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                  <text>10 - The Daily Sentinel , Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Munda y, June 7, 1976

PLEASANT VALLEY
Mon ld Good, daughter ,
LOflg Boffom ; Edwin Bass,

Legion wins twice at home Local news, in·briefs
By Greg Bailey
The Meig s Amer ican
Legion learn Saturday swept
a double header at Syracuse
from Lowell by the counts or
11-1 and 6-5 making its record

4-o.

Sayre llad two singles each,
Minnis had a double and
s in~l e, and John son and
Brian Hamilton ~ach had a
single.
I L
000 001 li-'1 5 I
M

The first game belonged to
Meigs right !rom the very
start. The local learn plated
one run in the lirst when Wall
was sale on an error , stole
second, moved to third on a
fly to the outli eld , and
scampered home on Mike
Nesselroad's sacrifi ce.
What proved to he the
winning tally crossed the
plate in tlte second on three
straight sing les by Gary
Swain , Calvin Minnis, and

John Sayre. Lowell got il'
only run in the si xth on a
single, a base on bal ls, and a
passed ball.
Winning pitcher Brent
Johnson and reliever Steve
Baird combl n~d to fan

~ix

and

walk a like number. Losing
pikher Hicc struck out only
two and walked one .
Mick DaYenpurl led lhe
local leam '.al the plate by
slamming two doubles. Greg
Smith had a triple, Swain and

-~-~
by

113 003 x- 8 II I

Ri ce and !.oa r. Johnson (wp ),
Baird (71 and Hamilton .
THE SECOND GAME
proved lo be a little different
as the game wasn·~ decided
until lhe bottom of the last
inning. Meigs jwnped out lo a
HI lead in the -~econd on a
double by Davenport and a
single by Minnis.
But Lowell went ahead for
the first lime in the afternoon
when they plated three runs
in the fourth on three singles,
a walk , a stea l, and a wild
pitch. Meigs tied it in their
turn at bat when Johnson
singled 1 stole second, and

scored on a single by Davenpor t. Davenport then also
stole second and rode home
un Gary Swain's base hil.

" Thf!n~

ar~

alwavs two

lfhina s out ior your blood ;
the I.R . S. and the
mosquitoes . One can't be
avoided, the other we
c.creens for ."
The job of r..u•1 ing 'em up
and taking 'em down can
be av o ided with self s tor ing
storm and screen win dows
doors from
t he

"F RIEND LY ONES."

CEMEN1
BLOCK
The Department Store of
191l.

M

010 220 1-6 9 I

Ullman and Loar. Smith,
Minnis'( wp, 4) and Hamilton,
Johnson (6J.

A TWO-TENJHS of one
mill levy to be voted upon
Tuesday In Meigs Coun ty lor
con tinuation of operations of

fhe Southea ster n Ohio
Emergency Medica l Se.rv lce
woold be In effect for live
years rather than 10 years as
reported earlier .

~

GREG BAILEY
The loca l American Legion·
team Sunday took a long trip
to Ashland and dropped their
first two games or the season
as U•ey managed to collect
only six hils all afternoon.
dropping the two contests by
scores or 6-4 and 11-4. The
double Joss put the ir record at

single~

and four walks in the
third. Meigs tied il in the
fourth , but the hosts put the
game on ice in the firth when
Sleve Skaggs stroked a tworun homer.
Besides his homer , Nesselroad had a single, as did
Johnson and Calvin Minnis.
The hosts' pitchers fanned 10
and gave up eight walks while
Meigs' pitching lanned six
and walked seven.
M
101 200 0-4 4 1
A
004 020 x-6 8 1
Minnis, Huffman (3),
James (lp, 3), Nesselroad (5)
and Johnson.
Hamilton, Welch (wp, 4),
Skaggs ( 6), Smith (7) and
MacKenzie .

In the first game. Meigs
juntped out to a 1-0 lead in the
fi1· st lr ame when Brent
Johnson led orr with a single
and stole second . He stole
second and was followed by
two wa lks and a wild pikh
that let him run home. The
lead was increased to 2~ in
the third on a long h9me run
by Mike Nesselroad.
But the hosts caught fire
AFTER JUMPING oul \o a
and plated four runs on three quick three run lead in the
first inning, Meigs lost steam
and let the hosts come back
for a big 11-4 win.
The visitors got those three
Tonight fhru Thursday
runs
on a hit batter, four
NOT OPEN
walks, and Brian Hamilton's
single that drove In two runs.
Fri., Sat., Sun .
Hamilton had both of Meigs'
June 11 -12 -13
two hits in the second contest,
SKY RIDERS
James Cobur n, Susannah
both singles.
York , Robert Culp, Cha rles
Steve Skaggs hit another
Aznavour. Har r y Andrews.
homer, this time a three-run
It 's a Thriller!
shot, in the bottom of the first
(PGJ
to tie the game, and from
Show Starts 7 p.m.
then on it was all downhill ror
the hosts. They scored four ·

MEIGS THEATRE

ME tG S

A
MEN'S
double
elimination ASA sanctioned
softbal l tournament will be
held In Racine June 2l, 26, 27,
s ponsored by Southern
Athletic B095fers. En try lee
Is $40 and two Dudley soffballs. For addit iona l in formation c~ lt .Bill Jewell af
949-23-46.

A MARR !AGE license was
issued fo Timmy Leo Smith,
22, Rf. 1, Reedsville, and
Pauline Frances McGrew, 18.
Liffte Hocki ng.
HARRISONVILLE
Harrisonvi ll e Order
of
Eas tern Stars will meet

Thursday af 8 p. m. Members
are to br ing

homemade

times in the second to give
themselves some breathing
room .
Losing pikher Steve Baird
and . Brady Huffman combined to strike out 10 and
walk seven while winner
Feltrop and reliever Smith
fanned six and walked a
whopping twelve batters, but
Meigs ju.st couldn't seem to
get that timely hit .
Coach George Nesselroad's
boys have a full schedule this
week as they host Wellston at
Syracuse Wednesday, Athens
comes in for a doubleheader
Saturday, and Lancaster,
always a strong opponent,
comes to town for two on
Sunday.
M
3000101i-4 21
A

342 002 x- 11 8 I

Baird (lp ), Huffman (&gt;)
al)d Hamilton. Feltrop (wp ),
Smith (51 and Blair.

Area
Death

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

Staa t s,

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

Woodard. Point Pleasant ;

RALPH Warden Our ~.
Chesler , a can didate for

De ibert Yo ung , Clifton ;
Erma Hart, Gallipolis Ferry ;

Meigs County Com missioner

Mrs . John Grimm,

In Tuesday's etecflon, Is a

New

Haven ; Susan Bush. Point
Pleasant; Ray Suphtn, Sf.
Albans; Lillian Robbins, Ben
Somervi lle, Poin t Pleasant;
Edward Myers, Gallipolis;
Benjam in Barnell. Leon ;
Mrs . Marlin Sande, Sf.

medical patient at Veterans

Memor ial Hospital .

John' s,

N.

D. ;

Sun Day
Best

Lydia

McKinney, Point Pleasant;
Diana Da lly, Gallipolis; Leo
Hotly , Gallipolis; Bane
Crtfes, West Colum bia ;

THE
POMEROY
Emergency Squad answered
a call fo the Nathan Biggs
residence on Rutland Road at
9:35 p. m. Sunday for James
Biggs, who was II t. He. was
taken fo Hol zer M&lt;dica l
Center . AI 9.: SO p. m.
Saturday, the sq uad went fo
fhe Lewis Smith residence on
Shade Road for Mrs. Smith, a

Ohio voters can end Ford-Reagan battle today
....
By CLAY F. RICHARDS
.
United Press laternatiooal
President Ford and Ronald Reagan coold end the long and
sometimes raucoUII primary sea10n today close to a dead heat.
On the Democratic side three Western liberals have one last
big chance to stop J"lllll1ly Carter.
.
1hls Is the day Calliornia, Ohio and New Jersey elect 540
I Democratic and 331 Republican delegates - about on~lrd
the number needed to win the presidential nomination in both
parties.
· CalliornJa, the biggest prize, Is expected to go for two men
who have served as ils governor - Democrat Edmund G.

He len

Will la m s,

Point

Pomeroy ; Mr s. Roy Brewer ,

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

daughter, Point Pleasant;
Arizona Osborne. Point
Pl easant ; Mrs . David
Makham , daughter,
Gall ipol is; Mary Paflerson,

matern i ty patient, who was

taken fo Holzer Medical
Center also.

Henderson .

Tuesday, June 8, 1976

en tine

Invalid transfer
set up in Meigs

!
residents of Meigs County between hospitals.
The commissi one r s
released to SEOEMS $3,000 to
operate the service. Meeting
with the commission on the
matter were Wiliiam Taylor,
execut ive
direc tor
of
SEOEMS, and Ted Turner ,
linance director . Attending
were Henry Wells, a nd
Bernard Gilkey , cornmiss ioners, and Mar tha
Chambers, clerk.

Syria joins
peace-move
TONI TODD
Bubbling with excitement ... Tani Todd's tanktop cooler
merges ring• of stripe• to an appliqued "A" skirt, .belted
in stripes, bordered in solid. Have yours in polye.ter
double knit, machine wash-dry. Black/White
8-18.
Main Store. Annex and Warehouse
open weekdays and Saturday , 9: 30 to 5.
Shop Fridays 9: 30 to 8 p.m .

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

CAIRO (UPI ) - Syria has
decided to join an Arab
foreign ministers' emergency
conference tonight on
collective action to halt the
all-cut war fhat has engulfed
Lebanon, a spokesman for
the Arab League said. ·
Tbe Damascus government
advised it was sending a
"high level" delegation to the
session of the 21ktation Arab
League, the spokesman said.
The Cairo meeting, called
at the request of ihe Palestine
Uberation.Ofganization, was
moved up a day "in view of
the steady deterioration of
the Lebanon situation and
intensified fighting," Arab
League Secretary-General
Mahmoud Riad said.
Syria's decision was a surprise to League officials, who
had expected a boycott of the
conference in line . with
Damascus'
apparent
determination to continue

unilat e ral
military
Intervention. Syria also is
opposed· to collective Arab
peace-making efforts.
PLO officials said an
immediate cease-fire and
IUiconditional wiithdrawal of
Syrian troops from Lebanon
headed the list of demands
they would submit to the
conference.
Arab League officials said
the Syrians may have thought
'It more advisable to come to
Cairo and defend their role lit
I.Albanon against charges from
the
·mainly
Palestlnlans, Egypt and Iraq
- that liquidation of the PW
was the invading troops' goal.
Including Syria, 17 of the
Arab League nations have
agreed to attend the
conference, No word has been
received yet from Lebanon,
Jordan or Ubya, the officials
said.

JNews • • •zn Brzefs;

fJAM/FM
CLOCK RADIO

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of t.ime.

Holzer Medical Cebler
(Births, June f)
Mr . and Mrs. William
Adkins, son, Wellston; Mr.
and Mrs: Robert Reed, son ,
Point Pleasan t; Mr . and Mrs.
Robert Gill, son, Northup;
Mr. and Mrs. Norman Byler;
daughter, Jackson .
(Births, June 5)
Mr . and Mrs . Timothy
Wam s ley , daughter,
Gallipolis Ferry, W. Va.

MOMENTUM WINS
NORTHFIELD, Ohio
lUPI) - Dale Ross guided
Momentum to the fastest
mile of the year Saturday
night at Northfield Park,
covering the mile in 1:58 4-6
to post a t•.,-!ength victory
over Missouri Time in the
$5,000 Gold Standard Pace.
The winner returned $3.60,
$2.80 and $2.20. Natural
Ability showejl.
In the loth~ace trifecta,
the 4--2-9 combination paid
$240.90. Attendance was 5,938.
The hancile was $431,766.

not. concentrating oo the Issues.
I
Udall, who bought a series of television cornmerclab depicting Carter as taking one position in one part of the country and
another position to a different audience, predicted he would
finish a strong second in Ute race .
Frank Oturch said he had been unable to campaign
extensively in the state and indcated he thought Carter would
win it.
Brown campaigned In New Jersey where he hoped to pull
another "uncommitted" coup agalilst Carter, as he did In
Rhode Island last week. Brown pushed uncommltted slates
that favor either him or Hubert HUinphrey - or both .

Fifteen Cents
Vol. 211. Nu. :16

.

HEADING NORTH
Births. June s, a daughter
ZANESVILLE, Ohio (UP! I fo Mr. and Mrs. David
- The Lorena stern wheeler, Markham , Gallipolis; a son
Mr. and Mrs . Will iam
Zanesville 's
$100 ,000 fo
Karper, Point Pleasa nt, and
Bicentenni~l project, is
a daughter fo Mr. and Mrs.
moving northward to Ohio Edwin
Putn ey,
Poin t
a fte~ a successful transler Pleasant.
Sunday at the mouth or the
Mississippi.
The boat is to arrive in
Marietta June H in time for a
In 1939, King George VI and
trlwnphant journey up the
· Musklngwn River for the Queen Elizabeth became the
zane Trace Commemoration first British monarchs to visit
the United Stales.
June 111-20.

The Meigs Coun ty Commissioners today signed an
agreement to institute invalid
transfer service by the
Southeast Ohio Emergency
Medical Service (SEOEMS )
in .coopera ti on with the
volunteer
squads
or
Pomer oy,
Midd leport ,
Racine and Syracuse.
The invalid ER transler
system
will
provide
scheduled transportation at ·
ph ysici ans' orders for

at y

e

Pleasant; Bonnie McDade.
Leon : Mark Clark, Gallipolis
Ferry ; Mrs . Alexander May,

That means he could pick up more than 200 additional
.delegates, putting him well over the 1,100 mark In his quest for
flte 1,505 needed for nomination.
As the candidates headed into the home stretch, issues were
dropped and the rhetoric turned increasingly to personal
attacks on opponents.
"You don't want a candidate for president who can't win,"
Ford yelled into a microphone to a crowd of 14,000 In Dayton.
In California, Reagan said Ford's television conunercials
labeled him a warmonger and were "totally dishonest."
In Ohio, before his last-hour swing to New Jersey, Carter
accused Morris Udall of conducting a n~~ative campaign and

•

Owa tn Young, New Haven ;

Mrs , ReK Vance. Pomeroy ;

to :·

her husband, Howard,
Lucedale ; fwo daughters,
Mrs. Edwin (Mary Janel
Roush. Rf. I. Letart, and Mrs.
Robert (Salty) Tucker,
Lucedale, Miss.; two sons,
Howard, Jr .. and Jeff Rust,
both of Lucedale ; a brother,
James Slallsmifh , Salt Lake
City, Utah, and six grandchi ldren.
Friends wilt be received at

Brown Jr., and Reagan, hi$ RepubUcan predecessor.
That leaves New Jersey and especially Ohio as the major
battlegrounds, and Ford and Carter are favored in both states.
With Reagan favored to capture all 167 California delegates,
and Ford out in front for most of the '11 in Ohio and 77 in New
Jersey, the GOP primary season could ~nd in a virt~al
deacilock. Tbe President held a-82U90 edge m delegates gomg
into today, with 1,130 needed for nomination.
On the Democratic side Carter was far ahead with 911
delegates. Despite the fact he was expected to get only 20 per
cent of California's 280 delegates, he was f~vored to win many
of Ohio's 152 and New Jersey's 107.

Orville Graham , Pomeroy ;

E. Rust ot Lucedale, Miss ..
formerly of Mason County,
who died Saturday in Mobile,
Ala .. will be held Tuesday af
10 a.m. from fhe Foglesong

Veterans Memorial Hospital
Saturday Admissions Crestlyn Hill, Racine ; Violet
McDonald, Dexter ; Ralph
Durs, Long Bottom.
Saturday Discharges Denzil Boggess , Margaret
McKenzie, Frieda Fields.
Sunday Admissions Virginia Musser, Long
Bottom ; Louise Eshelman,
Pomeroy ; Sally Ukhlield,
New Haven; EIUiice Christy,
Middleport; Craig Dorst,
Shade.
Sunday Discharges Curtis Riffle , Ross Kent,
Rosalee Clarke, Bertha
Hobstetter.

PC;., ;: ROY, OHIO

Refreshments witt be served.

Eugene

Basfrlck, Fla.; Andrew Coib,
South Field, Mich. ; Mrs.
Kenna Birmingham, Alpha

services for Mrs . Marcedus

Hospital News

Farmers 8 an-k

Lakin ;

sale .

MARCEDUS E. RUST
MASON , W. Va . - Funeral

the funeral home from 2 to t4
7 to 9 p.m. today.

'

candy

~~'l':m::m~:::::~~:':-::::::;:::::::::~:·:·:&lt;:::::~~~::&lt;::::::::::::~~&lt;=:=::~:::::m=~~~

and

1848: The golden years.
What I uck! Just as a weakened Mexico turns over California
to us, one of Captai n S utter'~ men finds a few pieces of gold
in t~e sand a long the Sacramento River. The men don't stop
look mg. They find more gold and cross their fingers while
it's being tested . It's_gold, a ll right. In such rich deposits that
~ prospector could gather $500 worth in just a few hours.
rhe word spreads. Doctors, lawyers, farmers, merchants,
·even s_ervants leave their jobs and rush for the gold fields.
Some sa il around Cape Horn . Others risk their lives to plod
their "prairie schooners" across deserts and mountains. By
the end of 1850, San Francisco is transformed from a sleepy
Spanish village to a city of 15,000. By 1853, California
boasts 250,000 people. All looking for the rich lifd

a

County

Funeral Home in Mason.
Mrs . . Rust Is survived

Frorn a Great Ame1·~can

for

ESTHER BARBER, Beech
Humane Society will meet Sf .. was taken to Veterans
Thursday, June 10, af Mid- Memorial Hosplfal af 10: 59 p.
dleport Village Halt af 7:30 p. m. Sunday by the Middleport
m. All members urged fo Emergency squad . She was
sulferlng wifh chest pains.
attend .
THE

Ashland deals double loss

4-2.

c

They then went ahead by two
in the firth .
But Lowell wasn't "dead .
·They lied the game in the
sixth on a base on balls and a
home rUil by Smithburger.
The winning run came
when Hamilton led the
seventh of! with a bunt single.
Mike Nesselroad was hit by a
pikh. Hamilton was erased
at · third, but Swain then
singled Nesselroad home to
end the game.
Minnis led the second game
attack with two ·singles and
three RB!s while Swain also
had two singles and two runs
balled in. Davenport had a
double and single, -and
Johnson , Hamilton , and
Sayr~ had a single each.
Meigs pikhing fimried nine
and walked three while losing
pitcher Ullman struck out ror
four and walked two .
L
000 302 0-5 6 0

candy

.
.
BY UNITED PRI!;SS INTERNATIONAL
CIDPINGA, RHODESIA - RHODESIAN NATIONAI.JliT
guerrillas have kUiedfive white civilians in the past three days
.in their campaign to force Prime Minister Ian.Smith to accept
J)laclt majority rule. A land mine planted by the Soviet-armed
insrtlgenlsexploded Mnday ~nder a car about 50 miles north or
Otiplnga near the border with Mozambique, killing a mother
and her two young daughters.
. Security forces conununlques said two quarry workers
were Killed Saturday In the Mtoko area, about 100 miles north·
east of Salisbury. An Mrican school teacher also was kUied.
Fanners said Elizabeth Botl18 and her daughters Marianne,
it, and Louberlie, 8, were killed near the border village of
Melsetter. Mrs. Botha's hu.sband, Louis, and two other
{lllssengers were injured in the blast.
.
The attacks by the guerrillas, based across the border in
Mozambique 20 miles east of here, have not frightened local
farmers and tea planters from their farms .
AKRON, OIDO - FIRESTONE TIRE &amp; RUBBER Co.
made $33(1,1100 in improper domestic political contributions
from 1970 to late 1973 and tens of thousands of dollars worth of
"Improper" foreign payments, the giant rubber finn admitted
Monday.
.
·
Richard A. Riley, JX:~sident and chief executive officer of
Firestone, said the revelations were contained in a summary
ffied in respi&gt;nse to a letter of inquiry from the Security and
~xchange Conunission (SEC).
WESTPOINT,N. Y. - THE U. S. MILITARY Acallerny's
much publicized cheating scandal, which has brought scrutiny
to the school and Its honor code, has now touched nearly a fifth
of the junior class.
Internal review panels Monday handed up accusations
against 34 more cadets, !ringing the total charged thus far to
168 out of the class of about 870. The charges may be the last
large group of accusations to come out of the inquiry, however,
since second-classmen, who were heine kept so they would be
available for questioning, have now been released for S1UJUDer
leave.
SYRIAN TANKS AND TROOPS BACKED BY MIG jet
fighters fought leftists and Palestinian guerrillas today along
the mountain road to Beirut in what may be the heaviest battle
of Lebanon's It-month civil war, the leftists' Beirut radio
reported today. The fighting alon·g the strategic Damascus·
Beirut highway, which overlooks the Lebanese capital from
the flank of 5,000-foot Mount Lebanon, has advanced little since
the all-out war began Monday, according to battlefield reports.
Pillestinian officials in Cairo for an emergency Arab
League peace meeting said the highway battle Monday night
.was marked by the artillery exchange that unleashed 100
llhells a minute. They confirmed the fighting continued today,
but they gave no details beyond the ~!rut radio reports. :ntere
·were no casualty figures from either side, but the leftists'
battlefield reports indicated !.Albanese civ!Uans once again
(Continued on page 2)

BANK RATE FINANCING ·
MIDDLEPORT

By PETER P. SPUDICH Jr.
CLEVI':I.AND (UP! ) - Jimmy Carter, hoping to
wind up wtlh at least 1,200 delegates after toclay's thre.e
Important primaries, predicted MoJlday the
Democratic party would "come out of the primaries
with a harmonious party."
"Ali the candidates that have already withdrawn
from the election are oow favorably incllned toward
me " Carter said during an impromptu news
co~feren·ce at Burks Lakefront Airport. "They're very
close friends of mine. And I think we'll come out of the
primaries with a harmonious party.
"It's heen the first chance in the history of our
.... country when a majority of the voters of this country
OVER 50 YEARS - Alumni of Chester High &amp;hool
who graduated more than 50 years ago recognized were
alumni banquet held at Chester Elementary, left to right,

,\

front, Grace Hawley, Mae Lambert, Tillie Baum; back
row, F.Jossie Allensworth , James Weber, Earl Knight,
Bertha Smith, Howard Knight, Buell Ridenour, Helen
Knight Wilson and Alba Radford.

206 return to Chester High
By KaUe t;row
CHESTER - Two hundred
and six persons attended the
Chester High School alumni
banquet and dance Saturday
.evening
at · Chester
Elementary &amp;hool. Chester
High was consolidated with
Tuppers Plains to become
Eastern in 1957.
The fifty ye~r reunion class
was honored and presented
gifts fr om the alumni
association . Fifty year
members were Mildred Well
and Victor and Nola will.
Also recognized were
alumni members who
graduated over 50 years ago .
They were Howard Knight ,
Alba· Radford, Helen , Knight
Wilson , Earl Knight, Mae
Lambert, Bertha Smith,
James Weber, Flossie
Allensworth, Grace Hawley,
Goldie Wolfe, Tillie Baum,
and Buell Ridenour.
Wanda Young Adams
traveled the
greatest
distance having arrived from
California. Others were from
Arizona and New York.
Officers elected for . next
year were Bertha Smith,
president; Howard Knight,
first vice president; Blaine
Milhoan, second vice
president; Roger Keller , ·
third
vice
president ;
Rosemary Keller, secretary;
Norma Hawthorne , assistant
secretary; John Riebel ,
treasurer and Clarice Allen ,
assistant treasurer .
Named to the decorating
committee were Dale Kautz,
chairman, Robert Wood,
Betty Dean, Donald Mora and
Maxine Goeglein .
John Will, president,
con ducted the business
session . Esther Ridenour
gave the secretary's report
and Kathryn Windon the
treasurer's report. Will ex\ended thanks to the Chesler
PI'A who prepared the dinner
and the yotJng ladies who
served. He also extended
thanks to those who made
donations, Fick and Karr
Construction, Dale Kautz for
the programs, Chester Fire
Department for flte tables
and chairs, the decorating
committee and all others who
helped. Mfs. Dlive Weber,
pianist, provided music

Resurfacing
project on

CR 1 imderway

Preparations are underway
to resurface CR 1 from &amp;ilem
Center School on SR 124 to
Columbia &amp;hool Lot on SR
· Oblomls voted In appareat recerd aumbera •today to 113 and to the Athens County
dloote tbelr party candidates lor preaideat, Senate, line, according to county
Coagresa, tbe Geaeral Assembly aDd the Ohio Supreme engineer Wesley Buehl.
Coo, the UPI reponed.
County Roads 27 and I·A
Secretary of State Ted W. BroWD bad predicted a record are also Included In the
z,seo,ooe voten would taro out for ooe of tbe molll batted project. Eighty percent of the
primary electloo fa tbe state's ~'-'tory·
project ($480,000) wlii be paid
. ''!be voila&amp; Is Jli'Obebly gotug to be.pretty havy aDd It · through a federal grant,
. will probably mate my estimate," Bnnm uld today.
percent ($120,000) by
:;o Eleet!Oil beard worten In MlboitiDg, Trumbull· aotl twenty
the county and the Southern
Summit eoantlel deeertbed the voter turnout 11 "fairly Dhio Coal Co. The Southern
heavy" whUe tbe l111'11011t of before-work voten In Cuyahoga
Ohio. Coal Company 's portion
. Couaty wu reported to be ''brisk."
Is $75,000, the COUilty to pay
·.·:·...·.·.·.•,•,:,:,,;:::: the balance of $120,000.

.Voting heavy in Ohio

INGELS FURNITURE

Hannonious party possible

during the dinner hour .
Chesler School. ·
Will presented John Riebel
Round and square dancing
with ail American Flag !rom followed the banquet with
the alumni to be flown at the music by the Khord Kings.

George Theiss was the caller
for the square dance. Th e,
banquet next year will be
held on June 4.

50 YEAR CLASS REUNION - The fifty year reunion class of Chester High School was
honored Saturday -night at the annual alumni banquet · and dance held at Chester
Elementary School. Shown I~ are Mildred DaUey Well Nola Knight Will and her husband
Victor Will. They were presented gifts !rom the Alumni ~ssociatlon .

,:;

~~:Ut~~~~~;th:'~n:~~~~. !fth:~ur~f:'~:~:

::

: , , :~:i:i::rE:~~:,~::~~,,~~~~,~~~:~:~~~::::,,JI:
Scholarship will help
Pu11ins study ·Physics

REEDSVILLE - Diana
Lynn Pullins, Reedsville, has
bee n awarded a yearly
renewable $600 scholarship
by Modern Woodmen or
America. a lraternal Insurance society with home
offices in Rock Island, m.
Tbe daughter or Mr . and Mrs.
Edgar Pullins, Reedsville,
she will major In Physics at
Ohio University.
High school seniors from
thro1J8hout the United States
receive the merit awards,
which total $66,400 for the
four-year scholarship period.
· Diana , like the other
winners ,
earned
her
schoiarshlp in open competition with other high
school seniors In one of six
geographic areas of ap,
proximately equal Modern
Woodmen Junior membership. College aptitude of
the applicants was judged by '
a panel of eminent educators.
Evaluation criteria Included
scores on college aptitude
tests, scholastic·records, and
leadership and char acter
trait,..
She
ranked
first
academi ca lly
In
her
graduating class at Eastern
High School, was secretary.
treasur~r of the National

I

'

'

I
DIANA PULLINS
Honor Society. In the school
band, on the school newspaper Stafl. participated In
student government, and was
a member or 4--H.
NOW YOU KNOW
Former Brltlsh Prime
Minlsler Harold Macmillan
once appoln\ed a cabinet that
Included 13 relatives by blood
or marriage.

Elderly workers needed

I

~-

••
OFFICERS OF CHESTER ALUMNI - Officers· of Otester alumni who presided
Saturday night' at the annual alwnnl dinner at Chester Elementary are, center, front,
Starling Massar and Esther Ridenour ; back, and left to right, Betty Gaul, Kathryn Windon
Richard Fick, Reid Young, Dale·Keutz, and John Will.
'

Tbe Meigs County Council
on Aging and the Gallla,
Jackson , Meigs Mental
Health Center are seeking
persons age 60 or over to
serve as paid workers In the
new Senior Friends Project
for geriatric patients.
Tbe Senior Friends will
work 20 hours per week and
receive 12 an hour plus
transportation expenses. A
training period will start
soon.
Senior Friends will help
geriatric patlen\,9.

Tbe Senior Friends wlii
work 20 hours per week and
receive $2 an hour plus
transportation expenses. A
training period will start

soon.
Senior Friends wlii help
geratrlc patients In an in·
tenslve
enrichment
resociallzatlon program that
is federally funded through
the Ohio Commission on
Aging . Information ls 1
available from Doug Uzon at
the Senior Citizens Center,
Pomeroy (992-7884).

Pomeroy has fo~r parcels for sale
Pomeroy VIllage Council
Monday ni~ht approved a
resolution to sell four pieces
of property owned by the
village.
Meeting with council was
Judge Robert E. Buck who
prepared and read the ordinances. The property that
will be advertised for sale arc
lots 12 and 13 in the V. B.
Horton addition across from
the White House, the city hall
building, the second ward fire
house on Condor St ., and the
first ward fire house on Nye
Ave.
·
The third reading was
given an ordinance fixing
salaries of village employes .
Judge Buck advised council
that the present ordinance on
the books in regard .to driving
left of center should be
rewritten.
Meeting with coWtcil were
(

Dan Will and Dan Thomas,
memhers of Boy &amp;out Troop
249 in regard to making and
placing an attractive sign
"Welcome to Pomeroy" as .
part of ·their project of Ob·
taining their rank or Eagle.
The two boys suggested the
sign lie placed at the in·
tersection of East Main
Street and Nye Ave. Council
agreed that this was a good
location but advised the boys
that they would have to ob·
tain permission from the
State Highway.
Council discussed the man y
signs in the area of Nye and
East Main and felt that the
signs deflnilefy are an "eye

sore.11

•

Lou Osborne advised that
he has learned the rate for
gas trucks to cross the ferry
has been increased from $3
one way to $12.

Council agreed It did not
have jurisdiction over the
rates charged by the operator
of the ferry . Mayor Clarence ·
Andrews agreed to talk to
Doc McCoy, the operator of
the ferry . and also Fred
Taylor, the mayor of Mason.
Councilman Harold Brown
said the vacant lot next to the
Daily Sentinel Office was
unsightly and unsafe. He .
asked If there was an ordinance to control the
situation and if so, it should
be,enforced.
Harry Davis, councilman,
reported that the sa fety
committee had met and
discussed purchase or hose
for the ladder truck and back
up hose at a cost of $1 ,800,
Council agreed to rebuild the
breathalyzcr since this was
much cheaper than buying a
new machine.

Mayor Andrews told
council If th ey are considering placing on the ballot
in November the permissive
auto license fee ($5) an ordinance should be drawn up
to this effect.
Davis also reported that
several trees had blown down
at Beech Grove Cemetery In
a recent storm and several
were In bad shape and should
come down . He will Investigate.
It was reported that H &amp; P
Sanitation Is not fulfilling Its
agreemen t and council
suggested Basil Haynes, one
of the owners, be contacted
and meet with council soon.
It was announced that
chemicals have been added to
the new water system to help
control the hardness of the
water but it would take 90
days to test the result to see if
the chemicals were helping.

J

Chuc k · Bartels, councilman, SIJ8gested that a
chain link fence be placed
where the Iron bars are on the
. upper parking lot wall. He
noted that a youngster sitting
on the wall could very easily
slip thro1J8h over the side.
Bartels also noted that the
gas company be contacted to
repair the holes made on Ann
Street when pipe lines were
laid. Bartels also hoped to aet
some support from the
citizens or Pomeroy for a
recreation area·.
Attending were Mayor
Andrews, Ralph Werry, Lou
Osborne,
Davis,
Phil
· Globokar, Bartela, Brvwn,
Phyllis Hennessy, treasurer,
who acted as clerk in the
absence of Jane Walton ,
Judge Buck and Henry
Werry . The meeting was
opened by prayer by-the Rev.
William Midcileswarth.
·,,
t

�I

2- The Da1ly Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Tuesday, June 8,1976

.. ............
;·;·;.;.;.::::;:;::,:-_...

Scramble on for majority lea~er job

We Hold These: Truths ...

Datelfue 1776

PHILADELPHIA, June 8
announced retirement, and a announcement Saturday
preSidential nomination, sa1d -- Congress began conheated game of mus1cal
WASHINGTON (UP! ) Rep John McFall, D-Cahf , m Cleveland, Ohio Mooday sideration of the Lee
cha1rs IS cerlam to result for the Democratic Whip, sa1d that he would not conSider resolutions calling for
The scramble iB on for the
the var1ous top leadership Monday he Will r un for runnmg for any leaderslup Independence, colonial
post of House maJority
posts m boUl houses
leader, which will be vacated
O'Neill's spot, and Rep John post as long as hts confederation and foreign
alliances but failed to eome
As of now, O'Netii does not Brademas, D-Jnd ., depu ty prestdential campaign 1s
lf Rep. Thomas P O'Neill of
to a decision. Further
expect oppostllon to suc'Ceed whip, announced he would act1ve.
Massachusetts moves up to
as speaker when the 95th seek McFall's post
Carl Albert's job as speaker.
Newly
elected
and deba~ was put off until
Congress meets In January
Rep Phtllp Burton , D- returning Democrats wtll Monday, two dayo hence.
O'Neill formally anno¥nced Callf , who has satd publicly caucus m December and for the job Monday wtth a he would run for majority assuming they will continue
"dear colleague" letter to leader when O'Netll vacated as the majortty party m the
fellow Democrats, clatrrung the spot, has not yet made a House - wlll 'nommate a
"I have a record of proven formal announcement of h1s speaker and majority leader
accomplishments for the candidacy.
to be confirmed by a vote of
Democrahc party "
Not smce Albert became Ule fuli House m January.
Rep Rtchard Bolling, 0- Speaker m 1970 has there
The whtp's JOb IS presently
Mo , who openly soltctted been a real contest for the No. appointive by Ule speaker
Veterans Memorial Hospital
support on the House floor m 2 leaderslup post The late and maJority leader Efforts
Admitted - Gertrude
February
to
succeed
to
By NICHOLAS DANILOFF sa1d
Hale Boggs of !.outstana, Ulen were made m recent years Lehew,
Portland; Brenda
.O'Neiii's
present
job,
"The conglomerates are as
WASHINGTON (UPI) the whip, was opposed by and probably will be made Imboden, Rutland; Ralph
proclauned
h1s
support
of
The Navy, whose fleet has Interested m making ships as
Rep Morris Udall, D-Artz , m agam - to make that No . 3
shrunk to Its smallest s1ze they are m manufacturing O'Neill for speaker and h1s a bttterly fought contest that leadership post also eiecttve Parsell, Pomeroy ; Helen
Middleport,
own candidacy for maJOrity Boggs won .
smce It traditionally IS on the Huffman,
Since 1939, Is distressed that horse turds "
Wtlham
Frederick,
Long
leader
only
hours
after
"ladder"
to
the
major
The
dtmtnuhve,
white71 new slnps are lied up m
Udsll, busy campatgrung
Bottom
;
Shetla
Erlewine,
financial knots m shtpyards hatred off1cer charged that Albert's retirement for
the
Democratic postlions
Dexter; Carol Hall, Vinton,
clauns
turned
m
by
the
from the East Coast to the
Guy
Thoma, Rutland, Hugh
Newport News shipyard were
Gulf of Mex1co.
Rousey,
Pomeroy , Karen
Comptroller General both fraudulent and mflated
sutherland, Rutland
Ehner Staats was to report to
Eyemg 64 black volumes of
Discharged - Charles
the House Armed ServiCes clauns spanrung nearly 10
Halfteld,
Venedia Knight,
Committee today on reasons feet across Ule corrumltee
Brenda
Templeton,
Sarah
COLUMBUS (UPI) - The property itself continues to money fo1 Instructional
why the yar~s have fallen bench, Rickover satd
Congo,
Charles
Biggs
.
"No one has ever looked Ohto General Assembly grow m value
behind the1r delivery dates
grants and mcludes $5 million
and are clauning $1.9 billion through all these claims returns for a three-day
Gov James A Rhodes has to lure new Industry to Ohio.
from the Navy to cover cost except the people who session Wednesday afternoon asked rrunortty and maJOrity The •ndustr18l Incentive was
PLEASANT VALLEY
complied them I thmk Ulis faced with a $149 mtllion party legtslallve leaders to to have been provtded to
overruns.
Discharges Mrs Orvtlie
Deputy Defense Secretary could be one of the biggest supplemental appropriations call a JOint sesSion Thursday Volkswagen , but now may be Elhs, Po10t Pleasan,t; Floyd
William Clements was sum- ripoffs m the history of the bill, gubernatorial vetoes of for an address on Issues authorized for any new Bush , Letart; Katherme
popular legtsiatton and a "v1tal to the state's
moned Thursday to explam a Umted States
Terry, Point Pleasant; David
"The fact that they (the complicated property tax economy " Rhodes' office " major" tndustry.
proposed Pentagon
Cheesebrew,
Point Pleasant ;
Since the legislature
comprorruse to settle the sh1pyards) are wlllmg to comprom1se.
would not g1ve any further adJourned, Rhodes has Mrs Perry Sayre, Point
The property tax bill was deta1ls on the talk, Rhodes
ciauns speedily for about settle for half, shows that
Pleasant, John Paul Mayes,
these ar....mr\'aM,' ' he sa1d. worked out over four weeks of f1rst to the General Assembly vetoed several btlls, two of Point Pleasant, Elsie Kin$747,000 under a 1958law.
which
may
come
before
each
The General Account10g conference committee th1s year
Adm Hyman Rtckover 1s
chamber m a move to nlard, Southside, Johnny
trying to force Ule Navy and Off1ce, Co ngress ' meetmgs Since May 19, when
Howard, Falls Church, Va
The
supplemental ovemde
Pentagon brass to hold the mvesllgative arm, already the legislature adjourned for appropriatloos btll, cleared
Both
are
constdered
shipyard conglomerates to has reported the bhune rests a campaign break before for House constderation by consumer measures. One
Holzer Medical Center
Ule1r original contracts - prmc1pally on the Navy, lv1th Tuesday's prunary elections. the
House
Finance lumt repossessiOn rtghts for
(Discharges, June 7)
shipyard
inefficiencies
The compromise calls for Commtttee last week, pumps finance compames, Ule other
and take them to federal
thrown
m
Dtana
Adkins, Angela
court 1f necessary.
credits on any future unvoted some $128 mtllion tnlo the reqUires "urut pncmg" of
Ausbn,
Rosalee
Bosbc, Anna
Inadequate
spectficallons,
real
estate
tu
mcreases
Rtckover let fly some
state Welfare Department's items on grocery store
Church,
Ora
Crabtree,
choice epithets Monday informal changes in orders, startmg m 1977 The House budget
to
pay
for shelves.
Gerald Day, Charles Edbefore
the
Senate failures to deal wilh problems verswn of the bill mcluded accumulated Medteatd bills.
Both btils passed the wards , Vivian Ferguson,
subcommittee on pr10rtt1es as they arose and changes m tax credtts retroactive to
The supplemental spending legtslature by wtde margins
quality
standards
ail 1972; the Senate verswn measure also allocated more
Oscar Fmk, Lawrence
and economy
Fowler, Gtlbert Glass, Sherry
Drawmg a bead on the contributed to the tangle, a unplemeted Ule credtts m
Holtz, James Knapp, Opal
patrtotlSIII of Ule shtpysrd GAO offictal told the House 1979.
Mulford, Marcella Phillips,
conglomorates, Rtckover panel last week.
The bill seeks to stop
Harry Roush, Uoyd Shmn,
property owners from
Carolyn Smtth, Danette
receiving tax btlls mcreased
Snmth, Bertha Stanley, Juha
each year because of
inflation
Swan, Sr., Maxwell Wilson,
Carolyn Wmkler, Nada
Besides the tax credtts, the
Wolfe.
btil calls for a gradual
Mr Uncoln Russell was
reduction m the tax
(Birth, June 7)
evenmg VISitor of
Sunday School attendance
BY RUTH LARKINS
assessment rate on tangtble Saturday
Mr
and
Mrs. Jtrnmy Workon May 30was 49, the offermg
Marton Hayman and Grace personal property owned by Mr . and Mrs Harley
man,
daughter,
Gallipolis,
was $23 80 Worshtp servtces Louden have returned home businesses, as lon1 as the Johnson .
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Michael ·
Guy Russell and frtend of
were held at II a m wtth after spending the wmter m
The Me1gs County group of Cremeans, son, Midllleport;
Columbus were weekend the Black Lung Assoctatton
Duane Sydenstrtc ker Florida
Mr and Mrs. Richard Jonas,
v1s1tors of Uncoin Russeli will meet Sunday, June 13 at I daughter,
speaking from Eph . 6 1-17
Mrs Hayman has been a graduatmg class
Wellston
Mr and Mrs Ivan Shumate p.m at the meetmg hali next
Arthur Hawk of Anzona patient at St Joseph Hosp1tal
V1slllng
Mary
Pierce
over
and sons of Mansfteid were to Jack Ward's nile club -at
has been v1s1tmg relattves m Parkersburg but has
and friends 111 thts locality returned home and IS doing the weekend were Denver holiday vtsttors of Mrs
Curtis from Mt Hope, W. Va , Geneva Shumate and Mr and the mtersection of SR 143 and
and attended the alumm ruceiy
7 wtth Prestdent James_F.
banquet at Coolville.
Mr Ball has been a patient Mr and Mrs Hobert Newell , Mrs Larry Johnson and Kldd of Glouster and Haro1d
Jtmmy Archer and w1fe of at Veterans Memonal Mr and Mrs. Larry Curtis fam1ly Also VISiting were Cook of the Good Samaritan
Several people attended the Mrs Paul Pierce and sons of
Dayton, 0 spent Memonai Hospttal, but has returned
Black Lung Chmc present to
memortal
serVIces at Chester Mason
Day weekend w1th h1s home
talk and answer questions
Mr Robert Reeves, Bryan
parents, Mr and Mrs
Ernestine Hayman and Monday.
Alarge turnout from Metgs
Mary Pierce ts a patient at and Jamte of Mtddleport
Russell Archer and attended !.1la Ridenour were m
County,
West V1rgm1a and
church here Sunday morning
Lancaster, Ohio over the Veterans Memortal Hospital were Saturday afternoon surrounding areas ts asked of
Mr and Mrs. Russell Clme VISitors of Mr and Mrs
The Archers' daughter weekend They attended the
all who have hee~ turned
spent
part of last week m James Reeves
'
Joyce has moved back home graduation exercises Mrs
down and all working m coal
Moundsville,
W
Va.
wtUl
Mr and Mrs Paul Darneli mmes now. Also , anyone
from her teachmg postlion m Hayman' s granddaughter
CLEVELAND (UP!) Uletr
family
were Saturday evenmg recelVlng benefits now is Ohto Lottery executive
northern Ohw to take up a CaUly Fttzpatrtck was in the
Mr and Mrs. Eiza I.arkms guests of Mr. and Mrs. James
course at Ohw Umvers1ty
took
dinner wtth Mr. and Mrs Reeves They enJoyed a urged to come as these director Gerald Patromte
Genevieve Guthne has
benef1ts may be stopped announced today sales for
Fred !.arkms Sunday They cookout
received word of a daughter
anytime,
and aclton will be Ohio's first instant lottery
all went to the cemetery m
Mr. and Mrs Wtlllam d1scussed on preventmg this game wiD begin next Tuesday
born to Mr and Mrs. John
Boyce of Columbus, Mr
Cavmee (Beth Yost} of Sugar Mr . and Mrs Chester the afternoon.
for prizes ranging from $2 to
Mr and Mrs Roy Bogard George Wtlliam Venoy of happemng
Grove, 0. They will remam Fredertck on Fnday evemng and
$10,000.
All
medical
records
or
gtrls, Ed1son , Ohio were
with her parents there until
Players will rub gold foil
Mr and Mrs Charles D weekend guests of Mr and Columbus, Mr and Mrs
papers should be brought
the husband recetves h1s Woode
attended
the Mrs Vtrgll Bogard and Wilham Russell of Mmers- The VISitOrs Will aSSISt in from a circle, squares and
VIlie were Memorial hoitday
dtscharge from the servtce of Memonal Day servtces at family
prize box on their tickets. H
guests VISitors of Mrs Bertha reopenmg cases.
his country m about two Chester at I 30 p m Monday, at the Other
any
of the numbers in the
If transportatiOn to the
Bogard home
months
three
squares matches the
May 31 and the Tractor Pull were Floyd and Ronme Russeli
meebng place ts needed call
Saturday vtsttors of Mrs
Mrs Wtiber Parker ac- later
munber
of Ule circle they win
Mr. Stafford at 992-2393
Bogard, Cincmnall, Ohto, Mr
companted Florence and
Mr and Mrs Uoyd Brooks and Mrs David Dailey and Helen Johnson were Mr and before Saturday of 992-7724, the amount shown m the prtze
Samuel Mtchael to the and the1r Cub Scouts also Rae Lynn and Becky Pooler, Mrs Joseph L Johnson of so that 1! may be arranged box.
Satelltte Beach, Fla , Mr. and Wtves are welcome.
Ravenswood Cemetery on attended memonal services
H all three nwnbers in the
Chester
Mrs Everett Ray Johnson,
Sunday
squares
match the circle
at Chester and were part of
Asteak supper was enJoyed Audra, Jeffrey and Enc of
Clara Follrod attended the the parade, as were the
number
players
win at least
Ule Fred I.arktns home by Dublm, Mr and Mrs James
TWO KILLED
alumni banquet at Coolv1lle Eastern H1gh School Band, of at
$15,000
and
qualify
as
Mr and Mr and Mrs Fred
TOLEDO, Ohto (UP!)
Htgh School Saturday whtch some of the Alfred Larkins and Ernestme Johnson, Jam1e Sue, Todd
fmahsts m the Jackpot
Two persons were killed and Drawing for prizes of
evenmg, the 55th reun10n of young people are members Hayman, barbecued by thetr and Teresa, Mr. and Mrs
i:arry Johnson , G10a Rae, 17 mjured, two senously, $250,000, 500,000 and the $1
her graduahng class
Mr and Mrs Gerald son, Raymond !.arkms.
when a mint-school bus rmllioo grand prize.
Tahnee Jo and Brady, Mr
Mr and Mrs Delbert Yost Swartz and family of
carrymg
students to a school Tw~oliar and $5 winners
and Mrs. Kenneth Johnson ,
and j':lla Yost vtsited Martella and Mr and Mrs.
PRESIDENT
ADAMS
for
the
mentally retarded may collect immediately
Annette and Duane and Mr
cemeteries of relalives here, Robert Robmson and tarmiy
WHITTIER,
Calif
(UP!)
colitded
wtth
a car, hit a steel from any licensed Ohio
and
Mrs.
Lee
Roush,
Rodney,
and Eiia remained for a VISit of Belpre VISited Nina In an appropriate vtctory for
pole
and
overturned
today on Lottery sales agent. Persons
Cheryl
and
Elizabeth
Ann
w1th Genevteve Guthrie . Robmson and Clara Folirod
the
Btcentenntal
year
,
the
City's
west
Side
Police winnmg $200, $500, $1,000 and
and
Joey
of
Pomeroy.
R1 chard Yost also spent on Sunday
Samuel
Adams,
32, a busmess
satd
the
drtver
and
a
student
Mr
and
Mrs.
Joseph
$10,000 and jackpot finalists
Memonal Day weekend with
Wtlham Carr and Penm admmtstratton student, was
were killed
Johnson
and
Mr
and
Mrs
Mrs Guthrie
attended the tractor pull and
Many other folks have 'Firemen 's dmner on the elected president of the Everett Ray J ollnson and
body of Rio Hondo family were weekend guests
v1s1ted ce metem s and Chester Commons, Memonal student
College
Monday
of Helen Johnson
banquets m thts and Tuppers Day
Adams
said
he
was
a
dtrect
Mrs. Lena Knapp of LangsPiams communities
(ConUnued frllm pige 1)
descendant
of
the vilie was Sunday VISitor of
A good sized crowd atwere
suffering
heavy
losses.
- - - - - , Revolullonary War leader of Mr and Mrs Doyle Knapp,
tended ground-breakmg
Daily Sentinel
that name.
Kat!, Kevm and Charles
ceremomes for the new St.
I..OS ANGELES - DR. JOSEPH EMORY, convicted of
Paul Churc.at Tuppers Plams
abortion and murder m the past, was arrested Monday with his
OTEO
TO
THE
GOLDWATER
SURGERY
TEREST OF
Sunday, May 30 at 2 p m.
wife and son on murder charges m the deaths of 10 of 25 infants
MEIGS-MASON A~EA
PHOENIX, Ariz. (UPI) A very large crowd atwho dted under his care in less than three years
CHESTER L TANN~HILL Surgeons Monday Implanted
Extc Ed.
tended servtces for 1m Carr
Emory specialized m cheap services for Mextcan aliens,
ROBE ItT HOEFLICH
a steel-and-plasbc hlp JOint In
at the church here last
especially childbirth, providing unprofessional treatment
Publls~~J Edd~W ••cept Sen Barry Goldwater, RTuesday, May 2!i Relahves
"wiUl such wanton and reckless disregard for life tbat It '
sat urday by The Ohio Artz Goldwater, 67, has been
from New VIenna, Circleville
constituted
murder," said deputy DiBtrlct Attbrney J&gt;lnko
VOTING HIGH
Valley Publish
ing Com
increasmgly bo thered by
p~tny ,
111
court St,
and Lancaster, Ohw and
Boaznich.
An
earlier action to revoke Emory's license as an
The Me1gs County Board of
Pomeroy Ohio H769 arthritis, doctors sa1d. To
many frtends and relahves
osteopathic
physician
was stalled by legal delays
Business 6ft in Phone 992
make movement easter , Elections reported today that
2156 Editorial Phone 992
from Pomeroy and other
AiBo
arrested
were
Emory's wife, Harriet, 51, and their
2157
suergeons at Good Samaritan absentee ballotmg m today's
son,
Alan,
32,
who
authorities
said helped dellver babies and
places m Meigs County atSecond
class Ohio
po stag e Hospital resurfaced hts right prtmary was 473 ballots, IS
paid
at Pom~roy
tended
aided
Emory
in
other
medical
procedures although not I
Nortonal advert/song hlp jomt wiUl ' plastiC and htgh for a pnmary, a spokeshcensed.
Mr and Mrs Chares D • represen tativ e Ward
i
cedthebo
tth
f man satd
Griffith company , Inc , rep a
nea etopo
Woode and Nma Robmson
Bottlnetll &amp; Gallagher Dtv
hls thigh With a stamless steel
WASHINGTON - THE DEMOCRATIC NATIONAL
from here attended the
~57/~lf0~ 7A ve · New York ball, destgned to swtvel
convention
next month wtll hold its fights durmg the SOI!p
Chester hymn smg at Long
NEW
SWITCH
DATE
Subscrlp lo on rates
smoothly In the plastic JOint
Delivered by carrier Whtre
operas and show 1ts good deeds during prime time. "Our
Bottom U M Church,
The
swltchover
to
extended
a-v ailable 75 ce nts p&amp;r
Saturday evemng, May 29.
weefc
By Mqtor Route
area servtce between the 985 cand1dale will gtve his acceptance speech on prime time lf I
TwO ASSISTED
where carrier •t'l'vlce not
numbers
of the Western have to kill everyone in the audience to do It," National
available , Or1e month ,
SYRACUSE
On
June
2,
Mr and Mrs . Chester
SJ 25 By mall In Ohio and the Syracuse ER Squad at
Reserve Telephone Co. in the chairman Robert Strauss SBld Monday
W
Va
,
One
Veer
S22
00,
In a speech to the Women's DelllOCtatic Club he said there
Gorrell and !.mda of Tuppers
She months, Sll SO Three
12 35 p m. transported Luella Chester area and the will be no repeal of 1972 when the party fought over credentials
Plams spent Fnday evemng
Months S7 00 Elsewhere
Pomeroy ,
Middleport ,
$26 00 yea r ~lx montl'lS Moore to Pleasant Valley
wtth Charles and Helen
Racme
and
Rutland
areas of and the platform during prime time and normnated George
Sll 50 three m'onths , 57 so
Hospttal.
On
June
4
at
5
22
McGovern at 5a.m. Strauss added that if he has anything to do
Woode
Subscr 1pt10n price Incl udes
p m Paul Burton, Syracuse, The General Telephone Co of wtth 1!, Prestdent Ford's support of Richard Ntxon before the
~ unday T1m es Sentinel
Nma Robtnson attended
was taken to Holzer Med1 cal Ohto Will take place on July restgnatlon and pardon a month later "wtll be an ISSue" in the
hymn practice al the home of 1--~------~ Center.
!8 " " ' .Jul y lfi
fall campatgn
ll
~~
•
By GENE BERNHARDT

-·
r.=======~

·.·.

A Chronicle of America

Albert's weekend
announcement he will retire
at the end of the year lgruted
a major leadership battle for
the next Congress. Senate
Democratic Leader M1ke
Mansfteld and Republican
L.eader Hugh Scott prevtously

Rickover mad
about ripoff

June 8, 1776:

HOSPITAL
NEWS

General John Thomas having died of smallpox on June
command of the American forces in Canada fails to
Sullivan. He dispatches 2,000 men under
Thompson to seize Troia Rivl~rea. on the
St Lawrence about midway between Montreal
Quebec Today, misled perhapo intentionally by tts c:ana:;:;; l
dian guide, Thompson's force blunders into the midst
about 6,000enemy troopo, covered by a Brltlsb neet In
river The Americanuttack, bultar•evaiSti:routtnutmbere~ ;·;~:&lt;J
the British capture 236, Including Thompson. Badly scattered, the Americans retreat through swamps- the last or,
the 1,100 •urvlvors straggling Into the camp at Sorel late,;
on June 11 On the 13th, Sullivan resolves to evacuate : :
Canada.

