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                  <text>D-11).-.The Sunday Times~nune l , Sunday, May I, 1977

Man who played Jesus got no religious lift
By VERNON SCOTr
HOLLYWOOD (UP I )
Robert Powell, !he 33-yearold Englishman who starred
as tl)e Christ in NBC-TV's six
hourl. u Jesus of · Nazareth "
epic, was a brwlh of fresh air
on his first visit to Hollywood.
" ! haven 't been lQ
Hollywood befot e because

Scott's world
this place Is caught up wilh
success," he said , " I wanted
to arrive !Jere with something
going for me, and 'Jesus of
Nazareth '
makes
my
presence known."
Curly haired and animated,
Powell makes an altogether
different appearance than he
did in !he role of Jesus. His
blue eyes are lively rather
than tranquil. The saintly
aura and beard, to be sure,
are gone. The esthetic face
and aquiline nose are the
same.

As a child In Manchester,
England, Powell attended
Anglican Sunday school. His

religious training never went

further. He is neither more
nor less religioll'liy inclined
!han he was before playing
the role of the Christian
Savior.
His reason fo r playing
Jesu.~ was the same as any
actor's mi~ht be It wa s a
challenging role that wvuld
bring him international
attention. Even so, Powell
hesitated about accepting the
part.
"It consumed a year of my
life," he said. ~~ But lt was
worth it because the role will
pay dividends for the rest of
my career. Few other paris
will ever be seen by so many
people.
" The television show was

disavowal of feelings of celestial inspiration in playing the
Christ. His approach was
strictly pragmatic.
" Religiously inspiring? No .
But the magic of the words
and passages of the Bible are
so beautiful that the work was
filled with a verbal
inspiration.
1" I wasn't aware of any
religious experience as I
played the part. But in a way
I fought that possibility to
maintain an objective point of
view . f didn't allow myself to
get carried away in that
sense.
"The most difficult thing
was making some of the most
famous words ever spoken
come alive, as if they were
being said for the first lime
rather than having been engraved in marble.

·•I was reluctant to play tbe
role at first for two reasons.
Normally an actor feels !here
is a possibility he can hit a
part 100 per cent. But playing
Jesus , eliminates that
possibility.
" The other reason, of
course, Is the question, how to
you follow a role like Jesus
Christ?"
Powell seems to have had
JitUe trouble finding another
job.
'
He recently completed a
costarrlng role In the Italian
movie "Beyond Good and
Evil," an historical film
dealing with the menage a
trois among the German
philosopher Nietzsche, Lou
Von Salome and Paul Ree.
"Actually, my role as Jesus
Is not representative of my

work /' he said. "I've never
played a part like that before
and I never will again .
" But for some reason I've
played a good rna ny
historical characters poets, musicians, writers.
"I seem to look like all the
real life people I have played.
And I imagine the shape of
my face had something to do
with (Franco ) Zeffirelli
casting me as Jesus."
Powell is mOill particularly
proud of his title role in
"Mahler" and as the poet
Shelley in a BBC televisioo
production .
The sooner Powell can

disassociate himself from tbe
Jesus role, the better, so far
as he's concerned.
"The impact of lha I part
has a strange effect on other
people," he said . "They want
to talk to me about
Christianity and religion as if
I were some sort of authority.
" As a matter of .fact, Jive
learned a great deal about
religion while I was playing
the role. It is something I
won 't forget, but I must get
on to other things, And that's
why I'm here in Hollywood.
"This is where the film
work is . Any Englishman
seeking roles in pictures must

come to Hollywood because
90 per cent of international
movies are maqe oc backed
here. We can still work In the
theater in England. But it's
impossible to do both there."
Powell is doing mere than
M.y1 ~

On the topic
HAIR!

Hayman, located in Syracuse. Ohio on Brldgeman St.

(Rust ic Hllls l. Watch for sale signs.
'"

3 DAY ESTATE SALE

This estate is one afthe oldest and an accumulaflon of 3
generations of an ' original Hocking Valley Family.

(The family owned

&amp;

operated mints

PHONE--------------

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

&amp;

Compony

store!).

.

'

STARTING AT 10:30 A.M. FRIDAY, MAY 6 will sell all
china. glassware (cut &amp; ·pressed), figurines,
primitives. 4 violins (one Stratuarfus Cremoba dated
1606L pocket knives, . tot very eKpenslve jewelry,
silverware (lot very valuable SterlinQL clocks, books,
cards, etc. Hundreds of Items to be !old.
STARTING AT 10,30 A.M. SATURDAY, MAY 7 WILL
· SELL all items from tl)e barn &amp; outbuildings Including
lhousands brick &amp; tile (all new) . Many misc. Items.
STARTING AT 11:00 A.M: SATURDAY, MAY 7
ANOTHER AUCTIONEER WILL SELL hundreds of
old coins &amp; currency._ Some foreign money.

STARTING AT 10:30 A.M. SUNDAY, MAY 8 will sell
ant iq ue furn itur ~ &amp; old Items from· this 17 room home
plus 5 rooms shi pped from St: Paul, Minn. In 1940 &amp; lust
unpac;::ked.
'
The net proceeds olthis estate will be put In charitable
trust fund for the ullimate beneflf ot the residents of

the city of Nelsonville. There ~re many rare and
beautiful items for the antique buye-r or collector. No '
one should miss seeln9 thl s large estate. By using extra
auctioneers ~Ill sell this 8 day es~ate sale in 3 days.
Nothing shown before day of sale. Lunch on premises.

Terms - cash or check w-PID each ·day of sale. Not
responsible for acc:ldents.

J. Lloyd Evans, Exec; of Estate of R. Baird Stuart.

dec.

C. E. Berry, AHorney of Estate
Bill Janes- Auclloneer &amp; Sales Manager, Phone 614962-4377, 614-557·3411, 614-557,3133.
Auctioneers- Fred Marris, Randy Newsom,
and other Associ at~ Auc11on•ers

I

-~
~- --· - . ~ i

CUSTOM MADE

DRAPERIES
SAVE 30%
Now is the time to order custom made
draperies- Come in • .see our selections
of hundreds of fabrics and colors and
patterns that will give your, home the
custom styled look you'll like - many
colorful prints ·elegant satins · sheers or
lush solids.
Come in, let us help you select what you
want and save 30 per cent during this
Spring Sate.

BRING IN YOUR MEASUREMENTS
'

il
__
, ..

-.,.....r i

Custom

bedspreads
available
individuall ~or coordinated to match
your draperies - Buy the size that's
right for your bed. Save 50 per cent
during the sale on custom made
bedspreads.
HOME FURNISHINGS DEPARTMENT, 1ST FLOoR

ELBERFELD$ IN .POMEROY
•

WASHINGTON (UPI ) James Earl Ray said In a
television Interview
broadcast today that he was
y
w
in a Memphis gas station
having his white Mustang car
By United Press Inleniallonal
serviced
at the lime Martin
WASJDNGTON - AN ONSLAUGHT OF HOME repair
Luther
King Jr . was
frauds and other gypster schemes is anticipated by the
in 1968.
assassinated
Federal Trade Qlmmission as a result of President Carter's
Ray
,
who
originally
push to conserve energy.
pleaded
guilty
to
!he
murder,
Michael Pertschuk, new chairman of the FTC, said in an I
now
wants
a
new
trial ,
Interview he has established a. special task force to police
claiming
that
a
man
known
to
advertising for siding, insulation and other energy&lt;lllving
him
only
as
Raoul
might
be
home improvements. The agency also may go after
responsible for the crime.
advertising which encourages energy waste, he said.
Ray was interviewed in his
The fonner chief counsel lor the Senate Conunerce
prison
cell at Brushy
Committee said entrepreneurs alr!!BdY are peddling various
Mountain Park prison in
energy conservation devices and programs.
Tennessee
by
author-·
'
.
Mark
Lane,
who
investigator
PORTSMOUTH, OlDO - ABOUT 1,200 PERSONS
claims
the
assassinations
of
attended a prayer-rally in. Spartan Stadium bere Sunday in
both
King
and
John
F
,
support of an expansion at tbe uranium enrichment plant at
Kennedy
were
the
result
of
[nearby Piketon which President Carter now says may be
conspiracies and · not the
switched to Oak Ridge, Tenn.
deeds of Ray and Lee
single
Carter, during the presidential campaign, has promised
Harvey
Oswald.
support of the proposed expansion at the Piketon plant. Among
Lane
was intei-viewed on
those attending the rally were Gov. James A. Rhodes, Rep.
the
ABC
Good Morning
William Harsha, R-Ohio and Ohio House Speaker Vernal Riffe,
America
program
in
D-New Boston.
connection
with
publication
Bishop Edward Herrnuin of the Catholic Archdiocese of
Qllumbus delivered the opening remarks in the non- of another book to support his
theories. The progam cui into
deoomlnational
service.
The rally lasted about 30 minutes.
.
. ,,
.'
portions of Lane's filmed
BOULDER, COLQ.-TAKE ANOTHER LOOK 11t your pet interview with Ray.
. Ray said of'his movements
dog. Or the one next door, down ~e street or across town. F1do
on
April 4, 1968, when King
may be friendly enough on hiS own, but several anunal
behaviorists and state wildlife specialists say you should
watchoutlfhe starts roaming with a pack.
The behaviorists contend domestic dogs retain the pack
Instincts of tbeir ancestors. They say the "mob psychology" of
the pack can transform pet dogs into vicious threats to
hwnans livestock and game animals. "The animals can
become' very dangeroQS," said David Cbiszar, ·an animal
behaviorist at the University of &lt;Allorado in Boulder. "A dog
pack is like a mob of humans. Individuals will do things in such
WASHINGTON (UPI) s group that they would never dream of doing by themselves."
Presldent Carter promised to
avoid · future
misunderstandings between
his administration and
Congress
today as he a11d his
CLIFTON, W. Va. - In· Bank from 9 a.m. vntil noon
terested residents In the sponsored by the Racine E R top aides briefed the Cabinet
Mason . Clifton area · are Squad. In case of rain the
and congressional leaders .I!J1
urged to attend a meeting to clinic will be in the Racine the budget and whether it can
·
discuss the proposed coal Fire Station.
be in balance by 1981.
·tlfple this evening at 6 p.m.
a the Clifton monument.
Marriage licenses have
"This Is an effort on our
been issued to David Lee
part to bring together the
All Pomeroy Chapter Henry, 28, Gallipolis Ferry, executive and legislative
Eastern Star members are 'ftl. Va .; and Nancy Jane
leaders," said the President
requested to bring ~ covered ' Litchfield , 25, same address ;
dish for the pptluck which will Randall Steven Russell. 22, as he personally opened the
follow grand ·Inspection on Rt. 3, Pomeroy, and Cyntha
meeting in the State Dining
Diane Lane ; 17, Middleport .
May 3.
Room of the White Holl'lC for
the Cabinet , two dozen
There will be a meeting at 7
Charles R. HaHield, Rt: 1,
congressional leaders and
Rutland, who offers ex - this evening at Letart Falls
cavating service. Is not .the community hall to plan the
high:ranking White House
Charles D. Hatfield, same Memorial Day dinner Sunstaffers.
address , that has been named day, May 29.
Congressional Democratic
In recent law suits .
leaders
have complained that
'
Carter undercut them when
The Rutland Church of God
he withdrew his proposal for
4hold a yard sale Tuesday
Showers likely and cooler a $50 a head tax rehate. They
and Wednesday at the home
f1 Bob Eads •. Salem Street, tonight. Lows In the mid 50s. had campaigned for the
Rulland, beginning at 9:30 Chance of showers Tuesday. proposal, they said, even as
a .m .
Highs to lower 70s. Chance of the administration
' A free blood pressure .cllnlc rain 90 per cent today, 60 per announced the change of
will be held May 3, In front of cent tonight and 50 per cent heart.
HWhen
the Racine Home National Tuesday.
communications

INews. • . in Briefsll

StOre - across Hocking River to s•le ..Or 12 miles north

SAVE ·50% ON

LABOR.

~:::::::~:::::::::::::::::::::;::;;;::::::::::~:·:-::·:·:·:·:·:;:~:-&gt;:·:·:·:·:::::·:::·:·:::::::::::·::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~~~~

of Athens on St. Rt. 33 to Nelsonville.

TO YOUR OLD ROOF

ADDRESS---------------CI'Tv _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ZIP----

MONDAY, MAY 2, 1977

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Ray pleads innocence of

(ANTIQUES &amp; OLD ITEMS DATING BACK TQ THE
1800's)
.
FRIDAY, MAY61 SATURDAY, MAY7 &amp; SUNDAY,
MAY 8 (Mother's Day)
STARTING EACH DAY ATlD,JO O'CLOCK A.M.
(NELSONVILLE, OHIO ON ST. RT. 33)
For out of town people, take St. Rt. 33 south out ol
Columbus, 0 . through L1ncaster towards Athens to
Nelsonville. Turn in Nelsonville at the L. 5. Discount

GIVE ABEAUTIFUL "NEW''
. LOOK AND PROTECTION

MA \'OR TO WED
CHICAGO (UPI) - Acting ·
Mayor Michael Bllandic, a 54year-old bachelor 1 wUI marry .
Chicago socialite Heather
Morgan, It was aMounced
...Friday. Mlu Morgan, about
35, Is the daughter of Graham
J. Morgan; chal11!1an of the
board and chief executive
officer of the Chicago-based
U. S. Gypsym &lt;AI. A Tall,
attractive blond, Miss
Morgan is executive director
of the Chicago Council on
Fine Arts.

NO. 12

PUBLIC AUCTION

~PRING SALE I DECORATOR .INDUSTRIES
H*9,
' ..
'

CUSTOM MADE
BEDSPREADS

Holliday, Patty Parker, Kathy Parker, Carl Gheen, Linda Partlow, Mark
Riggs, Cindy Pitzer, Terri Pullins, April Wise and Sharon Karr.

en tine
VOL XXVIII

Elberfelds ln.Pomeroy

FREE
ESTIMATES ,

ROCKING FOR CANCER - Members of tbe Meigs County JuniQr
Leaders Club "rocked away" Saturday on Kroger's parking lot for the
American Cancer Society. Shown doing their part were, 1-r, Judy

Not responsible for accidents or loss of property.

Lincoln Day celebration

Roof
0 Sidewalk D (Please Check)
NAME ______________________

'
••'

· Lunch
I . Carnahan
L. Donohue
D. Smith
949· 1708
742·3048
949-2033
Sell by number system with pos itive I.D.

.

GUARANTEE
ON BOTH
MATERIALS AND

•

Terms : Cash

FLEXSTEEL

Please send me f urther information on
Gran'u tated Roofing . It is understood I am
1.11der no ~bligation whatsoever .

~·

Globe fruit jars, flat lrOfls, marble top dresser , pink

egance zn any rooH1

BAKER FURNITURE

Sherif! James J . R. department arrested Steve
Proffitt's Department today La Valley, 18, Rt. 3, Racine,
reported two arrests for for possession of Jess than lOll
marijuana possession, a hit· gra1113 of marijuana at the
skip traffic Incident, a fire, Rac!ne Park. He posted bond
and five breaklngs and en- and was released. His
terings reported since hearing Is to be held Friday,
Friday, Investigations are May 6, In Meigs County
proceeding In all the rob' &lt;Alurt .
beries.
Sunday afternoon 'deputies
· Friday . evening
the arrested a 16-year-old Racine
Rt. 2 youth for possession of
marijuana, also less than 100
grams. He and the marlluana
were found In his auto l\llrked
at the Dorcas Church Jot. The
youth was released to the
custody of his parents pen·
ding a hearing in the Meigs
&lt;Alunty Juvenile &lt;Alurt.
Sunday afternoon deputies
cited to court Thomas 0 .
McKay Jr., 28, Rt. 3, Racine
PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS for
hit-skip as a result of an
accident Friday around 3:35

:

and green dishes and misc. good dishes, German
cuckoo dock, sewing rocker. school bells, stooe (ar,
glass door cupboard, oak table w -6 chairs, 6 straight
chai rs w.velvet bottoms~ wash basin and pitcher set,
spittoon. wall mirror, small pot belly stoye, wood beds,
dressers, rockers.
"TOOLS &amp; MISC."
1968 Ford Fairlane , ladders, lawnmower ~ set of pi pe
dyes, lawn and garden tools too numerous to mention.

A

'-------~-------------------------•.

" HOUSEHOLD''

14.6 Frosf. Prool refrigerator. Sunray electric $tove~
gas range. portable B&amp;W T.V., couch and 2 chairs,
rockers, stan;:ls, misc. clocks, radios, lamps, bookcase,
sew ing machine. metal clothes closet, metal utility
cabinets, wringer washer, Maytag dryer, Warm
Morning gas heaters, small and large cedar chests,
lawn chairs, electric hm and heater, dishes, pots and
pans, sweeper, misc. books and many other Items.
" ANTIQUE OR COLLECTOR ITEMS"
1
Cane rocker, picture frames, old dolls, 16-47 violin,

ESTATE SAL£

personal

1977

10,30A.M.
Will sell the personal property ot !he late Gladys

A reward in the amouq,l of $2,000.00 is
hereby offered to any person or persons who
provides information which leads to the
detec tion , apprehen sion, and conviction of
the person or persons responsible lor the
murder of Wesley Dale Mu sser.
kly Information pertaining to same
s hould be given to the Meigs County
Sheriff's Department by calling 992-3371.

let's talk about our teens

Sheriff busy in
robbery. probes

E5TATESALE

REWARD

seen simultaneously in En·
gland, !he United States and
Italy. It was estimated 30
million of · England 's 55
million population tuned into
'Jesll'l of Nazareth' and the
percentage was even higher
in Italy.
C. K. SNOWDEN
"Technica lly, I'll never
....__ _ _·...,&amp;.l:i~
24 State Street
play a harder part .
Phon e 446-4290
Everything else will be like a
holiday .
' I "Most of the time It was
just another role in which I
Intrinsically, the length and style of a teen's hair haJ no
"Countonme for
had to work harder than 1 bearing oo his tendencies toward getting Into trouble, though
MAYS &amp; 6, 1977 - 9:00 A.M.
prompt,
service." have in mY 13 years as an si nce the late 60s the so.ealled establishment has seemingly
Will sell the personal property of tile late Wesley Dole
MUsser. Located from Rutland, Ohio on the New lima
1! •11 IU"'
Like a good neighbor, actor," he said. 11lt did wanted to ll'le this standard as a measure of potential. And,
Road go 3.6 mile. Watch for sale signs.
require
me
to
be
on
screen
State Fam1 is there.
admittedly, even law enforcement agencies have leaned
!he better part of five hours. " toward "hair style judgment" in their thinking.
SIJT~ r"m lo,vr~n ce ComDa~ r !!
'i66 Guns to be sold at 1:po on th e 5th . English Enfietds,
nH U IAO&lt;(I0
flo111t Oflr~n Biqum m~UIO IIII~Gr l
Powell was candid in his
Japs. Germans. U.S. Springflelds. US Rem in gton, I
The problem, if one still remains, varies in Importance
Stevens, dou~le barreled cap fired, cap &amp; ball rifles,
determined by, amoog other things, geographical location.
US Whitney-ville , P. Henry Parker, Wldson, Spencer
While most areas of !he country have finally accepted hair
repeater rifle, Rem ington carbine, Klruf Russian W·
style freedom as a basic right, others hold fast to the old
•
bayonet, Winchester, Danzig, 410 Bay State, Simso,
Torre Annumziata, Sport, Mexico, Rem . Russian,
standards, with the clean-shaven, burr-eut look standing for
Swiss, France MLE, Cananda · Ross, Chaletteralelt,
Jaw-abiding good citizenship. H the latter held true Jaw
Rolling Blo ck - Remunknow, 4 Sabre's, 22 Bay.onets &amp;
enforcement would be a simple matter.
ammunition .
Parenls who remail: concerned with their children's desired
173 Coins to be sold at 10: 00 on the 6th . Canadian 1c.
Dutch l c, 6 Belgium, 3 French 50 Franc, Phlppine 10
hairstyles will find it easier on the ulcers to shift their concern
centavo, Canadian quarter s, Dutch 1 G. Piece,
to other indicators of more obvioll'l importance.
Phillipine 25 centavo, French 20 Franc, Columbian 10
We hear often that law officers ,pay closer attention to tbe
centavo, Indian - head penny 1899, Canadian _dimes.
activities of "long ahirs." While this may have been true when
French Franc, Fre_
nch Centime &amp; France, Spanish
Engli!h 6 Pence (sliver 1932), Ph ilippi ne large· 1 cent
the fad stlll'ted, It has little hasis in fact now. And If this"
(1934), Dutch, Sweden . Panama . Oriental coins.
thinking prevailed, police officers would surely be spending a
tokens, silver quarters, half dollars -&amp; dollars, Indi an
Jot of unnecessary time observinR gray headed long h.airs, as
hJ!ad pennies, 2c pieces, and many others.
many from the inteUigentsla have joined the group of hair·
"ANTIQUE OR COLLECTOR ITEMS"
Horse drawn sleigh, ox yoke, spinni ng wheel, chi na
worshipers. Let's face it, some li)&lt;e attention no matter what
cabi net, cradle. chairs, 4_wagon wheels. beds. wooden
mll'lt be done to achieve it, if !hat Is a real reason for
tub washer, wood ice lx&gt;x, spool table, dressers, co ffee
succumbing to hair style trends.
· gr inder, picture frames. stone jars, powder horns,
Excessive hair adornment, while it may show lack of
German helmet, oak library tabl e, desk, kerosene .
lamps, sideboard , &amp; m isc . items, also arrowheaQ
concern for conventionality by the old standards, will have
collection .
'
little if any influence, sublimal or othenvise, on a youngster's
"HOUSEHOLD"
deep&lt;!eated standards. H he has been taught the right and
Amana refr igerator . freeze r , Fr lgidia r e lau ndr y
wrong hasics, his hsir isn't going to make him forget, nor Is 11e
center. washer. table &amp; c hairs.. cabinets. dish es, pots
and pans.
·
'
beaded automatically toward an unruly existence because of
"BEEF CATTLE"
his long hair.
4 Cows &amp; 2 Calves.
H your teen's hair makes you ashamed and disgll'lled,
"TOOLS"
you'll pro~ably have to do something ul)ique to get It changed .
Bench saw &amp; gr inder. vices, mitre saw, drills, h.and
tool s', many, many tool s.
In law enforcement we have decided not to let hair both~r us.
"Farm Machinery" to sell at 1:00 on May 6
Everyone
FINS
UP
I-IOL.STEilE
I)
Fl
iH.NITl
lH
E
we
"do
business
with"
wilf
be
treated
equally
in
this
.
.
CA Allis Chalmers tractor. manure spreader. wagon
jurisdiction, come hair or Yul Brynner.
plows, 'posthole digger, feed grinder , cement mixer,
Next week : How To Handle The Dlsrespeclful Teen.
cultivator, lawn mowers , ladders, water tanks, 100 gal.
FLEXSTEEL FEATURES:
gas tank-, seeder, barbed wire, m isc. horse drawn
Sponsored by R. E. Tracy Fire and Safety, Middleport,
equipment. Scout &amp; Jeep. ·
and provided by J .'J . Cremeans, Chief of Police.
• S.olld kiln-dried oak frames .
Sell by number system with positive I.D.
• Long lasting springs made trom the lin·
LUNCH
,
CASH
D. Smith
J . Carnahan
T. Donohue
est blue steel.
'
614-949-2033
949-2708
742-3048
• A· collection of over 1,000 carefully seNot responsible tor accidents or loss of ~roperty.
lected fabrics. Most are treated for soli
Women's
POINT PLEASANT - Republican
and stain resistance.
Organization,
and
Eddie
The traditional Republican
McDermitt
and
Brian
Lincoln Day celebration this
. A perfert ac(clll .to any ~l rcur is this
Billings
of
the
two
Young
year will be a dinner, special
wluRed Chippendale chair av&lt;~ilahle
entertainment, and a dance Republican Clubs, coor1vith a tailored kick pleat or provincial
May 7 in the Moose Hall here. dinated planning for the
wood base. Cht,r•se J 'rorn Flexstc~·l 's
Dinner will be served at observance which first was
vast fabric collection of prints, ve lvets,
6:30 p.m., followed by en- delayed by had weather, then
tertainment, and the evening by a time conflict with the
i&gt;nrl &lt;OI ids.
wlll conclude with · a dance annual Chamber of &lt;Aim·
merce dinner,
starting at 9.
Tickets now are on sale for
John
C. Musgrave,
chairman of the Mason $4 each covering the dinner,
992-3307
Middleport County Republican entertainment and dance
Executive &lt;Almmittee; Kitty from members of the several
McDel1!1itl, president of the GOP. orga,nlzatlons, GOP
office holders and at the door.
Republicans and their friends
are urged to pur.chase tickets·
as soon as possible since only
allinited nwnber can be sold.
The dinner Is to be catered
by the VUiage Inn ooder the
supervision of Johnny
Wamsley, Entertainment will
be provided by Mason
Qlunty's
own professional
-:-Insulates against cold
magician,
Benjamin
or heat.
Franklin
IV,
following
din·
-Will not chip, crack or
·
ner,
Dancing
wlll
be
to
Gary
peel.
Stewart's group until 1 a.m.
- No need to tear off
your roof to repair any
slate. metal, shingle or
FOUNDER CLAIMED
built-up roof. Make it
CINCINNATI (UPI) leakproof with be.a utiful
Morgan B. Pennington, 70,
Granules.
owner and founder of
_;_ Choose yours in any
Pennington Bros. Inc., one of
color of your choice.
the largest wholesale
bakeries In the U.S., died of a
-Add years of life to
heart attack Friday. .
your present home or
Pennington founded 'the
building .
hakery here in 1930 and later
In
' opened
bakeries
Washington &lt;Alurt House and
r----~A7CrH~-couPo;--~, Marietta with 14 other
distribution centers In Ohio.
Hackett Granulated Roofing
Funeral arrangements
937th Ave.
Mlddlepor
were incomplete.

looking for screen roles In
Southern California. He's
been playing golf every day
and, like everyone elle, he's
made the pilgrimage to
Awrica's contemporary
mecca - Disneyland.

