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12-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Thursday, April ~28~'07
;:;:,
7 _ _..,._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.;.._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _

1

Diabetes drive
for funds opens
Stressing the need for a full
scale campaign against
diabetes, our nation's third
leading cause ol death, Mrs.
Carol Lurie, president of the
internationally
accredited
Juvenile Diabetes roun·
dation.
opened
th~
orgapization's 1971 fund
raising drive for diabetes
research .
According · to
la test
government statistics,
diabetes now afflicts ten
million Americans. This year
alone It wiil attack another
600 ,000 people, and drain the
economy or more than $5.3
biilion in lost wages, health
care and disability payments.
Working through nearly 80
chapters in t~e U.S. and
Ca nad a, the roundation
raises funds primarily for the
direct support of research
projects and postdoctoral
fellowships in the field . In
just three years a total or
over $2 million has been
awarded. In 1976, of all
voluntary health agenci es
reviewed by the Nationa l
Inform ation Burea u, the
Juvenil e Diabetes Foun·
dation allocated the largest
percentage or funds collected
(ove r 80 per ce nt ) to
research .
Though currently the

MASON DRIVE-IN

~evere coffiplications often

prevent and cure di abetes are

dependent on more research.

B-OB Match
is announced
BELLErONTAINE, OIJ IO
- Bellefontaine Ali-Breed
Kennel Club, In c. will hold an
· AKC Sanctioned B-OB ·Match
on Sunday, May 22 at the
Logan County Fairgrounds,
south edge of Bellefontain e.
All regu lar Obedience
classes will be offered, plus
Sub-Novice and Graduate
Novice . O b e d ie n ce
registration is 9 a.m. to 11
a .m. and judging at noon .
Conformation registration
for all breeds, 10 a .m . to
noon; judging, 1 p.m .
Junior
Showman s hip
classes will also be oflered .
For information on ad·
vance entries at a reduced fee
(deadline May 16th), contact
match secretary Mary Cost,
Rt. 1, Rushsylvania , Ohio
44347. Phone 513-468-2845.

F'UN TIME CUT
RIO GRANDE - Public
recreation activities at Lyne
Cente r on the RGC-CC
campus have been cancelled
for this Friday, Saturday and
Sunday, April 29, JO and May
1 because of student May
weekend activi ties . Cur·
!ailment ol family recr eation
night on Friday is included.
Public recreation will resume
the following week and
family recreation night will
be held May 6.

MUSTANG COUNTRY
Joel McCrea

G

MEIGS THEATRE
CLOSED FOR
VACATION

In 1975, North Vietnamese
troops assaulted parts ol
Saigon's suburbs as the Communists tightened a noose
around the South Vietnamese
capital city .

WATCH FOR
OPENING DATE

Big May~~·
Save up to 96%
-ofthe fee on
Travelers.Checks.
Buy up to 15,000 worth of
First National City Travelers Checks
for only a12 fee during the Big May Sale.,

•

OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT TIL 8

.

and gangrene. are an ever-

present threat.
Better
treatments
that
~an
eliminate the complications
and, eventually, ways to

·MAsoN , W. Va. -An estimated 150property owners or their
epresentatives of the Mason-Clifton corrununity and ol
.tiddleport across the Ohio River appeared unanimous Thurslay night at a formal hearing conducted by the Huntington
Jistrict Corps of Engineers in Wahama High School
!J'Illllasium against construction of a coal loading tipple in

FRIDAY APRIL 29th- SATURDAY APRIL 30th- MONDAY MAY 1st

leading to blindness. heart
attack, stroke, kidney disease

ROOSTER GOGBURN

- PLUS-

END-OF-THE MONTH SALE

disease can be controlled,

Fri., Sat .• Sun.
Aprii29-May 1

( ... And The Lady)
John Wa yne P
Katherine Hepburn

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY
·

::Iifton.

.

---E;~~~~-~;~~~;---~~;.ru~~;~;.Sa;l--e~oF!H£--T---~;~~~;;~;~s,u~--1
ZIPPE'RED TICKING !
MOSAH SALE
I
95
695

BOYS $
PAJAMAS
Sizes B to 1tB. Sto 1id colo rs a n d patterns, long
s 1eeve ·coa s y 1e 1op. 1ong 1eg bottoms, 100

per cent polyester .

OO

$4

!!
I
~
I
!

I PILLOW T~VERS !!

PIU.OW COVER

Fits a 21 , 27 standard
pillow. 100 per cenl cotton.
cotorfasf and

~egular price Sl.89. hidden
z pper, tits standard size

1
1

!
~
I
I

~ ~!1/r~~.s.pah;~~~c!~d ~~~~

du st tight.

!
I

Regularly $4 59 .

colors

s24

ELECTRIC KNIFE

Made by Hamilton Beach , white with gold
or flame trim .

$}749

$399
2 FOR $300
---E;o~~;~~~~~~~---~r--~~;~~~;;~~~;~-----i---~;~;~;~~;~~iu--PAIR

s795

MEN'S

PAJAMAS

Long s leeve top s. coa l s t yle and lo rig leg
bottom s with adjusta b le waist. so lids and
patterns , sizes A. B,C. and D.

. Sf; 45

1

I

Ad

•
Bl
h
vertlser
eac ed Muslin
36 inches wide . soft finish, excellent quality .

6gt

1

!

PAIR

_..,_.._...._.._..__.._._.._.._.. .....

!
1
!
I

KIMBALL P 'IANO
Consoles and spinets in traditional French
Provincial and Spanish styling, all with
matching benches . Pianos located in
furniture department, 3rd floor .

II

!