Alfred

Social Notes

Long Bottom
News Notes

to be aired

Instant

lottery

•
startmg

I

3- The Daily Sentmel,Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Tuesday, June 8, 1976

I

Colonel owners refuse terms to join NBA
By RICHARD WALKER
be "premature " to write an
I..OUISVILLE, Ky. (UP! ) obituary for the Colonels or
- The owners of the the ABA.
Kentucky Colonels of the
An NBA commtttee has
American Basketball proposed the league accept
Assoetation Monday refused four ABA teams for
to accept the $4.5 millioo membership at a cost of $4.5
entry fee and oUler terms mtllion each, plus an
required of ABA teams agreement to absorb the
seekmg membership in the costs of buymg out the ABA
older NBA
By MILTON RIQIMAN
teams not accepted and other
The dectslon by John Y. costs
connected
wtlh
UPI Spartl Edllor
Brown and hts wife, Ellie, disbandtng Ule ABA
The four ABA teams
NEW YORK (UP!) - Both stdes have gtven a little. Boston leaves m doubt the future of
the
Kentucky
franchise,
expected
to jom the NBA are
:has sweetened the pot stili hoping to sign Fred Lynn, Carlton
though
Brown
says
it
would
lndtana,
Denver,
New York
:Flak and Rtck Burleson. and their financial adviser. Jerry
: ~ein, has come down some Lynn, once said to be looking
:for $2 million, likely would listen now to $1 million over five
•Years providing the Red Sox included a no-trade provision.
: That's be(:ommg the big thmg now, the no-trade clause, and
:doesn't Ulat strike you funny?
: How long ago was it that Andy Messersmith and the rest of
this fellow ballplayers were bleedmg so much and struggling so
:hard for their "freedom" ciaimmg they should be free to go
PARIS (UP I) - Bjorn
:wherever they Uke at Ule end of each season, even from a Borg sat with his head his first major lltle
The other seed to qualify
:purely moral standpoint. So they fmally get their freeom, and between his knees, his
for
the last etght was Manuel
•what's the first thing they do ' Insist on ooe of these no-trade shoulder-length blond hair
Orantes
of Spam but the
:clauses tying them to the club for five years Now Ulat's what soaked with sweat, and said:
Forest
Hills'
champion had to
lyoucaU a perfect case of wanting to have tt both ways
"I must he getting old."
W81t
untd
today
to find out h1s
: To go on, though, Oakland has a number of players who
He SBld it with a wry smile, quarter-fmal opponent. Eddie
:J~aven't signed the1r contracts yet, etther, fellows like Joe which was just as well
,Rudi, Vida Blue, Gene Tenace, RoiUe Fmgers, Sal Dando and considering he was just one Dibbs and Poland's Wojtek
:Bert Campaneris, and Kapstein represents Ulem all except day over 20, but it reflected Fibak were scheduled to
resume thetr fourth-round
:Slue and Bando.
the gruelling 3-hour, 40- match thts morning, Dtbbs
: Only a week is left before the trading deadline and with time minute match he had just
growing short, it isn't at ali cotnculental Charlie Fmley and endured defending his havmg won the ftrst set, 7-6,
D1ck O'Connell are talking all Ule time or Ulat Red Sox French Open tennis title in on a 7-5 tie-breaker, and
Ass1stant General Manager John Claiborne IS talkmg wtth temperatures that hit 98 Fibak gettmg Ule second, 7-li,
before darkness.
Kapstem.
degrees.
The top half of the men 's
These talks have generated all kinds of rumors. One IS that
"That was the most t1rmg
the Red Sox, rather than hold sttll for Lynn's demands, are match I have played m my singles draw was slated to
considermg trading their 24-year-{)id super sophomore who career. I was just washed out play today. The Umted States
was the MVP and rookie of Ule year last season and is hitting alter two sets. I have never was assured of at least one
quarterflnalist because Brtan
345 i1UW
felt like that before m my Gottfried and Harold
The Red Sox supposedly are willing to gtve up Lynn and life," said the Swede.
SololnOll were to play each
Burleson for Rudt and Campaneris
"Now I'm 20, I guess 1t wtll other.
Oaklsnd and Boston both are havmg bad seasons The A's, be all downhill from now on,"
In the other matches,
wilmers m their diVISIOn for the past five years and world he said, the smile returhlng .
Arthur
Ashe faced h1s
cljamps Ulree times, are next to last m the American L.eague
The Monday match on toughest match of the
West and Ule Red Sox are third m the East DiviBion
center court had been the
Charlie Finley doesn't deny he's talkmg wtth the Red Sox best to date m the two-week tournament agatnst
Hungary's Balasz Taroczy,
abOut a deal.
championships With Borg who eltrnmated the 1970 and
''I have been m constant conversahon w1Ul Dtck O'Connell barely beating FrancoiS
with regard to a possible trade," he says "I'm also talking Jauffret of France, 14 years 1971 chanipton, Jan Kodes, m
the prevtous round m straight
with other clubs. I'll deal w1Ul anybody "
his semor, 6-4, 6-3, 3-0, ~. IB- sets. Raul Ram1rez of Mex1co
\Yhat about Lynn'
8, before an overflow crowd took on Belgium's Bernard
"I don 't want to bandy players' names around," says Charlie
The VIctory put hiiil into the Mtgnot and Gutllermo V1las
FiHiey
quarter-fmals of the compell- taclillct Corrado Barazzutti of
'lllat still doesn 't alter the fact Lynn's name has been tloo he has won for the past
mentioned m conversations by the Red Sox With Finley, and two years and against the Italy
Vtlas again has been
the A's' owner doesn't deny Ulat etUler.
only man tn have beaten hun seeded to met Borg m a
Whether Ule A's deal with the Red Sox or someone else, Joe here, Adrtano Panatta of
Rllllt seems the most likely player to be traded by Fmley Italy That defeat came when repeat of last year's final and
recause he probably could get the most for him. Looking at the Borg was 17 and playmg for the Swede S81d he thought
Vilfs would mdeed come
other stde, though, I'd say Fred Lynn still will be wtth Boston
through the top half of the
nelityear along with Carlton Ftsk. There's no question the Red
draw
So'x are trymg as best they can to sign Lynn, Flak and
"I cannot see Ashe lastmg
Blli"leson
"We want all three men to play for thia club," says
Clatborne "We have made what we think are excellent offers
tn aU three . Our offers were countered w1th' offers which we two
thlhk are infiationary,and out of !me. When we get to the point
where we think we can no longer negotiate, we'll call a press
.
conference and put all the facts on the table so that the public
and the press can judge for Ulemselves."
In !.PPRS Uttle League
The Red So~ never have said what they've offered Lynn but
The Middleport L1tfle
achon
Saturday, Portland
they have said they feel they've been "very liberal " TranLeague
Braves had a
slated, lhat probably means Uley've already offered hun dropped a pair to the host
rela1tvely
easy lime of 1t
Pomeroy
Ttgers
13-hnd
21-5.
$300,000 for Ulree years, and if they have gone Ulat high, whtch
Monday
mght
as they downed
In
the
first
game
Terry
I wouldn't doubt, Ulen Fred Lynn could make roughly hve
the
VISiting
Middleport
InAdkins
had
a
three-bagger
times more in salary thiS year than he did last year, and that
dtans,
11-()
Dave
Demoskey
and
a
smgle
to
pace
their
doesn't sound to me like a half bad year at all. Even for the
team to v1ctory. John Smtth helped h1s team to ratse their
best-looking second year man in all baseball.
chtpped 10 a double whtle record to 4-0 by stroking a
Cliff Icenhower, Brtan home run and double as d1d
Whaley, Mtke Kennedy, and Terry Wayland Tun Justts
VAUGHAN IS MVP
Brtal Wtll each had a smgie. contnbuted a tnple and
Bill Vaughan, a Junior at Wmnmg pttcher Jay Evans double whtle Jtm Boyer,
Case Western Reserve truck out mne and walked Ricky Ebersbach, and Dave
University In Clevlenad, etght
Me:Ufows all had a smgle
has been named the Most
Jeff Wayland ptcked up hts
I.osmg pttcher W Connelly
Valuable Player on the struck out three wh1le second wm by fanmng e1ght
"
varsity baseball team for walking ten T Ward had a !ndtans whtle tsswng just one
the winter-spring sports double for Portland, and S free pass and four htts.
season. Bill Is the son of Souder and Dave Bryant each
A!Ulough Ule Indians' Apnl
Mr. and Mrs. Richard had two singles
King was effective for the
Vaughan, 671 s. Third Ave.,
ftrst 'three mmngs, the In'
Middleport.
dians
dropped the1r record to
THE
TIGERS
unleashed
an
l'.reviously undefeated
2-3
M1ss
King walked etght
la.hit
attack
in
their
second
Powell's Uttle League Giants :.::::::::::::.::..:::,,:.,:,:.,::·:., ::::.:_,:,:.,..:,:,:,:,:,:,:.:,:.,::::::. . ..
and
retired
s1x Braves by
game
to
win
21-5.
Otis
Core
were handed their ftrst loss of
THE GIANTS got revenge
way
of
the
strtke
out route
htt
a
home
run,
double
,
and
Ule,season by the Racme A's m Ule second contest by
King
had
a
tnple
and
smgle
two
singles
to
lead
the
attack
Saturday in the f1rst game of platmg 10 runs m the second
whde
Dave
Hoffman
and
Brtan
Wlil
had
two
triples
and
a q9ubleheader at Racme, 4- mnmg enroute to a 14-7 wm
Dave
Jannerelh
each
had
a
a
double
With
John
Smtth
2.
The team pounded out 17 htts,
The game was !led 2-2 led by J Ftelds with a homer gettmg a trtple, double, and smgle.
I
000 00-- 0 4
gomg mto Ule last mmng , but and double Sheets, Young, smgle
203 42-11 9
John Porter tripled and Jay and J McKinney also had Cliff Icenhower had two B
Rees followed w1th a home two-baggers Winning pt!cher doubles and a smgle while
run to win the game Zane Chns Allen gave up nine htts, Mark Frtend had one twoBeegle had a double for the walked six, and struck out bagger and one smgle Terry . . - - - - - - - - - . ,
Adkins, Brian Whaley, Doug
wmners Winmng p1tcher, six.
Kent Wolfe, fanned 10 and
Kent Wolfe led Ule losers Eblm and Mtke Kennedy had
gave up no walks.
wtth two trtples and a double. singles COre was the wmning
R Stewart had the only Scott Frederick also had a p1tcher, and he teamed up
extra base hit for the Gtants, double. Losing pttcher Zane w1th Smith to allow only four
a triple !.osmg ptlcher J. Beegle allowed nme htts m hits while striking out etght
Fields allowed only four htts two innmgs whtle fannmg one and walking nine
!.9stnl! pitcher Troy Ward
while also fanning ten and and walking two Melanie
teamed
up w1th S Souder to
giving up one walk. He hit two Weese relieved m Ule second
fan
stx
and
1ssue ten walks
batters. TheA'srecordtsnow and gave up etght htts, had
Dave
Bryant
and Ward got
3-3.
three strtke outs, and walked
triples while Dtan Ward and
G
101 00 -2 5 two
A '
002 02 - 4 4 G
MIDDLEPORT, 0.
0 10 3 01 --14 17 S. Beegle collected a smgle
A
0 3103-7 9 each.

Sport.Parade

and San Antomo, with league merger represented a
Kentucky and St. Louts left "holdup " He SBid Ule ABA
out The NBA trustees are negollators "gave away all
scheduled to consider the lhe1r leverage and left themapplications at a meeting 111 selves at the mercy of the
Hyanms, Mass., begmrung NBA."
Sunday
The ABA president said his
"It's a little too early to tell CirCUit has heen "disrupted
exactly what's gomg to hap- all year long With two teams
pen," Brown said after !Denver and New York)
returnmg Monday from a makmg application to the
secret ABA trustees' meetmg NBA It des troyed the
1n Chicago.
credtbtlity of our league "
Brown, president of the
Brown said there IS no
ABA, satd the NBA terms for guarantee the NBA trustees

will accept the merger terms
Brown said a more realistic
prtce for ABA teams to enter
Ule NBA would have ranged
between $2 million and $2.5
mtlhon He said Kentucky
probably would have applied
to be part of the merger If the
entry terms had heen more
''reasonable "
Brown sa1d tj1e ABA would
have to experience a- "new
bh-th" at a meeting of Its
trustees m Salt Lake City
June 23, to remain viable If

the merger !alb through . But
he said the league does h~ve
alternatlvu becauae ''we've
got six or the finest teama in
" pro basketball."
"Whatever comes out of
this wtll be good," Brown
said "It wUi either put an end
to all this conversation about
'the great NBA' and let the
ABA forget abo~t the NBA or
it wUI put together the best of
all pro basketball that,
hopefully, wlli benefit the
fams ."

Borg advances to quarterfinals

Assemhiy on 'oh Wednesday
J

Wolfpen
Black lung
News Notes questions

I'

-By

Ron Mackenzie &amp; Jeff MacNelly /01976 United Feature Sy ndicat e 1

.
'"
"
·-'
II\ I

Malpractice suit
asks for $35,000
A $35,000 malpracbce swt
has been flied in Gallia
County Common Pleas Court
by a Jackson man on behalf
of his three-year-old son.
Piamllffs in Ule action are
David Paul Crusan, a minor,
Ulree years of age by his next
friend Lawrence P O'usan
Jacks~n Ohio and I.awrenc~
P. ~. against Dr. G.
Wilson Bowers, Jr , Holzer
Medical Center, Gallipolis
and Holzer Hospital Foundation, Gallipolis
Accordmg toUle complamt,
on May 20, 1972, whtle
plamtlff, David Paul Crusan,
was a pahent at the Holzer
Medtcal
Center,
approXllllately two days after
h1s birth, a Circumcision was
performed by defendant G.
Wtlson Bowers, Jr . M.D
Plamtiffs father Lawrence
P Crusan contends that Dr.
Bowers was responsible for
the post-operative care and
followup of the plamtiff,
David Paul Crusan. He
further clatms that the
defendant was negligent in

II I I

""
"'
, his performance of t~~' M
operabon and m h1s super,,
viswn o! the post-operahv~ .t
care and follow-up and as ,a, ,
direct and proxunate resull~
of the negligence, com;
plicallons developed whi&lt;;_l.\;.
caused Dav1d Paul Crusan
great pam and anguiBh. Due ..
to high susceptibility to hi~ •
urinary tract mfecti&lt;lq,
developed.
The petition states piamtllf:-:
also developed dysuna and
had great dtfftculty 1n.n
urmtallon whtch neceSSltateq,~
a second operallon.
..
In his claun, the father a~s&lt;t~
contends that the negligenc&amp;.J
of the defendant was '"
unknown until Aug 12, 197~ ..
when the plaintiff took h\~
mmor son to a specialist fop"~
exammatwn
The father on behalf of hiS, 1
son demands JUdgment for _,;
$25,000 and for hunself 11.':
$10,000 judgment for ex• I'
penses incurred for medicalno
care and hospitaltzatton. """

.

.~

·"
.... . p

Travel trailer
stolen from . ·-"
Honda Sales '"'"
1111J:

TWO WIN DEGREE
Two Me1gs Counhans
recetvmg degrees Saturday
durmg the spring commencement of Bowlmg Green
State University were Glenn
Emerald Enslen, Jr , 404
Lincoln St ., Middleport,
bachelor of sctence, and
Frank Paul Girolami, 132
Butternut Ave., Pomeroy,
bachelor of science In
educatwn.
UNIT CALLED
RACINE - The Racine
Fire Department was called
Saturday at 4:05p.m. to the
JliD Wtcklme reSidence on
Yellow Bush Road. Seven
men and two trucks answered
the call.
must file claims at any
regional lottery offtce and
jackpot finalists also must
meet a deadline

"

l

A 24'h foot travel trail&amp;..
valued at $5,300 was taken::
sometime Monday mght frolll"'
the lot at SmtUl Honda Sales,
Upper Rt. 7. Steve Betz
discovered the trailer WI\S :mtssmg_ at 8 05 a.m toda:t:,
The tratler ts gold and
whtte wtth green stripes.
Sheriff's deputies are irfvestigatmg
•~
Deputies were called
Mond~y
to mvestigate
vandalism at the VFW Farm'
located at the junction of Rt:o~
141 and 775.
'" N
Glen Soles, 406 Jacksow•:,
Pike, sa1d someone scattered -2
beer bottles, glasses and' r.
trash around a butlding '
located on the property All'
electrtc meter was removed•""
from 1ts pole.
"' '
n o~

Berrys World

~.;:

---=-------------..~

"

.-

' •J

News •• in Briefs

\

...... ...

111 1,

" fl ~

'

,.. .~u

~-~
' I

,,

.

'"

OFFICE
OF

&lt;

·~J

GON611ESSIONAL
AFFAIRS

u

,...

..

"'
-,
Cl1976by NEA Inc

"In fight ol reca nt developments, maybe we'd
better change that name "

,,,,

.

Tigers win
Saturday
at Portland

Braves defeat

lndiansll-0

Giants
fu first

'd efeat

CANVAS
FOOtwEAR
by Keds
&amp; Converse
heritage house

Syracuse, Racine split
The Syracuse Reds and the
Racille B team m Uttle
!.eague play spilt a doubleheader Saturday at Syracuse.
Catcher Eric Cunnmgham m
the first game led Syracuse to
a 14-8 wm wtth a home run,
trtple, three doubles, and a
btg 8 RBis. Wmnmg pttcher
Brtan Allen walked seven and
fanned two.
R. Imboden led the losers
with a triple while losmg
pitcher Richard Dugan
issued 4 walks while fannmg
five.
R
!50 0 2B-- a 9
S
534 211- 14 10
THE SECOND j!ame saw

much longer on thts court
With these heavy balls,'' sa1d
Borg. " They suit Vilas
perfectly and I don 't think he
wtll be beaten m the next two

Redlegs win
two games in
weekend play

.

Philadelphia
Pit1sburgh
N ew York
St Louis
Ch tcago
Montreel

East
W l

Pet

34

708

14

GB

29 22 569 61 'l
26 29 473 11 1 1

23 29 442 IJ

22 '19
17 18
West
W L

43 1 1)1 7
378 1517

Pet

GB

Oakl and
Call fornre

24 18 jjtJ / 8'17
2~ 31 407 11• J
Monday 's Results
Kansas City 10 Detro it 0
M inn eso ta 1 Ctevo tand 2
Texas 6 Ba lt imor e "
fOn ty games schedul ed)
Today' s ,robable Pitchers

I All

pm

Mtnnosote (Hughes 1 6) t~t
Cle\le tend !Eckersley J 4) 1 30

Pm

Texas (Peterson
o Jl at
Baltimor e fA !e)( and er J 2) , 7 JO
pm
Ca lrrornla (Ross 3 6) !!!I New
Yo rk (E II IS 44) Bpm
Oakland !Mitch ell 1 Jl a t
Bos ton &lt;Tiant 7 J l. 7 30 p m
Wednesd•y's Gamet
Dett'"oil at Kansas City nig ht
Chi cago at Milwaukee, night
Mtnnesota at Cleveland , night
Texas at Baltimore. night
CBIJforn ta at New York . nrght
Oeklend at Boston night
Mator Leatue Results
By U nlted Preu International
Nahonal Leagu e
Cinclnnall
000 000 lJO- 4 6 2
Ptttsburg h 000 001 31x- 5 6 I
B tl lmg hl!l m
Mc Enan ey ( 81
and Ptummm er Klson Moo~e
(Il l Giusll (9) and SanQuitten
WP --M oose ( 7 I)
L P'-M CE
nancy ( 1 3) HRs- Cinc tnnell

Morga" 2 191 Rose 191
Pittsburgh Robinson 19!. Oliv
(7)

Zlsk (61

S t e~rge ll

Ol

York

!Onl y

oames

sc hedu led I

American Ltagut

Detroit

000 000 000- 0 • 2

Kansas City 030 002 S0.- 10" 1
Ruh le, Grill i (7) o!tnd Klmm

Busby , Lltlell (7)
WP- Busby (2 1)
(4 2)

~tnd

Sllnson
LFI'- Ruht e

HR- Kanas Cit y, M cRae

())

Minnesota
Clevel and

001 030 03Q- 7 II J
001 000 OIQ- 2 9 I

Goltz (6 21 and Wvn egar,
Walls, Thomas IS) and Ashby

LP- Walts 10 II

HRs--Mln

nesota Wynegar (6 ), KUliCk
(6) Cl e\letand , Menning (-4)

TeKas
Baillmore

120 003 ooo- 6 12 I

1100 010 012- • 9 I

Um barger Foucault (9) and
Sundberg . Grim sley , Cuellar
( 6) t'lnd Ouncan WP- Umbarg
er (6 &lt;I ) LP- Grlmsley ( I~ )
HR- 8elt tmore, Grlch !Sl

I Only games schedul ed)

tntern•llonal Lng"ue
Standings
United Press International

W l. Pd G.B

Rhode tstand 32 19, 627
51 LOU IS
500 100 010- 1 11 0 Toledo
27 24 .l29 l
Houston
o10 000 320- 6 9 2 Syracuse
24 23 lll 6
Curl iS, Hr&amp;bosky (7) and
22 22 lOO 6'1'
Simmons Nlc kro , Griffin (4) , Tidewater
24 24 lOO 6'h
Steber! (6)
Pen tz (B) end Richmond
21 25 457 6'1'
Johnson WP- Cur t ls (4 51 LP Memphis
- N iekro (3 6) HR- Hous lon , Rochester
19 23 •52 8'1,
Johnson (6)
Charleston
19 28 404 11
Mond1y's Rtaulla
P hladelph ta ~00 10::1 001- 9 ll I Toledo 12 Memphis l, lst, 7
Los Angeles 400 010 001- 6 10 o
Reed , Gl!lrber (6) and Boone , Innings
Rt'IOd en, Houoh (4 ), Mershall Toledo 9 Memphis J, 2nd, 7
Innings
(8 ) and Yeager WP- Reed IS
1)
LP ........ Hough (7 1) • HRsRochester u Charleston 6
Phlladelpt'll!! L u z I n S k I 18 ) Richmond 14 Syracuse 10
At len ( 31 Los Ano el es Cey
Only games scheduled
1101

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Til!" m. sat.

~

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000 o10 ooo- 1 4 1

I

Open EvenJngs 'ti16:00

-:~

1:~

000 002 03K- s 5 1

USED CARS

992-5342

&lt;''

Swan , Lockwood (9 ) and
Grote, Foster (1 2l end R
Da..-ls LP - Swan C2 6 ) HR -·
San Diego Winfield (9 )

Times EDTI

Detro it (Roberts 4 4) a1
K ans~ s City (Leonard 5 1). 8 30
pm
Cht ca go {J ohnson 3 Sl at
Milwaukee !Travers 6 2~ 8 30

er

N ~w

San Dieg o

~~~~·.

INC.

t.

Major League Standi ngs
Bv Untted Pr ess International
Nitlonal League

This Week's SptCI•t

r

~~

the SCOREBOARD

Cmctnna tt
32 20 615
The Pomeroy Rediegs Los
Ange les
31 23 574 2
picked up two v1ctones 10 San 0 1ego
27 23 540 4
27 29 482 7
Peewee ac hon ove r the Houston
A tlanta
20 30 400 11
weekend by downmg the host San Fnmc lsco 21
33 389 12
Monday's R e~ ults
Rutland Angels on Frtday 17P1ttsburgh 5 Cln c1 nn at 1 4
13 and rompmg over the St
Loui s 7 Hou s ton 6
Pomeroy Angels on Satur- Phll~delphla 8 Los Angeles 6
san D iego 5 New York 1
day, 11-5
(Only gam es scheduled )
In Fnday 's game the
Today s Probable Pttch ers
(All Times E OTI
vtctors jumped off to a 4-0
Allanta
INiekro
3 4)
at
lead m the ftrst and were Chicago (Bur ris 2 71 2 30 p m
Cincmnao 1Alcala S 1) at
never headed Wmmng pitPtttsburgh CRooker 6 .2) , 8 35
cher Jackie Welker fanned pm
ftve Angels and walked
Sl LOUI S (Forsch I ll at
Hous ton (Oterke r 55), 8 35
twelve, but teammates Brtan pm
Korn, Ralph Sham, and Brett
Ph1tad elph ta (Chnstenson 6 2 )
a1 Los Ange les ( John 2 J ), 10 30
Korn (along w1lh Welker) pm
socked doubles to lead the
New York (Loltctl 2 7l at San
htttmg Brett Korn , Sham, Otego (F r elsleben 3 I I 10 p m
!Fryman 6 Jl at
and Damn Roach also had SanMontrenl
Fran osco (Dr ess ler I 2)
smgies
11 05 p m
Wednes day 's Games
Losmg
p1tcher
Jon Atlanta
at Ct'lt cago
umgstreth combmed with Ct nCi at P ttl sb urgh, n tgh t
Doug Priddy and Dan Davts St Louis at Houston night
Phlladelphta at Los Ang ntght
to strtke out etghth Redlegs New
York at San Ot eg o night
but they walked 21. Davts Montreal a t San Francisco
contnbuted a trtpie and a
American League
smgle m the losing cause,
East
w L Pet GB
Ken Wtse had two smgles, New York
28 19 560 and Bobby Guyer had one Baltimore
24 25 490 5
22 24 d78 5' ,
p
416 06-17 7 Boston
22 26 4S8 6'/:r
Cl eveland
R
050 17- 13 5 Detroit
21 27 438 l'h
Milwaukee
18 26 409 B1h
West
,On Saturday the Redlegs
w L Pet GB
had an easter hme of it as Kansas Ctty 31 18 633
28 20 S8J 2117
they plated stx runs m the Texas
25 21 S4J 4 1/,
Chtcago
first mnmg and then coasted Minnesota
25 24 SIO 6
to the wm The v1s1bng
Angels outhlt the hosts, but
losmg pitcher Parker Long
walked 11 while fannmg nine
Bret Korn collected three of
the four smgles for the
wmners while Brtan Korn got
the other.
Chrts Shank fanned ftve
and walked seven m ptckmg
up the wm. he gave up two
smgles to Scott Hysell and
one each to Ryan Ohver,
Chrts Kennedy, Sean Dodge,
and Darrm Hayes
A
021 02- 5 6
R
621 2a--11 I

HE KNOWS HIS INSURANCE!

~

Standings
Averages
Results

rounds ''

the v1sitors' bats get hot as
- - - -.
Uley scored an 1mpress1ve 24i"\1\M,COJLD YOU
7 victory Tony hnboden led
TE LL ME ABOUT
1HE HOJSE 'I'OU
the winners w1th some fine
ADVERllSto tt.J
defensive play and a hot bat
as he socked two home runs
~~E -~
and a smgie to knock In seven
runs Also homering were R
Lyons, A. Pape, and T
Brinager
Wmmng pitcher Steve
I
Ftsher struck out three and
_\
walked seven while gtvmg up
~
seven hits.
'
Malcolm Guinther and !..
' ·-'- - ...._
l&gt;ickens combined to strtke ~
out only one while walking 16.
R
M7 17- 24 L7
IWUNIN~
~~'ENCY
Mrddteporl, Oh•o
s
021M- 7 7 . . . .- .. . . . . .. . . . . . .. . . . . nu
................'.'.2·2.3.42. . . .

I'UILDS

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Pomeroy. Ohio

'"

�I

2- The Da1ly Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Tuesday, June 8,1976

.. ............
;·;·;.;.;.::::;:;::,:-_...

Scramble on for majority lea~er job

We Hold These: Truths ...

Datelfue 1776

PHILADELPHIA, June 8
announced retirement, and a announcement Saturday
preSidential nomination, sa1d -- Congress began conheated game of mus1cal
WASHINGTON (UP! ) Rep John McFall, D-Cahf , m Cleveland, Ohio Mooday sideration of the Lee
cha1rs IS cerlam to result for the Democratic Whip, sa1d that he would not conSider resolutions calling for
The scramble iB on for the
the var1ous top leadership Monday he Will r un for runnmg for any leaderslup Independence, colonial
post of House maJority
posts m boUl houses
leader, which will be vacated
O'Neill's spot, and Rep John post as long as hts confederation and foreign
alliances but failed to eome
As of now, O'Netii does not Brademas, D-Jnd ., depu ty prestdential campaign 1s
lf Rep. Thomas P O'Neill of
to a decision. Further
expect oppostllon to suc'Ceed whip, announced he would act1ve.
Massachusetts moves up to
as speaker when the 95th seek McFall's post
Carl Albert's job as speaker.
Newly
elected
and deba~ was put off until
Congress meets In January
Rep Phtllp Burton , D- returning Democrats wtll Monday, two dayo hence.
O'Neill formally anno¥nced Callf , who has satd publicly caucus m December and for the job Monday wtth a he would run for majority assuming they will continue
"dear colleague" letter to leader when O'Netll vacated as the majortty party m the
fellow Democrats, clatrrung the spot, has not yet made a House - wlll 'nommate a
"I have a record of proven formal announcement of h1s speaker and majority leader
accomplishments for the candidacy.
to be confirmed by a vote of
Democrahc party "
Not smce Albert became Ule fuli House m January.
Rep Rtchard Bolling, 0- Speaker m 1970 has there
The whtp's JOb IS presently
Mo , who openly soltctted been a real contest for the No. appointive by Ule speaker
Veterans Memorial Hospital
support on the House floor m 2 leaderslup post The late and maJority leader Efforts
Admitted - Gertrude
February
to
succeed
to
By NICHOLAS DANILOFF sa1d
Hale Boggs of !.outstana, Ulen were made m recent years Lehew,
Portland; Brenda
.O'Neiii's
present
job,
"The conglomerates are as
WASHINGTON (UPI) the whip, was opposed by and probably will be made Imboden, Rutland; Ralph
proclauned
h1s
support
of
The Navy, whose fleet has Interested m making ships as
Rep Morris Udall, D-Artz , m agam - to make that No . 3
shrunk to Its smallest s1ze they are m manufacturing O'Neill for speaker and h1s a bttterly fought contest that leadership post also eiecttve Parsell, Pomeroy ; Helen
Middleport,
own candidacy for maJOrity Boggs won .
smce It traditionally IS on the Huffman,
Since 1939, Is distressed that horse turds "
Wtlham
Frederick,
Long
leader
only
hours
after
"ladder"
to
the
major
The
dtmtnuhve,
white71 new slnps are lied up m
Udsll, busy campatgrung
Bottom
;
Shetla
Erlewine,
financial knots m shtpyards hatred off1cer charged that Albert's retirement for
the
Democratic postlions
Dexter; Carol Hall, Vinton,
clauns
turned
m
by
the
from the East Coast to the
Guy
Thoma, Rutland, Hugh
Newport News shipyard were
Gulf of Mex1co.
Rousey,
Pomeroy , Karen
Comptroller General both fraudulent and mflated
sutherland, Rutland
Ehner Staats was to report to
Eyemg 64 black volumes of
Discharged - Charles
the House Armed ServiCes clauns spanrung nearly 10
Halfteld,
Venedia Knight,
Committee today on reasons feet across Ule corrumltee
Brenda
Templeton,
Sarah
COLUMBUS (UPI) - The property itself continues to money fo1 Instructional
why the yar~s have fallen bench, Rickover satd
Congo,
Charles
Biggs
.
"No one has ever looked Ohto General Assembly grow m value
behind the1r delivery dates
grants and mcludes $5 million
and are clauning $1.9 billion through all these claims returns for a three-day
Gov James A Rhodes has to lure new Industry to Ohio.
from the Navy to cover cost except the people who session Wednesday afternoon asked rrunortty and maJOrity The •ndustr18l Incentive was
PLEASANT VALLEY
complied them I thmk Ulis faced with a $149 mtllion party legtslallve leaders to to have been provtded to
overruns.
Discharges Mrs Orvtlie
Deputy Defense Secretary could be one of the biggest supplemental appropriations call a JOint sesSion Thursday Volkswagen , but now may be Elhs, Po10t Pleasan,t; Floyd
William Clements was sum- ripoffs m the history of the bill, gubernatorial vetoes of for an address on Issues authorized for any new Bush , Letart; Katherme
popular legtsiatton and a "v1tal to the state's
moned Thursday to explam a Umted States
Terry, Point Pleasant; David
"The fact that they (the complicated property tax economy " Rhodes' office " major" tndustry.
proposed Pentagon
Cheesebrew,
Point Pleasant ;
Since the legislature
comprorruse to settle the sh1pyards) are wlllmg to comprom1se.
would not g1ve any further adJourned, Rhodes has Mrs Perry Sayre, Point
The property tax bill was deta1ls on the talk, Rhodes
ciauns speedily for about settle for half, shows that
Pleasant, John Paul Mayes,
these ar....mr\'aM,' ' he sa1d. worked out over four weeks of f1rst to the General Assembly vetoed several btlls, two of Point Pleasant, Elsie Kin$747,000 under a 1958law.
which
may
come
before
each
The General Account10g conference committee th1s year
Adm Hyman Rtckover 1s
chamber m a move to nlard, Southside, Johnny
trying to force Ule Navy and Off1ce, Co ngress ' meetmgs Since May 19, when
Howard, Falls Church, Va
The
supplemental ovemde
Pentagon brass to hold the mvesllgative arm, already the legislature adjourned for appropriatloos btll, cleared
Both
are
constdered
shipyard conglomerates to has reported the bhune rests a campaign break before for House constderation by consumer measures. One
Holzer Medical Center
Ule1r original contracts - prmc1pally on the Navy, lv1th Tuesday's prunary elections. the
House
Finance lumt repossessiOn rtghts for
(Discharges, June 7)
shipyard
inefficiencies
The compromise calls for Commtttee last week, pumps finance compames, Ule other
and take them to federal
thrown
m
Dtana
Adkins, Angela
court 1f necessary.
credits on any future unvoted some $128 mtllion tnlo the reqUires "urut pncmg" of
Ausbn,
Rosalee
Bosbc, Anna
Inadequate
spectficallons,
real
estate
tu
mcreases
Rtckover let fly some
state Welfare Department's items on grocery store
Church,
Ora
Crabtree,
choice epithets Monday informal changes in orders, startmg m 1977 The House budget
to
pay
for shelves.
Gerald Day, Charles Edbefore
the
Senate failures to deal wilh problems verswn of the bill mcluded accumulated Medteatd bills.
Both btils passed the wards , Vivian Ferguson,
subcommittee on pr10rtt1es as they arose and changes m tax credtts retroactive to
The supplemental spending legtslature by wtde margins
quality
standards
ail 1972; the Senate verswn measure also allocated more
Oscar Fmk, Lawrence
and economy
Fowler, Gtlbert Glass, Sherry
Drawmg a bead on the contributed to the tangle, a unplemeted Ule credtts m
Holtz, James Knapp, Opal
patrtotlSIII of Ule shtpysrd GAO offictal told the House 1979.
Mulford, Marcella Phillips,
conglomorates, Rtckover panel last week.
The bill seeks to stop
Harry Roush, Uoyd Shmn,
property owners from
Carolyn Smtth, Danette
receiving tax btlls mcreased
Snmth, Bertha Stanley, Juha
each year because of
inflation
Swan, Sr., Maxwell Wilson,
Carolyn Wmkler, Nada
Besides the tax credtts, the
Wolfe.
btil calls for a gradual
Mr Uncoln Russell was
reduction m the tax
(Birth, June 7)
evenmg VISitor of
Sunday School attendance
BY RUTH LARKINS
assessment rate on tangtble Saturday
Mr
and
Mrs. Jtrnmy Workon May 30was 49, the offermg
Marton Hayman and Grace personal property owned by Mr . and Mrs Harley
man,
daughter,
Gallipolis,
was $23 80 Worshtp servtces Louden have returned home businesses, as lon1 as the Johnson .
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Michael ·
Guy Russell and frtend of
were held at II a m wtth after spending the wmter m
The Me1gs County group of Cremeans, son, Midllleport;
Columbus were weekend the Black Lung Assoctatton
Duane Sydenstrtc ker Florida
Mr and Mrs. Richard Jonas,
v1s1tors of Uncoin Russeli will meet Sunday, June 13 at I daughter,
speaking from Eph . 6 1-17
Mrs Hayman has been a graduatmg class
Wellston
Mr and Mrs Ivan Shumate p.m at the meetmg hali next
Arthur Hawk of Anzona patient at St Joseph Hosp1tal
V1slllng
Mary
Pierce
over
and sons of Mansfteid were to Jack Ward's nile club -at
has been v1s1tmg relattves m Parkersburg but has
and friends 111 thts locality returned home and IS doing the weekend were Denver holiday vtsttors of Mrs
Curtis from Mt Hope, W. Va , Geneva Shumate and Mr and the mtersection of SR 143 and
and attended the alumm ruceiy
7 wtth Prestdent James_F.
banquet at Coolville.
Mr Ball has been a patient Mr and Mrs Hobert Newell , Mrs Larry Johnson and Kldd of Glouster and Haro1d
Jtmmy Archer and w1fe of at Veterans Memonal Mr and Mrs. Larry Curtis fam1ly Also VISiting were Cook of the Good Samaritan
Several people attended the Mrs Paul Pierce and sons of
Dayton, 0 spent Memonai Hospttal, but has returned
Black Lung Chmc present to
memortal
serVIces at Chester Mason
Day weekend w1th h1s home
talk and answer questions
Mr Robert Reeves, Bryan
parents, Mr and Mrs
Ernestine Hayman and Monday.
Alarge turnout from Metgs
Mary Pierce ts a patient at and Jamte of Mtddleport
Russell Archer and attended !.1la Ridenour were m
County,
West V1rgm1a and
church here Sunday morning
Lancaster, Ohio over the Veterans Memortal Hospital were Saturday afternoon surrounding areas ts asked of
Mr and Mrs. Russell Clme VISitors of Mr and Mrs
The Archers' daughter weekend They attended the
all who have hee~ turned
spent
part of last week m James Reeves
'
Joyce has moved back home graduation exercises Mrs
down and all working m coal
Moundsville,
W
Va.
wtUl
Mr and Mrs Paul Darneli mmes now. Also , anyone
from her teachmg postlion m Hayman' s granddaughter
CLEVELAND (UP!) Uletr
family
were Saturday evenmg recelVlng benefits now is Ohto Lottery executive
northern Ohw to take up a CaUly Fttzpatrtck was in the
Mr and Mrs. Eiza I.arkms guests of Mr. and Mrs. James
course at Ohw Umvers1ty
took
dinner wtth Mr. and Mrs Reeves They enJoyed a urged to come as these director Gerald Patromte
Genevieve Guthne has
benef1ts may be stopped announced today sales for
Fred !.arkms Sunday They cookout
received word of a daughter
anytime,
and aclton will be Ohio's first instant lottery
all went to the cemetery m
Mr. and Mrs Wtlllam d1scussed on preventmg this game wiD begin next Tuesday
born to Mr and Mrs. John
Boyce of Columbus, Mr
Cavmee (Beth Yost} of Sugar Mr . and Mrs Chester the afternoon.
for prizes ranging from $2 to
Mr and Mrs Roy Bogard George Wtlliam Venoy of happemng
Grove, 0. They will remam Fredertck on Fnday evemng and
$10,000.
All
medical
records
or
gtrls, Ed1son , Ohio were
with her parents there until
Players will rub gold foil
Mr and Mrs Charles D weekend guests of Mr and Columbus, Mr and Mrs
papers should be brought
the husband recetves h1s Woode
attended
the Mrs Vtrgll Bogard and Wilham Russell of Mmers- The VISitOrs Will aSSISt in from a circle, squares and
VIlie were Memorial hoitday
dtscharge from the servtce of Memonal Day servtces at family
prize box on their tickets. H
guests VISitors of Mrs Bertha reopenmg cases.
his country m about two Chester at I 30 p m Monday, at the Other
any
of the numbers in the
If transportatiOn to the
Bogard home
months
three
squares matches the
May 31 and the Tractor Pull were Floyd and Ronme Russeli
meebng place ts needed call
Saturday vtsttors of Mrs
Mrs Wtiber Parker ac- later
munber
of Ule circle they win
Mr. Stafford at 992-2393
Bogard, Cincmnall, Ohto, Mr
companted Florence and
Mr and Mrs Uoyd Brooks and Mrs David Dailey and Helen Johnson were Mr and before Saturday of 992-7724, the amount shown m the prtze
Samuel Mtchael to the and the1r Cub Scouts also Rae Lynn and Becky Pooler, Mrs Joseph L Johnson of so that 1! may be arranged box.
Satelltte Beach, Fla , Mr. and Wtves are welcome.
Ravenswood Cemetery on attended memonal services
H all three nwnbers in the
Chester
Mrs Everett Ray Johnson,
Sunday
squares
match the circle
at Chester and were part of
Asteak supper was enJoyed Audra, Jeffrey and Enc of
Clara Follrod attended the the parade, as were the
number
players
win at least
Ule Fred I.arktns home by Dublm, Mr and Mrs James
TWO KILLED
alumni banquet at Coolv1lle Eastern H1gh School Band, of at
$15,000
and
qualify
as
Mr and Mr and Mrs Fred
TOLEDO, Ohto (UP!)
Htgh School Saturday whtch some of the Alfred Larkins and Ernestme Johnson, Jam1e Sue, Todd
fmahsts m the Jackpot
Two persons were killed and Drawing for prizes of
evenmg, the 55th reun10n of young people are members Hayman, barbecued by thetr and Teresa, Mr. and Mrs
i:arry Johnson , G10a Rae, 17 mjured, two senously, $250,000, 500,000 and the $1
her graduahng class
Mr and Mrs Gerald son, Raymond !.arkms.
when a mint-school bus rmllioo grand prize.
Tahnee Jo and Brady, Mr
Mr and Mrs Delbert Yost Swartz and family of
carrymg
students to a school Tw~oliar and $5 winners
and Mrs. Kenneth Johnson ,
and j':lla Yost vtsited Martella and Mr and Mrs.
PRESIDENT
ADAMS
for
the
mentally retarded may collect immediately
Annette and Duane and Mr
cemeteries of relalives here, Robert Robmson and tarmiy
WHITTIER,
Calif
(UP!)
colitded
wtth
a car, hit a steel from any licensed Ohio
and
Mrs.
Lee
Roush,
Rodney,
and Eiia remained for a VISit of Belpre VISited Nina In an appropriate vtctory for
pole
and
overturned
today on Lottery sales agent. Persons
Cheryl
and
Elizabeth
Ann
w1th Genevteve Guthrie . Robmson and Clara Folirod
the
Btcentenntal
year
,
the
City's
west
Side
Police winnmg $200, $500, $1,000 and
and
Joey
of
Pomeroy.
R1 chard Yost also spent on Sunday
Samuel
Adams,
32, a busmess
satd
the
drtver
and
a
student
Mr
and
Mrs.
Joseph
$10,000 and jackpot finalists
Memonal Day weekend with
Wtlham Carr and Penm admmtstratton student, was
were killed
Johnson
and
Mr
and
Mrs
Mrs Guthrie
attended the tractor pull and
Many other folks have 'Firemen 's dmner on the elected president of the Everett Ray J ollnson and
body of Rio Hondo family were weekend guests
v1s1ted ce metem s and Chester Commons, Memonal student
College
Monday
of Helen Johnson
banquets m thts and Tuppers Day
Adams
said
he
was
a
dtrect
Mrs. Lena Knapp of LangsPiams communities
(ConUnued frllm pige 1)
descendant
of
the vilie was Sunday VISitor of
A good sized crowd atwere
suffering
heavy
losses.
- - - - - , Revolullonary War leader of Mr and Mrs Doyle Knapp,
tended ground-breakmg
Daily Sentinel
that name.
Kat!, Kevm and Charles
ceremomes for the new St.
I..OS ANGELES - DR. JOSEPH EMORY, convicted of
Paul Churc.at Tuppers Plams
abortion and murder m the past, was arrested Monday with his
OTEO
TO
THE
GOLDWATER
SURGERY
TEREST OF
Sunday, May 30 at 2 p m.
wife and son on murder charges m the deaths of 10 of 25 infants
MEIGS-MASON A~EA
PHOENIX, Ariz. (UPI) A very large crowd atwho dted under his care in less than three years
CHESTER L TANN~HILL Surgeons Monday Implanted
Extc Ed.
tended servtces for 1m Carr
Emory specialized m cheap services for Mextcan aliens,
ROBE ItT HOEFLICH
a steel-and-plasbc hlp JOint In
at the church here last
especially childbirth, providing unprofessional treatment
Publls~~J Edd~W ••cept Sen Barry Goldwater, RTuesday, May 2!i Relahves
"wiUl such wanton and reckless disregard for life tbat It '
sat urday by The Ohio Artz Goldwater, 67, has been
from New VIenna, Circleville
constituted
murder," said deputy DiBtrlct Attbrney J&gt;lnko
VOTING HIGH
Valley Publish
ing Com
increasmgly bo thered by
p~tny ,
111
court St,
and Lancaster, Ohw and
Boaznich.
An
earlier action to revoke Emory's license as an
The Me1gs County Board of
Pomeroy Ohio H769 arthritis, doctors sa1d. To
many frtends and relahves
osteopathic
physician
was stalled by legal delays
Business 6ft in Phone 992
make movement easter , Elections reported today that
2156 Editorial Phone 992
from Pomeroy and other
AiBo
arrested
were
Emory's wife, Harriet, 51, and their
2157
suergeons at Good Samaritan absentee ballotmg m today's
son,
Alan,
32,
who
authorities
said helped dellver babies and
places m Meigs County atSecond
class Ohio
po stag e Hospital resurfaced hts right prtmary was 473 ballots, IS
paid
at Pom~roy
tended
aided
Emory
in
other
medical
procedures although not I
Nortonal advert/song hlp jomt wiUl ' plastiC and htgh for a pnmary, a spokeshcensed.
Mr and Mrs Chares D • represen tativ e Ward
i
cedthebo
tth
f man satd
Griffith company , Inc , rep a
nea etopo
Woode and Nma Robmson
Bottlnetll &amp; Gallagher Dtv
hls thigh With a stamless steel
WASHINGTON - THE DEMOCRATIC NATIONAL
from here attended the
~57/~lf0~ 7A ve · New York ball, destgned to swtvel
convention
next month wtll hold its fights durmg the SOI!p
Chester hymn smg at Long
NEW
SWITCH
DATE
Subscrlp lo on rates
smoothly In the plastic JOint
Delivered by carrier Whtre
operas and show 1ts good deeds during prime time. "Our
Bottom U M Church,
The
swltchover
to
extended
a-v ailable 75 ce nts p&amp;r
Saturday evemng, May 29.
weefc
By Mqtor Route
area servtce between the 985 cand1dale will gtve his acceptance speech on prime time lf I
TwO ASSISTED
where carrier •t'l'vlce not
numbers
of the Western have to kill everyone in the audience to do It," National
available , Or1e month ,
SYRACUSE
On
June
2,
Mr and Mrs . Chester
SJ 25 By mall In Ohio and the Syracuse ER Squad at
Reserve Telephone Co. in the chairman Robert Strauss SBld Monday
W
Va
,
One
Veer
S22
00,
In a speech to the Women's DelllOCtatic Club he said there
Gorrell and !.mda of Tuppers
She months, Sll SO Three
12 35 p m. transported Luella Chester area and the will be no repeal of 1972 when the party fought over credentials
Plams spent Fnday evemng
Months S7 00 Elsewhere
Pomeroy ,
Middleport ,
$26 00 yea r ~lx montl'lS Moore to Pleasant Valley
wtth Charles and Helen
Racme
and
Rutland
areas of and the platform during prime time and normnated George
Sll 50 three m'onths , 57 so
Hospttal.
On
June
4
at
5
22
McGovern at 5a.m. Strauss added that if he has anything to do
Woode
Subscr 1pt10n price Incl udes
p m Paul Burton, Syracuse, The General Telephone Co of wtth 1!, Prestdent Ford's support of Richard Ntxon before the
~ unday T1m es Sentinel
Nma Robtnson attended
was taken to Holzer Med1 cal Ohto Will take place on July restgnatlon and pardon a month later "wtll be an ISSue" in the
hymn practice al the home of 1--~------~ Center.
!8 " " ' .Jul y lfi
fall campatgn
ll
~~
•
By GENE BERNHARDT

-·
r.=======~

·.·.

A Chronicle of America

Albert's weekend
announcement he will retire
at the end of the year lgruted
a major leadership battle for
the next Congress. Senate
Democratic Leader M1ke
Mansfteld and Republican
L.eader Hugh Scott prevtously

Rickover mad
about ripoff

June 8, 1776:

HOSPITAL
NEWS

General John Thomas having died of smallpox on June
command of the American forces in Canada fails to
Sullivan. He dispatches 2,000 men under
Thompson to seize Troia Rivl~rea. on the
St Lawrence about midway between Montreal
Quebec Today, misled perhapo intentionally by tts c:ana:;:;; l
dian guide, Thompson's force blunders into the midst
about 6,000enemy troopo, covered by a Brltlsb neet In
river The Americanuttack, bultar•evaiSti:routtnutmbere~ ;·;~:&lt;J
the British capture 236, Including Thompson. Badly scattered, the Americans retreat through swamps- the last or,
the 1,100 •urvlvors straggling Into the camp at Sorel late,;
on June 11 On the 13th, Sullivan resolves to evacuate : :
Canada.

Alfred

Social Notes

Long Bottom
News Notes

to be aired

Instant

lottery

•
startmg

I

3- The Daily Sentmel,Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Tuesday, June 8, 1976

I

Colonel owners refuse terms to join NBA
By RICHARD WALKER
be "premature " to write an
I..OUISVILLE, Ky. (UP! ) obituary for the Colonels or
- The owners of the the ABA.
Kentucky Colonels of the
An NBA commtttee has
American Basketball proposed the league accept
Assoetation Monday refused four ABA teams for
to accept the $4.5 millioo membership at a cost of $4.5
entry fee and oUler terms mtllion each, plus an
required of ABA teams agreement to absorb the
seekmg membership in the costs of buymg out the ABA
older NBA
By MILTON RIQIMAN
teams not accepted and other
The dectslon by John Y. costs
connected
wtlh
UPI Spartl Edllor
Brown and hts wife, Ellie, disbandtng Ule ABA
The four ABA teams
NEW YORK (UP!) - Both stdes have gtven a little. Boston leaves m doubt the future of
the
Kentucky
franchise,
expected
to jom the NBA are
:has sweetened the pot stili hoping to sign Fred Lynn, Carlton
though
Brown
says
it
would
lndtana,
Denver,
New York
:Flak and Rtck Burleson. and their financial adviser. Jerry
: ~ein, has come down some Lynn, once said to be looking
:for $2 million, likely would listen now to $1 million over five
•Years providing the Red Sox included a no-trade provision.
: That's be(:ommg the big thmg now, the no-trade clause, and
:doesn't Ulat strike you funny?
: How long ago was it that Andy Messersmith and the rest of
this fellow ballplayers were bleedmg so much and struggling so
:hard for their "freedom" ciaimmg they should be free to go
PARIS (UP I) - Bjorn
:wherever they Uke at Ule end of each season, even from a Borg sat with his head his first major lltle
The other seed to qualify
:purely moral standpoint. So they fmally get their freeom, and between his knees, his
for
the last etght was Manuel
•what's the first thing they do ' Insist on ooe of these no-trade shoulder-length blond hair
Orantes
of Spam but the
:clauses tying them to the club for five years Now Ulat's what soaked with sweat, and said:
Forest
Hills'
champion had to
lyoucaU a perfect case of wanting to have tt both ways
"I must he getting old."
W81t
untd
today
to find out h1s
: To go on, though, Oakland has a number of players who
He SBld it with a wry smile, quarter-fmal opponent. Eddie
:J~aven't signed the1r contracts yet, etther, fellows like Joe which was just as well
,Rudi, Vida Blue, Gene Tenace, RoiUe Fmgers, Sal Dando and considering he was just one Dibbs and Poland's Wojtek
:Bert Campaneris, and Kapstein represents Ulem all except day over 20, but it reflected Fibak were scheduled to
resume thetr fourth-round
:Slue and Bando.
the gruelling 3-hour, 40- match thts morning, Dtbbs
: Only a week is left before the trading deadline and with time minute match he had just
growing short, it isn't at ali cotnculental Charlie Fmley and endured defending his havmg won the ftrst set, 7-6,
D1ck O'Connell are talking all Ule time or Ulat Red Sox French Open tennis title in on a 7-5 tie-breaker, and
Ass1stant General Manager John Claiborne IS talkmg wtth temperatures that hit 98 Fibak gettmg Ule second, 7-li,
before darkness.
Kapstem.
degrees.
The top half of the men 's
These talks have generated all kinds of rumors. One IS that
"That was the most t1rmg
the Red Sox, rather than hold sttll for Lynn's demands, are match I have played m my singles draw was slated to
considermg trading their 24-year-{)id super sophomore who career. I was just washed out play today. The Umted States
was the MVP and rookie of Ule year last season and is hitting alter two sets. I have never was assured of at least one
quarterflnalist because Brtan
345 i1UW
felt like that before m my Gottfried and Harold
The Red Sox supposedly are willing to gtve up Lynn and life," said the Swede.
SololnOll were to play each
Burleson for Rudt and Campaneris
"Now I'm 20, I guess 1t wtll other.
Oaklsnd and Boston both are havmg bad seasons The A's, be all downhill from now on,"
In the other matches,
wilmers m their diVISIOn for the past five years and world he said, the smile returhlng .
Arthur
Ashe faced h1s
cljamps Ulree times, are next to last m the American L.eague
The Monday match on toughest match of the
West and Ule Red Sox are third m the East DiviBion
center court had been the
Charlie Finley doesn't deny he's talkmg wtth the Red Sox best to date m the two-week tournament agatnst
Hungary's Balasz Taroczy,
abOut a deal.
championships With Borg who eltrnmated the 1970 and
''I have been m constant conversahon w1Ul Dtck O'Connell barely beating FrancoiS
with regard to a possible trade," he says "I'm also talking Jauffret of France, 14 years 1971 chanipton, Jan Kodes, m
the prevtous round m straight
with other clubs. I'll deal w1Ul anybody "
his semor, 6-4, 6-3, 3-0, ~. IB- sets. Raul Ram1rez of Mex1co
\Yhat about Lynn'
8, before an overflow crowd took on Belgium's Bernard
"I don 't want to bandy players' names around," says Charlie
The VIctory put hiiil into the Mtgnot and Gutllermo V1las
FiHiey
quarter-fmals of the compell- taclillct Corrado Barazzutti of
'lllat still doesn 't alter the fact Lynn's name has been tloo he has won for the past
mentioned m conversations by the Red Sox With Finley, and two years and against the Italy
Vtlas again has been
the A's' owner doesn't deny Ulat etUler.
only man tn have beaten hun seeded to met Borg m a
Whether Ule A's deal with the Red Sox or someone else, Joe here, Adrtano Panatta of
Rllllt seems the most likely player to be traded by Fmley Italy That defeat came when repeat of last year's final and
recause he probably could get the most for him. Looking at the Borg was 17 and playmg for the Swede S81d he thought
Vilfs would mdeed come
other stde, though, I'd say Fred Lynn still will be wtth Boston
through the top half of the
nelityear along with Carlton Ftsk. There's no question the Red
draw
So'x are trymg as best they can to sign Lynn, Flak and
"I cannot see Ashe lastmg
Blli"leson
"We want all three men to play for thia club," says
Clatborne "We have made what we think are excellent offers
tn aU three . Our offers were countered w1th' offers which we two
thlhk are infiationary,and out of !me. When we get to the point
where we think we can no longer negotiate, we'll call a press
.
conference and put all the facts on the table so that the public
and the press can judge for Ulemselves."
In !.PPRS Uttle League
The Red So~ never have said what they've offered Lynn but
The Middleport L1tfle
achon
Saturday, Portland
they have said they feel they've been "very liberal " TranLeague
Braves had a
slated, lhat probably means Uley've already offered hun dropped a pair to the host
rela1tvely
easy lime of 1t
Pomeroy
Ttgers
13-hnd
21-5.
$300,000 for Ulree years, and if they have gone Ulat high, whtch
Monday
mght
as they downed
In
the
first
game
Terry
I wouldn't doubt, Ulen Fred Lynn could make roughly hve
the
VISiting
Middleport
InAdkins
had
a
three-bagger
times more in salary thiS year than he did last year, and that
dtans,
11-()
Dave
Demoskey
and
a
smgle
to
pace
their
doesn't sound to me like a half bad year at all. Even for the
team to v1ctory. John Smtth helped h1s team to ratse their
best-looking second year man in all baseball.
chtpped 10 a double whtle record to 4-0 by stroking a
Cliff Icenhower, Brtan home run and double as d1d
Whaley, Mtke Kennedy, and Terry Wayland Tun Justts
VAUGHAN IS MVP
Brtal Wtll each had a smgie. contnbuted a tnple and
Bill Vaughan, a Junior at Wmnmg pttcher Jay Evans double whtle Jtm Boyer,
Case Western Reserve truck out mne and walked Ricky Ebersbach, and Dave
University In Clevlenad, etght
Me:Ufows all had a smgle
has been named the Most
Jeff Wayland ptcked up hts
I.osmg pttcher W Connelly
Valuable Player on the struck out three wh1le second wm by fanmng e1ght
"
varsity baseball team for walking ten T Ward had a !ndtans whtle tsswng just one
the winter-spring sports double for Portland, and S free pass and four htts.
season. Bill Is the son of Souder and Dave Bryant each
A!Ulough Ule Indians' Apnl
Mr. and Mrs. Richard had two singles
King was effective for the
Vaughan, 671 s. Third Ave.,
ftrst 'three mmngs, the In'
Middleport.
dians
dropped the1r record to
THE
TIGERS
unleashed
an
l'.reviously undefeated
2-3
M1ss
King walked etght
la.hit
attack
in
their
second
Powell's Uttle League Giants :.::::::::::::.::..:::,,:.,:,:.,::·:., ::::.:_,:,:.,..:,:,:,:,:,:,:.:,:.,::::::. . ..
and
retired
s1x Braves by
game
to
win
21-5.
Otis
Core
were handed their ftrst loss of
THE GIANTS got revenge
way
of
the
strtke
out route
htt
a
home
run,
double
,
and
Ule,season by the Racme A's m Ule second contest by
King
had
a
tnple
and
smgle
two
singles
to
lead
the
attack
Saturday in the f1rst game of platmg 10 runs m the second
whde
Dave
Hoffman
and
Brtan
Wlil
had
two
triples
and
a q9ubleheader at Racme, 4- mnmg enroute to a 14-7 wm
Dave
Jannerelh
each
had
a
a
double
With
John
Smtth
2.
The team pounded out 17 htts,
The game was !led 2-2 led by J Ftelds with a homer gettmg a trtple, double, and smgle.
I
000 00-- 0 4
gomg mto Ule last mmng , but and double Sheets, Young, smgle
203 42-11 9
John Porter tripled and Jay and J McKinney also had Cliff Icenhower had two B
Rees followed w1th a home two-baggers Winning pt!cher doubles and a smgle while
run to win the game Zane Chns Allen gave up nine htts, Mark Frtend had one twoBeegle had a double for the walked six, and struck out bagger and one smgle Terry . . - - - - - - - - - . ,
Adkins, Brian Whaley, Doug
wmners Winmng p1tcher, six.
Kent Wolfe, fanned 10 and
Kent Wolfe led Ule losers Eblm and Mtke Kennedy had
gave up no walks.
wtth two trtples and a double. singles COre was the wmning
R Stewart had the only Scott Frederick also had a p1tcher, and he teamed up
extra base hit for the Gtants, double. Losing pttcher Zane w1th Smith to allow only four
a triple !.osmg ptlcher J. Beegle allowed nme htts m hits while striking out etght
Fields allowed only four htts two innmgs whtle fannmg one and walking nine
!.9stnl! pitcher Troy Ward
while also fanning ten and and walking two Melanie
teamed
up w1th S Souder to
giving up one walk. He hit two Weese relieved m Ule second
fan
stx
and
1ssue ten walks
batters. TheA'srecordtsnow and gave up etght htts, had
Dave
Bryant
and Ward got
3-3.
three strtke outs, and walked
triples while Dtan Ward and
G
101 00 -2 5 two
A '
002 02 - 4 4 G
MIDDLEPORT, 0.
0 10 3 01 --14 17 S. Beegle collected a smgle
A
0 3103-7 9 each.

Sport.Parade

and San Antomo, with league merger represented a
Kentucky and St. Louts left "holdup " He SBid Ule ABA
out The NBA trustees are negollators "gave away all
scheduled to consider the lhe1r leverage and left themapplications at a meeting 111 selves at the mercy of the
Hyanms, Mass., begmrung NBA."
Sunday
The ABA president said his
"It's a little too early to tell CirCUit has heen "disrupted
exactly what's gomg to hap- all year long With two teams
pen," Brown said after !Denver and New York)
returnmg Monday from a makmg application to the
secret ABA trustees' meetmg NBA It des troyed the
1n Chicago.
credtbtlity of our league "
Brown, president of the
Brown said there IS no
ABA, satd the NBA terms for guarantee the NBA trustees

will accept the merger terms
Brown said a more realistic
prtce for ABA teams to enter
Ule NBA would have ranged
between $2 million and $2.5
mtlhon He said Kentucky
probably would have applied
to be part of the merger If the
entry terms had heen more
''reasonable "
Brown sa1d tj1e ABA would
have to experience a- "new
bh-th" at a meeting of Its
trustees m Salt Lake City
June 23, to remain viable If

the merger !alb through . But
he said the league does h~ve
alternatlvu becauae ''we've
got six or the finest teama in
" pro basketball."
"Whatever comes out of
this wtll be good," Brown
said "It wUi either put an end
to all this conversation about
'the great NBA' and let the
ABA forget abo~t the NBA or
it wUI put together the best of
all pro basketball that,
hopefully, wlli benefit the
fams ."

Borg advances to quarterfinals

Assemhiy on 'oh Wednesday
J

Wolfpen
Black lung
News Notes questions

I'

-By

Ron Mackenzie &amp; Jeff MacNelly /01976 United Feature Sy ndicat e 1

.
'"
"
·-'
II\ I

Malpractice suit
asks for $35,000
A $35,000 malpracbce swt
has been flied in Gallia
County Common Pleas Court
by a Jackson man on behalf
of his three-year-old son.
Piamllffs in Ule action are
David Paul Crusan, a minor,
Ulree years of age by his next
friend Lawrence P O'usan
Jacks~n Ohio and I.awrenc~
P. ~. against Dr. G.
Wilson Bowers, Jr , Holzer
Medical Center, Gallipolis
and Holzer Hospital Foundation, Gallipolis
Accordmg toUle complamt,
on May 20, 1972, whtle
plamtlff, David Paul Crusan,
was a pahent at the Holzer
Medtcal
Center,
approXllllately two days after
h1s birth, a Circumcision was
performed by defendant G.
Wtlson Bowers, Jr . M.D
Plamtiffs father Lawrence
P Crusan contends that Dr.
Bowers was responsible for
the post-operative care and
followup of the plamtiff,
David Paul Crusan. He
further clatms that the
defendant was negligent in

II I I

""
"'
, his performance of t~~' M
operabon and m h1s super,,
viswn o! the post-operahv~ .t
care and follow-up and as ,a, ,
direct and proxunate resull~
of the negligence, com;
plicallons developed whi&lt;;_l.\;.
caused Dav1d Paul Crusan
great pam and anguiBh. Due ..
to high susceptibility to hi~ •
urinary tract mfecti&lt;lq,
developed.
The petition states piamtllf:-:
also developed dysuna and
had great dtfftculty 1n.n
urmtallon whtch neceSSltateq,~
a second operallon.
..
In his claun, the father a~s&lt;t~
contends that the negligenc&amp;.J
of the defendant was '"
unknown until Aug 12, 197~ ..
when the plaintiff took h\~
mmor son to a specialist fop"~
exammatwn
The father on behalf of hiS, 1
son demands JUdgment for _,;
$25,000 and for hunself 11.':
$10,000 judgment for ex• I'
penses incurred for medicalno
care and hospitaltzatton. """

.

.~

·"
.... . p

Travel trailer
stolen from . ·-"
Honda Sales '"'"
1111J:

TWO WIN DEGREE
Two Me1gs Counhans
recetvmg degrees Saturday
durmg the spring commencement of Bowlmg Green
State University were Glenn
Emerald Enslen, Jr , 404
Lincoln St ., Middleport,
bachelor of sctence, and
Frank Paul Girolami, 132
Butternut Ave., Pomeroy,
bachelor of science In
educatwn.
UNIT CALLED
RACINE - The Racine
Fire Department was called
Saturday at 4:05p.m. to the
JliD Wtcklme reSidence on
Yellow Bush Road. Seven
men and two trucks answered
the call.
must file claims at any
regional lottery offtce and
jackpot finalists also must
meet a deadline

"

l

A 24'h foot travel trail&amp;..
valued at $5,300 was taken::
sometime Monday mght frolll"'
the lot at SmtUl Honda Sales,
Upper Rt. 7. Steve Betz
discovered the trailer WI\S :mtssmg_ at 8 05 a.m toda:t:,
The tratler ts gold and
whtte wtth green stripes.
Sheriff's deputies are irfvestigatmg
•~
Deputies were called
Mond~y
to mvestigate
vandalism at the VFW Farm'
located at the junction of Rt:o~
141 and 775.
'" N
Glen Soles, 406 Jacksow•:,
Pike, sa1d someone scattered -2
beer bottles, glasses and' r.
trash around a butlding '
located on the property All'
electrtc meter was removed•""
from 1ts pole.
"' '
n o~

Berrys World

~.;:

---=-------------..~

"

.-

' •J

News •• in Briefs

\

...... ...

111 1,

" fl ~

'

,.. .~u

~-~
' I

,,

.

'"

OFFICE
OF

&lt;

·~J

GON611ESSIONAL
AFFAIRS

u

,...

..

"'
-,
Cl1976by NEA Inc

"In fight ol reca nt developments, maybe we'd
better change that name "

,,,,

.

Tigers win
Saturday
at Portland

Braves defeat

lndiansll-0

Giants
fu first

'd efeat

CANVAS
FOOtwEAR
by Keds
&amp; Converse
heritage house

Syracuse, Racine split
The Syracuse Reds and the
Racille B team m Uttle
!.eague play spilt a doubleheader Saturday at Syracuse.
Catcher Eric Cunnmgham m
the first game led Syracuse to
a 14-8 wm wtth a home run,
trtple, three doubles, and a
btg 8 RBis. Wmnmg pttcher
Brtan Allen walked seven and
fanned two.
R. Imboden led the losers
with a triple while losmg
pitcher Richard Dugan
issued 4 walks while fannmg
five.
R
!50 0 2B-- a 9
S
534 211- 14 10
THE SECOND j!ame saw

much longer on thts court
With these heavy balls,'' sa1d
Borg. " They suit Vilas
perfectly and I don 't think he
wtll be beaten m the next two

Redlegs win
two games in
weekend play

.

Philadelphia
Pit1sburgh
N ew York
St Louis
Ch tcago
Montreel

East
W l

Pet

34

708

14

GB

29 22 569 61 'l
26 29 473 11 1 1

23 29 442 IJ

22 '19
17 18
West
W L

43 1 1)1 7
378 1517

Pet

GB

Oakl and
Call fornre

24 18 jjtJ / 8'17
2~ 31 407 11• J
Monday 's Results
Kansas City 10 Detro it 0
M inn eso ta 1 Ctevo tand 2
Texas 6 Ba lt imor e "
fOn ty games schedul ed)
Today' s ,robable Pitchers

I All

pm

Mtnnosote (Hughes 1 6) t~t
Cle\le tend !Eckersley J 4) 1 30

Pm

Texas (Peterson
o Jl at
Baltimor e fA !e)( and er J 2) , 7 JO
pm
Ca lrrornla (Ross 3 6) !!!I New
Yo rk (E II IS 44) Bpm
Oakland !Mitch ell 1 Jl a t
Bos ton &lt;Tiant 7 J l. 7 30 p m
Wednesd•y's Gamet
Dett'"oil at Kansas City nig ht
Chi cago at Milwaukee, night
Mtnnesota at Cleveland , night
Texas at Baltimore. night
CBIJforn ta at New York . nrght
Oeklend at Boston night
Mator Leatue Results
By U nlted Preu International
Nahonal Leagu e
Cinclnnall
000 000 lJO- 4 6 2
Ptttsburg h 000 001 31x- 5 6 I
B tl lmg hl!l m
Mc Enan ey ( 81
and Ptummm er Klson Moo~e
(Il l Giusll (9) and SanQuitten
WP --M oose ( 7 I)
L P'-M CE
nancy ( 1 3) HRs- Cinc tnnell

Morga" 2 191 Rose 191
Pittsburgh Robinson 19!. Oliv
(7)

Zlsk (61

S t e~rge ll

Ol

York

!Onl y

oames

sc hedu led I

American Ltagut

Detroit

000 000 000- 0 • 2

Kansas City 030 002 S0.- 10" 1
Ruh le, Grill i (7) o!tnd Klmm

Busby , Lltlell (7)
WP- Busby (2 1)
(4 2)

~tnd

Sllnson
LFI'- Ruht e

HR- Kanas Cit y, M cRae

())

Minnesota
Clevel and

001 030 03Q- 7 II J
001 000 OIQ- 2 9 I

Goltz (6 21 and Wvn egar,
Walls, Thomas IS) and Ashby

LP- Walts 10 II

HRs--Mln

nesota Wynegar (6 ), KUliCk
(6) Cl e\letand , Menning (-4)

TeKas
Baillmore

120 003 ooo- 6 12 I

1100 010 012- • 9 I

Um barger Foucault (9) and
Sundberg . Grim sley , Cuellar
( 6) t'lnd Ouncan WP- Umbarg
er (6 &lt;I ) LP- Grlmsley ( I~ )
HR- 8elt tmore, Grlch !Sl

I Only games schedul ed)

tntern•llonal Lng"ue
Standings
United Press International

W l. Pd G.B

Rhode tstand 32 19, 627
51 LOU IS
500 100 010- 1 11 0 Toledo
27 24 .l29 l
Houston
o10 000 320- 6 9 2 Syracuse
24 23 lll 6
Curl iS, Hr&amp;bosky (7) and
22 22 lOO 6'1'
Simmons Nlc kro , Griffin (4) , Tidewater
24 24 lOO 6'h
Steber! (6)
Pen tz (B) end Richmond
21 25 457 6'1'
Johnson WP- Cur t ls (4 51 LP Memphis
- N iekro (3 6) HR- Hous lon , Rochester
19 23 •52 8'1,
Johnson (6)
Charleston
19 28 404 11
Mond1y's Rtaulla
P hladelph ta ~00 10::1 001- 9 ll I Toledo 12 Memphis l, lst, 7
Los Angeles 400 010 001- 6 10 o
Reed , Gl!lrber (6) and Boone , Innings
Rt'IOd en, Houoh (4 ), Mershall Toledo 9 Memphis J, 2nd, 7
Innings
(8 ) and Yeager WP- Reed IS
1)
LP ........ Hough (7 1) • HRsRochester u Charleston 6
Phlladelpt'll!! L u z I n S k I 18 ) Richmond 14 Syracuse 10
At len ( 31 Los Ano el es Cey
Only games scheduled
1101

76 Olds Cutlass
Supreme Coupe
Burgundy fin , burgundy

vinyl bucket seats, console,

air, tape player, SS wheels,
radial f1res, 6 000 mtles

'5295

Kan- &amp; Van landt
You' ll Like Our Quollty

Way of Doing Business
GMAC FINANCING

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Til!" m. sat.

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USED CARS

992-5342

&lt;''

Swan , Lockwood (9 ) and
Grote, Foster (1 2l end R
Da..-ls LP - Swan C2 6 ) HR -·
San Diego Winfield (9 )

Times EDTI

Detro it (Roberts 4 4) a1
K ans~ s City (Leonard 5 1). 8 30
pm
Cht ca go {J ohnson 3 Sl at
Milwaukee !Travers 6 2~ 8 30

er

N ~w

San Dieg o