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&lt;

.

ing to interviewer

STORE DESTROYED - A \w()-Story building which
housed the Ben Franklin Store was destroyed by fire early
Sunday morning in New Haven. Approximately 80 men

NEW HAVEN, W. Va. ·_
Eighty firemen of five area
volunteer fire departments
hattled a fire here .early
Sunday that destroyed the
Ben Franklin Store. Losses
were estimated at $400,000.
The New Haven, Mason,
break down, as they have · Pomeroy , Rutland and
within ihe last · few weeks \r&lt;liadJepori Fire Depart·
becall'le of my own change of ments answered the · call
position on the $50 rebate .. . I received by the New Haven
recognize how difficult it Department at 2 : ~ a.m.
makes it," said Carter. ·

Local news, in briefs

Weather

Cause of the fire was
detel1!11ned by the State Fire
Marshal Sunday to .be an
electrical motor shortage,
according to a spokesman for
the New Haven Department.
The building was owned by
Cal1!1el Robinson of Ravenswood, and the store was
managed by his son, Ron
Robinson, New Haven.
Two persons residing in
apartments above the store

"I don't feel a damn' bit
sorry about it (smuggling),"

and Pomeroy, stood by In
case additional help was
needed.
Smoke and heat damage
occurred to the homes of
Hazel Roush and 0 . J .
Richardson ,
Tookies
Fashions, ·owned by Mrs.
David Simonton, and the
fonner New Haven Bank,
owned by · the Green Sales
Company, Damage to these
buildings was not estimated.
New Haven Fire Chief Cecil
Duncan reported the entire
block could have been lost to
the flames if not for the
assistance of the other !Ire
departments . to whom he
gave special thanks.
'The fire department also
Fred A. Hartweil, 28, thanked the ladies auxlliary
Bidwell, a motorcyclist, is for serving coffee and donuts
listed in satisfactory con· to the departments, and R. G.
dillon at the Holzer Medical Green, who donated refresh·
Center ·where he was ad· ments from the New Haven
mitted following a car- Supel1!1a rket.
motorcycle accident at 2:50
p.m. Saturday on US 3S at
Mitchell Rd. Hartwell suffered a fractured right leg
and finger.
The Gallia . Meigs Post
State Highway Patrol said an
auto driven by Susan L.
Petrie, 16, Bidwell, turned
into the path of the cyclist. He
was taken to the Holzer
Jayne Lee Hoeflich ,
Medical Center in a SEOEMS·
representing
schools of Meigs
ambulance. Petrie was cited
&lt;Alunty
in
the
annual spelling
to Juvenile Q)urt for failure
bee of the Columbus Citizen
to yield right of way.
Journal
held Saturday at the
Rodney W. Shil..ot, 17 ,
Ce nter
for
Fawcett
Bidwell, was cited to ·.ruvenlle
Tomorrow
on
the
Ohio
State
cOurt for reckless operation
following a single vehicle University Campus ranked
accident at 1:28 a .m. Sunday 11th In the competition.
Forty-six of the 70 chamon SR 160 at the junction of
pions
of 'county , city and
CR 30. The patrol said Shilot
exempted
village schools
tra veling southwest lost
were
eliminated
from the
control of his truck on a
competition
as
the
result
of a
curve. There was moderate
written spelling test held
damage.
during
the morning hours.
A deer was killed in an
Twenty-four
of the 70 were
accident at 7:30a.m. Sunday
selected
through
the written
on SR 141. west of SR 775.
test
for
participation
in the
The aruma! ran into the path
held
in
the
oral
spelldown
of a car operated by Edward
center
auditorium
in
the
J. Miller, 24, Patriot.
'
A final accident occurred at afternoon.
An
eighth
grader
at the
5:50 p.m. Sunday on 'Mill
Meigs
Jimlor
High
School
In
Creek Rd. seven tenths of a
Pomeroy,
Jayne
Is
a
reading
mile north of US 35. The
patrol said Stanford E.' Fulks, and spelling student of Roger
Jr., 24, GaUipolis, lost control Birch and was given some
of his vehicle which ran off assistance in preparing for
the right side of the highway the &lt;Allumbus event by Mrs.
striking a mailbox and ditch. Carla Saelens. She was acThere
was
moderate companied to the bee by her
damage. No charges were parents, Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Hoeflich, High St., Pomeroy.
filed .

were rushed to ' Pleasant
VaUey Hospital by the New
Haven Rescue Squad . .
Carole Edwards, 29, was
treated and released for a·
hand laceration received
whlhi breaking a window to
escape the fire. Her husband,
Dan, was treated . .and
released · for
smoke
inhalation .
Two other squads, Mason

More road names suggested Cyclist
injured
Meigs County Engineer
Wesley A. Bueh( has announced more county road
names selected in con·
junction wi.th the .co unty
holl'le numbering project.
The listed names will be
submitted to the County
Conuni~ioners for adoption
at the regular meetin.g May
10. Persons not satisfied wit!)
the names selected should
contact the engineer im·
mediately, or attend the
commissioners m~ting.
Jim Page, project engineer
for the house numbering said
the names will be used as
part of the new rural address
· in place of the rural route
number, so problems should
be resolved prior to the name

Old Dexter Church, Cll , C4
being used. The names are
being published so that to Cl.
Mine No. 2, Cll, CJ to C27.
residents can view them prior
Side
Hill, C7.
to use. Roads not presented
Malloons
Run, CB.
are. still being studied, and
Parker Run, C9.
will be presented later.
Dexter, ClO, SR124 to C4.
Proposed names , the
Carpenter Hill, ClO, C4 to
county road number of each,
and the location of each:
SR143.
State Fann, CJO, SR143 to
Painter RRidge, Cl, SR325
Ql. Line.
to SR124.
Carpenter • Dyesville, Cll.
·salem-School Lot, C1,
Titus, Cl2.
SR124 to SR 143.
School Lot · A.C.L., C1,
Lasher, Cl3.
Wolfe Pen , C14, SR143 to
SR143 to Co. Line.
Briar Ridge, C2.
Cl8.
Leading Creek, C3, Cl to
White Oak, C14, Cl8to T259.
Hysell Run, Cl5.
SR124.
New Lima, C3, SR124·
Beech Grove, C!6.
Cottrill, C17
SR143.
McCumber, C4, C60 to ClO.
Kin~sbury, C!B.
Peach Fork , Cl9.
Bolles, C4, C10 to CJ.
Bradbury, C5, Middleport
Old State 33; C20.
[&lt;Alntinued on page 8)
to SRI24.

Hearing opens on ·Laetrile b an Jr. High band rated superior
United Press llllernallonat ·
Glen Rutherford is one of
few· Americans with a legal
BUPPlY of tbe cancer drug
" Laetrile 11nd Bill Sharhano
admittedly smuggles his
supply In from Mexico.
Rutherford got a federal
court order In 1975 to let him
import Laetrile. Now, he is
testifying
at
the
·govenunent's first hearings
m the controversial drug,
scheduled for today and
Tuesday in Kansas City, Mo.
Rutherford, of Conway
Spi'inp, ~Cal).; hopes to win
reversal of the Food and
Drug Administration's 14year ban on laetrlle. He
'wanta to belp people like
Sharbono, of Newtoil, JW~'n.,
who would rather do things

from five area fire departments bat,tled the blaze which
resulted in an estimated $400,000 damage. The building
was owned by Carmel Robinson of Ravenswood.

Losses in .fire estimated $400,000

Carter moves
to end _g oofs

"legally.

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was shot:
"At that lime, I·intended to
go to a movie ... I recalled
!hat I had car trouble the day
before. I doubled back to
service the car. I believe
that's close away (sic) from
the terminal and where the
shooting took place."
Mter he left the gas station,
he said, "I ran into a [police)
road block in the immediate
vicinity of where the shooting
was supposed to have taken
place, There have been police
statements that they waved
me off. Anyhow , I went to
New Orleans.''
The
FBI, .
which
investigated the King murder
and a Justice Department
review earlier this year ,
concluded that all the
evidence showed thai Ray .
killed King with a rifle he is
known to have purbcased
several days before.
Lane said Ray claimed he
had been involved with
others, including a man
named Raoul , in some
s muggling
schemef
, operating ·across
the
Canadian and Mexi~ an
borders.

p.m. at the Cecil Brlnager
residence at Dorcas. It is
charged that McKay came
into the private driveway,
lo!ll control of his 1974 pickup
truck, went out of the
driveway on the left !llrlklng
and breaking off a small
peach tree. The driver fajled
to stop.
McKay also will have a
he a ring Friday in Meigs
&lt;Alunty &lt;Alurt.
The mobile home of Mr.
and Mrs. Kevin Styer, Rt. 1,
Long Bottom, (Rainbow
Ridge) was destroyed by fire
Sunday around 10:30 a.m.
The Bashan Fire Dept. and
the Racine Fire Dept.
responded but the 12' x 55'
Fleetwood mobile home wu
destoyed and a 1973 Monte
Carlo and a 1970 Chevrolet
(Continued on page 8)

says Sharbono, who credits for those who want it .
Laetrile with stopping
Laetrile is the chemical
lymphnode cancer he had . amygdalin, found in the pits
nine years ago. "I might be a of peaches, apricots and
smuggler aU right, but it's bitter almonds. Supporters
life to me. I'm gonna have it, want it classified as a
that'sall there Is to it. But I'd vitamin, B-17, to make it
like to be able to get it more easlly obtainable.
Laetrile now Is legal in 26
legally."
Thirty
persons
are countries. Doctors In Alaska
scheduled to testify at tbe can prescribe it without fear
FDA hearings, ordered by the of legal action, the Indiana .
loth U.S. Circuit &lt;Alurt of Legislature approved it' last
Appeals at Denver.
week and at least 10 other
The FDA - along with tbe states, notably Florida, are
American
Medical considering legalization.
Association, the American
''It's my life,'' says Ruther ..
Cancer Society and the ford . " Does my .govenunent
National Cancer Institute have the right to tell me by
believes Laetrile has not been what modillity I might die? Is
proven
effective
and this not the United States7"
therefore is not safe.
Rutherford became
Others say the substance acquainted with Laetrile in
appatently is nontoxic and 1971 when he went to Tijuana 1
therefor · should be available Mexico, . ' for
Laetrile
"

treatments rather than
submitting to major surgery.
Sharbono made the . same
decision. Both say they are
On Saturday April 30, the
cured.
Meigs Junior High Band
But ,tests at cancer competing in Portsmouth in
research centers have failed the District 17, Ohio Music
to find any evidence in favor Educators Assoc iation
of Laetrile. Dr. Lewis &lt;Alncert Band contest for
'Thomas of the Sloan- ratings, not against other
Kettering Cancer Center in hands, received straight l's
New York told sc ience from three judges for a final
recently writers that tests "Superior" rating .
there 'found Laetrile "has no
The Junior High Band,
effect one way or another on primarily made up of eighth
cancer."
gr aders, assisted by seven
The Florida House last seve nth graders, played
week approved, and sent. to three selections, "Overture:
the Senate a b11l to legalize the Court of Henty ·VIII," by
the .use ?f Laetnle by , John Cacavas; "Three Songs
phys1c1ans m that state.
of Colonial America ," by
Gov . Reubm . Askew LeRoy
Jackson
and
~ndorsed the . m~as":"e and "S partans of Tomor~ow," by
md1cated he w11l s1gn 1t tf 1t 1s Andrea Balent.
passed by the Senate.
Under· the direction of

in District 17 music contest
Jeffrey S. Buell, the Meigs
band was the only Junior
High band to receive a
superior rating in its class.
Included In the Judges

comments were,
" ... This . is a very fine
Junior High hand ... You do
many things very well. I like
best the idea that you have
pride and do things musically
... A very good group playing
with good attention to style
and sound ·... In my opinlo~,
this was an outstanding
performance. •'
The next perfonnance by
this group will be May ~ at
the Spring Concert. Also
featured will be the Seventh
grade hand and the Senior
High Band.

. 'I

Miss Hoeflich

finished 11th
in spelldown

)

t

�2-The Dally Sentmel Middleport PomeroY 0 Monday Mav 2 1977

BOARD OF ME IGS
COUNTY COMMISSIONERS

'

Classrooms lack
1,750 teachers
'

Uruted Press loternaUonal
Strikes by teachers m
Cinctnnatl New Alban}
Coldwater and the Warren
Local School D1strl ct 1n
Washongton County today
odled 1 750 teachers and kept
about 30 000 students out of
classrooms
The strike m Cinctnnatl IS
the only one mvo lvmg wages
as an 1ssue and has caused

about half of the coty s 2 950
teachers and half of the 63 400
students to sta) a"ay from
classes
Hanulton Count) Common
Pleas Court JUdge F'rank M
Gus~Aeller was to hear a
request today by the
Cmcmnat1
Board
of
Educatlon that he grant a
permanent InJUnction aga1nst
the strikmg teachers
The latest strike was m the
Warren Local School Dostnct
at Vmcent It began today
when 121 teachers failed to
show up for work
The teachers members of
the Warren Local School
D1str1ct voted F'nday to
strike when the Board of
Educa lion refused demands
to fU"e an elementary school
prmc1pal and rehire a second
grade teacher whose contract
was not renewed The dtstrtct

has 3 000 students
About 60 striking teachers
m the Plam Local School
Dostnct m New Albany
wh1ch has about I 300
students continued theor
walkout today m a diSpute

over seven teachers who dtd

Board of Education to renew

not have thetr contracts rene
"ed

the contr.a cts of several

teachers mcludmg football
coach Barne) Otten
~nvolvmg 72 teachers went
The distriCt has 11100 stu
1nto 1ts second week toda} m dents
A stnke m Coldwater

a dtspute over fatlure of the

Sadat to help
Zaire's AF
CAffiO Egypt (UP!) - Egyptoan p1lots and ground
Pres1dent Anwar Sadat has support crews w11l be sent w
gone on the offensive agamst Zaue unmedlalely Earlier
Comrnumst achv1ty m Sadat had ms1sted not a
Afnca declarmg Egypt Will smgle Egyptian sold1er would
operate Zatre s entll'e alt be sent outs1de Egypt as long
force and vowmg to take a as the Arab-Israeli conflict
stand
agamst Moscow contmued
unless 11 retracts an alleged
HELP ASKED
threat w Egypt
SALZBURG Austna (UPI )
Sadat announced h1s
- The International Atomic
position wh1ch certamly will
Energy Agency opened a tw&lt;r
worsen
already
tense
Egypllan.SOVIel relations m week conference today woth a
a speech Sunday to a May message from Presodent
Day
rally
1n
the Carter who sa1d 11 could help
Mediterranean c1ty of h1s pohcy of seekmg to
prevent the spread of nuclear
Alexandria
weapons
In
a
reversal
of
government policy Sadat
VISIT HERE
declared Egypt wtll operate
Mr
and
Mrs Nat PrentiCe
Zaire s entire atr force to help
spent
the
past
weekend here
Presodent Mobutu Sese Seko
v•s•tmg
her
mother
Mrs
crush the mvaswn of Shaba
provmce which he and Welby Whaley They were
Mobutu have said was Sovoet retum1ng to theu home w
Akron after spendmg the
backed
Th1s apparently meant wmter 10 F'lorl~a

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necessary experience and

equipment to operate the
facilllles
sa1d Ralph
Vanzant Chief of the Parks
and Recreation DIVIsion
One

contract

Includes

operation of the camp
comnussary and 2 beach
refrestunent concessions Bit

East Harbol' State Park "'
Ottawa County and a mobile
refreshment concession urut

at Crane Creek State Park p1
Ottawa and Lucas counties
The second contract
lllCiudes operat1oo of a boat
rental

and

refreshment

conceSBoon at Forked Run
State Park m Me1gs County
and boat rental facilities and
moblle refreshment
concessiOn umts at both
Barkcamp State Park m
Belmoot County and Strouds
Run State Park m Athens
County
B1ds must be subrrulted to
the Parks and RecreatiOn
DIVISion S Columbus

The operator must provide
headquarters by 2 p m May
all
other
eqlflpment
19
The use of mob1le merchandise, matenals,
concessoon stands m state labor and utilities necessary
parks 1s a new concept we are to ensure the operations
trymg lor the f1rst time this comply with approved
year
Vanzant
sa1d standards
The operatmg seasons
V1s1tors to parks without
pennanent structures will no mclude Boat rental April IS..
longer have to brmg theU" Oct I beach concesswns
own food and beverage or Memorial Day to Labor Day
travel outsode the park to and camp comm1ssary
Mayl-Sept 30
purchase refreshments
Durmg the seasons of
Vanzant sa1d the mobole
operation
tlte operator must
concessiOn
umts
must
provtde
dally service,
conform to specoflc standards
hsted
m
the
bod secunty operation and
of
the
housekeepmg
soecif1cations
ODNR woll furniSh to the lacllllles Vanzant srud
operawr at East Harbor
The fac•hties are open for
State Park a
camp Inspection by prospective
commissary bUildmg w1th bidders who conta ct the
sales and storage areas and approproate park manager m
two beach refreshment advance
East Harbor State Park IS
concession bu1ldmgs wtlh
east of Port Clinton on State
sales and storage areas
For operation of the Routes 269 and 163 Crane
refreshment concesswn at Creek State Park Is 17 miles
Crane Creek State Park west of Port Clmton off U S
ODNR will provide land for a 2
Barkcarnp State Park 1s
mob1le concessiOn umt
furniShed by the operator
one mile east of Belmont
The concessionaire at F'orked Run State Park IS
Forked Run State Park will west of ReedsVIlle on State
be furnished with docks IS Route 124 Strouds Run Stake
rowboats w1th oars a Park IS on County Road 20 off
refngerated 1ce house and a U S 33 near Athens
Requests for bod proposal
bUildmg approxomately 32
forms should be sent to the
feet by 20 feet
ODNR will provode the Ohw Deparlment of Natural
concess1onaU"e at Barkcamp Resources DIVISion of Parks
Attn
and Strouds Run state parks and Recreatwn
wlth sox rowboats With oars Sherman Frost Fountam
and land for a mob1le Square Columbus 43224 or
phone (614) 466-3277
concessiOn umt

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Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
By Lawrence E Lamb, M D
DEAR DR LAMB - Are
there any cancer cells 10 the
bone marrow of persons w1th
an extremely low wh1te call
count' Is the presence of
cancer the cause of the low
white cell co unt' Does
radiation destroy white blood
cells Explam the relation
shop between brUises and
White blood cells Generally
how does one feel when he Is
short of white blood cells' Is

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there any way to detenmne

,,

this condition wothout a bone
marrow test? Please send me
The Health Letter on Un
derstandmg the Anemias
DEAR READER - In
general the white blood cells
are one of the body s defense
mechanisms agamst tn
fectlon Some people have
low white counts for no good
reason Others may have a
lo'f' white count fdr any
nulnber of reasons Includmg
the side effect.. of some
medicines or exposure to
toxins which may occur m
one s occupallon

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ASTRO•GRAPH
Bermce Bede Osol
TAURUS (Apnl 20 May 20)
U usua l sl OS5 and more polen
1 al problems ex1st Ieday 10 one
10 one re!at onsh ps a where
you re nego!lat ng an ag ee
ment
GEMINI (May 21 June 20) Th s
s one o f hose days w~ en
everybody w I tr y to transler
the r burdens to you r shoulders
Looks hke a busy day'
CANCER (June 21 July 22) Be
v: ary today Jest you be draw n
nto a s tu at on where you could
be requ red to pay fo r m1stak es
or ext ra11ag ances at ano ther
LEO (July 23 Aug 22) Fam ly
d sag reements have a way of be
1g blown out of proport on to
day Unless eve yone s very
carelu hars h feel ngs could
result

LIBRA (Sepl 23 Oct 23) t may
be w se 10 pass up dei:1 s where
you sense the other part~ 1'\as the
edge go ng n Favorab e ad
JUStments a en t 1ke y today
SCORPIO (Oct 24 Nov 22)
Unless you ~nd oth ers make
su e you e put ng together to
day mo e prob l ems th a n
product v ty w II resul t
SAGITTARIUS (Nov 23 Dec
21) You ha11e a knack fo r pan
t ng yourseU .nto a corner today
You cou d take an a ready bad
s tu a t on ar d make I e11en
wor se

C'APRICORN (Dec 22 Jan t 9)
Av o d try ng to make a pat over
n your own n age today Til s
could cause resentment to
ser ous ty scar- the elat onsh p
AQUARIUS (J~n 20 Feb 19)
Dan I put your reputa t on op the
I na today for one who m ay not
be wo th 1 You could dam age
your own mage fo naught
PISCES (Feb 20 March 20) Its
h gh ly p obpbte you ha11en 1
prof ted frol'!l past expe ence
You could act today n a way that
I pped YOl.l...,U P before
ARIES (March 21 Apr~l 19) Be
extremely c.lilreful n ALL flnan
ca t deal ng:;. today Don t gel
uo
n
anyth ng
m xed
specu lative
(A e you a Ta J us? Bern ce
Osol ha s wr tt en a spec at Astra
Graph l etter for you For your
copy send 50 cen1s and a self
add ressed stamped enve ope to
As ro Graph P 0
Box 489
Aad a C ty Stat on New Yo k
NY 10019 Be sure to ask lor
Tauru s Volu me 7 J

detailing newly obtamed
transcripts
of
taped
con' ersations between Noxon
and his top advisers The
tapes date back to June 20
1972 three days after the
Watergate break~n

Colson saod he limned to a
tape of the conversation m
the off1ce of former spec181
Watergate prosecutor Leoo
Jaworski and stud1ed two
separate transcripts of It
In ne1ther of those fran

• There s some gross mac
gross distortion

scnpts was there ever a

curacies

Colson sa1d Sunday "' a
telejlhone onterv1ew This IS
a beauliful PR ( pubhc
relatwns) JOb for Dav1d
Frost
Colson said the reports
consisted of 'f1rst thmgs that
are untrue

A low white count does not

in mother's milk
WASHINGTON (UPI\ Researchers found small but
detectable levels of po1sonous
pesticides rn the rrulk of
nursmg mothers m 46 states
to
the
accordmg
Envuonmental Protechon
Aj!ency
The agency sa1d eVIdence
of d1eldrm oxychlordane and
heptachlor epo11de do not
mdlcate an unmedl8te health
threat to the mothers or theU"
children but the poss1ble
long-term consequences
are uncertam
The survey was taken
among I 436 women at 150
hospitals m every state
except Delaware Nevada
Rhode Island and Wyorrung
It was the largest sarnplmg of
1ts kind ever undertaken
Detectable levels of
dieldr1n oxychlordane and

mean that a person has
cancer at all So you can have
a low count and there will be
no cancer cells m the marrow
or anywhere else
Too much radoatoon may
destroy white blood cells
Smce radoat1on 1s often used
m treatment of cancer I
presume that IS where you
foxed on the 1dea that cancer
and low white cell counts
were related Many of the
medlctnes used to treat
cancer are also toXIC to the
bone marrow and may lower
the wh1te cell count
Smce whole cells red cells
and small cells called
platelets that are mvolved In
the blood clottmg mechanism
are all produced by the bone

Demonstrators were ar
PORTSMOUTH
NH
(UP!) -Two Superwr Court ra1gned m groups of !Oat the
Judges set up court m a Portsmouth National Guard
Nallonal Guard armory and Armory
1 1
conducted mass arraignment
THE DAII Y SF.NTINEL
proceedings mto the morrung
DEVOTED TO THE
hours today for about I 000
INTEREST OF
ant~nuclear protesters
MEIG~MASON AREA

were

arrested

marrow you can have an

anem•a low whote cell count
and a tendency to bleed The
latter can causC' brutstng I

ha•1en to add that easy
bru1smg often occurs without
any chan~e 10 the bone
marrow or m the prodU{'tlon
of either while or red hi md

•

and

expensive

pamful

evaluatwn Other patients
with addotwnal fondmgs will
need a bone marrow test
whoch os fauly Simple to
provide more mformatton to
the PhYSICian
I am sendmg you The
Health Letter number 4 3
Understandmg the Anemias
that you requested Others
who want thiS ossue can send
50 cents w1th a long stamped
self addressed envelope for
It Just send your rcquc~t to
me m care of this uewspapc1
P 0 Box 1~1 Rud1o C1ty
Statioon New York NY 10019
IJF.AR DR l.AMB - I
would hk• to know wh 11 prolonged use of extess
would happco tf somcom tuHk lhv rmd hormvnf's

y

at

prev1ous Seabrook
demonstrations or who came
from out of slate

"""'HOEFLICH
Ed
ROBERT

CltyEdltur

PubliShed da ly ex(:~pt Saturday
by The Ohio V11.Uey Publishrng Com
any 111 Court St Pomeroy Ohio
45769 Busmes.o; Offlc.:e Plmne 992
2156 Ed toraal Phone992 2157
Seconl c las.'l ~JWUtgc ~1d at

Pomeroy Ohio
;Nabunat

mJvcrtl.'l g reprcseu

Griff th Comp&lt;tny
Inc Butt ncl!i a 1d Gallagher D1v
57 Third Ave New York NY

ta!Jve Ward

10017

Subscr ption rates Delivered by

carr cr

aval]able 75 cenL~ per
l'!eek By Motor Route where carr er
ser. cc nol &lt;J\Siiable One month
$3 25 By mail Ln Ohlo and W Va
One

whe~

Vcar

$22 00

Stx months

$1J SO Three months $7 00
Ebewhere 126 00 year Su monllis
$13 50
Three mtmlhs $7 50
Subscr pt10n ~trtce mcludes
Tim eli-Sentinel

Sun~y

I

POINT PLEASANT INN
Pt Pleasant, W Va.

