 passes fm 26
yards m 30 carrtes Saturday yards The regulars had 401
as the regulars blanked the yards rushmg and 63 more
reserves 47-0 m the annual on passes
sprmg scrunmage He ts a Haves sard he was ple.tsecl
candtdate to replace two-ltme wrth Logan s pcrtormance
Hetsman Trophy wmner
' He dtd a pretty good JOb
Archie Griffm
He has been dotng tha t all
Rod Jerald, lookmg to suc- spnng,' the coach satd
ceed Corneltus Green at
And Jerald does a pr etty
quarterback, ptcked up 60 good JOb althou gh we're
)ards m 15 carnes and added pro tecltng ham and .Jun
another 45 yards m the al£ by Pasanta,' he added
completmg three of ius erght
Defens• ve coor dmatoa
pass attempts One of hts George Htll satd generally
aenals was a 16-yard scortng we ve had a ftne sprtng and 11
pass to new spltt end Herman looks hke we ve got some !me
Jones
depth We ve got the fm est
Then there's returning full starters returnmg smce I've
back Pete Joh nson last been here ''
year's leading scorer m the
nation He scored four tUlles
m the scrtmmage, whrle
sca mpenng for ll8 yards tn
26 carrtes
The defense returns seven

•

•

wzns zn
Michigan
\{ro Gr.rndc Colle ge s
Be rn 11 ri 1 tlle) won the mrle
t dCC 111 ram; cold weather m
the R.ts!etn Mtc lngan Relays
Sutw da1 ,,nm noon wtth a
LUnC ol 4 10
He h1ul qu •It fred em her
thts )Oil bv ru uung a 4 06 Ill
Ius hco~ l It "" ' nne of the
Hltm Ct ltm c.s among the
q u&lt;~h flc r s,

so Ius wtnnmg
Saltu t\,t y u d S even more
unpm I ml as llc \\as runntn g
lgcuns l sum u uf I he
hlp 4 nnnut e nulm s

'"

ONLY

net liOn s

I tll ty 1s undefeated 111 the
nulc llns yca1 havmg won
the Ol11o StdlC 11clays and lhc
M,u sl\.tll ltlvrtaltOihrl
Ollwr Hw G•unde 1 unncrs
11ho dtd not place Saturday
wer e fohn Anderson 4 28 .md
John Clm1c. 4 29
Brll ( mfu•l ct 1 an In the 6
mtle " cui

H ayes

h0 ldS

football is
best class
CAMBHIDGE Ohto I UP!)
Ohro Slate coach Woody
llo~1 es sa) s football ts the
most nnporlant sUbject' hrs
pl,t)CIS wrll take durmg thetr
college cat eers
ll.t\ es 11 ho addressed the
unn twl sprtng meetmg
Saturd,ty of lhe Ohto UP!
Edrtm s Assocral!on at nearby
Salt Fork State Par k, hsted
four !lungs wh tch he satd
football teaches
You learn to work
HdJ es told the gathermg or
edtlors mtd !herr spouses It
IS hat d, grmdmg du ty,
smelly 11 ork Number two
you lea rn to work together
Number three you learn that
worktng together always
makes you greater Ulan you
thought you could be and
numbe• four on every play
you have about a twentieth of
a second to make a dec aston "
Th ere .tre too damn many
people 111 tht s world who
c.mnot make dectstons And tf
you • e gurng to play foolall,
vou '1c gmng to make
deciSions on every play," he
cont•nued
f respect this sport," satd
1la) es wl10 rs startmg has 26th
seaso n as Buckeye head
coach ' People ask me why
I ve stayed so long Because I
!rnd too many of my fne ndsl
when thcv leave rt, regre
havrng left 1t '
Bud Wllktnson (former
Oklahoma coach) told me
years ago and told me agam
out on the West Coast at
Clurstmas ltme He satd,
Woody, don't grve 1t up "
'Do you thmk he enJoys
sttltng up there m the press
box the way he did coaching
football,' Haye~ asked,
refernng to Wtlkmson's
pos\lton as a TV network

By FRED DOWN
I he\ Baltunore Onoles
UPI Sports Writer
defeated Ute Oakland A's 4-3
Jeff Burroughs of the Texas ,,fter u 6-2 loss, the Kansas
Hangers appears once agam Ottv Hol als beat Ure New
to be the 'Mr Amenca ' of York Yankees 2 1 tn II
1974
mmngs, and the Culi!ormn
'I he muscular oulltelder, Angels topped the Cleveland
who won the Amen cun lndr.tns 5-4 .tiler ,, 12-J defeat
I cague s Mo st Vnluable 111 other AL gam es
Player Award at the age of 2:! Mt!wauk ee at Minnesota and
m 1974, expenencL'&lt;I u lust Dctr otl al Ciucugo wer e
1ear Ul 1975 when Ins batlt ng pos tponed because of
av erage plummctted 76 mclemcnt wcnthet
pomts from 301 lo 226
Orioles Z-4, A's 6-3
B11rroughs
ntcknamed
lltll) Wtlilams hit the 416U1
Mr Amenca ' by In s
homer
of his cureer und Joe
teammates in 1974, hus
Hudt
al$0
hurnerc~l m tire flfsl
levelll&lt;l' off Ins swmg tins
' ea son redu ced Ins stnke- game as Vtda Alue pllclll'd n
ouls and sttll hil~ balls over seven )utter for his second
the hottzon beca use of hts Vlctorv for Ute A s Reggre
great strength He s mude J,u kson drove m Ure IJ tng
run 111 hts thtrd plate
mght hits m has last 10 at
appear
nnce ,,s art Oriole und
bats hus u 308 bultmg
Ken
Singleton's
sncriftL'Il OJ
Hverage, ha~ hve home1 s und
drove
In
lhc
winning
run fot
knocked an 14 runs , sparki ng
llltlhmore
In
the
saxth
!mung
the Hangers to U1elr ear ly
of
the
second
game
season tWOiJame first pluce
Ro)als 2, Yankees I
lead tn the AI West
Hudy May pllched n no
Bill roughs
thr ee run
hllle•
wttt! Amos Otts led off
homer - each of his !.tsl
the
nmlh
wJih n double nnd
tin ee homers hu ve bee n "lth
was promptly 1eltevcd b)
two run ners on base snapped a 3-3 lie In the e\ghtlt Sparky Lyle 'i,1e Roy,tls
mmng Swtday and hfted Ihe scored the wmnlng run off
Hangers to a 6-3 victory over Lyle m the lith
Indians 12-4 , Angels 3-5
the AI champion Boston lled
Hrco Curly s two-run
Sox It wus the Rangers
homer
and a solo shot by
fourtlt stratghl wm over the
Buddy
Hell were the big
ned Sox and they dealt I uts
blows
or
11 JQ.lut attack whtch
fta nl hts first loss after three
earned
the
lndlnns to lhelf
vtclories
ftrst
ga
me
vtclor
y Bobb)
GaJIOr d Perry survav ed
Boiiils
drove
m
two
tuns in u
car!J troubles, retlfed 19 of
lhr
ee-l
un
ru
st
inmng
and
the lust 21 batters und wound
,Jerry
He
my
drove
In
two
up prtchlng a sev en~lllte r (01
1 uns to lead the Angels In the
the Hangers whrle strik10g
out fiv e and walking none lie second ga me
has won three games and lost , - - - - -- - - - two this seuson
The Red Sox took a 3-0 lend
10 the Uttrd lnmng on a solo
homer by Dwight Evans and
a two-run shot by Bernie
Carbo fom Grteve homered
10 the ftflh for the Rangers
ftrsl run and Mtke Hargrove
lut a t11orun homer m the
stxth to lte the score at 3-.1

''9Perationsand
hOspital rooms cost
a lot more
than you think!'
BIU. FLETCHER

ABA Pl ayoftf Stand1ng s
Bv Un1tcd Pre ss lntcrn at•oni'll
( F1nrtl s- 8ost of Seven)
N ew York l eads Denver 1 D
Ma y I New York 170 Den ver

1258
Powell St
Middlepo rt
PH 992 1155

liB

May ta t Denv er
May 6 at New Y10rk
May 8.11 New York
x May 11 at Dtn vcr
x Mfly I J at N w York
x May 16 at 0 nver
x If necessar y

Mv great, gr P.al friend at
Bowling Green, Doyt Perry,
was never happy afler he quit
coaching," Ha yes satd 'And
hts record was greater than
any of us ever had "
The OSU coach satd
believe m young people I
believe m good, young people
"ho are wtlhng to go out and
try, and make mtstakes - nol
smoke marijuana and sit and
look at their foot for an hour "

See rne for State Farm
hospital surg1cal insurance.

We offer a II mechantcs work !Ires tuneups brake tobs
otl change · major
overhauls minor lransmtsston repatr?
Hours 8 to S Monday through Saturday
except Thursday 8 to noon

ROY LYONS
TRAINED MECHANIC

an&lt;~ l yst

•

GAULS SHAKE HAYEN

9x12 LINOLEUM

RUGS

USlMII)

Lost year ends
for Burroughs

US-ITS OUR

BAKER'S
BUDGET SHOP

•911

1s

n•spo nsl blt for rrportlng
rt•f\uUs

From

Room Size

h ,

of

rm

2r. pomts 111 lhe ftrst half to
gtve the Wa1rwr s ,, 58-48
h,r\fllme lead I he all pr o
forward sar d he shot
errallcally m the Det1 oat
senes so he decrded to It 1
and go to the bds kel m ~) r c
today
'Phoemx doesn I have lite
shot blocker th at Dell ott h,ul
m Bob !.mter so tf lou can
get msrde 011 the Suns, 1on
haved good chance to scor~
he satd
Phoenrx commrl te d 30
turnovers m Ihe game and
ytelded 15 stea ls lo Golde n
State Barry had SC\Cil or
those steals, se ven rehoturds
and Lht ee

t

st.ltll'i tH s forms

IIH hum&lt; h .un

~

Erme DrGr e~ono lh ,md lim
McMtllan 12
Golden Slate not espcct.tll)
happ) ope mn g th e conference
fmals on ly 40 hour s aftrr "
grueltng ovcrltmc vtd tll)
ov er Detrort pr aclrcaliy blt•11
the Stills off the com t
Burr) lut a
dJ lVCS and long

SUlt~itJ V ('

11 ls h111g n suits of thdr
MUIIItl t'r h.l ~l hull gamrs to
·'Jllll'ur In th r ~entilu I,
jJit '"' stop b1 th t Sentinel
ufrut• 111111 pu k up stand-

Rio ace

Eastern

Ptuladelph•a lea ds Bost on 2 1
Aprr l 27 Boston" Ph1ladelph1a 2
Apnl 29 Ph1l adtph1a 2 Boston 1

Sentinel

so.

100 000 000 - 1 9 1
St LOUIS
Los Ange les 000 100 1lx- 3 10 0
M cGlothen Hrilbo sky (7 J
Fr se ll a (8) and S•mmon s Rau
(dOl and Yeager LP M cGio
then (2 3) HR - Los Angeles
Gar vey ( ll

All anl a

pm
uo

NOTICE ON FILING
OF INVENTORY

The State of Ohto
MtHgs
County Court of Common
_ _ _,:__ _ _ _ _-i Plea~~; PrnhatP n.v' ""'"
r
1 To th e Trustees of the
j Trust estate to sl,l ch of the
fotlowmg as are r es dents of
Dai~
th e St ale Of OhiO VIZ - lhe
DEVOTE 0 TO THE
survlv ng spouse the next of
INTEREST OF
kin the benet c1artes und er
MEIGS MASON AREA
th ew It and to the attorney or
CHESTER L TANNEHILL auorneys represen t 11'19 any of
Exec Ed
the aforementiOned persons
ROBE~T ~OEFLICH
In the Matter ot the
Ctty Edttor
Trusteeship crealed by Item
Published dally excep t Three of the Last Will and
Sa l urday by Th e Oh1o Testament of Constahce B
Valley Publi Shing Co m
Shields Deceased Pomeroy
panv
111
Court St
Ohio R D
Sal isbury Town
Pom er oy
Oh lo 45769
Ship No 216 7•
Business Off1 ce Phone 992
You are hereby notif ied that
2156 Ed1tonal Phon e 992
the Inv entory of the Trust
2151
sec ond class pos.t age estate of the aforementioned
pa1d at Pomeroy Ohi!o
deceased late of said Countr.
Nat onat
ad ve rll siij g .. was fi led 1n lhis Court Sad
re p rese ntativ e warlt
Inventory Will be tor hear ing
Gr l ffil h Company I n c
before thIS Court on the 7fh
Boltlnelll &amp; Gallagher Dlv
day of May 1976 al 10 00
757 Th1rd Ave New York
o cl ock A M
N Y 10017
J
An y person desiring to file
Su bscr1ptlon
rat es
De l1veree1 by carrier where 1 except1on s thereto must file
available 75 cents ~r ~ them at least five days pr~or to
wee k
By Motor Rout e 1 the date se t for hear i ng
where ca rr~er service no t I
iJV81Iab le
0(l e mon th
GI Ven under my hand and
IJ 25 By mall In Ohio and
of sa1d Court this ?1rcl
w Va One Year 122 00 ds.:al
ay of April 1916
x montlis Sll
Three
months S7 00 Elsewhere
Manning D Webster
S26 oo year
51)( months
Judge
S\3 50 three months S7
Subscription price Includes
Sunday T1mes 'SenllneJ
By Ann B Watson
Deputy Cltrk

The

~

-

Mator League Results
By United Press International
National League
P1tts
000 000 101- 2 6 0
San Diego
000 DOll OOx ol 10 1
Med1ch Teku lve (6 1 Her
nandez (7) G1ustl (8 ) and
Sangull ten
Jones ( 5 l l and
Kendall LP- Medlch (I 3) HR
- san D1ego Rader [ I l

lu,tded scm C&lt;l

Celtics hold off McAdoo
•
m
2nd half, win 104-100

the SCOREBOARD

CANCER (June 21-July 22)11
yo u nee d a spec: 1al ta vor from
an ntt uen!lal rn end th1 s IS a
good day to approa ch h m
Don t go through middlemen

Hike-Bike event needs sponsors
•

made"
Someone was qmck to pomt
out to Jones Sunday that hts
next start will be m New York
agamst the Mets
'OUtstandmg," he satd "!
can't watt to get there I love
that town It 's a great
baseball ctty and I'd ltke to
make up for the dtsappomting
way I pitched there last year
I know that probably had a lot
to do with my losmg the Cy
Young Award I dtdn't
tmpress the New York
wnters too much "

ARIES (March 21 April !9)
The aspec ts sl!ll tend to favor
you 1n areas that c ou l d
p od uce gams espec 1ally
wh ere la m ly matter s are In
volve d

A bout so-called sealed bids

•

FIRST GRADE - Front row, I tor, Matthew Jewell, Marty Maynard, Tammy Wolfe,
Lee Richards, Lisa Pape, second row, Rya n Cleland, Dtana Stmpson, Wendy Wolfe,
Tammy Theass, Rachael Retber , back row, Damon FISher, Juamta Fredenck, Kevm Clark ,
Harold Rose and Donald Parsons.

For Tuesday May 4 1976

Letter to the editor

'

THIRD GRADE - Front, I to r, Tony Frederick, Kevin Dugan, Sandy Deem, Sheny
Sayre, second row, Rodney Beegle, Deborah Holter Barbara Rose, Melody West, Sandra
Harden, back row, Marl8no Wagner, David Powell, Lots !hie, Alan CriSp, Sean Riffle

The Padres gave Jones all
the run support ~ needed
wtth a four-run stxth mrung
highhghted by Doug Rader's
three run homer
Elsewhere m the Natwnal
League Sunday, Los Angeles
put away St Louts 3-1 ,
Phtladelphla romped over
Atlanta 8-2 Montreal downed
Cmcmnati 114, New York and
Houston spht a doubleheader,
the Astros wmmng the opener
5-4 and Ute Mets commg back
m the ntghtcap 7-4, and
Chtcago swept a pall' of extra
mmn~ ~ Vletortes over San
FranCISCO
Dodgers 3, Cardinals I
Pinch httter Btl! Buckner
latd down a perfect bunt to
score Soove Garvey wtlh the
go-ahead run m the seventh
lnnmg as Dodger southpaw
Doug Rau won hts fourth
game wtthout a loss
Expos 8, Reds 4
Barry Foote banged out a
bases-loaded smgle wtth two
out m the 16th mmng and
Pepe Mangual followed wtth
a two-run double to gtve the
Expos thetr marathotr\VIn
over Cmcmna ti
Phlllles 8, Braves 2
Mtke Schlmdt 's t" o-run
double off loser Andy
Messersrmth capped a fourrun second mnmg and the
Phtlhes scored four more m

111\Sf RAI I ( ()AlliE
NOrf
An)
• uJu h,
tt•,am

CHESTER, OHIO

ST. RT. 7
Play it oafe and sure
It may be time to
have your preoent
pohcy updated.

All during the month of May '76 Jake and Mid wtll be
offenng speetals on dtfferen1sandwlches, baskets and
dmners The 'Sptrtl of '16" special will run all month
Door pntes for those 14 years or under and 16 years or
over Reglsfratlon wtll begrn on May lsi and end May

Let's Talk Soon

DALE C. WARNER
992 2143

102 W Mam

Pomeroy

31st wtth drawmgs at 9 oo p m You need not be present

to wi n

USAF Recru11mg Otlo ce
221 N Columbus Rd
Athens, OH 45101
PH 593 6122

....____.

Mony many thanks to all who have mad e ourS y ears
m bu smess very spectal to both of us

"Spirt! of
76 Spectal"

Reg. Hot Dog,
Sauce, F.F.,
Small
76~
Drink

Jake &amp; Mtd Gaul

-----· -~------------'

�Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday,

I · ii;.;~~''ii;I~m~~~~~'''~~''l
~!~b c_on~inuing beautification
p
~ ~""""*'~~~ll:IS:.

The O.Uy Sentinel,Middleoor)-Pomeroy, 0 .. Monday, May 3, 1976

Polly's Pointers

!:&lt;

~

Cut paper towels
~nd cost in half

:.- • · € 1 1 ~

PLANTATION BELI.S AND BEAUX of the Civil War
period in "Let Freedom Sing'' are, 1-r, front, Heinz Coats,
Jim Sheets, Greg Thomas, Mark Goeglein, Mike
Goeglein , Melanie Dillard, Connie Smith, Julia Hayes,

and Angelia Curtis; and second row, Frank Martin, Nick
Riggs, Randy Murrsy, Brian Betzing, Bill Anderson, Terri
Roush, Roxanne McDaniel, Kristin Anderson, Belinda
Grimm, and Vicki Morrison.

Choir to

"LET FREI!JDOM SING" - Taking roles in the
scenes of the musical presentation from the arrival of the
pilgrims through the westward eKpansion in "Le t
Freedom Sing," are, 1-r, front, Bernard Wallace, Kelly
Whitlatch, and Crystal Lane, square dancers; Jaye
Roberts, Cindy Curtis, Laura Va n Meter, Patricia Duffy,
Karla DeMoss, Angela Baker and Bryan Zirkle, pilgrims ;
second row, Bret Korn, Rubin.McDaniel , Shilpa Goradia,

Amy Sisson, and Glellda Gwn, square dancers, Jeff Nash,
Francis Scott Key, Matt Van Vranken as G~or11e
Washington, Gina Johnson as Betsy Ross, ani! Shawn
Gihnore, Mark Boyd, and Gene Klein as the Spirit of '76;
third row, Sbawnee Salser, Cathy DeLong, Kevin Knapp "
and Barbara Chappelear, and fourth row, Tammy Pettit,
and Melinda Thomas, square dancers.

,,"
"

present

'I

•

concert
POM I': ROY
" Let
Freedom Sing," the story of
America in song, dance arid
tableau, will be presented by
the Pomeroy Elementary
Sc hool choir at 1 p.m. on
Friday in the school
auditorium .
The pageant was written by
Mrs. Gladys H. Foley, vocal
musi c instructor, over a
three-month period with fa cts
gleaned from the fourth and
fifth grades Social Studies
books. It is presented in nine
segments, or sCenes, each
de picting in songs and dances
a part of America n history.
The first scene deals with
the
Pil gr im s . with
'. Angela Baker, Suzan T110ma,
Karla DeMoss, Laura Van
Meter, Tammy Ca pehart,
Bryan Zirkle, Patricia Dliffy
and Cindy Curtis in the roles.
The music includes "God ·
Sa ve Our Gracio!L'l King ,"
"The Mayflower Compact,"
"We Gather Together to Ask
the · Lord's Blessing, " and
" Old Hundred and the
Do•ology."
in th.e Revolutionary War
Scene, the Spirit of '76 is
depic ted bv Shawn Gilmore.
Mark Boyd and Gene Klein ,
with Matt Van Vranken as
George Washin gton , and
Gina Thomas, Betsy Ross.
Fo;·-· lh e·r ·· scene, Melinda
Thomas is fluti st. Jeff Nash is
cast as Francis 'Scott Key for
the scene on the War of 1812
and the wr itin g of the
national anthem .
Music includes "Ya nkee
Doodle," "American Liberty
Song" and "America." ·
Then came the westward
expa nsion with the cowboys,
cowgirls, Indians, and the
ci rcle squar~ dancers .
Taking roles in the scene are
Mike Thoma s, Priscilla
Herdman, Annette Johnson,'
Jon Perrin, Jimmy Wilson,
Charles' Kn opp, Bernard
Walla ce, Kevin Knapp ,
Barbara Grueser, J oe
Humphr ey,
Dewey
Au therson, Joey Barton,Dixie Eblin, Tammy Pettit,

ALL MOTHERS
LOVE
,

FLOWERS
Place Your
Mother's Day
Orders Early
Call: 992-5560

~

59 N. Second St.
Middleport, 0.

'·
'·

"
'

'"

...."'..

.. ,

BICENTENNIAL FINALE is presented with traditional patriotic music offering
dancers, 1-r, kneeling, Cindy Soulsby, Gayla Haning, Kim Eblin a nd Debbie Werry, and
standing, Laura McCullough, Trina Reeves, a nd Lisa Ba.ter ; baton twirler, Tammy
Eichinger, and Rochelle McDaniel as the Statue of Liberty giving tC., final sa lute in the
production written and directed by Mrs. Gladys Foley, Meigs vocal miL'lic teac her.
Kell y Whitla tch, Jaye
Roberts, Glenda Gum,' B•·et
Korn, Barba ra Hoffm an,
Sha wnee Sa lser , Ca thy
DeLong, Shilpa Goradi a,
Melinda Thomas, Amy Sisson
and Robyn ¥enoy. Music for
the scene inqludes "Home on
the
Ran ge,"
" Indian
Harvest," and "Skip to My

I

w

Randy .Murray is cast as
Abrahan.l Lincoln in the
Gettysburg Address scene,
and th e mu sic includes
" Battle Hym n of th e
Republic" and ''Dixie." For
the plantation, the music is
"Old Folks at Home" and "0,
Susannah" with the belles
and beaux being Roxanne
McDaniel, Kristen Anderson,
Billy Anderson, Julia Hayes,
Terri Roush, Connie Smith,
Greg
Thomas,
Vicki
Morrison, Melanie Dillard,
Belinda Grim m, Angelia
Curtis, Heinz Coates, Nick
Riggs, Bryan Betzing, Mark
Goeg lein , Mike Goeg1e in ,
Jimmy Sheets, and Frank
Martin.

RA CINE - Numerous
awards were presen ted when
Racine Cub Scout Pack 243
and Buy Scout Troop 241 held
their Pinewood derby race
and mee ting recently at the
scout building in Racine.
The meeting opened with
!he pledge to the flag and the
cubs and webelos singing the
Pinewood Derby song led by
-Jean Cleland, dean leader.
Ten boys qualified for a
total of 36 awar~s and each of
the cubs exhibited a hobby for
judging. Receiving awards
were Tommy Allen, bobcat
badge; Alan Crisp, denner
cord;
Tracy
Cleland,
ass istant denner cord; Paul
Hill, .Jr ., geo logist anct
citizen ; David Salmons,
naturali s t , geolog ist,
engineer and arrow of light; .

DR. RONALD F. RIVIERE
01. A. J. STA!Hll DR. FU!MAN MAI.TZ
FOR PRICES CALL COLLECT
rAREA CODE (614)---,

One or Two Day Full Denture

1-

Service, Partials , Extractions,
X - Rays, Cleaning

z

.WINNERS FOR mE BEST hobbles competition of
Racine Cub Scout Pack 243 were, I to r , Tracy Cleland,
arts ; Alan Crisp, baseball and stamp collection, Jimmy
Cleland, third, leaf collection .

second row, Jon Perrin, Jimmy Wilson, Mike Thomas, •
Annette Johnson , Priscilla Herdman, Barbara Grueser, ~­
Mike Miller, Tony Jewell, Kail Knapp, Barbara
Whitlatch, Brenda Fry, Mike Schloss, and Kim Morrow.

with a salute to today '-- the Eichinger twirling to "Stars
bicentennial year, opening and Stripes," •
with the Pomeroy School
Mrs. Helen Williams, sixth
Song, composed by Mrs. grade teacher, will give "I
Fo ley, the Pomeroy dancers, Know
Who
Holds
Cindy Soulsby, Kim Eblin, Tomorrow,'' Robert Morris
Lisa Ba•ter, Debbie Werry, will present "Blowing In tbe
Trina
Reeves,
Laura · Wind," and the chorus will
McCullough , and Gayla conclude with "Give Me Your
Haning, dancing to ''You're a Tired Your Poor " and "God
Grand Old Flag" and BJes; Americ'a ,"· with
"Yankee Doodle Dandy " Rochelle McDaniel making
with batonist, Tammy an appearance as the Statue
of Liberty.
'
Narrators for the program
are Tammy Eichinger,
Angelia Curti~. Rochelle
McDaniel , Roxanne
McDaniel and Belinda
Grimm, Ricky Smith is the
stage manager, and . Kim
Patterson the coordinator.
Choir members are Kristen
Anderson, Billy Colmer,
Angelia .curtis , Melanie
Dillard, Tammy Eichin~er,
Shawn Gilmore, Mary Beth
Hawley, Mary Klein, Mark
Mattox, Mike Miller, Randy
Murray, Jeff Nash, Kim
Patterson; J. R. Wamsley,
Tanya Aleshire, Leota Bush,
Brenda Fry, Belinda Grimm,
Julia
Hayes , Rochelle
RACINE CUB SCOUT PACK 243 Pinewood Derby
McDaniel,
Connie Smith,
winners were, I to r, Trevor Cardone, first ; Paul Hill, Jr.,
Greg
Thomas,
Melinda
second, and Jason Hill, third.
Thomas , Angela Triplett,

Jewell, John Beaver, Jack
Braley, Mike Miller, Victor
Painter and Kail Knapp are
the soldiers in the World War
I scene. Taking the part of the
soldier and his girl as the
chorus si ngs, "Now is the
Hour " are Barbara Whitlatch'
a nd Mickey Reed, with
Brenda Fry, Shelley Stobart
and H. J. Grimm in the roles
of the family left behind .
The presentation concludes

Awards presented Scouts

a:

L_ 252·3181 __j

:::&gt;

soldiers be ing Tony Jewell,
John Beaver, Jack Braley,
Mike Miller, Victor Painter,
and Kail Knapp .
Kim Morrow and Mike
Schloss do
"St rolling
with "Over There," ''1 Saw Through the Park" in the Gay
Six Short Soldiers" with the Nineties scene while Tony

Lou ."

