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18 -

TheDailySentinel~MlddlepOJi-Pomeroy, O., Wednelldav. Ma1~y~~~~.~lif~/H~-------~---------------------------~----------~--,
NOTICE OF OIL
a GAS LEASE
FORFEITURE

NOTICE OF OIL
a GAS LEASE
FORFEITURE

TO: Atl•ntlc lntern•tlontl Oil TO: Atl•nt lc lnternatlontl 011

Corp .

Urlln

Summit Ch,st, 1000

Ave.

Columbus, Ohio
Gentlemen :
You are hereby notified that
the
IJnders lgned
lessors

hereby elect

to declare

a

forfeit ure of tt'le fol low ing oi l
and gas tease between vou a~

, lessee and the undersigned a5

lessors :

" Lea!!.e dated the 18th day of

ApriL 1972, between Frank E .
Dodderer and Elsie I . Dod-

derer , his w ife . as Lessors ,
and Atlant ic lnt ern ati'onal 011

Corp ., as Lessee , coyertng

I
~
I

~

•

l'

!
i

Corp.
SUmmit Ch1~oe, 1000 Urlin
AV"e.
Cafum but, Ohio

Gentlemen :
You are hereby notified that
the
undtrs lgned
lessors
htreby elect to declare a
forfeiture ot the follow ing o!l
and gas lease between you as
lessee and th e unders igned as
lessors :
Leese dated the Bth day of
May, 1972, between Hobart M .
Dodderer and Beulah Dod · .
derer , his wife , as Lessor s.
end Atlantic International 011
corp ., as Lessee, covering 76
acres, more or tess, si tuate In

22 .50 acres , more or tess,
Township,
Me i gs
sit uate In Olive Township, Oliv e
Meigs County , Ohio. and being County , Ohio , and bei ng
bounded on the North by bounded on tl'le North by
Ge'o rge Collins , on the East by Howard Dobbins. on the East
James Osborf"'e, on th e Sout h by Fran k Dodderer , on the
bY Robert Fortney and on the South by C. R. Garrell and on
West by Arthur Heiney , said the- Wes t by C. R . Garrell end
lene being of rec ord In the E. Ritchie , said lease being of
off ice or th e Clerk of the record in the ottlce of the
Counfy Recorder In M eigs Clerk of. the County Record er
co unty , Ohio , In Lease Book In Melos County, Ohio . In
Lease Boo k. 58, at Page 235.
58, ot po ge 23 I.
The above leaJe Is hereby
The above lease Is hereby
declared forfe ite d by the declared forfelfeel by the
undersigned Lessors because unders igned Lessors because
of th e non -paym ent of delay of the non -paymerit of delay
rental as required by the rental as required by the
terms of the said Ieese .
terms of said leue .
11 Is the Intention or lh'e
It is the Intention of the
undersigned Lessor to file and undersigned Lessor to tile ohl:t
record an affidav it of for - record an affidavit of for feiture for the above lease feiture for the above lease
with the County re corder of wltn the Cou,ty Recorder of
M eig s County , Ohio, as Meig s County , Ohio , as
provided by law .
prov ided b y taw
Signed
Signed
Hobart M . Dodderer
Frank E . Dodderer
Lessor
Lessor

Ill 17, IB, 19, 20. 21. lie

NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT
Case No. 21797
Estate of Olga Jane Theis t

Oece u ed .
Not i(:e is hereby given that
F r ed w . Crow , Jr . Of
Pom erOy . M eigs County, Oh io,
ha s been d u ly appointed
Anci llar y Admi nis tr c-tor of th e
Estate ot Olga Jane Theiss,
decease d , lat e of Ravenswood ,
Jack,son
Cou nty ,
Wes t
Virginia .
Cr edito rs are requ ir ed to
fil e th eir cl aims wit h said
fidu ciary w i_th in tour months .
Dated this 3rd day of May
1916

..
'