~~~~·.

INC.

t.

Major League Standi ngs
Bv Untted Pr ess International
Nitlonal League

This Week's SptCI•t

r

~~

the SCOREBOARD

Cmctnna tt
32 20 615
The Pomeroy Rediegs Los
Ange les
31 23 574 2
picked up two v1ctones 10 San 0 1ego
27 23 540 4
27 29 482 7
Peewee ac hon ove r the Houston
A tlanta
20 30 400 11
weekend by downmg the host San Fnmc lsco 21
33 389 12
Monday's R e~ ults
Rutland Angels on Frtday 17P1ttsburgh 5 Cln c1 nn at 1 4
13 and rompmg over the St
Loui s 7 Hou s ton 6
Pomeroy Angels on Satur- Phll~delphla 8 Los Angeles 6
san D iego 5 New York 1
day, 11-5
(Only gam es scheduled )
In Fnday 's game the
Today s Probable Pttch ers
(All Times E OTI
vtctors jumped off to a 4-0
Allanta
INiekro
3 4)
at
lead m the ftrst and were Chicago (Bur ris 2 71 2 30 p m
Cincmnao 1Alcala S 1) at
never headed Wmmng pitPtttsburgh CRooker 6 .2) , 8 35
cher Jackie Welker fanned pm
ftve Angels and walked
Sl LOUI S (Forsch I ll at
Hous ton (Oterke r 55), 8 35
twelve, but teammates Brtan pm
Korn, Ralph Sham, and Brett
Ph1tad elph ta (Chnstenson 6 2 )
a1 Los Ange les ( John 2 J ), 10 30
Korn (along w1lh Welker) pm
socked doubles to lead the
New York (Loltctl 2 7l at San
htttmg Brett Korn , Sham, Otego (F r elsleben 3 I I 10 p m
!Fryman 6 Jl at
and Damn Roach also had SanMontrenl
Fran osco (Dr ess ler I 2)
smgies
11 05 p m
Wednes day 's Games
Losmg
p1tcher
Jon Atlanta
at Ct'lt cago
umgstreth combmed with Ct nCi at P ttl sb urgh, n tgh t
Doug Priddy and Dan Davts St Louis at Houston night
Phlladelphta at Los Ang ntght
to strtke out etghth Redlegs New
York at San Ot eg o night
but they walked 21. Davts Montreal a t San Francisco
contnbuted a trtpie and a
American League
smgle m the losing cause,
East
w L Pet GB
Ken Wtse had two smgles, New York
28 19 560 and Bobby Guyer had one Baltimore
24 25 490 5
22 24 d78 5' ,
p
416 06-17 7 Boston
22 26 4S8 6'/:r
Cl eveland
R
050 17- 13 5 Detroit
21 27 438 l'h
Milwaukee
18 26 409 B1h
West
,On Saturday the Redlegs
w L Pet GB
had an easter hme of it as Kansas Ctty 31 18 633
28 20 S8J 2117
they plated stx runs m the Texas
25 21 S4J 4 1/,
Chtcago
first mnmg and then coasted Minnesota
25 24 SIO 6
to the wm The v1s1bng
Angels outhlt the hosts, but
losmg pitcher Parker Long
walked 11 while fannmg nine
Bret Korn collected three of
the four smgles for the
wmners while Brtan Korn got
the other.
Chrts Shank fanned ftve
and walked seven m ptckmg
up the wm. he gave up two
smgles to Scott Hysell and
one each to Ryan Ohver,
Chrts Kennedy, Sean Dodge,
and Darrm Hayes
A
021 02- 5 6
R
621 2a--11 I

HE KNOWS HIS INSURANCE!

~

Standings
Averages
Results

rounds ''

the v1sitors' bats get hot as
- - - -.
Uley scored an 1mpress1ve 24i"\1\M,COJLD YOU
7 victory Tony hnboden led
TE LL ME ABOUT
1HE HOJSE 'I'OU
the winners w1th some fine
ADVERllSto tt.J
defensive play and a hot bat
as he socked two home runs
~~E -~
and a smgie to knock In seven
runs Also homering were R
Lyons, A. Pape, and T
Brinager
Wmmng pitcher Steve
I
Ftsher struck out three and
_\
walked seven while gtvmg up
~
seven hits.
'
Malcolm Guinther and !..
' ·-'- - ...._
l&gt;ickens combined to strtke ~
out only one while walking 16.
R
M7 17- 24 L7
IWUNIN~
~~'ENCY
Mrddteporl, Oh•o
s
021M- 7 7 . . . .- .. . . . . .. . . . . . .. . . . . nu
................'.'.2·2.3.42. . . .

I'UILDS

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When you need money for home improvements, or any good
reason, talk to us. We handle HomeOwner Loans Q';lickly, easily
and with consideration. Amounts up to $15,000 available.

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COMPANY
12r, K Mam Street 992-2171
Pomeroy. Ohio

'"

�4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, June 8, 1976
FITNESS COURSES
Rio Grande College - Rio
Grande Coinmunily College
will be offering a series of
activity courses in tennis,
swimming , golf , and fitn ess
during its swnmcr school
for just his SI!Cond vicwry of since May l.
terms. Evening courses in By RICK GOSSELIN
UPI
Sports
Writer·
the year. "
The Royals are bringing
tennis and lifetime fi tness
Though the season is hardly Busby along gingerly and tbe
For
the
first
time
in
his
will be offered for the first
career Steve Rusby of the two months old, Busby one-time ace, who now has
SYRACUSE - Behind the summer term (June I4-Jul y Kansas City staff has found already has been on the the fourth best record among
hitting and pitching of Jeff 16) and evening courses in out what it's like to struggle. disa bled list twice because of starters on the Kansas City
Hubbard, the Syracuse In- swimming will be offered
Therefore, he was more a strained shoulder . He staff, has no complaints.
the second summer
de penden l team Sunday during
than happy to see the Tigers remained in Florida for eight
When asked if he would
term (July 19_Augusl 20).
captured its fifth straight
In addition, the coflege will come rolling into town days at the start of the season have liked to pitch a complete
league win here by downing a
Monday night. · The hard- and spent 17 days on the game, Busby replied : "It's
lou h Middle ort club 6_4_ be offering cour ses in Water thr pwin g ri g ht -ha nd er disabled list in May. The not important. How I feel
g
. P
'
Safety Instruc tor as well as
. After giv~ng_up all fHourbbrunds Treatment of Athletic In- pitched two4Iil ball over six De troit victory was his first does not ma tter . Whitey
In ear y mnmgs,
u ar • . .
.
·
f
innings to beat Detroit, 10.0,
I Herzog,
K ~ n Ra R
City
settled down and blanked the JUn es . ~eg_ls l ra h on . or
visitors the rest of the way. Sum mer SessiOn One Will be
Trailin g 4-2 going into the Jun e 14 and July 19 for
bottom of the eighth, Hub- Swnmcr SessiOn Two. For
bard unloaded a grand slam more InformatiOn, call the
to notch th e co me-from- Offi ce of AdmiSSI O~s - RIO
behind victory.
Grande College - RIO Grande
seventh solo homer of the solo shots. "As long as l ' v~
Hubbard fanned five and Commun ity College at 245- By POHLA SMITH
UP! Sports Writer
5351
night in the eighth inning to -been playing, interesting
walked only two while batPITISBURGH IUPI )
give Pittsburgh a 5-4 victory things have transpired when
terymate Mick Ash was busy
Pete Rose said it was "the ove r Cincinnat i in the the Pirates and Reds played
hitting two for three. There
wierdest thing I ever saw," na tionally televised game each other. When we play
were some rine defensive
FA ~ILY REQUEST
but most of the other Pirates and tie a major league homer against them, anything can
plays on both sides.
The famil y of Ella Mae and Reds figur ed their for the most bases-empty happen ."
·
Middl eport's Rick Van - Eppl e Re ut er, wh o was Monday night home run
homers
in
a
nine
inning
game:
Cincinnati's Joe Morgan,
Matre lost a tough one as he buried Sunday, requests that contest was about par for the
''That's our history, man ,'' who socked two of the
yi elded eig ht hi ts whil e any dona tions in her memory course.
said Pirates' captain Willie homers, said, "usually it
fanning three and walking a be sent to the Meigs County
Richie Zisk pinch-hit the Stargell, who had one of the happens a lot sooner." He
like number. Sandy Clonch Heart Associa tion in cttrt! of
was referring to the fact that
went 3 for 5 for the losers the Pomeroy Postmaster.
Royals
are
12·0
over
Pomeroy
A-s
the
sl!lllfest never really got
while Mick Childs was 2 for 4.
going
until the eighth inning.
Syracuse travels to Point
The Pomeroy Royals in respectively. Chris Wqods,
The
first hit of the game
Pleasanl next Sunday for a
Pon y action Sat urd ay Jeff Grueser, and Todd
MEET TIIURSDAY
never
carne until Bill
battle for the league lead.
All candidates of the Big romped over the Pomeroy Rawlings all had singles.
Robinson
singled off Reds'
Losing pitcher Ray Stewart
M
0II 200 000-4 10 2 Bend -Reg atta Queen contest A's 12-0 behind the one-hit
Billingham in
starter
Jack
S
000 020 04x- 6 8 I are to meet at 7 p.m. Thurs- pitching of Mike Triplett . and Keith Musser teamed up
the
fifth.
The
first
run was not
to
strike
out
two
and
walk
day at the Meigs Inn . They Triplett fanned 13 and walked
scored
until
Pirate
Frank
are to lake two sen ior pic- only two while giving up the seven.
Taveras
collected
the
tures wi th them and also a only hit, a single, to Ray
Pirates'
second
hit,
stole
COLUMBUS (UP!) dress fo r a group picture to be St ewart.
•·arveiBoy
came on strong in second and went home on
Chris Tayl or and Chuck
taken during the evening.
double errors in the sixth.
Kennedy led the winners with the stretch to win the $1,600
Pirate starter Bruce Kison
a triple and two singles, featured pace at Scioto
never
gave up a hit untU
Downs Monday night by I ~.
Morgan
led off the seventh
lengths over Til)a Gale,
Mr . and Mrs. Charl es Mr . and Mrs. John Hetzer.
NEW YORK (UPI ) with
a
homer.
That blast to
Farve! Boy, driven by Brad
Powell from Florida, Mrs.
Hecent visitors with Mr. Detr oit outfielder ·Ben
right
center
field
started ·a
Farrington, covered the mile
George Wolf of Chester, and and Mrs. . Chester Mundry Oglivie, who hit .500 and hit
chain
reaction.
in 2:04 and returned $4.60,
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Flowers of and Lori were Mr. and Mrs. three home runs last week,
AI Oliver and Stargell led
$3.40
and $3.20. Tina Gale
Belpre visited with Mrs. Rose Charles Price and Bobbie was named the American
off
the Pirates' seventh with
paid $6 and $6.80 while the
Thomas this week.
Pi- ice, Mr. and Mrs. Paul League Player of the Week,
backto-back
homers to right
third horse, Adiopatch, paid
Robin Humphrey, student Whal ey and Kenny, Mr. and AL President Lee MacPhail
center,
and
one out later,
$3.60.
at Ohio Stale University, Mrs. Roger Dillon, Scott and announced Monday.
Robinson
slarruned
one the
The 3-4 nightly double
Oglivie went S-16 and two of
Columbus, spent the weekend Tim of Long Bottom, and Mr.
other
way
for
a
4-1
lead.
combination of Dixie Berry
with her parents, Mr and and Mrs. Jim Starcher of the homers we re game- and Gravel Road paid $43.
Pete Rose and Morgan
Mason , W. Va.
winnin g blows . He also
· Mrs. Charles Humphrey.
homered
and Tony Perez
The 4,535 fan s wagered
Mr . and Mrs. Lawrence slugged 1.125 and scored the
Mr . and Mrs. George Ar singled
and
scored on an
attend ed
th e winning run in another game. $271,958.
nold of Northridge, Calif., Rose
have moved to their home Co mm ence ment of their
here. Thi s was form erl y grand children Patty and
occupied by the Ch arles Randy Rose a t Akron . They
·~N • ""
u•soN - 1""'
"A -'-L ~C!JErUU:
MEICS • tc:l! IIA•c
:!.!!! -•= ,.
__ _
are the children of Mr . and
Swogger family.
11!rs. Ruth Barthelmas and Mrs. TlmJ nas .J. Rose. Patty
!C'.' :!: ~-BP.rr~r; (~ ;:ry)
c.\.'1:5 W. kT A~; 6;15-6!30 P.~l.
iriend of Columbus visi ted was one of U1e Ve~lell.iclurlans
'li
:;. DA :u _s&gt;::;7I~l:L ( ro:EP.CY)
with Mrs. Lucill e Smith of their class.
R.ID CUTS VIU. NCT BE ~.AtE uP
MI!D!E!'C.~T
Mr . and Mrs . Archie
recently.
Uli~SS ACPE!.t 0~,
RACJI.t
The Community Builders · Brooks of Logan visited with
Ruru.:;v
Club enjoyed a cookout and Mr . and Mrs. Cheste r
ht\1 llAvtN !U!oroy Team• vill J&gt;l•r thei" · Thuroday night ho:e ~·· ~Ill
picnic at the Belleville Darn Mundry Sr. recently.
t1o.Dd.u. anC iledne :ldft)' r.i trht
be played at ·~~iga Hi~h ~cilccl.
IIASCli
Rece nt visitor s at the
hane F"'"' at the Soll•bury
J'llld (Nl) on tcp of hill,
and park. Attending were Mr .
c ; cld.
and Mrs. Walter Brown and Williams - Balderson home
were
Mrs.
Esther
DeWolfe
of
David , Mr. and Mrs. DohrJ!(J~'Jli,Y - June 21. 1976
'll!UR!UY - ;rmiE 3. 1976
man Reed, Kim and Kirk, Delavan, Wis., Mrs. Roy Fick
Doily
~ntir.•1 ot ~~ddleoort
and
Beth
Anne,
of
Columbus,
~ut.r-Erorrar.
at
taily
Sentir.el
Mr . and Mr s. Ronal d
lleute!'-Broean
at Rutland
Rae
1ne
at
Nev
Puen
Mr.
and
Mrs.
J
.
D.
Kibble
of
Osborn e, Mr. and Mrs.
New Haven at Muon
!'aeon at Mlcidleport
Ernest Whitehead, and Mr. Parkersburg, W. Va ., and
and Mrs. Warren Pickens . Mr. and Mrs. Zenith
WEp!iESDAY - JliiiE 21. 1976
' Mll!W - June 7. 19%
The June meeting will be a Chevalier and Alan of Belpre
Rae! .. tt Rauter-Brocon
llally Sentlr.e1 at :-boon
Rd .
picnic supper.
Mlddleoort at kurland
Mr. and Mrs. Jim James of
Mr . and Mrs. Bill Wherry of
lev HaYen, at Reuter-erClpn
~.SDAY - Junt 24, 1976
utland it Doily .f&lt;!ntlnel
Parkersburg , W. Va. visited Pa rkersburg, W. Va. visited
Mlddleport at ltev Jl.aven
11Eti£SIN - .Tune 9, l976
at the George ArnOld and R. with Mrs. Helen Archer
Maeon at Racl~~e
Rlelne at Doily Sontlnel
E. Williams homes Tuesday . Monday.
Mrs.
Elizabeth
Coleman
of
Mrs. Charles Hauber is a
]J!!JRS~Y - J\lr!o 10. l97t
MCf,7J.Y - Juno i2$ 1~
surgical patient at the St. Sebring and Mr. and Mrs.
Rutland at Fe cine
~n at JCeuter-~!'o~n
Ronald
Coleman
and
son
of
Jos eph Hospital, Parkers Mlddleoort at lleuter-Brogan
Rllc!ne at Middleport
Warren visited with Mrs.
burg, W. Va .
Muon at hiew Haven ·
Rutland at Nev Faven
Mabel
Hetzer
and
family
and
Rick Hauber from Virginia
Beach, Va . spent the weekend the R. E. Williams family
M\'!gY - .Tune 14. 19?6
WEtl:!:lllli.Y • JUI!• JO. 1976
.
Dolly i:entloel at lleuter-Rrogon
at the home of his parents, Sunday.
1'-lddleport at lla!!y Eentlnel
Mr. an'd Mrs. J. D. Kibble
Nov Haver. at Rut1ond
Mr. and Mrs . Charles Hauber
~e1r.e 1 t Maeon
of Parkersburg, W. Va .
and family.
w.sr.a.x - Ju+x 1. 1976
visited
with
the
H.
E.
Kibble
Doily Sent!r.el at frutlond
Mr. and Mrs. Richard
!/l!)t.'ES!JAY - June !6, 1976
lleuter-Brocan at Pael ne
Sellers of Columbus were family Friday.
Reute!'-Brogan at ~J. d dleport
Muon at t\ev Raven
Mrs . Bill Meredith of
weekend guests of Mr . and
Beverly , Charles Meredith of
Mrs. Otis Casto.
]J!URS:AY - ,!une 17, 1976
Mrs. Terry Hoff man and I.A!xington , Ky., and Harold
Mlv Haven at rauy Sent i r:el
daughter of Morehead, Ky. Sauer of Middleport visited
lridd1eport at Rae,ne
n
are visiting with her parents, with relatives here Sunday.

Hubbard's

arm, hat
spark win

Bushy blanks Detroit Tigers 10-0
runs to lead the assault
against Detroit, which has
now been outscored, 26-6, in ·
iis last two games. Mark
Littell pitched two-hit ball
over the final three innings to
earn his fifth save.
·rwlos 7, lndla1111 %:
Butch Wynegar and Craig
Kusick hit back-to-back home
runs in the eighth inning to
help the Twins' Dave Goltz
post his sixth win in eight
dec.isions . Rick Manning
clubbed his fourth home run
of the year for the Indians;
who also turned a triple play
in the fifth inning.
Rangers &amp;, Orioles 4:
Light-hitting Gene Clines
singled in two runs and
scored another as Texas
handed Baltimore its seventh
loss in the )ast nine games.
Lenny
Randle ,
Jeff
Burroughs and Tom Grieve
also knocked in runs enabling
Jim Umbarger to boost his
record to IH.
Phlllles 8, Dodgers 6:
Greg Luzinski drove in
three runs with a homer and a
sacrifice fly and Mike
Schmidt knocked in two runs
to lead Philadelphia over the
Dodgers. Dick Allen also .
homerejl for the Phillies as
they handed reliever Charlie
Hough his first loss alter
seven wins. Ron Cey had a
grand slam homer for Los
Angeles.

manager ) decides these
matters. I can't be very
objeetive. U I can get the baU
60 feet, I'll pitch. l'U pitch
every other day if they let
me. I'll go out tbere and try to
get someone out.
"Whitey knows what's best
for me and be's the boss."
Frlmk White drove in five
runs and Hal McRae stroked
four hits and scored three

1

Zisk 's blast stops Reds, 5-4

Reedsville
News Notes

error to tie the game in the
eighth. Zisk's game-wilmer to
lead off the Pirates' eighth
ended the parade.
"I was just trying to get on
base, just to look for the ball
and hit it hard," Zisk said. "I
wasn't thinking home run and
I wasn 'I thinking try to win
the ball gal(le. I was just
looking to hit the ball hard,
hoping to get on base and
start a rally."
No use trying to explain it;
that's just baseball, said
Rose. ·
"That's the great thing
about this game, you never
know what to expect, " he
said. "The man who ligures
out this game will be a
Houdini.''

Hou.s ton has

Padres 5, Me18 I:
Alan Foster U&gt;ssed a fourhitter for his first win since
June I of last year in pitching
the Padres over the Mets.
Dave Winfield hit a three-run
homer and Willie McCovey
had a tworun double lor San
Diego which tagged Craig
Swan with his sixth loss in
eight decisions.
Cardinals 7, Astros 6:
St. Lo uis scored fiv e
unearned runs in the first
inning then held on behind the
relief pitching of AI Hrabosky
to defeat the Astros ."
Shortstop Roger Metzger's
error paved the way lor the
Cardinals' first Inning assault
but they scored what proved
to be the winning run in tbe
eighth on a wild pitch by
reliever Gene Pen~. Cliff
Johnson had a two-.-un homer
for Houston.

Girls Blue
MOCCASINS
The Shoe Box

'

Middleport, Ohio

Free service to veterans
and their families will be
· available locally when a
Field Service Unit of the
Disabled American Veterans
(DAY) visits Meigs County
Tuesday, June 15. This Is the
third consecutive year that
one of these 26-foot mobile
offices has toured the state in
order to provide free counseling and claims service to
veterans and their families.
The DAY Field Service Unit
will be located at the Mid. dleport Community Park
from 10 a.m. untU 6 p.m.
The traveling veterans '
service facility will be
manned by DAY National
Service Officers who are fully
qualified to assist veterans or

LANGSVILLE, OHIO

RT. NO. 1 45741

GENERAL REVENUE

1 !":

Pi. A NNED £.11 f' EN DITU A ES

lbl

(AI C"TEGORIES

CAFITA ~

AriTICIP~T•NCl
~

MA [t,I[ I~AN CL fO~ 1~(
!; 0

$

2 EN\'IAON ... (N I A ~

~·~='~"~··~---~~
· -------f'---~-3 PUBLIC
111- WSI&gt;OR!AT!OW
"~.O.LIH

•

$

$

$

•

~---r-----r---~ .
$
$
I UEI'l"'A!ES
1 SOCIIII. StMIC [$
fOA AOtD 01\ r O(Ifl
&amp; f iNAHI:IAL
M liLTII'IiR ~D$f

~~: 053 _'~-

$

$

$

$

I&lt;

J!H'r

I

I

w

1

\/

ACCourn tlO 36 2 OSJ 003

RACINE VILLAGE 91 2

VILLAGE CLERK
RACINE, OHIO 4l711

s

A 0 '-0IN I$1~AioQOj

8

~£UOD

19-6 1&lt;•1Hjb.o 'l
OE.CHIOER Jl 19 76 Pl-'NS TO SPENO l ttfSE tUNDS f 0 f' 111E PLJflf'UStS

-:-:==::-+---c-:-:-;
.:-,-t--I PIJIIUC S"f[I V
$ 1, 053
.; 3
$
-::-::==-c:---t'-=;.-.:....&lt;'-f'--- -~ .

:&gt;EVENTI1 EN!Itl t/Jci•T

ANO

S

, Gf NHAl GOYl
IU ( DVGAIION

\

USDA
Choice Meats

USDA Choice
Lean, No Waste

VALLEY BELL

2% MILK
gal.
PHEBE'S STORE
June S-12
Right Reserved to Lim it Quantlt,Jes

We Gladly Accept Fed. Food Stamps
Monday lhru Friday
9:00 to 7:00
Satl;&lt;dily 9 to 9

$}.39

DEL MONTE

-ORANGE JUICE ............
;;::~
._

59~

PUMPKIN..................2·~:~t 99
39~
C
FRUIT CO KTAIL ......~a.".. . .
29~
PUDDI NGS.................f~!:~
$}2"'
OXYDOL ..................~'!... .
. 69#Joy················~··············
~

LIBBY'S SOLID PACK

YELLOW ONION$

3 lb. bag 59e
HEAD LETTUCE
3 for •1.00

TOMATOES
lb.

39e

lb.

'1.49

12

HUNT'S

300

Produce Special:s!

CUBE STEAK

T-Bone Steak ....... !~:.$F

9

Sirloin Steak ........ ~~:.$1 59

ROYAL

GIANTSIZE

.

DISHWASHING LIQUID
·
.

SEA MIST

pkg .

OJ

oz.

,.

22

,

bot.

•

'

19~

AMMON lA .............:~::~ .

$

REIGEL SLICED

sg

-BACON.............. ~~·... !
$159 .
HAM ................. ::·.~·-·· .
7·
BOLOGNA..•.... ~~. ·:
DUBUQUE CHOPPED

.

.,

TASTEE CHUNK

g~
\&lt;

SERVICE UNIT - A field service unit will visit in
Meigs County at the Middleport community park
Tuesday, June 15 to assist veterans in obtaining benefits
the law provides for them.

LeFlore , oet 4 3 17 4 26 58 _333
Munson , NY 47 201 28 64 ,318
Patek KC
ii 151 29 4e 318
St aub.' Oet
48 168 20 53 :31 5
48 188 29 59 .31 4
Carew, Min
Yount Mil
44 166 21 52 313
..
'
Home Runs
·.
National Le~tue: Kingman .
NY 21; Schmidt, Ph!l lS ;
Foster, Cln 11 ; Monday, Chi
and Cey , LA 10.
American League: Otis, KC
10 ; May, Ball , Bando , Oak and
Ford , Mlnn 9; Yastrzemskl,
Bas , Hendrick, Clttv and Bur .

m.

QUANTITIES

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WASHING'I'ON (UP!) Green Bay Pacli.ers former
8llpro defensive star Willie
Davis, a 17th-round draft
pick, and Paul Brown, the
coach who picked him and
then traded him, agree that
the college draft is well
worthwhUe.
.
Both appeared Monday as
def':"'se witnesses lor the
NatiOnal FootbaU League at '
the federal court trial
broug~t by Washington
Redskins 1967 No. I rookie
Jim
" Yazoo"
Smith,
challenging the draft as an
illegal violation of the
anti!~ laws.
Dav1s,
the
former
Grambling College star,
testified that elimination of
the draft as advocated by
Smith's lawyers would
financially hurt the lowerechelon players because the
All-Americans and ~luHhlp
stars would be able to exert a
whip hand in a free market
for top draftees .
"Some owners might act
irrationally," the on~ime
Green Bay all-pro said.
"They take over teams
sometimes out of ego and
would overbuy."
Smith
seeks
treble
dalilllges on grounds the draft
denied him bargaining
leverage to obtain a better
contract and protection
against injury when the
Redskins selected him first in
the 1967 draft. The former
Oregon defensive star's
playing career ended when he
sustained a broken neck in
the last game of his rookie
1968 season.
Brown, who developed
teams Into winners at
Cleveland and Cinclnnati,
said on the witness stand that
the college draft "Is the life
blood of (X'O football."
Brown, still general
manager of the Cincinnati
Bengals after stepping down
as coach earner this year,
told of developing both the
Browns without using the

Prices Valid June 9-18

Rlchar.d, Hou end Montefusco ,
SF 6-S,.,

Nafionat League: . Cedeno.
Hou 23 : Morg an, (in 22 ;

Blyleven , Tex 84 , Hunter , NY
.

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7

draft and the Bengals by
using lt . _
Brown told how he developed the Cleveland
Browns into a championship
team after World War II
without using the draft. BUL
he said .that by signing free
agent stars from the military
services he built such a
powerful team that the AllAmerican Conference In
which they played died alter
only lour seasons.
" We started out in
Cleveland with ~rowds of 6070 000 fans but this fell off to
20'000 because the people '
th~ught why go out to see the
game when they knew in
advance the Browns would

win?"

Gf; DRIP

I

Baltery operated

says Davis, Brown

MABON PERSONAlS
Amenc~n
League: . Stolon ,
Mil 7-2;_ T•~nt , Bos 1·3: T,onana ,
Lee and Betty_Kraus of Warren, Ohio, Mrs. Fred
C,al 7-4, 81rd, KC 6· 1. Fllzmor Rosenbaum of Pomeroy, were &amp;inday dinner guests of Mr.
ns, KC, Travers , Mi l , C~mpbell
and Goltz, M lnn 6·2; F1guero• :
and Mrs. Russell Capehart and Christy Bletner. Other· recent
NY lind Umbarger, TeK 6·4 ,
guests of the Capehart's were Mr. and Mrs. Edward
Hunter .. NY , Torre~ and Blue,
Oak, 6-5. Palmer, Ball 6-6.
Hackemeyer of Cincinnati; Mn. AmeUa Gabelein of Bristol,
Earned Run _Average
Tenn.
(based on 0 inn1ngs pitched)
Mr. and Mrs. Russell Capehart, Mason, Mrs. Fred
National League: Zachry, Cin
·1.32 ; Forsch, Hou 2.00 ; Hbuah,
Rosenbaum, Pomeroy visited recently with the Capehart's
LA 2.40 ; Jones, SO 2.46 ;
daughter, and son-in-taw, Mr. and Mrs. John Troy and family roughs, Te)( 8.
Ruth .... e~ , A,tl 2.54 .
Runs aaHad In
~mer.can Leegue; . Carroll.
at Lexington, Ky.
National Lugue: Foster , Cln , Ch1 e.nd Travers, Mil 1.96;
Sgt. and Mrs: Nicky Nicholson and daughter, Amber of 50 ; Kingman , NY 47 ; Morgan , Kern. Clev 2.11 ;. Brown. Ctev
.
New Jersey visited hla mother, Mn. Evelyn Nicholson and Cln and Schmid! Phil 39 . 2.15; Wood, Chi 2.15 .
other relatives, recently.
·
Perez, Cln.and Winfield, SO 38.·
National r!~k~e~~'\eaver NY
A m e r 1 c a n League : Bur .
u ·
,•
Mrs. Wibna Blake, Clifton, haa returned home after roughs . Te&gt;e 40 ; Chambliss , NV 78 i Montefusco, SF 63 , R:t.
38 ; Munson , NY 37 ; Ot is, KC chard , Ho_u 62 ; Messersmith,
visiting her lister in Colwnbua.
3.5 · Ford Mlnn and Grieve rex
Atl 57 ; ~ollch, NY 56 .
Mr ..and Mrs. Bill Lyons have ret~~rned to their home ~~ 34 '
'
'
Amer.can League : . Tanana,
·
Stolen BJSes
Cal
103 ;
Ryan , Cal
94 ;
Maumee, ru. alter visiting his sister, Miss Betty Lyons, at
Cllfto~.

were decla red eligible
Monday for the draft under
the undergraquate eligibilty
clause .
Oth e r blue -c h ipp e rs
expected to go early are All·
America Scott May, a S-7
forward
from
NCAA
champion Indiana ; Robert
Parish, a 7-1 center from
Centenary ; 6-9 Alabama
center Leon Douglas;
Indiana's 6-3 guard Quinn
Buckner; and S.IO center
Scott Uoyd of Arlzana State.
The other undergraduates
available under what used to
be termed the hardship
clause are:
Norman Cook, Kansa s;
Charles Daniels, Rice;
Johnny Davis, Dayton; Jacky
Dorsey, Georgia; Edward
Douglas, formerly RutgersNewark; Daryl Gainey,
formerly Fairmont Stale ;
Reg Glasgow, CaliforniaRiverside ; Loy Hudson,
Albany (Ga .) State; Robert
Kelley , lormtrly Nevada-Las
Vegas and Guilford ; Warne!
Lamb, !A!hlgh cOmmunity
College ; Lonnie Shelton,
formerly Oregon State;
Larry Wright, Grambling;
Rick Balzan, formerly
Roncalli High School,
Manitowoc, Wis.; Brent
McNair, formerly Canislus;
and Nick Sortal, formerly
Herrin High School, Herrin,

Draft worthwhile

i

~-----~~~-

A GENHl A. Ut 'l lNUl
SII,..R " G PA\_M_ENT Of

NEW YORK (UP! ) - The
long basketball season is
finally over and heads are
turned next to the tall men
who are going to be next
year 's bumper crop of
rookies .
The National Basketball
Association draft will be held
today when the league's 18
teams make their choices via
a conference call from league
headquarters beginning at 2
p.m. EDT. The first .found
choice is expected to be
Marylalid's 6-1 All America
guard John Lucas, who
comes to Houston after being
traded from Atlanta in a deal
involving switches of No. I
picks alid two players.
The highly touted Lucas
averaged 20 points this
iseason and broke Torn
McMillen's career sccrlng
record at Maryland.
"In addition to a pro
career, I'm ·also thinking
abOut entering the · World
Team Tennis satellite tour lor
experience ," Lucas said
recently.
The Hawks received tbe
Rockets' choice on the first
roUnd, the ninth of the draft,
plus Joe Meriwether, aS-loot10 center-forward and Gus
Bailey, a guard.
Also expected to go high In
the draf~ are All-Americas
Adrian Dantley of Notre
Dame
and
Richard
Washington of UCLA, who

A.OURESCENT LAMP

p~·r;;:;;· News . .NOti!S1

GenerBI Ae~enue Snllr•ng pro~toes reoeral ILJn!IS orrectl'; to lnc~l ;m~ stale go•er11monts li' &lt;S r(!po• t ot yuur gollernmenl 's plan •s pubt•sheO
1o encou111Qt crtlnn PI!UC!pttion 1n Oete1 mlm~g your g,•lernmcnts OectSOil Cfl ne w Uto monol y "Mil o~ sper~ t Note ol,n~ complt lnlt or
dltcrlmlnlllon In ltll "" ol tht.. Iundt 11"1111 bt 1elll lo THE G O ~E~NMEN T
lhe Olflct or Atvtnut Sh111ng, Wuh., D.C. 20 228 .
or
RACINE VILLAGE