DE

en

" Th e Gay ·Nin eti es" is
depicted by Kim Morrow and
Mike Schloss with the music
"Strolling Through the Park"
and " Daisy, Daisy." World
War I and II are depicted

THE WESTWARD EXPANSiON with its Indians, the
wars of America, and the Gay Nineties in song and dance
is portrayed by front , 1-r, J oe Humphreys, Charles Knopp,
Kyle Woods, Dixie Ebliii, John Beaver, Jack Braley,
Victor Painter, Michelle Stobart, and H. J. Grimm ;

w

Scott.-- Clelan d, a th lete,
scien tist , ar tis t, showma n
an d sportsman ; Jason Hill ,
ath lete , artist, sho wman,
spor tsman; J eff Delong,
at hlete, arti st, scientist,
bobcat and showman ; Zane
Beegle , engi neer , scholar,
aquanaut, trave ler ,geologist,
nat uralist; Trevor Cordone,
athle te, artist , scholar, ·
scientist, citizen, showman ,

engin eer, forester , sportsman . Cubs advancing from
bears to webelos were Travor
Cardone, Jason Hill , Jeff
Delong and Scott Cleland.
Winners of the cub scout
hobbies judging were Tracy
Cleland, first, arts; Alan
Crisp, second, baseball, and
stam p collec ti ng; Jimmy
. Cleland, third , leaf collection.
Cub scout Pinewood Derby
winners were Trevor · Cardone, first; Paul Hill , Jr.,
second, and Jason Hill, third .
Boy scout derby winners
were Paul Cardone, first;
John Porter, secon d, and
Brian Cleland, third .
·
Helpin g to start th e cars
were Earl Cleland, sc~ul·
master, and Don Beegle.
Dave Hill and Bob Fisher

t-~otlce

Barbara Whitlatch, Robin
Buffington, Dixie Eblin, Mlka.Goeglein, Barbara Grueaer, :
Priscilla Herdman, Gina :
Johnson, Roxanne McDaniel, :
Brian Spencer, Deanna Van •
Meter, Matt Van · Vranken, :
Vicki Morrison.
:
Sandra Reed, Tracy :
Harding, Sonia Parker, Edie •
Grinun, Todd Grover, Kim :
Morrow, Jeanna Pauley, Lots' :
Roush, Angela Van Cooney, :
' Julia Spencer ," Angel~ :
Hubbard, Brian Betztng, •
Barbara Chappalear, Ricky :
Little, Kim Pauley, Nick :
Riggs, Alberta Richards, :
Amy Sisson, Kelly Whitlatch, :
Kyle Woods, Patty Duffy, •
Shilpa Goradia, Andrea :
Johnson, Meban Long, Jon :
Perrin, Shawnee Salser, :
•Sharlene Watson, Bryatr
Zirkle, Timothy Reed,
Christie LaudermtU, Glenda
Gwn, Crystal Lane, Sandra
Mattox, Sherry Wears, Gay!@·
Haning, Jaye Roberts, Usa'
Baxter, Cathy Delong, Unda
Noel, Trina Reeves, Brenda
Robbins, · Rodney Rous~,
Susan Thoma, Debra Werry,
and Karen Spencer.

PUCO Gase No. 76-213- TP-COt
LEGAL NOTICE
is hereby given that the Pub lic Utillties

Commission of Ohio Is conducting an Investigation of

the etfects of customer-prov ided te lephone terminal
equipment on administrative procedures, exlsflng
tariffs, and telephone service standards within the
State of Ohio. The investigation is being conducted with
a view toward developing standard procedures for
dealing with Issues related to customer.provlded

PINEWOOD DERBY winners were, left to right, Paul
Cardone, first; John Porter, second, and Brian Cleland,
third.

terminal equipment Including but not limited ' to
identifying specific changes to Chapter 22 of the ·Commission's Rules and Regulations . Any party
desiring to participate In this Investigation should so
advise the Public Utilities Commission of Ohio, 111
North High Street, Columbus, Ohio .13215, in wrltl~g;
not later than May 7, 1976. Please refer to Case No. 76213-TP-COt.
THE PUB~lC UTl~ITIES COMMISSION OF OHIO
RANDA~L G. APPLEGATE
SECRETARY

were "mechanics" in case of

PALERMO,Sicily !UP!) acc idents to derby cars . Italy 's Gioramma Siocto
Judges were Mrs. Donna Pintor beat America's Bea
Norris and Steve Baldwin, Farber and Canada's Elaine
assis tant sco utmaster . Burke ·in Sunday's opening
Judges for hobbies were Mrs. race of the Women's World
Barbara Lawrence , Mrs. Harness
Driving
Joyce Ritchie, and Mrs. Ruth Tournament.
Stearns, teachers.
Siocto Pintor drove trotter
The scouts extend thanks to ldrusa to !' ~ ·length victory
Middlepor t Pack 245 for the over Farber, 'the American
use of the race track, judges women's driving_champion
and parenls attending. The and her trotter Uden. Burke,
livin g circle close d th e driving Malaga, was third.
meeting.
The 1,6()().meter race' had a
2:10.2 rating for the mile.

i~~3~~~~[~~~~:FO'A ;'~"E

;

~EAibO,

31. 197!. FL~N S TO !!PEND l'"ESE ·FUNOS mR THE ~UPIPOIII
SEVENTti £NTITLEME'-'r
j \JLY t , 1110 THA0t.lal1
AC COUIH NO. 36 3 053 011 '

t/

ALBANY, OHIO 40710

suom11 OICpOIIIa tor

t~ncl+ng contld .,,l,on 'by_ ?·1·76

Gl;nn ' E. Jewell-

;! ::;;;;;;~;;;;;;;,;;;;~;;;.:o,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;'' ·.

COLUMBUS, ()-flO 43205
'lJ Srnile Tomotrow i{Yor.. TaJc e Care OJ Your 1'r.c lh TodaY

MOf-VAY THROUG-1 FRIDAY
8 : ~ A.M. TO 6:30P.M.

N. w.·OPTOMETR
MMPTj IN,
O.D.
~t

OFFICE: Hvi.Jt&lt;): 9;30 to 12,2 to S (CLOSE
AT NOON ON THURS.) - EAST COURT
ST., POMEROY.

..

SCIPIO TOWNSHIP 925
COUNTY TREASURER
MEIGS CDUNrY
RR 2

fA

cep~ ollnlt f*IICWllftCI

INn.ATION FIGHTER
DEAR POLLY - I would
• like to pass on sortie of the
Ideas I have put to use as
"savers." Paoer !Dwels are
so eJgJei!Sive so I have cut
their cost In half . Before
putting a new rolt in the rack
I take 11 sharp knife and cut
all aroWtd the middle of the
roll , goin~ throush to the
cardboard roll but do not cut
II. When the wrapper Is
removed, I put a large rubber
band around one half the roll ,
Now when I tear off a towel it
Is about six by eleven inches
which Is large enongh for
most uses. One side is used
and then the other, so I get
twice as many towels from
one roD .
. I find butter or margarine
go further If I put IWil poWtds
In a ·large milling bowl and,
~~ it Set soft. Then I start the
inlxer on low and ,gradUally
wcirk up !D high, all the time
uatng a rubber spatula to
keep pushing-the butter to the
center, Sometimes I put a
combination of the two
spreads, but regtlrdless of
what I use the volwne Is
Increased by the addition of
alr. I put this in plastic
containers and find it gqes
further and spreads easily.
Instead .of buying those
expensive cloths to go in the
dcyer .to prevent static cling,
e!c. l make my own. I keep a
roll of those re-usable wipe
cl~ths. When ready to use the
dcyer, I wring the' cloth out of
regular liquid fabric softener
and let it dry. I find this
works well and use them over
and over.
Those who sew will find

~

I

I

that money can be saved by
making winter bath robes for
m~n or women out of large
size blankets. I nlade my
husband and I each one for
less than ten dollars. Those
pretty new sheets would
make nice summer ones.
Seconds can often be purchased for this use.
An ~ld inner tube cut up
makes wonderful rubber
bands to stretch around large
items . They are almost
impossible to break. My
letter is long but another
•economy Is to try to get my
money's worth out of an
expensive thirteen cenl
stamp. - NORA.
DEAR POLLY - With
prices what they are, I use all leftover food to assemble my
own TV dinners. ll is amazing .
how many meals can be put
in the freezer to be ready to
heat when needed. Even just
one portion of something can
be frozen separately. 1Polly's
note ~ I save all those small
fofl pans that lr02en lhfllgs
come In to have on haad just
for tbls. - VIOLET.
DEAR POLLY - Bottom
sheets wear out much quicker
than top ones. Now when I
buy them I get two bottom
ones, one top and two pairs of ·
pillowcases. I rotate their use
and find it a savings In that I
get much longer wear out of
all. - R. H.
.
You will receive a dollar ff
Polly uoes your favorlle
homemaking Idea, Pet
Peeve, Polly's Problem or
solution Ill a problem. Write
.Polly fn care of this newspaper.

had high blood pressure.
Because new medicines are
available that help to
eil?hinate sodium, not all
doctors are as strict abOut
limiting salt as they used to
be.l still think it's a good idea
to limit salt if you have a
tendency toward high blood
pressure. All doctors agree in
limiting salt is the patient has
swellinfi, heart failure or
other manifestations of ac~
cumulating fluid.
Your doctor obviously
thinks you have a very mild
form of diabetes , and that is
why he is trying to control it
with diet. If you cooperate, he
will probably be successful. If
the problem is being overweight, once yow- weight is
adequately reduced you
might be able to eat some
sweets part of the time. The
big problem with sweets for a
person with even mild
diabetes is that they contain a
lot of calories. That makes it
difficult to control obesity.
They are also rapidly ab-sorbed In to the blood steam
and make it a little more
difficult to control the
diabetic .
This does not mean that a
diabetic should not have
carbohydrates but rather
that large amounts of concentrated swee!l! should be
avoided because of their
c8lorie intake and, iri the
diabetic who is takinR In·
sulln, the difficulty . this
creates in smoothing out the
blood sugar level throughout
the 24-hout period.

RACINE - The honor roll
for the fifth six w.eeks grading
period at Southern H i gh
School is announced . Named
to the rot t with those names in
capital letters meklng all A 's
were :

SENIORS - WILLIAM
Bush , Keith Circle, Karen
Clark, PAUL CROSS, Randy
Dudding, MOLLY FISHER ,
. Koste Hysell , Cheryl Larkins,
Corena Rhodes , , Debbie
Roush. .R.obert Roulsh,
BECKY SAYRE , Sheryl
Simpson .
·
JUNIORS - PATRICIA ·
AUTHER SON , Sobbl
Chapman , Jerrena Dil l , Er ic
Dunning , Carol Glenn, Juli
Gooch, Oreama JenklfiS , Carl

Johnston, BRENDA LEWIS ,
Roger Michael, Nina M iller,
VIck i Roush , ·DENISE
TA~BOTT , Kevin Willford,
Scott Wolfe, Linda Young .
SOPHOMORES - Steve·
Baker , Bessie
Shaffer, ,
LARRY FISHER , . Jim
Foreman, Perry H i ll , Teresa
Meadows , JAYE ORO .
Roseberry ,

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Dear Helen:
MONDAY
My husband Larry and I were divorced last year . He got
BIG
BEND
WARRIORS
married again, but It didn't last.
He called me, we had dinner together rect!n,tly£11nd he spring practice Monday, 5
asked me to go away with him for the weekend W"see if we p,m. at old Rutland Football
could work things out. Itw~s the loveliest trip - twice as great field.
SALEM CENTER PTA,
as our honeymoon.
But my mother Is furious . She's a live-by-tile-Bible person Monday , 7:30 p.m. at the
and brought me.up the same, so she says I should KNOW how school. Band students to
program .
deeply I've sinned. We committed adultery in her view, as we present . the
wi.ll be
"weren't tnarrled." Fornication is tbe word she likes to .use . Grandparents
She's making it. very tou~h on me, as !live with her and reco"nized.
she cares for our daughter while I work or go ciut. (We fight
MIDDLEPORT GARDEN
about other things, too, such as how to raise Lorraine.)
Club, home of Miss Nellie
Larry and I aren't sure yet wbether we're ready for re- Zerk le and Miss Hallie
marriage, but we wahl to see each other. I can't believe that 's Zerkle, 7:30 p.m. Monday.
wrong, just because we no longer have a license framed above Fortieth birthday of the club
the bed.
to be observed. Mrs. Homer
What would you suggest? - WANTS A LIFE OF HER Russell wiD be co-hostess .
OWN
MEIGS COUNTY Salon 710
Monday, 7:30 at the home of
Myrlle Walker, Vine Street,
Dear Wants;
Racine. Mary Roush, coIf you want a life of your own, get an apartment of your hostess .
own. Livl.ng with your mother because she offers convenient
baby-sitting Is unfair to her as well as uncomfortable for you
RACINE PTO Monday,
and Larry,
7; 30 p.m. Program by the
'II
1
·
ttl h band. Refreshments to be
As for her dii!Bpproval ; You coni nue to get Jt un
e served by first grade..
"makes an honest woman of you." And I know she 'II
disapprove of Ml!l when I agree it's wise to wait for reRACINE CHAPTER 134,
mamageunttlyou'requltesureitwlllwork. - H.
O.E.S. Monday , 8 p.m. at the
+++
Masonic Temple: A 50 year
pin will be presented and two
Dear Helen :
We gave my mother-in-law a diamong ring. She gave it to candidates will be initiated.
~r drunken daughter who wilL probably hock it for booze. We
SOUTHERN ATHLETIC
bought her a beautiful shawlfor her birthday, gave her money Boosters, 8 p.m. Monday at
quite often. That creep of a daughter Is wearing the shawl and high school, Racine.
spent the cash at bars.
TUESDAY
Now my husband Is laid off and we're really hurting, what
TRI-COUNTY Citizens
with three children to care for. But does Mama worry .about Band Radio Club, 7:30 p.m.
us? All her spare dollars and care go to tbe Losh, even though Tuesday
at
Pomeroy
she has a husband who makes more than mme does.
Elementary School.
·
Who~ays being a dishonest ll'ampdoesn'tpayoff?
SPECIAL
ME ETING
A j:eeent letter to yo~ column ID!~ of a mqther leaving • Southern Band Boosters, 7:30
most -8£ her money to tile black sheep because he needed 1t p m Tuesday at high school
whereas the industrious kids didn't. Why Is It ~rents so often Raclne.
'
DREW WEBSTER POST
favor the ones who least deserve !herr help? UNAPPRECIATED
regular meeting Tuesday, 6
p.m.
Dear Un :
CONCER NED AND in Because they need help ·the most. And parents are terested parents at Wahama
motivated not only by sympathy but guilt I tbe old "where did I High School meet Tuesday , 8
go wrong" syndrome).
p.m. at high school.
.
It isn't fair, but it's tbere. So don't waste time on resentMIDDLEPORT MASONIC
·
ment. You've got better things to do with your life , - H.
Lodge 363 Tuesday, 7:30p.m.
Dear Helen:
++ t
.
All ma ster masons invited .
candy and pop vending machines in public schools? In one
POMEROY GARDEN
instance, a Hawaiian high school replaces these useless sweets Club, I p,m. Tuesday at the
with healthfui snacks ...:. nuts, fruit juices, apples, raisins, etc., home of Mrs. Howard Nolan ,
and profits actually soared.
Syracuse .
Sure, schools need money for band uniforms, etc., but not
OHIO ETA PHI Chapter,
at the expense of the students' teeth and health. I think the sale Beta Sigma Phi Sorority,
of "empty sweets" should be cut down as much as uossible in
schools-and we parents can manalle thiS,_via PTA and health Tuesday, 7; 30, Coiumbus
and Southern Ohio Electric
groups. Arise, Moms and Dads, and fight tbe candy-pop
Co. with installation of ofvenders. - KAREN
fi cers .
CHESTER COUNCIL 323,
Daughters of Atnerica, 8 p.m.
Tuesday at the hall. Ways
and means committee will
have a silent auction.

Church Women United
plan Fellowship day
May Fellowship Day of
Church Women United of
Meigs County will be ob·
served at the Rutland United
Methodist Church on Friday.
There will be a sack hmch
at noon with the dessert and
drink being provided by the
host church. The afternoon
program will begin at 1:30
p.m.
Along with Protestant,
Catholic· and Orthodox
women
in
2,000 local units across the
country, church women of
Meigs County will continue
the iradition established in
1933 of worshiping together
on the first Friday in May to
emphasize tile creative and
healing relations that are
possible among people in
every community.
May Fellowship Day will
celebrate valiant women in
the life of the nation, the
melllC?r;t of those who left a
mark, the presence of
dedicated women in our
midst · today, and the certainty that there wtll be many
to follow.
The worship service will
dramatize the valiant women

Honor lists are published

Cheryl

Soc IaI
Calendar

'~

When to Cl!l the Apron Ties

Lose weight for
better health

. "

I

.

By Helen Bollel

·

DR. LAMB

By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - I
visited a doctor last spring
whom I'll call Dr. A. He found
.,Jipy cholesterol too high, He
told me to be careful of my
milk, meat and egg intake.
Since then I have visited Dr.
B who says it has leveled off.
If I eat these products will it
come back? Dr. A found a
high· blood pressure condition. He doesn't believe In a
!181t free diet. .Dr . B says
watch your salt intake. What
do you say? Dr. B says I have
sugar diabetes. He is trying
to ~ontrol it with a diabetic
diet. Does this mean I can
never eat sweets? I would
appreciate your opinion since
neither doctor will give me
satisfaction
on
these
questions.
DEAR READER
Medicine is not an exact
IC!ence, The body is not · a
)ftcise machine and varies
from time to time. The
combination of these often
l'ellllts in different medical
opinions . The cholesterol
level tends to fluctuate,
particularly in some people.
During the time a person fs
losing weight, cholesterol
may fall sharply. As soon as
lhe weight Is stabilized even
11 a lower level ihe
chole~terol may then rise
qain. I can readily see
where you might have gone to
Ill' A when your cholesterol
was • high and when you
visited Dr B, if you have been
restricting your diet and were
In the ' process of losing
weight, that your level might
be low. If that were true and
that were the cause, certainly
if you abandoned your
dietary program, you'd have
a good likelihood of again
having a hi~h chole.•t..rot
level.
•
The way to keep the
· · cholesterol level down Is to
lose weight, change your diet
to avoid high-cholesterol,
hlgh.fat foods and persist In a
diet that avoids these roods
·thereafter. If you return to
your previous habits that
were assoclated with a high
cholesterol
level,
the
likelihood · is the hi11h
cholesterol will retw-n too.
For more Information on
\ diet in controlling cholesterol
t send 50 cents for The Health
Letter, nwnber 1-3, Diet,
Preventing Atherosclerosis.
Send a long, stamped, self·
addressed envelope for
mailing. Address yow- letter
tD me In care of this news·
·paper, P. 0. Box 1551, Radio
City Station , New York, NY
'10019.
Doctors used to be very big
on limiting salt in people who

US

~=~

.

John

In 1919, U.S . airplane
pas.senger service began
when Robert Hewitt flew
Mrs. J , A. Hoagland and Miss
Ethel Hodges from New York
City to Atlantic City,

'.

Sayre , scott Souders . car .
Thomt~ , T im Thoren .
Micha el Warner , Debbie
Smith , BARBARA WHITE ,
Ni~eR '"~~o~.E N _ Thomas
Allen , Doug Belt, BRICE
HAR-T , Seth Hilt , Jeannie
Johnson , Brent Pa tterson.
man

of American history who out
of their ·deep religious convictions spoke and acted on
behalf of the hwnan rights of
others. Special tributes will
be paid to women like Ann
Hutchison, Abigail Adams
and Sojow-ner Truth. The
concept of justice illwninated
their lives as they led
movements for the abolition
of slavery and equal rights
for all people .
Speaker for the observance
will be Mrs. Patrick Lochary
of Pomeroy, who will talk on
valiant women of this community. There will be ·a
mrsery for small children
during
the
afternoon
progrl\lll.
Mrs. Thomas Bentz,
president, has asked that all
women wear bi centennial
dresses if they have them.

GALLIA COUNTY SALON .
612, Eight and Forty, 7:30
Thw-sday at the home of Mrs .
Joan Wood, 812 Second Ave. ,
Gallipolis.

Miss Howard
plans to wed
The wedding of the Rev.
Eddie Buffino.ton and Miss
Karen Alin ·lioww·a ~-rtaay·
evening at 7;30 p.m. at the
Triedstone Baptist Church,
Fo th A
d Pi St
ur
ve . an
ne .,
Gallipolis , wiJI be open to
· friends and relatives. .
The Rev, John D. King,
pastor of the Triedstone
Church will read the vow•
'

.

MEN'S
BOAT SHOES

'6.50

t' '

Pair

e

•139

!: .Bean:at IV
•

•

Bearcattlng Is listening to aU the exciting broadcasls- pollee and Hre calls, •
nal\onal weather service. civil defense. government agencies, and hundreds more
-on a Bearcat scanning radio.
'
._)

••

puts~ there.

95

Ingels Furniture
442-263S Middleport

Bank Rate Financing

:

••

!e
:

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'•

Trophies were awarded
Sunday at the Pomeroy
Bowling Lanes to winners In
the
American
Legion
Auxiliary Bowling League.
First place winners were
Feeney-Bennett Junior
Gutter-Dusters, sponsored by
the Juniors of the American
Legion Un'it 128, with Juanita
Justis, Brenda Pettit and
Diane Petit. Second place
winners were Rutland
Pioneers sponsored by the
Rutland Post 467 with Jane
Garnes, Lou Gilmore and
Ann Hatfield on the team .
The third place trophy went
to the Feeney-Bennett
Flyers, sponsored by the
American Legion Post 128
with the players being Becky
Broderick, Dottie Will and
Gerry Kessinger,
Individual trophies went to
Juanita Justis with a 226, the
high game; Gerry Kessinger,
143, high average, and S40,
high series; Carolyn Clonch,
18 pin Improvement for the .
most improved, and Erma
Hendrix, Lou Gilmore, Ruby
Hysell, Beth Hendricks,
Juanita Justis and Brenda
Pettit, perfect attendance.
Participation trophies were
given to Denise Garnes,
Chrisly Jones, Pearl Russell,
I!JIIen Tucker and Judy
McDaniel.
A banquet will be held
Friday night at the Martin
Restaurant and bowlers
planning to attend are to
make reservati ons with Lou
Gilmore.

For.l ;yow-l rououite

MOTH El{

YOUR OWN MESSAGE
TELLING HER OF YOUR
LOVE ON THESE PAGES
MOTHER'S DAY, MAY 9TH
We'll Send Mom A Special
Card, Too!
Be sure to inc:lude her address.

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.,

20 WORDS JUST '1.00

MAIL WITH 51.00 TO
,.

THE DAILY SENTINEL
Pomeroy, Ohio

IN
POlNT PLEASANT

NORELCO SHAVER
CLINIC ·

10:00 AM TO 6:00 PM

Middleport, 0.

;•

:

Trophies
awarded

FRI., MAY 7th

~-

,

*

WILl BE IN THE STORE

heritage house

.'

''*'*''

BY FACTORY TRAINED EXPERTS

Navy or White

·: ,&amp;mAl~ is like being in a bank
,. robbery_without gettiqJ sbot.
•
I•

",OiriMI

MEIGS ATHLETIC
Boosters, 7; 30 Monday,
. Meigs High School.
POMEROY
CHAPTJlR,
O.E.S. will meet at 7;45 p.m.
Tuesday at the Masonic
Temple. Past matrons and
past patrons will be honored.
The past matrons are asked
to wear gowns of their year.
WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT Fire men 's Auxiliary, 7:30
Wednesday at the firehouse .
A housewares party will be
SALE POSTPONED
held . Hostesses will be the
The rwninage sale to be
officers. Members may take held by the United Methodist
guests.
Women of th e Pomeroy
POMEROY LODGE 164, F. Church has been po~tponed
and A. M., Wedneay, 7;30 for a month.
p.m. Masonic Temple. All
master masons invited.
THURSDAY
· MEIGS COUNTY Council
of Parents and Teachers, 7:30
Thursday, at the Pomeroy
Elementary School.

,••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ..

Terl Zirkle .

Civic beuutification of the that man depends on plants,
lor
service
station
Letart Falls Cemetery by the not plants on man . A
owners
Bend 0' t~e River Garden thank-you note was read from
It rOc.i OWf'l I Mnfot Jtltlelft,
Club will be continued this Mrs. Bert Gr1mm, and cards
~h.. ttlllot·
· month with general cleanup were signed for Mrs. Grimm
......,.IMurMCe.-bll
around shrubbery and the . and Mrs. Grella Simpson,
101' 'fOij ~ row
planting of ~wnmer fl ower&lt; both recuperating from inlftOII CO*...
in the_planter.
jw-ies suffered in a norida
lot . . COli tMrl Mf' No .
Meeting recenlly at the accident earlier this year .
tOfe •""" Dr KltionwWI• .
Not onty lllft4trc1"home of Mrs. Wilson CarMrs. Wingett dlscussod the
l6eltltl4y co~ • .,, .._.
penler, Pomeroy, the club Racine bieentennlal planting
DIMr¥6'-ICOWf~·wl ·
men1bers set May 19 as • and the members agreed to
ColtoNol_....,.,..
a
work
date
at help. The traveling prize
•" "" ""1'-.
the ceme tery . Mrs. W. brought by Mrs. ·Diehl was
0. Barnitz, hostess, gave " won by Mrs. Wingett. . A
devotions using an Easter pro gram on J apan ese
theme, the 24th Psalm and a arrangements was given by
puem, "The Ballad of the Mrs .
Carpen ter.
She
Trees ." The club pQCm was displayed a Moraibana
r'ead by Mrs. E. A. Wingett, arrangement of yew and
and the club prayer given by while azalea .
Mrs. Clifford Morris. For roll
Mrs. Barnitz served a
call members gave garden dessert cow-se. The May 24
problems and suggested meeting will be held at the .
ways to solve them.
home of Mrs. Wingett.
'---------•
Mrs. James Diehl had the
eco logy thoughts for the
month and told about using
egg cartons in the classroom
for math projects. She said
egg shells can be used in the
bottom of flower pots and
they can also be put out for
the birds in the wintertime.
Mrs . Morris read a paper,
"f\ecognition of the Value of
Plants" which emphasized

•COMPLETE MOTOR OVERHAUL '
•CLEAN.UP
•TUNE·UP

ONLY •7.88 plus t••
RECHARABLE SHAVER $2.00 utra.
LADlES SHAVERS ONLY SU8.
Heads-Cords-Cleaners Also Available
Here's what we'll do: a complete motor overhaul ; replacement of all

necess~ry !f10tor p~rts, bru5~s, co !ls or

rotors . Plus regular clea·nlng, oiling

and adtusttng
. Don I miss
thiS repair special! I Bring in your Shaver today! t
'
.

ALL OF THE_ABOVE PLUS NEW SHAVING HEADS!

ONLY! ! $13.88 plus t-..

Rechargable Shav~rs •'2.00 extra

�Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday,

I · ii;.;~~''ii;I~m~~~~~'''~~''l
~!~b c_on~inuing beautification
p
~ ~""""*'~~~ll:IS:.

The O.Uy Sentinel,Middleoor)-Pomeroy, 0 .. Monday, May 3, 1976

Polly's Pointers

!:&lt;

~

Cut paper towels
~nd cost in half

:.- • · € 1 1 ~

PLANTATION BELI.S AND BEAUX of the Civil War
period in "Let Freedom Sing'' are, 1-r, front, Heinz Coats,
Jim Sheets, Greg Thomas, Mark Goeglein, Mike
Goeglein , Melanie Dillard, Connie Smith, Julia Hayes,

and Angelia Curtis; and second row, Frank Martin, Nick
Riggs, Randy Murrsy, Brian Betzing, Bill Anderson, Terri
Roush, Roxanne McDaniel, Kristin Anderson, Belinda
Grimm, and Vicki Morrison.