Ph.

67~276

DINING &amp;DANCING
UNDER THE DOME!

Synthorld by mostake
DEAR READER - It
depends It you took Syn
throid m place of b1rth control
pills by mistake a lot could
happen But 1! you Ignore the
m1ssed by miStake and JUSt
ask a bout the effects of
Synthro1d •t 1s not hkely to
cause any hann
Synthrood 1s--llij(rotd hor
mone Your thyro1d gland 1s
designed so that 1f you take
hm1ted amounts of unneeded
thyroid hormone 11 just qu1ts
puttmg out so much The net
resutt of the mcrease m
thyrmd through p11ls and a
decrease m thryro1d hormone
because of the slowdown m
your gland ends up about the
same
Nothmg gamed
nothing harmed
Excess1ve doses beyond the
amount the thyroid normally
produces may produce
symptoms Slffitlar tu an
overactive thyroid gland
Usually
thi s
mvolves

CHESTER L. TANNEHill

The demonstrators were

arrested Sunday when they
occupied the construction stte
of a $2 b1llion nuclear power
plant
Some 300 state pollee from
f1ve states rounded them up
m the parking lot of the
nation s newest atorruc plant
m nearby Seabrook where
they gathered to argue
agamst the potential hazards
of nuclear energy
Bail for most protesters
ranged from $100 to $500
H1gher bond was set for those

You re gong to be mvo ved m
several different th ngs at the
same time th s year Try to dete
m 1 e qu ckly wh c h 15 most
pro I ta ble

mediCtne you may have

heptachlor epox1de were
found m the milk of a
maJority of nurSing mothers
- dieldrin m approXIIIl3tely
80 per cent of all milk
samples heptachlor epo11de
m roughly 63 per cent and
oxychlordane m 74 per cent of
all samples
It said heptachlor was
found m less than 2per cent of
the sampled milk and two
other pestlcodes for which the
rrulk was tested chlordane
and MU"ex were not found 10
any
The government has
cracked down on pestoc1des m
recent years D1eldrm
heptachlor and chlordane
have been lianned for most
uses lllCludmg all lood crops
Muex whoch was used to
control the fire ant, will be
banned after June 30 of next
year

Nuke protesters given
arraignments by court

What white cells do
cells
Whether a person should
have additional tests to
evaluate a low wh1te count
really depends upon the
whole pocture and the
patient s hostory Many
patients With a moderately
low whole count and nothmg
else do just /me and do not
warrant a more extensive

reference to hush money
Colson srud l would say that
some JOurnalists had better
go back and check theU"
facts
Colson also challen~ed re
ports that on June 20 1972
N1xon used the word
stonewall" m reference to
Watergate and argued that
Noxon actually referred to the
way he expected the New
York Tunes would respond to
lnQUII"Ies about a Times ad
placed by pohtical opponents
seekmg to he Noxon to the
break m
1

Pesticides found

who

May 3 1977

and secol'ld

thrngs that were not brought
out m depth
He sa1d
he
found
particularly mosleading '
the Post story which quoted
NIXon as referrmg to
Goddamn hush money m a
meetmg w1th Colson Jan 8
1973
•

RT 62

HEALTH

•
•'

WASHINGTON (UPI ) Charles Colson says reports
linkmg Richard NIXon to a
coverup as early as three
days after the Watergate
break 1n are part of a
beautiful PR JOb for Dav1d
Frost
The former spec1al Wh1te
House counsel calls the latest
Watergate revelations old
hash released man effort to
publicize Frost s sertes of
nationally televised
mterv1ews w1th Nixon
heglnnmg Wednesday noght
The Washmgton Post and
the New York Tunes camed
frontpage stones Sunday

VIRGO (Aug 23 Sept 22)
You e nnate y e5 e t tul o l
anyone tr y ng to tell you what to
do today Don t overreact

Bids invited to take over
•
Forked Rim concession
United Press International
COLUMBUS - The Ohio
Department of Natural
RellOurces (ODNR) DIVISion
of Parks and Recreation IS
accepling b1ds for the
operation of three pubhc
serv1ce facilities at three
southeastern Oh1o state parks
and four public service
facilities at two northwestern
Ohio state parks
Two four year and seven
month leases begmrung May
20 1977 will be awarded to
the highest bidders With the

Watergater Colson says
new Nixon coverup links ;
mostly a pack of lies

I

DINING MONDAY THRU SUNDAY

I

DANCING 9 PM TIL 2 AM
lUESDAY THRU SAlURDAY

I

T G I F EVERY FRIDAY
SAM TILl PM
Jom us for our Grand Opening Wed ,, May 4
thru Sunday, May 8
1t

Buffet Style Service

PAVER DEALERS

In ~ct:Or'dance Wtfh Section

"!107 86 ol the Oh o Rev ised
Code $Uied Olds w II be
rece ved bv the M eigs County
Com mtUtoners
n ,,. r
off ce too• ted "' the CQurt
Houu Pomeroy Ohi o 45169
until 6 30 P M on May 10
1977 It wl'l ch t1mt and place
the btds w tll bf opl'ned and
r ead ~loud for a sl!'lt propelled
b tum l nous fm tsher complete
w ith manufacturers standard
accenor tn
A dealers regrnentat ve

snell provide tnsfruct ions In

the proper operation and
malntenitlnce at th e t i me of
deli very One complete set of
parts serv1ce repa r and
operators manuals sh a ll be
prov1ded
The
dealer
~nd
manufacturer shall provide a
one ';lear warr an ty for HH!
fin sher and attachments
supplies
The
warranty
per od
shall
not
lim II
opera I ng ~ours
The
follow ng
s.pec1f1Ca i iOns 10 be con
s der ed
as
m inimum
requ ire men ts and must be
subm fled by 5 00 P M as
dated above
General
1 The asphalt f n sher
shall be sell propelled
mounted on pneumat c dr ve
II res and capable of appl ying
all types of hot or cold mix
b1tum nous p~v ng material
to spread the material as t Is
be ng 1a1d at preset th•ckness
ready for roll ng a l l Without
the use of forms
Hopper
1 - M1n mum of lour tons
c apa c ty
2 - Hopper w ngs shall be
of t he ~ydraut catty fold ng
self clean ng type
3 - The conveyor svstem
must cons1SI of a r ght hand
and left hand conveyor
capab le of being operated
s muttaneous l y
or
1n
dependently conveyor speed
must be Independent of
pa11 ng speed at standard
eng ne speeds
Ease of
replacement
must
be
malntamed
Push Rollers
1 - Osc llat ng push rollers
2 - Rol l er mount ng p vots
r ght and l eft from center of
mach ne keep ng the truck
centered at lhe pivot point
Si'readlng Augers
1 - T~e paver shall have
two
( 2)
hydraul cally
powered augers reach ng the
ent1re w dth of the screed
2 Each auger must
operate s multaneously w th
1fs conveyor each s de .n
dependently of t~e other
3 The auger dr ve
systems are automat clllly or
manually controlled by the
operator
to contro l t~e
amount ol materia l n front of
the sc reed to nsure proper
proport onlng of mater at to
the screed regardless of the
work ng speed
Screed
1 - The screed must be full
lloa t mg type wtth abras1on
and
corrosion
res st ng
ground steel plate
2 - The screed sha 1 be
prov1ded w th a sat sfactory
heat ng system and s~a l l be
constructed from spec a t
t~bras on resistant stee l
3 - Spray hose to be fur
n shed for c lean ng
4 The screed shall be
carr ed m a frame hav: ng
tong s de arms extend i ng
forward and p1voted on the
ma.n frame of the fm l sher for
max mum level ng ab llty
5 Means" must be
provtded for ra s ng the
sc reed
by
two
power
operated ~ydrau iiC hosts to a
traveling pos liOn cl ear of t~e
road surface
6 - Lock$ must be provided
tor holdtng the screed n the
rased post on mdependently
of the hydraul c hosts
7 - Twm screed heaters
shall be prov1ded to heat the
sc r eed
8 - The basic replaceable
screed b.,_se (exclud flg ex
tens ons) must be of one piece
construct on
9
For
maximum
economy of operat on and
ma ntenance
the screed
bottom must be of eas ty
rep aceable bolt on con
strucllon
10 . .,. __ The screed Without
ex tens ons must be capable
of pav ng a foot WidthS and
must accommodate
ex
tens ons to paving widt~ of 12
feet
l1 - Left and right 2 ex
tens on!
~ydraul~tally
controlled
Mark 2
or
equ valent
12 - The screed must be
adjustable for crown w1thln
the range of J rnch max mum
pos t ve
and
J;.
tnch
ax mum negat ve crown
13 - An lndtcator to show
rown sell ng shall be n
stalled within easy v ew of
the screed operator
14 - Leveling screws one
a t e I her s de of th e screed
must be prov ded to adtust
the f~1ck.ness of the mat
15 - Cut off shoes mvst be
ncluded fo r educe the w dth
of the mat be.ng paved to a
m nimum of 6 teet n 3 nch
ncrements
16 The entire screed
assemb ly
must
be
hydraul catty ra1sed and
lowered
17 - Safety type platforms
are to be attached to t~e
screed for the operator
18 - The area 1mmed1atety
above t he spread.ng augers
must be open to allow the
operator a full v1ew ot t~e
spreadmg augers at all times
Screed V1brators
1 Hydraul c VIbrator
drtve
2 - Ant frict ion bear ngs
throughout
Power Unit
1 - Gasolm-e engme
2 - Min mum 64 H P
3 - Water cooled
4 l2 vojt etectr.cal
svstem
Speed Select1ons
1 - Low range to not
tess than 100 f p m
2 - lntermed ate range - 0
to735mF:Jh
3 - H ! Q~ range - 0 to not
ess thlln 14 m p h
.t - Full reverse

C

a

TireS

'

I WNCH 11 AM THRU 2 PM

NOT ICE
TO
SELF
PROPELLED BI TU M I NOUS

1 The paver s~all be
equ1pped w1th two pneumat c
dr ve o f not less than
1l 24x24 8 pty n s :ze and
rat ng shall be hydraftated
2 - Two rubber ttres under
lhe hopper shall be of a
m nimum of 22 tnches outside
d a meter by 12 nc~es w1de
Operator Controls
1 The con lrol console
shalt be usable al both
operators sf allons enabl ng
operat on from either side of
the paver
2 - The operators seat Is
to tle of heavy dVty padded
type w th backrest
3 - Hydraut cally powered
fr ont wheel steering Is

3-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport Pomeroy, 0 Monday May 2, 1977

Reds stopped 4-1
Ualted Pr.. olutei"ILIUoaal
CINCINNATI - Chicago
Cubs reliever Bruce Sutter a
free agent fond who Signed for
a paltry $500 bonus says he
enjoys hearmg people hke
Pete Rose call him the be$!
young bullpen ace In the
National League
It means something when
•t comes from other teams
sa 1d the 24-year~ld right
hander after his air tight
relief yesterday helped halt
the Reds' five-game wmmng
streak Sutter and starter
R1ck Reuschel combmed for
a seven hitter to tame the
red hot Reds +I
Sutter has pitched less than
one season m the major
leagues but the chunky 6-foot
2 forkball specialist 1s
already
earnmg
rave
reviews

Expos

Mary Hobstetter
Actmg Clerk
Board of Meigs
County Comm ss1oners
(.4) 25 {5) 2 'ltc

NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO

DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
Columbus Ohio

Aprll22

1977

Contract Sales Legal
Copy No 71 53 2

UNIT PRICE CONTRACT

Seated proposals w II be
received ttl th e offiCe of the
D1rector
of
the
on o
Department
of
Trans
portal on
Columbus Oh o
unt I
10 00 A M
Ohio
Standard T1me Tuesday
May 17
1977
for
lm
provements n
Athens
Gallla
Metgs
Monroe and Washington
counties Oh o on V ar1ous
Sect ons of U S Route SO and
Stale Route 7 and the village
of Coolville n Athens County
U S Route JS n Gall•a
County U S Route 33 and
State Route 7 m Me gs
county State Route 1 and 78
and the v llage of Ctar ngton
•n Monroe County
U s
Roule SO and State Routes 618
and 339
n Washington
County by pa ntmg ex sting
guardrail
The date set for com
plet on of thts work shall be
as se t forlh n the b1dd ng

New York 8,
San Diego 2
SAN DIEGO -Roy Staoger
drove m two runs wtth a

double and a homer as the
New York Mets defeated the
San D1ego Padres 8-2 to fmtsh
a sweep of thell" three-game
serles
Staiger s double m the
fourth scored John Stearns
aU the way from f1rst, puttmg

t:~roposal

Each b dder shall be
requ red to flle wit~ hIs b d a
certif ed check or cash er s
check for an amount equal to
ftve per cent of hiS bid but n
no event more than f1fty
thousand dollars or a bond
for ten per cent of hts btd
payable to the Director
B 1dden must llpply on the
proper
formS
for
quallf cat on at least ten days
t:~rlor to lhe date s~ t for
open ng b dS n accordanCt
wilh Chapter 5525 Ohio
Rev sed Code
Plans and specific at ons
are on t le m 1he Department
of Transportal on and the
off ce of t~e Distr ct Deputy
D1rector
The D rector reserves the
rtQht to retect any and all
bids
DAVID L WEIR
DIRECTOR
l5J292tc

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
Case No 22 061
Estate of VIvian E Johnson
Deceased
Not ce Is hereby given thllt
Marvin Morris of Dexter
Oh o has been duly appointed
Executor of the Estate of
Vlv an E Joh nson deceased
late of Box 144 Racine Me1gs
County 01110
Cred itors are re(luired to
file their cla 1m s with said
fiduciary
within
three
months
Dated th is 13th day of April

1977

Mannino Webster
Judge
Common Pleas Court
Probale Division
Meigs County Ohio
{4)

18 25 {51

2

Jtc

NOl'ICE ON FILING

OF INVENTORY
AND APPRAISEMENT
The State of Ohio Me•os
County court of Common
Pleas Probate Div1sion
To the Admm strator of th e
eslate
to such of the
following as are res dents of
the state of Ohto vl:z - the
surv1vi ng spouse the next of
kin the benefle~artes under
the will and to the attornel'r
or attorneys represent ng any
of the aforement oned per
sons
Ellzabet~
Byer Jackson
Deceased M dd leport Oh o
SaiJsbury Townsh i p
No
21996
You are hereby notified
lhat !he Inventory and Ap
pra lsement of the estate of
lhe aforementioned
deceased tate of said County
was flied n this Court Sa1d
Inventory and Appraisement
W1tl be for hear ing before this
Court on the 9th day of May
1977 ~t 10 00 o clock AM
Any person des ring to f le
except ens lhl!!reto must f le
them at least five days prior
to the date set for hearing
G1ven under my hand and
seat of said Court this :22nd
day of April 1977

4 - Controls for hopper and
screed l1fl transm sslons
con¥eyor
auger
11nd
v bra lor are robe with i n easy
reach of the paver operator

I

MAnn ng 0 Webster
Judoe
By Ann 8 Watson
(~) 25 {SI 1 2tc Oeputy Clerk

He s the best short
reliever we've had here In the
four years I ve been here

sud
teammate
Jerry
Morales who came off the
bench m the ninth to dnve 1n
two runs
Said Chicago Manager
Herman Franks • He might
be the best anybody s had I
haven t seen the rest of the
league but I don't know how
anybody could be better
Sutter P-3 as a rookie last
year, feels his forkball saved
his career
l needed something or I d
be out of baseball by now, he
sa1d after h1s four-strokeout
effort
Sutter gained his fourth
save of the season With twohit relief pitching over the
last 31 3 mnmgs
The Cubs broke up a pit

ching duel between Reuschel
and Cmc1nnat1 starter Pat
Zachry by scormg twice m
the Sixth After Ivan DeJesus
smgled up the middle Greg
Cross was safe on shortstop
Dave Concepcion s error Bill
Buckner doubled m the first
run and Bobby Murcer
delivered a sacrifice fly to
score Gross
The Reds got a run In the
bottom of the SIXth when Joe
Morgan hit a one~ut double
went to third on a groundout
and scored on a Wild pitch by
Reuschel
The Cubs added two more
runs m the ninth when
Zachry 2-3 t•red MaMy
Trillo led off with a smgle and
alter a strikeout Steve Ontiveros walked and Jerry
Morales dnlled a two-run
doub1e to center

Celtics ousted from title chance"
BASEBALL

United Pressluternattonal
NEW YORK - Thurman
Munson homered for the third
game III a row and scored the
go-ahead run on Chr1s
Chambliss soxth mmng
double as the New York
Yankees ran theor Winrung
streak to four games
yesterday by defeating the
.~ Seattle Marmers S..2
The Yankees made the
moSt of fove hits 1n 51-3
' mmngs off loser Glenn
Abbott 0 3 while the
Mariners wasted most of
theu 13 hits off Ken Holtz
man 2-1, and Sparky Lyle
after scormg twice m the first
mnmg
Munson hit his fourth home
run of the season m the
bottom of the fU"st and the
• Yankees lied 11 m the second
, on a walk Ron White s double
and Paul Blall" s grounder
In the sixth Munson
smgled Reggoe Jackson
walked and Chambliss
doubled, chasmg Abbott
, Reliever Tommy Moore
walked
Carlos
May
mtentionally to load the
bases, then walked White to
.~ force m another run
v

Kansas City 8,
Blue Jays 2

".

'
,
•
•&gt;

'

,"

We ve been crltlCtzed for

our lack of defense all year
lwt we showed we could play
National lugue
it today • Coach Gene Shue
East
W L Pel GB
,aid yesterday after h1s
13 7 650
51 Louis
Philadelphia 76ers
P1tt~burg!l
1176111
ehmmated
the defending
Montreal
9 8 529 21&gt;
champion Boston Ce1t1cs
New York
99 5003
Ch cogo
8 9 471 3V&gt; from the National Basketball
Pho la
8 9 471 31&gt; Association playoffs
West
Lloyd Free s 27 points
W L Pel GB
triggered the 76ers to an 83-77
Los Angeles 17 4 810
C ncmnatl
9 ll 450 7 h
wm over the Celtocs 1n the
Houston
9 12 429 8
seventh
game of their
San Fran
8 12 400 Bh
pressure-packed
series,
Allanta
8 13 381 9
movmg Philadelphia mto the
San Olego
8 16 333 10 1&gt;
Sundays Games
Eastern Conference finals
Pittsburgh 4 Houston 3 10
agamst
the Houston Rockets
mmngs
We
played
one hell of a
Ch1cago 4 Cmctnnati 1
defensive game just an
Sf Louis 8 Atlanta 0
Montreal 6 Los An~eles 2
absolutely fantastic defen
New York 8 San 0 ego 2
Slve game sa1d a jubilant
Phlladelph a 7 San Francisco
Shue l d ssy we won the
~
entire series on defense '
Monday s Games
P•ttsburgh ( K son 2 1) at
Shue sa1d the 76ers were
Atlanta (LaCorte 1 21 7 35 aggressove for the entire 48
pm
St Lou is (Denny 5 01 at minutes
'We were forcing them,
lncinnat (Norman 11 ) 8 05
jumping with them Shue
sa1d
Then the coach turned to
Opm
New York ( Koosman (1121 Free, the little guy who
begged to be traded In midat Los Angeles (Rau 3 01
10
season
he felt he
1 ~fymgames scheduled) wasn t because
getting enough
playing tune
Amer1can League
l told you all season said
East
Lloyd Free 1s a
W L P ct GB Shue,
Milwaukee
17 7 632
pressure player and a win
New York
12 9 571 I
ner'
Bait more
10 8 556 112
F'ree had a tough ftrst half,
Boston
10 9 526 2
although
he scored 12 pomts
Toronto
10 12 455 3 1&gt;
Detro t
8 13 381 s
he rrussed hls first SIX tries
Cleveland
7 12 368 5
from the field and was just
West
fourfor
12 for the half But m
W l Pet GB
the
second
half he sank six of
Minnesota
14 9 609
Kans C ty 12 8 600 •;, 15 and keyed the 76ers' of
Chocago
II 8 579 1
£ense
,
Oakland
12 10 545 11f2
It was the 13th lime Boston
Texas
10 9 526 2
has appeared m the seventh
Callforn a
9 14 391 s
Seattle
8 17 320 7
game of a playoff senes Sunday s Games
and only the second tune It
Kansas C ty 8 Toronto 2
has been beaten
Chicago 12 Texas 4
Boston 6 Oakland 4

the Mets ahead ~ at that
pomt and knocking out
Padres starter Bob ShU"ley
In the SIXth Sta1ger added
an msurance run wtth hiS
homer off reliever V1c
Bernal
Lenny Randle tripled and
smgled twice m hiS !U"st start
for New York after being
acquired from the Texas
Rangers earlier thiS week
Gene Richards and Dave
Winfield each collected two
hits for San D1ego
Craig Swan collected his
f1rst victory of the year, With
relief help from Bob Apodaca
and Skip Lockwood Swan
unproved his record to 1 2
after holding the Padres to
one run and SIX h1ts before
leavmg "' the sixth ShU"ley
now IS 2-2

Braves
behmd
Enc
Rasmussen s five-hit
p1tchmg
Rasmussen surrendered no
more than one hit an mrung
and boosted h1s record to 2-3
With his second complete
game of the season
The Cards wmnmg their
fourth straoght game shelled
Atlanta
starter
DICk
Ruthven ~ for three runs "'
the first two 1nmngs, two of
them on Smunons' tr1ple
Keith Hernandez and Ken
Reitz drove home rliiiB m the
thord and the fifth tnnmgs and
Garry Templeton Tony Scott
and Simmons drove m
msurance runs In a three-run
sixth

Pi#sburgh 4,
Houston 3

PITTSBURGH -AI Oliver
tied
the game with a solo
e P ia 7,
homer m the nmth mnmg and
home the wmnmg run
San Francisco 2 smgled
m the lOth as the Pittsburgh
SAN FRANCISCO - Larry Pirates defeated the Houston
ChriStenson pitched a SIX Astros 4-3 for their seventh
hitter and drove m two runs VICtory m the last e1ght
w1th a smgle as the games
With one out III the Pirate
Ph1ladelplua Phillies beat the
loth, Ornar Moreno beat out
San Francisco Gl8nts 7 2
Christenson 2-2, did not an infield smgle and stole
allow a h1t until Terry second JUS! ahead of a throw
Whitfield doubled with two by Astro catcher Joe
out In the fifth llllllllg He Ferguson who had thrown
gsve up a tw&lt;H'Un bomer to out three preVIous Pirate
Willie McCovey m the nmth baserunners
With two outs, Dave Parker
mnmg for all of San
was
walked mtentoonally
Francosco s scorln~
before Ohver bounced a
St. Louis 8 Atlanta 0 smgle to roght off Ken Forsch,
2-2, who also Yielded the
ST LOU1S- Ted Sllilillons leadoff solo homer to Oliver
tr1pled home two runs and 10 the ninth The victory went
drove "' another With a to Pittsburgh reliever Rich
sacrifice fly, leading the St Gossage ~ who allowed one
Louis Cardmals to an ~ h1t over the fmal three
troumph over the Atlanta mnmgs

Philad l h

KANSAS CITY - Tom
Poquette doubled and smgled
and turned ll1 two sparking
defensive plays to help boost
the Kansas City Royals past
the Toronto Blue Jays 8-2
Dave Lemanczyk, 2-2,
walked Poquette 1n the f~rst
Poquette went to thord on
John Mayberry s single and
scored on a wild pitch After
Darrell Porter walked Amo9
Otis scored Mayberry With a
smgle then AI Cowens bloop
single sent Porter home
Lemanczyk held the Royals
scoreless until tbe eighth
before Kansas C1ty erupted
for five rliiiB three on Fred

Patek s bases'ioaded double
Larry Gura ~. scattered
SIX hits through seven lllnmgs
before being relieved by
Mark Littell who pocked up
his thud save

mnmg launchmg the Chicago
White Sox to a 12-4 victory
over the Texas Rangers

Oakland4
BOSTON - Carlton F1sk
drove m five runs with a pall"
of homers as the Boston Ri!d
Sox rallied for a 6-4 vtctorv
over the Oakland A s
completmg a sweep of theor
three-game ser1es
Fosk extendmg his hitting
streak to e1ght games drilled
a two-run lwmer high Into tbe
screen m left..center off

BOWLING

Only

No 2
88 24
No4
6250
Nol
5854
No 3
50 62
8111 Jeffers - 354 160
35.4 133
337 126

Clifford Murray Jerry Howards -

Jeff Workman -

337 133

Paula Norman -

312

Oakland starter VIda Blue,
Pock N Shovel
Then the veteran catcher
Apnl24 1977
capped a four..-un e1ghth by
belting hiS fourth lwmer of Roadrunners
Farmers Bank
the seasofl
Team 1
Salem St Mkt

Minnesota 6,
Detroit 5
BLOOMINGTON, Mlnn
Roy Smalley got his forst hit
of the season to cap a four
run nlnth~nnmg rally and lift
the Mmnesota Twins to a ~
victory over Detroit

98 30
76

52

68

60

68 60

Seldom Rest Ceramics 48 80
Ed s Crossroads Gro
26 102
Mens high sertes - Short
Russell 523 Charles Searles
467 Rpger Carpenter 462
Women s h1gh senes -

Shtrley Hanmg 4~2 Chr s
Bowers 379 Debby Tillis 362
Mens h1gh game - Short
Russell 220 Charles Searles
185 Ron Haning 169
Women s h1gh game -

Shirley Haning 164

Shorley

Hamng 143

Bowers

Chris

and Debby Tdlls 141

Baltimore 3,
Califomia 2

W L

games

Chicago 12,

Mercury, Venus and Mars

The evening stars are
Jupiter and Saturn
Those born on this date are
Under the sign of Taurus
Smger-actor Bmg Crosby
was born May 2 1904

Milwaukee 7 ·5,

wall To wall Fashions

•••••••••••••••••••••
~I 1jJ II J :
m.