- -- - , . - - - - " " " ' T";;iC;;-;;
t Q~u;~ -

Lucas expected
first NBA pick

their families in filing claims with its fleet of Field Service
for federal and state benefits Units , more than 98,9000
to which they are entitled by veterans . and their . dependlaw _ disability com- ents contacted !he mobile
pensation, pension , em- offices for assistance. As a
ployment, . job training, result of these visits, DAY
education, hospitalization National Service Officers
and medical care, social filed 6,000 new claims ani! resecurity, death claims and opened another 33,000 claims
other matters.
for veterans benefits.
During the first two years
The project is an extension
of the DAY's nationwide tour of the DAY's long-time
national service program
which provides a wide
variety of free assistance to
veterans and their families.
During the period from July
~
By Alma Marshall .
I, 1974, to June 30, 1975, the
K
» DAY was successful In fUIQg
Letart - Mrs. Albert (Tom) Roush, Jr. (the former Terry favorable claims which
Bird) was honored with a stork shower on May 27th by the resulted in 220,000 individual
Graham United MethodiSt women, at the church. The color awards totaling $465-million
in federal benefits. Memscheme was pink, white and blue.
Games were played Wider the direction of Mary Richards. bership in the Disabled
Mrs. Anna Parson won the door prize and other prizes were American Veterans is not
required as a· basis for this
won by Esther Brown, Ruth Pickens, and Brenda Merritt.
Cake, punch and mints were served to the foUowing: DAY counseling and claims
Brenda Merritt, Ruth Pickens, Esther Brown, Joe and Betty service.
The DAY employs 280 fullBurris, Diane Dunlap, Chris Shelton, Mrs. Ritchie Bird, Judy
time
National Service Ofand Debbie Hesson, Mary Richards, Connie Bird, Anna
ficers
- most of whom are
Paroons, Jane Bird, Mrs. Ada Clarke, Miss Anna Allen and
disabled
Vietnam Era
Michelle Wren.
veterans
~~ Veterans
Sending gifts were Vera Pickens, Anna Bumgarner,
Administration
installations
Nessie ·Moore, Rev. Mrs. Achsah Miller, Esther and Louise
throughout
the
country.
Roush, Mrs. Loren Bird, Carolyn and Paula Bird, GlOria
of
However,
the
location
Roush, Mrs. Albert &amp;ush, Sr., Mary Bumgarner and Barbara
some
VA
facilities
makes
it
Bumgarner.
difficult for many veterans,
Mason - Women of Mason United Methodist Church are as well as their widows and
having a Father-Son banquet at the church on June 21 at 6 p.m. dependents, to personally
visit a DAY National Service
Office.
The DAY's Field
Mason -The Mason City Historicay Society meeting June
Unit
program carries
Service
3 at the former Lewis property at 10 a .m. was followed by
·assistance
right to the
IWich at noon. Mrs. Earl Ingels, Sr ,, presented the devotionals
veteran's
doorstep.
John 3:1S.21. Mrs. Catherine &amp;nith, (X'esldent, presided. The
Local DAV members ·aretreasury report was given by Mrs. Delwon Roberts.
cooperating
with the national
The group discussed the Memorial Book and note paper
headquarters
of the Disabled
which the society has purchased. The note paper sells for $1.25
American
Veterans in
and has a ske!ch on each page of the Lewis home.
bringing
the
Field Service
Mrs. Robert Maring, wife of the pastor of Mason United
Unit
program
into
this area .
Methodist Church, prepared the charter member list in Old
English which reportedly was be.autifully done. The teacher
wbo taught Mrs. Maring Old English script was Miss Lucy
Lewis, daughter of the late Virgil A. Lewis. An old frame was
Major League Leaders
purchased to hOld the Charter Member list.
By United Press International
Baiting
It was lrought to the attention of those attending that
I based on 100 at bah)
. azaleas and other flowers had been planted at the Lewis home
National League
G. AB R. H. P&lt;l
and dirt will be hauled by the town employees to flU in an area
Robinson , Pit 36 119 19 .4!i .378
.
·
,
LA
of the yard.
McBride St L 33 12S 20 46 359 , Gnffey, Ctn 16, Lopes ,
and
• ·
·
Brock Sl L 13
The society members agreed to sponsor a float lor the July Griffey, Cin 47 179 45 61 .341
Amfricln Ltague· Patek KC
, NY
44 118 IB 40 ,339
'
'
td, BicenteMial parade with George Carson lumishit!g the Torre
Rose , Cin
52 213 46 72 , 338 and North, Oak ~8 ; Baylor , Oak
Cey. LA
51187 30 63 .337 25; Ca~ponens, Ook 21 ;
vehicle.
Cln
47 1s4 28 62 337 Carew, Mrnn 20 .
A meeting will be held on June lith at City Hall at 7:30 Foster 'Phil
Pitching
Boone,
4.-' 131 21 44 ·.336 ~
Most
VIctories
p.m. in regards to the BicentelUlial parade and activities. The M~rgan , Cln 46 154 41 51 .331
National League: Jbnes , so
next meeting will be held on July lsl at the home.
M1lner , NY
31122 21 40 .328 10. 2; Lonborg , Phil 8·1; Hough ,
American Leag'le
LA 7 . 1 ; Matlack , NY 6·1;
Attending were Mrs. Catherine Smith, Mrs, Earl Ingels,
Brett
KC
~Q
A~
R·
~
·
~~~
C.hrlstenson, Ph11 !nd RoOker ,
49
4
9
7
3
Mrs. Zelma Hunter, Mrs. Hazel Smith, Mrs. Doris Roberts, McRae, KC
49
187
32 65 :3475 Pill 6-2; Fryman, Mil , Koos :
Mrs. Helen Barton, Mrs. Evelyn Proffitt, Mrs. Murl Megee Lvnn, Bos
38 142 19 49 3_. 5 man , NY and _Strom, !iO 6-J,
Bostock , Min 37139 21 47 :338 -.Reuss, Pitt 6-4; Ruthven , Atl ,
lind Mrs, Carol Alexander.

SHARIN G P LANN E D US E R EPORT

--

first choice

Free
•
.services
for
veterans

Denim Suede

August 1, 1976

5.c. The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, June 8, 1976
·
- ...
to last until5 p.m. The bulk of
all drafting ill exected to ta ke
place in th is session.
Following Houston in order
of selection will be De troit,
Atl anta , Milwaukee, Sa n
Diego, California , Chicago
Cubs, Chicago White Sox,
Montreal , Minne sota, San
Francisco, Texas, New York
Mets, Cleveland, St. Louis,
NEW YORK (UP! ) "Bannister looks like he's New
York
Yanks ,
Floyd Bannister, a hard- really something special," Philadelphia, Kansas City,
throwing lefthander wi.J.o said one major league sccut Los Angeles , Baltimore,
some pro scouts Ieel is "Ourreports say he' can play Pitt s burgh , Boston ,
]X'epared to ptch in the major right now in the major Cincinnati and Oakland.
league$ without any minor leagues, that he can break in
The league presidents
league seasoning, is expected right-off the bat."
made the order of draw in the
to be the first player drafted
An estimated 700 names secondary phase and Atlanta
today as the regular phase of are in the hopper in the both won the right to select first .
major league bueball 's the ·. regular and the_ Detroit wUI follow , and then
annual draft of high school secondary phase of the draft, picks will be R!ade by
and college players gets which will be conducted Cincinnati, Kansas City, San
under way.
·
Wednesday. Headquarters Diego, MUwaukee, Houston,
The Houston Astros, wbo for both sessions will be : Cleveland, New York Mets,
finished with the worst record · Baseball Commissioner California, Los Angeles,
in the major leagues last Bowie Kuhn's New York Texas, Philadelphia, Chicago
season, will get to pick ftrst in office.
While Sox, St . Louis,
the draft and are expected to
Lastyearthedraltwentto Baltimor-e, Montreal,
select Bannister, a flame- 34 rounds and lasted lour Oakland, Pittsburgh,. New
thrower who registered a 37-li hours and 58 minutes . York Yanks , Chicago Cubs,
mark in hiB three varsity Today's regular phase starts Boston, Siln Franc~co and
seasons at Arizona State.
at noon EDT and is expected Minnesota.

. Uses 8 D-cell balterles (not !_r'cluded) 1
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Reg . 119 · 95
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1
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· 1

Ol.

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35

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Reg . 11 ·29

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No more tears.

89

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South Bend

r,...

Asked if the same thing
could happen to the NFL
today if the draft were
eliminated, Brown replied:
"I think it would hurt in the
distribution of talent a great
deal. We're in show busineSB
and the
closer
the
competition and the more
suspense, the better the

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He said that he was able to
develop the Bengals· into a
Super Bowl playoff contender
three years after their 1968
creation almost e~tirely from
the draft. ·
"The league stocked us
with veterans through an
allocation," Brown added,
"but primarily we built
ourselves up through the
draft."
He argued against Smith's
claim that the draft denies a
college player bargaining
power with the team which
selects him.
"If a player didn't have
bargaining power as a No. I
draftee, we could offer him
the minimum salary and say .
'take it or leave It,'" he said.
"The pressure is on us to get
him signed. If we hadn't been
able to sign Archie Griffin
this year we'd be given a bad
time by the fans.
"You can't sign a football
player and take advantage of
him and then have him come
to camp with the rig~t heart
and spirit," he said.

NEW YORK (UP!) Johnny Bench, a six-time
electee, caps a group of live
pi'eviously elected All-Star
starters
and
three
"newcomers" In the first
weekly tabulation's for the
National League starting
lineup lor the 1976 All-Star
game.
Top votegetters by position
are : Steve Garvey of Los
Angeles at first base; Joe
Morgan and Pete Rose of
Cincinnati at second and
third base r.especllvely and
Larry Bowa of Philadelphia
at shortstop. The ouifleld
positions are filled by
Philadelphia's Greg
Luzlnski, St. Louis' Bake
McBride and current major
league home run leader Dave
Kingman of the New York
Mets -each bidding for his
first AliStar. start.

$199

With coupon I Reg . m.u $666 wL 1th c oupon
1m11 2
Limll2
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tPr1ce~ Valid June 9. 11 ,
Prices Valid June 9-11
_______________
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Wilh Coupon
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49

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5 oz.

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Top grain leathers In populor colors.

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Rel iev es Itching ond chafing
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. IOl 2-ply towels
- Super absorbency

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�4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, June 8, 1976
FITNESS COURSES
Rio Grande College - Rio
Grande Coinmunily College
will be offering a series of
activity courses in tennis,
swimming , golf , and fitn ess
during its swnmcr school
for just his SI!Cond vicwry of since May l.
terms. Evening courses in By RICK GOSSELIN
UPI
Sports
Writer·
the year. "
The Royals are bringing
tennis and lifetime fi tness
Though the season is hardly Busby along gingerly and tbe
For
the
first
time
in
his
will be offered for the first
career Steve Rusby of the two months old, Busby one-time ace, who now has
SYRACUSE - Behind the summer term (June I4-Jul y Kansas City staff has found already has been on the the fourth best record among
hitting and pitching of Jeff 16) and evening courses in out what it's like to struggle. disa bled list twice because of starters on the Kansas City
Hubbard, the Syracuse In- swimming will be offered
Therefore, he was more a strained shoulder . He staff, has no complaints.
the second summer
de penden l team Sunday during
than happy to see the Tigers remained in Florida for eight
When asked if he would
term (July 19_Augusl 20).
captured its fifth straight
In addition, the coflege will come rolling into town days at the start of the season have liked to pitch a complete
league win here by downing a
Monday night. · The hard- and spent 17 days on the game, Busby replied : "It's
lou h Middle ort club 6_4_ be offering cour ses in Water thr pwin g ri g ht -ha nd er disabled list in May. The not important. How I feel
g
. P
'
Safety Instruc tor as well as
. After giv~ng_up all fHourbbrunds Treatment of Athletic In- pitched two4Iil ball over six De troit victory was his first does not ma tter . Whitey
In ear y mnmgs,
u ar • . .
.
·
f
innings to beat Detroit, 10.0,
I Herzog,
K ~ n Ra R
City
settled down and blanked the JUn es . ~eg_ls l ra h on . or
visitors the rest of the way. Sum mer SessiOn One Will be
Trailin g 4-2 going into the Jun e 14 and July 19 for
bottom of the eighth, Hub- Swnmcr SessiOn Two. For
bard unloaded a grand slam more InformatiOn, call the
to notch th e co me-from- Offi ce of AdmiSSI O~s - RIO
behind victory.
Grande College - RIO Grande
seventh solo homer of the solo shots. "As long as l ' v~
Hubbard fanned five and Commun ity College at 245- By POHLA SMITH
UP! Sports Writer
5351
night in the eighth inning to -been playing, interesting
walked only two while batPITISBURGH IUPI )
give Pittsburgh a 5-4 victory things have transpired when
terymate Mick Ash was busy
Pete Rose said it was "the ove r Cincinnat i in the the Pirates and Reds played
hitting two for three. There
wierdest thing I ever saw," na tionally televised game each other. When we play
were some rine defensive
FA ~ILY REQUEST
but most of the other Pirates and tie a major league homer against them, anything can
plays on both sides.
The famil y of Ella Mae and Reds figur ed their for the most bases-empty happen ."
·
Middl eport's Rick Van - Eppl e Re ut er, wh o was Monday night home run
homers
in
a
nine
inning
game:
Cincinnati's Joe Morgan,
Matre lost a tough one as he buried Sunday, requests that contest was about par for the
''That's our history, man ,'' who socked two of the
yi elded eig ht hi ts whil e any dona tions in her memory course.
said Pirates' captain Willie homers, said, "usually it
fanning three and walking a be sent to the Meigs County
Richie Zisk pinch-hit the Stargell, who had one of the happens a lot sooner." He
like number. Sandy Clonch Heart Associa tion in cttrt! of
was referring to the fact that
went 3 for 5 for the losers the Pomeroy Postmaster.
Royals
are
12·0
over
Pomeroy
A-s
the
sl!lllfest never really got
while Mick Childs was 2 for 4.
going
until the eighth inning.
Syracuse travels to Point
The Pomeroy Royals in respectively. Chris Wqods,
The
first hit of the game
Pleasanl next Sunday for a
Pon y action Sat urd ay Jeff Grueser, and Todd
MEET TIIURSDAY
never
carne until Bill
battle for the league lead.
All candidates of the Big romped over the Pomeroy Rawlings all had singles.
Robinson
singled off Reds'
Losing pitcher Ray Stewart
M
0II 200 000-4 10 2 Bend -Reg atta Queen contest A's 12-0 behind the one-hit
Billingham in
starter
Jack
S
000 020 04x- 6 8 I are to meet at 7 p.m. Thurs- pitching of Mike Triplett . and Keith Musser teamed up
the
fifth.
The
first
run was not
to
strike
out
two
and
walk
day at the Meigs Inn . They Triplett fanned 13 and walked
scored
until
Pirate
Frank
are to lake two sen ior pic- only two while giving up the seven.
Taveras
collected
the
tures wi th them and also a only hit, a single, to Ray
Pirates'
second
hit,
stole
COLUMBUS (UP!) dress fo r a group picture to be St ewart.
•·arveiBoy
came on strong in second and went home on
Chris Tayl or and Chuck
taken during the evening.
double errors in the sixth.
Kennedy led the winners with the stretch to win the $1,600
Pirate starter Bruce Kison
a triple and two singles, featured pace at Scioto
never
gave up a hit untU
Downs Monday night by I ~.
Morgan
led off the seventh
lengths over Til)a Gale,
Mr . and Mrs. Charl es Mr . and Mrs. John Hetzer.
NEW YORK (UPI ) with
a
homer.
That blast to
Farve! Boy, driven by Brad
Powell from Florida, Mrs.
Hecent visitors with Mr. Detr oit outfielder ·Ben
right
center
field
started ·a
Farrington, covered the mile
George Wolf of Chester, and and Mrs. . Chester Mundry Oglivie, who hit .500 and hit
chain
reaction.
in 2:04 and returned $4.60,
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Flowers of and Lori were Mr. and Mrs. three home runs last week,
AI Oliver and Stargell led
$3.40
and $3.20. Tina Gale
Belpre visited with Mrs. Rose Charles Price and Bobbie was named the American
off
the Pirates' seventh with
paid $6 and $6.80 while the
Thomas this week.
Pi- ice, Mr. and Mrs. Paul League Player of the Week,
backto-back
homers to right
third horse, Adiopatch, paid
Robin Humphrey, student Whal ey and Kenny, Mr. and AL President Lee MacPhail
center,
and
one out later,
$3.60.
at Ohio Stale University, Mrs. Roger Dillon, Scott and announced Monday.
Robinson
slarruned
one the
The 3-4 nightly double
Oglivie went S-16 and two of
Columbus, spent the weekend Tim of Long Bottom, and Mr.
other
way
for
a
4-1
lead.
combination of Dixie Berry
with her parents, Mr and and Mrs. Jim Starcher of the homers we re game- and Gravel Road paid $43.
Pete Rose and Morgan
Mason , W. Va.
winnin g blows . He also
· Mrs. Charles Humphrey.
homered
and Tony Perez
The 4,535 fan s wagered
Mr . and Mrs. Lawrence slugged 1.125 and scored the
Mr . and Mrs. George Ar singled
and
scored on an
attend ed
th e winning run in another game. $271,958.
nold of Northridge, Calif., Rose
have moved to their home Co mm ence ment of their
here. Thi s was form erl y grand children Patty and
occupied by the Ch arles Randy Rose a t Akron . They
·~N • ""
u•soN - 1""'
"A -'-L ~C!JErUU:
MEICS • tc:l! IIA•c
:!.!!! -•= ,.
__ _
are the children of Mr . and
Swogger family.
11!rs. Ruth Barthelmas and Mrs. TlmJ nas .J. Rose. Patty
!C'.' :!: ~-BP.rr~r; (~ ;:ry)
c.\.'1:5 W. kT A~; 6;15-6!30 P.~l.
iriend of Columbus visi ted was one of U1e Ve~lell.iclurlans
'li
:;. DA :u _s&gt;::;7I~l:L ( ro:EP.CY)
with Mrs. Lucill e Smith of their class.
R.ID CUTS VIU. NCT BE ~.AtE uP
MI!D!E!'C.~T
Mr . and Mrs . Archie
recently.
Uli~SS ACPE!.t 0~,
RACJI.t
The Community Builders · Brooks of Logan visited with
Ruru.:;v
Club enjoyed a cookout and Mr . and Mrs. Cheste r
ht\1 llAvtN !U!oroy Team• vill J&gt;l•r thei" · Thuroday night ho:e ~·· ~Ill
picnic at the Belleville Darn Mundry Sr. recently.
t1o.Dd.u. anC iledne :ldft)' r.i trht
be played at ·~~iga Hi~h ~cilccl.
IIASCli
Rece nt visitor s at the
hane F"'"' at the Soll•bury
J'llld (Nl) on tcp of hill,
and park. Attending were Mr .
c ; cld.
and Mrs. Walter Brown and Williams - Balderson home
were
Mrs.
Esther
DeWolfe
of
David , Mr. and Mrs. DohrJ!(J~'Jli,Y - June 21. 1976
'll!UR!UY - ;rmiE 3. 1976
man Reed, Kim and Kirk, Delavan, Wis., Mrs. Roy Fick
Doily
~ntir.•1 ot ~~ddleoort
and
Beth
Anne,
of
Columbus,
~ut.r-Erorrar.
at
taily
Sentir.el
Mr . and Mr s. Ronal d
lleute!'-Broean
at Rutland
Rae
1ne
at
Nev
Puen
Mr.
and
Mrs.
J
.
D.
Kibble
of
Osborn e, Mr. and Mrs.
New Haven at Muon
!'aeon at Mlcidleport
Ernest Whitehead, and Mr. Parkersburg, W. Va ., and
and Mrs. Warren Pickens . Mr. and Mrs. Zenith
WEp!iESDAY - JliiiE 21. 1976
' Mll!W - June 7. 19%
The June meeting will be a Chevalier and Alan of Belpre
Rae! .. tt Rauter-Brocon
llally Sentlr.e1 at :-boon
Rd .
picnic supper.
Mlddleoort at kurland
Mr. and Mrs. Jim James of
Mr . and Mrs. Bill Wherry of
lev HaYen, at Reuter-erClpn
~.SDAY - Junt 24, 1976
utland it Doily .f&lt;!ntlnel
Parkersburg , W. Va. visited Pa rkersburg, W. Va. visited
Mlddleport at ltev Jl.aven
11Eti£SIN - .Tune 9, l976
at the George ArnOld and R. with Mrs. Helen Archer
Maeon at Racl~~e
Rlelne at Doily Sontlnel
E. Williams homes Tuesday . Monday.
Mrs.
Elizabeth
Coleman
of
Mrs. Charles Hauber is a
]J!!JRS~Y - J\lr!o 10. l97t
MCf,7J.Y - Juno i2$ 1~
surgical patient at the St. Sebring and Mr. and Mrs.
Rutland at Fe cine
~n at JCeuter-~!'o~n
Ronald
Coleman
and
son
of
Jos eph Hospital, Parkers Mlddleoort at lleuter-Brogan
Rllc!ne at Middleport
Warren visited with Mrs.
burg, W. Va .
Muon at hiew Haven ·
Rutland at Nev Faven
Mabel
Hetzer
and
family
and
Rick Hauber from Virginia
Beach, Va . spent the weekend the R. E. Williams family
M\'!gY - .Tune 14. 19?6
WEtl:!:lllli.Y • JUI!• JO. 1976
.
Dolly i:entloel at lleuter-Rrogon
at the home of his parents, Sunday.
1'-lddleport at lla!!y Eentlnel
Mr. an'd Mrs. J. D. Kibble
Nov Haver. at Rut1ond
Mr. and Mrs . Charles Hauber
~e1r.e 1 t Maeon
of Parkersburg, W. Va .
and family.
w.sr.a.x - Ju+x 1. 1976
visited
with
the
H.
E.
Kibble
Doily Sent!r.el at frutlond
Mr. and Mrs. Richard
!/l!)t.'ES!JAY - June !6, 1976
lleuter-Brocan at Pael ne
Sellers of Columbus were family Friday.
Reute!'-Brogan at ~J. d dleport
Muon at t\ev Raven
Mrs . Bill Meredith of
weekend guests of Mr . and
Beverly , Charles Meredith of
Mrs. Otis Casto.
]J!URS:AY - ,!une 17, 1976
Mrs. Terry Hoff man and I.A!xington , Ky., and Harold
Mlv Haven at rauy Sent i r:el
daughter of Morehead, Ky. Sauer of Middleport visited
lridd1eport at Rae,ne
n
are visiting with her parents, with relatives here Sunday.

Hubbard's

arm, hat
spark win

Bushy blanks Detroit Tigers 10-0
runs to lead the assault
against Detroit, which has
now been outscored, 26-6, in ·
iis last two games. Mark
Littell pitched two-hit ball
over the final three innings to
earn his fifth save.
·rwlos 7, lndla1111 %:
Butch Wynegar and Craig
Kusick hit back-to-back home
runs in the eighth inning to
help the Twins' Dave Goltz
post his sixth win in eight
dec.isions . Rick Manning
clubbed his fourth home run
of the year for the Indians;
who also turned a triple play
in the fifth inning.
Rangers &amp;, Orioles 4:
Light-hitting Gene Clines
singled in two runs and
scored another as Texas
handed Baltimore its seventh
loss in the )ast nine games.
Lenny
Randle ,
Jeff
Burroughs and Tom Grieve
also knocked in runs enabling
Jim Umbarger to boost his
record to IH.
Phlllles 8, Dodgers 6:
Greg Luzinski drove in
three runs with a homer and a
sacrifice fly and Mike
Schmidt knocked in two runs
to lead Philadelphia over the
Dodgers. Dick Allen also .
homerejl for the Phillies as
they handed reliever Charlie
Hough his first loss alter
seven wins. Ron Cey had a
grand slam homer for Los
Angeles.

manager ) decides these
matters. I can't be very
objeetive. U I can get the baU
60 feet, I'll pitch. l'U pitch
every other day if they let
me. I'll go out tbere and try to
get someone out.
"Whitey knows what's best
for me and be's the boss."
Frlmk White drove in five
runs and Hal McRae stroked
four hits and scored three

1

Zisk 's blast stops Reds, 5-4

Reedsville
News Notes

error to tie the game in the
eighth. Zisk's game-wilmer to
lead off the Pirates' eighth
ended the parade.
"I was just trying to get on
base, just to look for the ball
and hit it hard," Zisk said. "I
wasn't thinking home run and
I wasn 'I thinking try to win
the ball gal(le. I was just
looking to hit the ball hard,
hoping to get on base and
start a rally."
No use trying to explain it;
that's just baseball, said
Rose. ·
"That's the great thing
about this game, you never
know what to expect, " he
said. "The man who ligures
out this game will be a
Houdini.''

Hou.s ton has

Padres 5, Me18 I:
Alan Foster U&gt;ssed a fourhitter for his first win since
June I of last year in pitching
the Padres over the Mets.
Dave Winfield hit a three-run
homer and Willie McCovey
had a tworun double lor San
Diego which tagged Craig
Swan with his sixth loss in
eight decisions.
Cardinals 7, Astros 6:
St. Lo uis scored fiv e
unearned runs in the first
inning then held on behind the
relief pitching of AI Hrabosky
to defeat the Astros ."
Shortstop Roger Metzger's
error paved the way lor the
Cardinals' first Inning assault
but they scored what proved
to be the winning run in tbe
eighth on a wild pitch by
reliever Gene Pen~. Cliff
Johnson had a two-.-un homer
for Houston.

Girls Blue
MOCCASINS
The Shoe Box

'

Middleport, Ohio

Free service to veterans
and their families will be
· available locally when a
Field Service Unit of the
Disabled American Veterans
(DAY) visits Meigs County
Tuesday, June 15. This Is the
third consecutive year that
one of these 26-foot mobile
offices has toured the state in
order to provide free counseling and claims service to
veterans and their families.
The DAY Field Service Unit
will be located at the Mid. dleport Community Park
from 10 a.m. untU 6 p.m.
The traveling veterans '
service facility will be
manned by DAY National
Service Officers who are fully
qualified to assist veterans or

LANGSVILLE, OHIO

RT. NO. 1 45741

GENERAL REVENUE

1 !":

Pi. A NNED £.11 f' EN DITU A ES

lbl

(AI C"TEGORIES

CAFITA ~

AriTICIP~T•NCl
~

MA [t,I[ I~AN CL fO~ 1~(
!; 0

$

2 EN\'IAON ... (N I A ~

~·~='~"~··~---~~
· -------f'---~-3 PUBLIC
111- WSI&gt;OR!AT!OW
"~.O.LIH

•

$

$

$

•

~---r-----r---~ .
$
$
I UEI'l"'A!ES
1 SOCIIII. StMIC [$
fOA AOtD 01\ r O(Ifl
&amp; f iNAHI:IAL
M liLTII'IiR ~D$f

~~: 053 _'~-

$

$

$

$

I&lt;

J!H'r

I

I

w

1

\/

ACCourn tlO 36 2 OSJ 003

RACINE VILLAGE 91 2

VILLAGE CLERK
RACINE, OHIO 4l711

s

A 0 '-0IN I$1~AioQOj

8

~£UOD

19-6 1&lt;•1Hjb.o 'l
OE.CHIOER Jl 19 76 Pl-'NS TO SPENO l ttfSE tUNDS f 0 f' 111E PLJflf'UStS

-:-:==::-+---c-:-:-;
.:-,-t--I PIJIIUC S"f[I V
$ 1, 053
.; 3
$
-::-::==-c:---t'-=;.-.:....&lt;'-f'--- -~ .

:&gt;EVENTI1 EN!Itl t/Jci•T

ANO

S

, Gf NHAl GOYl
IU ( DVGAIION

\

USDA
Choice Meats

USDA Choice
Lean, No Waste

VALLEY BELL

2% MILK
gal.
PHEBE'S STORE
June S-12
Right Reserved to Lim it Quantlt,Jes

We Gladly Accept Fed. Food Stamps
Monday lhru Friday
9:00 to 7:00
Satl;&lt;dily 9 to 9

$}.39

DEL MONTE

-ORANGE JUICE ............
;;::~
._

59~

PUMPKIN..................2·~:~t 99
39~
C
FRUIT CO KTAIL ......~a.".. . .
29~
PUDDI NGS.................f~!:~
$}2"'
OXYDOL ..................~'!... .
. 69#Joy················~··············
~

LIBBY'S SOLID PACK

YELLOW ONION$

3 lb. bag 59e
HEAD LETTUCE
3 for •1.00

TOMATOES
lb.

39e

lb.

'1.49

12

HUNT'S

300

Produce Special:s!

CUBE STEAK

T-Bone Steak ....... !~:.$F

9

Sirloin Steak ........ ~~:.$1 59

ROYAL

GIANTSIZE

.

DISHWASHING LIQUID
·
.

SEA MIST

pkg .

OJ

oz.

,.

22

,

bot.

•

'

19~

AMMON lA .............:~::~ .

$

REIGEL SLICED

sg

-BACON.............. ~~·... !
$159 .
HAM ................. ::·.~·-·· .
7·
BOLOGNA..•.... ~~. ·:
DUBUQUE CHOPPED

.

.,

TASTEE CHUNK

g~
\&lt;

SERVICE UNIT - A field service unit will visit in
Meigs County at the Middleport community park
Tuesday, June 15 to assist veterans in obtaining benefits
the law provides for them.

LeFlore , oet 4 3 17 4 26 58 _333
Munson , NY 47 201 28 64 ,318
Patek KC
ii 151 29 4e 318
St aub.' Oet
48 168 20 53 :31 5
48 188 29 59 .31 4
Carew, Min
Yount Mil
44 166 21 52 313
..
'
Home Runs
·.
National Le~tue: Kingman .
NY 21; Schmidt, Ph!l lS ;
Foster, Cln 11 ; Monday, Chi
and Cey , LA 10.
American League: Otis, KC
10 ; May, Ball , Bando , Oak and
Ford , Mlnn 9; Yastrzemskl,
Bas , Hendrick, Clttv and Bur .

m.

QUANTITIES

liMITED

------------------?-----------------I
COUPON
ll(tlll:ltl~l
.

HOT LAlliER DISPENSER

Dls~:Oisue~s s~:~m~~~ :~~~e~u
1~"!econds
·

.
. UL Listed

$777 ~~~~ ;oupon

Reg. 114.95

WASHING'I'ON (UP!) Green Bay Pacli.ers former
8llpro defensive star Willie
Davis, a 17th-round draft
pick, and Paul Brown, the
coach who picked him and
then traded him, agree that
the college draft is well
worthwhUe.
.
Both appeared Monday as
def':"'se witnesses lor the
NatiOnal FootbaU League at '
the federal court trial
broug~t by Washington
Redskins 1967 No. I rookie
Jim
" Yazoo"
Smith,
challenging the draft as an
illegal violation of the
anti!~ laws.
Dav1s,
the
former
Grambling College star,
testified that elimination of
the draft as advocated by
Smith's lawyers would
financially hurt the lowerechelon players because the
All-Americans and ~luHhlp
stars would be able to exert a
whip hand in a free market
for top draftees .
"Some owners might act
irrationally," the on~ime
Green Bay all-pro said.
"They take over teams
sometimes out of ego and
would overbuy."
Smith
seeks
treble
dalilllges on grounds the draft
denied him bargaining
leverage to obtain a better
contract and protection
against injury when the
Redskins selected him first in
the 1967 draft. The former
Oregon defensive star's
playing career ended when he
sustained a broken neck in
the last game of his rookie
1968 season.
Brown, who developed
teams Into winners at
Cleveland and Cinclnnati,
said on the witness stand that
the college draft "Is the life
blood of (X'O football."
Brown, still general
manager of the Cincinnati
Bengals after stepping down
as coach earner this year,
told of developing both the
Browns without using the

Prices Valid June 9-18

Rlchar.d, Hou end Montefusco ,
SF 6-S,.,

Nafionat League: . Cedeno.
Hou 23 : Morg an, (in 22 ;

Blyleven , Tex 84 , Hunter , NY
.

66 ; GoSSCI Qf' Ch i flO

I

COFFEEMAKER

1-Fost brewing octloo deliv ers fi rs t cup tn
90 seconds.
1·1ust
Ml!kes 8 CUPS
Reg. 124.95
~~~~ Ctpon

l

$1 7'1J

Prl~os Valfd June 9-11

I

----------------~--------5-------ll(tiiJ:l•NI
COUPON

ESSENCE DE BRUT
fOR MEN

l
l FliCKER LADIES' SHAVER

Sh.ves dean . close and comtortobly

1

I without nicks or cuts.
.'
$1)99
1
99~ ~~~t ;oupon
L · · With
Limit Coupon
I Reg. 1u 9
2

Fresh, ma sculine fragrance

Reg . 110.00

Prices Valid June 9-11 ,

1

I

Prices Valid June 9-18

I

Regent Sheffield

-------------------1-------------·-------COUPON
QtllhliNI
I
Presidential

' OVER TliE CALf' MEN'S SOCKS
. One size fits all

· Knit tor wear and comforl
Reg , S24 .00 $499 per do10n
With Coupon
Limit 2 Dolen
Prices · V~ Id June 9-181

I1 MIRACLE WORKER KNIFE
The shar pest knife you' ll ever own .

1
I

4
79
I
I
--·----------------i----------:-------COUPON
1
COUPON
Reg .

.

I

I
boating , auto. 1

For camping , fishing,

I

emergen cy use

With Coupon
Limit 2

lUI

Prices Valid June 9-11

7

draft and the Bengals by
using lt . _
Brown told how he developed the Cleveland
Browns into a championship
team after World War II
without using the draft. BUL
he said .that by signing free
agent stars from the military
services he built such a
powerful team that the AllAmerican Conference In
which they played died alter
only lour seasons.
" We started out in
Cleveland with ~rowds of 6070 000 fans but this fell off to
20'000 because the people '
th~ught why go out to see the
game when they knew in
advance the Browns would

win?"

Gf; DRIP

I

Baltery operated

says Davis, Brown

MABON PERSONAlS
Amenc~n
League: . Stolon ,
Mil 7-2;_ T•~nt , Bos 1·3: T,onana ,
Lee and Betty_Kraus of Warren, Ohio, Mrs. Fred
C,al 7-4, 81rd, KC 6· 1. Fllzmor Rosenbaum of Pomeroy, were &amp;inday dinner guests of Mr.
ns, KC, Travers , Mi l , C~mpbell
and Goltz, M lnn 6·2; F1guero• :
and Mrs. Russell Capehart and Christy Bletner. Other· recent
NY lind Umbarger, TeK 6·4 ,
guests of the Capehart's were Mr. and Mrs. Edward
Hunter .. NY , Torre~ and Blue,
Oak, 6-5. Palmer, Ball 6-6.
Hackemeyer of Cincinnati; Mn. AmeUa Gabelein of Bristol,
Earned Run _Average
Tenn.
(based on 0 inn1ngs pitched)
Mr. and Mrs. Russell Capehart, Mason, Mrs. Fred
National League: Zachry, Cin
·1.32 ; Forsch, Hou 2.00 ; Hbuah,
Rosenbaum, Pomeroy visited recently with the Capehart's
LA 2.40 ; Jones, SO 2.46 ;
daughter, and son-in-taw, Mr. and Mrs. John Troy and family roughs, Te)( 8.
Ruth .... e~ , A,tl 2.54 .
Runs aaHad In
~mer.can Leegue; . Carroll.
at Lexington, Ky.
National Lugue: Foster , Cln , Ch1 e.nd Travers, Mil 1.96;
Sgt. and Mrs: Nicky Nicholson and daughter, Amber of 50 ; Kingman , NY 47 ; Morgan , Kern. Clev 2.11 ;. Brown. Ctev
.
New Jersey visited hla mother, Mn. Evelyn Nicholson and Cln and Schmid! Phil 39 . 2.15; Wood, Chi 2.15 .
other relatives, recently.
·
Perez, Cln.and Winfield, SO 38.·
National r!~k~e~~'\eaver NY
A m e r 1 c a n League : Bur .
u ·
,•
Mrs. Wibna Blake, Clifton, haa returned home after roughs . Te&gt;e 40 ; Chambliss , NV 78 i Montefusco, SF 63 , R:t.
38 ; Munson , NY 37 ; Ot is, KC chard , Ho_u 62 ; Messersmith,
visiting her lister in Colwnbua.
3.5 · Ford Mlnn and Grieve rex
Atl 57 ; ~ollch, NY 56 .
Mr ..and Mrs. Bill Lyons have ret~~rned to their home ~~ 34 '
'
'
Amer.can League : . Tanana,
·
Stolen BJSes
Cal
103 ;
Ryan , Cal
94 ;
Maumee, ru. alter visiting his sister, Miss Betty Lyons, at
Cllfto~.

were decla red eligible
Monday for the draft under
the undergraquate eligibilty
clause .
Oth e r blue -c h ipp e rs
expected to go early are All·
America Scott May, a S-7
forward
from
NCAA
champion Indiana ; Robert
Parish, a 7-1 center from
Centenary ; 6-9 Alabama
center Leon Douglas;
Indiana's 6-3 guard Quinn
Buckner; and S.IO center
Scott Uoyd of Arlzana State.
The other undergraduates
available under what used to
be termed the hardship
clause are:
Norman Cook, Kansa s;
Charles Daniels, Rice;
Johnny Davis, Dayton; Jacky
Dorsey, Georgia; Edward
Douglas, formerly RutgersNewark; Daryl Gainey,
formerly Fairmont Stale ;
Reg Glasgow, CaliforniaRiverside ; Loy Hudson,
Albany (Ga .) State; Robert
Kelley , lormtrly Nevada-Las
Vegas and Guilford ; Warne!
Lamb, !A!hlgh cOmmunity
College ; Lonnie Shelton,
formerly Oregon State;
Larry Wright, Grambling;
Rick Balzan, formerly
Roncalli High School,
Manitowoc, Wis.; Brent
McNair, formerly Canislus;
and Nick Sortal, formerly
Herrin High School, Herrin,

Draft worthwhile

i

~-----~~~-

A GENHl A. Ut 'l lNUl
SII,..R " G PA\_M_ENT Of

NEW YORK (UP! ) - The
long basketball season is
finally over and heads are
turned next to the tall men
who are going to be next
year 's bumper crop of
rookies .
The National Basketball
Association draft will be held
today when the league's 18
teams make their choices via
a conference call from league
headquarters beginning at 2
p.m. EDT. The first .found
choice is expected to be
Marylalid's 6-1 All America
guard John Lucas, who
comes to Houston after being
traded from Atlanta in a deal
involving switches of No. I
picks alid two players.
The highly touted Lucas
averaged 20 points this
iseason and broke Torn
McMillen's career sccrlng
record at Maryland.
"In addition to a pro
career, I'm ·also thinking
abOut entering the · World
Team Tennis satellite tour lor
experience ," Lucas said
recently.
The Hawks received tbe
Rockets' choice on the first
roUnd, the ninth of the draft,
plus Joe Meriwether, aS-loot10 center-forward and Gus
Bailey, a guard.
Also expected to go high In
the draf~ are All-Americas
Adrian Dantley of Notre
Dame
and
Richard
Washington of UCLA, who

A.OURESCENT LAMP

p~·r;;:;;· News . .NOti!S1

GenerBI Ae~enue Snllr•ng pro~toes reoeral ILJn!IS orrectl'; to lnc~l ;m~ stale go•er11monts li' &lt;S r(!po• t ot yuur gollernmenl 's plan •s pubt•sheO
1o encou111Qt crtlnn PI!UC!pttion 1n Oete1 mlm~g your g,•lernmcnts OectSOil Cfl ne w Uto monol y "Mil o~ sper~ t Note ol,n~ complt lnlt or
dltcrlmlnlllon In ltll "" ol tht.. Iundt 11"1111 bt 1elll lo THE G O ~E~NMEN T
lhe Olflct or Atvtnut Sh111ng, Wuh., D.C. 20 228 .
or
RACINE VILLAGE