l

YARD

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

I

END OF THE MONTH SALE

VAN HEUSEN 115.00 and 116.00

$550

MEN'S

~~~~~at !0~~~ c~o~~·~ol~~s?e~~o~~TS~I

Wrangler Denim Skirts
Junior Sizes 8 fo 18

knits and corded material 65 per cent
polyester, 35 per cent cotton .

Men's $45 · oo
Men's$41.95
'Men's $39.95

Sp·orl
Coals .......... sae
1 531 · 00
·
Sport Coals .......... . Sale $29.00
Sport Coals ... ...... .. Sale $28.00

I
1
I
1
I

white.

$}19·

~

----~----~-..-----.-_...._...._.._..~;-..---.._.._...._._....__._..,..

END OF THE MONTH SALE
YOUNG

MEN'S

.{)FF

CUT

$595

.

JEANS

I
I $}29
1
1

I

I! Coordinat:d's~::Rby

Dotted Swiss Yard Material
45 in ches wide, 65 per cent Fortrel
polyester , 35 per cent cotton, regular price
$1.69 yard . Excellent selection of colors and

Dewln
pant jackets,

Large group of blazers ,
slacks, blouses and skirts
Reg . m .oo ... : ........................... Sale U.60

I
1
I
1
I
,

Reg . S1J .oo •••••••••• ..................... . S1le S7.80

Reg . SlS.OO· ............... , •.••••••.••••
Reg . m .oo ...........·...................
Reg . 123.00 .............. .. ..............
Reg
. $28 .00 ••••••••••••••• ,•• •••.._
• • ••• •• •••
_..,_._,_._._.._.._

,

YA

I .
I

Cotton Crepe Yard Good·s

36 inche s wide, 100 per cent cotton , .s,·lid
co lors and patterns.

.

Sale$9.00
SaleS1D.20
Sale513.80

__ ___

RD
______________
__

· END OF THE MONTH SALE

___

Sale S16 .80
~

ENDOFTHEMONTHSALE
JEWELRY DEPARTMENT

&amp;

NECKLACES
BRACELETS
"The Nothing Look"

1
1

1

,

! Reg. 16.00 Necklaces ............... Sale 4.79
--------~~~---------L----------!~--------+-~~~~~~~~~~~==~~~~.9-~
I
I
BOYS . 3.95 SHORT SLEEVE
1
I
l
!
so
1
!
100 per ce nt cotton, so lid color twilL size 29
lo 36.
.

gge

1

END ~F THE MONTH SALE

·

END OF THE MONT.H .SALE

Coronado

SPORT SHIRTS
Solid colors and patterns,
per cent
polyester, so per cent cotton, permanent
press . Sizes 6 to 16 .

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

d

2
for
s599
_______.....,..._ __

1

$}19

I
1

I

. END OF THE MONTH SALE

Size~~N'S4p~~~~o~~~~~Sand I

· cent polyesterdouble
Patterns
·t
' 100 Per
·
k n• s.
Men's$10.95 Dress Slacks .......... _. ••• $8.~0
Men'sSI2.95DressSiacks .............. $10.00
Men'sSI4.95DressSiacks .... .. ........ S11.50
Men's $16.95 Dress Slacks .. .......... .. $13.00

II

.

Place Mats

88~

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

5

END OF THE MONTH SALE

. Charlie Cologne Spray

Generous size, 100 per cent pure viscose
ravon. solid col~rs. ma ~ hine washable.

__ __
.-.._..

.._...

____

1 Reg. 17.00 Cologne ................. Sale '5.88
I
1
1
1 Reg. 4.00 Cologne ................ Sale 3.18

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

I

END OF THE MONTH SALE

________,.

ENDOFTHEMONTHSALE

~=:.:~~A~TS:~ts

POLY COATED CUPS

.

By Katz and Phil maid
Nylon and Permanent Press
S,M, L, XL , XXL.
Regular $5.00 ........................ Sale $4.00
RegularS7 .oo ........................ SaleS560
RegularSIO.oo ....................... Salesa:oo
Regular $12.00 ...................... Sale S9.60

F

or hot or cold drinks , picnic, patio and
everyday use . 24 cups in package .

1
!
I
89~
I
I
I
! ·
I
~--..~~~~~~~-~~~~-~~~+~--------~----~~-~--~--~~----~----------ENDOFTHEMONTHSALE
!
ENDOFTHEMONTHSALE
j
ENDOFTHEMONTHSALE
Small 19t

l~rA~i~cle~~~~

Sizes 24x36

inches and 36 x 54 inches . Rubbe rback , neat
pattern . regularly $6.49 and $13.49

,

·

1h PRICE

l
1
1
1

WAX

CUT-RITE

l

PAPER '

2

!'

69~

ROUS

'

Traveler• cnecu

usua1FH

M F

$5.000
2.500

$50.00
25 .00

$2 .00
2.00

1.000
500

10.00

2.00
2.00

-~

5.00

Olte !IO(Ki (!fd ~ nUS

'

'

· RUGS

BATH ROOM
Limited quantity, includes tank sets, li d
cover. contour rugs and ovals, regular price
$2.00 to $5.49, discontinued.

'10U SAVE

96%
92%
80"/o
60%

lL
72

' f'verfo Ri ca . ilnd ends Muv 31 '911

Hrlc

\l.11 \ ,tk 1Ltll11h "llltl&lt;"'
Ulh I loll C IIi&gt; !o ' &lt;}(,·" • &gt;I I lit" ,,.,. 1 "" I itt: Ill

I 11 '1 "\.111• &gt;tl ,ol C Ill II dh"il'r' ( lh\~ '
'.111 ~I I t ' I• •u ,1. 11 , •II I ll&lt;" ' I·~ &gt;I I 1." 11111&lt; 1.&lt;1
,,, ,., ~ ~ ~ "~ 1 [,, 1 .u "" ''"'llldl•'' l' • 1111 111
•.uh I, nlo 11 ,. t h.o t1 .Ill\ , ollk·t t 1 .II t'l t""

" h•·m·wr 1, '" "" "n , .h ·, u, •11

,

· II

11~ 1

....

CLOUD NINE

See how mudJ you s:l\'e.

il, tW "• ".III .• Uit l lo •I ,. " ' ' 11 ,.

I&lt; •11!11"1 ,. I ll \1 ;\,ll l!!ll.il { tl I II . II

,,1.;,..,

( 1!,.,. , ,' 1\,c

\nillll hr ' .L...·rl ....l ,,, ,,,.,..u ''"'
Y~' .l ihll \" h•" • "l l"t .o loiUII.i 1!,\·.n •••'

1.,•1 ~
11"' t ,,., ' "''"~ '·'! c 111 l '·"d,·r,
C l1 n ''"'"'·on \ l.11 "" ' '·" ' ·

PRICE

!

RACINE
HOME NATIONAL

FERTILMIX POTTING SOIL

144

$.

•

1
1
1I

MOTH

BOX

giving .

I
I
II

BALLS

!
1

Kills moths and carpet beetles .

87

1-

• BOX

SALE PRICES

~ 9~~;·~~01E~:1~ka
95
$69

I
1
i
I
I
I
II

G

ENDOFTHE MONTH S A L E - -

BGys' and Gil1s' Sk!epwear
Paiamas , long gowns. robes, shorties . All of our spring

TEA ·KETTLE

·

$499

.and summer chll drens sleepwear.
SAL!; PRICES
Reg ..S4.oo ................................ Salen.oa ·
Reg.ss.oo ................................ SaleS3.88

l ----'EN"'Do"F-TH'E ;;Q"N;H5A...'i___
u .so ····················~·····~·····Sale S4.91
I Reg.
Reg. $10.00 ...... • .... • ••. • • • • ... ... •"" Sale S7.48
Rea.$1J.oo ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 5alet10.JI

___ r--:~E"NooF'iHE'MoNrH si:'L.r--WEST BEND

WAREHOUSE ON MECHANIC STREET

sweeper - ~~ S~ P}c"!ai~n~~d ~!~tt~!~ ~~~~~~nted

SAVE '28.85

Regular $30.00 ........................... Sale s24 .64
RegularS40.00···--·--·· ................. saleS32 .84

CHILDRENS DEPART.MENT

2'12 quart size in Harvest Gold or avocado ,
tr igger operated a luminum spout. Regular
price $5.95

I

upright

Regular $20.00 • •• ••• ••• ••. • • ••••••••••••• . Sale S16 .44

1____

WEST BEND
WHISTLIN
.

WOMEN'S DRESSES
Toni Todd,' ·i{ay Windsor, Holinobber, Berkshire,
Flu tterby, City Sc;ene. S11es 6 to 20 and 12'h to 26'12.
Includes all of our women 's regular and half slle
dresses. ,Buy no_w and save lor Mother's Day
Regular$12.00····--··------····--······· · Sale$9.84
Regular $54.00 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Sale $44 .24

L~~~;~~cu~~.~~!~L

EUREKA SWEEPER SA

t

a

1
1

1

cover, completely immersible, harvest gold
and avocado, rllQular price $29.95.

$2479

r

I
1

.l

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

..

100 per cent nylon

Gold or brown tweed
Special SIO.OO Square Yard Installed with
pad.
.

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

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

OHIO

'

BAG

--~:'NoOI="T'HE"M'6N'TH5'AL.E,_

BANK
RACINE

II

OUNCE

--E";o(;;;:-;E~-;;;,.-;-;~;---T---e-;o-o;;HE~~~;s;;LE _ _ _ _

For indoor plants , retains mo'istur e . Free of
· pests and diseases. 1 Lb . 112 oz . Bags

A Home Bank
For
Meigs County
People

10

I
I

---------~---------...1

. __ _.. . jj _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _...,..
(

•

"·

at
VOL XXVIII

NO. 11

POM EROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

l

FRIDAY, APRIL 29, 1977

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

.at $336 million now

several months.
Alleged
over c harges
ranged from a high or $71L62
million for Gull to a low of
$117,949 for Cities Service.
Gulf issued a statement
saying it " categorically
· denies" violating FEA
regulations. Standard of
Indiana also denied any
overcharges, saying: 11 This is
another example of govern,
men!
retroactive
rulemaking . We intend · to
again vigorously contest ,
'MOSCOW - SOVIET DIVERS HAVE BECOME the first
tllese notices."
· to swim ·beneath the North Pole, the official Soviet news
An FEA spokesman said
agency Tass said Thursday. The agency said the information
the companies were notified
was relayed to the Research Institute of the Arctic and
ot the planned action and
Antarti ~a in Leningrad, which is currently carrying out
STAVANGER, · Norway given 10 days to reply . Final
weather experiments on the polar ice cap .
(UP I) - Paul "Red" Adair , orders will be issued after the
· ''For the first- time in the history. of exploration of the
the Houston, Tex. oil well replies are in, the spokesman
Arctics, Soviet.polar explorers held a series of experimental
troubleshooter, arrived today said, and companies wanting
swims with aqualungs under the ice cap of the geological point
to oversee another dramatic to challenge those orders can
of the North Pole," Tass said. The news agency said- the
attempt to shut off a gusher do so either before an FEA
expedition is photographing the polar hasin to check on
oil well that lias pi&gt;lluted an appeals board or in court.
''mathematical models of the weather arid climate of the
FEA regulations allow U.S.
area of the North Sea larget
Northern Hemisphere."
than Rhode Island.
oil compan ies to raise
u we'll fix itt the consumer prices to cover
CLEVELAND - CJ,.EVELAND INDIANS president Alva
legendary Texas disaster . legitimate cr ude oil cost
"Ted" Bonda told Frank Robinson Thursday night the ::::::::::::;:;::::: ;:;:;:;:;:;: ;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:: :~::::::::::::::::::::::: fighter said before boarding a increases.
beleaguered manager's job is "secure,::._be said afterward to
helicopter for his first look at
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
newsmen. "I am glad I went to see Frank. He needed some
the week-old gusher.
S!lnd11y · through
cheering up ,'' said Bonda, who .had returned from a business
" I don't think it's that
trip to &lt;krrriany only hours before the team beat Toron!Q 4-:1 to
Tuesday, fair and " mild
difficult," Adair said . " I' ve
end a seven-game losing streak . ..
o
Sunday and Monday and a
been on lot bigger and
While he was away designated hitters Rico Carty publicly
chance
of
showers
tougher wells than this. I just
Tuesday. Highs will be In
asked RObinson to provide more leadership and the club's
ca II it another blowout."
play-by-play announcer, Joe Tait, said in a radio talk show
the 70s and lows will be In
· Adair's men were making
Robinson should be dismissed.
the 40s or lower 50s.
what was termed s low
progress in their efforts to
TOLEDO, OHIO - OHIO A'ITORNEY GENERAL ;.;:;:;J::::::::::::::::::!i:::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::;:;:;:;:;::::::::: cap the geyser of oil, gas and ·
William J. Brown Thursday charged Leaders, Inc ., an Ohio
mund that spouted 120 feet
company which sells a fuel additive, with making false claims
into the sky .
Mid-Ohio Valley Industrial
and deceiving Ohio consumers.
" We really don't have very Emergency Planning Council
Also named in the suit filed in Lucas County Conunon
much information, but we is planning a seminar May 10
Pleas Court were Locations Ud., Inc., a Minnesota firm which
assume everything is going
and 11 from 7 to 10 each
formerly sold a fuel additive and nine major reliailers of the
well" aboard the midsea evening at the National
products. BroWn said that Leaders Inc. and Locations . Ltd.
. A special meeting will be platform, said Gordon Gua rd Armory, north of Point
have represented that the fuel additives cut automobile fuel
held at Meigs High School at Goering, reg ional manager of Pleasant.
consumption by 18 to 40 per cent.
Philipps Petroleum Co.
According to a spokesman
"According to tests available to my office, these products 7:3Q p.m. Tuesday, May 3 to
Phillips, which manages
don't do what they 're supposed to do," said Brown. "In fact, schedule baUfields at the and partly owns Norway's for the organization , the
these tests indicate that the prodqcts have no significant effect Meigs High Athletic complex Ekolisk lield, asked Adair to semina r is fashioned for any
for spring and summer
emergency related . gro up
on car mileage."
come half way around the
recreation programs.
that would be concerned with
world to take personal charge
Fields to be scheduled are
accidents involving vehicles,
LONDON - TiiE SOVIETS ARE RACING lar ahead of
of
a gusher which has
the
Meigs
High
School
transporting
dangerous and
the West in building up and modernizing their armed forces,
deleated nearly a week's
baseball
diamond
,
the
toxic
chemicals.
the authoritative International Institute for Strategic Studies
Salisbury grade school field, effort to control lt.
Outlined in the seminar will
said today .
By the time Adair arrived
the
two
little
league
be ' the identification of
" The trend is clear,'' the institute said in its annual
in Stavanger, Norwegian
and
toxic
strategic survey. "It revealed a proceS!i of continuous Soviet diamonds and the tee ball officials said an oil slick hazardous
chemicals
in
transit,
visual
military modernization whichin almost every area seemed to field on top of the hill.
spreading from the well had
Charles Chancey, Meigs
tank-truck
shutoff
outpace the intensity and scope.of Western military programs.
polluted more than a
"As Western military options become more constrained," the High Athletic Director, will thousand square miles of the procedures, the handling of
conduct the l!leeting.
LP gas emergencies and
survey said, "Soviet military options were increasing."
North Sea .
others.
All area law enforcement
officers, emergency squads
and lire departments are
cordially invited to attend.
Registration will be during
the first session on May 10.
be
Certili cates · will
animal has attacked durmg daylight
awarded for those completing
LIMA , Ohio (UPI) - A.S . ·area and say they won't move the
stock back until the predator Is
hours, has clawed its way through
the two evening session.
Burkeholder went out to his barn in
fences and torn barn sidings to get at
killed.
nearby Bluffton earlier this week
Allen County Humane Officer Bill
the sheep. Once he tears them apart,
and found the tom and clawed
Reeder
has
assigned
his
six
officers
however, he eats very little. ·
carcasses of 50 ol his sheep.
farmers
into
night
·
That shows he apparently is not
and
cooperating
Burkholder's ·sheep, heavy with
patrols
to
try
and
stalk
the
killerafraid
of humans and is vicious
lamb at this time of year, had been
which
they
have
yet
to
beast
to a ttack one, said Reeder.
enough
easy prey for a strange creature
AID UNIT CALLED
identify.
"Four-day-old
lambs have been
which in the last six weeks has killed
The
Middleport
"We're pretty sure by the prints
grabbed across the back and flung
a total of 134 sheep, worth about
Emergency Squad was called
its in the feline family," Reeder
about. There are fang marks on both
$5,000, in nor:them Allen County.
to North Second Ave .; at 2:06
said. " And we had two sightings
sides," Reeder said.
" About eight were outright dead,"
p.m. Thursday for Donald
today (Thursday ). A man called a
Some sheep within the territory
Burkeholder said'. " A bunch of them
Van Cooney who had become
half hour a'go. He said it was black
staked out by the killer are worth
were very torn up in hind corners
ill on the sidewalk. He was
and gray and it looked like a bobcat.
$200 a head, Reeder said, so
and around the head . We 've had
taken to the office of Dr. J . J.
Bigger though ."
pressure to kill It quick is great.
dogs before but nothing like this ."
Davis. At 3:36p.m., the squad
Before the sightings, human
"I don'! know , I've been up all
Farmers in the seven-mile stretch
went to 2~9 North Third Ave. ,
officers were shooting suspicious
night a couple times but l didn't see
where the sheep were killed have
for Timothy Jones, 6, who
anything," Burkeholder said.
dogs as well.
begun moving their stock out oi the
suffered a head injury in a
Reeder has warned that the
fall. He was taken to
Vet_erans Memorial Hospital.
VATICAN CITY - POPE PAUL VI AND the Archbishop
of Canterbury, standing side by side at the same altar, prayed
to God today for ch urch unity and exchanged a kiss of peace.
The spiritual leaders of 700 million Roman Catholics and 67
million Anglicans dramatized their churches gradual
rapprochement with a joint prayer service in the Vatican's
Sistine Chapel.
• Michelangelo's giant fresco of the Last Judgment, with a
vouthful Christ damning the wicked, provides a backdrop to
he chapel's altar . Alternating in prayer in Latin and English
· md speaking some verses jointly, the two church leaders
'ailed on God to "make of us a sign or His to the world and lead
JS in His ways."
·

en tine

Oil firms' ripoff set
By EDWARD K . DeLONG
WASHINGTON (UPI) Federal energy officials have
boosted to $336 million the
amount they say 20 firms
improperly reaped in inflated
prices on crude oil sales by
foreign subsidiaries to their
parent companies in the
United States.
" We feel like our case is
pretty strong," says . a
spokesman for the Federal
Energ y Administration
Thursday.
Oil companies deny they
are guilty of overcharging
and vowed to fight the
allegations.
The agency has claimed
three successively higher
totals for the alleged price
gouging in the three years
since the battle started,
The agency issued both its
earlier
estimates
of
overcharging in 1975. The
highest at that time was $275
million . .

FEA officials said they
intend to roll back the price
hikes and order consumer
refunds, perhaps by reducing
gasoline pump prices by a
j:leMy or IWO a gallon for

Hotshot
takes on
oil job

Seminar
planned.

May 10,11

he scheduled

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END OF THE MONTH SALE
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END OF T.HE MONTH SALE
Amouru ol

By United Press International
WASHINGTON- TiiE DEADJJNE HAS IJEEN e1tended
· twice, but White House energy staffers think they have finally
finished writing all the legislative details needed to turn
President Carter's energy policy into reality. There was an allout push by the President's energy team Thursday to polish
each proposed law in!Q final form and gel the package ready to
send Cong~ess today .
Efforts to draft legislation for the energy plan, which
Carter outlined for Congress and the nation April 20, fell more
than a week behind original schedules . Administration sources
said the initial deadlines - first April 20, then April 25 proved impossibly optimistic . Members of the White House
energy staff predicted they would meet today's deadline,
although with difficulty. " There's a real crunch on," one said
Thursday.

Ball6elds to

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our regular price $.49

•

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1 Selected from r e gular stock, solids and
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!
END OF THE MONTH SALE
I
ENDOFTHEMONTHSALE
Short Sleeve Knit Shjrts
Sizes S, M, L, and XL. $1 6.00 Quiana Knit and
$15 .00 Sp le ndor Knit. Solid colors. lim ited
quan it y .

Clifton , W. Va. wh.icll is directly across the river from this entire village. I feel such facilities should be located In more
village.
sparsely populated areas and we certainly have a lot of these.
" I realize that coal loading lacilities are n~ssary In the
" I have been led to believe that with a covered conveyor,
area and do provide employment, but I believe that it is very coal dust in the area would be at a minimum. I !eel that
poor judgment to locate such a facility so close to a heavy whatever this minimum is would be too much for this area . I
residential area .
have yet to see any type of coal loading facility which did not
"The vicinity direcUy across the river from the proposed create an ellcessive amount of dust.
"The Middleport Vjllage Council, the Middleport Chamber
lacilily is a highly populated residential area, where people .do
take pride in the appeararice ol their homes . This would be of Commerce, the Pomeroy-Middleport Rotary Club and
very demoralizing lor these people to have to put up with the Middleport VIllage residents are all very highly opposed to the
coal dust in the air whicll will undoubtedly be generated by this location of this coal loading lacility and !eel that it would be
facility . Residents in Middleport do make an effort to keep the very detrimental to the Village by the dust, noise and
village and · their properties clean. This would be almost landscape damage which would be created and request that
impossible to do if this facility were permitted to operate only . the Corps of Engineers not penni! such construction in the ·
1,000 feet from their front doors.
area under consideration .
"Many ol these people enjoy living on the river because of
"FUrthermore, I cannot understand how the Corps came
the beautiful view of the landscape and river traffic. This to the conclusion that the construction and operation of this
facility would certainly detract from this by providing a dusty · facility would not result in a significant impact on the human
and noisy operation directly across the river . It would also environment, thereby not requiring that an environmental
discourage pleasure boating along this area. Many people use impact statement be prepared. It would seem to me that this
this part of Southeastern Ohio for boating and many boat docks type of facility would certainly be one which would have an
are located along the river in the vicinity of the proposed site. impact on the human environment. In the construction of
Boaters would have their boats constantly covered with dust almost anything new, the EPA does require that such a
which would soon become very discouraging and boating statement be prepared.
"In light of these facts I would request that the permit
enthusiasts would soon find other places for docks . This would
be a loss to the village in both tourist attraction and definitely not be 11ranted unless a complete environmental
impact statement lB prepared and that this definitely shows
inconvenience to its residents.
"There are many places along the river in this area where there would he no detrimental effects to the environment. And
such a coal loading facility could be located and not affect an this I would find hard to believe."

END OF THE MONTH SALE

!I

NECKTIES

Col. Samuel L. Britten, deputy district engineer, U. S.
Army, presided and opened the hearing with a formal
statement for the record. Its emphasis was that the Corps
would he impartial in wllatever arguments that were to be
offered for or against the tipple that William Zuspan of Mason
proposes to build.
Statements were made by at least nine persons who reside
in the Clifton a rea. Eight Ohio homeowners, aU from
Middleport, including Mayor Fred Hoffman, made statements
in the hearing. Numerous others asked questions of Mr .
Zuspan .
Relevant new fa cts brought out during the questioning
included :
- Mr . Zuspan indicated he would haul coal by truck from
strip fields in Hocking County , Ohio to the tipple in Clifton ,
should it be built.
-Mr. Zusi&gt;an has applied for a striooin2 oermit lor 600
acres or coal behind the Clifian-c1fmmW)ity.
·
Mr. Zuspan has applied for a pennit to construct a coal
loading tipple inside the general area known as Minersville, an
unincorporated village upriver and contiguous to Pomeroy.
Clifton-Mason area residents olfering statements for the

record, all in opposition to the proposed construction on
grounds of acessive coal dust and environmental problems
were Mrs. Virginia Sue Hussell, speaking on behalf of her
mother, Mrs. HDward McDaniel; Damy Kearns, Roy Eimer,
Howard McDaniel, Jr., Roscoe Edwards, Lois Peters, Mary
Riley, and Mrs. Nancy Brinker, on behalf of her mother, also
Mrs. Howard McDaniel.
Speakers from Middleport offering oral statements were
Paul Smart, representing the Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary
Club, Mr. and Mrs. ~aid (Jerry ) Hillerty, Middleport
councilman Alan King and Dewey Horton , school teacher Mike
Gerlach, Nancy Reed , Hallie Zerkle, and Dr. Ray R . Pickens,
a native of Clifton who resides in Pomeroy high above the Ohio
River, enjoying a direct overview of Clifton and the site of the
proposed tipple, and who practices medicine in Middleport.
Also attending from Middleport as a representative of
town council was Council President Marvin Kelly .
· Hilferty's statement drew special attention because, as an
architect of national standing he stressed that he moved his
family to the bend area of the river because of its beauty and
quiet rural atmosphere, the very qualities he believed
fllreatened by ~e proposed tipple .
Most of the oral statements were summarized in Mayor
Hoffman's statement read into the record of the. hearmg on
which Col. Britten will hand down a decision later.
Hoffman's statement said :
"As mayor of the Village of Middleport, I would like to
voice the strong objections ol the Village Government and
rllliidents to the orooosed location of the coal loading facility at

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END OF THE MONTH SALE

!I

SALE PRICES
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ .._.. ____

Opposition sounded to coal tipple in Clifton

Ki11er-beast has taken 134 sheep

--PA'ITY NEUTZLING, DAUGHTER of Mr. and Mrs. James Neutzli!Jil, Pomeroy,
checks a bulletin board in the fifth grade class of Mrs. MarY Hysell at the Pomeroy
Elementary School made up of news stories from The Daily Sentinel giving accounts or
appearanees by guest speakers over recent weeks in Mrs. Hysell's clill!Sroom . The speakers
have been provided by the Meigs Retired Senior Volunteer Program of the Meigs Senior
Citizens ·eenter. The program has supplied speakers who have discussed topics relevan!lo
current units of study of the pupils.

Accused murderer captured
WINFIELD , W. Va. resistence .''
Putnam Co urtl y sheriff
The apprehension ended an
deputies , aided by a intensive manhunt Thursday
telev.ision report and a house- after Young escaped from the
to-house search, Thursday • Putnam County jail at about
night caught a jail escapee 3:30 a.m . Deputies sa id
accused In the stabing death Young dpparently picked the
of a 61-year-old Mason lock on his jail cell and broke
County woman.
a padlock on a metal trap
John Lewis Young, a 32- door leading to the attic . He
year-old Mason Co untian , pried loose some shingles and
was arrested by Sheriff climbed through a small hole
David Wright ..and Deputy onto the roof.
Roger Blankenship as Young
It was theorized that Young
walked down Su'g ar Camp jumped off the roof onto a
Road about 10 miles north of large elm tree between the
here.
courthouse and jail. He left a
"We ran upon him so fast pair of hoots on the roof, but
that he · didn't have time to Blankenship said the fugitive
react," Blankenship said . also had a pair of shoes which
"He didn't put up any he was wearing when

Public welcomed to
free demonstrations
District conservationist time required, the various
Boyd A. Ruth today urged quantities ol fuel, and most
attendance at the "No-tillage important - the amount ol
com P lanting and Multiflora potential topsoil loss of each
Rose
Cont rol
Demon- . method of planting. These
strations" tomorrow at 10 plots will be checked at
a.m., co-sponsored by the harvest time to determine
Meigs Soil and Water Con- crop yields and net return per
servation District and the acre.
Everyone interested in
Meigs Cooperative Extension
multiflora rose control may
Service.
The demonstration will see a demonstration immediately following the corn
begin on the oale Kautz
farm
about
.,..
mile
planting. The multifulora
Chester
on rose control demonstration
south
of
SR 7. Four methods of corn wiU be on the adjoining David
planting will be shown: Koblentz farm .
conventional plowing and
The total program will
discing, Chisel plowing, No· probably last from 10 a.m. to
till planting in existing crop 12 :30 p.m . AU demonstrations
field, and No-till planting in are free; the public is
existing meadow.
welcomed. For further inObse rvers will see dif· formation call the SCS office
ferences In types of equip- at 992-&lt;i&amp;l7 or the Extension
ment needed, the amount of office at 992·3895.

arrested some 18 hours later.
Young and a 16-year-old
boy were arrested on Dec. 1
hours after the body of Mrs.
Mary Berry of Mason was
discovered in her house,
according to Mason County
Sheriff 's Department
records.
. Mrs. Berry, owner of the B
&amp; B Market in Mason, was
lound in her bed, hound with
rawhide and stabbed 10
times.
The juvenile pleaded guilty
of second-degree murder and
was sentenced to five to 18
years in the West Virginia
Penitentiary at Moundsville . .
Young, indic ted on a
charge of !irs! degree
murder, was held in the
Putnam County jail because
of repair work on the Mason
County jail, wh ich was badly
damaged in a dynamite
explosion March 2, 1976.
He was scheduled to have a
hearing on a change of venue
motion , · Assistant Mason
County Prosecuting Attorney
William Woodyard said. His
wa s
t en tatively
t'rial
scheduled to begin May 9.
Deputies were aided by a
television report or the
escape, which included a
description ol Young - a 5foot-9 , 165-pounder with
shoulder-length brown hair.

E-RCALLED
RACINE - The Racine E·
R Squad was called Thursday
at 11 :35 a.m. lor Kevin
Turley, Racine, who was
taken to Pleasant Valley
Hospital. Atl:37 p.m, Thursday LyM Hawk, Rt. 2, Was
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.

�2-The Daily Sentinel, Mlddleport-l'omeroy, 0, Fnday, :'Prll29, 1977
3-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Fr1day. Aprol29. 1977

CCC has better prospects this time
By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS (UPI) - A
once-vetoed b1ll establishing
a Qvilian Conservation Corps
(CCC) for pubh c works
programs in Ohio 1s on 1ts
way to the governor's desk
agam. Indications are that it
may fare better th1s llffie
The House Thursday
ratified Senate changes m the
CCC b1ll, 74 to 13, and sent it
to Gov James A. Rhodes
Rhodes vetoed the measure
last year on grounds private
mdustry could best absorb
the unemployed through
mdustroal expansion.
But these changes have
smce been made, promptmg
support of the Department of
Natural Reso urces and
legislative Repubhcans :
- No CCC program could
begm unlll sufficient state
funds were available . If Congress agrees thts s urruner,

state CCC programs would be
eligible for up to 80 per cent

Ohioans who would work in gettmg m the new budget,"
federal fundmg
sa1d Kieffer
- The CCC would be phased str~p-mme reclamation. htter
The strop mine reclamation
out of existence by June 30, removal, flood control or bill sent to the Senate by the
1982,, 1! the program proves other envrronmental prOJectS House os alffied at repairing
unsuccessful
and
the as determmed by the abandoned mines on private
legoslature decides not to department .
land wh1ch are causong
renew tt.
Oh10ans at least 16 years o1 " evere or widespread ''
"It's probably more age could be h•red under the -- w~ter pollution or damage to
acceptable than it was," said program fo~ six to 12 months adJacent property.
Fred
M1lls,
Rhodes' at the eXl~mg mmlffium
Currently, the state much
legislative a1de " I don't wage - less •f they are given . purchase the land and resell
anticopate a veto now that tqe housmg' clothes and food 1! 1! 1t wants to accomphsh
fundmg has been taken care ~~~";!. !herr stay at CCC reclamation.
of The 'sl.Dlset' proviSions
There would be four camps
Under the bill, soonsored
also help "
:·
Proor to JOming the Senate housing no more than 50
COSTLY NICKELS
in adJournment for th e persons, mstead of a single
weekend the House passed , 88 large camp.
JACKSONVILLE, Fla.
One of the last holdouts
(UPI) - Ute 118 metal
to 1, a b)ll fa cilltatmg str1p
tounterpart, the "pickle
mme reclamation by the against the proposal, Rep
Rex F Koeffer Jr ., Rnickel" just Isn't worth
state on private land.
The
House
Rules Zanesvolle, ObJected to
what it used to be.
E x e c u 11 v e
Vl c e
Committee schedUled a floor spending $5 million on the
vote for next Tuesday on the CCC program next year.
President Wllllam R.
$13.2
b1lhon
general
"We have every mdicallon
Moore told the annual
appropnat10n b1ll wr1tten by that the Department of
convention of Pickle
majonty Democrats.
Natural Resources w1U have
Packers
lnternallonal
The CCC would g1 ve mini· trouble maintaining ex1stmg
Thursday that the wooden
mum-wage, public service parks with the money It's
" pickle nickels" PPI bas
Jobs to young , unemployed
used for two decades as a

Tax cut about to pass
By DON PHILLIPS
WASHINGTON (UP! )
President Carter's tax
s\lmulus b1ll, once the
corne rstone
of
the
administration 's economic
reccvery program, 1s abour to
pass the Senate as a simple
tax cut w1th a small
sprmkling of minor spec1al
interest benefots.
Long since denuded of 1ts
$50 per person tax rebate at
Carter's request, the b1ll
nonetheless does grant a $6
billion tax cut to most of those
who claim the standard
deduction although some
Single persons actually will
pay a shght mcrease.
A family of four making
$10,000, would get a tax cut of
$205; and at $20,000 a cut of
$100. A couple woth no
children would get a cut of
$137 at $10,000 mcome, $100 at
$20,000 and $144 at $30,000. A
smgle person would get a cut
of $119 at $10,000, but would
pay tax increases of $58 at
$15,000, $68 at $20,000, and $90
at $30,000.
In a "sleeper" provtSlon
that has not rece1ved major
publicity, the bill also would
greatly sunplify lax forms for
the more than 48 milhon
persons who use the standard
deduction.
On next year's forms, those
who do notitemize deductiOns
would f1gure taxes by looking
at one table . There wotild be
no calculatiOns, not even the
sunplest additiOn or subtrac11fE DAILY SENTINEL
DEVOTEOTOTHE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS.MA.SON AREA
CHESTER l.. TANNEHILL

Elec Ed
ROBERT HOEFLICII
City EtHtor
Pubhsh~ d!uly exc.:ept Saturday
by The Ohio Valley PubUshulg Com·
any, m Cowt St. , Pomeroy, Ohio
45769 Busmess Of(tce Phone 99'2·
2156 Edito r~al Phone992 21&amp;7
Se&lt;:ond class po.st.l:lge patd 11 l
Pomeroy, Ohto
NliUonal &lt;~dvertLSmg represenbltive Ward - Gritftth Co mpany,
Inc , BoUmelli and Galla~her D1v ,
757 Thtrd Ave , New York , NY
10017
Sub5crtpUon rates Dchvcrt.o.d by
earner where available 75 cent.s per
week B) MotorRoutewherecarrter
service not available, One lnonth,
13.25 By matl m Ohio tmd W Va ,
One Year, 122 00, Six months,
$11 &amp;0 , Three mon ths, S7 00,
Elsewhere $26 00 year , Stx monthS
113 &amp;0
Three months, $7 50
Sub~r!ptlon pnce Includes Sunda}
Times-Sentin el

t10n.
For the most part, the
Senate has kept the bill pretty
much as Carter asked.
But 1! defied hiS request to
kill busmess tax mcentives as
well as the rebate. Under the
Senate

incentives,

now

swelled to $4.8 bilhon over
two years, businesses could
choose between an extra 2 per
cent mvestment tax credit or
a jobs credit for mcreased

employment.
The Senate spent most of
th•s week cons1dermg dozens
of amendments, but rejected
most of them.
A proposed home msulation
tax cred1t of up to $225 was
defeated 53 to 38 after
Democrats and Sen. Edward
Brooke, R-Mass., urged that
the 1ssue be put off until
carter's energy program is
considered

Reports on
Nixon are hit
SAN CLEMENTE, Calif.
(UP! ) - Former President
Richard Nixon's highest aide
has angrily denounced a
number of recent news
reports about Nixon as
inaccurate.
Jack Brennan told a
Republican group here he
had never commented on
news reports in the past but,
"Now I'm gettmg trritated."
He smd 1! was not true that
Noxon called Pres1dent
Carter three or four times to
offer counsel, that NIXon
called once, saying reports
gave
the
erroneous
unpression that "President
Nixon is just sitting out here
-waitmg for an opportunity to
call."
He denounced a story that
quoted
two
interior
decorators as saymg NIXon
"chose every p1ece of
furniture" on the set used for
taping his interviews with
British television personality
Dav1d Frost,
showing
''terrible taste.''
' 'That ' s absolute crap ,''

Brennan fumed in a talk
Wednesday mght. "He never
saw the set before the
tapings."
He called reports that
Nixon talked with former
Secretary of State Henry
Kissinger every day for
guidance durmg the tapings
"absolute bull."
"He talked with Kissinger
three tunes during all the
tapmgs."

Brennan, then a lieutenant

colonel, spent flve years as
NIXon's Marme Corps aide,
and left the Marines three
years ago to remam as the
ch1ef of Nixon's four-person
staff.
Bren~8n said Ntxon's
healtl\ IS "doing qUite well,"
but that he had to elevate his
leg during a portion of the
lengthy Frost interv1ew
because he had been s1tting
too long lor his phlebitiS
condition " wh1ch is not painful. 11

He sald Pat Nixon 1s not
recovering from a stroke,
which left her partially par·
alyzed on one side, as rapidly
as she had hoped but "walks
on the beach and does
physical therapy" and is
doing satisfactorily.
PRISONS
COLUMBUS (UP!)
George F. Denton, state
director of rehabilitation and
corrections, told the House
Judiciary Committee
Thursday that Ohio's prison
population has grown to a
reccrd 13,189 this mooth almost double the number
imprisoned three years ago.
Denton said the sharp in·
crease can be attributed to
" an unprecedented rise in the
number of persons being
committed to Ohio !ll'isons by
Ute courts."
He was testifying before
the committee on a proposed
$275 lllllllon bond issue to
finance construction ol new
prisons and improvements at
ex:istmg ones.

promotion device now cost
the organization slx and a

half cents apiece.

by Rep Arthur R Bnwers, [).
Steubenville, the state could·
-Contract for the reclamation work and pay the full
cost
-Pay for up to 75 per cent
of the reclamation done by
the landowner or a contractor
of h1s own choos1 ng.
Additional improvements
co uld be made at the
landowner's expense.
In any case, the landowner
would have to relffiburse the
state for any substanbal
mcrease in the market value
of hts property brought about
by the reclamat1on .
The reimbursement could
be made woth mcortle from
crops or t~mber , by allowmg
use of the land for public
recreatiOn or conser vation
purposes, or through a lump
swn payment when the land
IS sold.
Begmnmg next July, the
state will devote 75 per cent of
tts annual severance tax
revenues, estimated at $4
mtllion , to restoratiOn of
abandoned strip mined land.
The Senate reconvenes at
7.30 p.m next Monday and
the House at 11 a m Tuesday

~'1~N
: .: ·. sport • d e
1lm
&gt;:·»

Other seniors
helping stage
annual play
Several seniors of Meigs
High School w11l have behind
the scene roles when the
annual play is presented at 8
this evenmg in the school
audttormm.
"Dear Phoebe" ts the btle
of this year's play, a comedy
dealing with a newspaper
off1ce. Taking parts m roles
outs1de the cast are Robin
Dewhurst and Kim Grueser,
costumes; Patty Warner,
Vicki Dent, Demse Marshall,
Debbie
Taylor,
Beth
McKnight
and
Becky
Thomas, make-up; Barbara
Douglas, Dale Browning,
Cheryl Kennedy , Kathy
Coleman, Beverly Will,
Tammy Blake, June Wamsley, Paula Eichinger, props;
Barb Douglas, Kim Grueser,
Dale Browning, Cheryl
Kennedy, Becky Thomas,
Mary
Boggs,
Cathy
Meadows, Rick Johnson and
Ron Coats, publicity ; Mel
Slffiffions and Pam North,
prompters, and Keith Bailey,
Dale Brownmg, Ron Wood
and Tl!D Thomas, hghtlng
and sound.

and Stidham were cited for
unproper backing.
There was slight damage to
the Stodham and Sands autos.
A second accident in·
vestigated by the H1ghway
Patrol occurred at 9:15p.m
Thursday on US 35 at the
junction of SR 180.
The patrol reported a
vehicle droven by Jane A.
Kerr, 18, Bidwell , wa s
eastbound, when another
vehicle operated by Laura
Wellington, 17, Bidwell,
pulled from a private drive
strikmg the Kerr auto. No
mjury
was
reported
Wellington was cited for
defective brakes. There was
slight damage to both
vehicles

ROCCO-COLONNA
COLUMBUS (UPI)- Ever
since Reps. Kenneth Rocco
and Rocco Colonna, both
Cleveland-a rea Democrats,
JOined !lie Ohio House a
couple of years ago,
observers
have
been
wondering when they would
sponsor a bill together - a
''Rocca-colonna'' bill.

Such a bill fmally came to
the floor Thursday. It called
for motorists to turn on !hell'
headlights in ram , snow and
fog, and was defeated on a
vote of 39 to 51.

'*~
·:&gt;~

MARK HAGGERTY IS INSTRUCTED BY his father, Bob Haggerty, at the H. &amp; R
Firestone Store m Middleport, Ohio. Mark is a senior in Distributive _Education at Meigs
High School with a career objective in bosmess management. In addition to his classroom
studies at Me1gs, Mark spends his afternoons gaming practical experu;nces under ~1s
father's superVIsion at the H &amp; R Firestone Store. These expenences will be of speCial
value to him as he furthers his education in business management at a techniCal school next
year.

CARL CARMICHAEL PRESENTED the Distnbutive
Education Creed Wednesday night at the third annual
banquet of 0 E.C.A. held at the Meigs Inn. On the left Is
high school principal, James Diehl and on the right is
Mark Gilkey, D.E.C.A. president.

HEALTH

Certificates of appreciation
were presented employers
Wednesday night when the
th1rd annual Meigs High
School Distributive
Education EmployerEmployee banquet was held
at the Meigs Inn.
The program opened w1th
Paul
Reed, D.E .C.A.,
treasurer, g1vmg the invocallon. H1gh School

One 13; Star Trek 15.

By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
A good thing to eat at
DEAR OR. LAMB - I am breakfast with this program
past 96. For many years I had lS one of the cereal products
to resort to laxahves and that contams bran.
I am sending you The
enemas for ehmmalion.
I have a sympathetic feel- Health Letter number 2-1, Iring for ,anyone who has that ritable or Spasbc Colon and
handicap. Several years ago Constipation You may not
a fnend encouraged me to try need it but you may be able to
dnnkmg water before share the lilformation with
breakfast. After trying 1t for friends and · help them too.
a couple of weeks I was back Others who want this in·
to normal. I have not taken formation can send 50 cents
any sort of laxative smce.
for 1t w1th a long, stamped,
Would you pass this in· self-addressed envelope for
formation on to your mailing. Jnst write to me m
readers ? It might help many care of tl"l&lt; newspaper, P.O
Box 1551, Radio C1ty Station,
others as 11 bas helped me
DEAR READER - Your New York, NY 10019.
thoughtful advice IS bemg
DEAh DR. LAMB - Could
passed on. M;iny people need you please tell me something
to train the bowel • Part of about kidney mfectwns. Last
that training program is to year my doctor diagnosed my
eat a reasonable breakfast 1llness as acute pyhtis. He
that would mclude at least sa1d it was a kidney infection.
The doctor gave me antwo glasses of liqwd.
The breakfast and liquid tibwties and I was cured. Is it
stimulate a natural reflex possible for a kidney infecbon
and when you learn to u5e this to reoccur•
reponse you can avoid the . Lately my urme lS cloudy,
useless and often hannful particularly at mght before I
laxatives tbat are so com· go to bed and m the morning
monlywled.

311--Porter Wagoner 3, Gong Show 4, Candid Camera
6, Treasure Hunt B; MacNeil-Lehrer Report 20,33;
Andy Williams 10, Name That Tune 13; Pop Goes
the Country 15.
Son 3,4, 15, Donny &amp; Marie 6, 13, Movie

"A Boy Named Charlie Brown" 8,10; Wash ington

Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.

Week In Review 20.33.
8:30-Chlco &amp; the Man 3,4, 15;

Wall Street Week 20,33
9 DO-Rockford Files 3,4,15. Movie "The Love Boat"
11 seems !me aga1n . I've also
had a dull pam m my back,
but the pam 1s not severe at
all Should I go to the doctor
and find out if I do have a
kidney infection again or is 1!
nothmg to worry about? I'm
16 years old.
DEAR READER - The on·
ly way a urmary tract infection can be diagnosed IS by
examming a specimen of
urme. Yes, you should go see
your doctor..
Pyhtis means infecllon of
the funnel shaped collecbng
area of the kidney where the
urme collects to pass through
the long tube (ureter) to the
bladder. Obstruction of the
ureter allows urine to collect
in the funnel shaped area and
an infection may follow.
Pressure on the ureter tube
may occur durmg pregnancy
or from a number or
anatollllcal factors. If you
happen to have a minor
change m your anatomy you
may be suscepllble to infections of the kidney and may
need penod1c treatment.

Cloudy urme alone does not
mean an 1nfecllon. You may
have
orthostatic
albummuria. What os that ?
Albumin is one of your
naturally occurrmg blood
proteins and we all lose a
small amount m the urme
each day. Increased loss IS
called albuminuna (albUllllfi
m the urme ). In some other·
Wise healthy people when
they are standing upright (orthostatic posit10n) there is an
increased leakage of albumm
into the urme so the condibon
1s called orthostatiC
albummuria.
That would lit w1th your
observabon that your urme 1s
cloudy at night before you go
to bed but IS clear m the mor·
ning after you have been Jymg down all mght
A mild dull pain may be
associated wtth a dropped
kidney orlan mfecbon An infection may also mcrease the
leakage of albumon .
Phosphat es and other
chem1cals can also make
your urme cloudy

Gaul's Market, Bob Haggerty
of H and R. Frrestone, Larry
Arthur of the Jones Boys
Store, a second year certificate; Jack Ambrose of the
Kroger Co., Sonny McClure of
McClure's Dairy Isle , a
seco nd year certificate;
Randy Hunt, director of the
Me1gs Band, Boll Childs of
Me1gs
Plaza,
Ken
McLaughlin of Nelson's
Drug Store, Mrs. Harold
Newell of Newell's Sunoco
Station , Larry Powell of
Powell's Super Valu, Jim
Ridenour of Ridenour's TV
and Appliances, second year
certificate; Jay Hill of Radio
WMPO, second year certificate ; Willard Durst,
Standard Oil Co .. Mrs. Mary
Lou Swisher, Swisher's Dairy
Land, and John Green of
Twin City Gateway, a second
year certificate.
Following dinner, students
presented John Balettnar,
distributive
education

Appt€ciation is
shown employers

5 311--Adam-12 4; News 6: Family Affair 8, Elec. Co
20,33
6 QO-News 3.M.8, 10.13.15, ABC News 6, Zoom 20,33
6 311--NBC News 3,4, 15, ABC News 13, Andy Gnfflth 6,
CBS News 8, 10; Vegetable Soup 20; VIlla Alegre 33
7 oo-Truth or Cons 3, To Tell the Truth 4; Liar's Club
6; $128,000 Quest1on B. News 10; To Tell the Truth

~Sanford &amp;

:;:~;,

~;;:~
::;~:

FRIDAY, APRIL 29, 1977
5 oo-Big Valley 3; My Three Sons 4, Brady Bunch 8,
Mister Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33. Emergency

8

·:-:·.~

sf:::

Un lverstty Report 33.

Unneeded laxatives

~:;:;:.
:·:&lt;?

~:~~

Principal James Diehl was
introduced by Mark Gilkey,
D.E.C A. president, master
of ceremomes, who also
welcomed employes, and
Carl Carmichael repeated the
D.E.C.A. Creed.
Certif•cates of appreciati~n
went to Roger Hysell of the
Farmers Bank and Savmgs
Co , a second year certificate , Mrs. D1ck Gaul of

coordmator, an engraved

plaque in appreciation of h1s
work
Distributive education
students are Becky Bego, Jim
Bmg, Gene Blankenship,
Bruce Bumgardner, Carl
Carmichael, Mary Sue Durst,
John Evans, Mark Gilkey,
Mark Haggerty, Mark
Lawson, Bob McClure, Paul
Reed, Jesse Schmucker,
Rosemary Snowden, Tim '
Smith, Tim Thomas, Diana
Wheeler, Dan W1lland Cheryl
Woods.
ASK TOWED
A marriage license was
Issued to Harry Warren
Pickens, Sr., 52, Racme, and

Gustava May Johnson, 56,
Racine.

Television Log

7

·-:~:;:

a

~.:;s

13; My Three Sons 15, Ohio Journal 20 ; Marshall

I

~:-:::.

ar~

&gt;::li

Patrol probes
two accidents
was
Slight
dama ge
reported followmg a three car
acc1dent Thursday at 6·54
p.m . on M1ll Creek Road m
Gallia County.
Accordmg to the Gallia·
Meigs Post, St~te Highway
Patrol, vehicles driven by
Frederick C Sands, 41, Rt. 1,
Gallipolis; Carol A. Stidham,
17, Gallipohs and James F.
G1bson, 56, Pomeroy, were
travelmg south when G1bson
stopped his vehicle in the
roadway and began hacking.
Stidham, observing G1bson
backmg, also backed and
struck the Sands auto G1bson

&gt;::::..

~

6,13; Lowell Thomas Remembers 20, Woman
Alive! 33
9:»--Movle "Summer of -42" e.10; The Way If Was 20.

10 IIC}--Qulncy 3,4,1 5; News 20; Firing Line 33
10 311--Lock. Stock &amp; Barrel 20

11 00--.News 3,4,6,8,10, 13, 15, Monty1 Python's Flying

Circus 20; Black PersJll'ctlve on the News 33 .
11 311--Johnny Ca•son 3,4,15; Borella 6,13, NBA Play.
011 e, 10; ABC News 33.
12 oo-Janakl 33
12 411--Mod Squad 6; Ironside 13
1 DO-Midnight Special 3,4,15
1:411--News 13
2 30-News 3
3 DO-Movie "Twelve O'clock High" 3.
5 oo-Movle "One In a Million" 3.
SATURDAY, APRlL30, 1917
6 oo-Sunrlse Semester 10.

6 311--Matlers of Life 6, Treehouse Club 10, Kentucky
Afield 13
.,
7 DO-Saturday Reoort 3, Children's Theatre 4. Eddie
Saunders 6; Treehouse Club 8, U S Farm Report

10. Gilligan 13
7 3D-Bullwtnkle 3, World of Survival 4, Way Out

Games e; Call It Macaroni 10; Oddball Couple 13,
Sesame St 20.
e·oo-Woody Woodpecker 3.4.15; Tom &amp; Jerry 6, 13;
Sylvester &amp; Tweety 8,10.
8 311--Pink Panther 3,4, 15; Jabber law 6.13. Clue Club
10, Mister Rogers 20
9 oo-Scooby-Doo, Oynomutt 6,13; Bugs Bunny-Road
RunnerS; Bugs Bunny &amp; Friends 10, Sesame St. 20
10 ·!10-Speed Buggy 3,-1,15, Tarzan e,10; Once Upon A
Classic 20
10 Jo-Monstr

10·311--Monster Squad 3,4,1 5, Kroll! Supershow 6,13,

Batman e. 10; Zoom 20
11 00-Space Ghosts, Frankenstein , J r 3, 4, lS ;
Shazam ISIS a. 10; Consumer Survival Kit 20
11 3Q-Big John , Little John 3.4,15. Superfrlends 13;

Big Blue Marble 6, Best of ErnteKovacs 20
12 OQ-Land of the Lost 3,15, Short Story Special 6;
Movie "Ghost Valley" 4, Action News for Kids 13;
Crockett's VIctory Garden 20 .

12 3Q-Kids from C.A P.E.R 3,15; American Bandstand 13, Soul Train 6, Ark II e; Gomer Pyle,
USMC 10
1 OQ-Ara 's Sports World 3, Movie " Brothers In fhe
Saddle" 4, Children's Film Festival e; Movie
" Goodbye Charlie" 10; Wrestling 15, Infinity
Factory 33

1 3Q-Greatest Sports Legends 3; Point of View 6;
Hogan's Heroes 13, Zoom 33
3,4,15 ; Movie "Tower of Terror" 6,
Racers 8, Movie " Thunder Alley" 13; Nova 33.

2:06-Gandstand

2 15-Baseball 3,4,15
·
2 3Q-Movle "Impact" e.
3:0Q-New Amer ican Glass 33
3 311--Tennis 6,13; Call It Macaroni 10; Book Beat 33.
4:0Q-Urban League 10, Woman 33 .
4 3()-{)utdoors with Ken Callaway 8, Sports Spec
tacular 10, Anyone for Tennyson? 33.

5 oo-Star Trek 3, Wide World of Sports 6, 13, Marcus
Welby, M 0. 4. Golf 15, ; Calch-33 33
5 JG--Cansumer Experience 33.
6 oo-News 3.4.10, Lawrence Welk e.
6 3Q-NBC News 3,4,15, News 6; CBS News 10; Lilias
Yoga &amp; You 33
7:00-Music Hall America 3; Lawrence Welk 4,15, Hee

Haw 6,e, S128.000 Question 10; American Heritage
13, World War I 33
7·3o-Oolly 10; In Search of 13; Best of Ernie Kovacs
33.
e OQ-Movle " Alroort 1975" 3,4,15; Blanksy's Beauties
6, 13, Mary Tyler Moore 8,10: Fall of Eagles 33
e 311--Fish 6.13 ; Bob Newhart 8,10
9 oo-Starsky &amp; Hutch 6,13; All In The Family e,10;
Leonard Bernstein 33
9 3Q-AII's Fair 8,10
10·0Q-Movle "Mysteries from Beyond Earth" 3.4,15.
Future Cop 6, 13, Carol aurnelt 8.10; Soundstage 33.
11 oo-Wrestling 4, News 8, 10,13,6; Monty Python's
Flying Circus 33
II 15-ABC News 6
11 :311--Movle " Bailie of the Worlds" 6; News 3,4,15;
Boxing e, Mary Hartman 10; Movie " Wild on the
Beach " 13; Janakl 33
11.45-Fi lm 15
12: oo-Mary Hortman 3, TVTV Show 4.15. Movie "The
Hrotherhoad" 10.

1 OQ-Movle "Monster Zero" 13
1. 3Q-Sammy &amp; Co 6.
2 OG-News 3
2·30-Movle " Panic In the Streets" 3; ABC News 13
4 OQ-Movle "Sleepers West" 3.
5 3o-Movle "Spring Tonic" 3

:::::::

By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sports Editor

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

NEW YORK (UP!) - George Stembrenner, tht: man w•th all
the horses in the American League, also has one m the
Kentucky Derby that cost him only a fra chon of what Regg.e
Jackson did and could w1nd up having a better year.
~e horse's name is Steve's Friend and the Yankee owner
paid only $26,000 for him a year ago. Steinbrenner bad hliD
shipped from California to Churchill Downs Thursday woth the
mtention of running him in the Derby next week.
Can he beat Seattle Slew, though•
"He has as good a chance .as anyone," says the Yankees'
boss about his brown Florida-bred bargam, a strong fmisher
who won the $140,000 Hollywood Derby two weeks ago. "Seattle
Slew is a great horse and well-tramed, but whether he's a
super horse remains to be determmed."
Although he has ofllc•ally nominated Steve's Friend for the
Derby and had him sent to Churchill Downs for the express
purpose of r unnmg in next Saturday's 81g One there,
Stembrenner still os wa1tmg to see what happens
"Chances are pretty good he'll run in the Derbv but his
trainer, John Fulton, and I have made up our minds
we're not going to run him in one of those 'cavalry charges'
where the held is so b1g," says Stembrenner.
"A few years ago, when they had a very large held for the
Derby, a couple of horses were injured and never ra n again.
F11p Sal was one of them. "
Stembrenner wa s talking about the 1974 Derby won by
caMonade. There were 290 Derby nominees that year,largest
ever, and even after the bulk of them were withdrawn, the 23
horses who actually started constituted the largest field m
history.
Cannonade was roughed up a b1t at the start and came all the
way from 12th place to wm. Fhp Sal was 20th after they broke
from the gate, wentlame at the thre~uartersmark, pulled up
and never competed anymore after that.
"I'm a neophyte m this industry, shll an apprentice,' ' says
Steinbrenner, who has been m horse racmg only SIX years,
"and I'm certainly not trying to run theor business, but l think
the owners bave to exerciSe more doscrehon tban they have in
the past regardmg the number of entroes in the Derby.
"The IndianapoliS Speedway doesn't let every car m the 500.
They make them qualify. Maybe the Derby should be
restricted to horses who have won a Grade I Stakes' event or at
least placed m it. There have been other years I bad pretty
good horses and 11 would 've been a thrill to run them in the
Derby, but I didn't think 11 was farr to the oth~r owners who
bad genumely fine contenders. When you get a held of, say, 18
horses, I call that a 'cavalry charge.' I don't want my horse to
be any part of that I think too much of him "
For years, there have been proposals to limit the entroes m
the Derby. Two years ago, the field was limited to 20 w1th the
condibon that if more than that number did pass through the
entry box, preference would be given to the 20 horses who bad
accumulated the highest lifetlffie earnmgs up to then. A f1eld of
15 is more than enough, says Steinbrenner, who 1sn't sure
which he'd like to win more, a Kentucky Derby or a World
Series.
Only one man, John Galbreath, ever has won both .
Chateaugay prov1ded him w1th his f~rst Derby victory m 1963,
Proud Clarion w1th his second four years later and four years
after that h1s Pittsburgh Pirates won the Worl&lt;\ Series
"He's a great person and a great sportsman," Steinbrenner
says of the Darby Dan Stables' owner, whose San Hedron will
nm m this year's Derby "He has done a lot for baseball and
for horse racmg. They Ialli about Secretanat, but for my
money , I ihmk John Galbreath had a horse, Graustark, who
could've been greater yet. That's only my op1ruon. Graustark
never won the Derby, the Preakness or the Belmont but he was
the best running horse I ever saw. He W3:! mjured in the Blue
Grass and that was it."

Rose has eye on Frisch mark
RICK VAN SANT
CINCINNATI (UP!)
Pete Rose's relentless pursUit
ki F 'sch
t
of
con mues
tomFran
t e r1
gh b mid-season the
And ~
, .
•
•
Cincmnati Reds h~el~ hot
sho\fogur;:: to ';:t~an pass
the egen ry ro 1·
What• Rose 1s bein
a ter the
os
1
FrlSChrodsc a'!" to t h ~-tt
most
p · uct1ve sm
c ••• er
·
1 b ball
m the history o ase ht'
Rose, who enters_tomg s
ga!"e here agamst the
Ch•cago Cubs with a 14-i:pedame
hitting streak, has rap
out
2,783 hits so far in a major
league career spannmg 15

Tigers edge Reds, 6 to 4
DETROIT (UP!) - Jason
Thompson's one-&lt;Jut home
run m the mnth innmg
Thursday night provided the
wmmng margin for the
Tigers m Detroit's 6-4 victory
over the Cincmnall Reds m
the annual sandlot benefit
exhlbihon game.
The Reds jumped to a 2-(t
lead on solo home runs in the
second and fourth liiiimgs by
Bob Baoley and Johnny
Bench, but Steve Kemp's two·
run shot in the fourth t1ed the

game for t he Tigers.
DetrOit edged ahead in the
fifth on a run-scoring single
by Rusty Staub, but a triple
by Ray Kn1ght and doubles by
Ed Armbrister and John
Summers pushed the Reds on
top m the s1xth.
Kemp's sacrifice fly m the
seventh inn~ng tted the score
agam and set the stage for
Thompson's game-winnmg
clout before 28,131 fans.
Steve Grill• gave up SIX hits
to take the Win for the Tigers.

UC gets two more cagers
- CINCINNATI (UP!) University of Cmcmnah
football coach Ralph Staub
announced Thursday that
high school stars Dwight
Williams of Cleveland and
Ken Robinson of Houston,
Tex., have signed letters of
intent to enroll at UC th1s fall
Williams, a 6-foot, 178·
pound defens1ve back and
punt returner, played at

Cleveland St. Joseph's High
School.
RobUISOn, a &amp;-2, 1911-pound
linebacker and tight end .
graduated in 1974 from
carver H1gh School m
Houston , but only now
decided to attend college.
Robinson's brother, Heard,
currently is a starting strong
safety for the Bearcats

on
CIPpBI clllniag Pl•lal
(A6 dtl'ibJOili'BBifpl'iCBB)
___
__
_
.cloooltll-·
_____
........,..,...__
..... ··----·-..........
..,

RIIIT OUil 1111111! II VAC- , _ - ,.,.to,

• _ _ .... oll•rt. . . - - -

~.··-

=;:»-·
ODOR-fRIEI

CWIS CMPm CWIIO . .
IIIPI TMIM CLIAitU LIJIIIII
AeMI'IIIIII.IIM VA_C for IMd.,-youwentlOQft~rcerpM ..etlv dNn'

BAUM TRUE VALUE
985-3301

CHESTER, 0.

8y

years
h
nded
t 2,880
FrlSC pou
ou
hits in h•s career, so · Rose
needs 1·ust 98 more hits to
pass Frankie and move up a
few more notches on the alltime hit hst.
Rose already is the sport's
28th leading hitter and m
about a month will Jump mto
27th place ahead of George
Sisler's 2 812
·
Already• ahead
of the hkes
of Ted Williams
J oe
Medwlck, Mickey Mantle,
Joe Cronm Joe DiMllgglo
and Bill Te~ry in h•ts Rose
'
also will pass names like Mel
Ott Babe Ruth and Ro~ers
·

H b 1 1 th
seasons Pete ·easoly could
orns y a er os season
ha
· ·
' holdthatrecordbyhimselfat
rrmg InJUry.
•
the end of next ear
Although Ty Cobbs almost
Y
unbelievable maJ'or league
Earher this season Rose
hot record of 4,191 appears II ed RIP Coil ms • N au·ona1
llTipoSSlble for the 36-year old League record of 135 home
Rose•to match , Pete ins•sts he runs by a switch-lt•tter.
does have a crack at the
Rose says he would hke to
National League record of own Vlftually every Reds'
h1ttmg record before he
3·630 held by Stan Mus•al
, d WI·th hts curren t
To catch "Stan the Man", rct1res an
Hose would have to keep hos 14i:ame hlthng streak he
200 hits a season pace aomg once .agam IS worki ng on a
through his 40th blrlhd.;'y
tncky mark that so far has
Rose sets 200 hits as .his eluded hun.
goal each season and If he
The club record for
reaches II this year he and consecullve games woth a hit
'
25 bar d b Vada Pmson
Cobb w11l be the only players os s e Y
ever to pile up mne ~It and Ed Roush. Rose once

reached 23 The maJor Burris and Sunday the Reds '
. Fr dd N
• t
league 'sastomshmgrecordos
e 1e ormangoesaga1ns
DtMaggio's :;s
Rkk Reuschel
. .
u·
~~~..;;.-;;:=:;::::::;::;;;:;::""
1
Pete also WI be p aymg m
h IS 508\h s t ra•_
·g ht game,
~roday noght and If he doesn t
m1ss a game the .rest of the
season, he woll tie the club
re&lt;;ord of 652 consecutive
games on the final game of
Eat a Honda CB750 ·
th e sea~n on Oct 2. F rank.
for lunch!
McCormock set the Reds
\1 ()\ t' • ~vt' t'' Tlw h olltls t
re•ord
from 1938 •42 The
'
th l ll ).( on tfll' H JUd tiJda \'
National League mark IS
h:t.r.; arn\'t'CJ 1 Stlol:.' th(' powc·r
t,!l7gamesby Billy Wolloams
ful l_,. rfnrtl1l'f torl:w
1\i\ Vi\;;AKl 6'&gt;0 ·I
and the maJor teague record
IS rronman Lou Gehrog" s
2 130
•
•.
Rose s hlltmg has helped
the Reds bounce back from a
ternble start. Cincy started
th1s week woth a feeble 4-10
record, but a 23-run outburst
Monday night m Atlanta
KZ650
started a current three-game
$1895 •
win streak.
B9.,.•tl ro "';J &lt;•ui &amp;Cih&lt;ll!&lt; ~ ~UQijii!S ieO
'"' II" , e • O 1t1•&lt;&gt;g t "!!Ihi do ~I ., , 1•&lt;1!1&gt;
Idle Thursday, the Reds
1
1 i&gt;ol &gt;!!I &lt;
plan to pot~h Woodoe Fryman
''"'' II • "lh• "(
J&amp;R SPORT SHOP
aga onst Chocago's B11l
ua e M1ln st
Bnnham to open a threePomeroy, Ohio
sertes
tomght.
while Dave Fre1sleben was game
.J'l ·:ne4
Saturday mght, ancy's Jack
the loser
'771\awasa~i
Billmgham 1s to oppose Ray
Astros 3, Giants l:
Bob Watson 's twoar un
homer was the big blow for
the Astros, who beat the
Goants behind the combmed
f!Ve-ltit pitching of Joaquin
Andujar, Joe Samboto and
Ken Forsch. Walson 's homer
came after an error by newly
acqmred shortstop Tim Foh,
who played his f~rst game for
the G1ants John Montefusco
was tagged for three runs and
SIX hots 1n six mnings and lost
his second game for the
Ga1tns.