CHICAGO - Jorge Orta
and Jill\ Esslan slugged home
runs In an eight-i"un first
I

rn.

4FOOTx8FOOT

C:RESTWALL
PANELING

\

I

Cleveland 3-8

MASONITE

4' X 8'
RED BRICK
PANEL

MASONITE

0j :

••
••
••
••
•••••••••••••••••••••

•
•
•
•

• Emy core pcnel ng
• Vo 1ety of subtle ~hades
• Manmade I n sh on hard

bOO,d

Authen ~ look ng br ck panel
Rough bnck rex lure
Mon made f n sh on hordboord
G ves the oppeoronce of eat
br c:k

SALEPRICE

SAVE NOW!

The Brewers won Ute ftrst

game 7-3, building a sox-run
lead after two llllllllgs With
the help of a three..-un homer
by Robm Yount
LEADS CLAN
EDINBURGH
Scotland
(UP!) -Former New York
Mayor John V Lindsay led an
American contmgent of Scots
participating
m
the
traditiOnal Internallonal
Gathermg of the Clans wh1ch
began Sunday
More than 8,000 Scots from
Scotland
and
abroad
participated m the operung
march of the clans at the
Meadowbank stadiWlJ
The gathering s first week
Is centered Ill Edinburgh
Durmg the second and final
week clansmen disperse to
theu
clan
terntorles
throughout Scotland

• Poly beoms look hondhewn w fh a
cen ur es old o1r
• ~ocn eng h has two mo ched p eces
• for use on wall o ce I ng

•
1027 •

4' x 8' WOOD PANELING
SALE

PRICE

SHEET

BILL FlETCHER

•

!io th ck 3 ply plywood 11enee ed w th
wh11e p ne
Embossed groo¥es end kerf mo ks
10 slmulofe old WOI"n Xlrds
Choose f om 3 smart shodes

4' 16' x121
SALE PRICE

4 16 114
SALE PRICE

4 16 116
SALE PRICE

1427 1647 1877

14,

South Th1rd Street
Middleport
PH "2 7155

Farm has LIFE insurance too!
Call me for details."
St11te Farm
L fe Insurance Com

na" ••••

Texas 4

was the fourth tune th1s hest~f seven quarter-final
se?~es Abdul Jabbar had seroes 3-2 with the next game
scheduled tonight In Port
scored 40 points or more
The Golden State victory land
Portland plagued by poor
set up a seventh game
Wednesday n1ght tn Los free throw shootmg and with
Angeles to decode wbo f,ces lour of its starter• In foul
the wmner of the Portland trouble during most of the
Denver series
second hall battled back
The Warriors ran off 15 from a 12-polnt deficit late In
straight po1nts early 1n the the third quarter
game and opened up a W.
Key baskets by reserves
polllt lead In the hrst half Wally Walker Herm GlllJam
The Lakers cut It to 62-52 at and Johnny Dav1d helped lift
the half and two hook shots by the Blazers within two pomts
Abdul Jabbar and a pair of wtth six minutes remamlng
Guard Lionel Hollins hit
field goals by Lucius Allen
left the Wamors With a four four clutch baskets down the
pollll lead early m the third stretch for Portland the final
period
one comlllg With 28 seconds
But Barry and Wilkes each remalnmg to send the contest
scored four baskets ll1 the mto overtime
next SIX minutes to offset f1ve
by Adbul.Jabbar and Golden
State ended the period
leadmg 88-80
Abdul.Jabbar p1cked up hos
fifth personal foul With II 19 OPEN HOUSE
remammg 1n the game The
LONDON (UP!) - Queen
Warriors outscored the Ehzabeth becomes the
Lakers 9-2 to take a 97-82lead newest
m
participant
and were never threatened Brltam s thriving stately
alter that
home busmess when she
opens her Norfolk retreat,
Denver 114 over Sandrlngham House, to the
public Wednesday
It will be the first time she
Portland's 105
has opened one of her private
DENVER - Center Dan homes to sightseers All proIssei scored rune points m ceeds will go to char1t1es
The house was bought m
overtime
and
David
Thompson had 31 pomts 1862 by the Prlllce of Wales,
overall, leading the Denver later King Edward VII wbo
Nuggets to a 11 HOS victory made It his hunting, shooting
over Portland that kept alive and fishing retreat
The mans10n will close
the Nuggets' NBA playoff
when the the Queen IS m
lwpes
The Trail Blazers led the restdence

scheduled

==~~-..

BALTIMORE
Pat
Kelly s second home run of
the game a leadoff blast In
the lOth mnmg gave the
Baltimore Orooles a 3 2
VIctory over the Califorma
Angels

Los Angeles 106

The Almanac
United Press International
Today IS Monday May 2
the 122nd day of 1977 with 243
to follow
The moon IS approaching
Its full phase
The morning stars are

Saturday Begmmng

W L

Warriors 115 and

'

Kansas City (Leonard 11 )
8 30 am

MILWAUKEE - JohMy
Grubb's bases~oaded triple
keyed a s1x-run second
mnmg
powermg
the
Cleveland Indians to an 8-.5
VICtory over the Milwaukee
Brewers and a split of their
doubleheader

Boston 6,

over the Wa!!hlngton Bullets
108-103 and mto the NBA
playoff semi/mats
Newlin made ftve of siX
field goal tries and all hve
from the free throw I me m the
fourth quarter to bnng the
Rockets to a come-from
behind v1ctory and a 4-2
triumph In their best~f-seven
quarter final senes
The Rockets atso received
unportant help m the fourth
quarter from Rudy Tom
janov1ch who sank four
jumpers
Tomjanov1ch
fomshed With 26 points the
leadmg scorer m the game
The Bullets who held leads
of 12 pomts In the second
quarter and 10 pomts In the
third went mto the !mal
penod ahead 77 76 But as the
two teams became very
physical ot was the outsode
shooting of Newlin and
Tomjanovoch which gave the
Rockets the edge
With 5 24 remamlng In the
game and the score tied 8~
Newlin hit two jumpers and
Tomjanovoch sank another to
give the Rockets a s1x pomt
advantage
Rookie M1tch Kupchak
scored 12 of his 18 pomts m
the fourth period for
Washington but the closest
the Bullets could come was
Withm two pomts on three
occaswns

OAKLANV
Golden
State s Rick Barry and
Jamaal Wilkes combined for
47 points and outdueled Los
Angeles Kareem AbduiJ abbar leading the Warr1ors
to a 115-106 victory over the
Lakers and evenmg their
NBA quarter !Ina! playoff
series
games ap1ece
Rockets lOB over Barryat three
Balt1more 3 Callforn a 2
had
27
pomts and
Minnesota 6 Detroit 5
Wllkes added 20 to overcome
New York s Seattle 2
Milwaukee 7 5 Cleveland 3 8 Washington 103
a 43-pomt performance by
Today s Games
LANDOVER, Md - Mike Abdul.Jabbar who played
M lwaukee (Haas 0 I) at
Toronto (Hargan 1 1) 7 30 Newlm scored lo of his 21 most of the fma.l quarter with
pomts m the fourth quarter to five fouls and scored only
pm
Oakland (Langford 2 OJ lead the Houston Rockets four pomts m the period It
at Baltimore (May 2 21 7 30
pm
Chicago (Barrios 2 11 at

Yankees streak goes to 4-0

••
vo

UDiled PresslDte1111lUoul
PHILADELPHIA

d
ff
I
D
COO 0
0 gers:,~~·~.~·~&amp;t:::o \1;~%~e\1 1 ~

UaltedPress InternaUoua1
LOS ANGELES - Gary
Carter blasted two solo home
runs and Del Unser slammed
a three-!'Un homer m the soxth
Inning to break a 2-2 tie as the
Montreal Expos ended the
Los Angeles Dodgers eight
game Wlnllmg streak w1th a 62 victory Sunday
Steve Ro~ers scattered
seven Dodgers h1ts m gomg
the distance for his second
VIctory m three deciSions
Unser wlw had only one
RBI m April squeezed home
Tony Perez m the fifth mrung
for the Expos fU"st run off
Los Angeles starter Don
Sutton Carter followed With
his siXth homer of the season
Los Angeles tied the game
m the fifth on a slllgle by
Steve Garvey, and run
scormg doubles by Dusty
Baker and Steve Yeager
Sutton was forced to leave
the game when struck by a
Dave Cash line drive on h1s
p•tcllmg hand Elias Sosa 0-1
took o11er m the Sixth and
gave up Unser s three-run
home run
The Expos added a run m
the nmth on Carter s seventh
homer of the season

requ~red

Every Sunday
12 Noonlhru 7 P M.

J

5 - Stllndard nstrumtnt
gauges shall Include e'nQine
remperetur'e oil prtnure
nour
meter
ammeter
speedometer hydraulic oil
temperature manual choke
control end key Ign i tion
switch
Wt ltht
1 - Tot.al weight of stan
ctard mach.ne s~all be a
m rumum of 9 ISO lbs
Transmiuion
l - Powtor for propulsion
shall be nvdrostatlc
2 Power for feeders
scres and screed snail be
h'(draul c
3 - All geadnQ to bt In oil
t19hl cases
Paint
1 - Two coats of h igh Qrade
enam~t shall be applied over
clean surfaces tor maximum
protect1on and dunb1flty
Lubriutlon
1 F i nisher shalt be
prov ided w1th an adequate
muns
ot
lubr l catlna
beanngs and all power trarts
mlttlng gurs sprockets and
chains
Equipment
1 - The f1n sher shall be
turn1st1ed w th all necenary
special urvlce tool s and
sa t sfactory lever type hand
operated grease gun
Construction Details
1 - The dr ves from the
eng ine lo the wheels hopper
con11eyor screw conveyor
and screed Shalt be of f rst
qual ty l1ydraullc deSign n
accordance
with
best
engmeer ing practices
2 All dr~ves shall be
suitably s~1elded or enclosed
for t~e protect on of the
operator
TRADE IN
One 1973
Wabco 555 Grader
B1dder to furn sh the r own
bid ~arms The front of the
envetot:~e enclos ng the bid
mu st be marked
Self
Propelled Btturhlnous
Paver
Items
advertised
as
standard
e(lu l pment
ln
manufacturers
current
l •teralure but not included n
the above spf!clficahons
must be furn ished as stan
da rd equ pm enf
B•dder ro specifv t me of
del very
The County Com miss oners
may acce pt the lo west bid or
select the best b d for the'
ntended
purpose
and
reserve the fight to reject any
or all b d!':o and or any part
thereof
I

Like a good neighbor,
State Farm rs thel"e

A

POMEROY CEMENT BLOCK CO.
~

HWI

G:4t;!JD!J The Department Store of Building Since 1915
Tt-.~F~O'oes

peny
Home Office
Bloom ngton l!lino s
p 7554

\

.,

�4-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy,

0.,Monday, May 2. 1977

Littler in easy victory

Connors' rally wins the King
LAS VEGAS , Nev. (UP!)-

Jimmy Connors faltered in
the second set but regained
his form in the third Sunday
afternoon to beat Rau l
Ramirez and win the $50,000
first prize in the 1977 Alan
King Tennis Classic.
Connors, the de fen.ding
champion and the top-seeded
player; beat t he secondseeded Ramirez &amp;-1, :&gt;-7, 6-2 in
a nationally · televised match
affected by winds gusting to
25 miles an hour.
"!adjusted for the wi(ld by

simply keeping the ball in
play. I wanted to get good
pace on the shots," Connors
said . Ramirez, tht crowd's
favorite who earned SZi,OOO
explained,: " I was playing
well, but I would simply have
to pla y better than that to
beat Jimmy."
Stan Smith and Bob Lutz of
the United States Ui)6et the
top-seeded team of ·Raul
Ramirez and Bob Hewitt of
South Africa 6-3, 36, &amp;-1 in the
doubles (inals.

O.D.

WOODLANDS, Tex. (UP! )
- Gene Uttler, one ofthe few
remaining old pros still
battling ihe PGA's horde of
talented young lions, coasted
to his 29th tour win Sunday
and a $40,000 paycheck with a
three-shot victory in the
Houston Open .
Littler started the day five
strokes ahead and while he
was carving out a so-so, twoover-par 74 over the steamy
7,()00-yard Woodlands Golf
Club course, no one could
make a run at him.
Little, 46, finished at 12under-par 276 - three shots
off the tournament record at
Woodlands.
Lanny Wadkins grabbed
second place with a 70 Sunday
for a 72-hole total of nineunder 279 and won $22,800.
Ne•t came Chi phi

Rodriguez at eight under,
while Bill Kratzeit and Andy
North were at seven-under
281. Jack Nicklaus, whose 75
on Friday put him out of
contention, came back with
his third sub-par round of the
tournament - a 71 - and he
finished in a group at 282.
Arnold Palmer evoked
some of the memories of his
past glories by firing the best
round of the day. 67. to wind
up eight shots behind Littler.
George Burns, who had
started the day deadlocked in
second place, collapsed to a
79 and suffered his second.
straight disappointing finish
in this tournament. Burns

was third here a year ago
after leading the tournament
with nine to play.
Burns birdied the opening
hole to shave Littler's lead to

A GREAT WAY
TO SAY
I

Your own message to Mother on thesa
pages, Mothe.r's Day, May 8th. We'll send
Mom a special card, tool It's a
thoughtful ond unique woy to tell
her how wonderful she Is.

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

WE'LL SEND MOM A SPECIAL CARD

lour, but bogied the next two
holes and was never a factor .

Littler than birdied the par-0,
559-yard fourth to open up a
seven-shot margin.
Littler strung together nine
straight pars before suffering
bogeys on the 13th, 16th and
17th. But by then the only
question was the final victory
margin.
It was Littler's first
tournament win since he
captured the Westchester
Classic in July, 1975 - the
third title he won that year.
The Houston Open was his
fifth tour triumph since
Littler underwent cancer
surgery in 1972.
Early in the week Littler
had credited a change in his
putting grip with helping to
improve his touch on the
greens.

"Dave Stockton (who did
not play in the tournament
but was in Houston for a PGA
meeting ) told rne mY left
hand was underneath the
club and to bring it out to the
side," Littler said.
"! did and I . am hitting

Leaders·

·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::·:::::::::::::::::::·:·:·:·~·=·:·:·:·:·:·:·:· :·:·:::

Youth baseball
signup deadline
is on May 7th
The Mlddlepor1 Youth
Baseball League Ia announdn~ tbe deadlln• foi"
sign-up ta May 7.
Anyone alfeady "atgued
up to reminded lbe $5
reglatratlon fee !)lust be
paid before they are
allowed to start pracllce.
The fee may be. paid to
their coaches or Mlck
Childs, m-6188 or to Pat
K !Ieben, 99 2- 6Zl %.
The League Is also
asking anyone 15 years or
older who Is luterested u
umpiring this seasou to call
ChUds or Kitchen. The
League would like to thank
everyone who contributed
to their receut Tag Day. A
list of coaches and teams
wiD be announced later.
;:;:::::::-::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;.;

REJECTS BARGAIN
SANTA MONICA, Calif.
(UP!) - Film director
Roman Polanski, charged
putts as good as I ever have.'' with dn!gging and raping a
The $40,000 payday pushed 13-year-oid girl, reportedly
his earnings this year to turned down a plea
$88,298 and he is seventh on bargaining offer that might
the aU-time money list with have removed the threat of
deportation after his upcom$1,352,311.
Torrential rains Saturday ing trial.
The Santa Monica Evening
night had rendered the
Outlook
said during the week·
Woodlands course unplayable
end
the
district attorney 's
. until mid-mornin g. Touroffice
initiated
plea
nament officials had to, wait
bargaining
to
avoid
bringing
until water drained off the
first green before they could the girl to the stand. The
said Polanski rejected
find a suitable spot to place apapersuggestion
by the
the pin.
Standing water around the prosecutor that he plead
course, combined with the hot guilty to unlawful sexual
intercow-se with a minor.
afternoon ~un , made the .
Polanski, a native of
layout seem almost as humid Poland
and a naturalized
as a sauna.
citizen of France, could be
deported if he is convicted of
perversion - one of six
In 1972, FBI Director J . counts brought against him.
Edgar Hoover died at the age
In 1941, the Federal
of 77. Also that day, 91 per- Communications Comsons were killed in amine fire mission approved the regular
at Kellogg, Idaho.
scheduling o! commercial
television broadcasts.
·

Bumer resigns
at Westenille

5--The O.Uy Sentinel, Mlddleoort-Pomeroy, o., Monday, May 2, 1977

Social
Calendar

Major League Leaders
Batting
(based on 35 at bats)
National League
G AB R H Pel.
Si mmons, St . L
10 71 16 30 .413
Cey. LA
32 77 18 31 .403
Parker. Pll 18 75 16 30 .400

Veteran Westerville South
football Coach Chuck Burner
has resigned his "head
coaching position after 12
years on the job.
Burner compiled a 67-43-3
record during that time and
Matthews . All
18 68 13 26 .381 won two league chamYeaoer. LA l A 61 11 73 .377
the Mid-Eight title
Smith, LA 18 61 to 22 .3&lt;&gt;1 pionships:
in
1967
and
the Ohio Capital
Boiscla ir . NY
16 3&lt;&gt; 5 13 .361 Conference crown in 1974.
Johnson. Hou
Burner's 'Cats were runners.
14 39 6 14 .359 up in the rugged OCC five
Griffey, Cin 20 80 20 28 .350
times.
Gonzalez . Pill
During the last two years.
11 67 i 23 .343
American League
Bumer served as the game
G AB R H P&lt;l. director
of the Ohio
Velez, Tor
18 55 11 24 .436
North-South
footbaU game
Polsello. KC 10 3S 1 16 .421
Smith. Bait 13 48 1 19 396 'when It was · held at Ohio
Fisk, Bos
19 66 17 26 .394 Stadium.
Wilfong , M inn

12 35 6 13 .371
Washington , Tex
14 54 6 20 .370

Cubbage. Mlnn

?l 76 15 28 .36S

Singleton. Ball

IS 60 10 22 .367

Bu r leson . Box
19 82 12 '0 .366
17 55 12 20 .364
Home Runs
National Leagut!' : Cey , LA
9 ; Carter, Mtl 7; Burroughs,

Porter, KC

4t1 ,

Garvey,

LA

and

Kingman, NY 6. American
Leaaue : Zisk. Chi 7 ; Bavlor,
Cal. Gross. Oak and Velez,
Tor 6; seven players f led with
5.
Runs Batted In ·
National Jeague : Cey . LA
29; Simmons , St . L 23 ;
Garvey, LA 21 ; Burroughs.
Alt and Foste r , Cln 20 .
American League: Rudl. Cal
27 ; Allen, Qak 22 ; Zisk, Chi .
Hisle. Minn , Page, Oak and
Velez. Tor 19 .
Stolen Bases
National League : Lopez ,
LA 13; Cabell, Hov 9; Moreno
and Taveras. Pitt 8; Oi lone ,
Pitt 6. American League:
Remy , Cal 12; Pa lek, KC 10 ;
Norris, Clev and Untz, Oak B;
Bonds, Cal and North. Oak 7.

Pitching

Most Victories
National League : Denny.
St. L. 5-0 ; Rhoden , LA and
Seaver, NY 4-0; Forsch, St . L.
4-l; 11 pitchers t ied with
three victories. American
League : Tanana, Cal, Zahn ,
Minn and· Garvin, Tor .4-0 ;
Colburn, KC; 4·1; 12 pitcher s
tied with three victories .
Earned Run Average
(bilsed on lB innings pitched)
National league: Can delaria, Pitt 1.35; Rogers, Mil

•

Meigs
Property
Transfers
Ernest E. Quillen, Aff. of
Death, Syracuse.
Kermit Fisher, Delores
Jeane Fisher to Richard L.
Borland, Susan K. Borland,
Teddy Jolliff, Carol Ann •
Jolliff, 3. 75 acres, Lebanon.
Frank Beach, Reva Beaclt
io Theodore Strom, Leora
Strom, 70 acres, Salisbury.
Gustava Johnson to Gary
L. Smith, Melissa J. Smith.
o'h acres, Lebanon.

Sullon, LA 1.42; Seaver,
1.54; Hough, LA, 1.61 .
Amer ican League : Johnson,
Mlnn 0.95 ; Palmer, Ball 0.96 ;
Gura, KC and Lyle, NY 1.00 ;
Staton, Mil 1.64.
Strikeouts
National league : Rogers ,
Mil 35; Montefusco. SF 33 ;
Seaver, NY 32; Shirley. SO
30 ;
Richard, Hou and
Matlack, NY 36. American
League ; Ryan, Cal 4S ;
Tanana , Ca l 44 ; Blyle• e•1.
Tex: 23 ; Eckersley, Clev
Palmer, .Batt ~9 .
1.40;

NY

'\buhave

-~device

. . . . the tip Ofyour

rmger.

Not ~nly .will yo~r message appear in the Sunday Ti.misSenhnel, but we II send her a card telling her to look for
your greeting on May 8th.

Ellen Darst
ENGAGED - Mr . and Mrs. Carlos Snowden,
Pomeroy, and Budd Junior Darst, Middleport, are
announcing the engagement of their daughter, Miss EDen
Darst, to Robert McClure, son of Mr. and Mrs. Hershel
McClure, Pom~oy. The wedding will take place May 8 at
2:30p.m. at the McClure residence. Both Miss Darst and
her fiance will graduate from Eastern High School this
month. She is employed at the Gateway SUper Market,
and he works at McClure's Dairy Isle.

l

Helen Help

3.
5.
7.
9.

4.

11.

12.

13.

14.

15.
17.

J6.
18.

19.

20.

US. • •

+++

Dear Helen:
The person who worries about talking in his sleep and
giving away secrets:· My mother put a small strip of adhesive
plaster from my nose to chin. It wakened me when I got vocal
and cured the habit. This was 70 years ago and in those days
adhesive stuck tight! -GRANNY.

10.

YARD SALE SET
Everything from
homemade hotdog sauce to
small appliances will be
sold at lbe Pomeroy PTA
yard Bale to be held Thursday at the Wrlgbt St.,
Pomeroy, residence of Mr.
aud Mrs. Carl Roach .
The Bale wiD begin at 10
a.m. and continue uotU 4
p.m. Reese Cups, Tom
Watts

Film shown

A film entitled "A Ubrary
Is ... " was presented ·by Miss
Susan Fleshman, librarian,
at a meeting Tuesday night of
the Ohio Eta Phi Chapter of .
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority.
The blke-a-thon held
Saturday was discussed
along with the Founder's Day
observance held Thursday
night. Mrs. Sheila Reeves,
ways and means chairman,
reported on plans lor a bake
sale to be held Saturday at
the New York Clothing
House. Mrs. Janet Downie·
reported on members moving
into Xi Gamma Mu Chapter.
Mrs. Kathy Cummings and
Susan Lanning served
refreshments.

'

. ·~

ADDRESS

,.-:

PRINT YOUR MESSAGE CLEARLY-WRIR ONE WORD
PER SPACE. MAIL WITH •1;oo TO:

Sunday Times Sentinel
Pomeroy, .Ohio

In the hands of the right people, the tip of t~gs ~ dramatically lower your electric
a finger can be an impressive device that
b!ll. ButJt can help._ In the battle to keep your
helps keep electric costs in line.
bills down, conserVIng power is an important ·
. E~cially wh~n that finger flips off
weapon.
light SWitches, radios and television sets
And: while y~:m're fighting on the home
before it leaves the room.
~ro~t, we re working to help keep your bills
Or when it nudges refrigerator doors
m line, too. By continuing to expand our
closed between snacks and waits until the
search fo~ economical fuel sources and to
dishwashers, clothes washers and dryers are hold the ~eon building and operating costs.
filled befqre it turns them on.
Working together. It's the only way we
No one's going to tell you that running can hope to lick the problems that affect·
aroWld your home turning off lights and
the cost of electricity today. And tomorrow.