STARTS TH.URSDAY AT 9:30AM

Sale! Kroehler Sofas, Love Seats and-Chairs
~~~.::;w.--...~P"1 : : : :

••••
••
, ~.

·

·

NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
Columbus, Oblo,
Mly 7, H76
contract sates Legal Copy

Your Choice At ·

'5 99°0

·

Reg. '789.00 2 Pc. Sun~, Modem Rust Plaid
Rei '839.00 2 Pc. Fkral Wear Dated Cover
.Reg. '798.00 2 Pc. Early American Green Tweed
Reg. '798.00 2 Pc. Early American Plaid
Reg. '798.00 2 Pc. Early American Stripe

••• means that we have teamed .up
with Kroehler Mfg. Co. to cut costs and
pass the savings on to you during these
Factory-Dealer Savings Days.

f

Reg. '759.00 2 Pc. Early American Wear Dated Floral
Reg. '759.00 2. Pc. Early American Nylon Fkfal
Reg. '748.00 Sofa and Love~

P~t

Herculon

Na.76·340

RICHARD D. JA CKSO N
DIRECTOR

liev. 1· 17 ·73
May 19, 26

May 2i·22·2J

Sale! Berkline Rock-0-Loungers

THE SUNSHINE BOYS
!Technicalar l
Burns,

Matthau ,

. Acc&lt;rdlng to United Press
International the Meigs
County bridge Is one of three
the States of Ohio and West
Vlrglni!l have planned
togelller and wiU cooperate to
finance. The other bridges
. are located between Dllles
Bottom and MDWldBvllle and
Steubenville and Weirton.
Gov. James A. Rhodes said
construction of the bridge
from Dllles Bottom to
MoundBvllle could l~d to an
announcement soon on the
location of a pilot coal
gasification plant In southern
Belmont
County.
He
predicted additional Industries, jobs, and perhaps

DAYTON, OHIO - ONE OF TilE MOST expenstve pieces
of property ever auctioned In the Dayton area, the 22 story
Grant-Deneau En\erprlses Building, was sold for $10,000
Wednellday, Owners of the lxillding were $7 million In debt.
The building had been turned over to U. S. District Court
for auction beca115e of . Grant-Deneau Enterprises debts.
Westinghouse Auditing Corp. filed suit agail1st the company In
December, 1975. The top bid of $10,000 was submitted by the
Dayton lilw firm of Goldman, Bogin and Fox. Alow bid of $10
was ~'Ill~ buiJ.rtlitU'Aappr.ais~Un....IM,v.acy.N.$7.:~
mtll{oil. Tile structure has a connecting parking garage and
·200,000 square feet of office ,space.

Fri., Sat .. Sun.

George

today.

Walter

Richard

Benjamin . PG

Show starts at7 p.m .

Sale $188

Regular '249.00 and '259.00
Large selection of vinyl and cloth covers

- WASHINGTON - THE FEDERAL ELECTION
Conunlssion will not begin distributing $3.4 million In federal
campaign matching fundll to presidential candidates until next
week at the earliest.
President Ford refused to swear in the five FEC members
conflnned this week by the Senate·WJilllt conflnns his new
appointee, former Republican Congressman William Springer
of Dllnois. Sen. Howard Cannon, D-Nev., chairman of the
Senate Rules Conunlttee, said his conunlttee will hold a
. hearing Friday on Springer's appointment. It will' be next week
before the full Senate can act on it.
ATEAMSTER UNION ORGANIZER was killed and three
men wounded In a bloody battle Wednesday between
Teamsters and rival ironworkers outside a struck metals plant
In New York City,
Police said the shooting erupted in front of the Samson
(Continued on page 2) •

Tire repairs
order of the
day on WVA2

Save $100 to $285
On 4 Pi(ce Bedroom Suites

Up to $40,000 Worth!
Hold it, we've got you covered
. . , up to $40,000 for each separate account. ~top in today and
find out all about it!

A Home Bank

For
Meigs County
· People

RACINE
HOME NAnONAL
.BANK

energy .conversion factllties
Wednesday as he .and ·we•t
Virginia Gov. Arch A. Moore
Jr. announced the financial
agreement under which the
three bridges will be constructed between their states
at a colit of $66 million.
The bridges, Rhlides said
were planned since his
second term as governor In
the late 1116iii.
· Pla111 for lbe brldgell are
nearly completed IIIII !be
goveruou ordered conuructlon to begin lm·
mediately. Work CI!JI be
llnlabed In about three
yean, they ntd.
Rhodes said lnsome places
along the river, It Is 70 miles
between .bridges. He said
some chemical firms have
declined to locate In the area
because of a lack of transportation between the two
states.
Rhodes also said the delay

In c0111lruction coat Ohio a
$a37 million federal Clllll
gasification pilot plant
. earUer thla year. He said the
new bridges would provide
Incentives for new Industry,
1and that "In all probability" a
smaller coal gasification
plant will soon be located on a
650-acre site near Dllles
Bottom.
"We expect to be able to
make an announcement
soon,'' Rhll!les said. "We may
have three or lour
gaalflcatlon planta In that .
part of the state."
Moore told newsmen after
meeting with Rhodes for
more than an hour that West
Virginia will be In charge of
the construction, contributing
$44 million, part of It In
federll,l fWldll . Ohio wiU pay
$22 million, also using federal
money.
Participating in the
meeting wltll .the governors
were state Highway Com-

missioner Wllllam S. Ritchie
Jr. oi West Virginia and
Richard D. Jackson, director
of the Ohio Department of
Transportation.
Moore and Rhodes said
they directed .Ritchie and
Jackson to Immediately seek
to place the bridges on the
federal highway system ID
procure operating and
maintenance !Wlds,
Moore said construction
was delayed during the administration of fonner Ohio
Gov. John J. GIIHgan because
"everything was put In
neutral and the state of Ohio
took a deep breath and
relaxed a little."
He said the delay hiked the
coat by roughly 35 per cent,
and further delay would
"probably put the cost
completely out of reach. "
The governors said their
states would receive 70 per
centmatchlng fundll from the
federal government.

Maple - Walnut - Oak - Pine Cedar Pecan - Olerry All Nationally Advertised
Brands - Modern :__ Early American
Mediterranean- Contemporary.

SAVE 40%

Sale! Serta

On Fireplace Equipment Screens
Fireside Sets- Electric Logs- Gas Logs
Limited Stock

AVANTI

SAVE 25%

Perfect.Sleeper

Mattress and
Box Spring Sels .

ON ALL PICTURES
· LARGE SELECTION

Full Size Reg. $33;.90
Save $80.00

Main Store. Annex and Warehouse Open Thursday 9:30to S
Shop Friday 9:30 to 8 p.m. and Saturday 9;30 to S p.m.

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY
1:

Sale '2591
Queen Size Reg. $419.95
Save $90.00

Sale '329'5 '

I.

POINT PLEASANT - W.
Va. 2 from here to HWltlngton
became a paradise for people
e~q~ert in tire repair Tuesday
and Wednesday.
Approximately 75 flat tires
were reported along the
route. West Vtrglnla State
Pollee said a truck hauling
~Uap metal from Gallipolis
'to Huntington scattered
metallic slivers along much
of the 40 mile (64km) stretch
of road. Motorists were
siDpped In their treadll when
tires picked up the slivers of
metal.
.
Trooper David Debord of
the Hun Ungton detaclunent
said the truck left Gallipolis
early Tuesday; crossed the U.
S. 35 bridge Into Point
Pleasant, W. Va. and contmued toward HWJtington. A
~t rear door apparently
allowed the small pieces of
sheet melal to sift out of the
truck and onto both lanes of
the ·two-lane highway. The
metal was scattered llghtiy
a1ong both sides of the road.
·Sgt. M. P. (Pete) Koerner
of the state pollee said no
accldenta were caused as a
result of blowouts.
An Investigation by state
pollee Is continuing and
•arrests may be made.
· , Koerner would not
release the name of the truck
driver- or that of the truck's
owner last night.
Ray Logan, an employe of
Price's Gulf In Gallipolis
Ferry, w. 'va., said about 40
tires were repaired at the
station between early
'l'uesd~rr and noon yesterday.

FIRST-EVER

BALTIMORE (UP!) Thelma Davldaon Adal,r
bas
been
elected
moderator of the United
Presbyterian
General
Anembly -the first black
woDlBD ever 10 lwld' the
highest elected poeltion In
the church. Martha P.
Marlill, of MI. Wublllgton
Presbyterian Church In
Cincinnati, Ohio, was
appointed vice-moderator
by Adair. A· General
Alsembly spokesman sal~
II wu lhe first lime lbe two
top poeta were held by
women.
The new· moderator said
lhe church must give luD
parllclpatloa In Ill acUvtlles 'to women and to
mlnoriUes who "have been
historically excluded.''

Weather
Clear tonight with lows In
the mid to upper 50s. Mostly
sunny and warm Friday with
highs In the mid to upper 70s.
Probability of rain Is 10 per
cent today and 20 per cent
tonight and Friday.·

MEIGS INVITED IN
The Appalachian Ohio
Re'glonal Transit Assn.
(AORTA) Board of Trustees
voted Tuesday to Invite the
Commissioners of VInton,
Jackson, GalUa and Meigs
Counties to serve on the
AORTA Board. The board
expansion stems from the
Federal Highway Adminlatratlon grant AORTA
has been awarded to expand
services Into the above
counties.

First plan for a bridge to Ravenswood
came from Meigs Cormty school teacher
;:;;:
RACINE - There's some folks up Association In Racine, Frank Oeland :;:;
::;:: around this Meigs CoWJty town who know - president, took lhe plans to all the county ':::
:} regardless of the claims by Ohio Gov. James commissioners up and down and on both ;:::
';:l RhodesandWestVirglnlaGov. ArchMoore sides of the river. The plan mel wide ;:;:
\i:i - that planning for the bridge ID Ravens- support.
::::
;::: wood began about 10 years ago In the
The Columbus Dispatch Newspaper ;;;;
:;;;: communities of Racine and Ravenawood. endorsed the plan of the bridge.
:;;;
::::: Ever since Kaiser Alwnlnum Corp. began
The Highway directors and governtirs of :;:;
:i'i operations at Its plant TOIII!hly 20 years ago, both states Initiated joint planning. A i:i:
:;:;. and many Meigs heada of famlUes earned hearing was conducted In Pomeroy on the i::
:;:;: their bread In West VIrginia, the need for a project about five years ago. Another :'::
:::. !ridge wll'l obvlous. Abridge meant getUng hearing was conducted In Ravens111ood, as :i:i:
'i:i: to work from eastern Meigs County by were ·frequent meetings to drum up public :;::
;:;: dtlvlng three, five, eight, 10 mUes. Going support for a bridge.
·
-,:;:
:;:;: around by way of U. S. 33 and the Mason
When the Racine locks and dam were ::~
:::: Bridge meant a trip of 30 to 50 mUes one under conslructlon a movement was ::1
;;;; way.
·launched to relocate U.S. Route 33 so as to .;:;:
):::
Ten years ago Larry Heines, a cross over the dam. This became unfeasible ,:::
·iiii mechanical drawing teaCher of Meigs when it was concluded the highway network :i:i
{ CoWJty, and Ernest Wingett were teachers as It stands could not be adapted easily to a :;:;
:;:: In Ravenswood High School. High water had bridge In that location.
:i:i
::'; closed them away from U.S. 33. They could
Construction of the bridge, Ills believed :;:;
:;:; not gei!Q work.
. ·certain, will add Impetus to latent plana to j;:;
;:;:
"One day !asked Larry," said Wing ell, relocate U.S. !Wute 33 from the Interchange :;:;
{ " Why don't you draw up plans for a bridge at Rock SprinRS across east MeiRS County to ';i: .
:':&lt; ID Ravenswood and'a route from Five Points the new !ridge, and thence four miles to :,:
;ii to the brldgel"
Interstate 77 outside Ravenswood.
:;:;: Heines now a teacher and coach at
The link from the Ohio River location of ;:;·
iii Eastern Htgh, prepared a sketCh of what the bridge to 1-77 already Is under
\;;: such a project might look like, according to construction , It Is reported. Design of the ;:;:
i:i:i Wingett.
link from Rock Springs .to Five Points Is ii:
:;;;: Members of the CommWJity Improvement completed, It has been reported.
;;;

ii

n

:[:.\:: ~:: : ::: ::;: : :: : ::: : : : : : :: : : : : : ::::: : :: : : : : ::::: : : : ::::: : : : : : : : : : : : : : ~: : : : :: :: :::: : : : : : ::: : : : ::::::::::::::~::: : : : : : ::::::::~:::::::::: ·:: : : :::~=·: : ::::: :: :;~:~

Dateline
1776
WILLIAMSBURG, May

TAKE TOP HONORS - MoUy Fisber was named valedictorian and Paul Cross the
salutatorian oflhe senior class at Southern High School. Molly is the daughter of Marlene
" ~)'llauiae; •q!0!&lt;1&lt;m,Flahett-of Racine. Paul,Ia llletson of Mr. and Mn. Mdrew Cross, .
Letart Falls.
'

Rohr speaker at
SH graduation
RACINE - William Rolli',
athletic director at Ohio
University, will speak at the
Commencement exercises at
Southern High School .Sunday, at 8 pm.
Baccalaureate Services
will be held at the high school
SUnday afternoon · at 2 p.m.
The speaker will be the Rev.
Don Walker.
Alter receiving
his
Bachelor of Science Degree
from
Ohio
Wesleyan
Unlverslty 1n 1940, Bill Rohr
taught and coached on the
hlgb schoollevel seven years.
His
first
teaching
assignment was at his alma
mater, Massillon High School
where he taught social
studies for two years. He was.
also an assistant football
coach Wider now general
manager of the Cincinnati
Bengals, Paul Brown.
·
World War II Interrupted
Rohr's career In 1942. He
served In the U. S. AJr Force

.

School calendar adopted
RACINE - The Southern IMldlng for meetings, and
Local Board of Education Racine Baseball Association
Wednesday a~opted the 1D use Racine Elementary for
school calendar for 19711-1977 meetings; Racine Fire
beginning A1111ust 30, and Department to use the junior
ending May 21.
.
high grounds for the
Jane Wagner, clerk, said fireworks display on July 4;
lite board alSo accePted tile Ohio Valley Baseball Leape
resignation of Joy Norris as to use Syracuse Elementary
lnalrwnenlal mualc teacher building for meetings thla
and marching band director summer, and the United
effective Alii!. 1; hired Aaron Methodist youth· group to use
Sayre .as
Vocational- the jWJior high on May 30 for
Agricultural teacher for 1978- ·games day.
77 school year; grant- The board gave Mrs.
ed permission to the Wagner pennlsslon to attend
Letart Baseball Assn. to a clerk-treasurer clinic In
the Letart Baseball Assn. to . Nelsonville on JWJe 3.
use the Letart Elementary
The band boosters were
granted pennlsslon to serve a
banquet for the CB'ers at the
MANAGERS TO MEET
Managers of the Middleport Youth Baseball
Leaguewlllmeetat 7:30p. m.
this evening at Middleport
VIllage Hall. The pubUc Is
Invited. Also, coaches of the
league wiU have a work day
at the ball field at 9 a. m.
Saturday and all persons
Interested are invited to help.

high school on JWJe 12. The
board also approved the
construction of an Awdllary
bulldlog at Letart Elementary.
The Southern Board of
Education agreed to participate In the Southeast Ohio
Special Education Regional
Resource Center (RESA).
Attending were Jack Bostick,
Robert Sayre,, Denny Evans,
Ruger Adams and Dallas Hill
board members, Bobby Ord,
r.uperlntendent, James
"'dams, Jim Wickline, Larry
Wolfe and Bill Baer, Principals, Ramona Yonker, JWJe
Ashley and Mrs. Wagner. The
lll!xt ml!jlting will be JWJe 14.

Shortage probe delayed
ELYRIA, Ohio (UP!) - An
Ohio Slate Highway Patrol
investigation of shortages
totaling more lhan $1.4
mllllon In the stale's auto
licensing system, ordered
seven weeks ago by Gov.
James A. Rhodes. h"' nol )•rl.

· 20
Re1ldenla of
Mecklenburg and
Lunenburg Coualles
proleated lbe exempllo01
from military muaten
given overseen ar plaotatlon managers. M1111y of
them were dealgnallag
themselves as overseers In
order . to escape miUtary
duly, the jletltlen to the
•late legislature 1ald.

'Power
outage
righted

four years. Following
discharge from the U.S. Alr
Force in 1946, Rohr became
basketball coach and a year
later athletic director at
Portsmouth High School
h
where In five years e
complied at 82-29 won-lost
record.
·
In 1951, Rohr received hla
Masters of EducatlQn Degree
from Marshall University
and began his ·collegiate
coaching at Miami Universlty where his successful
record landed him the
basketball coaching job at
WILLIAM ROHR
Big Ten school Northwestern
In 1958. Northwestern
became a Big Ten contender
in the six years Rohr coached theatre-type seats. Rohr has
lllem.
recently been elected
For the past 13 years Rohr · President of the National
has been athletic director of Association of College
Ohio University. During his Directors of Athletics. Rohr
tenure, he masterminded the has also been Inducted Into
building of the Convocation Ohio Wesleyan's Miami's and
Center that seats 13,080 Ohio University's Hall of
people in air-conditioned, Fame.

'l

' .

Fifteen Cents
Vol. 2~. No. 2~

Rhodes said thla wOUld
mean Ohio wOUld receive $16
mlllloo In federal money and·
use $6 million In state fWldll,
$2 million a year lor three
years. Jackson said the
money would come from
gasoline ta1 revenues.
"Under the Federal Highway Bill, President Ford
provided the much.needed
fiexlbillty with federal (Wlds
so that both states could
conunence work on these
much-needed bridges," the
governors said In a prepared
statement.
The three bridges are part
~ a seven-bridge package
prepared by Rhodes and
Moore In the 19608.
The other bridges are
between East Liverpool,
Ohio, and Chester, W. Va.;
Wheeling and Bellaire, Ohio;
St . Marys, W. Va., and
Newport,
Ohio,
and
Parkersburg, W. Va., and
Belpre, Ohio.

By United Press International
COLUMBUS - THE PUBUC UTILITIES Commission of
Ohio, In an effort to help redevelop Ohio's toner cities, has
ordered a statewide plan for re-establislunent of gaa service to
residential and small commercial customers In those areas.
The PUCO said gu may be delivered to sites where
buildings have been destroyed If the consumption of gas does
not exceed the highest use at the site during the past five years.
Customers can apply to their gas companies to transfer gas to
new or clliTently unserved premises If all gas burning
equipment and visible pipes have been removed by the
applicant. An on..slte inspection by the gas company Is also
required.

MEIGS THEATRE
NOT OPEN

Plans are completed and
will be~ln soon
trl a new loU free Ohio River
bridge linking Ravenswood,
W. Va., and the Great Bend
area In Meigs CoWJty, Ohio, It
wu announced In Colwnbus
conatruc~on

[News. . . in Brief~

.

Tonight THRU Thursday

enttne
Free bridge to Ravenswood assured

:::::::~~::::::::::::::).:::,o:;::::::::::::::::_::::.:::::;:~::.:·:::::.:::.:·:·:;::::::K-!·!~3:!:~::::::::::::::::::::::::!~:!%~:~

UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
Sealed proposals will De
received at the off ice of the
Director of the Ohio Depart m en t of
Trensportallon ,
Columbus , 0111o . until 10 :00
A.M ., Ohio Standard Time ,
Thursday , June 3, 197 6, for
impro\Jemenls In :
Gollla and Me igs Coun ties.
Manning D . Webster
Ohio , on various sections .
Judge GAL . State Route 325 in Galpa
Cour t of Common Pleas . ·county ; MEG . u. s. ,ROute 33
Probate Division and Slat e Rou tes )38 , 681 and
692 in Meigs County . by !liP ·
(51 5, 12. l'il , Jtc
pl ying a bltum inous surfa ce
treatment to pavel'flent In part
an~;~ to shoulders in part .
Shoulder &amp; Pavement Width
- FOR SALEVaries .
Offers will be received It - · Proje
ct and Work Len gth the offices of Crow , Crow &amp;
Porter , Attorneys at Law , 116,529 feet or 22 .07 m lies .
" The da te sel for co mplet ion
Pomeroy , Ohio , at 10 :00 A .M .
of this work shall · be as se t
on Friday . M!y 21st, 1976, for forth in the bidding proposal. "
the purchas e of the reel estate
Each bidder shall b e
owned by the late Mary required to file With his bid a
Parker in the VIllage of. certified "c heck on cashier's
Chester , Ohio . Th e property check for !!In amount equa l tD
was appreised at U ,OOO.OO and live per unt of his bid, but in
cannot be sold ror tess than the
appraised va l ue . Terms of no event more than flft.u
sand do l lars , or a bond tor
sale : Cash , and sublect to the thouper
cent of his bid, payable
lien for real estate taxes for ten
to th.e dDirector .
1916 .
Bidders must apply, on the
proper forms, tor qualificaTion
Mabel Moore, at least ten days prior to the
Admin lstratr lx of date set tor opening bids in
the Es tat e of accordance with Cha pler 5525
MBry Parker, Deceased Oh
io Rev ised Code.
Plans and spec ifications are
151 17, 18 . 19, Jlc
on file In the Departrnent of
tran~portallon and th.e offi ce
of
the
Di strict
Deputy
Director .
The Direc tor reserves the
right to r e je ct any and all bids.

•

at y

e

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Thursday, May 20, 1976

MAY FURNITURE SALE

Beul ah Dodderer
Lessor

Elsie I. Dodderer
LeSsor.
( 5) 17 , 18, 19, 20, 21, St c

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

•

started, the Elyria Olronlcle
-Telegram reported today In
a copyrighted article.
Additionally the
Investigation will nol begin
for at least another 45 days,
patrol sources told the
(Continued on page 2)

Work ers needed
for food stand
·

A call for help to build the and members of the Bofl!ltei'a
falrgroWlda food booth went &lt;r anyone having children In
~t when the Meigs Hlgl) . any of the Instrumental
Band Boosters met In the clali8es In the Meigs Local
Band Room at the high school School District are asked to
for their regular meeting help with food donations and
with Pat Woods president,' to work during fair week.
presiding .
'
Contact any of the officers If
· The treasurer's report was able to Jielp, so schedules can
'given and the' books will lie be 'made.
audlled before the new
Dwight Goins commented
Ireasurer takes office.
oo the band's participation In
Richard Cole reported on lhe Band Featival al Cinthe progreas In building a clnnatl on Sunday. He also
food stand at the fairgrounds. announced dates for band
The concrete slab has been camp and said band mem·
poured and block Ia now bers will be participating In a
ready to be placed. A work nwnber of parades and other
party will be held this acUvities this summer.
·Saturday at 9 a. m. to lay the
Golna Installed officers for
blocks. All band parents or the coming year with Pal
Interested persons able are Woods as president for a
asked to be at the fairgroWJdll second year. New officers are
to help lay blocks.
Mrs. Clarice Krautter, !at
As aoon as the blocks have vice president ; Mrs. ·Jane
set the IMiams will be set. Snouffer, second · vice
Coie e~q~lalnect that the Band president; Mrs. Allee
Booeters can pay for only Wamsley, secretary, and
part of the expense In Mrs. Betty Fultz, treasurer.
building the food stand with Woodsappolnted Mrs. Wanda
the fair board helping with Vining as telephone chairpart.
·
man and thanked the officers
A cominltlee of MUdred for their help during the past
Hu,' ,; on, Donna Grate and year.
Belva Glaze was appointed to
The regular meeting of the
lll!l!Ufe equipment to furnish Meigs Band Booetera Is the
the kitchen for the foodstand . third Monday of each month
The Boosters will be at 7:30 p, m. The next
operating the food stand meeting wlll be JWJe 21. All
during the Meigs County Fair parent.. are urged to attend.

Eleclrlcal power was out
lor three hours, 4.;' p.m.,
Wednesday over a wide area
~ Meigs and Athena Counties.
John Weeks, River Dlvlalon
It the Colwnbusand Southern
Ohio Eleclrlc Company, said
a tranaformer carrying a
main feeder Une near the
Forest' Run Block Co. on
Forest RWI Rd., apparently
was struck by lightning last
week. The lightning was
believed to have cracked an
. insulator, aUowint1' to leak.
As a result the pole caught
fire Wednesday evening and
the feeder Une exploded.
W&lt;rkers were on the scene
Wednesday evening making
temporary repairs and today
made a permanent correction. This will lake two or
lllree days, but there wiU be
no power outage. .
· Eleclrlcal current was off
In the Bashan, Letart, Portland, Tuppers Plains,
Hockingport and Coolville By HELEN THOMAS
areas for the three hour UP! White House Reporter
WASHINGTO~ (UP!) period Wednesday evening.
With 12 primaries and
several
more
state
conventions to go, President
Ford feels he has regained a
winning momentwn and says
he Is "optimistic for a good
victory In Kansas City" at the
Na tiona!
A woman wu Injured In a Republican
Convention
In
August.
freak accident Wednesday at
The two primary triwnphs
11:30 a.m. on SR 143 one mile
In Michigan and Maryland
north of SR 7.
The Meigs COWlty Sheriff's exhilarated Ford, but he was
Department said Kathryn V. making no big predictions as
49, Pomeroy' was in her to the outcome of the future
car which waa being towed by contests with rival Ronald
another vehicle. The wheels Reagan.
In a brief session with
on the Hall car locked,
lrealdng the chain pulling the ,reporters Wednesday, Ford
car, and Mrs. Hall's vehicle said he feels he "will come
struck a culvert. She was out reasonably well" In next
taken to liolzer Medical week's six primaries.
While his private polls tell
Center by the Pomeroy E-R
htm
he Ia behind Reagan In
Squad. The car was
California
where Reagan
demolislled. No citation was
served
as
governor
for eight
Issued.
years, Ford said he believes
he has a "lighting chance" In
TAGDAYSET
its JWJe 8 primary.
Tag Day will be observed
He hopes ID bolster his
by the !4arl Falls Baseball position with California
AssociatiOn on the streets of Republicans this weekend
Pomeroy Saturday. Persons when he starts a four-day
pm'ticlpating are to meet at West · Coast. trip . "The
the Letart Elementary School momentum has started. and
at 8:30 Saturday morning.
we are going to work at

Ford. optimistic
for good victory

Woman hurt in

unusual mishap

aau.

A

..

keeping It going," Ford said.
The next big political wts
of Ford's strength are In
Tuesday's primaries In·
Arkanaas, Idaho, Kentucky,
Nevada,
Oregon
and
Tennessee.
Ford campaigned a few
hours last week In Kentucky
(Continued on page 2)

Petry, Gibbs
facing charge

having drugs
Pamela Petry and Timothy
Gibbs, New Haven, W. Va.,
have each been charged In
Meigs County Court with
possession of barbltuatea
following a three car colllalon
oo the Pomeroy Parldflll lot
May 3, according to Charlea
Knight, aalstant PJ'Oflecutor.
Petry and Gibbs will appaar In county court at a later
date.
Two juveniles were also
Involved and one has pleaded
guilty to charges of
delinquency In Meigs County
Probate Court. The second
juvenile will appear at a Isler
date.

�.•

3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, May 20, 1976
2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, May 20, 1976

PORTLAND, Ore. (UP! ) Jlnuny Carter, who neared
the halfway mark in
delegates needed
lor
nominaUon this week despi~
a close shave in Michigan and
a loss in Maryland, isn't
saying how he will do
Tuesday in Oregon.
With 709 committed
delegates of the 1,505 needed
lor
the
Democratic
nominaUon, Carter says Sen.
Frank Olurch of Idaho and
. Rep. Morris Udall of Arizona
have made "a deal not to lock
horns in the final primaries."

Carter also says another
opponent , California Gov .
Edmund Brown Jr. is trying
for nothing more than ''a
convention deadlock where
he can do some horsetradlng
lor a position on the ticket. "
A p()ll for The Oregonian
newspaper in Portland
showed Carter leading
comfortably, but it.was taken
before the Michigan and
Maryland primaries.
Though Carter has not
predicted how he will do in
Oregon, he has said, "Omrch
has to be considered a strong

regional favorite son here."
Olurch and Brown say
Carter is wrong in talking
ahout deals. "There is no deal
between Morris Udall and
me ," responded Church.
Brown said, " I'm not
interested in the vice
presidency," and ruled. out a
Carter-Brown Uckct, saying,
"I entered this campaign
because I felt no candidate
had captured the hearts and
minds of the people."
All three were in Oregon
Wednesday, with Brown and
Olurch in the state again

today while Carter visited
Nevada and California.
Oregon, Idaho, Ne:vada ,
Kentucky, Tennessee and
Arkansas hold primaries on
Tuesday.
Brown admits his fight for
the nomination· is, "uphill."
His campaign in Oregon is for
a hea:vy write-in vote because
his name Is not on the ballot.
Church said a heavy write·
in for Brown could kill his
chances to beat Carter In
Oregon, where they are vying
lor a porUon of 34 delegates to
the national convenUon.

Muskie would beware trap of 1972
By GENE BERNHARDT

WASIDNGTON (UPI) Sen. Edmund Muskle, ]).
Maine, told Democratic
platform writers today they
should put their own stamp on
·the Republican complaint of

too much government In
Washington and "avoid the
trap that snared us in 1972."
"What's so damn liberal
about wasting money?~'
Muskle said in prepared
remarks for the platform

~'Ommittee.

Muskle, his party's vice
presidential nominee in 1968
and unsuccessful contender
for
its
presidential
nomination In 1972, urged
endorsement in the platform

of a "SIDISet bill" pending In
Congress to self destruct all
federal programs every five
years unless Congress voted
to renew them.
"I strongly urge that we
adopt this as a major Demo·
craiic program and that we
overcome the reluctance I

are Danforth Award ·c ouple
T

RACINE - Becky Sayre,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Sayre, and Randy
Dudding, son of Mr. and Mrs.
John Dudding were' named
the Danworth Award winners
- the outstanding senior girl
and hoy - when the annual
awards assembly was held at
Southern High School
Wednesday.
Dudding also won the Larry
Morrison Athlelli of the Year
award which includes a
trophy · and a $300 scholar·
ship.
Keys for their ac·
complishments in various
field slnclude, Dudding,
social studies; Mike Warner,
industrial arts; Helen Shain,
horne economics; Paul Cross,
science; Mel Waldnig,
g; Pam Morris, short·
haJi ; Becky Sayre , comme ·al;
Bill
Bush,
mathe
; Randy Dud·
ding and Lee Ord, drainattcs;
Molly Fisher, English; Molly
Flaher, French; vocal mUSic,
Becky Sayre ; Corena
Rhodes, the John Phillip
Sousa Award with four year
band awards going to Molly
Fisher, Becky Harris and
Miss Rhodes; Randy Dud·
ding, activities; Bob Roush
and
Corena
Rhodes,
citizenship;· Molly Fisher,
perfect attendance; Bill
Bush, Randy Dudding and
Molly Fisher, honor awards.
The senior members of the
National Honor Society were
recognized and Include Paul
Cross, Randy Dudding,
Becky Sayre, Keith Circle,
Blll Bush, lee Ord, Corena
Rhodes, Molly Fisher and
Cheryl Larkins.
Four year vocal mUSic
awards went to Rhonda West,
Keith Circle, Gail Evans,
Molly Fisher, Becky Harris,
Denise Hendrix, Koste
Hysell, Corena Rhodes, lee
Ord, Terry Norris, Becky
· Sayre, Laura Theiss and Mel
Waldni~ .

DANFORTH AWARDS - Becky Sayre and Randy
Dudding were the Danforth Award winners of the
Southern Local High School senior class. Dudding also
won the Larry Morrison Athlete of the Year award, a
trophy and a $300 scholarship, at' &amp;Juthern High School
this year. Jim Hamm picture .

Local

members of Ironworkers Local 455. The ironworkers had been
on strike at the plant since July, 197o. Members of the two
unions fought eaclJ other with baseball bats and chains.
Devereaux "Dave" M_cGuire, 46, of HID!tington, N. Y., was
found dead about a block from the plant. Fernando Anon, an
Ironworkers member, was shot in the spine and right ear and
was listed in critical condition. The other wounded man was
identified only as a Teamster.
WASHINGTON - AFTER 15 MONTHS of revelations of
CIA assassination schemes and other abuses, the Senate
overwhelmingly approved a 15-memher watchdog committee
to monitor the nation's intelligence operations.
Since it is an Internal Senate matter, no further action is
needed except for appointment of the members. The 72-22 vote
was a triwnpil for llberal and moderate reformers, who beat
back conservative efforts to exempt the . code-eracking
National Security Agency, Defense Intelligence Agency and
other Pentagon units from the budgetary scrutiny of the new
Select Committee on Intelligence.

Ford
(Continued from page I)

CLUB TO MEET
HARRISONVILLE - The
Harrisonville Senior Citizens
Club will meet Thursday,
May 27 at 6 p.m. at Ft. Meigs.
Games will be played and
refreshments served.

and Tennessee, where
political observers say he has
close races, and will make a
nwnber of appearances in
Oregon Saturday · and
Sunday . He had plaMed to
spend a few hours in Las

Vegas, but there is
speculation he may stay out
of Nevada because its GOP
leaders
are
backing
Reagan.
The President will close the
tour in California and return
to Washington Tuesday when
the next primary returns
come in .

DR. LAMB

Karen Stodola, Mary McFarland, Marla McGinnis,
Jennie James, April Parsons, Kathleen Test and Bob
Barnitz.

SEVEN SOPHOMORES were inducted into the '
National Honor Society at Wahama High School during a
special ceremony Tue!;day morning. They were, 1..-,

Meany defends
school busing
WASHINGTON (UP! ) AFI.rCIO President George
Meany today issued a
stinging attack against those
people-- many of them in the
labor
movement- who
oppose busing as a means of
school desegregation.
.
"Busing is ~ot the issue,"
Meany declared. "The issue
is quality educaUon.
"The big yellow buses have
improved the quality of
education for mllllons, and
there isn't . the slightest
reason to pretend, suddenUy
that school busing Is
somehow in itself harmful or

,.,

I,

but he is very uncomfortable.
I have read some of your
comments in the paper and
wonder if he should be using
coffee at all. He hasn't given
up cigarette smoking either
and I have tried to tell him
that It was Important. During
his attacks he never uses any
alcohol but in between times
be has his usual cocktail
every evening and sometimes
quite a few at parties.
He complains of pain in the
pit of his stomach when he
has the ulcer and the pain Is
relieved by eating something.
He usually keeps some an·
tacld tablets next to the bed in
case he wakes up at night
with a feellng of burning in
the stomach. Any recommendations you have would
he appreciated.
·
DEAR READER - Peptic
ulcers are quite common In
our stressful society. About
one out of four men even·
iually have one, and it's true
.that the~ do tend to recur.

Your husband's story Is fairly
typical. One doesn't have to
be an executive to have an
ulcer, but It seems to help.
Manual laborers and farmers
are less likely to have them.
The exact mechanianl of
why a person has an ulcer
isn't known, but they are
associated with an Increased
production of acid digestive
juice by the stolnach. Coffee,
tea, colas and such beverages
do stimulate the stomach to
produce more acid digestive
juice. Alcohol has the same
effect, perhaps even worse.
Cigarette smoking seems to
decrease the ability. of the
digestive juices In the small
intestine to neutralize the
acid digestive juice from the
stomach. ·
· Most of these ulcers are In
the duodenUin, the first part
of the small intestine just
outside the stomach itself.
For a more , complete
description of what ulcers are
IJ

reactionary attack on
desegration from Utile RoCk

~ea~i:~~ .~~ear~0~~

unknown.
"Fear on the part of people
that they are somehow in
some way being pushed
around again. Fear that
others are. g~ining an unfair
advantage. Fear arising from
ignor a nce
a n,d
misunderstanding.
' 'Fear exploited and
inflamed by those who seek
power
positions
for
themselves and who are
willing
to
destroy
MRS. CAPEHART INDUCTED - Mrs. Mary . undemoc~atic."
communities as long as they
Capehart, guidance counselor and advisor of the National
!.feany recently has end up controlling the wreckHonor Society at Wahama High School, was inducted into
squelched efforts by AFL- age."
the society as an honorary member at a recent tapping.
Meany Insisted the "facts
CIO members in Boston and
Mrs. Capehart, who has served as the sponsor of the
Louisville to break away prove that busing is not the
National Honor 'Society for 19 years, will be retiring this
from the federation's position issue." He noted that more
year. On the right is Dll!l Stodola, president, who was in
favoring .busing. But he had than 40 per cent of the
charge of the ceremony.
nor previously issued such a nation's children ride buses
to school, only 3 per cent
strong defense of busing.
•
His statement was filmed WJder court order.
"Ideally that child ought to
for presentation at a Justice
Department sponsored be able to get quality
0
0 0
o • o
o o o
conference on "Desegration education in a neighborhood
Without Turmoil." It followed school," he said. "But lf the
and Lincoln .Mercury cars cameras to ex pl ore the
United Press lnternil1ional
the administration's decision community refuses, if a
DE TROIT - The Ford because quick acceleretion wreckage ·to determine to. intervene in a Boston federal judges finds the
Motor Co. Wednesday might ca~se the gas pedal to whether the wreckage Is school desegregation case Constitution is being violated
retailed nearly one-half ·Slick. Ford said about 28,000 really the Fitzgerald and the
before the Supreme Court. and orders busing as the only
million current.model Ford of the 441,700 cars It Is cause of the sinking.
recalling are suspected of
"Fear
caused
the way to obtain that quality
having
a
dt;tfectlve
COLUMBUS - Secretary outbreaks of violence that education, then there must be
accelerator control cable. All of State Ted W. Brown said
have characterized every busing."
must be inspected, however, Wednesday, "any dishonesty,
to discover which are double voting or voting by

of this

and that

defective, Ford said.

SAULT STE. MARIE Coast Guard Officials sa ld
Wednesoay they will begin

ineligible persons" during the
June B primary election will
result in prosecution. " We
realize, of course, that the
great majority of voters are

Veterans Memorial Hospllal
ADMITTED - Ralph Ours, exploring wreckage on the honest people and would not
Long Bottom; Brenda Elllott, bottom of Lake Superior double vote," said Brown .
believed to be the "But nevertheless, · the
Shade; Grace Paynter, Port- Thursday
remains of the Edmund dishonest few might chooSe
land; Eunice Cooke, Mid· Fitzgerald. The Fitzgerald th is method of cheating."
dleport; Jacob Scott, Mid· went down In Lake Superior
Brown said all local boards
There is an epidemic
dleport; Pauline Hysell, Nov. 10, 1975, during severe of elections will assist in his sweeping this country that is
weather . There were no Investigation of suspected
Minersville; Michael Van survivors
.
destroying the fabric of our
cases of double voting or
Meter, Middleport; Maggie
Investigators will use other questionable voting
national life. I am speaking
Gilmore, . Racine; Betty remote controlled sonar tactics .
about drag trafftclng and
l'rlend, Long Bottom; devices, televisidn and still
drug abuse. Without a doubt,
Maynard Ellls, Cheshire.
drug abuse constitutes a
DISHCARGED - Pauletla
UNIT CALLED
clear and present threat to
Watson, JeMy Williamson,
The Pomeroy Emergency the health and future of our
Margie Hunt, Ada Slack,
Squad was called for Nellie country.
(ConUnued from page I)
Patricia Thornton.
Eblin, 243 Mulberry Ave., a
The cost of drug abuse to
newspaper.
medical patient, at 11:37 p.m. the nation Is truly staggering.
Patrol Supt. Col. Frank R. Wednesday. She was taken to
More than 5,000 Americans
Blackstone
acknowledged tp Holzer Medical Center.
Pleasant Valley Hospital
die
each year from the im·
the newspaper the patrol has
D~GES - Stanrey
proper
use of drugs. Law
Aleshire, Middleport; Jack not started the investigation
Kinney, Apple Grove; Katie Into the 'ZI shortages in the '''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''·
King, Point Pleasant; Mrs. accounts of deputy auto
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
half of all street crimes Paul Justis, Racine; I.e Ann registrars across the state-;
Salurday
through
robberies, muggings,
Blackstone cited a small
Harbour, Apple Grove;
Monday,
fair
and
near
burglaries
- are committed
Michael Porter, David investigative staff currently
seasonal
temperatures
by
drug
addicts
to support
up"
an
Thomas, Mrs. Charles Fields, "winding
Saturday
through
Mouday.
their
expensive
habits.
daughter, Point Pleasant; investigation Into state
Hlgha
wtu
be
In
the
upper
Although
it
is
extremely
Judy Pierce, Miison; Bertha mental health facillties as the
60s to tbe mid 70s aud lows difficult to pinpoint an exact
Casto, leon: JeMy Halley, reason the patrol has not
will be in tbe mid 40s to the cost, counting narcotic·
Crown City;
Thomas started its investigation
lower
50s.
related crime, lost produc·
probe into the shortage.
Willlams, Pomeroy.
:::::::::
:
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
tivi
ty, criminal justice
He said other than oome
systems costs, and direct
limited official contact early
treatment and prevention
in April in several .of the
ASK TOWED
program
spending, the
counties where large
Marriage licenses have
annual
expense to
estimated
shortages occurred, no action been issued to Elmer Mer!
the
country
is
somewhere
has yet been taken under Bowles, 45, Rt. 1, Middleport between $10 and $17 billion.
Rhodes' directive.
and Juanita Christine Kirk, StatisUcs such as these only
Blackstone admitted the :lli, Rt. 1,. Rutland; Michael
initial
contact
with LoweU Bing, 20, Long Bottom serve to emphasize the
prosecutors in several coun- and .Diana Lynn Painter, 19, urgent need for stepped-!IP
efforts in combatting the
t i e s "only scratcl!ed the Rt. 1, Middleport.
further spread of the drug
and where they are located surface ...tip of the Iceberg."
menace and In effectively
and what to do about them
The patrol did investigate a
you can send 50 cents for The shortage, now estimated at
Th D 'lv Sen · e1
treating those who are ad·
e a.,,. tin
dieted.
Health letter, nwnber 1-5, $6,200 in the accounts of Oak
'DEVOTED TO THE
Over the past five years
Ulcers
Ouodenal, . Harbor deputy auto registrar
MEI~l.~~~~1~REA
total federal expenditures
Stomach. Send a long, Wilbur
White
who
CHESTER~ . TANNEHI~~ . have grown from less than
stamped, self-addressed disappeared April 15.
Exec. Ed.
. . ' '100 mllllon per year to over
envelope for malling. Ad· Persons close to that case
ROBERT HOEF~ICH
$750 million per year for a
dreu your letter to me In told the newspaper pollee
CitJ Editor
·
Publlshe da ily exceot · comprebel181ve program of
care of this new!l)laper, P.O. have "an Idea where White
saturday by The ohro
ti
Ire tme t
d
Va
lLey Publishing Com . : preven on,
a n an
Box 1051, Radio City Station, is" but have been unable to
pany , 111 court St., control. Because of these
New York, NY 10019.
take action since no charges
Pome r oy, Ohio .t5769
eff Is ltbeg to
,
Business Ott lee Phone 992:
or •
an appear , pr
Stress does seem to be a have been filed.
·
21
56.
Ed
itor
ial
Phone
992.
several
years
that
the
tide
major factor In ulcers.
Rhodes told the patrol to
21
§~cond class postage 1 .sources
had turned. Foreign supply
Perhaps that's why men have start a "complete and
pai,d ar . Pomeroy, Ohio .
were
smashed
more ulcers than women comprehensive Investigation
Nat&lt;onal advertlsl
representative warnrl through international efforts,
now . There was a iime when to determine who took the
Grlf.
f l&lt; h Company
, Inc .. thedrugsupplyonourstreets
we were a less industrallzed funds and where the money
Bottmelll
&amp; Gallagher Div.,
757 Third Ave ., New York , dried up, and drug abule
society that women had more now ls."
N . ;.;b1 ~~~7t'ptlon rate" Indicators began to turn
ulcers than men.
In his letter to ·Blackstone
DeHvered
by carrier wh'ere downward. Unfortunately,
Moat individuals who are April I, in directing the
avai l able 75 cents per
week . By Moror Route
successfully treated lor a investigation, Rhodes said his
where
carrier service not
peptic ulcer learn to decrease ·order was promoted by the
a vailable , One month,
13.25. By mall in Ohio and
ErR CALLED
their psychic stress. That Chronicle ' Telegraph's in·
into
the
doesn'talways mean that the vestlgatlon
~x ~o·n~~~ sW50, sn-~:~ .
The Middleport E·R unit
months, 17.00. Elsewhere . was called to 353 Fourth Ave.
stress is related to the job shortages.
S26.00 ye11r ; .Six months
t 1 .t.a
ur~.:.--..a
either. It can be asaoclated
113.50 : three m'onths, s7.SO. a '""p.m .............ay for
NOW
YOU
KNOW
Subscrlpllon price Includes Dorothy Reynolds, a medical
with family situations and the
sunday Times.senllnet.
patient, who was taken to
An angry llama will spit in
steu may be at home.
his an~onlst's face .
L - - - - - - - - - - 11 PJ.easant Valley Hospital.
l)

Shortage

that dips low, beat the
Oticago Cubs, 14-4, and shut
out the New York Mets, ~.•
Against the Giants Alcala
gave up six hits in 6 1-3
lnnln8! and left leading 3-2.
Will McEnaney and Rawly
Eastwlck finished up as the
Reds scored two more runs In
the eighth on a pinch.nlt
double by Tony Perez and the

became the third National
League club Alcala has
beaten as the Reds .held on for
a~ victory Wednesday night
before a fine crowd of 23,591.
In two earlier starts since
being promoted from the
bull!'&gt;en by manager Sparky
Anderson,
Alcala,
a
righthander with a fastball

-S outhern ·defe.ats Vikings,·

these optimisUc signs proved'
to he temporary. By the
middle of 1975 It was clear'
that conditions were again.
worsening . Even smaller
communities ·which had
previously been almost '
completely free of drug .
prob!e1118 began to show signs
of significant drug abuse.
It is time that an even
higher priority be given to :
combatting this national :
problem. Toward the goal I i
have cQ.5)lonsored the Drug ,

shares second in SVAC
By Greg BaUey
Batterymates Brady
Huffman and Greg Dunning
ended their high school
baseball careers In style
Wednesday night as they
teamed up to lead Southern to
...a 7·1 victory over visiting
.:.Symmes Valley and a share
" ,of second place with Kyger
•·Creek in the svAC, Kyger
and Southern have finished
,iwJth 11-4 records in the league.
•.: Both seniors, after a week
~ and shalf layoff, seemed to be
•more than the Vikings could
' handle. Ace righthander

.

Huffman had a no-hitter
going until the top of the fifth
when Symmes Valley's
Otristian tagged him fat a
solo shot Into the. parking lot
for the Vikings' only run.
Huffman fanned 16 of ihe 21
outs and allowed only two
hits, the homer and a single
by Malone In the sixth. He
walked six.
Dunning did the catching
and furnished the muscle
power as he banged out a
double and a single. Scott
Wolfe had two singles and
four RB!s to help Huffman.

:NBA finals will
•
"

~begin on Sunday

·r

BOSTON (UP!) - Inter.spersed with those summer
' reruns will be the National
..Basketball Association's
championship playoffs.
. The Boston Celtics and
·Phoenix Suns, finalists in the
NBA's two-month postseason tournament, open
their championship series
&amp;.mday (CSS.:TY 3:30 p.m.,
EDT) at Boston Garden.
· H the series goes seven
games, the final could be
played as late as June 9, 7'k
months after the seaoon ope·
ned. The reason for the length.
of the final series is obvious:
CBS may be able to telecast
l!lree Sunday games instead
!!' only one or two.
N The
time lapse between
games will benefit the older
Celtics, especially 3&amp;-year-old
~ohn
Havlicek
and
overworked Dave Cowens.
li:avlicek, bothered by torn
l!ssue between the arch and
heelofhisleft foot throughout
the playoffs, should he ready
for the opener.
.. Cowens, near exhaustion at
the end of the fifth game
against Cleveland, should be
rejuvepated by four days of
rest after battling the Cavs'
Nate Thurmond.
The Suns have been idle

..

since stopping the Golden
State Warriors' quest for a
second straight title.
The Celtics know from
recent, bitter experience how
the Suns feel and the
knowledge should make them
play harder. The Celiics were
def.ending champions last
sprmg when the Washington
Bullets knocked them out in a
six-game Eastern Conference
UUe series.
The Suns, with a starting
team comprised of two
rookies and three veterans
acquired from other teams,
are the NBA's story of t~
year. They beat SeatUe in a
quarter-final series, then
whipped the defending
champion Golden State
Warriors in a seven-game
Western Confer e ~ c e
championship series.
They have played team
basketball under Coach John
MacLeod, whose talent has
been to get the Suns to
maximize their abilities.
"MacLeod has looked at
the team and let it play the
type of ball that best suited Its
ablllty ," said Phoenix guard
Paul Westphal, traded from
Boston last sununer along
with two draft choices for
Olarlie Scott.

The hosts scored first in the
bottom of the second when
Dunning socked his double
and scampered home on a
single by Steve Hendricks.
They brought across the
winning run in the third when
they scored four big runs.
After an out, Cundiff reached
on an error and came home
on Jim Riffle's ground rule
double. After another out,
Dunning and Hendricks
walked to 'toad the bases and
Wolfe followed with a single
to score two and the fourth
run came home when the ball
was bobbled trying to get
Wolfe at second. The hosts
scored twice more in the fifth
on three singles:
Oilier hitters for Southern
were Eric Dunning and
Huffman with a single, John
Sayre with a double, and
Hendricks with two singles.
Southern's overall record is
, 13•8, second best in the
school's history.
S. Valley
000 010 ~I 2 2
Southern
014 020 x- 7 10 4
Huffman and Dunning,
Forbes (7). Galloway (LP),
Ingels (7) and Payne.

SEA'ITLE &lt;UP!) - Two
hundred or more players may
participate in a Seattle Seahawks tryout camp Sunday in
the Kingdome.
Dick Mansperger
Seahawks director of playe;
personnel; said hopefuls from
Texas; California and
Pennsylvania will be among
the players participating in
the tryouts.
A similar tryout camp last
weekend
in
Spokane
attracted 76 players and
resulted in the signing of
Herb
Singleton,
a
quarterback, and Wayne
Johnson, a wide receiver, to
National Football League
free agent contracts. .

ERIE, Pa. (UP!)
Roberto Duran, the defending
lightweight champion of the
world, Wednesday exchanged
verbal hells with his latest
challenger Lou Blzzarro. The
pair wiU meet Sunday In a
nationally televised title
fight.
"I'll knock hiin out early,"
Duran, a native of Panama,
promised reporters.
But Bizzarro said: "I plan
to lake the tiUe away from

WE SUPPLY

~~:i."~a~~!m~~i~;~!: =~~:::t~~tt! j

One man in four has peptic ulcer
By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - I am
writing about my husband to
see If you have any
suggestions about his ulcer. I
guess he is what you'd call
ulcer prone since he's had
recurrent attacks of duodenal
ulcers now during the past 10
years. He Is 47 and has a good
job. There is a certain
amount of pressure with It
since It is an executive
poaiUon and he has to make'
lots of decisions. The first
tlnie he had an ulcer he took
very good care of himself and
did &gt;Ill the thing! the doctor
told nJrn to do. He took his
. medicine regularly and the
ulcer healed. He sUU tended
. to have an acid stomach but
he got along rather well for
several months untll he had a
recurrence. He must have
. had six or seven attacks of
ulcers during the past 10
yeara. He has never had to he
hospitalized for any of them

SAN FRANCISCQ (UPI )He goes by Santo Alcala and
while that isn't exactly a
household name, folks who
follow the baseball fortunes
· of the World Champion
Cincinnati
Reds
are
beginning to re.;ognize the
young pitcher. ·
The San Francisco Giants

I

"Some Democrats seem tO
accept waste and inefficiency
as a cost of helping people ...
and that attacking waste
somehow amounts to a
repudiation of the New Deal.
And what do waste and
inefficiency have to do with
the New Deal?" he said.
"I am not suggesting that
we join In the Republican
chorus that government.has
been the cause of America's
problelll8 and that everyone,
weak and strong, must solve
their own problems," said
Muskie.
"When we write this
platform we must avoid the
trap that snared us in 1972.
For in those 15,000 words we
catalogued virtually every
problem that we · thought
bothers America~. Yet the
election results showed that
our platform was irreleVant
for all practical purposes,"
he said.

HOSPITAL
(Continued from page I)
NEWS
Industries plant in Queens when several carloads of men from
Teamsters
810 charged a picket line manned by
News •• in Briefs

•

,,

Miss Sayre, Randy Dudding~;~:,.;::.:~~~=~;
\

Alcala makes.· it 3 in
.. row for Cincinnati

.

Carter saying little about Oregon

·

come down hard on the un· :
derworld agent who peddles ,
narcoUcs for profit. It dOes ;
Utile good to spend many \
dollars In an attempt to break :
the terrible addiction of a 1
person and the subject them \
once again to the pusher on :
the street. The pusher 1s ;
rarely an addict, but hu the-;
financial. means of posting ~ :
almost any amount of bond ••
and thim skipping the coiD'ts' ·:
jurisdlcatlon before being ,
br ht to trial H is b ck
aug
· e a on 1
the street trafflclng in nar- i
cotlcs within a matter of 1
days, or even hours, of bla :
release.
The
Drug
Pusher :
Elimination Act would·:
change all that. A first of.' 1
fender would receive II;!
minimum sentence of five• i
. years or up to twenty.flve•l
years plus fines of up ~ :
$5(1,000. A second offendel'' \
would receive a minlnium ,'
sentence of ten years to life '
p1 fin of
to '100 000 1
us es up
• ·"
Suspended sentences an4 f
probation would be denied in·~.'
..
all ca
Ag 1
thi "'
ses.
an,
' "''
~~S::l;ls t~~ar~~!: :
pusher who sells drugs
because It Is an easy way to
achieve wealth wl'~
a tala! ,
~·
dit~regard . for the coat JnJ:

lnunan lives.
/ •
We cannot hope to solve the
drug problem In this country
lllleas we get to the source.
We muat put the pushera
away and stem the now from
abroad of illegal drugs. Only •
the
_,
I
ncan ..gnlflcant progre11 l
be made In winning the flcht ,'
over the acourge of druiJ~
abuse.

•'

"

0 0

0

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Giants got two off Eastwick
in the ninth.
"! am surprised to be
pitching as good as I am,"
said Alcala, whoP!'id his dues
with Si:l years in the minors.
"I knqw I can pitch but if
Sparky don't give m~ a
chance,! cannotprove what I
can do.

Yastrzemski slams 3
home ·runs in 9-2 win·

GAME IS TODAY
The AA Dlstrlcl Baseball
Tournameut scbeduled for
Weduesday at Rio Grande
was postponed uutll
Thursday afternoon due to
wet grouuds.

•

BASEBALL
-------Motor league Standing•
By United Press lnternation•l
Notlon:~.~eogue

Philadelphia
Plttsb:urgh

w20.. ~ ..8 Pet.
.71.tl
20 12 ,625

GB
2

"Sparky told me I have the New YOrk
20 IS .571 3'1•
job as long as I keep pitching Chicag o
" 18 .438 8
MQntreal
12 l7 .414 tWt
good. '1'h~t 's all I want to do st. ~ouls
" 21 .400 9'h
now. I want to pitch good
West
enough to stay m
' the majors Los Angeies w22
.. ~.13· Pet.
Ga
.629
and good eilough to help the Cincinnati
21 13 .618 "'
team. I spend too many years san Diego
17 16 .515 4
Houston
17 20 .459 6
in the minors. I don't want to ·Atlanta
12 2J .343 10
go back."
San Francisco 11 24 .31 4 11
Wednesday ' s Results
AIcala , who was born and Chi a1 Mtt , ppd ., raln.cold
raised ,In the Dominican Philadelphia 2 New York 1
Republic, is only 23, having Pittsburgh 1 s t. ~outs 6
Los Angeles 4 Allan Ia 1
started out in the Reds Houston 9 San Diego 4
system as a 17-year old
Cincinnati s San Francisco 4
"He weighed only · 140 ·. Todi1Y~j,P{1'::::: 1:~+~chers
poundswhenwesigned him,"
Pittsburgh IMedtch J.J i at st.
recalled Anderson. " Each louis
IDenny 1·21. 1:30 p.m.
Ph iladelph ia (Lonborg 5-0) at
year he has gained a Utile New York l~oti c h 2·41. 4:05
more weight and now he is p. ~ouston INiekro I·SI at san
over 200. I think he .will go to Diego IWehrmelster O·Jh 4
220 before. he stops. I'm not p.m.
worried, though, because at Francisco
Cincinnati{CI'IIIdwell
!Gullett 3·21
at san
0,4). 4 . 0 ~
~be can handle the weight.
p.m.
·
Chicago (R: .Reuschel 2·3) at
He could be a 1Ot lik e Don Montreal
!Rogers 2·31. B os
Drysdale."
p.m.
.
Alcala was given a 2-llead
Atlanta IMorton D·&lt;l ot ~os
by batterymate Johnny A~getes ~~:~y\2 10 ~~~~ p.m.
Bench in Wednesday night's Chicago at Pittsburgh, otght
' • •
• St. LOlJIS at Phila , night
game, Be nchdrIvmg m a pair New York at Montreol, nigh t
of runs off John Montefusco Atlanta at San Francisco, night
with a fourth inning double. Cincinnati at San Diego, night
Cesar Geronimo lined a Houston at ~os Angeles. night
shot off Montefusco's left shin
American League
leading off the filjh and the
East
W,. L.. Pet. GB
Count looked like .a goner,
York
19 10 .655
holding his head in New
Balt imore
16
" .SJ]
anticipa lion of shaking off the Detroit
13 15 .464
Milwaukee
11
14 .440 6
pain. He did, with a helping Boston
13 16 .449 6
hand from trainer Joe liscio, Cleveland
13 17 .433 6
'"
West
and went on to pitch seven
W.. ~ .. Pet. GB
innings before being lifted for Kansas City 19 10 .655
,11
TeKas
19 11 .633
a hitter.
Minnesota
16
14
.533
3'h
They took Montefusco, the Oakland
IS lB .455 6
staggering Gilints' only Chicago
11 16 .407 7
13 23 .361 911,
reliable starter, to Stanford ·California
. Wednesday;s Results
Medical
Center
for New York 3 Cle\leland 2
precautionary xrays, which Baltimore 5 Milwaukee J
Boston 9 De troit 2
proved negative.
Kansas City 5 Oakland 2
"I knew he wasn't hurt all Chicago 4 Minnesota l
(Only games scheduled)
that bad," said manager Bill
Today's Probable Pitchers
Rigney, "when I went out to
I All Times EDTl
Boston (Lee Q.JJ at New York
·see him lying on the ground
3·21 , 8 pm .
8l)d he said to me 'you're (Figueroa
Ollkland (Mit chell 1·1) at
going to )Jave to shoot me like Kansas City (Bird 3-1) , 8: 30

By BILL MADDEN
urt Sports Writer
At 36, Carl Yastrzernski is
beginning to challenge Ted
Williams' numbers.
Yas tr ze ms ki , wh o
surpassed Williams' all4ime
Boston Red Sox record lor
games played on Tuesdsy,
isn't likely to surpass the o2t
ca reer home-run total
compiled by "The Splendid
Splinter." Bu t Wednesday
night, he belted Nos. 320, 321
and 322 of his own career In
Boston 's 9-2 victory over the
Detroit Tigers that. enabled
ltim to join Williams ln the
select club of eight Bosox to
have hit three or more
homers in one game.
" 1 came out for about an
hour this afternoon to take
extra ,batting practice," said
Yastrzemskt, who entered
the game batting .198. "All of
a sudden, I got my hands
higher and 1 was hitting them
into the upper deck."

Karras sued
for divorce

m

a horse."'
· The Reds, who still are only
a half game behind Los
Angeles in the National
league West, conclude their
abbreviated series here today
with Don Gullett pitching
against the Gian.ts' · Mike
Caldwell.

Portsmouth
will host
tournament

pm.
t
California &lt;Ross o.s) at Texas
(Perry 4 · 2) ~ 8: 35pm .
Minnesota (Redfern 1-0l at
Chicago {Forster 1-1) , 9 pm .
(Only games scheduled)
Friday's Games

Boston at New York, night

Oakland at Chicago, night
Ken City at Minnesota, night
California at Texas, nigh t
Milwaukee at Cleveland , night
Detroit at Baltimore, night

Polyester
Whitewall

TIRES

"State Farm has LIFE insurance,
too! Call me for details!'

A

Plans are underway for the
annual Independent Insurance Agent's Insurance
Youth Classic scheduled for
JID!e II, 1976 at the Elk's
Country Club In Portsmouth.
The winners of this area
will advance to state tournament play at the Westfield 7 Innings
Tidewat er 7 Memph·ls 6, 2nd ,
Country Club, Westfield
.
Center, Ohio, July 23. State 8 Innings
R: lchmond A Charleston 1.
winners will be eligible to go 1st, 7 Inn ings ,
Richmond S Charl&amp;ston 2,
on to the National lour· 2nd,
7 Innings .
nament to be held August 13Syracuse at Rochester ,
17 at · Reston South Golf ppd ., Snow
Toledo at Rhode Island,
Course, Reston, Virginia. ppd
., rain .
Entries will be grouped by
age and by experience so no
one, no matter how young and
inesperlenced will be left out.
The tow-name
be a one
day, I , event. Awards
will
made for every age
level for both boys and girls.
Complete details and entry
forms for the Independent
lnaurance Agent's Insurance
Youth Oasslc are available
from any Portsmouth area
Independent Insurance
Agent.
For add!Uonallnformatlon,
. contact: Bert Crothers, cochairman, Bert Crothers
Insurance, 161t Gallia Street,
Portsmouth, Ohio 45662,
Phone 353-3550, or BiU Sch·
wamberger, co-chairman,
Mtrfln Insurance, 1143 Gallia
Street, Portsmouth, Ohio
45662, Ph. :J53.8890.

EACH

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'

BAIJNCED

S ~t F11~

specleal
scdel

Standings
International league
United Press International
W. ~ . Pet. GB
Rhode Island
21 12 .636
Syracuse
17 11 .607 Ph
Richmond
17 15 .531 Jh
Memph is
15 14 .517 4
Toledo
14 16 .467 5112
Tidewater
12 15 .444 6
Rochester
10 13 .435 6
Charleston
9 19 .321 9 lJ~
Wednesday ;s Results
Tidewater 3 Memphis 1, lst,

run to help rookie Pete
Vuckovich to his first major
lea~o'lle victory, Vuckovich,
who worked seven Innings,
was staked to a 2.(1 lead In the
first when Garr singled home
a run and later scored on
ca tcher Butch Wynegar's
U1rowing error .
Royals 5, A's 2:
Hal McRae, AI Cowens and
~'rank White hit !lrst~nning,
runo~~coring singles that sent
the Royals off to their seventh
win in eight games. John
Mayberry was 3-for-1 for
Kansas City while Paul
Spllttorff went 5 2-'1 innings to
gain the victory.
Orioles 5, Brewers 3:
Mark Belanger continued ·
hls uncustomary heavy
hitting by tripling home a run
and scoring another In the
first
inning,
helping
struggling Mike Cuellar to his
second victory . In five
decisions . Belanger, a
lifetime .230 hitter, also
singled In the game to raise
his average to .280--topll on
the Orioles.
SARATOGA SPRINGS,
N.Y. &lt;UPI) - Rockwell
Hanover, the two-year-old
son of pacing great Albatrou,
made hls initial start a good
one Wednesday night with a
IS-length win In the $1,000
at

DETROIT (UP!) - The
wife
of
television
sportscaster and actor Alex
Karras has sued for divorce
after 18 years of marriage.
Ivalyn Karras filed the
acton in Oakland County
Circuit Court Tuesday. Under
BILL FLETCHER
Michigan's divorce laws, no
12Sll
grounds are needed.
Powell St.
The couple has been
Middleport
separated since lust July.
PH.
992·7155
Mrs. Karras Is seeking
custody of their five children.
She also requested a court
order blocking the sale of the
family 's home in suburban
Bloomfield Hills.
Karras, the former Detroit
lUll IAIM
Lion all-pro lineman now
Like
a
good
neighbor,
living in North Hollywood, ·
Calif., was not available for
State Farm is there.
!NIUIUH
comment.

$2395

Racine, 0.

In the National League, it
was Philadelphia 2New York
I, Pittsburgh 7 St. Louis 6,
Los Angeles 4 Atlanta I,
Houston 9 San Diego 4 and
CinCinnati 5 San Francisco 4.
ChicagoMontreal was rained
out.
Yankees 3, Indians 2:
Otto Velez stroked his first
homer of the season while
Lou Piniella and Chris
0 1ambiiss each single'!! home
run s as the Yankees made it
two straight over Cleveland.
the Indians blew a chance to
tie the game In the ninth when
Rico Carty was thrown out at
the plate during a dQuble
steal attemp\.
While Sox 4, Twins I:
Chicago's Ralph Garr
slapped out three singles,
~cored twice and drove in u

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Yastrzemski homered In
the fourth , fifth ond ninth
innings in a perfect 4-for-1
night which included lour
RBis. ~·crguson Jenkins, 3-:i,
was lhe beneficiary of Yazi's ·
power display, going the
distance and scattering seven
hits.
Elsewhere Wednesday,
New York edged Cleveland,
3-2, · Baitil)lore put away
Milwaukee, &amp;-3, Chicago beat
MiMesota, 4-1, and Kansas
City downed Oakland, !i-2.

,,

75'

POMEROY

�.•

3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, May 20, 1976
2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, May 20, 1976

PORTLAND, Ore. (UP! ) Jlnuny Carter, who neared
the halfway mark in
delegates needed
lor
nominaUon this week despi~
a close shave in Michigan and
a loss in Maryland, isn't
saying how he will do
Tuesday in Oregon.
With 709 committed
delegates of the 1,505 needed
lor
the
Democratic
nominaUon, Carter says Sen.
Frank Olurch of Idaho and
. Rep. Morris Udall of Arizona
have made "a deal not to lock
horns in the final primaries."

Carter also says another
opponent , California Gov .
Edmund Brown Jr. is trying
for nothing more than ''a
convention deadlock where
he can do some horsetradlng
lor a position on the ticket. "
A p()ll for The Oregonian
newspaper in Portland
showed Carter leading
comfortably, but it.was taken
before the Michigan and
Maryland primaries.
Though Carter has not
predicted how he will do in
Oregon, he has said, "Omrch
has to be considered a strong

regional favorite son here."
Olurch and Brown say
Carter is wrong in talking
ahout deals. "There is no deal
between Morris Udall and
me ," responded Church.
Brown said, " I'm not
interested in the vice
presidency," and ruled. out a
Carter-Brown Uckct, saying,
"I entered this campaign
because I felt no candidate
had captured the hearts and
minds of the people."
All three were in Oregon
Wednesday, with Brown and
Olurch in the state again

today while Carter visited
Nevada and California.
Oregon, Idaho, Ne:vada ,
Kentucky, Tennessee and
Arkansas hold primaries on
Tuesday.
Brown admits his fight for
the nomination· is, "uphill."
His campaign in Oregon is for
a hea:vy write-in vote because
his name Is not on the ballot.
Church said a heavy write·
in for Brown could kill his
chances to beat Carter In
Oregon, where they are vying
lor a porUon of 34 delegates to
the national convenUon.

Muskie would beware trap of 1972
By GENE BERNHARDT

WASIDNGTON (UPI) Sen. Edmund Muskle, ]).
Maine, told Democratic
platform writers today they
should put their own stamp on
·the Republican complaint of

too much government In
Washington and "avoid the
trap that snared us in 1972."
"What's so damn liberal
about wasting money?~'
Muskle said in prepared
remarks for the platform

~'Ommittee.

Muskle, his party's vice
presidential nominee in 1968
and unsuccessful contender
for
its
presidential
nomination In 1972, urged
endorsement in the platform

of a "SIDISet bill" pending In
Congress to self destruct all
federal programs every five
years unless Congress voted
to renew them.
"I strongly urge that we
adopt this as a major Demo·
craiic program and that we
overcome the reluctance I

are Danforth Award ·c ouple
T

RACINE - Becky Sayre,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Sayre, and Randy
Dudding, son of Mr. and Mrs.
John Dudding were' named
the Danworth Award winners
- the outstanding senior girl
and hoy - when the annual
awards assembly was held at
Southern High School
Wednesday.
Dudding also won the Larry
Morrison Athlelli of the Year
award which includes a
trophy · and a $300 scholar·
ship.
Keys for their ac·
complishments in various
field slnclude, Dudding,
social studies; Mike Warner,
industrial arts; Helen Shain,
horne economics; Paul Cross,
science; Mel Waldnig,
g; Pam Morris, short·
haJi ; Becky Sayre , comme ·al;
Bill
Bush,
mathe
; Randy Dud·
ding and Lee Ord, drainattcs;
Molly Fisher, English; Molly
Flaher, French; vocal mUSic,
Becky Sayre ; Corena
Rhodes, the John Phillip
Sousa Award with four year
band awards going to Molly
Fisher, Becky Harris and
Miss Rhodes; Randy Dud·
ding, activities; Bob Roush
and
Corena
Rhodes,
citizenship;· Molly Fisher,
perfect attendance; Bill
Bush, Randy Dudding and
Molly Fisher, honor awards.
The senior members of the
National Honor Society were
recognized and Include Paul
Cross, Randy Dudding,
Becky Sayre, Keith Circle,
Blll Bush, lee Ord, Corena
Rhodes, Molly Fisher and
Cheryl Larkins.
Four year vocal mUSic
awards went to Rhonda West,
Keith Circle, Gail Evans,
Molly Fisher, Becky Harris,
Denise Hendrix, Koste
Hysell, Corena Rhodes, lee
Ord, Terry Norris, Becky
· Sayre, Laura Theiss and Mel
Waldni~ .

DANFORTH AWARDS - Becky Sayre and Randy
Dudding were the Danforth Award winners of the
Southern Local High School senior class. Dudding also
won the Larry Morrison Athlete of the Year award, a
trophy and a $300 scholarship, at' &amp;Juthern High School
this year. Jim Hamm picture .

Local

members of Ironworkers Local 455. The ironworkers had been
on strike at the plant since July, 197o. Members of the two
unions fought eaclJ other with baseball bats and chains.
Devereaux "Dave" M_cGuire, 46, of HID!tington, N. Y., was
found dead about a block from the plant. Fernando Anon, an
Ironworkers member, was shot in the spine and right ear and
was listed in critical condition. The other wounded man was
identified only as a Teamster.
WASHINGTON - AFTER 15 MONTHS of revelations of
CIA assassination schemes and other abuses, the Senate
overwhelmingly approved a 15-memher watchdog committee
to monitor the nation's intelligence operations.
Since it is an Internal Senate matter, no further action is
needed except for appointment of the members. The 72-22 vote
was a triwnpil for llberal and moderate reformers, who beat
back conservative efforts to exempt the . code-eracking
National Security Agency, Defense Intelligence Agency and
other Pentagon units from the budgetary scrutiny of the new
Select Committee on Intelligence.

Ford
(Continued from page I)

CLUB TO MEET
HARRISONVILLE - The
Harrisonville Senior Citizens
Club will meet Thursday,
May 27 at 6 p.m. at Ft. Meigs.
Games will be played and
refreshments served.

and Tennessee, where
political observers say he has
close races, and will make a
nwnber of appearances in
Oregon Saturday · and
Sunday . He had plaMed to
spend a few hours in Las

Vegas, but there is
speculation he may stay out
of Nevada because its GOP
leaders
are
backing
Reagan.
The President will close the
tour in California and return
to Washington Tuesday when
the next primary returns
come in .

DR. LAMB

Karen Stodola, Mary McFarland, Marla McGinnis,
Jennie James, April Parsons, Kathleen Test and Bob
Barnitz.

SEVEN SOPHOMORES were inducted into the '
National Honor Society at Wahama High School during a
special ceremony Tue!;day morning. They were, 1..-,

Meany defends
school busing
WASHINGTON (UP! ) AFI.rCIO President George
Meany today issued a
stinging attack against those
people-- many of them in the
labor
movement- who
oppose busing as a means of
school desegregation.
.
"Busing is ~ot the issue,"
Meany declared. "The issue
is quality educaUon.
"The big yellow buses have
improved the quality of
education for mllllons, and
there isn't . the slightest
reason to pretend, suddenUy
that school busing Is
somehow in itself harmful or

,.,

I,

but he is very uncomfortable.
I have read some of your
comments in the paper and
wonder if he should be using
coffee at all. He hasn't given
up cigarette smoking either
and I have tried to tell him
that It was Important. During
his attacks he never uses any
alcohol but in between times
be has his usual cocktail
every evening and sometimes
quite a few at parties.
He complains of pain in the
pit of his stomach when he
has the ulcer and the pain Is
relieved by eating something.
He usually keeps some an·
tacld tablets next to the bed in
case he wakes up at night
with a feellng of burning in
the stomach. Any recommendations you have would
he appreciated.
·
DEAR READER - Peptic
ulcers are quite common In
our stressful society. About
one out of four men even·
iually have one, and it's true
.that the~ do tend to recur.

Your husband's story Is fairly
typical. One doesn't have to
be an executive to have an
ulcer, but It seems to help.
Manual laborers and farmers
are less likely to have them.
The exact mechanianl of
why a person has an ulcer
isn't known, but they are
associated with an Increased
production of acid digestive
juice by the stolnach. Coffee,
tea, colas and such beverages
do stimulate the stomach to
produce more acid digestive
juice. Alcohol has the same
effect, perhaps even worse.
Cigarette smoking seems to
decrease the ability. of the
digestive juices In the small
intestine to neutralize the
acid digestive juice from the
stomach. ·
· Most of these ulcers are In
the duodenUin, the first part
of the small intestine just
outside the stomach itself.
For a more , complete
description of what ulcers are
IJ

reactionary attack on
desegration from Utile RoCk

~ea~i:~~ .~~ear~0~~

unknown.
"Fear on the part of people
that they are somehow in
some way being pushed
around again. Fear that
others are. g~ining an unfair
advantage. Fear arising from
ignor a nce
a n,d
misunderstanding.
' 'Fear exploited and
inflamed by those who seek
power
positions
for
themselves and who are
willing
to
destroy
MRS. CAPEHART INDUCTED - Mrs. Mary . undemoc~atic."
communities as long as they
Capehart, guidance counselor and advisor of the National
!.feany recently has end up controlling the wreckHonor Society at Wahama High School, was inducted into
squelched efforts by AFL- age."
the society as an honorary member at a recent tapping.
Meany Insisted the "facts
CIO members in Boston and
Mrs. Capehart, who has served as the sponsor of the
Louisville to break away prove that busing is not the
National Honor 'Society for 19 years, will be retiring this
from the federation's position issue." He noted that more
year. On the right is Dll!l Stodola, president, who was in
favoring .busing. But he had than 40 per cent of the
charge of the ceremony.
nor previously issued such a nation's children ride buses
to school, only 3 per cent
strong defense of busing.
•
His statement was filmed WJder court order.
"Ideally that child ought to
for presentation at a Justice
Department sponsored be able to get quality
0
0 0
o • o
o o o
conference on "Desegration education in a neighborhood
Without Turmoil." It followed school," he said. "But lf the
and Lincoln .Mercury cars cameras to ex pl ore the
United Press lnternil1ional
the administration's decision community refuses, if a
DE TROIT - The Ford because quick acceleretion wreckage ·to determine to. intervene in a Boston federal judges finds the
Motor Co. Wednesday might ca~se the gas pedal to whether the wreckage Is school desegregation case Constitution is being violated
retailed nearly one-half ·Slick. Ford said about 28,000 really the Fitzgerald and the
before the Supreme Court. and orders busing as the only
million current.model Ford of the 441,700 cars It Is cause of the sinking.
recalling are suspected of
"Fear
caused
the way to obtain that quality
having
a
dt;tfectlve
COLUMBUS - Secretary outbreaks of violence that education, then there must be
accelerator control cable. All of State Ted W. Brown said
have characterized every busing."
must be inspected, however, Wednesday, "any dishonesty,
to discover which are double voting or voting by

of this

and that

defective, Ford said.

SAULT STE. MARIE Coast Guard Officials sa ld
Wednesoay they will begin

ineligible persons" during the
June B primary election will
result in prosecution. " We
realize, of course, that the
great majority of voters are

Veterans Memorial Hospllal
ADMITTED - Ralph Ours, exploring wreckage on the honest people and would not
Long Bottom; Brenda Elllott, bottom of Lake Superior double vote," said Brown .
believed to be the "But nevertheless, · the
Shade; Grace Paynter, Port- Thursday
remains of the Edmund dishonest few might chooSe
land; Eunice Cooke, Mid· Fitzgerald. The Fitzgerald th is method of cheating."
dleport; Jacob Scott, Mid· went down In Lake Superior
Brown said all local boards
There is an epidemic
dleport; Pauline Hysell, Nov. 10, 1975, during severe of elections will assist in his sweeping this country that is
weather . There were no Investigation of suspected
Minersville; Michael Van survivors
.
destroying the fabric of our
cases of double voting or
Meter, Middleport; Maggie
Investigators will use other questionable voting
national life. I am speaking
Gilmore, . Racine; Betty remote controlled sonar tactics .
about drag trafftclng and
l'rlend, Long Bottom; devices, televisidn and still
drug abuse. Without a doubt,
Maynard Ellls, Cheshire.
drug abuse constitutes a
DISHCARGED - Pauletla
UNIT CALLED
clear and present threat to
Watson, JeMy Williamson,
The Pomeroy Emergency the health and future of our
Margie Hunt, Ada Slack,
Squad was called for Nellie country.
(ConUnued from page I)
Patricia Thornton.
Eblin, 243 Mulberry Ave., a
The cost of drug abuse to
newspaper.
medical patient, at 11:37 p.m. the nation Is truly staggering.
Patrol Supt. Col. Frank R. Wednesday. She was taken to
More than 5,000 Americans
Blackstone
acknowledged tp Holzer Medical Center.
Pleasant Valley Hospital
die
each year from the im·
the newspaper the patrol has
D~GES - Stanrey
proper
use of drugs. Law
Aleshire, Middleport; Jack not started the investigation
Kinney, Apple Grove; Katie Into the 'ZI shortages in the '''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''·
King, Point Pleasant; Mrs. accounts of deputy auto
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
half of all street crimes Paul Justis, Racine; I.e Ann registrars across the state-;
Salurday
through
robberies, muggings,
Blackstone cited a small
Harbour, Apple Grove;
Monday,
fair
and
near
burglaries
- are committed
Michael Porter, David investigative staff currently
seasonal
temperatures
by
drug
addicts
to support
up"
an
Thomas, Mrs. Charles Fields, "winding
Saturday
through
Mouday.
their
expensive
habits.
daughter, Point Pleasant; investigation Into state
Hlgha
wtu
be
In
the
upper
Although
it
is
extremely
Judy Pierce, Miison; Bertha mental health facillties as the
60s to tbe mid 70s aud lows difficult to pinpoint an exact
Casto, leon: JeMy Halley, reason the patrol has not
will be in tbe mid 40s to the cost, counting narcotic·
Crown City;
Thomas started its investigation
lower
50s.
related crime, lost produc·
probe into the shortage.
Willlams, Pomeroy.
:::::::::
:
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
tivi
ty, criminal justice
He said other than oome
systems costs, and direct
limited official contact early
treatment and prevention
in April in several .of the
ASK TOWED
program
spending, the
counties where large
Marriage licenses have
annual
expense to
estimated
shortages occurred, no action been issued to Elmer Mer!
the
country
is
somewhere
has yet been taken under Bowles, 45, Rt. 1, Middleport between $10 and $17 billion.
Rhodes' directive.
and Juanita Christine Kirk, StatisUcs such as these only
Blackstone admitted the :lli, Rt. 1,. Rutland; Michael
initial
contact
with LoweU Bing, 20, Long Bottom serve to emphasize the
prosecutors in several coun- and .Diana Lynn Painter, 19, urgent need for stepped-!IP
efforts in combatting the
t i e s "only scratcl!ed the Rt. 1, Middleport.
further spread of the drug
and where they are located surface ...tip of the Iceberg."
menace and In effectively
and what to do about them
The patrol did investigate a
you can send 50 cents for The shortage, now estimated at
Th D 'lv Sen · e1
treating those who are ad·
e a.,,. tin
dieted.
Health letter, nwnber 1-5, $6,200 in the accounts of Oak
'DEVOTED TO THE
Over the past five years
Ulcers
Ouodenal, . Harbor deputy auto registrar
MEI~l.~~~~1~REA
total federal expenditures
Stomach. Send a long, Wilbur
White
who
CHESTER~ . TANNEHI~~ . have grown from less than
stamped, self-addressed disappeared April 15.
Exec. Ed.
. . ' '100 mllllon per year to over
envelope for malling. Ad· Persons close to that case
ROBERT HOEF~ICH
$750 million per year for a
dreu your letter to me In told the newspaper pollee
CitJ Editor
·
Publlshe da ily exceot · comprebel181ve program of
care of this new!l)laper, P.O. have "an Idea where White
saturday by The ohro
ti
Ire tme t
d
Va
lLey Publishing Com . : preven on,
a n an
Box 1051, Radio City Station, is" but have been unable to
pany , 111 court St., control. Because of these
New York, NY 10019.
take action since no charges
Pome r oy, Ohio .t5769
eff Is ltbeg to
,
Business Ott lee Phone 992:
or •
an appear , pr
Stress does seem to be a have been filed.
·
21
56.
Ed
itor
ial
Phone
992.
several
years
that
the
tide
major factor In ulcers.
Rhodes told the patrol to
21
§~cond class postage 1 .sources
had turned. Foreign supply
Perhaps that's why men have start a "complete and
pai,d ar . Pomeroy, Ohio .
were
smashed
more ulcers than women comprehensive Investigation
Nat&lt;onal advertlsl
representative warnrl through international efforts,
now . There was a iime when to determine who took the
Grlf.
f l&lt; h Company
, Inc .. thedrugsupplyonourstreets
we were a less industrallzed funds and where the money
Bottmelll
&amp; Gallagher Div.,
757 Third Ave ., New York , dried up, and drug abule
society that women had more now ls."
N . ;.;b1 ~~~7t'ptlon rate" Indicators began to turn
ulcers than men.
In his letter to ·Blackstone
DeHvered
by carrier wh'ere downward. Unfortunately,
Moat individuals who are April I, in directing the
avai l able 75 cents per
week . By Moror Route
successfully treated lor a investigation, Rhodes said his
where
carrier service not
peptic ulcer learn to decrease ·order was promoted by the
a vailable , One month,
13.25. By mall in Ohio and
ErR CALLED
their psychic stress. That Chronicle ' Telegraph's in·
into
the
doesn'talways mean that the vestlgatlon
~x ~o·n~~~ sW50, sn-~:~ .
The Middleport E·R unit
months, 17.00. Elsewhere . was called to 353 Fourth Ave.
stress is related to the job shortages.
S26.00 ye11r ; .Six months
t 1 .t.a
ur~.:.--..a
either. It can be asaoclated
113.50 : three m'onths, s7.SO. a '""p.m .............ay for
NOW
YOU
KNOW
Subscrlpllon price Includes Dorothy Reynolds, a medical
with family situations and the
sunday Times.senllnet.
patient, who was taken to
An angry llama will spit in
steu may be at home.
his an~onlst's face .
L - - - - - - - - - - 11 PJ.easant Valley Hospital.
l)

Shortage

that dips low, beat the
Oticago Cubs, 14-4, and shut
out the New York Mets, ~.•
Against the Giants Alcala
gave up six hits in 6 1-3
lnnln8! and left leading 3-2.
Will McEnaney and Rawly
Eastwlck finished up as the
Reds scored two more runs In
the eighth on a pinch.nlt
double by Tony Perez and the

became the third National
League club Alcala has
beaten as the Reds .held on for
a~ victory Wednesday night
before a fine crowd of 23,591.
In two earlier starts since
being promoted from the
bull!'&gt;en by manager Sparky
Anderson,
Alcala,
a
righthander with a fastball

-S outhern ·defe.ats Vikings,·

these optimisUc signs proved'
to he temporary. By the
middle of 1975 It was clear'
that conditions were again.
worsening . Even smaller
communities ·which had
previously been almost '
completely free of drug .
prob!e1118 began to show signs
of significant drug abuse.
It is time that an even
higher priority be given to :
combatting this national :
problem. Toward the goal I i
have cQ.5)lonsored the Drug ,

shares second in SVAC
By Greg BaUey
Batterymates Brady
Huffman and Greg Dunning
ended their high school
baseball careers In style
Wednesday night as they
teamed up to lead Southern to
...a 7·1 victory over visiting
.:.Symmes Valley and a share
" ,of second place with Kyger
•·Creek in the svAC, Kyger
and Southern have finished
,iwJth 11-4 records in the league.
•.: Both seniors, after a week
~ and shalf layoff, seemed to be
•more than the Vikings could
' handle. Ace righthander

.

Huffman had a no-hitter
going until the top of the fifth
when Symmes Valley's
Otristian tagged him fat a
solo shot Into the. parking lot
for the Vikings' only run.
Huffman fanned 16 of ihe 21
outs and allowed only two
hits, the homer and a single
by Malone In the sixth. He
walked six.
Dunning did the catching
and furnished the muscle
power as he banged out a
double and a single. Scott
Wolfe had two singles and
four RB!s to help Huffman.

:NBA finals will
•
"

~begin on Sunday

·r

BOSTON (UP!) - Inter.spersed with those summer
' reruns will be the National
..Basketball Association's
championship playoffs.
. The Boston Celtics and
·Phoenix Suns, finalists in the
NBA's two-month postseason tournament, open
their championship series
&amp;.mday (CSS.:TY 3:30 p.m.,
EDT) at Boston Garden.
· H the series goes seven
games, the final could be
played as late as June 9, 7'k
months after the seaoon ope·
ned. The reason for the length.
of the final series is obvious:
CBS may be able to telecast
l!lree Sunday games instead
!!' only one or two.
N The
time lapse between
games will benefit the older
Celtics, especially 3&amp;-year-old
~ohn
Havlicek
and
overworked Dave Cowens.
li:avlicek, bothered by torn
l!ssue between the arch and
heelofhisleft foot throughout
the playoffs, should he ready
for the opener.
.. Cowens, near exhaustion at
the end of the fifth game
against Cleveland, should be
rejuvepated by four days of
rest after battling the Cavs'
Nate Thurmond.
The Suns have been idle

..

since stopping the Golden
State Warriors' quest for a
second straight title.
The Celtics know from
recent, bitter experience how
the Suns feel and the
knowledge should make them
play harder. The Celiics were
def.ending champions last
sprmg when the Washington
Bullets knocked them out in a
six-game Eastern Conference
UUe series.
The Suns, with a starting
team comprised of two
rookies and three veterans
acquired from other teams,
are the NBA's story of t~
year. They beat SeatUe in a
quarter-final series, then
whipped the defending
champion Golden State
Warriors in a seven-game
Western Confer e ~ c e
championship series.
They have played team
basketball under Coach John
MacLeod, whose talent has
been to get the Suns to
maximize their abilities.
"MacLeod has looked at
the team and let it play the
type of ball that best suited Its
ablllty ," said Phoenix guard
Paul Westphal, traded from
Boston last sununer along
with two draft choices for
Olarlie Scott.

The hosts scored first in the
bottom of the second when
Dunning socked his double
and scampered home on a
single by Steve Hendricks.
They brought across the
winning run in the third when
they scored four big runs.
After an out, Cundiff reached
on an error and came home
on Jim Riffle's ground rule
double. After another out,
Dunning and Hendricks
walked to 'toad the bases and
Wolfe followed with a single
to score two and the fourth
run came home when the ball
was bobbled trying to get
Wolfe at second. The hosts
scored twice more in the fifth
on three singles:
Oilier hitters for Southern
were Eric Dunning and
Huffman with a single, John
Sayre with a double, and
Hendricks with two singles.
Southern's overall record is
, 13•8, second best in the
school's history.
S. Valley
000 010 ~I 2 2
Southern
014 020 x- 7 10 4
Huffman and Dunning,
Forbes (7). Galloway (LP),
Ingels (7) and Payne.

SEA'ITLE &lt;UP!) - Two
hundred or more players may
participate in a Seattle Seahawks tryout camp Sunday in
the Kingdome.
Dick Mansperger
Seahawks director of playe;
personnel; said hopefuls from
Texas; California and
Pennsylvania will be among
the players participating in
the tryouts.
A similar tryout camp last
weekend
in
Spokane
attracted 76 players and
resulted in the signing of
Herb
Singleton,
a
quarterback, and Wayne
Johnson, a wide receiver, to
National Football League
free agent contracts. .

ERIE, Pa. (UP!)
Roberto Duran, the defending
lightweight champion of the
world, Wednesday exchanged
verbal hells with his latest
challenger Lou Blzzarro. The
pair wiU meet Sunday In a
nationally televised title
fight.
"I'll knock hiin out early,"
Duran, a native of Panama,
promised reporters.
But Bizzarro said: "I plan
to lake the tiUe away from

WE SUPPLY

~~:i."~a~~!m~~i~;~!: =~~:::t~~tt! j

One man in four has peptic ulcer
By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - I am
writing about my husband to
see If you have any
suggestions about his ulcer. I
guess he is what you'd call
ulcer prone since he's had
recurrent attacks of duodenal
ulcers now during the past 10
years. He Is 47 and has a good
job. There is a certain
amount of pressure with It
since It is an executive
poaiUon and he has to make'
lots of decisions. The first
tlnie he had an ulcer he took
very good care of himself and
did &gt;Ill the thing! the doctor
told nJrn to do. He took his
. medicine regularly and the
ulcer healed. He sUU tended
. to have an acid stomach but
he got along rather well for
several months untll he had a
recurrence. He must have
. had six or seven attacks of
ulcers during the past 10
yeara. He has never had to he
hospitalized for any of them

SAN FRANCISCQ (UPI )He goes by Santo Alcala and
while that isn't exactly a
household name, folks who
follow the baseball fortunes
· of the World Champion
Cincinnati
Reds
are
beginning to re.;ognize the
young pitcher. ·
The San Francisco Giants

I

"Some Democrats seem tO
accept waste and inefficiency
as a cost of helping people ...
and that attacking waste
somehow amounts to a
repudiation of the New Deal.
And what do waste and
inefficiency have to do with
the New Deal?" he said.
"I am not suggesting that
we join In the Republican
chorus that government.has
been the cause of America's
problelll8 and that everyone,
weak and strong, must solve
their own problems," said
Muskie.
"When we write this
platform we must avoid the
trap that snared us in 1972.
For in those 15,000 words we
catalogued virtually every
problem that we · thought
bothers America~. Yet the
election results showed that
our platform was irreleVant
for all practical purposes,"
he said.

HOSPITAL
(Continued from page I)
NEWS
Industries plant in Queens when several carloads of men from
Teamsters
810 charged a picket line manned by
News •• in Briefs

•

,,

Miss Sayre, Randy Dudding~;~:,.;::.:~~~=~;
\

Alcala makes.· it 3 in
.. row for Cincinnati

.

Carter saying little about Oregon

·

come down hard on the un· :
derworld agent who peddles ,
narcoUcs for profit. It dOes ;
Utile good to spend many \
dollars In an attempt to break :
the terrible addiction of a 1
person and the subject them \
once again to the pusher on :
the street. The pusher 1s ;
rarely an addict, but hu the-;
financial. means of posting ~ :
almost any amount of bond ••
and thim skipping the coiD'ts' ·:
jurisdlcatlon before being ,
br ht to trial H is b ck
aug
· e a on 1
the street trafflclng in nar- i
cotlcs within a matter of 1
days, or even hours, of bla :
release.
The
Drug
Pusher :
Elimination Act would·:
change all that. A first of.' 1
fender would receive II;!
minimum sentence of five• i
. years or up to twenty.flve•l
years plus fines of up ~ :
$5(1,000. A second offendel'' \
would receive a minlnium ,'
sentence of ten years to life '
p1 fin of
to '100 000 1
us es up
• ·"
Suspended sentences an4 f
probation would be denied in·~.'
..
all ca
Ag 1
thi "'
ses.
an,
' "''
~~S::l;ls t~~ar~~!: :
pusher who sells drugs
because It Is an easy way to
achieve wealth wl'~
a tala! ,
~·
dit~regard . for the coat JnJ:

lnunan lives.
/ •
We cannot hope to solve the
drug problem In this country
lllleas we get to the source.
We muat put the pushera
away and stem the now from
abroad of illegal drugs. Only •
the
_,
I
ncan ..gnlflcant progre11 l
be made In winning the flcht ,'
over the acourge of druiJ~
abuse.

•'

"

0 0

0

EXCEPT THE FISH
ROD &amp; REEL

R'od &amp; Reel Combination, a super
on a perfectly balanced 5-foot rod.
"d

him.u

SPRING

$6.25

TIR

. DON'TGONEARTHEWATER

... without a Johnson reel!

Giants got two off Eastwick
in the ninth.
"! am surprised to be
pitching as good as I am,"
said Alcala, whoP!'id his dues
with Si:l years in the minors.
"I knqw I can pitch but if
Sparky don't give m~ a
chance,! cannotprove what I
can do.

Yastrzemski slams 3
home ·runs in 9-2 win·

GAME IS TODAY
The AA Dlstrlcl Baseball
Tournameut scbeduled for
Weduesday at Rio Grande
was postponed uutll
Thursday afternoon due to
wet grouuds.

•

BASEBALL
-------Motor league Standing•
By United Press lnternation•l
Notlon:~.~eogue

Philadelphia
Plttsb:urgh

w20.. ~ ..8 Pet.
.71.tl
20 12 ,625

GB
2

"Sparky told me I have the New YOrk
20 IS .571 3'1•
job as long as I keep pitching Chicag o
" 18 .438 8
MQntreal
12 l7 .414 tWt
good. '1'h~t 's all I want to do st. ~ouls
" 21 .400 9'h
now. I want to pitch good
West
enough to stay m
' the majors Los Angeies w22
.. ~.13· Pet.
Ga
.629
and good eilough to help the Cincinnati
21 13 .618 "'
team. I spend too many years san Diego
17 16 .515 4
Houston
17 20 .459 6
in the minors. I don't want to ·Atlanta
12 2J .343 10
go back."
San Francisco 11 24 .31 4 11
Wednesday ' s Results
AIcala , who was born and Chi a1 Mtt , ppd ., raln.cold
raised ,In the Dominican Philadelphia 2 New York 1
Republic, is only 23, having Pittsburgh 1 s t. ~outs 6
Los Angeles 4 Allan Ia 1
started out in the Reds Houston 9 San Diego 4
system as a 17-year old
Cincinnati s San Francisco 4
"He weighed only · 140 ·. Todi1Y~j,P{1'::::: 1:~+~chers
poundswhenwesigned him,"
Pittsburgh IMedtch J.J i at st.
recalled Anderson. " Each louis
IDenny 1·21. 1:30 p.m.
Ph iladelph ia (Lonborg 5-0) at
year he has gained a Utile New York l~oti c h 2·41. 4:05
more weight and now he is p. ~ouston INiekro I·SI at san
over 200. I think he .will go to Diego IWehrmelster O·Jh 4
220 before. he stops. I'm not p.m.
worried, though, because at Francisco
Cincinnati{CI'IIIdwell
!Gullett 3·21
at san
0,4). 4 . 0 ~
~be can handle the weight.
p.m.
·
Chicago (R: .Reuschel 2·3) at
He could be a 1Ot lik e Don Montreal
!Rogers 2·31. B os
Drysdale."
p.m.
.
Alcala was given a 2-llead
Atlanta IMorton D·&lt;l ot ~os
by batterymate Johnny A~getes ~~:~y\2 10 ~~~~ p.m.
Bench in Wednesday night's Chicago at Pittsburgh, otght
' • •
• St. LOlJIS at Phila , night
game, Be nchdrIvmg m a pair New York at Montreol, nigh t
of runs off John Montefusco Atlanta at San Francisco, night
with a fourth inning double. Cincinnati at San Diego, night
Cesar Geronimo lined a Houston at ~os Angeles. night
shot off Montefusco's left shin
American League
leading off the filjh and the
East
W,. L.. Pet. GB
Count looked like .a goner,
York
19 10 .655
holding his head in New
Balt imore
16
" .SJ]
anticipa lion of shaking off the Detroit
13 15 .464
Milwaukee
11
14 .440 6
pain. He did, with a helping Boston
13 16 .449 6
hand from trainer Joe liscio, Cleveland
13 17 .433 6
'"
West
and went on to pitch seven
W.. ~ .. Pet. GB
innings before being lifted for Kansas City 19 10 .655
,11
TeKas
19 11 .633
a hitter.
Minnesota
16
14
.533
3'h
They took Montefusco, the Oakland
IS lB .455 6
staggering Gilints' only Chicago
11 16 .407 7
13 23 .361 911,
reliable starter, to Stanford ·California
. Wednesday;s Results
Medical
Center
for New York 3 Cle\leland 2
precautionary xrays, which Baltimore 5 Milwaukee J
Boston 9 De troit 2
proved negative.
Kansas City 5 Oakland 2
"I knew he wasn't hurt all Chicago 4 Minnesota l
(Only games scheduled)
that bad," said manager Bill
Today's Probable Pitchers
Rigney, "when I went out to
I All Times EDTl
Boston (Lee Q.JJ at New York
·see him lying on the ground
3·21 , 8 pm .
8l)d he said to me 'you're (Figueroa
Ollkland (Mit chell 1·1) at
going to )Jave to shoot me like Kansas City (Bird 3-1) , 8: 30

By BILL MADDEN
urt Sports Writer
At 36, Carl Yastrzernski is
beginning to challenge Ted
Williams' numbers.
Yas tr ze ms ki , wh o
surpassed Williams' all4ime
Boston Red Sox record lor
games played on Tuesdsy,
isn't likely to surpass the o2t
ca reer home-run total
compiled by "The Splendid
Splinter." Bu t Wednesday
night, he belted Nos. 320, 321
and 322 of his own career In
Boston 's 9-2 victory over the
Detroit Tigers that. enabled
ltim to join Williams ln the
select club of eight Bosox to
have hit three or more
homers in one game.
" 1 came out for about an
hour this afternoon to take
extra ,batting practice," said
Yastrzemskt, who entered
the game batting .198. "All of
a sudden, I got my hands
higher and 1 was hitting them
into the upper deck."

Karras sued
for divorce

m

a horse."'
· The Reds, who still are only
a half game behind Los
Angeles in the National
league West, conclude their
abbreviated series here today
with Don Gullett pitching
against the Gian.ts' · Mike
Caldwell.

Portsmouth
will host
tournament

pm.
t
California &lt;Ross o.s) at Texas
(Perry 4 · 2) ~ 8: 35pm .
Minnesota (Redfern 1-0l at
Chicago {Forster 1-1) , 9 pm .
(Only games scheduled)
Friday's Games

Boston at New York, night

Oakland at Chicago, night
Ken City at Minnesota, night
California at Texas, nigh t
Milwaukee at Cleveland , night
Detroit at Baltimore, night

Polyester
Whitewall

TIRES

"State Farm has LIFE insurance,
too! Call me for details!'

A

Plans are underway for the
annual Independent Insurance Agent's Insurance
Youth Classic scheduled for
JID!e II, 1976 at the Elk's
Country Club In Portsmouth.
The winners of this area
will advance to state tournament play at the Westfield 7 Innings
Tidewat er 7 Memph·ls 6, 2nd ,
Country Club, Westfield
.
Center, Ohio, July 23. State 8 Innings
R: lchmond A Charleston 1.
winners will be eligible to go 1st, 7 Inn ings ,
Richmond S Charl&amp;ston 2,
on to the National lour· 2nd,
7 Innings .
nament to be held August 13Syracuse at Rochester ,
17 at · Reston South Golf ppd ., Snow
Toledo at Rhode Island,
Course, Reston, Virginia. ppd
., rain .
Entries will be grouped by
age and by experience so no
one, no matter how young and
inesperlenced will be left out.
The tow-name
be a one
day, I , event. Awards
will
made for every age
level for both boys and girls.
Complete details and entry
forms for the Independent
lnaurance Agent's Insurance
Youth Oasslc are available
from any Portsmouth area
Independent Insurance
Agent.
For add!Uonallnformatlon,
. contact: Bert Crothers, cochairman, Bert Crothers
Insurance, 161t Gallia Street,
Portsmouth, Ohio 45662,
Phone 353-3550, or BiU Sch·
wamberger, co-chairman,
Mtrfln Insurance, 1143 Gallia
Street, Portsmouth, Ohio
45662, Ph. :J53.8890.

EACH

MOUNTED AND

992-7161

..

Middleport, o.

Ebersbach Hardware
MAIN ST.

·'

PH. 992-2811

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SALES

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Black Asphaltum
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Black Asbestos CAN

Tire Prices

GENERAL TIRE

lilt

HolM OIIU: lkunlnat~n, 111M''

SPECIAL

For The
Lowest
'

BAIJNCED

S ~t F11~

specleal
scdel

Standings
International league
United Press International
W. ~ . Pet. GB
Rhode Island
21 12 .636
Syracuse
17 11 .607 Ph
Richmond
17 15 .531 Jh
Memph is
15 14 .517 4
Toledo
14 16 .467 5112
Tidewater
12 15 .444 6
Rochester
10 13 .435 6
Charleston
9 19 .321 9 lJ~
Wednesday ;s Results
Tidewater 3 Memphis 1, lst,

run to help rookie Pete
Vuckovich to his first major
lea~o'lle victory, Vuckovich,
who worked seven Innings,
was staked to a 2.(1 lead In the
first when Garr singled home
a run and later scored on
ca tcher Butch Wynegar's
U1rowing error .
Royals 5, A's 2:
Hal McRae, AI Cowens and
~'rank White hit !lrst~nning,
runo~~coring singles that sent
the Royals off to their seventh
win in eight games. John
Mayberry was 3-for-1 for
Kansas City while Paul
Spllttorff went 5 2-'1 innings to
gain the victory.
Orioles 5, Brewers 3:
Mark Belanger continued ·
hls uncustomary heavy
hitting by tripling home a run
and scoring another In the
first
inning,
helping
struggling Mike Cuellar to his
second victory . In five
decisions . Belanger, a
lifetime .230 hitter, also
singled In the game to raise
his average to .280--topll on
the Orioles.
SARATOGA SPRINGS,
N.Y. &lt;UPI) - Rockwell
Hanover, the two-year-old
son of pacing great Albatrou,
made hls initial start a good
one Wednesday night with a
IS-length win In the $1,000
at

DETROIT (UP!) - The
wife
of
television
sportscaster and actor Alex
Karras has sued for divorce
after 18 years of marriage.
Ivalyn Karras filed the
acton in Oakland County
Circuit Court Tuesday. Under
BILL FLETCHER
Michigan's divorce laws, no
12Sll
grounds are needed.
Powell St.
The couple has been
Middleport
separated since lust July.
PH.
992·7155
Mrs. Karras Is seeking
custody of their five children.
She also requested a court
order blocking the sale of the
family 's home in suburban
Bloomfield Hills.
Karras, the former Detroit
lUll IAIM
Lion all-pro lineman now
Like
a
good
neighbor,
living in North Hollywood, ·
Calif., was not available for
State Farm is there.
!NIUIUH
comment.

$2395

Racine, 0.

In the National League, it
was Philadelphia 2New York
I, Pittsburgh 7 St. Louis 6,
Los Angeles 4 Atlanta I,
Houston 9 San Diego 4 and
CinCinnati 5 San Francisco 4.
ChicagoMontreal was rained
out.
Yankees 3, Indians 2:
Otto Velez stroked his first
homer of the season while
Lou Piniella and Chris
0 1ambiiss each single'!! home
run s as the Yankees made it
two straight over Cleveland.
the Indians blew a chance to
tie the game In the ninth when
Rico Carty was thrown out at
the plate during a dQuble
steal attemp\.
While Sox 4, Twins I:
Chicago's Ralph Garr
slapped out three singles,
~cored twice and drove in u

Rich, creamy hot fudge surrounds
ice cream-filled fudge cake, whipped
topping with marachino cheny.

E78xl4
4 PLY

Star Supply Co.

Yastrzemski homered In
the fourth , fifth ond ninth
innings in a perfect 4-for-1
night which included lour
RBis. ~·crguson Jenkins, 3-:i,
was lhe beneficiary of Yazi's ·
power display, going the
distance and scattering seven
hits.
Elsewhere Wednesday,
New York edged Cleveland,
3-2, · Baitil)lore put away
Milwaukee, &amp;-3, Chicago beat
MiMesota, 4-1, and Kansas
City downed Oakland, !i-2.

,,

75'

POMEROY

�4- The Daily Senlinel,Middlepor_t-Pomeroy, 0. , Thursday, May 20, 197_6 ....

Pirates upset
·

Righthander Kip Lewis
'!ched db tt d th So th
pl
an a e e U '
weslern Highlanders to a 7-li
t
v1
upse ' ctory over league·
leading North Gallia Wed·
nesday evening. Lewis went
the dl'stance yt'eldt'ng st' x h1·ts,

fanned six and issued two

.....

,.,. . . • .. ... ,

Y&gt;&lt;, ' "

,

Mojor Luoue Results

., . •

~·~ :::.f!:'.:l~~~·~.

svort Ra·... d·e

c.....
:;::~::
&lt;:.:-:&lt;

::::~~
:':&lt;:)
:}~j
·&gt;:-.-.

~ New York

·• •

1100 001) 01o- 1 9 0
Ch r isten
McGraw
(71,
Garber
181,son,
UnderwOOd
!91 and

AstroGrapM
Bernice Btlele Oaol

willing cooperation.

with ki n than with outsi ders.

VIRGO (AUf. 23-Sept. 22) To-

CAPRICORN (!)oc. 22·Jtn.1t) ,

day you 'll ex hibit jtxce ptiona lly
keen judgment, and you have
the cOurage of your convic·

5- The Daily Sentinel, Mlddleport·Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, May 20,1976

The organizational ability lor .
'l"hich you're noted Is even ··· ··~;,
sha rper today. This is the day .;..
to tie down something difficult. ;.

·~
h•?...ifR.

lions. Don'l sidestep hard
deCisions."

AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Ftb. .1t) ~
free passes.
Q
r!: and Hodges , Grote ( 9 ) , WPLIBRA (Sept. 23·0cl. 23) Take
For Frldoy, Moy 21, 11Ti
The next lew days could be ~:
The victory was South·
• 0
~~~
Christenson 1&lt;-ll , L:P- Lollch
special pride in anything you
profita ble ones. ae alert for op-- .....
· ht and ;:;::&gt;.:; ,
·:l:••.. . 12-ll .
ARIES (Morch 21 -Aprll19) To put your hand to today. The
western 's th·.tr d s tratg
porlu nllies through persons '·'
your
su
rprise.
you
should
find
left th'e Highlanders with a 5-7 ·=·;::::
:···;;a Pittsburgh 100 1100 02&lt;- 1 10 o
compen sation could be surwho hold you In high esteem.
1
d
::;.,:::
:~~ s1 . Louis
003 030 000-611 1 ot hers just seem to wanl to do pris ingly large.
-~
things
for
you
today.
Someone
PISCES
(Fob. 20-Morch 20) I~ '"
eague recor · • 2 · th :;::(:~
By MILTON RICHMAN
~:t&lt; Candelaria, Tekulve tl L GJ.
SCORPIO
(Oct.
24-Now.
22)
you've been wanting to take a .
North Gallia .,. In
e :;,.:::
UP! Sporll Edllol'
:~::';ll
ustl 17), Hernandez !B l. Moose may even volunteer to repay a
fan ning rive and walking SVAC still holds down first :-:-&gt;"·
• • 19 1 end Sonoull len ; McGlothen, debt.
Today, you'll treat all of tile
short fun trip, now is the time . ...
I our ,
Hrabosky
181, TAURUS (April 20-Moy 20) tightly. 'f' ou:u be fun to be
Chances are you have your
place in the league but must
!EDITOR'S NOTE: Milton Richman concludes his swing Frisella
Prol y 191,(8),
Rasmussen
(9) and
around. People will enjoy your
He slammed a two-run now play another league tilt through parts of Ohio, West VIrginia and Pennsylvanls by Sim mons. WP- Hernandez I J. Group activities are favored tor company.
homer in the third inning. In to capture the championship. Interviewing world cham(IIOn wrestler Bruno Sammartino.) ~st~PL-;;.,~:.s"j.~~~~n c'?i~'c~~s you today. Influential persons SAGITTARIUS (Now. 23-Doc.
will be d ra wn to you . A 21) Entertain at home tonight
addition
Lewis,
Don trips,
Bush Cht
The
Pira
at
PITISBIJRGHtUPI )- Youlookat BrunoSarrunartino,and fora 121; Pittsburgh , Zlsk 121.
had two tohits
in four
'll'cothe
tod;tes
i';}..
a '·.·,play
th"·e Class
beneficial relationship could or do something with the whole
I
ua~
the inunedlate reaction Is pity. No man his size Should he in Atlan
ta
Larry Carter had a single and A District
Tournament.
Los Anoeld
o100 000
o1o oooooo- 1 660o resu lt.
family. You'll be much happier
21
Unescore :
such a tiny jail.
Ruthven, Devine
161, 4 Dal GEMINI (Miy 21 -Juno 20)
a double and Rick Crouse got
Mar 21 , 1978
... N
a double and home run . Greg S'western 122 011 1}-7-11-2
His prison is a steel orthopedic appliance called a Milwaukee Canton IBl and Pocoroba: John , Your most important ideas w ill
... ; ...
James topped the Pirate
Expose yourself to situations ·-·
Brace. ltbecame a partofSammartinosincehe broke his neck Marshall (8) ana Yeager. WP- "b e well -rec;elved by frien ds to where you can mee.t people ,.....
Discuss them freely. You
·
John
12·21Angeles
. LP- Ruthven
I, th ree wee ks ago.
attack with two hits.
North Gallia 200 200 2--6- 6-2 ahd was nearly killed wresting
HR - tos
; Yeager 14-51
151. . day.
may gel a suggestion that will NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS and make contac t~ !his coming
Brett Tackett was th e
Lewis (W) and Crouse.
In medical language, his sixth cervical vertebra was Houston
103 1100 oso- 9 12 1 add new dimensions to them.
year. Relationshi ps established .v;
STATE OF OHIO
Tackett (L) Minnis (4) and fractured.
B
Sa
t' . San Diego ooo 400 ooo- 4 a 3
los ing hurl er . He was
Department of Transportation can advance yo ur finan c la lln ~ ~ . q
.
teres ts and career.
· ......
Columbus, Oh to
relieved by Calvin Minnis in Tackett .
Eveninhispresentdisabled condition, runo rrunar tnols
Cosgrove, Griff in 141, Siebert CANCER (juno 21 -Juiv 22)
Mayl, 1976
the fourth.. Combined they
a mountain of a man : six feet tBll, and weighing 260, he has a 181 ana Johnson ; Spillner, Rely solely on you ~ log ic and
reaso n today. Your intuitions,
Contract Sales Legal Copy No .
21-inchneck, 20%-inch upper arms and a 57'H nch chest with a :.?."\~~. ~~-~~~~r: \8/;. ~~~ w ~ich are usually reliable, may 76·H6
1
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
3&amp;-inch waistline.
Splllner (1 .6), HR - Houston ; pl ay cute tricks on you today.
sealed proposals will be
Despite his size, docoors found a brace to accommodate him, Watson 121.
re ceived at the office of the
and now he's inside it all the way from his chin Whis pelvis.
Cin cinnat i ooo 210 02o- s 9 o LEO (Jutr 23-Aug. 22) Where Direc tor of the Ohio Depart yesterday you had difficulty ment of Transpor t ation ,
Bruno Sarrunartino, the world 's best-known wrestler, is still San Frnclsco 100 001 002- • 10 o getting
Columbus , Oh io, until 10;00
compliance with your
· the wick
Alcala,
McEnanev
7), East A.M .. Ohio Standard Time ,
its champion, despite his broken neck. When he Sl'ts m
181 and
Bench ; (Montefusrequests, today you could get
Thursdl!y, June 3, 1976, tor
By FRED DOWN
living room of his home In Pittsburgh and isn't under therapy , co, Lavelle 181. Heoverlo 191
improvements in :
3 Cleveland 2, Baltimore 5 all he thinks about Is the day he can wrestle again.
· and Rader . WP- Aicola 13-0l.
UP! Sports Writer
Gallia and Mei gs coun ties,
b
d
LPMontefusco
f.t
-JL
,
"••&lt;~'lwaukee 3• Chl' cago 4 Ml'n··
"He's an exceptionally kind person, a wonderful l).us an
Ohio , on , various sections - .
Mike Schmidt, regarded by
GAL . State Route 325 In Galli a
many experts as the National nesota i and Kansas City 5 and a tremendous father to our three children." says his wife,
County ; MIOG . U. S. Route 33
NOTICE
OF
ELECTION
American
League
·
Oaklan
d
2.
Carole
to
whom
Sammartino,
38,
has
heen
married
17
years.
League's home run king for
and Stat e R.outes "338, 681 end
ON TAX LEV'I' IN
New York · 000 101 1()(}- 3 10 o
692 in Meigs County by ap .
"But since this injury, I'm very worried about him. He has had Clevelond
years to come, has learned Pirates 7, Cards 6:
EXCESS OF THE TEN
Ooo 000 002- 2 51
ply ing a bl'tum lnous sUrface
MILL LIMITATION
May , · Tldi'"ow' (9) , Martinez
Pinch-hitter Duffy Dyer's many injuries over the years, but this is the worst and if I had
that there are times when it is
NOTICE Is hereby given treatmen -t to pavemen t in part
(9 )
and
Dempsey :
Hood ,
run
-scoring
double
climaxed
my
way,
he
would
never
wrestle
again
."
wiser to swing for singles.
Thomas (7) and Fosse. WP- that In pursuance Of a and to shoulders In part .
Shoulder &amp; Pavement Widt h
Sammartino was · lucky : His injury did not leave him May 13·11 , 'LP- Hood 11 ·21. HR Resolu t ion of the Council Of
Schmidt , who led the NL a four4-un , ninth-inning rally
- New York, Vel ez ( 1l ; Cleve . the Village of Middl eport, - Varies .
that
enabled
the
Pirates
to
paralyzed,
making
his
chances
for
recovery
excellent.
A
Project and Work Length with J8 homers but st&lt;uck out
Ohio, passed on the 4th dav of
land , Blanks I 1l.
March, 1976, there will be ·11 ll.529 teet or 22. 07 miles .
180 times in 1975, knew such a beat the Cardinals. Richie highly sensitiVe individual as well as an articulate one, he is
" The date set for completion
Mllweukee 000 011 l OG- 3 8 0 submitted to a vote of the
time had arrived in the fifth Zisk, who drove in three runs, not your stereotype of a professional wrestler.
people of said VIllage at a of this work shall be· as set ,
Balflmorl:!!
212
000
OOx5
8
1
When he speaks, he does so gently, reflecting the soft, earinning Wednesday nig hl-&lt;~ nd ignited the rally with his
Colborn , Champion (2 ), ~as ­ Special ELECTION to be held forth in the bidd lng proposal ."
Ea ch bidder shall be
second
double
of
the
game.
pleasing
intonation
from
his
native
Abruzzi
region
of
central
tra
(5 ), Rodriguez
{7) and in the V illage of Middleport ,
delivered a single and drove
Moore, Porter (7) ; Cuellar. Ohio, at the regular places of required to file with h is bid a .
Manny
Sanguillen
also
had
Italy.
He
came
to
this
country
when
he
was
15.
in the run thal,..£~ye the
Garland (6) , Jackson (9 ) and voHng therein , on Tuesday , cer t ified check or cashier 's
"Of course I can appreciate how my wife and the rest of my Hendricks . WP- Cuellar ( 2-J l. the 8th day of June, 1976, the ctl eck for an amount equel to
Philadelphia Phillies a 2-1 three hits for Pittsburgh as
L P- Colborn (2-4) . HR- Mil- question of levy ing, In e)( cess five per cent of his bid, but In
victory over the New York reliever Ramon Hernandez family feels," Sammartino says. "I understand completely, waukee
, Aaron (2 ). _
of the ten mill limitation, for no event more than fifty
won his first game. Harry and naturally I'm concerned about the people !love. My desire
Mets.
the benefit of Middleport thousand dollars, or a bond tor
001 240 101 - 9 15 I Vill age for the purpose of ten per cent ot his bid, pay.able
It was a club record l ith Rasmussen' took his fifth loss to come back is something I can't explain. When you're in Boston
the Director .
200 000 OOo- 2 1 3 providing maintenance, fire to Bidders
inst three victories.
sports, you have such a limited time and then it's all over with, Detroit
must li"Pply . on the
stra ight road victory for the aga
apparatus
,
appllanc
.
e
s
,
Jenkins
{3
-5)
and
Fisk
;
Dodgers 4, Braves 1:
finished.
proper forms, for qualifica t ion
Roberts, ·Grilli 151. Hiller 181 bu ildings or sites therefor, at
Phils, who lead the NL's
least ten days prior to the
Mike Marshall received
"When this first happened, I lay in the hospital and thought I and Freehan . LP - Roberts (3- · sources of water supply and date
!;;astern Di vision by two
set for opening bids in
2). HRs- Boston , Yastrz~mskl 3 mater ials ttlerefor .
credit for his eighth save had no alternative. rve broken bones before but when you're (S l. Ri ce (SJ ·; Detroit; Horton
ga mes.
Said tax being : an ad - accordance with Chap ter 5525
17 ), .
ditional ta x of one mil l to run OhiO Re\IISed Code.
Schmid t's single ca me alter taking over in the eighth talking about something so close to the spine, it's a differer,t
Pl ans and specifications are
for five years .
on file in the Departmen t of
after a double by Larry Bowa from Tommy John , who was ball game. The doctors said it was only my good physical Oakland
010 tOO ooo- 2 7 1
Transportation and the office
and gave Philadelphia a 2-0 hit by a line drive. Steve condition that saved me . They said if it were someone else, Kansas Ci ty 300 000 02x- 5 15 o at a rate not exceeding 1. 0 of
the Distri c t Deputy
Torrez
,
Todd
(6), Lindb lad mills for ea ch one dollar of
Yeager
hit
a
two;-un
homer
he'd
he
dead
or
paralyzed
from
the
neck
down.
Now
I'm
lead. Larr y Chri stenson
(6 ), Fingers ( 7) and Haney ; valuation, which amounts to Dire ctor.
and
Dusty
Baker
a
runstarting
to
feel
better.
blanked the Mets for six
Spllttortf, Pattin 161 and ten cen ts for ea.ch one hundred The Director reserves the
Martinez. WP - Spllttorff (J. J) . do ll ars. of va luation, for fiv e right to re rect any and all bids.
innings but the Phils needed scoring double to lead Los . " If 1progress the way I'm going and the doctors give me the ·LP
RICHARD D. JACKSON
- Torrez (4-4) . HR - Oak- year s.
Angeles' six -hit attack. okay, I do not intend to retire, no."
DIRECTOR
the se rvices of three M
The Polls for sa id E lection
land, Bay lor (3) .
arshall hasn't given up a
· d
will be open at 6: 30 o'clock Rev . 8·17-73
relieve rs- Tug McGraw, run in his last 11 1·3 innings
Nobody inwrestlingdraws thewayBrunoSammarttno oes.
......
010 000 DOO- 1 a 2 A .M . and remain open un til !51 20, 27, 2tc
Gene Ga rber. and Tom and has three wins in addition They knock down the doors to see him. More than 21,000 were Minnesota
.
Cl'iicago
201 000 lOx- 4 9 o 7: 30 o'clock P.M . of-said day.
•rr l"t
By
order
of
th
e
Board
of
Blyleven
,
Burgmeier
(
7)
and
Underwood- to preserve the to his saves.
in New York's Madison Square Garden April 26 when Wynegar ; Vuc~ovlch , Ham ilton El ect ions, of Me igs County,
win and deal ex-American
Sarrunartino met Stan Hansen of Amarillo, Texas .
4
(8) and Downing . WP- Vuck - Ohio .
Padres : two-run
The two wrestled awhile and then Hansen caught Sammar, ovich (1 .1). LP- Biyleven &lt;J-3).
I.eaguer Mickey L,•&gt;lich his Astros
Ro b 9,Andrews'
·e rnest A . Wingett
- - ,
fifth loss in the NL,
tino with a body slam,
·chajrman .
(Only games scheduled J
sin
gle
and
Bob
Watson
's
"Nine
out
of
10
times
you
land
on
your
back
when
that
"I was swinging for a
three-run
were eighththe big . happens," sa)'S Sammartino. "I landed on my head. When
Dorothy M . JohnSton
single," said Schmidt , who blows
of homer
a five-run,
d I
Director
admitted that he probably inning, which carried the got up, he drove me where I had no control whatsoever, an as
Dated May 10, 1976
would have heen trying to hit 1\stros over San Diego. Tom he sprung me off the ropes, he caught me with his elbow in the
one out of Shea Stadium in the Griffin , seco nd of three forehead, snapping my head.straight back. He weighs over 300
(51 n , 20, 27 161 3, &lt;tc
same situation last season.
· ed powtds, so that completed the job."
Or . Edwin Campbell of the New York state Athletic
The Pirates defeated St. Houston pitchers, recetv
Louis, 7-6, Los Angeles beat credit for his third win while Corrunission was the one who eventually halted the bout,
Spillner
tagged
technical winner. Sarrunartino retained his
ATTEND GAME
Atlanta, 4-1, Houslon routed Dan
loss was
against
one with
win. making Hansen the ~
his sixth
Mrs , Sadie Thuener,
San Diego, 94, and Cincinnati Reds 5, Giants f :
title because his should weren't pinned_and he never gave
Syracuse, William Lehew and
topped San Fra ncisco, 5-4 , in
Johnny Bench and Tony up. As a matter of
, he :ovanted to conttnue even though he
sons, Ted and Billy, Pomeroy
oth er Nati onal Leag ue Per ez each hit two-run was bleeding P. fusely lrom the head.
.
games. Chicago at 'Montreal doubles as the Reds beat the
attended the Cincinnati Red's
Campbell s s it was the most severe injury he encountered
was rained out.
ballgame in Cincinnati
Giants and provided rookie in 20 years ith the commission.
Sunday.
In the American l.eague's Santo Alcala with his third
Hansen h never called or said he was sorry for what
only scheduled games, it was
'
d bl · happened.
win.
Bench's
ou
e
"On
the
con
ary, he seeii!S to be trying to make ·capitalTV
of
Boston 9 Detroit 2, New York straight
in the fourth inning gave
Jacob w. Lee, Vinas L. Lee
it;'!&lt;-says Sammartino. "I've heard some of his boastmg on
to Douglas Johnson Jr ., Alma Twp., Trus. of Salem Twp.,
and it struck me as being ugly, He is going around saying 'I'm Johnson , 2 .5 acres, Sutton. 4.369 acres, Salem .
Wald K. Foster, Shelba J.
the man who broke Bruno Sammartino's neck."'
Wil ey D. Ours, Audrey
· Foster to Jeffrey Lee Davis,
In some 2,000 previous matches, Sammartino lost only once, Brenda Jean Davis, .20 acre, Ours to Roy Bailey , Do ro th v
Bai ley , Parce ls, L ~t art.
five years ago to a Bulgarian named Ivan Koloff. He has been Racine . Sutton.
Archie McKinney , Eva
Charles Moore, Mary K. McKinney
world champion II years and estimates he has made nearly $2
, VIrgil Parsons to
Moore
to
Bob
R.
Moore,
million .
Bradford Church of Chris1
Everything you want to
Luella Moore, 100 acre Lot
Inc ., 15 .216 acres, Salisbury .
As lor whether wrestling is on the up-and-up, Sarrunartino 296, 100 acre Lot 295, 5 acres,
see in Levi's denims for
Spencer
Buchanan,
spring and summer .
Freda Buchanan . Bettv
says, "Mostly the people who ask me thai are the ones who 24.23 acres, Sutton.
Choose several pairs
Dary l V. Stumbo, Sharon A. Rockhold , Woodrow Rock ·
never go to the rna tches.
, Gertrude Chevalier ,
now.
to Stumbo-Hovatter hold
''I don 'I believe the hundreds of thousands who c.ome out to Stumbo
Francis Chevalier, William
Equities. Lot, Middleport.
Buchanan
.
Doris
Buchanan
,
see wrestling believe it is a fake . H they did, why would they
Bob Damron, Nancy Jess ie Lee Buchanan , Elsie
keep coming out'"
Damron
to
Perry
E.
Buchanan to Nora Buchanan ,
Kennedy,
sarbara
J. 21h acres, Pomeroy .
Ella Marie Bright to Elsie
Kennedy. 6 acres. Stlpio.
N. 2nd Avenue
Sybi l Ebersbach, . Comm ;, Mae Bright McMurray,
Middleport, 0.
Joseph McMur r ay ,
Orpha M. Bennett, dec. to Herman
Cincinnati a 2-1 lead and
Parcels
,
Rutl!u1d
.
Bernard Lewis Bennet!, 37
Perez capped the Reds'
acres, 30 acres, Olive.
scoring with his double in the Pomeroy Bowling Center
Bernard Lewis Bennett to
Wednesday Alternoon
eighth . Rawly Eastwick, the
Donald L. Bennett, Marjor ie
League
S. Bennett. 37 acres. Olive.
third Reds pitcher, was
.,
May 12,1976
Bert Franklin Christian,
credited with a save. John
Standings
,,'
Marie Christian to
It' s con tou red nature
Teain
W. L. Sharon
Montefusco was the loser,
Cad
N.
Martin,
Linda
D.
lower than the toe t o help you st&amp;nd
.
Ed 's Crossroads Groc. 14 10
DuHon Drugs
13 11 Martin, 2.5 acres, Columb ia.
The trit on pol yure thane used to make the sole
••
John Phillip Follrod to
Team
1
13
11
g ives 25 pe r cent more we ar at about hall th e weight of
Boone ; Loll ch, LockwOOd (81