Indians snap losing spell,
Dodgers beat Padres again
By FRED DOWN
UPI Sports Writer
Frank Robmson figur ed
things couldn't get craz1er, so
he let the "inmates" run the
••asylwn'' - the Cleveland
!nd1an ballclub, of course,
which seemed bent on finding
new ways to lose games.
"I JUst called in the starting
nine players and told them to
line up and tell me where they
wanted to bat," explained
Robmson Thursday mght,
after the Ind1ans snapped
their losing streak With a 4-3
VIctory over the Toronto Blue
Jays. "It's not the kind of
thmg you make a habit of, but
1! achieved its purpose."
Buddy Bell, who batted
first, had three hits, scored
tWice and drove in two runs to
spark the Cleveland attack
which brought AI Fitzmorris
his first wm of the year.
Frank Duffy, who elevated
himself from No. 9 to No 2,
also contnbuted to the
VIctory with a smgle and
executed two ~acrifoce bunts

Jesse Jefferson, who was
tagged for four runs and s•x
hits in 2 1-3 innmgs, suffered
his first Joas for the Blue
Jays.
The Seattle Manners
defeated the Mmnesota
Twins, 4-3, m the only other
scheduled Amencan League
game, while the Los Angeles
Dodgers downed the San
Diego Padres, 7-:i, and the
Houston Astros topped thf
San Francisco G•ants, 3-t, m
the only Nabona! League
games
Mariners 4, Twins 3:
Jose Baez' two-run smgle m
the sixth mning gave the
Marmers a 3-1 lead and he
smgled and eventually scored
the wmn1ng run m the e1ghth
on Steve Braun's single
Heheve r John Montague
went five mnmgs to wm his
second game wh1le Dave
Goltz suffered hiS second loss
for the Twms.
Dodgers 7, Padres 5:
Rkk Monday capped a SIXrun rally m the th1rd mmng

w1th a two-rWl homer, whiCh

enabled the Dodgers to
recover from a 4-() deficit and
wm their siXth straight game.
Steve Garvey delivered a
game-tying, two-run double
before Monday delivered hos
homer
Burt
Hootton
rece1ved credit for the win
woth the rehef help of Stan
Wall and M1ke Garman ,

m the " fun game "

Major
League

STANDINGS

Major League Standtngs

By Untted Pres s. lnternattonal
National Leagu e

East
W

Pet

L

9

6

LOUI S

lQ

Montreal

a

1
6
7
9
9

Pittsburgh
Sf

Chicago
New York
Philadelphia

7
6
5
Wes t
W L

Lo s Angeles

GB

600 -

588 571 .

500
400

1/'J
1112

357

3
3117

Pel

GB

15

3 8:13

San Franctsco

B

Atlanta

8 10

471
AAA
10 44.4
10 .41 2
13 381
Results
9

H ouston
8
Ct nctnnatt
1
Sa n O tego
8
Thursday ' S
Houston J San Franc tsco

61/ 1

7
7
7112
8 1h

1

Los Angeles 1 San D•ego ,5

Today 's Probable P1tche.-s
( All T1mes EDT I
Chtcago (Bonh a m 2 l l a t
Cmcmn att (Fry man 1 2), 8 05
pm
Houston ( Ko m eczny l Ol at
Ptttsburgh ( Reu ss 0 ?l. 8 OS
pm
Atlanta (M esser smtth 2 l) at
51 Lou 1S ( For sch 3 ll , 8 35
pm
New York {Matla.ck 0 2) at
San Otego (Sawyer 1 1), 10 P m
Montreal !StanM use 1 2) al
Los Ange l es (John 0 1l. 10 30
pm
Philadelphia ( L erch 2 J j at
San Franc tsco ( Barr 3 11 10 JS
pm
Saturday's Games
Houston at P1tf Sburgh
Phil adelphta a t San Fran CISCO
Cl'm: ago at Cmctnnatl , n tght
At lanta at S f LOU IS n1ght
Montreal a t Los A ng eles. n•gt1t
New Yor k at San D iego . n1ght

Results, line scores
Ma1or League Baseball Results (8), Burgme ter (9 ), Johnson (9)
and Wvnegar WP- Montague
By United Press International
Nattonal League
(2 2) LP - Gottz (0 2)
Houston
020 OHl OOD- 3 10 1
San Fran
000 000 100- 1 52 Toronto
100 002 000- 3 7 3
103 000 OOx- 4 8 1
AnduJar . Sambtto (9), Forsch Cleveland
Jefferson , Johnson (3) and
(9) and Herr ma nn , Montefusco,
Williams ( 7) , Curfts (9) and Asl'1by , F1lzmorns, Wa11s (6 )
WP- F•Izmorrts
Sadek WP - Andu1ar (2 1J LP and Kenda ll
- Montefusco (2 2l HR - Hous
( 1 21 L P - Jefferson (0 1J
ton , Watso n (1)
Los Ang el es 006 OHl 000- 7 9 2
San O tego
310 000 Ol D- 5 9 0
Hooton , Wall { 8 ). Garman (9)
and Oates. Fre ls leben . Metzger
( 4) , Tomlin ( 7) , Bernal (9) qnd
Roberts WP- Hooten (2 1) LP
:..:.fre~n "'"llf A)
HRS- L OS
Ange les. Monday (3) , Garvey
(6 ) san D1 ego, Hendn ck (3)
Amerrcan League
Se aTtl e
010 002 010- A 14 1
Minnesota
100 000 020- 3 6 1
M acCorm ac k , Montague (5)
and St1 nson , Goltz, Schuel er

NHL playoffs

NBA playoffs
NBA Playofls
By Umted Press International
Eastern Conference
Semifinal Round
(Best of Severt)
Ph•ladelphta vs Boston
( Philadelphta leads, 3 :Zl
Apr 17- Bos ton 113 Ph lla 111
Apr 20- Phila 113 Boston 101
Apr 22 ~ Phlla 109 Boston 100
Apr 24 - Boston 12A Phtl a ll9
Apr 27- Phlla 110 Boston 9'1
Apr 29- Phlla a t Boston
x May \- Bo ston at Ph tla
Houston vs Washtngton
(Sertes t1ed , 2-2 1
Apr 19- Wash 111 Hous 101
Apr 21- Hous 124 wash l 18 ot
Apr 24- Wa sh 93 Houston 90
Apr 26-Hous ton 107 Wa sh 103
Apr ~ -Wa s h at Houston
May 1- Houston a t Wa sh
)( May 4- Wash at Hou ston
Western Conference
Sem•f•nal Round
(Be sf of Seven)
Los Angeles vs . Golden State
{ Sertes t1ed , 2-2)
Apr 2D-LA 115 Golden Sf 106
Apr 22- LA 95 Golden St 86
Apr 24- Go lden St 109 LA lOS
Apr 26-00 id en St 114 LA 103
Apr 29 ~ Golden St at LA
May I - LA at Golden St
x May 4- Golden St at Los Ang

Leaders

Ma 1or L ea gue Lead er s
By Un1ted Press l nternattonal
...
BattHl9
(based on 35 131 bat s)
N altonal League
G AB R H Pet
Cey , LA
18 67 17 30 4118
S1 mmns St L 17 62 14 26 419
Parker , Ptt
15 62 14 24 387
Mathews At! 18 68 13 26 382
Smrth , LA
l6 60 \'f 22 J67
Yeager, L A
16 53 11 19 358
Trdlo, Cht
14 ~6 7 16 348
Evans. SF
16 55 10 19 3A5
Robnsn , P1 l
\.4 41
9 14 )41
Cash . Mil
14 59 10 20 339
Am encan L f!a gu e
GAB R H Pet
Sm 1lh Ba it
10 36 7 17 472
Velez , Tor
15 45
9 20 444
McRae KC
17 72 15 29 403
Smg lton , Bal 15 50 ~ 20 400
Cubbge , Mtn 18 67 13 25 373
Ess1an CtH
13 J5
8 13 371
Burl son. Bos 16 68 11 25 368
Washngln TJC 11 41
'J 15 ]66
Page Oak
19 74 \6 '27 J65
May. Del
15 52
4 19 365
Hom e Ru ns
Nat•onal L ea gue Cey LA 8 1
Burroughs All and Ga r vey, LA
6, Ca rt er and Valen tm e, Mtl 5
Amencan Leagu e .Z 1sk Ch1
1 Baylor Cal , Soder holm, Ch1
Har r ah lex , Aul! and Velez,
To r 5
Runs Salted In
Nattonal L~ague Cey, LA 27
Ga rv ey LA 21, Burroughs, At I
and T enace, SD 19 S1mmons.
St L 18
Am en can L. eague • Rud1 , Ca l
26 , Allen , Oak ~0 Z1s k, Ch 1 19,
Page Oak 18 . Aull and Ve lez.
Tor 17
Stolen Ba ses
Nattonal League Lopes. , LA
12, Cabel l Hou 9, Moreno ()nd
Ta ver as Ptll Q ltve players
lred w1th 5
Am encan L eag ue Remy , Cal
10. Patek. KC end Ltnlz , Oak
North Oak 7 Bond s Ca l.
Nor ns. Clev. H1sle Mmn and
Scott Oak 6
F'•tchmg
Most V1ctortes
Natwnal L eague D enny St L
5o , Hough , Rau Rhoden and
Su tton , LA and Seaver, NY 3 0
For sch , Sl L and Barr SF 3 1
Ruthven All 3 'J
Ame rica n Leagu e
Tanana.
Cal. Knapp , Ch1, Castro, M1l,
Johnson and Zahn . Mrnn and
Ga r v•.n T or 3 0 Palmer , Bait.
Ruhle . Det , Colborn , KC and
Torre-z. Oak 3 1, Ryan, Ca l J 2
Earned Run A\'erag e
( based on 18 tnnmg s p•tchecJ J
Nattonal L eag ue Sutton LA
and Sh irl ey, SD 1 09 . Rogers,
Mtl I 25 , Le r ch, Phil 1 57
Sea ver NY 1 69
Amencan League . Palm er ,
Bai t 0 73 , Travers Mil 1 tll
E i lts. Oa k , Ftgueroa NY and
Bl y leven , Tex 1 80
Stnkeouts
Nat1ona1 L eagu e Montefusco ,
SF 33 , Rogers, Mtl 29 Sh 1rl cy,
SO 28
Racha r d ,
Hou
26,
RuT h ven All and N orman C1n