Ohio
Power"''-'
Working together is the only way.
-

I

•.

toys ,

Young men and women
oft en ask why they ha&gt;o~e to
more
for
the 1r
pa y
automobile insurance.
O ri &gt;o~ers ln their teens and
ea rlier twenties cause far
mor e than their sj1are of
t; afti c accidents.. R.eports
Safefy
th e
Nationa l
Cou ncil : 21.8 percent of all
motor ists a re 2.4 years of
age or under , yet lhese
youth ful operators are
Involved as d river~ in 38.6
per cent of all accidents
and 37.3 per cent of all fatal
mi shaps.
A great man y young people
are skill ed , responsible
dri vers. Obvious! y, though,
quite a lew a re not .
There 's no substitu te for
development competence
and the r ight attitudes,
a
positive
in cl ud ing
app ro ach to de fens i ve
dr iving .
Our
ag en cy
provides
financ ial prote ct ion and
service in case ot accidents
i n&gt;o~o lv ing young drivers ...
but
man y
of
these
can
be
acc idents
prevented. That 's why we
say - prevent ion Is the
best poli cy.

DALE C. WARNER
V92 -2143

102 W. Main

Pom er oy

·· ·
-Debbie Finlaw, center, will be installed as president of Xi Ganuna
Mu Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi Sorority in ceremonies to be conducted tomorrow night at the
chapter meeting. Other new officers of the chapter, pictured with Mrs. Finlaw, right to left
are Carol;yn Satterfield, corresponding secretary; Kay Adkins, secretary; ·earoi Jean
Adams, v1ce president, and Kalhy King, treasurer.
'

Gardeners to continue project
RACINE - Continuation of
the Letart Falls Cemetery
beautification project was
planned during a recent
meeting of the Bend 0 ' the
River Garden Club held at the
home of Mrs. Gretta Simpson.
Members will meet at the
cemetery May 23 to trailllplant flowers into the planters there. Mrs. Simpson
gave devotions to open the
meeting which InCluded
reading of Psalm 2 and an
article "God's Handiwork."
Mrs. Ruth Barnitz had the
club poem; Mrs. Ida Diehl,
the inspirational thought for
the day, and Mrs. Eileen
Buck, the club prayer. For
roll call members named a
special iree of remembrance.
The ecology program was
given by Mrs. Letha Morris
who explained that this is the
seventh anniversary of Earth
Week. She spoke of gardening
as beneficial therapeutic
value as it helps overcome
depression and fatigue. The
earth, she said, is a~ important language by which
God communicates with
people. It lies dormant and
then brings forth its hidden
life in buds and .fruit to feed
the hungry. ·
She said In this way, we

Dear Helen :
At 15, I had a promising singing career and by 17 J had
made my dreams come true : I was earning·big money at what
!loved best.
Then at 18, I gave it all up because my fiance felt left
behind in my shadow. He wouldn~ marry me unless he could
be No. 1.
Since society taught me (in those days) that a woman's
ultimate goal was marriage and moUierhood, I abandoned
music. I even threw away my press clippings to please hlm.
My husband badgered me to work, but a "safe" job, one
that wouldn't damage his ego. Many times I supported him
while he spent my money in bars on other women, being
careful to leave motel matchbooks where I could find them.
When I got free of that marriage, I jumped into an
impulsive second try -still hooked on "woman's role."
. Now, finally, in my late 30s I'm embarking on the career I
should never have given ilp. It will be hard, but I won't quit
again.
Polly Cramer
I'm writing this to answer parents whose dreams lie in
seeing their daughters safely married. Expand your dreams,
people !-Teach your girls to aim at careers as weU as marriage,
and seek out partners who won't "extinguish" them.
Let yoiD" daughters know they have choices. Above all,
DEAR POLLY ~ When
DEAR POLLY- My new
show them that one partner should never be suppressed to lift•
ordering anything through
leather
purse
smells
so
uptheother!-ONMYWAY AT LAST
strongly of leather I cannot the mail always make a
stand it and wondered if you duplicate if you ate typing it.
or a reader could suggest Otherwise make a note of the
something I could do to name and address, the date
and the amount of money sent
remedy this. ·LORA.
DEAR LORA - Try putting them. Keep this in what I call
your purse in a tightly closed a ''follow up" folder. l wait a
box that you have filled with month tinless the ad specified
crushed newspaper. Be sure silt to eight weeks delivery
~
~ to place tissue paper loosely
and follow up with a letter
reminding the finn of the
din
around
the
purse
so
there
is
' RACINE - Funds for giving. a rea g. Prayer no danger of any newsprint order .If I have no answer in a
purchasinB ISO new hymnals closed the program.
For roll call 17 members coming off on the purse. month I report :ne matter to
for the church are now on
the Better Business Bureau in
band, it was reported "l;&gt;y the and guests gave a scripture Leave a couple of weeks. I am their town. You would be surtreasurer at a meeting of the on love. Officers' reports sure that any reader who has prised bow many times I
Booster Sunday School Class were given and pictures of solved this problem another have had to do this, but I
of the Racine First Baptist the l~st meeting where way will be k!nd enough to always get my order.
it with us. -POLLY·
Church at the home of Mrs. members wore sale hats were share
When planning a trip make
DEAR
POLLY - My Pet
Marjorie Grimm ·Fdday shown. Mrs. Sla ck noted the Peeve is with those out a " traveling list." Reclass will begin selling dishnight.
mind yourself of a flashlight,
A 6 p.m. chicken dinner cloths. Mrs. Marie Roy wUI magazines thai do not car tools, thermos, SWl and
preceded the meeting. Mrs. hosf the next meeting. The number EVERY page. I often reading glasses, camera and
Helen Slack, president, Lord's Prayer in pnlson find myself referring to a films, rags , tissues ,
· page that is numbered and
opened the meeting with concluded the meeting.
medicineS ,
then having to count to the coveralls,
group slitging of "Love Ufted
vitamins, to empty the garpage
desi~ed.
Me." Miss Vera Beegle led in
Keeping a small magnet in bage, lower the thermostat,
prayer with sentence prayers
your sewing basket ts most notify the post office and
being given by each member
convenient when retrieving make arrangements to leave
of the clasS. Scripture from
needles or pins that drop to the house key with someone
HOSPITALIZED
Galatians 5 and Ephesians 2
near or dear.
Mrs . Nancy · Manley, the floor.
was read, and Mrs. SlaCK
When writing my grocery
I find that keeping cleaned
gave a meditation on love. · Middleport, is a . patient at
list
I always group together
Mrs.
Helen
Simpson Veterans Memorial Hospital. celery in a closed container of dairy products, meats, cleanwater in the refrigerator pre&gt;presented the program on Cards may he sent to her longs its freshness. - MRS. ing things and so on so I do
love wl\h each member !here at Room 131, Bed 2.
not waste time rll!lning back
W.B.M.

Funds available
to buy hymnals

products,

chUdreo and adult clothing
wm be sold by tbe PTA.
Residents with contrtbutloDB to make to the
sale are ·asked to contact
ellber Mrs. Roach at 99%5297 or Mrs. Jam"" Soulsby, 99:1-%377.

New leather purse smells

MOTHER'S NAME

Chapter of Bela Sigma Phi Sorority. Pictured left to
right, are Janet Downie, Sharon Bailey, Kathy Fr)., Ubby
Sayre, Debi Buck, Sandi Sargent, SUsan Oliver and Darla
Hawley.

NEW MEMBERS OF XI GAMMA MU - A
candlelight ritual SIUlday night at the home of Mrs sue
Zirkle welcomed new membership of Xi Ga~ Mu

POLLY·s POINTERS

6.
B.

SIGNATURE

111 Court Street

FOR YOUNG
DRIVERS

. II

+++

2.

Prevention is
the best po li c y ...

RACINE Chapter 134 OES
Monday at Masonic Temple
at 8 p.m. Fifty year pin to be
presented. All officers and
. members asked to attend.
EASTERN
Athletic
Boosters Monday at 7:30p.m.
at ~igh school. Richard
Spencer, president.

TUESDAY
POMEROY Chapter 186
Order of the Eastern Star'
grand inspection, 7:45 p.m:
. ~~~::;:;::::::::::o:::::::=-.::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::o::;;:;;::::::.:'&amp;i. Tuesday with Mrs. Doris
Smith, worthy grand matron, _
as mspectlng officer. Ail
Eastern Star members invited.
MIDDLEPORT Masonic
Lodge 363, F&amp;AM, meeting
11!1
By Helen Bottel ·111 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at the
~
~
temple. All Master Masons
invited.
1.8 She Her Uncle's Daugbter?
DREW WEBSTER Post 39,
Dear Helen :
American
Legiori, meeting
After my mother's death at age 66, I brought home some of
7:30
p.m.
Tuesday
at post
her old books. i.AJOking through one, I fotmd a letter from my
home.
. father's brother which proved beyond a doubt that he and
WEDNESDAY
Mama had had an affair about 27 years ago . Don't know hOw
POMEROY Lodge 164
long it lasted, but the brother died in 1971.
I'm slire Dad doesn't know. He was always so proud of his F&amp;AM Wednesday, 7:30p.m.
good and faithful wife. They seemed to care. dj!eply for each All master masons invited.
BOARD OF Trustees of
other.
Columbia
Township WedWhat bothers me most is !hat I was a "surprise" baby,
nesday,
7:30p.m.
attownship
born when Mama was 40. I could be the daughter of my
building.
suppoSed uncle! Will always wonder. !love them both very
SOUTH-EASTERN Ohio
much.
Garden
Tractor Assoc.
I'Ve told no one but my husband who says "Forget it!" But
Wednesday
8 p.m. at the Dale
this is faniily history. Should I jUst burn the letter? Kautz
residence
near
DOUBTFUL DAUGHTER
Chester.
THURSDAY
Dear DOOutful:
YARD
SALE, Pomerot
•:Forget it" is good advice for this generation : above all
PTA,
Thursday
at the home
keep the secret from yoiD" father.
of
Mrs.
Carl
Roach
of Wright
But I couldn't bring myself to obliterate family history, so
I'd suggest you store the letter in your safety deposit box and St., Pomeroy. ·
think of it again after "Dad" is gone. -H.

Dear Granny:
Might this also be a tip for snorers?- H.

1.

MONDAY
MIDDLEPORT Garden
Club, 7:30 Monday at the
home of Miss Nellie Zerkle
and MI!S 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 ganlen 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 companions urged to attend.

at 9 a .m. each morning.

MEIGS County Pioneer and
Historical Society meeting, 2
p.m. Monday at Meigs
Museum, Butternut Ave.,
Pomeroy.

'

.

MOntER'S DAY GREETINGS AD
COST ONLY 11.00 FOR 20 MJRDS

TO HOlD SALE
The Eleanor Circle wiU
hold a rummage sale Wednesday and Thursday in the
ba !lement ofthe Heath United
Methodist Church begiMing

w:-*'-*'--'*J.;"

speak to the earth and it
teaches us . .She talked about
the evergreens and shrubbery which were frozen and
killed this winter and of the
branches which have turned
brown. She suggested
trimming all the. brown
branches off but being sure to
wait several weeks or months
before cutting them down as
they may survive.
Mrs . Iiernice Carpenter
received a ribbon for her
spring arrangement of driftwood with spring flowers.
Mrs. Simpson also received a
ribbon for her mass
arrangement of spring
flowers.
Mrs. Nora Cross talked on.
transplantillg plants and
displayed several vegetable
plants during her discussion.
She said that small plants
when transplanted need the
utmost care with good potting
soil, water, an adequate
amount, the right temperature and the right type of
container.
Taking part in the
discussion on transplanting
were Mrs. Ruth Barnitz, Mrs.
Morris, Mrs. Chlorus Grimm,
Mrs. Ida Diehl, Mrs. Carpenter, Mrs. Eileen Buck and
Mrs. Grella Simpson:
Refreshments were served

from a table centered with an
arrangement of spring
flowers and green candles in
crystal holders.

NEW TERM

- Awtana~
"ENERGY SAVING" ·

REFRIGERATOR

Career
Caurses

USES SUGHitY MORE ELECTRICITY

THAN A. ..

WATT
LIGHT BULB
INQUIRE
NOW

ana forth aU over the store.
At GBC, we have a course
Next to any item that I have a to
suit your needs by day 9r
coupon for I make a star and at night , beginning or
when it is bought the coupon advanced . We are co is put with it and I do not have educational accredited.
oue·r
financial
and
to spend time looking for employment
assista~ce .
them at the check-out The date for making a start
is now. Our
career
counter.- ULUAN.
DEAR POLLY- One day I · representative. Mr .
Nice wonder,
will
be
found myself out of that spray pleased
to p&amp;rsona lly
prnduct so many of us use to discuss your plans, simply
remove stains before doing call him at 446 .4367, 446- ·
the laundry, and I needed it 4373 or 446-43711 . Terms
begin on June 6th and Sep1.
badly to remove a spot from a
lOth.
garment. I wet the spot, added just a couple of DROPS of
dishwashing detergent, rubl&gt;ed slightly and the garment
came out beautifully. I have
St. No. 7H?-04728
used this ever since as it
36 locust St.
Gallipolis, OH 45631
works and is cheaper than
Approved For Training
having to buy the spray pr&lt;&gt;Veterans
duct.- MRS. L.J.C.

This fully fea.t ured
refrigerator
will ,
save you $207.00 :
over . a 12 year .
period (the normal
life
of
a ·',
or.&gt;r. igerator) as ·
ompared
to ,
lcoompetitive
,
... of similar size ... '.
at
are
des ign ed to
electricity.
1

Gallipolis Business
College

DENTURES - DENTISTRY
DR .

RONALD F. RIVIERE

OR. A. J . STAfHLI ·- OR . K. H. CHUNG DR . VICTORY. LIANG- OR. G. J . STOMBAUGH

One or two day
full denture service ,
partial dentures
FOR PRICES
OHIO "TOLL FREE

1-800-282-6411

RIVIERE CENTER 949 E. -Livingston Ave .. Columbus
Weekdays8 :30 A.M. to6 :30 P.M .
'Yotl'IISnul e Tom.orrbt•

1

' " "

100

;,t :·t. · 'I J } our 1 ,.,..1f1 T oJu~·

1

Amana's
Energy
Saying
refrigerators have much more
urethane foam in su lation than
has ever been used in home
refrigerators before . Desi gned to
keep heat out, cold in, and
electric bills down.

DEWXE FEATURES
Amana is completely Free0 '-Frost
Exclusive
3
Position
Energy Saver Control
Convertible door s change

from right t4 left hand

opening any time
M•gnetic door gasket
keeps cold in, heat out

;..·-,-.~~ ~·-=-\ ~

:._-, j .., ... :.~'

;.;..-

...

~-

~- ~-· · ·

;,

.

~,...

Two
aufomat1 c
co ld
controls .
Sot
one
Independent of the other .
Amana
exclu&lt;Ji&gt;o~ e
" refrigerato r. with in· a refrigerator" meat keeper.
keeps meal fresher longer .
Five
ha lf
width
·ca nt ilevered shelves.

�'

J

.

6- The Daily Sentinel , M,iddleport· Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, May 2, 1977

WANT AD
CHARGES

7-The Daily Sentillel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, May 2, 1977

Television Jog for easy viewing

Let The Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash- ,

MONDAY, MAY 2,1977

C11:.h
llltty
2dttys
3dKys

100

6dttys

J\N)

,...,
i$0

E~n·h wonl ovt!r u~ mmhnwn Ui
wurdti l.j 4 l'enb ~r Yo'l!n.llk'r dcty
A~ runnuw otltt!-r Ulan lv •~· utL\'t:
da)'lli Will fil dliiT!(t'\l ot1 the l d&lt;i}
r&lt;~h: .

In memOf} , Citnl uf Thotnlu. u1xl
OlJLtuar)' 6 cents per word. S:tOO
rmmmwn

~h

mat!\•ance

Mob1le Uonw ~lesan1t Y~trd S&lt;ilt:~
are otl't'tplt'tl only With c&lt;1sh Willi
otdt•r :l5 l.:t'llt dl&lt;lr~e for Hdl&gt; t:tm yiuj.l Box Nwn~r In Cartt ur Tht• St!ll"
tmel

TIM: Pul.ilLSher rcscrw:. the n~lll ~
lo t:tl.J.t or tt:/l.'d lULY ttU!i dct:mt·d uiJjt!t:l!Onul. 1

11!~pon:.Llllc

It! Publa:;l~t v.tllnut be
lll(!l l' than uue uu.:ur-

fur

D~:,~ring the illneu

ond d~th o1
Maggie Smi th, we wl~oh to
thank our friends ond relatives
who sent cords and flower,,
The Ewing Chapel, Or. Telle.
nurses at Vet•rons HOlp1tal.
asp41c ialiy Sue Tillis, lPN , Rev.
Perri n and AmOs Tillis . We a lao
w i1h to thank the neighbor, of
Mu lb•rry Ave and •specially
Don no and Rich JOnes her bas I
of friend John E1ch. W~ c.an't
thank yOu enOugh for your
kindneu during the illneu and
deoth of our d&amp;Qr mother. Your
k 1ndness will never be forgotten, May Gods love shine upon
thee 0~ay1 .
Children, Sylvia Corman. Dole
Sm1th, Don Smith. Guy
Smith and Georgie Scragg1

' t!t1mst&gt;r1turt

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES
Mum.lll)'
Nwu on Satunill}'

Tuestllty
Uwu Fz1day
· -IP,M
the duy ~fo r e publluat Luu

SunUuy
4P.M.
F'rhlay artcnwuu
BOARD OF MEIGS
COUNTY COMMISSIONERS

t

NOTICE
TO
MOTUR
VEHICLE DEALERS :
In accordance w 1th Section
307 86 of tn e Oh ro Revised
Code, sea l ed bids will be
rec e i ved by the Meig s County
Commiss i oners in the ir of fi ce, lpca led In the Court
House , Pomeroy , Ohio .45769 ,
unti l 6 30 P M on May 10,
1977 . at wh i ch time and place
the bids will be open ed and
read aloud for t he following
vehicles
B id s mu st be su~m1tted by
5: 00 P M ., as da ted acove 1n
sepa r ate prop osals : each
proposal to meet the con ditions and specifications .
Proposal No. I
1 - One 1977 model dump
truck with a Peabod y Ga llon
nr equivalent dump body ,
. OB "x B.4 ''x JO" head and ta l l gate with cen ter door rn ~ate ,
m in i mum
size
16"x10 11
Opening.
2 - Heavy duty 8" hoist
with P .T .O. and lev ers.
3 - :V.. cab protector with 2''
wings .
.; ~ Ca b l i ghts , A corner
lights and 6 ref lec tors .
s - Mud flaps .
6 - Wheel base 72" cab to
axle or suitable tor body.
7 - 24.000 lbs . G .V .W . or
heav ier .
8 - 9,000 lbs I Beam fron t
axle
'
9 - 18,500 lbs . 2-speed axle
10 - 5 speed 285 V Clark
svncromesh
tran sm ission,
d~rect In fifth .
1l - 'l6Cl Cu ln V -8 ou
engine or larger .
12 - Step fuel tanks , r ight
and left. m ini mum capacity
100 gallons .
13 - 4,000 lbs mi ni mum
front spring ca pa ci ty .
14 - 11,000 lbs . minimum
rear spring capacity .
15
Auxiliary
rear
spr i ng! .
16 - Combination rear and
fron t d irect ion al s1gna I lights .
17- Traffi c hazard switch .
18 - Dual electr i c horn s.
19 - Heater and defroster .
20 - Two speed windshi eld
w 1pers •nd washers.
21 - Power Steerin9 .
22 - 900 x 20 ply front t ires .
highway tread, 7" rims
23 - 90Gx20 12 ply rear tires
on and off road tread , 7"
rims
2A - One additional 7° r im
25- Cast spoke wheels .
26- Heavy du t y cl utch .
27 H eavy duty brake
booster with 7" rear brakes
28 - Heavy duty bumper
a nd front tow hooks .
29 - L H . and R H . senior
west coast mirrors .
30 - 4.000 watt heavy duty
battery .
31 - 62 amp . or larger
a lternator
3l - Cab grab handles , L &amp;

R.

33 - F ull depth foam bench

Quadrafrock . Good
Phono (304 Ja77·2J.&lt;O.

lires .

1968 GTX ,.,._. speed , Excellent
Pho nt;t
cond i l1on . $1000.

---1971 MONTE CARLO, otr concH992 -32511.

tionlng, p.s p.b., rod iol tires ,
rally whee i~o , lOON mileage , ex·
Ira clean Phone 992·3230 after
6p m .

RACINE GUN Club, We have
changed our gun shoot to FAI DAV , nights, sta rtingol7 p.m
SHIRLEV ''Jeffers" Wolfe is now
the new Owner of lola 's Beauty
Salon In S'p'rocuse, Oh1o, John
Sf, Shirley was formerly
emplo.,.ed at Linda 's Lady Fair.
Raci ne , Ohio. Any of my former
patrons w1shing appointments.
moy coli 992·25&lt;49. Phone nOw
listed under l ola's Beauty Shop
uf1f1l new d1rector1es are Issued
ot wh1ch t1me the nome wdl be
Shirley's Beauty Nook.

1969 CHEVEllE o1 dr. hardtop, 350
outomotlc, power steering,
pONer brak111s . Excellent cOnd ition. Asking $300. Phone
m -7360 after.c p. m,

985·4201.
1973 CHEVY NOVA V 8, air, n1ce
car. $1 795. Phone Harold
Brewer, Long Bottom. Ohio,
(614} 9B5·355-" after b p. m.
19?6 CHEVY 3 qua rter ton, 4
wheel drive , automatic, 350
engtne , only , 7,500 miles Also,
Firewood for sole . Coli

992·59.7.
1969 CADillAC, p.s., p b., oir ,
excellent c0nd 1t10n. Phone
99':2 -5009 of fe r S p.m.

19720LDSCUTLASS. mogwheels .

lET ART FAllS Cemetery lot care CASH I ! I for · junk cars . Frye's
fee is payable naw. Coat 1s
Truck and Auto WRECKER SER$7 .50 per lot for one year.
VICE! Phone 742-2081 .
Money ts ' to be sent to tha Sexton, Clarence I. Norri1 , At. 2, OLD FURNtTURE , 1ce bOxes , brass
bed s.
et c ,
comp lete
Box 11,. , Racine, Ohio45771 .
households Write M . D. Miller.
Rt. 4, Pome roy. Ot-l 1o or call

992·77/IJ.
WANTED • CHIPWOOO Poles,
Ma)(. diameter, 10 mdl&amp;s ' on
largest end, $8 per ton; buncHed slobs, $6 per ton. Oeil¥ered
to Ohio Pollet Company , Rt 2
Pomeroy , Ohio . Phon e

992-261!9.
Standing timber , Phone 667-6214

APPliANCE SERVICE man, ox- ONE OR 2 acres in cOuntry w1th or
periencttd. No phone calls :
Gallio Refrtgeratton Co .. 611
Third Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio.

without house. Cleared or
uncleared On la nd contract

phone 7~2 -307• .

OLDER RESPONSIBLE lady lo live
In and cora for aged widOw in
Rutfand , Ohio. Not invaltd nor
senile. light houseworlt and
cooking. No laundry. Coli
7.. 2-2078 for information,

BODY AND REPAIRMAN ne.ded
tor Hysell's Used Cars
Rutland . Phone 742·3154 .

in

,

IF YOU hove a servke to offer,
wont to buy or sell something,
ae looking for work . . or
whatever ,. yOu 'll get results
laster with a Sentinel Wont Ad .

Call992·2156.

Phone TWO FAMILY GARAGE Sale:
Tuesday, April 3 , 9 a m St.
ROute 7, just north of Memory
1%9 BONANZA CAMPER , 19 ft.,
Gardens . Watch for sig ns ,
good condition. Self-contained.
Clothing, ta.,.s , and many items
Also, 18 ft. Searcy boot, 90
for every room in the hOuse.
horsepOINer, Johnson motor.
Cal1949-2248 after 5 p.m.
2 FAMilY YARD Sale , May 2, 3, 4,
829 Sauth Third St., Middleport.
Clothing for everyone. Old
dishes, stands, baby i tems,
maternity clothes .
COUPLE WITH .. daughters need o
3 or.; bedroom home. Must be PORCH SALE , Tues . oncl Weds a t
312 Pearl St., Midd leport, 9 till
nice. Phane99'2-629 .. .
Self - contained .

992-7315.

&lt;•J 25, (5J 2, 21c

I

N~w Co -O p
water sof ·
tentrs, model VC -SVI.
Only U19. 95

Save sso .oo on a

Hotpoint

R~frlgerator .

new

1 Good Used McCullougl'l

2 BR MOBilE 1-Jome, $125 month,
pay aw-n u liht1es , depos i t
Wri te Polly So.,...lond . Rt -4
Thornv1lle,Oh

Chain S_li_w
SU
Now In stock . com plete line
of bulk garden seeds and

SMALL 2 BR Mobile Home, $65
month. PoT Own utdit1es
Deposit Wr te Polly BOw land .
Rt . .; , Thornville, Ohio.

1 good McCullough Chain
Saw
US
I Good Used . Poulan Chain
Saw
S50
Survivor Sales - only $29,95
onion sets J lb s.
sT oo
1 N ew 15 Cubic Ft.
Free1er
S299

--~

MOBilE HOME space for rent , $35
month , Pay awn utilities . Wnfe
Polly Bowland , Rt• .11 . Thronville , OH.

-

-

ORCHID ROOM for rent for on.
niver5aries wedd1ng receptions , brida l shOwers or pr ivate
meeting room Phone 992-3975
or 992·2571 .