(fj"~ ~

'W"'--------"-\
NEW

Phillies win lith

.. KRINK~E"
FABRIC
THE

NEW LOOK
$198 TO

_......

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

.,

Meigs
Property

Several Styles

Transfers

Colors
To Choose
From

This Is
PEDWINS
Natural Walking
Shoe

MIDDLEPORT DEPARTMENT STORE

Team 2
Teams

an y other known soling material.
Experien ce lt.

THE SHOE BOX

NOTICE OF OIL
&amp; GAS LEASE

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

FORFEITURE

TO: A11antic International Oil
Corp.
Summit Chase, 1000 Urlln
Ave .
Columbus , Ohio
. I
Gentl em en :
You ar e hereby notif ied that
th e undersign ed
lesso rs
hereby elect to d eclare a
forf-eiture of the fa llowing oi l
and ga s lease between you as
lesse e and th e undersigned as

WE

FILl All
NEW &amp;
REFILl
~PRE~ICRI PTIONS
HRS.
8:30 to 8:00
DAILY
CLOSED
SUNDAY

VILLAGE PHARMACY

lessors :

L ea se dated the 18th day of

Aptil, 1972, betw een Frank E .
Dodderer and Elsie I . Dod .

derer , his wife , as Lessors ,
and At lanti c Internati onal Oil

Corp ., .as Less ee, cover ing
22.50 acres , more or tess ,
situate in Olive Township ,
Me ig s CoUn t y , Ohio , and being
bound ed on the Noi"t~ by
George Coll ins, on the E ast by

James Osborne , on the South
by Robe rt For tn ey and on th e
Wes t by Arthur Heiney , sa id
lease bei ng of re cor d in ltl e
off ice of the Clerk of ltl e
Coun ty Re corder In Me igs
County , Otlio, in Lease Book
58, at page 231.
Th e above lea se is her eby
de clare d forfeited by th e
unders ign ed Lessors becau se
of the non -payment of delay
ren tal as r equ ir ed by the
term s of said lease .
It is th e Inten t ion of the
undersigned Lessor to fil e and
re cord an affidavit of for fe it ure fo r the abo ve lease
with th e Cou"' y re cord er of
M e ig ~
Co unt y, Ohio , a' S
prov ided b.y law
Sign ed
Frank E. Dodder er
Less.or

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
NEW HAVEN, W.VA.

Elsie 1. Doaderer
Le&amp; sor

lS I

.'

0

• ..._. . , . ,

II, 18, 19, 20. 21. Sic

12 12
12 12

Farmers Bank &amp; Savings Co .,

Lot, Pomeroy.
Team 6
a 16
Paul E. Beeq le, Helen E.
H igh sing le QameTina Beegle to David H. Zirkle,
' Coll ins 170: Selby Man ley 163. Maude
Ann
Zirkle,
High series Selby
Corrective Deed, Racine.
Manley .466 ; Delma Karr AA2j
Franklin Real Estate Co. to
Tinll Collins 427 .
Board 'of Trus . of Sa lem

Home Furnishings
•FLEXSTEEL
•HOOVER
•ADMIRAL
•SPEED QUEEN
•PROVINCETOWN
MAPLE
.
•BASSETT
•LANE
•SYROCO
•ARM~TRONG

eFRIGIDAIRE

·BAKER FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
, I

.

..

Converse AII-Sta.r Tennis Shoes

BIRDSEYE t399
DIAPERS

OUR PRICE

CURITY
PREFOLD

By Helen and

•'

ANNIVERSARY HONORED - Mr. and Mrs.
Lawrence Manley, 690 Laurel St., Middleport, on Aprll20
celebrated their 43rd wedding anniversary . Mr. and Mrs.
Manley have lour children, Raymond, Lawrence, Jr.,
Roger and Mrs. Rosemary Hysell, all of Middleport, and
13 grandchildren. A Utree layer cake was presented to the
couple made by their daughter-in-law, Mrs. Raymond
Manley, and their daughter.

. • My brother and I have never been able to answer the phone
at:our house· even if one of us is standing over it, our mother
in;ists on ru~g out from another room wget it.
' We can't use the phone without permission, and we have. to
e~laln who we're calling and why, with a. third-degree after
we hang up. ·
. .
:· Our friends can call, but she lets them stay on two minutes,
th~ she starts yelling so they hang up. Naturally, we must
report everything they said.
.
' Our pbone isn't used for business, and we don't abuse the
prlvUege.
tt
..
~lease tell parents that teenagers are capable of gmng and
reteiving messages, without all that interference. We have
nothing to hide, but we'd like a little privacy.
.
• Since we don't have to ask permission to vacuum, why IS
the phone so different? - CUT-OF.F TEENAGERS
Dll:AR CIIT-OFF TEENS:
• Good question! Why don't you ask your mother to write us .
a letter, answering it? Maybe if she'd get her "reasons" down
on paper she'd realize how foolish they are. - HELEN

Social
Calendar

THURSDAY
MIDDLEPORT Child
Conservation League, 7:30
p.m. Thursday at the
Columbus and Southern Ohio
Electric C6. Manning
Webster to be the guest
speaker. Bowling party to
+++
•
follow the meeting .
CUI'-OFFS:
MIDDLEPORT-Pomeroy
' Your letter is a good example of why some parents
consider parenthood such a drag. They take on so many , area branch, AUW, 7:30p.m.
useless "extras" that they're run ragged trying to keep up with Thursday, Meigs High School
them all. - SUE
Library . Theme "Third
World Women" with program
+++
NQm TO cuT.OFF'S MOTHER: For Pete's sake, simmer ~ic "Master of Our Destidown!- HANDS
ny" with Roberta Wilson,
+++
chairman. Prospeclive
RAP :
.
.
members to be guests. In·
There was a teen hang-out In our town - not wild, just a stallatlon of officers by
place to have fun Instead of standing around on street comers. Sharron Helen, Athens
But they lady next door who runs a music studio got It closed Branch. Hostesses, Maxine
because of the "noise."
Wingett, Lee Lee, Rachael
: Wecanprovetherewasnodopeorbooze.Howcanwefight Downie, Nancy Reed and
ci(y haU? - STARSKY AND HUTCH THE SECOND
Margl!l'et Ella Lewis.
.
D~~'AR SAND H:
dinl\IAGN0UA C!Thub, psdotluckt
1' Go to city hall (the City Council) and state your case. H ner, 6: 30 p.m. ur aY a
enl&gt;ugb parents back you up, perhaps your hang-out won't be a the home of Mrs, Ella Smith.
cl4se-out much· longer.
·
ROCK SPRINGS Better
• Or maybe you could find a new location and get your own Health Club, 1: 15 · p.m.
~n canteen going, All right? - SUE AND HELEN
Thursday at the borne of Mrs.
:
+++
Helen Blackston. Mrs. Teresa
'
·Abbott to have the program,
·
Mrs. Phyllls Skinner, the
contest.
·
CLASS 12, Thursday night,
'
7:30 p.m. Heath United
LETART, W. Va. - Mr. Craw, on May 28, 1926.
Methodist Church.
an'd Mrs. Wlll\am Brooks,
. Mr ..and Mrs. Brooks have
DEMOCRAT PARTY
Lt(tart, will obser\ve their 50th two daughters and two sons, Thursday at Episcopal
w4dding anniversary will! an · Dorothy, MI. Alto; ~1, Parish House, 8 p.m. All
OJI.I!n house StDiday, May 23, New Haven; Harry, Letart, committeemen urged to
!rom 2 to 4 p.m. at their and Melvin, Genoa, Dlinois. attend , Public invited.
hOOJe.
•
They also have i1 grand·
LADIES AUXILIARY ' Big
t
:Ihe couple was married at children and two grea - Bend Citizens Band Radio
th~ Union Parsonage by Rev. grandchildren.
Club, 7:30 Thursday at the
,
meeUng hall. Discussion on

11:

~-~----·

:

[

.·

..

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

I

JHE

•

o.

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

SALE I
~

custom
draperies

II ,
II :.

MIDDLEPORT DEPARTMENT STORE
~

l

SPECIAL

SALE

SATURDAY
HYMN SING, 7:30 p, m.
Sattrday at Cheshire United
Methodist Church, Cheshire.
Featured singers will be the
Shaffer family !rom Crown
aty and the Jordan-ettes.
Public Invited.
BAKE SALE Saturday, 10
a.m. at Gaul's Market In
Chester sponsored by Chesler
T·ball and pee wee . league.
HYMN SING Saturday at
7:30 p.m. at Fellowship
Church, Racine. Public In·
vited.
ANNUAL REUNION and
banquet of Rutland High
School Saturday, 6:30p.m. at
Rutland Elementary. Round
and square dancing from 10
p.m. to 1a.m. MU81c by String
Ousters.

\

KIDDIE SHOPPE

__

_

...

Save 30%
On Matching Custom
Bedspreads During
This Sale.

,.,

I

Please bring window sizes with JOU.
MAIN 'STORE, ANNEX AND
WAREHOUSE OPEN
FRIDAY, 9:30 to 8, and
SATURDAY
9:30 to 5 PM.
'

••
~

SUNDAY
REVIVAL SERVICES, 7:30
each evening at Middleport
Church of the Nazarene
through Sunday. Speaker Ed
Irwin , evangelist, singer,
musician, to be evangelist;
public invited.

MONDAY
MISCELLANEOUS
shower wlll be held at the
Enterprise United Methodist
Church for Brenda Wlll
Black, May 24, 7.:30 p. m. All
rr:~nds of Mrs. Black are
Invited.'
·
PICNIC PLANNED
SYRACUSE - Syracuse
Cub Scout Pack 242 will
combine a meeting and picnic
Saturday at the home of Pete
175 N mONO AVE I MIODIEPOII!. OH 45160
Thoren. Cubs are to meet at
Phonel6141992 3586
the._ Syracuse Elementary
___..
,_' .... _.. _..,......,.._...__.._.._.. __.( ·• Scjjoolat 5:30p. m.
'I

t_
..,....

.Oioose Fn111 Over 700 Fabrics
and Colors in Our Collection.

1I

I

~.~. $1.89

.

On Custom Draperies
For Your Home or
Office.

bake sale to be held
Saturday at 9:30 at Krogers.
LAUREL CLIFF Beller

· Also see our new shipment of sun
: dresses; halter dresses and halter
·• tops for girls. Sizes 2 to 6X .

'

Save 30%

THIRD Friday Club
Friday, 7:311 p.m. at home of
Mrs. Ernestine Burnell, ·
1 Syracuse.
POPPY DAY, Friday and
Saturday, in Racine by the
America Legion Auxiliary of
Racine Post 6o2.

: NOW HAS PAMPERS

"t
"•

•

heritage house

first aid supplies and plans

: While you're here see our lar~e
• selection of many new styles m
: shorts, shirts, tank tops &amp; shOrt sets
: for girls &amp; boys. From infant to 14.

i

that are
durable yet
comfortable

KIDDIE SHOP PE !~:::or::~;=~:

Box 52•29
.'Dayt"1me...... .. ........... ........

,

soles

I for

51.29
'Overnite
....................
~~
...
•

••

Hl!:LP OFFERED
The Ohio Bureau EmService,
In
ployment
cooperation
with
the
Veterans Administration , has
placed an employment
representative five days per
week at the Veterans Administration office In
ColumbUs to assist veterans
in job placement. Velerals
are advised to contact that
representative frotn 8:30
a.m.-4 :30 p.m. a.t 360 South
Third Street, Room 306,
Columbus.

Supple calfskin
leather

•
.:A nntversary
tS• SUndary

.

~

·
ll
Don Hanning, principal of
The pledge, 01 a eg1ance
the Bradbury fifth and sixth and the Lord s Prayer were
ee•ti,.ng...H+...,._,.~H+H+~H~H. ..,......_....
grade school, spoke at a given to open th.e.m,..~
recent PTA meeting on the
~
plans wdepartmentalize the
scho ol program beg inning
next year .
Hanning stressed that the
two grades would not be
mixed and that report cards
would continue to heused,.but
that departmentaliza tion
would penni t the teachers to
speclllze in leaching one or"
twosubJects rather than all .
·
subjects.
The principal also spoke on
the mental health levy w be
voted on next month and the
PTA gave !Is endorsement.
There was also a short
discussion on PTA and PTO
with no action being taken
now.
A report was given on the
progress of the playground
committee and it was noted
that basketball nets have
been Installed along with
poles for tether ball. Teresa
Casci and Mrs. Maxin e
.Goegleln talked about the
need for employment of a
county health nurse and
members were urged to
contact the Meigs County
Who says you need to spend more
a pair of high
Board of Health.
qu
ality
dress
shoes?
Not
Thom
MeAn.
Classic
sly ling ·
Mrs . Ed ward Crooks
combined with quality mater ial s and craltsmanshlp make
thanked the room mothers for
Bootmaster s an outstanding v~ lue. Compare with brands
participation during the year.
costi ng much more and you ' l l bu y 6oolma ster .
The attendance award went
Boolmasters are ava ilable In a va riety of styl es.
.
to the rooms of Hanning and
Susan Ornstein. Officers for
the 1976-n year were installed and Mrs. Goeglein
Your thorn MeAn Store
presented the cardinal award
N.
2nd
Avenue
for membership to the unit.
Middleport,

Leather covered
innersoles

+++

'

~-

.

tmaster
by Thom

+++

STRETCH lACE

OPEN FRIDAY AND SATURDAY TIL 8

Bottel

.·Toddlers .....................~-~-· $1.49

'
•

Principal speaks to PTA

'

·1

•
'•

A thought fQr the day :
American writer Cha rles
Dudley Warner said, "What
&gt;;mall
potatoes we a U are,
Refrestunents were served
by Miss Jean Parson's compa red with what we
classroom,
might be."