Choir to

"LET FREI!JDOM SING" - Taking roles in the
scenes of the musical presentation from the arrival of the
pilgrims through the westward eKpansion in "Le t
Freedom Sing," are, 1-r, front, Bernard Wallace, Kelly
Whitlatch, and Crystal Lane, square dancers; Jaye
Roberts, Cindy Curtis, Laura Va n Meter, Patricia Duffy,
Karla DeMoss, Angela Baker and Bryan Zirkle, pilgrims ;
second row, Bret Korn, Rubin.McDaniel , Shilpa Goradia,

Amy Sisson, and Glellda Gwn, square dancers, Jeff Nash,
Francis Scott Key, Matt Van Vranken as G~or11e
Washington, Gina Johnson as Betsy Ross, ani! Shawn
Gihnore, Mark Boyd, and Gene Klein as the Spirit of '76;
third row, Sbawnee Salser, Cathy DeLong, Kevin Knapp "
and Barbara Chappelear, and fourth row, Tammy Pettit,
and Melinda Thomas, square dancers.

,,"
"

present

'I

•

concert
POM I': ROY
" Let
Freedom Sing," the story of
America in song, dance arid
tableau, will be presented by
the Pomeroy Elementary
Sc hool choir at 1 p.m. on
Friday in the school
auditorium .
The pageant was written by
Mrs. Gladys H. Foley, vocal
musi c instructor, over a
three-month period with fa cts
gleaned from the fourth and
fifth grades Social Studies
books. It is presented in nine
segments, or sCenes, each
de picting in songs and dances
a part of America n history.
The first scene deals with
the
Pil gr im s . with
'. Angela Baker, Suzan T110ma,
Karla DeMoss, Laura Van
Meter, Tammy Ca pehart,
Bryan Zirkle, Patricia Dliffy
and Cindy Curtis in the roles.
The music includes "God ·
Sa ve Our Gracio!L'l King ,"
"The Mayflower Compact,"
"We Gather Together to Ask
the · Lord's Blessing, " and
" Old Hundred and the
Do•ology."
in th.e Revolutionary War
Scene, the Spirit of '76 is
depic ted bv Shawn Gilmore.
Mark Boyd and Gene Klein ,
with Matt Van Vranken as
George Washin gton , and
Gina Thomas, Betsy Ross.
Fo;·-· lh e·r ·· scene, Melinda
Thomas is fluti st. Jeff Nash is
cast as Francis 'Scott Key for
the scene on the War of 1812
and the wr itin g of the
national anthem .
Music includes "Ya nkee
Doodle," "American Liberty
Song" and "America." ·
Then came the westward
expa nsion with the cowboys,
cowgirls, Indians, and the
ci rcle squar~ dancers .
Taking roles in the scene are
Mike Thoma s, Priscilla
Herdman, Annette Johnson,'
Jon Perrin, Jimmy Wilson,
Charles' Kn opp, Bernard
Walla ce, Kevin Knapp ,
Barbara Grueser, J oe
Humphr ey,
Dewey
Au therson, Joey Barton,Dixie Eblin, Tammy Pettit,

ALL MOTHERS
LOVE
,

FLOWERS
Place Your
Mother's Day
Orders Early
Call: 992-5560

~

59 N. Second St.
Middleport, 0.

'·
'·

"
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'"

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BICENTENNIAL FINALE is presented with traditional patriotic music offering
dancers, 1-r, kneeling, Cindy Soulsby, Gayla Haning, Kim Eblin a nd Debbie Werry, and
standing, Laura McCullough, Trina Reeves, a nd Lisa Ba.ter ; baton twirler, Tammy
Eichinger, and Rochelle McDaniel as the Statue of Liberty giving tC., final sa lute in the
production written and directed by Mrs. Gladys Foley, Meigs vocal miL'lic teac her.
Kell y Whitla tch, Jaye
Roberts, Glenda Gum,' B•·et
Korn, Barba ra Hoffm an,
Sha wnee Sa lser , Ca thy
DeLong, Shilpa Goradi a,
Melinda Thomas, Amy Sisson
and Robyn ¥enoy. Music for
the scene inqludes "Home on
the
Ran ge,"
" Indian
Harvest," and "Skip to My

I

w

Randy .Murray is cast as
Abrahan.l Lincoln in the
Gettysburg Address scene,
and th e mu sic includes
" Battle Hym n of th e
Republic" and ''Dixie." For
the plantation, the music is
"Old Folks at Home" and "0,
Susannah" with the belles
and beaux being Roxanne
McDaniel, Kristen Anderson,
Billy Anderson, Julia Hayes,
Terri Roush, Connie Smith,
Greg
Thomas,
Vicki
Morrison, Melanie Dillard,
Belinda Grim m, Angelia
Curtis, Heinz Coates, Nick
Riggs, Bryan Betzing, Mark
Goeg lein , Mike Goeg1e in ,
Jimmy Sheets, and Frank
Martin.

RA CINE - Numerous
awards were presen ted when
Racine Cub Scout Pack 243
and Buy Scout Troop 241 held
their Pinewood derby race
and mee ting recently at the
scout building in Racine.
The meeting opened with
!he pledge to the flag and the
cubs and webelos singing the
Pinewood Derby song led by
-Jean Cleland, dean leader.
Ten boys qualified for a
total of 36 awar~s and each of
the cubs exhibited a hobby for
judging. Receiving awards
were Tommy Allen, bobcat
badge; Alan Crisp, denner
cord;
Tracy
Cleland,
ass istant denner cord; Paul
Hill, .Jr ., geo logist anct
citizen ; David Salmons,
naturali s t , geolog ist,
engineer and arrow of light; .

DR. RONALD F. RIVIERE
01. A. J. STA!Hll DR. FU!MAN MAI.TZ
FOR PRICES CALL COLLECT
rAREA CODE (614)---,

One or Two Day Full Denture

1-

Service, Partials , Extractions,
X - Rays, Cleaning

z

.WINNERS FOR mE BEST hobbles competition of
Racine Cub Scout Pack 243 were, I to r , Tracy Cleland,
arts ; Alan Crisp, baseball and stamp collection, Jimmy
Cleland, third, leaf collection .

second row, Jon Perrin, Jimmy Wilson, Mike Thomas, •
Annette Johnson , Priscilla Herdman, Barbara Grueser, ~­
Mike Miller, Tony Jewell, Kail Knapp, Barbara
Whitlatch, Brenda Fry, Mike Schloss, and Kim Morrow.

with a salute to today '-- the Eichinger twirling to "Stars
bicentennial year, opening and Stripes," •
with the Pomeroy School
Mrs. Helen Williams, sixth
Song, composed by Mrs. grade teacher, will give "I
Fo ley, the Pomeroy dancers, Know
Who
Holds
Cindy Soulsby, Kim Eblin, Tomorrow,'' Robert Morris
Lisa Ba•ter, Debbie Werry, will present "Blowing In tbe
Trina
Reeves,
Laura · Wind," and the chorus will
McCullough , and Gayla conclude with "Give Me Your
Haning, dancing to ''You're a Tired Your Poor " and "God
Grand Old Flag" and BJes; Americ'a ,"· with
"Yankee Doodle Dandy " Rochelle McDaniel making
with batonist, Tammy an appearance as the Statue
of Liberty.
'
Narrators for the program
are Tammy Eichinger,
Angelia Curti~. Rochelle
McDaniel , Roxanne
McDaniel and Belinda
Grimm, Ricky Smith is the
stage manager, and . Kim
Patterson the coordinator.
Choir members are Kristen
Anderson, Billy Colmer,
Angelia .curtis , Melanie
Dillard, Tammy Eichin~er,
Shawn Gilmore, Mary Beth
Hawley, Mary Klein, Mark
Mattox, Mike Miller, Randy
Murray, Jeff Nash, Kim
Patterson; J. R. Wamsley,
Tanya Aleshire, Leota Bush,
Brenda Fry, Belinda Grimm,
Julia
Hayes , Rochelle
RACINE CUB SCOUT PACK 243 Pinewood Derby
McDaniel,
Connie Smith,
winners were, I to r, Trevor Cardone, first ; Paul Hill, Jr.,
Greg
Thomas,
Melinda
second, and Jason Hill, third.
Thomas , Angela Triplett,

Jewell, John Beaver, Jack
Braley, Mike Miller, Victor
Painter and Kail Knapp are
the soldiers in the World War
I scene. Taking the part of the
soldier and his girl as the
chorus si ngs, "Now is the
Hour " are Barbara Whitlatch'
a nd Mickey Reed, with
Brenda Fry, Shelley Stobart
and H. J. Grimm in the roles
of the family left behind .
The presentation concludes

Awards presented Scouts

a:

L_ 252·3181 __j

:::&gt;

soldiers be ing Tony Jewell,
John Beaver, Jack Braley,
Mike Miller, Victor Painter,
and Kail Knapp .
Kim Morrow and Mike
Schloss do
"St rolling
with "Over There," ''1 Saw Through the Park" in the Gay
Six Short Soldiers" with the Nineties scene while Tony

Lou ."

DE

en

" Th e Gay ·Nin eti es" is
depicted by Kim Morrow and
Mike Schloss with the music
"Strolling Through the Park"
and " Daisy, Daisy." World
War I and II are depicted

THE WESTWARD EXPANSiON with its Indians, the
wars of America, and the Gay Nineties in song and dance
is portrayed by front , 1-r, J oe Humphreys, Charles Knopp,
Kyle Woods, Dixie Ebliii, John Beaver, Jack Braley,
Victor Painter, Michelle Stobart, and H. J. Grimm ;

w

Scott.-- Clelan d, a th lete,
scien tist , ar tis t, showma n
an d sportsman ; Jason Hill ,
ath lete , artist, sho wman,
spor tsman; J eff Delong,
at hlete, arti st, scientist,
bobcat and showman ; Zane
Beegle , engi neer , scholar,
aquanaut, trave ler ,geologist,
nat uralist; Trevor Cordone,
athle te, artist , scholar, ·
scientist, citizen, showman ,

engin eer, forester , sportsman . Cubs advancing from
bears to webelos were Travor
Cardone, Jason Hill , Jeff
Delong and Scott Cleland.
Winners of the cub scout
hobbies judging were Tracy
Cleland, first, arts; Alan
Crisp, second, baseball, and
stam p collec ti ng; Jimmy
. Cleland, third , leaf collection.
Cub scout Pinewood Derby
winners were Trevor · Cardone, first; Paul Hill , Jr.,
second, and Jason Hill, third .
Boy scout derby winners
were Paul Cardone, first;
John Porter, secon d, and
Brian Cleland, third .
·
Helpin g to start th e cars
were Earl Cleland, sc~ul·
master, and Don Beegle.
Dave Hill and Bob Fisher

t-~otlce

Barbara Whitlatch, Robin
Buffington, Dixie Eblin, Mlka.Goeglein, Barbara Grueaer, :
Priscilla Herdman, Gina :
Johnson, Roxanne McDaniel, :
Brian Spencer, Deanna Van •
Meter, Matt Van · Vranken, :
Vicki Morrison.
:
Sandra Reed, Tracy :
Harding, Sonia Parker, Edie •
Grinun, Todd Grover, Kim :
Morrow, Jeanna Pauley, Lots' :
Roush, Angela Van Cooney, :
' Julia Spencer ," Angel~ :
Hubbard, Brian Betztng, •
Barbara Chappalear, Ricky :
Little, Kim Pauley, Nick :
Riggs, Alberta Richards, :
Amy Sisson, Kelly Whitlatch, :
Kyle Woods, Patty Duffy, •
Shilpa Goradia, Andrea :
Johnson, Meban Long, Jon :
Perrin, Shawnee Salser, :
•Sharlene Watson, Bryatr
Zirkle, Timothy Reed,
Christie LaudermtU, Glenda
Gwn, Crystal Lane, Sandra
Mattox, Sherry Wears, Gay!@·
Haning, Jaye Roberts, Usa'
Baxter, Cathy Delong, Unda
Noel, Trina Reeves, Brenda
Robbins, · Rodney Rous~,
Susan Thoma, Debra Werry,
and Karen Spencer.

PUCO Gase No. 76-213- TP-COt
LEGAL NOTICE
is hereby given that the Pub lic Utillties

Commission of Ohio Is conducting an Investigation of

the etfects of customer-prov ided te lephone terminal
equipment on administrative procedures, exlsflng
tariffs, and telephone service standards within the
State of Ohio. The investigation is being conducted with
a view toward developing standard procedures for
dealing with Issues related to customer.provlded

PINEWOOD DERBY winners were, left to right, Paul
Cardone, first; John Porter, second, and Brian Cleland,
third.

terminal equipment Including but not limited ' to
identifying specific changes to Chapter 22 of the ·Commission's Rules and Regulations . Any party
desiring to participate In this Investigation should so
advise the Public Utilities Commission of Ohio, 111
North High Street, Columbus, Ohio .13215, in wrltl~g;
not later than May 7, 1976. Please refer to Case No. 76213-TP-COt.
THE PUB~lC UTl~ITIES COMMISSION OF OHIO
RANDA~L G. APPLEGATE
SECRETARY

were "mechanics" in case of

PALERMO,Sicily !UP!) acc idents to derby cars . Italy 's Gioramma Siocto
Judges were Mrs. Donna Pintor beat America's Bea
Norris and Steve Baldwin, Farber and Canada's Elaine
assis tant sco utmaster . Burke ·in Sunday's opening
Judges for hobbies were Mrs. race of the Women's World
Barbara Lawrence , Mrs. Harness
Driving
Joyce Ritchie, and Mrs. Ruth Tournament.
Stearns, teachers.
Siocto Pintor drove trotter
The scouts extend thanks to ldrusa to !' ~ ·length victory
Middlepor t Pack 245 for the over Farber, 'the American
use of the race track, judges women's driving_champion
and parenls attending. The and her trotter Uden. Burke,
livin g circle close d th e driving Malaga, was third.
meeting.
The 1,6()().meter race' had a
2:10.2 rating for the mile.

i~~3~~~~[~~~~:FO'A ;'~"E

;

~EAibO,

31. 197!. FL~N S TO !!PEND l'"ESE ·FUNOS mR THE ~UPIPOIII
SEVENTti £NTITLEME'-'r
j \JLY t , 1110 THA0t.lal1
AC COUIH NO. 36 3 053 011 '

t/

ALBANY, OHIO 40710

suom11 OICpOIIIa tor

t~ncl+ng contld .,,l,on 'by_ ?·1·76

Gl;nn ' E. Jewell-

;! ::;;;;;;~;;;;;;;,;;;;~;;;.:o,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;'' ·.

COLUMBUS, ()-flO 43205
'lJ Srnile Tomotrow i{Yor.. TaJc e Care OJ Your 1'r.c lh TodaY

MOf-VAY THROUG-1 FRIDAY
8 : ~ A.M. TO 6:30P.M.

N. w.·OPTOMETR
MMPTj IN,
O.D.
~t

OFFICE: Hvi.Jt&lt;): 9;30 to 12,2 to S (CLOSE
AT NOON ON THURS.) - EAST COURT
ST., POMEROY.

..

SCIPIO TOWNSHIP 925
COUNTY TREASURER
MEIGS CDUNrY
RR 2

fA

cep~ ollnlt f*IICWllftCI

INn.ATION FIGHTER
DEAR POLLY - I would
• like to pass on sortie of the
Ideas I have put to use as
"savers." Paoer !Dwels are
so eJgJei!Sive so I have cut
their cost In half . Before
putting a new rolt in the rack
I take 11 sharp knife and cut
all aroWtd the middle of the
roll , goin~ throush to the
cardboard roll but do not cut
II. When the wrapper Is
removed, I put a large rubber
band around one half the roll ,
Now when I tear off a towel it
Is about six by eleven inches
which Is large enongh for
most uses. One side is used
and then the other, so I get
twice as many towels from
one roD .
. I find butter or margarine
go further If I put IWil poWtds
In a ·large milling bowl and,
~~ it Set soft. Then I start the
inlxer on low and ,gradUally
wcirk up !D high, all the time
uatng a rubber spatula to
keep pushing-the butter to the
center, Sometimes I put a
combination of the two
spreads, but regtlrdless of
what I use the volwne Is
Increased by the addition of
alr. I put this in plastic
containers and find it gqes
further and spreads easily.
Instead .of buying those
expensive cloths to go in the
dcyer .to prevent static cling,
e!c. l make my own. I keep a
roll of those re-usable wipe
cl~ths. When ready to use the
dcyer, I wring the' cloth out of
regular liquid fabric softener
and let it dry. I find this
works well and use them over
and over.
Those who sew will find

~

I

I

that money can be saved by
making winter bath robes for
m~n or women out of large
size blankets. I nlade my
husband and I each one for
less than ten dollars. Those
pretty new sheets would
make nice summer ones.
Seconds can often be purchased for this use.
An ~ld inner tube cut up
makes wonderful rubber
bands to stretch around large
items . They are almost
impossible to break. My
letter is long but another
•economy Is to try to get my
money's worth out of an
expensive thirteen cenl
stamp. - NORA.
DEAR POLLY - With
prices what they are, I use all leftover food to assemble my
own TV dinners. ll is amazing .
how many meals can be put
in the freezer to be ready to
heat when needed. Even just
one portion of something can
be frozen separately. 1Polly's
note ~ I save all those small
fofl pans that lr02en lhfllgs
come In to have on haad just
for tbls. - VIOLET.
DEAR POLLY - Bottom
sheets wear out much quicker
than top ones. Now when I
buy them I get two bottom
ones, one top and two pairs of ·
pillowcases. I rotate their use
and find it a savings In that I
get much longer wear out of
all. - R. H.
.
You will receive a dollar ff
Polly uoes your favorlle
homemaking Idea, Pet
Peeve, Polly's Problem or
solution Ill a problem. Write
.Polly fn care of this newspaper.

had high blood pressure.
Because new medicines are
available that help to
eil?hinate sodium, not all
doctors are as strict abOut
limiting salt as they used to
be.l still think it's a good idea
to limit salt if you have a
tendency toward high blood
pressure. All doctors agree in
limiting salt is the patient has
swellinfi, heart failure or
other manifestations of ac~
cumulating fluid.
Your doctor obviously
thinks you have a very mild
form of diabetes , and that is
why he is trying to control it
with diet. If you cooperate, he
will probably be successful. If
the problem is being overweight, once yow- weight is
adequately reduced you
might be able to eat some
sweets part of the time. The
big problem with sweets for a
person with even mild
diabetes is that they contain a
lot of calories. That makes it
difficult to control obesity.
They are also rapidly ab-sorbed In to the blood steam
and make it a little more
difficult to control the
diabetic .
This does not mean that a
diabetic should not have
carbohydrates but rather
that large amounts of concentrated swee!l! should be
avoided because of their
c8lorie intake and, iri the
diabetic who is takinR In·
sulln, the difficulty . this
creates in smoothing out the
blood sugar level throughout
the 24-hout period.

RACINE - The honor roll
for the fifth six w.eeks grading
period at Southern H i gh
School is announced . Named
to the rot t with those names in
capital letters meklng all A 's
were :

SENIORS - WILLIAM
Bush , Keith Circle, Karen
Clark, PAUL CROSS, Randy
Dudding, MOLLY FISHER ,
. Koste Hysell , Cheryl Larkins,
Corena Rhodes , , Debbie
Roush. .R.obert Roulsh,
BECKY SAYRE , Sheryl
Simpson .
·
JUNIORS - PATRICIA ·
AUTHER SON , Sobbl
Chapman , Jerrena Dil l , Er ic
Dunning , Carol Glenn, Juli
Gooch, Oreama JenklfiS , Carl

Johnston, BRENDA LEWIS ,
Roger Michael, Nina M iller,
VIck i Roush , ·DENISE
TA~BOTT , Kevin Willford,
Scott Wolfe, Linda Young .
SOPHOMORES - Steve·
Baker , Bessie
Shaffer, ,
LARRY FISHER , . Jim
Foreman, Perry H i ll , Teresa
Meadows , JAYE ORO .
Roseberry ,

~

~~

•

'·

Dear Helen:
MONDAY
My husband Larry and I were divorced last year . He got
BIG
BEND
WARRIORS
married again, but It didn't last.
He called me, we had dinner together rect!n,tly£11nd he spring practice Monday, 5
asked me to go away with him for the weekend W"see if we p,m. at old Rutland Football
could work things out. Itw~s the loveliest trip - twice as great field.
SALEM CENTER PTA,
as our honeymoon.
But my mother Is furious . She's a live-by-tile-Bible person Monday , 7:30 p.m. at the
and brought me.up the same, so she says I should KNOW how school. Band students to
program .
deeply I've sinned. We committed adultery in her view, as we present . the
wi.ll be
"weren't tnarrled." Fornication is tbe word she likes to .use . Grandparents
She's making it. very tou~h on me, as !live with her and reco"nized.
she cares for our daughter while I work or go ciut. (We fight
MIDDLEPORT GARDEN
about other things, too, such as how to raise Lorraine.)
Club, home of Miss Nellie
Larry and I aren't sure yet wbether we're ready for re- Zerk le and Miss Hallie
marriage, but we wahl to see each other. I can't believe that 's Zerkle, 7:30 p.m. Monday.
wrong, just because we no longer have a license framed above Fortieth birthday of the club
the bed.
to be observed. Mrs. Homer
What would you suggest? - WANTS A LIFE OF HER Russell wiD be co-hostess .
OWN
MEIGS COUNTY Salon 710
Monday, 7:30 at the home of
Myrlle Walker, Vine Street,
Dear Wants;
Racine. Mary Roush, coIf you want a life of your own, get an apartment of your hostess .
own. Livl.ng with your mother because she offers convenient
baby-sitting Is unfair to her as well as uncomfortable for you
RACINE PTO Monday,
and Larry,
7; 30 p.m. Program by the
'II
1
·
ttl h band. Refreshments to be
As for her dii!Bpproval ; You coni nue to get Jt un
e served by first grade..
"makes an honest woman of you." And I know she 'II
disapprove of Ml!l when I agree it's wise to wait for reRACINE CHAPTER 134,
mamageunttlyou'requltesureitwlllwork. - H.
O.E.S. Monday , 8 p.m. at the
+++
Masonic Temple: A 50 year
pin will be presented and two
Dear Helen :
We gave my mother-in-law a diamong ring. She gave it to candidates will be initiated.
~r drunken daughter who wilL probably hock it for booze. We
SOUTHERN ATHLETIC
bought her a beautiful shawlfor her birthday, gave her money Boosters, 8 p.m. Monday at
quite often. That creep of a daughter Is wearing the shawl and high school, Racine.
spent the cash at bars.
TUESDAY
Now my husband Is laid off and we're really hurting, what
TRI-COUNTY Citizens
with three children to care for. But does Mama worry .about Band Radio Club, 7:30 p.m.
us? All her spare dollars and care go to tbe Losh, even though Tuesday
at
Pomeroy
she has a husband who makes more than mme does.
Elementary School.
·
Who~ays being a dishonest ll'ampdoesn'tpayoff?
SPECIAL
ME ETING
A j:eeent letter to yo~ column ID!~ of a mqther leaving • Southern Band Boosters, 7:30
most -8£ her money to tile black sheep because he needed 1t p m Tuesday at high school
whereas the industrious kids didn't. Why Is It ~rents so often Raclne.
'
DREW WEBSTER POST
favor the ones who least deserve !herr help? UNAPPRECIATED
regular meeting Tuesday, 6
p.m.
Dear Un :
CONCER NED AND in Because they need help ·the most. And parents are terested parents at Wahama
motivated not only by sympathy but guilt I tbe old "where did I High School meet Tuesday , 8
go wrong" syndrome).
p.m. at high school.
.
It isn't fair, but it's tbere. So don't waste time on resentMIDDLEPORT MASONIC
·
ment. You've got better things to do with your life , - H.
Lodge 363 Tuesday, 7:30p.m.
Dear Helen:
++ t
.
All ma ster masons invited .
candy and pop vending machines in public schools? In one
POMEROY GARDEN
instance, a Hawaiian high school replaces these useless sweets Club, I p,m. Tuesday at the
with healthfui snacks ...:. nuts, fruit juices, apples, raisins, etc., home of Mrs. Howard Nolan ,
and profits actually soared.
Syracuse .
Sure, schools need money for band uniforms, etc., but not
OHIO ETA PHI Chapter,
at the expense of the students' teeth and health. I think the sale Beta Sigma Phi Sorority,
of "empty sweets" should be cut down as much as uossible in
schools-and we parents can manalle thiS,_via PTA and health Tuesday, 7; 30, Coiumbus
and Southern Ohio Electric
groups. Arise, Moms and Dads, and fight tbe candy-pop
Co. with installation of ofvenders. - KAREN
fi cers .
CHESTER COUNCIL 323,
Daughters of Atnerica, 8 p.m.
Tuesday at the hall. Ways
and means committee will
have a silent auction.

Church Women United
plan Fellowship day
May Fellowship Day of
Church Women United of
Meigs County will be ob·
served at the Rutland United
Methodist Church on Friday.
There will be a sack hmch
at noon with the dessert and
drink being provided by the
host church. The afternoon
program will begin at 1:30
p.m.
Along with Protestant,
Catholic· and Orthodox
women
in
2,000 local units across the
country, church women of
Meigs County will continue
the iradition established in
1933 of worshiping together
on the first Friday in May to
emphasize tile creative and
healing relations that are
possible among people in
every community.
May Fellowship Day will
celebrate valiant women in
the life of the nation, the
melllC?r;t of those who left a
mark, the presence of
dedicated women in our
midst · today, and the certainty that there wtll be many
to follow.
The worship service will
dramatize the valiant women

Honor lists are published

Cheryl

Soc IaI
Calendar

'~

When to Cl!l the Apron Ties

Lose weight for
better health

. "

I

.

By Helen Bollel

·

DR. LAMB

By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - I
visited a doctor last spring
whom I'll call Dr. A. He found
.,Jipy cholesterol too high, He
told me to be careful of my
milk, meat and egg intake.
Since then I have visited Dr.
B who says it has leveled off.
If I eat these products will it
come back? Dr. A found a
high· blood pressure condition. He doesn't believe In a
!181t free diet. .Dr . B says
watch your salt intake. What
do you say? Dr. B says I have
sugar diabetes. He is trying
to ~ontrol it with a diabetic
diet. Does this mean I can
never eat sweets? I would
appreciate your opinion since
neither doctor will give me
satisfaction
on
these
questions.
DEAR READER
Medicine is not an exact
IC!ence, The body is not · a
)ftcise machine and varies
from time to time. The
combination of these often
l'ellllts in different medical
opinions . The cholesterol
level tends to fluctuate,
particularly in some people.
During the time a person fs
losing weight, cholesterol
may fall sharply. As soon as
lhe weight Is stabilized even
11 a lower level ihe
chole~terol may then rise
qain. I can readily see
where you might have gone to
Ill' A when your cholesterol
was • high and when you
visited Dr B, if you have been
restricting your diet and were
In the ' process of losing
weight, that your level might
be low. If that were true and
that were the cause, certainly
if you abandoned your
dietary program, you'd have
a good likelihood of again
having a hi~h chole.•t..rot
level.
•
The way to keep the
· · cholesterol level down Is to
lose weight, change your diet
to avoid high-cholesterol,
hlgh.fat foods and persist In a
diet that avoids these roods
·thereafter. If you return to
your previous habits that
were assoclated with a high
cholesterol
level,
the
likelihood · is the hi11h
cholesterol will retw-n too.
For more Information on
\ diet in controlling cholesterol
t send 50 cents for The Health
Letter, nwnber 1-3, Diet,
Preventing Atherosclerosis.
Send a long, stamped, self·
addressed envelope for
mailing. Address yow- letter
tD me In care of this news·
·paper, P. 0. Box 1551, Radio
City Station , New York, NY
'10019.
Doctors used to be very big
on limiting salt in people who

US

~=~

.