- -- - , . - - - - " " " ' T";;iC;;-;;
t Q~u;~ -

Lucas expected
first NBA pick

their families in filing claims with its fleet of Field Service
for federal and state benefits Units , more than 98,9000
to which they are entitled by veterans . and their . dependlaw _ disability com- ents contacted !he mobile
pensation, pension , em- offices for assistance. As a
ployment, . job training, result of these visits, DAY
education, hospitalization National Service Officers
and medical care, social filed 6,000 new claims ani! resecurity, death claims and opened another 33,000 claims
other matters.
for veterans benefits.
During the first two years
The project is an extension
of the DAY's nationwide tour of the DAY's long-time
national service program
which provides a wide
variety of free assistance to
veterans and their families.
During the period from July
~
By Alma Marshall .
I, 1974, to June 30, 1975, the
K
» DAY was successful In fUIQg
Letart - Mrs. Albert (Tom) Roush, Jr. (the former Terry favorable claims which
Bird) was honored with a stork shower on May 27th by the resulted in 220,000 individual
Graham United MethodiSt women, at the church. The color awards totaling $465-million
in federal benefits. Memscheme was pink, white and blue.
Games were played Wider the direction of Mary Richards. bership in the Disabled
Mrs. Anna Parson won the door prize and other prizes were American Veterans is not
required as a· basis for this
won by Esther Brown, Ruth Pickens, and Brenda Merritt.
Cake, punch and mints were served to the foUowing: DAY counseling and claims
Brenda Merritt, Ruth Pickens, Esther Brown, Joe and Betty service.
The DAY employs 280 fullBurris, Diane Dunlap, Chris Shelton, Mrs. Ritchie Bird, Judy
time
National Service Ofand Debbie Hesson, Mary Richards, Connie Bird, Anna
ficers
- most of whom are
Paroons, Jane Bird, Mrs. Ada Clarke, Miss Anna Allen and
disabled
Vietnam Era
Michelle Wren.
veterans
~~ Veterans
Sending gifts were Vera Pickens, Anna Bumgarner,
Administration
installations
Nessie ·Moore, Rev. Mrs. Achsah Miller, Esther and Louise
throughout
the
country.
Roush, Mrs. Loren Bird, Carolyn and Paula Bird, GlOria
of
However,
the
location
Roush, Mrs. Albert &amp;ush, Sr., Mary Bumgarner and Barbara
some
VA
facilities
makes
it
Bumgarner.
difficult for many veterans,
Mason - Women of Mason United Methodist Church are as well as their widows and
having a Father-Son banquet at the church on June 21 at 6 p.m. dependents, to personally
visit a DAY National Service
Office.
The DAY's Field
Mason -The Mason City Historicay Society meeting June
Unit
program carries
Service
3 at the former Lewis property at 10 a .m. was followed by
·assistance
right to the
IWich at noon. Mrs. Earl Ingels, Sr ,, presented the devotionals
veteran's
doorstep.
John 3:1S.21. Mrs. Catherine &amp;nith, (X'esldent, presided. The
Local DAV members ·aretreasury report was given by Mrs. Delwon Roberts.
cooperating
with the national
The group discussed the Memorial Book and note paper
headquarters
of the Disabled
which the society has purchased. The note paper sells for $1.25
American
Veterans in
and has a ske!ch on each page of the Lewis home.
bringing
the
Field Service
Mrs. Robert Maring, wife of the pastor of Mason United
Unit
program
into
this area .
Methodist Church, prepared the charter member list in Old
English which reportedly was be.autifully done. The teacher
wbo taught Mrs. Maring Old English script was Miss Lucy
Lewis, daughter of the late Virgil A. Lewis. An old frame was
Major League Leaders
purchased to hOld the Charter Member list.
By United Press International
Baiting
It was lrought to the attention of those attending that
I based on 100 at bah)
. azaleas and other flowers had been planted at the Lewis home
National League
G. AB R. H. P&lt;l
and dirt will be hauled by the town employees to flU in an area
Robinson , Pit 36 119 19 .4!i .378
.
·
,
LA
of the yard.
McBride St L 33 12S 20 46 359 , Gnffey, Ctn 16, Lopes ,
and
• ·
·
Brock Sl L 13
The society members agreed to sponsor a float lor the July Griffey, Cin 47 179 45 61 .341
Amfricln Ltague· Patek KC
, NY
44 118 IB 40 ,339
'
'
td, BicenteMial parade with George Carson lumishit!g the Torre
Rose , Cin
52 213 46 72 , 338 and North, Oak ~8 ; Baylor , Oak
Cey. LA
51187 30 63 .337 25; Ca~ponens, Ook 21 ;
vehicle.
Cln
47 1s4 28 62 337 Carew, Mrnn 20 .
A meeting will be held on June lith at City Hall at 7:30 Foster 'Phil
Pitching
Boone,
4.-' 131 21 44 ·.336 ~
Most
VIctories
p.m. in regards to the BicentelUlial parade and activities. The M~rgan , Cln 46 154 41 51 .331
National League: Jbnes , so
next meeting will be held on July lsl at the home.
M1lner , NY
31122 21 40 .328 10. 2; Lonborg , Phil 8·1; Hough ,
American Leag'le
LA 7 . 1 ; Matlack , NY 6·1;
Attending were Mrs. Catherine Smith, Mrs, Earl Ingels,
Brett
KC
~Q
A~
R·
~
·
~~~
C.hrlstenson, Ph11 !nd RoOker ,
49
4
9
7
3
Mrs. Zelma Hunter, Mrs. Hazel Smith, Mrs. Doris Roberts, McRae, KC
49
187
32 65 :3475 Pill 6-2; Fryman, Mil , Koos :
Mrs. Helen Barton, Mrs. Evelyn Proffitt, Mrs. Murl Megee Lvnn, Bos
38 142 19 49 3_. 5 man , NY and _Strom, !iO 6-J,
Bostock , Min 37139 21 47 :338 -.Reuss, Pitt 6-4; Ruthven , Atl ,
lind Mrs, Carol Alexander.

SHARIN G P LANN E D US E R EPORT

--

first choice

Free
•
.services
for
veterans

Denim Suede

August 1, 1976

5.c. The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, June 8, 1976
·
- ...
to last until5 p.m. The bulk of
all drafting ill exected to ta ke
place in th is session.
Following Houston in order
of selection will be De troit,
Atl anta , Milwaukee, Sa n
Diego, California , Chicago
Cubs, Chicago White Sox,
Montreal , Minne sota, San
Francisco, Texas, New York
Mets, Cleveland, St. Louis,
NEW YORK (UP! ) "Bannister looks like he's New
York
Yanks ,
Floyd Bannister, a hard- really something special," Philadelphia, Kansas City,
throwing lefthander wi.J.o said one major league sccut Los Angeles , Baltimore,
some pro scouts Ieel is "Ourreports say he' can play Pitt s burgh , Boston ,
]X'epared to ptch in the major right now in the major Cincinnati and Oakland.
league$ without any minor leagues, that he can break in
The league presidents
league seasoning, is expected right-off the bat."
made the order of draw in the
to be the first player drafted
An estimated 700 names secondary phase and Atlanta
today as the regular phase of are in the hopper in the both won the right to select first .
major league bueball 's the ·. regular and the_ Detroit wUI follow , and then
annual draft of high school secondary phase of the draft, picks will be R!ade by
and college players gets which will be conducted Cincinnati, Kansas City, San
under way.
·
Wednesday. Headquarters Diego, MUwaukee, Houston,
The Houston Astros, wbo for both sessions will be : Cleveland, New York Mets,
finished with the worst record · Baseball Commissioner California, Los Angeles,
in the major leagues last Bowie Kuhn's New York Texas, Philadelphia, Chicago
season, will get to pick ftrst in office.
While Sox, St . Louis,
the draft and are expected to
Lastyearthedraltwentto Baltimor-e, Montreal,
select Bannister, a flame- 34 rounds and lasted lour Oakland, Pittsburgh,. New
thrower who registered a 37-li hours and 58 minutes . York Yanks , Chicago Cubs,
mark in hiB three varsity Today's regular phase starts Boston, Siln Franc~co and
seasons at Arizona State.
at noon EDT and is expected Minnesota.

. Uses 8 D-cell balterles (not !_r'cluded) 1
$777 With Coupon 1
Reg . 119 · 95
Limit 2
1
Prices Valid June 9-18 ,
· 1

Ol.

SILK 'N LEGS
SHAVE CREAM

35

C With Coupon
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Reg . 11 ·29

Prices Valid June 9-11

-----------------~---------------COUPON
1
Wl(tliJ:l•J~I
oz. 'Johnson &amp;

7

Johnson

BABY SHAMPOO
No more tears.

89

~

With Coupon
Limit 2
!Price Valid June 9-18 1

Reg . S1 .7l

II

1
I
I

6 1~ oz. RAPID SHAVE
Reg . II.09

. 39e

With Coupon
Limit 2

.

I
I

Prices Valid June 9-11

1

v. 01 • .

I
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1
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SOFT &amp; DRI ROLL.ON

r--·-----------------L---------------COUPON
1
llltli!;Itl~l
20-peck

SMILE SUGARLESS GUM
Spearmen! or fruit

$119 · With
Coupon
Limit 2

Reg. n .oo

&lt;

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19~ Wlih Coupon
Limit 2

-----"~~~~~~':~9~~---f----:r~=~~~~::~.-~--COUPON

1

ll(tl11:l•NI

Gillelte

I

South Bend

r,...

Asked if the same thing
could happen to the NFL
today if the draft were
eliminated, Brown replied:
"I think it would hurt in the
distribution of talent a great
deal. We're in show busineSB
and the
closer
the
competition and the more
suspense, the better the

TRAC II ADJUSTABLE RAZOR II . SPIN CAST COMBO
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.5 Wilkinson Stainless Steel I VIA LANVIN TOILET WATER
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From Paris

He said that he was able to
develop the Bengals· into a
Super Bowl playoff contender
three years after their 1968
creation almost e~tirely from
the draft. ·
"The league stocked us
with veterans through an
allocation," Brown added,
"but primarily we built
ourselves up through the
draft."
He argued against Smith's
claim that the draft denies a
college player bargaining
power with the team which
selects him.
"If a player didn't have
bargaining power as a No. I
draftee, we could offer him
the minimum salary and say .
'take it or leave It,'" he said.
"The pressure is on us to get
him signed. If we hadn't been
able to sign Archie Griffin
this year we'd be given a bad
time by the fans.
"You can't sign a football
player and take advantage of
him and then have him come
to camp with the rig~t heart
and spirit," he said.

NEW YORK (UP!) Johnny Bench, a six-time
electee, caps a group of live
pi'eviously elected All-Star
starters
and
three
"newcomers" In the first
weekly tabulation's for the
National League starting
lineup lor the 1976 All-Star
game.
Top votegetters by position
are : Steve Garvey of Los
Angeles at first base; Joe
Morgan and Pete Rose of
Cincinnati at second and
third base r.especllvely and
Larry Bowa of Philadelphia
at shortstop. The ouifleld
positions are filled by
Philadelphia's Greg
Luzlnski, St. Louis' Bake
McBride and current major
league home run leader Dave
Kingman of the New York
Mets -each bidding for his
first AliStar. start.

$199

With coupon I Reg . m.u $666 wL 1th c oupon
1m11 2
Limll2
1
tPr1ce~ Valid June 9. 11 ,
Prices Valid June 9-11
_______________
...JI_____________
·--·-·- -·-

Reg . 53 _50

-

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COUPON

ReQ .

29~

95c

1

I
I

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3 01.

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With Coupon I
Limit 2
.1

Reg. SIO.OO

$299

With Coupon
Limit 2

I
Prien Valid June 9-18
I
---------------~--r---------------Prices Valid June 9-18

COUPON

1

22 WASH 'N DRI

I

Wash es and cleans without water , soap or
Wilh Coupon
Limit 2
Prices Valid June 9-11

49

Reg . 11.04

~

I

COUPON
5 oz.

II ULTRA BRITE
TOOTHPASTE
12c OFF
I
I
1

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594

R-. 98c
With Coupon
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- - ----------------~-----~~-·------

ll(tlll:l•M
21

01 .

BUB BUBBLE BATH
Mild formula with lanolin
Reg . 98c

I
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AMITY MEN'S BIUFOLD
Top grain leathers In populor colors.

1

I
59~ With Coupon I
UmiJ 2
I

Prices Valid June 9-18

COUPON

1

Reg. 16.98

$3911

With ~oupon
Limit 2

Prius Valid June 9-11

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

COUPON
4 01.

CRUEX SPRAY P~ER
Rel iev es Itching ond chafing
$129 Limit
With Coupon
Req. S2.39
2

'

I
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COUPON

HI-DRI TOWELS
. IOl 2-ply towels
- Super absorbency

Reg . 57e ' 47~ With Coupon
Limit 2

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CORD
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Reg. s2. 75

$199

With. Coupon
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Industrial strerl!llh cleaner
R 11 29
With Coupon
eg . ·
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Prices Valid June 9-11 _-Prices Valid June 9-18
.
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TWO-PART KEY RING

Snops opert or locks together .
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DUTTON'S
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�.

•

8- 'l1le DaU~ Sontinoi,Mlddleport·Pomeroy, 0 .. Tuesday, June8, 1f16
a bll!lner represenllng Racine .
First BilptiOt Church. They
were lwtcheon guests at the
horne of Rev. and Mrs . Ralph
Zwtdel in Zanesville.
Mrs. Lenna Brinker spent
several days with her brother
lllld sister-In-law, Mr . and
Mrs. Cloist Badgley at East
Letart.
Mr . and Mrs. Bill Beegle of
Crown City spent a weekend
with his parents, Mr . and
Mrs . Bob Beegle.
Guests of Mr. lllld Mrs.
Ralph Badgley, May 2S,
were Mr . and Mrs . Joe
Wood of Ol!Dard, California,
T. Terry Johnson
and Mrs. Rachel McBride of
Syracuse.
Mr. and Mrs . • Robert
0
SOfi Dain
Cornwell and Mrs. Ruth
Circle of Gallipolis, Mrs.
Lelah Wetherby of Mid·
dleport and Mr. and Mrs.
Ernest Bush of Letart were
guests Swtday of Mr . and
T. Terry Johnson, son of Mrs. Ed Miller .
Mr . and Mrs. Edison Brace
Wilma Harrison, 17 Garfield
and
Mrs. Jack Adams visited
Ave .. Gallipolis. recentiy won
In
Hwttlngton
and Crown
a Bush Leadership Fellows
City,
Swtday.
Award to use In cootinuing
Mr . and Mrs . Charles
study in the field of business.
Williams
visited his parents,
He is currently vice
presiden t, industrial Mr . and Mrs . Cisco Williams
relations for American Hoist at Albany on Swtday.
Mrs . Holly Horner and Mrs.
&amp; Derrick Co ., St. Paul.
Edith
Dufour of Akron apent
Minnesota .
a
week
with Mr. and Mrs. ·
The Bush Foundation of St.
Paul annually awards a Elza Birch.
Mrs . Roderick Grimm
selected number of fellowship
spent
Friday with Mr. and
awards throughout a rive
Mrs
.
Dennis Manuel at
slate area ; this grant is one of
Marietta.
19 awarded in 1976.
Mr . and Mrs . Jim Brace
Johnson has been accepted
and
family of Crown City
into
the
Advanced
spent
Saturday with Mr. and
Management Program of
Mrs
.
Edison
Brace and Mr.
Harvard University, Grad·
uate School of Business and Mrs. Charles Bailey.
Mrs. Carolyn Miller spent a
Administration, Boston. He
with Mrs . Florence
day
will atl&lt;lnd this program,
Adams
at Letart Falls.
along with 160 other
Graduates
honored in the
executives from around the
world, for six weeks this morning worship service at
summer and seven weeks in First Baptist Sunday were :
the summer of t977. The high school • Tim Jenkins,
program provides in-depth Danny Brown, Jim Holman,
study in broad areas of Ron Cunningham. David
Neigler, J. F. Young, Paula
corporate management.
and college • Anita
Mr. Jiitinson is the grand· Rowe
King,
Patti
Struble and Mike
son of Mrs . Ullian Lee and
Struble.
the late Dale Lee of Racine in
Mrs. Letha Morris returned
Meigs County.
home from Holzer Medical
Center after being a
pneumonia patient.
Bill Leke of Columbus was
an overnight guest or his
grandparents, Mr . and Mfs .
Francis Morris Saturday,
after attending the alumni
banquet.
Mrs. Loren Nixon of New
By Mrs. Francis Morris
Straitsville spent Friday
Mrs . Marie Roy was until Tuesday with Mr . and
hoste ss for the Booster Mrs. Ralph Webb.
Sunday School Class Friday
Mr. and Mrs . Starling Orr
evening, May 21, at her home . of Gahanna spent Swtday
Mrs .
Edna · Pickens, until Tuesday over Memorial
president, · opened the Day with Mrs. Orr's parents,
meeting
a devotional Mr. and Mrs. Chrisie Powell.
program by Mrs. Marjo,le
Mrs. Alice Ann Davies of
Grimm followed . Group Akron visited her aunts, Mrs.
singing "Love Ulted Me" Ann Coe and Mrs. Maxine
was followed by scripture, Wingett and attended the
Hebrews 11: 1-li and sentence alumni with them. Mrs. Coe
prayers by all. Readings by acc:ompanied her to her home
members Included "Kindness for a visit.
In Action" by Helen Slack;
Miss Grace Ellis, Miss
"Faith in Jesus", Dorothy Ruth Ellis and Mr . Howard
Badgley; "Make It A Habit to Bingman of Columbus were
Pray for Others". Ura here for the alumni and
Morris ; 11 Consider" I Edna visited Miss Edith Hayman
Pickens; , "Faith," Clara and other relatives.
·
Powell; "Can I Go On
Donna Briice and Darlene
Unheeding," Vera Beegle; Hendershot of Parkersburg,
"Lord, Tea.ch Us to Pray", W. Va . spent Friday and
Wanda
Powell; S!lturday with Mr. and Mrs.
"Tomorrow '~, Marie Roy;
Edison Brace.
"The World Bible", Velma
Mr. and Mrs. Don Jr.
Taylor ; "Can a Leopard Walker and Michelle, Delbert
Change its Spots", Helen Walker and Norma Woods
Simpson; "What Have you were weekend guests of Rev.
Given ~ ', Grace Jividen; "Are
you Keeping it a Secret". and Mrs . Don Walker.

.

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NOTICE TO CONTRACTOR 5
STATE OF OHiO
DEPARTMENT OF
•
TRANSPORTATION
Columbus;, Ohio
May11 , 197&amp;
COntract S11les Leg11l Copy '

o\\\1

.00

.,.39

LB.

RIPE

GWJEN
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BLEACH
GAL

COLBY
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$}6~
...

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llad1e lhaeN
DEALER

JUNE 7 THRU 16
7:30p.m .
Joseph Hoskinn,
Speaker

TURNER

$

MX3 C.B.

.95

MICROPHONE

a. Jtwttrv and Ottltr
YIIUiblts

~y­

NI•d In

Nc.L 76 · 413

.

On Success Road

remove buttons from gar·
ments consigned to the rag
bag. Buttons are put In small
plastic pill b&lt;Jttles that stand
upright In large metal fruit
cake or cookie boxes.
One is fortunate to have a
large •upply on hand, but
those less fortunate could
shop at thrift store• . They
·put buttons cut from gar·
ments that cannot be
repaired ,Into bins and sell
them lor nominal prices. This
Is a good hunting ground, not
only for bul(qns for c'(JilUllOn
needs but lor specialized
buttons that pe&lt;iple may be
collecUng .
Also. I roll leftover fabrics
from sewing and place · the
rolls In the plastic bags the
newspapers comes tn. They '
can be easily seen when
needed lor quilts, patching
and sma ll projects . CATHERINE .
DEAR POLLY - If you are
spending too much time
cleaning soap film and mold
from your shower tiles, try
hanging a window squeegee
In the shower to be used by
each bather after hls shower.
The kids will love .ploying
window washer and your tiles
DEAR POLLY - My Pet will stoy brigHt and
Peeve is that address labels greaseless much longer. on magazines are on the front JACKIE.
and ruin a plctyre cover that · Polly will send you oae of
might be used . II seems the her "peachy" tbaak·you
back would be fine for the cards, l~al for framing or
label.
placing Ia your lamlly sera~
I cUp long stories or con- book, llshe uses yourfavorite
densed
novels
from Pointer, Peeve or Problem In
magazines and staple each her column. Write .Polly'•
story together wllh the Pointers In care of this new..
magazine cover an.d take paper.
them to friends in the hospital
or to pallents In a vel&lt;lran's
hospital. They are · not too
heavy to hold when one is In
bed. - ALYCE.
DEAR POLLY - and Mrs.
D.R.N. whose Pet Peeve is
wllh the packaging of buttons
- I seldom have to buy
buttons. I can nearly always
find a complete set In my
button box, since I always

Gift!

1out

5.0 LB. BAG

10 LB. BAG

CHURCH Of .
CHRIST

POLLY'S PROBLEMS
DEAR POI.LY - Would
you be able to give me some
ideas for making use or
buttons , ~i n ce I huve
thousands of them . Is U1ere
ever a buyer for buttons' SYLVIA.
DEAR SYLVIA - You
might use some of the bullous
to Iordi designs on blue je&amp;as
and jackets. However I would
I f!
A
fj rsl separate
, .. em an dlI e
together all matching ones.
Many can doubtless be used
on garment• you may be
making. Pretty and unusual
buttons are often hard to !Ind.
Cheap looking buttons on
readymad 'clolhlllg may be
replaced with better buttons
to add much to a garment's
looko.
As you sort your buttons,
toke out any that looks very
old or that you may know to
be qulle old. There are
collectors of old bullous. The
best way to contact them
might be to look through
hobby
and
antiques
magazines at the library lor
names and addresses, and
then write ••me of them. POLLY.

Father's Day

POTATOES

ASST.
COOKIES
pkgs.

SHOWBOAT

s·ALAD
'DRESS.ING

28 oz.
CANS

~

32 oz.

----------

MIRACLE WHIP

Potted Meat

DILL PICKLES

79e

WITH '10.00 OR MORE ORDER AND COUPON
EXPIRES 6·12·76

EXTRA SPECIAL!

"The Insurance Store"

UNIT PRICE CON.TRACT
lclOS·OOOS 1121
sealed proP,osats will be
recetved at the ortlce ot th e
Director of the Ohio Depart .
m en! of
T ransportation ,
Co lumbus , Ohio , until li:I :OO
A .M . , Ohio Stan dard Time ,
Tu esday , June '2'1 , 111 76, tor
i mprovements In :
.
A thens . Gallla , Hoc ki ng ,
Meigs ~nd V inton Co unt ies ,
Oh io. on ... arious sectio ns of U .
S. Routes 33 and, SO, State
Routes 7, 56 , 78 , 9.J, 124end 160 ,
by c onstru~t l ng guardrell on
br idoe
approa ches
end
upgrading some shou l ders and
signing ,
Prolect l eng th - 0 feet or 0 1
mi l e.
Work Lenoth - 0 feet or 0
mile .
The Oh lo Oepertmen! of
T r ansportation
her-eby
nollfles all bidders that II wil l
lllfflrmatlvely Insure thl!lt In
any conlrl!cl entered Into
pursuant
to
this
l!ld ·
vertlsement , minority
bus in ess enterpri ses will be
afforded full oppor t unit y to
su bm i t b!ds In re sponse to til lS
lmlltatlon and w!lt not be
discriminated ag-a inst on the
grounds of rac e, color , or
naturatorlgln In conside rat ion
tor an award .
" M inimum wage rates tor
this prolect
have
bee n
predetermined as requir ed y
law and are se t forth In the bid
proposaL "
" Th e date se t for c ompletion
of this work shall be set forth
In the bidd ing proposal. "
Eech bidder shall be
required to fil e with his bid e
certified check or cashier 's
check for an ammount eQua l
to five per cent of hh bid, but
In no event more than fifty
thousand dollars . or a bond for
ten per cent of his bid, paveb l e
to the Dire ctor .
Bidders must apply , on !he
proper form s, for quallf lc el ion
at lea·st ten days prior to the
date set for openlno bids In
ac cordan ce w i th Chapter 5525
Ohio Revised Code .
Plans and speclticllllions are
on file In the D epa rtm ent ol
Transportat ion and the off i ce
of
the
D istr ic t
Deputy
Dir ec tor .
,The Dir ec tor r eserves the
r iih t to ret•cJ &amp;1"\V ant1 el t bids .
I RIC'I1A'k0 D . JA CKSON
DIRECTOR
\

'

p~

TH'
IULOVA
AC·
CU UARTI DIDITAL llo
"'"' rtmorkoblo watch. II
,..mpulortau limo · with
a11ruome eccurecy. Ita
heart Ia 1 tiny q11rt1
cryatel thet viWetn 1t' lt\t
••••~•une
freqUency ' '
716,A32 cycln per MCtnd.
tt tmpiOyfl 1 u"lque tnt•
bull"' command · dt.,loy
ayattm . Touch the crown
Md the hour end m lftuttt
llthl up .,oln~t tho dark

rH ICrtwi . .,Uih It tnd fhl
IICOftdl Chlftll btfort
yow eyn. Pull .It 1ne1 tftc
Geto IIUhH on .

come '" tHor
•
r.on.Cltfnonatrlltlon.
~e&lt;

,.,,

.

GOESSIER

...,,.,-

Court St., Pomeroy

R.y . 8-17 -73

161 l. B. 21&lt;

' · Buslntn Packlge
POIICitl

10. Liability Insurance
11. Ftrm Insurance

MAioN F.IIIRNITUII

"If You Have It, We Can Insure It"
PACKAGE POLICY - Pvl your outo, home, heolth

. ....

and life Insurance lnloONE poli cy . Save money and

have one prem lum .due date for all your insurance.

,•,•

o 0 oI t 0 o t ' I 0

· . Somi Of Our oihor Services:

Copy Servlc.-Nolory Strvlc.-Cor Loosing
Ser.vin

• ' •••••• t ' •

..·...•,·, .··.··..
·.. ·.. ··.··.. ··.
.. •. .• ..
..

0 0I 0 o

REUTER.IJROGAN INSURANCE SERVICE.
"The InsurAnce Stant"

o o ', I 0 o o

•' • ' , •

I

214 E. MAIN

OLEO
1 LB. OLEO

PILGR·A M

Bountiful buttons
can benefit budKet

TEEN QUEEN

WIENERS
12 oz.

SHELLIE
BEANS

Polly's Pointers

COUPON

Fami~

4 STICKS

OR

REUTER-BROGAN

6. B01t I nsurnct
7. MotorcvcTes__ _

With

SUPERIORS

GREEN BEANS

Events

1. Auto Insurance
2. Home lnsunnce
3 Mobile Homes
4. Health lnaunnct
5. Life Insurance

Da~

TEEN QUEEN
CUT

Social

MEETING

Sundays So Employees Can Spend

·--·--·---

TEEN QUEEN.

PKG.

Racine

GOSPa

.'

·'"'

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

one of 19
Bush fellows

Margie Grimm. A spring
prayer was read by Mrs.
session
Grinun and the
closed with the i.JJrd's Prayer
in lUlisCln . A quiz was conducted by Helen Simpson and
Mrs . Roy served refresh·
ments.
Mrs. Mary K. Yost, Mrs .
Martha Lou Beegle and Mrs.
Ollle Mae Cozart attended the
Sesquicentennial
birthday
celebration of the Ohio
Baptist Convention at
Zanesville Saturday. May 22.
They were dressed In old
fashion costume and mar·
ched In the parade, carrying

•

BIG JIM'S

ed

J hn

..

0
0
1 1
I
, f
1
0
0
1

''

I 0

' '

oo

° 1,

0

RADOFIN
CALCULATOR
ONLY

~44

50 EXTRA

50 EXTRA

50 EXTRA

DOD EXTRA
TOP VALUE STAMPS

TOP VALUE STAMPS

TOP VALUE STAMPS

WITH 40 OZ. TRAY

WITH WHOLE

TOMATOES

WATERMELON

WITH GAllON

WITH 5 LB.

TOP VALUE ST~MPS

%

2% MILK

SUGAR .

%

STORE HOURS
Mon., lues., Wed. It Sat.-8:30tfl5:00

THURSDAYtiL,2NOON

FRIDAY UNTIL I PM

MASON FURNITURE
773-5592

PH. 992·5130
L-~··••••••••••••••
(

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

'

Herman Grate

MMon, W. v•.

·'

�.

•

8- 'l1le DaU~ Sontinoi,Mlddleport·Pomeroy, 0 .. Tuesday, June8, 1f16
a bll!lner represenllng Racine .
First BilptiOt Church. They
were lwtcheon guests at the
horne of Rev. and Mrs . Ralph
Zwtdel in Zanesville.
Mrs. Lenna Brinker spent
several days with her brother
lllld sister-In-law, Mr . and
Mrs. Cloist Badgley at East
Letart.
Mr . and Mrs. Bill Beegle of
Crown City spent a weekend
with his parents, Mr . and
Mrs . Bob Beegle.
Guests of Mr. lllld Mrs.
Ralph Badgley, May 2S,
were Mr . and Mrs . Joe
Wood of Ol!Dard, California,
T. Terry Johnson
and Mrs. Rachel McBride of
Syracuse.
Mr. and Mrs . • Robert
0
SOfi Dain
Cornwell and Mrs. Ruth
Circle of Gallipolis, Mrs.
Lelah Wetherby of Mid·
dleport and Mr. and Mrs.
Ernest Bush of Letart were
guests Swtday of Mr . and
T. Terry Johnson, son of Mrs. Ed Miller .
Mr . and Mrs. Edison Brace
Wilma Harrison, 17 Garfield
and
Mrs. Jack Adams visited
Ave .. Gallipolis. recentiy won
In
Hwttlngton
and Crown
a Bush Leadership Fellows
City,
Swtday.
Award to use In cootinuing
Mr . and Mrs . Charles
study in the field of business.
Williams
visited his parents,
He is currently vice
presiden t, industrial Mr . and Mrs . Cisco Williams
relations for American Hoist at Albany on Swtday.
Mrs . Holly Horner and Mrs.
&amp; Derrick Co ., St. Paul.
Edith
Dufour of Akron apent
Minnesota .
a
week
with Mr. and Mrs. ·
The Bush Foundation of St.
Paul annually awards a Elza Birch.
Mrs . Roderick Grimm
selected number of fellowship
spent
Friday with Mr. and
awards throughout a rive
Mrs
.
Dennis Manuel at
slate area ; this grant is one of
Marietta.
19 awarded in 1976.
Mr . and Mrs . Jim Brace
Johnson has been accepted
and
family of Crown City
into
the
Advanced
spent
Saturday with Mr. and
Management Program of
Mrs
.
Edison
Brace and Mr.
Harvard University, Grad·
uate School of Business and Mrs. Charles Bailey.
Mrs. Carolyn Miller spent a
Administration, Boston. He
with Mrs . Florence
day
will atl&lt;lnd this program,
Adams
at Letart Falls.
along with 160 other
Graduates
honored in the
executives from around the
world, for six weeks this morning worship service at
summer and seven weeks in First Baptist Sunday were :
the summer of t977. The high school • Tim Jenkins,
program provides in-depth Danny Brown, Jim Holman,
study in broad areas of Ron Cunningham. David
Neigler, J. F. Young, Paula
corporate management.
and college • Anita
Mr. Jiitinson is the grand· Rowe
King,
Patti
Struble and Mike
son of Mrs . Ullian Lee and
Struble.
the late Dale Lee of Racine in
Mrs. Letha Morris returned
Meigs County.
home from Holzer Medical
Center after being a
pneumonia patient.
Bill Leke of Columbus was
an overnight guest or his
grandparents, Mr . and Mfs .
Francis Morris Saturday,
after attending the alumni
banquet.
Mrs. Loren Nixon of New
By Mrs. Francis Morris
Straitsville spent Friday
Mrs . Marie Roy was until Tuesday with Mr . and
hoste ss for the Booster Mrs. Ralph Webb.
Sunday School Class Friday
Mr. and Mrs . Starling Orr
evening, May 21, at her home . of Gahanna spent Swtday
Mrs .
Edna · Pickens, until Tuesday over Memorial
president, · opened the Day with Mrs. Orr's parents,
meeting
a devotional Mr. and Mrs. Chrisie Powell.
program by Mrs. Marjo,le
Mrs. Alice Ann Davies of
Grimm followed . Group Akron visited her aunts, Mrs.
singing "Love Ulted Me" Ann Coe and Mrs. Maxine
was followed by scripture, Wingett and attended the
Hebrews 11: 1-li and sentence alumni with them. Mrs. Coe
prayers by all. Readings by acc:ompanied her to her home
members Included "Kindness for a visit.
In Action" by Helen Slack;
Miss Grace Ellis, Miss
"Faith in Jesus", Dorothy Ruth Ellis and Mr . Howard
Badgley; "Make It A Habit to Bingman of Columbus were
Pray for Others". Ura here for the alumni and
Morris ; 11 Consider" I Edna visited Miss Edith Hayman
Pickens; , "Faith," Clara and other relatives.
·
Powell; "Can I Go On
Donna Briice and Darlene
Unheeding," Vera Beegle; Hendershot of Parkersburg,
"Lord, Tea.ch Us to Pray", W. Va . spent Friday and
Wanda
Powell; S!lturday with Mr. and Mrs.
"Tomorrow '~, Marie Roy;
Edison Brace.
"The World Bible", Velma
Mr. and Mrs. Don Jr.
Taylor ; "Can a Leopard Walker and Michelle, Delbert
Change its Spots", Helen Walker and Norma Woods
Simpson; "What Have you were weekend guests of Rev.
Given ~ ', Grace Jividen; "Are
you Keeping it a Secret". and Mrs . Don Walker.

.

·.

C~d

SHORTENING
3 ~B.
CAN

ARMOUR'S

PORK
&amp;
.
.

BEANS

PORK
ROAST

NEW ALABAMA
RED

40 QZ. CAN

.· SLICED

BONELESS

COUNTRY STYLE

PORK
STEAK

PORK ·
SPARERIBS

BUlova

cno\tt

Acruquartz

Digital

t\Otl

NOTICE TO CONTRACTOR 5
STATE OF OHiO
DEPARTMENT OF
•
TRANSPORTATION
Columbus;, Ohio
May11 , 197&amp;
COntract S11les Leg11l Copy '

o\\\1

.00

.,.39

LB.

RIPE

GWJEN
lSI.£

WATERMELONS

BLEACH
GAL

COLBY
'LONGHORN

CHEESE

sg~ ·

$}6~
...

.

llad1e lhaeN
DEALER

JUNE 7 THRU 16
7:30p.m .
Joseph Hoskinn,
Speaker

TURNER

$

MX3 C.B.

.95

MICROPHONE

a. Jtwttrv and Ottltr
YIIUiblts

~y­

NI•d In

Nc.L 76 · 413

.

On Success Road

remove buttons from gar·
ments consigned to the rag
bag. Buttons are put In small
plastic pill b&lt;Jttles that stand
upright In large metal fruit
cake or cookie boxes.
One is fortunate to have a
large •upply on hand, but
those less fortunate could
shop at thrift store• . They
·put buttons cut from gar·
ments that cannot be
repaired ,Into bins and sell
them lor nominal prices. This
Is a good hunting ground, not
only for bul(qns for c'(JilUllOn
needs but lor specialized
buttons that pe&lt;iple may be
collecUng .
Also. I roll leftover fabrics
from sewing and place · the
rolls In the plastic bags the
newspapers comes tn. They '
can be easily seen when
needed lor quilts, patching
and sma ll projects . CATHERINE .
DEAR POLLY - If you are
spending too much time
cleaning soap film and mold
from your shower tiles, try
hanging a window squeegee
In the shower to be used by
each bather after hls shower.
The kids will love .ploying
window washer and your tiles
DEAR POLLY - My Pet will stoy brigHt and
Peeve is that address labels greaseless much longer. on magazines are on the front JACKIE.
and ruin a plctyre cover that · Polly will send you oae of
might be used . II seems the her "peachy" tbaak·you
back would be fine for the cards, l~al for framing or
label.
placing Ia your lamlly sera~
I cUp long stories or con- book, llshe uses yourfavorite
densed
novels
from Pointer, Peeve or Problem In
magazines and staple each her column. Write .Polly'•
story together wllh the Pointers In care of this new..
magazine cover an.d take paper.
them to friends in the hospital
or to pallents In a vel&lt;lran's
hospital. They are · not too
heavy to hold when one is In
bed. - ALYCE.
DEAR POLLY - and Mrs.
D.R.N. whose Pet Peeve is
wllh the packaging of buttons
- I seldom have to buy
buttons. I can nearly always
find a complete set In my
button box, since I always

Gift!

1out

5.0 LB. BAG

10 LB. BAG

CHURCH Of .
CHRIST

POLLY'S PROBLEMS
DEAR POI.LY - Would
you be able to give me some
ideas for making use or
buttons , ~i n ce I huve
thousands of them . Is U1ere
ever a buyer for buttons' SYLVIA.
DEAR SYLVIA - You
might use some of the bullous
to Iordi designs on blue je&amp;as
and jackets. However I would
I f!
A
fj rsl separate
, .. em an dlI e
together all matching ones.
Many can doubtless be used
on garment• you may be
making. Pretty and unusual
buttons are often hard to !Ind.
Cheap looking buttons on
readymad 'clolhlllg may be
replaced with better buttons
to add much to a garment's
looko.
As you sort your buttons,
toke out any that looks very
old or that you may know to
be qulle old. There are
collectors of old bullous. The
best way to contact them
might be to look through
hobby
and
antiques
magazines at the library lor
names and addresses, and
then write ••me of them. POLLY.

Father's Day

POTATOES

ASST.
COOKIES
pkgs.

SHOWBOAT

s·ALAD
'DRESS.ING

28 oz.
CANS

~

32 oz.

----------

MIRACLE WHIP

Potted Meat

DILL PICKLES

79e

WITH '10.00 OR MORE ORDER AND COUPON
EXPIRES 6·12·76

EXTRA SPECIAL!

"The Insurance Store"

UNIT PRICE CON.TRACT
lclOS·OOOS 1121
sealed proP,osats will be
recetved at the ortlce ot th e
Director of the Ohio Depart .
m en! of
T ransportation ,
Co lumbus , Ohio , until li:I :OO
A .M . , Ohio Stan dard Time ,
Tu esday , June '2'1 , 111 76, tor
i mprovements In :
.
A thens . Gallla , Hoc ki ng ,
Meigs ~nd V inton Co unt ies ,
Oh io. on ... arious sectio ns of U .
S. Routes 33 and, SO, State
Routes 7, 56 , 78 , 9.J, 124end 160 ,
by c onstru~t l ng guardrell on
br idoe
approa ches
end
upgrading some shou l ders and
signing ,
Prolect l eng th - 0 feet or 0 1
mi l e.
Work Lenoth - 0 feet or 0
mile .
The Oh lo Oepertmen! of
T r ansportation
her-eby
nollfles all bidders that II wil l
lllfflrmatlvely Insure thl!lt In
any conlrl!cl entered Into
pursuant
to
this
l!ld ·
vertlsement , minority
bus in ess enterpri ses will be
afforded full oppor t unit y to
su bm i t b!ds In re sponse to til lS
lmlltatlon and w!lt not be
discriminated ag-a inst on the
grounds of rac e, color , or
naturatorlgln In conside rat ion
tor an award .
" M inimum wage rates tor
this prolect
have
bee n
predetermined as requir ed y
law and are se t forth In the bid
proposaL "
" Th e date se t for c ompletion
of this work shall be set forth
In the bidd ing proposal. "
Eech bidder shall be
required to fil e with his bid e
certified check or cashier 's
check for an ammount eQua l
to five per cent of hh bid, but
In no event more than fifty
thousand dollars . or a bond for
ten per cent of his bid, paveb l e
to the Dire ctor .
Bidders must apply , on !he
proper form s, for quallf lc el ion
at lea·st ten days prior to the
date set for openlno bids In
ac cordan ce w i th Chapter 5525
Ohio Revised Code .
Plans and speclticllllions are
on file In the D epa rtm ent ol
Transportat ion and the off i ce
of
the
D istr ic t
Deputy
Dir ec tor .
,The Dir ec tor r eserves the
r iih t to ret•cJ &amp;1"\V ant1 el t bids .
I RIC'I1A'k0 D . JA CKSON
DIRECTOR
\

'

p~

TH'
IULOVA
AC·
CU UARTI DIDITAL llo
"'"' rtmorkoblo watch. II
,..mpulortau limo · with
a11ruome eccurecy. Ita
heart Ia 1 tiny q11rt1
cryatel thet viWetn 1t' lt\t
••••~•une
freqUency ' '
716,A32 cycln per MCtnd.
tt tmpiOyfl 1 u"lque tnt•
bull"' command · dt.,loy
ayattm . Touch the crown
Md the hour end m lftuttt
llthl up .,oln~t tho dark

rH ICrtwi . .,Uih It tnd fhl
IICOftdl Chlftll btfort
yow eyn. Pull .It 1ne1 tftc
Geto IIUhH on .

come '" tHor
•
r.on.Cltfnonatrlltlon.
~e&lt;

,.,,

.

GOESSIER

...,,.,-

Court St., Pomeroy

R.y . 8-17 -73

161 l. B. 21&lt;

' · Buslntn Packlge
POIICitl

10. Liability Insurance
11. Ftrm Insurance

MAioN F.IIIRNITUII

"If You Have It, We Can Insure It"
PACKAGE POLICY - Pvl your outo, home, heolth

. ....

and life Insurance lnloONE poli cy . Save money and

have one prem lum .due date for all your insurance.

,•,•

o 0 oI t 0 o t ' I 0

· . Somi Of Our oihor Services:

Copy Servlc.-Nolory Strvlc.-Cor Loosing
Ser.vin

• ' •••••• t ' •

..·...•,·, .··.··..
·.. ·.. ··.··.. ··.
.. •. .• ..
..

0 0I 0 o

REUTER.IJROGAN INSURANCE SERVICE.
"The InsurAnce Stant"

o o ', I 0 o o

•' • ' , •

I

214 E. MAIN

OLEO
1 LB. OLEO

PILGR·A M

Bountiful buttons
can benefit budKet

TEEN QUEEN

WIENERS
12 oz.

SHELLIE
BEANS

Polly's Pointers

COUPON

Fami~

4 STICKS

OR

REUTER-BROGAN

6. B01t I nsurnct
7. MotorcvcTes__ _

With

SUPERIORS

GREEN BEANS

Events

1. Auto Insurance
2. Home lnsunnce
3 Mobile Homes
4. Health lnaunnct
5. Life Insurance

Da~

TEEN QUEEN
CUT

Social

MEETING

Sundays So Employees Can Spend

·--·--·---

TEEN QUEEN.

PKG.

Racine

GOSPa

.'

·'"'

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

one of 19
Bush fellows

Margie Grimm. A spring
prayer was read by Mrs.
session
Grinun and the
closed with the i.JJrd's Prayer
in lUlisCln . A quiz was conducted by Helen Simpson and
Mrs . Roy served refresh·
ments.
Mrs. Mary K. Yost, Mrs .
Martha Lou Beegle and Mrs.
Ollle Mae Cozart attended the
Sesquicentennial
birthday
celebration of the Ohio
Baptist Convention at
Zanesville Saturday. May 22.
They were dressed In old
fashion costume and mar·
ched In the parade, carrying

•

BIG JIM'S

ed

J hn

..

0
0
1 1
I
, f
1
0
0
1

''

I 0

' '

oo

° 1,

0

RADOFIN
CALCULATOR
ONLY

~44

50 EXTRA

50 EXTRA

50 EXTRA

DOD EXTRA
TOP VALUE STAMPS

TOP VALUE STAMPS

TOP VALUE STAMPS

WITH 40 OZ. TRAY

WITH WHOLE

TOMATOES

WATERMELON

WITH GAllON

WITH 5 LB.

TOP VALUE ST~MPS

%

2% MILK

SUGAR .

%

STORE HOURS
Mon., lues., Wed. It Sat.-8:30tfl5:00

THURSDAYtiL,2NOON

FRIDAY UNTIL I PM

MASON FURNITURE
773-5592

PH. 992·5130
L-~··••••••••••••••
(

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

'

Herman Grate

MMon, W. v•.

·'

�9- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, June 8, 1976

8- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, .June 8. 1976

,:!:.! =flat:; t=

~
~

~!

~.:

RR~x;:~X;;;,-;:::=:?.i:!~~::::~::::::::.::::~:::::~:;;;&gt;,;::;:;::;:;;,;.;.;.;:;:;:;:;;;;;.;.;.;.;.;;:~~~~

Generation Rap

.
By Helen and Sue Hottd
.

:~:
::::

j:j:

::::

fie ld; Mr. and Mrs. Halterhouse, Bucyrus ; Barbara
Sei pl e, Indian a ; Harrell
Vernon , Dayton; Mr. and
Mr s.
Kermit
Boring,
Chillicothe; Dorothy Johnston, Pomeroy; Nellie Blum,
Gal ion: Freda Kennedy, and
Debbte Goodwin , Athens;
Amy Caldwell and Bernice
McKnight ; Fernie and
Lucille Alex3/lder and Neva
Schupbach, Columbus; Lucy
Thomas , Maude Holcomb,
Laura Krebs, Mr. and Mrs .
Arthur Crabtree , Goldie
Gillogly, Mr. and Mrs. Cecil
Gillogly, and son, Mr. and
Mrs. Harold Gillogly and
family , Mr. and Mrs. Frank
Turner, Cathy Carsey, Mrs .
Wanetta Radekin , Mr. and
Mrs. Edward Coen, Grace
Hen sler, Kathle en Ragan,
Mr . and Mrs . Geor ge
Thomas, Herbert Sieinbarger, Albert Cone, and Mr.
and Mrs. Danny Turner and
family, all of the area .
Her daughters presented
her two dozen red roses, and
other gills including a red
rose corsage, candy, perfume
and other items. Mrs. Foster
li ves at Russell Nursing
Home in Albany and is
always glad lor frien ds and
relatives to visit her there.

Local dancers visit
Honey/and Festival

i +i

Western Ohio Methodists
meet at Lakeside on 13th

Party honors
Ginevra Foster

Impolite or Just Furgelful'!
Rap :
Seems like so many times the person you 're with doesn't · CARPENTEH - A bi rth~
introduce you to friends that come up to talk. Are introductions day celebration, planned and
going out of style, and what do you do - just stand there like a hosfed by her daug hters and
nerd? - IGNORED
their families at the Foster
home, was held Sunday lor
Ignored :
the 95th birthdya of Ginevra
Maybe your friend suffers from "introduction block" : Foster .
when a name MUST be remembered, it suddenly vanishes. So
Those pr ese nt included
rather than confess (pretty embarrassing when you can't sons-in-law and daughters,
recall your first cousin's handle, right '), he or she pretends Mr. and Mrs . Dwight (Zelia )
you already know one another.
Zeiple, Grove City; Mr~nd
Help out by jolining in the conversa tion and eventually Mrs. Jerry !Wilma) _ Hull,
introducing yoursell. - HELEN
Dayton ; Mr. and Mrs. Joe
Hi
I Emily) Turner, Albany , and
A WORD FROM SUE : '' Proper" introductions, like much her son and daughter-in-law,
old-fashioned etiquette, are giv ing way to the "Hey, John, Mr. and Mrs. L. D. Cottrill,
here's Mary" type thing . Jf your friends don 'l bother even with Point Rock area; other
that, well, there's no law against saying, "Hi , I'm Mary ."
relatives and friends, Mr. and
!But don 't put anyone on the spot with ""Introduce me, Mrs. Theodore Rupert and
yell" See above .)
family , Grove City ; Mr . and
Mrs. Eddie Jordan, Lake
Dear Helen and Sue :
Park, Fla.; Paul Weyand,
I have worked in an office two years and meet a lot of Wendy "Weyan d, Mrs. Connie
businessmen, practically all on the make. I'm sure the only Good and family , Mr . and
married guy who stays true to his wile is one no other woman Mrs. Lawrence Oxley, Dale,
would have.
·
Danny , Allen , Terrie, Lynn
The obvious conclusion from this is : either marry a blob or and Amos Oxley, Colum bus;
expect to have an unfaithful husband . Or - maybe the best ML and Mrs . Kenney Turner
way : don't marry at all, and just have fun with all the dumb, a nd Ben, Chattanooga,
generous, horny married men waitmg to be -played lor a fool.
Tenn .; Mr. an d Mrs. Ronri ie
- TEMPTED
Williams, Linda Williams and
Mike Magonatta, Nellie Vale ,
Dear Templed :
Rutland ; Tony Tu rner ,
Your "best way" is one of lhe reasons why so many married Albany : Lavern Turner and
men (but definitely not all !) fool around. It takes a pretty Connie
Sprin ge r ,
strong character to ignore all that availability, right ? - SUE
Wapakoneta :' Nellis Hawke ,
i +i
Enos Peck, Fran ces Amrie
Dear Tempted :
and Ruth Jordan. SpringSo only "blobs" stay true to their wives ' That's just plain
hokum ! l£1's hear it from you fa ithful husbands. ''Tempted"
and company need an eye-&lt;Jpe ner. - HELEN
Dear Rap :
"Jumpy Joe " wanted letters from wives and girlfri ends of
tru ckers Ito prove lhat alltruckin' marriages don't crack up ).
Jumpy should take his woman on a run with him . That's
the Quickest way tolind out whether she'd l&lt;lke to he life.
I fell in love with a tru ck driver three years ago. At first I
thought he loved truckin' more than me. But one time in that
Several members of the
big baby won me over. When you're on the road wi th just your
Belles
and Beaus Western
man and an Ill-whee ler to keep you company it's the most
Square
Dance Club of Royal
fantastic feeling in lhe wor ld. I even learned to drive it . Now
Oak
attended
the 15th annual
we're together 365 days of the year and we wouldn'ttrade it lor
Honcy
land
·Festiva l at
any other life. - GEAR J AMMP.R MOMA
Concord College, Athens, W.
Va . over the weekend.
Rap :
One of the lour callers was
These noisy dames should read the Bible: "Let the woman
Cecil
Sayre, caller and in learn in silence with all subjection ... not teach nor usurp
structor
lor the Belles and
authority over a man , but be in silence." 1I Timot11y 2: 11-12) .
Bea
us.
In
addition to the
- BIBLE STUDENT
square dancing there was
also a ru und dancing
Dear B.S.:
exh
ibition and wor kshop
Yea! ... well ... May your girl friend agree with you, poor
cond
ucted by Mr. and Mrs.
thing . - H &amp; S.
Ray Dowdy of Beckley who
have given lessons at the club
here .. Approximate ly 65
squares participated in the
festival program .

•

Going from the local club
were Mr . and Mrs. Wyatt
Chadwe ll , Mr. and Mrs. "Roy
Holter, Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Larry Smith, Mr . and Mrs .
Doug Bishop, Janice Ritchie
and Jim Stewart , Mr. and
Mrs. Ben Ewing, Mr. and
Mrs . David F'higg, Mr . and
Mrs. Bernard Shriver, Mr . .
and Mrs . Don Johnson , Mr.
and Mrs . Roger Black, Mr.
_and Mrs. Earl Ewing, Mr ,
and Mrs. Stan ley Harbour·,
Mr. and Mrs . Joe Lish, Mr .
and Mrs. Larry Noble, Also
attending were Mr. and Mrs .
Cecil Sayre, L&lt;tart, W. Va .
and Mr . and Mrs . Charles
Scott, Belpre Club.

Ministers and elected lay
men, women and youth from
this community will join
other representatives of the
1402 local United Methodist
churches in western Obio at
Lakeside June 13 for the
opening of the live-day West
Ohio Annual Conference.
More than 5,000 persons are

CHURCH OF CHRIS'r·CHOIR members who will give
two performances of "I Love America," L&lt;ft to right,
front row , are Sharon Stewart, Becky Glaze, Peggy
Brickles, Janet Venoy, Flo Grueser, Debbie Grueser,
Becki Fry and Bea Stewart ; middle row, Connie Bailey,

'' I Love

America ,"

a

bicentenn ial musical written
by John W. Peterson and Don
Wyrtzen, will be presented by
the Church of Ch rist Choir at
Meigs Junior High School
auditorium Friday, June 18 at
8 p.m., and on Sunday, July 4
at7 :30 p.m. at the Middleport
Church or Christ.
Mrs.- Debbie Gerlach is
director or the musical with
Michael Gerlach as the
narrator . It is in three
segments, the first entitled

ADOPTED - Mr. and
· Mrs. Ross Roush of Mason,
W. Va. are announcing the
adoption of a son, Hamilton
Shane. Maternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Howard (Pete) Van Maire,
Mason, W. Va. and the
paternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Douglas R.
Roush, Rt. I, Letart, W.Va.
Mrs. Blanche Tucker,
Mason, W. Va., Is a
maternal greatgrandmother, and Van L.
Roush of Route I, L&lt;tarl,
W. Va. Is a paternal greatgrandfather.

~: LECTION

DAY dinner
Tuesday
at
Syrac use
Municipal building sponsored
bv the ladies or the
Presbyterian Church.

NEW HAVEN - Melanie
Fry celebra ted her third
birthday rece ntl y with a
party at the home or her
parents, Mr . and Mrs. Mel
A Holly Hobbie theme was
carried ou t with the
decorated cake, baked by
Mrs . Judy Snowden , Rutland,
be ing served with ice cream
and Kool-Aid. Games were
played and prizes awarded to
Kelly Roush, Stepha ni e
Tulloh, Eri c Russe ll and R. J.
Roush .
Others attending were Mrs.
Sharry Roush, Mrs. Alice
Humphrey and Peter, Mrs.
Rhonda Wood and Ryan, Mrs.
Sharon
Shrader
and
Christopher, Mr s. Dian e
Fields, Kelly and )Jill , Mrs.
Joy Rus sell , Mrs. Kri s
Tulloh, Mr. and Mrs. William
Bird,
Mrs.
Debbie
Bumgarner and Troy, Jackie
Paugh , Mark Allen , Mrs.
Sharon Vickers and Ann, and
Me-nnie ' s grea tgrandmothers, Mrs . Pansy

june meetinf{
set by church

WEDNESDAY
WHITE ROSE LODGE ,
RUTLAND - The annual
I:30 Wednesday afternoon at
June
meeting or homecoming
lhe
American
L&lt;gion
Hall
in
NOTICE ON FILING
of the First Baptist Church
Middleport.
OF IN VENTO RY
AND APPRAISEMENT
will be held June 13 al
The St at e of Ohio, Meig s
THURSDAY
Rutland . Sunday School is at
Co unt y, Court of Common
MEIGS COUNTY Humane 10 a.m. with superinte~dent
Pleas, Probate Di vision
Society Thursday at MidTo the Administ rator of the dleport Village Hall , 7:30 Drewery Gore. Morning
estate . to such of ftle following
service at II a.m. is led by the
p.m. All members urged to pastor, Roger Ford. Dinner
as are residents of th e Stat e of
Oh io . viz : the surv ivi ng attend .
will be served and the afspous e. the next of kin , th'e
bene f ic iar ies under 1t1 e Wi ll ;
ternoon service is set lor 2
and to the attorn ey or at
ROCK SPRINGS Grange , 8 p.m.
torneys r epr esent ing ilny o f
the aforement ioned persons. ·: p.m. Thursday
with a
Guest speaker will be Hev.
Emmer
P.
Bilrl e l s, bi cente nn ial
program
.
John
King, pastor of TriedD ec eased , S yre~ c use , Ohio ,
Sulton Tow n ship , No . 21711. Women to wear long dresses;
stone Baptis t Ch ur ch,
You are hereby notified that men either old costumes or
Gallipolis , accompanied by
the
I nventory
and
Ap
his choir.
praisem ent of the est ate of I he overalls.
afor e m entioned ,
d ece~se d .
FRIDAY
tat e of said County , was filed
MARY Shrine 37, Order of Theron Johnson. Husbands
In this Court . Said Inventor y
and Appra isement will be for th e
While Sh rine of
hear ing befor e this Cour t on Jerusalem, Friday, 8 p.m. at and friends invited to attend.
th e lllh day of June , 1976, ar
Meal · and beverage will be
th e PomerO)' Masonic furn ished.
10 :00 o'c lock A . M .
Any person des iring to f ile Temple. Mrs. Naomi AnHAPPY Harvesters Class,
excep tion's ther eto must f ile
them at least f ive days prio r to derson, Marietta , district Trinity Clmrch, 7:30 Friday.
th e date .set for hearing .
deputy, will be at the meeting
Given und er my hand and
SATURDAY
seal of sai d Court, this '27 th to give in structions. A ·
dov of Moy 1976.
committee will serve refresh- · DANCE SPONSORED by
Parents Without Partners
ments.
Mann ing D. Web ster
RETUR~ Jonathan Meigs Rolling Hills Chapter 838, ai .
Ju dg e
Chapter, Daughters of the the Moose Cl ub in Point
By Ann B. Wat so n
Deputy CI Crk Ameri can Revolu tion, annual Pleasant, Saturday, 9 p.m. to
Flag Day pi cnic. 6 p.m. 1 a.m. Cost is $3 per person .
161 I, 6, 21c
Friday at . Ihe home of Mrs . All singles weic~me .

11

God of Our Fathers," "The

Annual picnic enjoyed
'!'he an nual picnic or the
Catholic Women's Club of the
Sacred Heart Church was
held Thursday night at Forest
Acres Park, with II members, the Rev. Ft. Welton and

APRIL. VAN MATRE

Girl born

Fry, New Haven.

"Patriotism lor America"
which in music and narration
relates a love for the land and
some of its history with the
songs including " I Love
America, II 11 l'm Just a Flag
Waving American," "Johnny
Bull " and "In God We
Trust."
"Praise lor America " is
the second part, and it is a
tribute to America and its
flag with such music as
"America, the Beautiful ,"

Shirley Bumgardner, L&lt;na McKinley, Jenna Arnott,
Katharine Russell, Christy Hess, Clyda Allensworth, Pat
Arnold, and back row, Randy Roach, Earl McKinley, Mac
Stewart, Michael · Gerlach, Kenny Hoffman, Bruce
Bumgardner and George Glaze.

Mr . and Mrs. George R.
Van Matre of Mason are
announcing the birth or a
daug hter, April Lynn , May 27
at Holzer Medical Center.
Mr . and Mrs . Van Maire
have a son, Kevin, and a
daug hter, Melin da. Maternal
grandparents are Mr .. and
Mrs. Jerry Byus, Rt. I, Point
Pleasan t, W. Va. , and the
paternal grandparents are
Mr . and Mrs. Howard (Pete )
VanMatre , Mason. Maternal
great-grandfather is Andrew
Byus, Point Pleasant, and the
paternal great-grandmother
is Mrs. Blanche Tucker ,
Ma son, W. Va .

Keith Sutherland attending.
Prayer by the pastor and
the pledge to the flag led by
Mrs . Susan Blaker opened the
business meeting. The
mental health levy was en- .
dorsed by !he club and
members were urged to
support it. The bicentennial
dinner was discussed, and the
par ish booklet will be
available by that time it was
noted. The dinner will be held
on June 27. Members are to
help decorate lor the event on
Friday, June 25.
Reported ill were Mrs .
Jan et Korn, Vicki Blankenship and Vicki Gloeckner .
Mrs. Ned Menchini sent
thanks lor a planter given her
on her birthday, and a vote of
thanks was given to those
who helped with the first
commun ion and gradu~tio n
brea kfast held recently.
In the absence of Jo Ellen
Roush, Mrs. Elsie Sutherland
gave the secretary's report.
Mrs. Roush 's resignation wsa
accepted with regret. A
thank-you note was read from
Mother Mary Claire of St.
John 's Villa, Carrollton.
Prayer by the Rev . Fr.
Welton closed the meeting ,
Members went ·to th~
Sutherland home In Rutland
lor an evening of visiting.

Red, White and Blue" and
"Praise the Lord and Give
Thanks, America." The
third segment is a plea lor the
future of America with an
appeal for the people to turn
back to the living God of the
universe. Selections include
"It's Time to Pray," "Jesus
is Calling" and " If My
People" and concludes wilh
the "Battle Hymn of the
Republic ." · Soloists are Kenny Hoffman, Christy Hess, George
Glaze, Bruce Bumgardner,
Becky Glaze and Katharine
Russell.
The sopranos are Bea
Stewart, Pat Arnold, Becki
Fry, Flo Grueser, Janet
Venoy, Clyda Allensworth,
Christy Hess , Katharine
Russell, Kathy Hood, Jenna
Arnott and Robin Southern.

Carpenter
Personals

STYROFOAM

·

.. M-M-M·M!

GRADE A

$}59

__

ARMOUR'S

CHICKEN

3 $100

PARTS

lge.

POTTED MEATS •.. ••••
SCOT LAD

WINGS • • • •lb. 49~
LEGS &amp; THIGHS lb. 79$

cans

3.~·.=.a: ...

99¢
INSTANT TEA
OLD VIRGINIA
.
.
2 lb. jar
GRAPE JELLy................ ..
..........

Astro-

OLD VIRGINIA

Gffipn

BREASTS• • • • • • lb. 89~

79¢ ·

APPLE JELLY................. .
MORTON'S SALT

....... 5

SUPERIORS

HAM SAlAD

24 oz. jar

CHECK THE PRICE

THIGHS • •" • • • • • • lb. 79$
DRUMSTICKS • • • • •. lb. 99c

Joe's Recipe!
Home .Made

ALL MEAT

bxs.
for
l~b.

HI·HO BRAND

lb.]

CRACKERS ..................~o! •
ALL POPULAR BRANDS .

·. ·

Carton

CHEWING TOBACCO.......~: .T!x.
VAPOREflE CAT &amp; DOG

FLEA COLLARS .......... ~:h....

$384

PRODUCE

DAIRY

Golden Ripe

BROUGHTON'S

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 221 To-

day you'll be templed to play
the game of one-u psmansh ip
when others. tell you of their
achievements. You won't ap-

you rself go you'll buy things

!

..

r·

4

FOR

playing to empty seats.

l~b.

AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Ftb. 111)
You may support an unpop ular
cause today, not beca use you
believe in it. but because you
don't wapi to be tagged as one
01 the herd.

·box

. BANQUET
79~

nEISHMAN'S

EGG BEATERS
Reg. 99'

$}00

39e

$
8

GORTON'S

.09

FISH &amp;FRIES

32 oz. box

16 OUNCE :

PAK

:~~~Ey~u~~":;. ::-=~~~~n~~l

Almond Joy
and Mounds

y Q Ur
Birthday

l EXTRA
BAR

7

PAK

79~

AWAKE

DIET RITE $}19

\

39~

COCA-COLA

8 PAK

ALL WEEK
16 oz. bots.

8 PAK
••

'1"

BIRDS-EYE

RETURNABLE BOlTLES

16
OL
bois.

69~

each

12 oz. can

grasping small details today,
somehow you tend to miss the
"'" '~II picture. Don't overlook
what should be obvious.

lb.

Man Pleaser Dinners

Prince Elbow
Macaroni &amp; Spaghetti

CAPRICORN (Doc . 22-Jon.
U) Be democratic In group activiti es today and let everyone
have a say. If you tr y to
dominate the show, you'll soon

Juno I, 1171
You should have a fair share of
opportunities heading your
way th is comi ng year. Explore
them. all carefully or you c.ould
pass up one o f the b etter ones.

lb.

FROZEN FOODS

HOMO MILK
%gal. 79c

Prince Macaroni
&amp; Cheese Dinner

same token , don't let your self
be taken by someone who is
just a sponger.

.

~-

-~

each

derstanding today. But by the

~

POLISH
SAUSAGE

$}39

yo u don't need at a price you
ca n 't afford '.

•

ALL MEAT

BROUGHTON'S

5 $1

• L;&gt;•

LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Your
elCpensive wt1 ims could get the
better of you today. If you let

plastic
gallon

lb.

/

preciate being uPstaged by
anyone .

SUPERIORS

2% MILK

EGGS BANANAS
doz.49¢

skills.

SUPERIORS

69¢ ,..------,~------.

GRADE '8' LARGE

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) You
may set targets for you rsel f today t hat far exceed your
ca pabilities. Be realis tic In
assessing your talents and

•

WIENERS BOLOGNA

associates·.

(I)

Stanley Edwin Cozart , Ollie
Mae Cozart to Phyllis Hilchie, Lot 21 w. &lt;; Lot 22,
Racine.
A thought for the day :
Lena Virginia Ma son aka
American
writer Henry Thol.ena V. Mason , dec. to David
.
reau
said,
"There Is no odor
Dunham,
Don ald
W.
so
bad
as
that which atlsos
Dtmham , Cert. for Trans.,
from goodness tainted ."
Lebanon.

COOLER CHESTS ••••••• :r~e.s:~ ••••

VISIT HERE
Mr. and Mrs. Jacob
Schaafer of Columbus visited
recen tly in Middleport,
calling on Mr. and Mrs. L. W.
McComas.
·

be

Transfers

We Accept Federal Food Stamps ~ ~ -~.
PHONE 992-3480 ·
.I!Ornet Mill and ~~ond Sts. we reserve the right to limit quantities. MIDDLEPORT, 0:

VISITORS
Recent visitors in Middleport were Mr . and Mrs.
John Ward of Hamilton .

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dtc.
21) Treat those who are deser.ving with c harity and un-

Meigs
Property

~ ~ 1j.

Altos are Sharon Stewart,
Becky Glaze, Peggy Brickles,
Connie
Bailey ,
Lena
McKinley and Shirley
Bumgardn er. Tenors are
George
Glaze ,
Bruce
Bumgardner and Kenny
Hoffman, and singing bass
are Mac Stewart , Ear l
Mckinley and Randy Roach.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22!11
seeking in formation today . be
sure to get it from the proper
source . Things you get
second-hand are likely to be
distorted and elCaggera ted .

David Dunham, Gloria J_
Dunham,
Donald
W.
Dunham, Anna C. Dunham to
Shirley VIrginia Hoover, 41
acres, Lebanon.
'
Kathryn (;. Wise, dec. to
Charles H. Wise , Affidavit,
Pomeroy .
VIrginia J . Betz, William
Betz, Mazie C. Hannahs,
Victor Hannahs to Charles H.
Wise, Lot, Middleport.

SUPER MARKET· Open Dai~ 9 to 1
.
Sun. 10 to 10

The Almanac
By
United
Press
International
Today is Tuesday, June 8,
• Bernice Bode Osol
the lfiOth day of 1976 with 206
Wodnoodo~, Juno 8, 1978
to follow.
The moon is approaching ARIES (Morch 21-Aprll 19)
its full phase .
Your aQvehturous spirit cou ld
The morning stars are lead you astray today, if yo u
engage in any form of speculaMercury and Jupiter . .
tion. It's not a some lhing-forThe evening stars are Mars nothing
day.
and Saturn.
Those born on this date are TAURUS (April 20-Mo~ 20) In
making an importa nt agreeunder the sign of Gemini.
ment today , darn be more
American architect Frank generous th an you r co unterUoyd Wright was born June part The dea l won't hold water
unless each give equally.
8, 1869.
On this day in history :
GEMINI (Mo~ 21-Juno 201 You
In 1869, !ves McGaffney of may vo lun teer to do something
Chicago obtained a patent for for another today, hoping you'll
a "sweeping machine"-- the later reap more than you've
sown. It just won't work out that
first vacuum cleaner.
way.
In 1928, Schenectady, N.Y.,
station WGY began a regular CANCER "(Juno 21-July 22)
Was te not. want not is an old
of
telev ise d and
schedule
wise saying. You probably
programs three limes a won't heed it today , and will be
week .
extravagan t with you r
resour ces and those of

parents, Mr. and -Mrs. L. D.
Cottrill, his brother and
sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.
Fry an d Mrs. Helen Knapp,
- - - - - - - - - Lavern Jordan and visited
her grandm others , Mrs .
Mary Fry and Mrs. Lou
Eubank a nd son, Kester, other relatives. They also
Ferre ll , and aunts, Mrs .
former · res idents of this attended the birthday party
Charlene Fry, Trina Ferrell
community who now live for her grandmother ,
and Teresa Ferrell.
near Groveport, Ohio, visited Genevra Foster and enjoyed
Sending gifts were Mrs .
with Paul and William C. seeing relatives and friends
Connie Van Maire and E. T.,
Peck and ealled on Mrs. who were there.
Mr . · and Mrs. Glen
and Melanie's uncles, Mr .
Clarence Arbaugh . Other
Gassaway,
Powell, Mr. and
and Mrs. Reed Ferrell and
guests at the Peck home were
family , Flint, Mich ., and
their brother-in-law and Mts. Ted Miller, Caledonia,
James Ferrell, Pomeroy.
sister, Mr. and Mrs. Emzie and Mrs. Wayne Fuller,
Davis, Parkersburg, W. Va. Cardington, spent a weekend
Mr. and Mrs. Kermit with Mr. and Mrs. William
and
attended
Boring, Chillicothe, called to Miller
· MEETING FRIEl AY
see his sister, Goldie Gillogly, graduation exercises of their
Plans for the Meigs Coun ty
Guests of Murl Galaway and other relatives here on daughters. Other guests at
Garden Clubs Association during the holiday weekend Sunday afternoon .
the Miller home have been his
Regatta fl ower show will be were Mrs. David Woodrum,
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Jones, sister and lami,ly, Mr. and
completed at a mee tin g' Carolyn Jo and Lisa, Canal Nelsonville, visited her Mrs. Bob Schoonaur and
scheduled for 7:30 Friday Winchester, Mr. and Mrs. parents, Mr. and Mrs. Earl children, Caledonia . Mrs.
night at the home of Mrs. L&lt;on Woodrum, Randy and Starkey on Saturday. Guests Miller entered Holzer
Janet Bolin, New Lima Road, Cathy an d friends, Bob of the Starkeys on Sunday Medical Hospital on June I
Rutland, the Meigs Coun ty Woodrum and children, and were his nephew and family, and is scheduled to undergo
contact chairman, Mrs. Bolin Mr. and Mrs. Eddie Clemons, Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Jewell, surgery.
desires representation from . Tommy, Brian and Daniel, Mary and Judy, Columbus;
Vacation Bible School is in
all garden clubs in the McArthur.
·
and on Monday, Mr. and Mrs. session at temple United
county.
Mr. a nd Mrs. Denver Starkey . joined famlly Methodist Church with more
~een, Bloomington, Illinois members fOr a cookout at the than forty youth and eighteen
visited relatives here this home of their daughter .and teachers and assistants. Tbe
BACK HOME
past weekend.
son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Roy theme Is God's Love Is Jesus,
Mr . and Mrs. Karl Kloes,
Mrs. Bernice McKnight, .. Wiseman at Harrisonville. and songs, Bible study and
Pomeroy, have return ed Co lumbus, announced the Others
present
were crafts are being used to
from Allentown, Pa. where marriage of her daughter Reverend and Mrs. David develop the theme . A picnic
they attended the wedding of Sharon, to Ed Seasoe, also of Wiseman and family of will be held on Friday
Billy Robert Alle n, Chester, Columbus. Miss McKnight Woodsfield, Ohio and Mrs. afternoon and a program ·Js
and Karen Simms, Allen- has many relatives in this Margar~l Parson, Rutland. planned for Sunday evening.
town . Enroute home they area and has visited here
Mr. and Mrs. Dale StansWeekend guests of Lucy
went sightseeing in the Amish frequently.
. Thomas were her sister, Amy bury joined their children,
country aroun d Lancaster,
Bernice McKnight was · an Caldwell and her niece and Mr. and Mrs. Warren Turner, .
Pa . in Strausburg, Gettys- overnight guest here and family, Mt. and Mrs. John Mr. and Mrs. LBrry Stansburg and Hershey.
visited her mother, Goldie Kimes, Paula Jean and bury and children, and .Mr.
Gillogly and was at Temple Thomas, of Columbus. The and Mrs. Jerry Stansbury
Cemetery.
group visited with Genevra and faniily at Lake Snowden
WEEKEND GUESTS
Guests of Mr. and Mrs. Foster a t her 95th birthday on Sunday and Sunday night.
Mrs . George Angeletti , Walter Swett were his celebration, then journeyed They were.also joined by Mr.
Cleveland, and her daughter mother, Audrey Swett of on to Mercerville cemetery · and Mrs. Jimmie Haning and
who
were
and son-in -law , Mr. and Mrs. Middleporl and their son-in- and visited relatives in the daughters,
camping at LBke Snowden,
f)an Thoman and family of law 'and daughter, Mr . and Galllpolis area .
Parma were weekend guests Mrs . Arthur Reedy and son,
Mr . and Mr s. Eddie too, for supper on Sunday
of Mr . and Mrs. Tim Sisson ; Mike, of Southside, W. Va .
Jordan , Lake Park, Florida · evening. The group returned
E. Second Sl., Pomeroy.
Mr. il lld Mrs. Charles were weekend guests of her to1 their homes on Monday,
MELANIE FRY

CHICAGO t UP!) - The
Hoover Auditoriwn, St•at of
rhica~o
Bears have acquired
- deliberations.
thrt&gt;e
former
OhiD college
Thursda y evening 54
stars
from
the
Cincinnati
persons will be ordain\!d into
Benga
ls
running
back
the ministry. The conference
Ha
rold
'·Cha
mp
"
Henso
n,
concludes with the stationing
middle
linebacker
Brad
of ministers fur the. ~omtng
and
rookie
year . Bishop Ensley will rea d Cousi no,
pla
cekicker
Tom
Klaban
- in
the changes Ft·iday, :June 18.
a trade for undisclosed draft
choices.
.
Bears' General Manager
Jim Finks made the move a
In
196a,
Ameri ca n month before the start of
astronauts Ed White and Jim swnmer tmining camp in an
McDivitt completed their effor t to shore up his club's
orbital journ ey, lmv ing
power running game, ~nd the
traveled 1.6 million miles in placekicking game, it was
62 orbits of the earth .
announced Monday.

Grade A
Chicken
Lower ·
Priced

Church choir presenting musical

Third birthday observed
TUESDAY
RACINE MASONIC Lodge
461 F&amp;AM. regul ar meeting,
Tuesclay, 7::10 p.m.
ELECTION DAY dinner
and bake sa le Tuesday at
Ora nge Township Fire House
sponsored by · the Tuppers
Plains Communi ty Club .
ELECTION Day dinner
Tuesda y at Ra cin e Fir e
House beginning at 9 a.m.
spon so red
by
Ladies ..
Auxiliary.
. ELECT ION Day dinn er
Tue sday a t Forest Run
United Methodi st Chur ch.
Men u incl udes bean and
veg etable soup , san dwiches,
pie and cake .
MIDDLEPORT CHILD
Conservation Leag ue, old
fa shioned family picnic at
Route :13 roadside park, 6:30
p.m. Tuesday.
White
elephant sale to be held and
new officers to be installed.
Everyone to ta ke a covered
di sh and table service.

Tuesday evenings. Bi shop
Joel McDavid, Lakeland,
Fla ., guest speaker, will'
address the body and guests
lhose evenings un a Bicentennial theme.
Bishop F. Gerald Ensley,
episcopal leader of th e
'
expected to pack the l.Bke of a plan whereby the con- conferen ce th ese past 12
Erie United Methodist ference will invest sub- years, will preside over
Grounds dtiring that week , stantial time , effort and plenary meetings through
including 2, 700 voting money in helping relieve Friday for~noon , June 18. It
members - making this the hunger in American society. will be his last conference as
In its !80th year of service an active bishop. He retires
largest conference in the 9.9million
member in this part of the Northwest Sept. I after 21 years in offi ce.
Special recogniti on lor
denomination.
Territory, the conference will
Bishop
and Mrs. Ensley will
A major item or business is take note of the nation's. 200th
be
Wednesday
evening in
expected to 'be development anniversary Monday and

•,

WITH
FREE
GlASS

s

29

�9- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, June 8, 1976

8- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, .June 8. 1976

,:!:.! =flat:; t=

~
~

~!

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RR~x;:~X;;;,-;:::=:?.i:!~~::::~::::::::.::::~:::::~:;;;&gt;,;::;:;::;:;;,;.;.;.;:;:;:;:;;;;;.;.;.;.;.;;:~~~~

Generation Rap

.
By Helen and Sue Hottd
.

:~:
::::

j:j:

::::

fie ld; Mr. and Mrs. Halterhouse, Bucyrus ; Barbara
Sei pl e, Indian a ; Harrell
Vernon , Dayton; Mr. and
Mr s.
Kermit
Boring,
Chillicothe; Dorothy Johnston, Pomeroy; Nellie Blum,
Gal ion: Freda Kennedy, and
Debbte Goodwin , Athens;
Amy Caldwell and Bernice
McKnight ; Fernie and
Lucille Alex3/lder and Neva
Schupbach, Columbus; Lucy
Thomas , Maude Holcomb,
Laura Krebs, Mr. and Mrs .
Arthur Crabtree , Goldie
Gillogly, Mr. and Mrs. Cecil
Gillogly, and son, Mr. and
Mrs. Harold Gillogly and
family , Mr. and Mrs. Frank
Turner, Cathy Carsey, Mrs .
Wanetta Radekin , Mr. and
Mrs. Edward Coen, Grace
Hen sler, Kathle en Ragan,
Mr . and Mrs . Geor ge
Thomas, Herbert Sieinbarger, Albert Cone, and Mr.
and Mrs. Danny Turner and
family, all of the area .
Her daughters presented
her two dozen red roses, and
other gills including a red
rose corsage, candy, perfume
and other items. Mrs. Foster
li ves at Russell Nursing
Home in Albany and is
always glad lor frien ds and
relatives to visit her there.

Local dancers visit
Honey/and Festival

i +i

Western Ohio Methodists
meet at Lakeside on 13th

Party honors
Ginevra Foster

Impolite or Just Furgelful'!
Rap :
Seems like so many times the person you 're with doesn't · CARPENTEH - A bi rth~
introduce you to friends that come up to talk. Are introductions day celebration, planned and
going out of style, and what do you do - just stand there like a hosfed by her daug hters and
nerd? - IGNORED
their families at the Foster
home, was held Sunday lor
Ignored :
the 95th birthdya of Ginevra
Maybe your friend suffers from "introduction block" : Foster .
when a name MUST be remembered, it suddenly vanishes. So
Those pr ese nt included
rather than confess (pretty embarrassing when you can't sons-in-law and daughters,
recall your first cousin's handle, right '), he or she pretends Mr. and Mrs . Dwight (Zelia )
you already know one another.
Zeiple, Grove City; Mr~nd
Help out by jolining in the conversa tion and eventually Mrs. Jerry !Wilma) _ Hull,
introducing yoursell. - HELEN
Dayton ; Mr. and Mrs. Joe
Hi
I Emily) Turner, Albany , and
A WORD FROM SUE : '' Proper" introductions, like much her son and daughter-in-law,
old-fashioned etiquette, are giv ing way to the "Hey, John, Mr. and Mrs. L. D. Cottrill,
here's Mary" type thing . Jf your friends don 'l bother even with Point Rock area; other
that, well, there's no law against saying, "Hi , I'm Mary ."
relatives and friends, Mr. and
!But don 't put anyone on the spot with ""Introduce me, Mrs. Theodore Rupert and
yell" See above .)
family , Grove City ; Mr . and
Mrs. Eddie Jordan, Lake
Dear Helen and Sue :
Park, Fla.; Paul Weyand,
I have worked in an office two years and meet a lot of Wendy "Weyan d, Mrs. Connie
businessmen, practically all on the make. I'm sure the only Good and family , Mr . and
married guy who stays true to his wile is one no other woman Mrs. Lawrence Oxley, Dale,
would have.
·
Danny , Allen , Terrie, Lynn
The obvious conclusion from this is : either marry a blob or and Amos Oxley, Colum bus;
expect to have an unfaithful husband . Or - maybe the best ML and Mrs . Kenney Turner
way : don't marry at all, and just have fun with all the dumb, a nd Ben, Chattanooga,
generous, horny married men waitmg to be -played lor a fool.
Tenn .; Mr. an d Mrs. Ronri ie
- TEMPTED
Williams, Linda Williams and
Mike Magonatta, Nellie Vale ,
Dear Templed :
Rutland ; Tony Tu rner ,
Your "best way" is one of lhe reasons why so many married Albany : Lavern Turner and
men (but definitely not all !) fool around. It takes a pretty Connie
Sprin ge r ,
strong character to ignore all that availability, right ? - SUE
Wapakoneta :' Nellis Hawke ,
i +i
Enos Peck, Fran ces Amrie
Dear Tempted :
and Ruth Jordan. SpringSo only "blobs" stay true to their wives ' That's just plain
hokum ! l£1's hear it from you fa ithful husbands. ''Tempted"
and company need an eye-&lt;Jpe ner. - HELEN
Dear Rap :
"Jumpy Joe " wanted letters from wives and girlfri ends of
tru ckers Ito prove lhat alltruckin' marriages don't crack up ).
Jumpy should take his woman on a run with him . That's
the Quickest way tolind out whether she'd l&lt;lke to he life.
I fell in love with a tru ck driver three years ago. At first I
thought he loved truckin' more than me. But one time in that
Several members of the
big baby won me over. When you're on the road wi th just your
Belles
and Beaus Western
man and an Ill-whee ler to keep you company it's the most
Square
Dance Club of Royal
fantastic feeling in lhe wor ld. I even learned to drive it . Now
Oak
attended
the 15th annual
we're together 365 days of the year and we wouldn'ttrade it lor
Honcy
land
·Festiva l at
any other life. - GEAR J AMMP.R MOMA
Concord College, Athens, W.
Va . over the weekend.
Rap :
One of the lour callers was
These noisy dames should read the Bible: "Let the woman
Cecil
Sayre, caller and in learn in silence with all subjection ... not teach nor usurp
structor
lor the Belles and
authority over a man , but be in silence." 1I Timot11y 2: 11-12) .
Bea
us.
In
addition to the
- BIBLE STUDENT
square dancing there was
also a ru und dancing
Dear B.S.:
exh
ibition and wor kshop
Yea! ... well ... May your girl friend agree with you, poor
cond
ucted by Mr. and Mrs.
thing . - H &amp; S.
Ray Dowdy of Beckley who
have given lessons at the club
here .. Approximate ly 65
squares participated in the
festival program .

•

Going from the local club
were Mr . and Mrs. Wyatt
Chadwe ll , Mr. and Mrs. "Roy
Holter, Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Larry Smith, Mr . and Mrs .
Doug Bishop, Janice Ritchie
and Jim Stewart , Mr. and
Mrs. Ben Ewing, Mr. and
Mrs . David F'higg, Mr . and
Mrs. Bernard Shriver, Mr . .
and Mrs . Don Johnson , Mr.
and Mrs . Roger Black, Mr.
_and Mrs. Earl Ewing, Mr ,
and Mrs. Stan ley Harbour·,
Mr. and Mrs . Joe Lish, Mr .
and Mrs. Larry Noble, Also
attending were Mr. and Mrs .
Cecil Sayre, L&lt;tart, W. Va .
and Mr . and Mrs . Charles
Scott, Belpre Club.

Ministers and elected lay
men, women and youth from
this community will join
other representatives of the
1402 local United Methodist
churches in western Obio at
Lakeside June 13 for the
opening of the live-day West
Ohio Annual Conference.
More than 5,000 persons are

CHURCH OF CHRIS'r·CHOIR members who will give
two performances of "I Love America," L&lt;ft to right,
front row , are Sharon Stewart, Becky Glaze, Peggy
Brickles, Janet Venoy, Flo Grueser, Debbie Grueser,
Becki Fry and Bea Stewart ; middle row, Connie Bailey,

'' I Love

America ,"

a

bicentenn ial musical written
by John W. Peterson and Don
Wyrtzen, will be presented by
the Church of Ch rist Choir at
Meigs Junior High School
auditorium Friday, June 18 at
8 p.m., and on Sunday, July 4
at7 :30 p.m. at the Middleport
Church or Christ.
Mrs.- Debbie Gerlach is
director or the musical with
Michael Gerlach as the
narrator . It is in three
segments, the first entitled

ADOPTED - Mr. and
· Mrs. Ross Roush of Mason,
W. Va. are announcing the
adoption of a son, Hamilton
Shane. Maternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Howard (Pete) Van Maire,
Mason, W. Va. and the
paternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Douglas R.
Roush, Rt. I, Letart, W.Va.
Mrs. Blanche Tucker,
Mason, W. Va., Is a
maternal greatgrandmother, and Van L.
Roush of Route I, L&lt;tarl,
W. Va. Is a paternal greatgrandfather.

~: LECTION

DAY dinner
Tuesday
at
Syrac use
Municipal building sponsored
bv the ladies or the
Presbyterian Church.

NEW HAVEN - Melanie
Fry celebra ted her third
birthday rece ntl y with a
party at the home or her
parents, Mr . and Mrs. Mel
A Holly Hobbie theme was
carried ou t with the
decorated cake, baked by
Mrs . Judy Snowden , Rutland,
be ing served with ice cream
and Kool-Aid. Games were
played and prizes awarded to
Kelly Roush, Stepha ni e
Tulloh, Eri c Russe ll and R. J.
Roush .
Others attending were Mrs.
Sharry Roush, Mrs. Alice
Humphrey and Peter, Mrs.
Rhonda Wood and Ryan, Mrs.
Sharon
Shrader
and
Christopher, Mr s. Dian e
Fields, Kelly and )Jill , Mrs.
Joy Rus sell , Mrs. Kri s
Tulloh, Mr. and Mrs. William
Bird,
Mrs.
Debbie
Bumgarner and Troy, Jackie
Paugh , Mark Allen , Mrs.
Sharon Vickers and Ann, and
Me-nnie ' s grea tgrandmothers, Mrs . Pansy

june meetinf{
set by church

WEDNESDAY
WHITE ROSE LODGE ,
RUTLAND - The annual
I:30 Wednesday afternoon at
June
meeting or homecoming
lhe
American
L&lt;gion
Hall
in
NOTICE ON FILING
of the First Baptist Church
Middleport.
OF IN VENTO RY
AND APPRAISEMENT
will be held June 13 al
The St at e of Ohio, Meig s
THURSDAY
Rutland . Sunday School is at
Co unt y, Court of Common
MEIGS COUNTY Humane 10 a.m. with superinte~dent
Pleas, Probate Di vision
Society Thursday at MidTo the Administ rator of the dleport Village Hall , 7:30 Drewery Gore. Morning
estate . to such of ftle following
service at II a.m. is led by the
p.m. All members urged to pastor, Roger Ford. Dinner
as are residents of th e Stat e of
Oh io . viz : the surv ivi ng attend .
will be served and the afspous e. the next of kin , th'e
bene f ic iar ies under 1t1 e Wi ll ;
ternoon service is set lor 2
and to the attorn ey or at
ROCK SPRINGS Grange , 8 p.m.
torneys r epr esent ing ilny o f
the aforement ioned persons. ·: p.m. Thursday
with a
Guest speaker will be Hev.
Emmer
P.
Bilrl e l s, bi cente nn ial
program
.
John
King, pastor of TriedD ec eased , S yre~ c use , Ohio ,
Sulton Tow n ship , No . 21711. Women to wear long dresses;
stone Baptis t Ch ur ch,
You are hereby notified that men either old costumes or
Gallipolis , accompanied by
the
I nventory
and
Ap
his choir.
praisem ent of the est ate of I he overalls.
afor e m entioned ,
d ece~se d .
FRIDAY
tat e of said County , was filed
MARY Shrine 37, Order of Theron Johnson. Husbands
In this Court . Said Inventor y
and Appra isement will be for th e
While Sh rine of
hear ing befor e this Cour t on Jerusalem, Friday, 8 p.m. at and friends invited to attend.
th e lllh day of June , 1976, ar
Meal · and beverage will be
th e PomerO)' Masonic furn ished.
10 :00 o'c lock A . M .
Any person des iring to f ile Temple. Mrs. Naomi AnHAPPY Harvesters Class,
excep tion's ther eto must f ile
them at least f ive days prio r to derson, Marietta , district Trinity Clmrch, 7:30 Friday.
th e date .set for hearing .
deputy, will be at the meeting
Given und er my hand and
SATURDAY
seal of sai d Court, this '27 th to give in structions. A ·
dov of Moy 1976.
committee will serve refresh- · DANCE SPONSORED by
Parents Without Partners
ments.
Mann ing D. Web ster
RETUR~ Jonathan Meigs Rolling Hills Chapter 838, ai .
Ju dg e
Chapter, Daughters of the the Moose Cl ub in Point
By Ann B. Wat so n
Deputy CI Crk Ameri can Revolu tion, annual Pleasant, Saturday, 9 p.m. to
Flag Day pi cnic. 6 p.m. 1 a.m. Cost is $3 per person .
161 I, 6, 21c
Friday at . Ihe home of Mrs . All singles weic~me .

11

God of Our Fathers," "The

Annual picnic enjoyed
'!'he an nual picnic or the
Catholic Women's Club of the
Sacred Heart Church was
held Thursday night at Forest
Acres Park, with II members, the Rev. Ft. Welton and

APRIL. VAN MATRE

Girl born

Fry, New Haven.

"Patriotism lor America"
which in music and narration
relates a love for the land and
some of its history with the
songs including " I Love
America, II 11 l'm Just a Flag
Waving American," "Johnny
Bull " and "In God We
Trust."
"Praise lor America " is
the second part, and it is a
tribute to America and its
flag with such music as
"America, the Beautiful ,"

Shirley Bumgardner, L&lt;na McKinley, Jenna Arnott,
Katharine Russell, Christy Hess, Clyda Allensworth, Pat
Arnold, and back row, Randy Roach, Earl McKinley, Mac
Stewart, Michael · Gerlach, Kenny Hoffman, Bruce
Bumgardner and George Glaze.

Mr . and Mrs. George R.
Van Matre of Mason are
announcing the birth or a
daug hter, April Lynn , May 27
at Holzer Medical Center.
Mr . and Mrs . Van Maire
have a son, Kevin, and a
daug hter, Melin da. Maternal
grandparents are Mr .. and
Mrs. Jerry Byus, Rt. I, Point
Pleasan t, W. Va. , and the
paternal grandparents are
Mr . and Mrs. Howard (Pete )
VanMatre , Mason. Maternal
great-grandfather is Andrew
Byus, Point Pleasant, and the
paternal great-grandmother
is Mrs. Blanche Tucker ,
Ma son, W. Va .

Keith Sutherland attending.
Prayer by the pastor and
the pledge to the flag led by
Mrs . Susan Blaker opened the
business meeting. The
mental health levy was en- .
dorsed by !he club and
members were urged to
support it. The bicentennial
dinner was discussed, and the
par ish booklet will be
available by that time it was
noted. The dinner will be held
on June 27. Members are to
help decorate lor the event on
Friday, June 25.
Reported ill were Mrs .
Jan et Korn, Vicki Blankenship and Vicki Gloeckner .
Mrs. Ned Menchini sent
thanks lor a planter given her
on her birthday, and a vote of
thanks was given to those
who helped with the first
commun ion and gradu~tio n
brea kfast held recently.
In the absence of Jo Ellen
Roush, Mrs. Elsie Sutherland
gave the secretary's report.
Mrs. Roush 's resignation wsa
accepted with regret. A
thank-you note was read from
Mother Mary Claire of St.
John 's Villa, Carrollton.
Prayer by the Rev . Fr.
Welton closed the meeting ,
Members went ·to th~
Sutherland home In Rutland
lor an evening of visiting.

Red, White and Blue" and
"Praise the Lord and Give
Thanks, America." The
third segment is a plea lor the
future of America with an
appeal for the people to turn
back to the living God of the
universe. Selections include
"It's Time to Pray," "Jesus
is Calling" and " If My
People" and concludes wilh
the "Battle Hymn of the
Republic ." · Soloists are Kenny Hoffman, Christy Hess, George
Glaze, Bruce Bumgardner,
Becky Glaze and Katharine
Russell.
The sopranos are Bea
Stewart, Pat Arnold, Becki
Fry, Flo Grueser, Janet
Venoy, Clyda Allensworth,
Christy Hess , Katharine
Russell, Kathy Hood, Jenna
Arnott and Robin Southern.

Carpenter
Personals

STYROFOAM

·

.. M-M-M·M!

GRADE A

$}59

__

ARMOUR'S

CHICKEN

3 $100

PARTS

lge.

POTTED MEATS •.. ••••
SCOT LAD

WINGS • • • •lb. 49~
LEGS &amp; THIGHS lb. 79$

cans

3.~·.=.a: ...

99¢
INSTANT TEA
OLD VIRGINIA
.
.
2 lb. jar
GRAPE JELLy................ ..
..........

Astro-

OLD VIRGINIA

Gffipn

BREASTS• • • • • • lb. 89~

79¢ ·

APPLE JELLY................. .
MORTON'S SALT

....... 5

SUPERIORS

HAM SAlAD

24 oz. jar

CHECK THE PRICE

THIGHS • •" • • • • • • lb. 79$
DRUMSTICKS • • • • •. lb. 99c

Joe's Recipe!
Home .Made

ALL MEAT

bxs.
for
l~b.

HI·HO BRAND

lb.]

CRACKERS ..................~o! •
ALL POPULAR BRANDS .

·. ·

Carton

CHEWING TOBACCO.......~: .T!x.
VAPOREflE CAT &amp; DOG

FLEA COLLARS .......... ~:h....

$384

PRODUCE

DAIRY

Golden Ripe

BROUGHTON'S

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 221 To-

day you'll be templed to play
the game of one-u psmansh ip
when others. tell you of their
achievements. You won't ap-

you rself go you'll buy things

!

..

r·

4

FOR

playing to empty seats.

l~b.

AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Ftb. 111)
You may support an unpop ular
cause today, not beca use you
believe in it. but because you
don't wapi to be tagged as one
01 the herd.

·box

. BANQUET
79~

nEISHMAN'S

EGG BEATERS
Reg. 99'

$}00

39e

$
8

GORTON'S

.09

FISH &amp;FRIES

32 oz. box

16 OUNCE :

PAK

:~~~Ey~u~~":;. ::-=~~~~n~~l

Almond Joy
and Mounds

y Q Ur
Birthday

l EXTRA
BAR

7

PAK

79~

AWAKE

DIET RITE $}19

\

39~

COCA-COLA

8 PAK

ALL WEEK
16 oz. bots.

8 PAK
••

'1"

BIRDS-EYE

RETURNABLE BOlTLES

16
OL
bois.

69~

each

12 oz. can

grasping small details today,
somehow you tend to miss the
"'" '~II picture. Don't overlook
what should be obvious.

lb.

Man Pleaser Dinners

Prince Elbow
Macaroni &amp; Spaghetti

CAPRICORN (Doc . 22-Jon.
U) Be democratic In group activiti es today and let everyone
have a say. If you tr y to
dominate the show, you'll soon

Juno I, 1171
You should have a fair share of
opportunities heading your
way th is comi ng year. Explore
them. all carefully or you c.ould
pass up one o f the b etter ones.

lb.

FROZEN FOODS

HOMO MILK
%gal. 79c

Prince Macaroni
&amp; Cheese Dinner

same token , don't let your self
be taken by someone who is
just a sponger.

.

~-

-~

each

derstanding today. But by the

~

POLISH
SAUSAGE

$}39

yo u don't need at a price you
ca n 't afford '.

•

ALL MEAT

BROUGHTON'S

5 $1

• L;&gt;•

LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Your
elCpensive wt1 ims could get the
better of you today. If you let

plastic
gallon

lb.

/

preciate being uPstaged by
anyone .

SUPERIORS

2% MILK

EGGS BANANAS
doz.49¢

skills.

SUPERIORS

69¢ ,..------,~------.

GRADE '8' LARGE

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) You
may set targets for you rsel f today t hat far exceed your
ca pabilities. Be realis tic In
assessing your talents and

•

WIENERS BOLOGNA

associates·.

(I)

Stanley Edwin Cozart , Ollie
Mae Cozart to Phyllis Hilchie, Lot 21 w. &lt;; Lot 22,
Racine.
A thought for the day :
Lena Virginia Ma son aka
American
writer Henry Thol.ena V. Mason , dec. to David
.
reau
said,
"There Is no odor
Dunham,
Don ald
W.
so
bad
as
that which atlsos
Dtmham , Cert. for Trans.,
from goodness tainted ."
Lebanon.

COOLER CHESTS ••••••• :r~e.s:~ ••••

VISIT HERE
Mr. and Mrs. Jacob
Schaafer of Columbus visited
recen tly in Middleport,
calling on Mr. and Mrs. L. W.
McComas.
·

be

Transfers

We Accept Federal Food Stamps ~ ~ -~.
PHONE 992-3480 ·
.I!Ornet Mill and ~~ond Sts. we reserve the right to limit quantities. MIDDLEPORT, 0:

VISITORS
Recent visitors in Middleport were Mr . and Mrs.
John Ward of Hamilton .

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dtc.
21) Treat those who are deser.ving with c harity and un-

Meigs
Property

~ ~ 1j.

Altos are Sharon Stewart,
Becky Glaze, Peggy Brickles,
Connie
Bailey ,
Lena
McKinley and Shirley
Bumgardn er. Tenors are
George
Glaze ,
Bruce
Bumgardner and Kenny
Hoffman, and singing bass
are Mac Stewart , Ear l
Mckinley and Randy Roach.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22!11
seeking in formation today . be
sure to get it from the proper
source . Things you get
second-hand are likely to be
distorted and elCaggera ted .

David Dunham, Gloria J_
Dunham,
Donald
W.
Dunham, Anna C. Dunham to
Shirley VIrginia Hoover, 41
acres, Lebanon.
'
Kathryn (;. Wise, dec. to
Charles H. Wise , Affidavit,
Pomeroy .
VIrginia J . Betz, William
Betz, Mazie C. Hannahs,
Victor Hannahs to Charles H.
Wise, Lot, Middleport.

SUPER MARKET· Open Dai~ 9 to 1
.
Sun. 10 to 10

The Almanac
By
United
Press
International
Today is Tuesday, June 8,
• Bernice Bode Osol
the lfiOth day of 1976 with 206
Wodnoodo~, Juno 8, 1978
to follow.
The moon is approaching ARIES (Morch 21-Aprll 19)
its full phase .
Your aQvehturous spirit cou ld
The morning stars are lead you astray today, if yo u
engage in any form of speculaMercury and Jupiter . .
tion. It's not a some lhing-forThe evening stars are Mars nothing
day.
and Saturn.
Those born on this date are TAURUS (April 20-Mo~ 20) In
making an importa nt agreeunder the sign of Gemini.
ment today , darn be more
American architect Frank generous th an you r co unterUoyd Wright was born June part The dea l won't hold water
unless each give equally.
8, 1869.
On this day in history :
GEMINI (Mo~ 21-Juno 201 You
In 1869, !ves McGaffney of may vo lun teer to do something
Chicago obtained a patent for for another today, hoping you'll
a "sweeping machine"-- the later reap more than you've
sown. It just won't work out that
first vacuum cleaner.
way.
In 1928, Schenectady, N.Y.,
station WGY began a regular CANCER "(Juno 21-July 22)
Was te not. want not is an old
of
telev ise d and
schedule
wise saying. You probably
programs three limes a won't heed it today , and will be
week .
extravagan t with you r
resour ces and those of

parents, Mr. and -Mrs. L. D.
Cottrill, his brother and
sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.
Fry an d Mrs. Helen Knapp,
- - - - - - - - - Lavern Jordan and visited
her grandm others , Mrs .
Mary Fry and Mrs. Lou
Eubank a nd son, Kester, other relatives. They also
Ferre ll , and aunts, Mrs .
former · res idents of this attended the birthday party
Charlene Fry, Trina Ferrell
community who now live for her grandmother ,
and Teresa Ferrell.
near Groveport, Ohio, visited Genevra Foster and enjoyed
Sending gifts were Mrs .
with Paul and William C. seeing relatives and friends
Connie Van Maire and E. T.,
Peck and ealled on Mrs. who were there.
Mr . · and Mrs. Glen
and Melanie's uncles, Mr .
Clarence Arbaugh . Other
Gassaway,
Powell, Mr. and
and Mrs. Reed Ferrell and
guests at the Peck home were
family , Flint, Mich ., and
their brother-in-law and Mts. Ted Miller, Caledonia,
James Ferrell, Pomeroy.
sister, Mr. and Mrs. Emzie and Mrs. Wayne Fuller,
Davis, Parkersburg, W. Va. Cardington, spent a weekend
Mr. and Mrs. Kermit with Mr. and Mrs. William
and
attended
Boring, Chillicothe, called to Miller
· MEETING FRIEl AY
see his sister, Goldie Gillogly, graduation exercises of their
Plans for the Meigs Coun ty
Guests of Murl Galaway and other relatives here on daughters. Other guests at
Garden Clubs Association during the holiday weekend Sunday afternoon .
the Miller home have been his
Regatta fl ower show will be were Mrs. David Woodrum,
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Jones, sister and lami,ly, Mr. and
completed at a mee tin g' Carolyn Jo and Lisa, Canal Nelsonville, visited her Mrs. Bob Schoonaur and
scheduled for 7:30 Friday Winchester, Mr. and Mrs. parents, Mr. and Mrs. Earl children, Caledonia . Mrs.
night at the home of Mrs. L&lt;on Woodrum, Randy and Starkey on Saturday. Guests Miller entered Holzer
Janet Bolin, New Lima Road, Cathy an d friends, Bob of the Starkeys on Sunday Medical Hospital on June I
Rutland, the Meigs Coun ty Woodrum and children, and were his nephew and family, and is scheduled to undergo
contact chairman, Mrs. Bolin Mr. and Mrs. Eddie Clemons, Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Jewell, surgery.
desires representation from . Tommy, Brian and Daniel, Mary and Judy, Columbus;
Vacation Bible School is in
all garden clubs in the McArthur.
·
and on Monday, Mr. and Mrs. session at temple United
county.
Mr. a nd Mrs. Denver Starkey . joined famlly Methodist Church with more
~een, Bloomington, Illinois members fOr a cookout at the than forty youth and eighteen
visited relatives here this home of their daughter .and teachers and assistants. Tbe
BACK HOME
past weekend.
son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Roy theme Is God's Love Is Jesus,
Mr . and Mrs. Karl Kloes,
Mrs. Bernice McKnight, .. Wiseman at Harrisonville. and songs, Bible study and
Pomeroy, have return ed Co lumbus, announced the Others
present
were crafts are being used to
from Allentown, Pa. where marriage of her daughter Reverend and Mrs. David develop the theme . A picnic
they attended the wedding of Sharon, to Ed Seasoe, also of Wiseman and family of will be held on Friday
Billy Robert Alle n, Chester, Columbus. Miss McKnight Woodsfield, Ohio and Mrs. afternoon and a program ·Js
and Karen Simms, Allen- has many relatives in this Margar~l Parson, Rutland. planned for Sunday evening.
town . Enroute home they area and has visited here
Mr. and Mrs. Dale StansWeekend guests of Lucy
went sightseeing in the Amish frequently.
. Thomas were her sister, Amy bury joined their children,
country aroun d Lancaster,
Bernice McKnight was · an Caldwell and her niece and Mr. and Mrs. Warren Turner, .
Pa . in Strausburg, Gettys- overnight guest here and family, Mt. and Mrs. John Mr. and Mrs. LBrry Stansburg and Hershey.
visited her mother, Goldie Kimes, Paula Jean and bury and children, and .Mr.
Gillogly and was at Temple Thomas, of Columbus. The and Mrs. Jerry Stansbury
Cemetery.
group visited with Genevra and faniily at Lake Snowden
WEEKEND GUESTS
Guests of Mr. and Mrs. Foster a t her 95th birthday on Sunday and Sunday night.
Mrs . George Angeletti , Walter Swett were his celebration, then journeyed They were.also joined by Mr.
Cleveland, and her daughter mother, Audrey Swett of on to Mercerville cemetery · and Mrs. Jimmie Haning and
who
were
and son-in -law , Mr. and Mrs. Middleporl and their son-in- and visited relatives in the daughters,
camping at LBke Snowden,
f)an Thoman and family of law 'and daughter, Mr . and Galllpolis area .
Parma were weekend guests Mrs . Arthur Reedy and son,
Mr . and Mr s. Eddie too, for supper on Sunday
of Mr . and Mrs. Tim Sisson ; Mike, of Southside, W. Va .
Jordan , Lake Park, Florida · evening. The group returned
E. Second Sl., Pomeroy.
Mr. il lld Mrs. Charles were weekend guests of her to1 their homes on Monday,
MELANIE FRY

CHICAGO t UP!) - The
Hoover Auditoriwn, St•at of
rhica~o
Bears have acquired
- deliberations.
thrt&gt;e
former
OhiD college
Thursda y evening 54
stars
from
the
Cincinnati
persons will be ordain\!d into
Benga
ls
running
back
the ministry. The conference
Ha
rold
'·Cha
mp
"
Henso
n,
concludes with the stationing
middle
linebacker
Brad
of ministers fur the. ~omtng
and
rookie
year . Bishop Ensley will rea d Cousi no,
pla
cekicker
Tom
Klaban
- in
the changes Ft·iday, :June 18.
a trade for undisclosed draft
choices.
.
Bears' General Manager
Jim Finks made the move a
In
196a,
Ameri ca n month before the start of
astronauts Ed White and Jim swnmer tmining camp in an
McDivitt completed their effor t to shore up his club's
orbital journ ey, lmv ing
power running game, ~nd the
traveled 1.6 million miles in placekicking game, it was
62 orbits of the earth .
announced Monday.

Grade A
Chicken
Lower ·
Priced

Church choir presenting musical

Third birthday observed
TUESDAY
RACINE MASONIC Lodge
461 F&amp;AM. regul ar meeting,
Tuesclay, 7::10 p.m.
ELECTION DAY dinner
and bake sa le Tuesday at
Ora nge Township Fire House
sponsored by · the Tuppers
Plains Communi ty Club .
ELECTION Day dinner
Tuesda y at Ra cin e Fir e
House beginning at 9 a.m.
spon so red
by
Ladies ..
Auxiliary.
. ELECT ION Day dinn er
Tue sday a t Forest Run
United Methodi st Chur ch.
Men u incl udes bean and
veg etable soup , san dwiches,
pie and cake .
MIDDLEPORT CHILD
Conservation Leag ue, old
fa shioned family picnic at
Route :13 roadside park, 6:30
p.m. Tuesday.
White
elephant sale to be held and
new officers to be installed.
Everyone to ta ke a covered
di sh and table service.

Tuesday evenings. Bi shop
Joel McDavid, Lakeland,
Fla ., guest speaker, will'
address the body and guests
lhose evenings un a Bicentennial theme.
Bishop F. Gerald Ensley,
episcopal leader of th e
'
expected to pack the l.Bke of a plan whereby the con- conferen ce th ese past 12
Erie United Methodist ference will invest sub- years, will preside over
Grounds dtiring that week , stantial time , effort and plenary meetings through
including 2, 700 voting money in helping relieve Friday for~noon , June 18. It
members - making this the hunger in American society. will be his last conference as
In its !80th year of service an active bishop. He retires
largest conference in the 9.9million
member in this part of the Northwest Sept. I after 21 years in offi ce.
Special recogniti on lor
denomination.
Territory, the conference will
Bishop
and Mrs. Ensley will
A major item or business is take note of the nation's. 200th
be
Wednesday
evening in
expected to 'be development anniversary Monday and

•,

WITH
FREE
GlASS

s

29

�II - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy 0 . Tuesday Ju~ 8 !976
DICK TRACY
' '
'
'

10 - The Daily Sentinel, ~~rlle porl-Pomcro.l'• 0 , Tuesd~y. June 8, 1976
WANT ADS

INFORMATION
DEADLINES
lp P M • Day
Before
ubl fc a 1iofl
MO'nday

am

O ea dl tnc

9

Correcll ons will bt.'

ac

cep l ed untrl 9 a rn tor
Dav ot Pub ll c(ll tron
REGULATION S
The Pubttsher r ese rv e5
the rlg1'1t to ed rt o r r c 1cc t
any ad s deemed ob
tect lonat
Th e pub I tshcr
will not b e r esponstb l e lor

more than one tnco rr ec
msertton ,

RATES
~

Fo,. Wi! nt Ad Scr v rc t.•

cents

tnsenton

per word

one

Mtntmu m Ch a rge ~I 00
14 ce nt s per word th r ee
cof)secuttv e

rnse r Iron &lt;:.

2b cen ts pe r worr.1 s.rx
consecuttve
rn sertron s
25 Per Ce nt OtS (:oun 1 on
patd ad s 11n0 ads pa rd
Wtlhtn 1Q dFIYS
CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
\1 00
for
~0
WOI [J
mintmum
Ea c h add ttr onal w o rd J
ce nt s
BUN D ADS

Add tlro nal ?Sc Charg e
per Ad ve rt tscrne n t

OFFICE HOURS

8 30 u m ro ~ 00 p m
Datly 6 30 a m IO 17 00
Noo n S a turdt~y
Ptwn e today 9'n 7156

NOTIC ES

ATTN It
ALL tiOUSEWIVES
All Yard Sales Rummfjge ,
Porch and Basement Porch
and Basement Sales , e tc
m us !be pa 1d rn advance
Ge t your tn rn early by
stoppmg by ou r offt ce at
The Da lly Sentrn e l
111
Court St o r wrttrng Box
729 Pomeroy , OhtO 45769
wrth your remtllanc e

Card of Thanks
THE lamrly o t James D Abies
wtshes to eK ptt! SS therr !hon k ~
to H oc krn~ Valley Ho s prtal and
s tall , the Hernlem and Brown
and Ewrng Funeral Homes th e
Reverend E H Mortrn songs
by M r James Barl e y flo ral of
fenngs k rndness from lr tend ~
rn our lrme o f sorrow
The Abies Famrly

Notices
RACI NF. F1re Depor tmen t writ
ho ve a gun 5hoot Satu rday ol
6 30 p m or the 1r new buddrng
o!l Bashan Rood
NOW oper1 for Busrness lhe
TownKrln 120 1 1 EastMo mS t
Pomeroy , Ohro Greenware
po 1n t s
cerornt c s upplre s
Monday
Tuesday
classes
Weds and Frrdoy W tdl 2 p m
Even1ngs by app0111lrnerll Call
9~2 5954 lrnda Moyer
THE Patnt 8o.K Now Open So lem
St Ru tland Ohta Flberg la 5s
rcparr , body work s cus tom
pornttng Phone 742 -3053 or

742 3008

CHANGE O F HOUR S - Begr11r1rng
June 12 wn w1ll be closed Sotur
days New hour s wrll be Man
day th rough Fr1d oy 9 a m hll
7 p m Carolrno Fobr rcs Rout e
7_ one -half mrle nor th o f
Chester Ohro Henry a nd Mary
Hunter owners
D&amp; J S House of Fabm s Sole - to
make room for new shrp men t
of fob rrcs June 7 tht u 12 1 mrle
S of Mrddle port Stale Rt 7

SituatioJts Wanted
Wil l DO odd JObs rooftng porn
ttng houl rng treework , and
mow rng Phone 992 74Qq
Wil l core lor elderly person 1n my
home Phone 1 (614 ) qss 3949
or 992-34 10
Will do boby stlltng
Phone 992-7143

onyltme

Will do burldmg and remode l1 ng
roofrng , plumbrng
furnace
reporr gas or or l or general
repa ir
Free es!rmates and
reasonable ra te s
Ph o ne
Charles Smclalr (614 ) q8s 4121
or 992 -2221

Classified Ads
br1ng you

e1 t ra cash
for

shopping sprees
NO TI CE TO

CO NTR AC TO RS
'

~