0:: ::: ;occo~:):~~~;;;;;:;:::·:~::::~:~~~-:

DtARANDI:
: Even af Utree limes age 22! - HELEN

TO

•229

• •

It's a Moat Unuaual Way!
DEAR RAP : ' .
This Is in responAe to Judy who can't see why you have to
have se1 if you go to bed with a gtiy.
Me and my ol' man have been living together for a year,
and were engaged a year before that. We decided that we
dido 'I want to have lnlerCOUI'8e until after we were married and we stlllaren'tquite sure about marriage. Neither of us is a
virgin, but we feel we made mlsta~s in that respect.
Anyway, we get along just great. He helps me with
everything after coming home from work. Then we go to bed,
kiss each.other good night and fall asleep, either holding hands
or with h1s arm around me.
I'D adnlit you've got to lind the guy who goes along with
your ideas here. - AND! (AGE 22)
·
DEARANDI:
'
And he wouldn't be easy wfind! - SUE

Group Ladies Sportswear

SIZES 3-16 ,

"

I.:NewINTRO~UCTORY
Born..................

·6··

THE FONZ SHIRTS

•0

I

'12''

BIKINI SALE

~-~~-~·= ··~ 0

I

BlACK, WHITE, MAROON, GOLD OR BLUE

LIST PRICE
117.25

n"

~~

BAHR CLOTHIER$

Local Bowling

u• y

l: : .Generation Rap *~
Sue
1
••

A

I

.,.

'

'"
f

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY
'

'

�4- The Daily Senlinel,Middlepor_t-Pomeroy, 0. , Thursday, May 20, 197_6 ....

Pirates upset
·

Righthander Kip Lewis
'!ched db tt d th So th
pl
an a e e U '
weslern Highlanders to a 7-li
t
v1
upse ' ctory over league·
leading North Gallia Wed·
nesday evening. Lewis went
the dl'stance yt'eldt'ng st' x h1·ts,

fanned six and issued two

.....

,.,. . . • .. ... ,

Y&gt;&lt;, ' "

,

Mojor Luoue Results

., . •

~·~ :::.f!:'.:l~~~·~.

svort Ra·... d·e

c.....
:;::~::
&lt;:.:-:&lt;

::::~~
:':&lt;:)
:}~j
·&gt;:-.-.

~ New York

·• •

1100 001) 01o- 1 9 0
Ch r isten
McGraw
(71,
Garber
181,son,
UnderwOOd
!91 and

AstroGrapM
Bernice Btlele Oaol

willing cooperation.

with ki n than with outsi ders.

VIRGO (AUf. 23-Sept. 22) To-

CAPRICORN (!)oc. 22·Jtn.1t) ,

day you 'll ex hibit jtxce ptiona lly
keen judgment, and you have
the cOurage of your convic·

5- The Daily Sentinel, Mlddleport·Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, May 20,1976

The organizational ability lor .
'l"hich you're noted Is even ··· ··~;,
sha rper today. This is the day .;..
to tie down something difficult. ;.

·~
h•?...ifR.

lions. Don'l sidestep hard
deCisions."

AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Ftb. .1t) ~
free passes.
Q
r!: and Hodges , Grote ( 9 ) , WPLIBRA (Sept. 23·0cl. 23) Take
For Frldoy, Moy 21, 11Ti
The next lew days could be ~:
The victory was South·
• 0
~~~
Christenson 1&lt;-ll , L:P- Lollch
special pride in anything you
profita ble ones. ae alert for op-- .....
· ht and ;:;::&gt;.:; ,
·:l:••.. . 12-ll .
ARIES (Morch 21 -Aprll19) To put your hand to today. The
western 's th·.tr d s tratg
porlu nllies through persons '·'
your
su
rprise.
you
should
find
left th'e Highlanders with a 5-7 ·=·;::::
:···;;a Pittsburgh 100 1100 02&lt;- 1 10 o
compen sation could be surwho hold you In high esteem.
1
d
::;.,:::
:~~ s1 . Louis
003 030 000-611 1 ot hers just seem to wanl to do pris ingly large.
-~
things
for
you
today.
Someone
PISCES
(Fob. 20-Morch 20) I~ '"
eague recor · • 2 · th :;::(:~
By MILTON RICHMAN
~:t&lt; Candelaria, Tekulve tl L GJ.
SCORPIO
(Oct.
24-Now.
22)
you've been wanting to take a .
North Gallia .,. In
e :;,.:::
UP! Sporll Edllol'
:~::';ll
ustl 17), Hernandez !B l. Moose may even volunteer to repay a
fan ning rive and walking SVAC still holds down first :-:-&gt;"·
• • 19 1 end Sonoull len ; McGlothen, debt.
Today, you'll treat all of tile
short fun trip, now is the time . ...
I our ,
Hrabosky
181, TAURUS (April 20-Moy 20) tightly. 'f' ou:u be fun to be
Chances are you have your
place in the league but must
!EDITOR'S NOTE: Milton Richman concludes his swing Frisella
Prol y 191,(8),
Rasmussen
(9) and
around. People will enjoy your
He slammed a two-run now play another league tilt through parts of Ohio, West VIrginia and Pennsylvanls by Sim mons. WP- Hernandez I J. Group activities are favored tor company.
homer in the third inning. In to capture the championship. Interviewing world cham(IIOn wrestler Bruno Sammartino.) ~st~PL-;;.,~:.s"j.~~~~n c'?i~'c~~s you today. Influential persons SAGITTARIUS (Now. 23-Doc.
will be d ra wn to you . A 21) Entertain at home tonight
addition
Lewis,
Don trips,
Bush Cht
The
Pira
at
PITISBIJRGHtUPI )- Youlookat BrunoSarrunartino,and fora 121; Pittsburgh , Zlsk 121.
had two tohits
in four
'll'cothe
tod;tes
i';}..
a '·.·,play
th"·e Class
beneficial relationship could or do something with the whole
I
ua~
the inunedlate reaction Is pity. No man his size Should he in Atlan
ta
Larry Carter had a single and A District
Tournament.
Los Anoeld
o100 000
o1o oooooo- 1 660o resu lt.
family. You'll be much happier
21
Unescore :
such a tiny jail.
Ruthven, Devine
161, 4 Dal GEMINI (Miy 21 -Juno 20)
a double and Rick Crouse got
Mar 21 , 1978
... N
a double and home run . Greg S'western 122 011 1}-7-11-2
His prison is a steel orthopedic appliance called a Milwaukee Canton IBl and Pocoroba: John , Your most important ideas w ill
... ; ...
James topped the Pirate
Expose yourself to situations ·-·
Brace. ltbecame a partofSammartinosincehe broke his neck Marshall (8) ana Yeager. WP- "b e well -rec;elved by frien ds to where you can mee.t people ,.....
Discuss them freely. You
·
John
12·21Angeles
. LP- Ruthven
I, th ree wee ks ago.
attack with two hits.
North Gallia 200 200 2--6- 6-2 ahd was nearly killed wresting
HR - tos
; Yeager 14-51
151. . day.
may gel a suggestion that will NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS and make contac t~ !his coming
Brett Tackett was th e
Lewis (W) and Crouse.
In medical language, his sixth cervical vertebra was Houston
103 1100 oso- 9 12 1 add new dimensions to them.
year. Relationshi ps established .v;
STATE OF OHIO
Tackett (L) Minnis (4) and fractured.
B
Sa
t' . San Diego ooo 400 ooo- 4 a 3
los ing hurl er . He was
Department of Transportation can advance yo ur finan c la lln ~ ~ . q
.
teres ts and career.
· ......
Columbus, Oh to
relieved by Calvin Minnis in Tackett .
Eveninhispresentdisabled condition, runo rrunar tnols
Cosgrove, Griff in 141, Siebert CANCER (juno 21 -Juiv 22)
Mayl, 1976
the fourth.. Combined they
a mountain of a man : six feet tBll, and weighing 260, he has a 181 ana Johnson ; Spillner, Rely solely on you ~ log ic and
reaso n today. Your intuitions,
Contract Sales Legal Copy No .
21-inchneck, 20%-inch upper arms and a 57'H nch chest with a :.?."\~~. ~~-~~~~r: \8/;. ~~~ w ~ich are usually reliable, may 76·H6
1
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
3&amp;-inch waistline.
Splllner (1 .6), HR - Houston ; pl ay cute tricks on you today.
sealed proposals will be
Despite his size, docoors found a brace to accommodate him, Watson 121.
re ceived at the office of the
and now he's inside it all the way from his chin Whis pelvis.
Cin cinnat i ooo 210 02o- s 9 o LEO (Jutr 23-Aug. 22) Where Direc tor of the Ohio Depart yesterday you had difficulty ment of Transpor t ation ,
Bruno Sarrunartino, the world 's best-known wrestler, is still San Frnclsco 100 001 002- • 10 o getting
Columbus , Oh io, until 10;00
compliance with your
· the wick
Alcala,
McEnanev
7), East A.M .. Ohio Standard Time ,
its champion, despite his broken neck. When he Sl'ts m
181 and
Bench ; (Montefusrequests, today you could get
Thursdl!y, June 3, 1976, tor
By FRED DOWN
living room of his home In Pittsburgh and isn't under therapy , co, Lavelle 181. Heoverlo 191
improvements in :
3 Cleveland 2, Baltimore 5 all he thinks about Is the day he can wrestle again.
· and Rader . WP- Aicola 13-0l.
UP! Sports Writer
Gallia and Mei gs coun ties,
b
d
LPMontefusco
f.t
-JL
,
"••&lt;~'lwaukee 3• Chl' cago 4 Ml'n··
"He's an exceptionally kind person, a wonderful l).us an
Ohio , on , various sections - .
Mike Schmidt, regarded by
GAL . State Route 325 In Galli a
many experts as the National nesota i and Kansas City 5 and a tremendous father to our three children." says his wife,
County ; MIOG . U. S. Route 33
NOTICE
OF
ELECTION
American
League
·
Oaklan
d
2.
Carole
to
whom
Sammartino,
38,
has
heen
married
17
years.
League's home run king for
and Stat e R.outes "338, 681 end
ON TAX LEV'I' IN
New York · 000 101 1()(}- 3 10 o
692 in Meigs County by ap .
"But since this injury, I'm very worried about him. He has had Clevelond
years to come, has learned Pirates 7, Cards 6:
EXCESS OF THE TEN
Ooo 000 002- 2 51
ply ing a bl'tum lnous sUrface
MILL LIMITATION
May , · Tldi'"ow' (9) , Martinez
Pinch-hitter Duffy Dyer's many injuries over the years, but this is the worst and if I had
that there are times when it is
NOTICE Is hereby given treatmen -t to pavemen t in part
(9 )
and
Dempsey :
Hood ,
run
-scoring
double
climaxed
my
way,
he
would
never
wrestle
again
."
wiser to swing for singles.
Thomas (7) and Fosse. WP- that In pursuance Of a and to shoulders In part .
Shoulder &amp; Pavement Widt h
Sammartino was · lucky : His injury did not leave him May 13·11 , 'LP- Hood 11 ·21. HR Resolu t ion of the Council Of
Schmidt , who led the NL a four4-un , ninth-inning rally
- New York, Vel ez ( 1l ; Cleve . the Village of Middl eport, - Varies .
that
enabled
the
Pirates
to
paralyzed,
making
his
chances
for
recovery
excellent.
A
Project and Work Length with J8 homers but st&lt;uck out
Ohio, passed on the 4th dav of
land , Blanks I 1l.
March, 1976, there will be ·11 ll.529 teet or 22. 07 miles .
180 times in 1975, knew such a beat the Cardinals. Richie highly sensitiVe individual as well as an articulate one, he is
" The date set for completion
Mllweukee 000 011 l OG- 3 8 0 submitted to a vote of the
time had arrived in the fifth Zisk, who drove in three runs, not your stereotype of a professional wrestler.
people of said VIllage at a of this work shall be· as set ,
Balflmorl:!!
212
000
OOx5
8
1
When he speaks, he does so gently, reflecting the soft, earinning Wednesday nig hl-&lt;~ nd ignited the rally with his
Colborn , Champion (2 ), ~as ­ Special ELECTION to be held forth in the bidd lng proposal ."
Ea ch bidder shall be
second
double
of
the
game.
pleasing
intonation
from
his
native
Abruzzi
region
of
central
tra
(5 ), Rodriguez
{7) and in the V illage of Middleport ,
delivered a single and drove
Moore, Porter (7) ; Cuellar. Ohio, at the regular places of required to file with h is bid a .
Manny
Sanguillen
also
had
Italy.
He
came
to
this
country
when
he
was
15.
in the run thal,..£~ye the
Garland (6) , Jackson (9 ) and voHng therein , on Tuesday , cer t ified check or cashier 's
"Of course I can appreciate how my wife and the rest of my Hendricks . WP- Cuellar ( 2-J l. the 8th day of June, 1976, the ctl eck for an amount equel to
Philadelphia Phillies a 2-1 three hits for Pittsburgh as
L P- Colborn (2-4) . HR- Mil- question of levy ing, In e)( cess five per cent of his bid, but In
victory over the New York reliever Ramon Hernandez family feels," Sammartino says. "I understand completely, waukee
, Aaron (2 ). _
of the ten mill limitation, for no event more than fifty
won his first game. Harry and naturally I'm concerned about the people !love. My desire
Mets.
the benefit of Middleport thousand dollars, or a bond tor
001 240 101 - 9 15 I Vill age for the purpose of ten per cent ot his bid, pay.able
It was a club record l ith Rasmussen' took his fifth loss to come back is something I can't explain. When you're in Boston
the Director .
200 000 OOo- 2 1 3 providing maintenance, fire to Bidders
inst three victories.
sports, you have such a limited time and then it's all over with, Detroit
must li"Pply . on the
stra ight road victory for the aga
apparatus
,
appllanc
.
e
s
,
Jenkins
{3
-5)
and
Fisk
;
Dodgers 4, Braves 1:
finished.
proper forms, for qualifica t ion
Roberts, ·Grilli 151. Hiller 181 bu ildings or sites therefor, at
Phils, who lead the NL's
least ten days prior to the
Mike Marshall received
"When this first happened, I lay in the hospital and thought I and Freehan . LP - Roberts (3- · sources of water supply and date
!;;astern Di vision by two
set for opening bids in
2). HRs- Boston , Yastrz~mskl 3 mater ials ttlerefor .
credit for his eighth save had no alternative. rve broken bones before but when you're (S l. Ri ce (SJ ·; Detroit; Horton
ga mes.
Said tax being : an ad - accordance with Chap ter 5525
17 ), .
ditional ta x of one mil l to run OhiO Re\IISed Code.
Schmid t's single ca me alter taking over in the eighth talking about something so close to the spine, it's a differer,t
Pl ans and specifications are
for five years .
on file in the Departmen t of
after a double by Larry Bowa from Tommy John , who was ball game. The doctors said it was only my good physical Oakland
010 tOO ooo- 2 7 1
Transportation and the office
and gave Philadelphia a 2-0 hit by a line drive. Steve condition that saved me . They said if it were someone else, Kansas Ci ty 300 000 02x- 5 15 o at a rate not exceeding 1. 0 of
the Distri c t Deputy
Torrez
,
Todd
(6), Lindb lad mills for ea ch one dollar of
Yeager
hit
a
two;-un
homer
he'd
he
dead
or
paralyzed
from
the
neck
down.
Now
I'm
lead. Larr y Chri stenson
(6 ), Fingers ( 7) and Haney ; valuation, which amounts to Dire ctor.
and
Dusty
Baker
a
runstarting
to
feel
better.
blanked the Mets for six
Spllttortf, Pattin 161 and ten cen ts for ea.ch one hundred The Director reserves the
Martinez. WP - Spllttorff (J. J) . do ll ars. of va luation, for fiv e right to re rect any and all bids.
innings but the Phils needed scoring double to lead Los . " If 1progress the way I'm going and the doctors give me the ·LP
RICHARD D. JACKSON
- Torrez (4-4) . HR - Oak- year s.
Angeles' six -hit attack. okay, I do not intend to retire, no."
DIRECTOR
the se rvices of three M
The Polls for sa id E lection
land, Bay lor (3) .
arshall hasn't given up a
· d
will be open at 6: 30 o'clock Rev . 8·17-73
relieve rs- Tug McGraw, run in his last 11 1·3 innings
Nobody inwrestlingdraws thewayBrunoSammarttno oes.
......
010 000 DOO- 1 a 2 A .M . and remain open un til !51 20, 27, 2tc
Gene Ga rber. and Tom and has three wins in addition They knock down the doors to see him. More than 21,000 were Minnesota
.
Cl'iicago
201 000 lOx- 4 9 o 7: 30 o'clock P.M . of-said day.
•rr l"t
By
order
of
th
e
Board
of
Blyleven
,
Burgmeier
(
7)
and
Underwood- to preserve the to his saves.
in New York's Madison Square Garden April 26 when Wynegar ; Vuc~ovlch , Ham ilton El ect ions, of Me igs County,
win and deal ex-American
Sarrunartino met Stan Hansen of Amarillo, Texas .
4
(8) and Downing . WP- Vuck - Ohio .
Padres : two-run
The two wrestled awhile and then Hansen caught Sammar, ovich (1 .1). LP- Biyleven &lt;J-3).
I.eaguer Mickey L,•&gt;lich his Astros
Ro b 9,Andrews'
·e rnest A . Wingett
- - ,
fifth loss in the NL,
tino with a body slam,
·chajrman .
(Only games scheduled J
sin
gle
and
Bob
Watson
's
"Nine
out
of
10
times
you
land
on
your
back
when
that
"I was swinging for a
three-run
were eighththe big . happens," sa)'S Sammartino. "I landed on my head. When
Dorothy M . JohnSton
single," said Schmidt , who blows
of homer
a five-run,
d I
Director
admitted that he probably inning, which carried the got up, he drove me where I had no control whatsoever, an as
Dated May 10, 1976
would have heen trying to hit 1\stros over San Diego. Tom he sprung me off the ropes, he caught me with his elbow in the
one out of Shea Stadium in the Griffin , seco nd of three forehead, snapping my head.straight back. He weighs over 300
(51 n , 20, 27 161 3, &lt;tc
same situation last season.
· ed powtds, so that completed the job."
Or . Edwin Campbell of the New York state Athletic
The Pirates defeated St. Houston pitchers, recetv
Louis, 7-6, Los Angeles beat credit for his third win while Corrunission was the one who eventually halted the bout,
Spillner
tagged
technical winner. Sarrunartino retained his
ATTEND GAME
Atlanta, 4-1, Houslon routed Dan
loss was
against
one with
win. making Hansen the ~
his sixth
Mrs , Sadie Thuener,
San Diego, 94, and Cincinnati Reds 5, Giants f :
title because his should weren't pinned_and he never gave
Syracuse, William Lehew and
topped San Fra ncisco, 5-4 , in
Johnny Bench and Tony up. As a matter of
, he :ovanted to conttnue even though he
sons, Ted and Billy, Pomeroy
oth er Nati onal Leag ue Per ez each hit two-run was bleeding P. fusely lrom the head.
.
games. Chicago at 'Montreal doubles as the Reds beat the
attended the Cincinnati Red's
Campbell s s it was the most severe injury he encountered
was rained out.
ballgame in Cincinnati
Giants and provided rookie in 20 years ith the commission.
Sunday.
In the American l.eague's Santo Alcala with his third
Hansen h never called or said he was sorry for what
only scheduled games, it was
'
d bl · happened.
win.
Bench's
ou
e
"On
the
con
ary, he seeii!S to be trying to make ·capitalTV
of
Boston 9 Detroit 2, New York straight
in the fourth inning gave
Jacob w. Lee, Vinas L. Lee
it;'!&lt;-says Sammartino. "I've heard some of his boastmg on
to Douglas Johnson Jr ., Alma Twp., Trus. of Salem Twp.,
and it struck me as being ugly, He is going around saying 'I'm Johnson , 2 .5 acres, Sutton. 4.369 acres, Salem .
Wald K. Foster, Shelba J.
the man who broke Bruno Sammartino's neck."'
Wil ey D. Ours, Audrey
· Foster to Jeffrey Lee Davis,
In some 2,000 previous matches, Sammartino lost only once, Brenda Jean Davis, .20 acre, Ours to Roy Bailey , Do ro th v
Bai ley , Parce ls, L ~t art.
five years ago to a Bulgarian named Ivan Koloff. He has been Racine . Sutton.
Archie McKinney , Eva
Charles Moore, Mary K. McKinney
world champion II years and estimates he has made nearly $2
, VIrgil Parsons to
Moore
to
Bob
R.
Moore,
million .
Bradford Church of Chris1
Everything you want to
Luella Moore, 100 acre Lot
Inc ., 15 .216 acres, Salisbury .
As lor whether wrestling is on the up-and-up, Sarrunartino 296, 100 acre Lot 295, 5 acres,
see in Levi's denims for
Spencer
Buchanan,
spring and summer .
Freda Buchanan . Bettv
says, "Mostly the people who ask me thai are the ones who 24.23 acres, Sutton.
Choose several pairs
Dary l V. Stumbo, Sharon A. Rockhold , Woodrow Rock ·
never go to the rna tches.
, Gertrude Chevalier ,
now.
to Stumbo-Hovatter hold
''I don 'I believe the hundreds of thousands who c.ome out to Stumbo
Francis Chevalier, William
Equities. Lot, Middleport.
Buchanan
.
Doris
Buchanan
,
see wrestling believe it is a fake . H they did, why would they
Bob Damron, Nancy Jess ie Lee Buchanan , Elsie
keep coming out'"
Damron
to
Perry
E.
Buchanan to Nora Buchanan ,
Kennedy,
sarbara
J. 21h acres, Pomeroy .
Ella Marie Bright to Elsie
Kennedy. 6 acres. Stlpio.
N. 2nd Avenue
Sybi l Ebersbach, . Comm ;, Mae Bright McMurray,
Middleport, 0.
Joseph McMur r ay ,
Orpha M. Bennett, dec. to Herman
Cincinnati a 2-1 lead and
Parcels
,
Rutl!u1d
.
Bernard Lewis Bennet!, 37
Perez capped the Reds'
acres, 30 acres, Olive.
scoring with his double in the Pomeroy Bowling Center
Bernard Lewis Bennett to
Wednesday Alternoon
eighth . Rawly Eastwick, the
Donald L. Bennett, Marjor ie
League
S. Bennett. 37 acres. Olive.
third Reds pitcher, was
.,
May 12,1976
Bert Franklin Christian,
credited with a save. John
Standings
,,'
Marie Christian to
It' s con tou red nature
Teain
W. L. Sharon
Montefusco was the loser,
Cad
N.
Martin,
Linda
D.
lower than the toe t o help you st&amp;nd
.
Ed 's Crossroads Groc. 14 10
DuHon Drugs
13 11 Martin, 2.5 acres, Columb ia.
The trit on pol yure thane used to make the sole
••
John Phillip Follrod to
Team
1
13
11
g ives 25 pe r cent more we ar at about hall th e weight of
Boone ; Loll ch, LockwOOd (81

(fj"~ ~

'W"'--------"-\
NEW

Phillies win lith

.. KRINK~E"
FABRIC
THE

NEW LOOK
$198 TO

_......

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

.,

Meigs
Property

Several Styles

Transfers

Colors
To Choose
From

This Is
PEDWINS
Natural Walking
Shoe

MIDDLEPORT DEPARTMENT STORE

Team 2
Teams

an y other known soling material.
Experien ce lt.

THE SHOE BOX

NOTICE OF OIL
&amp; GAS LEASE

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

FORFEITURE

TO: A11antic International Oil
Corp.
Summit Chase, 1000 Urlln
Ave .
Columbus , Ohio
. I
Gentl em en :
You ar e hereby notif ied that
th e undersign ed
lesso rs
hereby elect to d eclare a
forf-eiture of the fa llowing oi l
and ga s lease between you as
lesse e and th e undersigned as

WE

FILl All
NEW &amp;
REFILl
~PRE~ICRI PTIONS
HRS.
8:30 to 8:00
DAILY
CLOSED
SUNDAY

VILLAGE PHARMACY

lessors :

L ea se dated the 18th day of

Aptil, 1972, betw een Frank E .
Dodderer and Elsie I . Dod .

derer , his wife , as Lessors ,
and At lanti c Internati onal Oil

Corp ., .as Less ee, cover ing
22.50 acres , more or tess ,
situate in Olive Township ,
Me ig s CoUn t y , Ohio , and being
bound ed on the Noi"t~ by
George Coll ins, on the E ast by

James Osborne , on the South
by Robe rt For tn ey and on th e
Wes t by Arthur Heiney , sa id
lease bei ng of re cor d in ltl e
off ice of the Clerk of ltl e
Coun ty Re corder In Me igs
County , Otlio, in Lease Book
58, at page 231.
Th e above lea se is her eby
de clare d forfeited by th e
unders ign ed Lessors becau se
of the non -payment of delay
ren tal as r equ ir ed by the
term s of said lease .
It is th e Inten t ion of the
undersigned Lessor to fil e and
re cord an affidavit of for fe it ure fo r the abo ve lease
with th e Cou"' y re cord er of
M e ig ~
Co unt y, Ohio , a' S
prov ided b.y law
Sign ed
Frank E. Dodder er
Less.or

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
NEW HAVEN, W.VA.

Elsie 1. Doaderer
Le&amp; sor

lS I

.'

0

• ..._. . , . ,

II, 18, 19, 20. 21. Sic

12 12
12 12

Farmers Bank &amp; Savings Co .,

Lot, Pomeroy.
Team 6
a 16
Paul E. Beeq le, Helen E.
H igh sing le QameTina Beegle to David H. Zirkle,
' Coll ins 170: Selby Man ley 163. Maude
Ann
Zirkle,
High series Selby
Corrective Deed, Racine.
Manley .466 ; Delma Karr AA2j
Franklin Real Estate Co. to
Tinll Collins 427 .
Board 'of Trus . of Sa lem

Home Furnishings
•FLEXSTEEL
•HOOVER
•ADMIRAL
•SPEED QUEEN
•PROVINCETOWN
MAPLE
.
•BASSETT
•LANE
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eFRIGIDAIRE

·BAKER FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
, I

.

..

Converse AII-Sta.r Tennis Shoes

BIRDSEYE t399
DIAPERS

OUR PRICE

CURITY
PREFOLD

By Helen and

•'

ANNIVERSARY HONORED - Mr. and Mrs.
Lawrence Manley, 690 Laurel St., Middleport, on Aprll20
celebrated their 43rd wedding anniversary . Mr. and Mrs.
Manley have lour children, Raymond, Lawrence, Jr.,
Roger and Mrs. Rosemary Hysell, all of Middleport, and
13 grandchildren. A Utree layer cake was presented to the
couple made by their daughter-in-law, Mrs. Raymond
Manley, and their daughter.

. • My brother and I have never been able to answer the phone
at:our house· even if one of us is standing over it, our mother
in;ists on ru~g out from another room wget it.
' We can't use the phone without permission, and we have. to
e~laln who we're calling and why, with a. third-degree after
we hang up. ·
. .
:· Our friends can call, but she lets them stay on two minutes,
th~ she starts yelling so they hang up. Naturally, we must
report everything they said.
.
' Our pbone isn't used for business, and we don't abuse the
prlvUege.
tt
..
~lease tell parents that teenagers are capable of gmng and
reteiving messages, without all that interference. We have
nothing to hide, but we'd like a little privacy.
.
• Since we don't have to ask permission to vacuum, why IS
the phone so different? - CUT-OF.F TEENAGERS
Dll:AR CIIT-OFF TEENS:
• Good question! Why don't you ask your mother to write us .
a letter, answering it? Maybe if she'd get her "reasons" down
on paper she'd realize how foolish they are. - HELEN

Social
Calendar

THURSDAY
MIDDLEPORT Child
Conservation League, 7:30
p.m. Thursday at the
Columbus and Southern Ohio
Electric C6. Manning
Webster to be the guest
speaker. Bowling party to
+++
•
follow the meeting .
CUI'-OFFS:
MIDDLEPORT-Pomeroy
' Your letter is a good example of why some parents
consider parenthood such a drag. They take on so many , area branch, AUW, 7:30p.m.
useless "extras" that they're run ragged trying to keep up with Thursday, Meigs High School
them all. - SUE
Library . Theme "Third
World Women" with program
+++
NQm TO cuT.OFF'S MOTHER: For Pete's sake, simmer ~ic "Master of Our Destidown!- HANDS
ny" with Roberta Wilson,
+++
chairman. Prospeclive
RAP :
.
.
members to be guests. In·
There was a teen hang-out In our town - not wild, just a stallatlon of officers by
place to have fun Instead of standing around on street comers. Sharron Helen, Athens
But they lady next door who runs a music studio got It closed Branch. Hostesses, Maxine
because of the "noise."
Wingett, Lee Lee, Rachael
: Wecanprovetherewasnodopeorbooze.Howcanwefight Downie, Nancy Reed and
ci(y haU? - STARSKY AND HUTCH THE SECOND
Margl!l'et Ella Lewis.
.
D~~'AR SAND H:
dinl\IAGN0UA C!Thub, psdotluckt
1' Go to city hall (the City Council) and state your case. H ner, 6: 30 p.m. ur aY a
enl&gt;ugb parents back you up, perhaps your hang-out won't be a the home of Mrs, Ella Smith.
cl4se-out much· longer.
·
ROCK SPRINGS Better
• Or maybe you could find a new location and get your own Health Club, 1: 15 · p.m.
~n canteen going, All right? - SUE AND HELEN
Thursday at the borne of Mrs.
:
+++
Helen Blackston. Mrs. Teresa
'
·Abbott to have the program,
·
Mrs. Phyllls Skinner, the
contest.
·
CLASS 12, Thursday night,
'
7:30 p.m. Heath United
LETART, W. Va. - Mr. Craw, on May 28, 1926.
Methodist Church.
an'd Mrs. Wlll\am Brooks,
. Mr ..and Mrs. Brooks have
DEMOCRAT PARTY
Lt(tart, will obser\ve their 50th two daughters and two sons, Thursday at Episcopal
w4dding anniversary will! an · Dorothy, MI. Alto; ~1, Parish House, 8 p.m. All
OJI.I!n house StDiday, May 23, New Haven; Harry, Letart, committeemen urged to
!rom 2 to 4 p.m. at their and Melvin, Genoa, Dlinois. attend , Public invited.
hOOJe.
•
They also have i1 grand·
LADIES AUXILIARY ' Big
t
:Ihe couple was married at children and two grea - Bend Citizens Band Radio
th~ Union Parsonage by Rev. grandchildren.
Club, 7:30 Thursday at the
,
meeUng hall. Discussion on

11:

~-~----·

:

[

.·

..

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

I

JHE

•

o.

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

SALE I
~

custom
draperies

II ,
II :.

MIDDLEPORT DEPARTMENT STORE
~

l

SPECIAL

SALE

SATURDAY
HYMN SING, 7:30 p, m.
Sattrday at Cheshire United
Methodist Church, Cheshire.
Featured singers will be the
Shaffer family !rom Crown
aty and the Jordan-ettes.
Public Invited.
BAKE SALE Saturday, 10
a.m. at Gaul's Market In
Chester sponsored by Chesler
T·ball and pee wee . league.
HYMN SING Saturday at
7:30 p.m. at Fellowship
Church, Racine. Public In·
vited.
ANNUAL REUNION and
banquet of Rutland High
School Saturday, 6:30p.m. at
Rutland Elementary. Round
and square dancing from 10
p.m. to 1a.m. MU81c by String
Ousters.

\

KIDDIE SHOPPE

__

_

...

Save 30%
On Matching Custom
Bedspreads During
This Sale.

,.,

I

Please bring window sizes with JOU.
MAIN 'STORE, ANNEX AND
WAREHOUSE OPEN
FRIDAY, 9:30 to 8, and
SATURDAY
9:30 to 5 PM.
'

••
~

SUNDAY
REVIVAL SERVICES, 7:30
each evening at Middleport
Church of the Nazarene
through Sunday. Speaker Ed
Irwin , evangelist, singer,
musician, to be evangelist;
public invited.

MONDAY
MISCELLANEOUS
shower wlll be held at the
Enterprise United Methodist
Church for Brenda Wlll
Black, May 24, 7.:30 p. m. All
rr:~nds of Mrs. Black are
Invited.'
·
PICNIC PLANNED
SYRACUSE - Syracuse
Cub Scout Pack 242 will
combine a meeting and picnic
Saturday at the home of Pete
175 N mONO AVE I MIODIEPOII!. OH 45160
Thoren. Cubs are to meet at
Phonel6141992 3586
the._ Syracuse Elementary
___..
,_' .... _.. _..,......,.._...__.._.._.. __.( ·• Scjjoolat 5:30p. m.
'I

t_
..,....

.Oioose Fn111 Over 700 Fabrics
and Colors in Our Collection.

1I

I

~.~. $1.89

.

On Custom Draperies
For Your Home or
Office.

bake sale to be held
Saturday at 9:30 at Krogers.
LAUREL CLIFF Beller

· Also see our new shipment of sun
: dresses; halter dresses and halter
·• tops for girls. Sizes 2 to 6X .

'

Save 30%

THIRD Friday Club
Friday, 7:311 p.m. at home of
Mrs. Ernestine Burnell, ·
1 Syracuse.
POPPY DAY, Friday and
Saturday, in Racine by the
America Legion Auxiliary of
Racine Post 6o2.

: NOW HAS PAMPERS

"t
"•

•

heritage house

first aid supplies and plans

: While you're here see our lar~e
• selection of many new styles m
: shorts, shirts, tank tops &amp; shOrt sets
: for girls &amp; boys. From infant to 14.

i

that are
durable yet
comfortable

KIDDIE SHOP PE !~:::or::~;=~:

Box 52•29
.'Dayt"1me...... .. ........... ........

,

soles

I for

51.29
'Overnite
....................
~~
...
•

••

Hl!:LP OFFERED
The Ohio Bureau EmService,
In
ployment
cooperation
with
the
Veterans Administration , has
placed an employment
representative five days per
week at the Veterans Administration office In
ColumbUs to assist veterans
in job placement. Velerals
are advised to contact that
representative frotn 8:30
a.m.-4 :30 p.m. a.t 360 South
Third Street, Room 306,
Columbus.

Supple calfskin
leather

•
.:A nntversary
tS• SUndary

.

~

·
ll
Don Hanning, principal of
The pledge, 01 a eg1ance
the Bradbury fifth and sixth and the Lord s Prayer were
ee•ti,.ng...H+...,._,.~H+H+~H~H. ..,......_....
grade school, spoke at a given to open th.e.m,..~
recent PTA meeting on the
~
plans wdepartmentalize the
scho ol program beg inning
next year .
Hanning stressed that the
two grades would not be
mixed and that report cards
would continue to heused,.but
that departmentaliza tion
would penni t the teachers to
speclllze in leaching one or"
twosubJects rather than all .
·
subjects.
The principal also spoke on
the mental health levy w be
voted on next month and the
PTA gave !Is endorsement.
There was also a short
discussion on PTA and PTO
with no action being taken
now.
A report was given on the
progress of the playground
committee and it was noted
that basketball nets have
been Installed along with
poles for tether ball. Teresa
Casci and Mrs. Maxin e
.Goegleln talked about the
need for employment of a
county health nurse and
members were urged to
contact the Meigs County
Who says you need to spend more
a pair of high
Board of Health.
qu
ality
dress
shoes?
Not
Thom
MeAn.
Classic
sly ling ·
Mrs . Ed ward Crooks
combined with quality mater ial s and craltsmanshlp make
thanked the room mothers for
Bootmaster s an outstanding v~ lue. Compare with brands
participation during the year.
costi ng much more and you ' l l bu y 6oolma ster .
The attendance award went
Boolmasters are ava ilable In a va riety of styl es.
.
to the rooms of Hanning and
Susan Ornstein. Officers for
the 1976-n year were installed and Mrs. Goeglein
Your thorn MeAn Store
presented the cardinal award
N.
2nd
Avenue
for membership to the unit.
Middleport,

Leather covered
innersoles

+++

'

~-

.

tmaster
by Thom

+++

STRETCH lACE

OPEN FRIDAY AND SATURDAY TIL 8

Bottel

.·Toddlers .....................~-~-· $1.49

'
•

Principal speaks to PTA

'

·1

•
'•

A thought fQr the day :
American writer Cha rles
Dudley Warner said, "What
&gt;;mall
potatoes we a U are,
Refrestunents were served
by Miss Jean Parson's compa red with what we
classroom,
might be."

0:: ::: ;occo~:):~~~;;;;;:;:::·:~::::~:~~~-:

DtARANDI:
: Even af Utree limes age 22! - HELEN

TO

•229

• •

It's a Moat Unuaual Way!
DEAR RAP : ' .
This Is in responAe to Judy who can't see why you have to
have se1 if you go to bed with a gtiy.
Me and my ol' man have been living together for a year,
and were engaged a year before that. We decided that we
dido 'I want to have lnlerCOUI'8e until after we were married and we stlllaren'tquite sure about marriage. Neither of us is a
virgin, but we feel we made mlsta~s in that respect.
Anyway, we get along just great. He helps me with
everything after coming home from work. Then we go to bed,
kiss each.other good night and fall asleep, either holding hands
or with h1s arm around me.
I'D adnlit you've got to lind the guy who goes along with
your ideas here. - AND! (AGE 22)
·
DEARANDI:
'
And he wouldn't be easy wfind! - SUE

Group Ladies Sportswear

SIZES 3-16 ,

"

I.:NewINTRO~UCTORY
Born..................

·6··

THE FONZ SHIRTS

•0

I

'12''

BIKINI SALE

~-~~-~·= ··~ 0

I

BlACK, WHITE, MAROON, GOLD OR BLUE

LIST PRICE
117.25

n"

~~

BAHR CLOTHIER$

Local Bowling

u• y

l: : .Generation Rap *~
Sue
1
••

A

I

.,.

'

'"
f

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY
'

'

�6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 ., Thursday, May 20, 1976

Youth niaht
planned ~~::~:~;:~~~~~a~m~~
1'\ ' ·

r

a variety of gannes.

Youth night to be held at
the Meigs County Fair in
August was planned during a
meeting Wednesday night of
the Meigs County .Junior Fair
Conunittee in the vocatiopal
agriculture room at Meigs
High School.
Representatives of the Girl
Scouts, the FHA, the FFA
and the boys and girls' 4·H
clubs were present. Youth
night wlll be CElebrated on
Wednesday night at the
fair with king and queen to
be annoWJced and crowned at
that ttme. A trophy will also
be awarded for the outstanding committee member
and acUvlties that
will

At the youth night program
which will begin at 7 p, m.
each group on the committee
will be given 15 .minutes to
present some type of entertainment. Games will be , ,
played and $75 has been
alloted for that with each
group to select one member
to work on the ganne comrnjttee . Ahorse show will also
be a feature ofthe youth night
progrann.
On Saturday night of fair
week, there will be a dance in
the coWJty garage for the
youth with a live band to be
on hand.
May 29 was set as the time

STORE HOURS
Mon., Tues., Wed." Sat .-8:30tJI 5:00
THURSDAY tiU2 NOON

FRIDM. .UNnL 8 PM

M3SQN FURNITURE
77J.S592

i

· -THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY &amp; SUNDAY

OPEN DAILY 10 TO 9
SUNDAY1T07

JIWSIY

.MOVIE PROJECTOR
1. low-profile stylirtg 2. Smoke-tinted

Bond issue is endorsed
secretary , and Mrs. Dee
Spencer, treasurer . The sixth
grade won the room count.
Mrs . Vicky Cummings
presided at the meeting
which opened with the ple\lge
to the flag. Officer reports
were given and plans were
discussed for blacktopping
the parking lot. To conclude
the meeting the sixth grade
class led in th e Lord 's
Prayer.

The Letart Falls PTO
meeting Monday night at the
school endorsed the $420,000
bond issue for . a building
program a t Southern High
School.
Other highlights of the
meeting included an informal
graduation ceremony with
presentation of certificates
for the sixth graders and the
installation of officers for the
1976-77 year.
Bob Beegle , So uthern
Junior High School principal,
spoke to the sixth graders on
opportuniti es available to
them in the jWJior high . The
sixth grade trip to the Gavin
Plant, Our House, and then on
to the park a t . Point
Pleasant was noted.
ln~talled by Bob Sayre,
South ern Local Board of
Ed ucation, were Mrs .
Catherine Wolfe, president;
Mrs. Joyce White, vice
president; Mrs. Lynn Crown,

CLUB TO MEET
MASON , W. Va . - Mason
Homemakers Extension Cl ub
will meet Friday at 7:30p.m.
at the home of Mrs. Catherine
Smi th with Mr s. Sara h
SpenCEr, co-hosteSll. Members are to bring a small
antique which means a lot to
them to the meeting as the
theme for the lesson
"Collecting An Art."

Super Shef®

69C

Our b1 ggest bu rger with cheese ·n

tr1mrni ngs on a sesame seed bun . . ...

"Big Fun"
BrgShel ,' reg

lr ~s . rargc soll

drmk /l. turnover

..... .

$109

"Little Fun" Funmeal"

79c

AIHwel burger lnes. sott dflnk. ·
&lt;&gt; wee t tre a t 1!. surpr1se pnze

Officers were elected and
projects chosen at the
organizational meeting of the
circles of the B. H. Sanborn
Missionary Society of the
Middleport . First Baptist
Church Tuesday night.
Meeting at the home of
Miss Rhoda Hall, the Love
Joy Circle members selected
the Syracuse Nursing Home
and shutins, Mrs. Frances
Bearhs, Mrs. Lula Murray,
Mrs. Florence Hannay and
Mrs. Anna Grim to be
remembered during the year.
OffiCErs elected to serve
with Miss Hall, chairman,
were Mrs . Freda Hood,
secre tary; Mrs , Mary
Hughes, vice chairman and
devotionalleadet ; Mrs Ethel
Hughes , treasurer;
rs.

Club enjoys
weiner roast
Mr · and Mr &lt; Floyd Ross of
Bunker Hill hos ted a wiener
roast Saturday night for the
Big Bend Citizens Band
Radio Cl ub wit~ 60 members
and their famlhes attending ,
Gue~ts fr?m out ol ~wn
attendmg .with their families .
were Mr. and Mrs. Berme
Ross, Columbus; Mr. and
Mrs. Larry Brown, Athens;
Mr · and Mrs. Bob Dorcher •
The Plams, members of the
Channel S Club of Athens;
Mr. and Mrs. Lar_ry Jones,
Shade; Mr. and Mrs. Ronnie
Robinson R d ill , Mr
and Mr 'Let eedsvN le,
·
s. an e son, and
Mr. and Mrs . Roger Sm1th,
Pomeroy.
Music was provided for
dancing and singing by Joe
Christy and Larry Jones.
Canned goods and money
were collected for a needy
fl!Jllily. Several prizes were
given by the hostess. A
bi centennial . theme was
carried out in the refreshment table decorations.

CARPETS •••
THE PIIORSSIONAL WAY.

ggc

Big Shef ®
Meal Deal
SkipP-_er's Treat® ·

ggc

cnsp

s al ad (or large lne s ) . . . . . . . .

..,

"Spirit of '76"
s.

Mothers
honored
Mothers were honored at
the Bradford Church of Christ
on Mother's Day with 31
attending . Each
was
presented with a carnation
corsage.
Given special recognition
was Hilda King, the oldest
mother and also the mother
being a Christian the longest
time, 68 years. Also
recognized were Bonnie
Lightfoot, youngest mother·
JelTi Ughtfoot and Svlvi~
Blake, the mothers wit!; the
most children . There was
special music on the autoharp
by Betty Will.
~

~ .... .,. O'Savings
Your ct1oice o l large tnes &amp; Big She!:

Double Cheeseburger or Skipper's Treat·

ggc

2325 JACKSON AVE.,
PT. PLEASANT, W. VA.
'I

11

,.

Cnrr S~\tr&gt;rn~ rnc

ARGUS
MINI PALMA TIC
POCKET CAMERA
KIT

ONLY
REG. 40'
'
'

.

TOOTH.PASTE
oz.

REG. 11.52
I

/

ROSE MILK
S·KIN CARE
CREAM

\

~ \

'~ J
. r:t

12 oz.
REG. 12.29
ONLY

The Lady
Reusable
Razor
By
Personna
Reg. $1 ~ 19

$}34

COPPERTONE
LOTION

moillt ure in ju!lt on e
Atep. Sa ve moner. .. ,
cet results ju..qt like a

professional !

69~

BAYER ASPIRIN
REG. 11.40
ONLY

OR OIL

79~

100 TABLETS ,
AYAILAILI fOR IIINIAL

PICKENS

HARDWARE

MASON, W.VA.
HOURS :
Monda y lhru
Thursday &amp; Saturday
8 :00 to S:JO

POLl DENT
DENTURE CLEANSER
60 TABLETS
REG. 11.99

Friday

INSULATION
Blown Into Your Walls

ONLY

$119

Shatterproof
Bottle

14 oz.
REG. JUS
ONLY

For STUFFED

"Free Estimates"

a"d Runny

FOREMAN AND ABBOTT

REG. '2.07

Middleport, Ohio
\'
Ph. 992·5321

.

CEPACOL
MOUTHWASH

TRIAMINIC®
SYRUP
Noses

ONLY

5

.

AIM OR CLOSE.tJP

6.4

The pocket comero that hos an f/9.5 optical
gloss 3 element lens for clearer, sharper pit·
ture$ ond re all y fih your·po cket!

79~

Rent th e fantastic ne~ Up &amp;
Oul Hydro -Mist Machine fo r
~upe ri o r ca rpet cleo~~n ing. Loose i\Ji and

8:00108:00

reg ular soft dr ink .

POLAROID

BAITERY

A

HICK'S
RIG.
$93.96

$8499

FOR 3SMM CAMIIAS

"D"

19~

! hii .quolity super 8 projector featutu ou tomo!k thr ead·
11'\g, reel·to-roel so you rtl'ver ho.., to touch the 111m onre
you dort it in theloodi!lQ \lot. It thread ' !hell co mpletely
Bell &amp; Howtll'• Fllmovmo - 100m lens !h&lt;lf leh you f rtl th~
tcreen without movi ng the projecltu o r the ~c r een. You con
proiect in reverMI tu well m lorword, even t lop th e act ion
on o single fra me lor o lo n'iler look.

AUTOMATIC
STROBE

2191

EVEREADY

ff!movell; dirt . p revi .

ln es &amp; regular so ft dnnk . . . . . . . . . . . .

Hamburger. reQutar fnes

DO IT'\'OUtSELA

"S'IIAM"a.iAN lOUR

,.,.

JEWIllY

1h PRICE

ous s ham1~ · r e~idu e ,
and u p tn 90% or the

Ctieeseburger
Tw'n burgers~~~~e~te~;~!e regular

sa~d~'~'l&amp;

Freda Edwards, white cross
chairman; Mrs. Rom a
Hawkins,love gift chaftman .
Prayer opened the meeting
and Mrs, Frances Smart
gave..the progrann using an
editorial from the American
Baptist Magazine by the Rev .
Charles Lusher . Refreshments were served by the
hosteSs to Mrs. Iva Turner,
Mrs. Florence Rhodes, Mrs .
Hughes, Mrs. Smart, Mrs .
Edwards, Mrs. Hood.
The Dorcas Circle met at
the home of Mrs . Sarah
Fowler, chairman, with Mrs.
)(atie Anthony giving prayrr.
Devotions on May flowe•·s
were given by Mrs. Fowler.
The officers elected were
Mrs . Anthony. vice chairman
and program leader ; Mrs .
Mary Brewer. sec retary ;
Mrs. 'Eliza beth Slavin,
tre:tsurer, and Mrs. Clara
Riley, project treasurer .
Shutins to be remembered
during the year are Mrs.
Viv ian Titus, Mrs . Dana
Hamrn , Mrs. Irene Cross and
Williann Farley. The Arcadia
Nursing Horne was also
selec~d as a location to visit.
Bulletins from the church and
the ' Secret Places will be
mailed to the shutins. To help
with the project work
members will collect bolt!~
caps which can be redeemed .
Attending the meeting were
Mrs. Fowler, Mrs. Sigman,
Mrs. Anthony, Mrs. Judy
Cowan Mrs Riley Mrs
Se 1 '
·
'
·
ar es, Mrs. Clara Darst,
Mrs .SlavmandMrs. Brewer.
Mrs . Fowler served refreshments
·

WITH ZOOM LENS

6: Instant rerun.
...-:::;;;;;:::--...

Officers elected

e

Golden l" h ldte t

for eosy remo vaL 3. Automatic threading .rl. Dual projedion cop abili ty ($uper
8 and 8 mm) 5. 400-foot -reel capacity

BELL 6 HOWELL
SUPERS
MOVIE PROJECTOR

HECK'S REG.
$107."96

dust cove r ollow1 projection while in
ploce. Mounted on pull-away hinges

Quivey,Judy Holiday, AvanellHoliday; second row, I tor,
Pauline Atkins, Unda SpenCEr, Lucille Leifheit, }leidi
Ashley, Frances Goeglein, Pam Holcomb, Sylvia Midkiff,
Sharon Jewell, Opal Dyer, Emma English· back row 1 to
r, Hilbert Quivey, John Colwell, Leo Story, 'Fred Goegiein
Chester King, Norman Will, Earl Cross, Dave Spencer'
Stanford Stockton and Keith Ashley .
'

lei

..,.

DUALS
THE MEIGS COUNTY Pomona Grange ritualistic
degree team recently took first place in the district and
filth in the state ritualistic contest. Last week the group
went to Gallia County where the fifth degree was
presented in full form . Making up the degree team are:
front row, 1 to r, Katherine Shenefield, Jo Kautz, Ann
Colwell, Pam Kautz, Mary Colwell , Stella Atkins, Helen

OPEN DAILY 10 TO 9
SUNDAY 1 T07

PRICES IN EFFECT THROUGH SUN., MAY 23, WHILE QUANTITIES LAST

KODAK

~ . ..

1!.

l

•

Mason, W.Va.

He.rman Grate

I

'

• 7- The Dally Sentinel, Mlddleport-Pomeroy,O., '1!'111'3daY, May20, 1976

. . .fu.r·t-he. . . .M
._d.lam
. .b. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

•

I

homes.
The next meeting waa sei
while lambs will be weighed for June 9 at 7 p.m. at Meigs
startin~ at 8 a. m. at the High School.

77~.'

Oral Nasal
Decongestant
Anti histaminic

4 oz.

sa799
HECK'S REG.
$94.96

18

99

HECK'S REG.
$22.1~9

IIWSIY DE'r.
,

PRONTO
LAND CAMERA

frofi~l i1llgh! (orllv 16 01 .). llfiCIII, tuggtO!y Dui M, ond lndudn ""'"V ot

1~ od""'ll(ed tl..:tronk ftohlf•li l""ndin SX·10,PrO&lt;&gt;!ol uW&gt; SX-70 Him
w~ i( h i1 loodrtd, ••~wd, tjtc!ed, orw:l d.•elop.d '01 ,. ;,~on S~ - 1c:i
&lt;~ mero. A limplt, brighrl oplrcal viewlindor help• lho uwr lro..,. ~ ~
prc l ~ff g;wroltty. Tl&gt;t J ·tlt-nt, 19.&lt;1 \ \ /)m"' ltno f!l'I'UMl tr om 3 l"r

to inlin&lt;ty. Dillonct io ~rlimoted oncl HI on the lot no btrul .

5

53

99

HECK'SREG.
$59.96

JIWSIYIIIPT.

Modern, pochtoble, all block "'nion of com·
pU!eriud strobe. Sytlem of four AA type but·
tenu affords foste r rtcyding end enough
number ?I color boloncing ll9'hu. It proYickn
ou tomot1c o~oft switching 1ystem In hohhaeodaplar wit h dtltochoblt PC c,a rd. .

KODAK

POCKn CAMERA
WITH TELEPHOTO LINS

e Two lepuu:

0111

normal drstonce

e

for clear, crisp dose·uf)t; one for

New Hlpflcuh with 8 automatic

fla shes e Easy, drop- in film loading

ca mera lor taking big snop,hots .

;~~?~:
IIWSIY

IJ9T.

$

e 8eoutifullirile

29''

$2399
HICK'S PIG.
$29.96

�6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 ., Thursday, May 20, 1976

Youth niaht
planned ~~::~:~;:~~~~~a~m~~
1'\ ' ·

r

a variety of gannes.

Youth night to be held at
the Meigs County Fair in
August was planned during a
meeting Wednesday night of
the Meigs County .Junior Fair
Conunittee in the vocatiopal
agriculture room at Meigs
High School.
Representatives of the Girl
Scouts, the FHA, the FFA
and the boys and girls' 4·H
clubs were present. Youth
night wlll be CElebrated on
Wednesday night at the
fair with king and queen to
be annoWJced and crowned at
that ttme. A trophy will also
be awarded for the outstanding committee member
and acUvlties that
will

At the youth night program
which will begin at 7 p, m.
each group on the committee
will be given 15 .minutes to
present some type of entertainment. Games will be , ,
played and $75 has been
alloted for that with each
group to select one member
to work on the ganne comrnjttee . Ahorse show will also
be a feature ofthe youth night
progrann.
On Saturday night of fair
week, there will be a dance in
the coWJty garage for the
youth with a live band to be
on hand.
May 29 was set as the time

STORE HOURS
Mon., Tues., Wed." Sat .-8:30tJI 5:00
THURSDAY tiU2 NOON

FRIDM. .UNnL 8 PM

M3SQN FURNITURE
77J.S592

i

· -THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY &amp; SUNDAY

OPEN DAILY 10 TO 9
SUNDAY1T07

JIWSIY

.MOVIE PROJECTOR
1. low-profile stylirtg 2. Smoke-tinted

Bond issue is endorsed
secretary , and Mrs. Dee
Spencer, treasurer . The sixth
grade won the room count.
Mrs . Vicky Cummings
presided at the meeting
which opened with the ple\lge
to the flag. Officer reports
were given and plans were
discussed for blacktopping
the parking lot. To conclude
the meeting the sixth grade
class led in th e Lord 's
Prayer.

The Letart Falls PTO
meeting Monday night at the
school endorsed the $420,000
bond issue for . a building
program a t Southern High
School.
Other highlights of the
meeting included an informal
graduation ceremony with
presentation of certificates
for the sixth graders and the
installation of officers for the
1976-77 year.
Bob Beegle , So uthern
Junior High School principal,
spoke to the sixth graders on
opportuniti es available to
them in the jWJior high . The
sixth grade trip to the Gavin
Plant, Our House, and then on
to the park a t . Point
Pleasant was noted.
ln~talled by Bob Sayre,
South ern Local Board of
Ed ucation, were Mrs .
Catherine Wolfe, president;
Mrs. Joyce White, vice
president; Mrs. Lynn Crown,

CLUB TO MEET
MASON , W. Va . - Mason
Homemakers Extension Cl ub
will meet Friday at 7:30p.m.
at the home of Mrs. Catherine
Smi th with Mr s. Sara h
SpenCEr, co-hosteSll. Members are to bring a small
antique which means a lot to
them to the meeting as the
theme for the lesson
"Collecting An Art."

Super Shef®

69C

Our b1 ggest bu rger with cheese ·n

tr1mrni ngs on a sesame seed bun . . ...

"Big Fun"
BrgShel ,' reg

lr ~s . rargc soll

drmk /l. turnover

..... .

$109

"Little Fun" Funmeal"

79c

AIHwel burger lnes. sott dflnk. ·
&lt;&gt; wee t tre a t 1!. surpr1se pnze

Officers were elected and
projects chosen at the
organizational meeting of the
circles of the B. H. Sanborn
Missionary Society of the
Middleport . First Baptist
Church Tuesday night.
Meeting at the home of
Miss Rhoda Hall, the Love
Joy Circle members selected
the Syracuse Nursing Home
and shutins, Mrs. Frances
Bearhs, Mrs. Lula Murray,
Mrs. Florence Hannay and
Mrs. Anna Grim to be
remembered during the year.
OffiCErs elected to serve
with Miss Hall, chairman,
were Mrs . Freda Hood,
secre tary; Mrs , Mary
Hughes, vice chairman and
devotionalleadet ; Mrs Ethel
Hughes , treasurer;
rs.

Club enjoys
weiner roast
Mr · and Mr &lt; Floyd Ross of
Bunker Hill hos ted a wiener
roast Saturday night for the
Big Bend Citizens Band
Radio Cl ub wit~ 60 members
and their famlhes attending ,
Gue~ts fr?m out ol ~wn
attendmg .with their families .
were Mr. and Mrs. Berme
Ross, Columbus; Mr. and
Mrs. Larry Brown, Athens;
Mr · and Mrs. Bob Dorcher •
The Plams, members of the
Channel S Club of Athens;
Mr. and Mrs. Lar_ry Jones,
Shade; Mr. and Mrs. Ronnie
Robinson R d ill , Mr
and Mr 'Let eedsvN le,
·
s. an e son, and
Mr. and Mrs . Roger Sm1th,
Pomeroy.
Music was provided for
dancing and singing by Joe
Christy and Larry Jones.
Canned goods and money
were collected for a needy
fl!Jllily. Several prizes were
given by the hostess. A
bi centennial . theme was
carried out in the refreshment table decorations.

CARPETS •••
THE PIIORSSIONAL WAY.

ggc

Big Shef ®
Meal Deal
SkipP-_er's Treat® ·

ggc

cnsp

s al ad (or large lne s ) . . . . . . . .

..,

"Spirit of '76"
s.

Mothers
honored
Mothers were honored at
the Bradford Church of Christ
on Mother's Day with 31
attending . Each
was
presented with a carnation
corsage.
Given special recognition
was Hilda King, the oldest
mother and also the mother
being a Christian the longest
time, 68 years. Also
recognized were Bonnie
Lightfoot, youngest mother·
JelTi Ughtfoot and Svlvi~
Blake, the mothers wit!; the
most children . There was
special music on the autoharp
by Betty Will.
~

~ .... .,. O'Savings
Your ct1oice o l large tnes &amp; Big She!:

Double Cheeseburger or Skipper's Treat·

ggc

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PT. PLEASANT, W. VA.
'I

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ARGUS
MINI PALMA TIC
POCKET CAMERA
KIT

ONLY
REG. 40'
'
'

.

TOOTH.PASTE
oz.

REG. 11.52
I

/

ROSE MILK
S·KIN CARE
CREAM

\

~ \

'~ J
. r:t

12 oz.
REG. 12.29
ONLY

The Lady
Reusable
Razor
By
Personna
Reg. $1 ~ 19

$}34

COPPERTONE
LOTION

moillt ure in ju!lt on e
Atep. Sa ve moner. .. ,
cet results ju..qt like a

professional !

69~

BAYER ASPIRIN
REG. 11.40
ONLY

OR OIL

79~

100 TABLETS ,
AYAILAILI fOR IIINIAL

PICKENS

HARDWARE

MASON, W.VA.
HOURS :
Monda y lhru
Thursday &amp; Saturday
8 :00 to S:JO

POLl DENT
DENTURE CLEANSER
60 TABLETS
REG. 11.99

Friday

INSULATION
Blown Into Your Walls

ONLY

$119

Shatterproof
Bottle

14 oz.
REG. JUS
ONLY

For STUFFED

"Free Estimates"

a"d Runny

FOREMAN AND ABBOTT

REG. '2.07

Middleport, Ohio
\'
Ph. 992·5321

.

CEPACOL
MOUTHWASH

TRIAMINIC®
SYRUP
Noses

ONLY

5

.

AIM OR CLOSE.tJP

6.4

The pocket comero that hos an f/9.5 optical
gloss 3 element lens for clearer, sharper pit·
ture$ ond re all y fih your·po cket!

79~

Rent th e fantastic ne~ Up &amp;
Oul Hydro -Mist Machine fo r
~upe ri o r ca rpet cleo~~n ing. Loose i\Ji and

8:00108:00

reg ular soft dr ink .

POLAROID

BAITERY

A

HICK'S
RIG.
$93.96

$8499

FOR 3SMM CAMIIAS

"D"

19~

! hii .quolity super 8 projector featutu ou tomo!k thr ead·
11'\g, reel·to-roel so you rtl'ver ho.., to touch the 111m onre
you dort it in theloodi!lQ \lot. It thread ' !hell co mpletely
Bell &amp; Howtll'• Fllmovmo - 100m lens !h&lt;lf leh you f rtl th~
tcreen without movi ng the projecltu o r the ~c r een. You con
proiect in reverMI tu well m lorword, even t lop th e act ion
on o single fra me lor o lo n'iler look.

AUTOMATIC
STROBE

2191

EVEREADY

ff!movell; dirt . p revi .

ln es &amp; regular so ft dnnk . . . . . . . . . . . .

Hamburger. reQutar fnes

DO IT'\'OUtSELA

"S'IIAM"a.iAN lOUR

,.,.

JEWIllY

1h PRICE

ous s ham1~ · r e~idu e ,
and u p tn 90% or the

Ctieeseburger
Tw'n burgers~~~~e~te~;~!e regular

sa~d~'~'l&amp;

Freda Edwards, white cross
chairman; Mrs. Rom a
Hawkins,love gift chaftman .
Prayer opened the meeting
and Mrs, Frances Smart
gave..the progrann using an
editorial from the American
Baptist Magazine by the Rev .
Charles Lusher . Refreshments were served by the
hosteSs to Mrs. Iva Turner,
Mrs. Florence Rhodes, Mrs .
Hughes, Mrs. Smart, Mrs .
Edwards, Mrs. Hood.
The Dorcas Circle met at
the home of Mrs . Sarah
Fowler, chairman, with Mrs.
)(atie Anthony giving prayrr.
Devotions on May flowe•·s
were given by Mrs. Fowler.
The officers elected were
Mrs . Anthony. vice chairman
and program leader ; Mrs .
Mary Brewer. sec retary ;
Mrs. 'Eliza beth Slavin,
tre:tsurer, and Mrs. Clara
Riley, project treasurer .
Shutins to be remembered
during the year are Mrs.
Viv ian Titus, Mrs . Dana
Hamrn , Mrs. Irene Cross and
Williann Farley. The Arcadia
Nursing Horne was also
selec~d as a location to visit.
Bulletins from the church and
the ' Secret Places will be
mailed to the shutins. To help
with the project work
members will collect bolt!~
caps which can be redeemed .
Attending the meeting were
Mrs. Fowler, Mrs. Sigman,
Mrs. Anthony, Mrs. Judy
Cowan Mrs Riley Mrs
Se 1 '
·
'
·
ar es, Mrs. Clara Darst,
Mrs .SlavmandMrs. Brewer.
Mrs . Fowler served refreshments
·

WITH ZOOM LENS

6: Instant rerun.
...-:::;;;;;:::--...

Officers elected

e

Golden l" h ldte t

for eosy remo vaL 3. Automatic threading .rl. Dual projedion cop abili ty ($uper
8 and 8 mm) 5. 400-foot -reel capacity

BELL 6 HOWELL
SUPERS
MOVIE PROJECTOR

HECK'S REG.
$107."96

dust cove r ollow1 projection while in
ploce. Mounted on pull-away hinges

Quivey,Judy Holiday, AvanellHoliday; second row, I tor,
Pauline Atkins, Unda SpenCEr, Lucille Leifheit, }leidi
Ashley, Frances Goeglein, Pam Holcomb, Sylvia Midkiff,
Sharon Jewell, Opal Dyer, Emma English· back row 1 to
r, Hilbert Quivey, John Colwell, Leo Story, 'Fred Goegiein
Chester King, Norman Will, Earl Cross, Dave Spencer'
Stanford Stockton and Keith Ashley .
'

lei

..,.

DUALS
THE MEIGS COUNTY Pomona Grange ritualistic
degree team recently took first place in the district and
filth in the state ritualistic contest. Last week the group
went to Gallia County where the fifth degree was
presented in full form . Making up the degree team are:
front row, 1 to r, Katherine Shenefield, Jo Kautz, Ann
Colwell, Pam Kautz, Mary Colwell , Stella Atkins, Helen

OPEN DAILY 10 TO 9
SUNDAY 1 T07

PRICES IN EFFECT THROUGH SUN., MAY 23, WHILE QUANTITIES LAST

KODAK

~ . ..

1!.

l

•

Mason, W.Va.

He.rman Grate

I

'

• 7- The Dally Sentinel, Mlddleport-Pomeroy,O., '1!'111'3daY, May20, 1976

. . .fu.r·t-he. . . .M
._d.lam
. .b. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

•

I

homes.
The next meeting waa sei
while lambs will be weighed for June 9 at 7 p.m. at Meigs
startin~ at 8 a. m. at the High School.

77~.'

Oral Nasal
Decongestant
Anti histaminic

4 oz.

sa799
HECK'S REG.
$94.96

18

99

HECK'S REG.
$22.1~9

IIWSIY DE'r.
,

PRONTO
LAND CAMERA

frofi~l i1llgh! (orllv 16 01 .). llfiCIII, tuggtO!y Dui M, ond lndudn ""'"V ot

1~ od""'ll(ed tl..:tronk ftohlf•li l""ndin SX·10,PrO&lt;&gt;!ol uW&gt; SX-70 Him
w~ i( h i1 loodrtd, ••~wd, tjtc!ed, orw:l d.•elop.d '01 ,. ;,~on S~ - 1c:i
&lt;~ mero. A limplt, brighrl oplrcal viewlindor help• lho uwr lro..,. ~ ~
prc l ~ff g;wroltty. Tl&gt;t J ·tlt-nt, 19.&lt;1 \ \ /)m"' ltno f!l'I'UMl tr om 3 l"r

to inlin&lt;ty. Dillonct io ~rlimoted oncl HI on the lot no btrul .

5

53

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HECK'SREG.
$59.96

JIWSIYIIIPT.

Modern, pochtoble, all block "'nion of com·
pU!eriud strobe. Sytlem of four AA type but·
tenu affords foste r rtcyding end enough
number ?I color boloncing ll9'hu. It proYickn
ou tomot1c o~oft switching 1ystem In hohhaeodaplar wit h dtltochoblt PC c,a rd. .

KODAK

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WITH TELEPHOTO LINS

e Two lepuu:

0111

normal drstonce

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for clear, crisp dose·uf)t; one for

New Hlpflcuh with 8 automatic

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ca mera lor taking big snop,hots .

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$

e 8eoutifullirile

29''

$2399
HICK'S PIG.
$29.96

�9- The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, May 20, !976

---

MASON, W. Va. Bibles
were presented during
Sunday School at Faith
Baptist Olurcll May 16 to
Debbie Branham and Oleryi
Van Meter, graduates ol
Wahama and Susan Loper, a
graduate ol Pt. Pleasant
High. Sunday School attendance May 16 was 53.
On Mother's Day, May 9,
each mother present was
given a potted petunia. A
special potted plant was
given to the oldest mother,
Mrs. Vanna Samples. ·The
youngest was Mrs. Debbie
tee and the mother with the
most cllildren present was
Mrs. Judy Roach .
Thirteen youth attended the
youth rally at the Good News
Baptist Church in Gallipolis
SatiD'day evening.
Three youtll ol the Faith
Baptist Olurcll were baptized
Sunday afternoon.
The Youth Fellowship will
meet Sunday, May 23, at 6:30
p. m. All children and
teenagers are invited to attend.
The church is presently
meeting in the Steelworkers
Union Hall on Railroad St.
between Horton and Pomeroy
Sts. Sunday School is at 10 a.
m.; services, ll a. m.. and
7:30p.m. by interim pastor
Ivan Cardwell, Athens. Bible
study by Ivan Cardwell is on
Wednesdays at 7:30p.m.
Everyone Is Invited to all
services.
Over 75 persons attended
the Thursday evening skating
party at. the New Haven
Community building.
Among them were: IDena
VanMeter, Alicia A. Roush,
Greg · Roush, Mrs. Lorraine
McCauley, Usa, Lora and
Jon Pat, Jimmy Gibbs, Joey
Ohlinger, Larry Van Meter,
Greg Herrin, Mrs. Virginia

son.

Market Report
·· SALES REPORT
• Ohio Valley Uvestock Co.
May 15, 1!176
GaiUpolis, Ohio
STOCKER CATTLE:
Steers - 250 to 300 lbs .. 27 to
36; 300 to 400 lbs. 27.50 to
37.75; 400 to 500 ibs. 28 to 40;
500 to 600 lbs. 28 to 38.25 ; 600
to 7001bs. 30to 38; 700 lbs. and
over 28 to 39.85.
Heifer Calves - 250 to 300
lbs . 33 Down; 300 to 400, 31.50 ;
400 to 500 lbs. 35; 500 to 600
lbs. 34; 600 to 700 lbs. 34.50 ;
700 lbs. and Over 35.50.
STOCK COWS &amp; BULLS (By the Head) Stock Cows 135
to 215 ; Stock Cows and Calves
170 to 3iO; Stock Bulls lBO to
350; Baby Calves 55 Down;
{By the Pound) - Canners
and Cutters Cows 22 to 29.50 ;
Holstein Cows 27.50 to 32.50;
Commercial Bulls 31.50 to
37.50.
Pigs 24 to 43 ; Veal Calves Tops 220 lbs. to 250, 51 to Sll;
Medium 200 lbs to 300, 38.50 to
46.75; Culls 30 Down. Sows
over 400 lbs. 39 to 43.60.

initiated

H ospil•

.

ARTIFICIAL
FLOWERS

ARTIFICIAL FLOWERS

8For

Flowering Bulbs For Spring Planting
Metal &amp; Plastic Porch Boxes
Moke Pomeroy Your Shoppong Center

BEN~FRANKLIN
PHONE
'192-3498

200-202 East Main St.
POMEROY, OHIO

·-----------------.1
Use Ollr Convenient ~y- Away Plan
()p@n Friday Night Till - Sal. Til S

.

'•

GRADUATE&amp;
FATHER'S DAY

CINCINNATI - .A new
slate of officers was elected
Tuesday at' the 85th annual
Convention of the Ohio
Bankers Association. Elected
president was Albert R. Pike,
Chairman of the Board and
Chief Executive Officer of the
Lake C01mty National Bank, ·
.Painesville.
this cord or that one. Named Vice President was
PEGGY.
William A. Stroud, President
'of the First-Knox National
DEAR POLLY - Those Bank, Mt. Vernon, and reround cardboards wrapped
with loll that frozen pizzas
come on make nice plates lor
round cakes you might. be
baking to take away lrorR
home. There is no worry
about a plate being returned.
- MRS. L. G.
DEAR POLLY - I have
The Midwest Country
discovered that using the Music Assoc , will sponsor il
upholstery brush attachment Bicentennial Youth Talent
on the vacuum cleaner works Program on July 16 at the .
much better than using a · Neil House in Columbus open
clothes brush for removing to boys and girls 7 through 18.
lint from clothing. - MRS. Awards will be given for the
J.M.H.
best vocalist for boys and
DEAR POLLY - I buy girls, best musician, most
plain steel woo! pads instead versatile entertainer with
of the more expensive soap special awards for Country
pads. Then I keep such a ball Music Youth Groups.
completely immersed in a
Applications may be ob·
wide mouth jar of. water and talned by writing Midwest
baking soda. It does not rust Country Music Assoc. P. 0.
and lasts quite a long time.- Box 406, Rockton, m. 6}072.
TERESA.
Deadline for entries is June
You wHI receive a dollar U 9th. This will be in conPolly uses your favorite junction with the Utile Miss
homemaking Idea, Pet Ohio Talent Contest and Miss
Peeve, PoUy's Problem or Ohio Teen 'Ager Pageant, now
solution to a problem. Write in it's 5th year. 11iis Is an
Polly In care of this news- extra added feature for the
paper.
Blcentenniai year.

Silver plating ages
after long storage

News

96~

Cll

....

FOR THE

Polly's Pointers

Ducks &amp; ducklings, bird
baths ,
flamingos,
pheasants &amp; chipmunks .

Spe(ial Group (Val. to 39c)

The · Carleton Sunday
School had an attendance of
83.. Folio~ Suaday School
the Jualilr / Sunbeam and
Busy Bee classes presented a
Mother's Day program of
verses, readings and special
8Gl'lgs. Presenting a special
reading ' also was Olen
Harrlaon, after which the
superintendent, Ralph Carl
presented each mother with a
potted plant.
Recent vlsltars of Mr. and
Mrs. Nev White and Mrs.
Jennie Hollie were Mr. and
Mrs. Jobllny Barker and
famUy of Glenwood, W. Va.,
Mr. and Mrs. Sherman White
of Middleport, Mrs. Grace
White, Langsville, Mr. and
Mrs. Roger Toney of Chester
and Mr. and Mrs. Bernard
White, Mason, W. Va. ·
Mr. and Mrs. Olen Harrison •
spent a recent weekend in
Worthington with Mr. and
Mrs. Pbllip ijarrlson and
Rodney and Trevor.
Mrs. John Walter Dean
visited with her grandmother, Mrs. Ada Slack, who
is a patient at 'Veterans
Memorial Hospital where sh,e