John

In 1919, U.S . airplane
pas.senger service began
when Robert Hewitt flew
Mrs. J , A. Hoagland and Miss
Ethel Hodges from New York
City to Atlantic City,

'.

Sayre , scott Souders . car .
Thomt~ , T im Thoren .
Micha el Warner , Debbie
Smith , BARBARA WHITE ,
Ni~eR '"~~o~.E N _ Thomas
Allen , Doug Belt, BRICE
HAR-T , Seth Hilt , Jeannie
Johnson , Brent Pa tterson.
man

of American history who out
of their ·deep religious convictions spoke and acted on
behalf of the hwnan rights of
others. Special tributes will
be paid to women like Ann
Hutchison, Abigail Adams
and Sojow-ner Truth. The
concept of justice illwninated
their lives as they led
movements for the abolition
of slavery and equal rights
for all people .
Speaker for the observance
will be Mrs. Patrick Lochary
of Pomeroy, who will talk on
valiant women of this community. There will be ·a
mrsery for small children
during
the
afternoon
progrl\lll.
Mrs. Thomas Bentz,
president, has asked that all
women wear bi centennial
dresses if they have them.

GALLIA COUNTY SALON .
612, Eight and Forty, 7:30
Thw-sday at the home of Mrs .
Joan Wood, 812 Second Ave. ,
Gallipolis.

Miss Howard
plans to wed
The wedding of the Rev.
Eddie Buffino.ton and Miss
Karen Alin ·lioww·a ~-rtaay·
evening at 7;30 p.m. at the
Triedstone Baptist Church,
Fo th A
d Pi St
ur
ve . an
ne .,
Gallipolis , wiJI be open to
· friends and relatives. .
The Rev, John D. King,
pastor of the Triedstone
Church will read the vow•
'

.

MEN'S
BOAT SHOES

'6.50

t' '

Pair

e

•139

!: .Bean:at IV
•

•

Bearcattlng Is listening to aU the exciting broadcasls- pollee and Hre calls, •
nal\onal weather service. civil defense. government agencies, and hundreds more
-on a Bearcat scanning radio.
'
._)

••

puts~ there.

95

Ingels Furniture
442-263S Middleport

Bank Rate Financing

:

••

!e
:

····························!
'•

Trophies were awarded
Sunday at the Pomeroy
Bowling Lanes to winners In
the
American
Legion
Auxiliary Bowling League.
First place winners were
Feeney-Bennett Junior
Gutter-Dusters, sponsored by
the Juniors of the American
Legion Un'it 128, with Juanita
Justis, Brenda Pettit and
Diane Petit. Second place
winners were Rutland
Pioneers sponsored by the
Rutland Post 467 with Jane
Garnes, Lou Gilmore and
Ann Hatfield on the team .
The third place trophy went
to the Feeney-Bennett
Flyers, sponsored by the
American Legion Post 128
with the players being Becky
Broderick, Dottie Will and
Gerry Kessinger,
Individual trophies went to
Juanita Justis with a 226, the
high game; Gerry Kessinger,
143, high average, and S40,
high series; Carolyn Clonch,
18 pin Improvement for the .
most improved, and Erma
Hendrix, Lou Gilmore, Ruby
Hysell, Beth Hendricks,
Juanita Justis and Brenda
Pettit, perfect attendance.
Participation trophies were
given to Denise Garnes,
Chrisly Jones, Pearl Russell,
I!JIIen Tucker and Judy
McDaniel.
A banquet will be held
Friday night at the Martin
Restaurant and bowlers
planning to attend are to
make reservati ons with Lou
Gilmore.

For.l ;yow-l rououite

MOTH El{

YOUR OWN MESSAGE
TELLING HER OF YOUR
LOVE ON THESE PAGES
MOTHER'S DAY, MAY 9TH
We'll Send Mom A Special
Card, Too!
Be sure to inc:lude her address.

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20 WORDS JUST '1.00

MAIL WITH 51.00 TO
,.

THE DAILY SENTINEL
Pomeroy, Ohio

IN
POlNT PLEASANT

NORELCO SHAVER
CLINIC ·

10:00 AM TO 6:00 PM

Middleport, 0.

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Trophies
awarded

FRI., MAY 7th

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WILl BE IN THE STORE

heritage house

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BY FACTORY TRAINED EXPERTS

Navy or White

·: ,&amp;mAl~ is like being in a bank
,. robbery_without gettiqJ sbot.
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",OiriMI

MEIGS ATHLETIC
Boosters, 7; 30 Monday,
. Meigs High School.
POMEROY
CHAPTJlR,
O.E.S. will meet at 7;45 p.m.
Tuesday at the Masonic
Temple. Past matrons and
past patrons will be honored.
The past matrons are asked
to wear gowns of their year.
WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT Fire men 's Auxiliary, 7:30
Wednesday at the firehouse .
A housewares party will be
SALE POSTPONED
held . Hostesses will be the
The rwninage sale to be
officers. Members may take held by the United Methodist
guests.
Women of th e Pomeroy
POMEROY LODGE 164, F. Church has been po~tponed
and A. M., Wedneay, 7;30 for a month.
p.m. Masonic Temple. All
master masons invited.
THURSDAY
· MEIGS COUNTY Council
of Parents and Teachers, 7:30
Thursday, at the Pomeroy
Elementary School.

,••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ..

Terl Zirkle .

Civic beuutification of the that man depends on plants,
lor
service
station
Letart Falls Cemetery by the not plants on man . A
owners
Bend 0' t~e River Garden thank-you note was read from
It rOc.i OWf'l I Mnfot Jtltlelft,
Club will be continued this Mrs. Bert Gr1mm, and cards
~h.. ttlllot·
· month with general cleanup were signed for Mrs. Grimm
......,.IMurMCe.-bll
around shrubbery and the . and Mrs. Grella Simpson,
101' 'fOij ~ row
planting of ~wnmer fl ower&lt; both recuperating from inlftOII CO*...
in the_planter.
jw-ies suffered in a norida
lot . . COli tMrl Mf' No .
Meeting recenlly at the accident earlier this year .
tOfe •""" Dr KltionwWI• .
Not onty lllft4trc1"home of Mrs. Wilson CarMrs. Wingett dlscussod the
l6eltltl4y co~ • .,, .._.
penler, Pomeroy, the club Racine bieentennlal planting
DIMr¥6'-ICOWf~·wl ·
men1bers set May 19 as • and the members agreed to
ColtoNol_....,.,..
a
work
date
at help. The traveling prize
•" "" ""1'-.
the ceme tery . Mrs. W. brought by Mrs. ·Diehl was
0. Barnitz, hostess, gave " won by Mrs. Wingett. . A
devotions using an Easter pro gram on J apan ese
theme, the 24th Psalm and a arrangements was given by
puem, "The Ballad of the Mrs .
Carpen ter.
She
Trees ." The club pQCm was displayed a Moraibana
r'ead by Mrs. E. A. Wingett, arrangement of yew and
and the club prayer given by while azalea .
Mrs. Clifford Morris. For roll
Mrs. Barnitz served a
call members gave garden dessert cow-se. The May 24
problems and suggested meeting will be held at the .
ways to solve them.
home of Mrs. Wingett.
'---------•
Mrs. James Diehl had the
eco logy thoughts for the
month and told about using
egg cartons in the classroom
for math projects. She said
egg shells can be used in the
bottom of flower pots and
they can also be put out for
the birds in the wintertime.
Mrs . Morris read a paper,
"f\ecognition of the Value of
Plants" which emphasized

•COMPLETE MOTOR OVERHAUL '
•CLEAN.UP
•TUNE·UP

ONLY •7.88 plus t••
RECHARABLE SHAVER $2.00 utra.
LADlES SHAVERS ONLY SU8.
Heads-Cords-Cleaners Also Available
Here's what we'll do: a complete motor overhaul ; replacement of all

necess~ry !f10tor p~rts, bru5~s, co !ls or

rotors . Plus regular clea·nlng, oiling

and adtusttng
. Don I miss
thiS repair special! I Bring in your Shaver today! t
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.

ALL OF THE_ABOVE PLUS NEW SHAVING HEADS!

ONLY! ! $13.88 plus t-..

Rechargable Shav~rs •'2.00 extra

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6- The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport·Pomeroy, 0 , Monday, May 3, 19'1~
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7

DICK TRACY

Fast Results Use The Sentinel' Classifieds

WANT ADS
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
5 P M
Day
Before
Publtcitlon
Monday Deadlme 9

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

REGULATIONS

The Publ isher reserves

the nghl to ed1t or relect

- ------ --- ---··--

AELD SAW

mserhon

Mrntmum Cha rg e Sl 00
14 cen Is per word th ree

consec utrv e

tnser!Jons

26 cen ts per word srx
tnserllons
2S P er Cent Drscoun 1 on

consecutl've

pa rd ad s lind ads paid
w lthtn 10 davs

CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY

$2 00
lor
50
w ord
minimum
E~t c h addr tton al word J

ce n ts

BLIND ADS

Addtlro nal 25c Charge
per Adve rhs ement

OFFICE HOURS
8 JO e m to .5 00 p m

Dally , e 30 a m

to 12 00

Noon Seturdav
Phone todav 99 22 156

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

NOTICES
ATTN II
ALL IIOUSEWIVES

All Yard Sales, ~umm11gt ,
Porch and Basemen t Porch
end Buemen t Sl!lles , etc
must be paid In a dvanc~ :
Get your In In early by
stopp ing by our office at
The 011 Ji y Sentinel , 111
Cou rt St or w rft 1no Box
129, Pom e ro y, Oh lo 45169
w ith your remittance

•

NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
Columbus, Ohio,

Contrad Sales Legal Copy
No. 76-237

UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
PMS · OOOS (3!1

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Sell led proposals will be
received at the off1ce of the
Direc tor of the Oh to Oepllrt
ment of
Tran sportation ,
Co lumbus Ohio , un t il 10 00
AM
Ohio Standard Time
TIJesday , May 18 , 1976 , tor
Improvements In
District 10 IPillln No 10 2)
A th ens , Gallia , Ho cking ,
Meigs , Monroe , Morgan ,
Nob le Vinton and Washington
Counties , Ohio, on varmus
Intersec tions on U S R:ollte
No 33 . ' tat e Route Nos 329,
682and 69 1, Coulnty Road Nos
1. J, 7 and 27, Vllrious streets In
the VIllages of Chauncey ,
Coolville end t h e City of
Athen s, Athens County St ate
Route Nos 7 141. 160 218, 325
and 5.54 , vl!lrl o us streets In the
Vll ll!l ge of Rio Grande and the
City of Gallipolis , Gallla
County , Stl!lte ~oute Nos J2B,
595and 664 In Hock ing County
Sll!ll e Route Nos 7, 124, 1A3,
2A 8, 338 and 681 . County Road
Nos S lind 25 various streets
In the Villages of Middleport ,
Pomeroy and Rac ine, Me1gs
County , St ate Route Nos 7,
260, .53~ and 537 In Monroe
Coulnty , St ate Routes Nos 83 ,
37~ .
377 l!lnd 5.55, va r iou s
stree ts In the Villages of
Malta McConne l sville and
Stoc kport Morglln Coun t y
Stl!lte R:out e Nos 146, 147 and
821 In Nob le County U S
Route No 50 State Route No
93 In Vinton County , State
Routes Nos 7 26, 339 550 , 076
and 821. County Road Nos 3,
20, 26, 102, 109 3Al and 805 and
various streets m Newport
Township , the VIllages of
Beverly ,
Lowell
and
Matllmoras , the City of
Belpre , washington County ,
by appl ying thermoplastk
words and lints
Project and wor k Length Vary
The OhiO Depar t ment of
Transportaflon
hereby
not1t1es all biddtrs that It will
afflrmat1\lely lnsurt that In
any c on tr act entered into
pursuant
to
th i s
ad
vertl se men t ,
m i nority
business enterprises w ill be
afforded full opportun1ty to
submit b ids 1n r esponse to th is
Invitation and Will not be
discri m inated against on the
grounds of race , color , or
natura l origin In cons ideration
for an award
" Minimum wage rates for
this pro jec t
have been
predetermined as re&lt;:ju lred by
law and are set forth tn the bid
proposal "
" The date set tor completion
of th is work shal l be stl forth
In the bidd ing proposal "
~ Each
bidder
shall
be
required to file w1th his b id ll
certified check or c&amp;sh ter •s
cneck for an amount equa l to
five per cent of his bid, bin In
no event more than f i fty
thousand dollars, or a bond tor
ten per cent Gf his bid, payable
' o the Di rec tor
Bidders mus f apply , on the
proper forms , tor qualification
at least ten days prior to the
date set tor opening bids In
acc ordance w i th Chapter .5525
Ohio Revised Code
Plans and specifications are
on file In the Departmen t of
Transportat ion and the office
of
the
Dlstr.ct
Ce puty
Dlrtctor
The Director reserves the
r lghf to reject any and all b ids

.. . . ,

RICHARD D JACKSON
Dl RECTOR

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(AI 26 (5) 3, llo

Counov , Ohio

Lred!tors are requ1rea ro
f ile the •r cia1ms wlltl sa td
f tdu ci ary w l fhm four months
Da t ed t h is 29th day of Ap rtl

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1916

MANN IN G 0 Websler
Judge

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l SI 3, 10 11 . 31c

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1972 CHEVY.2 TON
102" C.A, 1S,OOO lb 2 speed rear axle, 292
trans • good tires

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SIX

We manufa c ture &amp; market
d1rect an ex tensive hn e,
( 40,000 -1 J. of electnca l &amp;
e l ectro n• c w•r lng
c on
nectlons Interconnections ,
switches , too ls &amp; other
electrtca l e l ec troni c ac
ce!sor les We o ff er produ c t
tralnmQ An es t a bli sh ed,
prote cte d terr •tory base
sa lar y + commission +
car 1 expenses + ben eftl s

Mobile home and lot 1n Chesntre

Phono367 7614

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Call Mr

al

Polanski, collect ,

343 4521,

(30~1

on

Monday 10 1 m 6 p m ,
Tuesday 9 1 m 6 p m ., or
Wedne sday tam -12 noon
An Equal Opporlunih
Employer M· F

LOST In YIC1nlty of Syrocuae Ball
Pork

Monday mons Wilson
glove
reward if

baseball

lound Call992 2071
LOST Man s-wallet-._;fh~~luabi;
papers between Pomero y and
Ractne If found call949 :2144

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_-== -

-~=

1970 Lmco ln Continental , good
condition new paint jOb , ex
haust
battenea and hres

-~~~!~~~Y!on~~~~~1968 Cornaro Hardtop, 327
automatic con sole
bucket
seats excellent Interior , new
E T wheels ond Daytona tires

Po ly

double
~9

kn it

_ mo~lng Ph~~_!9274'! ___ _

Po

WILL core for elderly person 1n my
home Phone I {614 ) 985 3849

ly and cotton for T Sl-urts Reg
SI 98 now 98 cents yard 1 table
of po lyester and cotton _.51nct.
wide
20% oft Shop our

or992 -3~10
---------------...----

_borgoin ~~~---------­
MOTHER Sdoy Is Sunday, May 9
Tell Mom how grea t she Is w1th
a spec1ol mas sage 1n the Times
Sentmel on Mothers Ooy In
elude her name and oddreu
and we w ill send o Cord telltng
her to look for the message 20
-~rds 1 ~s t $1 00

UECTRONICS
Repr ese nt 40 ,000 + 1tem
product
twe
the
"Cadillac" of th e electroniC s · eteclnral com ponent mdustry, base
salary , comm 1551on, car,
e~tpenses, benefits
Calt
Mr Polanski , colle ct , at
(304) l4l-4521 on Mon 10
a m -6 p m , Tue s 9 a m 6
p m , or We d 9 am 12
noon, or see our " F ietd
Sates" ad tn today 's pafler

EOE- M F

OLD furmture 1ce be••• brass
beds old wa ll telephone• and
ports or complete households
Wnte M 0 Miller, Rt 2,
Pomeroy, Oklo Coli
7760
7

m

TIMBERf~ ;rlc-;J;-~fond•n9

_!'_mbor Ca~ _!_6__1~ 4A6 8570 __
CASH pa1d for all1 makes and
model s ol mooiJe homes

Will sell below wholesale Call

2210 or afler 4 p m
2863

9~9

9~9 ·

VEGETABLE planls of all k1nds, 10
d1fferent varleltes of tomatoes
mcludmg non -acid white
tomato Very large selec tion of
bedding
plants
Also
Geran1ums and orher- potted
plants
Hangtng baske ts
Cleland Farms and Green
house
Gerold tne Cleland ,
Rocme
MODERN walnut console , AM FM
rod•o , 4 speed changer
Balance S100 40 or terms Call

TURF TRIM
PUSH MOWERS
lO", 3 HP, B&amp;S Eng

S$Cash$$S fer tunk•d auto Frye s
Truck Auto Parts flutland
Phone 742 2081

$89.95

GRILL Cook and wottrau wonted
Apply 1n person Crows Steak

old Caii7A2-2581

3901

________ _

6 mont h male AKC Reg Samoyed

RELIABLE baby 111ter m M1d
dleport area Call 992 22:20

-~~_1''!!_~~1 1 993 522• -----

~~..!!.!~~~Y

_ ! .!._• r 6 p m

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YARD SALE, Mov 3 lttru 81h 9 00
o m till 5 p m 565 N Front St
M1ddloparl Ohio
FOUR Family Carport Sole, 918

Saulh Third, Mlddloparl Mon ·
day May 3 12 to 7 p m Tues
and Weds , May 4, 5 10 ti ll 5
Avons , clot tllng
furniture ,
glider paint, m 111c Items
·-:-----:-~-:---

.A.KC Male Pek tngese puppy 8
weeks old Phone 992 S188
-~~~ Spm __________ _

ut11iti es poid. $130 per month

Phono 992 3975 or 992·2571
2 BEDRM lro•lor, fullr. corpeled,
located on Rt l.t3, c ose to Hor rttonv•lle I ch1ld Phone 742-

3122
FURNISHED 2 bodrm oparlmenl,

YARD Sole Moy 3, 4 and 5 Gas
adults on ly
tn M1ddlepart
range, refrigerator, wnnger ~ Phone 992 387.4
tyja washi ng machine double
- - - - - -,-- - - - - - - - --cabinet sink , mongl~ beds, 3 BEORM nouse With bath tn
rugs antiques, 3 pc. parlor
_ Rutland Phone 992 5~---IUite, kitchen choirs tables
3 AND 4 RM furn1shed and unsewtn g machine
pl ~tura
furnished opts Phone 992
frames collectors Items Many
51113..
other Items 1 mil~ west ef
------------------Racine on Rt 12... Otis McCim - COUNTRY Mob•le Home Pork , Rt
tock residence
33, ten miles north of Pomeroy
- - - - - - - - - - - -- ----Lorge lots w1th concret pat ios,
CHESTER Youth Association Yard
s1dewalks runn•rs and off
Sole , Frtday May 7 Sot May
street pork1ng Phone 9Cf.l7,.79
8 91111 5 2 miles above Chester
on Rt 7 Clt1zens wi•hing to 3 ROOM furn1shed opt utilities
pa1d 356 N Fourlh Mid·
donate saleable 1tems, please

coli Paul Ho1r1s

{ 61~ )

985-:la.O

before Thursday , May 6 Than k
you '

YARos;;)~ -MayS- ;; oni7- 9;;;.-

'1' ARD Sale Monday Tues and
Weds from 9 o m till 4 p m
-~'l_!~~urel Sl , ~~dleparl___ _
IF YOU hove o service to after ,
wont to buy or " " t omething
are leoklng for work
• or
whatever • you II vet r•sults
foster wtth o Sentinel Wont Ad

-~!~~~------------~­

FURNISHED AND UNFURNISHED

modern opts 2 and 3 bedrms ,
all electric brick bu• ldtng,
decorated plastered walls
complete Youngstown k1tchens
ond dtsposol units , storm doors
and wmdows , completely Insulated , front and rear en trances
beovtlfully land sea~, pri vate parking, low
rent , The Ha11en Terrace Apart ments, New Hoven W Vo Ph
:!Ool - 882-2~33

2 bedrm furmshed apt Call
3 129or992-~34

m-

POMEROY LANDMARK
•-- Jack w Caney, Mgr.
...
Phone m -2181

3 FAMILY Yard Sale beside
Pomeroy Bowling Alley on
Second St Tuesday and
Wednesday 9 a m till 4 p m
Un iform s, baby clothes,
women ' s clothing, gla55
ware and 1ars , Ployf e•
bottles

salt Ex:celslor Salt Work s, East
Main Street Pomeroy, Oh1o,

-~~~~9923B~---------1953 Ford Jubtlea frocter (eJCce llent) , Sl 650 Ford 9N t rac
tor overhauled $1 000 New S
ft 3 pt rotary mower (stump
umper). $385, Feur used r tdlng
awn mowers 7 and 8 h p $200
to $230 Luckett Form Equipment West Washmgton St ,

l

Albany Phcne
or698 7881

{61~)

69S 3032

3517
197"' Honda 750, Headers, excellen t cond11ton Phone 7.C2

2659
POLLED Hereford bull , 2 vrs old,
$300 7 weeks old nanny goat,

$25. Phone Shade ( 61~) 696
1234
STEREO RADIO modern design
om -fm rad1o 8 hock tape com
b1not1on 6olonce $101 20 or
terms Call 992 3965
GRAVEL V troctor, 32 mch mower
7 6 h p recently overhauled

-~~~~~!_92 7205_!~!_~nj~-­

1973

Harley

Davidson

Elec

_oragll~~_!'_l&gt;_ono94 ~265~-- _
4 Ce metery plots m Meigs
Memonal Gardens W1ll sell
sepa rate Also , for rent toboc
co bose S30 lbs at 25 cents lb

_Pho~~!__4_)~~-~~-----1975 Suzuki GT 750 motorcycle

--~~ond•l~~ Call7~2

299__?__

SET of double bed springs almost
new $7 00 Phon• 992-7595, on

-~~bur~~od --------~
15 one-half cub1c ft

chest type

MAN'S scoutleader s uniform
one boy s scout uniform riding
lawn mower , 10 speed blc yde ,
Phone

99'13090

M-

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--

0

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1971 Honda 500, 4 cyl mbtarcyde
with 2 helmet! , 1964 Ford body
roush, motor and tron sm1uion

SMALL house or trailer
good Phone day 9~9 281 ~ or
preferably •n the country
and near Pomeroy Either _ !~nl!l~s , ~~.:_~]furni shed or not Phone 949 CORN , Chbfles Goegleln Phone
7480
992 7625

Forced air furnace , central o1r

Phone 992 20511.
1 nACRES Phone 7~2-2359

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LOVELY 2 story older home m
Roc1ne lllc24 hvtng rm , d •mng
room, new bu1lt-in k1tchen w1th
cherry cabinets den bedrm
and one-half batl1 dewn wt' h
oak hardwood floors 3 bed~
ms New full bath ultl1ty room
upstair! full basement large

IIIEL~. FARQUAR WITH THE HELP
OF OUR PSYC HIATRIC C&lt;'~51.1L
WAS ABLE- TO REME-MBE'R
I"HOLE FORMULA !

Tractors.

WE CAlli N0W 5 Wil.J6 if\ITO
FULL PIWDUO: roO" OF OUR
5EN5AT IONAL " 11115&gt;TANT
FACEUFT"!

WIN AT BRIDGE

Correct club suit play
.

NORTH
47654 2
o~&gt;KLO

PH. 992-3746

Codner's Cam~rs

Septic Systems
Installed

WEST
4H8 .!
• J 10 9 7
+K 10 3

,BORN I..DSER

o~&gt;J

B4~'5' ~

___.
'-----'--

mo .

949·2883
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TEAFORD

acre

burnmg fireplace, gas F A
furna ce
Ntce carpetrng

$29.500
BUSINESS BUILDING Down (real ntce l and a 5
room apf up In Rutland .
Asking )Usf $13 500
OLDER HOME - 8 rooms,
4 brs , bath , no ce k1f , large
yard on M1dd leporf Only
S8SOO
11 RMS - Old house woth
all ulll llles and 2 lots near
store &amp; new restaurant
W1 ll lake offer
WANTED - Large famoly
for thlsS BRs , 2'1' baths, 10
rm

garage large lot on Rushc
H1lls, Syracuse
Sole pric e

$22,900

Phone 992-1S23 for

more Information

3 BEDRM

house

2 yra

old

carpeted 2 baths, central otr
conditiOning
basement and
garage in Albany , Ohto For op
polntment
phone (61,. ) 698

8722'
-4 acres, undeveloped $.4 000
Me1gs County V~nton I'T)oil
route , close to m tnes Phone
7~2

2867

PJlane {6lA) 985 3511 .

a·fi--,~~k t~p;;:- Ph~~e-m

29S S 2nd Sl

!'._~0~~ '!E !~2~------ ---

1913 350 Kawasaki Big Horn expansion chamber
knobby
hres 3 b1ke troller Coli 992 -

-

-

MAKE spnng ch~onl ng prof1table,
turn unwonted 1'ems mto cash
Ad vcr t,sc m the Wont Ads

ME:SBI: WE CAI.J $1-\AK!: 'e:M IF Wlii 1

4 10 l'Wio

Noble Summit Rd.,
Middleport
PHONE 992-5724
53 1 mo

,I

HOUSE 3 bedroom home 59
cere s I m1le from Rutland on
New lima Rood phone 7.42 -

ELWOOD:-;B::O~W::E:::R-:5 - REPAIR

29Be

-

Sweepers, toasters , 1rons oil
small applia nces lawn mower
nex t to Stole H1ghwoy Garage
on Route 7 Phone (61"' ) 985

4 Piling

we bu1td new and remodel
the old All tv pes ol
bUIId1ng and remodeling
from the foundation up
Additions ,
carpeting ,
palnt1ng, Siding, roofing ,
paneling , paper hangtng,

''
""" ~ '--$ - 3

etc
Ph 949-2023 or 84!-2661

1/ I

4-13-1 mo

WILL DO edenor patnltng ,
houses and roofs Phone 992 568.4 or 992 3374

GREG S C8 SALES localed al Erw tn s Gulf Servtce
Mtdd lepo rt
Ohio Phone 992 -

2438
3a2S
EXCAVATING BACKHOES AND
DOZE R LARGE AND SMALL ,
REM0DELtN G - Piu;b.;;-heot•n 9
SEPTIC TANKS INSTALLED BILL
and oil types of general repo1r
PULLINS PHONE 992 2478 DAY
Work guaranteed 20 yeors eJC
OR NIGHT
_e_~!_:~~-~~~e 992 _3409___ _

CHARM &amp; COMFORT About 5 Yrs old 3 BR Nice
kitchen &amp; dining Uf&gt;llty R.