~~~~~~~;·~;i="~h~u~~~;~d For Fast Results Use The Sentinel Classifieds
1 hou sond

Can ce tlat ron

STA TE OFOH IO

thoughts of one

so

Often br rngs o tmy teor
lho ught~

go bock to scenes long

LOST , weddrng r)ng engraved on
mstde Susre and John March
3 JQ\ 5 at Syracuse (&amp;fT'e lery ,
Prne Gr ove Cemetery or Beech
Gr ove CfHnetery Pho ne 949-

po '&gt;sed

June rolls on , butmemo11e s lmt
Sadly rms!&gt;ed by wrfe A ldo E
~a udree

1110

Help Wanted
DEP ENDAB lE bobys rtt er to core
lo r 2 911 h. age s 5 or'd B m my
horn e tn e..,.cn r ng ~ Phone 992

DO YOU HAVE PA RrY PlA N EX

PER IENCE' fRIENDLY TOY
PART IES HAS OENINGS FOR
MANAGERS IN YOUR AREA
RECRUITING IS EASY BECAUSE
MENT . NO COLLECTING OR
DELIVERING CAll COLLECT TO
CAROL DAY 518 48q 83q5 OR
WRITE FRIENDLY HOME PAR 20

RAILROAD

ALBANY N Y 12205

AVE

NOTICE OF
PUBLIC SALE
In pur suance wrlh I h e o rd er
of 111(' Com rn on Plea s Court
Probat e
Drv1 s ron
M et!J"&gt;
Co unty
Ohro
lhe
un
clers rg nut Adml tus trator De
Bonr s Non ol th e c s !at o o t
Charl es H yat t , de cease d , wrll
o tt e r tor s al a a t publ• c auction
at th e fr ont door o f th e Co u rt
house rn Pome roy, Ohto on
th e 30th day ol June 1976 . at
10 0 0
O'C loc k AM
111C
foll owt ny {!es crtbefl
r eal
es ta te to wrt
Pt~ r cet No 1 l he lo ll owrn g
rea l est a te s tlvated rn th e
County o l Mc rq s, 1n the Stale
of Ohro and rn lh c Vrllage ol
M rddlepo rt , and bo und e d i1rrd
d csc rtbccJ as follow s the ca s t
e nd o f Lot Nurnber Fr fly nrnc
f'i 9 l on the pta ! o f Co a tpor l
berng srxt y tco t wru e on !he
s rr ec t l yrnq cas t of Silrd lot
torty fe e t , llerng S1XIy t cc l
Al rdP n or th and south an d for ty
fee l de e p cast ancl west dnd
be ,ng the s ame premtsl's
former ly o cc uprt'd by G eorge
She rlo c k 1n tlrS lrle 11n1e
Also th e fo ll o w ing re al
est at e s rtu a tc rn the Cou nty of
Mc rgs , Star e of Ohr o , and 111
I h e F rrsl W.H d o f M tdd lcport
O h ro , and bo unded
anu
d esc rrb ecl as follow s
The
follow tn g rt'a l es 1a1e 1n Co a l
port n ow M•dCJieport. Ohro
be 111g par t a t Lot No tdly
nrn e (5 9 ! be rnq thr rt; feel
tront a nd srx ty feet d eep (3 0 x
60 fecit berng wesl o f eas t
for ty fee t and e a s t o f we st
tllr rty fee l nnd be my ttw sa mc
ti c ce o t ground dee cted to J A
iln d D N Daughterly by Mary
Da w s on an ct Jo hn Daw son
Ja nuary 51h , 1 ~98 ol record u t
Pom ero y Oh ro rn the De e d
Rec ords fo r Mcr q s County rn
Deed Boo k B?, Pag t&gt;s 19 &lt;1 anrt
.19 ~
Deed R e fer e n ce Vo lum e
?19 Page 585 Me rg s Cou nty
Deed R ec o rcl s ( 1\pp ra rse d
Value
$3 SOOOO l
Parc e l No 2 The fo tlow rnQ
re a l est at e srtu {1ted rn th e
County o f Mc rgs , rn lhe Sl at e
of Ohro , a nd tn t he V1 Hag e o f
Mrddlepo r t and bo unded a nd
des c rrbed as to ttow s All a t
Lo t No 58 rn Co alp ort , n o w
1nctuCJ DC! rn the ca rper at ron o f
M 1dd l c port , M c rgs Cou nry ,
Ohr o
Deed Re fere n c e
Vo lum e

m , Page 18J Mr&gt;y s Counly

Deed R ec ord s lfl pprar se d
Vlltue
SU OOOO J
Parce l No 3 The fo llow rng
re al es tat e s t!uat ecJ rn th e
Cou n t y o f Merg s , 1n !h e S tal a
of Ohto , and rn the Vr tlag e o f
Mrddl cpo rt and bou nd e d and
descrt bed as follo w s. LQt No
57, cxcep trng a str rp 46 teet off
of the e a s r Srd e o f Lo t No , 57
Als o the to ll owr n g d e scr rbcd
par ce l o r r ea l es tat e s rtuate '"
M iddlepo rt , M c 1gs County ,
Oht O Th e part o f Lo l No 66
ly mq wcsl of Lol No M ' ,, 02
of an a c r e on the e a s t s rde o f
Lor N o 66 , all of Coalport , now
a part ot th e Vt ltage o t Mrd
a le port
Deed R e fe r e n ce
Volum e
23 9 P age 181 , Me rg s County
D ee d Re co rd s 1 Apprarscd
Vi!lu c
\50000 )
Parc e n No 4
T ra ct N o 1 Th e fOllOWing
real est at e s dua tcd m the
VI ll a g e Of Mr C! dleport , tn the
County o t M er gs (1nd rn the
Stat e o f Ohro Be rn g that part
of Lo t No 60 tn th e Vdlage o f
Coalporl , now rn corporat e rt
tnl o th e Vrllage of Mrddteport.
Merg s Co unty
Ohro , and
boun ded and d esc rtbed a s
ro wr l
30 tee t o n
lot tow s
"fh 1rd S tr eet and 60 feet on Ihe
stree t parall a l w tlh the Rrver
Road , 11 c orner and
a
p a ra lle1oqram JO feet by 60
fee t
Tr ac t No 2 Ttl e tottowr n g
r e al es ra t e s rtuat ed tn the
Vtllage o f Mrddl e port, rn lhc
County o t Mcr g s and tn the
Stal e o t Ohro 8 cr ng thai e a s l
part o f Lo t No 6 1 orith e plat of
Coalport b ei ng 60 fee t W1 clr on
th e fron t and runnt ng ba c k 70
fe e t to a st one well wr t/1 th e
hou se s rtuare th e reon . ex
ceptrng th e r e from a 40 foot
s tr ip o tt o f Ihe back o f satd lot
as conv e yed by Maud A Petitt
and Jose ph A P etitt 10 Bert ha
Lemley Ward by deed datc C!
April 10, 1948 . and recorded rn
Vol 160 Page 315 o f the Deed
Recor ds of M ergs Cou nty ,
Ohro ana t urth e r e xccpttng
tram s a rd par ce l a JO fQ.Q.L
pr ccc l ront rny o n !lt c u nu
Avenue an d ex t endtn g at that
Wrdlh a d tst an ce of 30 fee l

•
1

~

Motor Co.

302 V 8, au tomatic trans, P
mfertor , blue ftntsh

Camping Equipment

WAN I ED Mon to tear down w ood
house Ill Syra cuse Phone 992
3598 0 1 992 /038

TI ES

QUALITY

1!12 FORD MAVERICK 2 DR

35 11

qjh AN NI VERSARY SAlE , On Star t ravel
cr aft rnrn1 m o to rs
trar lers campers new a11d us
ed bes t prices m In s tate
a re a Slop tn and compare
Camp Conley Storcroh Sales
Rt 62 N Pt Plea sant

Business Services

2 SIGNS Pomeroy
OF

lOST , Tom Col block and whr te
port Stome se Syracuse Ash
a nd Co llege St onm Nt:~m e Shu
Shu phone 992 2837

Of MS HA VE NO CASH INVESr

'
TUESDAY,JUNEI, tm
S:Oil-Bonanza 3; Partridge Famlly a, Mlsslon: 1mposslble 15.
S·JG-Adam-12 •· News 6; Family Affair 8. Elec Co.
20,33; Aam-12 t3.
6:01)-News 3,4,8,10,13,t5; ABC News 6; Zoom 20,33.
6:3G--NBC News 3,,., 15: ABC News 13: Andy Grllflth 6:
CBS News 8,10: Hodgepodge Lodge 20. Llllos Yoga
&amp;. You 33.
7:01l-TruthorCons.3; ToTelllheTruth &lt;; Bowllngfor
Dollors 6, Country Pla&lt;_e 8; News 10; Name That
Tune 13: Family Alfalr IS: Understanding Africa
20; Wild Wild World OI"Anlmals 33.

Lost and Found

• dem

rrom
thoto larlftllll
Rod~ lor
tho " "=k~=~~::J

11891
steering, radro, clea n

1!72 AMC HORNET
11995
Sport -about Wagon , 6 cy l , automa f tc tra ns, radio,
good ftres, whrte frn tsh, good econo m y

1971 FOR O STA. WAGON

EXPERIENCED
Radiator
Service

FREE ESTIMATES

1149S

Ph. m-mc

Choln

Saws-

Fmartcmg Available
Blown tn t o Wall s &amp; Atttn

"" ''-"' L I Wft

Mowen-

STORM
WINDOWS &amp; DOORS
REPLACEMENT

TIIItn-

Rldlnt

I

Plone.r,Bole
~~~~~~'!1"'~::~~:~:
saws,
Me rry • Tillers,
Mowers
491 Locust st.

LA~RY LAVENDER
Syracuse, Ohio
Ph . 911 -3993

,......,

3 AND 4 RM lu rnrshed and un
furnrshed opt s Phone 992 5434
CO UNlRY Mobrle Home Park Rt
33 t(ln mt les north o f Pomeroy
Lor ge lo ts wr th conc.ret potlos
~ 1d ewo lks
runners and off
s tree t pork rn g Phone 992 7479
ONE hedroom apartment s ot
VIlLAG E MANOR rn Mrddleporl
fo r $104 monthly plus e lec or
$130 rncludrng e lectfiC lOWER

RATES FOR IE NOR CITIZE NS
(onventerH to shopp1ng on
lh trd and Mrll Streets tn Mrd
d lepor I 8rond new htgh quoit
ly
apartmen ts
See the
manager a t R•v e rs rde Aport
men ts or ca ll 992 3273 Fur
ntsh ed
oportrnenl s
also
O'la ll obl e
One bedrm and 2 be drm fur
ms hed apor!ment s
Phone
992 3 129 or 9&lt;il2 5434
rRA IL ER space for ren t rn Mrd
d lopo rt Ph one 992 5434
FU RN ISHE D 2 room opa rtmen t
126 Mulberry Ave adul ts and
references
Phone qcn -2030
eve n rngs or 992 2167
2 Bedrm mobtle home
992 283 4

Phone

LARGE 3 rm fu rn1shed opt , orr
condr l1onmg 12 m•les from
Pomeroy on Rt 33 Available
June IS Phone 992 6 161

2 bedrrn a nd 1 bedrm furnr s hed
oportrnen l Ph o ne 992 2288 or

992 2348
2400 ~ q ft of o ff rc e spa ce As ts
or wdl remod e l wi th lease to
s ur! tennan t Phone 992 5786

Auto Sales

Wanted to Buy

SALVAGE

&amp;~ng

-----------

OlD furntt ure rce bo~~:es , bro5s 1972 Fo rd on e -ha lf ton prckup
$1 350 Ca ll (6 14)378 634q
beds , o ld wall teleph ones and
parts or comp le te households 1973 Mont e Ca rl o stlver low
Wrr te M 0 Mt ller , Rt 2,
mrleoge exce ll en t cond tlron
Pomero y, O ht o Coll992 77fiJ

Phone 992 2035 oc 992-2971

CASH po1d for all makes ond
19b9 VW bug , $550 Phone 992
model s ol mobtle homes
7797
Phoneoreo(ode 61 4 423 953 1
1970 Dodge Po laro , 4 dr , a c
$$Cas h$$$ fo r tun ke d a ut o Frye's
p s p b a 1 Phone 992 -50.48
Tr uck Auto Por ts, Rutland
Phone 74:1 208 1
2 power toke oft unrt s lor Dodg ._
!tuck $250 Rt ght and le ft
DEALERS tn JU nk cars scrop tron ,
Phone 992 51 II
metals Phone 992 5468
19b9 Roadrunner very goad con
JE NN Y ly nn or spoo l lwtn bed
d1t1on Ph one(6 1~ )3 67 71 53
red map le Phone 992 2860
1972 Nova 350 eng rne wrth
header wrl l socrt !tCe at $ 1200
Phone 8-43 2624

Business Opportunities

Business Franchise
AVAILABLE
IMMEDIATELY
IN POMEROY
MIDDLEPORT
AREA

For aggresstve mdtvtdual

who

ts wtlltng to work long
hou rs for good proftts.
Small Inve s tm e nt requtred
- $2,000 For detatl s and
tnt e rvt ew call Mr . Ada ms
1 304 375-4893 evemngs .

ON E b n drm lurmshed opt 134 1 ,
Mulberry Ave Phone 992 5436

5 ROOMS and both on 2 12 Con dor Colr~~2 2659

r-or
l'~le R t
Td
f
~ ' en or ra e
FOR Sole or rer' l 60)1( 1:1 2 bedrm
rn obtle home larg e yard and
garden spo t To rent $110 mon th plus depostl Pho ne 742-

3122

1971 J D 350 6 lu st hou se pos t
Wesleyan Holmes s Church on
Rt 143

Ya~d
1'

Sale

IF YOU hove o servtce to oiler
won t to buy or se ll somefh tng
are looktng fo r work
or
whateve r
, you II get resu lt s
la ster wtl h a Sen trn e l Won t Ad
Call q92 2116

2qsa

197 1 V W Super Beetle A 1 con A Iso
1973 Dodge
dillon
P1ckup C 100 Club ca b model
mtdd le S IZ&amp; engrne" l o~
m1leoge Ph o ne 7 ~2 2383
1971 VW

Be e tl e

$850

992 -3038

Phone

-

949 2607
q11-7376

TRAIN FULL OR
PART TIME You don' t have to qu1t your
prese nt Job to tram to dnve a
tractor trailer In only 7 to 8
weekend s PAR T TIME trammg
!S aturdays &amp; Sunday~) a qua l
1f red dnver c;:m be earntng

*12,000

per vear and up {3 weeks m a
FULL TIM~ res1dent tra1n1ng
program)
REV CO Trac tor Trader Tram
1ng, Inc w tll tram you on mod
ern , profess tonal eqUipm ent,
and place ment il5:ilstance •~
ava tlable upon gradualton.

CALL NOW 1

Parkersburg 422-4080

For 5ale

4 Fomtly Yard So le Tu pp ers MAKE s prtng cleanr ng profttob le,
turn unwanted tlems mto cos h
Ploms rn the Arbaugh Addrtron
Advert tse tn the Wont Ad s
June 7 8 and 9 fro m 9 o m trll4
p m. For tnfo rmal to n phone LOCU ST pos ts round or spi rt
(6 14) 667 3933
Phone 949-2774
3 Famtly Yard Sal e Weds , June 16 GRAPEFRUIT PILL " wtt h Otado x
at 10 00 !til evenrng Good
pl a n more con vent c n t lhon
doth1ng drs hes , e tc Some
grapelrutls
Ea t sohs lymg
Sara Coven try jewelry one
mea ls and lose wergh t Nelson
half pme 218 Mtl l St , Mrd
Drug
dlepor l, Ohto
FARMAll Super C culltvot ors ,
LARGE Vord So le a cross from Tex
plows , d 1sk corn plante r No
aco
Servtce
S tatt on
tn
2500 mower Mc(orrntck No 2
Syracuse June 7 thr ough II 9
hoy condtltaner , No
250'
tdiS p m
Phone (614) 376 6205

VEGETA BLE plant s o f al l krnd s 10
ddt e re nl vane l tes o f tom atoes
1ncludmg no n ocrd wh tt e
tomato Very Io rge se lec t ron o f
bed dt ng
pla nts
Al so
Geromu ms and other polled
p lants
Hangrng ba s ke ts ~
Cle land Form s and Greenhouse
Gera ldm e Cle land
Racrne

-

COA L, lrmestone and all types o f
salt ond roc k salt for tC e a nd
snow remova l Excels to r Sa lt
Works , Ea s t Ma tn St Pomeroy
O h1 o Phone 992 3891

TURF TRIM
PUSH MOWERS
30" , 3 HP, B&amp;S Eng

(

$650 Phone 992 3843

Kowo sa k1
cond11ton ,

lOSE wergh t w1lh New Shope
Tablets and Hydrex Wa ter P1ll s
at Dutton Drug , Middlepor t and
Nelson Drug1o

Parkersburg,

•AJ6 &gt;42

t61
•to 4

I W, BlJT NOT TO
BAI IT.

Replacemenl
Fre e Est•mates
We rec ommend and

Selt Quahty

5 9-16

RACINE
CARPET SHOP
Racine, Ohio

ASSORTED RUBBER
BACK CARPETING

'6.95

Dave Parsons, Owner
949-2814 6_7_1mo

LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE-A MAN

TO KNOW
HE'S SOME SORT
OF !OO'I'IQ'-- &lt;A!&gt;If
VERY WELL

RECOMMENDED- HAS
THE llllH DF THE
Pl.AHT, OF COORS£·

CODNER'S CAMPERS

Let OONELLI'S mokt tile
piua tor your otter
grodualion ~rty . Call •• of
99l-6167 ond we will mtkt
your party somethlna to
remember. Check tur
porty rates.

3•

Pass
Pass

6•
Pass

4t

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
B1lly Eisenberg, a membe1
of the la st American team to
win the world 's championship,
f1mshed second on the Cavendish mv1tallon w1th J1mmy
Cayne of New York Oswald
AH, Jacoby captamed that chamYES - pionship team and Jim Jacoby
was a playing member
Billy and J1mmy were one
of the pa;rs to b1d six wt th
today's hand .1nd Cayne one of
the very few to make the
slam .
The dummy was disappointing and there was no apparent way to avo;d two
losers. but Cayne handled 1t
nicely.

LJTIT.!;; ORPHAN ANNIE

6-3-1 month

Congratulations,
Gradrutes

Pass

Pass
Pass
Openong lead - 8 t

Sf . Rt. 124 POmeroy, Ohio
Phone 992-$468

Mrddleport, Ohio
992-6167
6-1-16-1 month

•Q J 9 2
SOUTH IDi
.KQB64
'K 9 7 3

Wesl North East

RIDERS SALVAGE

DONELli'S PillA

Wtndows and Doors

' 10 6
t KQJI06 53

tA
•K 87
Both vulnerable

s

'1.00 +

·EAST

WEST

•to 52

on ca,..

estimates

Junk Balteries 1.25
Motor Cast Clean
$3.50 Per Hundred
Copper JSc
Car Bodies.
Scrap-Iron.

Tax
W1th any 54.00 purchase
and !hiS ad, Good through
6-30 76 .

Alummum -Vtnyi -Steel
Contmuous Gutter

RAINBOW RIDGE
( Bashan Area)

LONG BOTTOM

An Ohoo reader wants to
know what you rebid arter you
open one club and partner
responds one dia mood You
hold :
•AQ xx •A x txx4rAKxxx

Your hand is a trifle too
weak lo Jump to two spades
Just bid one spade and plan to
b1d agam
rFor a copy ol JACOIJY
MODERN. send $1 to " Wm
at Bndge " c/ o this
newspaper. P 0 Box 489,
Radio Ctfy Staflon, I le w York.
N Y 10019)

SALES&amp; RENTAL
Travel Trarlers

OPEN

Donelll's Pizza
lcldleport, Ohio

Davs and evenings except
Tues. and Wed . or bV
contacting R. Codner,

owner .

Open 4 p.m. darly

5 21 1 mo

Closed all dly Monday•

~~~!!!!!~
4 ROOMS tota lly furnt shed on
l~n co tn Hg ts , excellen t shape
1ust needs porn I l arge kttchen
Iorge basement , $10 ,900:
Phone 992 7648

RooMv_7_ Y, ~~d~~e ~~r~ ~~d
frame , twa bed[m
home
loca ted between (oo lvr ll e and
Tuppers Pla rns One a cre lot
two cor garage cr ty water go ~
h e at ,
hardwo o d
fl oo rs ,
corpetd lrvtng room , ntce vtew ,

$11 000 Phone (614)667 3519
7 rm house wtlh b~th - p;;ti;
carpe ted , new furna ce, hot
water heat er , Iorge lot a n ltn coln Htl l Phone992-207 1

BRADFORD, Austioneer. Com plete Servtce Phone 9o49-2o487
or 949 -2000 . Racine, Ohio, Critt
Bradford
·

TEAFORD
Virgil B. Sr., Realtor
110Mechanic Pomeroy,O.

Sweepers, toasters, irons , all
small appliances lawn mower
next to State Htghway Garage

on Roule 7 Phone (614) 9853825
---------------REMODEUNG , Plumb1ng h;;;,t,~g

hea t , basement &amp; nt ce v tew
of river

and all types of general repatr
Work guaranteed 20 years ex·
perience Phone992-2.409.

MlDDLEPORT - 7 Rms ,
2 baths , 2 corner lots w1th

o-,o-TREe-r;;,-,.,;~g~20 ;.~-;:-s-e~~
perien c e
Insured free

v iew of

A REAL

river

FOR THE
135 acres

Mtn era fs, so me timber
Water availa b le .
(No

estimates .

LOCA TlON 527,500
BARGAIN - Nlce 3 Brs..
bath, large kit and li v1ng.
Fam1ly roo m &amp;all utllllles
On, y ss.soo.
SOLID - 12 Rms on 2lots,

bu ildmgs) On blacktop Rd .
$16,600
PRIVATE - 7''' hilly acres
lgreat for baby farm) .
Home has 5 BR, bath, own
waler w-so flener, N G hot
water hea t, ca rpeting

&amp;

utility,

992 -2384 or

5232.

Santtalion

992-3954 or 992-

2028
--------Will do roof1 ;;9~-~~;i~~tio~~

plumb tng and healtng No job
too large or too small Phone

with garage La rge yard .
$20,000 .
RUTLAND - 3 Brs., bath ,

and ditcher . Cha rles R. Hot ~
fteld , Back Hoe Service
Rutland, Oh1o Phone 742 2008'

Lan csca p ed ,

wtth stove &amp; refrtgerator

EXCAVATING

Ca rport &amp;. full
NEW LISTING
Brs .. 2 baths,
!&gt;replace, n1ce

DOZER, LARGE ANO SMALL
SEPT1C TANKS INSTALLED BILL
PULUNS, PHONE 99l-2478 01\Y
ORNIGHT .
'
SEPTIC iJystem~ - ~ ;;stall;d -bY

acres.

DETAlLED
FOR
COMFORT - 3 BR Wife
saver

k tfch en

(eat

In),

H W floor s lcarpeled) ,
bath Full t!asemenl W·
ut1l1ty $16 .000

basemen! .
- Mod. 3
heatolator
k1! , lull

basement , 2 car garage, 2

porches . &amp; large lot .
$34,000
NEW LISTING - 4 Brs.,
bath , nat gas heat, new kit.
with stove &amp; refrigerator at

--

Rutland $13,000
COME
TO
SUNNY
SOUTHERN OHIO.
START A HAPPY AND
BETTER WAY OF LIFE.

MO DERN rural , elec home on 1
o r 3 &amp; two thtrds a cres, 3
bedrooms livtng 1 both , k1t
che n lul l ftnt sh ed basement
wrfh laundry , recre ati o n
s torage Pho ne (6 14 )949 2748

win 's Gulf Servtee, Mid dleport , Ohto, Phone 992-

2438

------------BACKHCiES- AND

---------

I Gar PAST rnRRIN
Hll'CHCOCK WITHOIJr
HIM RECOGNIZING
/JIE!