underwent major surgery.
Sunday guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Ralph Carl and Rodney
were Miss Debbie Queen, Mr.
and Mrs. Virgil Carl and
famUy, Mr. and Mrs. Uoyd
King and family and Mr. and
Mrs. Dwight Carl and family.
Mrs. Faye Pratt is visiting
several days with her sister,
Mrs. Olen Harrison.
Mother's day dinner guests
of Mr. and Mrs. John Dean
were Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
Marklns, Racine, Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Reid and David
·of Pataskala, Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Smith of San Diego,
Calif., Mrs. Frank Young,
Alan, Dale and Susie of
MinerJvllle, Mr. and Mrs.
Garold Gilkey, Cindy and
Tllffillly..Df. /.!hens, M!'. and
Mrs. John Walter Dean and
Jeremy, Mr. and Mrs. BiU
Spaun and Shanon ol
Pomeroy, and Mr. and Mrs.
,Paul Payriter of Carpenter. ,
Calling to wish his mother, '
Mrs. Dean a happy Mother's
day were Sgt. and Mrs.
Richard Dean and Kenneth
Mathew of Mesa, Ariz.,
where he Ia stationed In the
Air Force at W111iams A.F .B.
Mr. and Mcs. Charles
Arnold spent Mother's day
with their daughter, Mr. and
Mrs. Daniel Cunningham and
son Charles at Pomeroy,
Ohio.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Burnside had •as visitors Mother's
day Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Houdershelt and Audra, Mr.
and Mrs. Glenn Thoma and
. {amlly of Cheater.
Recently visiting Mrs.
Neva King was Richard
Hielman of Hemlock Grove.
Vlaltors Mother's day with
Mrs. Hazel Arnold were Mr.
and Mrs. Ronald McNally
and daughters ol Athe118.

HALLMARK·
·,·

CLUB TO MEET
The
Meigs
County
Republican Women 's Club
will meet at 8 p. m. Wed·
nesday at the Meigs Inn. All
women are invited to attend
the meeling and join the club
for 197.6. Following the
meeting, there will be a social
hour .
In 1974, Judge John Sirtea
ordered President Nixon to
turn over tapes and other
records of 64 White Hou.'le
conservations , on
the
WRicrgH le affair.

elected treasurer was Robert
J. Fast, chairman, president
and chief executive olflcer of
the Tri-County National
Bank, Fostoria.

DUITON DRUG CO.
122 N. 2ND

MIDDLEPORT

Youth talent
will feature
July program

FLOW·
and

PRIMARY USES: This paint is for use on exterior surfaces such
wood siding, trim, shakes, wood sliingles, weathered ast1est:osl
shingles, unglazed brick, stucco, cement and cinder block. FINISHI:I
Flat. COVERAGE: Approximately 400 sq. ft. per gallon on sm&lt;Jotlt
l ...:&lt;..'iL.J surfaces. TINTING: Hundreds of additional colors may be obtaine&lt;t
by tinting Wonder Flow Acrylic Tint Bases with Trendition MOUIS!lll
Colorants. DO NOT tint with Color-in-Oil. Standard colors may
inter-mixed or let-down with 20 Chateau White. APPLICATon,.., .•
Brush, roller or spray. THINNING: Requires no thinning for
applications. If thinning is necessary, use only clean water.

REG. PRICE

SALE PRICE

SANDALS

!

•

.

non chalking, oil base.
'
One coat gives two coat appearance and protecti.on.
Saves you time and money. Heavy-bodied, high titanium.
Pure linseed oil formula provides excellent protection.
·
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(May Be Tinted)
·

~

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Marguerite's Shoes

REG. PRia '11A5

Pomeroy

~

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VALLEY LUMBER &amp;SUPPLY CO~
992-2709
OHIO

ZOIIIS

SOLARCAINE
SPRAY

production, the strikers. lose
another day's pay, their
families lose another dsy's
security and consumers lace
the prospect of higher prices
from an inflation-pressured
settlement.
.
"NOBODY WINS !"
URW International
President Peter Bommarito
stayed in Washington for an

AFL
CIO
executive
rommittee meeting. Miller
said he updated his ' boss on
the talks.
"U it were necessary for
111m to be here, If the word
was that the company was
ready to move off its positions
in the basic economic Issues,
he'd pull out of the AFL CIO
U!lks and be ;ight here,"

A
affol'flable
watch.

-

~=

SPOONS,
FORKS &amp; .
KNIVES

PAPER
'
PLATES

. 4 oz.

DRIJlWINE

HAMPSHIRE

FLEXWALL POOL

3- PIECE POOL .......

12 Ct.

1

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24 Pes.
Nelson's
Reg. 79c

Nelson's
Reg. 96c

'I

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AIR MAlTRESS
•'

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Sets up in 20 seconds! Sturdy
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6'x 1S"
deep,
American made, no sharp ooges.
NELSON'S
REG. $14.99

'11''

2 ring
pool, swim ring &amp; "' ~
ball. All you need. to do is add .water for
summer fun.

NELSON'S
REG. $4.99

mattress;
American made.
Nelson'sReg. $1.59

WN CHAIRS

$119

·B_A·R·B-Q GRILLS

CHAISE
NELSON'S
REG. $9.99

,.
12" TABLE
GRILl '
NELSON'S $169
REG.

CHAIR
NELSON'S
REG. $6.00

'4''

$2.29

.

FISHER-PRICE TOYS _

ICE CHEST/JUG COMBO

Adventure Plople

RttcueTum

Nelson's
Reg. $3.09

,

high -impact plastic,
30 qt. chest, 1 gal. jug.
.
NELSON'S
REG. $13.75

......

:

~n~;

Firestone announced
Wednesday it has taken out a

c•

"
'=
•·"'r~.·•'!:t-.Jr*:***·****-* ·~::.~~u*1rtJ~{!.*7~,:0W=r!~~*l .~

.~-

where they were."

•••

SALE PRIQ

S. 3RD AVE.

Betty Ohlinger
102 E. Main

'7''

.

full-page advertisement to be
published !his week "in
selected newspapers aroWld
the country" to give its
position on the strike ,
The company said the
advertisement will say in
part:
•
"Every day the rubber
strike goes on the industry
loses
another
day's

:

REG. PRICE
'9.25 GAUON

'

break again Wednesday.
"I'm not very optimistic
right now," said URW
representative Jake Miller.
"This (fringe benefits) is all
we've been talking about for
quite a while. The main
economic issues are right

RESCUE TEAM

..

DERO

***************************
.
:
MAY CLEARANCE! :

'8 99

....

'-·

. For Men, Women &amp; Children

values
to 520.00

•
t
•
•••
••
~

....
SALE PRICE
GALLON
......
•
·~t*~r.~r.~r
••:••:.~· ·································
Number 101-1 analyzed super one coat White house paint

For Men and Women

*~

• ••

GLOSS LATEX HOUSE.PAINT

MOCCASINS

: SHOES FOR WOMEN

. .•

"

•

CONVERSE
PRO KEDS
GRASSHOPPERS
KID POWER

GROUP OF SALE

...•

~

'8.95 GALLON

FOR THE WHOLE FAMILY

:

"

WONDER GLOW
PAINTS
WONDER FLOW FLAT . UTEI

Summer Sandals
and Canvas Shoes

a union negotiator expressed
pessimism about reaching a
settlement soon to end the
nationwide rubber strike.
Representatives
of
Firestone,
focus
of
negotiations in the strike that
also shut down Goodyear,
Goodrich ~nd Uniroyal
plants, and the union
recessed the talks at the noOn

Akron finance director
Peter F. Donnelly said the 27djly-oid' strike ha s cost the
city $135,000 In Income tax
revenues so far and will
rontinue · to cost ' $45,000 a
week as long as it lasts.
"We anticipated a strike
and took steps to conserve
our financial resources,' '
Donnelly said. "We have
instituted a lliring freeze and
are pUtting off major
purchases."

News Notes

Bankers elect officer slate

LAWN
DECORATIONS

....,. ,.. ,.

Kingsbury

WEARING COLONIAL costuming (at right), a choral
group will take part in the musical. Some members of the
chorus are, back row, 1-r, Wayne Lyons, Tere.sa Hill,
Darla Evans and Lori Powell, and front, Lois Frank,
David Salmons and John Porter .

POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - My silver
set turned black while it was
packed away, and I would
like to clean it up, but silver
polish does not help. Can you
suggest something I could use
RACINE - Two new
to clean this up again? members were Initiated into
MRS.· G.G.W.
the Racine Chapter 1 Order of
the Eastern Star, at a recent
Dear Mrs. G.G.W.- A silver
repair company told me that
meeting . Barbara Roush,
the base metal in plated
worthy matron, and James
silver · often displaces the
Roush, worthy patron,
presided.
silver, when it is stored away
lor a long time. This is parFoliowlng the ritualistic
ticularly true of the handles,
opening, two members were
spouts and legs to tea pots,
reinstated
and
com- ·
a}
munlcations regarding .
etc. This may be what has
happened
to yours. There
Grand Chapter session were
Holzer Medical Center
read along with invitations to
would
really
be little silver
{Discharges, May 19)
several Inspections . Leot'a
left
to
cleanup.
Take it to a
Edwin Adkins, Ethel Angel,
Ferrell was reported con- John Babcock, William silver plating company and
fined to a Dayton hospital . BLankenship , Jean Cart- ask their advice. They could
Bemice Theiss was reported wright, Ronald Coleman , tell how much silver remains
ill at home and Chlorus Gerald Demp sey, Fred on your pieces. - POLLY.
Grimm and Gretta Simpson Facemir e, Christopher
DEAR POLLY- My Pet
were reported recuperating . Frogale, Bernice Green,
Congratulations were ex- TeiTi Halley, Wanda Hill, Peeve is with a neighbor's
tended to Helen Pickens who Eva Hubbard, Anna Hudson, cat. I feed the birds ail winter
was recently installed as Louie Lathey, Thelma Leitch, and every time I look out that
worthy high priestess of the Richard Maier, Jennings cat is going across the yard
Mary Shrine·, White Shrine of Marcum , Demmie Perry, with a bird or young rabbit in
Jerusalem.
Jerry Rice , Ethel Rife, Anna his mouth. If a person has a
Racine inspection was Smitson, William Stewart, dog it has to be kept tied up
announced for June 21 and Nettie Swisher , Lester but cats are allowed to run
invitations were sent. Mrs . Taylor, Bert Thompson, Judy anywhere they choose. I think
people should have to keep
Barbara Dugan and her Toland.
their
ca ts at home. committee served refresh(Births, May19)
WILLIAM.
ments. Hostess for the June
Mr . and Mrs . Larry
meeling will be Mrs. Opal McGrath, son, Athens; Mr.
DEAR POLLY - My
Diddle and Mr. and Mrs. and Mrs. James Johnson, Pointer is for the ladies who
Ralph Webb.
quilt. Believe it or not, I got it
son, Wellston.
from the dentist. It Is to use a
chair with castors on the
bottom such as dentists use. I
used
to use a long bench, but
SUPER SPRING SAI.E
since
my son left for college I
Still in Progress
have
been using his desk
Specials Throughout the Store
chair that has no arms, but
has castors on the bottom. I
lind I can get much closer to
my quilt and reach further
without having to roll the
unfinished area so often. This
chair is quite comfortable
and rolls along as I work with
Orntmtntll wrought w0t1 style
ltnet ot tllgtl impact plastiC.
no getting up and down to lift
Lool-liQilt connHIOII .
a bench or chair. - G. H.
DEAR POLLY - Use a
cloth or plastic shoe bag (the
type that holds six pairs ol
shoes) to hold your various
electrical cords. It can be
hung .in the broom closet or ·
some out of sight place In the
kitchen, where it is easily
accessible.
You will have no
and
more searching around lor

Two members

CLEVELAND (UPI) Negotiations between the
striking United Rubber
Workers Union and Firestone
Tire and Rubber Co .
remained deadlocked on
fringe Issues Wednesday and

. · ACOMPLETE SELECTION
OF

"'·'. .

the case."

Rubber workers' st.* e deadlocked on fringe issues

Classifications for jobs opened
The Weal Virginia Civil claulllcatl0118 may be obo
Service System Ia accepting tained from any Emplqyment
applications . for 22 job Security office or by callJng
: cla88iflcations. Appllcatioll8 the toll-free Federal..State
·~ must be J)Oitmatked not later Job Information Center
thaJI Friday, June 11, 1976. Number: 1~ or tile
ApplicatiOilB and additional State Civil Service office In
\ Information on specific Charleston: 34&amp;-'7930.

Wears, Danny and . Nancy,
Mrs. Debbie Lee and Keith
Ann, Mrs. Shirley Dancy and
Tammy, Rick OhlinKer.
Jackie VanMeter, Melanee
Mossman, Robert Mossman,
Patricia Ohlinger, Beth
Smith, Paula Russell, Kristy
Tucker , Charles Weaver ,
Jaque Herrin , Lori Chapman ,
Jane Wyatt.
Brltta Van Meter, Jenny
Van Meter, Jeff Zirkle, David
Varian; Georgeena VanMeter, Tom Glover, Chuck
Stodola, Kim Van Meter, Mr.
and Mrs. Paul Pierce, Randy
and Scott, Mike Van Meter,
Mark Fowler, Mr. and Mrs.
James Pauley.
John Pauley, David Roush,
David Duddi ng, Randy · . CHILDREN OF TilE RACINE Elementary School
will be cast as historical characters (above) when they
Dudding, Tim W. Roush ,
present a musical, "Let George Do It" at 7: 3il this evening
Rocky ·Lee Kearns, J.. L.
I Thursday) at the Southern High School Auditorium.
Bast, Jim Thompson, Connie
From
the left in the backrow are Melinda Salmons, who
Kearns, Kathy James, Lynne
Will
portray
Martha Washington; Brian Cleland, who will
Oliver, Kevin James, Mike
play
King
George
III, and Kent Wolfe who will be George
Hobbs, Mark Johnson.
·
Washington.
In
front
are David Salmons, left, and John
Judy Van Meter, Jerry
Porter
who
will
narrate
the presentation which is open to
Coleman , Susan Loper, Mr.
the
public.
'
and Mrs . James Pauley III ,
Mr. and Mrs. Chuck AnTilESE RACINE Elementary School students (right,
derson, Janie and Todd, Ella
ahove) wlli be the "Indians" in the famed Boston Tea
Ford, Betty Van Meter, Brent
Party tonight in the musical, "Let George Do It" . From
Layne, Ruth Dudding, Mr .
the left are Richard Hill, Tony .Forester, Steve Fisher,
and Mrs. Gene Coleman,
James Cleland and James Bush.
Greg Barnette, Joe Thomp-

Miller said . "But that's not

·

$}099

-

ll"x17" cllt '""' ldlusteblt pkh,
wooden hendles, 2 olr vents .

$549

NELSON'S
REO. 56.77

•

MEMORIAL WREATHS
It's a precision
jeweled watch.
Water end shock
resistant. Slyled In
gleaming chromo and
stalnlesa steel. With a

sweep second hand . Full

19'' PEDESTAL CROSS
Nelson's Reg. $4.35
Nelson's
Reg : $3.09

Nelson's Reg . $4.49

numeral dial. Black
lealher strlliJ. And a
Bulova warranty.
All fota mere$15.95.

19" ~~~~ !!~s $669
24" SPRAY
9

BUL0\111
Nelson's
Reg . $3.37
I

.GOESSI.ER'S
JEWELRY
StORE
Court St., Pomeroy

,.J

"

'

15" WREAlH .

Nelson's Reg .

su9

lO" S!e~!'s Reg. $4.49

$24
$399

Beautiful Array
.
of Styles &amp; Colors to Choose From .

SHELL
NO:PEST
STRIP

�9- The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, May 20, !976

---

MASON, W. Va. Bibles
were presented during
Sunday School at Faith
Baptist Olurcll May 16 to
Debbie Branham and Oleryi
Van Meter, graduates ol
Wahama and Susan Loper, a
graduate ol Pt. Pleasant
High. Sunday School attendance May 16 was 53.
On Mother's Day, May 9,
each mother present was
given a potted petunia. A
special potted plant was
given to the oldest mother,
Mrs. Vanna Samples. ·The
youngest was Mrs. Debbie
tee and the mother with the
most cllildren present was
Mrs. Judy Roach .
Thirteen youth attended the
youth rally at the Good News
Baptist Church in Gallipolis
SatiD'day evening.
Three youtll ol the Faith
Baptist Olurcll were baptized
Sunday afternoon.
The Youth Fellowship will
meet Sunday, May 23, at 6:30
p. m. All children and
teenagers are invited to attend.
The church is presently
meeting in the Steelworkers
Union Hall on Railroad St.
between Horton and Pomeroy
Sts. Sunday School is at 10 a.
m.; services, ll a. m.. and
7:30p.m. by interim pastor
Ivan Cardwell, Athens. Bible
study by Ivan Cardwell is on
Wednesdays at 7:30p.m.
Everyone Is Invited to all
services.
Over 75 persons attended
the Thursday evening skating
party at. the New Haven
Community building.
Among them were: IDena
VanMeter, Alicia A. Roush,
Greg · Roush, Mrs. Lorraine
McCauley, Usa, Lora and
Jon Pat, Jimmy Gibbs, Joey
Ohlinger, Larry Van Meter,
Greg Herrin, Mrs. Virginia

son.

Market Report
·· SALES REPORT
• Ohio Valley Uvestock Co.
May 15, 1!176
GaiUpolis, Ohio
STOCKER CATTLE:
Steers - 250 to 300 lbs .. 27 to
36; 300 to 400 lbs. 27.50 to
37.75; 400 to 500 ibs. 28 to 40;
500 to 600 lbs. 28 to 38.25 ; 600
to 7001bs. 30to 38; 700 lbs. and
over 28 to 39.85.
Heifer Calves - 250 to 300
lbs . 33 Down; 300 to 400, 31.50 ;
400 to 500 lbs. 35; 500 to 600
lbs. 34; 600 to 700 lbs. 34.50 ;
700 lbs. and Over 35.50.
STOCK COWS &amp; BULLS (By the Head) Stock Cows 135
to 215 ; Stock Cows and Calves
170 to 3iO; Stock Bulls lBO to
350; Baby Calves 55 Down;
{By the Pound) - Canners
and Cutters Cows 22 to 29.50 ;
Holstein Cows 27.50 to 32.50;
Commercial Bulls 31.50 to
37.50.
Pigs 24 to 43 ; Veal Calves Tops 220 lbs. to 250, 51 to Sll;
Medium 200 lbs to 300, 38.50 to
46.75; Culls 30 Down. Sows
over 400 lbs. 39 to 43.60.

initiated

H ospil•

.

ARTIFICIAL
FLOWERS

ARTIFICIAL FLOWERS

8For

Flowering Bulbs For Spring Planting
Metal &amp; Plastic Porch Boxes
Moke Pomeroy Your Shoppong Center

BEN~FRANKLIN
PHONE
'192-3498

200-202 East Main St.
POMEROY, OHIO

·-----------------.1
Use Ollr Convenient ~y- Away Plan
()p@n Friday Night Till - Sal. Til S

.

'•

GRADUATE&amp;
FATHER'S DAY

CINCINNATI - .A new
slate of officers was elected
Tuesday at' the 85th annual
Convention of the Ohio
Bankers Association. Elected
president was Albert R. Pike,
Chairman of the Board and
Chief Executive Officer of the
Lake C01mty National Bank, ·
.Painesville.
this cord or that one. Named Vice President was
PEGGY.
William A. Stroud, President
'of the First-Knox National
DEAR POLLY - Those Bank, Mt. Vernon, and reround cardboards wrapped
with loll that frozen pizzas
come on make nice plates lor
round cakes you might. be
baking to take away lrorR
home. There is no worry
about a plate being returned.
- MRS. L. G.
DEAR POLLY - I have
The Midwest Country
discovered that using the Music Assoc , will sponsor il
upholstery brush attachment Bicentennial Youth Talent
on the vacuum cleaner works Program on July 16 at the .
much better than using a · Neil House in Columbus open
clothes brush for removing to boys and girls 7 through 18.
lint from clothing. - MRS. Awards will be given for the
J.M.H.
best vocalist for boys and
DEAR POLLY - I buy girls, best musician, most
plain steel woo! pads instead versatile entertainer with
of the more expensive soap special awards for Country
pads. Then I keep such a ball Music Youth Groups.
completely immersed in a
Applications may be ob·
wide mouth jar of. water and talned by writing Midwest
baking soda. It does not rust Country Music Assoc. P. 0.
and lasts quite a long time.- Box 406, Rockton, m. 6}072.
TERESA.
Deadline for entries is June
You wHI receive a dollar U 9th. This will be in conPolly uses your favorite junction with the Utile Miss
homemaking Idea, Pet Ohio Talent Contest and Miss
Peeve, PoUy's Problem or Ohio Teen 'Ager Pageant, now
solution to a problem. Write in it's 5th year. 11iis Is an
Polly In care of this news- extra added feature for the
paper.
Blcentenniai year.

Silver plating ages
after long storage

News

96~

Cll

....

FOR THE

Polly's Pointers

Ducks &amp; ducklings, bird
baths ,
flamingos,
pheasants &amp; chipmunks .

Spe(ial Group (Val. to 39c)

The · Carleton Sunday
School had an attendance of
83.. Folio~ Suaday School
the Jualilr / Sunbeam and
Busy Bee classes presented a
Mother's Day program of
verses, readings and special
8Gl'lgs. Presenting a special
reading ' also was Olen
Harrlaon, after which the
superintendent, Ralph Carl
presented each mother with a
potted plant.
Recent vlsltars of Mr. and
Mrs. Nev White and Mrs.
Jennie Hollie were Mr. and
Mrs. Jobllny Barker and
famUy of Glenwood, W. Va.,
Mr. and Mrs. Sherman White
of Middleport, Mrs. Grace
White, Langsville, Mr. and
Mrs. Roger Toney of Chester
and Mr. and Mrs. Bernard
White, Mason, W. Va. ·
Mr. and Mrs. Olen Harrison •
spent a recent weekend in
Worthington with Mr. and
Mrs. Pbllip ijarrlson and
Rodney and Trevor.
Mrs. John Walter Dean
visited with her grandmother, Mrs. Ada Slack, who
is a patient at 'Veterans
Memorial Hospital where sh,e
underwent major surgery.
Sunday guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Ralph Carl and Rodney
were Miss Debbie Queen, Mr.
and Mrs. Virgil Carl and
famUy, Mr. and Mrs. Uoyd
King and family and Mr. and
Mrs. Dwight Carl and family.
Mrs. Faye Pratt is visiting
several days with her sister,
Mrs. Olen Harrison.
Mother's day dinner guests
of Mr. and Mrs. John Dean
were Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
Marklns, Racine, Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Reid and David
·of Pataskala, Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Smith of San Diego,
Calif., Mrs. Frank Young,
Alan, Dale and Susie of
MinerJvllle, Mr. and Mrs.
Garold Gilkey, Cindy and
Tllffillly..Df. /.!hens, M!'. and
Mrs. John Walter Dean and
Jeremy, Mr. and Mrs. BiU
Spaun and Shanon ol
Pomeroy, and Mr. and Mrs.
,Paul Payriter of Carpenter. ,
Calling to wish his mother, '
Mrs. Dean a happy Mother's
day were Sgt. and Mrs.
Richard Dean and Kenneth
Mathew of Mesa, Ariz.,
where he Ia stationed In the
Air Force at W111iams A.F .B.
Mr. and Mcs. Charles
Arnold spent Mother's day
with their daughter, Mr. and
Mrs. Daniel Cunningham and
son Charles at Pomeroy,
Ohio.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Burnside had •as visitors Mother's
day Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Houdershelt and Audra, Mr.
and Mrs. Glenn Thoma and
. {amlly of Cheater.
Recently visiting Mrs.
Neva King was Richard
Hielman of Hemlock Grove.
Vlaltors Mother's day with
Mrs. Hazel Arnold were Mr.
and Mrs. Ronald McNally
and daughters ol Athe118.

HALLMARK·
·,·

CLUB TO MEET
The
Meigs
County
Republican Women 's Club
will meet at 8 p. m. Wed·
nesday at the Meigs Inn. All
women are invited to attend
the meeling and join the club
for 197.6. Following the
meeting, there will be a social
hour .
In 1974, Judge John Sirtea
ordered President Nixon to
turn over tapes and other
records of 64 White Hou.'le
conservations , on
the
WRicrgH le affair.

elected treasurer was Robert
J. Fast, chairman, president
and chief executive olflcer of
the Tri-County National
Bank, Fostoria.

DUITON DRUG CO.
122 N. 2ND

MIDDLEPORT

Youth talent
will feature
July program

FLOW·
and

PRIMARY USES: This paint is for use on exterior surfaces such
wood siding, trim, shakes, wood sliingles, weathered ast1est:osl
shingles, unglazed brick, stucco, cement and cinder block. FINISHI:I
Flat. COVERAGE: Approximately 400 sq. ft. per gallon on sm&lt;Jotlt
l ...:&lt;..'iL.J surfaces. TINTING: Hundreds of additional colors may be obtaine&lt;t
by tinting Wonder Flow Acrylic Tint Bases with Trendition MOUIS!lll
Colorants. DO NOT tint with Color-in-Oil. Standard colors may
inter-mixed or let-down with 20 Chateau White. APPLICATon,.., .•
Brush, roller or spray. THINNING: Requires no thinning for
applications. If thinning is necessary, use only clean water.

REG. PRICE

SALE PRICE

SANDALS

!

•

.

non chalking, oil base.
'
One coat gives two coat appearance and protecti.on.
Saves you time and money. Heavy-bodied, high titanium.
Pure linseed oil formula provides excellent protection.
·
·
(May Be Tinted)
·

~

a

**~

*************************~

Marguerite's Shoes

REG. PRia '11A5

Pomeroy

~

, ~~.,.

~

:•

••
•

•
•••

'

e•
=

i1

VALLEY LUMBER &amp;SUPPLY CO~
992-2709
OHIO

ZOIIIS

SOLARCAINE
SPRAY

production, the strikers. lose
another day's pay, their
families lose another dsy's
security and consumers lace
the prospect of higher prices
from an inflation-pressured
settlement.
.
"NOBODY WINS !"
URW International
President Peter Bommarito
stayed in Washington for an

AFL
CIO
executive
rommittee meeting. Miller
said he updated his ' boss on
the talks.
"U it were necessary for
111m to be here, If the word
was that the company was
ready to move off its positions
in the basic economic Issues,
he'd pull out of the AFL CIO
U!lks and be ;ight here,"

A
affol'flable
watch.

-

~=

SPOONS,
FORKS &amp; .
KNIVES

PAPER
'
PLATES

. 4 oz.

DRIJlWINE

HAMPSHIRE

FLEXWALL POOL

3- PIECE POOL .......

12 Ct.

1

.... . .

24 Pes.
Nelson's
Reg. 79c

Nelson's
Reg. 96c

'I

SUPER
AIR MAlTRESS
•'

'
Sets up in 20 seconds! Sturdy
' construction,
6'x 1S"
deep,
American made, no sharp ooges.
NELSON'S
REG. $14.99

'11''

2 ring
pool, swim ring &amp; "' ~
ball. All you need. to do is add .water for
summer fun.

NELSON'S
REG. $4.99

mattress;
American made.
Nelson'sReg. $1.59

WN CHAIRS

$119

·B_A·R·B-Q GRILLS

CHAISE
NELSON'S
REG. $9.99

,.
12" TABLE
GRILl '
NELSON'S $169
REG.

CHAIR
NELSON'S
REG. $6.00

'4''

$2.29

.

FISHER-PRICE TOYS _

ICE CHEST/JUG COMBO

Adventure Plople

RttcueTum

Nelson's
Reg. $3.09

,

high -impact plastic,
30 qt. chest, 1 gal. jug.
.
NELSON'S
REG. $13.75

......

:

~n~;

Firestone announced
Wednesday it has taken out a

c•

"
'=
•·"'r~.·•'!:t-.Jr*:***·****-* ·~::.~~u*1rtJ~{!.*7~,:0W=r!~~*l .~

.~-

where they were."

•••

SALE PRIQ

S. 3RD AVE.

Betty Ohlinger
102 E. Main

'7''

.

full-page advertisement to be
published !his week "in
selected newspapers aroWld
the country" to give its
position on the strike ,
The company said the
advertisement will say in
part:
•
"Every day the rubber
strike goes on the industry
loses
another
day's

:

REG. PRICE
'9.25 GAUON

'

break again Wednesday.
"I'm not very optimistic
right now," said URW
representative Jake Miller.
"This (fringe benefits) is all
we've been talking about for
quite a while. The main
economic issues are right

RESCUE TEAM

..

DERO

***************************
.
:
MAY CLEARANCE! :

'8 99

....

'-·

. For Men, Women &amp; Children

values
to 520.00

•
t
•
•••
••
~

....
SALE PRICE
GALLON
......
•
·~t*~r.~r.~r
••:••:.~· ·································
Number 101-1 analyzed super one coat White house paint

For Men and Women

*~

• ••

GLOSS LATEX HOUSE.PAINT

MOCCASINS

: SHOES FOR WOMEN

. .•

"

•

CONVERSE
PRO KEDS
GRASSHOPPERS
KID POWER

GROUP OF SALE

...•

~

'8.95 GALLON

FOR THE WHOLE FAMILY

:

"

WONDER GLOW
PAINTS
WONDER FLOW FLAT . UTEI

Summer Sandals
and Canvas Shoes

a union negotiator expressed
pessimism about reaching a
settlement soon to end the
nationwide rubber strike.
Representatives
of
Firestone,
focus
of
negotiations in the strike that
also shut down Goodyear,
Goodrich ~nd Uniroyal
plants, and the union
recessed the talks at the noOn

Akron finance director
Peter F. Donnelly said the 27djly-oid' strike ha s cost the
city $135,000 In Income tax
revenues so far and will
rontinue · to cost ' $45,000 a
week as long as it lasts.
"We anticipated a strike
and took steps to conserve
our financial resources,' '
Donnelly said. "We have
instituted a lliring freeze and
are pUtting off major
purchases."

News Notes

Bankers elect officer slate

LAWN
DECORATIONS

....,. ,.. ,.

Kingsbury

WEARING COLONIAL costuming (at right), a choral
group will take part in the musical. Some members of the
chorus are, back row, 1-r, Wayne Lyons, Tere.sa Hill,
Darla Evans and Lori Powell, and front, Lois Frank,
David Salmons and John Porter .

POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - My silver
set turned black while it was
packed away, and I would
like to clean it up, but silver
polish does not help. Can you
suggest something I could use
RACINE - Two new
to clean this up again? members were Initiated into
MRS.· G.G.W.
the Racine Chapter 1 Order of
the Eastern Star, at a recent
Dear Mrs. G.G.W.- A silver
repair company told me that
meeting . Barbara Roush,
the base metal in plated
worthy matron, and James
silver · often displaces the
Roush, worthy patron,
presided.
silver, when it is stored away
lor a long time. This is parFoliowlng the ritualistic
ticularly true of the handles,
opening, two members were
spouts and legs to tea pots,
reinstated
and
com- ·
a}
munlcations regarding .
etc. This may be what has
happened
to yours. There
Grand Chapter session were
Holzer Medical Center
read along with invitations to
would
really
be little silver
{Discharges, May 19)
several Inspections . Leot'a
left
to
cleanup.
Take it to a
Edwin Adkins, Ethel Angel,
Ferrell was reported con- John Babcock, William silver plating company and
fined to a Dayton hospital . BLankenship , Jean Cart- ask their advice. They could
Bemice Theiss was reported wright, Ronald Coleman , tell how much silver remains
ill at home and Chlorus Gerald Demp sey, Fred on your pieces. - POLLY.
Grimm and Gretta Simpson Facemir e, Christopher
DEAR POLLY- My Pet
were reported recuperating . Frogale, Bernice Green,
Congratulations were ex- TeiTi Halley, Wanda Hill, Peeve is with a neighbor's
tended to Helen Pickens who Eva Hubbard, Anna Hudson, cat. I feed the birds ail winter
was recently installed as Louie Lathey, Thelma Leitch, and every time I look out that
worthy high priestess of the Richard Maier, Jennings cat is going across the yard
Mary Shrine·, White Shrine of Marcum , Demmie Perry, with a bird or young rabbit in
Jerusalem.
Jerry Rice , Ethel Rife, Anna his mouth. If a person has a
Racine inspection was Smitson, William Stewart, dog it has to be kept tied up
announced for June 21 and Nettie Swisher , Lester but cats are allowed to run
invitations were sent. Mrs . Taylor, Bert Thompson, Judy anywhere they choose. I think
people should have to keep
Barbara Dugan and her Toland.
their
ca ts at home. committee served refresh(Births, May19)
WILLIAM.
ments. Hostess for the June
Mr . and Mrs . Larry
meeling will be Mrs. Opal McGrath, son, Athens; Mr.
DEAR POLLY - My
Diddle and Mr. and Mrs. and Mrs. James Johnson, Pointer is for the ladies who
Ralph Webb.
quilt. Believe it or not, I got it
son, Wellston.
from the dentist. It Is to use a
chair with castors on the
bottom such as dentists use. I
used
to use a long bench, but
SUPER SPRING SAI.E
since
my son left for college I
Still in Progress
have
been using his desk
Specials Throughout the Store
chair that has no arms, but
has castors on the bottom. I
lind I can get much closer to
my quilt and reach further
without having to roll the
unfinished area so often. This
chair is quite comfortable
and rolls along as I work with
Orntmtntll wrought w0t1 style
ltnet ot tllgtl impact plastiC.
no getting up and down to lift
Lool-liQilt connHIOII .
a bench or chair. - G. H.
DEAR POLLY - Use a
cloth or plastic shoe bag (the
type that holds six pairs ol
shoes) to hold your various
electrical cords. It can be
hung .in the broom closet or ·
some out of sight place In the
kitchen, where it is easily
accessible.
You will have no
and
more searching around lor

Two members

CLEVELAND (UPI) Negotiations between the
striking United Rubber
Workers Union and Firestone
Tire and Rubber Co .
remained deadlocked on
fringe Issues Wednesday and

. · ACOMPLETE SELECTION
OF

"'·'. .

the case."

Rubber workers' st.* e deadlocked on fringe issues

Classifications for jobs opened
The Weal Virginia Civil claulllcatl0118 may be obo
Service System Ia accepting tained from any Emplqyment
applications . for 22 job Security office or by callJng
: cla88iflcations. Appllcatioll8 the toll-free Federal..State
·~ must be J)Oitmatked not later Job Information Center
thaJI Friday, June 11, 1976. Number: 1~ or tile
ApplicatiOilB and additional State Civil Service office In
\ Information on specific Charleston: 34&amp;-'7930.

Wears, Danny and . Nancy,
Mrs. Debbie Lee and Keith
Ann, Mrs. Shirley Dancy and
Tammy, Rick OhlinKer.
Jackie VanMeter, Melanee
Mossman, Robert Mossman,
Patricia Ohlinger, Beth
Smith, Paula Russell, Kristy
Tucker , Charles Weaver ,
Jaque Herrin , Lori Chapman ,
Jane Wyatt.
Brltta Van Meter, Jenny
Van Meter, Jeff Zirkle, David
Varian; Georgeena VanMeter, Tom Glover, Chuck
Stodola, Kim Van Meter, Mr.
and Mrs. Paul Pierce, Randy
and Scott, Mike Van Meter,
Mark Fowler, Mr. and Mrs.
James Pauley.
John Pauley, David Roush,
David Duddi ng, Randy · . CHILDREN OF TilE RACINE Elementary School
will be cast as historical characters (above) when they
Dudding, Tim W. Roush ,
present a musical, "Let George Do It" at 7: 3il this evening
Rocky ·Lee Kearns, J.. L.
I Thursday) at the Southern High School Auditorium.
Bast, Jim Thompson, Connie
From
the left in the backrow are Melinda Salmons, who
Kearns, Kathy James, Lynne
Will
portray
Martha Washington; Brian Cleland, who will
Oliver, Kevin James, Mike
play
King
George
III, and Kent Wolfe who will be George
Hobbs, Mark Johnson.
·
Washington.
In
front
are David Salmons, left, and John
Judy Van Meter, Jerry
Porter
who
will
narrate
the presentation which is open to
Coleman , Susan Loper, Mr.
the
public.
'
and Mrs . James Pauley III ,
Mr. and Mrs. Chuck AnTilESE RACINE Elementary School students (right,
derson, Janie and Todd, Ella
ahove) wlli be the "Indians" in the famed Boston Tea
Ford, Betty Van Meter, Brent
Party tonight in the musical, "Let George Do It" . From
Layne, Ruth Dudding, Mr .
the left are Richard Hill, Tony .Forester, Steve Fisher,
and Mrs. Gene Coleman,
James Cleland and James Bush.
Greg Barnette, Joe Thomp-

Miller said . "But that's not

·

$}099

-

ll"x17" cllt '""' ldlusteblt pkh,
wooden hendles, 2 olr vents .

$549

NELSON'S
REO. 56.77

•

MEMORIAL WREATHS
It's a precision
jeweled watch.
Water end shock
resistant. Slyled In
gleaming chromo and
stalnlesa steel. With a

sweep second hand . Full

19'' PEDESTAL CROSS
Nelson's Reg. $4.35
Nelson's
Reg : $3.09

Nelson's Reg . $4.49

numeral dial. Black
lealher strlliJ. And a
Bulova warranty.
All fota mere$15.95.

19" ~~~~ !!~s $669
24" SPRAY
9

BUL0\111
Nelson's
Reg . $3.37
I

.GOESSI.ER'S
JEWELRY
StORE
Court St., Pomeroy

,.J

"

'

15" WREAlH .

Nelson's Reg .

su9

lO" S!e~!'s Reg. $4.49

$24
$399

Beautiful Array
.
of Styles &amp; Colors to Choose From .

SHELL
NO:PEST
STRIP

�"-',:;:;.~~~~~···--·~~;~:~""}:or Fast Results Use The Sentinel Classifieds
5

P M

Day

Be f ore

F' ublu:atton
Monda y D e adltne
a rn
C a n c e I 1 a t 1 on

9

Corrections will be ac

ccpted unt il 9 am

lor

Dav of PublicatiOn

REGUlATIONS

The Publisher r eserves
th e r lg Mt to edt! Qr

retect

any ads de emed ob
rec.t tonal Th e publtsher
wtll not be r espo nsi bl e tor

rnorc tha n one mcor r ect

mserhon

RATES

For Want Ad Ser v1c e

5 c e n ts

msertton

per

word

one

Mm tmum ChargeS! 00
14 cents per word three

consec uttv c

tnserttons

26 cents per word s•x .
co nsec ut ive
mser l tons

25 Pe r Ce n 1 Ot ~co un t on
pa td ad s and ad s patd
wttt1m 10 da ys
CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
$2 00 1 f o r
50
word
mr nr mum
Each ad dtlton al word J

cents

BLIND ADS
A ddr tlo nat 25c Charge
pe r Adve rTr seme n l

OFFICE HOURS
8 30 a m to 5 00 p m

Dally 8 JO am

to 12 00

Noon Saturday
Phone today 992 ?\S6

NOTICES
ATTN !'

All IIOUSEWIVE5
All Yard Sa tes Rurnmage ,
Por ch and Basement Porch

must be paid In

et~ .
advanc~ :

our

office at

and Basemen t Sa tes.

Get your m tn ear ly by

stopprng by

The

Dlllly

Se ntin el,

111

Court St or wntmg Box
729 , Pomeroy

Oh iO 45769

w ll h your remltlance

NOTICE OF ElECTION
ON TAX LEVY IN

EXCESS OF THE TEN

MILL LIMITATION
NOTICE tS hereby g tve n
that In pursuance of a
Resotutron of the Council of
th e Vil lage of Midd leport.
Ohio, passed o n the 4th day of
March , 1976, th ere w i ll be
submitted to a vote of the
people of sa td Vt llage at a
Speci al ELECTION to be h eld

m the Village of Middleport,
Ohio , at the regular pla ces of
votmg there in , on Tuesday
the 8th day of J une, 1976, the
ques t ton of ievytng , m e,.;cess
of the ten mill ll m1tat1on , for
the beneftt of Mid d lepor t
VI llage for the purpose of
Recreation purposes
Said tax being an addtftonal
tax of one half mill to run for 5
years
at a rate not exceeding one
half mill for each one dollar of
va luation , which amoun ts to
five cents for each one hun
dred dollars of va luation, for
f1ve veers
The Polls for said Electtofl
wtll be open at 6 30 o'cloc k
AM and remaifl open unti l
7 JO o'c lock P M of sa ld day
By order of the Board of
elections , of Metgs County ,
Oh io
Ernest A Wmgett
Chatrma n

Phone Elbert Johns.on
5149
·

WHITE and

tan female Walke r

IN MEMORY ol LOIS McCAIN , o
good tnend , on her btrthdo.,.
May 20 Jq76
FRIENDSHIP IS A
PRICELESS GIFT
Ttme
con
1 destroy 1h beauty
NOTICE OF ElECTION
For, as long o s memory l•ves,
ON TAX lEVY IN
Years can't erose the pleasure
EXCESS OF THE
Tho! the JOY of a fr lendshtp gtves
TEN Mill liMITATION
NOTICE Is hereby g1ven S1gned Delores Frank
that In pursuance of a
R:esolut1on of the Board of IN LOVING memory of our son ,
8l01ne J Turner who was
County Comm tssione rs ot th e
Coun ty of Metgs, Pom eroy ,
taken !rom us ftve yea rs ago,
Ohio , pa ssed an the 8th day of
May 20, 1971 No words con &amp;•·
March , 1976 , there will be
press our grtef Dad , Mom ,
subm ltted to a vote of the
and twin S1sler Brenda
people of Sllid County at a
~--. ---------------Spec 1a l ELECTION to be held
In the County of M9 lgs , Ohio,
at the regular pla ces of vottng
therein , on Tuesday , the 8th
day of June, 1976, th e question 1-N OUR recent Sickness and death
of levying, In excess of the ten
of our dear mother grand.
mill ltm ltetton for the benefit
mother, great grandmother
of Me 1gs County fo r the
and aunt, Lulo Bon , we wish to
purpose
of
continued
thank &amp;\leryone tor the klnd
operation of the Southeastern
neu ond sympathy 1ncl udlng
Ohio Emergency Medical
Dr Rtdgwoy Or P1ckens and
Serv ice for the purpose of
Or V1 llonuevo Also, the
emergency med ical ca re and
hOSP IIal transfer service
nurses and atdes of Veterans
Said ta x bemg an ad
Memonol Hospita l, Ewmg
dtl1onal ta x of 01 mill to run
Funeral Home , Syracuse Loduu
fo r ftve years
Amuhory end the Nazarene
Church
and Church of God,
at a rate not exceeding o 2 mIll
Syracuse for the prayers and
for e ach one do llar of
vtstls, cards ond lovely flowers ,
valuation , which amount s to
thanks for the musk ond
two cents for each one hun
dred dollars of va luat1on . for
smg1hg by the Norm Quartet
five years
God bless all of you lula Ban
The Polls for sa 1d Election __£_amtly
will be open at 6 30 o'clock
AM and remain open unttl
7 30 o 'c lock PM of said day
By order of the Board of
Elec t1ons , of Meigs County, RACINE Ftre Department will
Ohto
have a gun shoot Saturdor at
6 30 p.m at their new butldtng
Ernest A Wingett
off Bashon Rood
Chatrman
For
Memortol Day, beautiful
Dorothy M Johnslon
selection
flowe~rs
baskets
Dtrector
sprays, loose flowers vases
Faye 's Gtft Shop North 2nd St ,
Dated May 10 1976
M1ddleport Open d01 ly 9 a m
(51 13, 20, 27 (6) J .:t ic

Business Services

co

NOTICE OF ElECTION
ON TAX lEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE
TEN Mill liMITATION
NOTICE IS hereby g1ven
that 1n pursuan ce of a
Resolut ion of the Board of
County CommiSStoners of the
County of Metgs , Pomeroy
Ohio , passed on the lst day of
March , 1976, there wtll be
subm tlted to a vote of the
peop le of said County at a
Special ELECTION to be he ld
m the County of Me1gs, Ohto,
al the r eg ular places of volmg
th er e1n, on Tuesday , the 8th
day of June 1976 the questton
of levy 1ng, tn excess of the ten
mtll ltmtfatton , for the be ncf tl
of Meigs County for the
purpose of provtdmg Me igs
County's share for the benef 1t
of lhe Gall ta Me 1gs Jackson
Community Menta l Health
Board , for the purpose of
provtding the necessary
requirements of the Com
muntty
Mental
Health
Program established pur
svant to Chapter 340 of the
Oh10 Rev1sed Code
Said tax being an ad
dttlonal tax of 0 1 m1\l to run
for ten years

$1995
1972 AMC HORNET
Sport about Wagon , 6 cy l.. automatic trans , radto,
good tires , whtte ftni sh, good economy

1971 FORD STA, WAGON
$1495
V 8, automatic, P steering, good tires, clean mtenor

Roofing. GutteiS,

Painting and Repair
From the largest Truck or
Bulldozer Rad lalor to the
sm aties! Heater Core
Nathan Biggs
Rac:lia1or Spectahst

SMJTH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.
Ph

992· 2114

Pomeroy

Racine Plumbing
&amp;Heating
Racine, Oh1o
Need new roof or old
repaired? Hause , roof,
barn , shengles, build up,
pemtlng, electrical work,
gutters &amp; downspouts,
furnaces, water heaters,
water softners, Installed &amp;
repatred, sewage.
Call us at 949 2812
or 949 2203
3 28 1 mo

1972 Plymouth Duster, 6 cylinder 1965 Ford Golaxie . bucket seals,
automatic on floor : 1962 Ford
outomat~c. P S , P B. otr New
bottery Reol econom1col Ask- _ pickup truck Phone 992-5301
mg$1995 Coll(6!&lt;)696·1~.
1973 Ponttac Gron Prtx, all ex·
tras Phone 992·5470
1966 Ponttoc , power steenng and
TURF TRIM
power brakes Good condition
PUSH
MOWERS
196&lt; VW Phone 992 3884
30", 3 HP, B&amp;S Eng.
197.4 Olds Cutlass Supreme , p.s.
p b , 01 r, tope player with
$89.95
Sales &amp; Servtce
speakers. Eke cond1t1on &lt;:on
201310th Ave.
tact Fuzzy Lew1s 992 ·303~'-~
TURF TILL
Parkersburg, W.Va.
1971 Vega for qutek sale, Phone
' TILLERS
304·4B5-0386
8431653
l lf2 H. P., B&amp;S Eng
-~~~-~----------- 1969 C:-o-m-ar_o_, 307, au-to-m-otic~
614-423-6474
WANTED Someone to tear house
Alumtnum-Vtnyl Steel
$163.95
bucket seats , gqod cond1tton
down Contact Herschel Me
Contmuous Gutter
$925 Pnono 949 2860
dura 992-3436 or 992 5248
Replacement
POMEROY LANDMARK
MASON Auctton House Moson , 196i~ne- holfto~t;;;;;ii;,;l
Wtndaws and Doors
'I'._ Jack W Carsey, Mgr
truck , new !Ires and battery tn
W Vo Fr1day May 21 730 p m
Free Estimates
llfiDt
Phone 992-2181
good
cond1t1on
Phone
(614)
Cons1gnments welcome Phone
We recommend and
98S 3371
1304) 8B2-2407
Se ll Quality
COAL limestone and all trpes of
59 76
ANTIQUE SALE, Saturday May
ONE;ale poodle puppy block
sa!t and rock so h for 1ce and
at II am at Mason Auchon
$40 Phone992 7186
snow removaL Excelstor Salt
House Mason , W Va Bross 1951 Chevrolet Ptckup Phone
W.orks East Main St , Pomeroy ,
bed , oak 'ecretorv oak dtsh
992 7876
Ohlb Phone 992 3891.
cabtnet round cherry table ,
Blown
oak wash slond, corntval .1974 one·holf tan Chevy ptckup COAL limestone and calctum
25 500 m1!es, standard shtft
chlonde ond calctum bnne for
d1shes old botles marble top
Insulation Services
never used for hauling $3100
dust control and all types of
washstand , oak chatr, Oak
Fmanclng A\lattabie
Also 1964 one-half ton Ford
salt Excelsior Salt Works , East
dressmg table cherry chtld's
Blown tnto wails &amp; Atttc:s
ptekup. standard , good cond1
Motn Street, Pomeroy. Ohto,
desk , walnut dresser chest of
STORM
lion , $495 Phone 742·2460
drawers buffet, numerous pc.
phone 992-389·"'------c-WINOOWS &amp; OOORS
oi depreSS IOn gloSS monr
REPlACEMENT
1953 Ford Jubtlee tractor (ex·
other tlems too numerous to
WINDOWS
cell en!) $1 ,650 Ford 9N tracmention
Fred A Morkll
AlUMINUM
tor overha uled, $1 000, New 5
510 1NG· SOFF ITT
owner Howard Beasley Auc ft 3 pt rotary mower (stump
GUTTER S· AWNINGS
ltoneer Not responstb le for
umper)
$385
Four
used
rtd1ng
IF YOU have a serv1ce to offer
occtdenl$
awn mowers 7 and 8 h p $200
wont to buy or sell somethmg
to $230 Luckett Farm Equtp
Syracuse, Ohio
are lookmg for work
or
ment West Woshmgton St
Ph 992 ·3993
whatever
you'll get results
4 10 1 mo
Albony
Phone
(614)
698-3032
foster wtth a Senttnel Wont Ad
or
698
7881
DO YOU HAVE PARTY PLAN EXColl992-2156
·-::-::---:-:c=:-PERIENCE? FRIENDLY TOY
GARAGE
Sole Tuesday thru BEAN POSTS Coli 247-3077
PARTIES HAS OPENINGS FOR
Fnday , gas dryer . tables MAKE sprmg c!eanmg profttoble ,
MANAGERS IN OUR AREA
~h01n clothing and mtsc 203
turn unwonted 1tems tnto cosh
RECRUITING IS EASY BECAUSE
OEMS HAVE NO CASH INVEST · c-:ciftlc
_,..k-:S'..c!:~er.:.ay'-'--:c---:--: Advertise tn the Won t Ads
MENT NO COLLECTING OR BIG yard s• le Fndoy May 21 9 LOCUST posts , round or spht VEGETABLE plants of all kmds, 10
d1fferent vonettes of tomatoes,
DELIVERINGS CALL COllECT
!til 7 Furn1ture, toys , clothmg,
Phone 949-2774
1ndudmg non .acid white
CAROL DAY, (518) 489-8395 or
diS hes "• mise Gory R D1ll
tomato Very Iorge selection of
WRITE FRIENDLY HOME PAR·
res1dence Follow signs off of STEREQ.radto , modern destgn ,
am ·fm rod to , 8 track tope com·
beddtng plants
Also
TIES 20 RAILROAD AVE ,
248 at Chester Golf Course
btnolion Balance $101 20 or
Geromums and other potted
~~Y, NY 12205
GARAGE Sole Moy 20, 21 , 22
terms Call 992 3965
plcnts
Hanging baskets.
GRILL Cook and wet tress wonted
Thursday Fr~ and Saturday
Cleland Forms and GreenONE
Hereford
cow
w1th
calf
(half
Apply In person Crows Steak
109 Spnng Ave t'nmeroy 2nd
house Geraldine Cleland,
Murray Grey) one polled
,__House, Pomeroy
house from the ~orner Bar
Roctne
hereford
heifer
to
freshen
tn
Also have for so:" .. po1r of
$25 00 Per Hundred stufftng
Seplember. Phone (614) 985- MODERN walnut console, AM-FM
Cootng Whtte PeJI:e love
enve lopes
Send se lf .
4248 m eventngs or on
radio , 4 speed changer
Dovesfor$30
'
addressed
stamped
weekends
Balance
$103.40 or terms. Call
envelope Edroy Matis Box GARAGE SALE , Beddtng ac· .
·-'--.,---:::-...,--:c=992·3965
120
locust
posts
Phone
742·2359
188 YW , Albony , Mo 6&lt;402
ceuones boby ch1ldren's
mens , women 's materntty MODERN Walnut Console , om fm
HOUSEWIVES w1lh ch1ldren ,
clothtng , twtn bed sewtng
rodto 4 speed changer
$75 00 per week For appotnt-:
tlems onttque clock, books ,
Balance $102 30 or terms Call
1976 JEEP
men! coll 992-7269
Ouol 8 camera and pro1ector,
9923965
Avon ,
many
others
550.00 cash tn hand tf we
Wednesday through Saturday, HOME Grown tomoto plants , Im- can not beat any deal you
proved
Mextcon
Vtolant,
ahd
II 00 5 00 Old Rt JJ Enter
Gold medal , and cabbage bring us on 1eep or AMC
prise, bottom of Rose Htll
WILL DO odd 1obs, rooftng pain·
plan ts on Rt. 124 across from cars.
ling houlmg treework ond 3 Family Yard Sole on Co R~ 20,
Mumctpal
Pork, Thomas
mowtng Phone 992 7409
first tratler on left past Me1gs
Hayman , Syracuse, Oh1o .
County Fo1rgrounds 9 a m hll
WILL core for elderly penon In my
dark Thursday noon til dark, TRAVEL trol ler, 14 It hardtop
homo Phone I (614) 985 38-19
self contained , several used
Friday
0' 992-3410
mm1 and trctl b1kes. btcydes
AMC JEEP
WILL do patnhng, inside or out YARD SAlE , Thursday, Fnday and
Ftfe's, South Third, Middleport
Sotu rdoy , clothmg d11hes and
Phone 992-7494.
Call Steve Walburn 992·20B7 or
Ave.
523-9407
mtsc 11ems on new L1m9 Rood A:-=FE~W~uM1ke Magnotta , 992 3727
oe~d:-o~lr~c~o~n-.d-,oto~n~e~rs~.-w-.o~n ­ 44141h
Huntmglon, W. Va,
Rutland, Note E Vanaman
-------------~----EXPER IENCED pomters llex1ble
dow type from $30 F1fe's,
rates , free esftmates. All work YARD SALE , Fnday and Saturday ,
Soulh Thord, Moddleporl Phone
at Ronald Beegle restdence, I
guaranteed Phone 992·3004 or
992-7494
mtle E of Racme on 124 -~-'-=~::-:-::--:-:--­
74 3081
POOL
table, $30 00, Smger sewClothmg toys , some furn1ture ,
tng
machme treadle style, 2 ROOMY 7 yr old one story wood
new croci-let work, mov1e
portoble record players Call
frame , two bedrm. hol'l'l!t"
camera
992-6014 '
located between Coolville okt
~==-=-:-:----;--:-:--;-YARD
SALE
Frodoy
ond
Solurdoy
OLD furn1ture , ice boxes, brass
Tuppers Plains. One acre
3
b•ke
motorcycle
trotler
Call
at New yellow house on New
beds old wall telephones and
two C•lr garage, ctty water
s
992·7110
Lima Road, three-fourth m1le
ports , or complete households
heat
hardwood flo rs ,
from Rutland Ray lambert, 29 ft. Oelu)(e travel tro1ler, self
Wnte M. 0 M1ller, Rt. 2,
carpeted
llvmg room,...fnlce
chtldren's and adults clothtng
contained. otr cond1tloned
Pomeroy Ohto Call m 7760
-•ow. $21,000. Pilon~' (614)
M1sc Phone 742-2656
Sleeps 5, $4250 00 Warm Mor667-3519
TiMBeR, top pnce for stond1ng
ning wood heater wtth ther·
hmber Coli (614) 446-8S70
mostot and blower, used 1
month, cost $.440.00, sell for
CASH patd for all makes and
$350 ()() 3 year old sorrel more
models of mob1le homes
with blaze face, gentle , good
Phone area cede 614 _.23-9531 .
~--riding horse, $325 00 Phone
$$Cosh$$$ for 1unked auto Frye's FURNISHED opt • couple only , all
949·2466
Truck Auto Ports , Rutland .
utlltt1es pa1d $130 per month
GRAVELY lroctor 7.6 h.p. 32 in.
Phone 742-2081
Phone 992-3975 or 992-2571
mower , recently overhauled.
16 mm movte pro1ector w1th FURNISHED, 2 bedrm. apartment,
Ftne condition , $425 00 Call
adults only, '" Mtdd!eport
sound Coli 992-5766
992-720S
Phone 992-3874
TOMATO stokes Coll949 2273
1971 I.( ft Timberlake travel
NEED 7 ROOMS? - We
3 AND _. AM. furn1shed and un·
trailer, sleeps 6 with ownlngs,
DEALERS 1n 1unk con . scrap iron,
have it close to shopping
iurnished opts Phone 992·
$1100 . Also, 1971 Fury
metals Phone 992 5468
No yard to cut. Nice
5434
Plymoulh II , 2 dr hordlop ,
kitchen l'h baths plus
COUNTRY Mob1le Home Park, Rt.
automatic, p.s., brakes, $1 ,000.
shower
5 BR
Full
33 ten mtles north of Pomeroy
Phone 992·5465 after 5 p m
basement
ECONOMY
Lorge lots with concret pattos,
PRICED
Sidewalks, runners and off 1966 Hondo, recently overhauled ,
1969 Shasta hardtop traile r,
$150 AM·FM cassette player,
B,_E A LANDLORD street parkmg Phone992·7.479
$20 , 1 set American
sleeps .4 , self contained, new
Large brtck building wltn 4
Oragmaster wheels . 14 in.x7
fires elec brakes auto con· 2 bedrm. trailer, real mce Phone
rentals Nearly always
9923324
in. wide Fits Ford, Plymouth,
necttons extras $950 Phone
rented Good return on
Dodge, $125 , 621ncn, 451b. pull
9923517
Investment,
ONE
bedroom
apartments
al
------------------bow $25 Phone 992·54191 or
DETAILED
FOR
VILLAGE MANOR In Moddleporl
STARCRAFT Mtm.motor homes ,
9925972
for $104 monthly plus elec. or
COMFORT - 3 BR wife
travel trailers and fold ·downs
$130 mclud1ng electnc LOWER 10 speed bike, hke new, $60 Dog
new and used best price tn trl·
saver kttchen , H W floors
RATES FOR SENQR CITIZENS
house, new, $25 2 &amp; threestole ser.otee and quohty.
covered with carpet . Full
fourth in.x22 grinding whul
Camp Conley Slarcraft Soles ,
Convenient to shopping an
basement with utility Very
Thtrd and M1ll Streets In Mid·
on meta! stand. pedal oct1on,
Rt 62 N Pt. Pleasant,
nice front porch (Not very
dleport Brand new high quell·
$:25, Intercom set, S8 00. Two
old).
ty apartments See the
wtcker bar stools, $15 each,
RETIREMENT
WITH
manager at Rt\lers1de Apart
Westinghouse roaster With
INCOME - We have JUS!
ments or call 992·3273 Fur·
stand hke new $20. !. form
the place for you
If
'\'.shed apartments also
doo r $30, three 011 lamps,
AKC Regtslered Collie Stud Ser· ·~tloble
tnlerested
call
for
Avon
boitlas
four
7
50x16
vtee Stardust Kmg Phone
appointment .
(Low
toros , $20 Phone (614) 985oNre,;;;;,- -;;;b-;i; -h~;-;-~;
Investment)
.-!~!.41.~~ 4248. - - - - - - 4227
rent ~·a~ults only PI-lone 992
LIST TODAY WITH REGISTERED y.'h1te German
-------------------~
5535 ~\1'\nmgs
TWO hlghbock sw1vel von seats,
Meigs County's oldest a nd
Shepherd mole dog 17 months
--:.-----------out of 1975 Van. Block $75
largest full lime Rea l
old very gentle, $50 00 Phone One bedn · .and 2 bedrm fur.
Phone7.422217
•
Estate Ofllce
REAL
nished apa~ments
Phone
992 70JJ or 992·5010.
992 3129 or 992•5434
ESTATE is our business
~----------------~ .
3 1fJ hr..
rotot1ller
wooden
SElliNG out rabbtts ond pens . ---- ------ - --...----playpen
lownmawer, cloy
I not a sideline)
Coll9923018
TWO trollers for r•"''l one two
flower
pots
girl's
b1cycle
block
H. E CLELAND,
bedrm , other 3 b, ' s:m located
ENGLISH Setter pupp1es 7 weeks
and wh1 te General Elec TV,
BROKER
on
or
near
Kmg1bu•
V'lttood
I
or
coli 7421078
old Phone 843 2954
992 2259 or 9!2 .256B
2 cilold,en Phone 742-:1122

Siding Center

l

lARRY LAVENDER

DON SMITH

to,

WANTED TO RENT
•

The Complete
Remodeling Service
For Your Home

AI. TROMM CONST.
Rutland
742 232B
All Work Guaranteed
Free Esttmates
5·5-1 mo

-.----

Congratulations
Graduates
Let DONELLI'S make the
pina for vour after
graduation party Call us at
992-6167 and we wtll make
your parly somelhtng to
remember Check our
party rates.

Donalll's Pizza
lddlaport, Ohio
Open 4 p.m. daily
Closed all day Mondays

Septic Systems

Installed
by
Licensed lnsta ller
24 Hour Phone Serv1ce

Shepard Contractors
Phone 742 2409
Box_28A
Rutland, Oh.

.

4-26-1 mo.

SWIMMING
POOLS
Above and below ground
pool kits for the do-tl·
yourself man.
All pool supplies available,
too.

D. BUMGARDNER
Noble Summit Rd.,
Mtddleporl
PHONE 992-5724
53 1 mo.

NEW home for sole, 3 bedrms .
sewing room, 2 ceramic balh!l
personalized kitchen built for
the homemaker Plenty of
garden space on this one, acre
lot. Appro• 2 one·fourth miles
from Rt 7 on S R 12.( Toward
Rutland on south side of road
Watch for stgn AL TROMM
BUILDER Rutland. Phone 742
2328.
3 or 4 bedrm home on 1 acre
ground 1 m1le south of Chester
on Rt. 7. Famtly and l lvi n~
room, dining room, bullt·ln kit·
chen, aU carpeted, full size
basement and garage , c1ty
water, natural gas Seen by
oppt. Call (614) 9&amp;5-3842.
I 12 Acres Phone 742·2359
3 bedrm. home 1n Rustle Hills,
Syracuse
Will
consider
reasonably pnced mobtle home
on trade Phone 992-7523
2V2 acres on Boshan Road. Call
949-2830
3 bedrm. house on Solem St. In
Rutland, Ohio
6 Spacious rooms new bath, nice
yard Phone 992-7394
7 rooms, both, portly carpeted,
w•th new furnace and hat
water heater Lorge lot, Lincoln
H1ll . Phone992-2071

5 oo-Bonanza 3. Parfrldge Family 8, Mission lm
possible IS
5 30-Adam 12 4, 13; News 6; Family Affair 8; Electric
Company 20,33.
6 oo-News 3,4,8, 10, 13, 15, ABC News 6, Zoom 20,33
6:30-NBC News 3,4, 15, ABC News13; Andy Griffith 6,
CBS News 8, 10, Hodgepodge Lodge 20; Lilias,
Youoa and Vou 33
7·oo-Truth or Con5e&lt;1uences J; To ~!11 The Truth 4;
Bowling For Oollars 6, Lawrence Welk 8, News
10; Let's Make A Oealll; Family Affair 15; Anyone
for Tennyson&gt; 20. Family AI War 33

SHOWN! fXACTLY !,.fMY'5
JU&amp;T &amp;AID THE' 68&lt;../tET
WORf), CHISP! AND HAVIS l
GOT A WAY TO 5HOW THI:M!

R&amp;J COINS
Ohio
Rutla~d.

742-2331
Roger Wamsley
56 1 mo

WIN AT BRIDGE
Passing a forcing two-bid

SLOAN'S
CAIJPETtNG

.u.

and should pass right then and
there
We have composed loday 's
hand lo discuss th1s little
known Lightner convention
South's hand certatnly
meets all requirements for a
forcing two bid but it won 't
make 8ame all by ltsell
Three notrump wlll make
agamst any lead, but a dla·
mond Five clubs will make 1f
spades break 3·3 South can
set up dummy's fourth spade
for a heart discard, but West
holds four spades to spot) that

• J 82

.J 63

WEST
•QJ 108
•Q 1092
t A 9 53

BORN WSER

.. 7

MO&gt;T bf&lt;IPf'ltl&gt;
~L!'VB

~

~R

EAST

•s•

•J73
•KQI076
.952
SOUTH (D)
• AK9
•AK8

••

RE;AD.

.AKQI084
Both vulnerable

Medical Oxygen
and Supplies

Weot

Norl• Eaol

~u~~

Soulh

2 ..

ARE AVAILABLE
AT

Pass

!"'

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

17 Cole Street
Pomeroy, Ohto 45769
Telephone (61 4) 992 -3768
We Deliver
4 25 I mo.

The forcing two bid and the
negallve two-notrump
response were Jointly in·
vented by Ted Lightner,
Waldemar von Zedtwltz and
Oswald Jacoby back 1n he
very early days of contracl
This two bid was standardized to cover hands with lots
of high cards that might well
be one tnck short of game So,
after a while Lightner
proposed that 1f the opener
merely rebid to three of hiS
own SUit and responder held a

Complete Bridal
And Anniversary
Service
Free Consultation

Ann's Bridal and
AnniversaiJ Services
Phone Anna Blackwood
985-3805
Bron Thomas
992-2726 4_30- 1 mo.

HER~

An lndla11a reader wants to
know 1f there 1s any penalty
assessed agamst a player who
asks, "What did you bid
partner?" wiK!n no one has bid
anything
Of course not. This question
g1ves no mformatlon except
maybe that lhe questioner Is
absent minded

(Do you have a question
lor the experts? Write "Ask
the Jacobys" care ol thts

ZAK. l'IE ONE OF

,,'THEN BOTH OF YOU
T14ES!: ON T14E END OF '!\&lt;AT GEl' ON BOb.IW 1\-lAl'
VINE YOU'RE HOLD! No'
8Ho WINGED Cl&lt;rrl'ER
WHILE I KEEP ' 1M
BUSY!

JACOBY MODERN)

by THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS
I School
subj.
5 Imitative
10 Tenms star
JJ Ballet
position
12 Czech r1 ver
13 Public
speaker
II Rep.'s
opposite
15 Place
16 Part of a
wheel
17 Athlete's
forte
19 Sununer
(Fr.)
20 Debark
21 Pitcher
22 Operatic
segment
24 Battle site
25 "Rollerball" star
26 Yoke;
combine
27 Alder tree
(Scot.)
28 California

39 Chest
sounds
40 Massachu,
· sells town
DOWN
I Domesbc
workers
2 Resource
3 Early Henry
Fonda film
Yesterday's Answer
(3 wds.)
I Pronoun
II Ezra 26 Dlametri5 Main artery 15 Languish
cally oppaied
6 Ingrid
18 "Budden28 Customs or
Bergman's
brooks"
folkways
daughter
author
• 29 Pester
7 Badly
Zl Pennsylvan- 30 Aquatic
14 wds.)
nia c1ty
beast
8 Put on
ZZ DISperse
35 Madame
we1ght
Z3 Italian
Gynt
9 Operetta
city
36 "The
composer
21 Discolor
Cruel -"

11 :30-Johnny Canon 3, 4, 15; Rookles6, 13; Jan~~~ 33.
11 :45-Movle "The Milling Are Deadly 8; Movie Five
Million Yeil's-to Earth" 10
12 · 40-Don Kirshner's Rock Concert 6: Ironside 13.
I :co-Midnight Special 3,4, 15;,
1: 1S....Movle "Va lley of the Zomblls" 10.
1:40-News 13
2:30-News 3
3 :oo-Movie "The Movie Maker" 3.
4:1s-Salnt 3.
5 · Js-Movle "Duck Soup" 3.
6:»-Green Acres 3.

city

rrSB0tbND
1HE$

TREES-

,.....----...-~~~~~-::;--, 31 Prefix for

a-H CANT FIX THAT, BIJT__.....::::.::{''" ' ~~:or
/'!'A SLJRE Lit.. ABNGRCorrida
cry

. - , .. VIetnamese
.,..,, ,. holiday
~+--+-

'

EXCAVATING , BACKHOES AND
DOZER, LARGE AND SMALL,
SEPTIC TANKS INSTALLED . BILL
PULLINS, PHONE 992·247B, DAY
OR NIGHT
DOZER work , $10.00 per hour
with 8 ft blade For ttmber or
money Phone 992·2595.

One leiter si,...ply &gt;lands for anolher In this sample A io
used for lhe three L's, X lor the 1wo O's, etc. Single Icllers,
apostrophes, the length and formalion of the words arc all
hinls. Each day the code lcllcrs arc dllfcrcnt.

how to work
AXYDLBAAXR
lo LONGFELLOW

CJJSO

EKYL,

PHLYS

D

II

',

''

"
"

'""
,,,"
"

"

"•

..
"'"

''

FKW
NJY

WQHDWK
XFT

VQHD

XYH,

1'1C.TLJI&lt;=

JK

VJKEO

NJY
FAN

HOWDY, MA'AM-·
I'M FROM THE TWIN
FORKS PEST CONTROL
SERVICE
AND··

MOBILE home, 1973 Buddy, 14•· ,
64 , 2 bedrm. front den, fur·
nlshed or portly furnlohed,
Good condlllon Co il (614) 667·
3730
1

11GB~~)

I

'
I SHOULD THINK
'i'OU
COULD 60 OVE~ TO THE
50LF COURSE AND DO ·

I{OU!t J0661N6 .

"'
'"
·•

.

,,

Now
lttUn • ,
rona thlwplw ..... .
(J ........
.,lllot' .....

Mil .. _ _ _

Yesterday's Cryploquole: YOUR BODY IS THE BAGGAGE
YOU MUST CARRY THROUGH LIFE. THE MORE EXCESS
---~-----------, BAGGAGE, THE SHORTER THE TRIP. - ARNOW H.
t:l.ASOW
THEY

MOVED OUT
AGES AGO

Ue!P IN

EVll'ENCE A6AIN6T
MOONSHINER5.

EKWFAO

HJVWRR

MOBILE Homes for sale, 1969
Schult Custom, gOod condition.
Phone 742-3018

l

',

I I

CRYPTOQUOTE

LOSE wolgnl with New Shope
Tobl•ts and Hydrex Water Pills
at Dutton Drug, Middleport,
and Nelson Drug.

;

'
'

oom

it:

'

OVJKEO,

· ---,----

'·
'•
'•
'•

girl's name
Clout;
~++-+-tr-tsmash
_ _,,.., Steno's aid
Facility

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's

MOBILE Homes, extra clean one
bedrm Pacemaker trailer with
-- ~olh , $975. Phone 7&lt;2-2&lt;60

,,

1 Russian

GREG S CB SALES, located ol Erwin's Gulf Servtca, Middleport, Oh1o. Phone 9922438.

1968 Skyline t'ollar, 12&gt;160, ond
land 3 bedrm very gOOd condl·
loon, $8,000 Phone 992·5491
or992-5972.

,·

a:

newspaper The Jacobys will
answer mdlvldual questions
II stamped, sell-addressed
envelopes are enclosed. The
mosl mlerestlng questions
wr/1 be used In this column
and will rece1ve coptes ol