0&amp;0 TREE Tnmrtllng 20 years ex
pen ance
In su r ed
fr ee
est•motes Call 9f'i2-23B4 or
~4)69812~~r _____ _
vice all mak es ~:2 2284 The
Fobn c Shop , Pom eroy
Authortzed St nger Soles and
Serv1ce We sharpen SCissors

ceram ic bath . atr cond ,
carport, garden About 'h

acre Storage Bldg $16.900
INVEST - OON' T SPEND
- Here Is a 4 BR , 2 bath
home wtth a nice Rec

R

N G. hot water heat, utiloty
R , large enclosed por&lt;h,
garage and not uery old.
$30,000
AN AMAZING VALUE -2 story frame, s BR, 1112

baths. utility R , garage &amp;
carport
All In good
condition 11 7,000
OVERLOOKS THE RIVER
- Excellent condition 7 R
frame, 3 large . BR , full
basemen t with 2 car
garage Larg e front porch
to lounge on thts summer
Many other
f ea ture s

ASKING S18,SOO
Call Us Up
Gove Us A Try
We Have People
Eager To Buy
H. E. CLELAND BROKER
992·22S9 or 992-2568

0 DELL Ahgnment located behmd
Rutland Gro de School Tu neup ,
brakes wheel baloncmg alig nment Phone 7.112-2004
EXCAVATING dozer loader and
backhoe work dump trucks
and lo -boys for htre w1ll haul
ftll dtrt, lop so1l , limestone and
gro vel Coli Bob or Roger Jel fei-s
doy phone 992-7089 ,
n.ght ph one 992-3525 or 992
SEPTIC TANKS cleaned Modern
Sonttot1on 992-3954 or 992

5968
WILL do rooftng , construct1on
plumbtng and neoltn g No JOb
too large or too sm all Pnone
7~2-234a

EXCAVATING dozer, backhoe
and d1 tc her Char les R Hat fie ld
Bock Hoe ServiCe
Rutland , Onlo Pho ne 742 2008
~----

WILL tnm or cut f rees and snrub bery Phone 949·2545 or 74:2

loft.
b041

I have

You
can't

mouse
17 Golfer's
gadget
19 French
nobleman

open

that
door.

%0 Ralsed

sir!

pliltform

501 NYLON

Green , go ld , red , blue, rust
Do it yo urself, with pad
ding , 11.95 sq. yd .
W1th paddmg mstalled
$8 95 square yard

CALL142-2211
TALK TO
WENDELL GRATE
CAR PET CONSULTANT

a

DOWN
I Rockfish
2 Concerning
3 Britaon's
Order of
the 4 Killer
whale
5 In good
health
( 4 w!l.s.)
6 Didn't play,
as a poker
hand
(2 wds_)

7 Punish by

or

fino

Yesterday '• AnHwer

8 Lassoed
9 Grand or

27 Become
clamorous

comic

28 Dawn

10 Mementoes
for Zsa Zsa
(2 w!l.s )
18 Moray

goddess

29 Controbute

31 Mus1cal
Count

32Rose
21 Droop
23 Workshop
of sc1ence
25 Wager

essence

35 Restrict
39 That ( Fr)
41 Bambino

Cruces

Z7 Fell
behind
3G Well·
LIL ABNER

t

known
Ali
33 Editorial

~~':t

I WAS BOl1-l BOXING MD
HA!Y-BUT/5
CHAMP/a./
HE/'MN 'NLFF

34

10 DfiFEND

31 Pet for

HISINIFE?

AT SCHOOL - AND

JUST 1ro&lt; Y1f

BLACK BELT /N

KARATI::rr-

school

:n ~~=

- Gell~r

311 Most

1---1--4---1

amiable
4G " You -

:o:rl-----i-----i-----i-----i--1

McLENDON
:
·MORTGAGE
COMPANY • •
•

0I I

WHY ELSE VI.OULD
/HEY HAVE HE-R
ALL COVERED

UP LIKE
11-fAT?

YEAH I THEY
i:ON'T WANT 1C
UNVEIL HER
UNTIL lHEY
GET IN&amp;IDE I

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to
AXYQLBAAXR
Is

work

V.A.

Loans · "O" down· JO yr. term.
F.H.A. -Low Down Paym't. • 30 yr . Term .

------·FAST APPROVALS
Refinancing also available
V'!terans &amp; FHA applicants.

to

i

11

ZIAC

DAC

R' O

JOSLV

7

R

•

•.

Close Sat. At

••

•

• •t1

WHAR "'E
HEADED, MAW?

•

••

e

RUTLAND FURNITURE

742-2211

ARNOLD GRATE

ZIAC

OALN

VDS I

R

ON
UA

C DA

- PAFRJ&gt;

WA5 WAITIN5

GURDED

IAPHERM brsI
I I

FO~

1

E!IEFOI(E DECIPIN!!!&gt; 10
6ET MARRIED.

I

Now ..,..,... the elftlod !etten
fO
lht IUrpriN IIJIIWtr, U
aurreeted by the
cartoon.

rorm

abo••

IJIW ..- -... IrHE ( :K I XX)[ I I I l

••

OSMNL

Ju~hln•

S•turd•y'•

• •
•

s p.m.

GNAGPN

SLAFIU

I r] I rJ

WHAT THE ~11\JTER

{Aiuwert , . . ., . . )

Thursday 8 til12 noon

•

KAY

E

8:00til5:00

•

Unacrambltlh01e lwr Jumbl..,
letter to each oquott, to
form lour ordinary worda.

L 0 N G FE L L O' W

One letter somply ·stands for another In lhos sample A Ia
used lor lhe l hree L's, X for lhe lwo O's, etc Songle letters,
apostrophes the length and foronato on o( l he words are all
hints Each day the code Jette" are dillerent

MAF

•

RUTLAND

•
ei

JEST OVER TO GIT
TATER'S DIAPERS
OFF 'NTH' CLOTHES·
LINE

Vesterdal 's Cryptoquoh• THE: GREATEST OF FAULTS, I
SIIOUWSAY, IS TO BE CONSC IO\IS OF NONE - CAHLYJ.E

D

(j

•
~

··•••••··
:=
........................... -

------ •
::

qualified

Mon ., Tues., Wed .

" o l II&lt; !I! I I I

It :

CRYPTOQUOTE

Rutland

...

''Y HI N i l I fl. II/~/ !I !I

Bloamer

•
••
••

.i:• FRIDAY TIL 8 ::·=
••
• ••
•

330 Main St .
614-454-9703
Zanesville. Ohio 43701

• •

..•

~tgM[3~;"'"' ==~ w.J c

a Therefore ,._........__._

3167
.

TUESDAY, MAY 4, 1976
6 ()()-Sunrise Semester 10
6 15-Farm Report 13
6 2~Rev Cleophus Robinson 13
6 3~Co lu mbus Today 4, News 6, Sunrise Semester 8,
Concerns &amp; Comments 10
6 4~0unce of Prevention 10
6 45-Mornlng Report 3
6 s~G ood Morning, West Virginia 13
6 ss-Chuck White Reports 10, Good Morning, Trl
State 13 .
,
7 oo-Toda y 3.~. 15, Good Morning , America 6, 13, CB.
News 8, Bugs Bunny and Fr iends 10
1 3~Sc hoolles 10
s·oo-Lassle 6. Capl aln Kangaroo 8,10. Sesame Street
33
8 3~Big Valley 6
9 · 0~NOf For Women Only J ; Phil Donahue ~ . Phil
Donahue 15, Political Talk 8, M ike Douglas 10;
Morning With D J 13
9 3~A M. 3' One Life lo Live 6, Tattletales 8; Mike
Douglas 13
10 oo-Celebrlty Sweepstakes 3,4,15, Edge of Night 6,
Price Is R lght 8,10
10 3(}-High Rollers 3,4, 15 Dinah! 6
11 o~Wheel of Forlune 3,15, Weekday 4, Gambit
8,10, For mer's Daughter 13, Electric Company
20
11 3~Hollywood Squares 3,4, 15, Happy Days 13, Love
of Life 8,10. Sesame StrHf 20
11 ss-Toke Kerr 8. Dan I mel'~ World 10.
12 o~Fun Factory 3,15, Let's Make A Deal 13: Bob
Braun 4, News 6,8, 10
12 3~ Take My Advi ce 3, 15; All My Children 6,13;
Search Fo r Tomorrow 8,10
12 45- Eiectrlc Company 33
12 5 ~NB C News 3,15
1 ro-News 3, Ryan's fiope 6,13, Political Talk 8,
Young and the Res I less 10; Not For Women Only 15.
1 3~Da y s Of Our Lives 3,4,15, Rhyme and Reason
6, 13, As The World Turns a,10
2 0(}-$20,000 Pyramid 6,13
2 3~Doctors 3,4,15, Break The Bank 6,13; Guiding
Llghl 8, 10.
3 oo-Anolher World 3.4, 15, General Hospital 6, 13; All
In The Fa mily 8, 10; Lilias, Yoga and You 20,
Educating t~e Handicapped Children 33
3 3{)-()ne Life to L ive 13 , Mickey Mouse Club 6, Match
Ga me 8, 10; You Can Do It 20; lTV Utilization 33.
4 oo-Mister Cartoon 3; Merv Griffin 4; Bewitched 6;
Mickey Mouse Club 8; Mister Rogers 2G.33; Movie
"The War of the Worlds" 10, Dinah I 13
4 3~Bewltched 3; Mod SquatU. Beverly Hillbillies 8,
Sesame Street 20,33; Fllntstones 15
5 oo-Bonanza 3, Partridge Family 8: Mission : Im possible 15
5 3~Adam 124,13, News6. Family AffairS; Electric
Company 20,33
6 ro-News 3.4, 8,10, 13, 15, ABC News 6, Zoom 20 , lTV
Utll lzlllon 33
6 J~N~C News 3,4,15, ABC N!'ws 13, Andy Griffith 6,
CBS ews 8,10, Hodgepodge Lodge 20 ; Lilias, Yoga
and ou 33
1 oo-Truth or Consequences 3; To Tell The Truth 4;
Bowling for Dollars 6'; Country Place 81 News 10,
Name that 1une 13, Family Affair l5; Un-,
dersfan lng Africa 20, Wild, Wild World of Animal a
33
1 3~Hollywood Squares 3,4, Let's Deal With It 6;
Match Game PM 8; Evening Edition with Merlin
Agronsky 20. Price Is Right 10; To Tell The Truth
13, High School T V Honor Society 15, Family
Theatre 33
8 oo-Baseball 3,4; Happy Days 6, T3; Rich Little 15;
Bugs BJnny -Road Runner 8, 10. Behind the Lines
33, International Animation Festival 20 .
a 3~Laverne &amp; Shirley 6,13; Good Times B, 10,
Consumer Survival Kit 20,33
9 oo-S W.A T 13; Pollee Woman 15; Commanders 6,
M·A·S-H 8,10, Evening at Symphony 20; Opera
Theatre 33
_
9 3{)-()ne Dav at a Time B, 10.
10 oo-Marcus Welby, M D 6, 13; City of Angels IS, To
Be Announced B; Switch 10; News 20, To Be An·
nounced 33 .
10 3~Last of the Wild 3, To Be Announced 4,
PolltlcaiTalk 8, Black Perspective on the News 20;
Woman 33
11 o~News 3,4,6,B, 10, 13, 15, ABC News 33
11 l~Presldentlal Primaries 3,4,6,8, TJ, Movie "The
Search" 10; Janak! 33
11 45-Mystery of the Week 6,13.
12·oo-Johnny Carson 3,4,15; Movie "Lady L" 8
1 15-News 13
1 3~ Tomorrow 3,4.

;;;-+--t--l-+-t--1 one

Know
Me"
U- Jenks

••
•

RUTLAND
FURNITURE

political
cartoorust
46 Greek letter

Z2 Tell
24 Seize
26 Palmas

••
••
••
••
••
•••
•
••
•
••

12 or 15 FT.

scholilr
15 And not
16 Shrew·

.-•••

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

Pelion on 8 " Ivanhoe" ·
herome
11 Meander
12 First of a
series
13 Attractive
14 Vain

I

warrant!

..
..

Do tt

Sale $4•Sq. vd

Hl-2211

..

I'm
qoinq
to the

..

yourself and save Regular
$6.95 sq yd.

5232

'" .

••
••
•
••
••
•
•

Candy Stripe
Bea utiful colors

"'"

-

SAVE ON
CARPETING

SEWING MACHINE Repo1rs ser-

deVIce

45 Famed

chewed

.

BRADFORD Aushoneer Com
plete Ssrvtce Phone 949-2487
or 949 2000 Ractne Oh to, Cntt
Bradford

44 Steering

ACROSS

I It's often

CONSTRUCTION

we spectal1ze 1n home
made Ptzza . Spaghe tti_,
Baked La sagna, &amp;. San &lt;;! ·
WI CheS
Qu1ck carry Out Service.
4 2 1 mo .

(Do you have a quest1on
lor the experts? Wr~te 'Ask
t~ e Jacobys
care of th1s
newspaper · The Jacobys w1ll
answer mdlvtd us l questiOns
'' stamped, self-addressed
envelopes are enclosed The
most 1nteres tmg questiOns
will be used m lh1s column
and w111 rece1ve cop1es ol
JACOBY MODERN J

by THOMAS JOSEPH

GOOD QUESTION' -n11S DANG PLACE
LOOKS LIKE A HONeYCOMS'

DUCK INTO ONE OF ~ESE CA~S.

D&amp;D

992-6167
OPEN•P M CAlLY
CLOSED MONDAY

D. BUMGARDNER

A New Jersey reader wants
to know how old Mol ton Work,
the top auctoon brodge authoroty, was on 1925 when contract
was onvented
Mr Work was born on 1864.
so he was 61 years old Thos
dod not keep hom from learnong contract and he won
severa l regoonal tournaments
proor to hos death on 1934

~

lARRY
lAVENDER
Syracuse, Oh10

M lddleport, Ohio

All pool supplies avaofable,
too .

1258
10ft Ideo new lime and lertllh:er
spreader SIBS W l Stroun

STORM
WINDOWS &amp; DOORS
REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS
ALUMINUM
SIDING SOFF ITT
GUTTERS AWNINGS

I mo

yourself man.

~~~

Jom "South fonds homself on
a very normal three-notrump
contract and wants to get as
many eKtra tr1cks as he can
out of the club suot "
Oswald " The correct play
here os to lead toward dummy
and shck on the ten spot Thos
play w111 cost hom a trock of
East holds a songleton club or
Jack and two small It woll

A WI'EK· •

Ph m-3993

Above and below ground
POOl kofs for the do -tf-

:

ONE set of maple bunk b.ds wllh
box spring s and mattress Ant1
que bedrm 1u11, Burl Inlaid ~
block
leather ba r i tools
Gravely w1th attachm ents

1110

Courteous
Seroice3 31

South

articles "

FOUR

Ftnancmg Ava1l1bl e
Blown !OtOWIIIS&amp; Atti CS

PH. 992.:ft0 10

DONEUI'S
PIZZA

a

ROOMY 7 yr old one story wood
frame
tw o bedrm
home
located between Coolvil le and
Tuppers Platns. One acre lot
two COl garage, clly water gas
heat
hardwood
floors
carpeted
hvtng room , nice

T~Nl'!'·

l!lown
lnsu latioii'Services

MIDDLEPORT

SWIMMING
POOLS

deal
BUSINESS -,All stock and
equipment Good locat1on
Needs a couple with a few
thousand, or will lease
MINERALS - 135 acres In
Lebanon Township 2 mtles

Sf'f!t&gt; AIIMI&gt;,

FREE ESTIMATES

24 Hour Service

home, 2 car garage,

east of Bashan
GET IN TOUCH WITH US
ON THESE SOON. OVER
40 PICTURES TO LOOK
AT DROP IN TO SEE.

MliY UNIT GOIHG 41 Clii'ACITY·FROM NOW 011 IT'LL lit FUlL

4 26-1 mo.

CAB CO.

and lot 100x 14S See this
and we' ll try to work

LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE-THE WIZARD'S WORKSHOP

'

Only

$16,500
12 ACRES In town ,
garden land. large garage
with storage
J BR,
renovated home w1fh wood

UTILE ORPHAN ANNIE

Phone 742 2409
Bo x 28A
Rutland, 011.

NEW

17 Cole Street
Pomeroy, Ohoo 45769
Telephone (614) 992-3768
We Deliver
4 25-1 mo

Norlh East

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
J1m "How about some ar·
tocles on songle suot plays' '
Oswald ' 'Jom IS referrong
to the best way to play one
particular suit and the subJect os well worth a sero es of

HOURS A MY, 5EV!'N DIIYS

TWIN CITY
MAQtiNE SHOP

$25.000 00
2 HOUSES - 1 has 9 rm s ,
balh, the ather has 3 rms
and ba th All utilities, and
almost one

West

JNT

'

ARE AVAILABLE
AT

~--~---~---

Both vu lnerable

Pass Pass Pass
Openong lead - J •

Shepard Contractors
mo

A11

• QJ 8
oi&gt;AQ542

24 Hour Phone Servtce

OPEN
FRI -SAT -SUN
or by contactong
R Codner , Ow~er

3 28 1

• AKQ

1\S lF ~e'S
Pt.A'II t-.'6
A
ll&lt;DMBOIJEi

by

TRAVEL TRAILERS

Cal~~s,U-~~~;882

7

Ltcen sed Installer

Sales &amp; Rental

Need new roof or old
repaired? House , roof,
blrn, shingles, build up,
painting, electrical work,
gutters &amp; downspouts,
furnaces, water heaters,
Wlter softner~, Installed &amp;
repaired, Sewage.

EAST

• Q 10
• 512
+A964
• 9 86 3
SOUTit 101
4 AK

aD'@K-

4 5 76

Rac1ne , Oh1G

gaon a trock for hom if West
holds a small songleton club or
(our small clubs "
Jom "Expressong thongs on
percentages, he woll score love
club !rocks 42 per cen t of the
tome and all omportani four
club trocks 96 per cent of the
time H he leads to the kong and
back to the ace he scores hve
trocks JUSt 36 per cent of the
Lome and four !rocks JUSt 86
per cent of the tome '
Oswald
'A word of cau·
loon H South held the ten of
clubs onstead of dummy hos
correct play would be to play
the lop clubs "

3

• 8 63
• 7 52

Roger Wam sley
4 I 1 mo

RAINBOW RIDGE
IBashan Areal
LONG BOTTOM

front and rear porches unat
----------toched goroge
2 storage rbutldtngs, all set upon large lot
Medica I Oxygen
w1th add1t1onal lot available
and Supplies
Must socnftce for $21 ,000 Call

freezer $150 Call (614) 985. 3 bedrm homo Call992-7033
3985

Greaves 250 dtrt b1ke

KALAMAZOO wood or coal
heater 22 1nci'l f1 rebox , $20 Full
stze foam rubber mattress
almost new $20 RHI type
We bear tor,e recorder , used,
S20 8eout1ul extension dtnmg
table large and 5 motch1ng
cane bottom chotrt, cost $450,
toke one half Same a• new
used very l1ttle Phone (61,.)

Rulland 742 2331

&amp;Heating

3 BEDRM HOUSE 1n M•ddleporl

v1ew $21 ,COO Phone (61~ )
BEAN POSTS Call2~7 - 3077
667 3519
CAMPER, will 111611 Datsun bed
_ Pho~~~!__4l~~~---- __ _ 3 BEOROOM total elec nome,

flule Phone 992 ·3255

Co11992-2156

R&amp;J COINS

Racine Plumbing

Rutland

Large 2 car garage and 1
level
ac r e
Ask rng

1972 Honda 750, excellent condi tion extras $950 Phone 992 -

FURNISHED opt , couple only , all

CAPTAIN EASY

Certified technician.
Briggs &amp;
Stratton
Engines .
Pickup &amp; Dehvery

For Sale

Moke Young, Manager
Sales and lnslallaloon
Rt . 3, Pomeroy, Ohoa 45161
Phone day or mght
6149~1- 22~
l -L11 _1)1o •

4 BR RANCH N1ce
closets, l'h baths, large k•f
donmg, F A ool furnace

TURF TILL
TILLERS
31/2 H p_ , B&amp;S Eng .

USED CAR tn good running cond1
lion not more than 10 years

11 month old German Shepherd,
good With children Call m .

1

Vorgol B. Sr., Realtor
110 Mechanoc Pomeroy, 0.
Phone 992-3325

vice
Stardust K1ng Phone
PARTY PLAN EX
FRIENDLY TOY _(614)!85.:_~~B---~-----OPENINGS FOR AKC Registered collte pup1 10 COAL llme1tone and all ~types of
soh and rock salt fo r 1ce and
M~:~~·~~~ IN OUR AREA
weeks old Phone 843 2753
snow removal Excels1or Salt
RF
I
IS EASY BECAUSE
Works , Eost Mo1n St , Pomeroy
OEMS HAVE NO CASH INVEST REGISTERED Wh i te German
Oh to Phone 992-3891
Shepherd for sale Coil 992
MENT NO COlLECTING OR
5010
DELIVERINGS CALL COLLECT
~~ZERB~F~~;;-~d~~~~
CAROL DAY, {~18) ~S9-839S or PUPS- m1)(ed breed Free to good
Wdl deltver to locol dren.ng
WRITE FRIENDLY HOME PAR
-~
~~~!~c:_ne ~~3-~! !_ ___ _
-~omes P__l&gt;on ':J~~l_98S ~~~­
TIES, 20 RAILRO,A,D AVE
COAL
, l•mestone and calc tum
ALBANY N Y 12205
GERMAN Shepherd pupp1es for
chl onde and calc1um br1ne for
sale Call {61~) 367-0609afler S
$25 PER HUNDRED slufilng
dust control ond all types of

-~~~~~~~402 -----

house 10
Phone 992 3858

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

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

-~5-4271~~~~~~------

3 BEORM

99'13965

WANTED-Good usod hoy baler '
Call evenmgs aft•r 5 p m 992131S or992-3859

-~~----------------BASSETT pupp1es Phono {61•)

LOST '
Sunday between
Pomeroy and Middleport
lady's sliver wrist wafch,
Shari Mitch Phone 992 347B

-,;;;,·ft"'fi-~)
• &lt;A

MAC'S
LAWN
MOWER
SERVICE

or

See how you can reallv
save

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

$163.95

envelopes
Send
ulf
addressed
stomped
envelope Edroy Mati s, Box

I

j

burled tr easure
rings, Stiv er, gold .
Coin &amp; Metal
Detectors
For R ent

home woth no obhgaloon

1976 Che11efle won in contest

Phonearea code6 1.4 423 953 1

AKC Registered Coll te Stud Ser -

I ~ Free estimates on carpeting and onstallation .

uwn

MowersTillers-RIding

~

NEW 1 LJwn Boy mowers,
P1oneer
chai n
saws ,
Bolen's Mowers, Merry
Tillers , MTD Mowers
498 Locust St
Middleport, Ohio
992 -3092

COINS

CA8PETING

' -' ~=:!~
,: -\
..t•

.. ~ · r~ "~-Sl i?

BUY, SELL or TRADE

We ' ll bnng santples to your

===

PGm f:r'OY

~i~
h. • ....

$195. Phone 949·2860.

-------....---FABRICSp;ci ol;ii'N~ lhrough
61h of Mav D&amp;J 1 HOUSE OF WILL DO odd jObs roofing, pain- 1972 Ou ster, outomehc 2 dr
ling, hauling, treework and
Phone 992 5737
FABRICSII 1 m1le sou th of M1d
dleport

Ph 992 2174

"

~!.!4 ,
1:

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS', INC.

~-SLOAN'S

992

•

F r om the largest Truck or
Bulldoze.,.....Radlat or to th e
smallest Hnter Co re
'
Nathan Biggs
Rad1ator Spectaltst

Phone Anna Blackwood
985.]805
Bron Thomas
992-2726 4-30-1 mo .

12;65- 3bedr;- ; IT -;i:; - $65oo
Phone 992-:2605

chback 3 speed Coli
1013

I

Ann's Bridal and
Anniversary Services

1973 Chev rolet Vega Statton
Wagon
automatic o1r and
power steering 1974 Chevrolet
Vega Hatchback , au tomat iC
1975 Chevrolet Vega Hat

--

A thought for the day ·
British noveli st Edward
Lytton sald, '"!lie easiem
person to deceive is one's own
self "

S2995
4 speed

WILKINSON'S
!_mall Eng .
_ J . ~:€
-~ Repolr
dft-~

comr:Uete

Free Consultation

----------- --------·

$3895
•731 NTERNATtONAL 2 TON
8 cyl , 5 speed, 18,5002Speed rear axle, good t"es

669·4111

'