OH-DH ...ICAN'TOO
IN10 MY FAVORITE
I?E5TAURANT LOOK·
lNG LIKE THI.S!

licensed mstaller . Shepard
Contractors Phone 7,.2 -2409.
ing . Phone Lemley
Company , 742-2003

CRYPTOQUOTE
p

Ortlltng

HAliliNG~-D~~~~y,--;at;r~l
and limestone or grave l, form
ltm e Ph . Jr . Dorst , 742-2850.

cAAPENTER.-f~~~~~ -~;ij;"nQ~
panellng Phone992-2759 ,

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

ON

WMPO AM·FM

DADBURN LA'ZV-FEMALE!!
WHII DIDN'T MAW CHOP

SOME KINDUN' WOOD AFORE
SHE TRAIPSED OFF TO

· IWIN FORKS

?

8 A.M., The Noon Report,
ancl5 P.M.

'

)'

BKPLQKG

P~:EKLBN

YJ BI ,

QK

LPY

AQI(GK

QJN

JY E XMKYI.K

YKUKG

K B KGBKXX
N BTO N.

QKYG!
PFPCN
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: ONE IS NEARER GOD'S HEART
IN A GARDEN THAN ANYWHERE ELSE ON EARTH.
DOR0'111Y GURNEY
fC 19'76 Klnl Pt•tur.. Syndtul.t.lnc. )

EXPANDED WEEKDAY NEWSCASTS AT

992-22S9 or 992-2568

One Jetter somply stands for another In this sample A is
used for the three I.'s, X for the two O's, etc. Single lctlers,
apostrophes . the length and !ormation ol tho wonls are all
hint• F.ach day lhr code lrtlrrs n1·c dillrro•nt.

F0Rfhe-ilsf~-;~;r-;;j!d;iil:

HEAR NEWS FIRST

6 acres , 3 bedrm house near
Rutland $10, 500 Phone 742

6:oo-Summer Semester 10.
6: l ~Form Report 13
6 ~The Story 13
6:3t&gt;----&lt;:olumbus Todov 4; News 6; Summer Semeater
8: Farmtlme 10.
6·45-Mornlng Report 3
6 so-.Good Morning , West VIrginia tl.
6 : 5~C huck While Reports 10; Good Morning, Trl
State 13
7 oo-Today 3,4,t5 , Good Morning, Amerlco 6,13: CBS
News B: Bugs Bunny &amp; Friends 10.
7:3o--Schoolles 10.
a:oo-Lassle 6 ; Capt. Kangoroo 8, 10; Sesame St. 33.
8:3G--Big Valley 6.
9:oo-AM. 3; Phil Donahue 4: Lucy Show 8: Mike
Oouglos 10: Morning with O.J. 13: Phil Donahue t5;
Mister Rogers 33.
.
9:3t&gt;----&lt;:ross-Wits J: One Life to Live 6: Tollletalet 8;
Mike Douglas 13; VIlla Alegre 33.
lO :oo-Celebrlty SwHpstakes 3,4, 15; Edge ol Night 6;
Price ls Righi 8, tO: Bit with Knit 33.
10 .3G--H igh Rollers 3,4,15: Dinah 6; Lilias Yoga &amp; YOIJ
33.
11 ()()-Wheel of Fortune 3,15; Weekdoy 4; Gambit
8, 10; Farmer's Daughter 13, Lowell Thomas
Remembers 33.
11 :3G--Hollywood Squares 3,4, t5: Happy Day1 13; Lovo
of Lite 8, 10; Biography 33.
11 : 5~Toke Kerr 8; Don !mel's World 10.
12 :oo-Magnlllcent Morble Machine 3, ]5; Let's Moke a
Deol 13: News 6,8,10: Sesome St. 33.
12 :3o-Take My Advi ce 3,15; All My Children 6,13;
Search lor Tomorrow 8,10.
12 . 5 ~NBC News 3,t5.
1:oo-News 3; Ryan's Hope 6, 13; Phil Donohue 8:
Young &amp; the Restless 10; Not For Woman Only 151
E lee. Co. 33.
1:3o--Doys of Our Lives 3,,., 15: Rhyme &amp; RealOfl 6,13 ;
As the World Turns 8,10: Wild Wild World of
Animals 33.
2:()()--$20,000 Pyramid 6,13; To Be Announced 33 .
2: 3o--Doctors 3.4,15, Breok the Bonk 6,13 ; Guiding
Light 8,10.
3 .oo-Another World 3.•. 15: General Hospltol 6,13; All
In the Family 8, to: Kup's Show 20: To Be Announced 33,
3 3tf---&lt;lne Life to Live 13; Mickey Mouse Club 61 Match
Game 8,10 8,to.
• :()()-Mister Cartoon J; Merv Grllfln 4; SomarHI 151
Bewitched 6; Mlckay Mou•e Club 8; Mlater
Rogers 20,33; Movie "The Fast..t Guitar Alive"
10: Dlnoh 13.
4· 3G--Bewllched 3; Mod Squad 6; Andy Griffith 8
Sesame St . 20,33; Fllnhtonea 15.
5·oo-Bonanza 3: Partridge Fomlly 8: Mission : Impossible 15.
5:3Q-Adom -12 4,13; New• 6; Fam ily Altair 8; Elec.
Co. 20,33.
6.oo-News 3,4,8, tO, 13,15: ABC News 6; Zoom 20,33,
6:3o--NBC News3 ,4,15; ABC Newa13; Andy Griffith 61
CBS News 8,10: Hodgepodge Lodge 201 VIlla Alegre
33.
.
7 oo-Truth or Cons. J; To Tell the Truth 4; Bowling for
Dollors 6; Pop Goes the Country 8; News 10; Wild
Kingdom 13. Family Affolr 15; Book Beat 201
Tourlst_s are Coming 33.
no--Last of the Wild 3; Something E•tra : On
Locatlon 4; Match Gome PM 6; S25,000 Pyramid 81
Evening Edlllon with Martin Agronsky 201 The
Judge 10; To tell the Truth 13; Wild Kingdom 15:
Book Beat 33.
8·()()--Llttle House on the Prairie 3.~.15; Bionic Wom1111
6,13: Tony Orlando l!o Down 8,10; Tribal Eye 33;
Mark of Jozz 20.
"
8:3G--Lowell Thomos Remembers 20.
9·()()--Sanford II. Son 3,4,15: Beretta 6,13: Thoeter In
Amerlco 33.
,
9'3t&gt;----&lt;:hlco &amp; the Man 3,4, 15.
lO:oo-Howk 3,4,15: Starsky &amp; Hutch 6, 13; Blue Knight
8,10: News 20
10:3G--Aimanoc 20: Journey 33.
ll :oo-News 3,4,6,8,10,t3,t5; ABC News 33.
11 :3G--Johnny Carson 3.~.t5; Movie "Mall Helm" 6, 13;
Movie "If He Hollers, let Him Gol" a, Movie
"Meet Me In Los Vegos" 10: Janokl 33.
1:oo-Tomorrow 3,4; News 13.
Channel Five
9 a.m 700-Ciub (c)
7 p.m. Testimony Time lcl
7:3t&gt;----&lt;:able Spotlight lei
8:3o--Movle' To e Announced (c)
10:()()--700-Ciub (c)

Unoeramble theoe f&lt;Nr Jumble~
one letter to each ~quare, to
form four ordinary wordo.

GREG'S-c8-5At:es~lo-;,~,;d"-;;ler:

large lot . $12 ,000.
49 ACRES - New 2 Br.
home, 3 yrs old, birch kit

6,13; Movln ' On 15; Reallv Rosie: St~rrlng The
Nutshell Kids 6.10, Burglar-Proofing 20; BurglarProollng 33.
8·3o--Laverne &amp; Shlrley 6,13; Good Tlm" 8,t0;
Consumer urvlvol 20,33.
9 oo-Movle " Prudence &amp; the Pill " t3: Pollee Womllll
15: Movie " The Sunclowners" 6; MASH I, tO;
Evening al Symphonv 20; Rachel. La Cubona 33 9:3tf---&lt;lne Day at a Time W, 10.
\
10 GO-City of Angels 3,15: To Be Announced~; Swlt(h
8,10; News20 .
the
tO .JO--NFL Action '76.~: Black Perspective on
News
11 oo-News 3,U,l0,13,15; ABC News 33.
11 .3o--Presidenllal Primaries 3,4,8, 13, t5: Movie "Cry
Terror " 10: Janaki 33.
12 ()()-Johnny Carson 3,,.,15, Mystery of the WHk 13;
News 6: Movie " Nicky' s World" 8.
1· 3G--News t3 .
Channel Five
9 a.m 700-C iub le i
7 p m Rex Hum bard l cl
8 p.m. Daytime (c)
9 p.m. Sports Travel Hour (cl
10 p m 700-Club lcl
11 p.m Election Night Movies (c )
WEDNESDAY, JUNE f, 1976

~~Ml!Ub!;;::t.:::!t!-!C

742-2346
eXCAVATiNG--d~;e-;~-b~~kh~;

basement

etc Storage bldg $15,000 .
RT. 143 - Close 1n Moblle
w-k1tchen . ulility &amp; garage
added Own &amp;. c1ty water.
1' '~

WI-N/)() I HAV£ 17/E;t:ELIN'
1&lt;9l.il'/ IVESN"TCAR~
WHATTONN I M&amp;111CNGD- 2

sEPiiCTANKS ;l;;n-;d-M~de~~

lots

new gas F A furnace , 2
por c h es, basement and

do, Uriah?

bo ckhae work , dump trucks
and lo -bo ys for ht re wtll hau l
fill dirt , top sod , limestone and
grovel . Call Bob or Roger Jeffe rs
day phone 992 -7Qa9
mght phone 992-3525 or 992:

$46,500 .
LARGE OLD HOME - '
Brs , 1'12 baths, 2 llvmgs,
dining,

to

eXCAVAiiNG:-da~;~ k,~d;-;.~d

Pallo, love ly kit , lull
3

thtnq

VICe, alf makes , 992-2284 Tfle
Fobrtc Shop
Pomeroy ,
Authom:ed Singer Sa les and
S&amp;r\llce. We sharpen Setssors .

brick veneer ranch home
and

Call

Don't lJOU
have anll-

(614) 696-7257 Albany
sEWINGMACHINE-Re-;i~- ~;r~

2 car garage and lots of
pines $29,500.
CHESHIRE - Mod 6 rm
b a se ment

Yesterday's Amwer
12 Like a
2f Armadas;
Turkish
flotillas
28 - bleu !
bath
16 Not yours
32 Friend of
19 Dessert
Androcles
wme
33 ArchttecZl Windflower
tural
22 Sundered
pier
Z3 Expunged
35 Chahce
24 Bakery
veil
3f Before
treats

ELWOOD-BOWERS--REPAiR-=

Phone 992-3325
INVESTMENT - Business
room down and 5 room apt .
up Br ick, tile canst. , nat.
gas &amp;. ci ty waler $13,500.
POMEROY - 3 br . home
with 1v, baths, hot water

House has been renovaied

A HONEY
MONEY -

I

• A 6 53

Rt. 3, Pomeroy, Ohoo 45769
Phone doy or n1gh!
614-992-2201 1 14 1 mo

l 2.8 1 mo

w va .

304-485-0386
614-423-6474

,POMEROY LANDMARK
9.- Jack W. C&lt;lrsey, Mgr
ilil Phone 992-2181

SM ITH and We sson Mod el -41
2796
auto 22 co l targe t pistol nvw '
S1BO ltrm 1970 Da !sun 510 HOU SE for so le In Chester area
Three year old fo ur bedroom
Sedan fotr condrt 1o n runs 1
brrc k ranch t. r f1ve acres of
good , $500 Pot belly s tove,
land Ha s two bath s large '
SbS P hone f/92 7805
roo m s, ftn lsh ed basement w1th
1971 Honda 500 exce llent cond1
ltrep loce in family room Phone
tto n, helme ts mcluded , $750
(614 ) 985 3938 o r co n1act Don
Als o 1964 Ford Galax te mo tor
Rous h
tn g ood condt lton body 1s
rough , S75 Phone 949 :1814 :il bedrm horne , fully furntsh ed
close to schoo l and shopp1hg ,
Monday
th r u
Sa tur d ay ,
Inquire 894 Pe arl St
Mtd Dnyttme 843.206 1 evenrngs ond
d le port Ohta
Sunriay

• 972

----~· -.

Mtke Young, Manager
SaJes and Installation

Mod . k1t. with cook &amp; bake
un 1ts. Many extras . $25,000
4 ACRES - Near school

Pe,ts for S.'le-

'Q

See how you can really

Call us at949·211l
or 949-2203

He led a spade to 'dummy at
trick two and contmued with
the queen of hearts to West's
ace West led a second diamond Cayne ruffed, cashed
the kmg of hea rts wh1le discarding a club from dummy,
ruffed a low heart and had a
count on the East hand of two
hearts. seven diamonds and
four clubs
This led to a simple squeeze
agamst East Jimmy led a second trump to his own hand,
ruffed h1s last heart, led dummy's last trump to his own
hand , played out h1s last
trump to leave dummy With
one diamond and two clubs
and poor East with no discard.
He had to hold a h1gh diamond
and was forced to unguard his
queen of clubs

6

.AJ 973

save.

5 Brs ., 2 baths , enormous

J

NORTH

home with no obltgattor!.

6 CANS OF RC

$163.95

-

roof or old
Houu, roof,

pamtmg, electrtcal WDrk,
gutters &amp; downspouts,
furnaces , water heaters,
warer sotrners, installed &amp;
repatred, Sewillle.

2013 lOth Ave.

TURF TILL
TILLERS
3112 H.P., B&amp;S Eng.

A Iorge home on Ash Stre et tn
Mid dle port far sal e o r trade fo r
sm aller hom e Phone 992 7797

Cayne squeezes six spades

opet1ng and Installation.
We'll bring samples to your

barn. shingles, build up,

Sales &amp; Service

q82 4123

YARD Sa le Ju ne 9 10 and II ot OL DER , remodeled all e lec 3 3 bed rm house tn Mlddlep ; rf
Starlmg Mosser on Rou te 7 Se
bedrrn ho me $1 7 500 Call
nea r Por k Swtmm mg poo l, ond
cond house on nghl above
qq1 5011
s tores Phone 992 7667
Eas t e rn Hr gh Sc hoo l Used
woo d burn 1ng
ftr el o ce JU ST fresh G uer nsey m1lk cow HO USE FOR SAlE 15 mt les from
w1th calf , $350 fum Contact
clot hm g mrsc t l em~
Pomeroy 3 BR ranch 2 ba th s
James Roy Parsons off Rao ne DR o nto redwood deck , FR w1th
FO UR Forn rl y Yard Sa le on Co Rd
Bo shon Road
woodburnmg ftreploce , 1 h 14
31 by Eagle Rrdge Church
s
torage building on 1 a cre lo t ,
Thursday Fn , Sa turday an d ONE dtnelte set uce llen t con d1
$27,000 Phone (61&lt;) 667 3662
tton Two end ta bles , matchng
Sunday Follow s rgn s
anttque bed and buff et d resser
6 ;oom -h~~s~ , ;;;;~;11 k;pf ,
GARAG E Sole , Thursday and
Phon e 992 -6092
bedrms , modern kitchen , woll
Frrday , 463 Grant St
Mtd to wall carpe t, H W fl oors , full
IN Dash 23 channel CB om fm
dleport
ba seme nt, new gas fu rnace,
mp)( rad io , 8 track stereo Call
s mall lo t to mow , tdeol for
YARD So le , Fndoy , one·5 00,
'1'11Jq65
o lder co up le or ~mo ll famtl y tn
Saturday 10,00 ttl I 5 00 at 520
3 speed stere o , all wood cobtnet ,
good
ne1g hb orhood
1n
Sycamore St m M]dd leport
mahogany exce ll ent play ing
Pomeroy Coli for oppomtment
cond rlion $50 coll992 2376
Phone 9'12-3097
,
One 9 month ol d Hereford bull
4 room house tn Le ta rt Also , coal
can be re gr s tered Phone ~2
and lurntture Con tact ifadd
A K C Dobe rman Prn sche r pup7537.
Rhodes , Roc1 n e
p res 6 weeks o ld Sho ts and
YOUNG cobb11S , 1100 Call (614) 3 bed rm house bath ce lla -r and
wocmed Coll (614 )5330761
378 6261, Reedsv 1l le Oh to
o utbu rld tngs , almost 4 a cres of
AKC Regrstered coc ker sponte l
land , sou th end o f Rutland See
pupp1es $75 Phone (304) Ba2 5 h p roto ttller $60 Co li Athens
8tll Smtih , ot 'Sm itll 's Body Shop
{614 ) 592-1158 33 Townsend
21&lt;5
or phone 7-42 3135or 992 7708
Place

Mob'l HomesfOJSale __ _ 1973 -450 Prototype
motorooss good

Siding Center

3 acres , 1 8 ,:;;1 le~ ~~ C~u-;, t y-R~~d
4 Out of Dexter Phone (6 14 )

$89.95

Free

JUNE SPECIAL

Square Yard Installed

1969 J T 0 4 speed , mags, ex
cel len t condt11on $900 Phone

WIN AT BRIDGE

~------

'

1970 Bute k Rr v te ro lull power exce ll e nt co ndr l1 o n
$ 1200
Ph one 742 -2796
'

repatred?

5 26 1 mo .

19S6 Chevy Bel atr 5.3 ,00 actual
mr les Phone 992 -6092

1971 Ford Movenc k Grabber 6
cy l out omaltc low mtleog e
Phone
e)(cellent
condtlmn

MOBIL E home a dult s onl y Phone
992 5535
4 rms w1 lh ba th furnr s hed a pa r t
men t ,
every th rng
po1d ,
upsto1rs, oparl ment no pels o r
child ren Adults only Phone
992 5910, o r can be seen a t 81 4
E Mom 51 Pomeroy

1964 Co talrno 4 dr , fl oor 3
speed $95 o r best o ff er Call
onytrme Sunday and after 6
p .m on week days Phone W2-

8-12 .

new

YOU'VE GOT TO APMlT IT'$
GIV INI5 HI? E'&gt;ROADCA5T A
5EN$ATI0NAL Cl-IMAX. !

&lt;SllEAT 5COTTl THE MlllACI-E

FISURE &amp;- FACEtiFT FOR'MULA
S HKA~ K KER TI$$UE5 50 TlGHT
IT'S PULLED HER E'&gt;ONE5
SOWLEGtillD!

SLOAN'S
CARPOING

Ractne , Ohio
Nee d

CAPI'AIN EASY

5 26-2 mo

Racine Plumbing

High prices for scrap
autos. motors and
other metals . Phone
992 -2228. Monday thru
Friday 8-3, Saturday

7·30--Baseball 3.~: Let's Dea l with It 6; Match Game
PM8; Price Is Right 10, To Tell the Truth 13: Nash ville on the Road 15: Evenlng Edlllon with Martin
Agronsky 20: Family Theatre 33 8 ()()-Happy Days

Middleport, Ohlo ft:l-30!2

4-TO 1 mo .

HALLS

FURN ISHED 2 bedrm oportrn&amp;n l,
adult s only , tn Mtddfepo fl
Phone 992 -3874

,[ _ Troc tors.

~ .,Mt~;:!!".,.

WINDOWS
ALUMINUM
SIOING· SOFFITT
GUTTERS- AWNINGS

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

V 8 a ul oma lt c, P s teering , good ftres , c lea n tnte nor

Ent .
Rtpolr

Ill

Blown
Insulation Services

For Rent

OEPARTMENTOF
TRANSPORTATION
Columbu s, Oh to
:
M ay2 1, 19H
, Con t ract Sa tes Le gal Cop y
•
No76426
I\U NIT PRICE CONTRACT
tosealed proposal s wtll be
r ' cC t\led at the olf rce of the
Qrrec tor o f the Oh to De part
rn::en t of
Tran s portollton
C~lumbus , O hro unltl 10 oO
N./VI Oh to Slandard T rm c
~ esday , June IS , 1976 , f a~
r ~t~prov e m en t s 1n
/\!hens and M etgs Coun tles
htO , on vartou s sectto n s
TH MEG
Slate Route 7
l y applyrng a bi!umrnouS wcs lcrly I rom Norlh Sec ond
r fa ce
trealm e nt
to Avc nu e a nd bemg the north
s out ders
easterly co rn er o f Lot No 61
hOuiC!ers - 1 10 3 fee t
on the pta! o f Coalport , c on
veyeC! by Maud Avena! Pe 11 11
"prote c t a nd Work L, e nglh
and Joseph A
Pe t trl ro
51111 .. 793 fe et o r 10 19 m rles
Lawr ence Boyd an d He len
" The da l e sel fo r c ompletron Mart e Boyd by dec a dat ed
Of' · th ts work. shall be a s se t /1prrl ?6 , 19 'i5 and rC'cor d cd rn
f&lt;y:lh rn Ihe brddtn g proposal ., Vo l
18/ , P aqo S17 , D ee d
-.Eilch
btdder shall
be Re c ord s o f Mcrgs Co un l y
'
r'"lurred to frt e wllh ht s brd a Ohro
CCJitlted c heck or cashrer 's
Deed Ref e r en c e
Volume
c he ck for an a mount equal to 7l1 , Pa ge 81, Me&gt;gs Co unly
le
ftve per ce nt of h 1s bid , bul Ill De e d R ec ord s (A pprcl tSe d
no event m ore than f tlly Va lue
~ 1,000 00 1
1968 Skyltne lrmler 12.r~ 60 and
lhousand doUa r s , or a bond for
la nd 3 b edrm very good cond1
Th e s a i d p rc m rs es arc
ten per (ent of h rs btd , payable appra1 sed at S6 , 500 00 and
!ton , SB 000 Phone 992 -5491
to tht&gt; Dtrcctor
ca nnot IJC sold for le ss than
or 992 5972
etdde rs must apply , on the two !h trds o f the app ra rs ed
proper form s, for qualrfrcatton vat u e
1906 12x65 Vtnda le 3 bedrm
at tteast ten davs prror to the
S.:ttd Pro pc r tres wdt be o f
mobtfe home w1th expando
dat e se t fo r openrng btds 1n fe rcd for sale se parat e ly for
Portly furntshed . Phone 992 accordance wtth Chapt er 55, 5 th e rndtvtdual app r,11 scd
2821 or q92 -2437
ONto R evtsed Code
Yitlue s a s se t fort h fo llow rng
~tans and spectftcattons arc the d csc r 1plron o f th e Ill ~ 1970 Commun rly Cara van 12&gt;'52
on 1 f ile tn tlie Departm ent of &lt;lr vrCJuar p r ope rt ies
2 bedrm , good condl tr on
Tronspor ta t ion and tt 1e office
Terms o f ~a l a Cil s h In 11.1nd
Phone
(61 4)965-&lt;294
Of,! the
Dtstrrcl
Deputy up o n dc ltv c ry o t (lee d
D1 r ec tor
ARE yo u tn the market lor a
fhe Drr ec,R)J ~re servcs Ul t
nf'rnArrl v rut r1
~ t o r1 e r homt o r o untl lo r that
rr{Jhlt o rt:r ec l any and nil b rds
/1 rlrn rn r:.lr ,) 'o r
VOLOi ro n site Come rn oncl look
:
RIC H ARDO JACKJC N
Da Oonrc., Non o f
al ou r 8.x26 and 8K35 used
th e E~tatc o t
Re~ B 1113
DIRECTOR
models
Kingsbury Mo bil e
Charl es Hyatt deceased
Homes
11 00 E Mom St ,
I
{6J•J, 8 2!c
(6 1 I. 8 1'1 n . oi l(
Pomeroy Phone 992 703 4
,__

Television log for easy viewing

'

I KJ I I I

ICYGERL ~
EM!JACE

!

v '~

Now...,..,.. the clrcloll lttleft
to form the turpri• ..........

I~~l~.;I=·~==="-~A~~·u~ueoled bJ
r

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1

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the

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rxxI xI f.
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FLAIIE

P£LY18- IIILDI!W

Antwerr Tltt ~~6Jtl tltt'l PJt HNII.,Itll
f~•r

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

auw) '

�II - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy 0 . Tuesday Ju~ 8 !976
DICK TRACY
' '
'
'

10 - The Daily Sentinel, ~~rlle porl-Pomcro.l'• 0 , Tuesd~y. June 8, 1976
WANT ADS

INFORMATION
DEADLINES
lp P M • Day
Before
ubl fc a 1iofl
MO'nday

am

O ea dl tnc

9

Correcll ons will bt.'

ac

cep l ed untrl 9 a rn tor
Dav ot Pub ll c(ll tron
REGULATION S
The Pubttsher r ese rv e5
the rlg1'1t to ed rt o r r c 1cc t
any ad s deemed ob
tect lonat
Th e pub I tshcr
will not b e r esponstb l e lor

more than one tnco rr ec
msertton ,

RATES
~

Fo,. Wi! nt Ad Scr v rc t.•

cents

tnsenton

per word

one

Mtntmu m Ch a rge ~I 00
14 ce nt s per word th r ee
cof)secuttv e

rnse r Iron &lt;:.

2b cen ts pe r worr.1 s.rx
consecuttve
rn sertron s
25 Per Ce nt OtS (:oun 1 on
patd ad s 11n0 ads pa rd
Wtlhtn 1Q dFIYS
CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
\1 00
for
~0
WOI [J
mintmum
Ea c h add ttr onal w o rd J
ce nt s
BUN D ADS

Add tlro nal ?Sc Charg e
per Ad ve rt tscrne n t

OFFICE HOURS

8 30 u m ro ~ 00 p m
Datly 6 30 a m IO 17 00
Noo n S a turdt~y
Ptwn e today 9'n 7156

NOTIC ES

ATTN It
ALL tiOUSEWIVES
All Yard Sales Rummfjge ,
Porch and Basement Porch
and Basement Sales , e tc
m us !be pa 1d rn advance
Ge t your tn rn early by
stoppmg by ou r offt ce at
The Da lly Sentrn e l
111
Court St o r wrttrng Box
729 Pomeroy , OhtO 45769
wrth your remtllanc e

Card of Thanks
THE lamrly o t James D Abies
wtshes to eK ptt! SS therr !hon k ~
to H oc krn~ Valley Ho s prtal and
s tall , the Hernlem and Brown
and Ewrng Funeral Homes th e
Reverend E H Mortrn songs
by M r James Barl e y flo ral of
fenngs k rndness from lr tend ~
rn our lrme o f sorrow
The Abies Famrly

Notices
RACI NF. F1re Depor tmen t writ
ho ve a gun 5hoot Satu rday ol
6 30 p m or the 1r new buddrng
o!l Bashan Rood
NOW oper1 for Busrness lhe
TownKrln 120 1 1 EastMo mS t
Pomeroy , Ohro Greenware
po 1n t s
cerornt c s upplre s
Monday
Tuesday
classes
Weds and Frrdoy W tdl 2 p m
Even1ngs by app0111lrnerll Call
9~2 5954 lrnda Moyer
THE Patnt 8o.K Now Open So lem
St Ru tland Ohta Flberg la 5s
rcparr , body work s cus tom
pornttng Phone 742 -3053 or

742 3008

CHANGE O F HOUR S - Begr11r1rng
June 12 wn w1ll be closed Sotur
days New hour s wrll be Man
day th rough Fr1d oy 9 a m hll
7 p m Carolrno Fobr rcs Rout e
7_ one -half mrle nor th o f
Chester Ohro Henry a nd Mary
Hunter owners
D&amp; J S House of Fabm s Sole - to
make room for new shrp men t
of fob rrcs June 7 tht u 12 1 mrle
S of Mrddle port Stale Rt 7

SituatioJts Wanted
Wil l DO odd JObs rooftng porn
ttng houl rng treework , and
mow rng Phone 992 74Qq
Wil l core lor elderly person 1n my
home Phone 1 (614 ) qss 3949
or 992-34 10
Will do boby stlltng
Phone 992-7143

onyltme

Will do burldmg and remode l1 ng
roofrng , plumbrng
furnace
reporr gas or or l or general
repa ir
Free es!rmates and
reasonable ra te s
Ph o ne
Charles Smclalr (614 ) q8s 4121
or 992 -2221

Classified Ads
br1ng you

e1 t ra cash
for

shopping sprees
NO TI CE TO

CO NTR AC TO RS
'

~

~~~~~~~;·~;i="~h~u~~~;~d For Fast Results Use The Sentinel Classifieds
1 hou sond

Can ce tlat ron

STA TE OFOH IO

thoughts of one

so

Often br rngs o tmy teor
lho ught~

go bock to scenes long

LOST , weddrng r)ng engraved on
mstde Susre and John March
3 JQ\ 5 at Syracuse (&amp;fT'e lery ,
Prne Gr ove Cemetery or Beech
Gr ove CfHnetery Pho ne 949-

po '&gt;sed

June rolls on , butmemo11e s lmt
Sadly rms!&gt;ed by wrfe A ldo E
~a udree

1110

Help Wanted
DEP ENDAB lE bobys rtt er to core
lo r 2 911 h. age s 5 or'd B m my
horn e tn e..,.cn r ng ~ Phone 992

DO YOU HAVE PA RrY PlA N EX

PER IENCE' fRIENDLY TOY
PART IES HAS OENINGS FOR
MANAGERS IN YOUR AREA
RECRUITING IS EASY BECAUSE
MENT . NO COLLECTING OR
DELIVERING CAll COLLECT TO
CAROL DAY 518 48q 83q5 OR
WRITE FRIENDLY HOME PAR 20

RAILROAD

ALBANY N Y 12205

AVE

NOTICE OF
PUBLIC SALE
In pur suance wrlh I h e o rd er
of 111(' Com rn on Plea s Court
Probat e
Drv1 s ron
M et!J"&gt;
Co unty
Ohro
lhe
un
clers rg nut Adml tus trator De
Bonr s Non ol th e c s !at o o t
Charl es H yat t , de cease d , wrll
o tt e r tor s al a a t publ• c auction
at th e fr ont door o f th e Co u rt
house rn Pome roy, Ohto on
th e 30th day ol June 1976 . at
10 0 0
O'C loc k AM
111C
foll owt ny {!es crtbefl
r eal
es ta te to wrt
Pt~ r cet No 1 l he lo ll owrn g
rea l est a te s tlvated rn th e
County o l Mc rq s, 1n the Stale
of Ohro and rn lh c Vrllage ol
M rddlepo rt , and bo und e d i1rrd
d csc rtbccJ as follow s the ca s t
e nd o f Lot Nurnber Fr fly nrnc
f'i 9 l on the pta ! o f Co a tpor l
berng srxt y tco t wru e on !he
s rr ec t l yrnq cas t of Silrd lot
torty fe e t , llerng S1XIy t cc l
Al rdP n or th and south an d for ty
fee l de e p cast ancl west dnd
be ,ng the s ame premtsl's
former ly o cc uprt'd by G eorge
She rlo c k 1n tlrS lrle 11n1e
Also th e fo ll o w ing re al
est at e s rtu a tc rn the Cou nty of
Mc rgs , Star e of Ohr o , and 111
I h e F rrsl W.H d o f M tdd lcport
O h ro , and bo unded
anu
d esc rrb ecl as follow s
The
follow tn g rt'a l es 1a1e 1n Co a l
port n ow M•dCJieport. Ohro
be 111g par t a t Lot No tdly
nrn e (5 9 ! be rnq thr rt; feel
tront a nd srx ty feet d eep (3 0 x
60 fecit berng wesl o f eas t
for ty fee t and e a s t o f we st
tllr rty fee l nnd be my ttw sa mc
ti c ce o t ground dee cted to J A
iln d D N Daughterly by Mary
Da w s on an ct Jo hn Daw son
Ja nuary 51h , 1 ~98 ol record u t
Pom ero y Oh ro rn the De e d
Rec ords fo r Mcr q s County rn
Deed Boo k B?, Pag t&gt;s 19 &lt;1 anrt
.19 ~
Deed R e fer e n ce Vo lum e
?19 Page 585 Me rg s Cou nty
Deed R ec o rcl s ( 1\pp ra rse d
Value
$3 SOOOO l
Parc e l No 2 The fo tlow rnQ
re a l est at e srtu {1ted rn th e
County o f Mc rgs , rn lhe Sl at e
of Ohro , a nd tn t he V1 Hag e o f
Mrddlepo r t and bo unded a nd
des c rrbed as to ttow s All a t
Lo t No 58 rn Co alp ort , n o w
1nctuCJ DC! rn the ca rper at ron o f
M 1dd l c port , M c rgs Cou nry ,
Ohr o
Deed Re fere n c e
Vo lum e

m , Page 18J Mr&gt;y s Counly

Deed R ec ord s lfl pprar se d
Vlltue
SU OOOO J
Parce l No 3 The fo llow rng
re al es tat e s t!uat ecJ rn th e
Cou n t y o f Merg s , 1n !h e S tal a
of Ohto , and rn the Vr tlag e o f
Mrddl cpo rt and bou nd e d and
descrt bed as follo w s. LQt No
57, cxcep trng a str rp 46 teet off
of the e a s r Srd e o f Lo t No , 57
Als o the to ll owr n g d e scr rbcd
par ce l o r r ea l es tat e s rtuate '"
M iddlepo rt , M c 1gs County ,
Oht O Th e part o f Lo l No 66
ly mq wcsl of Lol No M ' ,, 02
of an a c r e on the e a s t s rde o f
Lor N o 66 , all of Coalport , now
a part ot th e Vt ltage o t Mrd
a le port
Deed R e fe r e n ce
Volum e
23 9 P age 181 , Me rg s County
D ee d Re co rd s 1 Apprarscd
Vi!lu c
\50000 )
Parc e n No 4
T ra ct N o 1 Th e fOllOWing
real est at e s dua tcd m the
VI ll a g e Of Mr C! dleport , tn the
County o t M er gs (1nd rn the
Stat e o f Ohro Be rn g that part
of Lo t No 60 tn th e Vdlage o f
Coalporl , now rn corporat e rt
tnl o th e Vrllage of Mrddteport.
Merg s Co unty
Ohro , and
boun ded and d esc rtbed a s
ro wr l
30 tee t o n
lot tow s
"fh 1rd S tr eet and 60 feet on Ihe
stree t parall a l w tlh the Rrver
Road , 11 c orner and
a
p a ra lle1oqram JO feet by 60
fee t
Tr ac t No 2 Ttl e tottowr n g
r e al es ra t e s rtuat ed tn the
Vtllage o f Mrddl e port, rn lhc
County o t Mcr g s and tn the
Stal e o t Ohro 8 cr ng thai e a s l
part o f Lo t No 6 1 orith e plat of
Coalport b ei ng 60 fee t W1 clr on
th e fron t and runnt ng ba c k 70
fe e t to a st one well wr t/1 th e
hou se s rtuare th e reon . ex
ceptrng th e r e from a 40 foot
s tr ip o tt o f Ihe back o f satd lot
as conv e yed by Maud A Petitt
and Jose ph A P etitt 10 Bert ha
Lemley Ward by deed datc C!
April 10, 1948 . and recorded rn
Vol 160 Page 315 o f the Deed
Recor ds of M ergs Cou nty ,
Ohro ana t urth e r e xccpttng
tram s a rd par ce l a JO fQ.Q.L
pr ccc l ront rny o n !lt c u nu
Avenue an d ex t endtn g at that
Wrdlh a d tst an ce of 30 fee l

•
1

~

Motor Co.

302 V 8, au tomatic trans, P
mfertor , blue ftntsh

Camping Equipment

WAN I ED Mon to tear down w ood
house Ill Syra cuse Phone 992
3598 0 1 992 /038

TI ES

QUALITY

1!12 FORD MAVERICK 2 DR

35 11

qjh AN NI VERSARY SAlE , On Star t ravel
cr aft rnrn1 m o to rs
trar lers campers new a11d us
ed bes t prices m In s tate
a re a Slop tn and compare
Camp Conley Storcroh Sales
Rt 62 N Pt Plea sant

Business Services

2 SIGNS Pomeroy
OF

lOST , Tom Col block and whr te
port Stome se Syracuse Ash
a nd Co llege St onm Nt:~m e Shu
Shu phone 992 2837

Of MS HA VE NO CASH INVESr

'
TUESDAY,JUNEI, tm
S:Oil-Bonanza 3; Partridge Famlly a, Mlsslon: 1mposslble 15.
S·JG-Adam-12 •· News 6; Family Affair 8. Elec Co.
20,33; Aam-12 t3.
6:01)-News 3,4,8,10,13,t5; ABC News 6; Zoom 20,33.
6:3G--NBC News 3,,., 15: ABC News 13: Andy Grllflth 6:
CBS News 8,10: Hodgepodge Lodge 20. Llllos Yoga
&amp;. You 33.
7:01l-TruthorCons.3; ToTelllheTruth &lt;; Bowllngfor
Dollors 6, Country Pla&lt;_e 8; News 10; Name That
Tune 13: Family Alfalr IS: Understanding Africa
20; Wild Wild World OI"Anlmals 33.

Lost and Found

• dem

rrom
thoto larlftllll
Rod~ lor
tho " "=k~=~~::J

11891
steering, radro, clea n

1!72 AMC HORNET
11995
Sport -about Wagon , 6 cy l , automa f tc tra ns, radio,
good ftres, whrte frn tsh, good econo m y

1971 FOR O STA. WAGON

EXPERIENCED
Radiator
Service

FREE ESTIMATES

1149S

Ph. m-mc

Choln

Saws-

Fmartcmg Available
Blown tn t o Wall s &amp; Atttn

"" ''-"' L I Wft

Mowen-

STORM
WINDOWS &amp; DOORS
REPLACEMENT

TIIItn-

Rldlnt

I

Plone.r,Bole
~~~~~~'!1"'~::~~:~:
saws,
Me rry • Tillers,
Mowers
491 Locust st.

LA~RY LAVENDER
Syracuse, Ohio
Ph . 911 -3993

,......,

3 AND 4 RM lu rnrshed and un
furnrshed opt s Phone 992 5434
CO UNlRY Mobrle Home Park Rt
33 t(ln mt les north o f Pomeroy
Lor ge lo ts wr th conc.ret potlos
~ 1d ewo lks
runners and off
s tree t pork rn g Phone 992 7479
ONE hedroom apartment s ot
VIlLAG E MANOR rn Mrddleporl
fo r $104 monthly plus e lec or
$130 rncludrng e lectfiC lOWER

RATES FOR IE NOR CITIZE NS
(onventerH to shopp1ng on
lh trd and Mrll Streets tn Mrd
d lepor I 8rond new htgh quoit
ly
apartmen ts
See the
manager a t R•v e rs rde Aport
men ts or ca ll 992 3273 Fur
ntsh ed
oportrnenl s
also
O'la ll obl e
One bedrm and 2 be drm fur
ms hed apor!ment s
Phone
992 3 129 or 9&lt;il2 5434
rRA IL ER space for ren t rn Mrd
d lopo rt Ph one 992 5434
FU RN ISHE D 2 room opa rtmen t
126 Mulberry Ave adul ts and
references
Phone qcn -2030
eve n rngs or 992 2167
2 Bedrm mobtle home
992 283 4

Phone

LARGE 3 rm fu rn1shed opt , orr
condr l1onmg 12 m•les from
Pomeroy on Rt 33 Available
June IS Phone 992 6 161

2 bedrrn a nd 1 bedrm furnr s hed
oportrnen l Ph o ne 992 2288 or

992 2348
2400 ~ q ft of o ff rc e spa ce As ts
or wdl remod e l wi th lease to
s ur! tennan t Phone 992 5786

Auto Sales

Wanted to Buy

SALVAGE

&amp;~ng

-----------

OlD furntt ure rce bo~~:es , bro5s 1972 Fo rd on e -ha lf ton prckup
$1 350 Ca ll (6 14)378 634q
beds , o ld wall teleph ones and
parts or comp le te households 1973 Mont e Ca rl o stlver low
Wrr te M 0 Mt ller , Rt 2,
mrleoge exce ll en t cond tlron
Pomero y, O ht o Coll992 77fiJ

Phone 992 2035 oc 992-2971

CASH po1d for all makes ond
19b9 VW bug , $550 Phone 992
model s ol mobtle homes
7797
Phoneoreo(ode 61 4 423 953 1
1970 Dodge Po laro , 4 dr , a c
$$Cas h$$$ fo r tun ke d a ut o Frye's
p s p b a 1 Phone 992 -50.48
Tr uck Auto Por ts, Rutland
Phone 74:1 208 1
2 power toke oft unrt s lor Dodg ._
!tuck $250 Rt ght and le ft
DEALERS tn JU nk cars scrop tron ,
Phone 992 51 II
metals Phone 992 5468
19b9 Roadrunner very goad con
JE NN Y ly nn or spoo l lwtn bed
d1t1on Ph one(6 1~ )3 67 71 53
red map le Phone 992 2860
1972 Nova 350 eng rne wrth
header wrl l socrt !tCe at $ 1200
Phone 8-43 2624

Business Opportunities

Business Franchise
AVAILABLE
IMMEDIATELY
IN POMEROY
MIDDLEPORT
AREA

For aggresstve mdtvtdual

who

ts wtlltng to work long
hou rs for good proftts.
Small Inve s tm e nt requtred
- $2,000 For detatl s and
tnt e rvt ew call Mr . Ada ms
1 304 375-4893 evemngs .

ON E b n drm lurmshed opt 134 1 ,
Mulberry Ave Phone 992 5436

5 ROOMS and both on 2 12 Con dor Colr~~2 2659

r-or
l'~le R t
Td
f
~ ' en or ra e
FOR Sole or rer' l 60)1( 1:1 2 bedrm
rn obtle home larg e yard and
garden spo t To rent $110 mon th plus depostl Pho ne 742-

3122

1971 J D 350 6 lu st hou se pos t
Wesleyan Holmes s Church on
Rt 143

Ya~d
1'

Sale

IF YOU hove o servtce to oiler
won t to buy or se ll somefh tng
are looktng fo r work
or
whateve r
, you II get resu lt s
la ster wtl h a Sen trn e l Won t Ad
Call q92 2116

2qsa

197 1 V W Super Beetle A 1 con A Iso
1973 Dodge
dillon
P1ckup C 100 Club ca b model
mtdd le S IZ&amp; engrne" l o~
m1leoge Ph o ne 7 ~2 2383
1971 VW

Be e tl e

$850

992 -3038

Phone

-

949 2607
q11-7376

TRAIN FULL OR
PART TIME You don' t have to qu1t your
prese nt Job to tram to dnve a
tractor trailer In only 7 to 8
weekend s PAR T TIME trammg
!S aturdays &amp; Sunday~) a qua l
1f red dnver c;:m be earntng

*12,000

per vear and up {3 weeks m a
FULL TIM~ res1dent tra1n1ng
program)
REV CO Trac tor Trader Tram
1ng, Inc w tll tram you on mod
ern , profess tonal eqUipm ent,
and place ment il5:ilstance •~
ava tlable upon gradualton.

CALL NOW 1

Parkersburg 422-4080

For 5ale

4 Fomtly Yard So le Tu pp ers MAKE s prtng cleanr ng profttob le,
turn unwanted tlems mto cos h
Ploms rn the Arbaugh Addrtron
Advert tse tn the Wont Ad s
June 7 8 and 9 fro m 9 o m trll4
p m. For tnfo rmal to n phone LOCU ST pos ts round or spi rt
(6 14) 667 3933
Phone 949-2774
3 Famtly Yard Sal e Weds , June 16 GRAPEFRUIT PILL " wtt h Otado x
at 10 00 !til evenrng Good
pl a n more con vent c n t lhon
doth1ng drs hes , e tc Some
grapelrutls
Ea t sohs lymg
Sara Coven try jewelry one
mea ls and lose wergh t Nelson
half pme 218 Mtl l St , Mrd
Drug
dlepor l, Ohto
FARMAll Super C culltvot ors ,
LARGE Vord So le a cross from Tex
plows , d 1sk corn plante r No
aco
Servtce
S tatt on
tn
2500 mower Mc(orrntck No 2
Syracuse June 7 thr ough II 9
hoy condtltaner , No
250'
tdiS p m
Phone (614) 376 6205

VEGETA BLE plant s o f al l krnd s 10
ddt e re nl vane l tes o f tom atoes
1ncludmg no n ocrd wh tt e
tomato Very Io rge se lec t ron o f
bed dt ng
pla nts
Al so
Geromu ms and other polled
p lants
Hangrng ba s ke ts ~
Cle land Form s and Greenhouse
Gera ldm e Cle land
Racrne

-

COA L, lrmestone and all types o f
salt ond roc k salt for tC e a nd
snow remova l Excels to r Sa lt
Works , Ea s t Ma tn St Pomeroy
O h1 o Phone 992 3891

TURF TRIM
PUSH MOWERS
30" , 3 HP, B&amp;S Eng

(

$650 Phone 992 3843

Kowo sa k1
cond11ton ,

lOSE wergh t w1lh New Shope
Tablets and Hydrex Wa ter P1ll s
at Dutton Drug , Middlepor t and
Nelson Drug1o

Parkersburg,

•AJ6 &gt;42

t61
•to 4

I W, BlJT NOT TO
BAI IT.

Replacemenl
Fre e Est•mates
We rec ommend and

Selt Quahty

5 9-16

RACINE
CARPET SHOP
Racine, Ohio

ASSORTED RUBBER
BACK CARPETING

'6.95

Dave Parsons, Owner
949-2814 6_7_1mo

LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE-A MAN

TO KNOW
HE'S SOME SORT
OF !OO'I'IQ'-- &lt;A!&gt;If
VERY WELL

RECOMMENDED- HAS
THE llllH DF THE
Pl.AHT, OF COORS£·

CODNER'S CAMPERS

Let OONELLI'S mokt tile
piua tor your otter
grodualion ~rty . Call •• of
99l-6167 ond we will mtkt
your party somethlna to
remember. Check tur
porty rates.

3•

Pass
Pass

6•
Pass

4t

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
B1lly Eisenberg, a membe1
of the la st American team to
win the world 's championship,
f1mshed second on the Cavendish mv1tallon w1th J1mmy
Cayne of New York Oswald
AH, Jacoby captamed that chamYES - pionship team and Jim Jacoby
was a playing member
Billy and J1mmy were one
of the pa;rs to b1d six wt th
today's hand .1nd Cayne one of
the very few to make the
slam .
The dummy was disappointing and there was no apparent way to avo;d two
losers. but Cayne handled 1t
nicely.

LJTIT.!;; ORPHAN ANNIE

6-3-1 month

Congratulations,
Gradrutes

Pass

Pass
Pass
Openong lead - 8 t

Sf . Rt. 124 POmeroy, Ohio
Phone 992-$468

Mrddleport, Ohio
992-6167
6-1-16-1 month

•Q J 9 2
SOUTH IDi
.KQB64
'K 9 7 3

Wesl North East

RIDERS SALVAGE

DONELli'S PillA

Wtndows and Doors

' 10 6
t KQJI06 53

tA
•K 87
Both vulnerable

s

'1.00 +

·EAST

WEST

•to 52

on ca,..

estimates

Junk Balteries 1.25
Motor Cast Clean
$3.50 Per Hundred
Copper JSc
Car Bodies.
Scrap-Iron.

Tax
W1th any 54.00 purchase
and !hiS ad, Good through
6-30 76 .

Alummum -Vtnyi -Steel
Contmuous Gutter

RAINBOW RIDGE
( Bashan Area)

LONG BOTTOM

An Ohoo reader wants to
know what you rebid arter you
open one club and partner
responds one dia mood You
hold :
•AQ xx •A x txx4rAKxxx

Your hand is a trifle too
weak lo Jump to two spades
Just bid one spade and plan to
b1d agam
rFor a copy ol JACOIJY
MODERN. send $1 to " Wm
at Bndge " c/ o this
newspaper. P 0 Box 489,
Radio Ctfy Staflon, I le w York.
N Y 10019)

SALES&amp; RENTAL
Travel Trarlers

OPEN

Donelll's Pizza
lcldleport, Ohio

Davs and evenings except
Tues. and Wed . or bV
contacting R. Codner,

owner .