~~~-

ALLEY OOP

BRAOFOR,O, Austtoneer. Com·
plete Service Phone 949·2487
or 949 2000. Ractne, Oheo, Critt
Bradford .
ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR Sweepers, toasters, trans, all
small appliances. Lawn mower,
next to State Highway Garage
on Route 7 Phone (614) 9&amp;5·
3825.
REMODELING, Plumbing heotong
and all types of general repair.
Work guaranteed 20 years experience. Phone 992 2409.
D&amp;D TREE Trimming, 20 years ek·
perlence. Insured free
estimates Coli 992·2384 or
(614)6q8-7257 Albony .
SEWING MACHINE Repairs, ,.r.
vice, all makes , '992 2284 The
Fabric Shop , Pomeroy
Authorized Singer Soles and
Service. We shorpen Sc11sors
EXCAVATING, dozer, loader and
backhoe work, dump trucks
and !o·boys for h1re, will haul
fill d.rt, top soil, limestone and
groval Coli Bob or Roger Jeffers, day phone 992-7089,
night phone 992-3525 or 992.
5232.

WILL DO extenor pointing,
houses ond roofs Phone 992·
5684 or 992-JJ74.

2NT Pass

Pass
Opem"ll lead- Q•

lWIN CITY
MADfiNE SHOP

Vtrgil B. Sr., Realtor
110Mechantc Pomeroy,O.
Phone 992-3325

Pass

Pass

7 ()()-Hollywood Square• 3,4; Ohio State l.ottery 6;
Evening Edlflon With Marlin Agron5ky 20; Wild
Kingdom 10, To Tell The Trulh 13; Music City
US A. 15
8 oo-Movle "Sil3rk Kill" J,o, 15; Welcome Back,
Kotter 6, 13; Waltons 8. 10; Oper3 Theater 20; Mark
of Jan 33.
8 311-Barney Miller 6, 13; Lowell Thomas Remembers
33.
I
9 :QO-Streets of Sen Francisco 6, 13; Hawaii F lve-0 • :
Olympllld 33; BOQarl 10.
9 ~'0-Movle " The Dark Side of Innocence" 3,4, 15.
IO :oo-Harry 06, 13; Glen Campbell 8, 10; Bill Moyers'
Journel 33.
10·311-News 20
11 QO-News 3.4,6,8, 10, 13, 15 , ABC News 33.
11 311-Johnny C~rson 3,4, 15, Mannix 6, l3 ; Movie
" Sidekicks" B; Movie "The Main Attracllon" 10;
Janak! 33.
oz ' 4o:..:r;\aglclan 6, 13.
1 oo-Tomorrow 3,4
! · ~News 13
FRIDAY,MAY21, 1976
6·QO-Summer Stmesler 10
6 lS....Farm Rti)Ort 13.
6 20-Biue Ridge Quart.t 13
6:30-(;olumbus Today 4; News 6; Summmtr
Semester 8: Farmtlmo 10
6:40--Cunce of Prevention 10
6:45-Morning Report 3.
6·50-Good Morning, Wtst VIrginia 13.
6 55-Chuck While Rti)Orls 10; Good Morning, Trl
State 13.
7:11()-Todey 3,&lt;,15; Good Morning, America 6,13; CBS
News 8; Bugs Bunny and Friends 10.
7:30-Schoollos 10.
B:QO-Lasale 6; Captain Kangaroos, 10; Sesame Slreel
33.
8 311-Big Valley 6.
9. oo-Not For Women Only 3; Phil Don3hut4, 15; Lucy
Show 8; Mike Douglas 10; Morning with D J. 13.
9·30-A M. 3; One Life to Live 6; Tattletales a: Mlkt
Douglas 13.
10 (1()-{;elebrlly Sweepstakes 3,4, 15; Edge of Night 6;
Price Is Right 8, 10.
10 30-High Rollers 3,4,15; Dlnahl 6.
11 oo-Wheel of Fortune 3,15; Weekday 41 Gambit
8,10; Fermer's Daught.r 13.
11 : 30-Hollywood Squares 3,4, 15; Heppy Days13; Love
of Lite 8,10: Seaame Street 211,33.
11 55-Take Kerr 8; Den lmel 's World 10.
12 oo-Magnlllcenl Marble Machine 3,15; Let's Meko
A Deal 13: Bob Braun 4; News 6,8, 10.
12 30-Take My Advice 3,15: All My Children 6,13;
Search lor Tomorrow 8,10
12 :-Eiectrlc Company 33.
12 ·5S....N8C News 3,15.
1.11()-News 3; Ryan's Hope 6, 13; Phil Donahue
Young And the Restless 10; Not For Women Only
15.
1·30-Days Of Our LIVtl 3,4,15; Rhyme and RHIOrl
6, 13; As the World turns 8,10
2 Q0-$20,000 :•yramld 6,13.
2·30-Doctors 3,4,15; Break The Bonk 6,13; Guiding
Light I, 10
3 oo-Another World 3,4, 15; General Hospital 6,131
All In the Family 8, 10; Crockett's VIctory Garden
20.
'
3:311-0ne Life to Live 13; Mickey Mouse Club6; Match
Game 8, 10; Book Beat 20
4 :DO-Mister Cartoon 3; Merv Griffin 4; Somerut 151
Bewitched 6; Mickey Mouse Club 8; Mlsltr ROQtrs
20,33; Movie ''Buffalo Bill" 10; Dlnehl 13.
4: 30-Bewltched 3; Mod Squad 6; Beverly Hlllbllllell1
Sesame Street 211,33; Flintstone• 15.
5:oo-Bonanza 3; Perlrldge Family 8; Million:
Impossible 15.
5:30-Adem-12 4,13; News6, Family Altair 8; Electric
Company 20,33.
6:QO-News 3,4,8,10,13,15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20,33.
6.30-NBC News3,4, 15; ABC News13; Andy Grllfllh6;
CBS News 8, 10; Hodgepodge Lodge 20;
Carrucoltndu 33.
7: oo-Truth or Consequences 3; To Tell The Truth 4;
BOwling lor Dollars 6; Space: 1999 8; Avletlon
Weather 33; News 10; Don Adams Scree" Ttsll3t
Family Altair 15; Ohio Journal 20.
7:30-Porter Wagoner 3; Treasure Hunt A; Candid
Camera 6: Evening Edition With Martin Agronsky
20: $25,000 Pyramid 10: To Tell The Trufh 13: Pop!
Goes The Country 15; Bleck Ponpoctlve on the
News 33.
8:QO-Sanford and Son 3,4, 15; Donny &amp; Marle6, 13; Pilot
8; Washington Week In Review 20,33; Prnldents:
76 years on Camera 10.
8:30-The Practice 3,4,15, Wall Street Week 20 33.
9:oo-Rockford Files 3,4,15; Movie "You'll Like My
Mother" 6, 13; NBA Play.Oft 8, 10; Firing Lint 20;
Masterpiece Theatre 33.
lO:oo-Pollco Story 3,4, 15; News 20; Paul Nuchlms 33 .
10 30-Avlatlon Weather 20.
11 : oo-News 3,4,6, 13, 15; ABC News 33.
11 lS....News 8,10

usele~S hand , responder could

NORTH
• 76 3 2

"'free estimates on car·
11ettng and tnslallation.
We'll bnng samples to your
·home with no obligatio•.
See how you can really
save
Mtke Yeung, Manager
Sales and Installation
Rt.J, Pomeroy, Ohto 45769
Phone day or night
614-!92 2206
)_]4 I mo
•
r.::. '
~

•

~

TEAFORD
4 BRS. - 1'f2 baths, hot
water heat, gas fireplace,
basement, n 1ce yard.
garage , on Mulberry .
$20,000.
RUTLAND - Large lot, 3
Brs , new baln and gas
furnace, large living and
kit Basement $12.500.
RACINE - Nearly new 3
Brs , 1'12 baths, nice kit, ,
full basement, garage and
1.4 acres S31 ,500.
49 ACRES - 3 yrs old, 2
Brs , nice birch kit. with
sliding glass drs. Full dry
basement, carport with
utility. $31,500
RACINE AREA - Nice 3
Brs., bath, mod kit, dining
and lots of closets Level
lot . 518,000.
NEW LISTING - L,arge 1
floor building for trad ing
post, antiques, etc. Over 1
acre at DeKier S9,000
RANCH - 31arge Brs, l 'l2
baths, real nice k lichen
wtln bar, dining has ~lass
doors Full basement and 2
car garage. 536,500
NEW LISTING - 6 rms .,
bath, a ll utilities, front
porch and 2 level lots.
$6500
ALL YOU BUYERS COME
SEE WHAT WE HAVE.
BARGA INS GAL OR E.

THURSDAY , May 20, 1976

Buy, Sell or Trade

SEPTIC TANKS cleaned. Modern
Sanitation. 992 3954 or 9925968.
WILL do roofmg , construction,
plumbing and healing No job
too large or too small. Phone
742-234B.
EXCAVATING, dozer, ·backhoe
and dltcher. Charles R Hot·
field , Bock Hoe Ser\liCe,
Rullond, Ohoo. Phone 742·2008
WILL trtm or cut trees and shrubbery. Phone 949·2~5 or 742·
3167

FOR SALE, 15 aero• with nice 7
rm and bath , 3 bedrm home,
newly remodeled, 2 car
garage, rural water, gas wei,
oil mlnerol rights, $34,000.
Phone 742-2336.

Television log for easy viewing

SHOULD L.ET

COINS
CURRENCY
SUPPLIES
METAL
DETECTORS

- _ __._ !.

FREE ESTIMATES

at a rate not exceedmg 0 2 mill
for each one dollar of
valuatton , whtch amounts to
two cents for ea ch one hun
Dated May 10 , 1976
dred dol lars of valuation , for
ten years
lSI 13, 20, 27 161 3. 41c
The Polls for said Electton
wt ll be open at 6 JC o'clock
NOTI CE OF ELECTION
AM and rem am open until
ON TAX lEVY IN
7 JO o'clock PM of said day
EXCESS OF THE TEN
By order of th e Boa rd of
Mill liMITATION
Elections of Meigs County
NOTICE Is hereby Qtven 'Ohio
that m pursuance of a
Reso lution of the Council of
Ernes t A Wingett
the VI llage of Mtddleport ,
Chatrman
Oh io , passed on the 4th day of
Merch , 1976, there will be
Dorot hy M Johnston
subm ttted tO a vote of the
Otrector
people of said Village at a Dated May 10. 1976
Special ElECTION lobe he ld
•n the VIllage of Midd leport. (5) 13 , 20, 17 (6) 3, 4t c
Ohio, at the regular places of
votlng !herem, on Tuesday ,
the 8th day of June 1lil76, the
question of levying , In excess
of the ten mill ltml!atton , for
the benefit of Midd leport
NOTICE OF Oil
VIllage for the purpose of
&amp; GAS lEASE
Current Expenses
FORFEITURE
Said tax bfltl~ an ad
dltlonllllax of J mil ls to run for TO Atlantic International Ott
five years
Corp
summ1t Chase, lOOD Urhn
at a rate not exceed ing J 0 Ave .
milts tor each one dollar of
Columbus, Oh1o
val uation, which, amoun ts to
Thirty Cents for each one Genllemen
hundred dollars of va luat ion,
You are hereby not1ft ed that
for Five years
the understgned lessors
The Polls for sa td Elect ton hereby e lec t to de clare a
will be open at 6 JO o'clock forfettur e of the following oil
AM and remain open until and gas lease between you as
7 30 o'clock P M of satd day lessee and !h e undersigned as
By order of the Board of lessors
Elections, of Meigs County ,
Lease dated the 8th day of
Ohio
May , 1972, between Hobar t M
Dodde rer and Beulah Dod
E rnes 1 A W•ngett der er , hts wtte, as Lessors ,
Cha1rma n and Atlantic tnternat1onal 011
Corp , as Lessee, CO\Ierlng 76
Dorothy M Johnston acres , more or less, Sttu~te m
Townsh ip
Meigs
Dtrector Olive
County , Ohio . and be •ng
Dated May 10. 1971!1
bounded on th e North by
Howard Dobb ins . on the East
151 13, 20 27 16) 3 •tc
by Frank Dodderer , on the
South by C R Garrell and on
the west by C R Garrel l and
E R•tch1e , said lease being of
NOTICE OF
record tn the office of the
APPOINTMENT
CaseNo . 21804 Clerk of the County Recorde r
Estate of Ar1hur Lynch tn Me1gs County Ohlo , m
Lease Book 58, at Page 235
Deceased
The above lease Is he r eby
Notice is hereby gtven that
James E Simpson of 264 s declared forfeited by the
~ec ond , Midd lepor t, Meigs und erstgn ed Lessors because
County, Oh to, has been duly ot the non payment of delay
appointed Admlntstrator of rental as reQu•red by th e
the Estate of Arthur Lynch , terms of the satd lease
It 1S the 1ntentlon of th e
deceased, late of Sal1sbury
Township , Meigs County , unders tgned Lessor to fil e and
record an affidavit of for
Ohio
Creditors are reQuired to ftle fettur e for the abo ve lease
the ir claims with said with the County Recorder of
fiduciary within three months Metgs County , Ohio , as
Oates th•s lOth dey of May provtded by lt~w
Sig ned
1976
Hobart M Dodderer
Lessor
Manning 0 Webster,
Judge
Beulah Dodd erer
Court of Common Pleas,
Lessor
Probate Oivis1on
Metgs County, Oh1o 15) 17, 18. 19 . 20 . 21 , 51c
lSI 13 , 20, 27 , lie

2~19

1975 CHEVROLET Capnce
5S29S
co. car , low mileage, sa ndstone fintsh , vinyl top
a nd tntenor , atr condttlonlng, power wtndows &amp; door
• locks, tilt steering wheel, cru ise control, AM radto &amp;
tape, truly a loaded car ard has good eye appeal
4 door,

Aluminum Siding,

22

Doro thy M Johnston
D.rector

!

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

r

THE SHARKS HAVE HIM,
• • THAT'S WHAT HE'
PL.ANNED FOR ME!

fit~l¥.11
U_"'"'
_"""

_so~ !-~~ ~ ) 446!-477

Call After 9 P.M.

BY RIGHlS,

992.

hound , m ..,. 1clnity of Eastern
Hlnh School Call Russell Dod·

New home or large trailer with large
yard or in the country. Small family,
have references. Will consider
buying.

" - l'"' uaupenunel. MlddleDOrt-Pomerof. 0 .. Thursday, May 211, 19'16
DICK TRACY

NO, THAT'S ANOTHER GOOD
PlACE lb 6ET HURT .,

to

.......,.lilt clrcW

.-1111

..(II III]"

�"-',:;:;.~~~~~···--·~~;~:~""}:or Fast Results Use The Sentinel Classifieds
5

P M

Day

Be f ore

F' ublu:atton
Monda y D e adltne
a rn
C a n c e I 1 a t 1 on

9

Corrections will be ac

ccpted unt il 9 am

lor

Dav of PublicatiOn

REGUlATIONS

The Publisher r eserves
th e r lg Mt to edt! Qr

retect

any ads de emed ob
rec.t tonal Th e publtsher
wtll not be r espo nsi bl e tor

rnorc tha n one mcor r ect

mserhon

RATES

For Want Ad Ser v1c e

5 c e n ts

msertton

per

word

one

Mm tmum ChargeS! 00
14 cents per word three

consec uttv c

tnserttons

26 cents per word s•x .
co nsec ut ive
mser l tons

25 Pe r Ce n 1 Ot ~co un t on
pa td ad s and ad s patd
wttt1m 10 da ys
CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
$2 00 1 f o r
50
word
mr nr mum
Each ad dtlton al word J

cents

BLIND ADS
A ddr tlo nat 25c Charge
pe r Adve rTr seme n l

OFFICE HOURS
8 30 a m to 5 00 p m

Dally 8 JO am

to 12 00

Noon Saturday
Phone today 992 ?\S6

NOTICES
ATTN !'

All IIOUSEWIVE5
All Yard Sa tes Rurnmage ,
Por ch and Basement Porch

must be paid In

et~ .
advanc~ :

our

office at

and Basemen t Sa tes.

Get your m tn ear ly by

stopprng by

The

Dlllly

Se ntin el,

111

Court St or wntmg Box
729 , Pomeroy

Oh iO 45769

w ll h your remltlance

NOTICE OF ElECTION
ON TAX LEVY IN

EXCESS OF THE TEN

MILL LIMITATION
NOTICE tS hereby g tve n
that In pursuance of a
Resotutron of the Council of
th e Vil lage of Midd leport.
Ohio, passed o n the 4th day of
March , 1976, th ere w i ll be
submitted to a vote of the
people of sa td Vt llage at a
Speci al ELECTION to be h eld

m the Village of Middleport,
Ohio , at the regular pla ces of
votmg there in , on Tuesday
the 8th day of J une, 1976, the
ques t ton of ievytng , m e,.;cess
of the ten mill ll m1tat1on , for
the beneftt of Mid d lepor t
VI llage for the purpose of
Recreation purposes
Said tax being an addtftonal
tax of one half mill to run for 5
years
at a rate not exceeding one
half mill for each one dollar of
va luation , which amoun ts to
five cents for each one hun
dred dollars of va luation, for
f1ve veers
The Polls for said Electtofl
wtll be open at 6 30 o'cloc k
AM and remaifl open unti l
7 JO o'c lock P M of sa ld day
By order of the Board of
elections , of Metgs County ,
Oh io
Ernest A Wmgett
Chatrma n

Phone Elbert Johns.on
5149
·

WHITE and

tan female Walke r

IN MEMORY ol LOIS McCAIN , o
good tnend , on her btrthdo.,.
May 20 Jq76
FRIENDSHIP IS A
PRICELESS GIFT
Ttme
con
1 destroy 1h beauty
NOTICE OF ElECTION
For, as long o s memory l•ves,
ON TAX lEVY IN
Years can't erose the pleasure
EXCESS OF THE
Tho! the JOY of a fr lendshtp gtves
TEN Mill liMITATION
NOTICE Is hereby g1ven S1gned Delores Frank
that In pursuance of a
R:esolut1on of the Board of IN LOVING memory of our son ,
8l01ne J Turner who was
County Comm tssione rs ot th e
Coun ty of Metgs, Pom eroy ,
taken !rom us ftve yea rs ago,
Ohio , pa ssed an the 8th day of
May 20, 1971 No words con &amp;•·
March , 1976 , there will be
press our grtef Dad , Mom ,
subm ltted to a vote of the
and twin S1sler Brenda
people of Sllid County at a
~--. ---------------Spec 1a l ELECTION to be held
In the County of M9 lgs , Ohio,
at the regular pla ces of vottng
therein , on Tuesday , the 8th
day of June, 1976, th e question 1-N OUR recent Sickness and death
of levying, In excess of the ten
of our dear mother grand.
mill ltm ltetton for the benefit
mother, great grandmother
of Me 1gs County fo r the
and aunt, Lulo Bon , we wish to
purpose
of
continued
thank &amp;\leryone tor the klnd
operation of the Southeastern
neu ond sympathy 1ncl udlng
Ohio Emergency Medical
Dr Rtdgwoy Or P1ckens and
Serv ice for the purpose of
Or V1 llonuevo Also, the
emergency med ical ca re and
hOSP IIal transfer service
nurses and atdes of Veterans
Said ta x bemg an ad
Memonol Hospita l, Ewmg
dtl1onal ta x of 01 mill to run
Funeral Home , Syracuse Loduu
fo r ftve years
Amuhory end the Nazarene
Church
and Church of God,
at a rate not exceeding o 2 mIll
Syracuse for the prayers and
for e ach one do llar of
vtstls, cards ond lovely flowers ,
valuation , which amount s to
thanks for the musk ond
two cents for each one hun
dred dollars of va luat1on . for
smg1hg by the Norm Quartet
five years
God bless all of you lula Ban
The Polls for sa 1d Election __£_amtly
will be open at 6 30 o'clock
AM and remain open unttl
7 30 o 'c lock PM of said day
By order of the Board of
Elec t1ons , of Meigs County, RACINE Ftre Department will
Ohto
have a gun shoot Saturdor at
6 30 p.m at their new butldtng
Ernest A Wingett
off Bashon Rood
Chatrman
For
Memortol Day, beautiful
Dorothy M Johnslon
selection
flowe~rs
baskets
Dtrector
sprays, loose flowers vases
Faye 's Gtft Shop North 2nd St ,
Dated May 10 1976
M1ddleport Open d01 ly 9 a m
(51 13, 20, 27 (6) J .:t ic

Business Services

co

NOTICE OF ElECTION
ON TAX lEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE
TEN Mill liMITATION
NOTICE IS hereby g1ven
that 1n pursuan ce of a
Resolut ion of the Board of
County CommiSStoners of the
County of Metgs , Pomeroy
Ohio , passed on the lst day of
March , 1976, there wtll be
subm tlted to a vote of the
peop le of said County at a
Special ELECTION to be he ld
m the County of Me1gs, Ohto,
al the r eg ular places of volmg
th er e1n, on Tuesday , the 8th
day of June 1976 the questton
of levy 1ng, tn excess of the ten
mtll ltmtfatton , for the be ncf tl
of Meigs County for the
purpose of provtdmg Me igs
County's share for the benef 1t
of lhe Gall ta Me 1gs Jackson
Community Menta l Health
Board , for the purpose of
provtding the necessary
requirements of the Com
muntty
Mental
Health
Program established pur
svant to Chapter 340 of the
Oh10 Rev1sed Code
Said tax being an ad
dttlonal tax of 0 1 m1\l to run
for ten years

$1995
1972 AMC HORNET
Sport about Wagon , 6 cy l.. automatic trans , radto,
good tires , whtte ftni sh, good economy

1971 FORD STA, WAGON
$1495
V 8, automatic, P steering, good tires, clean mtenor

Roofing. GutteiS,

Painting and Repair
From the largest Truck or
Bulldozer Rad lalor to the
sm aties! Heater Core
Nathan Biggs
Rac:lia1or Spectahst

SMJTH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.
Ph

992· 2114

Pomeroy

Racine Plumbing
&amp;Heating
Racine, Oh1o
Need new roof or old
repaired? Hause , roof,
barn , shengles, build up,
pemtlng, electrical work,
gutters &amp; downspouts,
furnaces, water heaters,
water softners, Installed &amp;
repatred, sewage.
Call us at 949 2812
or 949 2203
3 28 1 mo

1972 Plymouth Duster, 6 cylinder 1965 Ford Golaxie . bucket seals,
automatic on floor : 1962 Ford
outomat~c. P S , P B. otr New
bottery Reol econom1col Ask- _ pickup truck Phone 992-5301
mg$1995 Coll(6!&lt;)696·1~.
1973 Ponttac Gron Prtx, all ex·
tras Phone 992·5470
1966 Ponttoc , power steenng and
TURF TRIM
power brakes Good condition
PUSH
MOWERS
196&lt; VW Phone 992 3884
30", 3 HP, B&amp;S Eng.
197.4 Olds Cutlass Supreme , p.s.
p b , 01 r, tope player with
$89.95
Sales &amp; Servtce
speakers. Eke cond1t1on &lt;:on
201310th Ave.
tact Fuzzy Lew1s 992 ·303~'-~
TURF TILL
Parkersburg, W.Va.
1971 Vega for qutek sale, Phone
' TILLERS
304·4B5-0386
8431653
l lf2 H. P., B&amp;S Eng
-~~~-~----------- 1969 C:-o-m-ar_o_, 307, au-to-m-otic~
614-423-6474
WANTED Someone to tear house
Alumtnum-Vtnyl Steel
$163.95
bucket seats , gqod cond1tton
down Contact Herschel Me
Contmuous Gutter
$925 Pnono 949 2860
dura 992-3436 or 992 5248
Replacement
POMEROY LANDMARK
MASON Auctton House Moson , 196i~ne- holfto~t;;;;;ii;,;l
Wtndaws and Doors
'I'._ Jack W Carsey, Mgr
truck , new !Ires and battery tn
W Vo Fr1day May 21 730 p m
Free Estimates
llfiDt
Phone 992-2181
good
cond1t1on
Phone
(614)
Cons1gnments welcome Phone
We recommend and
98S 3371
1304) 8B2-2407
Se ll Quality
COAL limestone and all trpes of
59 76
ANTIQUE SALE, Saturday May
ONE;ale poodle puppy block
sa!t and rock so h for 1ce and
at II am at Mason Auchon
$40 Phone992 7186
snow removaL Excelstor Salt
House Mason , W Va Bross 1951 Chevrolet Ptckup Phone
W.orks East Main St , Pomeroy ,
bed , oak 'ecretorv oak dtsh
992 7876
Ohlb Phone 992 3891.
cabtnet round cherry table ,
Blown
oak wash slond, corntval .1974 one·holf tan Chevy ptckup COAL limestone and calctum
25 500 m1!es, standard shtft
chlonde ond calctum bnne for
d1shes old botles marble top
Insulation Services
never used for hauling $3100
dust control and all types of
washstand , oak chatr, Oak
Fmanclng A\lattabie
Also 1964 one-half ton Ford
salt Excelsior Salt Works , East
dressmg table cherry chtld's
Blown tnto wails &amp; Atttc:s
ptekup. standard , good cond1
Motn Street, Pomeroy. Ohto,
desk , walnut dresser chest of
STORM
lion , $495 Phone 742·2460
drawers buffet, numerous pc.
phone 992-389·"'------c-WINOOWS &amp; OOORS
oi depreSS IOn gloSS monr
REPlACEMENT
1953 Ford Jubtlee tractor (ex·
other tlems too numerous to
WINDOWS
cell en!) $1 ,650 Ford 9N tracmention
Fred A Morkll
AlUMINUM
tor overha uled, $1 000, New 5
510 1NG· SOFF ITT
owner Howard Beasley Auc ft 3 pt rotary mower (stump
GUTTER S· AWNINGS
ltoneer Not responstb le for
umper)
$385
Four
used
rtd1ng
IF YOU have a serv1ce to offer
occtdenl$
awn mowers 7 and 8 h p $200
wont to buy or sell somethmg
to $230 Luckett Farm Equtp
Syracuse, Ohio
are lookmg for work
or
ment West Woshmgton St
Ph 992 ·3993
whatever
you'll get results
4 10 1 mo
Albony
Phone
(614)
698-3032
foster wtth a Senttnel Wont Ad
or
698
7881
DO YOU HAVE PARTY PLAN EXColl992-2156
·-::-::---:-:c=:-PERIENCE? FRIENDLY TOY
GARAGE
Sole Tuesday thru BEAN POSTS Coli 247-3077
PARTIES HAS OPENINGS FOR
Fnday , gas dryer . tables MAKE sprmg c!eanmg profttoble ,
MANAGERS IN OUR AREA
~h01n clothing and mtsc 203
turn unwonted 1tems tnto cosh
RECRUITING IS EASY BECAUSE
OEMS HAVE NO CASH INVEST · c-:ciftlc
_,..k-:S'..c!:~er.:.ay'-'--:c---:--: Advertise tn the Won t Ads
MENT NO COLLECTING OR BIG yard s• le Fndoy May 21 9 LOCUST posts , round or spht VEGETABLE plants of all kmds, 10
d1fferent vonettes of tomatoes,
DELIVERINGS CALL COllECT
!til 7 Furn1ture, toys , clothmg,
Phone 949-2774
1ndudmg non .acid white
CAROL DAY, (518) 489-8395 or
diS hes "• mise Gory R D1ll
tomato Very Iorge selection of
WRITE FRIENDLY HOME PAR·
res1dence Follow signs off of STEREQ.radto , modern destgn ,
am ·fm rod to , 8 track tope com·
beddtng plants
Also
TIES 20 RAILROAD AVE ,
248 at Chester Golf Course
btnolion Balance $101 20 or
Geromums and other potted
~~Y, NY 12205
GARAGE Sole Moy 20, 21 , 22
terms Call 992 3965
plcnts
Hanging baskets.
GRILL Cook and wet tress wonted
Thursday Fr~ and Saturday
Cleland Forms and GreenONE
Hereford
cow
w1th
calf
(half
Apply In person Crows Steak
109 Spnng Ave t'nmeroy 2nd
house Geraldine Cleland,
Murray Grey) one polled
,__House, Pomeroy
house from the ~orner Bar
Roctne
hereford
heifer
to
freshen
tn
Also have for so:" .. po1r of
$25 00 Per Hundred stufftng
Seplember. Phone (614) 985- MODERN walnut console, AM-FM
Cootng Whtte PeJI:e love
enve lopes
Send se lf .
4248 m eventngs or on
radio , 4 speed changer
Dovesfor$30
'
addressed
stamped
weekends
Balance
$103.40 or terms. Call
envelope Edroy Matis Box GARAGE SALE , Beddtng ac· .
·-'--.,---:::-...,--:c=992·3965
120
locust
posts
Phone
742·2359
188 YW , Albony , Mo 6&lt;402
ceuones boby ch1ldren's
mens , women 's materntty MODERN Walnut Console , om fm
HOUSEWIVES w1lh ch1ldren ,
clothtng , twtn bed sewtng
rodto 4 speed changer
$75 00 per week For appotnt-:
tlems onttque clock, books ,
Balance $102 30 or terms Call
1976 JEEP
men! coll 992-7269
Ouol 8 camera and pro1ector,
9923965
Avon ,
many
others
550.00 cash tn hand tf we
Wednesday through Saturday, HOME Grown tomoto plants , Im- can not beat any deal you
proved
Mextcon
Vtolant,
ahd
II 00 5 00 Old Rt JJ Enter
Gold medal , and cabbage bring us on 1eep or AMC
prise, bottom of Rose Htll
WILL DO odd 1obs, rooftng pain·
plan ts on Rt. 124 across from cars.
ling houlmg treework ond 3 Family Yard Sole on Co R~ 20,
Mumctpal
Pork, Thomas
mowtng Phone 992 7409
first tratler on left past Me1gs
Hayman , Syracuse, Oh1o .
County Fo1rgrounds 9 a m hll
WILL core for elderly penon In my
dark Thursday noon til dark, TRAVEL trol ler, 14 It hardtop
homo Phone I (614) 985 38-19
self contained , several used
Friday
0' 992-3410
mm1 and trctl b1kes. btcydes
AMC JEEP
WILL do patnhng, inside or out YARD SAlE , Thursday, Fnday and
Ftfe's, South Third, Middleport
Sotu rdoy , clothmg d11hes and
Phone 992-7494.
Call Steve Walburn 992·20B7 or
Ave.
523-9407
mtsc 11ems on new L1m9 Rood A:-=FE~W~uM1ke Magnotta , 992 3727
oe~d:-o~lr~c~o~n-.d-,oto~n~e~rs~.-w-.o~n ­ 44141h
Huntmglon, W. Va,
Rutland, Note E Vanaman
-------------~----EXPER IENCED pomters llex1ble
dow type from $30 F1fe's,
rates , free esftmates. All work YARD SALE , Fnday and Saturday ,
Soulh Thord, Moddleporl Phone
at Ronald Beegle restdence, I
guaranteed Phone 992·3004 or
992-7494
mtle E of Racme on 124 -~-'-=~::-:-::--:-:--­
74 3081
POOL
table, $30 00, Smger sewClothmg toys , some furn1ture ,
tng
machme treadle style, 2 ROOMY 7 yr old one story wood
new croci-let work, mov1e
portoble record players Call
frame , two bedrm. hol'l'l!t"
camera
992-6014 '
located between Coolville okt
~==-=-:-:----;--:-:--;-YARD
SALE
Frodoy
ond
Solurdoy
OLD furn1ture , ice boxes, brass
Tuppers Plains. One acre
3
b•ke
motorcycle
trotler
Call
at New yellow house on New
beds old wall telephones and
two C•lr garage, ctty water
s
992·7110
Lima Road, three-fourth m1le
ports , or complete households
heat
hardwood flo rs ,
from Rutland Ray lambert, 29 ft. Oelu)(e travel tro1ler, self
Wnte M. 0 M1ller, Rt. 2,
carpeted
llvmg room,...fnlce
chtldren's and adults clothtng
contained. otr cond1tloned
Pomeroy Ohto Call m 7760
-•ow. $21,000. Pilon~' (614)
M1sc Phone 742-2656
Sleeps 5, $4250 00 Warm Mor667-3519
TiMBeR, top pnce for stond1ng
ning wood heater wtth ther·
hmber Coli (614) 446-8S70
mostot and blower, used 1
month, cost $.440.00, sell for
CASH patd for all makes and
$350 ()() 3 year old sorrel more
models of mob1le homes
with blaze face, gentle , good
Phone area cede 614 _.23-9531 .
~--riding horse, $325 00 Phone
$$Cosh$$$ for 1unked auto Frye's FURNISHED opt • couple only , all
949·2466
Truck Auto Ports , Rutland .
utlltt1es pa1d $130 per month
GRAVELY lroctor 7.6 h.p. 32 in.
Phone 742-2081
Phone 992-3975 or 992-2571
mower , recently overhauled.
16 mm movte pro1ector w1th FURNISHED, 2 bedrm. apartment,
Ftne condition , $425 00 Call
adults only, '" Mtdd!eport
sound Coli 992-5766
992-720S
Phone 992-3874
TOMATO stokes Coll949 2273
1971 I.( ft Timberlake travel
NEED 7 ROOMS? - We
3 AND _. AM. furn1shed and un·
trailer, sleeps 6 with ownlngs,
DEALERS 1n 1unk con . scrap iron,
have it close to shopping
iurnished opts Phone 992·
$1100 . Also, 1971 Fury
metals Phone 992 5468
No yard to cut. Nice
5434
Plymoulh II , 2 dr hordlop ,
kitchen l'h baths plus
COUNTRY Mob1le Home Park, Rt.
automatic, p.s., brakes, $1 ,000.
shower
5 BR
Full
33 ten mtles north of Pomeroy
Phone 992·5465 after 5 p m
basement
ECONOMY
Lorge lots with concret pattos,
PRICED
Sidewalks, runners and off 1966 Hondo, recently overhauled ,
1969 Shasta hardtop traile r,
$150 AM·FM cassette player,
B,_E A LANDLORD street parkmg Phone992·7.479
$20 , 1 set American
sleeps .4 , self contained, new
Large brtck building wltn 4
Oragmaster wheels . 14 in.x7
fires elec brakes auto con· 2 bedrm. trailer, real mce Phone
rentals Nearly always
9923324
in. wide Fits Ford, Plymouth,
necttons extras $950 Phone
rented Good return on
Dodge, $125 , 621ncn, 451b. pull
9923517
Investment,
ONE
bedroom
apartments
al
------------------bow $25 Phone 992·54191 or
DETAILED
FOR
VILLAGE MANOR In Moddleporl
STARCRAFT Mtm.motor homes ,
9925972
for $104 monthly plus elec. or
COMFORT - 3 BR wife
travel trailers and fold ·downs
$130 mclud1ng electnc LOWER 10 speed bike, hke new, $60 Dog
new and used best price tn trl·
saver kttchen , H W floors
RATES FOR SENQR CITIZENS
house, new, $25 2 &amp; threestole ser.otee and quohty.
covered with carpet . Full
fourth in.x22 grinding whul
Camp Conley Slarcraft Soles ,
Convenient to shopping an
basement with utility Very
Thtrd and M1ll Streets In Mid·
on meta! stand. pedal oct1on,
Rt 62 N Pt. Pleasant,
nice front porch (Not very
dleport Brand new high quell·
$:25, Intercom set, S8 00. Two
old).
ty apartments See the
wtcker bar stools, $15 each,
RETIREMENT
WITH
manager at Rt\lers1de Apart
Westinghouse roaster With
INCOME - We have JUS!
ments or call 992·3273 Fur·
stand hke new $20. !. form
the place for you
If
'\'.shed apartments also
doo r $30, three 011 lamps,
AKC Regtslered Collie Stud Ser· ·~tloble
tnlerested
call
for
Avon
boitlas
four
7
50x16
vtee Stardust Kmg Phone
appointment .
(Low
toros , $20 Phone (614) 985oNre,;;;;,- -;;;b-;i; -h~;-;-~;
Investment)
.-!~!.41.~~ 4248. - - - - - - 4227
rent ~·a~ults only PI-lone 992
LIST TODAY WITH REGISTERED y.'h1te German
-------------------~
5535 ~\1'\nmgs
TWO hlghbock sw1vel von seats,
Meigs County's oldest a nd
Shepherd mole dog 17 months
--:.-----------out of 1975 Van. Block $75
largest full lime Rea l
old very gentle, $50 00 Phone One bedn · .and 2 bedrm fur.
Phone7.422217
•
Estate Ofllce
REAL
nished apa~ments
Phone
992 70JJ or 992·5010.
992 3129 or 992•5434
ESTATE is our business
~----------------~ .
3 1fJ hr..
rotot1ller
wooden
SElliNG out rabbtts ond pens . ---- ------ - --...----playpen
lownmawer, cloy
I not a sideline)
Coll9923018
TWO trollers for r•"''l one two
flower
pots
girl's
b1cycle
block
H. E CLELAND,
bedrm , other 3 b, ' s:m located
ENGLISH Setter pupp1es 7 weeks
and wh1 te General Elec TV,
BROKER
on
or
near
Kmg1bu•
V'lttood
I
or
coli 7421078
old Phone 843 2954
992 2259 or 9!2 .256B
2 cilold,en Phone 742-:1122

Siding Center

l

lARRY LAVENDER

DON SMITH

to,

WANTED TO RENT
•

The Complete
Remodeling Service
For Your Home

AI. TROMM CONST.
Rutland
742 232B
All Work Guaranteed
Free Esttmates
5·5-1 mo

-.----

Congratulations
Graduates
Let DONELLI'S make the
pina for vour after
graduation party Call us at
992-6167 and we wtll make
your parly somelhtng to
remember Check our
party rates.

Donalll's Pizza
lddlaport, Ohio
Open 4 p.m. daily
Closed all day Mondays

Septic Systems

Installed
by
Licensed lnsta ller
24 Hour Phone Serv1ce

Shepard Contractors
Phone 742 2409
Box_28A
Rutland, Oh.

.

4-26-1 mo.

SWIMMING
POOLS
Above and below ground
pool kits for the do-tl·
yourself man.
All pool supplies available,
too.

D. BUMGARDNER
Noble Summit Rd.,
Mtddleporl
PHONE 992-5724
53 1 mo.

NEW home for sole, 3 bedrms .
sewing room, 2 ceramic balh!l
personalized kitchen built for
the homemaker Plenty of
garden space on this one, acre
lot. Appro• 2 one·fourth miles
from Rt 7 on S R 12.( Toward
Rutland on south side of road
Watch for stgn AL TROMM
BUILDER Rutland. Phone 742
2328.
3 or 4 bedrm home on 1 acre
ground 1 m1le south of Chester
on Rt. 7. Famtly and l lvi n~
room, dining room, bullt·ln kit·
chen, aU carpeted, full size
basement and garage , c1ty
water, natural gas Seen by
oppt. Call (614) 9&amp;5-3842.
I 12 Acres Phone 742·2359
3 bedrm. home 1n Rustle Hills,
Syracuse
Will
consider
reasonably pnced mobtle home
on trade Phone 992-7523
2V2 acres on Boshan Road. Call
949-2830
3 bedrm. house on Solem St. In
Rutland, Ohio
6 Spacious rooms new bath, nice
yard Phone 992-7394
7 rooms, both, portly carpeted,
w•th new furnace and hat
water heater Lorge lot, Lincoln
H1ll . Phone992-2071

5 oo-Bonanza 3. Parfrldge Family 8, Mission lm
possible IS
5 30-Adam 12 4, 13; News 6; Family Affair 8; Electric
Company 20,33.
6 oo-News 3,4,8, 10, 13, 15, ABC News 6, Zoom 20,33
6:30-NBC News 3,4, 15, ABC News13; Andy Griffith 6,
CBS News 8, 10, Hodgepodge Lodge 20; Lilias,
Youoa and Vou 33
7·oo-Truth or Con5e&lt;1uences J; To ~!11 The Truth 4;
Bowling For Oollars 6, Lawrence Welk 8, News
10; Let's Make A Oealll; Family Affair 15; Anyone
for Tennyson&gt; 20. Family AI War 33

SHOWN! fXACTLY !,.fMY'5
JU&amp;T &amp;AID THE' 68&lt;../tET
WORf), CHISP! AND HAVIS l
GOT A WAY TO 5HOW THI:M!

R&amp;J COINS
Ohio
Rutla~d.

742-2331
Roger Wamsley
56 1 mo

WIN AT BRIDGE
Passing a forcing two-bid

SLOAN'S
CAIJPETtNG

.u.

and should pass right then and
there
We have composed loday 's
hand lo discuss th1s little
known Lightner convention
South's hand certatnly
meets all requirements for a
forcing two bid but it won 't
make 8ame all by ltsell
Three notrump wlll make
agamst any lead, but a dla·
mond Five clubs will make 1f
spades break 3·3 South can
set up dummy's fourth spade
for a heart discard, but West
holds four spades to spot) that

• J 82

.J 63

WEST
•QJ 108
•Q 1092
t A 9 53

BORN WSER

.. 7

MO&gt;T bf&lt;IPf'ltl&gt;
~L!'VB

~

~R

EAST

•s•

•J73
•KQI076
.952
SOUTH (D)
• AK9
•AK8

••

RE;AD.

.AKQI084
Both vulnerable

Medical Oxygen
and Supplies

Weot

Norl• Eaol

~u~~

Soulh

2 ..

ARE AVAILABLE
AT

Pass

!"'

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

17 Cole Street
Pomeroy, Ohto 45769
Telephone (61 4) 992 -3768
We Deliver
4 25 I mo.

The forcing two bid and the
negallve two-notrump
response were Jointly in·
vented by Ted Lightner,
Waldemar von Zedtwltz and
Oswald Jacoby back 1n he
very early days of contracl
This two bid was standardized to cover hands with lots
of high cards that might well
be one tnck short of game So,
after a while Lightner
proposed that 1f the opener
merely rebid to three of hiS
own SUit and responder held a

Complete Bridal
And Anniversary
Service
Free Consultation

Ann's Bridal and
AnniversaiJ Services
Phone Anna Blackwood
985-3805
Bron Thomas
992-2726 4_30- 1 mo.

HER~

An lndla11a reader wants to
know 1f there 1s any penalty
assessed agamst a player who
asks, "What did you bid
partner?" wiK!n no one has bid
anything
Of course not. This question
g1ves no mformatlon except
maybe that lhe questioner Is
absent minded

(Do you have a question
lor the experts? Write "Ask
the Jacobys" care ol thts

ZAK. l'IE ONE OF

,,'THEN BOTH OF YOU
T14ES!: ON T14E END OF '!\&lt;AT GEl' ON BOb.IW 1\-lAl'
VINE YOU'RE HOLD! No'
8Ho WINGED Cl&lt;rrl'ER
WHILE I KEEP ' 1M
BUSY!

JACOBY MODERN)

by THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS
I School
subj.
5 Imitative
10 Tenms star
JJ Ballet
position
12 Czech r1 ver
13 Public
speaker
II Rep.'s
opposite
15 Place
16 Part of a
wheel
17 Athlete's
forte
19 Sununer
(Fr.)
20 Debark
21 Pitcher
22 Operatic
segment
24 Battle site
25 "Rollerball" star
26 Yoke;
combine
27 Alder tree
(Scot.)
28 California

39 Chest
sounds
40 Massachu,
· sells town
DOWN
I Domesbc
workers
2 Resource
3 Early Henry
Fonda film
Yesterday's Answer
(3 wds.)
I Pronoun
II Ezra 26 Dlametri5 Main artery 15 Languish
cally oppaied
6 Ingrid
18 "Budden28 Customs or
Bergman's
brooks"
folkways
daughter
author
• 29 Pester
7 Badly
Zl Pennsylvan- 30 Aquatic
14 wds.)
nia c1ty
beast
8 Put on
ZZ DISperse
35 Madame
we1ght
Z3 Italian
Gynt
9 Operetta
city
36 "The
composer
21 Discolor
Cruel -"

11 :30-Johnny Canon 3, 4, 15; Rookles6, 13; Jan~~~ 33.
11 :45-Movle "The Milling Are Deadly 8; Movie Five
Million Yeil's-to Earth" 10
12 · 40-Don Kirshner's Rock Concert 6: Ironside 13.
I :co-Midnight Special 3,4, 15;,
1: 1S....Movle "Va lley of the Zomblls" 10.
1:40-News 13
2:30-News 3
3 :oo-Movie "The Movie Maker" 3.
4:1s-Salnt 3.
5 · Js-Movle "Duck Soup" 3.
6:»-Green Acres 3.

city

rrSB0tbND
1HE$

TREES-

,.....----...-~~~~~-::;--, 31 Prefix for

a-H CANT FIX THAT, BIJT__.....::::.::{''" ' ~~:or
/'!'A SLJRE Lit.. ABNGRCorrida
cry

. - , .. VIetnamese
.,..,, ,. holiday
~+--+-

'

EXCAVATING , BACKHOES AND
DOZER, LARGE AND SMALL,
SEPTIC TANKS INSTALLED . BILL
PULLINS, PHONE 992·247B, DAY
OR NIGHT
DOZER work , $10.00 per hour
with 8 ft blade For ttmber or
money Phone 992·2595.

One leiter si,...ply &gt;lands for anolher In this sample A io
used for lhe three L's, X lor the 1wo O's, etc. Single Icllers,
apostrophes, the length and formalion of the words arc all
hinls. Each day the code lcllcrs arc dllfcrcnt.

how to work
AXYDLBAAXR
lo LONGFELLOW

CJJSO

EKYL,

PHLYS

D

II

',

''

"
"

'""
,,,"
"

"

"•

..
"'"

''

FKW
NJY

WQHDWK
XFT

VQHD

XYH,

1'1C.TLJI&lt;=

JK

VJKEO

NJY
FAN

HOWDY, MA'AM-·
I'M FROM THE TWIN
FORKS PEST CONTROL
SERVICE
AND··

MOBILE home, 1973 Buddy, 14•· ,
64 , 2 bedrm. front den, fur·
nlshed or portly furnlohed,
Good condlllon Co il (614) 667·
3730
1

11GB~~)

I

'
I SHOULD THINK
'i'OU
COULD 60 OVE~ TO THE
50LF COURSE AND DO ·

I{OU!t J0661N6 .