Eoci;olt; -~~~

_

-=

OliVER DIESEl O.C. 9 Bul ldozer
w 1th 8 ft. blade. Coil (614 )
592-2605 offer 9 p.m. except
~~So t and Sunday mghts.
1-A2 in cost ~ron kttchenslnk, 1
bosm and I drain board , hang
on wall type, white, 1·3 burner
gas , hotplate phone 992-5714

---

-~

8 acres land for sola ClOse to No
1 m1ne . 669-3633 .
Smger GQiden lauch N Sew does
it all, zig tig :zogs , m akes.
designs, auto butfonhales and
many other features Just l1ke
new, or1ginol pnce S•U9.95 .
Must sell f or $99 95 cosh or
terms . Phone 992-5146.
1897 MODEL WINCHESTER pump
gun , U)(cellent condif1 on ,
Edison
Cylinder
typ e
Don Eblm,
phonograp h
Brown ' s Tra de r
Court ,
M inersville
ECONOMY TRACTOR w ith oil at.
tochmenls l1k e new, oskn'lg

$2250. Phone (61 4) 69a-3290.
FO!t MEMORIAl D,AY . Beout1ful
se lection of flOwers Bas ke ts,
sprays , wreaths , vases . Fay 's
No..-elty Shop . N. Second St ..
M1dd leport.

USED

FORESTRY

H'p'dro Sawbuck Model 1000-A;
M ic higa n Mode l 55A 6 Loader,
John Deere 4408 Skidder. (on.
tact Denn is Smu rr
(614)
838 53.C5
1B FT. SliCK Croft Boot, fiberglass
bottom, 80 h.p. Johnson, trader
and sk i equ ipment Also, bO
h.p. motor and tank s Phone
MUNCIE 4 speed fransmtss1on Includes Hurst shifter, clutch,
pressu re plata, $125. Phone
9'12-3502 .
USED FORESTRY EQ UIPMENT.
nmberjock 230D Slddder, John
Deere 350 Dozer; Hydr o
Sawbuck, Model 1000-A Contact Dennis Smurr , phone (614)

742-301 9 or 42·2066.
SUPER HOUSEBOAT. One of a

ki nd , handmode by Oy(ner. This
.co ft. steel haul boo t is
paw-ered by o 210 1.0. engme.
Is complete w ith i ts own cus tom
mode trailer, ha s a 3 woy
refng ., comple te hand mode
galley with private state room
and head . Has oil necessary instrumentction Th1s boot mu st
be sold to settleonestote . Asklng $12,000. For more information contact Mrs . Ari llo Do 1ley,
1312 15th Street, Vienna , West
V1rgin1o 1 (30-4) 295-5559.
12

FT. STARCRAFT alum inum
fishing boat with 7Yt n.p.
motor. Phone 742-2965.

~t

l8 .'1
WATfR SOFTENER?
Let

Pomeroy

Landmark

soften &amp; condition your
water and a Co-ap water

sallener, Model UC.XVI.
Now Only ·'279.95
Let us test
Free.

your

water

Pomerov Landmark

Y.~Jack W. Carsey~ Mgr.

..

onion

s,~e-'!ts"-·---

__

Phone992-2181
__

20GALLONAquor;umw;ihf;lior
and sloe I slond. Coll99:q933 .
a FT CAMPER lop lor pickup
truck . 40ft extens10n ladde r 1n

Business Services
CARPENTER &amp;
BUIL,DERS

SWAIN'S
Automatic
Transmission Service

PARTS · lABOR
GUARANTEED

GUTTER SERVICE
Continuous

~EWHOMES

&amp;

REASON~BI F

bulld41n.

REMODELI~G

.______

Reedsville, 0 . Ph. 371-'250
---'
3-27-1 mo.

STERE O. NEW AM -FM stereo
rad io combination . $1 29.95 or
_ easy terms Coil 992-3965.
SPRING GARDEN Supplies , Cabbage, coul1f10wer. broccoli,
ond head lettuce plants,
'p'eilow. white, and red onion
sets , 0n1on plants, Kennebec.
cobb ler, K4Jiohdin, Red Pontiac
and Red l osodo seed potatoes.
Bulk garden seeds, poff1ng sod ,
peat mOss , l ru1t trees ond r0$e
bushes . Midway Market ,
Pomeroy , Oh1 o, 992 -2582 ,
Bob.s Ma rket, Moson , W.Va .

(304)773·5721 .
1973 JEEP CJ5, good conditton,
Plu s extras. $2900 Bunker H•ll
Rood ocross t rom cemetery .

TOMATO .

PLANTS.

Cabboge,

broccoli , cauliflower , bru ssel
sprou ts, egg plants , hanging
pots . geron1u ms,
baskets
begonia!, flats , pelun tos ,
marigolds. pa nsies , so lzio,
ba lsa m, d1onthus , snap dragons , alyssum , V1 nco. col.
eus , (Is land's Green house,
Roc1ne Geraldine Cleland
21 IN . ZENEITH Color T.V., ex "
cellent condi tton. Travis rod,
new , 86 in to 150 in Phone
742-2187 .

THR EE YEAR old Bi. level s.au th of
Tuppers Plains neor Route 7 .
L_orge lot. trees, bu il t-ms,
carpe ted lhree bedrooms , two
balhs , family room, two car
garage , TP woter, S~ 900.
phone 985·A205.
HOUSE FOR SAlE by owners . 4
rooms end both. ponneled, livtng room ond carpeted. Will
sell l or $6500. Coli 992-6250
offer 5 p m 10 lynn St. , Mid dleport

1'11 ACRES WITH 12 x 60 Mobile
home , Garage , building wtfh
ce llar lac::ated In Langsvi lle,
Phone 742-2965

~-28-1

• · 13·1 mo. pd .

MAIN
POMEROY, 0.
JUST LISTED acres -

Nice 3.05

lovely newer home

has 3 BRs, bath , formal
dining R.. 23K23 Iivlng R.,
ufil it y R. All oarpeted
except kitchen ,
large
garage with work shop, cold
room. pole bldg ., c hicken

house. $34,900.00.
JUST LISTED -

45 acres ,

good 3 bedroom house, part
basement, out cellar, barn
&amp; other bldg s., garage .
Tobacco base . Fuel oil

hea l . $10,500.00.
JUST LISTED - Ranch
lype just 3 yrs old . 1 acre. 3

John St.

Syracuse

Owner
Shirley (Jeffers) Wolfe
Formerly
lola's Beauty Salon
For appointment call
992-2549 Tuesday thru
Saturday 8:00a.m. to
5:00p.m . Open nights
by appointment.

2 men to opera te. Owner
r e t l r lng , Home and Auto
bu si ness. Pr ice d Equip ment plu s Stock at time of
sa le.

BUYING OR SELLING
REAL ESTATE - LOOK
TO CLELANDS
FOR
HELP.

HENRY E. CLELAND

conditioned. one Ow"ner. Phone

BROKER

Hank-Calhy-Leona Cleland

1976 HONDA CB750 1600 miles.
Associates
Excellent condi tion with oc992-2259 - 9fS-4122
cessorles . Call985 -3919 after 7 t L----m_._2_5&lt;1_8_ _ _ _.J
p .m,
COFFEE TABLE, end tables, solid 3 bedroom house. near Eastern
High School, 2 car garage , full
dark walnut wood. like new.
bo~oement, large living room
Phoneqq2-3706.
w i th firep lace, family room,
REGISTERED
APPALOOSA
985 -3867.
--Geldrng, good conformotton,
flashy , needs eJCperlenced REEDSVILlE , 3 bedroom , Io rge
beou ftful new kttchen. and dinrider. Phone 992 -1735.
ing oreo . living room, has
QUARTER HORSE ond m;ll c~ r:
fireplace on approximately 3-4
phone 7A2-2316.
acre , Phone 379-b266.

:::.:--

mo.

-

LITTLE ORPHAN ANNlE-IELFLEII

Free Estimates
NaSunday Calls Please

. ,..

~t "'S

.4-24-1 mo.

""FROm'

Hl&amp;H . I
liJAlE 1 lA

DOOII

,.,....

PREtWC'.ou

I!IEU:·WMM"

Young's

Commerc ial property opprox . 17
acres . level land, lacoted at
Tuppers Pla1ns on Ohio, ROute

PHOTOGRAPHY
Ae~al
Commercial
Schools
Weddings

7. Phone (61•) 667·6304 .
NEW 3 bedroom hOuse. built.Jn
kitchen , bath ond IJ,, Phone
742-2306 or contact M ilO B. Hutchison , Rutland , Oh1o.

TEAFORD

KEN GROVER
PHOTOGRAPHY
(6141 985-4155
ChHter , Ohio

Virgil B. Sr .. Realtor
216 E. Second Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Phone 992-3325

CafPeti,ig

...

Route 3, Pomeroy! 0 .

•

I

Installation ; samples
'· brought fa your home
with no charge.

BORN LOSER

BIX.!(

NEW- Everything here is
in peak condition. 3 lovely
bedrooms ,
air

conditioning,

Full

basement and 1 acre of

land . $32,000.

COUNTRY

HOME -

2

bedrooms
plus
bath,
leading
creek
water,
garage with a cellar. Two-

vice , all makes, 992-2284. The
Fabrtc Shop , Pomeroy .
Authorized S1nger Sales and
Service. We sharpen Scissors ,

PIANO TUNING. lone Daniels. 12
years of serv ice. Phone
992-20a2.

backhae work ; dump trucks
ond lo-boys for hire ; will haul
fill dirt, to sod, limestone and
grovel Coli Bob or Roger Jeffe rs, day phone 992-708iljl ,
night phone 992 -3525 or 992-

2 BEDROOMS Near
school In Middleport . New

NEED CENTRAL Air condi fioning WILL do roofing , construction ,
for your mobile home? We
plumbing and heating. No rob
hove the best. Let Our experts
too large or too small . Phone
install a worry free CoJemon
742-2348 .
unit, We &amp;ervtce what we sell
Kingsbury
Home
Soles: CARJ;IENTER , flooring, ceiling ,
paneling. Phooe992-2759 . ·
Pomeroy,
Ohio .
Phone
992·7034 .
MOBILE Home Repa ir, Elec.,
plumbing ond heating, Phone
992·5858 .

bath, new natura I gas F .A.
furnace . 2 porches. Want

$12,000.
OUTSKIRTS OF TOWN2 or 3 bedroom older home .

Has

city

basement ,

water,
1112

full

baths,

2

town , nice double lot on
corner, 2 car garage .
Owners are going south ,

QUe;~T\0~.

HOWERY

AND

MARTIN

.

'

Score
has
" moved
out!

never

both and Ill, full ba1ement, 2
porches . Phona 992-707.4 or
992·3-465.

TUPPERS PLAINS, ThrH bedroom
house, corpeled, Iorge kitchen,
attached garage, klrg. lot,

$2• .000. Phone (6") 667-6304
or 667-33-49.
HOUSE IN Minersville , S room.
and bath. Forced air heat,
natural gos1 3 porch.. and
basement. Pnone 992 -5833.

6 RM . Homo ond bolh. Phone
992·33/IJ.

2 Bernardo

~now

how
his
storLJ
turned

O'Higgins'
country
3 Expected
(3 wds.)
4 Befor e
5 Little
Margaret
6 Gennan
expletive
7 Appa rently

Yesterday's ADBwer

11 Word for
SUnon
Templar
15 Coating
18 Adolescent
21 Bullet
22 Forensics
expert
23 Texas city
24 Express
of 1660

( 4 wds.J
8 Playwright,
-

ITELKAN
I
I I KJ (J
ICRAFTO
I
KJ I · 0

Rattigan

9 Made corrections in

here:(II I J J I X)

BRIDGE

sweetheart!" ,--..,..--,--

Oswald and Jim Jacoby
,....f---!---1

?:1 Caesar's
'

4

twice"

Overbid proves lucky

\

ULABNER

finge rs
31 Lolly
mountain
32 Sufftx for
brew or
cook
33 Rio de -

• K 87

t9 52

EAST
• J92
•Q I096

tK 7

tQJ 103

• 10 816
• K5
SOUTH (DI

selling

ll-i' CITIZ£NS

WEST
• Q 10 13
.J4 2

36 "The - Is

• K86
• A 53
t A 864
• AJ 2
Both vulnerable

You"
37 Again '
38 Dust Bowl
victim
39 Attempt
afres h

O'DOSPA"TtH

Ex·

coveting, septic systems ,
dOzer , backhoe, dump truck,
limestone, grovel, blacktOp
pov;ng, Rl. U3 . Phone I (6U)

69a-7331.

West

North East

South
1 N.T

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work It :
A X Y ·D L B A A X R

Is

Pass

2 N.T. Pass

Pass

Pass

3 N.T

Pass

Opemng lead - 3 •

l, ONGFELI, QW

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

One l ett er simply st andS f or another. In this sample A is
.
"
used for the three L's, X lor lhe two O's, e t c. Si ngle lc tlers. Jim
IMP team matches
apos t rophes, the l e ngth and formation of the words are all ar e supposed to be the best

hints. Eaoh day the code leiters are different.

les t of skill between bndge
play e r s How about some
hands tha i s how how bot h luck
a nd skill apply in these con-

CRVPTOQUOTES

~ MOIIIN.(7 OUR BUBINEIOS
10 111 E 8U~UR13&amp;
HASN'T HUI?I US ·
ONE

BIT!

OUR CU510MERO
SEEM OELIGHTED

'
MK

AT "mE IDEA OF
COMING CXJT HERE

LPQK

XYKUJ

BY MINI- P.&gt;US I

BKUYKOJ

M V. K B

MK

J p

UYK

X Y

WB
·VGQWAWJD . - JUXPVK
Saturday's Cryptoquole :GOD MUST HAVE MADE
PARTS OF CREATION FOR SHEER FUN - HOW
WOULD YOU ACCOUNT FOR THE KANGAROO. ,
CHESTERTON
() 1977 K1DI Features Syadlc:lte, Inc.

make' '
J1m . " The man who passed
at two wa s qmte happy when
he saw the dummy. It looked

as if he would score two tncks
in each maJor suit , one in

.Q 943

r-------------------~----34Powwow

Hr;;; LE:F/ IT ALL

2

NORTH
• A 54

28 Butter·

out!

IN"TER'EST TAKEN t3Y
DAD WHEN l-IE
L.f:Nt'.S VOU MONEY,

Now arrange the circled leners to
26 Heavy
form the surPrise answer, as sug·
soup
gested by lho above cartoon.
28 Wallace
or Noah
Print anawer
29 Cartoonist
{Answers tomorrow)
Bushmiller
Jumbles
TYPED
FLORA
COWARD
SHANTY
30 Director
Salurday'al
Answer:
You
can
alao
flnd
this
on
the
slarboard
side,
VadUn
oddly
enoughA
"PORr'
HOLE
35 For ( Sp.)
Monday. May 2
36 Kind of
sauce

fat

Scile. Syracus•. 2

HOUSE IN Pon••ro&gt;y . • bedrooms ,

boards

11 Tanunany

She suffers

baths , double
goroge ,
firaploca , air conditioning, 1
acre lot. Phone m -2,.92.

150. Garage, cement drive and
small storage bldg. Furnished
or unfurnished. Coli 992· 7U7.

10 Burn a bil

~

GASOUNE ALLEY

I KJ

DOWN
I Trod the

·-

REDUCED $2000. 3 bedroom, 2 v,

bedro&lt;;mo ond both, Lot 100 x

RAYPH

river

.

HOMESITES for sole, I acre and
up. MlckUeport, near Rutland , DUGAN 's FRONT End Alignment,
formerly Odell'• Allnement
Call
992-7•a1 .
better l!lok today.
behind Rutland Grade School.
NEW 3 bedroom house , 2 baths ,
Alignment, wheel balancing ,
WANT TO SELL YOUR
all elec. , I ocre, Middleport,
tune·up, brakes and minor
FARM AT A BIG PROFIT
clOse to Rutland . Phone 992repair. Phone 7-"2-2005 or
CALL US. WE HAVE
7~81.
742-200.t . Evening work by ap·
CLIENTS WANTING 100
pointment.
SMAll
form
for
sale
,
10%
down,
ACRES UP.
OWner fmonced . Monroe Coun- HARRISON'S T.V . Repair. Service
G. Bruce Tuford
iy , W. Vo. Phooa (:l&lt;U) 772·
Colis. 276 Sycamore , St., MidHalon L. Teaford
3102 or (304) 772-3227 .
dleport. Phone 992·2522 .
A51oclotes
COUNTRY farmland w ith seclud- MOWN'S FIRE ond Solely Exloned woods, water ond good acqulshers . All alze1 , business ,
cess In Monroa County, W, Vo .
homo , boo!. Roflllod, tooled.
$1,000 down, call (:J&lt;U) 7728111
Brown, Rutland , Ol-uo
VA-FHA , 30 yr. financing . lretOncr
3102 or(:»!) n2-3227.
Phone 7~2 ·2777 .
·
Morfijoge, n E State, Athens ,
phone (61•J 5'12-3051.

HOUSE FOR

by THOMAS JOSEPH
40 Belgian
ACROSS

leader
12 Current
13 Cling
14 Yale
bulldog
15 Outfit
16 Skin
g rowth
17
Tooth
k'
substance
L-~~~~~~~~~ 9 L..::.!~:;:::;::::=;:::;:;=c~::....:'-J 19 Rep.
between Fr.
and Sp.
20 Confined
jilts Lila!
21 Indian
fate worse than death ...
groom
marries
childhood
Challenged
Worked a t,
as a trade
25 Black
26 Sulk

Rutland, Ohio. phone 7.. 2-2008
SEPTIC TANKS deoned. Mode rn
Sanitation, 992·3954 .

I I I

mixture

FOR 1\IJO

5232 .
EXCAVATING, dozer, bockhee
and ditcher. Charles R. Hot.
field , Bock HOe Servi ce,

thirds acre of land. $16,500.

~t)JC··H"d"'
1 Yearn
5 Smelting

ICHARb!:: A

I'll pay you
plus six per centl

ENAt&lt;O

'

Carpet-Lino.-Tile
Phone Mike Young ot
992-2206or 992-7630

•

Unscramble these four Jumbles,
one letter to each square, 10 form
four ordlnar')l words

1

SEWING · ALTERATIONS : EXCAVATING . .d.&lt;&gt;&lt;e c. loodor and
Uphoistering 1
drapes
reasonable . 572 S9uth Third
Ave ., Middleport . Phone
992·6306.

33.

11.30-Johnny Carson 3,4,15; Movie " Moll He lm" 6, 13;
Columbo 8: Mary Hariman 10; ABC News 33.
12 .00-Movle " China Seas" 10; Janakl 33.
l ·DO-Tom orrow 3,4
1·0&gt;-News 13.

Free Estimates

MACBEAR ~ 1gn pomt1ng serviCe , .BRADFORD , Auctioneer, Com.
smofl si gns and pos ter•. Con.
plate Service . Phone 9~9·2467
tract only. Call 7A2-3035. Free
Or 949-2000 . Racine, Ohto, Cntt
3 YEARS OLD All
estimates.
Bradford.
electric 3 bedrOQm home ln
town with c ity water, nice · FREE ESTIMATES to nd prope rty of ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR
kitchen and fenced yo rd. A
moles , roaches, ants , silver fish
Sweepers, toasters , irons , all
nice home for only $22,000.
and termites , Southern Pest
5moll appliances. lawn mOwer ,
Control, 949-2803 .
next to State Highway Garage
EXTRA
SPECIAL
on Rj&gt;U ie 7. Phone (614) 985·
'
EXCAVATING
,
BACKHOE
,
dOzer
,
Large sunny kitchen with
3825
trencher , LOW Boy , dump tru ck
many
wood
cabinets ,
trucks , septic sy1tems . Bi ll REMODEliNG , Plumbing, heating
central air and heating ,
Pullins, phone 992-2478 day or
ond aU types of general repair
large dining, 4 bedrooms ,
ntght.
Work guaranteed 20 years e)(2 1f:~ baths, family room with
perlence. Phone 992-2409 .
fireplace and pool table,
23/.t acres. $46.000 .
SEWING MACHINE Repairs, ser·

7409.

~·

F&lt;lRITTO

10 · 17 -1 _~ (Pdl

Wil! do odd jobs , rool1ng, pomtmg, gutter work. Phone 992-

IERVICE

Gong Show

8:30-Laverne &amp; Shirley 6, 13.
9. DO-Eight Is Enough 6,13; Mash 8,10.
9: 30-Movle " Code Name : Dlatnond Head" 3,4.15; One
Day at a Tlme8 1 10; Best of Ernle Kovlcs20.33.
IO .OD--Famlly 6,13; Kojak 8,10; News 20; The Way 1
Was 33
10:30-Biack Journal 20 ; Americana 33.
11 :OD--News 3,4,8,10, 13,15,6; MacNeil-Lehrer Reporl

6:45-Mornlng Reporl 3.
6:5()-Good Morning, West VIrginia 13.
7:01)-Today 3,4,1 5; Good Morning America 6,13; CBS
News 8; Chuck Wh ile Reporls 10.
7:05-Porky Pig 10.
7:30-Schoolles 10.
8: 0D-Howdy Doody 6; Capt. Kangaroo a,1 0; Sesame
Sl . 33
8·30- Big Valley 6.
9 ·DO-A.M. 3; Phil Donahue 4,13,15; Andy Grlflllh 8;
Mike Douglas 10.
9 3D---Cross-Wits 3; Edge of Night 6; Concentrallon 8.
IO:OD-Sanford &amp; Son 3.4.15; Dinah 6; Here's Lucy 8,10;
Mike Douglas 13.
10 :30-Hollywood Squares 3,4, 15; Pri ce Is Righi 8,10.
ll ·oo-Wheel of Fortune 3,4, 15; Happy Days 6.13.
11 :30-Shoot for the Stars 3.4,15; Family Feud 6,13;
Love of Life 8,10; Sesame St . 20.
11 : 5~BS News 8; Ms . Flxlt 10.
12 :DO-News 3,4,6,10,13; Name That Tune 15; Divorce
Court 8.
12 :JO-Lovers &amp; Friends 3,15; Ryan's Hope 6,1 3;
Search for Tomorrow 8, 10 .

UTILE ORPHAN ANNIE

diamonds and two or
clubs

three m
to wind up with s even or

eight tricks "
Oswa ld : " The thr ee notrump bidder wished he had
se ttled for two, but did see

some hope He won the second
spade m dummy, led a club,
!messed hi s jack. cashed the
ace , noted the tall of the king
tram Eas t, fmcssed against
West 's ten and made h1s ga me
for a score of 600 and a 10 IMP
gain . The other declarer made
the sa me nine lricks. but th at
did him no good at all ."

~u~~
An Idaho reader wants to
know the correct openmg btd

with ·
A KJx:oc • Kx t AQx..,Kx x
This hand should be opened
one notrump In spite ul l~c
five-card spade su1t . You have
16 points , 5-3-3·2 d1S tn but10 n.
and sloppers in a ll suits .

J V K tests?"
Oswald : " He re's a simple
K U J hand mdeed At bOth tables
South ope ned with a standard,
but mi n 1mum l6-po1 n t
(For a copy of JA COBY
SOME notrump Both North players MODERN, send $1 to · "Win
ELSE ra1sed lo two notrump . One at Br i dge ," clo I his
G.K. South passed as he should ; t he • newspaper. P 0 . Box 489,
Rad10 C1ty Station, New York,
oLher decided to try three on
the theory lhat 11 }Ust m1ght N Y. 10019)

!

· Mon., Tues., Wed.
8:00ti15:00
Thursday B til Noon

1'EE·HEE·HEE .. I

·'·.~~

FRIDAY TIL 5
Close Sat. At 5 P.M.

I

..
•
'·

&amp;ANG
EJAMG

8ANG

AL.L RIGHT, WHO'S
OUT THERE MAKING
ALL THAT NOISE?

HE KEEPS HITTIN6

'EM BACK!

-

6:01)-News 3.~.6.8,10,13,15 ; ABC News 6; Zoom 20.
6:30-NBC News 3,~,15 ; Andy Grlffllh 6; CBS News
B,lO; Vegetable Soup 20; Combat 20.
7:0D-Truth or Cons. 3; Liar's Club 6; Country Carnival a: News 10: To Tell the Truth 13; My Three
Sons 15: Anyone for Tennyson? 20 ; American
Issues Forum 33.
7: 30-Hollywood Squares 3.•: Lei's Deal With It 6:
Match Game PM8 ; tn The Know 10: Wild Kingdom
13; TV Honor Society 15.
8:DO-Counlry Music Hit Parade 3,4,15; Happy Days
6,13; Who's Who 8.10; American Short Story 20,33.

6:30-- Focus on Columbus 4 ; News 6 ; Sunrise Semester
8; Concerns &amp; Comments 10.

A local contractor
Phone 949-2801
or 949-2860

'

15; New M ickey Mouse Club 6: Lucy Show 8;
Sesame St 20.33; Movie "Gidget Grows Up" 10,
Dinah 13.
4: 1&gt;-Litfle Rascals • ·
~ : 3~¥Y. Three Sons 3; Partrldg_e Family 4;
Emergency One 6: Partr idge Famil y 8; Fllnlstones
15.
.
5:DO-Big Valley 3; My Three Sons~ ; Brady Bunch 8;
Mister Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33; Emergency
One 13; Star Trek 15.
5:30-Adom·12 4; News 6; Family Affair 8; Elec. Co
20,33.

TUESDAY, MAY 3,1977
6:oo-Sunrlse Semester 10.
6: 15-Farm Reporl 13.
6:20-Not For Women Only 13.

JfREE

20.