Amen ca n L eague
Tanana,
Ca l 39 . Ryan , Cal 35. Bly leven ,
Tex J3 , Palmer
Bait 24,
Eckersley , Clev 23

~~~ ~• 1!, Prll~~"h,&lt;' tl
IWOII(II!

ALEX KARRAS
says . . .

"IT CUTS THE TUFF STUFF
TWICE AS FAST"
Sp1nlr1m 's New twtn Outck-Lok c utttng
ltnes' g1ve Double Streng th
Double
Act•on Fe&lt;t lures metallic dual V2 c ul!lng
head'
plas11 CI 7ed pre cut re sm ltnes :t4
H P heavy duty motor na s power t o spare
Untque new llltertng sys tem

FREE BONUS
(w1th pw chase)

100
Patent

Pcnmng

s.

25
NHL. Playoffs
By Un•ted Press International
Semtfmal s
( Be$1 of Seven)
Montreal vs . NY Islanders
(Montreal l ea ds, 2 1l
A pr'23- Mtl 4 NY lsl n drs 3
Apr 26- Mtl 3 NY l slndrs 0
Apr 28- NY lsl ndrs 5 Mtl 3
Apr 30- Mtl at NY lsl ndrs
)C. M ay J- NY l slndrs at M tl
x May 5- Mtl at N V lslnd rs
x May 7--NY l slnd rs at Mtl

1~

INDOOR
Fl OUTDOOR

EXTENSION CORD.
Heavy duty orange
hne 1250 watt 10
amp 125 volt
16 Gil 3 w1re

$18.95
Value

VALUE &lt;!88 .90
TURNS YOUR LAWN INTO THE MOST GORGEOUS GARDEN YOU EVER HAD
IN A FRACTION OF THE TIME IT USED TO TAKE

399 W Main St.

992-2164
Pomeroy, 0 .
THE STORE WITH "ALL KINDS OF STUFF" - FOR
PETS. STABLE S, LARGE &amp; SMALL ANIMALS, LAWNS
AND GARDENS.

4-PLY WHI

Phtlad E! Iphta vs . Boston
&lt;Boston leads, 3 Ol
Ap r 24- Boston 4 Ph lla 3 of
Apr 26- Ba ston 's Phtl a 4, 2ots'
Apr 28- Boston 2 Phila I
May 1- Phda at Boston
x May 3- Boston at Phtla
x-May 5- Phtla at Bost on
K May B~ Boston at Ph •Ia
x-if necessary

for

$

Sizes A78 · 13.
678 -13. C78 -14
Plus 51 72 oo• 2 01
F E T per tor e and
4 nlcl tores
"A'' ::-iiz e
5-rih d esign.

DELUXE CHAMPION POLYESTER CORD
WHA playoffs
WHA Playoffs

By Untied Press tnternatumal
Eastern DI VIS IOn
F•nal Round
( Best of Se\len )
Qu ebec vs. Indianapolis
( Quebec leads. 3·0)
Apr 23 - Quebec 3 ln dpls 1
Apr 25- Quebec 8 lndp ls 3
Apr 28- 0ue 6 l ndp ls 5, ot
Apr 30 Quebec at lndpl s
)(May 2-- lndpls at Quebec
)(M a y ()- Quebec at lndpl s
K Mdy B~ lndpl s at Quebec

Western Ot\: ts•on
Fanal Round
( Best ol Seven)
Houston vs Wtnn1peg
Denver vs. Portland
- (Senes t1ed, 1·11
(Portland leads, 3- 1)
Apr 26- Wlnn lpg 4 Hous 3. ot
Apr 2Q-Po rtlnd 101 Den vr 100
Apr 28- Hous 7 Wmn tpeg 2
Apr ?2- Denvr 121 Portlnd 110
Apr •l 30- Hous at Wmn 1peg
Apr 24 ~ Portlnd 110 Den v f" 106
May 1- Hous at Wmntpeg
Apr 26-Portlnd 105 Oenvr 96
x Mav 3- W tnn,peg a t Hous
x May 1- Portlnd at Denv r
(6th &amp; 7th game dates as vet x May 5- Hous at Wmntpeg
x May 8- W1 nn!peg a! Hous
una\'ailablel
x- H nece ss ary
x-if necessary

Sizes D78 14,
E78 ·14. F78 ·14

S1zes G78 14 . 15,
H7B -14. 15

S1ze L78 15

4for

4for

4for
$

$
Pl us &gt;2 09 to ' 2 37 FE
per t1re and 4 ol d ttres

T

Plus 2 b3to &gt;2 7 9 FE
pe r ttr~ r~ncl 4 old t1rrs

i

Plus 3 09 F E l pe1
11re en if 4 old t11e s

BLACKWALLS sg LESS PER SET OF 4

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto
Brake Service • Front End Alignment

E. Main
I

�,

4-- The Daily Sentinel , Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday, April29,

Outdoors
United Press International
Using a cane 'pole for game
fish is becoming a lost art.
Some " eJ.perts" look down
at it and opt instead for an
expensive piece of -gear with
a fancy handle and ceramic
eye.
Though it's often the first
rod a youngster uses, as soon
as he is old eoough it is put
away in the garage with the
old bicycle tires and vacuum
cleaner hoses.
But there are many
successful fishermen who!ll
use nothing else.
An elderly couple recenUy
took a good catch of crappie
from a flooded foreSt area
with long cane poles baited
with live minnows .
They said that lowering the
bait this way didn't alarm the
fish . And since the minnow
wasn't battered by casting, it

for very long, " he explained.
~&gt;So I use a cane pOle with as
thick a base as r can rmd, tie
on heavy line and a large
spinner and start trolling.
Then when I hook a muskie, 'I
fight it for as long as I can
and throw the pole in the
water . The fish fights the pole
while I take a rest. Then I go
back and fight him some

more."
Sure, he loses some fish .
But who doesn 't - with any
kind of gear ?
The point is that regardless
of the species you're after,. a
cane pole may be just the
thing . Small lakes with lots of .
overhanging br ush make
good places for bass but even
the best fishermen find it
difficult to cast in such areljs.
A bait presented silenUy with

a cane pole can produce some

1977

the

"We know what we must
do," said Celtic guard Jo Jo
White, most valuable player
in
last
year's
NBA
championship final s. " We
have no choice; we must
win."
While the odds would seem
to favor the 76ers, Boston has
won 12 of its last 13 home
playoff game~ nver the p;1 ~t

track meet May 3rd
The 1977 Mid-Ohio Con- Monday, May 9. Ma lone will
ference track meet will be be the defending champion
held on Tuesday, May 3 and and a tough team to beat.
will be hosted by Malone Chall~nging them will be
College who is once again Walsh and Mount Vernon as
favored to be the champion. well as Ohio Domin ican,
Several of Malone's Pioneers Tiffin, Cedarville, and Urhave already met national bana.
NAJA qualifying standards as
MID-OHIO CONFERENCE
have Rio Grande's niiler
Bernie Tilley and six-miler Team BASEBALL
MOC OVERALL
Archie Mundy as well as
W L WL
6 0 6 0
Cedarville's Brian Ji~llln the M t. Vernon
2 (l
6 6
3-mile. Mount Vernon and Malone
Rio Grande
6 2 12 6
Walsh will round out the Ohio
Dom in ican 5 s 6 6
competition in the five-team Cedar~Jille
2 6 9 6
Tiffin
No Report
meet.
Urbana
· No Report
TENNIS
AVG .
Cedarville College will be Player BATTINGAB
R H Avg
defending champions as they Justice, OD
19 4 9 .473
host the Mid-Ohio Conference Wilson , RG
65 16 28 .43 1
51 17 21 .412
Tennis Tournament this Ralzlalf, C
Joyce. OD
22 5 9 .409
weekend, April 29 and 30. George,
RG
49 13 20 .408
Challenging the Yellow Thomson . M 40 10 16 .400
20
8 .400
Jackets will be the Cavaliers Rice, MV
of Walsh College and the Houston , RG 51 14 20 .397
RG
64 16 25 .391
Pioneers
of
Malone. Malone,
Probick, OD 37 9 14 .378
Cedarville has beaten both of Greetham, C ·53 17 20 .317
these teams 8-1 and 7-2
PITCHING STATS
WL
respectively. Also hoping to
K elly, M
3 0
do well in the tournament will Mark
2 0
Uvenstarger, MV
be Mount Vernon and Rio Jim Stenger, OD
3 I
Grande.
·
·
Ron Floyd, C
2 0
Dave Huesman, RG
3 1
GOLF
Tom Merr itt , OD
2 2
The Mid-Ohio Conference Skip
Johnson , RG
4 1
gold tournament will be held Tim Just ice. M
J I
at Reid Park in Springfield on Randy Cagw in, C
2 3

Falcon catcher about
to erase MAC record
BOWLING GREEN, Ohio baseball draft. "! couldn't
(UP!) - Larry Owen isn't believe it. I really feel proud
ready to challenge the Phila- to know that I've tied a record
delpia Phillies' Mike Sclunidt of a great baseball player. "
Although Owen, a 5-11, 1811for the National ~gue home
pounder
should end the
run title, but the Bowling
season
as
the
MAC's all-time
Green catcher . is about to
homer
champion,
he doesn 't
erase most of Schmidt 's Midconsider
himself
a power
American Conference
hitter
and
is
prouder
of his
slugging rerord&gt;l .
lifetime
batting
average
of
Owen, a senior from New
.344.
Carlisle has blasted 13 home
"I've .hit some big home
runs in 32 games this year,
eclipsing Schmidt's and the runs, including my first
MAC's previous high of 10, grand slam which won us a
and has tied the PhJille star's game against ·Cincinnati last
career mark of 27 with 24 ~k." said Owen, "but it's
my batting average that I'm
games yet to play.
·
''I didn't even realize I Was really proud of.''
Owen hit .246 as a
close to his record, " said
freshman,
,333 as a
Owen, who 'was a 16th round
sophomore,
.359last
year and
selection of the California
stands
at.392
through
the first
Angels in last summer's
21 games this season. .,. .
"Coach (Don) Purvis says
every athlete reaches a peak
in his career imd then levels
BEULAH. RESULTS
off, but my batting average
GROVE CITY, Ohio (UPI ) has improved every year,"
Montgomery Chorus said Owen . I ' m very
slipped past Tridenture by a confident that I can hit any
nose Thw-sday to win the pitcher . I just hope things
(eatw-ed $4,500 race on a keep going the way they are ."
sloppy Beulah Park,
"Larry has continued to
Harold Welch guided the progress ever since he got
\V(nner over the six furlongs here/' said Purvis, "and he 's
in 1:12 I-5. Yankee Woods still on an upward curve. He
came in thlfd .
h;!sn't leveled off ye~. I 'm
; A 7-1 daily double of Kid sure the scouts are aware of
Lightening and Travel Jay that and !'in reasonably
certain he will be able to play
Paid $44.
' The~ trifecta of Waugo- professional ball."
ihante Point, Sooner Put and·
Beachgi'ove Gal was worth
f6'/'I.IO to 63 people.
A crowd of 3,412 bet

Houston series.
· In olher series, Washington
is at Houston and Golden
State is at Los Angeles
tonight, with both matchups
tied two games apiece .
Portland, leading 3-1, next
plays Sunday in Denver.
The closeness of the
Houston-Washington series
can been seen in the
statistics. The Bullets lead in
points, 425-422, while the
Rockets have a slight edge in
rebound ing, 107-ID3. Neither
team has won by more than
10 points, including an
overtime
triumph
by
Houston, and each team has
dropped a game at home.
The Lakers are happy to be
returning home to the Forum,
where they've won, a leaguerecord 39 of 43 games this

year . After ~nning the first
two games of the series at Los
Angeles, they lost the next
two at Ol!kland, where they
haven't won since 1973.
" Golden State played
excellent basketball the last
two games." said Lakers'
Coach Jerry West. " We just
weren't good in Oakland, but
I assure you one thing - we
will be better at home."
Two Laker starters - forward Cazzie Russell and
guard Lucius Allen - and
reserve guard Bo Lamar are
injw-ed, though . Allen, with a
disloca ted toe , is listed as
doubtful for tonight. Russell
has a charley horse and
scored only six points in
game No. 4, while Lamar is
~uffe ring from a br uised
thigh .

Kentucky Derby Festival underway

exciting catches.
wsa more active where it
Im agine the thrill of
lan&lt;jing a large bass or
cOunted.
Before you get the idea that · panfish on such a limber rod .
By BOB WESTON
cane poles are only useful for
Better yet , imagine what
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (UP!)
panfish, there is one elderly the guys back at the dock are
·
Crammed into the next 10
man who uses a cane pole for going to say when you tell
days
of the Kentucky Derby
muskies.
them you caught it qn a cane
Festival
are a Great Balloon
" I'm 78 years old and I pole.
Race,
a
Great Steamboat
can't fight a big fish like that ·
Race, a Mini-Marathon foot
race - and oh yes, a horse
race - all designed to attract

· Mid-Ohio Conference

two seasons. However.
Philadelphia did manage to
break the string a week ago
tonight in Boston with a 109100 triumph and, though the
76ers lost last Sun&lt;iay in
Boston , they did shave a 22point deficil to one late in the
game.
The Celtics must diagno~
and s olve Philadelphia 's
first-period offensive blitz,
which has decided all three
76er victories. Those early
leads put Boston in the
unenviable position of having
to play catchup ball for the
final 30 minutes against such
talented opponents.
The winner of this series,
which wou ld stretch to
Sunday in Philadelphia with a
Boston victory , plays the
survivor of lhr WR shim,rton-

the huinan race. ..
The 27lld Derby Festival,
opening today, will offer a
total of 126 events leading up
to and beyond the 103rd
Kentucky Derby May 7.
Other highlights on the

kaleidosopic schedule Saturday and Sunday.
include :
- The 22lld ann ilal Pegasus
- 11le Derby Festival Ball Parade Thursday , with the
Friday night at which the theme this year of " A Child 's
Festival Queen is crowned. Dream" and actor George
-The Derby Festival Bas- Peppard as honorary grand
ketball Classic featuring high marshal. Col. Harland
school All-Americans Sanders of Kentucky Fried
Chicken fame will serve as
Saturday night.
- A Kentucky Derby of grand marshal.
The festival winds up
Cycling with top amateur
bicycle ra cers competing Sun &lt;lay, May 8, with the
ann ual barbecue for the
Honorable Order of Kentucky
Colonels to be held for the
first time outside th e
Louisville area at historic
Bardstown.
Theprogramforthenext 10
&lt;lays also includes concerts
galore, running the gamut

Bucks still

•
618 pupils On top m
thanked b . Big } 0 play from pop to rock to dixieland
y nesota,
CHICAGO (UP!) - Minboasting a six.game
streak, Wisconsin
Acs UDlt andwinningNorthwestern
play head New league
to head in Big Ten baseball
The local chapter of the
competition this weekend , •
propos·ed
Cancer So,ciety
a nd one of th ein might IS
0

American
recently
s pon sored
a
program at all the Meigs
Elementary Schools called
"Send a Mouse to College," to
which there was a very good
response from all the
students,
parents
a nd
teachers.
The society thanks the 108
at Pomeroy Elementary, 119
at Salisbury Elementary, 80
at Middleport Elementary, 60
at Riverview Elementary, 47
at Chester Elementary, 54 at
Tuppers Plains Elementary,
31 at Rutland Elementary, 40
at Salem Center Elementary,
24 at Bradbury Elementary
18 at Syracuse Elementary,
59 at Racine Elementary, 3.1
at Harrisonville Elementary,
26 ·at Letart Falls Elementary , a nd 8 at Portland
Elementary Schools . .

manage to supplant Ohio
State as the league leader.
The Buckeyes have played
only two games and won both
to hold the top rung and 'this
weekend play only t wo
games, both at Indi a na
Sa tw-day. But should Ohio
State stumble, any one of the
other three might seize the
top spot.
Minnesota holds se.cond
place with a 7-1league record
and Satur&lt;iay plays twice at
Northwestern, in fourth place
with a 4-2 record. Sunday the
Gophers move to Wisconsin ,
in third place at 4-2, for
another doubleheader.
Iowa, the only other team
in the league with as many as
fow- wins, also gets into the
round robin , playing twice at
Wisconsin Saturday and two
at !'lorthwestern Sunday.
Other Saturday games will
be
Michigan at Purdue and
NEW YORK (UP!) - A
Michigan
State at nlinois.
decision will be forthcoming
Sunday
they
switch
from a Manhattan Supreme
opponents,
the
Spartans
at
Court justice by May 10 on
New York City's suit to bar Purdue and Wolverines at
the Jets ' football team from Dlinois.
Minnesota leads the league
playing at the Mea&lt;iowlands
Sports Complex in East in hitting with a .313 average
and ranks second in pitching
Rutherford, N.J.
with
a 1.94 earned run
Justice Harold Baer conaverage.
The Gophers have
tinued a temporary order
five
or
the
league's top hitters
restraining the .· Jets from
and
three
of
the .top pitchers .
playing their fall schedule
Michigan
State's
AI Weston
anywhere else but Shea
led
the
batting
race
with a
Stadium and said he would
.545
mark
and
the
Spartans'
issue a decision between May
Larry Pashnick , though
4 and May 10.
beaten in his only start, had
the best earned run average,
ST . LOUIS (UP!) ~ John 0.00.
Denny, the National League's
earned run average leader
last season and the first
pitcher in the majors to win

MACOMB, 1!1. (UPI ) F'ive midwestern universities
today announced plans to
form a new intercollegiate
athletic conference to be
known as the Mid,Continent
Athletic ASsociation.
The presidents · of Akron,
Eastern Illinois University,
Northern Michigan , Western
Dlinois and Youngstown State
(Ohio) universities signed a
statement · of
intent
We&lt;ines&lt;iay to create the new
association·
Th e signing followed a
meeting of the presidents and
university athletic directors
in Dlicago.
Representatives of the Uni. versity of Northern Iowa and
Wayne
State
(Mich .),
expressed interest in the
conference
but
both
institutions are presently
members
of · other
conferences.
Th e new conferen ce is
expected to . sponsor football
a nd
ba ske tball
championships during the
1978-79 athletic season , with
additional sports to follow.
NCAA Executive Director
Walter Byers, who learned of
the new conference while
attending an NCAA television
committee meeting, said the
new conference "has the
potential of becoming one of
the strongest conferences in
NCAA Division II and should
be a construct! ve influence. in
Division II nationally,"

to country to marching
mlLSic.
Headliners for various concerts and public appekrances
during the festival will
include Jim Nabors; Dolly
Parton and Kermy Rogers,
Lou Rawls, Bob Seger and the
Atlanta Rhyth m Section ,
Wolfman Jack , .and The.
Tommy Dorsey Band.
Celebrities planning to ri&lt;!e
in the P egas us Parade
include Van Johnson , Fess
Parker, and Miss Teenaged
America, Rebecca Ann Reid,
of Dallas, Tex.
Two dozen hot-air balloons
will compete in the "hare and
hound" race Saturday
morning, as the skies over
Louisville erupt in a great
profusion of color.
On Wedne sday, three
sternwheelers renew their
r ivalry in
the Great
Steamboat Race on a 14~nile
Ohio River course here . They
are in order of size: the .Delta
Queen of Cincinnati, the Belle
of Louisville , and the
"mi&lt;iget" of the trio, the Julia
Belle Swain, of Peoria,
The I:knile Mini-Marathon
Mondayisexpectedtodrawa
field of more than 700
runners . Louisville Mayor
Harvey Sloane is a perennial
competitor in this event and
manages to come in among
the first half of finiShers .
The first event on the
festival was the "They're
Off" luncheon today, with .
t e1 e vi s i 0 n
s p0 r t s
commentator Heywood Hale
Broun as the featured
. speaker . William May ,
chairman of the Kentucky
Racing Commission, was to
receive a Silver Horseshoe
Award at the luncheon in
recognition
of
hi s
contributions to the turf
sport.

International league
Uni"ted Press International
W L Pel. GB

Charleston .
Tidewater
Pawtucket

6 2 .750
7 3 ,700
7 4 .636

Richmond
Rochester

6 d .600
A 5 .444
4 7 .364
3 7 .300

Toledo
Columbus .
Syracuse

2 7 .222
Thursda y s Results

DENVER (UP!). - The
Denver Broncos will play the
Atlanta Falcons in Atlanta
Aug . 20 instead of the
Washington Redskins at RFK
stadium Aug . · 18, team
General Manager Fred
Gehrke said Thursday.

19" Color TV

Tidewa ter at

TAGDAYSET
The Middleport Baseball
League will hold tag day
Saturday, April 30 . All
playen In uniform are to be
at city hall at noon.

'

.

Flowers For
All Occasions

Raymond Roach . VIrginia

Roach to Stanley Mack. Jean

~ck,

. . BLUE RIBBON WINNERS In the cultural arts progl'am at Rldne Elementary were
fu-st row, Rebecca Cox, Jeff Evans, Tanuny Wolfe, Ricky Panonl; leCilnd row Harold
Rose, Marty Maynard, Tammy Theiss, Jamey Henaler, tblrd row, Wendy Wolfe, Matthew
Jewell , Teresa Teaford and Rachel Reiber all oecond BJ'IIden.

Federal strip mining law.
advanced in House action

LOWEST

BY DREW

VON BERGEN
WASHINGTON (UP!) - A
federal
strip
mining
reclamation
law, with
· President Carter's blessings
in its favor despite claims it
would cut coal production,
awaited action by the House ·
today.
The House Thur sday
rejecte&lt;i by a 34~ vote a

POSSIBLE PRICE

41h

Now. .

to refer
the bill to ~n ad hoc Energy
Committee create&lt;i to review
the pres ident's energy
package.
The House also defeated an
administration - backed
:amendment which would
have required approval of the
Interior and Agriculture
Department for five years in

FOOD

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New
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Because of the popu larity
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have a ll the New Scofield
study features and King
James Ve rsion fext.

Roast beef,

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MEAT:

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VEGEfABlES:

Baked beans, peas, noodles.

POTATOES:
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Mashed. home fries .

Tossed, slaW, coHaige cheeSe,
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Apple, cherry and peach.
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Carter having his way

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NE_W TERM

Mayor wants wager

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OPEN :
Mon. thru Sat.
8:00 to 5:00p.m.

Parcels, Portland. lebanon .

N

MOM WILL LOVE
A

TERRARIUM
fresh green
plants for
table or
floor standing

PlANTS

HANGING
BASKETS
choose one filled
with bloom or
green foliage.

.•

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

,•

and on prime agricultw-al Democrat, W.R. Poage, Dland, and require the written · Tex., Thursday persuaded
consent of surface owners their committee to · accept a
before any mining is done on COIJ1promise wheat and corn
·
support package . It contained
their land.
According to the U.S. support rates still slighUy
Bw-eau of Mines, 671 million above Carter 's proposals but
tons of coal was produced in sharply below an earlier plan
the United States last year, of which drew a veto threat
which 375 million; or 55.9 per when it was approved by a
cent, was surface mined.
House subcommittee.
Although 34 states have
Administration officials espassed their own surface timated the subcommittee
m i n i n g
1 a w s , plan, ,rejected in favor of the
environmentalists claim they Poage-Foley compromise
are "generally ineffective" in on
a
25-20
vote
achieving reclamation .
Thursday , would have

VALENTINE
GIFT

BLOOMING

CONVENIENT
FREE
PARKING

at a recent meeting of the Parent

order to strip mine prime Teachers Organization. They are
agricultural lands, and
another amendment to shown in the accompanying pictu,res.
finance reclamation with
federal Continental Shelf
leasing proceeds.
Environmentalists
have
been struggling for more tban
six years for enactrnent of the
law,
twice
winnin g
of steamboat Belle of
CINCINNATI (UPI) congressional approval only
Louisville in the 14th annual
Louisville
,
Ky.,
Mayor
to see bills vetoed by former
steamboat
race, May 4.
Harvey Sloan has been asked
President Gerald Ford.
"
If
you
· accept my
by
Cincinnati
Mayor
Jim
Carter, however, has
challenge
and
I win the
strongly endorsed enactrnent Luken to wager $100 on the
outcome of the May 4 wager, I request that my
of a reclamation law.
The House decided to go steamboat race between winnings go to benefit the
ahead with immediate Cincinnati' s Delta Queen and Cincinnati Fine Arts Fund. I
await your reply.' '
consideration of the bill , the Belle of Louisville.
Luken telegrannned Sloan : · The steamboat race on the
despite arguments by several
"On behalf of the people of Ohio River at Louisville is an
Republicans it first should be
baseball
and annual attraction of "Derby
cleared by the en_ergy panel. the .
preceding
the
Rep. Del Claw,o;on, R-Calif, . steamboating capital of tbe Week,"
said the measure was ''incon- world - Cincinnati, Ohio - I . Kentucky Derby on May 7.
sistent" with Carter's call for make and propose a friendly The steamer Julia Belle
increased coal proouctlon to 1 wager of $100 that steamboat Swain of Peoria, Ill., also is
Delta Queen will finish ;iliead entered in the race.
billion tons a year .
The Senate Energy and
Natural
Resources
Committee is also currenUy
writing its version of the
legislation .
·
The House bill would
.
require coal lands disturbed
•
by surface mining - a
process where the topsoil is
scraped off to expose the
proposals down close to levels
mineral for extraction by · By BERNARD BRENNER
sought by Carter, several
bugeshovels-tobereturned
WASHINGTON (UP!) leading members of the
to their approximate original Prospects for a congressional
Agriculture
contours and (eft in a farm policy compromise with Senate
Committee indicated their
condition that would not President Carter have imbarm the environment.
proved sharply now that the panel may also scale down.its
Unlike previous · bills, so- House has retreated on earlier tentative support
called "mountaintop" mining proposed increased crop sup- plans.
.Chairman Thomas .Foley, ·
would be permitted under ports, sources say.
D-Wash., of the House
this legislation. Such mining
In addition to the House
Agriculture Committee said
consists of slicing off the top action Thursday which
he
now sees a ' 'reasonable
of a mountain leaving a brought Agriculture
chance"
Carter - who had
plateau for futw-e use .
Committee crop support
blunUy threatene&lt;i to veto an
Other provisions would set
omnibus farm bill still being
up a fund, f\flanced by a fee right to designate certain developed by the two
on coal production, to reclaim
areas unsuitable for surface committees - will now agree
land previously mined but mining , set up strict criteria to sign the final proouct .
abandoned; give states the for mining on steep slopes
Foley ;md another senior

MAY 8th

5 Years Durabili ty
Chalk Resislilnl
Ouick Drying
Fade-ResistJnt Colors
MildBw Resistant coating
Free of Lead Hazards
·
Veive( Fl at F;n rsh
Soap and Water Clean Up
Easy to Apply
Resis ts Blistering and Peeling

B. Proflltf lo Gordon Proffitt
aka Grodon C. Proffitt,

Cultural arts winners at the Racine

.

CULTURAL ART WINNERS at Racine Elementary
School's first graders receiving blue ribbons were, first
row, 1-&lt;", Annett Gardone, Dion Jones, Donald Riffhi, Jon
TutUe ; second row, Joy Stobart, Dencil Hudson, Brian
Diehl, Sara &amp;se ; third row, Charles Cleland, Tina Sloter,
Lina Curtis, and David McMillian, The program was
spnsored by the PTO.

Record raises
go into basic
steel wages

are sure to
please her.
Azaleas, Murns&gt;
Hydrangeas,

Exclusive
special
edition for members of
the
·
Goebel Collector's
Club
at a special pr ice. This
" M.
I.
Hummel " .
' figurine may be ordered
with your redemption
card, through y,o ur
off icia l representative.
Membership invitations
. now avaiiCibie. •

PITISBURGH (UP! )
One of the largest ~ay
increases ever received by
basic steel industry employes
- more than 33 cents per
':lour ,.-- will take effect
iunday;
the
United
lteelworkers announced.
On that date, a general pay
hike of 2Q.&lt;:ents-per.bour will
take effect under terms of a
new three.year contract, although
the
present
agreement doesn't expire
until July 31.
Also, the 400,000 .USWA
members in basic steel will
receive a cost-of.hving raise
of 13 cents per hour .
In addition, an increment of
four-tenths of a cent per howwill be added to the job class

cost about $6.2 billion a
year compared with the
administration's $2 bill(on
plan. The compromise may
cost about $2.2 billion to $2.5
billion, experts estimated.
Under the compromise,
farmers would get increases
in support target prices for
both wheat and corn in 1977,
probably resulting in $500
million
in
income
supplements . to
wheat
growers. Crop support loan
rates for this year would
remain
at
previously
ahnounced levels.
In 1978 - first year of a
fo ur
year ext ension
· of curre~t farm law
wheat t argets would
,go
to $3
a
bushel
instead of the administration's $2 .90 ·figure
and a subcommittee's $3.20
proposal. Corn targets next ,
year would go to $2.10 a
bushel instead of $2 proposed
by the administration and
· $2.40 by the subcommittee .
Wheat crop s upport loans
for 1978 and beyond would be
boosted 10 cents a bushel to a
minimum of $2.35 a busheL

At GBC, we have a course
to suit your needs by day or
at night. beginning ar
advanced . We are co 291.
educattonal accredited .
Oller
financial
and
Tbreeodlgit number
employmer,t
assistance.
865.
Thed1te for making a star1
Five-digit number
is now.
Our career
rep·resen1atlve, Mr .
53551.
wl'll
be
:::::::::;:;:::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::::=:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;::::::::::: Nicewonder ,
pleased to personally
structure on Sunday.
di5cuss yaur plans, simply
Another increase of 20 call him at 446-4367, 446or 446-4378. Terms
cents per how- is due Aug. 1, 4373
begin on Julie 6th and Sept.

plus 20 more cents in each of
the next two years.
.
In Octo.ber , all employes In
basic steel will get a $ISO
bonus under the USWA's "nostrike" agreement with the
industry.
Current average
steelworker pay, inclu&lt;iing
overtime, : is slightly more
than $8 an how- .

lOth.

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College
St. No. 75-02-04728
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Gallipolis, OH 4~31
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LOTTERY NUMBERS
This week's wlnillng Pot
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numbers:
Threeodlglt number

with farm compromises

WE HAVE SOFT ICE CREAM
Ml LK SH-Ai&lt; ES AND BANANA