Open 4 p.m. darly

5 21 1 mo

Closed all dly Monday•

~~~!!!!!~
4 ROOMS tota lly furnt shed on
l~n co tn Hg ts , excellen t shape
1ust needs porn I l arge kttchen
Iorge basement , $10 ,900:
Phone 992 7648

RooMv_7_ Y, ~~d~~e ~~r~ ~~d
frame , twa bed[m
home
loca ted between (oo lvr ll e and
Tuppers Pla rns One a cre lot
two cor garage cr ty water go ~
h e at ,
hardwo o d
fl oo rs ,
corpetd lrvtng room , ntce vtew ,

$11 000 Phone (614)667 3519
7 rm house wtlh b~th - p;;ti;
carpe ted , new furna ce, hot
water heat er , Iorge lot a n ltn coln Htl l Phone992-207 1

BRADFORD, Austioneer. Com plete Servtce Phone 9o49-2o487
or 949 -2000 . Racine, Ohio, Critt
Bradford
·

TEAFORD
Virgil B. Sr., Realtor
110Mechanic Pomeroy,O.

Sweepers, toasters, irons , all
small appliances lawn mower
next to State Htghway Garage

on Roule 7 Phone (614) 9853825
---------------REMODEUNG , Plumb1ng h;;;,t,~g

hea t , basement &amp; nt ce v tew
of river

and all types of general repatr
Work guaranteed 20 years ex·
perience Phone992-2.409.

MlDDLEPORT - 7 Rms ,
2 baths , 2 corner lots w1th

o-,o-TREe-r;;,-,.,;~g~20 ;.~-;:-s-e~~
perien c e
Insured free

v iew of

A REAL

river

FOR THE
135 acres

Mtn era fs, so me timber
Water availa b le .
(No

estimates .

LOCA TlON 527,500
BARGAIN - Nlce 3 Brs..
bath, large kit and li v1ng.
Fam1ly roo m &amp;all utllllles
On, y ss.soo.
SOLID - 12 Rms on 2lots,

bu ildmgs) On blacktop Rd .
$16,600
PRIVATE - 7''' hilly acres
lgreat for baby farm) .
Home has 5 BR, bath, own
waler w-so flener, N G hot
water hea t, ca rpeting

&amp;

utility,

992 -2384 or

5232.

Santtalion

992-3954 or 992-

2028
--------Will do roof1 ;;9~-~~;i~~tio~~

plumb tng and healtng No job
too large or too small Phone

with garage La rge yard .
$20,000 .
RUTLAND - 3 Brs., bath ,

and ditcher . Cha rles R. Hot ~
fteld , Back Hoe Service
Rutland, Oh1o Phone 742 2008'

Lan csca p ed ,

wtth stove &amp; refrtgerator

EXCAVATING

Ca rport &amp;. full
NEW LISTING
Brs .. 2 baths,
!&gt;replace, n1ce

DOZER, LARGE ANO SMALL
SEPT1C TANKS INSTALLED BILL
PULUNS, PHONE 99l-2478 01\Y
ORNIGHT .
'
SEPTIC iJystem~ - ~ ;;stall;d -bY

acres.

DETAlLED
FOR
COMFORT - 3 BR Wife
saver

k tfch en

(eat

In),

H W floor s lcarpeled) ,
bath Full t!asemenl W·
ut1l1ty $16 .000

basemen! .
- Mod. 3
heatolator
k1! , lull

basement , 2 car garage, 2

porches . &amp; large lot .
$34,000
NEW LISTING - 4 Brs.,
bath , nat gas heat, new kit.
with stove &amp; refrigerator at

--

Rutland $13,000
COME
TO
SUNNY
SOUTHERN OHIO.
START A HAPPY AND
BETTER WAY OF LIFE.

MO DERN rural , elec home on 1
o r 3 &amp; two thtrds a cres, 3
bedrooms livtng 1 both , k1t
che n lul l ftnt sh ed basement
wrfh laundry , recre ati o n
s torage Pho ne (6 14 )949 2748

win 's Gulf Servtee, Mid dleport , Ohto, Phone 992-

2438

------------BACKHCiES- AND

---------

I Gar PAST rnRRIN
Hll'CHCOCK WITHOIJr
HIM RECOGNIZING
/JIE!

OH-DH ...ICAN'TOO
IN10 MY FAVORITE
I?E5TAURANT LOOK·
lNG LIKE THI.S!

licensed mstaller . Shepard
Contractors Phone 7,.2 -2409.
ing . Phone Lemley
Company , 742-2003

CRYPTOQUOTE
p

Ortlltng

HAliliNG~-D~~~~y,--;at;r~l
and limestone or grave l, form
ltm e Ph . Jr . Dorst , 742-2850.

cAAPENTER.-f~~~~~ -~;ij;"nQ~
panellng Phone992-2759 ,

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

ON

WMPO AM·FM

DADBURN LA'ZV-FEMALE!!
WHII DIDN'T MAW CHOP

SOME KINDUN' WOOD AFORE
SHE TRAIPSED OFF TO

· IWIN FORKS

?

8 A.M., The Noon Report,
ancl5 P.M.

'

)'

BKPLQKG

P~:EKLBN

YJ BI ,

QK

LPY

AQI(GK

QJN

JY E XMKYI.K

YKUKG

K B KGBKXX
N BTO N.

QKYG!
PFPCN
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: ONE IS NEARER GOD'S HEART
IN A GARDEN THAN ANYWHERE ELSE ON EARTH.
DOR0'111Y GURNEY
fC 19'76 Klnl Pt•tur.. Syndtul.t.lnc. )

EXPANDED WEEKDAY NEWSCASTS AT

992-22S9 or 992-2568

One Jetter somply stands for another In this sample A is
used for the three I.'s, X for the two O's, etc. Single lctlers,
apostrophes . the length and !ormation ol tho wonls are all
hint• F.ach day lhr code lrtlrrs n1·c dillrro•nt.

F0Rfhe-ilsf~-;~;r-;;j!d;iil:

HEAR NEWS FIRST

6 acres , 3 bedrm house near
Rutland $10, 500 Phone 742

6:oo-Summer Semester 10.
6: l ~Form Report 13
6 ~The Story 13
6:3t&gt;----&lt;:olumbus Todov 4; News 6; Summer Semeater
8: Farmtlme 10.
6·45-Mornlng Report 3
6 so-.Good Morning , West VIrginia tl.
6 : 5~C huck While Reports 10; Good Morning, Trl
State 13
7 oo-Today 3,4,t5 , Good Morning, Amerlco 6,13: CBS
News B: Bugs Bunny &amp; Friends 10.
7:3o--Schoolles 10.
a:oo-Lassle 6 ; Capt. Kangoroo 8, 10; Sesame St. 33.
8:3G--Big Valley 6.
9:oo-AM. 3; Phil Donahue 4: Lucy Show 8: Mike
Oouglos 10: Morning with O.J. 13: Phil Donahue t5;
Mister Rogers 33.
.
9:3t&gt;----&lt;:ross-Wits J: One Life to Live 6: Tollletalet 8;
Mike Douglas 13; VIlla Alegre 33.
lO :oo-Celebrlty SwHpstakes 3,4, 15; Edge ol Night 6;
Price ls Righi 8, tO: Bit with Knit 33.
10 .3G--H igh Rollers 3,4,15: Dinah 6; Lilias Yoga &amp; YOIJ
33.
11 ()()-Wheel of Fortune 3,15; Weekdoy 4; Gambit
8, 10; Farmer's Daughter 13, Lowell Thomas
Remembers 33.
11 :3G--Hollywood Squares 3,4, t5: Happy Day1 13; Lovo
of Lite 8, 10; Biography 33.
11 : 5~Toke Kerr 8; Don !mel's World 10.
12 :oo-Magnlllcent Morble Machine 3, ]5; Let's Moke a
Deol 13: News 6,8,10: Sesome St. 33.
12 :3o-Take My Advi ce 3,15; All My Children 6,13;
Search lor Tomorrow 8,10.
12 . 5 ~NBC News 3,t5.
1:oo-News 3; Ryan's Hope 6, 13; Phil Donohue 8:
Young &amp; the Restless 10; Not For Woman Only 151
E lee. Co. 33.
1:3o--Doys of Our Lives 3,,., 15: Rhyme &amp; RealOfl 6,13 ;
As the World Turns 8,10: Wild Wild World of
Animals 33.
2:()()--$20,000 Pyramid 6,13; To Be Announced 33 .
2: 3o--Doctors 3.4,15, Breok the Bonk 6,13 ; Guiding
Light 8,10.
3 .oo-Another World 3.•. 15: General Hospltol 6,13; All
In the Family 8, to: Kup's Show 20: To Be Announced 33,
3 3tf---&lt;lne Life to Live 13; Mickey Mouse Club 61 Match
Game 8,10 8,to.
• :()()-Mister Cartoon J; Merv Grllfln 4; SomarHI 151
Bewitched 6; Mlckay Mou•e Club 8; Mlater
Rogers 20,33; Movie "The Fast..t Guitar Alive"
10: Dlnoh 13.
4· 3G--Bewllched 3; Mod Squad 6; Andy Griffith 8
Sesame St . 20,33; Fllnhtonea 15.
5·oo-Bonanza 3: Partridge Fomlly 8: Mission : Impossible 15.
5:3Q-Adom -12 4,13; New• 6; Fam ily Altair 8; Elec.
Co. 20,33.
6.oo-News 3,4,8, tO, 13,15: ABC News 6; Zoom 20,33,
6:3o--NBC News3 ,4,15; ABC Newa13; Andy Griffith 61
CBS News 8,10: Hodgepodge Lodge 201 VIlla Alegre
33.
.
7 oo-Truth or Cons. J; To Tell the Truth 4; Bowling for
Dollors 6; Pop Goes the Country 8; News 10; Wild
Kingdom 13. Family Affolr 15; Book Beat 201
Tourlst_s are Coming 33.
no--Last of the Wild 3; Something E•tra : On
Locatlon 4; Match Gome PM 6; S25,000 Pyramid 81
Evening Edlllon with Martin Agronsky 201 The
Judge 10; To tell the Truth 13; Wild Kingdom 15:
Book Beat 33.
8·()()--Llttle House on the Prairie 3.~.15; Bionic Wom1111
6,13: Tony Orlando l!o Down 8,10; Tribal Eye 33;
Mark of Jozz 20.
"
8:3G--Lowell Thomos Remembers 20.
9·()()--Sanford II. Son 3,4,15: Beretta 6,13: Thoeter In
Amerlco 33.
,
9'3t&gt;----&lt;:hlco &amp; the Man 3,4, 15.
lO:oo-Howk 3,4,15: Starsky &amp; Hutch 6, 13; Blue Knight
8,10: News 20
10:3G--Aimanoc 20: Journey 33.
ll :oo-News 3,4,6,8,10,t3,t5; ABC News 33.
11 :3G--Johnny Carson 3.~.t5; Movie "Mall Helm" 6, 13;
Movie "If He Hollers, let Him Gol" a, Movie
"Meet Me In Los Vegos" 10: Janokl 33.
1:oo-Tomorrow 3,4; News 13.
Channel Five
9 a.m 700-Ciub (c)
7 p.m. Testimony Time lcl
7:3t&gt;----&lt;:able Spotlight lei
8:3o--Movle' To e Announced (c)
10:()()--700-Ciub (c)

Unoeramble theoe f&lt;Nr Jumble~
one letter to each ~quare, to
form four ordinary wordo.

GREG'S-c8-5At:es~lo-;,~,;d"-;;ler:

large lot . $12 ,000.
49 ACRES - New 2 Br.
home, 3 yrs old, birch kit

6,13; Movln ' On 15; Reallv Rosie: St~rrlng The
Nutshell Kids 6.10, Burglar-Proofing 20; BurglarProollng 33.
8·3o--Laverne &amp; Shlrley 6,13; Good Tlm" 8,t0;
Consumer urvlvol 20,33.
9 oo-Movle " Prudence &amp; the Pill " t3: Pollee Womllll
15: Movie " The Sunclowners" 6; MASH I, tO;
Evening al Symphonv 20; Rachel. La Cubona 33 9:3tf---&lt;lne Day at a Time W, 10.
\
10 GO-City of Angels 3,15: To Be Announced~; Swlt(h
8,10; News20 .
the
tO .JO--NFL Action '76.~: Black Perspective on
News
11 oo-News 3,U,l0,13,15; ABC News 33.
11 .3o--Presidenllal Primaries 3,4,8, 13, t5: Movie "Cry
Terror " 10: Janaki 33.
12 ()()-Johnny Carson 3,,.,15, Mystery of the WHk 13;
News 6: Movie " Nicky' s World" 8.
1· 3G--News t3 .
Channel Five
9 a.m 700-C iub le i
7 p m Rex Hum bard l cl
8 p.m. Daytime (c)
9 p.m. Sports Travel Hour (cl
10 p m 700-Club lcl
11 p.m Election Night Movies (c )
WEDNESDAY, JUNE f, 1976

~~Ml!Ub!;;::t.:::!t!-!C

742-2346
eXCAVATiNG--d~;e-;~-b~~kh~;

basement

etc Storage bldg $15,000 .
RT. 143 - Close 1n Moblle
w-k1tchen . ulility &amp; garage
added Own &amp;. c1ty water.
1' '~

WI-N/)() I HAV£ 17/E;t:ELIN'
1&lt;9l.il'/ IVESN"TCAR~
WHATTONN I M&amp;111CNGD- 2

sEPiiCTANKS ;l;;n-;d-M~de~~

lots

new gas F A furnace , 2
por c h es, basement and

do, Uriah?

bo ckhae work , dump trucks
and lo -bo ys for ht re wtll hau l
fill dirt , top sod , limestone and
grovel . Call Bob or Roger Jeffe rs
day phone 992 -7Qa9
mght phone 992-3525 or 992:

$46,500 .
LARGE OLD HOME - '
Brs , 1'12 baths, 2 llvmgs,
dining,

to

eXCAVAiiNG:-da~;~ k,~d;-;.~d

Pallo, love ly kit , lull
3

thtnq

VICe, alf makes , 992-2284 Tfle
Fobrtc Shop
Pomeroy ,
Authom:ed Singer Sa les and
S&amp;r\llce. We sharpen Setssors .

brick veneer ranch home
and

Call

Don't lJOU
have anll-

(614) 696-7257 Albany
sEWINGMACHINE-Re-;i~- ~;r~

2 car garage and lots of
pines $29,500.
CHESHIRE - Mod 6 rm
b a se ment

Yesterday's Amwer
12 Like a
2f Armadas;
Turkish
flotillas
28 - bleu !
bath
16 Not yours
32 Friend of
19 Dessert
Androcles
wme
33 ArchttecZl Windflower
tural
22 Sundered
pier
Z3 Expunged
35 Chahce
24 Bakery
veil
3f Before
treats

ELWOOD-BOWERS--REPAiR-=

Phone 992-3325
INVESTMENT - Business
room down and 5 room apt .
up Br ick, tile canst. , nat.
gas &amp;. ci ty waler $13,500.
POMEROY - 3 br . home
with 1v, baths, hot water

House has been renovaied

A HONEY
MONEY -

I

• A 6 53

Rt. 3, Pomeroy, Ohoo 45769
Phone doy or n1gh!
614-992-2201 1 14 1 mo

l 2.8 1 mo

w va .

304-485-0386
614-423-6474

,POMEROY LANDMARK
9.- Jack W. C&lt;lrsey, Mgr
ilil Phone 992-2181

SM ITH and We sson Mod el -41
2796
auto 22 co l targe t pistol nvw '
S1BO ltrm 1970 Da !sun 510 HOU SE for so le In Chester area
Three year old fo ur bedroom
Sedan fotr condrt 1o n runs 1
brrc k ranch t. r f1ve acres of
good , $500 Pot belly s tove,
land Ha s two bath s large '
SbS P hone f/92 7805
roo m s, ftn lsh ed basement w1th
1971 Honda 500 exce llent cond1
ltrep loce in family room Phone
tto n, helme ts mcluded , $750
(614 ) 985 3938 o r co n1act Don
Als o 1964 Ford Galax te mo tor
Rous h
tn g ood condt lton body 1s
rough , S75 Phone 949 :1814 :il bedrm horne , fully furntsh ed
close to schoo l and shopp1hg ,
Monday
th r u
Sa tur d ay ,
Inquire 894 Pe arl St
Mtd Dnyttme 843.206 1 evenrngs ond
d le port Ohta
Sunriay

• 972

----~· -.

Mtke Young, Manager
SaJes and Installation

Mod . k1t. with cook &amp; bake
un 1ts. Many extras . $25,000
4 ACRES - Near school

Pe,ts for S.'le-

'Q

See how you can really

Call us at949·211l
or 949-2203

He led a spade to 'dummy at
trick two and contmued with
the queen of hearts to West's
ace West led a second diamond Cayne ruffed, cashed
the kmg of hea rts wh1le discarding a club from dummy,
ruffed a low heart and had a
count on the East hand of two
hearts. seven diamonds and
four clubs
This led to a simple squeeze
agamst East Jimmy led a second trump to his own hand,
ruffed h1s last heart, led dummy's last trump to his own
hand , played out h1s last
trump to leave dummy With
one diamond and two clubs
and poor East with no discard.
He had to hold a h1gh diamond
and was forced to unguard his
queen of clubs

6

.AJ 973

save.

5 Brs ., 2 baths , enormous

J

NORTH

home with no obltgattor!.

6 CANS OF RC

$163.95

-

roof or old
Houu, roof,

pamtmg, electrtcal WDrk,
gutters &amp; downspouts,
furnaces , water heaters,
warer sotrners, installed &amp;
repatred, Sewillle.

2013 lOth Ave.

TURF TILL
TILLERS
3112 H.P., B&amp;S Eng.

A Iorge home on Ash Stre et tn
Mid dle port far sal e o r trade fo r
sm aller hom e Phone 992 7797

Cayne squeezes six spades

opet1ng and Installation.
We'll bring samples to your

barn. shingles, build up,

Sales &amp; Service

q82 4123

YARD Sa le Ju ne 9 10 and II ot OL DER , remodeled all e lec 3 3 bed rm house tn Mlddlep ; rf
Starlmg Mosser on Rou te 7 Se
bedrrn ho me $1 7 500 Call
nea r Por k Swtmm mg poo l, ond
cond house on nghl above
qq1 5011
s tores Phone 992 7667
Eas t e rn Hr gh Sc hoo l Used
woo d burn 1ng
ftr el o ce JU ST fresh G uer nsey m1lk cow HO USE FOR SAlE 15 mt les from
w1th calf , $350 fum Contact
clot hm g mrsc t l em~
Pomeroy 3 BR ranch 2 ba th s
James Roy Parsons off Rao ne DR o nto redwood deck , FR w1th
FO UR Forn rl y Yard Sa le on Co Rd
Bo shon Road
woodburnmg ftreploce , 1 h 14
31 by Eagle Rrdge Church
s
torage building on 1 a cre lo t ,
Thursday Fn , Sa turday an d ONE dtnelte set uce llen t con d1
$27,000 Phone (61&lt;) 667 3662
tton Two end ta bles , matchng
Sunday Follow s rgn s
anttque bed and buff et d resser
6 ;oom -h~~s~ , ;;;;~;11 k;pf ,
GARAG E Sole , Thursday and
Phon e 992 -6092
bedrms , modern kitchen , woll
Frrday , 463 Grant St
Mtd to wall carpe t, H W fl oors , full
IN Dash 23 channel CB om fm
dleport
ba seme nt, new gas fu rnace,
mp)( rad io , 8 track stereo Call
s mall lo t to mow , tdeol for
YARD So le , Fndoy , one·5 00,
'1'11Jq65
o lder co up le or ~mo ll famtl y tn
Saturday 10,00 ttl I 5 00 at 520
3 speed stere o , all wood cobtnet ,
good
ne1g hb orhood
1n
Sycamore St m M]dd leport
mahogany exce ll ent play ing
Pomeroy Coli for oppomtment
cond rlion $50 coll992 2376
Phone 9'12-3097
,
One 9 month ol d Hereford bull
4 room house tn Le ta rt Also , coal
can be re gr s tered Phone ~2
and lurntture Con tact ifadd
A K C Dobe rman Prn sche r pup7537.
Rhodes , Roc1 n e
p res 6 weeks o ld Sho ts and
YOUNG cobb11S , 1100 Call (614) 3 bed rm house bath ce lla -r and
wocmed Coll (614 )5330761
378 6261, Reedsv 1l le Oh to
o utbu rld tngs , almost 4 a cres of
AKC Regrstered coc ker sponte l
land , sou th end o f Rutland See
pupp1es $75 Phone (304) Ba2 5 h p roto ttller $60 Co li Athens
8tll Smtih , ot 'Sm itll 's Body Shop
{614 ) 592-1158 33 Townsend
21&lt;5
or phone 7-42 3135or 992 7708
Place

Mob'l HomesfOJSale __ _ 1973 -450 Prototype
motorooss good

Siding Center

3 acres , 1 8 ,:;;1 le~ ~~ C~u-;, t y-R~~d
4 Out of Dexter Phone (6 14 )

$89.95

Free

JUNE SPECIAL

Square Yard Installed

1969 J T 0 4 speed , mags, ex
cel len t condt11on $900 Phone

WIN AT BRIDGE

~------

'

1970 Bute k Rr v te ro lull power exce ll e nt co ndr l1 o n
$ 1200
Ph one 742 -2796
'

repatred?

5 26 1 mo .

19S6 Chevy Bel atr 5.3 ,00 actual
mr les Phone 992 -6092

1971 Ford Movenc k Grabber 6
cy l out omaltc low mtleog e
Phone
e)(cellent
condtlmn

MOBIL E home a dult s onl y Phone
992 5535
4 rms w1 lh ba th furnr s hed a pa r t
men t ,
every th rng
po1d ,
upsto1rs, oparl ment no pels o r
child ren Adults only Phone
992 5910, o r can be seen a t 81 4
E Mom 51 Pomeroy

1964 Co talrno 4 dr , fl oor 3
speed $95 o r best o ff er Call
onytrme Sunday and after 6
p .m on week days Phone W2-

8-12 .

new

YOU'VE GOT TO APMlT IT'$
GIV INI5 HI? E'&gt;ROADCA5T A
5EN$ATI0NAL Cl-IMAX. !

&lt;SllEAT 5COTTl THE MlllACI-E

FISURE &amp;- FACEtiFT FOR'MULA
S HKA~ K KER TI$$UE5 50 TlGHT
IT'S PULLED HER E'&gt;ONE5
SOWLEGtillD!

SLOAN'S
CARPOING

Ractne , Ohio
Nee d

CAPI'AIN EASY

5 26-2 mo

Racine Plumbing

High prices for scrap
autos. motors and
other metals . Phone
992 -2228. Monday thru
Friday 8-3, Saturday

7·30--Baseball 3.~: Let's Dea l with It 6; Match Game
PM8; Price Is Right 10, To Tell the Truth 13: Nash ville on the Road 15: Evenlng Edlllon with Martin
Agronsky 20: Family Theatre 33 8 ()()-Happy Days

Middleport, Ohlo ft:l-30!2

4-TO 1 mo .

HALLS

FURN ISHED 2 bedrm oportrn&amp;n l,
adult s only , tn Mtddfepo fl
Phone 992 -3874

,[ _ Troc tors.

~ .,Mt~;:!!".,.

WINDOWS
ALUMINUM
SIOING· SOFFITT
GUTTERS- AWNINGS

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

V 8 a ul oma lt c, P s teering , good ftres , c lea n tnte nor

Ent .
Rtpolr

Ill

Blown
Insulation Services

For Rent

OEPARTMENTOF
TRANSPORTATION
Columbu s, Oh to
:
M ay2 1, 19H
, Con t ract Sa tes Le gal Cop y
•
No76426
I\U NIT PRICE CONTRACT
tosealed proposal s wtll be
r ' cC t\led at the olf rce of the
Qrrec tor o f the Oh to De part
rn::en t of
Tran s portollton
C~lumbus , O hro unltl 10 oO
N./VI Oh to Slandard T rm c
~ esday , June IS , 1976 , f a~
r ~t~prov e m en t s 1n
/\!hens and M etgs Coun tles
htO , on vartou s sectto n s
TH MEG
Slate Route 7
l y applyrng a bi!umrnouS wcs lcrly I rom Norlh Sec ond
r fa ce
trealm e nt
to Avc nu e a nd bemg the north
s out ders
easterly co rn er o f Lot No 61
hOuiC!ers - 1 10 3 fee t
on the pta! o f Coalport , c on
veyeC! by Maud Avena! Pe 11 11
"prote c t a nd Work L, e nglh
and Joseph A
Pe t trl ro
51111 .. 793 fe et o r 10 19 m rles
Lawr ence Boyd an d He len
" The da l e sel fo r c ompletron Mart e Boyd by dec a dat ed
Of' · th ts work. shall be a s se t /1prrl ?6 , 19 'i5 and rC'cor d cd rn
f&lt;y:lh rn Ihe brddtn g proposal ., Vo l
18/ , P aqo S17 , D ee d
-.Eilch
btdder shall
be Re c ord s o f Mcrgs Co un l y
'
r'"lurred to frt e wllh ht s brd a Ohro
CCJitlted c heck or cashrer 's
Deed Ref e r en c e
Volume
c he ck for an a mount equal to 7l1 , Pa ge 81, Me&gt;gs Co unly
le
ftve per ce nt of h 1s bid , bul Ill De e d R ec ord s (A pprcl tSe d
no event m ore than f tlly Va lue
~ 1,000 00 1
1968 Skyltne lrmler 12.r~ 60 and
lhousand doUa r s , or a bond for
la nd 3 b edrm very good cond1
Th e s a i d p rc m rs es arc
ten per (ent of h rs btd , payable appra1 sed at S6 , 500 00 and
!ton , SB 000 Phone 992 -5491
to tht&gt; Dtrcctor
ca nnot IJC sold for le ss than
or 992 5972
etdde rs must apply , on the two !h trds o f the app ra rs ed
proper form s, for qualrfrcatton vat u e
1906 12x65 Vtnda le 3 bedrm
at tteast ten davs prror to the
S.:ttd Pro pc r tres wdt be o f
mobtfe home w1th expando
dat e se t fo r openrng btds 1n fe rcd for sale se parat e ly for
Portly furntshed . Phone 992 accordance wtth Chapt er 55, 5 th e rndtvtdual app r,11 scd
2821 or q92 -2437
ONto R evtsed Code
Yitlue s a s se t fort h fo llow rng
~tans and spectftcattons arc the d csc r 1plron o f th e Ill ~ 1970 Commun rly Cara van 12&gt;'52
on 1 f ile tn tlie Departm ent of &lt;lr vrCJuar p r ope rt ies
2 bedrm , good condl tr on
Tronspor ta t ion and tt 1e office
Terms o f ~a l a Cil s h In 11.1nd
Phone
(61 4)965-&lt;294
Of,! the
Dtstrrcl
Deputy up o n dc ltv c ry o t (lee d
D1 r ec tor
ARE yo u tn the market lor a
fhe Drr ec,R)J ~re servcs Ul t
nf'rnArrl v rut r1
~ t o r1 e r homt o r o untl lo r that
rr{Jhlt o rt:r ec l any and nil b rds
/1 rlrn rn r:.lr ,) 'o r
VOLOi ro n site Come rn oncl look
:
RIC H ARDO JACKJC N
Da Oonrc., Non o f
al ou r 8.x26 and 8K35 used
th e E~tatc o t
Re~ B 1113
DIRECTOR
models
Kingsbury Mo bil e
Charl es Hyatt deceased
Homes
11 00 E Mom St ,
I
{6J•J, 8 2!c
(6 1 I. 8 1'1 n . oi l(
Pomeroy Phone 992 703 4
,__

Television log for easy viewing

'

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�12 - Tlje Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, June 8, 1976

r- ---- -------~------ ------- ~

Area Deaths

!
.

!
I

Fonner clerk
of Pomeroy
died Monday

I
E. J . (Eddie) Strauss, 70,

Minersville, who died
Monday
at
Veteran s
Memorial Hospital. was a
former Pomeroy vil lage
clerk and had been a merchant police officer and
before that an employee of
Robin son's Laundry in
Pomeroy many years .
He was preceded in death
by his parents, Valentine and
Anna Hobsteller Strauss, and
two sisters, Mrs . Agnes
Neutzling and Mrs. Mildred
Grindley .
Surviving are his wife ,
Eileen : a son, Dr. John
Strauss, Beverly: a daughter,
Mr s.
Brenda
Eimer,
Columbus; two grandchildr en, three brothers,
Herm J. of Athens an d
Charles and Donald , both of
Pomer·oy: a sister, Mrs. Ruth
Adams, Delray Beach, Fla.,
and seve ra l nieces and
nephews.
Funeral services will be at
1 p.m. Wednesday at lhe ·
Ewing Fun eral Home with
Mr. Richard Evanson officiating . Burial will be in
Beech Grove Cemetery .
Friends may call at the
ftmeral l10me anytime .

Methodist Church and had
res ided in the Athens area the
last 15 years.
Mrs. r'oster is survived by
four daughters, Gladys
Medl c y and
Gertrude
Welling , both or Athens ;
Bess ie Will ett, Co lumbus,
and Hilda Irons, Elizabeth,
W. Va .; a daughter-in-law,
Norma Handolph, Athens;
three step-daughters, Martha
Cole and Susan Galbreath ,
b&lt;Jth or Belpr·c, and Lulu
Drumbaugh , Akron ; a
brother, Cleve land Snider,
Chauncey. eight · gra nd chi ldren, and 1:1 grea tgrandchildr·en.
Ftmeral services will be
held Wednesday at 2 p 111 . at
the Wh ite F\meral Home in
Coolville with the Rev. Hoy
Deeter in charge. Burial will
be in Stewar t Cemetery,
Hockingport. Friends may
call at the funeral home at
an ytime .

l,E'I1'1E SPF.NCE!l
~YHACUSE - Mrs. Lettie
Spencer, 71, Syracuse, died
Monda y
at
Veteran s
Memorial Hospital.
She was preceded in death
by her parents , George and
Flora Barwn Frederick, Sr. ;
two h.usbll!lds , Hef1ll.!ln R.
Frank and Valcic Spetrcer,
and one brot her , Gera ld
Frederick .
Surv iving are three so ns,
Denver R. Frank, All iance;
Howard F:. Frank, Rl. :1,
Racine: Clar ence Frank, Syracuse: one daughter, Mrs.
ANNA F. FOSTER
C.1mrles 1Grace 1 Price, Long
ATHENS - Mrs. Anna Bottom: two brothers,
!lanctolph Foster, 92 , . of Milford Frederick; MinersAthens, formerly of Coolville,
ville: George Frederick, Jr .,
died Monday. She had resided Rl. I , Long Rottom ; two
at the home of a friend , Edith sisters, Mrs . Edna Dami,
Pugh in Albany. Born near Avella. Pa., and Mrs. Lillian
Hockingport , she was the Frost, Columbus; 14 granddaughter of the late James childrell, seven greatand Henrietta Thorne Snider. grandchildren, and several
She was also preceded in nieces a.nd nephews.
death by her first husband ,
Fw1cral servi ces will be
Arthur E. Randolph; her held at I p.m. Thursday at the
second husband , Clement V. Ewing Funeral Home. Burial
Fos ter ; a son, Kenn eth will be in Chester Cemetery.
Randolph, and three sisters Fri ends may call al the
She was a member of fw1cral home after 7 this
Hoc kin gp ort Unit ed evening.

Crow apJlOintcd
co unsel for
Mrs. Hendricks
I. Carson Crow was ap-

pointed defense counsel for
Virg inia Hendricks when she
appeared Friday in Meigs
County Court before .Judge
Robert E. Buck .
A preliminary hearing for
Mrs. Hendri cks, cha rged
with murder in the shotgun
slaying of her husband, Floyd
Eugene (Buddy) Hendricks,
June l , will be held Thursday
at 9 a.m . in county court.

Weather
Swmy and warm Wednesday, highs in the upper
80s. Clear ton ight, lows in the
lower 60s. Probability of rain
near zero per cent today ,
tonight lllld Wednesday.

POUND REVISED
LONDON (UP!) - The
British pound, bolstered by
$5.3 billion in standby credit
from 10 major tradin g
nations, soared anolher four
cents on the London money
market tilday to hit $1.80.

FUNNY BUSINESS

Final honor
list made
RA CI Nt
I ne f inal Sill(
wee ks hon or roll at Southe r n
Dis trict Junio r H igh :
SE VENT H
Cris t a
Beeg l e . Paul Cardo n ~ . Steve
Ci r c iC . Ter ri Cr ot,J ch, Ec:ldie
Du ff y . Robin Fo rtune , Ti na
Gibb s. Jocly Gr uese r . E r ic
H arris . So nja H i ll , T eresa
Ho l slei •• De tl u Johnson , Bob
Le e, Te r nsa Manuel , Mary
13c l h
Ohil 1 ,
Char l o n c
Pi c k en s 1 fiec ky Rhodes .
He rt a
Robin so n ,
Mark
Si mp so •1. Mary Oe th Slavm ,
T&lt;1111nlY Srnilh , Br yan Wo ll e.
Ja ck Wo lf e. Paula Wo ll e,
Me li ss a Yonk er , and all A :
BONNIE BO SO. PE GGY
B US H , J A N ET MIDDLE
SWART , CARL MORRI S.
EIGHT H M eg Am
b e rger . Steve
Co ll man,
Shar on Cr ou sh . Ray Deem .
K i m Dugan , Amy F isher
Richard F urb ee, RosemarY
H ubbard .
Me l issa
H, l e ,
Manue l ,
Stev e
Ca rm e n
Nortqn , Amy Soud er , an d all
A Cri cke t Ca rp en ter , Jack
Duffy . Bri an J oh nson . James
Meadow s.
.
P e rf ec t a t tendance lor
schoo l year , Cr ista Beeg le ,
Peggy Bush . T er r i Crou ch
Robin Fo r t une , John F ran k ;
Sc oll N ease , Bec k y Rhodes ,
T eresa Ri ce. She rr y Rose,
Bryan Wo lf e, Jack Wol f e,
PauloJ Wo l f e. Steve Co ffma n ,
Kenny Coo k . Jack Duff y,
David Foreman , Richard
F urbee ,
Pam
Harden
Me l issa
lhl e ,
Carme~
Manuel , D enn is Michael ,
Jon atha n Rees , Donna Ri ce .

Roger Bollen

o~e 6Et-.IERAL- AOMIOOlON
~ND010E SEAT IN lHE

St&lt;\0KiN6 l-O~E, PLEASE .

.

•

•

•

·. •

Ford draws 80,000 m swmgmg through Oh1o
.

.

lly HELEN THOI\fA.S
UP! White llouse ReptJrler
WASHINGTON (UP!) President Ford says the
re&gt;urns
fr om today 's
primaries in Clrlifornia, Ohio
and New Jersey will
determine who is going to be
the Republican presidential
nominee.
rord drew crowds of more

than 80,000 Monday as he
campaigned . by motorcade ·
across Ohio in a 280 mile
spurt from Cincinnati to
Toledo to seek a conclusive
victory and win the state's 97
delegates.
He was confident of victory
in Ohio and New Jersey, but
while he spoke more
optimistically of his chances

.

in California, he depiCted
himself as an "underdog"
against native son Ronald
Reagan .
The President stepped up
his campaign oratory against
Reagan in the final hours of
the primary electioneering.
He descibed his opponent as a
candidate who "can't win "
and who would lead the

Republican party into a
"debacle" similar to its
devasting defeat in 1964 when
Lyndon B. Johnson won the
by a Jandslide.
The primary "is a vitally
important one," Ford told an
enthusiastic crowd along his
route . " It wtll probably
decide who's going to win"
the oomination.
"Do you want a Republican
candidate for the presidency
who can win or do want one
who's going to lose? I say
vote for rord and you'vegot a

while and blue reading lists
will be given out whi'ch
children may use to record ·
the names of the books they
read.
At the end of the summer
each child will be given a
special certificate to show
they look part in the reading
program during the bicentennial year. The fir st

the university.
"I'm all right, I'm all
right," he reassured them .
Later a l the Toledo airport ,
where he again mixed in with
a crowd gathered near his
aircraft, Ford had this comment on the incident : "As I
understand it, it was just a
fla shbulb. It sounded pretty
ominous, but I'm okay.11
The head of the White
House Secret Service detail
told reporters, " we just
talked to her and confirmed
that it wa s an accirl•nf ."

facts."
~gan

ELBERFELDS
IN POMEROY

Explosion of camera's buJh shakes President
BOWLING GllEEN, Ohio
(UP! ) - The sound of an
exploding flashbulb in a camera held by a young woman al
Bowling
Green
Slate
University Monday night
caused momentary coQfusion
and nearly brought President
Ford to his knees.
The President doubled up,
looked shocked and nearly
fell to his knees from the
surpri se of the shot-like
explosion but was held up by
three Secret Service agents
as IJC was leaving a speech at

"As long as we tell the
truth," he added, "I think the
people ought to know the

has said he would
consider sending U.S. fcrces
to Rhodesia as part ol a
peacekeeping effort aiming
at avoiding bloodshed.
Ford appeared surpriled
when he was told Reagan bad
not eominilted hlmaell when
asked If. he would SURJOI't
Ford if the President won the
GOP nomioatlon.
"I'm disappointed," Ford
said.
He said he had always
Library Summer Fun
been a "team" playll' and
prog~amisThursday,JuneloBell s t r i k e m·
·. C o l u m b u s said he would support the
slartmg at 3 p.m. at the
former California governor If
library in Pomeroy (next
door to the post office .)
COLUMBUS (UPI) - . A, workers of .America began Reagan won the Republican
Summer story-teller Linda walkout against Ohro Bell their job action May 28 in. nomination.
Stow will be there to tell triggered by a job jurisdic- Cleveland. Workers in the'
legends and stories and lead lion dispute in Cleveland has Youngstown, Dayton and
activities. There will be a spread to Columbus and Toledo ·areas have also been
craft time and the reading near!~ 4,000 employes have affected.
A spoll;esman for the CWA
lists will be given out.
been 1dled rn lhe state.
The Communications said Monday about 1,600
w ·kers were off the job in
Columbus but Ohio Bell said
only several hundred had
refused to work .
The flashbulb exploded as motorcade after shaking
the unidentified woman hand$ with students in tM
attempted. to take the front row.
President 's picture and the
Agents hustled Ford to the
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
sound
threw
Ford's door and otMr agents rushed
Thursday through
entourage of reporters and to the young woman, who was
Saturday,
fair Thursday
Secret Service agents into visibly shaken by the commowith
a
chance
of 1howers
momentary confusion as they tion her camera had caused.
Friday
or
Saturday.
sought its source.
She was led away before her
Continued
warm
with highs
Ford had just completed a identity could be established.
In
the
80s
and
lows
In the
campaign speech and a quesAs soon as Fprd got outside,
60s.
tion session with a friendly the limousine pulled away
audience of about 600 and Ford stood up and waved
students . The incident to the crowd as though
occurred as he was heading nothing had happened .
for the door toward$ his

Library ·program will open
The fr ee Summer Fun
programs start this week at
Megis Libraries in Pomeroy
and Middleport, especially
for children ages 6 to 12.
Films, crafts , activit ies
and story-telling limes are
scheduled for every other
Thursday · afternoon during
the summ er. Each child
coming will be encouraged to
read and enjoy books. Red,

candidate who will win,'; the
president said.
Ford told reporters at the
final stop in Toledo that hls 1
TV campaign ads In
California depleting
Reagan as a potentia!'
president who could "start a
war" - simply ''told the
truth."
He said that it was Reagan
who said that he would "send
American
troops
to
Rhodesia" and thai "the
American people want the
truth ."
·
·
·

Re-do your
kitchen with

~

Carter close to
first ballot win

By ARNOLD SAWISL.\K
The Democrats had more
• United Pres• )Jltematlonal
than 450 uncommitted
With the 1976 presidential- delegates and a nwnber of
primaries now history, small ,blocs held by inactive
Jimmy Carter today was and defunct ca ndidates.
poised at the brink of a first · There still are about 135
ballot Democratic delegates left to be selected
nomination and President by caucus and convention by
·. Ford narrowly led . Ronald the end of June.
Reagan in the still close ' On the record, rord was
Republican race.
·
less than 50 votes ahead of
A.s California, Ohio and Reagan, with just under 200
·New Jersey cleaned up vote listed as uncommitted and
counting from the last of the about 280 left to be selected in
32
Bicentennial
year state GOP conventions before
primaries Tuesday, Carter the middle of July. However,
had more than 1,125 of the Ford already appeared to
1,505 votes needed for the have a claim on many of tM
Democratic nomination and uncommitted, including the
Ford had 911 of the 1,130 most of the 67 chosen in New
required for the GOP Jersey Tuesday.
standard.
.Ford, elated by his big Ohio
. Carfer, will! a big victory in win and having anticipated
Ohio Tuesday, was almost 800 the California loss, said "We
delegates ahead of the closest will win in KaiiSBs City."
Democrat, even though he Reagan, savoring his
was swamped by Gov, California landslide, said his
Edmund Brown Jr. in campaign still was ahead of ·
California and lost to an his expectations and pledged
uncominitted slate backing "It's going to go all the way."
Brown and Sen. Hubert
·Here was the stale-by-state
Humphrey in New Jersey.
swmnary of Tuesday's voting
· Rep . Morris Udall of at 5 a.m. EDT:
Arizona and Sen. Frank
- California: Reagan was
Church of Idaho, whipped in drubbing Ford 473,009 to
Ohio, all but conceded the '1:78,977 - 63 to 37 per cent nomination to Carter, but with 35 per cent of the
Brown declared he had precincts counted. Reagan
captured the momenlwn and won all 167 GOP delegates.
;raid "I think we can win this With 50 per cent of tbe
thing."
Democratic precincts

RAY CROMLEY

Less city is
more efficient
By Ray Cromley
. WASHINGTON -- We ar~ deluding ourselves when we
attempt to solve the economic problems of our supercities by
expansion.
The latest craze - popular even whe~ I was a boy - is to
!&lt;ike in the suburbs, make these suburbanites pay for city
services. The theory is, the wider lhe tax base, the grea ter the
efficiency.
'
Well , lhe evidence doesn't seem to back that theorizing , at
least when rl comes to our 48largest cities.
There is some reason lo agree with Theodore W. Kheel
writing in New York magazine, when he argues that " Ne~
York is obsolete.The best way to save it is to abolish it."
An assortment of data fr om several sources seems to
indicate maximwn efficiency comes with much tower
populations -- say in the 150,000 to 300,000 range. It's downhill
after that.
In the c~~e of fire protection, for example, efficiency peaks
at 3110,000 crttzens.
For schools, it seems that a city population of 200 1100 to
250,1100 is the optimum, with 40,000 to 50,000 pupils in' daily
attendance.
Economic efficiency, of course, is not the only criterion.
My own studies into school, police, welfare and other
services indicate strongly that the job is done best in localities
small enough for the average citizen lo have a mea ningful say
in what is going on. His voice in the Parent Teachers
Association , in letters to his local paper, in complaints to city
or county officials, don 'l gel lost in the shuffle.
As a boy I grew up in a city which was small when we
moved there, and mushroomed as I grew into manhood. In the
early days, top city officials were not too important for my
father, an automobile mechanic, or even for a boy not yet in his
teens, to talk to.
As the city grew larger, this changed. Ordinary residents
had to fight their way through the bureaucracy, growing more
and more frustrated.
.
More recently I've been a citizen of a rapidly growing
county, run like a ci ty. A few years back, when the county was
small enough, we could and did fight for and get major
unprove~ents m our school~, in our. health system, in our
hbranes, m care for the handrcapped, and in the elimination of
waste and corruption .
. Today, things are dlfferent. The personal small-town type
fnndlmess IS gone. Changes are difficult to come by. The
ferretmg out of waste IS made next to impossible by the layers
of goverrunenl and accounting. In too real a sense the
government is out of citizen control. And having severe b~dget
problems.
Gro~th cannot be slopped. But expansion can, The
solutiOn rs to hnd ways to ~ol enlarge our cities, remembering
th~re rs .a r~l need to mcrease the cooperation between
nerghbormg crlres, and between cities and suburbs.
Part or the solution is finding fresh approaches to
decentralization of the governments of· our metropolises and
encouraging, much more than we do now the building of
satellite cities which could slow the growth of'the monsters.
Many of the historical advantages of the super cities have
been lost with the decline of rallways and the rowlh of truck
POOL CLOSED
The Middleport swimming
pool has been closed since ·
Sunday due to breakdown of
the circulating pump. New
parts have been shipped from
Califronia by air freight and
the pool will reopen as soon as
they arrive.

Racine Social Events
Kev . and Mrs. Don Walker
took their children, Ricky and
Rexanna to Swnmersville,
W.Va . to spend a week with
relatives. Mrs. Walker was
an overnight guest of her
mother, Mrs. Gay Cogar at
Dixie, W. Va .
Mr . and Mrs. Donald
Bradford of Detroit here for
the alumni , visited Mr . and
Mrs. Crill Bradford Sunday
afternoon. Miss Wilma Sayre
of Columbus was also a guest
of the Bradfords Sunday
afternoon.
Mr. and Mrs. Steve Morlan
I Judy Wag nis) and two
daughters of Colun1bus were
guests of Mrs . Cora Lee
Cummins and family and
attended the alumni.
Mr. and Mrs . Perry Orr of
Columbus and Mr. Alba Orr
of Johnstown , Mrs. Mae
spencer and Vance Spencer
of Ches ler visited Mr. and
Mrs. Chrisie Powell recently.
Mr. and Mrs. Kyle Stump of
Akron and Mr . and Mrs. Bill
Beegle of Crown City were
Memorial Day weekend
guests or Mr . and Mrs. Bob
Beegle and attended the
alumni.
Mr. and Mrs . John Fisher
of Uniontown spent a few
days wi th her father, Mr.
Henry Roush and other

relatives .
Filing for dissolution of
Mr . Hoyt Powell of St. marriage in Meigs County
Alban s, w. va . and his son, Common · Plelll! Court MooGrover Powell of Columbus day were Edward LeMIIl!ter
visited Mr. and Mrs. Roy and Bonnie LeMaster, both
Riffle while guests of Mr. and Rt. 2, Pomeroy, and Mitziann
Mrs . Jerry Powell.
Lewis, Pomeroy, and
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Sammie R. Lewis, Rt. 4,
McKenzie ' ?hilip, Jeff and Pomeroy.
Jozie of Gallipolis spent
The divorce action of Allee
Saturday with Mr. and Mrs. Jones vs. James Jones has
Roy Riffle.
been dismissed; Vonda
Mr. and Mrs . Max Wolfe of ~arnes was granted her
Ashtabula spent Memorial . divorce from. Harry Garnes,
Day weekend with his sister, and the rnarnage of Ruby A.
Mrs . Helen Simpson.
Eyno~ and James 0 . Eynon
Ruth Jean Van Horn of was dissolved.
Beaver Falls, Pa. and her
sister, Grace Helmick of New
CALL ANSWERED
Brighton, Pa., visited Mrs.
The Pomeroy Emergency
Hazel Carnahan. Mrs . Squad answered a call to
Helmick•called on her cousin, Mechanic St., at 6:15 p.m.
Mrs . Laura Riffle .
Monday for Hugh Rousey
Mr . and Mrs . Steve who had becme ill. He was
Badgley and Kelll of taken to Veterans Memorial
Columbus and Derek Badgley Hospital where he was adof New Haven, W. Va. spent mitted.
Memorial weekend with Mr.
and Mrs. Ralph Badgley.
Mr. and Mrs. Edison Brace
visited a day with Mr . and
Mrs. Tom Brace and Mr. and
Mrs. Fred Brace in Parkersburg, W. Va.
Mr . and Mrs. George
Wallace and daughter of
Columbus spent the weekend
with her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Blythe Theiss.

VOL XXVIil

has a miracle adhesive

backing called A-2t" that'
makes it incredibly easy to
work with. No mixing , no

mess. Feet oft paper backing.
It's ready to use. Position it ,
move it. and it won't stick till
you want it to.

Con-Tact ~,decorative
coverings come in colors,
styles and patterns for eve ry
room in the house - living

ELBERFELDS

Didn't
you
•
recetve
your
Social Security
check?
WARDEN OURS

~ ~~-

i

~~~.

*

*

i Adolph's Dairy Valley i
Hrs .: lO:OOA.M. Tilll:OO P.M. Sun.- Thurs.
10:00 A.M. Till2:0p P.M. Fri. &amp; Sat.
992-2556

':f:X::::::::::~:::::::::..-::::::;:::::::::::;:~:;:;:~:;:::~:~:~:~:::~:;:~:~:::~:::::!::::::!!:~:~:::::::~===~=~:::~::::::::~:::::::::::::~

IiNews
• • •in Brie-fsi
~
,. i
Direct Depositing
does away with worry

:

.

*
*

You'll never have to fret about
receiving your Social Security
check again! With Direct Depositing the Federal Government deposits your check directly into your ·
savings or checking account ..• on
each payment day. What could be
more convenient! Call, come in or
write for all the details. You'll be
glad you did. .
·

POMEROY, 0 . :

'*****************************..

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WITH

FREE

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Refrigerators, Ranges, Microwave

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RICH JONES

•

DELICIOUS STRAWBERRY SHORT CAKE . :
: lWIST _!CE CREAM SUNDAES, SODAS; MALTS, ~
:
R.OATS, SOFT DRINK, SANDWICHES
~

*: W. MAIN

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

room, kitchen, balh. 59 C.
per yard
18"wlde

!

:

at y

the high school, bolh on one
year contracts . The 1977
budget of $45,676 submllted
by Susan Fleshman, clerk of
the Pomeroy - Middleport
Ubrary, was accepted, and
the board approved a
resolution giving Supt .
Dowler peqnlsslon to llle ior
11lle I Md DPPF funds for
1977 fiscal year .
Miss Janis Schmoll, a
Meigs Teacher Corps team
lender , was granted a leave
of absence for one year to
·pursue a doctorate In readlng
at lndlrma University. The
board granted permission to
Cecilia Rinaldi to attend a
yearbook wor kshop At
Morehead University, June
26-:&gt;il, mileage expense only,
and for Karen Goins, l..eda
Mae Kraeutcr, and · Frances
Roberts to attend a home
economics conference, Aug .
16, 17 and 18, In Columbus
wllll all e~pcnses to be paid.
Clerk John Triplett was
outhorized to advertise for
bids on student accident, bus
rmd thert Insurance for next
year. Materials on evaluallon
of administrators were
distributed to the board
members who will begin a
study to set up guldellmis and
job speclficallons.
Continued on page 14

entine

WEDNESDAY, JUNE 9, 1976

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS"

Republican newcomers to
the Meigs County political
scene came on strong in
Tuesday 's primaries to
defeat incwnbents for the
nominations of their par ty.
Richard
E.
Jones,
Pomeroy, who campaigned
against Bernard F. Gilkey for
the county commission term
beginning Jan . 3, IP77, ran
exceptionally well, racking
up 3,295 votes -to Gilkey's
1,721.
Frederick W. Crow, Ill of
near Racine, the second
newcomer to coun ly level
politics, also made an Impressive run in his race for
prosecuting attorney against
the incumbent, Bernard Fultz
of Middleport. Crow was
given a strong vote of 3,485lo
I,916 received by Fultz.
Running an excellent race
also on the Republican ticket
for the nomination of sheriff
was Bruce Davis of Rutland

though defeated narrowly by
the Republican incumbent,
Robert C. Hartenbach who
received 2,744 voles lo Davis'
2,667. Hartentmch will be
opposed in the fall by James
Proffitt, Democrat, who was
unopposed.
Republican incumben t

RICK CROW

Warden Ours won the
nomination to run ior
reelection as county . com missi oner, term beginning
Jan. 2, 1977. Ours received
1,631 votes to win over four
oth er candidates being
nudged a. bit along the route
by Robert F. Snowden of
Rutland who received 1,072
voles . Vote tallieS of the other
three Republican candidates
are Charles H. Bartels 797;
James R. Frecker, 914, and
Charles R. Hysell , 574.
I,ocally other Republicans
were unopposed. They and
their votes were:
John C. Bacon, common
pleas court judge, 3,582;
Larry E. Spencer, clerk of
courts, 4,122; Eleanor
Robson, recorder , 4,232 ;
George M. Collins, treasurer,
3,805; Wesley A. Buehl ,
engineer, 3,631; Rankin Ray
Pickens, coroner, 3,523. All

BY UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONA-L
CLEVELAND - UNITED RUBBER WORKERS
President Peter Bommarito said Tuesday "nothing much"
was accomplished during two days of negotiating with
Firestone in Washington,- adding he believes the nationwide
rubber strike may continue through the swmner.
The negotiations, aimed at producing a model agreement
for Goodyear, Goodrich and Uniroyal as weD, moved back to
Cleveland today. Bommarito and Joseph Calms, chief
negotiator for Firestone, were swnmoned to Washington by
James Scearce, head of the Federal Mediation and
Conciliation Service, after no progress was made in local talks
dating from the day the strike began, April21.
WASIDNGTON - A· MANY.SIDED ARGUMENT is
developing in the House over a bill to continue federal revenue
sharing to 38,000 state, county and JDcal governments. The
House begins debate today on the bill, which would extend
revenue sharing ihrough Sept. 30, 1980,'at a cost of $25 billion,
or $6.65 billion a year.
The program expires at the end of this year unless
· Congress extends it. It was begun under the Nixon
administration in 1972, and under it localities so far have
received $30 billion in federal money to u~ virtually as they
see fit. Local governmentS are lobbying hard for extension. Sc
Is President Ford, who wanted a ~-year extension instead of
the 3% years contained in the blll.
Hoose RijrubUcan 1..\!ader John J. Rhodes said Tuesday
that Democrats, including some who would like to kill revenue
sharing, are trying to load It up with "crlwling amendments."
Unless these are removed, he said, Ford will consider a veto ,
lifter which a new bill would have to be written.
WASHINGToN - TWO REVOLUTIONARY WAR sites
the area of the gold rush would be developed by the
National ~r~ Service under terms of legislation approved by
the House Tuesday. A·bill establishing the Valley Forge
National Historical Park in Pennsylvania cleared, 364 to 4, and
Will! sent to the Senate. George Washington's army spent the
winter of 1777-78 at Valley Forge, near Philadelphia.
The bill establishing the Old Ninety-six National Historic
Continued on pag~ 14
an~

P'

Dakota , Texas,
Utah ,
Connecticut and Puerto Rico .
The Republicans, with a
month · longer· to round out
their delega te se lection
process, still had choices to
be made in Colorado,
Connecticut, Delaware, Iowa
Minn eso ta ; Mis so uri:
Montana, New Mexico , North
Dakota, Utah , Washington,
lllinoi s and Texas .

the assistant superintenden t.
The Monroe Co. bid covers
complete cap sheeting wlU1
built-In vents and carries a
guarantee of five years on the
labor and IIIHlerlal.
Accepted during the
meeting
were
the
resignations of Donald Leigh
as guidance coun selor; Gary
Walker as one-half yearbook
sponsor; Jeanne Parsons as n
teacher at the Bradbury
School; Pam Crow as safety
patrol supervisor at the
Pom e roy E le me ntary
School: Aaron Sayre as
vo cational agric ultur e
teacher, and Norma Wilson,
who is retiring .
On the reeommendalion of ·
Supt. Chrles ·Dowler, the
boa rd employe(! Karen
Walker as the girls' volleyball l&lt;lacher .on a one year
cr.. tract, and John Costahzo
as an elementary teacher
~ss igned to the fifth grade at
Holland . Costanzo has been ·
working in the Teacher Corps
program . Miss Walker is a
graduate of Ohio Stale
University with a major in
physical education and a
minor in health.
111e board also employed
Leland Parker as a bus
meehnnic ond Jacob S.
Holman, Jr . us custodian at

ones, ._....row nominate
licans

That's because Con-Tact Brand

'*******************************

*

NO. 37

ping only West Virgin ia.
Church and Brown each had
won thr ee ; Sen . Henry
Jackson had won two; and
Gov . George Wallace and
Sen. Robert Byrd had one
each.
Delegate se le c tion
remained· to be completed by
the Democrats in Colorado,
Delaware, Misasouri, North

Ci\lt'I'I&lt;~ H

Saturday, June 26, will be
"sale day " in the Meigs Local
School District lhe District
Board of Education has
decided.
Not only did the board at Its
Tuesday night meeting set up
an auclion for the old Coa l
Port School in lower Pomeroy
on that date, but it also
arranged for a giant auction
Of surplus items to take place
al the Rutland gymtrasiwn ,
Auction of the Coal Port
School will be held at 10 a .m
on June 26, white lhe auction1
at the Rutland gymnasium
will start at 10:30 with James
Carnahan as the auctioneer.
Asst. Supt. Dan Morris said
Ure gymnasium is filled with
such items as fold down type
desks , sewing ma chines ,
typewriters, duplicators,
stoves, sinks, record players,
books, band Wliforms, and
even two automobiles and a
truck. Carnahan, Mor ris
said, has agreed to ~andle the
sale for ·$100, this including
the clerk 's fee. The board
approved the expendi lure.
In other action, the board
accepted the bid of -the
Monroe
Company
of
Cleveland of $11,424.50 for
repair of the roof on the
Middleport Elementary
School, as recommended by

•

It's easier than paint,
paneling or wallpaper.

lines, with the advent of closed-eircuit TV and other wire and
wireless communication, with the growing efficiencies of
smaller plants in many industries.
There is no rational need today, for example, for the
present concentration of federal goverrunent offices, agencies,
sub offices, sub agencies and bureaus in Washington, D. C.,
especially those not concerned with the making of policy.

MEIGS THEATRE
Junell -12-IJ
SKY RIDERS
James Coburn. Susannah
York , Robert Cu tp, Charles
A~navo ur , Harry Andrews.
It s a Thriller!
( PGl
Show Starts/ p.m .

marriage asked

.JIMMY

•

e

Dissolution of

counted, Brown lrad 1,006,728,
or 59 per cent, to Carter's
347,(M!6, or 20 per cent. Brown
also led in delegates 204 to 67.
- Ohio: With 79 per cent of
the precincts counted, Ford
led Reagan 413,301to 334,793
- 55 to 45 per cent. In the
race for the state's 97 GOP
delegates, Ford had 88 ,
Reagan
9.
Carter
overwhelmed hi s liberal
opposition, getting 438,087 to
177,369 for Udall and 117,805
for Frank Church . With his 52
per cent of the vote, carter
led for 119 Ohio delegates ,
Udall for 20.
- New Jersey: Ford was
unopposed in the popular
vote, and although the state's
67 GOP delegates are
officially uncommitted , tbe
President is expected to get
most of them. With 96 per
cent of the precincts counted,
Carter ran away with 57 per
cent of the popular vole,
getting i95,752 to 66,419 for
Church. But a slate of
uncommitleds favorable to
Brown and Humphrey got 75
delegates chosen, Carter only
25.
Al the end of the long run of
primaries, Reagan had ·won
12 contests and Ford II with
the President taking 'three
uncontested elections.
Carter had won 18 of the 31
primaries he entered - skip-

Meigs Local has
set big sale day

PLACE HIGH IN TESTS - Patricia Aulherson, Terri Zirkle and Brice Hart l-r
students at Southern- High School participated in the 1976 Ohio Tests of Schol~sti~
achievement sponsored by the Ohio Department of Education. Terri, taking the first year
French test, finished ~Irs~ ln. the Athens District, Division three, and sixth in the state. Sh e
finished fifth In the d1str1Cl mall divisions. Patricia taking second year French finished
first in the Athen~ District, Division three, and ninth i~ the state. Brice, taking the first year
al~ebra test, finished second In lhe Athens District, division three, and 16th In the state.
Bnce also placed ninth in the district regardless of division.

Levies go 1-1 Tuesday
Meigs County voters turned
tinuin g with the mental
7•549 VOTED
down one county-side levy
health program along with
and approved a second levy
A total of 7•549 voters Jackson and Gallia Counties
when they went to the polls went to the polls In Meigs Only a majority was needed
Tuesday.
County Tuesday. Of the for passage of that measure
5•672
Voters turned down a .2 or a total
were
In Middleport voter~
mill levy for continuation of Republicans; I,B 46 were approved 531-452 a 'three mlll
the operations of the South- Democrats
and . the levy which Is for current
eastern Ohio Emergency remaining 31 were In- dperatin'g expenses Official~
· Medical Service. '!'he vote dependent voters.
of the town indic~ted their
was 3,751 for, to 3,329 against .
interest in using the funds
A 55 percent majority was 3,645 to 3,476 a second .2 of a fr om the levy for street
reqwred for passage.
mill le vy which is to provide lighting expen ses and
However, voters approved the county's share of ~on- · Conrir: ned "" oa£e H

•

are unopposed in the fall.
Here's how Republicans
voted on other than local
candidates: Robert Taft, Jr.,
for U. S. Senate, 3,632;
Clarence
E.
Miller ,
representative to Congress,
4,350; Don P. Brown, 1,736,
John W. Potter, 1,670, for
justice of supreme court
beginning Jan , I, 1977; Sara
J . Harper, 997 ; J. Gareth
Hitchcock, 640; William J.
Morrissey, Jr., for justice of
the supreme court, beginning
Jan . 2, 1977; Ronald R.
Calhoun, 909; Thomas W.
Mitchell, 698; John Donald
Ratcliff, 400; Franklin
Sheeler, 1,636, all for judge of
court of appeals; Wllliam A.

SHERIFF
Keslar , 811; Ralph P.
Triplett, for lOth District
central
committeeman·
Marian S. S!nsel, 2,499, fo;
lOth District central committee woman ; Harold
Schrltler, 1,455; Merrll

HARTENBACH
Trlplctl, 2,115, lor state
representallve.
Local Democrats running
for nomlnallon Included
James J. Proffitt for sherlfl,
who received 1,227 voles ;
Conllnued on page 14

Ford favored in
Ohio's primary
By LEE LEONARD ·
COLUMBUS (UPI)
President Ford scored a
desperately needed victory
over Ronald Reagan early
today in the pivotal Ohio
primary, setting the stage for
a bitter struggle for the
Republican nomlnatlon In
Kansas City this August.
Jimmy Carter, who won the
popular vote but lost the
delegate contest In New
. Jersey , easily crushed his
Democratic rivals here,
putting a first ballot
nomination at next month's
national convention almost
within his grasp.
Ford also won in New
Jersey, where he was
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
In the Ohio presidential
primary with 12,074 or 93 per
cent of the stale's 13,059
potting pla ces reporting:
Republlcans
Cand.
Votes p.c.
Ford
490,613 55
Reagan
398.719 45

vole

Democrats
With 12,295 or 95 per cent of
ihe poll ing places reporting:
Carter
562,088 52
Udatt
226,885 21
Church
150,480 14
Jackson
", 825 3
Wallace
386 6
Donahey
, 112 4

' ., '

I'JtESIDEN'I' FOltD
·unopposed, In a twQ-&gt;'Itate
punch he needed to offset
Reagan 's winner-take-all
victory for 167 delegates In
his home stale of California.
"We will win in Kansas
City," Ford promised in a

telephone call to campaign
workers In Ohio after the
television networks projected
him the winner.
Late Ohio retlll'll8 gave
Forq 55 per cent of the vote to
Continued on page 14

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