"'
'"
·•

.

,,

Now
lttUn • ,
rona thlwplw ..... .
(J ........
.,lllot' .....

Mil .. _ _ _

Yesterday's Cryploquole: YOUR BODY IS THE BAGGAGE
YOU MUST CARRY THROUGH LIFE. THE MORE EXCESS
---~-----------, BAGGAGE, THE SHORTER THE TRIP. - ARNOW H.
t:l.ASOW
THEY

MOVED OUT
AGES AGO

Ue!P IN

EVll'ENCE A6AIN6T
MOONSHINER5.

EKWFAO

HJVWRR

MOBILE Homes for sale, 1969
Schult Custom, gOod condition.
Phone 742-3018

l

',

I I

CRYPTOQUOTE

LOSE wolgnl with New Shope
Tobl•ts and Hydrex Water Pills
at Dutton Drug, Middleport,
and Nelson Drug.

;

'
'

oom

it:

'

OVJKEO,

· ---,----

'·
'•
'•
'•

girl's name
Clout;
~++-+-tr-tsmash
_ _,,.., Steno's aid
Facility

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's

MOBILE Homes, extra clean one
bedrm Pacemaker trailer with
-- ~olh , $975. Phone 7&lt;2-2&lt;60

,,

1 Russian

GREG S CB SALES, located ol Erwin's Gulf Servtca, Middleport, Oh1o. Phone 9922438.

1968 Skyline t'ollar, 12&gt;160, ond
land 3 bedrm very gOOd condl·
loon, $8,000 Phone 992·5491
or992-5972.

,·

a:

newspaper The Jacobys will
answer mdlvldual questions
II stamped, sell-addressed
envelopes are enclosed. The
mosl mlerestlng questions
wr/1 be used In this column
and will rece1ve coptes ol

~~~-

ALLEY OOP

BRAOFOR,O, Austtoneer. Com·
plete Service Phone 949·2487
or 949 2000. Ractne, Oheo, Critt
Bradford .
ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR Sweepers, toasters, trans, all
small appliances. Lawn mower,
next to State Highway Garage
on Route 7 Phone (614) 9&amp;5·
3825.
REMODELING, Plumbing heotong
and all types of general repair.
Work guaranteed 20 years experience. Phone 992 2409.
D&amp;D TREE Trimming, 20 years ek·
perlence. Insured free
estimates Coli 992·2384 or
(614)6q8-7257 Albony .
SEWING MACHINE Repairs, ,.r.
vice, all makes , '992 2284 The
Fabric Shop , Pomeroy
Authorized Singer Soles and
Service. We shorpen Sc11sors
EXCAVATING, dozer, loader and
backhoe work, dump trucks
and !o·boys for h1re, will haul
fill d.rt, top soil, limestone and
groval Coli Bob or Roger Jeffers, day phone 992-7089,
night phone 992-3525 or 992.
5232.

WILL DO extenor pointing,
houses ond roofs Phone 992·
5684 or 992-JJ74.

2NT Pass

Pass
Opem"ll lead- Q•

lWIN CITY
MADfiNE SHOP

Vtrgil B. Sr., Realtor
110Mechantc Pomeroy,O.
Phone 992-3325

Pass

Pass

7 ()()-Hollywood Square• 3,4; Ohio State l.ottery 6;
Evening Edlflon With Marlin Agron5ky 20; Wild
Kingdom 10, To Tell The Trulh 13; Music City
US A. 15
8 oo-Movle "Sil3rk Kill" J,o, 15; Welcome Back,
Kotter 6, 13; Waltons 8. 10; Oper3 Theater 20; Mark
of Jan 33.
8 311-Barney Miller 6, 13; Lowell Thomas Remembers
33.
I
9 :QO-Streets of Sen Francisco 6, 13; Hawaii F lve-0 • :
Olympllld 33; BOQarl 10.
9 ~'0-Movle " The Dark Side of Innocence" 3,4, 15.
IO :oo-Harry 06, 13; Glen Campbell 8, 10; Bill Moyers'
Journel 33.
10·311-News 20
11 QO-News 3.4,6,8, 10, 13, 15 , ABC News 33.
11 311-Johnny C~rson 3,4, 15, Mannix 6, l3 ; Movie
" Sidekicks" B; Movie "The Main Attracllon" 10;
Janak! 33.
oz ' 4o:..:r;\aglclan 6, 13.
1 oo-Tomorrow 3,4
! · ~News 13
FRIDAY,MAY21, 1976
6·QO-Summer Stmesler 10
6 lS....Farm Rti)Ort 13.
6 20-Biue Ridge Quart.t 13
6:30-(;olumbus Today 4; News 6; Summmtr
Semester 8: Farmtlmo 10
6:40--Cunce of Prevention 10
6:45-Morning Report 3.
6·50-Good Morning, Wtst VIrginia 13.
6 55-Chuck While Rti)Orls 10; Good Morning, Trl
State 13.
7:11()-Todey 3,&lt;,15; Good Morning, America 6,13; CBS
News 8; Bugs Bunny and Friends 10.
7:30-Schoollos 10.
B:QO-Lasale 6; Captain Kangaroos, 10; Sesame Slreel
33.
8 311-Big Valley 6.
9. oo-Not For Women Only 3; Phil Don3hut4, 15; Lucy
Show 8; Mike Douglas 10; Morning with D J. 13.
9·30-A M. 3; One Life to Live 6; Tattletales a: Mlkt
Douglas 13.
10 (1()-{;elebrlly Sweepstakes 3,4, 15; Edge of Night 6;
Price Is Right 8, 10.
10 30-High Rollers 3,4,15; Dlnahl 6.
11 oo-Wheel of Fortune 3,15; Weekday 41 Gambit
8,10; Fermer's Daught.r 13.
11 : 30-Hollywood Squares 3,4, 15; Heppy Days13; Love
of Lite 8,10: Seaame Street 211,33.
11 55-Take Kerr 8; Den lmel 's World 10.
12 oo-Magnlllcenl Marble Machine 3,15; Let's Meko
A Deal 13: Bob Braun 4; News 6,8, 10.
12 30-Take My Advice 3,15: All My Children 6,13;
Search lor Tomorrow 8,10
12 :-Eiectrlc Company 33.
12 ·5S....N8C News 3,15.
1.11()-News 3; Ryan's Hope 6, 13; Phil Donahue
Young And the Restless 10; Not For Women Only
15.
1·30-Days Of Our LIVtl 3,4,15; Rhyme and RHIOrl
6, 13; As the World turns 8,10
2 Q0-$20,000 :•yramld 6,13.
2·30-Doctors 3,4,15; Break The Bonk 6,13; Guiding
Light I, 10
3 oo-Another World 3,4, 15; General Hospital 6,131
All In the Family 8, 10; Crockett's VIctory Garden
20.
'
3:311-0ne Life to Live 13; Mickey Mouse Club6; Match
Game 8, 10; Book Beat 20
4 :DO-Mister Cartoon 3; Merv Griffin 4; Somerut 151
Bewitched 6; Mickey Mouse Club 8; Mlsltr ROQtrs
20,33; Movie ''Buffalo Bill" 10; Dlnehl 13.
4: 30-Bewltched 3; Mod Squad 6; Beverly Hlllbllllell1
Sesame Street 211,33; Flintstone• 15.
5:oo-Bonanza 3; Perlrldge Family 8; Million:
Impossible 15.
5:30-Adem-12 4,13; News6, Family Altair 8; Electric
Company 20,33.
6:QO-News 3,4,8,10,13,15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20,33.
6.30-NBC News3,4, 15; ABC News13; Andy Grllfllh6;
CBS News 8, 10; Hodgepodge Lodge 20;
Carrucoltndu 33.
7: oo-Truth or Consequences 3; To Tell The Truth 4;
BOwling lor Dollars 6; Space: 1999 8; Avletlon
Weather 33; News 10; Don Adams Scree" Ttsll3t
Family Altair 15; Ohio Journal 20.
7:30-Porter Wagoner 3; Treasure Hunt A; Candid
Camera 6: Evening Edition With Martin Agronsky
20: $25,000 Pyramid 10: To Tell The Trufh 13: Pop!
Goes The Country 15; Bleck Ponpoctlve on the
News 33.
8:QO-Sanford and Son 3,4, 15; Donny &amp; Marle6, 13; Pilot
8; Washington Week In Review 20,33; Prnldents:
76 years on Camera 10.
8:30-The Practice 3,4,15, Wall Street Week 20 33.
9:oo-Rockford Files 3,4,15; Movie "You'll Like My
Mother" 6, 13; NBA Play.Oft 8, 10; Firing Lint 20;
Masterpiece Theatre 33.
lO:oo-Pollco Story 3,4, 15; News 20; Paul Nuchlms 33 .
10 30-Avlatlon Weather 20.
11 : oo-News 3,4,6, 13, 15; ABC News 33.
11 lS....News 8,10

usele~S hand , responder could

NORTH
• 76 3 2

"'free estimates on car·
11ettng and tnslallation.
We'll bnng samples to your
·home with no obligatio•.
See how you can really
save
Mtke Yeung, Manager
Sales and Installation
Rt.J, Pomeroy, Ohto 45769
Phone day or night
614-!92 2206
)_]4 I mo
•
r.::. '
~

•

~

TEAFORD
4 BRS. - 1'f2 baths, hot
water heat, gas fireplace,
basement, n 1ce yard.
garage , on Mulberry .
$20,000.
RUTLAND - Large lot, 3
Brs , new baln and gas
furnace, large living and
kit Basement $12.500.
RACINE - Nearly new 3
Brs , 1'12 baths, nice kit, ,
full basement, garage and
1.4 acres S31 ,500.
49 ACRES - 3 yrs old, 2
Brs , nice birch kit. with
sliding glass drs. Full dry
basement, carport with
utility. $31,500
RACINE AREA - Nice 3
Brs., bath, mod kit, dining
and lots of closets Level
lot . 518,000.
NEW LISTING - L,arge 1
floor building for trad ing
post, antiques, etc. Over 1
acre at DeKier S9,000
RANCH - 31arge Brs, l 'l2
baths, real nice k lichen
wtln bar, dining has ~lass
doors Full basement and 2
car garage. 536,500
NEW LISTING - 6 rms .,
bath, a ll utilities, front
porch and 2 level lots.
$6500
ALL YOU BUYERS COME
SEE WHAT WE HAVE.
BARGA INS GAL OR E.

THURSDAY , May 20, 1976

Buy, Sell or Trade

SEPTIC TANKS cleaned. Modern
Sanitation. 992 3954 or 9925968.
WILL do roofmg , construction,
plumbing and healing No job
too large or too small. Phone
742-234B.
EXCAVATING, dozer, ·backhoe
and dltcher. Charles R Hot·
field , Bock Hoe Ser\liCe,
Rullond, Ohoo. Phone 742·2008
WILL trtm or cut trees and shrubbery. Phone 949·2~5 or 742·
3167

FOR SALE, 15 aero• with nice 7
rm and bath , 3 bedrm home,
newly remodeled, 2 car
garage, rural water, gas wei,
oil mlnerol rights, $34,000.
Phone 742-2336.

Television log for easy viewing

SHOULD L.ET

COINS
CURRENCY
SUPPLIES
METAL
DETECTORS

- _ __._ !.

FREE ESTIMATES

at a rate not exceedmg 0 2 mill
for each one dollar of
valuatton , whtch amounts to
two cents for ea ch one hun
Dated May 10 , 1976
dred dol lars of valuation , for
ten years
lSI 13, 20, 27 161 3. 41c
The Polls for said Electton
wt ll be open at 6 JC o'clock
NOTI CE OF ELECTION
AM and rem am open until
ON TAX lEVY IN
7 JO o'clock PM of said day
EXCESS OF THE TEN
By order of th e Boa rd of
Mill liMITATION
Elections of Meigs County
NOTICE Is hereby Qtven 'Ohio
that m pursuance of a
Reso lution of the Council of
Ernes t A Wingett
the VI llage of Mtddleport ,
Chatrman
Oh io , passed on the 4th day of
Merch , 1976, there will be
Dorot hy M Johnston
subm ttted tO a vote of the
Otrector
people of said Village at a Dated May 10. 1976
Special ElECTION lobe he ld
•n the VIllage of Midd leport. (5) 13 , 20, 17 (6) 3, 4t c
Ohio, at the regular places of
votlng !herem, on Tuesday ,
the 8th day of June 1lil76, the
question of levying , In excess
of the ten mill ltml!atton , for
the benefit of Midd leport
NOTICE OF Oil
VIllage for the purpose of
&amp; GAS lEASE
Current Expenses
FORFEITURE
Said tax bfltl~ an ad
dltlonllllax of J mil ls to run for TO Atlantic International Ott
five years
Corp
summ1t Chase, lOOD Urhn
at a rate not exceed ing J 0 Ave .
milts tor each one dollar of
Columbus, Oh1o
val uation, which, amoun ts to
Thirty Cents for each one Genllemen
hundred dollars of va luat ion,
You are hereby not1ft ed that
for Five years
the understgned lessors
The Polls for sa td Elect ton hereby e lec t to de clare a
will be open at 6 JO o'clock forfettur e of the following oil
AM and remain open until and gas lease between you as
7 30 o'clock P M of satd day lessee and !h e undersigned as
By order of the Board of lessors
Elections, of Meigs County ,
Lease dated the 8th day of
Ohio
May , 1972, between Hobar t M
Dodde rer and Beulah Dod
E rnes 1 A W•ngett der er , hts wtte, as Lessors ,
Cha1rma n and Atlantic tnternat1onal 011
Corp , as Lessee, CO\Ierlng 76
Dorothy M Johnston acres , more or less, Sttu~te m
Townsh ip
Meigs
Dtrector Olive
County , Ohio . and be •ng
Dated May 10. 1971!1
bounded on th e North by
Howard Dobb ins . on the East
151 13, 20 27 16) 3 •tc
by Frank Dodderer , on the
South by C R Garrell and on
the west by C R Garrel l and
E R•tch1e , said lease being of
NOTICE OF
record tn the office of the
APPOINTMENT
CaseNo . 21804 Clerk of the County Recorde r
Estate of Ar1hur Lynch tn Me1gs County Ohlo , m
Lease Book 58, at Page 235
Deceased
The above lease Is he r eby
Notice is hereby gtven that
James E Simpson of 264 s declared forfeited by the
~ec ond , Midd lepor t, Meigs und erstgn ed Lessors because
County, Oh to, has been duly ot the non payment of delay
appointed Admlntstrator of rental as reQu•red by th e
the Estate of Arthur Lynch , terms of the satd lease
It 1S the 1ntentlon of th e
deceased, late of Sal1sbury
Township , Meigs County , unders tgned Lessor to fil e and
record an affidavit of for
Ohio
Creditors are reQuired to ftle fettur e for the abo ve lease
the ir claims with said with the County Recorder of
fiduciary within three months Metgs County , Ohio , as
Oates th•s lOth dey of May provtded by lt~w
Sig ned
1976
Hobart M Dodderer
Lessor
Manning 0 Webster,
Judge
Beulah Dodd erer
Court of Common Pleas,
Lessor
Probate Oivis1on
Metgs County, Oh1o 15) 17, 18. 19 . 20 . 21 , 51c
lSI 13 , 20, 27 , lie

2~19

1975 CHEVROLET Capnce
5S29S
co. car , low mileage, sa ndstone fintsh , vinyl top
a nd tntenor , atr condttlonlng, power wtndows &amp; door
• locks, tilt steering wheel, cru ise control, AM radto &amp;
tape, truly a loaded car ard has good eye appeal
4 door,

Aluminum Siding,

22

Doro thy M Johnston
D.rector

!

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

r

THE SHARKS HAVE HIM,
• • THAT'S WHAT HE'
PL.ANNED FOR ME!

fit~l¥.11
U_"'"'
_"""

_so~ !-~~ ~ ) 446!-477

Call After 9 P.M.

BY RIGHlS,

992.

hound , m ..,. 1clnity of Eastern
Hlnh School Call Russell Dod·

New home or large trailer with large
yard or in the country. Small family,
have references. Will consider
buying.

" - l'"' uaupenunel. MlddleDOrt-Pomerof. 0 .. Thursday, May 211, 19'16
DICK TRACY

NO, THAT'S ANOTHER GOOD
PlACE lb 6ET HURT .,

to

.......,.lilt clrcW

.-1111

..(II III]"

�Test for
diabetes·
80% off

l2 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, May 20, 1976

Rhodes defends travel
By LEE LEONARD
UP! Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS iUPI) - Gov.
James A. Ilhodes has fielded
some sharp questions about
his recent out"'f~ate travel ,
mainta inin~ he pays for it
himself and is working on
al\ract\ng industry to Ohio.
Tile governor held a news
conference Wednesday to answrr questions about his
thre-e-day visit io Atlanta,
Ga., earlier in the week.
Rhodes said he went there
to confer with
representatives of Italian
industry about the possibility
of some finns migrating to
Ohio if their country goes
Conununist In next month's'
ele.ctions.
The governor said he flew
to Atlanta by conunercial
airline at his own expense.
" U Italy goes Conununist,
industry will have to move
out and seek a base, probably
within 90 days," said the
~overnor. "Most of them will
be forced to come to
America. We 're just trying to
keep ahead of in ternational
industrial development."
Rut many of the questions
ce ntered
aroun d
hi s
appearan ce
at
a
stockholders ' meeting of
Wendy's International, a
hambur ger chain in which he

$275,000, nnd stayed over an
extra day to listen to a
comedian's jokes.
He said he saw his former
private business partner, Donald Hilliker, al the Atlanta
conference but did not travel
or meet with him.
'The governor said he sees
no conflict of interest in
merchandising the
haf11burgers in which he owns
stock.
" I was a stockholder before
I became governor,'' he said.
"I ate hamburgers before I
became governor and I'm
going to continue to eat them .
I like Wendy's."
He said he feels travel to
· such meetings is justified
because he pays the tab
himself. "I have taken no
expense from the state," he
said. "I went out and worked
during the four years I was

not governor. I made money,

and I didn't make it at the
expense of politics."
TI1e governor said he feels
no obliga tion to inform the
public about his ll'avels. ''I
have an obligation to a couple
of security people," he said.
Rhodes also said:
--He hopes to hear within
two
weeks
whether
Volkswagen Corp. will locate
an auto aSSJlmbly plant in
Ohio.
owns s~ock .
·
- He is trying to convince
Rhodes said he addressed the U.S. gover nment to
the. meeting for "three expand a uranium processing
minutes," introduced Danny operation run by the
Thomas to rece ive a Goodyear Tire &amp; Rubber Co.
d1nr itable contribution of at Piketon, Pike County, in

Support sormded for
mental health levy
Goldie Clendenin
PORTLAND - The Meigs
Coun ty Council on Aging
says: "Your vote for the
Mental Health Levy is an
investment in our county's
future."
If your home has a market
price of $17,000, your share
would be no more than $1 a
year, less than 10 cents each
month ; and would 'generate
~4 (s tate dollars matched) for
the provision of Men tal
Health services in · Meigs
8~

.southern Uhto.
-Dhio is in the thick of
competition with live other
states, i n cluding
Pennsylvania and Michigan,
for a tank manufacturing
contract , potentially at a
federal government tank
plant in Lima .

·C arpenter
Personals
Mrs. Ida Dennison spent
Saturday night and Sunday as
a guest of her nephew and
family, Mr. and Mrs. Dorsey
Jordan ; Virginia, Rick and
Ralph.
Th ose who have visited
recently with Martha Mays
were Helen Queen, who is
here from Florida with
relatives and Don Moore of
Lancaster. On Sunday, Mrs.
Mays' son and daughter4nlaiv, Mr. and Mrs. Albert
Quivey, Dover, paid her a
surprise visit and took her to
Ohio ·University Inn for
dinner.
Columbia Gran ge members who lourneved to S
Springfield Grange, Gallla
County. on Friday evening
were Mr. and Mrs. Earl
Starkey, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur
Crabtree and Mr. and Mrs.
Mendal Jordan . Meigs
County Pomona Grange
degree team exemplified the
fifth degree there.
Mr . and Mrs. Ray Brooks
spent the weekend with their
son and family, Mr. and Mrs.
William Brooks, Richard and
Tonya, at Jacksonville, N. C.
William Brooks, who is a
Gunnery Sgt. will retire in
October and the family has
purcbased the farm of the
late Mr. and Mrs. Rob Turner
and will move here.
Mr . and Mrs. Lavern
Jordan, Betty and Jerrie Sue,
and Mr. and Mrs. Jack
Jordan and Jason ,· were
dinner guests of her ~arents,
Mr. and Mrs . Reed Jeffers
and grandmother, Mrs.
Beulah Cordray. Other
callers were Mr . and Mrs.
Gene Jeffers, Marco and
Robert, and the other Jeffers
children, Lee Jeffers, Mrs.
John Dunham and Richard
Jeffers, all of New Boston,
Dlinois, telephoned greetings
on Mother's Day.
.
Bruce Gillogly suffered a
broken wrist at school. He is
the son of Mr. and Mrs.
Harold Gillogly.
Mr. and Mrs. Waiter
Jordan and Joshua were
gues~ of her parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Clinton Gilkey in

life.
The alcohol and drug abuse
problem,ones whohave lost a
companion , or someone else
near and dear, and there's
the Care Line wit~ a willing
Jisooning ear ; youth with
their. man y probl ems at
home, school and work ;
middle aged and ones who
are forced out of jobs and a
busy life; young or older
marriages going on the rock;
some want andneed jobs they
can 't find, and just can 't cope
Olunty.
with
the
everyday
If the levy fails, doors of frustrations.
And of course, Sr. Citizens
Meigs Mental Health Center
whom
I believe to be the best
will be closed next.,July 2. And
adjusted
of any age group,
this county will be theloser In
more ways than one.
and probably need less help
If I understand it correctly, since S. S. and S.S.I. help
other counties will close their financially .
doors against us ; and there 'll
Most of them are stlll inbe no more service from · teres ted in whatever they did
· th d
k
there, no outside patients ·In
o er ays and are eeping
accepted.
busy, healthy and happy.
Thus the Sr. Citizen Center Albany.
No one here was refused
Mrs. Bernice MckKnight,
service, though there is a where fellowship, arts and Colwnbus,
was an overnight
se rvices char ge . This crafts and a well-balanced guest of her brother and
program is not for what some noon meal for fr eewill family , Mr. and Mrs. Harold
call "crazy " people, but for donations for Sr. Citizens and Gillogly, Vicky and Bruce:
all who enter there.
$! for a guest.
1'bey were joined on Sunday
And where is there a family
We have much going for us for a fmally gathering, by his
or person who has no need of here In Meigs County, not 'mother, Goldie Qlllogly ,
help some time in life ?
only for Sr · Citlze!Jil - good local, and hilt brother-in-law
The MCMH Center employs schools, teachers , churches
Meigs Countians, and other and dedicated and concerned and sister, Mr. and Mrs.
Ralph Frazier, Galltpolis .
good programs combine to ministers.
So please let's keep Meigs
Mrs. Martha Mays Is doing
help folk of any age or walk in
County on the map, on the extensive remodeling on the '
way up not out by giving this home she shared with her
our be~t consideration.
' parents, Mr · and Mrs. Ney
The money is there waiting Carpenter for the past eight
Tonight
to help us 'help ourselves. If ye~s un.'!l the1r deaths.
NOT OPEN
Fr~d l ack~tl, Flatwoods,
we don't, another county that
comes up with its share will Kr , 1s. spendmg ~ few days
· m
wtth hts brother-m-law and
ab sOrb l·t ' IS
Fri ., Sat., Sun .
y un- . te Mr d M Willl
ders tanding.
sts r • . an
rs .
am
May 21 -22·23
.
Culwell.
THE SUNSHINE BOYS
Here ,s hopmg
eve ryone
Mr. and Mrs . Ralph
I Technicolor)
gets
out
and
votes
whatever
Chapman
and family, St.
Geor ge Burn s, Wa lter
way they beheve 10 and that Henry, Ohio , visited her
M a lth au,
Ri cha rd
Benja m in. PG
anyone votmg agamst ltw tll parents, Mr. and Mrs. Verlln
Show st arts at7 p.m.
never have cause to regret. Howery and his mother, Mrs.
Lyle Chapman , recently . .
Mrs. T. J. Spur~k of
Albany, who is well known
here and was a mUllic teacher
as well as an elementary
school teacher for several
. years in this area, is in
Universit y Hospital,
Columbus, and is scheduled
for eye surgery. This Is a
second operation · for
detached retina condition.
Her friends here wish her a
speedy recovery .
Members of Columbia
Grange journeyed to Rock
Springs Grange on Thursday
evening
where
they
3 GALS
presented a literary program
under the direction of their
FROM PARKERSBURG
lecturer, Arthur Crabtree.

MEIGS THEATRE

At The Inn

..TIGRESS''

Tonight &amp; Saturday
10:00 Til 2:00

Your '' Extra Touch"
Florist Sin ce 1957 ·

Ph. 992-3629

·FRANCIS
FLORIST

POMEROY

PH. 992-2644

The MEIGS INN

Pomeroy

352 E. Main,

Your FTD Florist
I

Sale Prices

SAN DIEGO (UPI) - MiiUoos of Americans have been
errooeously told they are
diabetics because tbe
standard test for the ctioeaae
is wrong more than 110 per
cent of the time, according to
a researcher In diabetes.
"The majority of the
patients dlsagnosed . as
havlne diabetes on the basil
of the currently accepted
sta ndards do not have
diabetes mellitus and In an
probabUiity will never
develop the disease," ·Dr.
Marvin D. Sipersteln told a
conference at the school of
medicine of the University of
California at San Diego
t Thursday.
Siperstein, vice chairman
of the department of
medicine at the Veterans
Administration Hospital In .
San Francisco, said the
glucose tolerance test, . the
most commonly used til ·
detect the disease, is wrong
80 to 90 per cent of the time.
There is Insufficient data to
supsiort the standards of the
test,. he said, and tliey are
probably wrong.
He urged doctors to be
reluctant to diagnose a patient's l'Ondition as diabetes,
saying failure to detect the
disease does "little, If any,
harm" while a false diagnosis
that the disease is present .
when it is not does ''enormous

Sportswear Department

harm."

·FRIDAY 9:30 AM TO 8:00 PM
SATURDAY 9:30AM TO 5:00 .PM
Bargain Days Sale

LONG DRESSES
AND JUMPSUITS

WOMEN'S SPORTSWEAR

Misses, juniors, half sizes .
Entire stock included .

(Two Racks Only)
Selected from stock and
reduced for final clearance.

Sale Prices

Save Over 50%

Bargain Days Sale

Bargain Days Sale

Bargain Days Sale

GIRLS SLEEPWEAR

COORDINATE
SPORTSWEAR

PRETEEN SPORTSWEAR

WOMEN'S DRESSES
100 percent polyester
misses and half sizes _
One Rack Only

in

Sale·$999
Dress Department

Sizes 2-4 toddler and 4 to 14 ·
girls . Entire spring stock
included.

Sale ·~ Prices
Girls Department

Bargain Days Sale

WOMEN'S SLEEPWEAR
Discontinued styles and colors
from several famous makers .
Long and short gowns, robes,
pajamas and scuffs .

Sale h Price
1

Lingerie Department
Bargain Days Sale

HANDBAGS
Nice selection of
leathers, straws.

Save this weekend on misses
1umors,womens sizes.
•

-

I

Sale Prices

Sportswear Department

vinyls ,

Accessories Department
Bar!(ain Days Sale

BATH ENSEMBLES
popular

BATH TOWEL .......... SALE 51.59
HAND TOWEL............SALE 99'
WASH CLOTH_. ·····--····SALE 59'
Home Furnishings Annex

Coordinates, blouses, pants,
shorts, tops, swim wear .
Entire stock included.

Bargain Day s Sale

Bar!(ain Days Sale

GIRLS COATS

COSTUME JEWELRY

12 months to size 14

Our entire stock of spring
jewelry is included.

Sale~

Price

Girls Departm ent
· Barga in DJJys Sale

BATH TOWELS

Save 20%
Irregulars of a
geometric pattern.

Sportswear Department

Dress Department

Solid color towels in pink,
blue, yellow, green.

Sale $1 49
Home Furnishings Annex
• Bargain Days Sale

BLUE DANUBE CHINA .
20 piece sets and open stock
pieces in popular Blue Danube
pattern .

Save 20%

Accessories Department
Bargain Days Sale

BEDSPREADS
Our entire stock of twin, full,
queen, king size bedspreads is
included.

-Sale Prices
Bargain Days Sale

STEREO RECORDS
Our entire stock of stereo 1.,. P.
albums included.

Sale Prices
Housewares Department

Music Department

Bargain Days Sale

Bargain Days Sale

BarRain Days Sale

STEREO TAPES

GUITARS

PIECE GOODS

Our entire stock of 8 track
stereo tapes included .

Choose classical or student
models.

Sale Prices

Sale Prices

Music Department

Music Department

Bargain Days Sale

· Bargain Days Sale

Lloyd FM-AM Digital

LloydAM-FM MPX

CLOCK RADIO

DIGITAL CLOCK RADIO

6 Only To Sell
Reg. $37 .95

$

SALE

2688

Only 3 To Sell
Reg. $64.95 _
SALE

Reg. $5.49 Yard Goods
Reg. $4.99 Yard Goods
Reg . $4.49 Yard Goods
Reg . S3.49YardGoods

Sale $3.29 yd.
Sale $2.99 yd.
Sale $2.69 yd:
SaleS2.09yd.

Bargain Days Sale

WINTUK YARN
Reg . $1.49 4 oz. Skein

$4888

Music Department

Music Department

· Bar!(ain Da ys Sale

Bar!(ain _Days Sale

.DECORATIVE BUCKETS
AND MILK CANS

100 percent polyester 54" to
60" width .

Home Sewing Department
Bar!(ain Days Sale

MEN'S DRESS SLACKS MEN'S WORK UNIFORMS
Sizes 29 to 48 waists. Reg.
$10.95 to $16.95.

Olive, tan, charcoal, green, navy.
Reg. S6.95 Pants
sale $5.59
Reg. $5.95 long Sleeve Shirts
Sale $4.79
Reg . $4.95 Short Sleeve Shirts
Sale $3.99

Housewares Department

Mens Department

Men's Department

BarRain Days Sale .

Bargain Days S11le

Reg. $4.99 in red or black.

Sale $288

LAWN FURNITURE
Save this weekend on porch,
lawn and patio furniture. Our
entire stock is included.

Sale Prices
Mechanic Street Wa

SENTRY ROTO-TILLERS

Reg . $359 .95 5 HP Briggs and
Stratton Chain Drive .

•30495

ELBERFELDS

•23995

IN POMEROY

SALE
Reg . $264.95 3112 HP Briggs and
Stratton ·
SALE

Free Customer Parking on Second Street
and at The Mechanic Street Wareh~

Mechanic Street Wa

Weather
A little cooler Saturday,
highs in the mid 70s.
Probability of rain is 20 per
cent today and 10 per cent
tonight and Saturday.

Area industrialists urged to attend
Ohio's river port hearings in June
Development of Ohio River ports was the topic of Tilursday night's May sessioo of the Central Ohio Valley Industrial
Council at Oscar'• Restaurant in GaiUpoiis.
Approximately 40 industrial representatives from Ohio
West Virginia and Kentucky were urged by Brig. Gen. (ret )
Wayne S. Nichols, Ohio River Division Engineer, Department
of Natural Resources, to attend one of four Jlllblic hearlnes in
June and "eXpress your views on this tmportsntissue."
Pointing out there are not many port .areas along uie Ohio
River, Nichols reminded lndivliluais "water transporla Uon Is
big business in Ohio,and It's tbe most economiCal."
Public helirings are scheduled 7:30 p.m.· June I in
Cincinnati In the City Council Cbamber, 801 Plum St. ; June 2,
7:30P.m. in Portsmouth, at $hawnee Stste Colle~c. 940 Second
St.; June 3, in Marietta at 7: 30p.m. at the Betsy Mills Club,
Fourth and Plwn Streets and June 4, in Steubenville, 7:30p.m.
at Harding Junior High School, 1928 Sunset Boulevard.
"The wheel which squeaks the loudest gets the most
attention," Nichols pointed out.
. The meetlnes will be chaired by Col. Scott B. Smilll,
District Engineer for the Huntington District of the U. s. Army

'otber Ohio River cities are under stuay tor this purpose.
responsibility for the state's portion of a River Ports study to
"They are all deeply myolvc&lt;t 111 and dependent upon lowthe Ohio Department of Transportation. The District Deputy cost Ohio River transporlation and eot·h poss1"sas 11 high I~ vel
Director within whose district each meeting will be held wiD be of professional skills, competent management und 11 dependprc!lenl to discuss the slate's port development program. · able work force fully capable of participating in the developNichols said the development of Qhlo River Ports is of ment and operation of modern port focllltles .
"Formulation of portdev~lopmenl plans wlll be made &lt;JIIly
particular urgency under present and prospective economic
cond1t1ons. It would offer means to extend lntereonnections after full consideration is given to the views of responsible
with overland methods of transporta tion and therefore merits agencies, groups and Individual citizens "
top priority consideration in the allocation of public resources. . Nichols pointed out that ports 0n1 rio 'tongc1· being !pea ted
The speaker added, "The objective of this farsighted m downtown areas or ·residential ure11S, due to cnvlronmenllll
program is to rec!uce costs of transporting basic commodities problems and protests by citizens.
such as coal, petroleum products, chemicals and steel, as well
AI ~Is stage, Rex McCormick, COV !C president, former
as general cargo, from points on the waterways to ·Inland · GaiUpoliS Chevrolet dealer, now of Kenova ; w. Vu ., 111·gcd the
destinations.
·
COVIC to think seriously of hiring· a full time director
"A lowering of transportation costs of iood and fuel, by use (preferably a retired Industrial official). '"fhls would permit
of low-cost river barges in movement of large cargoes will the council to devote full time on the issue at hand, 111e COVIC
reduce Inland delivered costs to industries and citizens:
)las both brains and money behind it. It would be a most
" It Is not the intention of the engineers or department of . effective vehicle to get whut we want," Mt'Connlck 911 id.
transportation to make recoDlijlendatlons as to cities most
Thursday 's session was hosted by the Gallipolis Arc•
appropriate for port development, but Cincinnati and nine
(Continued 011 page 14 )

•

a1
. y

e
VOL. XXVIII

IN CLASS AA Dlslrlet

meet today Meigs' Bob
WIJUamson Is In Bellaire
parllclpatlng In the 1976
Clan AA Dillrlcl Tract
MeeL Wllllamsoo •eanaed a
trip to the dlslrlct last week
by flnlshlne second In the
Class AA Sectlooal22t yard
dash at RIG Grande. He
also qualified fof lbe
dlstl'ld In the 100.yard
dasb, plating thtni In the
sectional In that. eveot.
Wllllamson· tallied 14 of
Meigs 15 points In last
week's sectional.

NO. 25

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

en tine

FRIDAY, MAY 21, 1976

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

Cost of.living up 0.4%

·:::::::::::::::::=::~:::::=:::::::::::~:::::::::~:~:~:~:~:~:~:~:~:!~:::::::!:!:!:~:!:i~=~!:!:!:~:i:::~=~:::~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;::::
~

UJrps or J.o;ngmeers. Gov. James A. Rhodes has delegated ihe

«

1Wews. • •in BriefsJ

By SARA FRITZ
WASHINGTON (UP! ) ~
The cost of Uving rose 0. 4 per
cent in April as the pace of
inflation picked up slighUy
after a luU in the first three
months of 1976, the Labor
Department said today,
A surge in food prices was
responsible for much of the
overall increase. But government economists stilj considered the April increase to be a
moderate one.
"Inflation is still not eating
our leg off- It 's still
moderate," remarked an
expert in the department's
Bureau of Labor Statistics.

The M per cent j~mp
compared to average
monthly rises of slightly
more than 0.2 per cent during
January, Febuary and
March.
The CPI increased 0.1 per
cent in Feburary and 0.2 per
cent in March. 'The April
il!crease was the same as
January's 0.4 per cent
jump.
A relaxation of inflation in
the cost of retail -services,
combined with a continued
slack'
in
non•food
conunodities, helped offset
the first increase in food
prices this year . .

BY UNITED PRE&amp;'! INTERNATIONAL
WASIDNGTON ~ t\TTORNEY GENERAL EDWARD
LEVI and President Ford today pondered all the arlgles _
political and otherwise - .of their forthcoming
dec1.9ion on whether to intervene in the Boston school
desegregation case, Levi had a meeting with the President
~
scheduled this afternoon, but spokesman Robert J . Havel said
the attorney general, beleaguered all week by arguments and
pressure from opposing sides of the explosive busing issue had
no declsliln ready to report. .
-· '
'
"The meeting is tO further inform him (Ford) about what
Levi is consid~~ing filing in the Boston case," Havel said. He
also said Lev1 IS now.considering only the Boston case but
might ptck another If he decides against action in Boston.'Sen.
Joseph R,. Biden Jr., D-Del., Thursday suggested the
Wilmington, Dcl., case migbt be a better one to select. A threeThe Middleport Fire truck 'after 20 years servke
judge federal court there this week ordered a desegregation Department in a letter to and our main pumper will
plan Involving Iarge-~J~le busing of children .across school 1\llddleport voters today reach that age within three
districts.
requests the voters support years.
other tax measures beNEW YORK - SEN. EDWARD M. KENNEDY, respond- fore them at the June 8 · "We felt that the services
we provide outside the village
ing to a published report today that he would accept a
"genuine" draft for the Democratic presidential nomination, election but not support a one could be re-evaluated and
said the story was "speculative" and his decision not to mill levy for the department. new contracts qrawn up.
The one mill levy was
"In the past the majority of
become a candidate "remains unchanged."
placed
before voters by the costs of equipment and
According to a story in today's edltloris of the New York
Daily News, \be Massachusetts Democrat "would accept a Middleport Village Council ~erations of this department
genuine draft" for the nomination "or would serve as a vice .and is one of three levies have come from you, the
presidential nominee on a ticket headed by Sen. Hubert being voted upon in the town voters of Middleport, through
donations and support of olir
Humphrey." Kennedy spokesman Ed Martin, reached in on June 8.
The
feelings
of
th
e
projects. With this and new
Boston early today, quoted the senator as saying, "I can't
department
are
revealed
in
obtslde contracts in mind, we
prevent specn\gtion, but my position remains uncbanged."
the
following
ststement
from
will
be able to get by without
Asked whether this was a complet~ denial of the Daily
the
department:
additional
taxes at this time.
News story, Martin said, "That's right."
"The Middleport Fire
"Do not misunderstand us.
NEW YORK - MARTHA MITCHELL, BEDRIDDEN with Department, after long and We need funds to buy hose,
a bone disease and said to be broke and friendless , won at least careful consideration of all masks and other small
.a partial victory in a bitter alimony battle with her estranged the facts, feels that if the equipment. If you feel that
people of Middleport continue you can afford the small
husband, former Attorney General John N. Mitchell.'
.
to
support this department in amount of all the levies, then
State Supreme Court Justice Manuel Gomez Thursday
the
future as they have in the vote yes, but If you must
ordered Mitchell to pay her $36,1100 in back alimony payments.
past
with their donations and choose between streets and
But Gomez said he might modify the original $1,001Hi-week
support
of Our fund raising street lights and the fire
temporary alimony order Issued after the couple separated in
projects,
the fire department department, we feel that your
19731f Mitchell can demonstrate he is too broke to afford it.
can
get
by without voting best choice at this time is to
Mrs. Mitchell's attorney, William C. Herman, said she bas
additional
taxes at this time. vote for the streets and street
not received any alimony for \be past eight months.
"The reason ,for this is as lights.
"We as volunteers donate
WASHINGTON - THE FEDERAL TRADE Conunisslon follows:
"Within three years we will our time and risk our live!! for
said today It may order used car dealers to ,tell their customers
hav.e to come to you for a levy the Village of Middleport,
about any known defects in the cars they sell.
The defect informatioo WO)Ild be added to a sticker on the to buy a new fire truck. This 'because we believe In this
car, along with other information such as mileage, type of could be as hign as $80,000. town . However •. with the
prior Ulle and what1 epairs were made before the car was The in~urance rating system above facts in mind you still
offered for resale. The agency orlginaUy proposed ttre will not allow credit for a fire feel you must choose, then we
disclosure rules in January, It said today It is expanding the
as your fire department feel
original proposal to include known defects and to make the
your best choice Is for streets
requirement apply to sales· between dealers as wen as to
and lights.
dealer-consumer transactions.
"The vlllage is in need of
flD!ds to continue to operate
COLUMBUS - DEMOCRATIC PRESIDENTIAL front ::e!h~~~:t ~~e:/ly t~:
runner Jimmy Carter will be in Ohio May P -28 for two days of
campaigning, it was announced Thursday.
Improving the Village of
Cafler will be in Cincinnati May 'il for an appearance at
Middleport. As we have
111e Ohio AFLGO convention. He wlll then go to Lorain and
The Rev . William Middles- stated before, for the best
Cleveland. On May 28 Carter will be In Akron, Youngstown, warth', poster of St. Paul's interest of all of Mi&lt;ldleport,
Lordsto\vn and Steubenville.
·
Lutheran OJurch, will deliver yotir fire department can
tbe sermon Sunday evening continue to operate without
CHARLESTON, W. VA. - THE COFFERS OF THE when baccalaureate Is held at the levy bdt the Village of
United Mine Workers Health and Retirement Fund swelled the Meigs IDgh School at 8 Middleport cannot."
considerably over ihe last year and the fund has reversed a p.m. for this year's 214
Joslng trend. Under new leadership, the fund has picked up a seniors.
substantial nllinber of new claimants and has eliminated Lhe
The Meigs High School
EXTENDED
procedure of cutting Injured miners off from health benefits Chorale will present the
Sunday
through
after their claims have been invaUdated for a certain period of music for the processional
Tuesday,
mostly
fair
time.
·
and recessional as weU as
through
the
period,
but
a
Contributions from coal &lt;;ompanies wbo pay a certain special nwnbers and the Rev .
chance of showers Monday.
amolint to the fund for each ton of coal mined rose from $297 Robert Hayden, pastor of the
Hlghs will be In the upper
~illion in 1974 to $400 million In 1975. A chief note, contained In Pomeroy United Methodist
80s to
70s and lows will
this month's copy of the UMW Journal, showed that instead of Church, will present the
be
In
tbe
mid
40s to the low
losing money, the fljnd showed a net gain in assets of $34 invocation
the
and
50s.
milllori. ·
benediction.
At the same time Interest and dividend income feUnearly
Officers of thi s year 's :::::::~::: ::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::t:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
$1.5 mllUon.
·
senior class are Michael
NOW YOU KNOW
Magnotta, president; Charles
WASHINGTON - THE UNITED MINE WORKERS union Marshall , vice president ;
· A b~by rattlesnake at birth
has suspended two miners for one year for leading an iUegal Jeff Walburn, secretary, and has the same amount of
strike last March that idled about 20,000 miners in the southern Michael Davenport , onlsonous w num as a fullICon tinued on pnge 14)
~rown rattler.
treasurer.

The Consumer Price Index
stood at 168.2 in April, up 6J
per cent over the last year.
That means retail goods and
services costing $100 In 1967,
now cost $168.20.
The report eased the worst
fears of some economists that
the nation might experience a
strong inflationary surge
after a remarkably good first
quarter. · It also lent
substance to President
Ford's campaign claims that
his conservative economic
policies have helped ease the
pressure on ttie conslimer
pocketbook.
F'ood prices jumped 0.6 per
cent, ending a three-month
decline. But Ute 0.5 per cent

increase in serviceS proved to

be the smallest rise since ta:it
AugWit, and an O.J per cent
increase
In
other
c ommodities s imply
continued a recent trend.
Use d car prices were
largely responsible for the
Increase
in
non -food
commodities, the third
consecutive
monthly
increase. •"uel oil and coal
prices Increased for the first
time in .six months ,
accompanied by price rises
for apparel and household
goods.
·
A surge in the COilt·of fresh
fruits and vegetables, coffee,
pork, poultry and dairy products forced grocery prices

•
F•'Iremen pre~.er F.ro01il lO _'!&gt;A_.,._,, :n~~u:"t:~~~~fi!~':
at 6 Saturday
one levy lose for regatta

Bacca1aureate
sennon will be
given Sunday

the

J' nn1'n

0.8 per cent drop was less

than"'ll tile--put two months.
Medical care cOlts rose 0.7
per cent, below the average
monthly increases of 1.1 per
cent since last November,
Increases prices of household
services
such as gas,
The 1976 frog jwnp will be
and
housekeeping
electricity
held at 6 p.m. Saturday,
also
)Nere
less
than
In recent
June
19, . at
the
months.
. Pomeroy football field,
followed by a square dance at
9 in the Farmers Bank
parking lot, and a rock dance,
featuring the group "Ikon,"
on the Elberfeld parking lot.
Sunday activities will
feature Heritage Sunday at
the Meigs Museum from 12
noon till 5 p.m. Topic for this
year's Heritage Sunday Is
Township History. Also, there
will be story telling, Appalachian and modern music,
and craft demonstrations.
The national baton twirling
contest will be held at 1 p.m.
at Meigs Jr. IDgh in Middleport.
Canoe races will be held at
the Pomeroy parking lot on
Sunday afternoon . The canoe
races are open to all indlvldu~s and groups ; everyone Is ,encouraged to parll.cipate.
. Anyone wishing \o parlictpate In any activity should
SALUTATORIAN of the
contact Pomeroy Chamber of
seohlr class of Meigs High
Commerce; Cotirthouse,
School Is Donna Thomton;
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 (992daagbler of Mr. and Mra.
5005) or regatta co-managers
William Thornton, Route 1,
George Arnott (992-5794) or
Deaer.
Ken Gilkey (992-7157).
' P'l"l!

. ·

WINNING THE DANFORTH FOUNDA'fJON AwiU'ds

as the outstanding boy and girl of Ute graduating dass of

Meigs High School composed of some 2H seniors were
Mike Magnotta and Georgene Grate.

I

~

\

~

••

..

~)

.

;.},

r

~

' I

'"

THFllE ARE THE CO-VALEDICTORIANS of the
graduating class of Meigs High School. They are left,
Debbie Janey, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Dallas .laney,
Langsville, and Tamra Stanley, daughter of Mr . and Mrs.
Paul Stanley, Route 2, Albany .

Over $61 '()()()
·

asked in suit
ROr
11

m',1

'

"ones

A Rt. 3, Pomeroy couple,
Paul M. and Cassandra
Rodman ; have flied a
damage suit in Gallla County
Common Pleas Court against
Don Watts Volkswagen, Inc.,
Upper River Rd., GalUpolis,
According to the complaint,
on Nov , 19, 1975, Rodmen
brought his car Into Don
Watts for repairs. He conlends that while the car was
being repaired, Don Watts
emplPyees hoisted the car up
and It overturned on the
plaintiff, causing injuries
including a fractured right
.leg , f(actured left foo t,
num~rous abrasions and
other injuries . He seeks
$51;1180 for injuries, damages
aild expenses incurred. IDs
wile seeks an additional
$10,1100 for loss of consortium .

THESE ARE THE HONORARIANS of the Meigs High School graduating clallll
com~d of 214 members. From the left, Mike Magnotta Sandra Carleton Dar ... H
and L1sa Thoma s.
'
•·
U1
arper

''l

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