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(let wsenti

405 H. 2nd AVE.

Republican~ed effort

Charlesto n at Syracuse.

•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•

RED RIBBON WINNERS -Taking red ribbons for
their art work were, first row,!..-, Dencil Hudson, Richard
Hudson, Sara &amp;se; second row, Marty Cleland, Wayne
Parsons, Law-a Allen, Tammy Holter; third row, Charles
Cleland, Tlnuny Teaford and Kim Stobart, all first
graders.

SECOND GRADERS WINNING red ribbons in the
cultural arts program at Racine Elementary were first
row, 1-&lt;", Tammy Wolfe, Ricky Parsoi!B, Lisa Pape,
Ronald Rice; secood row, Racbel Reiber, Wendy Wolfe
Marty Maynard, Diana Simpson ; third row Tammy
Theiss, Matthew Jewell , Teresa Teaford. The' program
was sponsored by the PrO.

Barton . deed . to Ch11rles
Weekley. 1 acre, Olive.
Odessa Proffitt oka Odessa

Elementary School were on display

ppd ., col d weather .

,

1 acre. Bedford.

' Gladys Barton, Ruth E.

House and
Trim Paint

Mrs. Millard V•nMefer

Open 9tos Mon.- Sal.

Ellsworth J . Holden to
Laura S. Kirk. Terry J . Kirk,
Sec. JOT7R14, Scipio.

Rochester,

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Pawtucket at Toledo , pdd.,
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Drexel Lambert, Edith

Lambert to Robert F .
Snowden, Joan Snowden. 29

1

five games this season ,
Thursday signed a three-year
contract with the St. Louis
Cardinals. Terms were not
announced .
Denny 's signing leaves only
outfielder Bake McBrid e
without a contract. McBride
is still recovering from knee
surgery and has said he does
not want to sign until his
physical condition is known .

Meigs
Property
Transfers

Bass tourney
set Saturday

Celtics have backs to wall
By CHRIS TURKEL
UPI Sports Writer
The rirst crucial game of
the NBA quarter.finals is
tonight in Boston and it
promises to be a scintillating
contest between l.he Celtics
and
Phl!adelphia 76ers.
The defending league
champiDn Celtic'S have their
ba cks to the wall, trailing
three games to two in the
best-of -seven Ea ste rn
Conference series.

.?--The Daily Sentinel, Middl~rt-Pomeroy, 0., Friday, April 29, 1977

SELECTS BG
BQWUNG GREEN, Ohio
( UPI) - Emzer Shurelds of
Lima Senior has become the
third northwestern Ohio high
school basketball player to
PT. PLEASANT - The sign a national letter-of-intent
Mason County Bass Masters at Bowling Green.
will bold an open tournament
The 6-7 Shureld&gt;l averaged
on Saturday in the GaUipolls 20.9 points and 15.5 rebounds
Pool of lhe Ohio River.
the past season.
Launch site is at the public
BG coach John Weinert has
· boat ramp in Point Pleasant. also signed 6-4 Joe Faine of
Any team wishing to enter Cory Rawson and 6-5 John
can do so between 6:30 a.m . Flowers
of
Sylvania
and 7:30a.m. before the start Southview .
of the tournament .
The entry fee is $25 p.r
team, with two men to a boat.
Cash prizes will be awarded
CHICAGO (UP!) - Leftto the first three places and handed knuckleball pitcher
the largest bass.
Wilbur Wood, who hasn't
There will be drawings for pitched since May 9 of last
prizes after the tournament season, returned to the active
for gifts donated by the list of the Chicago White Sox
following sponsors : Citizens
Thursday.
National Bank, Steve Stepp
To make room for Wood on
Marine and Cycle Sales, the roster , the White Sox sent
Kenova Boat Mart (B ass pitcher Silvio Martinez to
Pro ), River City Marine, The ther Iowa farm club.
Bronze Prop, Jim Baldwip's
Fine Guns, Outdoorsman's
Store, Meadows Sporting
Goods, Ohio Valley Sport
Shop (Bass Pro ), Fenlaw
Spinner Baits, and TriCounty Sport Shop,

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Middleport.

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�7- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, O., Friday, Aprll29, 1977

Therapy program
planned at GSI
Both the Brownie and Junior Scout Troops of Syracuse
traveled to Huntington Wednesday to be on the "Mr. Cartoon"
show over WSAZ-TV.
.
The girls, some traveling in cars and some in a bw;, left the
Syracuse Elementary School at 1 p.m., appeared on the afternoon show, and then ate at a drive-in before coming home.
Brownies of Troop 1120 on the outing were Kim Adams, Mary
Baldwin, Heidi Cobb, Kim Cogar. Sharon Cook, Angie' Davis,
Wendy Fry,.Juanita Ginther, Tracy Hubbard, Jane Imboden,
Jane J ett, Darla Lambert, Regina Nance, Jill Nease, Kathy
Pickens, Veronico Provo, Becky Roush, Sherri Sisson, Alida
Van Meter, Wendy Triplett, Paula Winebrenner, Shellie Wolfe,
a guest, RIChard Weaver, and adults, Mrs. Joyce Sisson, Mrs.
Ca rol Jean Adams, Mrs. Janet Pickens and Mrs. Kathy
Baldwin.
.
Junior scouts of Troop 1204 on the trip were Janie Amberger,
Christy Arnold, Becky Amott, Jennie Bentley, Shari Cogar,
Debbie Michaels, Lori Michaels, Kim Morrow, Dreama
Owens, Sherrie Ritchie, Lisa and Julie Willis and Penny Wolfe .
Adults accompanying them were Mrs. Sharon Michaels, Mrs.
Shirley Cogar, and Mrs. Gina Arnott.

A therapy program to be
held at the Gallipolis Slate In·
stitute was planned when the
Middleport Garden Club met
re&lt;.-ently at the home of Mrs.
M. L. French.
The s pring regi onal
meeting to be held Saturday
in Logan was announced.
Mrs. James Titw;, Mrs. M. J .
and Mrs. Walter Hayes were

Honor pupils
are listed at
Racine school
RACINE Fi fty -one
pupil s ha ve been named to
the fifth si x weeks honor roll
at Ra cine Elementary School

POMEROY BROWNIE TROOP 1271
Meeting at the Pomeroy Elementary School Tuesday, the
Brownies planned a visit to the Meigs Musewn for nexl week,
Erin Anderson had the pledge, Cheryl Roush, the Brownie promise, and all of the girls joined in singing new songs. Camp
plans were discussed and refreshments served.

Robert Beeg le, pnn ci pa l,
reported .
Grade 1 -

RUTLAND BROWNIES 1293
Plans were made for a skating party to he held Monday night
at the Skate-a-way Rink on Route 7 from 7 to 9:30 .p.m. when
ENGAGED - Mr. and Mrs . David R. Dewhurst of
the Rutland Brownies met this week.
Letart
, W. Va . are announcing the engagement and
Taking part in the flag ceremony were Greta Kennedy,
forthcoming
marriage of their daug hter, Teka Ann, to
Sabrina Wilson, Mindy McDona ld and Becky Vance. Terri
Combs led in the promise. The birthday of Christina Hysell . Danny Ray Westmoreland, son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles
'\vestmoreland. of Cottageville. Teka, a graduate of
IVas celebrated and refreshments were served.
Wahama High School and West Virginia Career College of
Huntington,
is employed at Pleasant Valley Hospital. Her
·
SYRACUSE JUNIOR TROOP 1204
fiance
is
also
employed at Pleasant Valley. The wedding
Joyce Sisson, cystic fibrosis bike-a-thon chairman .for
will
take
place
June 4 at 1 p.m. at the United Methodist
Syracuse, met with the juniors to discuss the fund raising acChurch
of
New
Haven
. The custom of open church will be
tivity which wiU take place May 7. She gave out registration
observed
and
a
reception
will follow in the church social
·
fonns and told of the prizes which will be awarded.
room.
Jennie Bentley opened the meeting with the Lord's Prayer,
Christy Arnold led in the pledge, and all of the girls recited the
girl scout promise. Final plans were made for the trip to Huntington which was taken Wednesday.
·

Teka Ann Dewhurst

Helen Help
Us ••• By Helen Bottel

POLLY·s POINTERS .
•

Polly Cramer

BARBECUE SET
CHESTER - The Chester
Fire Department has made
plans to hold a chi cken
bllrbecue at the fire house on
Memorial Day with serving
to start at I :30 p.m.
SOCIETY TO MEET
The Meigs County Pioneer
and fllltorical Society will
meet at 4 p.m. on Monday at
the museum, Butternut Ave.,
Por,eroy.

r-ur a ll your home

Ente rtainment and
Appliance Need s

DOXOL
TO HOLD SALE
The Middleport United
Pentencostal Church women
are having a yard sale today
and Saturday from 10 a .m, to
3 p.m. at the home of Mrs.
Bonnie Shaffer, located on old
route 7 near lht! Pomeroy corporation li'!lils.

SERVICE

RIDENOUR'S
TV &amp; Appliance

Gas Servtce
Racine, Ohio
f'he~ler ('I .. ; .,

named to the therapy committee.
Decorating the home of
Mrs. French were flower arrangements of jonquils and
forsythia featuring a bird
replica by Mrs. Malcoim
Roller, an orange japonlca by
Mrs. John Davis, the cohostess, and other spring
floral pieces by Mrs ..French.
Mrs. Hayes presented the
program entitled " How to
Save the Bluebirds. " She
described family happenings
with the bluebirds, talked of
their habits, and noted that
they are a sign of spring. She
said that although they suffer
from severe weather, they
are becoming better able to
endure the cold but that it remains the duly of conservationists to encourage them by
providing birdhouses and
protection since they are not
only beautiful but usefu l in
eating garden pests.

HUBBARDS
GREEN HOUSE
Open Daily
9to 6

Sunday

Vegetable Plants
Potted Plants
Hanging Baskets

May activities or1lethel62,
International Order of J ob's
Daughters, will include selling balloons on the streets of
Pomeroy for the Heart Fund.
Meeting Monday night at
the Pomeroy Masonic Temple, the Jobies made plans for
the balloon sale on May 7 and
for initiation at the May 9
meeting. It was noted that on
May 23 the majority degree
will be given and there wiU he
an electon of officers. On May
28, the girls will serve the
Pomeroy Alumni Association
banquet. On June 4 there will

992 -5776 Syracuse, 0 .

WE'VE GOT IT ALL

Grade 2 - Damon Fisher.
Matthew Jewell , Lisa Pape,
Ricky
Pa r sons , Ra c hel
Rei ber , D iana · Si mpson .
Tammy The i ss, Tammy

SEED CORN

·Wol fe, Wendy Wolfe.

By Funk's, Pioneer
&amp; Kenworthy ·

Grade J - Lor i Adams.
Di xie Dugan . Mandy Hil L
Mel issa lh le, Ke lly Rizer,
Kenda Rizer , Robin Savage,
Rebecca Va nMeter , L i sa

Parsons.

support it on the bacKs of
chairs. Sew the backing of
the quilt to the cloth on the
frames using strong twine.
Have the clamps set so as to
leave enough slack for easy
stitching. Move the clamps to
stretch the backing and you
are ready to quilt When you
have quilted around the edge
as far as you can work corn·
fortably, remove Clamps on ·
the sides and roll the quilt on
he frame and then reclamp.
. - MRS. C.B.M.
DEAR POLLY - Thecardboards that come wrapped
with rickrack, bias tape, etc.
are excellent to use for
writing shopping memos and
tr a ve log ues
on.
VIRGINIA.
Polly will send you one of
her sig ne d t ha nk- you
newspaper-coupon clippers if
she uses your . fa vorite
Pointer, Peeve or Problem in
her coiwnn. Write POLLY'S
. POINTERS in care of this

L ois I hi e, D av id

by W.R. GRACE

Gr ade 5 - James Bush,
Trevor Cardone, Teresa Hil l.
Re becca J.ohnson, Rand y
Ki ng , L inda Pr off itt, Rhondit
Sm ith ,
L a r en
Wolfe,
Tony Wol fe, Kevin Curfm an .

Ter ry Patterson, Davi d
Parson s, John Porter , Dav id
Sa lmon s, Tanya Sa lse r, Lor i
Warden.

..

wall To wall Fashions
m.

Mrs. Florence Richards,
Eighth District president of
the American Legion Auxiliary, and Mrs. Lula Rampton of Lewis Manley Unit 263,
· Middleport, were in Lancaster Tuesday night for the
50th anniversary celebration
of Fairfield Unit ll.
A dinner preceding the
meeting was held at the Holiday Inn. Guest speaker was
Mrs. Henry Palro, Depa rtment of Ohio president. Also
present was Miss Ann
Eschelman, Department of
Ohio secretary.

-m.

MASONITE

4' X 8'
RED BRICK

MASONITE

4 FOOTx 8 FOOT

PANEL

CRESTWALL

PANELING

• Aut hen tiC looking brick panel
• Rough brick texture

• Man·mode finish on hardboard
• Gi ves the appearance of reol
brick!

SALE PR ICE

SAVE NOW!

~-------

INTEREST

• Poly. beams lookhondhewn with o

. On Certificates

centuries old air
• Each length has two matched pieces
• For use on wall or cei ling

4' x 8' WOOD PANELING
• V•'' thick 3·pl y plywood veneered with
white pine

• Embossed groove:s and kerf marks
to S-imulate old worn boords
• Choose from 3 smart shodes.

Nin et y d ay in teres t pena lty

matu rity da le.

b efor

4" I 6" 112' .
SALE PRICE

4" X 6" 114'
SALEPRICE

•

4" 16" x16'
SALE PRICE

1427 1647 1877

.@

POMEROY -CEMENT BLOCK CO.

T h e Ath ens County
Sav i ng s &amp; Loan Co .

Pomeroy, Ohio

/!!!]

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
DOwN
1 Sound's
1 Rascal
partner
2 " Rags to
5 Hall a
ri.ches"
Kenya
author
terrorist
3 FOR's
8 Thicken
symbolic
9 Finally
individual
. (2 wds.)
(2 wds.)
13 Taj Mahal 4 Airport
,
site
abbreviation
Yesterday • Answer
U Grave
5 Hebrew
12 Son of
27 Construction
15 Royal
0 .T. notes
Poseidon
site word
nickname
6 Expiate
16 Spanish
29 Vaquero's
16 Carter of
7 Einstein's
silver dollar rope .
bowling
birthplace 19 Captain
30 Did steve17 Six, in Italy 10 Like the
Queeg's
dore work
18 Acquisition
proverbial
ship
:il Like a
21 Scarlett's
professor
20 Late Show
quarry
plantation
( 2 wds.)
Sal
36 Disappear·
22 Preposition 11 Taken
23 Negligent
ing "1'81
23 Proportion
care of
24 Fly
37 Just 'get by,
25 Actor,(2 wds.)
2~ Wing (Fr.)
with "out"
Walbrook ~~:-"~"TL:'26 Tied
27 Per 26 Petrolewn

a
Camera"

33 Opposite
of WSW
34 Singer
Cole
35 German
prison
camp
37 Taro
root

39
40 Average
41 MacDonald's
co-star

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work It:
II

Meigs Co. Branch

296 Se cond St .

~af-~w/

32

Of Depmit
s1.000 Minimum
1 Yr. Term

iC HW I

, ...
JOSHUA WRIGHT

Birthday
observed
Joshua James Wright, son
of James and Sandra Swartz

Wright and grandson of Carl
and Wilma . Wright, Hock·
ingport, and MiUard and
Junaita Swar tz , Alfred,
celebrated his first birthday
on Sunday, April 17, at his
Alfred home.
Cake, ice cream and Kool·
Alde were served. Attending
were Mr. and Mrs. Millard
Swartz, Mrs. Wilma Wright,
Amanda, Terry and Nancy
Swart~' , Alfred ; Joe, Linda
and Tonya Baughman, Tuppers Plains ; Ray and Kate
Rodehaver, Guysville; and
Cirtdy Richards, Athens.
Joshua is the greatgrandson of Vere and Grace
Swartz of Alfred and has a
sister, Amanda. . He was
presented to the Lord in
dedication on his first birthday.

Your own message to Mother on these
pages, Mother's Day, May 8th. We'll send
Mom a spacial card, tool It's a
thoughtf~l and unique way to t e ll

her how wonderful she Is.

TO MOTHER WITH LOVE
Tell her she's great with a Mother' s Day
greeting ad in Sunday Times -Sentinel's special
feature on May 8th. She'll be pleased with your
thoughtfulness and surprised by such an
original idea .

.

Social
Calendar

Fairfield Unit
has celebration

w i thd r awn

be a rwrunage and bake sale
at the Colwnbia Gas Co. of
Ohio offices.
Grand session to he held
June 16-19 was discussed with
several members planning to
attend. Those who do not attend will prepare a noat to be
entered in the Regatta
parade.
Paula Eichinger, honored
queen , presided at the
meeting during which lime it
was reported that for inspection the Bethel re.ceived a
grade 9f ''verygood.''

FERTILIZER

Grade 4 Alan Cr isp.
Sand r a Ha rd en. De bb ie

newspaper.

if

fers, Teresa Brown, Sherrie
Bamhart, Kevin King , Rita
Bailey, Stephanie Radford,
Christi Stanley, Bryan
. Wilcox, Ruth Carsey, J une
Hutton, Kathy Hess, Mary
Ann Tripp, Tina Miller, Mike
Miller, Richard and Anna
Shuler, Alan and Brian, Mr.
and Mrs. Don Railey, Delores
Balley, Mr. and Mrs. William
King , Hank Johnson and
Kathy King. Slopping by dur·
ing the evening wereJoey
Poutins and Mr. and Mrs.
Ernest Van Inwagen.

Activities announced

1106

'

K im Stoba r t.

Ho lt er,
Powell .

Asoftball game and wiener
roast was held Wednesday
night by the Bradbury
Church of Christ yputh at the
Bradbury School.
·
The young people had devotions around the campfire,
sang songs and concluded
with a prayer circle. Plans
were made for a prayer walk
to take place Saturday,
weather permitting, beginning at ll a.m. at the church.
Those taking part are to take
a sack lunch.
Enjoying the game and
wiener roast were Desi Jef-

to Mrs. Eva Hartley, Mrs.
Nelle Werner , Mrs. Gwinnie
White, Mrs. Pearl Hoffman,
Mrs. Edith Sauer, Mrs. Rorna
Hawkins, Mrs. Iva Turner,
Mrs. Elizabeth Searles, Mrs.
Rosemary Lyons, Mrs .
F lorence Rhodes, Mrs .
Isabelle Winebrenner, and
Mrs. Beulah White.

Contributions of $25 each to
the Middleport Firemen and
the Senior Citizens Center
were made by the Busy Bee
Class of the Middleport First
Baptist Church meeting
recently at the church.
Mrs. Elizabeth Slavin had
charge of the meeting which
opened with devotions from
the Secret Place by Mrs.
Freda Hood. The class voted
to buy salad bowls for the kitchen, and made plans for the
annual mother-daughter banquet to he held May 19 which
wlll be a covered dish dinner.
The birthdays of Mrs, Lillie
Dyke, Mrs. Janice Gibbs,
Mrs. Florence Rhodes, Miss
Freddie Houdashelt and Mrs.
F rances Bearhs wer e
celebrated.
Mrs. Edwards, Mrs. Electa
Souders and Mrs. Lillian
Demoskey were hostesses
and served a dessert course

A GREAT WAY
TO SAY

Gr ade 6 - Kathy Bak er,
Tyrone Br inager, Becky Lee ,

Rings on a kather top

DEAR POLLY - I would
like to know how to remove
'It's An Often·Asked Question ...
rings from t he leather top on
.
DEAR HELEN:
my coffee table. I would like
I have a divorced unwed daughl(!r who wishes to pay us a to kn ow before house clean1
visit, bringing aloog h~r boyfriend. We wlll never accept free ing time
as I have tried many
love in our hom.e .
furniture polishes but none
How do we gel this across to her without causing a big were effective. - M.N
argwnent? - OONCERNED PARENT
DEAR M.N. - You might
DEAR PARENT :
spread petroleum jelly over
. I'm sure your daughter already knows your stand on the surface, leave it for about
"unwedded bliss." If she cares about your feelings, she 'll· an hour and then wipe off
conform with sell'rate bedrooms, during the visit, even though with a dry cloth. I have found
the charade won 't chlinge facts or fool your friends.
this quite effective on wood
Avoiq a big judgmental issue.: just state your preference that has been polished and
and have two beds made up whell the couple arrives. (But also it will be a good preser·
don 't play after-hours watchdog, please.) - H.
vative for the leather on your
+++
table. Test on a small spot for
DEAR HELEN :
effect on the particular finish
The "Old Man With Memories and a Smile" brought a on your leather top. - POLlaugh and inspired my answer:
LY.
.An old man is like an old automobile. ru call it the "Ralph
DEAR POLLY - Pin a
Robertson model" (after me ). It was manufactured in 1902 in small safety pin in the front
Bloomfield, Mo . At that time it was highly appreciated, of each of your pairs of slacks
cleaned and wiped several limes a dav.
and find this is a help to both
But ·as the years passed on, it got rough treatment, had to , young and old in telling at a
go rain or shine, hot or cold; was cranky, hard to start some glance which is the front and
days, requiring a "choke" which, of course, caused it to whichis theback.
backfire.
Open envelopes at the botLater checkups showed old " R.R.'s" spark weak, the tom so as to save the return
motor slow and out of tune. Though intake reinained good, it · address and the stamps if you
couldn't control the gas and exhaust fumes worsened. Also the happen to he saving them. rear end aimost dragged the ground ; it got noisier and didn't ESTHER.
track too well; the speedometer ran slow, and it operated best
DEAR POLLY - My letter
• in low gear.
is for Bar.bara and her
The radiator leaked because it had too much alcohol ; mother who want to make a
headlights grew dim, battery run down, heater cold, seat quilling frame. As a little boy
sagging, the mohair oo top gone; the old body had become I' used to help my mother tack
rough and faded, with wrinkled fenders and several dents ; and comforters and that was
•· be careful or the horn wlll blow when least expected.
before the beginning of this
The younger generation goes "Ha, ha" as they see old R. century. My father made the
R. chugging by, but maybe they'Usay, "We bet he was a beaut, frame, and anyone who can
back when he was new! " - R.R. (Falling Apart After 75 Years . saw a board and drive a tack
of Service).
.can make one.
DEAR RALPH :
Sec ure four boards of soft
In my book, you're still a beaut ! Keep chugging,R.R. - H. lumber that are two inches
+ ++
by four inches by one inch.
To the person who complained ·about the high cost of That is what you ask f9r but
postage : Our U. S. Postal Service handles more mail than any they will actually measure
other country in the world, and its rates are cheapest, except one and Uu-ee-quarters by
for Canada! Also we're the best and most efficient service. Too three and a hall by threemuch is printed about isolated instances of slow delivery, etc. fourths inch. They must be
and too little about all the mail that goes through fast.
smooth on all sides and two of
·SUre rates have gone up: so has the price of bread, not to them should be at least one
speak of coffee and lea. But we won't have an increase this · foot longer than the longest
year, which is rnore than I can say of most services. Let's hear quilt and the other two one
it for Postal Employees. - P.B.
foot longer than the widest
NOTE FROM HELEN : And more than a one-handed clap, quilt.
please, you complainers out there.
·
Prepare strips of cloth two
and a half or three inches
wide, and long enough to go
all around the frame. The
. cloth should .be something
firm like denim or ticking.
Fold the strips in hall and
YARD SALE SET
GROUP TO SING
iron
in the fold. Using large
The Lefevres, a nationally
tacks
tack the strips to the
TUPPERS PLAINS - A.
known gospel singing group
the fold side.proframes
from Atlanta, Ga., will sing at yard sale will be held at jecting awith
bit
beyond
the edge.
the South ' Parkersburg Tuppers Plains Elementary Have tacks about two
inches
Trinity United Methodist School today from 10 a.m. to 4 apart.
Church , lOth Ave., and p.m. and Saturday from 10
Buy folir C clamps with a
·Thomas St. in Parkersburg at a.m. to 6 p.m. sponsored by jaw spread of at least two in·
2 p.m. on May 8. The public is Tuppers .Plains Boosters. ches. Clamp your frame with
Proceeds ·Hili be used for a clamp at each corner and
invited.
school improvements.

Ang ela Bostick,

Annett Cardone, Patre ce
Circle, Ma r ty Cleland. Lina
Curt i s,
Tammy
Hotrer ,
Dona ld Ri ffle . Tina Slater,

Wiener roast,
game enjoyed

Busy Bee Class
makes donations

D=wQ"' The Deparlme~t Store of Building Since 19i5
T he Frrdy D.&amp;

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

Ono Iott er simply stands for another. In this sample A Is
used for the three L's, X !or the two O's, etc. Single letters.
npoatrophes, th e leng th and !orm ati on of the words are all
hl nto. Each doy the code letters are different.
.
CRYPTOQUOTES
P

TG U W

KWUWD

WMWDXPHW

AGOWK

WMXWBA

GKQ

HSWWB ·

PKJ GK1 DWHAPK).- VGDO
ACGPK
Yesterday'a .Cryploquote: MONEY MAY NOT BUY HAP·
PINESS, BUT MOST OF US ARE WIWNG TO MAKE THE
EXPERIMENT. - AUTHOR UNKNOWN
C t•n Kiaa P"•Lvres Sfndleat.t.lllc.

l

·'

F RIDAY
CHuRCH Women United of
Meigs County key women to
meet at 1:30 p.m. Friday at
the Mount Moriah Baptist
Church fora planning session
on May Fellowship Day.
COACHES of Pee Wee and
little league teams from
Portland , Letart Falls,
Racine and Syracuse Friday
at ' Syracuse Municfpal
Building at 7:30p.m. Purpose ·
to organize the league
schedu;e.
"THAT GIRL From 'rex~
as," a comedy in 3 acts, will
be presented by the .senior
class at Southern High School
Friday alB p.m. Adults, $1.50
and students, 75 cents. The
comedy is by Albert Green
and directed by Mrs. Carla J.
Shuler.
BAKE SALE , Friday,
beginning 9 a.m. at Dale C.
Warner Insurance Agency,
W. Main, Pomeroy, by Forest
Run United Methodist
Church.
SATURDAY
SQUARE DANCE Satur. day, 9 to 12 at Racine Legion
Post 602 . Music
by
Stringdusters.
BABY SHOWER for
Mathew. Douglas, infant son
of Mr. and Mrs. Doug ·
Seaman, minister of the
Bearwallow·Church of Christ.
Shower to be held at 7:30p.m.
at the Modern Woodman Hall
at Burlingham. Friends and
neighbors of the Seamans are
invited.'
SPAGHETTI Suppersponsored by Waharpa Band
Boosters Saturday, 4to 8 p.m.
at Wahama High S~hool
cafeteria. Adults, $2.25 ;
children, $1.50 under 12, includes dessert and drink.
SUNDAY
POMEROY Chapter 166;
O.E .S. officers ·are to meet at
the Pomeroy . Ma·sonic
Temple for · a practice for
inspection. Star Points are to
meet at 2 p.m. with the other
officers to meet at 2:30 p.m.
MONDAY
MIDDLEPORT Garden
Club, 7:30 Monday at the
home of Miss Nellie Zerkle
and Miss Hallie Zerkle with
Mrs. Rita Hamm and Mrs.
Homer Russell, co-hostesses.
Program by Mrs. William
Morris on native wild
flowers, and Mrs. Carl Horky
will show garden slides.
BOSWORTH Council 46,
,Royal and Select Masters,
annual conference of the
super excellent masters
degree, 7!30 p.m. Monday at
the Pomeroy Masonic
.Temple. All regular com·
panlons urged to attend.
TUESDAY
POMEROY Chapter 186,
Order of the Eastern Star,
grand inspection, 7:45 p.m.
Tuesday with Mrs. Doris
Smith, worthy grand matron,
as Inspecting officer. All
Eastern Star members in·
vited.

WE'LL SEND MOM A SPECIAL CARD
Not only will your message appear in the Sunday TimesSentinel, but we'll send her a card telling her to look for
your greeting on May 8th.

MOlliER'S DAY GREETINGS AD
COST ONLY s1.00 FOR 20 WORDS
1. ~-----

3. - - - - 5. _ _ _ __ _
7. _ _ _ __

2-~---4__ _ _ __

6. - - - - 8. ~----

10 . _ _ _ __

9. -----::-----11. _ _ _~-

12. _ _ _ __

13. _ _ _ _

14, _ _ _ __

~

15· -~---

16. _ _ _ __

17. _ _..;...___ _ 18. _ _ _ _~

19. _ _ _ __

20.-~---

SIGNATURE _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
ADDRESS ----""'
··~
- ----

PRINT YOUR MESSAGE CLEARLY.-WRITE ONE WORD
PER SPACE. MAIL WITH '1.00 TO:

Sunday Times Sentinel
111 Court Street

'

Pomeroy, Ohio

�11-The Daily Senlmel, Mtddleport-Pomeroy. 0., Friday, April29, 1977

Chu
TRINITY CHURCH . Mev. W. H.
Perrin postcw; Roy Mayer, Sunday school supt. Church School ,
9 IS a. m., worship service, 10&lt;)()
0 m Choir rehearsal , Tuosdov .
7 30 p m. under direction of Mn
Paul Nease.
POMEROY

•

CHURCH . OF

THE

NAZARENE. Corner Un10n and
Mulberry , Rev. Clyde V H er~er·
son , pos tor. Sunday school . 9 tJO
o. m , Glen McClung , sup t ; morn.
1ng wor1h1p, lO.lO o m , evening
serv1ce 7 30: m1d-week S&amp;f\ltce ,
w&amp;dnesday . 7&lt;lOp.m
GRACE EPISCOPAL , The Rev '
Ha rold Oeeth, rector Church ser.
v1ces , 10 30 a. m ., Holy commu .
nion first Sunday of month chur.
ch school, 10 30 o . m fCK nursery
through 12.
POMEROY CHURCH OF CHRIST,

Richard Evanson pastor. Bible
se: hool , 9.30 a m , worsh1p, 10 30
a. m.. adu l l worsh1p serviGe and
yOung people 's meelmg , 7 30
p. m. Comb1ned B1ble study and
prayer meeting, Wednesday, 7 30
p. m
THE SALVATION ARMV . EnvoyRoy W. W1n lng officer in cha rge
Su nday , 10 o . m , Holi ness
meet.ng
10 30 o. m , Sunday
School Yaung People's Legion, 1
p m .. Thursday. I to 3 p m .,
Lad1es Home league. 7 p.m Prep
classes .
BURLING TON SOUTHERN BAP ·

liST CHAPEL . ROute I , ShadePastor Bobby Elkins. Sunday
school 5 p m , Sunday worstup,
5 45 p m , Wednesday proyerser.
vice 7 30 p m
51 PAUl LUTHERAN CHURCH,
Corner of Sycamore ond Second
Sfs , Pomeroy . The Re~o~ Wllltom
Middlesworth
Pastor , Sunday
School at '9 45 om. and ChurctJ
Servtces 11 a m
SACRED HEART Re.,, Father
Paul D Welton, pastor phone
992 2825 Solurday evemng Moss ,
7 30, Sunday Moss , 8 and 10 o.m ,
Confession Saturday , 7 7 30 p.m

Sunday
Ephesians
2./1-22
Monflay

Colossians
I 1·29
Tuesday
Hebrews
2.1· 18
Wedr1esday

Not so long ago there were two o f you Now there

are three. and you can almost :see you'r baby grow from
day 10 day. You get to thinking abo ut it Soon he ' ll be
walkmg. tulkmg . askmg queslion!&lt;!

Hehrewr

Are you ready 10 answer them Or, are you confused! Wondermg the way the world 1s gumg. just
where a 1s gmng to go!

Y·/ -28
Thur&gt;day
Jude

1

POMEROY WESTSIDE CHURCH

OF CHRIST 200 W Mom Sf., Jerry
Paul , mmtsler, phone 992 7666.
Conservott.,e , non. tnsfrumentol ,
Sunday worshtp, 10 a m, Btble
study , 11 o m , worshtp , b p m,
Wednesday Btble study 7 p m .
OlD DEXTER BIBLE CHRISTIAN
CHURCH
Re~o~ Ralrh
Sm1th ,
pastor .S~ndov schoo, 9 30 o. m ,
Mrs Worley Francis supennten.
dent Preo chmg serv1ces firs t &amp;
lh~rd Sunday s tollawmg Sunday
School
GRAHAM UNITED METHODIST ,
Preochmg 9 30 a m f.rsl and secand Sundays of each month,
thi rd and Fourth Sundays each
month, worsh1p serv1ce at 7 30
p, m, Wednesday · even1ngs at
7 30. Prayer and Bible Study

{ ·f-25