.t ·OO-M ister Cartoon 3; Little Rascals ,. ;

1:5D- News 13.

AIJ,.EYOOP

2-23-1 mo.

PROFESSIONAL

Con sumer Survlvilll J(lt

3: 1&gt;-General Hospllal 6, 13.
3:30-Match Game 8,10; Lilias vi&gt;ga &amp; Yoo 20.

12:40-Toma 6, 13.
1:00-- Tomorrow 3,4.

" The Originators

4- IS- 1-mo.

8,10.

2:0D-l20,ooo Pyramid 6,13.
2·30-Doctors 3.~.15 ; One Life to Live 6,13; Guiding
Light 8.10.
3:oo-Anolher World 3,4,15; All In The Family a,10;

11 : J~Johnny Carson 3,4,15; Streets of San Francisco
6,13; Kojak 8; Mary Hartman 10; ABC News 33.
12 : 00--Movle "Teacher's Pet" 10; Janakl JJ.

ISSFU. SIDING CO.

SOMETHING NEW Large 4 bedroom home In

lovely level lot. Ask;ng
$14.000.00.
OLD
ESTABLISHED
BUSINESS - Really needs

TO BUYl

Not The lmit•ton"

Vinyl &amp; • Aluminum
Siding,
Storm
W. i n dow s
&amp;
Insulation .
Call Professionals

Shirley's Beauty Nook

br ick &amp; frame . Asking just
$32 ,000 00.
JUST LISTED - 6 acres ,
has 2 year old double wide ,

Broadway ,
1'h
story
frame, 2 bedroom s, bath ,
fireplace in living room , 2
large porches, basement,

'/OU READY

1.\ci&lt;EE! ... ARE-

~U.5H!

Carpet &amp; Upholstery
Phone Mike Young
At
992-2206 or 992-7630

Nobil Summit Rood
Rt . 1
Middleport, 0 .
992-5724
Complete
Sales
and
Service and Supplies.

porches. and nice lot .
Needs a llltle work, but a
good buy ot lust $12 ,000.

liv ing R.. ut ilofy space ,
garage and 2 other bldgs .
Localed close to Forked
Run Lake . All for just
$17.000.00.
MIDDLEPORT

.SO-- DON'T BEAT
AROUND THE-

Route 3. PomlfOy , 0 .

bedrooms,
1111
baths ,
dtnlng area , utili ty , car peting, all ele&lt;;tric , garage ,

2 bedroom s. large closets,
d in ing room , very large

OKAY. I MEAN

Young's Carpeting

and outcellar. $17,500.

E.

IF YOU MI::AN
J.P. M~KEf• ~AY

Superior ·
Steam Extraction

EXPERIENCED
.
.

LARGE ROOMS 3
bedrooms. large dining ,
fireplace In living. bolh and
a half . Gas F.A. furnace

608

CAPTAIN EASY

1

f&gt;t!one 992-3339

Jack w. carSev , Mg ,
Phone 991 -1181

CAMPER , $600. A lso , horse
trailer . $450 Phone {61.CJ 6983290

'Ieee

Phone 949-2814
9 a .m. to Sp.m .

HARLEY HANING

RATES

one

outtors. w. hong It, or do It
yo..-Hif. S,Oclol pricH to

_!omeroy Landmadl

good condillon . 1970 Bukk aor
98H181.

_

EQUIPMENT.

MANAGERS
&amp; RUMMAGE SAlE at letart Falls,
ATTENTION
Demonstrators, Sell toys and
Quillen's old store haute. Stargifts the Party Pion Woy.
ting 26, 27, 28, 29. and 30th,
838·53.5
Friendly Home TOy Parties has
9·00 5·00 Lots of womens,
Openings for managers and
mens . ch1ldrens , bob1es thmgs. BASS BOAT . Phone 992 ·31 aL
dealers in your or60 . Party Pion
And some car ports. Odds and
CHAIN LINK fence, green t ooted ,
experience helpful. No cosh in.
ends.
230ft. long with 3 gates. linda
Vestment, no collecting or
Gilkey, last hause on Br&lt;&gt;..vnell
del1venng. Car and telephone GARAGE SAlE , tong Bottom
Senior (1ti:zens , at Cnspm CorAve., Middleport,
necessary . Call Collect to Carol
ner, May 5, 6, and 7, 10 till 4.
Day , (51B) •89-8395 bo1ween
REGISTERED POLLED Heriord bull .
New and uutd merchandise.
8 30 - 5:00 or wrlle Fnendly
2 years akl, gentle, good
Home Parties , 20 Railroad Ave. YARD SAlE , 4 FAMilY. in Brannon
breed1ng s to ck
Phone
Albany , N.Y. 12205.
Gorag' Building, corner al N.
992·5565
2nd and Hudson St. , MidPERSON TO mow lawn in Middleport. May 2, 3, and • · 9 tdl 30 IN . GAS ra nge, $20. Bathtub.
dleport. Phone 985-3930
Phone992·7.. 65 .
3 30 p.m. Nice clothing, d1shes ,
and many other ilems.
HOMEGROWN Tomato plants, im.
proved Mexican early Violen t.
ODDS AND ENDS Sola end Bake
golden Jubilees. Al so, golden
SOle , Moy 5 and 6 from 9 tdl 5.
Acre cabbage . A cross from the
At Masonic Lodge Hall located
TRUCK CAMPER. excellent condiswimming
pool .
Thomas
tion. length 10 ft. 6 in, New
behind Chester Post Office .
Hayma n, Syrocuse, Ohio
of
Sponsored by U M W
Hoven, (:J&lt;U) 882-:!'m.
Chester United Method ist CARLTON TRUMPET t $5o. Was ter n
18 FT. CAMPING trailer, with roU.
Church.
saddle , 15 1n. seat. $60. Phone
out awning, air condif1oning.

w.e ..

'

PLAINS ,

992-7201.

'seat, heavy duty tnm ·
3-4 - Heavy Duty fa ctory
re1nforced trame .
35
Co lo r :
Omaha
Orange .
36 - The front of th e en velope enclosing the bJd must
be marked " Dump Truck,
Proposal No . 1. "
Proposal No. l
1 - Same specif i cations as
Proposal No. 1.
2 - The front of the en velope enclosing the bid must
5
be marked " Dump Tr uck,
Proposal No . 2 11
YARD SAlE, May 2 thru 5th. SucProposal No.3
cess road Clothing ond misc . 9
1 - One 1977 112 ton model
till .C .
p i ckup truck .
2 - 350 Cu . ln . V -8 gas
CARPORT SALE . May 3 &amp; 4 , 10 toll
engine, regul.uor leaded gas .
On this day in history:
5. 918 Sauth Third , Middlepor t.
3 - 6,000 lbs G.V.W . for
In 1863, Gen. Thomas
re9,ular gas usage .
GARAGE
SALE .
Tuoi day .
A. ttea vy vuty front and
Jonathan
"Stonewall"
Wednesday , 9 :80 till 4:00.
rear springs,
Jackson was mistakenly shot
clothing ,
m i scellaneous ,
5 Heavy duty power
Memoria l Day , flOw-e r, Ghe-ap.
by
his
own
Confederate
6 - Power Steer 1ng.
Margaret Marshall res1dence,
7 - A M . Rad io.
soldiers. He died eight days
Mason, HOuse behind bg.,yling
8 - Full depth foam bench
later.
alley.
se~t, hellvy duty trim •
9 J -78x15 ' tires , steel
3 FAMILY YARD Sale. 770
belted radia l t ires.
Sycamore St., Middleport, Mo.,.
10 - One add i tional J -78x 15
2. 3, &amp; A, 10 till .. p .m.
tire and rim, steel belted
rad ial tire.
YARD
SALE, Racine Cor Wash, in
11 - Combination rear and
Ra c1ne. April 3, 10 o.m. till 4
9 HR -78 -15-B tire and
front directional si gn a I lights
rim, steel belted radial.
p.m.
12 - Trllfflc hazard switch
11 - A.M. Radio .
13 - Oual electric horns
12 - 22 gallon gas tank
1-4 - L.H . and R .H. Jr . west
minimum .
cout mirrors .
13 - Vinyl trim
15 - Heater and defroster .
14 - In side adjustable left
16 - Two speed w indshiel d
RISING STAR Kennel Boarding ,
, side mirror , factory .
w i pers and washers.
Indoor-Outdoor run1 , grooming
15
Rear
window
defogger
.
7 - Heavy duty shocks .
all breeds , dean sanitary
16 - The front of the en 18 - Rear step bumper .
v~Jope enclosing the bid must
facilities . Cheshire. Phone {614)
19 Automat ic tran be marked " Passenger Car ,
367-om.
smission .
Proposal No 4 "
20 50 amp . or l arger
HOOF HOLLOW. Buy, 1ell, trade
Bidder to furnish their OWfl
alternator .
bid forms and submIt each
or train hOrses . RUTH REEVES ,
21 - 131.5 " wheel base .
troin.r. Phone (6U) 698-3290 .
22 - The front of tne en - bld proponl on separate
forms .
velope e-nclosing the bid must
ALL BREED Dog grooming,
Bidder to specify t i me of
be marked "Pickup Truck ,
delivery ,
rttaaonoble rates . Coli for apProposal No . 3."
The county Commissioners
pointment, J &amp; B Kennels ,
Propos• I No.4
1
One 1,77, 4 door. may accept the lowest bid , or
7·2-3162 .
s~l~ct the best bid for the
passenger car .
l
ntend~d
purpos~.
and
SIBERIAN
HUSKY , lomole, 6 mon.
2 - 350 Cu . ln . V -8 gas
rtserve ttl~ r 1ght to reject an y
ths , shots. Nice pup, $75 .
engine .
or all b ids. and ·Or any part
Phone 992·5055.
3 _ Heavy cruty suspension .
thereof.
.; - 116"
minimum
SIAMESE KITTENS , sot~ I polnl, $15.
Power Steering .
Mary Hobstetter ,
Phono985-"75.
-~
6 - Power brakes .
Acting Clerk
AulomatJc
Tran
·
7
_AKC SHETLAND sheep dogs.
Board of Meigs
smlsslon .
County Comm Iss loners
(M;n,) Collies , 2 fomoleo , 7
Factory Air Con
8 _
wHk• old. Shots and wormed.
dltfonlng .
Phone (6" ) 367 ·0292 .

s-

FOR SALE

OHIO . New 2
bedroom apartmen ts. Fu lly
carpeted. No pets, $170 mon.
lh~ Phone (614 ) 667-630. or
667-3349.

949-21&gt;57.

Phone 992-29AI
FlOWERS FOR Mother's Doy to be
sokl by the Rutland EMS , Motn 72 VEGA, $000.00, 72 PLY .. $900 ..
st. In Rutland.
ph 949·2307
A REWARD in the amount of
S2,()(X) is herby offered to any
person or persons who pro.
¥Ides 1,formotion which leads
to the defection, apprehension, CASH paid for all makes ond
models of mobile homes
and conviction ol the person or
Phone
oreo code 614-423-9531
persons respons1ble for the
murder of Wesley Dole Muuer . TIMBER, Pomeroy FOrest PreA"'f mformatlon pe r loming to
ducts. Top pr1c• for standing
some shou'ld be given to the
sawtimber. Call ~ent Hanby ,
Meigs County Sheriff's Deport.
1-446·8570.
mentby calling 992-3371 . Sign.
COINS . CURRENCY , tok ens, old
ed , Frances Musser.
pOcket wotches ond chcuns ,
SPRING ClEANING? YOu need a
silver and gold. We need 1964
Break-- serve the family o
and older sll¥er coins Buy, sell,
bur:ket of chicken from the
or trade ' Coli Roger Womsiey .
Do1ry Isle in Middleport.
7•2·2331.

lOST DOG in Fort Me1gs orao ,
black Doberman with long
ears, has bump, on legs . $SO
Reword. Phone 742·2316.

---TUPPERS

PnS VENTURA Pontiac 260. To
lake over payments
Coli

1966 V.W. Beetle , 2 new recap
tires . Good motor. $-oiOO Phone

Phont:992-2 1~

NOTICE

1975 JHP CHEROKEE . p.b .. ps .

COAL . l1mes1one, ond calcium
3 AND _. RM , furnis hed and u nchlor1de and ca lcium brine for
furnished opts. ph one 99'1- 1- dus t control ond spectol m1xing
543A ,
soh for former s, Ex:c.elsl04' Salt
COUNTRY Mobile Home Po rk , Rt.
Works, Main Street, Pomeroy,
Ohio or phone 992· 389~:,:1,:..._ _
33. ten miles north of Pome ror
Lorge lots w ith concrete polios, APPLE S FITZPATRICK ORCHARD,
sldewolks , runner s and off
STATE ROUTE 689
PHONE
_ s free l_pork ing Phone 992· 7.C79. ._:W:.:I::
LK
=E:;
-.S;,:V.:;IL:.LO:
E", "("
6_1i'=ii.):::,66i.9io-3ii;7"'B~5:ii.~
2 BEDROOM Tro 1ler Brown 's
Trailer Pork , phone 992 -3324.

1 :OD--Goog Show 3; All My Children 6,13; News 8;
Young &amp; fhe Restless 10; Not For Women Only 15.
1:»-Days of Our Lives 3,,, 15; As The World Turns

5:DO-Big Valley 3; My Three Sons~; Brody Bunch 8;
Mister Rogers' Ne ighborhood 2(),33: Emergency
One 13; Star Trek 15.
5:30-Adam-12 4; News 6: Family Affair 8; Elec Co.
20,33.
6:DO- News 3.4.8, )0,13,15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20.
6:30-NBC News 3,4,15; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News B,IO; Vegelable Soup 2().
7.oo-Truth or Cons. 31 ; To Tell fhe Trufh 4; Liar' s
Club 6; Buck Owens 8; News 10; To Tellihe Trulh
13; My Three Sons IS; Americana 20,· Know Your
Schools 33.
7:30-That Good Ole Nashville Music 3; In Seard1 of''
Muppel Show 6; Gong Show 8, MacNeil-Lehrer
Reporf 20,33; Price Is Right 10; Candid Camera 13;
Nashville on the Road 15.
'
a :oo-Movle " In Search of Noah 's Ark" 3 . ~.15; Movie
"Charlie's .Angels" 6.13; Jeffersons 8, 10; Six
American Families 20,33.
8:30-Busllng Loose 8, 10.
9·oo-Maude 8, 10; Palllsers 20,33.
9:30-Movle "Roger &amp; Harry" 6,13; Phyllis B,IO.
10 :00-0ean Martin 3,4, 15; Andros Targets 8, 10; News
20; Soundstage 33.
10: 30-Farm Dlgesf 20.
11 :DO- News 3 •• . 6.8.10, 13, 15; Mont y Python's Flying
Circus 20; Black Journal 33.

I~W o rtk or Und('r

BEEN

WAlK IN ' ON CLOUDS EVER ·
SIN~E I LOST

THEM THREE
PCDUI\JD~ ...

BUT SOMETHIN' TELLS ME
I'M FIX IN' TO CRASH RIGHT

BACK DOWN TO EARTH
ENNI./ SECONT NOW

�e.-The l)aily ·Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, May 2, 1977
HQVlSITED
HEIDELBERG , West
Germany (UP!)- Clifford L.
Alexander, Secrelary of the
Army, visited headquarters
of the U. S. Army, Europe,
today at the start of a week's
tour o( American anny units
in West Germany.

Harry O' Dairy is
announcing This
Week's Special

:--------------------------- l More road
l
Area Deaths : (Continued from page ll
I

JOHN E\IANS

grandchildren .
Her husband . Everett J .
Masssie, died in 1945.
The body was taken to
James Funeral Home in
Springfie ld . There will be no
calling hours.
Graveside services will be
held 1: 30 p.m . Tuesday at
Fa i rview Cemetery . Cen terpoint , Ohio.

John E . Evans, 66, a former
Jackson County Sheriff, died
Saturday morning around
.S: JO 'a . m .
He wa s a native of Galt ia '
County , born at Peniel on
Dec. 26, 1910, son of the late
David C. and Margan~t
Evans .
He is survived by his wife,

Jo, and one son, John Thomas
Evan s , and two grand c h i ldren ;
one "brother ,
Richard A . Evans, CohJmbus,

DORA LEWIS
MASON . W. Va . -

and one sis ter , Margaretta
Williams, Ga l lipolis.
Fri ends may call at the
Eisnaugle Funeral Home in
Jackson from 2-.4 and 7·'9 p.m .
today . Funera l services will
be held l p .m . Tuesday at the

fu nera l home in Jackson .

DORA MASSIE

SPRINGF IELD -

.

+ .

dairy tsle
Middleport, Ohio

Mrs.

Dora Mae Lewis , 96 , Mason,
died earlY Monday morning
at Pleasant Valley Hospital.
She was born Feb . 12, 1881
In West VIrginia to the late
Thomas and Ellen Putnn: She
was also preceded in death by
her fl rst husband , Pearl
Swisher ;
her
second
husband , Clayton Lewi s; a
daughter, Loraine Walburn ;
three si ste.r s and five
brother s.
Surv i ving
ar e
tw o
daughters, · Mrs . Lucill e
Wolfe, ColumbuS; Mrs. Edna
Hampton, Barberton, Ohio ; a
son, Har ley Swisher-, Middleport ; eight grandchildren
and 15 great-grandchi ldren.
Funer-a l services will be
held at 2 p.m . Wednesday at
the Rawlings -Coats Funeral
Home, Midd leport with the
Rev . James Lewis of ficiating . Burial will be in
Gr avel
Hill
cemetery,
Cheshire . Friends may call at
the funeral home after 2 p.m .
Tuesday . The fam ily will
receive friends from 2 to 4
and 7 to 9 p .m . Tuesday .

Mrs .

Dora Mae Lambert Ma ssie,
85, died at 12 : 20 p.m . F riday
at the home of a daughter,
Mrs . Verlyn Pyles, of 3697 St.
Parish Pike, wi th whom she
lived in Springfield.
Mrs. Massie was bor n Feb .
26, 1692, in Gallla County ,
daughter of 1-'-tenry and
Lucinda Shelton Lambert .
Survivors · in addition to
Mrs. Pyles included a sister,
Mrs. El iza beth Davis, Zanesville; One .b rother, Glendon
Massie, Fresno, Calif.; eight
Qrandchlldren and four great-

FAMILY DINING

IDA SAY ANT
Ida Belle Bryant, 85, died at

'

9: 30a .m. Sunday at St. John' s

.Hospllal. Cleveland . She had

AT ITS BEST

resided In Cleveland the past
11 years .
She was born July 11 , 1891 ,
In Carter County , Ky .,
daughter of the late Tvre and
Catherine Baker Boggs .

She marr ied Mall Bryant In

1907. He preceded her in
death in 1962. The Bryants
resided In Kanauga several
years .
They had nine children .
Survivors Include : John ,
Gallipolis ; Mrs. George

!Goldie) Perry, Cleveland,

with whom she made her
home ; Mrs. Robert · &lt;Sue)
Elder , Lancaster; Mrs .
Charles {Loraine) Robinson ,
Bellefontaine ; Mrs. Theodore
(May) Swlnaton, Louisville,
1Ky .; f ifty -four·grandchi ldren,
89 great grandchildren and 10
great..great
grandchildren,.
One brother and one sister
surVIve, Charles Boggs, New
Boston and Mrs . Dillie
Sexton, South Shore , Ky .
She was a member of the

THE INN PlACE

TUESDAY NIGHT SPECIAL
Visit ovr Salad Bar . Chicken Fillets, Hom
Fries. Hot Rolls, Coffee, Tea or Milk

$295Plus tax

Free Wi II Baptist

Chu~ch

in

Cleveland.
Funeral services will be

held 1 p.m. w~~nes~ay at the
Gallia Baptlsl Church . Burial
will b~ In Dry Rldg'

Cemetery . Rev . Andrew
Parsons will officiate.
The body will lle ln state at
the church one hour prior to
the services.
Friends may ca II at
Mil!er's Home for Funerals
from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m . on
Tuesday.

SPECIAL NOTE
~ ·
Tbere will be a special
m""Ung at lite Oblo Valley
lndpeudnt Bueball
Hobson Drive, C21.
League Wedlleaday at 7:30
Laurel Cliff, C22.
•at the Syracuae City Hall.
Union Avenue, C24.
All coaches or represenPomeroy Pike, C25.
tative• of teams mual
Flatwoods, C26.
attnd.
Point Rock, C27, SR 689 to
Cl.
::::::::.:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:-::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Dyesvllle, C27, Cl to Cll.
Apple Grove - Dorcas, C28,
SR338 to SR124.
Bashan , C2B, SRI24 to
SR248.
1
Locust Grove, .C28, SR248 to
SR7.

Bowman's Run, C29.
Forest Run, C30, SR7 to ;
C34.
Morning Star, C30, C34 to
C26.
Bald Knob - Stlversville,
C31.
Eagle Ridge, C32.
Oak Grove, C33.
Pine Grove, C34.
Portland, C35.
Sumner, C36.
BearwaUow Ridge, C37.
Flood, C38.
Hemlock Grove, C39.
Burlingham, C40.
Alfred, C41.
Jopps, C43.
Star HaU, C45,
Success, C48.
Goose Creek, C-47.
Carsey, C49.
Eden Ridge, C50.
Strongs Run, C52.
Wlpple, C53.
Old State 348, C55.
Red Hill, C65.
Hiland, C75.
Children's Home, C'l6.
TeliSS, C82.
Midkiff, Cl63.
Sand Ridge, C338.
Story's Run, C345.
bead Man's Curve, C398.
Minersvlll~. C403.
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Wednesday through
Friday, f•fr Wednesday '
and Thursday wltb a
chance of showers Friday.
lllghs Wedne.day !o the 70s
aad overnight lows In the
. upper 40s and lower 50s,
warmlag by Friday to
highs fll. the mid 70s to low
80s and low81D SO..

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Saturday Admissions Floyd Roush, Letart, W.Va.;
Hubert Stewart, Middleport.
Saturday Discharges Margaret · Parcell; Josie
Shamblln, Steven Stanley,
Ralph
Harvey,
Linda
Hawley, Mary Spurrier,
Audrey Woods, Carolyn
Adams, Audrey McFarland,
Darla Hawley, Carolyn
Elam, Blanch Scragg,
Evelyn M·urray, Charles
WUS!&gt;n.
Sunday Admissions Nancy Manley, Middleport;
Jarrie Judson, Hartford;
Lucille Gihnore, Pomeroy;
Irene Burris, Mason, W.Va.
Sunday Oiscbarges Ernest Halley, Gladys Artis,
Hell
Kenneth ·" Keesee,
French, Adrienne French,
Marvin Darst:

-

!
I

.,,

)

j

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

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•

$~,CIC()
2500

r -~ ·OC()
500
'

If you hate to wait and love to s.;ne, you·u
Jove First NatiOntll Ci ty Travelers Checks'
Big May Sule. Buy them now und save up to
96% of the fee . Use thern whenever you gn

on vacation.
And if they get lost Or stoll!n you won'l have

u.~oj' •

r S50~-

. Mo , ..

96%

200
200
200

80%

2500

+ ~~oo
s

-·

00

YOUt•vt:

$200

-

92"1!...._

HUBBARDS
GREEN HOUSE
Ope!l Daily
91o6

Sunday
1to6

Vegetable Plants
Potted Plants
Hanging Baskets
992-5776

....... .....,

Q

'

• ...,.

Syracuse, o.

1\01'.

••0

p

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tO wait for a refund . Because First Natiunal Ci ty
Tra velers Checks can give yo u an on-the-spot
refund m ovcr4 S.OOO locations worldwide.
Thousands more than any other travelers·check.
Buy First National Ci ty Travelers Checks
now i·n May. and Sdve.

POMEROY, OHIO
~o.ooo. oo

Maximum Insurance For Each. DHosltot
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

'

CALLS ANSWERED
The Middleport E-R aquad,
called sundiy to South
Secood Ave. at 9:17 a.m. for
Mrs. 0. B. StOut, took her to ·
Pleasant VaUey Hospital; at
B:53 p.m. Sunday took Hilda
McDaniel, Route 7, below
Hobson, to Holzer Medical
Center; at 9:25 a.m. Monday
Ill lhe office of Dr . .J. J. Davis
for a heart patle)lt, Samuel
Fry, Jr., who was taken Ill
Holzer Medical Center.
The Pomeroy E·R unit
answered a caD Ill Hemlock
Grove at 8:50 a.m. Monday
for Emmett Hawk who was
taken Ill Veterans Memorial
Hospital.

-~

Farmers Bank
(

'.

Falcons
win 14-8
GARY CLARK

Girls sweep two.
The Meigs Girls' softbaU
team kept on their winning
ways Saturday as the Varsity
and Reserve owept a pair
from vlsltlng caldwell. In the
varslly contest, the Meigs
bats were hot as they
unleashed a 2&amp;-hit aU..ck.
KeUy Burdette got the win
as she tossed a nifty· threehitter and struck out two
while walking just one. Pam
Vaughan led the hitters as
she slammed·two home rlli\S,
a double and single, and
knocked tn eight runs enroute
to , the 1!HI victory. Mary
Boggs had a trtple and two
'singles, Klm Grueser had two
doubles and two singles. Beth
Vaughan and Burdette each
had three singles, an4
Dorolhy Chapman socked a

home run and two singles.
The Reserves bad an easy
tbne as tbey scored nine runs
in the first Inning enroute to a
25-11 wtn. Beth Bartrum got
the win by laMing one,
walking six and giving up
nine hi!B.
The Marauder lasses
cracked out 28 hits, and Sandi
Hamilton had five of them.
Terri Wilaon had 2 big home

-

ELBERFELDS
IN POMEROY
.
MOTHER'S DAY IS NEXT SUNDAY MAY 8th
-

0

THIS YEAR GIVE HER UNGERIE

C~le

~~S4;t"
.
AN

~~

AUTOMATIC DISHWASHER

KATZ

• EASY HOOKUP
Be sure to see ali the other fine lingei-ie gift
.
on the 2nd floor- Pajamas, slips, robes, long and
short gowns, slippers- all famovs makers .s.ucb.
as Formflt Ro_gers- Phil Maid- lorraine- Kafz .
Make your selections now.