1ng remodel10g room adch
ttons
Also garages
Free
Estimates CoiiM 2659

PRIOR
PRODUCT
K NOWL EDGE IS NOT
REQUIRED

- ~~~!M~-----------

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
case No 21198
Estate of VIRGINIA F .
HAWK Dtceased
Nottc e IS hereby g1ven that
Lester M Hawk of Rt 2,
Coolv ill e Oh 10 , h as b ee n dul y
appo in ted Adm~n1strator of
the esta te of Vtrgm ia F
Hawk . deceased, late of Meigs

•'

Our
company,
NY SE
ltsled with ' 75 sales m
eKcess of $400 million ,
seeks an Individual to toln
o ur w Va Ohio sa l es
for ce

CARPENTER w•ll do Siding, roof

1970CHEVROLETC 10
SJ495
. Cheyenne Super 350 V-B, automatic, power steering
and brakes, w w tires , wh . covers, step bumper,
chrome m i rror s, AM rad io, white and moss green,
sharp and many other options •

+

tlll A p m 39 mch range hood
clothes , dishes, beaks and
m11c Coun ty Road 25 turn at
Chester or Five Points Watch
for stgns Phone Harry Blown

Rev 8 17 73

,,•

lndustnal Electronics
Trainee or Experience
Salary+ Commission
Company Car

Reg $2 9S yard, now $2

Aprll16, 1176

__:_

Complete Bridal
And Anniversary
Service

10, To Tell lhe Truth 13, Friends of Man 15; Marco
Sportllte 33
8 DO-Movie "Ban!o Hackelt" 3, 3,j,15; On lhe Rocks
13; Gunsmoke B. U S A People &amp; Politics 20,33 ,
Rhoda 10.
'
8 3D-Movie "True Grit" 6, 13; UN Day Concert 20,33,
Phyllis 10
9 oo-AI I In The Family 8,10.
9 l~Mov le "The KeeQons" 8,10
10 oo-Joe Forrester 3,j, 15, News 20: BI -Ways 33
10 3~Lock, Sleek &amp; Barrel 20; Catch 33 33
11 ·oo-News 3,4,6,8, 10, 13, 15, ABC News 33
·11 3'o----Johnny Ca1'5on 3,4, 15, Cosmetic Surgery· Nip
'i ' N Tuck With Nature 6,13, Movie " Hustling" 8,
Movie "The President's Analyst" 10; Janak! 33
,I oo-Tomorrow 3,4; News ll

MONDAY, MAY l, 1'76
5 oo-B~nanra 3, Partridge Fam ily B. M ission lm
flllSSible IS
5 »-Adam 12 4, News 6, ,Family Affair 8. Elec Co
20,3], Adam 12 13
6 ()()-News 3,4,8,10,13, 15, ABC News 6, Zoom 20,33
6 3~ NB C News 3,4, 15, ABC News 13, Andy Grlffllh 6,
CBS News 8, 10 , Hodgepodge Lodge 20.
Carrascolendas 33
7 oo-Truth or Cons 3; To Telllhe Truth 4, Bowling tor
Dollars 6, Buck Owens a, News 10, Candid Camera
13, Family Affair 15 , Teaching Ch ildren to Read
20, Resourceful West V lrql nla 33
1 J~That Good Ole J'lashvl lle Musi c 3, Bobby Vinton
4, Space 19996. Price Is Rlghl8, Evening Edlllon
with Martin Agronsky 20, High Road to Adven lure

:1860

anv ads deemed ob
te cllonel The publ rshe r
wrll not be responsrble for

more than one mcorrect
msertron
RATES
For Want Ad Se rv rce
5 cents per word one

'Television log f~r easy viewing

I~

Business Services

15 .fJ i~ the Camper , real nice,
eJ~ceptlonally clean lot eJ~:tras
Including o TV antenna tack
stand, porto potll , sleeps 5.
Will sell cneop . Phone 992-

'

~.

am

Canc.ellatlon
Correction s wIll be ac
cepled unl rl 9 a m lo r
Day ot Publl cl!llt!on

The Dally Senllnel, Moddlepoo 1-Pumeroy, 0 , Mun&lt;ht~. M.n .I. 197f&gt;

.

••

DON'T THROW filM....,.,.,,.,"'
HE CAN HIT.. .

BLOOD MOURN FEWEST CUDGEL

•ou wo•ldn't K'llrtl C~~Uh fOUr d'iraJitr ~"""'
IAnawf'r~ What llncr"AOLLS..
'-"'Y"

ottall

�I '

6- The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport·Pomeroy, 0 , Monday, May 3, 19'1~
-

7

DICK TRACY

Fast Results Use The Sentinel' Classifieds

WANT ADS
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
5 P M
Day
Before
Publtcitlon
Monday Deadlme 9

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

REGULATIONS

The Publ isher reserves

the nghl to ed1t or relect

- ------ --- ---··--

AELD SAW

mserhon

Mrntmum Cha rg e Sl 00
14 cen Is per word th ree

consec utrv e

tnser!Jons

26 cen ts per word srx
tnserllons
2S P er Cent Drscoun 1 on

consecutl've

pa rd ad s lind ads paid
w lthtn 10 davs

CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY

$2 00
lor
50
w ord
minimum
E~t c h addr tton al word J

ce n ts

BLIND ADS

Addtlro nal 25c Charge
per Adve rhs ement

OFFICE HOURS
8 JO e m to .5 00 p m

Dally , e 30 a m

to 12 00

Noon Seturdav
Phone todav 99 22 156

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

NOTICES
ATTN II
ALL IIOUSEWIVES

All Yard Sales, ~umm11gt ,
Porch and Basemen t Porch
end Buemen t Sl!lles , etc
must be paid In a dvanc~ :
Get your In In early by
stopp ing by our office at
The 011 Ji y Sentinel , 111
Cou rt St or w rft 1no Box
129, Pom e ro y, Oh lo 45169
w ith your remittance

•

NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
Columbus, Ohio,

Contrad Sales Legal Copy
No. 76-237

UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
PMS · OOOS (3!1

' o'

I

" '

.....-·
"'
~

..

'

' I

"~ ''

" ·~I .

I ll

'Ill~ '

•

:"

,,~

.-

Sell led proposals will be
received at the off1ce of the
Direc tor of the Oh to Oepllrt
ment of
Tran sportation ,
Co lumbus Ohio , un t il 10 00
AM
Ohio Standard Time
TIJesday , May 18 , 1976 , tor
Improvements In
District 10 IPillln No 10 2)
A th ens , Gallia , Ho cking ,
Meigs , Monroe , Morgan ,
Nob le Vinton and Washington
Counties , Ohio, on varmus
Intersec tions on U S R:ollte
No 33 . ' tat e Route Nos 329,
682and 69 1, Coulnty Road Nos
1. J, 7 and 27, Vllrious streets In
the VIllages of Chauncey ,
Coolville end t h e City of
Athen s, Athens County St ate
Route Nos 7 141. 160 218, 325
and 5.54 , vl!lrl o us streets In the
Vll ll!l ge of Rio Grande and the
City of Gallipolis , Gallla
County , Stl!lte ~oute Nos J2B,
595and 664 In Hock ing County
Sll!ll e Route Nos 7, 124, 1A3,
2A 8, 338 and 681 . County Road
Nos S lind 25 various streets
In the Villages of Middleport ,
Pomeroy and Rac ine, Me1gs
County , St ate Route Nos 7,
260, .53~ and 537 In Monroe
Coulnty , St ate Routes Nos 83 ,
37~ .
377 l!lnd 5.55, va r iou s
stree ts In the Villages of
Malta McConne l sville and
Stoc kport Morglln Coun t y
Stl!lte R:out e Nos 146, 147 and
821 In Nob le County U S
Route No 50 State Route No
93 In Vinton County , State
Routes Nos 7 26, 339 550 , 076
and 821. County Road Nos 3,
20, 26, 102, 109 3Al and 805 and
various streets m Newport
Township , the VIllages of
Beverly ,
Lowell
and
Matllmoras , the City of
Belpre , washington County ,
by appl ying thermoplastk
words and lints
Project and wor k Length Vary
The OhiO Depar t ment of
Transportaflon
hereby
not1t1es all biddtrs that It will
afflrmat1\lely lnsurt that In
any c on tr act entered into
pursuant
to
th i s
ad
vertl se men t ,
m i nority
business enterprises w ill be
afforded full opportun1ty to
submit b ids 1n r esponse to th is
Invitation and Will not be
discri m inated against on the
grounds of race , color , or
natura l origin In cons ideration
for an award
" Minimum wage rates for
this pro jec t
have been
predetermined as re&lt;:ju lred by
law and are set forth tn the bid
proposal "
" The date set tor completion
of th is work shal l be stl forth
In the bidd ing proposal "
~ Each
bidder
shall
be
required to file w1th his b id ll
certified check or c&amp;sh ter •s
cneck for an amount equa l to
five per cent of his bid, bin In
no event more than f i fty
thousand dollars, or a bond tor
ten per cent Gf his bid, payable
' o the Di rec tor
Bidders mus f apply , on the
proper forms , tor qualification
at least ten days prior to the
date set tor opening bids In
acc ordance w i th Chapter .5525
Ohio Revised Code
Plans and specifications are
on file In the Departmen t of
Transportat ion and the office
of
the
Dlstr.ct
Ce puty
Dlrtctor
The Director reserves the
r lghf to reject any and all b ids

.. . . ,

RICHARD D JACKSON
Dl RECTOR

""'

'
I '

H

.....

-

(AI 26 (5) 3, llo

Counov , Ohio

Lred!tors are requ1rea ro
f ile the •r cia1ms wlltl sa td
f tdu ci ary w l fhm four months
Da t ed t h is 29th day of Ap rtl

'.
...
,.,
"

1916

MANN IN G 0 Websler
Judge

,.I"'

l SI 3, 10 11 . 31c

'

1972 CHEVY.2 TON
102" C.A, 1S,OOO lb 2 speed rear axle, 292
trans • good tires

"

'v-..

'""""
,_
· --~

SIX

We manufa c ture &amp; market
d1rect an ex tensive hn e,
( 40,000 -1 J. of electnca l &amp;
e l ectro n• c w•r lng
c on
nectlons Interconnections ,
switches , too ls &amp; other
electrtca l e l ec troni c ac
ce!sor les We o ff er produ c t
tralnmQ An es t a bli sh ed,
prote cte d terr •tory base
sa lar y + commission +
car 1 expenses + ben eftl s

Mobile home and lot 1n Chesntre

Phono367 7614

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

Call Mr

al

Polanski, collect ,

343 4521,

(30~1

on

Monday 10 1 m 6 p m ,
Tuesday 9 1 m 6 p m ., or
Wedne sday tam -12 noon
An Equal Opporlunih
Employer M· F

LOST In YIC1nlty of Syrocuae Ball
Pork

Monday mons Wilson
glove
reward if

baseball

lound Call992 2071
LOST Man s-wallet-._;fh~~luabi;
papers between Pomero y and
Ractne If found call949 :2144

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

_-== -

-~=

1970 Lmco ln Continental , good
condition new paint jOb , ex
haust
battenea and hres

-~~~!~~~Y!on~~~~~1968 Cornaro Hardtop, 327
automatic con sole
bucket
seats excellent Interior , new
E T wheels ond Daytona tires

Po ly

double
~9

kn it

_ mo~lng Ph~~_!9274'! ___ _

Po

WILL core for elderly person 1n my
home Phone I {614 ) 985 3849

ly and cotton for T Sl-urts Reg
SI 98 now 98 cents yard 1 table
of po lyester and cotton _.51nct.
wide
20% oft Shop our

or992 -3~10
---------------...----

_borgoin ~~~---------­
MOTHER Sdoy Is Sunday, May 9
Tell Mom how grea t she Is w1th
a spec1ol mas sage 1n the Times
Sentmel on Mothers Ooy In
elude her name and oddreu
and we w ill send o Cord telltng
her to look for the message 20
-~rds 1 ~s t $1 00

UECTRONICS
Repr ese nt 40 ,000 + 1tem
product
twe
the
"Cadillac" of th e electroniC s · eteclnral com ponent mdustry, base
salary , comm 1551on, car,
e~tpenses, benefits
Calt
Mr Polanski , colle ct , at
(304) l4l-4521 on Mon 10
a m -6 p m , Tue s 9 a m 6
p m , or We d 9 am 12
noon, or see our " F ietd
Sates" ad tn today 's pafler

EOE- M F

OLD furmture 1ce be••• brass
beds old wa ll telephone• and
ports or complete households
Wnte M 0 Miller, Rt 2,
Pomeroy, Oklo Coli
7760
7

m

TIMBERf~ ;rlc-;J;-~fond•n9

_!'_mbor Ca~ _!_6__1~ 4A6 8570 __
CASH pa1d for all1 makes and
model s ol mooiJe homes

Will sell below wholesale Call

2210 or afler 4 p m
2863

9~9

9~9 ·

VEGETABLE planls of all k1nds, 10
d1fferent varleltes of tomatoes
mcludmg non -acid white
tomato Very large selec tion of
bedding
plants
Also
Geran1ums and orher- potted
plants
Hangtng baske ts
Cleland Farms and Green
house
Gerold tne Cleland ,
Rocme
MODERN walnut console , AM FM
rod•o , 4 speed changer
Balance S100 40 or terms Call

TURF TRIM
PUSH MOWERS
lO", 3 HP, B&amp;S Eng

S$Cash$$S fer tunk•d auto Frye s
Truck Auto Parts flutland
Phone 742 2081

$89.95

GRILL Cook and wottrau wonted
Apply 1n person Crows Steak

old Caii7A2-2581

3901

________ _

6 mont h male AKC Reg Samoyed

RELIABLE baby 111ter m M1d
dleport area Call 992 22:20

-~~_1''!!_~~1 1 993 522• -----

~~..!!.!~~~Y

_ ! .!._• r 6 p m

----------

YARD SALE, Mov 3 lttru 81h 9 00
o m till 5 p m 565 N Front St
M1ddloparl Ohio
FOUR Family Carport Sole, 918

Saulh Third, Mlddloparl Mon ·
day May 3 12 to 7 p m Tues
and Weds , May 4, 5 10 ti ll 5
Avons , clot tllng
furniture ,
glider paint, m 111c Items
·-:-----:-~-:---

.A.KC Male Pek tngese puppy 8
weeks old Phone 992 S188
-~~~ Spm __________ _

ut11iti es poid. $130 per month

Phono 992 3975 or 992·2571
2 BEDRM lro•lor, fullr. corpeled,
located on Rt l.t3, c ose to Hor rttonv•lle I ch1ld Phone 742-

3122
FURNISHED 2 bodrm oparlmenl,

YARD Sole Moy 3, 4 and 5 Gas
adults on ly
tn M1ddlepart
range, refrigerator, wnnger ~ Phone 992 387.4
tyja washi ng machine double
- - - - - -,-- - - - - - - - --cabinet sink , mongl~ beds, 3 BEORM nouse With bath tn
rugs antiques, 3 pc. parlor
_ Rutland Phone 992 5~---IUite, kitchen choirs tables
3 AND 4 RM furn1shed and unsewtn g machine
pl ~tura
furnished opts Phone 992
frames collectors Items Many
51113..
other Items 1 mil~ west ef
------------------Racine on Rt 12... Otis McCim - COUNTRY Mob•le Home Pork , Rt
tock residence
33, ten miles north of Pomeroy
- - - - - - - - - - - -- ----Lorge lots w1th concret pat ios,
CHESTER Youth Association Yard
s1dewalks runn•rs and off
Sole , Frtday May 7 Sot May
street pork1ng Phone 9Cf.l7,.79
8 91111 5 2 miles above Chester
on Rt 7 Clt1zens wi•hing to 3 ROOM furn1shed opt utilities
pa1d 356 N Fourlh Mid·
donate saleable 1tems, please

coli Paul Ho1r1s

{ 61~ )

985-:la.O

before Thursday , May 6 Than k
you '

YARos;;)~ -MayS- ;; oni7- 9;;;.-

'1' ARD Sale Monday Tues and
Weds from 9 o m till 4 p m
-~'l_!~~urel Sl , ~~dleparl___ _
IF YOU hove o service to after ,
wont to buy or " " t omething
are leoklng for work
• or
whatever • you II vet r•sults
foster wtth o Sentinel Wont Ad

-~!~~~------------~­

FURNISHED AND UNFURNISHED

modern opts 2 and 3 bedrms ,
all electric brick bu• ldtng,
decorated plastered walls
complete Youngstown k1tchens
ond dtsposol units , storm doors
and wmdows , completely Insulated , front and rear en trances
beovtlfully land sea~, pri vate parking, low
rent , The Ha11en Terrace Apart ments, New Hoven W Vo Ph
:!Ool - 882-2~33

2 bedrm furmshed apt Call
3 129or992-~34

m-

POMEROY LANDMARK
•-- Jack w Caney, Mgr.
...
Phone m -2181

3 FAMILY Yard Sale beside
Pomeroy Bowling Alley on
Second St Tuesday and
Wednesday 9 a m till 4 p m
Un iform s, baby clothes,
women ' s clothing, gla55
ware and 1ars , Ployf e•
bottles

salt Ex:celslor Salt Work s, East
Main Street Pomeroy, Oh1o,

-~~~~9923B~---------1953 Ford Jubtlea frocter (eJCce llent) , Sl 650 Ford 9N t rac
tor overhauled $1 000 New S
ft 3 pt rotary mower (stump
umper). $385, Feur used r tdlng
awn mowers 7 and 8 h p $200
to $230 Luckett Form Equipment West Washmgton St ,

l

Albany Phcne
or698 7881

{61~)

69S 3032

3517
197"' Honda 750, Headers, excellen t cond11ton Phone 7.C2

2659
POLLED Hereford bull , 2 vrs old,
$300 7 weeks old nanny goat,

$25. Phone Shade ( 61~) 696
1234
STEREO RADIO modern design
om -fm rad1o 8 hock tape com
b1not1on 6olonce $101 20 or
terms Call 992 3965
GRAVEL V troctor, 32 mch mower
7 6 h p recently overhauled

-~~~~~!_92 7205_!~!_~nj~-­

1973

Harley

Davidson

Elec

_oragll~~_!'_l&gt;_ono94 ~265~-- _
4 Ce metery plots m Meigs
Memonal Gardens W1ll sell
sepa rate Also , for rent toboc
co bose S30 lbs at 25 cents lb

_Pho~~!__4_)~~-~~-----1975 Suzuki GT 750 motorcycle

--~~ond•l~~ Call7~2

299__?__

SET of double bed springs almost
new $7 00 Phon• 992-7595, on

-~~bur~~od --------~
15 one-half cub1c ft

chest type

MAN'S scoutleader s uniform
one boy s scout uniform riding
lawn mower , 10 speed blc yde ,
Phone

99'13090

M-

----- -- -

--

0

-·

1971 Honda 500, 4 cyl mbtarcyde
with 2 helmet! , 1964 Ford body
roush, motor and tron sm1uion

SMALL house or trailer
good Phone day 9~9 281 ~ or
preferably •n the country
and near Pomeroy Either _ !~nl!l~s , ~~.:_~]furni shed or not Phone 949 CORN , Chbfles Goegleln Phone
7480
992 7625

Forced air furnace , central o1r

Phone 992 20511.
1 nACRES Phone 7~2-2359

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

LOVELY 2 story older home m
Roc1ne lllc24 hvtng rm , d •mng
room, new bu1lt-in k1tchen w1th
cherry cabinets den bedrm
and one-half batl1 dewn wt' h
oak hardwood floors 3 bed~
ms New full bath ultl1ty room
upstair! full basement large

IIIEL~. FARQUAR WITH THE HELP
OF OUR PSYC HIATRIC C&lt;'~51.1L
WAS ABLE- TO REME-MBE'R
I"HOLE FORMULA !

Tractors.

WE CAlli N0W 5 Wil.J6 if\ITO
FULL PIWDUO: roO" OF OUR
5EN5AT IONAL " 11115&gt;TANT
FACEUFT"!

WIN AT BRIDGE

Correct club suit play
.

NORTH
47654 2
o~&gt;KLO

PH. 992-3746

Codner's Cam~rs

Septic Systems
Installed

WEST
4H8 .!
• J 10 9 7
+K 10 3

,BORN I..DSER

o~&gt;J

B4~'5' ~

___.
'-----'--

mo .

949·2883
~-------

TEAFORD

acre

burnmg fireplace, gas F A
furna ce
Ntce carpetrng

$29.500
BUSINESS BUILDING Down (real ntce l and a 5
room apf up In Rutland .
Asking )Usf $13 500
OLDER HOME - 8 rooms,
4 brs , bath , no ce k1f , large
yard on M1dd leporf Only
S8SOO
11 RMS - Old house woth
all ulll llles and 2 lots near
store &amp; new restaurant
W1 ll lake offer
WANTED - Large famoly
for thlsS BRs , 2'1' baths, 10
rm

garage large lot on Rushc
H1lls, Syracuse
Sole pric e

$22,900

Phone 992-1S23 for

more Information

3 BEDRM

house

2 yra

old

carpeted 2 baths, central otr
conditiOning
basement and
garage in Albany , Ohto For op
polntment
phone (61,. ) 698

8722'
-4 acres, undeveloped $.4 000
Me1gs County V~nton I'T)oil
route , close to m tnes Phone
7~2

2867

PJlane {6lA) 985 3511 .

a·fi--,~~k t~p;;:- Ph~~e-m

29S S 2nd Sl

!'._~0~~ '!E !~2~------ ---

1913 350 Kawasaki Big Horn expansion chamber
knobby
hres 3 b1ke troller Coli 992 -

-

-

MAKE spnng ch~onl ng prof1table,
turn unwonted 1'ems mto cash
Ad vcr t,sc m the Wont Ads

ME:SBI: WE CAI.J $1-\AK!: 'e:M IF Wlii 1

4 10 l'Wio

Noble Summit Rd.,
Middleport
PHONE 992-5724
53 1 mo

,I

HOUSE 3 bedroom home 59
cere s I m1le from Rutland on
New lima Rood phone 7.42 -

ELWOOD:-;B::O~W::E:::R-:5 - REPAIR

29Be

-

Sweepers, toasters , 1rons oil
small applia nces lawn mower
nex t to Stole H1ghwoy Garage
on Route 7 Phone (61"' ) 985

4 Piling

we bu1td new and remodel
the old All tv pes ol
bUIId1ng and remodeling
from the foundation up
Additions ,
carpeting ,
palnt1ng, Siding, roofing ,
paneling , paper hangtng,

''
""" ~ '--$ - 3

etc
Ph 949-2023 or 84!-2661

1/ I

4-13-1 mo

WILL DO edenor patnltng ,
houses and roofs Phone 992 568.4 or 992 3374

GREG S C8 SALES localed al Erw tn s Gulf Servtce
Mtdd lepo rt
Ohio Phone 992 -

2438
3a2S
EXCAVATING BACKHOES AND
DOZE R LARGE AND SMALL ,
REM0DELtN G - Piu;b.;;-heot•n 9
SEPTIC TANKS INSTALLED BILL
and oil types of general repo1r
PULLINS PHONE 992 2478 DAY
Work guaranteed 20 yeors eJC
OR NIGHT
_e_~!_:~~-~~~e 992 _3409___ _

CHARM &amp; COMFORT About 5 Yrs old 3 BR Nice
kitchen &amp; dining Uf&gt;llty R.

0&amp;0 TREE Tnmrtllng 20 years ex
pen ance
In su r ed
fr ee
est•motes Call 9f'i2-23B4 or
~4)69812~~r _____ _
vice all mak es ~:2 2284 The
Fobn c Shop , Pom eroy
Authortzed St nger Soles and
Serv1ce We sharpen SCissors

ceram ic bath . atr cond ,
carport, garden About 'h

acre Storage Bldg $16.900
INVEST - OON' T SPEND
- Here Is a 4 BR , 2 bath
home wtth a nice Rec

R

N G. hot water heat, utiloty
R , large enclosed por&lt;h,
garage and not uery old.
$30,000
AN AMAZING VALUE -2 story frame, s BR, 1112

baths. utility R , garage &amp;
carport
All In good
condition 11 7,000
OVERLOOKS THE RIVER
- Excellent condition 7 R
frame, 3 large . BR , full
basemen t with 2 car
garage Larg e front porch
to lounge on thts summer
Many other
f ea ture s

ASKING S18,SOO
Call Us Up
Gove Us A Try
We Have People
Eager To Buy
H. E. CLELAND BROKER
992·22S9 or 992-2568

0 DELL Ahgnment located behmd
Rutland Gro de School Tu neup ,
brakes wheel baloncmg alig nment Phone 7.112-2004
EXCAVATING dozer loader and
backhoe work dump trucks
and lo -boys for htre w1ll haul
ftll dtrt, lop so1l , limestone and
gro vel Coli Bob or Roger Jel fei-s
doy phone 992-7089 ,
n.ght ph one 992-3525 or 992
SEPTIC TANKS cleaned Modern
Sonttot1on 992-3954 or 992

5968
WILL do rooftng , construct1on
plumbtng and neoltn g No JOb
too large or too sm all Pnone
7~2-234a

EXCAVATING dozer, backhoe
and d1 tc her Char les R Hat fie ld
Bock Hoe ServiCe
Rutland , Onlo Pho ne 742 2008
~----

WILL tnm or cut f rees and snrub bery Phone 949·2545 or 74:2

loft.
b041

I have

You
can't

mouse
17 Golfer's
gadget
19 French
nobleman

open

that
door.

%0 Ralsed

sir!

pliltform

501 NYLON

Green , go ld , red , blue, rust
Do it yo urself, with pad
ding , 11.95 sq. yd .
W1th paddmg mstalled
$8 95 square yard

CALL142-2211
TALK TO
WENDELL GRATE
CAR PET CONSULTANT

a

DOWN
I Rockfish
2 Concerning
3 Britaon's
Order of
the 4 Killer
whale
5 In good
health
( 4 w!l.s.)
6 Didn't play,
as a poker
hand
(2 wds_)

7 Punish by

or

fino

Yesterday '• AnHwer

8 Lassoed
9 Grand or

27 Become
clamorous

comic

28 Dawn

10 Mementoes
for Zsa Zsa
(2 w!l.s )
18 Moray

goddess

29 Controbute

31 Mus1cal
Count

32Rose
21 Droop
23 Workshop
of sc1ence
25 Wager

essence

35 Restrict
39 That ( Fr)
41 Bambino

Cruces

Z7 Fell
behind
3G Well·
LIL ABNER

t

known
Ali
33 Editorial

~~':t

I WAS BOl1-l BOXING MD
HA!Y-BUT/5
CHAMP/a./
HE/'MN 'NLFF

34

10 DfiFEND

31 Pet for

HISINIFE?

AT SCHOOL - AND

JUST 1ro&lt; Y1f

BLACK BELT /N

KARATI::rr-

school

:n ~~=

- Gell~r

311 Most

1---1--4---1

amiable
4G " You -

:o:rl-----i-----i-----i-----i--1

McLENDON
:
·MORTGAGE
COMPANY • •
•

0I I

WHY ELSE VI.OULD
/HEY HAVE HE-R
ALL COVERED

UP LIKE
11-fAT?

YEAH I THEY
i:ON'T WANT 1C
UNVEIL HER
UNTIL lHEY
GET IN&amp;IDE I

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to
AXYQLBAAXR
Is

work

V.A.

Loans · "O" down· JO yr. term.
F.H.A. -Low Down Paym't. • 30 yr . Term .

------·FAST APPROVALS
Refinancing also available
V'!terans &amp; FHA applicants.

to

i

11

ZIAC

DAC

R' O

JOSLV

7

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•

•.

Close Sat. At

••

•

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WHAR "'E
HEADED, MAW?

•

••

e

RUTLAND FURNITURE

742-2211

ARNOLD GRATE

ZIAC

OALN

VDS I

R

ON
UA

C DA

- PAFRJ&gt;

WA5 WAITIN5

GURDED

IAPHERM brsI
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1

E!IEFOI(E DECIPIN!!!&gt; 10
6ET MARRIED.

I

Now ..,..,... the elftlod !etten
fO
lht IUrpriN IIJIIWtr, U
aurreeted by the
cartoon.

rorm

abo••

IJIW ..- -... IrHE ( :K I XX)[ I I I l

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Ju~hln•

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•

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GNAGPN

SLAFIU

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WHAT THE ~11\JTER

{Aiuwert , . . ., . . )

Thursday 8 til12 noon

•

KAY

E

8:00til5:00

•

Unacrambltlh01e lwr Jumbl..,
letter to each oquott, to
form lour ordinary worda.

L 0 N G FE L L O' W

One letter somply ·stands for another In lhos sample A Ia
used lor lhe l hree L's, X for lhe lwo O's, etc Songle letters,
apostrophes the length and foronato on o( l he words are all
hints Each day the code Jette" are dillerent

MAF

•

RUTLAND

•
ei

JEST OVER TO GIT
TATER'S DIAPERS
OFF 'NTH' CLOTHES·
LINE

Vesterdal 's Cryptoquoh• THE: GREATEST OF FAULTS, I
SIIOUWSAY, IS TO BE CONSC IO\IS OF NONE - CAHLYJ.E

D

(j

•
~

··•••••··
:=
........................... -

------ •
::

qualified

Mon ., Tues., Wed .

" o l II&lt; !I! I I I

It :

CRYPTOQUOTE

Rutland

...

''Y HI N i l I fl. II/~/ !I !I

Bloamer

•
••
••

.i:• FRIDAY TIL 8 ::·=
••
• ••
•

330 Main St .
614-454-9703
Zanesville. Ohio 43701

• •

..•

~tgM[3~;"'"' ==~ w.J c

a Therefore ,._........__._

3167
.

TUESDAY, MAY 4, 1976
6 ()()-Sunrise Semester 10
6 15-Farm Report 13
6 2~Rev Cleophus Robinson 13
6 3~Co lu mbus Today 4, News 6, Sunrise Semester 8,
Concerns &amp; Comments 10
6 4~0unce of Prevention 10
6 45-Mornlng Report 3
6 s~G ood Morning, West Virginia 13
6 ss-Chuck White Reports 10, Good Morning, Trl
State 13 .
,
7 oo-Toda y 3.~. 15, Good Morning , America 6, 13, CB.
News 8, Bugs Bunny and Fr iends 10
1 3~Sc hoolles 10
s·oo-Lassle 6. Capl aln Kangaroo 8,10. Sesame Street
33
8 3~Big Valley 6
9 · 0~NOf For Women Only J ; Phil Donahue ~ . Phil
Donahue 15, Political Talk 8, M ike Douglas 10;
Morning With D J 13
9 3~A M. 3' One Life lo Live 6, Tattletales 8; Mike
Douglas 13
10 oo-Celebrlty Sweepstakes 3,4,15, Edge of Night 6,
Price Is R lght 8,10
10 3(}-High Rollers 3,4, 15 Dinah! 6
11 o~Wheel of Forlune 3,15, Weekday 4, Gambit
8,10, For mer's Daughter 13, Electric Company
20
11 3~Hollywood Squares 3,4, 15, Happy Days 13, Love
of Life 8,10. Sesame StrHf 20
11 ss-Toke Kerr 8. Dan I mel'~ World 10.
12 o~Fun Factory 3,15, Let's Make A Deal 13: Bob
Braun 4, News 6,8, 10
12 3~ Take My Advi ce 3, 15; All My Children 6,13;
Search Fo r Tomorrow 8,10
12 45- Eiectrlc Company 33
12 5 ~NB C News 3,15
1 ro-News 3, Ryan's fiope 6,13, Political Talk 8,
Young and the Res I less 10; Not For Women Only 15.
1 3~Da y s Of Our Lives 3,4,15, Rhyme and Reason
6, 13, As The World Turns a,10
2 0(}-$20,000 Pyramid 6,13
2 3~Doctors 3,4,15, Break The Bank 6,13; Guiding
Llghl 8, 10.
3 oo-Anolher World 3.4, 15, General Hospital 6, 13; All
In The Fa mily 8, 10; Lilias, Yoga and You 20,
Educating t~e Handicapped Children 33
3 3{)-()ne Life to L ive 13 , Mickey Mouse Club 6, Match
Ga me 8, 10; You Can Do It 20; lTV Utilization 33.
4 oo-Mister Cartoon 3; Merv Griffin 4; Bewitched 6;
Mickey Mouse Club 8; Mister Rogers 2G.33; Movie
"The War of the Worlds" 10, Dinah I 13
4 3~Bewltched 3; Mod SquatU. Beverly Hillbillies 8,
Sesame Street 20,33; Fllntstones 15
5 oo-Bonanza 3, Partridge Family 8: Mission : Im possible 15
5 3~Adam 124,13, News6. Family AffairS; Electric
Company 20,33
6 ro-News 3.4, 8,10, 13, 15, ABC News 6, Zoom 20 , lTV
Utll lzlllon 33
6 J~N~C News 3,4,15, ABC N!'ws 13, Andy Griffith 6,
CBS ews 8,10, Hodgepodge Lodge 20 ; Lilias, Yoga
and ou 33
1 oo-Truth or Consequences 3; To Tell The Truth 4;
Bowling for Dollars 6'; Country Place 81 News 10,
Name that 1une 13, Family Affair l5; Un-,
dersfan lng Africa 20, Wild, Wild World of Animal a
33
1 3~Hollywood Squares 3,4, Let's Deal With It 6;
Match Game PM 8; Evening Edition with Merlin
Agronsky 20. Price Is Right 10; To Tell The Truth
13, High School T V Honor Society 15, Family
Theatre 33
8 oo-Baseball 3,4; Happy Days 6, T3; Rich Little 15;
Bugs BJnny -Road Runner 8, 10. Behind the Lines
33, International Animation Festival 20 .
a 3~Laverne &amp; Shirley 6,13; Good Times B, 10,
Consumer Survival Kit 20,33
9 oo-S W.A T 13; Pollee Woman 15; Commanders 6,
M·A·S-H 8,10, Evening at Symphony 20; Opera
Theatre 33
_
9 3{)-()ne Dav at a Time B, 10.
10 oo-Marcus Welby, M D 6, 13; City of Angels IS, To
Be Announced B; Switch 10; News 20, To Be An·
nounced 33 .
10 3~Last of the Wild 3, To Be Announced 4,
PolltlcaiTalk 8, Black Perspective on the News 20;
Woman 33
11 o~News 3,4,6,B, 10, 13, 15, ABC News 33
11 l~Presldentlal Primaries 3,4,6,8, TJ, Movie "The
Search" 10; Janak! 33
11 45-Mystery of the Week 6,13.
12·oo-Johnny Carson 3,4,15; Movie "Lady L" 8
1 15-News 13
1 3~ Tomorrow 3,4.

;;;-+--t--l-+-t--1 one

Know
Me"
U- Jenks

••
•

RUTLAND
FURNITURE

political
cartoorust
46 Greek letter

Z2 Tell
24 Seize
26 Palmas

••
••
••
••
••
•••
•
••
•
••

12 or 15 FT.

scholilr
15 And not
16 Shrew·

.-•••

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

Pelion on 8 " Ivanhoe" ·
herome
11 Meander
12 First of a
series
13 Attractive
14 Vain

I

warrant!

..
..

Do tt

Sale $4•Sq. vd

Hl-2211

..

I'm
qoinq
to the

..

yourself and save Regular
$6.95 sq yd.

5232

'" .

••
••
•
••
••
•
•

Candy Stripe
Bea utiful colors

"'"

-

SAVE ON
CARPETING

SEWING MACHINE Repo1rs ser-

deVIce

45 Famed

chewed

.

BRADFORD Aushoneer Com
plete Ssrvtce Phone 949-2487
or 949 2000 Ractne Oh to, Cntt
Bradford

44 Steering

ACROSS

I It's often

CONSTRUCTION

we spectal1ze 1n home
made Ptzza . Spaghe tti_,
Baked La sagna, &amp;. San &lt;;! ·
WI CheS
Qu1ck carry Out Service.
4 2 1 mo .

(Do you have a quest1on
lor the experts? Wr~te 'Ask
t~ e Jacobys
care of th1s
newspaper · The Jacobys w1ll
answer mdlvtd us l questiOns
'' stamped, self-addressed
envelopes are enclosed The
most 1nteres tmg questiOns
will be used m lh1s column
and w111 rece1ve cop1es ol
JACOBY MODERN J

by THOMAS JOSEPH

GOOD QUESTION' -n11S DANG PLACE
LOOKS LIKE A HONeYCOMS'

DUCK INTO ONE OF ~ESE CA~S.

D&amp;D

992-6167
OPEN•P M CAlLY
CLOSED MONDAY

D. BUMGARDNER

A New Jersey reader wants
to know how old Mol ton Work,
the top auctoon brodge authoroty, was on 1925 when contract
was onvented
Mr Work was born on 1864.
so he was 61 years old Thos
dod not keep hom from learnong contract and he won
severa l regoonal tournaments
proor to hos death on 1934

~

lARRY
lAVENDER
Syracuse, Oh10

M lddleport, Ohio

All pool supplies avaofable,
too .

1258
10ft Ideo new lime and lertllh:er
spreader SIBS W l Stroun

STORM
WINDOWS &amp; DOORS
REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS
ALUMINUM
SIDING SOFF ITT
GUTTERS AWNINGS

I mo

yourself man.