The Church isn't gomg to gtve yo u a set of pnnted
answers But it wtll gtve you something much more

Fr~day

Revelatio'l
5·1·14

valuab le II will help to start worktng ou t those a nswers

for yo ur se lf

Sarurday

Try n

lsmah
35 ·1-10
Scrlpi!Jres selecled o~ nut American B1bla, Soaely

IPYriQhl 1971 1\e!SI&amp;r Adv1tr11slng SeN Ice Strasburg, Vlrgirtll

KINGSBURY HOME SALES
&amp; SERVICE, INC.

.

.

RUTLAND

MEIGS TIRE CENTER, INC.
John F.

Ph . 992 ·2101

I He FINEST IN MOBILe HUMES
1100 E Mam
Pomeroy
Ph. 992.-7034

SEVENTH -DAY

SUNDAY TIMES-SENTINEL

~ullz

Pomeroy

BIG JIM'S PLAZA

Serving Melgs, Mason

Middleport, Ohio

And Galli• Area
Phone 9'12-2156

RACINE PLUMBING &amp; HEATING

LINDA'S lADY FAIR BEAUTY SALON
Catl949-2838 For An Appointment

"HE lL" DEALER
Third St.

Racine, Ohio

Ph 949-2882

Racine

'

REUTER-BROGAN INSURANCE
SERVICES
214 E. Main

PAUL'S BARBER SHOP
()penS to 5 - Closed Thurs.

Ph. 992 -51 30

Po1meroy

. Racine, Ohio

WAID CROSS SONS STORE

ELLIS &amp; SONS SOHIO

GROCERIES &amp; GENERAL
MERCJ-iANDISE
Racine
Ph . ?49-2550

COMPLETE AUTOMOTIVE SERVICE
Locust &amp; Beech Sts.MiddleportPh. 992-9921

. .

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT
Nationwide tns Co of Columbus,

Middleport

Ph. 992-2318

Pomeroy

804 W . Mam

'
BETSY ROSS !BAKERY
BAKERS OF GAY90. BREAD
Ph. 992-3030 .

0.

'

HEINER'S BAKERY

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE PHARMACY

BAKERS OF GOOD BREAD

WE FILL DOCTORS
PRESCRIPTIONS

Huntington , W. Va .

992-2955

SEAR'S CATALOG MERCHANT

Pomeroy

THIS SPACE AVAILABLE

LOUIS W. OSBORNE
220 E. Mam
Pomeroy
Ph . 992-2178

Phone 992-2156

MARK V STORE

lWIN CITY GATEWAY

Mtddlepor-1, Ohio

Middleport, Ohio
WE HANDLE ONLY
U.S.D A. CHOICE MEATS

-

GOEGLEIN SAND &amp; GRAVEL
Ph. 992-3284

McCOY AUCTION SERVICE
(For a real auction coil the Real McCOy)
1.0. (Mocl McCov
985-3944

Middleport
'

FR~!~PRODUCE&amp;PLANTS

RALL'S BEN FRANKLIN STORE

2 CONVENIENT MARKETS

MIDWAY MARKET

~fiM.MM!_

Pomeroy,

Ph . 992-2582

Middleport, Ohio

Mason .,

Ph. 773-5721

.

. )'HE DAILY SENTINEL

K&amp;C JEWELERS

lltt!dlcated to the Interests of
Meigs-Mason Area
Phone992 2156

'

Keepsake D1amond Rings
Pomeroy
Ph . 992-3785

212 E. Main St.
'

MEIGS COUNTY 8

THE ATHENS C!IUNTY SAVINrS
&amp; LOAN CO.
29• W. Second

Pomeroy

Ph.-• '""

SALEM STREET MARKET

Gerald &amp; Melva Elbl n . Owner

Open 8 to 7 dally: 12·5 Sun.
Rutland
Ph. 742-2424

RACINE PlANING MILL

ltOSEBERRY'S PENNZOIL
Ph. 949-9130

R•Cine

RACINE FOOD MARKET
THE STORE WITH A HEART
Ph. 949·2626
Racine

•

ADVENTIST .

Mulberry Heights Road, PomerOy.
Pastor, Gerard Seton, Sabbath
School Superintendent
Claro
Mcintyre , Sabbath School, Saturday afternoon at 2 00, w1th Wor
sh1p Servtce follow •ng at 3· 15

Syracuse

Ph. 992-3978

. RIDENOUR

TV " APPLIANCE
GAS SERVICE
tcactne

Chester
.

FIRST

BAPTIST

Sunday
e'&lt;~ange li s he
meet1 ng
7 30 p m
Prayer
meehng W&amp;dnesdoy. 7.30 p.m,
UNilEO
PRESBYTERIAN
MINISTRY OF MEIGS COUNTY,
Owtght l. Zavi tz , direc tor,
H A R R IS 0 N VI L L EPRESBYtERIAN , Re v , Ernest
Stnck hn. pas tor, Sunday church
sc:hool . 9 30 am ., Mrs . Homer
Lea
supt . morning worsh1p,
10·30
MIDDLEPOfH , Sunday school ,
q 30 a .m . R1c hard Vaughan, sup!
Morn•ng worshi p , 10 30.
SYRACUSE. Morning worsf&lt;l1p q
~ m , Sunday school , lOam Mrs
Sampson Hall, sup!
RUTLAND CHURCH OF GOO,
Re~o~ . James 0 Guynn, pastor
Sunday school , 10 a. m Sunday
worsh1p, 11om .. Sunday even ing
servtce. 7 p.m , Wednesday wor
sl"up service 7 30 p m ,
HAZEL COMMUNITY CHURCH ,
Near Long Bottom, Edsel Ho rl ,
pastor. Sunday school, 10 om ,
Church, 7. 30 p m ,, prayer
meet 1ng, 7 JOp.m Thursday .
MIDDLEPORT PENTECOSTAL .
Th trd A~o~e , the Rev . William Knit
tel, pastor Ronald Dugan, Sun.
day School Supt. Classes for 0 11
ages , even1ng service , 7 30, 81ble
sfud v. Wednesday, 1 30 p m ,
yOuth se rvices , Fr iday , 7,30p m
MIDDLEPORT FREEWILL BAP ·
liST , Corner Ash and Plum, Noel
Herrman , pastor Soturdoy even mg service 7 30 p. m , Sunday
School 10 JOa m
MEIGS
COOPERATIVE PARISH
METHODIST CHURCH
Robertt , Bumgarner,
Olfector
POMEROY CLUSTER
Rev Rober t Hayden
Rev James Corbtll
CHESTER worship 9 15 o m.
ChurchSc hool lOo . rn
POMEROY , worship, 10 30om.
Church School 9 30 o.m UMYF
b·30 p m
' ENTERPRISE , Worsh1p 9 a m.
ChurchSchooi10o m
ROCK SPR IN GS Worship 10
Church School 9 15o m.
0 m
UMYF 6 30 p m
FLATWOODS , worship 11 a .m.
ChurchSchoollOo.m
MIDDLEPORT CLUSTER
R:ev Robert Bumgarner
HEATH
Robert Bumgarner,
Pastor
Worsh1p
10.30 om ,
Chur(h School 9 30 a m, UMYF 6
p m
RU TLAND Wilbur H1l t Pastor,
worsh•p 10 30 0 m Church School
9·30 o.m
SVRACUSECLUSTH:
Rev Hor.,ey Koch, Jr
ASBURY, worsh1p 11 a m.
church School 9 50 a m UMW
f~ts t Tuesday B•ble Study Thur~
7.30p .m
FOREST RUN . worshtp q 0 m
Chu rchSchoollOo . m
MINERSVILLE . worsh1p 10 0 m
Church s,hool9 0 m
SYRACUSE , Church S,hool q 00
am worsh1pserv tce 7 30p m
0 '" ·

SOUTHERN CLUSTER

CHURCH . ~urdoy School sa,-..,lc.e ,
10 om , P1ayar meating. Tt\,rs doy 7 p m : Sundolf evening ser v •ce , 7pm
ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST,
Pomeroy ·Ho•nsonv•lle Rd ,; Don
Kennedy, pastor. B•ll McElrOy ,
Sundar scf&lt;lool supt
Sundoy
schoo , q 30 a. m ., morn1ng wor·
sh•p ond communion, 10·30 a .m :
Sunday evenmg youth ChnsJion
Endeovo.-, 6 pm.; wOfship ·service , 7 P m Wednesday evening
prayer meeting and Sible study,
7 lOp m .
Sl . JOHN LUTHERAN CHURCH ,
P•ne Grove The Rev. W1lhom
Middlesworth, Pastor
Churck
serv1ces 'I 30 Q m . Sunday School
10 30om
BRADBURY
CHURCH
OF
CH RI ST, Mr Donald Roley , postOf',
Sunday schOQI , 9 30 a .m ., wOf'·
ship serviCe, 10:30 a m · Sunday
ser.,•ces , 7 P m , yOuth grOup,
Wednesday . 7 p m
ANTIQUITY BAPTIST , Rev. Earl
Shuler, pastor, Sunday school
9 30 o.m ; Church service , 7 p. m.,
youth meeting 6 P m Tuesday B•·
bleStudy, 7 p. m
RACINE CHURCH OF THE
NAZARENE , Rev John A . Coff .
man. pastor Sunday Sckool, 9:30
om. Garold Wells , supt Morn.
•ng wonhip, 1030 am., Sunday
evemng worstup , 730: Proyer
meeting, Wednesdoy , 7.00p m
RACINE FIRST BAPTISl , Don l.
Walker, Pastor, Ronnie Salser,
Sunday school supl., Sunday
school, 9 30 a m , morn1ng wor sh1p, 10 40 am., Sunday e.,emng
worshiF., 730: Wednesday even•ng8ibestudy, 7·30
DANVILLE WESlEYAN , Rev R.
0. BrO&gt;Nn, pasJor Sunday ScMool,
9:30 o m : morntng worshtp
10 45, vouth sarv1ce, 6-45 p.m ,
evemng worshtp, 7 30 p.m :
prayer and praise, Wednesday ,
7.30 P m
SILVER RUN FREE BAPTIST,
M1 les Trout. poster
Sunday
school, 10 a m : Steve L1ltle, supt.
Evening serv1ce, 7 p m , prayer
meetmg, Thursday , 7 p.m.
'
CHESTER CHURCHOF
GOO,
Rev Bobby Porter, poslor. Sun
day school, 9·30 om. wOrship
se rvice , II a m , even1ng service ,
7.30 vouth service, Wednesday ,
1 30 P m.
LANGSVILLE CHRISTIAN CHUR CH. Ted Jones , pastor Sunday
school, 9·30 am Roy Sigman,
sup!., mommg worship, 10.30,
Sunday e"'ening sarvice 7 30,
mid-week ser.,tee Wednesday,
7 30 P m.
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF THE
NAZARENE , Rev
Dale Bos s,
pastor, Bob MoOre, Sunday
School sup!. Sunday schoOl
classes for all ages, 9:30 a m
morning worship, 10.45 am ,
NYPS, b 30 p. m . evongel•s fie serYICe
7 30 p m. Prayer and
fasting Tuesday , 10 a.m .,
Midweek
prayer
servtce ,
Wednesday , 1 30 p ,m , men's
prayer meeling, Sqfurdoy. 7 p.m. ,
missionary
meeting
second
Wednesday , 7.30p m.
UNITED
FAITH
NON ·
DENOMINATIONAL , Re"' Robert
Sm1th, pastor Sunday School,
9 30 o m .. Closs leader , Leo Htll ,
worsh1pserv1ce , 10 JOo . m., chur.
ch7 30p m
EDEN

UNITED

BRETHREN

LONG

BOTTOM

CHRISrtAN ,

Bruc:e Smllh, poslor. Wallace
Damewood, Supt ll •ble School,
9, J() o.m
Preocf&lt;llog $trvice,
10:4S o.m No evening strvke
HYSELL RUN FREE METHODIST

1 30 p.m
CALVARY BIBLE CHURCH , 26 N .

Second Middleport; pastor, Cur·
,1, sa.Phen. church ~~hoot 9.30
m
preod'ling servtces, 10 30
a . m.. ond 7:30 p m. Wednesday
:~en 1 ng Bible study , 7:30p.m

CHURCH . Rev Herbert Ail1ng,
pastor Sunday Sckool9.30 a.m.•
Morning servka, IO.)J o.m,
youlh
service , 6 d
p. m
EvongalisiiC service 7.30 P m
Prayer meettng, Thursday , 7 30
p .m
FREEDOM GOSPEL MISSION ol

Bold Knob . Re,., Lawrence
Gluesencamp, Sr , pastor, Roger
WillFord, Sr .. Sunday schOO sup I.
Sundoy tchool 9 30 a , ; Sunday
e.,en•ng service, 1 p.m. Prayer
meeting. Tuesday, 7.'JfJ p. m
Ernest Deeter, class leader
Youth meeting Wednesday 7:30
p. m
w i th Don and Martha
Meadows , leaders.
WHITE 'S CHAPEL, CQOivrlle RO
Rev. ROy Deater, pastCK. Sunday
schoof9 30o.m, worship service .
10 X) a m. &amp;lble s 'udy ond prayer
seN!Ce , Wedntttdoy . 7:30pm

IN

CHURCH - Drewy Gore, sup t
Re., . Timothy Sm1th
CHRIST, Elden R. Bloke , pastor.
Sunday School , 9.30 o.m : morn
Cluster Leader
Sunday School 10 am: HOward
mg worship , l0:45 o.m
Rev steven Wilson
McCoy supt.; Morn fng sermon,
THE HILAND CHAPEL. George
Associo le
11 o m : Sunday night services
Casto, pastor, Sunday School,
BETHA.NY , (Dorcas) . Worship Christian Endeavor, 7•30 p m.;
9 30 a m , evening worship, 1 30 q JO am Church S,hool 10.30 Song serviCe, B p m. , Preaching
8.30 p. m
Midweek Prayer
Thursday eventng prayer service, 0 m
7·30p m
CARMEl , Chruch Sctl6ol 9.30 meet1ng, Wednesdav . 7 p m . ; Roy
POMEROY FIRST BAPTIST . Rev
0 m wonh1p 10 30om. ~nd and Adams loy leader .
Peter Grandoll , postor William 41hSundoys
CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST, .
Watson, Sunday school supt.,
APPlE GROVE Sunday School located at Rutland on New Luna
Sunday school, 9•30 a.m .. BYF b 9·30 a m. wor sh1p 7 30 p. m 1s t Road , next to Forest Acre Pork :
p m , Btble study, Wednesday 7 and Jrd Sundays, Prayer meehng Rev Roy Rouse, pastor; RObert
p m; choir pracltce , Wednesday , Wednesday 7· 30 p m FeiiOwshtp Musser, Sunday School sup! Sun8 30 p m
supper f1rst Saturday 6 p m UMW day school , 10 30 a .m .. worship
FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST , 282 2ndTuesdoy73Qpm
730
p . moible
Study ,
Mulberry Ave , PomerOy , Paul J
EAST LETART , Chruch School Wedn&amp;sdoy . 7 30 p m ; Saturday
While , Pastor Gory Basham Sun- 1st, 2nd . 3rd Sundays, '9 30 am
mghtproyerservtce, 7.30p m
day school supt Sunday school , Fourth Sunday 10 30 o m WorHEMLOCK GROVE CHRISTIAN ,
9.30 a .m , morntng worsh1p , sh1p 2nd Sunday 7 30 p.m . 4th Roger Watson, pastor Jessie
10 30 e.,ening ~orshlp, 6·30 p m Sunday 9.30 0 m , Prayer meet1ng While, Sunday school supt MornM1dweek prayer servt&lt;::e, 7 30 Wednesday 7 30 p.m. UMW 1st tng worsh•p, 9·30 om ; Sunp.m
Tuesday 7 30 p.m
dayschool, 10 30 a m ; evening
MIDWAY COMMUNITY CENTER,
WESLEYAN (Ro"ne), Sunday seMce, 7.30 Wednesday B1ble
Dexter Rd .. Longsville Ohio, Rev . Schoo/ 10 am worsh1p II a. m.
Study , 7.30 p.m .
Clyde Ferrell , Pastor. Sunday Jr. UMYF Wednesday 3 30 p. m. ,
MT UNION BAPTIST , Rev John
School
11
a m
Saturday B1ble Sludy Thursday 7 p m . choi r E' lsw1ck , pastor: Sunday scho~
preoc h1 ng ser"'1'es 7 30 p m, Procl1ce Thursday a p m
supenntendent, Don Wilson. Sun.
Wednesday e.,ening B1ble sludy
LETAR T FALLS, Church School day school , 9.45 a. m . eventng
ot730pm
lsi 2nd , 3rd Sundays 1015 o. m
worsh1p, 7.30 p m
Prayer
FAITH TABERNACLE CHURCH , 4th Sunday 9 15 am .: Worship meeltng, 7·30 p m. Wednesday .
Bo1ley Run ROod R&amp;"' Emmelt 1st, 2nd . 3rd Sundays 9· 15 0 m ;
TUPPERS PLAINS CHRISTIAN
Rowson, pastor Handley Ounn, 4th Sunday 7 30 p m
CHURCH , Eugene Underwood ,
supt Surdoy school, IOa . m Sun
MORNING STAR , worsh1p '9 :30 pastor; HOward Coldwell, Jr ,
day e.,entng serv1ce 7 30, 81ble a. m Church School 10:30 a m. ~ Sundar School Supt . Sunday
teo chmg, 7 30 p m Thursday
M1d-Week Serv1ce Wednesday 8 Schoo, 9:30 o m . Morning SerDYESVlllE COMMUNITY CHUR· p. m
man, 10:30 am · sunday evening
CH , Roger C Turner, pastor
MORSE CHAPEL, Worshp 11 ser.,lce 7 p.lll.
Sunday school, 9 30 a m.; Sunday 0 m , ChurchSchool9 .30a m ,
LETART
FALLS
UNITED
morning worship, 10.30 Sunday
PORTLAND, worship 7.30 p .m .. BRETHREN , Rev . Freeland Norns ,
e'Ventngserv1ce , 7 30.
Church School q 30 o m
pas tor, FIO(d Norns, supt Sunday
THE SALVATION ARMY 115
SUTTON C hurch School 9 30 s,hool, 9:30 a .m : morning serButternut Ave , Pomeroy Envoy a.m. Worship 1s t and Jrd Sundays mon, 10.30 a .m.: Prayer service,
and Mrs. Roy W1ning, officers in 10: 30a m .
Wednesday , 7:30p. m .
charge Sunday holtness meehng,
NORTHEASTCLUSTER
CHURCH OF GOD OF PRO·
10 o. m : Sunday school , 10 30
Rev R•chard Thomas
PHECY , 0 J. White Rood off 160,
a.m Leader YPSM El01se Adams ,
Pastor
Rev George Groyle , poslorSun·
7 30 p m
salvotton meet.ng
Duane Sydenstncker
day School, 10 a.m .. Arthur HenLod1es HOme League , 12 noon lo2
John Douglas
son, Supt , Morn1ng Worsf&lt;llp, 11
p.m , Thursday , prayer meeting
AssD&lt;:1otes
o.m., Yaung People's serv~et, 7
and Bible study, Thu rsday, 7·30
JOPPA, Wors.htp 10 o. m : Ch..Jr. p m.; EvenJMg service , 7 30 p. m.,
p.m
ch Sd'loo19 a .m : Prayer Meeting Wednesday Mid-Week Prayer
Ser~o~ice,
7 30 p . m ., Youth
MIDDLEPORT
Wed lles day 8 p.m .
..
MT. MORIAH BAPTIST, Corner
LONG BOTTOM , Sunday school meeting, 6·30 p.m Evening war Fourlh and Mom , M•ddleport, at 9·30 a m worship servi,es at ship, 7:30 P m
Rev. Henry Key, Jr., pastor, Sun. 7 30 p m 81ble sludy and Youth
CHESTER CHURCH OF THE
day School, 9.30 a .m .. Mrs . Ervin meeting
ol a p m .
on NAZARENE , Rev. Herbert Grate,
Baumgardner, supt.
Morning Wednesdays .
pastor. Worship servtee, 11 am.
wOrship, 10.45 a.m.
NORTH BETHEL worsh1p 11 and 7:30 p. m. Sunday . Sunday
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH Of 0 m .; Churchschooi10o . m
School, 9:30 a.m . RlchOrd Borton,
CHRIST IN CHRISTIAN UNION ,
ALFRED, Sunday School 9.30 supt Prayer m.eting, WednesLawrence Manley, poster, Mrs . o.m : worsh1p 10:A5 am ; Prayer day. 7,30 p m
Russell YOung Sunday School meeting Wednesday 7 4S p m ,
BRADFORD
CHURCH
OF
Supt Sunday School 9 30 a m UMW 3rd TuesdayS p m,
CHRIST Gabriel Mzrs , pastor. Bl·
Even•ng
worsh1p ,
7 30,
REEDSVILLE , Sunday School9:30 bleSunday Sct'lool9:30 a .m.: mOf·
Wednesday prayer meetmg, 7 30 a.m. warship 7.30 p m ; Prayer nmg church 10 30 om.: Sunday
p.m
Meet,ng 7 30 p. m. Tuesday , evening service,
7.00 p , m,
MT MORIAH CHURCH OF GOD , V1sita1Jon7 30 p.m. 1st Thursday .
Wednesday service, 7.30 p.m.
Raci ne Route 2 lhe Re"' James
SILVER RIDGE , W&lt;&gt;&lt;•h;p 10 o.m
LAUREL CLIFF FREE METHODIST
M Muncy , poster Sunday school, ChurchSchool9o.m.
CHURCH. Rev . Floyd F Shook,
9.45 a.m , morn1ng worship, 11
TUPPERS PLAINS , worsh1p 9 pastor, Lloyd Wnght, Sunday
a.m.;"'- evening wo'rship, 7:30
a m.ChurchSchooi10o . m .
School Supt., Morni ng worship
Prayer meeting Tuesday , 1 30
KENO CHURCH OF CHRIST , 9:30 a.m. , Sunday •School 10·20
p m., Young people's meeting, George Fredenck supt. Service am .. Wednesday Prayer and Bi·
7:30p.m. Thursday
weekly , 9:30 a.m on Sunday . ble StudY. 7·30 p.m ; ·sunday evenMIDDLEPORT FIRST BAPTIST
Preach•ng firs I and thtrd Sundays lng worship 7·30 p m., Ckolr ProcCorner Sh&lt;thand Palmer, the Rev . of month by Cliftord Sm1th 9.30 ttce Tf&lt;lursdoy, 7 P m ,
'
DEXTER CHURCH OF CHRIST,
Peter Grondol. pastor, Mannmg 0 m
Kloes , supermtendent Sunday
' HOBSON CHRISTIAN UNION , ' C~rles Russell, Sr .. m1nlster,
School, WMPO Radio program Qortell Ooddrill, pastor Sundoy Rtck Macomber, supf. Sunday
7 o4S a.m.: Sunday School, 9 IS school,
9:30 a. m.,
Leonard school, 9.30 o.m_ ; w01'sh1p ser a.m, Morntng worsh1p , 10· 15 Gilmore , first elder: even1ng 5 er- !VICe, 10.30 a.m. B1ble Study, Tues a. m
Youth actlvihes ond vfce, 7 ~30 p.m.
Wednesday day, 7:30p .m ,
feiiOwsf&lt;l1p for tuntor and sen1or prayer meeting, 7 30 p.m.
REORGANIZED CHURCH OF
h1gf&lt;l studen ts , 6 p.m Sunday
MT MOR!AHCHURCHOFGOO, JESUS CHRIST OF LAITER DAY
even1ng worship, 1 30 p m M•d · Roone Reule 2 TheRe"'. Charles SAINTS, Portland Recine Rood .
week prayer serviCes, Wednes · Hand , pastor Sunday school, 9·.45 Wl lltom Raush, postor, Tom
day , 7·30 p.m '
Stobort, Sunday Sehool Director,
0 m . mOrning worship 11 0 m
CHURCH OF CHRIST , Mid- E~en', n
serv.ces Tue~day and Sunday School, 9 30 a . m.. Morn.
9
dleporl, 5th and Mom, George r. nday , 7:30pm. '
lng wor1h1p, 10 30 a ,m, Sunday
Glole, mmlsler, M1ke Gerlach,
BEARWALLOW RIDGE CHURCH evening serviCe 1 p. m . Wednessuper~nlendant
Terry Yankey. OF CHRIST , DOug seaman , day even.ng prayer services , 7 .30
youth m1n1ster. 81ble school, 9 )0 m1n1ster 81b le study , 9 30 o.m, ; P m,
o.m .: morning wcwsh1p, 10.30 morntng worshtp 10 30 a.m..
BETHLEHEM BAPTIST , Rev Eorl
a.m .: e~o~ening worship, 7:30, a~entng worsh 1p, 7 30 p .m . Shuler, past« worship ••Nice,
prayer ser'VIce, 7. p. m. Wednes· Wednesday Bible study , 7.30p. m . 9:30 o .m. Sunday school, 10:30
doy .
KENO CHURCH OF CHRIST . om, Bible Study and prayer ser·
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF THE
George Fredenck , supt, Sunday ~o~iceThurtdoy . 1 30p,m .
NAZARENE , Rev Er~e CO)( supply mormng servtee, 9 30 am. w1th
CARLETON CHURCH. Kingsbury
postOf , Mrs Mary La they , Sunday prea(hmg on lirst and third Sun- Road . Gory King, pa~otor Sunday
school supl. Sunday school 9 30 day of month by George Pkkens
school. 9.30 o.m., eventng wora. m. ; monung worship, 10 ~0
. STIVEft~VIllE COMMUNITV ship, 7 30 p.m. Prayer meeli!'9,

'

doy

wedrwsdoy , 7:30p.m .

INDEPENDENT HOLINESS CHUR·

CH INC . _ cor~r Faurth and
Li~oln Sis , M iddleport; Rev,
O 'Dell Manley, postDI"; sony_Hud·
on Sunday school supennten~en.l Sunday school, 9·30 a. m .;
evening worskip, , 7 ·30 p .. m.,
prayer and pra1se serv•ce ,
Wednesday . 7 30p.m .
THE

OF

RUTLAND APOSTOLIC CHURCH

W·W-WAIT A MtloJIJTE!

ANY ORDINARY FINDER WOULD
TAKE IT TO A POLICE STATION ..

L!H ·~ NOT JUMP TO
CONCLU510N5! •. MAYSE
50MEOIJE JUST FOUND

OR !SEND IT TO M&lt;KE'ES ADDI1E55

HIS KIDNAPERS MU5T'VE
SENT THIS TO P~OVE
THEY'VE GOT HIM!

'YE~.

I 'M CAPfAip.,J E-A,"t'...

ALL RIGHT,
I GOT THE
1ETT~R .• I\IHAT
A60UT IT f

OOtJ'T WA5TE
TIM&amp; PlAYING
GAMES, WISE
GUY! .. DO 'IOU
WANT TO TAlK
BUSIN65$ OR
DON ' T 'IOU~

WHO'$ CALLI~6 ~

M&lt;KEE'$ LICEN$6 .. 50
THE'Y'RE R6TURN1t.l0

IT BY MAIL!

THEN YOU'VE 5E'EN
WHAT'S IN IT, AN D 'IOU
KIJOW WE 'V E GOT THE
ltleRCHAroiDISE-: ... ARE
READ'/ TO 8VV1

OF JESUS CHRIST , Thomas L.
Holmes
poster Btble study,
Soturdo~ , 7:30 p.m E~o~angehslic
p m , prayer meehng, Tuesday ,
7 30 p m., 81ble Study . Thursday ,
7 JOp m

THE

POMEROY

WESLEYAN

HOLINESS - Horrison.,tlle Rood .
Dewey K•ng, pastor, Edison
Weaver, assistant, Hen!)' Ebl1n,
Jr .. Sunday school supl Sunday
school , 9 30 a m.: mormng worship, 11 a m Sunday even1ng
service, 7 30, prayer meeftng,
Thursday , 7 30 p. m.

MASON COUNTY

MASON FIRST BAPTIST, Second
and PomerOy Sis , Stan Craig,
pastor. Sunday school, '9 45 a .m .:
w0fsh1p servtce, -1 1 o m., training
unton, 6 30 p.m., e~o~entng war.
sh tp serviCe, 7·30 p m Mtd Week
prayer service, Wednesday , 7 30
p.m
MASON CHURCH OF CHRIST P.

0 Box 487, Mdler St , Mason , W.
Vo Sunday 81ble Study tO a. m. ,
worsh1p 11 o m and 7 p m. Bible
Study Wednesday 7 p. m , Vocal
rYIUSIC .

FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST , Cor.

n&amp;r of Second and Anderson ,
Mason . Poslor , Wolter Cloud
Sundar school 9·45 a m., worship
senoce, II o.m and 1 30 p. m .
Weekfy Bible study , Wednesday.
7:30p . m,
MASON ASSEMBLY OF GOD,

Dudding Lane, Mason, W. Vo .
Chester Tennanl, Pastor. Sunday
School 9:.45 a .m .: (h1ldren's
Church 6:-45 p:m . Yaung People's
Service 6-45 p m . Evarlgelisltc
Service 7:30 p.m Women's MISsionary Co...ncll 10 a m. ftrst and
third Tuesdays. Prayer and D•ble
Study, Wednetdoy , 7.30p.m
HARTFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST
IN CHRISTIAN UNION , The Rev

Wtll1om Campbell, pastor Sundar
School, 9 30o.m. : James Hughes,
supt., e"'ening service, 7 30 p. m .
Wednesday e.,entng prayer
meeting, 7 :30 p.m . Youth prayer
servico eock Tuesdoy.
BIBLE

OF •

RUTLAND CHURCH OF GOD -

NAZARENE, Re~o~ . Lloyd 0 . Grimm,
Jr. , poslor. Sunday sc~l. 9·30
o.m ; worship serviCe, 10.30 a.m .
Broodcasf hve overWMPO . yOung
peopl..t ' s
ser~o~ice ,
6 45 ;
evongillsfiC servtce, 7.30 p.m .
Prayer meeting, wednesday , 7:30
p.m : Missionary meet1ng, 7:30
p m f•rsiWedne!idoy of month,

FAIRVIEW

CHURCH

Pastor oenms. Bales. Sunday
school, 10 a.m: worshtp serv•ce,
It 30 a m. ond 7 30 p m, Prayer
meeting, wednesday ' 7.30 p. m .

Oenn1s Smtth. pastor; Frank
Vaung,Sundoy school supt Sundov school and com muman, 9·30
Worship and comun10n,
0 m
10 30o m
RUTLAND
COMMUNITY
CHURCH, Sunday School 'I·JO
a m.. worshtp ~ervke II a.m .
Wednesday prayer meelmg, 7·30
p m. yOuth services, Su~oy. 7
p m: Sunday nigf&lt;llworsh•p. 7:30
CHURCH

PEOPLE ' S

POMEROY _ corner Mom and •
Covrt Sis , third floor c:: ... er
Lighthavse Re!itouront. Han!)'
Cook pastor sunday school, 10
o.m . .' morning wor~hlp, 11 a .m :
even 1ng
serviCe ,
7 · 30
Wedn&amp;sdoy even1ng serviCe
7 30 Interdenominational, full
gospel

RUTLAND
RUTLAND CHU~CH Of CHRIST,

RUTLAND

1

Th ~flB\ Sen!inel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday, April 29, !977

CHURCH ,

Letart, W Vo ., Rt. 1, Rev. Charles
Hargraves , pastor Worship ser"'ICe&amp;, 9·30 !) .m : Sundov sct'lool,
II a m ,; evening worship, 1 30
p.m. Tuesday cottage prayer
meeting and Bible study , 9 30
a.m . worsh1p servtce w... dnes.:

THI't''S MIGoHTY

GOD - Not Pentecos tal , Rev.
George O•ler, pastor Worship
5ervlce Sunday , 9 45 a.m .. Sunday school, 11 a m., worship service, 7·30 p m. Thursday prayer
meeting, 7·30 p.m
MT HERMON Umted Brethren
Church Sunday School 9.30 a . m.
worship service 10.45 a m.
Preaching serv1ces every Sunday
al ternottng with C. E Wednesday
prayer meef1ng 7·30 p.m. Re., .
James Leach, postof'
Dav1d
Holter, loy leader.
JEHOVAH'S WITNESSES, 1 m1 le
east of Rutland, ju!1cl1on of ROute
124 and Noble Summtt Rood (1174) Sunday Bible lecture. 9 30
watchtC~He r study,
10·30
0 ,
am.; Tuesday, Bible study. 1 and
a,15 p m., Thursday , th(u)(:rotlc ,
7 30 p m., serviCe
school
meehng, 8 30 p m
HOPE BAPTIST - 570 Grant St.
Middleport, Bobby Elkms pastor.
Sunday School , 10om., worsh1p
ser.,•ce. 11 am , evenmg service
1 30 p m
Thursday prayer
meetang and B1b le study, 7:30
p.m
RUTLAND

FREEWILL

HE'/ WAIT, OOP.' I

NICE, UMF'Ai
'I'OU BESU~
AN ' 11-\ANI&lt; 'EM
FOR ME, WILL
YOU?

SYRACUSE FIRST CHURCH OF

7

WANTCf\t&gt;. 'TO ,.AKE
~ ' ~QYAL MOOVIto.N

SlliNDAI&lt;D WITH

"'YYU .I

SHEEE:SH !

... SO '0..1

PLANT

CAN
t; ON

r

FEEL M?RE

LIKE A PACK ANIMAL
~AN

iH ' NEW SITE
WHE'"'J Y 1F!ND tT!

LITTLE ORPHAN

I

AN &amp;)(f'LORER.

ANNIE-DARKEST HOUR
NO! DOti'T
TAU( ltKI!
THAT- BUT
CXJME· · HQ..P
Mt! """""

""' eeo-

BAPTIST

Church - Leland Holey , pastor,
Sunday school , 10 o m. e.,eniMg
service.
7·30 p m
Prayer
.meeHng Wednesday , 7 30 p.m

0

CHURCH OF GOO of Praphe&lt;y,

located an the 0. J. Wh•te ROod
off highway 160. Sunday School
10 a.m . Superintend~nt John
LDYeday . First Wednesday mght
o1 month CPMA ser..,.lces, second
wednesday WMB meet1ng, th~rd
thrOugh ftfth youth service.
George Croyle, pastDf'.

AND HE WILL
PRE:SS TJ..lE;
Ci-I.ARG~ 'rr

570 '

HOPE BAPTIST CHAPEL -

??- WHAT

5HE 15BELOVED WIFE'I'r- AN'
CHARGt=s-z THI5 WERE MERE'LY A LALJGI-lABLE
AGIN WHO'?FAM'LY S~Trr-

REACTiONARY

. REPt.lGNANI

I C\/''CIVIt:VV~V

15 DAID!'!-

Grant St , Middleport: Rev . Dobby
Elkins Sunday school, 10 a .m.,
morn1ng wOrship, 11, evening
worshtp, 7 30 p.m.: Thursdov
even1ng 81ble study and prover
meeting, 7·30 p m . Affiliated wtth

-Ht= N~R

ANervEREDr50 YO' KIN BE A H'IFOO&lt;ITE'
AN'CR'/OJE'-R HIM-BUT· -""
NOT' ME "l"-

WENTTOTH'CIN AN'
Me€ A BILLIONWt=
WRIT'
....,Tc'
,.;
O HIM-

1Z-'

~ ...

S.B C

the Sennonette

"The flowers appear on the earth, the time of singing has
come, and the voice of the turtledove is heard in our land." Song of Solomon 2:12.
Spring, perhaps more than any other season, vibrantly
affirms the amazing grace of the Eternal God. The renewal of
the natural world in the warm afterglow of Easter truly
reawakens our consciousness of God's gracious intentions
toward all-foc God is no respector of persons.
To those who receive this gill, the grace of God equals
forglvent!58 and a new standing with God. This same grace
then becomes an influence in our lives, conferring a fresh
ootlook and perspective on life. Our "spiritual eyes" are
opened to perceive God's grace expressed in the surrounding
world, as Christ so often did.
Scripture declares, "The grace of God has dawned, with
healing for all mankind." ((Titus 2:22). Whenever I think on
this marvellous text, I can visualize a gorgeous sunrise- with
singing birds, flowers springing forth, and freshness all
around. Suoh is the picture of spring. Such is the inner world of
one living in grace. Christ is the dawn of God's grace, for He
changes all our sunsets into sunrise.
May our consciousness be alert to tbe ever-abounding
grace of God in every situation of life. One needs only eyes of
falth,and a courage born of hope to claim the shining promise.
The Christ who redeems from sin is Indeed the Lord of Life !
Suddenly, it's spring! Spring within as well as spring
without. Il's spring becaUBe Christ - our Eternal •
Contemporary - Uves again. His grace can renew and revive
every heart and life when we let Him have His way. - Rev.
Richard W. Thomu, pastor, Northeast Cluster of the United
Methodist Church, Tuppers Plains.

• KATIE I PENNY!
fT'5 50 GOOD TO
SEE YOU!

YOUtPE
..A SIGHT.
fOR50 RE
EY ES;
'TOO!

I aded like
a dunce!

I 'D LIKE YOU TO
MEET A FRIEND
OFMI NE 1
RU&amp;SE t L
M ILLER.

ANY
FRIEND OF
YOUR&amp; IS
A FRIEND
Oi=OUQS
EH 1
PENNY?

FINE

DON'T KNOW HOW IM GLA-2i:TIE!
GR, TEFI/L I AM THAT
FULL
YOU BROUGHT ME OUT
OF LIFE TO LET
HERE I LOOK! MY
A 'THING LIKE
AR'IHRIT IS IS t&gt;O
ARTHfi.ITIS GET
MUCH BETIEfl.l
YOU DOWN!

BIL~ YOU

J UST
FINE I I Fl ~lALLY FEEL
LIKE I BELON0 ... LI KE
I'VE RJUND A HOM E
A REAL f'OME!

• AND HoW
AfiE YOt.J
DOINGPENNYf

I even let him
kiss me!

TAURUS (April 20 · Moy 20)
Even though you're set upon
hBv1ng lhtngs done ~our way today. don't o~o~erreact If o•hers fall
Ia fit your mold exectly

.

29

AS

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·Doc.

..

CANCER (Juno 2t-.luly 22)

LEO (July 23·AIO!I· 22) If you
have authority over others. wteld
it wisely today Should you act
tyrannically, you'll teet bad about
it later.

VIRGO (Aug . 23-Sopl. 22)
Assume no financial commitments on behalf ot someone
else today II could turn Into a
costly mess tor rou

ARIES (March 2t-Aprll 11)
Compan1ons you usually gel
along well With could be miffed
today if they teet you are taking
them for granted . Watch
yourself!

LIBRA (lopl. 23·0cl. 23) Make
do with what you have. rather
than borrow What you get loday
1s likely to make you feel unduly
obligated .

April ~· 1177

SCORPIO (Oct. 2-4-NO¥. ZZ) If
you have problems with others
today be honest about wko
caused them ll's possible you
cojjd b~ more IO blame .

Advancement 1s ltke ly this comtng year, but added responslbillhes come with it Be sure
you take time to smell 1he roses
along the way,
'

-1

SOUTH

three notrump and

A o\K64

elecLed to double

2¥
4¥
6¥

Pass
Opemng le&lt;Jd

So uth

'"'

3•

,J .

Pass
Pass

5•
Pa ss

.

2

The unlucky expert had a
new hand for us He showed us

--FIN' DON'T 'lOLl GO WAGGIN'

the West cards. gave us the

btddtng and as ked

'lORE TONGUE ABOUT IT~~

'\tfl]INf fi;}'\l

' What

would vou lead? ·

!

We stud ted the hand and
replied. " We would leod the

'

~arne

deuce of diamonds you
Jrd D1d Sout h make a
smg leton ten 'l ··
· No. · was the reply . " My
partner won the tnck and

gave me a club ruff Later on
he made a trump tm:k to :sel
t&lt; declarer two Tlw~ hand took
phu.:c 1r1 an 11\IP match and
believe 1t or not , cu ::; l u :s the

ran the adver•.tsement ·
11 Telephone
three dollars,
1

guaranteed to work one rruie.
Five males - five dollars"
In 1931, Prestdent Herbert
Hoover recetved the King of
Starn. first absolute monarch
to vtstl the United States.
In 1945, Amertcan troops
liberated 32,000 prtsoners
from
the
Dachau
concentratton camp m Nazi
Germany.

~THAT SCRAMBLED WOAD GAME

So ~ ~ ~(.!.)~'-!1

Jo}

by Henri Arnold

and Bob lee

delighted that he redoubled Unscramble these tour Jumbles ,
West cashed hiS SIX dmmond one letter lo each square, to form

±
..L~E~ .J.. _

trK1ks to score 1.000 pomts. a fourordlnarywords
net ga Ill or 800 and 13 iMPs r--::-::--,=-:-:--.

wht ch gave his side the
match

I

QCCIL

_:;:..:::.,~:.:;:~-ch~.,...--.

L.