Instant coHee prices go
up in response to 440%
increase in coHee beans

'

WHITE PLAINS, N. Y. (UPI) - Citing a 440 per
cent price increase in lhe cost of green coffee beans,
Nestle Co., Inc. has announced an Increase tn lhe price
of liB inslant coffees.
Nestle said Monday the price moves were made
"out of necessity," citing a 440 percent jump in green
coffee bean prices since a July 1975 !root destroyed 73.5
per cent of Brazil's 1976 coffee crop. Brazil is the
world's largest coffee producer and supplies 60 per
cent of all U. S. green bean imports. ·
In lhe past 12 months, Nestle said, lhe
International Coffee Organization's Composite Index
price for green beans has risen 140 per cent ,
The company's latesl wholesale markup, effective
May 28, wiU raise aU sizes of Taster's Choice regular
and Taster's Choice decaffeinated freeze-&lt;lrled coffees
by 12 cents an ounce. The action will increase lhe price
of Nescafe instant coffee by 5 centB an ounce, Nescafe
decaffeinated by 13 cents an ounce and Neslle decaf by
12 cents an ounce.

'

Sheriff

Marauders bow twice

• SCRUBS POTS AND PANS

Clifton group proposes
.mco:rporation,
. zonmg
.

•

MUIS, a single, and six RBl's.
Tanya Ash had a·double, two
slnglel, and five RBI'1, _
Tammy Blake had two
double• and two sinSies, Jo
McKinney bad three hlta, and
Sonya Ash had two doubles
and a single. Meigs baa lost
only one game lhls aeaaon,
and they get a chance to
remedy that as they host
Waverly Wednesday. Tonight
tbey travel to GaUipolls.

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY
!

•

CLASSES CANCELLED
There will be no classes in
:\Iter winning a IU slugfest
baton, dance or gylnnastlcs
at Duval Saturday afternoon
Tuesday, Gloria Wallace (Continued from page 1)
amounced today, StudeniB
the Wahama While Falcons
who have not ordered ''Giq- Camaro were damaged. It Is
upped their season record to
ettes" costwne or trim for the believed the fire started in
13-11 on the year as they
Regatta parade are asked to the kitchen-front room area
prepare to enter Into the final
of the traDer. No roe was
caU 992-7326.
week of regular season action
injured . .
before :!t!Ciional tournament
FIVEII&amp;Es
play.
.
Henry Bahr, president of
'i'he White Falcons have five
the Isaac Walton League
dates remaining, one on lhe
which owns a farm in Chester
road and five otralght at M e 1 g s
M a r a u de r Browning led the Meigs twp . reported that the
basebaUers had a long af· hitters with three singles. buildlng bad been entered
home.
This afternoon the bend temoon of It Saturday as the Hamilton had two singles as and a West Bend coffee
area team was to have visited varsity and reserve squads did Triplett, Smith had his maker stolen. Entry was
Hannan for a
return both went Into extra innings home run and two walks, and gained by breaking out a
engagement with Leo Wat- before bowing to visiting Wayland, Johnson and Pratt kitchen door window.
son's Wildca!B. The reaminder Caldwell 8-6 in tbe varsity each had one hit. CaldweU • The Rev. E. Blake, Spring·
of the week will find the locals contest and 7-6 in the reserve pitchers faMed seven and field, Ohio, who owns a :
at Bacthel Field against game.
·
walked seven.
·
cottage on Indian Run, said ,
Southern, Federal Hocking, - In the varsity game, C
210 001 103--8 11 1 Saturdsy someone In the past ·
Point Pleasant and Gallipolis CaldweU got two runs in their M
210 110 001~ 11 I three weeks stole from It a
tn succession beginning on first at bats when they
Braden (WP) and Snyder. 26" power skill saw, a 20"
Wednesday.
bunched three walks, a slngle Eberabach, Triplett {2, LP), power mower, 6 gal. boat
Of the five opponents and double. But the hosts Browning and Becker, ga.Olfue tank, 7 gal. gaaollne
can, Y-t" socket set, a minnow
scheduled Ibis week the White came roaring back to tie it Johnson (3) .
Falcons have beaten only one ivhen with two. ouiB in the
THE RESERVES dropped bucket, and other small .
bottom of that mnlng, Brian
Items. Tracks still tn the lawn ·
In their previous meeting this Hamilton singled and Greg their first contest of the suggest the theft occurred ·
year and that would be todays Smith followed It with his season as · they went ten Aprtl 28.
second homer of the season, a frames before bowing 7-6.
opponent Hannan.
Jbn Suttle, Rt. 1, Long
Tbe Wabama nine downed 337 foot shot over the left field Both teams went into the Bottom, reported to Meigs
the WUdcaiB by a 17· "·margin fence.
game undefeated.
County Sheriff James J.
in their first confrontation but
Caldwell got one more in
Meigs was down by four Proffitt that he had stolen .
lost to Southern (4-9), Pt. the second, but again Meigs · going into the bottom of the from his bern 1aat Monday ·
Pleasant (3-4) and Gallipolis came back to tie it when seventh, but raUied to tie it to Apr1125, a trailer hitch, Sears :
(1-2) . The first game with Crenson singled and Dale send it through ten. CaldweU battery charger, and 8 to 10
Federal Hocking was washed Browning and Mike Triplett actuaUy won It on an error rolls of tape.
out so thjs will mark the first dld the same. Meigs took a 5-3 when with two outs and a
Dana Covert, RD Pomeroy
tbne this year lhe two schools lead by the end of the fifth by runner ~n first, the Meigs (Highland Church Rd.)
have me't.
picking up single runs in the t:lght fielder tried to mak~ a reported Sunday that in the
In Saturday's game at fourth and fifth Innings, but fine catch on a fly baD, ut last couple of days he bad had ·
Duval Ken Riggs banged out the visitors did the_same in fell and dropped It and let the 18 hens stolen and Roger .
·
.
the sixth and seventh to take runner score. BU!y Elkins
four consecullve hits, In· lhe game Into extra innings. . took the loss f~r Meigs and Jeffers, Rt. 2, Pomeroy, tbat
eluding a do~ble and a home
After both teams failed to Greg Becker did the catching a CB radio was stolen off his
vehicle.
run to lead his team to a IU score in the eighth, Caldwell chores.
AGREE TO TALK
win.
. , got three runs in tbe ninth ~n
Meigs' varsity goes. to
PARIS
(UPI) -The United
. Wahama collected 15 safetie. iour straight singles. Meigs GaUipo!ls tonight, and on
States
and
Vietnam have
1n the
slugfest With Tbn came back with one in their Thursday the . Regional
Sayre, Tbn Thompson; Mark half, but the raUy fell abort. Champs travel to Belpre for agreed to begin negotiations
Smllh, and Mike Goldsberry
Ebersbach, :I'rlplett, and the opening round of the Tuesday In Paris on a
legging out two base knocks Browning combined to fan Sectional . Tournament. possible normalization of
apiece in addition to Rlgg's eight and walk six, and , Tuesday they host Athens. relations, lhe U..S. Embassy ·
said today.
fow'.
Duke Smith, Jay Layne and
Kurtis Sayre chipped in with
one ~e hit apiece for ~e
Mason Countlans.
The win went to Mike ,
Goldsberry who.s e record
soared to 4-2 on lhe year. The
senior. lefthander hl!s lost to
Point
Pleasant,
and
Parkersburg while defeating
Meigs, Eastern, Buffalo (P)
and Duval. The loss went , to
Bailey of Duval.
Following this weeks
regular season .games Coach
Gordon Spencer's crew will
try and defend lhelr Region
Four Section Four title as
:!t!Ciional tourney play opens
next Monday afternoon.
The gtimes are slated for
Wahama's Bacthel Field and
as of today bas a five team
field. Op Monday afternoon
May 9 Hannan takes on Haria
at 3:30 with Wabama meeting
Buffalo Immediately afterwards.
Winfield takes on the Hannan·Harta winner on Tuesday
at4:00with lhe winner moving
on into Thursday's sectional
championship against the
survivor of the Wahama·
Buffalo clash. The sectional
finals is slated to begin at 5:00
p.m.
DRIVER CITED
Pomeroy police repotted
medium damage to two
vehicles and charges filed
against roe driver in an
accident ro Lincoln Hill Road
In our delic ately leminine nvl1&gt;nl
at 9:52p.m. Sunday : .A. car
c oat a nd gown set, lavishly
driven by Rita Hughes,
b roidered with llowers a nd
Pomeroy, backed into a
edged wi th lace. Shell c oral,
parked vehicle owned by
Raymrod Baity, . Pomeroy.
lurq voise, bvttermi lk or mi ni.
The driver was arrested ro
Shift gown Sizes: S-M-L
charges· of leaving the scene
$5.50,
X-XX$7 .00 . Zip front
of an acciderll and driving
coat-Sizes: S-M- L$9.00
said.
X-XXX$10.00

~@j~ ll'FIJ'~

• SAVES nME

••

1!ARBARA KNIGHT

Lady attorney
·p racticing law ·
Meigs County's first lady
lawyer has hung out her
shingle beside that of her
husband, Charles Knight ;
who Is associated with lhe
Bernard Fultz and Charles
Knight law firm in Pomeroy.
She is Barbara Knight,
daughter of Irene Steykal of
Holiday, Fla., and was hom
and raised in Chagrin FaDs, a
suburb of Cleveland.
Barbara was notified
Wednesday she had passed
the state bar examination. Of
the 450 people who took the
exam 79 percent passed.
She became interested in
law in under graduate school:
"Not only could I ·do law
work, but wanted to do it. I
don't like to see people
pushed around and an attorney can protect people."
Barbara graduated from
Orange High School ·in
Chagrin Fa Us. She graduated
from Ohio University in 1969
with a degree in Com-

munications. Following
graduation she went to work
for Ohio Bell System where
abe worked as an analyst in
the coin department, She was ·
a business supervisor when
abe left Ohio Bell after five
ryears to attend capital Law
School where she received
her Juris Doctorate in
January of this year.
While attending college she
was active In the Women's
Law Associatlo.n and testified
before Senate Judiciary
Commitlee to revise certain
civil laws, particularly rape
laws. She was a delegate to
. the
Women's
Law
Association National Convention in 1976 arid has done
research for rro Se divorce.
Barbara and Charles
Knight were married Feb. 21,
1970. Charles is the son of
Howard and Eleanor Knight,
Chester. The couple resides
in Chester ..

i::;:::::;:;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;;~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:~l

~~News.

• .zn Brzefs\j

By Uolted PresslntetnaUoual
THE HEAVY FROST THAT COVERED MOST OF OHIO
·last week damaged about 50 per cent of lhe state's fruit crop,
C. William Swank, executive vice president of lhe Ohio Farm
Bureau Federation said Monday.
"We have about 50 per cent damages throughout the
state," said Swank. ~'We had a lot of warm weather in March
and April, warmer than usual. 11There is usually a one week
period when buds are very tender," Swank said. "That frost
must have been during that period."
.
"It looks like the grape crop along lhe lake suffered 50 per
cent damage or more," ·said Swank. "It got dawn to 22 or 24
degrees up lhere."
PARIS - THE UNITED STATES AND VIETNAM sat
down at the bargaining table today to discuss the
establishment of ~ormal relations and lheir hope of ending a
loog period of bitter war and diplomatic estrangement.
The talks, abned at breaking a deadlock over U.S. aid and
missing Americans, began on time in the Vietnamese
mil&gt;sion's modern new building in the fashionable Auteuil
residential section of western Paris. One member of the
Vielnamese delegation also was a member of Hanoi 's
commission on missing Americans. Outside, Edmund Mills of
Bakersfield, Calif., an ,American whose son is missing tn .
Vielnam, kept vigil.
WASHINGTON - AN EXPERIMENTAL, FIST-SIZED
blood pump has proved its ability \o buy time for patients
dying of cardiac failure following open heart su~gery,
according to a govenunenl advisory conunittee ..The pump has
been implanted in 13 persons so far, in Houston and Boston,
and, although aU died eventuaUy, major circulatory
bnprovement was observed in three persons for six to eight
days. No complicatlona were attributed Ill lhe pwnp.
The three persons helped cby the pump died up to a week
later of kidney failure or brain dainage resulting from shock
(Continued on page 12)

By Sarab Carsey
CLIFTON, W. Va. - The
incorporation of this Bend
area vlUage as a way to fighl
a proposed coal tipple · was
unanimously decided Monday evening during a meeting
of concerned residents.
The tipple, proposed by
Mason 's William Zuspan,
would be located towards the
soulhern end of the town next
to the river. Residents here
believe it would cause heavy
truck traffic, stripping of
adjacent hillsides for coal,
and dust . Zuspan is currently
awaiting a decision by tbe U.
S. Army Corps of Engineers
on permission to build the
tipple. Efforts have begun to
block construction
by
residents tn the Clifton and
Middleport areas. Both towns

would be directly affected by village police force.
the tipple.
Elmer stressed thai no
Gatbering near the town lndlvuduals would be taxed.
monwnent, residents were Under West Virginia laws, aU
presented a plan of action to Clifton needs to Incorporate is
be used If the Corps of a petition signed by 30 per·
Engineers
decides
In cent of the property owners
Zuspan's favor by Roy and a four-person committee
Elmer, also a Clifton to determine the t~wn's laws.
resident.
• This committee, · wilh the
Elmer said Clifton Is · residents ' support could
eligible for inco rporation place taxes on any industry it
under the laws of Wesl desires and set up a pollee
Virginia, · and with In- force lo regulate traffic
corporation, could establish speeds and load limits within
zoning laws which prohibll the corpciration lbnitB. It can
the construction of Industry also establish town houn·
in certain areas. In addition, daries, laws on dust, and lhe
if Incorporation becomes general appearance of
effective after the tipple has businesses.
AU revenue from taxes and
already been constructed, the
town could benefit from lhe fines would go Into the town
situation
with revenue treasury to be used for street
created from taxes and a lights, paved roads and other

at

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

- Provides the leadership
for community · service ac·
tivjties.
Cooperates
with
other organizations, agen cies, churches and schools.
- Serves the intereSts of
local membership.
- Has a program of continuing educaton as a family
organization.
- Offers membership to
men, women ami children of
all ages, with programs and
activities for each.
- Develops and recognizes
individual abilities a.nd
leadership.
- Creates full voice and
vote at age H, and has a
Junior Grange for lhose aged
5 through 14.
As
a ·
Fraternal
organization it:
- Promotes pa\rlotlc· and
civic activities.
- Provides social and
recreational feUowship.
- Fosters brotherhood in
an atmosphere of mutual
concern. Farmers and nonfanners can wor.k together
')

committee were Elmer,
Roscoe Edwards, Lewis
Peters and Will iam Van
Meter.

enttne
TUESDAY, MAY 3, 1977

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

$5.auto tag tax wins
approval in Pomeroy
Recognizing that a town
canriot provide services Its
people expect on a ten-yearold budget, Pomeroy Council
approved the ~ permissive
license tax on all vehiCles in
Pomeroy Monday night In a
regullir meeting.
Council clarified wording of
the legislation to mean
revenues used for street.
cleaning because the or·
dlnance, as stated; is for
"mainteriance of streets."
According to soliCitor Fred
Crow.maiptenance'' means
0
cleaning. 11 " ..
Crow suggested that
· . counCil pass the ordinance
and he would prepare a
resolution that would state
lhat the revenue .would be
used for street cleaning, .
Dr. Harold Brown, coun·
cilman, said the resolution
should read for street
U'!TLEST RIDER - Shannon Spaun, two year old
cleaning for an Indefinite
son of Mr. and Mrs. Bill Spaun, Pomeroy, was lhe
period, and council agreed.
youngest person Ill ride in lhe 25 mile Hike Bike Saturday .
There are 26 miles of
ShaMan filled the back sear _while his mother did the
streets in the village. It was
pedaling.
pointed out that cleaning
could be done on the 26 miles
very weU, if gone over once a
month. US 33 from Kerr's
Run to the bridge is state
maintained. Brown added,
" We haven't had clean
streets and won't have unlit
we have ·the money."
Harry Davis, councilman,
The Executive Committee negotiations should be
said Main St. is being cleaned
of the Gallla County Local complete&lt;! by May 17.
Bahr said a general which wiU be charged to the
Teachers'
Association
Monday night voted to extend meeting for members and state. It was suggested that
the time limit an additional15 non-members will be held the payroll should be marked as
days to complete negotiations following evening May 18 at 4 to what should be charged to
with the Gallia County Local p.m. at the GaUia County lhe state an.d what the village
Junior Fairgrounds. Purpose should pay.
Board of Education.
Brown said, "We can't rWl
According to Association of that session will be to elect
President Bill Bahr the 60- officers and discuss progress a city the way citi2ens expect
it to be r~n on a 10-year-old
day time period allowed of ne!(otialions.
The E xeculive Committee budget."
Brown
even
under the board-teacher
contract expired April 29. Is composed of · represen· suggested a miUage increase
With
the
extension. tatives from each building in be considered to pay exthe county school system. .
penses.
Attending Monday's
Councilma.n Phil Glohokar
session were Bahr, Shirley commented that perhaps a
Albright Doss, Roberta tax should he levied slmilar
Zdepskl, Marilyn Meadows, · to a sales tax, rather than the
A. J . Owens, Dottle Craig, permisslve tax. However,
for the good of all . All are Dallie Forgey, Marjorie this issue was not pursued.
, welcome in the Grange .
Payne, Howard Neekamp,
Meeting with co.uncil were
The Grange is the oldest Mary Lanier, Sherry Fisher, the cemetery trustees, Trell
farm organization in the Sue Ruff and Josie Bapst.
Schoenleb, Aaron Kelton aod
country. It was organized
The
association first Jack SeidenabeL They
December 4, 1867. It is non- requested negotiations begin reported that It Is difficult to
partisan and non-sectarian. for 1977 in February. The keep the cemetery in the
National
Grange current teacher • board condition lhat most residents
The
maintains a headqu arters conlract expires June 30.
want it with the revenue that
and owns its 'awn building in
Members of the teachers' is available. They added
team
are persons who pay for care of
Washington , D. C. to insu re negotiating
effective legislation.
Neekamp, Holzer Gregory
(Continued on page 12)
Food for thought - You and A. J. Owens. Observers
may not be a farmer but are Clay Baker, Unda
"Farming is important to Forsha and Shirley Ooss.
every man, woman and child Board
negotiators lare
in the world."
· William Carter, James! V.
For more information on Blevins and Supt. Tom
The Meigs County REACT
the Grange during or after Halrst.o n.
f
Team
is thanking persons
Grange Week , call on the
The
teachers
have
who
helped
make Saturday's
following Grange Masters: presented the buard a lli!t of
hike
bike
one
of safety.
Ray Midk iff, Langsvi lle ; 25-plus items. The hoard has
Those handling the safety
Pam Holcomb, Rt. 3 Albany; cownun_tered with a list 01·. its . fetures of the event were the
Norman Will, Rt. 1 Rutland; 0
Meigs County Sheriff's
Stanford Stockton, Hemlock
Department, Pomeroy and
TAG DAY SET
Grove ; Bertha CriP!Ien, Rt . I
Albany; Fred Goeglein, Rt. 2
The' Rutland Base~all Middleport .Police DepartPomeroy; Earl Cross, Rt. 3 League will hold lag \lay, ments, the R. C, Bottling Co.,
Racine ; Herbert Shields, Rt. Saturday, May7. All coaches, Quality Print Shop, th e
2 Racine, or State Grange parents and children are to Fabric Shop, Meigs County
Deputy MendaiJordan, Rt. 3, meet at the Rutland High Highway Garage, Ben-Tom
Corp.; The Ohio State Patrol
School gyn\ at 8:30a.m.
Albany.

Ga11ia teaehers extend
time for negotiations

Grange services recognized
Local Grange leaders
Monday opened a week of
activities expected to In troduce lhe public to their 110
year-old faJ1lily -orlented
farm organization lhat has
had a vital role In building
what today is known in
natiroal politics as "the farm
bloc."
The Grange In its early
years brought farmers
together for the first time to
fight for their interests at
state and federal levels. This
objective has never been
Changed.
During this Grange Week ·
America will be asked to
recognize that the Grang,e Is
an agricultural orgaruzation :
- Provides a spokesman
for agriculture and rural
America.
_ Serves as a legislative
force in State and National
capitals.
_ Strives to bnprove the
economic well-being . of
farmers and rural people.
As
a
community
or~anizatlon lt:

as soon as possible, Elmer
said. The complete process
takes approximately 90 days.
Named to the four person

•

•

e
VOL. XXVIII NO. 13

village Improvements. No
monies would be used for
salaries because work would
be volunteer, according to
statements made at the
meeting.
Eimer told the group it
must act as if Zuspan will be
aUowed to build the tipple. As
an incorporated town, rather
than Individuals, residents
have a better opportunity of
blocking the construction
wilh zoning laws, he said.
Dr. Ray Pickens, Pomeroy,
a native of Clifton, urged
residents to ·incorporate.
According to Dr. Pickens and
Elmer, the town will benefit
no matter the outceme. "We
can write laws any way you
(the residents) want," said
Elmer.
Petitions will be circulated

.

.

.

.

SHERR! SlSSON AND TODD ADAMS are among the Syracuse Elementary students
who will be cyclin' for Cystic Fibrosis Saturday thro48h the viUage. For each one who
collects at least $25 for the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation's program of research and care, a tabirt, such as one shown here by Kathy Pickens, will be awarded.

Two injured on cycle
The driver and a passenger
of a motorcycle were injured
in an accident at 7: 10 p.m.
Monday on SR 7, five tenths.
of a mile north of SR 248 in
Meigs County.
The Gallla - Meigs Post
State Highway Patrol said .
the rear lire blew out on a
motorcycle driven by Roger
D. Coates, 23, Rt. 1, Minersville, causing him to lose .
control and overturn. Coates
and a passenger, Jane A.
Coates, 19, Rt. l, Middleport,
were taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital by a
·sEOEMS ambulance for
treatment of injuries. ·
MaryS. Smith, 23, Bidwell,
suffered minor injuries in an
accident at 3 p.m. Monday on
SR 160, seven tenths of a mile

A final accident occurred at
west of Milepost 1.
The patrol said Smith 3:30p.m. four lenths of a mile
1t.:ontinued on page 12)
swerved to miss a dog then
lost control of her ca r. The
vehicle ran off the roadway
striking a road sign, guardrail and then rolled over.
There
wa s
moderate
damage.
A deer was killed in an
Sheriff James J. Proffitt
accident at 5:15 p.m . on SR
said
today the breaking and
160, seven tenths of a mile
enterin
g of
Salisbury
east of milepost I . The animal
ran into the path of a car Elementary School on April
operated by Jerry L. Molnar, 17 has been solved with the
arrest of an 18-year-old
34, Rt. 3, GaUipoli.s.
Another deer acoident Middleport man and a 11&gt;occurred on SR 7, four tenths . year-old Rt . 3 Pomeroy
of a mile south of SR 124 juvenile.
Recovered were two
where the. animal ran into the
calculators
and a cassette
palh of a car operated by
recorder.
Arrested was
Mark Richrriond, 18, Rt. I,
David
ScottRidgway, 18,
Middleport .
Middleport, who is confined
in county jail pending his
hearing Friday in County
Court . The juvenile was
released into custody of his
-"-parents pending a hearing in
George Folmer, Jr. , No. 8; juvenile court.
' Sherlf!ProHittsaidEugene
Jeff Webster No. 9; Gary
Hysell No. 10; Terry Pickens Dunn, 32, Rt . 1, Vinton, has
No. 11 ; V. D. Edwards base been arrested and charged
station No. 14; Nalhan Biggs with possession of a conNo . 15 ; Bob Bowles No. 16 ; t r 0 11 e d s ub s tan ce
Earl Mossman No. 17 ; Joe
(marijuana) in an amount
Christy No. 29; Walter Haggy less than 100 grams. He was
No. 20; Paul Pierce No. 12;
jaUed Monday at 4:35 a.m.
Ot'a Watkins No. 22.
and .was released at 11 :10
. The REACT team has two
a.m. after posting bopd. He is
monitoring channels, II as a
scheduled for a hearing
working channel and 9 for . Friday May 6, in the Meigs
taking road emergency calls.
County Col'.rt.

Two held in
B&amp;E of school
on April 17th

'Good work' says REACT

(

Post '!I; Jaymar Coal Co.,
Ohio · State
Highway
Department; Rob Eason,
Larry Pickens, Barbara Van
Meter, R.N., WMPO , and the
C.B.er on Channel 11 for
Standing by .
Guy D. Hysell, president of
REACT . thanks
team
members of their help at the
stations indicated including
Jerry Colmer No.3; Franklin
H. Casto No . 2; Chuck Blake
No. S, Donald Hysell No. 6;

'

., .

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