~~~

Jom "South fonds homself on
a very normal three-notrump
contract and wants to get as
many eKtra tr1cks as he can
out of the club suot "
Oswald " The correct play
here os to lead toward dummy
and shck on the ten spot Thos
play w111 cost hom a trock of
East holds a songleton club or
Jack and two small It woll

A WI'EK· •

Ph m-3993

Above and below ground
POOl kofs for the do -tf-

:

ONE set of maple bunk b.ds wllh
box spring s and mattress Ant1
que bedrm 1u11, Burl Inlaid ~
block
leather ba r i tools
Gravely w1th attachm ents

1110

Courteous
Seroice3 31

South

articles "

FOUR

Ftnancmg Ava1l1bl e
Blown !OtOWIIIS&amp; Atti CS

PH. 992.:ft0 10

DONEUI'S
PIZZA

a

ROOMY 7 yr old one story wood
frame
tw o bedrm
home
located between Coolvil le and
Tuppers Platns. One acre lot
two COl garage, clly water gas
heat
hardwood
floors
carpeted
hvtng room , nice

T~Nl'!'·

l!lown
lnsu latioii'Services

MIDDLEPORT

SWIMMING
POOLS

deal
BUSINESS -,All stock and
equipment Good locat1on
Needs a couple with a few
thousand, or will lease
MINERALS - 135 acres In
Lebanon Township 2 mtles

Sf'f!t&gt; AIIMI&gt;,

FREE ESTIMATES

24 Hour Service

home, 2 car garage,

east of Bashan
GET IN TOUCH WITH US
ON THESE SOON. OVER
40 PICTURES TO LOOK
AT DROP IN TO SEE.

MliY UNIT GOIHG 41 Clii'ACITY·FROM NOW 011 IT'LL lit FUlL

4 26-1 mo.

CAB CO.

and lot 100x 14S See this
and we' ll try to work

LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE-THE WIZARD'S WORKSHOP

'

Only

$16,500
12 ACRES In town ,
garden land. large garage
with storage
J BR,
renovated home w1fh wood

UTILE ORPHAN ANNIE

Phone 742 2409
Bo x 28A
Rutland, 011.

NEW

17 Cole Street
Pomeroy, Ohoo 45769
Telephone (614) 992-3768
We Deliver
4 25-1 mo

Norlh East

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
J1m "How about some ar·
tocles on songle suot plays' '
Oswald ' 'Jom IS referrong
to the best way to play one
particular suit and the subJect os well worth a sero es of

HOURS A MY, 5EV!'N DIIYS

TWIN CITY
MAQtiNE SHOP

$25.000 00
2 HOUSES - 1 has 9 rm s ,
balh, the ather has 3 rms
and ba th All utilities, and
almost one

West

JNT

'

ARE AVAILABLE
AT

~--~---~---

Both vu lnerable

Pass Pass Pass
Openong lead - J •

Shepard Contractors
mo

A11

• QJ 8
oi&gt;AQ542

24 Hour Phone Servtce

OPEN
FRI -SAT -SUN
or by contactong
R Codner , Ow~er

3 28 1

• AKQ

1\S lF ~e'S
Pt.A'II t-.'6
A
ll&lt;DMBOIJEi

by

TRAVEL TRAILERS

Cal~~s,U-~~~;882

7

Ltcen sed Installer

Sales &amp; Rental

Need new roof or old
repaired? House , roof,
blrn, shingles, build up,
painting, electrical work,
gutters &amp; downspouts,
furnaces, water heaters,
Wlter softner~, Installed &amp;
repaired, Sewage.

EAST

• Q 10
• 512
+A964
• 9 86 3
SOUTit 101
4 AK

aD'@K-

4 5 76

Rac1ne , Oh1G

gaon a trock for hom if West
holds a small songleton club or
(our small clubs "
Jom "Expressong thongs on
percentages, he woll score love
club !rocks 42 per cen t of the
tome and all omportani four
club trocks 96 per cent of the
time H he leads to the kong and
back to the ace he scores hve
trocks JUSt 36 per cent of the
Lome and four !rocks JUSt 86
per cent of the tome '
Oswald
'A word of cau·
loon H South held the ten of
clubs onstead of dummy hos
correct play would be to play
the lop clubs "

3

• 8 63
• 7 52

Roger Wam sley
4 I 1 mo

RAINBOW RIDGE
IBashan Areal
LONG BOTTOM

front and rear porches unat
----------toched goroge
2 storage rbutldtngs, all set upon large lot
Medica I Oxygen
w1th add1t1onal lot available
and Supplies
Must socnftce for $21 ,000 Call

freezer $150 Call (614) 985. 3 bedrm homo Call992-7033
3985

Greaves 250 dtrt b1ke

KALAMAZOO wood or coal
heater 22 1nci'l f1 rebox , $20 Full
stze foam rubber mattress
almost new $20 RHI type
We bear tor,e recorder , used,
S20 8eout1ul extension dtnmg
table large and 5 motch1ng
cane bottom chotrt, cost $450,
toke one half Same a• new
used very l1ttle Phone (61,.)

Rulland 742 2331

&amp;Heating

3 BEDRM HOUSE 1n M•ddleporl

v1ew $21 ,COO Phone (61~ )
BEAN POSTS Call2~7 - 3077
667 3519
CAMPER, will 111611 Datsun bed
_ Pho~~~!__4l~~~---- __ _ 3 BEOROOM total elec nome,

flule Phone 992 ·3255

Co11992-2156

R&amp;J COINS

Racine Plumbing

Rutland

Large 2 car garage and 1
level
ac r e
Ask rng

1972 Honda 750, excellent condi tion extras $950 Phone 992 -

FURNISHED opt , couple only , all

CAPTAIN EASY

Certified technician.
Briggs &amp;
Stratton
Engines .
Pickup &amp; Dehvery

For Sale

Moke Young, Manager
Sales and lnslallaloon
Rt . 3, Pomeroy, Ohoa 45161
Phone day or mght
6149~1- 22~
l -L11 _1)1o •

4 BR RANCH N1ce
closets, l'h baths, large k•f
donmg, F A ool furnace

TURF TILL
TILLERS
31/2 H p_ , B&amp;S Eng .

USED CAR tn good running cond1
lion not more than 10 years

11 month old German Shepherd,
good With children Call m .

1

Vorgol B. Sr., Realtor
110 Mechanoc Pomeroy, 0.
Phone 992-3325

vice
Stardust K1ng Phone
PARTY PLAN EX
FRIENDLY TOY _(614)!85.:_~~B---~-----OPENINGS FOR AKC Registered collte pup1 10 COAL llme1tone and all ~types of
soh and rock salt fo r 1ce and
M~:~~·~~~ IN OUR AREA
weeks old Phone 843 2753
snow removal Excels1or Salt
RF
I
IS EASY BECAUSE
Works , Eost Mo1n St , Pomeroy
OEMS HAVE NO CASH INVEST REGISTERED Wh i te German
Oh to Phone 992-3891
Shepherd for sale Coil 992
MENT NO COlLECTING OR
5010
DELIVERINGS CALL COLLECT
~~ZERB~F~~;;-~d~~~~
CAROL DAY, {~18) ~S9-839S or PUPS- m1)(ed breed Free to good
Wdl deltver to locol dren.ng
WRITE FRIENDLY HOME PAR
-~
~~~!~c:_ne ~~3-~! !_ ___ _
-~omes P__l&gt;on ':J~~l_98S ~~~­
TIES, 20 RAILRO,A,D AVE
COAL
, l•mestone and calc tum
ALBANY N Y 12205
GERMAN Shepherd pupp1es for
chl onde and calc1um br1ne for
sale Call {61~) 367-0609afler S
$25 PER HUNDRED slufilng
dust control ond all types of

-~~~~~~~402 -----

house 10
Phone 992 3858

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

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

-~5-4271~~~~~~------

3 BEORM

99'13965

WANTED-Good usod hoy baler '
Call evenmgs aft•r 5 p m 992131S or992-3859

-~~----------------BASSETT pupp1es Phono {61•)

LOST '
Sunday between
Pomeroy and Middleport
lady's sliver wrist wafch,
Shari Mitch Phone 992 347B

-,;;;,·ft"'fi-~)
• &lt;A

MAC'S
LAWN
MOWER
SERVICE

or

See how you can reallv
save

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

$163.95

envelopes
Send
ulf
addressed
stomped
envelope Edroy Mati s, Box

I

j

burled tr easure
rings, Stiv er, gold .
Coin &amp; Metal
Detectors
For R ent

home woth no obhgaloon

1976 Che11efle won in contest

Phonearea code6 1.4 423 953 1

AKC Registered Coll te Stud Ser -

I ~ Free estimates on carpeting and onstallation .

uwn

MowersTillers-RIding

~

NEW 1 LJwn Boy mowers,
P1oneer
chai n
saws ,
Bolen's Mowers, Merry
Tillers , MTD Mowers
498 Locust St
Middleport, Ohio
992 -3092

COINS

CA8PETING

' -' ~=:!~
,: -\
..t•

.. ~ · r~ "~-Sl i?

BUY, SELL or TRADE

We ' ll bnng santples to your

===

PGm f:r'OY

~i~
h. • ....

$195. Phone 949·2860.

-------....---FABRICSp;ci ol;ii'N~ lhrough
61h of Mav D&amp;J 1 HOUSE OF WILL DO odd jObs roofing, pain- 1972 Ou ster, outomehc 2 dr
ling, hauling, treework and
Phone 992 5737
FABRICSII 1 m1le sou th of M1d
dleport

Ph 992 2174

"

~!.!4 ,
1:

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS', INC.

~-SLOAN'S

992

•

F r om the largest Truck or
Bulldoze.,.....Radlat or to th e
smallest Hnter Co re
'
Nathan Biggs
Rad1ator Spectaltst

Phone Anna Blackwood
985.]805
Bron Thomas
992-2726 4-30-1 mo .

12;65- 3bedr;- ; IT -;i:; - $65oo
Phone 992-:2605

chback 3 speed Coli
1013

I

Ann's Bridal and
Anniversary Services

1973 Chev rolet Vega Statton
Wagon
automatic o1r and
power steering 1974 Chevrolet
Vega Hatchback , au tomat iC
1975 Chevrolet Vega Hat

--

A thought for the day ·
British noveli st Edward
Lytton sald, '"!lie easiem
person to deceive is one's own
self "

S2995
4 speed

WILKINSON'S
!_mall Eng .
_ J . ~:€
-~ Repolr
dft-~

comr:Uete

Free Consultation

----------- --------·

$3895
•731 NTERNATtONAL 2 TON
8 cyl , 5 speed, 18,5002Speed rear axle, good t"es

669·4111

'

1ng remodel10g room adch
ttons
Also garages
Free
Estimates CoiiM 2659

PRIOR
PRODUCT
K NOWL EDGE IS NOT
REQUIRED

- ~~~!M~-----------

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
case No 21198
Estate of VIRGINIA F .
HAWK Dtceased
Nottc e IS hereby g1ven that
Lester M Hawk of Rt 2,
Coolv ill e Oh 10 , h as b ee n dul y
appo in ted Adm~n1strator of
the esta te of Vtrgm ia F
Hawk . deceased, late of Meigs

•'

Our
company,
NY SE
ltsled with ' 75 sales m
eKcess of $400 million ,
seeks an Individual to toln
o ur w Va Ohio sa l es
for ce

CARPENTER w•ll do Siding, roof

1970CHEVROLETC 10
SJ495
. Cheyenne Super 350 V-B, automatic, power steering
and brakes, w w tires , wh . covers, step bumper,
chrome m i rror s, AM rad io, white and moss green,
sharp and many other options •

+

tlll A p m 39 mch range hood
clothes , dishes, beaks and
m11c Coun ty Road 25 turn at
Chester or Five Points Watch
for stgns Phone Harry Blown

Rev 8 17 73

,,•

lndustnal Electronics
Trainee or Experience
Salary+ Commission
Company Car

Reg $2 9S yard, now $2

Aprll16, 1176

__:_

Complete Bridal
And Anniversary
Service

10, To Tell lhe Truth 13, Friends of Man 15; Marco
Sportllte 33
8 DO-Movie "Ban!o Hackelt" 3, 3,j,15; On lhe Rocks
13; Gunsmoke B. U S A People &amp; Politics 20,33 ,
Rhoda 10.
'
8 3D-Movie "True Grit" 6, 13; UN Day Concert 20,33,
Phyllis 10
9 oo-AI I In The Family 8,10.
9 l~Mov le "The KeeQons" 8,10
10 oo-Joe Forrester 3,j, 15, News 20: BI -Ways 33
10 3~Lock, Sleek &amp; Barrel 20; Catch 33 33
11 ·oo-News 3,4,6,8, 10, 13, 15, ABC News 33
·11 3'o----Johnny Ca1'5on 3,4, 15, Cosmetic Surgery· Nip
'i ' N Tuck With Nature 6,13, Movie " Hustling" 8,
Movie "The President's Analyst" 10; Janak! 33
,I oo-Tomorrow 3,4; News ll

MONDAY, MAY l, 1'76
5 oo-B~nanra 3, Partridge Fam ily B. M ission lm
flllSSible IS
5 »-Adam 12 4, News 6, ,Family Affair 8. Elec Co
20,3], Adam 12 13
6 ()()-News 3,4,8,10,13, 15, ABC News 6, Zoom 20,33
6 3~ NB C News 3,4, 15, ABC News 13, Andy Grlffllh 6,
CBS News 8, 10 , Hodgepodge Lodge 20.
Carrascolendas 33
7 oo-Truth or Cons 3; To Telllhe Truth 4, Bowling tor
Dollars 6, Buck Owens a, News 10, Candid Camera
13, Family Affair 15 , Teaching Ch ildren to Read
20, Resourceful West V lrql nla 33
1 J~That Good Ole J'lashvl lle Musi c 3, Bobby Vinton
4, Space 19996. Price Is Rlghl8, Evening Edlllon
with Martin Agronsky 20, High Road to Adven lure

:1860

anv ads deemed ob
te cllonel The publ rshe r
wrll not be responsrble for

more than one mcorrect
msertron
RATES
For Want Ad Se rv rce
5 cents per word one

'Television log f~r easy viewing

I~

Business Services

15 .fJ i~ the Camper , real nice,
eJ~ceptlonally clean lot eJ~:tras
Including o TV antenna tack
stand, porto potll , sleeps 5.
Will sell cneop . Phone 992-

'

~.

am

Canc.ellatlon
Correction s wIll be ac
cepled unl rl 9 a m lo r
Day ot Publl cl!llt!on

The Dally Senllnel, Moddlepoo 1-Pumeroy, 0 , Mun&lt;ht~. M.n .I. 197f&gt;

.

••

DON'T THROW filM....,.,.,,.,"'
HE CAN HIT.. .

BLOOD MOURN FEWEST CUDGEL

•ou wo•ldn't K'llrtl C~~Uh fOUr d'iraJitr ~"""'
IAnawf'r~ What llncr"AOLLS..
'-"'Y"

ottall

�I

8- The Daily Senli~el, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monda)•, May 3, 1971i

HOSPITAL NEWS

Auto wrecked on CR I

No one was injured or cited way. William s' ('~r r:m off lhe
in two traffic accidents in- ruitdway into a ditt h anti
vestigated Sunday by the emb:1nkmcn1 . Then• was
Gallia-Meigs Pusl Stule rn od{'ratge d;unaue. The dog
Highway Patrol.
was nol injured.
The first occurred al :1 :20
A Gal iia Coun ty mi sha~
p.m. in Salem Twp. Meigs occurrcd OitHOp.nl.ur\ Rt. 7,
Counly, eight tenths or a mile two 1\nd eight tenths miles
north of Rl. 124 un Coun tv south or Hl. 218 where Nick)•
Road I where Clarence J. C. Smith , 18, Gall ipolis. lust
Williams, 22, Darwin, lost L'untrol uf H trailer hi s car
controi or his car while at- W3 S towi ng .
tempti ng lo avoid striking a
The tr:.~il c r cume louse.
dog which entered the high- struck a guardrail U1cn

MEIGS THEATRE
Tonight thru Thursday
NOT OPEN
Fri., Sat. Sun .. May 7-8-9
THE·ADVENTURE
OF SHERLOCK HOLMES '
SMARTER BROTHER ·
Ge.ne Wild er , Mad eline
Kahn .

I PGI
Show Slarts at 7 p.m.

Veterans Memorial Jlospllal Syracuse; Mr . and Mrs.
SATU HI3AY ADMISSIONS Dallas Tayl or, daughter,
Mike ~' i oca rri , Mid- Gallipolis.
dlepor· l ; Mr ldred Mitch ,
I Births, May I)
Pomeroy ; Hugh Rousey,
Mr. and Mr s. David
Pomeroy ; Job Prater, Arrington, sun, Gallipolis·
Pomeroy.
Ferry , W. Va .; Mr. and Mrs.
SATURDAY DIS - Bobby Henby, daughter, Oak
'
Lewis Hili ; Mr. and Mrs. Harvey
CHARGF.S
Miller, Bernard Gilkey, Mary Wood, son, Gallipolis.
Re ed, Dcss ie Patterson,
Birth, May 2)
Brell Friend , Warren
Mr . and Mrs. Robert
Salisbury , Nettie Swisher , Redm ond , daughter, New
Mary
Johes,
Mabel Haven, W. Va.
overturned . There was minor Neimeyer, Steve Barrell.
damage to the car bcrng
Pleasant Valley Hospital
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS ha uled on the trai ler.
DISCHARGES - Marlene
Clarence Wickline, Racine;
Avis Weaver, Ml. Ailu, W. Schullz, Point Pleasant; Tex
Va .; Gordon Collins, Reeds- Priddy , Burralo; Mrs .
ville; Katrine Millikan, William Nibert, Gallipolis
Ferry;
John Watson,
Pomeroy.
NOW YOU KNOW
Gallipolis;
Burdell Hayes,
SUNDAY
DISCHARGES
Benjamin Franklin waged
Roberlsburg;
Arawana
Job
Praler,
Robert
While
.
an unsuccessful battle lo
Anthony,
Point
Pleasant
;
have the turkey declared ttue
Hul1.cr Medical Center
Meirord
Lyvere,
Point
national bird on grounds th:tt
(Births, Apri130)
Pleasan t: Elizabeth Berry,
it wa s rnor·e e x c lus iv e !~
Mr . and Mrs . James Wood , Point Pleasa nt ; Eli zabe th
native to Americ~:~ than the daughter, Hio Grande; · Mr .
Pullin s; Point Pleasant;
eag le.
and Mrs. Jay Jen kins, Naomi Chapman, Mrs. Erdaughter, Jackson ; Mr. and nest Knapp, Point Pleasant;
Mrs. Ronald Thomas, son, Harry Hudnell, Leon; BerPomeroy ; Mr . and Mrs . nard Lan ce, Sr ., Point
Edward Hughes, son, Pleasan t; Mrs. George Love,
Well ston ; Mr . and Mrs. Point Pleasant.
Kenn eth Lamber t, son,
BIRTH - May 2, a son lo
We ll ston; Mr . and 'Mrs. Mr. and Mrs.l\1ichaei Sellers,
Mar vin Friend, daughter, Point Pleasant.

·THE INN PLACE
TUESDAY NIGHT

!-------------------~------

:

SPECIAL

Area Deaths

I

G. SAM CARTER
MASON - G. Sam Carler,
76, M ason, dfe d Sund ay
morni ng
in
Veterans

Memoria l
Hospita l
in
Pomer oy . The husband of
Doroth y Stone Ca rter, he was
a r etired steelworker with the

.Wheeling.Pi llsburgh

Steel

Company . ·
Funera l serv ices will be

held Tuesday al 10 a. m. at

Vis it Our Sa lad Bar
8-B-Q Pork Chops
Potato
Vegetable
Hot Roll s

Coffee, Tea or Milk

the Fog lesong Funeral Home.
Mason , wi th the Rev . David
Fields officia ti ng . Graves ide

riles will be a t 3 p. m . at West

Alexander Cemetery at West
Alexander , Pa ., wi th the Rev .

'2.95
pl us tax

Exciting Night Spot

THE MEIGS INN
Phone 992-3629
Pome~oy , Ohio

Pleasant Ridge, Pomer oy,
died Sunday morning at

HMC.

Mr . Young was born Ma y

28, 1915. the son of the la le
Albert and Eli zabeth Phill ips
Young. He was also preceded
in death by two brothers,

Hank and Randolph Young.

and a sis ter , Mrs. Marie
M orr is.
Mr . Young. a mem ber of
the Pomeroy Masonic Lod ge,
was a World War 2 ve teran
and a member of Drew
Webster • Pos t 39, Am erican

E. M. Berry officialing . Leg ion. He was employed by
the Meigs County Highway
Dept.
and 7 lo 9 p. m. today .
Surviv ing are two sisters,
Fr iends ar e bei ng received at
the funeral home from 2 to 4
He was born December 26,

t899, in Jackson County. W.
The Tri -County's Most

WJLLIAMM. YOUNG
William M. Young , 60, 10d

Va ., a son of the lat e John an d
Jenny Maupin Car ter. He was
a gradua te of Bell aire High
School an d a member of t he

Churc h of God in New Haven.
Sur vivor s In addition to his
widow are one son., the Rev .