~~~~~ l...

Colorado reader wants to ~~-N-Y_L_Q_P_.,
kn ow why we s t !I I co unI L~..;_.-_:;~:.;.-+-T?"~
~~1ndo;; m rubber and party
j
A

+

By Oswald &amp; James Jaco by

BARNEY

ILE PAW AIN'T
LOOKIN', I'LL HIDE MY
BUTTER -AN'- EGG
MONEY IN MV
SHOE-- -

Pa ss

~

West

South was delighted

l\orth East
1 ..

PISCES (Feb. 20-Morch 20) Do

ed one spade and West passed
North Jumped to three clubs ,

... i 6 5 3

2•
4•
Pass

WhaL happened at the other
table was that South respond·

South made a very had btd or

Ea st -West \'Uln t.:!rabl c
Wes t

We

.. 10 9

+1

gnevance today Its best to wa1t
unt1l you re both ca lm to work It

We· ll give you a hmt
cl1dn ' t f1gure Jt out

t t0984 j

"' •1 1)7 5

about Your cus tomar y caution ,

your part to keep the household
budget 1n line today. If yo ur mate
wants something you ca n't af- \
lord try to talk him out of It

.. J 10 2
¥ K tO 6

~

DIS1RIC.T.

Th;s out

ts not the day for you to seelc;
ravors from •n fluentlal contacts
Avo1d an almost certatn rebuff

EMH

" 9 ol
+ A KQ.l52

\))~'R!; ltJ lHIO t.O.IJ·IIet.lT

CAPRICORN (Doc. 22-Jon. t9)
To further yourself. you may be
tempted to gamble on
something today you know little

Before y ou go any further

happened at the other tab le

WEST
•Q 9753

f,lOT Ill MLI OOibHB~OOO...

match . ·

sec if you ca n figure out what

,. ,; KQ.J A4 2

GEMINI (Moy 21-June 20) !Itt's would serve you better
party t1me for you today. don 't
use 11 as the forum for bringing AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Fob. 19)
up a serious top1c You could Your mate may rekind le an old
spo1l everyone's fun

Today IS Frtday, April 29,
the 119th day of 1977 with 246
to follow.
The moon is bet ween its
first quarter and full phase .
The morning stars are
Venus and Mars.
The evening stars are Mer·
cury, Jupiter and Saturn
Those born on this date are
under the sign of Taurus.
The duke of Wellington, the
British general who defeated

Unlucky Expert suffers again
NORTH 1D )

Napoleon at Waterloo, was
born April 29, 1769.
On th1s day m htstory .
In 1878, Boston newspapers

The Almanac
United Press InternaUonai

BRIDGE

· For Soturdoy, April 30, 1177

Bernice Bede Osol

.....,......_...

f. .. ., .. _ "'~ ... · -

Oswald and Jim Jacoby

21) Work and responsib ilities
may be swep t under the rug to·
day because you're more
pteasure~bent than duty · •
consc ious They won't go away

OF WITH
M R. I LEI&lt; HEfZE I
AN D I'VE BEEN DOIN0
SOME WI&lt;JTING l

AND WHAT ABOUT
YOUUBILLY? HAVE
YO FOUND A
JOE&gt;?

.

"' J8 3 2

ASTRO•GRAPH

AND5HE1S Naf lACKING rQR
BEAUS, EITHERt WHAT Wmt
AL L THE 5URF fiS AND
130DYI3UILDEI&lt;&amp;
A fiOUNDI

o

I I

it ts a matter oi trad1L1on
They were counted m whast r - - - - - - - . ,
bndge and auct10n bndge and OEGAMA~

I

we have never gotten around ·

to dr oppmg them

tn 1

egul~r

contrafl
(Do you have a question
lhe experts&gt; Wnte "Ask

lor

the

......

[

[

(

·

-

WHAT H IS !50WLIN6
COMPAN ION WAS

r----...,.--,

I AAEPPA

Jacobys " cara ol thiS ~-.:_:;..;.::~,...;....;...~._....,._

I I

newspaper The Jacobys wiJ,
V y 'J
ans wer m d1 v1duaJ quest1ons L.-'-'r.,&gt;-&lt;J\,"-'&gt;-L..AL.....JL...l_;_'' stam ped. sell-addressee
envelopes are enclosed ThE
most m teresting quest1om
wl/1 be used m th is

Answer here:

colu mn

rece 1ve cop 1es 01 Yesterdays
JACOBY MODERN I
,,
and

Will

r

Now arrange the r;1 rcled leners to
form tho ! urp r1se answer. as sug gested l;ly the t~ l)o ve cartoon

HIS " h
r"""'IT?"'"'I,..,..."'~j II r 'f'
"
__ "- h A

I

n

(Answers lomorrow)

Jumbles BARON ABATE WIZARD ENTITY
Answer " II absolutely MAKES the island'"~

•"WATER"

•

�\
11)-The Daily Sentmel, Mtddlerv&gt;"'

0

omeroy 0

Fnday Apnl29, 1977

15 Wunl,OI Umk r
( ~~~

Auto Sales

("lull ~~

100

I &lt;.I

"''

'"'
'"

180
300

MALE DARK red lr sh Setter lest 1n
F•ve Potnts area fast seen Tues

J ,,

E11 11 ""ord t vet tlw n

1

day morn.ng Answers to the
nome of Zok Reword Phone
9'126072

LUI 15

J ptl

~o~ urtb, IS ~ U~l l~ l)t'l W()

da y

Alb ruru u If{ otlwr Lhon UJtllit'(U h v ~
lili ~ .s ~1 1! !)to rlla ;~l'\1 l:ll tit' I tli! )

Help Wa_nled

ral&lt;"

I I IIH'llh r y C~ d

or Tlw

k~ lliVI

Obituary ti lt'l ts l'l' ,.; urd
m umum Cw.sh u ih.h &lt;~II~ "
M o h1l~

Jlmnl' sales

t~ ml

s~

APPLIANCE SERVICE man e;~~:
per enced
No phone calls
Go-lho Refrgeroton Co 611
Th rd Ave Gc;~lltpOIIs Oh 0

00

Ya 1d l&gt;&lt;l lcs

!l lH pU d Ort!y Wit h 1: 11 ~1 II' th
onl~ Z5 n~u t d a gt for .ll(b t il r\
u r ~: Bvx. Nut1tbe1 In C.- rc uf Till. !)t

OLDER RESPONSIBLE lady to l•ve
m orld care lor aged wtdow tn

1:1 t

Rutland oh o Not nvalid nor
sen le l ght hOusework and
cookmg
No laundry
Call
7ol 2 2078 f or mforrnol an

I ''
rh~

Pu l&gt; hsl c•

~ ~~

v cs tht 1glt

t l'ti.Lt or r C J~ l1 an} 11 Is d ~u l I ul;.

jt'{'IJOI a l Tl t Pu b! sl '"r w II 101 lM..
~lipvi\S ilJ h: ftr I"II}H that 1)111 1111 () 1
Ph c 99'l21 56

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADUNES
Mo lla}
N w n ur Satu1 Ia)

l uc ~dil}
tl ru f nd t)
1 PM
tl c J&lt;J y txfon I}U!Jh~:ut t r

742 2331

tid}

CASH I I I fer 1unH, cars Frye s
Truck and Auto WREC~ER SER
VICE Phone 742 208 1

1

OLD FURNITURE !Ce boxes bross
beds
etc
complete
hOuseholds Wr te M D M•ller
Rl 4 Pomeroy Qh10 or coli
9'12 7760

IN MEMORY of our dod Fronk
Sh ies who leff us 35 yrs ago
onAprl29
Upng~tand W!&gt;t n all h1s ways
Fa thfu I true lo the end of his
days
Ins lence he suffered npat ence
he bore
Till God called h m home to suffer
no more
Sadly m1ssed by Frances Helene
and Rollm

WANTED
CH IPWOOO Poles
Mo)( d1ometer 10 mches on
lorges tend $8 per ton bundl
&amp;d slobs $b per fan Delvered
to Qh o Pollet Company Rt 2
Pomeroy
Oh1o
Phone
992 2689

Stond 1ng ltmber Phone667 6214
ONE OR 2 acres n cOun try w1th orwltheut hovse Cleared or
\Jr1Cleared On land con tra ct
Phone 742 3074

0\J rln g the illness and death of
Magg1e Smtih we w1sh to
thank our fnends ond relat•ves
who sent cards and flo..vers
The Ewmg Chapel Or Telle
nurses of Veterans HOSpital
espectatly Sue Ttll1s LPN Rev
Pemn and Amos T11l1s We also
wtsh to thank tllg ne1ghbors of
Mulberry Ave and espec•olly
Denno and R•ch Jones her best
of fnend John E•ch We cant
thank yOu enaugh tor your
ktndness dunng the 1llness and
death of Our dea r mother YOur
k ndness w1ll never be forgot
ten May Gods love shtne upon
l~e always
Children Sylvia Corman Dale
Smt th Qon Sm fh Guy
Sm th and Georgte Scrgggs

tf YOU hove a serv ce to offer
wont to buy or sell somet~tng
oe lo~1ng f or work
or
whale\ler
yov II get resu lts
foster w th o Senhne/Wcn!Ad
Coll992 2156
RUMMAGE SALE at Letart Falls
Q1.1 /len s old s tore house Star
tmg 26 27 28 29 end 30th
9 00 5 ()() lOfs of womens
mens ch1ldrens bob 1es th 1ngs
And some cor ports Odds and
ends

5 FAMILY V'ord So lo somethmg
for everybody Thursday 28
Frldgy 29 Saturday 30th T V
etc 900 till600 off Rt 7 on
143 T~ard Horrtsonvtlle at
old Jnhrmory
GARAGE SALE Frtday and Solur
day at lower end of M ddleporl
340 Page Sf someth ng for
everybody
ODDS AND ENDS Sole Mobile
Home related ports and ac
cessOnes
Exterior dpors
shOwer doors cabtnet doors
drawer fronts faucets carpet
remnants 4 &gt;~ 8 pannelling and
mtenor tnm 4 &gt;~ 811 nyl baords
sl dtng door screens and many
other m LsC 1tems Saturday
A.pnl 30 9 o m ttll du sk
Ktngsbury Home Soles 1100 E
Mo1n Sf Pomeroy

RACINE GUN Club We hove
changed Our gun shoot to FAI
DAY' n1ghts starttngot7p m
SHIRLEY Jeffers Wolfe IS now
the new Owner of lolos Beauty
SOlon tn Syracuse Ohio John
St
Shtrley was formerly
ompiCJved at Lindo s Lod{. Fa~r
Rocllle Ohto Arry of my ormer
patrons wlshtng appo.ntments
may call 992 2S..9 Phone nOw
hs ted under lola s Beauty Shop
unhl new d~rectorles are •ssued
at whu:;h f1me the nome w1ll be
Shtrley s Beauty Nook

YARD SALE Fr day May b Rf
124 1 mt le east of SOuthern
High School Racine Oh o
Southern Bond Boosters

RISING STAR Kennel BOard1ng
Indoor Outdoor runs groom ng
all breeds
clean son lory
tac hhes Cheshtre phone (6 14}
367 0292

SHOOTING MATCH Just off rt 7
by pass every Sunday at noon
SHOOTING MATCH Sunday at
Rutland Leg1on Holt noon May
1

HOOF HOLLOW 81.1y sell trade
or Ira n horses RUTH REEVES
lrotner Phone (614 ) 698 3290
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT.
Case No 22046
Est•te af R08E RT
L
FORREST Deceased
Notice Is hereby given tf"lllt
Jack R Robinson of 6l8 lf2
Seconct Street Mar lette
Otl io has been duly appointed
E.:ecutor of the Estate of
Robert L Forrest deceased
tete of Rutland
Me igs
county Oh io
Creditors are requtred to
ftle the tr claims w1th se1d
fiduciary
w it hin
three
months
Dated th is 11th day of April
1977
Manning 0 Webster
Judge
Court of common Pleas
Probate Di visio n
15. 22 2' 3tc

r-"MEiGs__,
I
I

Eqlipmena
PH.ft2-1176

JnterllltiOINII
Harvtstw
New ldtl Equipment

Chain

S:C------

t&gt;n ion sets

1 good McCullough Chain
Saw
S6S
I Good Used Poulan Chiun
Saw
S§O
SurVIVOr safes only sa 9S
On•on Seh 31bs
S1 oo
1 New 15 Cubtc Ft
Freeler
S299
Pomeroy Landmark

~'9.·.:..Jack w carny Mgr
out aw n ng o1r cOnd lf1Dn1ng ~
Phone 992 2111
Self confo 1ned
Phone
992 7315
SPRING GARDEN Supplies Cab
bage
cau l flOwer
braccoh
and
head lettuoe plants
yellOw" whtfe and red on1on
sets onion plants Kennebec
COUPLE WITH 4 daughters need a
cobbler Kalohchn Red Pont ac
3 or 4 bed room home Mus f be
and Red Losada seed potatOes
nice Phone 992 6294
Sulk garden seeds pottmg sod
peof moss lru I trees and rose
bushes
M•dway Me rkel
Pomeroy
Oh o
992 2582
Bob s Markel Mason W Vo
3 AND 4 RM furntshed and un
(30-4)773 5721
furn shed opts Phone 992
5•34
1973 JEEP CJS good cond hon
Plus extras $2900 Bunker H1ll
COUN TRY Mob le Home Port.: Rt
Road acrOss from ceme tery
33 ten m los north of Pome roy
Large lots w1th concre te pat as TOMATO
PLANTS Cabbage
s dewalks runners end off
brocco lt cau liflOwer brusse l
street park ng Phone992 7479
sprOu Is egg plants hang ng
baskets
pots
geromums
2 BEDROOM Tra ler Brawn s
begon1os
flats
petumos
Tro lle r Pork phone 992 3324
mcngolds
pons1es
sclz a
TUPPERS PLAINS OHIO New 2
balsam
dtonthu s
s nap
bedroom apartments
Fully
dragons alyssum V1nco col
carpeted No pe ts $170 mon
eus
Cleland s GreenhOuse
thly Phone (61 4) 667 6304 or
Roc•ne Gerald•ne Cleland
667 33•9
MASSEY FERGUSON 711 Skod
2 BR MOBILE Home $125 month
s leor mo tor 5.400 bucket w th
pay own uhl t es depos1t
Fayette tro1ler Sh nn s t ractor
Wnte Polly BOwla nd Rt 4
Soles Leon W Va Phone (61.4)
Thorn&gt;11ile on
.&amp;58 1630
- - ~-,-.,.c;-~--c-:
SMALL 2 BR Mot:u le Home $65 1974 SUZUKI TM100 newly rebu Jt
engtne e)(cellent cond1l on
month
Pay own ul l1hes
Coll843 :1945 m1.1s t sell
DepOs t Wnte Polly Bo.vland
Rt 4 Thornville Ot,•o
18FT CAMP ING tro ler w1th roll

1973 YAMAHA 360 MX new
motor $350 Phone 992 2595
21 JN ZENEITH Color TV ex
ce llen t cDnd1 f on Trovts rod
new Bb n to 150 tn Phone
742 2187

NEED A
WATER SOFTENER?
Le' Pomeroy Landmark
sonen &amp; condttton your
water and a Co op water
soUener Model UC XVI
Now Only

1279•95

Le' us test
Free

1

your water

Pomeroy Landmark
wz_;_JackW carsey,Mgr
...
Phone 992 1181

&amp;s

OLIVER DIESEl 0 C 9 Bulldozer NEED CENTRAL Alf cond1f antng
for yOur mob1 le home? We
with 8 ff blade Call {614 )
hove the best Let our experts
592 2605 after 9 p m except
nstoll a worry free (ole1110n
Sot and Sunday mghts:
un1t We serv•ce what we sell
1 42 tn cast tron k1lchensmk I
Ktng s bury
Home
Soles
bastn and 1 drctn bOard hong
Pomeroy
Oh o
Phone
on wolt type wf'ute 1 3 burner
992 7034
gas hotp late Phone992 5714
1972 two bedroom mobde home
8 ac res land for sale Close to NO
completely turn1shed
wtth
1 m1ne 6b9 3633
automaftc washer re ady to
m011e or mo...e n Rl 7 above
S nger Golden TOuch N Sew does
Gol!tpoltS 30.4 882 2-466
1t all ztg z•g zags m akes
des •gns auto buttonholes afld 1'il7 1 12x60Sky ll nemotulehome
mony other lectures tust l1ke
portly furn shed 304 682 2466
new IYIQinal pru:e $449 95
Mus I sell for $99 95 cash or 6 room and bo t h 4 bedroom lv
hv1ng room k• k~n mob le
terms Phone 992 51-46
home :247 2252
NORGE AUTOMATIC ileovy duty
ODDS
AND ENOS Sale Mob1le
washer and Uruco dryer wh te
Home related parts and oc
Good concltt1on $300 for both
cessones
Exterior doors
Pi"lane 992 5850 1n eventngs
shower doors cabtnef doors
1897 MODEL WINCHESTER pump
drawer fronts fau cets carpet
gun
e~tcellent
cond1t 011
remmonts 4 x 8 pan nell ng and
Edison Cyl•nder type
mtenor tnm 4 x 8 vtnyl boards
phonogrop h
Don Eblin
s ltd •ng door screens and mol'ly
Br o wn s Tra ler Court
otl'ler m1sc 1tems Saturday Ap
Mtnersvtlle
nl 30 9 o m t Jl dusk
l(mgsbu ry Home Sales 1100 E
ECONOMY TRACTOR wlth all at
Mom St Pomeroy
toch111ents L•ke new asktng
$2250 Phone (61~ ) 698 32'10

All BREED Ocg groom ing
reasonable rates Colt tor op
pointmenl J &amp; 8 Kennels
7~2 3162

ODDS AND ENOS Sole Mobole
home relo led ports and oc
cussones
EKtenor doors ONE ACRE Lot In Tuppers Plams
Arball Add1t on Very nice lot 1
s hower doors cobtnet doors
drawer
fronts
faucets
carpet
Call
843 2945 must sell
SI BERIAN HUSKY fe ma lo 6 monremnants 4 &gt;~ 8 p onnelhng and
ths shots Ntee pup $75
13 A and 1974 MatHie home one
1nlenor fnm 4 x 8 vinyl boards
Phonem 5055
other mob1le home s1te Onlled
s hdmg door screens and many
well
on 681 near Tuppe rs
SIAMESE KITTENS seal pomt $15
other m1sc 1toms Saturday
Ploon• $10 900 phone (61&lt;)
Phone985 .oll75
Apnl 30 9 a m hll dusk
667 3668
K•ngsbury Home Soles IIQO E
AKC SHETLAND sheep dogs
Mo•n
Sf
Pomeroy
ACRE FARM w cattle &lt;1nd tree
56
(M.n) Collies 2 females 7
tor
w th equtpment Phone
weeks old Shots and wormed
FOR MEMORIAl DAY Beouttul
247 2241 afte r 5 p m for mare
Phone (61•) 367 0292
selectton of flOw-ers Baskets
tnformal•on
sprays wreaths vases Fay!&gt;
Nwelty Shop N Second St
HOUSE IN Mlners \lt lle 5 rooms
M dd lepcrt
and bath Forced otr hea t
natural gos 3 porches and
USED FORESTRY EQUIPMENT 1975 JEEP CHEROKEE p b ps
basement pt,one 992 5833
Hydra Sawbuck- Model 1000 A
Ouadratrock
Go~
f1re s
M•ch•gon Model 55A6 Loader 6 RM 11ome and bath Phone
Phone (30-4) Bn 2340"
John Deere 4•0B Sk dda r Con
992 3360
1968 GTX •44 tpeed E&gt;~cellent
tact Denn1s Smurr
(6U)
3 bedroom house near Eastern
co ndlt1on
$1000
phone
83B 5345
Htgh School 2 cor garage full
9&lt;12 3259
basement Iorge I vmg room
18FT SUCK Croft Boat fiberglass
1972 YEG.A •.SOO 1972 Plymouth
bottom 80 h p Johnson tro1 le r
w1lh ftreplcce fam1 ly room
$1000 Phone9•9 2307
985 3867
and ~~· equtprnent Also 60
tl p motor and tanks Phone
1971 MONTE CARLO air candt
15 ACRES OFF New Luna Road
9&lt;127201
t,ontnt p s p b radial ttres
nea r Forrest Acres Pork Phone
rally wheels low mdeoge ex MUNCIE -4 speed transm1ss10n tn
742 2336
tra clean Phone 992 3230 offer
:-:--:-~~,-eludes Hurs t sh,fter clutch
REEDSVILLE 3 bedroom Iorge
6p m
preuvre plate $125 Phone
beouftful new k•tchen and din
9&lt;123502
1967 Chevrolet oiil dOOf' stofton
lng area L•v.ng room l'os
wagon ve ry good cancMton US ED -cF:-:0:-:R:-E-:c
ST"R---Y--::
EO
-::U-I"
PM
~EN
-T-:­
fireplace on appro.:~rnately 3 4
Phone 992 2295 after 6 p m
a cre Phone 378 626b
Timb•rlack 2300 Sktdder Jol'ln
Con b• seen at 114 Condor Sf
Deere 350 Dozer
Hydro 10 ACRES FOR Sole Phone
Betty Webster
Sawbuck Mode l 1000 A (on
992 3513
fo ci Oennts Smurr phone (61A)
1911 Ford Tonno 500 49 000
THREE YEAR old 8 level seuth of
838 5345
orlg1nal mtles outomot c 351
Tuppers Plains near ROute 7
ho~
n.-m
~..31_8_
1 _~
eng1ne
$ 1000 00
Col! BASS80AT ~P~
Lorge lot
trees
bu1Jt 1ns
9923194
ca rpeted three bedroom! twa
CHAIN LINK fence green cOoled
19?5 VENTURA POrlf1oc 260 To
baths lomtly room two cor
230 fl long w th 3 gates L•nda
tak• Over payments
Coli
ga rage TP wafer $29 900
G•lkey last house on Brownell
Phone 985 -4205
~92657 I~
Ave M1ddleport.t

eo. r

I'OMIIIOY, 0.

McCullo(,ll

New CoOp water sof.
teners model VC SVI
Only $279 95
Sa\le UO 00 on a new
Hotpoln t R:efrtgerator
1 Good Used MtCI.IIIough
Chltn Saw
us
Now In s tock complete line
of bull&lt; gtrden seeds and

YARD SALE 4 Fom 11y Yard Sale MOBILE HOME space for rent $35
Fnday and Saturday April 29
manltl Pay awn utd l1es wnte
and 30 2 m les south of Tup '~" Polly Bowland Rf 4 Thron
pe rs Plctns v, m1le north of
_•_•_
l le:.;.cO:.;Hc.:..,.,--,---~--c­
Eastern H•gh School :1, m le off 20 x 24 bid tor rent Polly
Rovte 7 on Co Raad 28 llee n
Setw lond Rt _.. Thcr rwt lle
Swam 985 4219
Oh1o
-4 FAMILY Yord Sale Fndoy arld :PA
-:':ST
:.'U
:'.R
0:E
: -::F::
O::R- , e- n-ct- -:pcch-o-n 0
Saturday 10 o m t II 4 P m
992 3513
Bedsp re ads
women s _c:..:.::~~--------------teenogers and mens cloth1ng
Other mtsc •ferns By F111e P
otnl Store

WE WISH to thank Our many
fnends
ne ghbors
and
relat1ves tor the~r prayers ex
press•ons of sympat~ cards
tood and beaufllul flowers
shOwn us dur ng the illness and
death of Our beloved mother
and grandmother Ed th Ab
b.ott Spectol thanks lo the Mtd
dleport Emergency Squad Rev
NOel Hermon Rev Andrew
Parsons Rev James Corb11t
Or Walker Holzer Medtcol
Center and Rowlin95 Coates
Funeral Home Your ktndneu
w II always be remembered
God bless each one
Children
~orold
Lawrence
Vlrg1mo Trude and all the
fomtly

W

FOR SALE

-w..i leil ~~~~

NOTICE

4P M
Frrdu) aftcrnu

COAL I mestone and colc1u1Tl
chi or de and cok•um br ne fer
dust control and special mixing
so li tor farmers ExcelsiOr Salt
1969 CHEVElLE 4 dr hard tap 350
Works Man Street PomerOy
outomot•c
pOwer steenng
Oi"lto ar phone 992 3891
power brokes E&gt;~cellent cond1
hon
Askmg $300
Phone APPLES FITZPATRICK ORCHARD
'1911360 af1er 4 p m
STATE ROUTE 689 PHONE
WILKESIIILLE (6U) 669 3785
1971 LTO COUNTRY Squ1re Ex
cell~nt mechonkol cond•hon
CAMPER
$600
Also
horse
Sell wholesale
Phone
tra ler $-450 Phone (614) 698
949 2051
32'10
J9b6 V W Beetle 2 new recup STEJ!:EO
NEW AM FM s tereo
t res Good motor $400 Phone
rod o comb•nohon $129 q5 or
985 4201
easy terms Call 992 3965
1969 CHEVROLET Belo•r good
wOfk car phonem 3141

__ ....,__ -

SMAll form for sole 10 ,-. daw n
ownerftnonced Monroe Caun
ty W Vo Ph""' (30&lt; ) 772
3102 "' (~ ) 772 3227
COUNTRY farmland w1th seclud
ed woods water and good oc
cess tn Monroe County W Vc
$1 000 dawn coli (:J0.4) 772
3102 o• (30.0) 772 3227
Commerc al prOperty opprox 17
acres level land locofed at
Tuppers Plains on Ohic. Route
7 Phone(614)667 630.&amp;

Business Services
EXPERIENCED

Young's Carpeting

PHOTOGRAPHY

Route 3, Pomeroy, 0

Aer•al
Commerc1al
Schools
Weddmgs

NEW 3 bedroom house bu•lt n
k1khen both and /, Phone
742 2306 or contact MilO 8 Huf
chison Rutland Qh o
4 UNDEVELOPED acres tn Me1gs

COunty Vtnlon ma•l route Call
742 2867 or see 01ck Lambert

-- VA FHA 30 yr f•nanc,ng Ireland
~

Mortgage 77 E Slate Athens
....f!2&lt;me(61 • ) 592 30'5'-'
1 -~
HOUSE FOR Sole 4 rooms one
both pannelled ohd carpeted
lvtng room Red1.1ced to.- qu1ck
solo 10 Ly nn Street 1ust oft
Grant and V•ne Middleport
May..!..e eafter5p ~
REDUCED $2000 3 bed room 2 /,
ba t hs
dovble garage
f replace o1r cond1f antng I
acre lot Phone 992 2492
HOUSE FOR Sole Syracuse 2
bedrooms end bath Lot 100 x
150 Garage cement dnve and
small storage bldg Furn1shed
orunfurntshed Co ll 992 71-47
HOUSE IN PomerOy 4 bedrooms
both and ;, full basement 2
porches Phone 992 707.4 or
992 3465
TUPPERS PLAINS Three bedroom
house rorpeted lo r9e k•lchen
attached garage Iorge let
$24 000 phone (b1.4) 667 6304
or b67 33.49

~YRAC usE

home ove rlo otong
rver $28 500 For deto•ls oncl
~po_
on_lm.!_ nf 992:..:7.::
2.;;
10:.:__ _

PRICED RIGHT 3
bedroom home wtth '12
acre Natural gas central
heatmg Ctly water and
nt ce kttchen Wont last
long at 1ust $9 000

Alum mum
Vinyl
S1d1ng.
Sf or m
W1ndows
&amp;
lnsulalton
Call Profess1onals

BISSELL SIDING CO.
A local contractor
Phone 949 2801
or 949-2860
Free Estimates
No Sunday Calls. Plea se
4-24-1 mo._

AutomatiC
TransmlSSJOn Servtce

Owner
Shirley

(Jeffers)

PARTS - LABOR

REASONABLE
RATES

F~n~nctnc Availabte

Blown 1fttiW1Ih; I AttiCS
RE~I.ACEIIIENT
~UMINUM

HARLEY HANING

SIDitfG.SOfFin
OIITTI'I!UWNINGS

Ph 992 3!93

BUSINESS INCOME ~ 4
apartments up and large
bus mess room down Wtth 3
pool tables and other
equipment tncluded tn the
sale
SOMETHING NEW ~ 2
bedroom bungalow wtfh
bath nat gas heat ctty
water front porch &amp; small
back yard wllh metal
utll1fy butldlng Want only
$12 900
SHELL
HOME
J
bedroom plan finished on
the outside Complete 1! to
sutt yourself Just S12 000
OVER 8 ACRES of
pnvacy near town
3
bedroom home modern
bath and kttchen with
dishwasher Utility room
nat gas F A furnace and
Leadmg
Creek water
sys,em
WOODED LOTS ~ In
Me1gs School Otsfrlct All
sizes all utlllt1es some on
sewer
SITE LOCATIONS LET
US HELP YOU A HOUSE
CAN BE YOURS FOR A
FEW HUNDRED OOWN
G Bruce Teaford
Helen l Teaford
A55oclates

4-10.1 mo

2-23-1 mo

J

Continuous one
p1ece
gutters We hang tt or do It
yourself Spec1al pr1ces to
builders

Phone 949 2814
9a.m lo5p m

4 28 1 mo

$13,000
FOR new adventure see
and own one of these dandy
homes:
TO SELL YOUR HOME
PROMPTLY AT FULL
MARKET VALUE - LIST
WJTH
CLELAND
REALTY
HENRY E CLELAND
BROKER
Hank Cleland
Associate
992 2259 ~992 2568
98S 4112

CENTRAL REALTY CO.
BAS HAN -Nice 2 story country home col'ltalntng 7
rooms and 1112 baths mostly carpeted Kitchen has all
new built In cabinets with bronze stove and
refrigerator to match new porch.es and all n•w
aluminum siding and storm w indows forced air
natural gas furnace and drilled well, garden space
This house Is warm and ready for immediate
occupancy come take a look tust S18 900
NEW LISTING- FREE GAS- Nice modern 11!&gt; story
farm house containing 4 bedrooms dining room.
kitchen with built In appliances basement cltv aod
well water 2 barns work shop and other buildings
large pond stocked with fish , approximately 23 acres
tillable and 46 acres fenced Good location call for
appointment prl&lt;e S80 000

SEPTIC TANKS cleaned Mode rn ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR ~
Santtat1on 992 3954
Sweepers taas lers ~rcns al l
small oppl onces lawn mower
Will do root ng , cons truct• on
next to State H1ghwcy Goroge
plumb•ng and heot.ng No 1ob
on ROute 7 pt-ione (6U) 985
too Io rge or too small Phone
3825
742 2348
CARPENTER
~ lconng
ce1l1ng REMODELING Plumbmg heahng
and all types of ge neral repatr
poneltng Phone 992 2759
work guaranteed 20 years 8)(
MOBilE Home Repo r Elec
per.ence Phone 992 2409
plumbmg and heatmg Phone
SEWING MACHINE Repotrs se r
992 5858
11 ce all makes 992 2284 The
HOWERY AND MARTIN Ex
Fabrtc Shop
Pomeroy
cava tl ng
sep I c sys !ems
Authorized Stnger Soles and
dezer back hoe dump truck
Service We sharpen Scissors
I mes tone
grovel
blacktop
pav ng Rt 143 Phone 1 (614) EXCAVATING dozer loader ond
bock hoe work dump trucks.
698 7331
ond Ia boys for h1re w1ll haul
DUGAN s FRONT End Altgnme nt
f II dtrt to soil l1mes tone and
formerly Odells AI nement
grovel Call Bob or Roger Jef
behtnd Rutland Grode School
fers
day phone 992 7069
Alignmen t wheel balanctng
n1ght phone 992 3525 or 992
tune up brakes and mtnor
5232
repa r Phone 7 •2 2005 or
7.42 2004 hemng work by op . .
po1ntmel'lt

---•••••••1

WE ARE SELLING PROPERTY AND NEED YOUR
HELP, LIST WITH US WE HAVE BUYERS FOR
VACANT LAND, FARM AND RESIDENTIAL
PROPERTY
JIMMY DEEM RE,LTOR

NowThru

BROWNS FIRE and Safety Exhn
qutshers AH sizes bustness
home bOat Re{tlled tested
Bill Brown Rutland Ohto
phone 742 2777

W1ll do odd Jobs roofmg polll
t1ng gu Iter work Phone 992
7•09
SEWING ALTERATIONS
Uphol ster tng
drapes
reasonable 572 Sauth Thtrd
Ave
M ddleport
Phone
9&lt;126306
PIANO TUNING Lane Daniels 12
years af s erv tc e
Phone
9&lt;12 2082
HAULING COAL limestone sand
and gra vel Phone 992 6351

•

..

• •:.?1

30 rolls of carpet In stock
Good selectton all on ule
Installed with padding, no
extra to PAY
Call742 2211
TALK TO
WENDELL GRATE
CARPET CONSULTANT

RUTLAND
FURNITURE
Rutland

• • • ../• •

-

Mon., rues • Wed.
8 00 l1l 5 00

'•
~

4

......

TnursdayBIJI Noon

:

Close Sat.

:

::

•

At

~UlLAND FURNITURE

• r.: f. n

ARfoiOlD ""A fE

~!

1

5 P.M

···•••••••·

•

:::

(4) 1 8 15

22

29

(5) 6

~~~·~ r

&amp; a1r........... '1595
• ..

0

"YOU'LL BE GLAD YOU DID"

5

VW

~----------------·- -------~

!

GUTTER SERVICE

&amp; Downspouts
•Aluminum Siding &amp; :iOfflts

1 •Aiwunum ijUtters
•Roofing

ontinuous
pouting

1973

P~mouth

Ford

Fury

Ill

4 dr . . . . . . . ... .. '2495
1
.. ...... 2495

LTD 2 dr .. ...................... '2495

1972 V.W. 4 cyl 4 speed.. .. ..

.'1495

1972 FORD PIN10 WAGON ...... . . . . . '1395
Automat c transm tss1on AM radto luggage rack n1ce
r oomy gas saver

1972 Chevy Impala 4 dr ................... '1295

1976 FORD F-150 ........................ '4195
VS power s teer ng 10 000 mile s good buy - don t m tss
t hts one

1971 Pontiac Catalma 2 dr ........ ....... .. '795

1974 F100 S.W.B ........................ '2995
Power steen ng au toma t te transm sston 6 cy linder 2
1n s lock both sharp
1975 CHEV. VAN C-10.. ................. '3995
AutomatiC t r ansm tss on 6 cyli nd er luggage rack
panel van one owner shows good care
1974 ECONOLINE DISPlAY VAN .. ..
Au t omatte t r a nsm tsston 6 cylinder

1
.. 2995

'2295

1973 Pontiac LeMans 2 dr................ !1895

1972 Ford Grand Tonno 4 dr . .. ...........'1295

-------TRUCKS-------1

1977 FORD F-100 CUSTOM 360...'2995
new t1res L W B rear step bumper

Std

1973
CHEVY CHEYENNE.. ........... '2895
Au to P S P B tilt whee l rear step bumper
L W B Twtn gas tanks heavy duty suspens1on

1973 CHEVY CUSTOM 307 VB .... '2695
LWB

Std

4 new t1res

1973
FORD EXPLORER 360 VB ... '2495
3 speed L W B rear s tep bumper
1973 CHEVY CUSTOM ................ s2395

Free otl change tor one year w1th
any new or used car or truck. 2000
m1les before changes.

6 cyl

std

LWB

RIGGS USED.CARS

See Pat H1ll, Rocky Hupp
or Darrel Dodrtll
For a good dea I on a new or used vehtcle
Open Evenmgs T1l6
Except Thursday and Saturday
Closed Sunday

Roger Rtebel
located on Sf Rl 7

985 4100

Ray R1ggs
Chester, Ohto

oo

Rhodes to see
a new CCC bill

Dan Thompson Ford
Middleport,

992 2

0

COLUMBUS

NOTICE OF
PUBLIC SALE
TO WHOM IT MAY CON
CER N
FOR
Nollce •S hereby g \len t hat
MEIGS LO CAL BOARD
on
May 10 1977 at 10 00 AM
OF EDUCATION
l c sa le wtl be he ld at
Sea led proposa s w 1 be aSmpub
th Nelso n Mo lo r s In c
r~ce \led
by the Board of Pomeroy
.cl 5769 to sell
Educat on of the Me•gs Local for cash OhiO
th e follow ng
School D str1ct of M ddleport collalerat
to w t
1975
Oh o al l he Cle rk s ofl tce 1Jnlll Pont ac .Astre
Se rtal No
7 30 o clock PM on May 16
7V77B5532170
sa1d
1977 and at that t1me opened co
llat e r al be,ng he d to
by the C erk of sad board as secure an obllgat on ar s ng
pr0111ded by law tor one (1 ) 65 under a reta I tnsta ment
passenger schoo l bus ac secu n ty agreement he d by
cord 1ng to spec•f •cat ons of Genera l Motors Acceptance
sa •d Boarct of Educat.an
on as
secu r ed
Se parate and mdependent Corporal
party
sa
d
publ
c
sale
Is to be
b ds wi ll be r ecerved With
conducted accord ng to the
respect to the chass•s and taw s of the Sta te of Dh10
body t ype and wtll stale that General Motors Acceptan c e
the bus when assem bled and Corpora lion reserves th e
pr1or to del very comply with r ghl 10 b•d at h s sale
all
schoo l
d s tr cl
Th e co llateral s presently
s pectft cat ons
a ll sa fety stored and may be seen at
regu la t ons and cu rr ent Oh o
th Nelson Motors tn c
M n mum Sta ndard s fo r Sm
Ohto
Schoo l BliS Construc110n of PomeroyGENERAL
MOTORS
the Department of l;:duc;al on
ACCEPTANCE
adopted by and w tt'l the
COR POR ATIO N
consent of the D rector of
( 4) 29
ltc
H1ghway Sa fety pursuant to
Sect on .cl511 76of the Rev1sed
Code and a ll other pert nent
proviStOn of law
Speed cat ons and
n
struct ons to b dders may be
obta ned at the otfte,e of the
Clerk Mtdd lepor t Ohto
A cert fed chec k payable
to th e clerk treasu r er of the
above boa rd of educat on or a
sat sfactory
b d
bond
execute(~ by the b dder and
the surely company In an
amoun t equa l to f ve percent
of the btd shaH be subm !led
w th each b d
Sad board of educe ! on
r eserves I he r ght to wa ve
nformal t1es to accept 0f"
r elect any and all or parts of
any and all b ds
Nob ds may be w thdrawn
tor at east lh rty (30) days
after the scheduled ctos ng
l•m e for rece pi of b d s
Board of Educat on of
Me igs Loca l
School D•slncts
Jane Wagner
C erk Treasurer of
Me QS Loca J
Sc hoo D strtct
South Th ird Avenue
M dd lepo r t Oh o A5160
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
PURCHASE OF ONE
SCHOOL BUS

(UPI)

CreatiOn of a
Civtltan
Conservation Corps (CCCl,
one of two dozen btlls vetoed
b) Gov James A Rhodes last
year, ts dest10ed t o be the
first measure passed a
second ttme and returned to
the governor by the 112th
General Assembly
Before Rhodes gets lhe bill

however, til e House must
agree to mino r Senate
changes made before the
upper chamber unanunously
approved t he btl! WednEsday
The CCC would g tve num
mum wage pubhc servtce
10bs to young unemployed
Ohtoans who would work 10
strip-miOe reclamatton htter
removal, flood control or
other environmental projects
as determ10ed by tho. Ohio
Department of Nat ur al

Resources
Rhodes vetoed tbe meas\U'e
last year, say10g he thoug ht

pnvatc mdustry co uld besl
absorb the un e mpl oye d
through mdustrtal expanston
The n ew bill has two
ch an ges from th e
one
Rhodes' veto Both changes
conv10ced Senate Minonty
Leader Michael Maloney, R
Cinc10nati 11:&gt; ur ge his 11 GOP
colleag ues 10 the Senate 11:&gt;
1010 a ll 21 Democrat s 10
approvtng the amended

measure
No CCC program would
begm untt l sufftcte nt state
funds a r e avatlable
If
Cong r ess
ag r ees
t h is
summer, state CCC pro
grams would be eltgtble for
up 11:&gt; 80 per ce nt federal
fund10g
The second change would
pha se th e CCC out of
extstence b y June 30 1982 tf
the
prog r am
proves
unsuccessful and tf th e
legislature decided not

renew Jt

WANTED
~TWO SENTINEL
CARRIER ROUTES
OPEN
I

FOR BOYS OR GIRLS
GOOD AREA, NICE

(4}

22

29

(5) 6

CUSTOMERS-GOOD

13

In 1975 Prestdent Duong
Van Mtnh announced the
uncondttional surrender of
South Vtetnam to tnvading

A

'-----------....,.------J

1974

'1895

thought for

the day

Amertcan author Ernest

1
I

1974 801ck Regal, 2 dr ................. ' 2995

1973 Ford Grand Tonno 2 dr. • .......

Commumst for.ces

Phone 949 -2814
9 a m to so m

2 dr ..... ............... 13295

1972 CHEV. CAPRICE 4 DR. .. ......... '2195
Power steer ing A C AM rad1o w Stra ck tape shar p
l1ke new ftn1sh

Of Dotng Busmess'
992 5342
GMC FINANCING
Pomeroy
Open Evenmgs Unl116 00- Ttl 5 p m Sat.

FOR SALE
Offers will be rece ved at
10 30 A M on Saturday May
7th 19 77 at t he off ces of
Crow Crow &amp; Part er At
torneys at Law Pomeroy
Oh o for the purchase of the
r eal estate of the late Vtv an
E J ohnson sltuafed n Sutton
Townsh•P Me1gs County
Ohto In cluded w th the sate
w I be th e Ira ler ...,nd sto rage
bu• ld ng s tuated on the
properly There w 11 a lso be
o ff ered for sate the 1tems at
persona I property n her
estate that are s1tuated n the
tra ler
The term s of sale are cash
and will be so ld s ub1 ect to the
lten tor real esta te taxes for
19 77
The r~ght 1s r eserved to
r eject any and a I offe r s
Mar\ltn Morr s
~xecvtor of the Es tate
of V 1v an E Johnson
Deceased
{A } 29
(5) A

1974 Olds Cutlass

.. ........... 13495

1973 Ford Wagon 4 dr ....................

" You'll L1ke Our Oualtly Way

1977

1975 Ford LTD 4 dr. .. ..

$ SAVE

1973 PLYMOUTH SATELLITE 4 DR .. . .. . '2195
Power steer ing A C 318 VB automat1c transmt sston
AM rad10 v1nvl too ntce

Karr &amp; Van Zandt

Me1gs County Comm tss oners
Henry Wells
Executtve Off cer CDBG
Me 1gs County Courthouse
Pome r oy Oh to 45769
Phone 614 992 2895
(Al 29
lie

Custom 4 dr •••

1973 BUICk Century 4 dr . .. . • • •

Pete

cou rthouse
n the Com
m ss aners
Olf1 ce
It ts
available
far
publ c
exam nat on and copy.ng
NO
FURTHE~
EN
VfRO NMENTAL
REVIEW
OF TH IS
PROJECT I S
ANT IC IP ATED PR IOR TO
THE
RELEASE
OF
FEDERAL
FUNDS
All
nterested agenc es groups
a nd pe r sons dtsagree•ng w th
th1S dec1S10n are •nv•Jed to
subm 1t wr1tten comment s to
the Me1gs Counly Com
m•ss.oners Off ce tor con
s den~ t an These comments
must be re ce ved by May lA

P~mouth Val~ant

1973 FORD LTD 4 DR .. ................ '2495
Power steertng A C power brakes AM rad1o vtnyl
top

Bus. Just Overhauled ............... 1995

NOTICE OF FINDING
No Slgn1ticant Effect
on th e Envtronment
To Al l In terested Agenc es
Groups and Persons
Jt has been proposed by the
Me gs County Co mm ss toners
that a Haus ng Rehabdtlat on
Program be mplemented n
Me gs County
Me gs Coun t y ntends to
req ue s t t he Un led States
Department of Hous ng and
Urban
Development
to
re lease Federal fund s under
Title l of the Hous ng a11d
Urban Development Act of
1974 (PL 93 383) to be usee! for
the programs f r s t year
cos ts The to ta l budget for the
program •s 580 000
IT HA S BEEN DETER
MINED
THAT
THE
PRO POSED
HOUS IN G
RE HABILITATION
PROG~AM
WILL
NOT
HAVE A SIG NIF ICA NT
NEGATIVE IMPAC T ON
THE ENVIRONMENT Th s
dec son was based on several
fa cto rs
A The goals and ob1ect1ves
of the hausmg rehab I tat on
prag ram
are 1n d rect
response to hous•ng needs n
Me1gs County
B The p rogram s des gn
and
adm1n1stralton
(as
proposed) w II ta c 1 tate the
prog r am s success and w II
encourage the nvc vement of
cou nty offtclals age nc1es
and c t1zens
C
The select on and
planntng
of
eac h
re11ab•l tat1on home s1te Wtll
satisfy a 1 necessary cr1ter a
to ensure pro tect success and
prevent
env ronmenta l
degradat on
The
Envtronme ntal
Assessment wh ~h more
ful y established the r ea~ons
beh nd th•s dec s1on artd also
documents and e~Cpla•ns the
crtter a Wh1ch must be met
for the p r ogram s success s
on fill:! tn the Me1gs Coun ty

1975

.. .......... .. '3695

1974 Pontiac Catal1na 2 dr ................ 12895

XLT ..........

.~~~~~~~~.~~~.?.'~ .... '1495

1976 Chevelle 305 V8.....

1973 FORD COUNTRY SEDAN ............ '2295
Wagon 4 door power s teenng VB luggage rack AM
radto fme veh1cle tnsJde and out

1975 FORD F-100 RANGER
'3995
Power s teermg VB A C carpet mg AM rad to clean

70 Bu1ck Skylark HT Cpe., a1r . . . . . . . . . . 11495

i'MILLERS
PRODUCE
&amp;
r
: GARDEN CENTER
Belpre,

s349

72 Chevy Impala HT Cpe..... .
72 BUICk 225 L1m1ted 4 dr HT =~;'!';r '2495
72 Chevy Impala 4 Dr., a1r. • .. • .. .. .. • '1295
72 Olds 98 4 Dr., a1r ..................... '2295
72 Bu1ck Elec. HT Cpe ................ ..... '2295
72 Ford Tormo 2 dr...... • .. ............. '1395
72 Ponbac Satan Wagon, a1r ....... ...... .. '1595
71 Ford 1h Ton P1ckup....... •
' 1695
71 Olds 98 Lux., power &amp; a1r ............ '1995
71 Dodge Demon 2 dr., 6 cyl.. ...........11195
70 Ford LTD 4 Dr., power &amp; a1r .. .. .. .. • 1895

See one of these courteous salesmen
Burns or Marvtn Keebaugh

NOTICE ON FILING
OF INVENTORY AND
APPRAISEMENT
Th e Sta te of Oh o Metgs
Coun ty Court of Com man
Pleas Probate D VISIOn
To the Executor of the
estate
ta suc h of the
fo l low ing as are resedents of
the State of Oh•o v z - the
surv vmg spouse the ne)(t of
kin the benef1c ares under
the w I and to the attorney
or attorneys represent ng any
of th~ afore men ! on persons
Vtv1an
E
Johnson
Dec;eased No 22061 Rae ne
Oh 10 Su tton Townstl p
You a r e he r eby not f ed
that the Inventory and AP
pra1sement of the estate o f
th e aforement oned
deceased late of sa•d County
was f•led m th s Cour t Sad
Inventory and Appratsement
wtll be for hear ng before lh• s
Court on th e 1Jth day of May
1977 at 10 00 o clock A M
Any person deslr ng ta f le
except ons thereto must f le
them at least f1ve days pnor
to t he date se t for hear.ng
G ven under my hand and
seal of satd Court th s 27th
day of Apn 1977
Mann tng D Webster
Judge
By Ann B watson
Deputy Clerk
(A ) 21f ( 5) 6
2tc

.. '3295

'10,000

1974 Ford Grand Tonno, Brougham ....... 13295

1974 FORD GALAX IE 500 4 DR . ........ '2895
Power steen ng AM rad1o P B extra clean

.. . 11495

68

W1ll case lot can goods stnctly
wholesale to all. We w1ll sell by 112
case or whole case only. The savmgs
are unbelievable. We w1ll feature
such name brands as Stokley,
Vancamp,
Campbells
Soups,
Delmonte and many others. If you
can't use a 112 case, split w1th your
ne1ghbor. Shop now, at

I

Power steenng 302 V8 A C AM radto vmyl top

...... '2495

Atr sun roof
power.... ... .....

70 Olds 98 HT Cpe

Miller Produce &amp;
Garden Center

1210 Washmgton Blvd

1975 FORD GRANADA 4 DR ............ '3195

1
3595

Buick ReRal HT Cpe................... '3495

73 Monte Carlo

6fc

STARTING THURSDAY
APRIL 28th

Rli~~~~

·······················~~

73

H Dabney and Clara P
Dabney
et a I by deeds
beanng date respecftvely of
April 9 1877 and March 1876
wh1ch deeds are recorded
respect ve ty n Volume 58
Pages 61S and 616 and
Volume 58 Pages 616 and 617
of th e Records of Deeds Of
Metgs County Oh•c
Re ference Deed Vol 129
Page 132 Me1gs County Deed
Records
You are requ1red to answer
the comp ant within twenty
e ght clays after t he last
pub l•ca l10n of th 1S not tce
wh ch wtll be publtshed once
each week for s x success ve
weeks
and
the
last
pub cation w tll be made on
May 6 1977
In case of your t adure to
answer or otherwise respond
as perm 11ted by the Oh o
Rules ot C•v 1 Procedure
w th n the t me s,tated
luctgment by default w II be
rendered aga.nst you for the
rei ef demanded
n the
comp tamt
Mann ng D Webster
Probate Judge
Me gs County Oh•o

NOTICE

1 Roll Blue ~hog
1 Roll Brown Shag
Both Rubber Back
Regular S8 95
Sa leSS 88 Sq Yd

742 2211

~?~.":..a.~~-~'.'......

2.. ..

1975 FORD MUSTANG
2 PLUS
' 3195
Power steering
4 cyl1nder
AC
s tandard
transmiSSIOn pretty wh1te wtth blue tntenor low
mUeage

Power and a or 15495

73 Olds Cutlass Supreme 4 dr.

.

Candy Strtp
Rubber Back
Regular S6 95
Save 54 88 Sq Yd

...
:; FRIDAY TIL 5 ~.
~.
.~ !
. ..
... .
•

MINJSTRATORS
EXECUTORS I F ANY OF
BIRD 0
ROMINE
ALSO
KNOWN AS BERT ROMINE'
DECEASED
Et al
De fendants
NOTICE
SERVICE BY
PUBLICATION
P latnt1ff has br ought lh1s
act Ol'l nam ng each of you as
one of tile defendants 1n the
ab ov e named court by t I ng
his com pl a nt on February
16th 1977
The ob1ect of the comp1a•nf
s that the rea I estate
hertna f1~r de sc r bed be sold
•n its ent1rety and to pay the
debts of the decedent Bertha
Ne meyer deceased th at the
nghts nteres ts and nens or
all part1 es ma y be fu ll y
determ n ed ad1us te d and
protected t hat plamt tfl be
authorized and ordered to sell
sa1d real es tate according Ia
the statutes m suc h case
made and prov1ded and tor
suc h other and furt her ret ef
as he rnay be enfttled to that
sa1d real estate •s descr1bed
as follows
..
The f o llow ng descrtbed
real estat e s1lu ated n the
County of
State of 01'11o
Me1 gs and 1n the v tlage of
Pom eroy t o w•t
Bemg the follow n g real
estate tn th e east half of 100
ac re Lot s Nos 306 and 307 n
th e County of Me 1gs and State
of Oh io d esc rib ed as fa t ows
to w•t
Beg,nn •n g at th e North
East corner of
James
Hopkin s lot thence South 12
degrees East 219 feet to a
stump
t hence North 89
deg r ees 177 teet
thence
No rth 67 1!~ degree s Ea st 254
feet to a r u n thence up and
along sa d run 472 feet to the
place of beg nn ng
con
ta mmg 95 100 acre s more or
tess sav1ng a nd except ng
ttle coa and other m nera s
therem and the r ght to mme
the
same
w t hou I
m
cumbran ce to the surface and
all ways and rtghts of way
alo n g any mtneral seam are
hereby excepted from th s
deed th e aforesaid be ng the
rea l estate co nveyed to Jacob
Dorn•ck by t he deeds of Sarah

May 1, 1977

MACBEAR s1 gn pa•nftng servtce
small stgns and posters (on
troct only Call 742 3035 Free
est motes

CHESTER~

1#/'.,.o'\

SAVE ON
CARPETING

HARRISON S T V Repo~r Service
Calls 276 Sycamore Sf M d
dleport Phone 992 2522

..

COOLVILLE- Nice modern brick home contain ing
three bedrooms~ dining room living room with
fireplace fullbasement with gar~~o'arge front porch
natural gas furnace city
dnd well water, a
beautiful home with apPi f~ otely 51!&gt; acres of land
fruit trees and sha~\.' .s surrounding It plenty of
garden spac:;e good ~h lng area close by located In
Coolville, Ohio priced at only S32,000 C.. II now

Nob1t Summtf Road
Rl 1
Mtddleport 0
992 5724
Complete
Sales
and
Servtce and Supphes

EXCAVATING dozer backhoe BRADFORD Au ct1oneer Com
and d•tcher Charles R Ho t
plete Service phone 949 2487
field
Bock H oe Serv ce
or 949 2000 Roc•ne Oh1o Crlft
Rutland Oh10 Phone 7.42 200B
B rodfor~

RACINE - Good 3 br ~ ftJ, 1\ dining room low
utilities, even a garden!. ~1.!' at only $8,500
113acre farm so acres tillable land mce
2 story farm house 7 rooms and bath all hardwood
tloors and basement Barna and other outbuildings 2
ponds a nice laying form priced to go located near
Chester call for appointment

DECEASED
THE UNKNOWN HER S
DEVISEES
LEGATEE S
DISTRIBUTEES
AD

GUTTER SERVICE

HOMESITES for sole 1 a cre and
up M•ddleport near Rutland
Coli 9&lt;12:.:_
7 4e::8c.t'--c------,,NEW 3 bedroom house 2 ba ths
all elec 1 acre Middleport
clase to Rutland Phone 992
7481

JUST LISTED NICE
RANCH TYPE
Small
yard 3 bedrooms bath
large
l1vlng
R
full
basement utiltty R Nat "gas furna ce carpetmg
paneltng lots of c abmets
$18 000
SOUTHERN
STYLE
HOME ~ Beautifu l kitchen
has everythtng formal
dlntng room 5 bedrooms 4
baths utility basement
Thts you must see $24 000
Ph STORY FRAME ~ 4
bedrooms bath utdtfy
basement Excell e nt buy at
IUSI $7 225 00
HARD TO BELIEVE?~ A
large house w1th a low gas
bill. 3 large BR with
closets 1112 baths formal
dining R large ktlchen
ufll 1fy R basement wlth
garage new alum s1dtng
See now at 1ust $18 500
ABOUT 1 ACRE - Very
ntce 1 tloor plan 3 BR
bilih central air cond and
heat (all new) porches out
bu lldtng garage fenced

IR I S TRACY AUSTIN
Add r ess Unknown
THE UNKNOWN HEIRS
DEVISEES
LEGATEES
OISTRIBUTEE S
AD
MINISTRATORS
EXECUTORS IF ANY OF
BERTHA
NEIMEYER

' 'The Or1g1nators
Not The Imitators"

lARRl,,~V~~DER

Phone 992 3339

vs

Carpel &amp; Upholstery
Phone M1ke Young
AI
992,-2206 or 992-7630

II

• '3795

;'?~~~ -~~~. ~ !r........ '4695

73 Olds 88 4 Dr., power

MEIG$ COUNTY OHIO
PROBATE DIVI SIO N
JA MES E SIMPSON AD
MI N ISTRATOR of the Estate
of BERTHA NEIMEYER
DECEASED
P la1nt1tf

Route 3, Pomeroy. 0

SlOIIM
WIIIDOWS &amp; OOORS

Cpe,

••

Dr...................... '1995

74 AMC Hornet 2

1:

Young's Carpeting

lnsulallon Smtces

.cr~:::~r~c

73 Cutlass 4 dr., a1r

IN THE COMMON
PLEAS COURT OF

1975 FORD 2 DR BROUGHAM .......... '4395
Power steering and brakes AM radto v1nyl top 1800
m1les a good car and a good buy

74 Chevy Vega GT Cpe. 4 spd .............'1995

Ph 378-6250

Superior •
Steam Extraclton

lllOWn

Sup.

74 Olds 88 Royal Cpe.

POMEROY OHIO

Hl·l mo

FREE ESTIMATES

Olds Cutlass

75 Chevy Monte Carlo

POMEROY
MOTOR CO.

GUARANTEED

Reedsvtlle, 0

76

THINK CHEVROLET
THINK

Wolfe

Formerly
lola's Beauty Salon
For appomtmenl ca II
992 2549 Tuesday thru
Saturday 8 00 a.m. to
5 00 p m Open mghls
by appointment
- .rrs. J mo.

NEW HOMES
&amp; REMODELING

-We ha ve the rrgh t deal for yo u
- Reliable servtce after the deal

SWAIN'$_

1

LTD

II

6

Astra roof dual comfort 6 way pass seats c rui s e
control leather upholstery AM FM stereo w1th
tape fueltn ject lon engine many rnore luxury tfems
not ftsted

1975 FORD
4 DR.. ...... .. ........ '4195
Power steering and brakes atr AM radto vtny l top a
real cream puff

76 MustanR
Cobra V8, 4 sp, AC ....... '3695
V 8 4 speed atr condtftantng

SWINGING TURTLE VAN
by TURTLE TOP

IV

1976 CADILlAC ELDORADO

of trades at no-fat prices!

'8800

73 Cadtllac Cpe. DeVille .................... '3800
Full power and alr

2 23 1 mo

Shirley's Beauty Nook
John St
syracuse

CARPENTER &amp;
BUILDERS

COUNTRY HOME -

and 2 acres $25 000

c"

76 Cadillac
DeVIlle ..................
Full power and a tr

76 Plymouth Volare 4 dr.

INVESTMENT ~ 3 unot
bnck apartment bulld 1ng
one 3 bedroom un1t down &amp;
one fu rn1shed 2 bedroom
and studio apartment up 3
car garage All for only
$17 500
A 3
bedroom frame home w1th
bath
furnace
full
basement carport garage

76 Cadillc;c Sedan DeV1IIe ................ ' 8900
Full power and air

SUNDAY, MAY lst-1:00-5:00

Carpet Llno Ttle
Phone Mtke Young ot
"2 2206 or "2 763G

(61.1985 41SS
Chester Ohto
10171mo1Pdl

&amp;

V1rg1l 8 Sr 1 Realtor
116 E Second Stree'
Pomeroy Oh•o 45769
Phone '92 3325
BU SiNESS ~ Goo d gotng
restauran:t m the heart of
town All equipment and
ft.:fures Ready for you to
ta ke over for $13 SOO

VEHICLES

lnstallahon. samples
brought to your home
w1th no charge

WIIIOOWS

TEAFORD

Eldorado

Free Estimates

PHOTOGRAPHY

1976 CONTINENTAL

Wh1te wlth Lipstick red trim half vinyl roof leather
tnterlor AM FM Quad stereo wfth tape cru•s.e
control flit wheel twtn comfort seats forqed
aluminum wheels full
luxury group Real
Sharp

76
Cadillac Cpe................110,000
Full power and air

KEN GROVER

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

HAS

USED CARS

PROFESSIONAL

READY
FOR SUMMER TRAVEL!

DAN
THOMPSON
FORD

Real &amp;tote {or SaiH

FurSale

BODY AND REPAIRMAN needed COONER s CAMPERS See quol1ty
for Hysell s Used Cars m
of SWISS COLONY BARTH
Rutland Phone7-42 3154
CRICKET truck campers MAPLE
lEAF spocemoker PLY MOR
CAP KIT caps NEW USED Soles
rental serviCe suppl1es Toke
Metgs 28 or 32 to Boshon
Located on Rambow R•dge
CASH pod for oil makes and
Long Bottom Oh1o Robert
models of mot:Hie homes
Codner owner
Phofle area code 614 423 9531
C-.--,:--,--:TIMBER Pomeroy Fares f Pro. TRUCK CAMftER e&gt;~cellent condl
hon length 10 ft 6 m New
ducts TOp pnce tor stand1ng
Hoven (304 ) 882 2924
sowt mber Cell Kent Hanby
I 446 8570
1974 19FT Bonomo SC I Btl bit
COINSC·'"'u-'R'RE_N_C'"Y- ,--c
okens old
Trave l Star $3800 Fold dOwns
start $1850 Parts and ac
pocket watches !Jnd dlQins
cesorles We sell serv •ce end
sliver and gold We need 1964
qvo l ty Camp Conley Sfcrcroft
and older s lver cons Buy sell
Soles Rl 62 N of PI Pleasant
or frode Call Roger Wams ley

H d Ull&gt;t!11 l v ll

Su

NOW
SHOWJNG

Let The Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash

WANT AD
CHARGES

now

·------

Hemtn gway
sa 1d ,
'All
modern American literature
comes from one book by
Mark
fwatn
called
Huckleberry F tnn

SPENDING MONEY

FOR MORE INFORMATION
PHONE 992-2156

\fHE DAILY SENTINEL

w

�•
12-Tbe Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. t'nday, Apnl29, !977

:----A~~; -Oe~th~----:
I

. I
1

ROBERT NIBERt
Robert Stewarl Nibert, 72.
a resident of Northup. was
pronounced dead upon
arrlvat at Holzer Medica l
Center Thur.sday night.
He marned the former
Helen Fuller, Northup , in
1926. Four children were born
to this un;on : Robert Dean.
Jerry _Leo. and Mrs. Leo
IMart1e l Johnson , a ll of
Gall ipol is and Mrs . Ray
(Jeann;e) F;sher, No&lt;thup.
Fourtee('! grandch ildren
and fovr great.grandch ildren
survive.
Mr. Nibert was born Nov.
26. 190 4, In Mason County , w.
Va .. son of the late S. C and
Annette Dufor Nibert. .
He was one ol 14 chi ldren .
Five brothers sur vi ve :
Frank, We st Jefferson :
Charles , Pt . Pl easant ;
Garland , Letart ; Ervin ,
Powellton, W. Va . and Harry,
Kinc;ald, W. Va .; two 5isters :
Mrs. Clara Kraus, Hamden
and Mr5. Mildred Shearer . .
Saras?la. Fla . Six bro thers
and SISiers preceded him In
death.
Mr. Nibert worked with I he
postal service for 38 years
before 1'1 is retirement in 1972 .
of the
"1 He
tl was1 aR member
carriers
"a ana
ural
~ Assoc;atlon . He was a
member of the Eagles Lodge.
Mr . Nlberl atte"ded school ~ n
both West Vlrgfn ;a and Oh;o.
Funeral
servi ces will be
held
2 p,m. Sunday at Miller 's
Home forFuoeralswithRev .
William B. Kughn offlciatlng .
Budai wHI be in Ohio Valley
Memory
FriendsGardens.
ma y ca ll a l Ihe
luneral home on Saturday
from • until 9 p .m.

Dav id Websle&lt; , Colu~bus
and S·Sgl . Jo"n Phtlltp
Webster, Ft . leonard Wood.
Mo . Two granddaughters
svrv lve.
Three brothe(s and two
s isters surv ive : Dan J .
Web5ter, Gree!lsburg, Pa .;
Mrs. Vincenf (Nettie) Stine,
Chillicothe : James Webster.
Ut1ca . Oh1o : Forest, of Cfr.
&lt;lev life and Mary Emtly
Webster, at home. One srster ,
Eli~abelh . preceded him ;n
death in 1974.
Mr . Webster graduated
from Cadmus High School In
1936. He attended Rio Grande
College two years and also
attended
Dh;o
Sta te
University for one year . ,
Mr . ~ebsfer began hiS
automobile career wi th the
lale H. B. Ecker In 19~ .
He was a member of the
Waterloo Ma son ic Lod~e.
Aladdin Temple of the Shnne
and Gallipolis Elks.
Funeral services witt be
held 2 p.m. Monday at the
Waugh - t-!alley -~oo~ Funeral
Home With bunal 1n Mound
Hill Cemetery .
Fr'iends may ca ll at the
funeral home from 2-4 and 7-9
p.m. on Sunday .

WASHINGTON (UPI ) TheCJAsaidtodayitknewof
·
·
thed1sappe~rance m1968o£a
stup carr)'lng 200 tons of
uraniwn ore but would not
commen t on reports the
ded
. I eJ f
cargo en ~ up U\ sra
or
nuclear w~pons .
" We know the ship
vanished and that was the
end ol it for us ,. a CIA
. !,
.
spokesman s~1d. The sh tp
was not Arnertcan. The cargo
was not American. "
Th
k
d lined
e spo esman ec
to
comment on any other
aspects of the mystery ship
and said the agency was not
the ~urce o£ news stories on
. .
the UICtdent.

The New York Times and
thelJJsAngelesTimessaidin
.
·
od
"
sepru;ttte stories t ay ,,uat
200wns of uranium - enough
lo produce 30 nuclear
weapons - disappeared nine
g
in
the
yea~s
a o .
"
Mediterranean tn a James
&amp;lnd" type operation that
diverted the cargo to Israel.
The New York Times sa id
. .
.
.
the UICident was. related Ul a
speec}J to be delivered today
in Austria by Paul L.
Le th.8U f
Se t
ven
' a ormer
~ e
Gover~ment
Operatto ns
Comrruttee staff expert on the
spread of nuclear weapons.
The U:ls Angeles Times

£or h an deI capped
.

set record

over Ohio

MASON DRIVE-IN

wday
with most
areas
earlythe
of
state
recording
temperatures below freezing .
Onlywere
in extreme
southern
Ohio
readin gs
held
above freezing. But even in
those sections, they were in
the ·30s.
Cleveland recorded 25 degrees today , breaking the old
record low temperature for
April 29 which was 31 dcgress
set in 1973. Columbus,.with 28
degrees , broke a 31 degree
low tem~erature set in 1976.
At Dayton, a 30 degree
reading broke the old mark
set in !909 by one degree .
Marietta had 31 degrees
which broke the old record
low ol 33 lor the date set in

OD

=P~O=M=E=R~O:Y:.::::=·~~~~~~~ of the American Coalition of 251967 degrees,
while Youngstown, with
broke the
~, -=S~T:·:•
---- ------- - - - - · - - - -.. old
mark
or
1967

THE INN PLACE
Gn~up

1

28 and Zanesville re·
ported 28 degrees, breaking
the old low of 31, set also in
1967.
. Findlay had a reading of 30
w tie the record low set in
1944.
There were two strong
weather systems early
today.
The first was a cold front,
stretching from North
Carolina, westward through ·
Tennessee to Oklahoma. The
second was a ridge of high
pressure wh~ch is covering
the Great Lakes and Ohio
Valley .
The high pressure is
moving southeastwarQ,
forcing the cold front furthe.
away !rom Ohio.
The Ohio extended outlook
lor Sunday through Tuesday,
calls for fair and mild
weather Sunday and Monday,
with a chance of showers
Tuesday . Highs will be in the
70s, and overnight lows will
range from the 40s or lower
50s.

I

Now you Know
Rodrigo de Jerez is
credited with being the first
·EuroP,ean to smoke. He is
said to have learned from
nalives of the West Indies,
where he landed with
Columbus in 1492. He brought
tobacco back to Spain,
amazed his friends by
smoking but was dem&gt;unced
to the Inquisition by his wife.

MEIGS THEATRE

BLUE"

TONIGHT &amp; SATURDAY 10-2

THE MEIGS INN

slows nati•on's
first Jady

N:tg"ht chill

Weather

I
I

urgery bare}Y'

B HELEN THOMAS
Y
.
.. UP! White House Reporter
WASHINGTON (UP! ) First_ La,d,y_ R,o, salynn Carter,
fee 1Ulg f Ule after surgery
l.oTemove a non-cancerous
lump fro.m her ~reast ,
plunged r ight back mw a
busy schedule toda Y
Mary Hoyt, Mrs. Carter's
press secretary, said the
First Lady had a Spanish
lesson ea rly today, then
greeted a group ol mentaUy
retarded children touring the
White House. She also
planned to attend a National
Symphony lecture and
concert.
'"~e 's fine," Mrs. Hoyt
said.
Mrs . Carter went to
Bethesda Naval Medical
Center Thursday for a routine
gynecological checkup she
has every six months. When
doctors round a llUDp in her
breast, she underwent
immediate surgery and the
lump proved nonmalignant.
Aides said Mrs. Carter, 49,
United Press International
was up and about the White
Record low temperattires House within three hours of
were set throughout Ohio th e 40-minute operation.

will

Is Proud To Present The Return of this Popular

._

Citizens with Disabilities,
said Califano "acted with
courage, compa ssion an d
intelligence" in signing the
reg ulation s that were
pending for 2\1, years.
Bow e
coo rdinated
nationwide protests by
handicapped persons at HEW
buildings earlier this month .
CaUfano has been picketed
at his home , his office and on
the speaker 's circuit by handicapped persons chanting,
"We shall overcome ... " and
demanding that he sign the
regulations left to the Carter
administration by departing
Republicans.

Leg aJnpUtated

'~ZERPIIA

said it was the single biggest
disappearance of nuclear
· 1 · hi
matena m storr
. .
The New York Tqnessa1d 1t
obtained detaals of the
mystery from an unnamed
CIA rr . 1
" o tela.
The mystery began ln
November •. 1968, when a
freighter With a cargo of
400 OOOpoundsofuraniumore
'
left Antwe•p bound lor Geno~
after a stop m Rotterdam ,
The New York Times said:
"Th sh'1
d th
. e
. e cargo
P an
nev~r r?c~~ thetr planned
destUiatlon .
Both newspapers qlJ(Jted a
senior official in Europe as
.
.
.
sayUig the ship, which had
been .flymgthe German fla g,
reappeared several weeks

New era
. promise
• d
S

WASHINGTON (UP I ) Handicapped persons who
boiste r ously . demande d
enforcement of a 1973 law
giving them equal access to
· b s ar.e
Mrs. Louise Finsterwald , sc hoo 1s an d JO
82, Athens, a former reserving judgment on the
Pomeroy resident, was "new era of civil rights in
seriouslyin juredwhenstruck America" declared by the
by a car on April 20.
Carter administration.
Mrs. Finsterwald had . Some say they want w see
gotten out ol a car driven by a how well the Department of
friend , Ethel F. Collins: Mrs. Health , Education and
enforce the
Collins a$suming Mrs. Welfare
Finsterwald was out of the e q u a I P r o t e c t i. o n
CHARLES WEBSTER
Charles J , Webster, 60, a
way, started to drive away requirements for deaf, blind
'·resident of 339 Fourt h Ave .. . and struck Mrs. Finsterwald. and other disabled persons,
Gallipolis , died at 10 p.m .
Both Mrs. Finsterwald and including alcoholics and drug
Thursday in Holzer M edical
Mrs. Collins were taken to addicts.
Ce nter following a brief ill ·
ness .
O'Bleness Hospital.
Others are cautious about
He was a sa les man for
Mrs. Finsterwald was later whether the regulation signed
Carroll Norri s Dodg e of
transferred
to Univers ity Thursday by HEW Secretary
Gallipol is .
Mr . Webste1 was born May Hospital, Columbus, where Joseph Califano Jr. is as
15 1 1916. in Walnut Twp .. son
one of her legs was am- complete as disabled persons
of the late James Noah
want it to be in eliminating
putated.
Webster and Erma Wickl ine
discrimination
in health
Webster, who su rv l&gt;.~es and
insurance or government
res tdes on Rt . 2, Patriot.
contracts.
He Is survived by his
wile, Wilma Pyles WebSier.
When it takes effect arotmd
whom he marr ied Sept. s.
Clear and .cold again June 1, the regulation will
1942, at Rodney .
tonight, with frost or a freeze apply to prpgrams supported
Two sons s urvive, Charles
likely. Lows tonight will be in with HEW's $147 billion
the upper 20s or the lower 30s. budget, including most public
Sunny and wanner Saturday, secondary and high schools,
with highs in the uppers 60s or colleges and universit~ es,
Fri ., Sa1 ., Sun.
the lower 70s. Proba bllity of
hospitals and welfare
Aprii29- May 1
precipitation is near zero per agencies.
cent today and tonight and 10
·"But this regulation will be
ROOSTER GOGBURN
per cent Saturday.
the basis for
( ... And The Lady l
will besimilar
issued
regulations
thatother
by
all
other
federal
departJ.ohn Wayne P
LODGE TO MEET
ments and agencies and that
Katherine Hepburn
RACINE- Racine Chapter will affect all recipients of
134 OES will meet Monday at federal
funds,"
said
-PLUsthe Masonic Temple at 8 p.m. Calilano .
A fifty year pin will be
MUSTANG COUNTRY
He said it requires
presented. All officers and "dramatic changes In the
Joel McCrea G
members are asked to attend. action and attitudes" of
recipients of HEW funds and
"opens a new era of civil
rights 'In America."
CQMP~QN
HEWhasreceived200com•
•
I'
o
• •
plaints Uhder the 1973 law,
OPTOMETRIST
said P~ter Libassi, general
OFF ICE HOURS: 9:30 1o 12,2 1o S (CLOSE
counsel-designate.
Frank Bowe, deal director
AT NOON ON TH!JRS.l- EAST COURT

NW

HOSPITAL NEWS

CIA puts lid on U-ship mystery

CLOSED FOR

VACATION
WATCH FOR

OPENING DATE
----::a~

President· ol Carter
was
informed
the discovery
immediately and was told his

later w1th a crew ol a
different nationality- and
·
·
Without 1ts uranium cargo.
. " It was a James Bond story
and a real headache ror us "
The New York Times quot~
"' · ffi .
.
a VJ.I\ o Clal as saymg .
The CIA official was quoted
as saying he and others
believed the uranium was
tak to [
1
en
srae ·
•
The U:Js Angeles Times
said the story may indicate
Ule solution to a mystery of
some years : Where does
Israel get the uraniwn to run
the small nuclear reactor at
Dimon a in the Negev desert
I th
st h u'
one o
e mo
eav Y
guarded installations on
Israeli soil?
The Times said one source
d'
d
.
m ICate the _ Israe~l~ may
have had helpm obtamrng the
uranitun from sympathizers
in the French and Italian
governments.
The New York Times said
the ur~nimn on the ship could
not be used directly to make
atomic bombs, but could be
fed into a reactor the Israelis
'obtained from the French
government in 1963, and the
resulting spent fuel could be a
source of plutonium, which
canbeusedtomakeatomic

.

bombs .

VETERANS MEMORIAL
ADMITTED Lowell
McNickle , Racine ; Josle
Shamblin, Hartford, W. Va.;
Ca rolyn Adams, Racine ;
Dordy Call, Pomeroy; DeMY
Games, Langsville; Ralph
H.orvey, Minersville; Daniel
Thomas, Point Pleasant, W.
Va.
DIS C HARGED
Margaret Johnson , Rema
Chafin, Clarence Trlbbltt,
Dorothy
Miller,
Mae
Maynard, Charlene Cochran,
Lowell Halfhill, Jr.

PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGES - Mrs .
Archie Logue, Bidwell; Lora
Mullins, Point Pleasant ;
Ruth Dau~erty, Gallipolis;
Leland Walters, Point
Pleasant; Robert Stewart,
West Columbia ; Mrs. Russell
Taylor, daughter, Gallipolis ;
Mrs. Jackie Smith, daughter,
Bidwell; Mrs. Harvey Price,
· son, Apple Grove; Mrs .
Leland Selbe, Letart; Vera
Martin, Point Pleasant; Eula
Glover, Henderson; Brian
Love, Point Pleasant; Lucille

Rorrer, Point Pleasant;
Worthy Jeffers, Glenwood;

Mrs. William Ball, Letart;
Ernestine Lyons, Leon ; Mrs.
Robert
Naylor,
Point
Pleasant; John Bemeserfer,
Mason ; Christopher
Matheny, MI. Alto; Mrs.
Charles Butler, So\lthSlde;
Arlene Scarberry, Mason ,
and Donald Stanley, Henderson.

Kober Medical Center
IDiscbariH, AprU Z8)
Paul Beaver, Donald
Bennett, Garland Bostic,
Jeannine Brown, Mary
Brown, Clay BUI'II.'l, Mrs.
Darrell Detty and son,
Donald Douglass, Bettie
Foster, Lawrence Fowler,
Mabel Hughes, Otha Jeffers,
Patricia Lemaster, Carolyn
Melvin, Ernest Merrill, Mrs.
Thomas Milstead and son,
Barbara Offutt, Wanda
Peoples, Orpha Peters,
Barbara Smith, Mrs. Alan
Stockmelster and daughter.
(Blrtbs, AprU 1!8) .
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Van
Meter, son, Chester; Mr. and
William
Lewis,
Mrs.
dau~ter, Hamden; Mr. and
Mrs. John Charmell, son,
Wellston ; Mr. and Mrs.
RJchard Liter, son, Long
Bottom.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
Special end of the month sale prices on men's and boy's
wear, houseware items, home furnishings, children's
wear, women's lingerie, dresses, sportswear.
A good time to select gifts for your ·mom on her day Sunday, May 8th.
,

OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT TIL 8

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
.

.

REPORT OF CONDITION
Consolidating domestic subsidiaries of the

POMEROY NATIONAL BANK OF POMEROY
in the state of Ohio,' at the close of business on March 31,1977 published In response to call
made by Comptroller of the CUrrency, under title 12, United States Code, Section 161.
Charter number 1980

National Bank Region N\UDber 4

Statement of Resources and Liabilities
- - - , - - - Cashandduefrom banks ... .. ............... .. ... .......... . ... .. ....... $1,320,0.11.83
U.S. Treasury securities . ... .. ..... .............. . .... . ....... .. ..... . ... 9,079,443.19
Obligations or States and poUtical subdivisions .. . ...... .......... ......... ... 1,870,215.81
Other bondS, notes, and debentures .............................. . ............ 1,742.50
Federal Rese&lt;Ve stock and corporate stock .. .. , ....... .. .... . . ... .. ... ....... 45,000.00
Federaltundssold and securities purchased
, ·
under agreements to resell ....... .. ...... ................·... , ... .. ..... 1,700,0QO.OO
Loans, Total (excluding unearned income) ....... , .. .. .•. . ... 10,293,124.05
Less: Reserve for possible loan losses . .. .. ... .. .. ............. 71,573.21
Loans, Net ... , .... ... ................. . .... . . . ............... .. .. ... . 10,221 ,550.84
Bank premises, fnrniture and fixtures, and
other assets representing bank premises....... ,. ............... ,., .•. : ...... 316,708.07
Other assets .. . .......... . .... . .... . ...... . .... , .. ... .. . , ........ .. ...... , 24 913,67
_
__,__· TOTALASSETS .... ... . .. ................ . ..... ..... .... .... ......... S2157!!6J59J
Demand deposits of individuals, prtnshps., and corps ... . • • , •• .. .. ... .. ... • ::l,ll!lil,B!'!.'r.!
Time and savings deposits of individuals,
prtnships,and corps .. ....... .. . ..... . . .. . . . ... ... .... ... . .. ..... ... . . 15,574,128.72
Deposits of United States Govennent ............ .. ...... ... .. ...... ... ...... 30,505.21
Deposits of States and political subdivisions ....... .. ... . .... .. ... ... .... . . . 1,951,844.70
;::::
Certified and officers' checks ..... .. .. .. ......... . . ........ . , . .............. 52,230.53
TOTAL DOMESTIC DEPOSITS .. .... . ..... . .... ... .. .. . . ... ..... . ...... 22,505,332.89
ID
Total demand deposits . ..................... . . . .. . .... . ... 6,174,674.22
Total tlme and savings deposits . ... .. ........... .. , ........ 16,330,658.67
TOTALDEPQSITSINOOMESTICAND
FOREIGN OFFICES . .... ...... ... . ... . ... ........... .. . ... . . ........ 22,505.332:89
Other liabilities .. . ..... . ............. .. . ... ......... . ........ ............. 63,925,33
TOTAL UABIUT!ES (excluding subordinated notes and debentures) ... .. .. m 569 258.22

.,..,
.--..

-.cc..

--+-!:t::lii:

occ
w _u

Common stock :
a. No. shares authorized 8,000
b. No. shares outstanding 8,00Q
(par value) .. . .......................... $200,000.00
. Surplus ..... .. ...... : . ........... . ........ . . ......... . .. . .....• •....... 1,300,000.00
Undivided profits .... ...... .. ........ . . . ...... . ....... .. . ................. 474,434.16
Reserve for contingencies and other capital reserves ....... .... ...... , ......... 35 !123 !.:!
TOTAL EQUITY CAPITAL ............. . . . ... .... ...... .. ..... . .... .... $2,010.357.69
TOTALUAB!UTIESANDEQUITY.CAPITAL ........................... $24,579,615.91

--+---

cc
z
cc
IX

0

0

~

Ill

~

•

a girl might have
By Hob HoeOirb
POMEROY - Alumni banquets are
t'Oming up this spring, as usual , and with
them come the happy reunions of some or
the classes.
However, it is doubUul that any of
these reunions will be as joyful as the
recent rejoin~~g of Christina SmUll, u,
with her class at the Pomeroy Elementary
School.
·
Chris, as' she's known to her friends,
was severely burned about the hands and
bodY on Feb. 6 when her nightgown ca ught
fire at the home of her grandparents 1 Mr.
and Mrs. Albert Roush , Route 4, Pomeroy .
Chris was in the family room of th e
home
when her nightgown becam~ ablaze
wildlife enhancement are only a few of the many benefits
An example of a properly constructed and managed
from
a
firepiace. She was alone in lhe
of a pond . this pond is on land owned by Horace Karr near
pond. Wa!A!r supply, recreatiln, fire protection and
room at the tim e. Chris readily admits that
~omeroy .
she knew that ruMing was not the thing to
do . However, Chris says her mind went
D
blank and she began rurming. Had it not
been for her grandfather who ca ught her
and smothered the fire when she ran into
the living room or the home, Chris would
By Boyd A. Rush
protect the soil and enhance the wildlife have been even more seriously burned .
Area.''
Soil Conoervatlonlst
Her grandfather had burns of the hands
The clinic will last until dark. It is co- value of ponds will also be discussed.
POMEROY - You asked for It, you sponsored by the Meigs Soil &amp; Water
Cooperative Extension Service per· and was hospitali:l.ed. several days.
got it. A " pond clinic !"
Ch jris was not so fortunate . Her borns
Conservation District and the Meigs sonnel will explain weed control and fish
A large number of folks have wanted a Cooperative Extension Service. Anyone management of a pond. Meigs County were serious. She was taken to the Burn
"pond clinic" conducted in Meigs County. thinking or building a pond or already Game Protector, Andy Lyles will discu.ss Center or Children's Hospital in Columbus
We are going to have one!
owning one should attend this free the fish pond stocking program and fishing and there she remained confined Cor two
It will be Thursday, May 5, 6:30p.m. program which is open to the public.
regulations.
months and 10 days. Doctot'll and staff
at Royal Oak Park. Turn south from Route
Ponds are one or the most popular and mem bers worked constantly with her to.
Soil Conservation Service personnel
7 at Five Points between Pomeroy and will explain how a pond site Is selected, visible soil and water conservation hel p her through the ordeal. Her grandChester (Co. Rd. 26). Go about Ill mile, along with survey, design and construction practices. About 1,000 ponds now dot the parents, Mr. and Mrs. Roush, with whom
follow signs t9 "Pond Demonstration procedures. Grass seedings and sJJrubs to
(Continued on Page A-3
she resides, were nearby practically at all
.. .

..

..

,,j'

. ..

., "' :"I

k
a
r
ar
Pond clinic planned at Royal 0 k

+

END-OF-THE-MONTH SALE
CONTINUES SATURDAY AND MONDAY

~WI~·:fe.w:a:s:.:g:oin=g~i.=nto:s:ur:.:g:er~y~.-~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

,..cc...

Greatest reunion

Averag·e lor 15 or 30 calendar days ending with call date :
.
Cash and due from banks .... ............ .. .. , .. .. .. . ... ..... ..... . . ... $1,420,145.71
Fed. funds sold and securities purchased
,
under agreements to resell ... '· ........................................... 273,333.33
Total loans .. ......... . : . ... :.. .......' . .... .. .......... .. .... ... ... ... 10,333,195.37
Time deposits of $100,000 or more in domestic offices •............... ... ..... 250,000.00
Total deposits..... ................... . ... .... ..... . , . ............. . . . 22,566,639.91
Time deposits of $100,000 or more (outstanding as of report date)
Time certificates of deposit in denominations of $100,000 or more ....•......... 250,000.00
I, MiooneGriffith, Cashler, of the above-named bank do hereby declare that this Report
of Condition is true and correct to the best of my knowledge and belief.
Maxine Griffith
April27,19T7

We, the undersigned directors attest the correctness of this statement of resources and
liabilities. We declare that it has been examined by us, and to the best of our knOwledge and
belief is true and correct.
. Edison Hobstetter
Horace Karr- Directors
Warren Pickens

·.

tmts
VOL. 1£ NO. 13

GALLIPOLIS- POINT PLEASANT ·

SUNDAY, MAY 1, 1977

times to help.
Knowin~ the terrific costs th at were
apparently to be involved in the
hospitalization of Chris, the Auxiliary of
the Middleport Fire Department began a
fund drive to help the family. The public
res ponded beautifully to contribute
several thousand dollars which wlll be
used on expenses, including the long
therapy which will be needed.
Making tremendous progress, Chris
wa s released from-the hospital six weeks
before doctors had expected. She has had
to return to Children's Hospital frequently
since being sent home, for examination
and therapy, but things are looking up.
Beginning Monday she will only have to go
to that hospital one time a month. She goes
to the Holzer Medical Center twice a week
for therapy which, hopefully , will restore
full use of her body and hands.
· Recently, Chris returned to her fifth
grade class at the Pomeroy Elementary
School where she is taught by Mrs. Mary
Hysell. Bob Morris, the principal, took
Chris to the classroom door and knocked
be£ore entering. The door opened and
Chri$ and Morris entered the room.
Mrs. Hysell cried, Morri.s cried , Chris
cried and many of the children cried
before breaking into a "welcome back,
Chris" applause.
Delighted to be back with her
classmates, Chris is only able w attend
morning classes. The afternoons are spent
in either home or hospital therapy and
treatment. Chris
. was lucky enough to be
.

CHRISTINA SMITI!
able to have a tutor for the months she was
hospitalized so was able to rejoin her class
with her work all up to date.
All in all, it was a frightening ,
traumatic experience for an 11-year-old .
But Chris through good care and a lot of
love and affection from many people has
and is conquering obstacles every day.
You can just about consider it a 100 percent safe bet that Chris is going to be just
fine.

tntittt
MIDDLEPORT·POMEROY

PRICE 25 CENTS

Spears found not guilty of robbery ·c omplicity
GALLIPOI.JS - After ileliberating charges carry a six months to five ybor
one hour and 15 minutes ltere Friday prison tenn.
evening, a Gallla Connty Petit Jury • - Offerin,~g-c""te~st""imony Friday for the
returned · a verdict of not gullty in the defense on behalf ol Spears were Shennan
robbery complicity trial of 33-year-old ~ Thompson, Judy Queen, Monica BrumRobert Spears, 644 Fifth Ave., Kanauga . field, Denise McGinness, all associates of
Spears had been Indicted on a felony Spears at the Colony Inn; four characler
charge of complicity in the Feb. 12 witnesses, Warren Skidmore, Tommy
aggravated robbery ol the Ohio Valley Sprague, Frank Knox and Hill Hamilton,
Livestock Yards on Vinton Ave. The Spears himself, and Clarence Alonzo
defense rested .a t 2:24 p.m . Friday after Lawson, Sr.
calling 10 witnesses, including the
Thompson,aresldentofRt. 2, Bidwell,
defendant.
· a fonner renter in the Colony Inri, testified
Testifying on behalf of the state that he knew Spears as well as the.Lawson
Thursday and Friday morning were boys involved in the stockyard crap game
Tommy Joe Stewart, manager of the Ohio robbery . . He said that Spears had to
Valley Livestook Yards, oile of 14 persons llexpel" the two cousins from the hotel at
robbed that night at the stockyards; Ptl. least twice in his presence. He said he was
B~rnard Goelling and Sgt. Joe Owen, at the Colony Inn Feb. 12, the same day of
. Gallipolis Police Dept.; Lt. George Plants, the stockyard robbery, and never saw the
chief investigator for the Gallia County Lawson boys in the establishment.
sheriffis dept.; Danny Thompson, Teddy
. Thompson also testified concerning
Lawson and Clarence Alonzo Lawson.
the sale of his son's 1960 blue and white
The robbery occurred between II: !5 Oldsmobile to Spears lor $75 earlier that
and 11:30 p.m. when the Lawson boys, evening on Feb. 12.
anned with sawed-off shotguns entered
~udy Queen testif~ed that Spears'
the Ohio Valley Livestock Yards where a , reputation was good while the reputation
crap gam.e was being played. They or· of Teddy Lawson, one of the state's major
dered the men there. to take off their witnesses, was not good. Denise McGinti'ousers and ordered one of the two women ness, another ·Colony Inn resident, an
present to gather all money onto the crap employee, also testified regarding the
table.
· business operation at the Colony Inn and
The Lawson cousins entered guilty how Spears spent from 16 w18 hours a day
pleas April 18 in Gallia County Common at the hotel. She said Spears managed the
Pleas Court To fourth degree felony bosiness and not Herb Rife.
charges of breaking and entering. They
Clarence Alonzo Lawson, Sr. said he\
had been indicted on charges of and his late son·in-law Billy Owens came
aggravated robbery. The fourth degree to the stockyards between. 11 :45 and 11:50

p.m. the night of Feb. 12 to investigate the
robbery.
At 2:05 p.m. Friday. the defendant,
Spears was called to the stand.by his attorney Marshall Douthett. Spears said he
purchased the Colony lnh (Queen Bee
Hotel ) from Herb Rife and Edith Gilkey.
He said he managed the. place with .two
fulltime bartenders, a . maid , and game
room operator.
He said there was a pool table and
pinball machine for the young in a room off
the bar. He said that soft drinks only were
pennitted in thai room .
Spears then described his relationship
with the Lawson boys, James Teddy
Lawson, 18, Rt. 2, Vinton, t!nd Clarence
Aionzo Lawson, 18, Rt. 2, Gallipolis, the
state's chief witnesses. He said he had to

ev1ct them from the hotel at least twice. He
said the action was taken because of their
abusive language; roughness and because
they used rooms without renting them and
took girls upstairs.
·
He said he did see the Lawsons in the
bar on the day of the robbery, Feb. 12.
However, in direct testimony, Spears said
he did not have any conversation with the
Lawson boys and Herb Rile regarding the
robbery of the stockyard crap game; he
did not have any conversation at any time
regarding any robbery ; he did not provide
any guns for the robbery and did not
participate in any meeting in Rife's hotel
room to divide money taken In the robbery.
Spears admitted to having had a shotgun and .38 pistol. He said the shotgun was

regular si:l.e and the pistol had been stolen
from_ his car in January.
· Spears said he never owned any
sawed..Off shotguns. He also discuss-ed the
purchase of Danny Thompson's 1960 Olds·
mobile on the day of the robbery stating he
bought it to drive in the bad weather and
planned to have it repaired at his body
shop in Kanailga.
When asked if he had anything to do
with the planning of the stockyard robbery
Spears answered 11 no."
On cross~ exarnination by Asst.
Prosecuting Atty. Rich!lfd C. Roder!ck,
Jr., Spears said Rife was a tegtilar patron
at the Colony Inn and rented rooms 20 and
21.
other renters were Denise McGinness,
Eugene Harmon , Shennan ThompsOn, Ed

Harrington and Debra Metcalf. He .said'he
did not see Rlre and the Lawson boys leave
the bar around II p.m. that night.
He 8Hid Rife wa.s at the bar around
II : 30 p.m. because he had to break up a
fight involving Rife and another patron.
· Roderick then called C.'hlef of Pollee
John Taylor and Gallia County Probate
and Juvenile Judge H. William Jenkins as ·
state's rebuttal witnesses but nelthi!r was
able to add anything. Atty. Douthett olr
jected to question s regardin g his client's
honesty proposed tQ the two witnesses.
The verdict ended the two-day trial
which formally began at I :30 p.m. Thursday after Assignment Judge James E.
Stilwell of Hocking County overruled a
ddense motion for a change in venue,
(Olntinued on Page A-2)

Victim compensated
GALLIPOLIS - The Conunissioners
of the Court of Claims for the State of Ohio
have approved the application or a recent
crime victim in Gallla County, Harry D.
Scott, 7211 Third Ave.
In a case filed Feb. 14, and approved
Aprlll8, Scott has been awarded $94.48 for
injurtes suffered in an attack Jan. 25.
According to the finding of fact, Scott
was walking to his home on Third Ave.
here when three men in a pickup truck
assaulted him.
The victim sustained contusions and
lacerations, broken glasses, and a chipped

tooth. Allowable expenses awarded Scott
were $98 for emergency room treatment at
the Holzer Medical Center and $94.48 for
glasses.
.
The victim was covered through the
Medicare program, and also has medical
coverage with Aetna Insurance Company
with whom the $98 bill owing the Holzer
Clinic is pending. Therefore, at this time,
the claims commissioners recommended
that no award for such loss be ~iven at this
time due to the availability of a readily
available collateral source:
·
Tbe victim's total award is $94.48.

OFF AND PEDAI.JNG - Hundreds of cyclists participated in a Hike-Bike for
retarded citizens Saturday morning in Meigs County. The group left the Pomeroy

Senior Citizens Center at 10 a.m. in perfect weather oil the 25 mile ride. Among lhe
riders was Stale Rep . Ron James.

NUi"se Act meeting set
GALLIPOLIS - State Representative
Members may call 446-53!1 for
Ron J:ames, who will be the guest speaker reservations for this dinner meeting by 5
at the May S meeting of. the Regional p.m. Tuesday. This meeting will be
Nurses Association at OsCar's Restaurant , election of officers for the 1977-78 year.
Members are encouraged to be
will discuss the Ohio Nurse, Practice Act,
present and unite with us against such
nconcepts of Change."
legislation .
Th~s Act will require registered nurses
to obtain a Bachelor of Science Degree in
nursing. LJcen.sed Practical Nurses will
need an Associate Degree. The Act, if
passed, would also elimin~te the hospitalaffiliated diploma schools of . nursing
(Holzer Medical Center School of Nursing
included).
Interested members and their guests
COLUMBUS - State Transportation
or any other interested persons are en- Director David L. W~ir has approved ,
couraged to attend this meeting. The effective May 2, abandonment of two
program will begin 8:18 p.m.
portions of old Ohio 124 near CR ·28 in
Meigs County, east of Racine in Sutton
HEGINS MONDAY
Twp., bypassed by relocation.
• GALLIPOLIS- M. Harold Brown will
Abandonment, diSCussed during a·
be swom in as interim city manager public hearing last Aug 28 in Pomeroy for
consultant at 8 a.m. Monday in the relocation of the corresponding portion of
Municipal Building. Brown will succeed the highway, was to be effective upon
. RichardT. (Dick ) Mills as city manager. acceptanc·e of the improvement on new
Mitis resigned the post April 6. The location and proper entry in the director's
resignation was effective midnight Sun· journal. Affected portions revert to the
Meigs County highway system.
day .

Abandonment of part

of old SR 124 set

'

'

LAST MINliTE BUYERS - Huge lines formed outside the Gallipolis UcC/lse
Bureau offi ce on State Street Friday and Saturday as residents whose last names
began with 'A through K purchased their 19n auw stickers . Deputy Registrar
Evelyn North said approximately 6110 persons boo~t stickers Friday and more
than 300 purchased stickers on Saturday prior to the deadline. The sale began April
1. Approximately 5,000 stickers were sold during the past monUl . Individuals

ROAD TO CLOSE
POMEROY - Cow1tY Road C·29 in
Sotton Township at Bouman's Run has
been closed to traffic due to unsafe cO'n·
ditions Meig s County Engineer Wesley A.
Buehl reports. The road is located .2 of a
mile east or cou nty road 34. Traffic
detoured by th e closing .should usc
township road T·19, known as Salser Road ,
which is the first road just north of County
Road C-29. ·

New well drillings in Gallia, Meigs

GALI.!POLIS, 1- According to the
April 14 edition of Ohio Oil and Gas
Association's scout report, 326 new wells
were completed in the Buckeye State
during Marth.
.
Initial production of oil was 2,443
barrels while the gas wells produced 86,396
MEETING CALLED
cubic
feet. In February , 19J7, 210 wells
CHESTER - The Sou theastern Ohio
were
completed
producing 1,588 barrels of
Garden Tractor Assn . will meet at 8
oil
and
69,138 cubic feet or gas.
Wednesday evening at the Dale Kautz
Gallia County wells nut previously
residence near Chester.

" .

'

•

whose last name s begin with L through Z may start buying their stickers 9 a.m.
Monday. Individuals are reminded to have the ir title and registration on hand .
Deadline for purchase of these stickers is MaY 31. The local office is open from 9
a.m. w4p .. daily except Thursday, when it is closed all day , l'he office hours are 9
a.m. w 12 nQOn on Saturda ys.

reported included one by Great I ~kes Gas Oil, Inc., Corning 1 0 :, on 20 acres of land
Corp . on a Bob Eva ns Hidden Valley . owned by Mabie Hayes, Addison Twp.:
Ranch site in. Springfield Twp.
Great I.akes Gas Corp., Woo'!ler. 175.51
New Meigs County wells were on the acres on Bob Evans' Hidden Valley Ranch
land of E. Swick, C. E. Eads and G. In Springfield Twp.; Neill C. Flemister ,
Wright, all In th e Rutland area , Drillers l.JJngview, Texas, 140.5 acres on land
are Aadrns Drilling Co. , Hill Gas and Oil owned by A.R.O.J. Corp. in Cheshire Twp.
Co,. and Talbott Drilling Co.
and Brasel and Bra.$el. Inc. for 42 acres on
New permits issued by t~e Division of property owl'led by Hetsel and Nellie M.
on and Gas in Gallia CountYwere A!theirs Russell in AduiSon Twp.

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