Rober t C. Car te r, Anderson,
Ind., and two grandchildren ,
Jyll and Johanna , and two
sis ters, Mrs . Lucy Brown ,
Charl eston , and Mrs. Nina
Young , Bellaire , Ohio.

tJippentngs

Mrs . Norma Par ke r of
Pomeroy and Mrs. Th elma
McKelvey of Hunti ng ton, W.
Va ., and several nieces and
nephews .
Funeral services w i ll be

held at 1 p.m. Wednesday ·at

th e Ew i ng

Funeral

Hom e

with the Rev Rober! Hayden

Girls score at
Belpre, Logan
in track meets
Last week 's girls' track
sch·ed ule sa w lhe Meigs
lasses pull in third in back-lobilCk meets.
Wednesday at Belpre the
local gals carne in behind
Caldwell with 71 points,
Belpre 42 and the locals with
28 and two-thirds. Two first
places were captured by T.
Burdette in the discus and S.
Granda! in the 220 yard dash .
Thursday they travelled to
Logan for a triangular meet
where Marietta look . first
with 73 points, Logan had 53,
and Meigs 16. Once again,
Susie Granda! won the 220 in
21!.2 seconds. Following are
lists of the Meigs finishers in
the lwo rneels.
AT BELPRE
Shot put, Pam Vaughan,
2nd 127'0" . ), K. Grueser, 3rd,
T. Burdette, 4th .
Discus, T. Burdette, lsl, K.
Grueser, 3rd, P. Vaughan,
4th.
High Jump, 4th (lie) S.
Carleton and C. Kennedy ,
100 yard dash, S. Grand a!
12.2i2nd ).
Mile Hun, K. Grueser, 4lh.
BIJO yard relay, Meigs , 2nd.
BIJO yard run , C. Blaettnar,
4th.
220 yard dash, S. Grandal,
lsl (28.4).
AT LOGAN
Shot put , Pam Vaughan,
3rd
Long jump, Becky Bego,
4lh.
80 yard hurdles, Sally
Carleton, 4th.
Discus, Tracy Burdette ,
4lh.
100 yard dash, Susie
Granda!, 3rd.
880 yard relay, Meigs, 2nd.
880 yard dash, Biaettnar,
4lh.
200 yard dash, Susie
Granda! , 1st 128.2.)

by tbe Meigs County Sheriff's
Dept. SUnday.
At 12:20 a. m. in Scipio
Twp. on SR 143 Alan C. Seth,
16, Pomeroy, traveling south
on a wet highway went off the
road on the left through a
fence into a field. There were
no injuries or no citation
issued.
Al2:20a: m. Sunday on TR
165 Jeffery Joseph Sargent,
18, Erie, Mich. driving north
went off the road to tbe left,
struck a utility pole, and
turned over. Sargent said he

waS injured, but he was not
immediately treated.
At 2:45 a. m. in Chester,
Michael A. Fleming, 19, Rt. I,
Long Bottom, driving north

on CR 32 dozed at tbe wh~l.
The car went off the road rmd
struck a utUity pole. There
were no injuries, and no
citation issued.

I

·Oldsters Willis Hatfield

t

(Continued from )lllge i)
death," three 'having been tied to pawpaw
trees on Tug River across from Mate~an
and shot by the Hatflelds in 1882, t,wo haVIng
perished when their nearby home was
burned by the Hatfields in Janu~ry 1888, and
a sixth who is said to have died of grief
"because his brotber was shot in his stead."

t

Your Mother's Day
Gift Shopping Headquarters

SPECIAL PURCHASE

\

.'

1!~ ~rews
z·n Brie·.f.si~
' ...
J'~

i:11j
:

BYUNITEDPRESSINTERNATIONAL
'
NAPLES, ITALY - CHURCHGOERS FEARFUL of
Impending catastrophe prayed today for the traditional
"miracle" that is supposed to liquefy tbe dried blood of St.
Januarius. According to tradition, the dried blood of Naples'
patron saint, preserved in two vials, becomes liquid on the first
Saturday of May. Cardinal Corrado Ursi, archbhshop of
Naples, blamed the delay on "neo)lllganism" attacking
Christian life, and on abortion in ]lllrlicular.
"H the mama Is the closest to God because she knows
herself how to give as Jesus Christ has given life to us, there
are miserable mothers, worse than wUd beasts, who with
abortion kill the life they have in tbeir womb," Ursi told
tbousands of worshipers crowding the cathedral Sunday.
Neapolitans believe dire events await them if tbe miracle fails
to occur, and they can recite a list of past calamities to sUpport
their belief.

I 00% Polyester.
A nice selection in
Misses and Half Sizes

NAIROBI, 'KENYA - SECRETARY OF STATE Henry
Kissinger·is ending his two-week African tour by attending a
three-day U. N: session to help find ways to narrow the gap be·
tween the world's rich and poor countries.
Kissinger, suntapned after a day in a wildlife preserve,
tentatativeiy scheduled talks today with Sri Lanka's Gamani
Corea, secretary general of the U. N. Conference on Trade and
Development and delegates .representing the world's less
~::~ countries. He planned a major policy address
1
.to tbe conference's 4,SOO delegates to propose the
~~--"-:~~~~;~~•:tl!~n International resources· bank that would
and export of raw matetlalll from poor
countries and also insure investors against nationalization.

Main Store, Annex and Warehouse Open Weekdays
and Saturdays, 9:30 to 5 and Fridays 9:30 to 8 p.m.

1

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

WASHINGTON - PRESIDENT FORD, undecided
whether to foUow his preference and veto a biD amending
federal campaign laws or face political realities and sign it,
may have gotten a signal from Congress that will help make up
his inind.
The House voted overwhelmingly Monday in favor of a
compromise bill restructuring the Federal Election
Conunission and making major changes in the law it
administers, so federal matching (unds again could flow to
money.!Jungry candidates. If, as expected, the Senate follows
suit today, Ford may decide a veto would be both futile and
politically embarrassing at a time when his campaign war
chest is healthy and those of all the other candidates are nearly
bare.

be

Friends may call at the Dav id
Davis Funeral Home, South
Webster, any l ime. Buria l
will . be there .

I)

University.
Rhodes said Agg rey 's
fa ther is "revered" as the
founding father of public
education in Ghanna .
"The man is black. But T
didn 'I appoint him because he
is black. He is the most
qualified man in the slate,"
said Rhodes.
On other rna tiers, Rhodes
said his recent trip wJapan
accomplished more than his
goals, and that he found
"many personal friends in
top management" of the
three largest Ja)lllnese auto
manufacturers.

The 1840's: Mailin g tracks on the long trails.
We've s pread ourselves to t he edges oflndi a n territory. And
we're sti ll rest less to move on. We must cross the "prairie
ocean" and make our long, slow way to t he Pacific coast.
Independence, Missouri, becomes our jumping-offplace. We
gather t here to form covered wagon trains. We learn to live
with perfect strangers, because our very lives depend on it.
We elect a capta in . Make rul es for the journey. Pledge ourselves to sta nd by each otfier to the death , t hrough t he peril s
of t he wildern ess, Indian raids, the cruel elements. At our
stops, we form our wagons into a sq uare to protect our
· ''townspeople" and corra l ou r a nim a ls. The journey takes
months. At the Snake River Canyon , we se para te. Some of
• us continue on the Oregon Trail. Others begin the Ca lifornia Trail. Soon, mo re than 1,000 peo pl e a year will follow us.
We're building a stronglrold ,in the West. ~

20COUNT
33 GAL. HEAVYLOAD
TRASH &amp; GRASS BAGS
REG. 5.49 ONLY

277

40COUNT ·
20 GAL. TRASH &amp;
GRASS BAGS

277

REG. 5.49 ONLY

IUIHH~GA.IOO

MANY
MORE
VALUES

,

Heovy duty plastic.

::

lock-on cover.

;·
~

SALE PRICE

....

....'
•

•

YOU DON'T NEED

CASH

OPEN ABll.I).A.Q)UNT

50' PLASTIC COATED. )57 ~
CLOTHESLINE
. :
SALE PRICE

t.islroTurt DOOR MAT
Yeor 'round poly mat. Skid-proof bonded
back . Hoses cleon. Resists mildew, fading.

" The par,adi se which most

people are looking for is not
a loca litv - it is merely a
state of mind ."

be ab le lo find if at the
hOme of the " FRIENDLY
ONES ". ·Their being
member-s of HWI gives you

lhe benefit of over 30,000
items wEtrehOI.Jsed for your

POMEROY, OHIO

$40,000.00 Maximum Insurance For Each Depositor
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

:

. •caa6aa:

·11"124"397
REG.
6.29

19"x33"
REG.

18" GARAGE .

.

18" X 8'
FOLDING
FENCE

697

10.95

Be.en l ooking tor something
special? Chances are you ' ll

Farmers Bank

at y

·::::::::::::~::::::::::::::::::::::;::~::::::::.:::·:;:.:•:·:•:·:!:·:·:::::::::·!·~:::·:·:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~

Wells Cemelery . Fri ends
may call at the funeral home

Welfare's
(Conlinued from page

•

CEMEN1
BLOCK .
The Department Store of

.'
'.

Commerce on lhe Big Bend
Hegatta. They asked council
what ilmeanl by a statement
re!lorted made at the last
meeting about paying for use
of the barbecue. pil during
regatta weekend.
Chuck Bartels at the last
meeting ~ tated that lhe
Pomeroy Fire Dept. and
Drew Webster Post No. 39
American Legion own tbe pit.
Although they had not been
approached yet, they wanted
it made _perfectly dear thai
they did not Intend to pay the
chamber for use of the area,
il.nd they will want enough
space lo cook and serve
barbecue chicken.
Gilkey and Arnott informed
council that there definitely
would not be any charge for
~~the~l.

Gilkey and Arnott also

en tine

asked about space availablt
on the )lllrking lot.
It was pointed out tbat due
wtbe ferry service, space Is
not available. They did olrer
to the chamher exhibit s)lllce
along the curb from Lyn Sl. to
Sycamore St. ·
Don Hunnell met with
c~cil in regard to financial
help for the Ultle League
program .
Hunnell . explained lhat
there are 10 teams in

Pomeroy w!Ut !MJ boys and
girls In the program. There
are two new diamonds at
Meigs High School and wire
fur a new backstop is needed.
Hunnell said he would like to
see a recreation committee
form ed and a summer
director hired. Hunnell
thanked council ror use Of the
city building during their
fund drive .
Cotmcii took action later In
(Continued on page 10)

Gu If payoIa
.

•

.

d
b
un . er pro .e
.

WASHINGTON 1UPI ) - Criminal agents of the Internal
Revenue Service are helping prepare evidence for a federal
grand jury investigation of allegedly illegal connection s between Gulf Oil Corp. and members of congress. .
U. S. Dlst,rlct Court Judge Oliver Gasch signed an order
April 7authorizing IRS agents to use &lt;'ertain investigative files
involving Gulf and members of Congress . The agents also were
1 prosecution force in
Gasch acted on motions rtled by Watergate special

VOL XXVIII NO. 12
POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
TUESDAY, MAY 4, 1976
PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS ~~~~[~::;~~o~e~t~ge !~~~~r~~h~:~
-~-~--...:.::...:.::..::..:._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __:__ _ _ __ _ __ _~----~----~-----------------

WOMEN'S
DRESSES
.

Mrs. Delmar I JeanI Ham m;
one son, Paul, both of South
Websle r ; lhree grand ch ildren, and a great.
grandchild.

I

t

e

'AND SALE

CELEBRATE 58TH
REV . L. R. CARMICHAEL
Mr.
and Mrs. Raymond
The Rev. L. R. Carmichael ,
Soulh Webster , pastor ot · Basser, Beech St., Midseve ral United Bre thr en dleport, celebrated their 58th
Chur ches in M eigs and wedding anniversary,
Athens Count ies in past Saturday, May I.
years . died Sunday evening
at South Webster.

descendants of humanity or space {
travellers.
:;::
Designed by Dr. Carl Sagan of Cornell ':':
University, the "greet~ card from the }
remote JlllSt" carries a Simple numbering :::;
system and tbree engraVings showing tlie )
positions of tbe continents :.m million years =:;:
ago, their position now, and where scientists}
expect tbem to be within 10 million years. ::::
. In the future map projection, a huge ;:;:
portion of the California coast south of San :':'
Francisco is shown submerged beneatb the :'::
Pacific Ocean, This drift, scientists said, is ;:;:
an 'expected consequence of the crustal ::::
motions LAGEOS wiD investigate.
:;:;
Scientists said California's wobbly San :;:;
Andreas raul! will receive top priority with
informa~on beall_led to LAGEOS from :::;
stations m San Diego and Qumcy, Calif., ;:;:
both ends of tbe active San Andreas Faull. :;:;

:::~:;:;:;::::::::::•::;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::;:;:;:;:;:::::;:;:;:;:;::':::::::::;:;:;:;:;:::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::::::::::::::;:

held al 2 p.m. Tuesday at
Grace Un ite d Methodist
Church at Sou th Webster.

I

VANDENBERG AFB, Calif. (UPI ) - A now, is meant to indicate tbe satellite's ).!!

:;:; ofland maSlieS tbat causes i!ilrthquakes was
:::: hurled into space Way, bearing a message
::': to· any descendan'fs of mankind that may
inhabit the earth nine million years from
:::: now
· ·
~::: A .Delta rocket lifted off at two seconds
:~:~ ]lllst 4 a.m. EDT, bluing smootbly on a
!:!: aolitbern trajectory toward a polar orll!t,'
::;: NASA officials said.
;:;: Orbit was confirmed at 5:30a .m. EDT.
:;:; Called LAGEOS for laser geodynamic
:::: satellite the satellite will measure minute
::;: movem~ts-to less than one inc~! the
:~:i earth's crust 3 600 miles below, bouncing
!:!: back precise ~formation on land shifts,
:::: polar motions and movements of places on
the globe. .
..
;:;: A stainless steel plaque on LAGEOS,
;:;:expected to be drawn back into tbe earth's
:':: atmosphere ahnost nine million years from

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

any t ime after 7 th is evening .

Two ordir\aqces out of six issuance O( $475,000 Of
failed to pass the second waterworks bonds to make
readings when Pomeroy improvemenls to its waterCouncil met in a long session works sysl&lt;lrn.
Monday night.
·
Second readings were
An ordinance to amend a approved ror an ordinance to
portion of ·another to control establish rates for metered
loitering on lhe river front service and non-metered
parking lots ror a 24 hour service for patrons of tbe
period from an observation water system, and an orpoint near the barbecue pil dinance against discharging
failed . Ralph Werry and water in to the public sewer
Harry Davis 'VOted no.
system, and providing .
The other ordinance that penalties for violations.
failed would have made il
Given Its first reading was
illegal to alter bumpers more ordinance fixing salaries and
than, three inches from wages of village employes
manufactured bumper heigh t effec tive June I. The orin conjunction with the slate dinance will grant a five
law. This ordinance died for jlercenl across the board
the lack 'Of a second to accept increase.
its second reading.
Mee ting with council were
A!lproved in ils third and Ken Gilkey and George
final reading was an or- Arnott who are working with
dinance providing for the the Pomeroy Chamber of

:~:~ satellite designed to observe tbe slow creep origin and purpose wany intelligent beings, ;:;:

Sur vivi ng are a da ughter,

From a Great American Bank

----

Only one person suffered
appar-ent minor injuries in
three accidents investigated

officiating. Bur ial wilt be in

Funeral ser v1ces will

- -----·-

r:=.:il:;:::;::~~"'~"'l Council defeats 2 ordinances

Three traffic mishaps reported

POMEROY
CEMENT BLOCK .CO.
The Department Store of Building Since 1915

.

-

'!

HAYDENVIlLE, Ohio (UP!) - TWO WEST VIRGINIA
men were killed Monday in the fiery collision of tbeir compact
car and a tractor trailer on U.S. 33 in Hocking Couinty.
lnvestigaling police identified the victims as Mike Adams,
24, and Hayward Law, both from Vienna, W. Va. Police said
the rig jackknifed moments before the car ran under tbe rear
portion of the truck and became lodged in the bed, where it
burst into flames. The truck driver escaped injury. ,
KENT, omo - AN ALL-NIGHT VIGIL and candleUght
procession were held on the Kent State University campus
Monday night in conunemoration of the sixth anniversary
today of the 1970 campus shootings.
Workshops were scheduled today by tbe May 4th
Conunittee, composed of students and faculty, and by the
ACLU, with some students wounded in I he shootings scheduled
to speak at a midday rally. Mterward, sponsors plan a "unity
. march" around the campus where the National Guard gunfire
into a mass of students climaxed a bitter four days of protests
against the U. S. involvement in southeast Asia.

p. k

ets
recalled
in West
IC

By United Press
Most pickets in San
Francisco's 35-4ay strike of
city workers were recallf\1
today in a good faitb gesture
aimed at speeding a
settlement . Thousands of
New York residents crossed
picket lines of a)lllrtment
house service workers to get
to their jobs.
The laborers' union, which
represents most of the 1,740
craft workers on strike in San
Francisco, announced a 24hour
moratoiium
on
picketing as negotiators set to
resume talks TUesday. Other
unions were still picketing
and tying up many city
services.
In New York City, the
chairman of the building
owners' negotiating
committee said the owners
were prepared for a long
strike rather than to give in to
wage demands by doormen
and other workers who
walked off the job Monday at
3,000 a)lllrtment buildings.
The strike could result in
serious garbage pileups; hot
water shortages and a shutdown of manuaUy operated
elevators.
Off-the-record talks
between the United Rubber
Workers and Firestone Tire &amp;
Rubber Co. Monday failed to
change either side's positions
in the lfHiay-old strike by
URW members against four
major tiremakers. Pickets
Monday kept nonunion
workers out of some rubher
plants.
Other labor disputes idled
Continental Trailways buses
in nine southern states and
Ullited Parcel Service trucks
in 13 midwestern states.
Talks between UPS and its
striking 14,000 Teamster
Union ·employes were
resuming Tuesday but no
talks were scheduled in the
bus strike.
strikes also idled a nuclear
reactor at Hanford, Wash.,
slowed the making of beer at
Anheuser Busch breweries ·

~ aplhnft hi~ei~ busil =tr~aebdre'srnid':"ededn'

PHILADELPHIA
GOV.Germany,
MILTON J.
SHAPP,
fromh
noedffwmg
'
a working
vacation in- West
says
he is home
optimistic
Volkswagen will locate a $196 miUion auto plant in an unused in Memphis, Tenn. ; and
Chrysler Motors building near New Stanton. Pa.
blocked entrances to Ohio's
The governor said Monday he does not expect Volkswagen only maxim urn security
to make an announcement on its decision until May 14, and he prison.
' plans to return to Germany for more negotiations with VW ·
,
officials. Volkswagen is looking at the massive, vacant Chrys.
ler plant about three miles southeast ,of New Stanton as a site
bUS
tolocate its first American VW Rabbit assembly f~ctory .
'

Schoo}

rig hook

Carter popularity will

r
i

J

'

MODEL NEW UNIFORMS - Members of four Pomeroy Little League Teams are
, wearing new uniforms through the generosity of donations . Modeling the.uniforms are 1-r,
Mike Kennedy,.Jimmy Sheets, Mike Whitlatch, and Rodney Manley.

Five teams in new outfits
Through the generosity of
merchants and townspeople
of the Pomeroy area, four
Pomeroy li llie league
baseball learns and one of
their pony league teams this
year will wear new uniforms.
The new uniforms were
purchased through Eiberfelds Department Store.
Powell' s Super-Value
(Larry Powell, owner)
outfitted one (I) whole little
league team with 'uniforms .
This team will play under the
banner of "Powell's Giants".
Powells' has contributed
greally to the program the
last two years.
A "special thanks" goes to
Elberfelds for tbeir generous

ATLANTA (UPI) - Jimmy
Carter, who left the
governor's office with most
Georgia politicians scoffing
at his ambitions, comes hnrne
for tbe state's preferential
primary today with a
commanding lead for the
Democratic pr esidential
nomination.
And President Ford, who
coasted tbrough the early
Republican primaries in the
Nortbern and Western states,
could lose his dwindling lead
over Ronald Reagan in the
delegate count by the thne
tlw polls close at 7 p.m.
Mild, sunny weather was
forecast .
Carter's principal
opposition came from Gov.
George
Wallace
of
neighboring Alabama, but
there are 15 other candidates
. on the "beauty contest" side
of the Democratic ballot, and
38 national convention
delegates are at stake witb
another 12 to be chosen at

·

Happy Hollow . road
missioners were Rutland
Mayor Eugene Thompson,
Hiram Siawter, Mr. and Mrs.
Bob Richmond, residents of
the area; Bill Smith, trustee
of 'Rutland Township, and
other residents of the area.
They asked the cornmissioners again to do
something to improve the
road . Wesley Buehl, county
·.;:;::~::: :;:;:;: ::::;:;:;:;:;:::::;:;:;:;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: engineer,
reminded the
delegation the trustees had
purchased dust control
materials and county crews
WATERTOWN, Mass., have placed it on the high.
May 4 - The· provincial · way.
legislature set up a com·
Bob Richmond allowed
mlttee to lake untrol of they did not want a super
propeny of royal officials highway, just have the road
· and otber loyalists who had fixed so it is passable. One
left Bostoa with the person argued thal90 percent
stipulation that the wives ol Rulland residents use the
and children of the tortes road ; 'it was agreed the road
be given enough lo support is heavily traveled, and the
themselves.
road's traffic never has been
;!::::::::;:::::;:;:::::::::::::::;:;:;:::::::::::::::;::!::;:::::;::::::::: colin ted.

By RICK VAN SANT
CINCINNATI (UPI)
Jimmy
Carter,
the
frontrunner
for
the
Democratic , presidential
nominallon, said today
primary elections in three
states · today
would
demonstrate his "continued
popularity."
carter, who addressed a
$50 a plate fund · raising
breakfast for about 2SO
supporters at a downtown
bote!, said he foresaw an
"overwhelming victory in
Georgia" and expected to "do
very wen In Alabama" and

No injuries were reported
today at 8 a .m. in a school
bus-tractor trailer collision of
mirrors on SR 124 in Salem
Twp.
Meigs County Sheriff's
Deputy Randall Carpenter
said Cora A. Loftis , 30,
driving a Meigs Local school
bus east on 124, met David H.
McQuaid, 37 , Gallipolis
il'aveling west on 124 in a rig.
The bus was left of center and
the two vehicles' mirr.ors
hooked.
There were 40 students
aboard the bus. There was
light damage to both
vehicles. No citation was
issued.

During a question and
answer session following the
breakfast he was asked what
he would · dQ to bring about
"total integration" Of the
nation.

and the city for use of their
facilities and for their support. The league also extends
thanks to those who contributed to the successful
"Tag Day " and bake sale
held on April lOth.
The league also extends
thanks to George ".Jack"
Warner and James "Jim"
Proffitt for donations of pipe
for a backstop.
Below are listed . the
merchants and other people
who contributed to the
uniform fund drive:
Elberfeids, Powell's SuperVatu, Famrer's Bank, V. D.
Edwards, Pomeroy National
Bank, Mullen's Insurance.
(Continued on page 10) ,

on

·

••
.up mllTors
·

figured he had a "good
prospect of · doing well in
Indiana."
"I stand a good chance,
unless I make a serious
mistake, of being the
nomiilee of our )lllrty," said
Carter. "I Intend to be
president. I do not intend to
lose. I feel sure I shall get the
nomination."

support to the Pomeroy
Summer ~outh Baseball
Progr a m. Eiberfelds
Department Store has helped
tren:tendously the Pomeroy
youth baseball program down
through the years.
This year the Pomeroy
youth league is initiating a
new program, "Tee Bail", for
youths 5-7. years of age. The
Daily Sentinel is sponsoring
one team with hats and 1shirls. The other "tee ball"
team will be sponsored by the
Reuter·Brogan Insurance
Service.
The Pomeroy Youth
League also extends its
thanks to the mayor of
Pomeroy, Clarence Andrews,

Political hopes
go
line today

Help .wanted .to rep ai·r

·

be demonstrated today.

prosecutor Charles F . C. Ruff after Ruff consulted with IRS
Commi ssioner Donald Alexander. Ruff's office and the IRS
declihed. conunent on the grand jury investigations.
Gulf allegedly diverted $12 conviction of Rep . James
million from the corporation Jones, D-Okla ., and the
between 1960 and !973 for indictment of former Gulf
overseas payoffs and illegal lobbyist Claude Wild Jr.
gifts to politicians including
In his order, Gosch said
Sens. Hubert Humphrey, 0- "the special prosecutor may
Minn ., Russell l.nng, D-La., grant agents of the Internal
and Hugh Scott, R·Pa.
Revenue Service access to all
The IRS and the special books, records, and any other
prosecu!or would neither documents and transcripts of
confinn nor deny the .IRS w~s testimony presented to or
involved in evidence heing developed before the ... grand
presented the grand jury.
jury hi Its Investigations and
The IRS and the prosecutor for use by the lrlternal
also declined either to Revenue Service. in its
confirm or deny that the investigation of poSBible tax
investigation dealt with liabilities of Individuals ,
Humphrey, I.nng, Scott, and corporations and political
other members of Congress committees or organi·'
who allegedly received large zalions."
payments from Gulf.
Ruff sa id "Internal
Various court records show Revenue Service agents are
the Watergate special now aiding !he special
prosecutor
has
been prosecutor In analyzing the
presenting criminal evidence of ten compl ex financial
to a grand jury convened last tr ansactions invo lved In
August. Evidence haB liiegal cam)llllgn contrlbuaiready res ulted in the lion s."

The condition of Happy
Hollow Road whi ch half
encircles Rutland , already
pressed several times for
action by the Meigs County
Commissioners, was brought
up again Monday. Happy
Hollow road is a township
road.
Meeting
with the com- I

Dateline 1776

The commissioners were
asked if the county would do
the work and when. Buehl
slated that they do not have
any money lo spend on the
road, )Jut can help with
equipment. Sml th. township
trustee, stated that the
trustees do not have the kind
of money needed to repair the
road and that il would cost
$18,000 a mile to blacktop it.
The road is approximately 2
miles long.
Smith asked the commissioners if there was a
chance of' "trading" a county
road for Happy Hollow road,
a county toad that is not used
as much. The commissioners
said no, and added the matter
would have to be given some
stody.
Smith also added tbat there
is no way lhe trustees can
keep up the road with money
availa)lle.

large.
On the Republican side,
only Ford and Reagan are on
the ballot, and the state will
have 48 delegates:..Ia of them
to be selected at large.
The impact of Georgia 's
first real presidential
prhnary in 44 years was
diluted
somewhat
by
Reagan's romp in Texas last
Saturday,
when
the
challenger took ail of the
state's delegates and
narrowed Ford's previously
wide lead.
Even a clean sweep would
not lift Wallace within
shouting distance of Carter,
who has 447 delegates to
Wallace's 113. Morris Udall,
who is second to Carter
among active candidates, has
delegate slates posted in only
two districts.
Wallace h!IS slates in all but
the 5tb district in downtown
Atlanta .
Carter, unable to succeed
himself a·s governor, got
some grins in the state
Capitol when he announced
his presidential candidacy on
Dec. 14, 1974.
In nearly 18 months, he has
won eight primaries and
gradually extracted endorsements from ahnost every
leading
Democrat
In
Georgia- including most of
the naysayers who .ridiculed
him privately at the start.

Wellston will
host district
masonic event

MaY.or Thompson staled
that Rulland Village needs
the road maintslned, that
Harrisonville people also use
the road. He added that the
village cannot use its funds on
any road outside the corWellston Chapter No. 174
porati on limits. He also Royal Arch Masons, wlli host
slated tbat the village cannot the official visitation of Most
make applications for a Excel)en t Companion
federal grant to be used Charles· A. Noland, Graild
· outside the vlilage, and added High Priest of the Grand
that, as an individual, he · Chapter of Royal Masons of
would help In any way Ohio on May 7 beginning at
possible to get the road 6:30 p.m. with a dinner. All
repaired. ·
companions and ladies are
When asked about where invited.
the tax dollars are spent it
The 12th Capitular District
was pointed out that gasoline wlli hold Its annual reunion
and oil tax money is what Is and confer tbe Royal 1\l'Ch
used by the trustees to repair Degree on a class of canthe roads. Property taxes are didates. The degree cast wiD
used to help operate the be composed of members of
schools.
Wellston, Pomeroy,
The threat that if the Gallipolis, McArthur , Trowel
present commissioners do not 1Jackson) and LaGrange
(Continued ·on page 10)
(Ironton) chapters.
~

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