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                  <text>12 - The Dally Sent mel, Middleport-Poll)eroy, 0., ThW'sday, May

Rio classes to be held
in Maine this summer

In both classes, students
will have a chance to com•
plete and show finished
photographs and sketches.
Participants will leave the
campus July 25 by van and
return Aug. 6. Lodging will be
in tents at the Seal Harbor
campground. Total cost will .
be $200, not including meals
cnro ute.

Registration will be held
July 15 and students must
register lor both classes in
order to participate in the
trip. Since special equipment
will be required , those interested should contact either
instructor at RGC-CC for
more information (phone 2455353) .

Ath ens Livestock
Sales Inc.
Aprll30
Slaughter Steers, 31- 37.50;
Ieeder steers ( 4IJO.BOO ) choice
39.25 - 45 . good 26.50 - 39.25;
slaughter heifers, 28 - 35,
feeder heifers (400-700
lbs.) choice 28.25 - 33.50 good
22. - 28.20; slaughter bulls
(over 10000 lbs ) 31.20- 35.40 ;
feeder bulls (4IJO.BOO lbs.
choice 38.50 - 43.25 good 28. 38.50.
Slaughter cows : Utility
25.25 - 28.20; canner-cutter
22.00 - 25.10; veals (choiceprinoe ) 45.-65.25.
Ho~s No. 1 Barrow &amp;
Gilts, 200-230 lbs. 37.-37.30;
sows 30. - 35.; pigs (by the
head 16.·21? -, boars 22.50 23.70.

BOWLING
Pomeroy Bowling Lanes
Morning Glories
April 26, 1977

Team
Pts.
Newell Su11oco
158
G. &amp; J . Auto Part s
146
Sears
lDS
Roa ch's Gun Shop
·104
Karr &amp; Van Zand l
94
N62
• ~
High ind. game - Lenora
M cKnight 178; Jo Ann Ward
177 .
High ind . 3-games - Vicky
Gillilan 436; Mildred · Karr

427 .
High team gam e -

Karr &amp;
Van Zandt 818.
High team 3-game .~ G. &amp;
J. Au t o Parts 2297 .

MASON DRIVE-IN

Rf,SCUE SQUADS
COLUMBUS (UP! ) ---, The
Ohio Senate passed- and returned to the House
Wednesday a blll exempting
volunteer rescue vehicles
from
motor
vehicle
registration requirements.
The exemption would be
extended to a bout 250 such
vehicles in Ohio if the House
agrees to a minor Senate
amendment.

Fri., Sat., Sun.
May 6-7-8

DIRTY MARY
CRAZY LARRY- PG
PLUS

VANISHING POINT
Newman,

Dean

Jagger, Cleavon Little.

By HELEN THOMAS
UPIWhlleHo..e
C&lt;&gt;r...,poadellt
NEWCASTLE· UPON-TYNE, England (UP!) - A broadly
grinning Prestdent Carter, making his first foreign trip u
chief of state, visited the ancestral home of George
Washington Friday and was greeted by shouts from thousands

MOTHER'S DAY .GIFTS
OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT TIL 8

senses.

Market Report

~rrr

FRIDAY AND SATURDAY SALE

Art instru&lt;tcr, Lark
Napier, Jr., will teach the
sketching course designed to
give students a working
knowledge of the teehnical
problems associated with
coastal sketching as well as
develop their aesth etic

RIO GRANDE - The
rugged coast or 111aine is the
destination lor 20 Rio Grande
C&lt;&gt;llege-Community College
(RGC-CC) students who will
participate in photography
and sketching classes this
sununer. The two classes, to
be held at Seal Harbor, Me.,
will_be open to any resident ol
Meigs, 'Ja ckson, Vinton or
Gallia Counlies .
11
BBsi c Experimental
Photogr aph y" and " Environmental Sketching" are
the classes to be ollered, and
each carri es three hour.s of
college credit.
According to Leo C. Hill,
RGC-CC .instructor, the
photography cou rse will
enable students to become
acquainted with the aesthetic
and
photographic
possibilities of the Maine
costal region . Participants
will experience the pictorial
opportunities of travel
photography .

Carter cheered at Washington's ancestral home

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

Mother's Day Sale!

of wellwishers of "Hit Jimmy !" and " Hey, Jinuny !"

Carter, flashy in a new blue cashmere and wool suit, ·shook

Mother 's Day Sale!

Women's Sleepwear

Reg. '9.00 ............. Sale 17.69
Reg. '11.00 ........... . Sale '9.39
Reg. '14.00..... ...... Sale '11.89
Reg. '18.00 ........... Sale '15.29
Mother's Day Sale!

IRONSTONE 20 PIECE
DINNER WARE SETS

WOMEN'S
HANDBAGS

Includes a large group of short
robes, wa Itz gowns , and
babydolls.

Reg. '8.00. ........ ..... Sale '6.79

Mother's Day Sale!

4 dinner plates 10" , 4 salad plates 7'1 2", 4
cups, 4 saucers. 4 soup-cerals.

l·ncl udes all of our
women 's spring and
summ er handbags, vi nyls
and straws.

'12.95 White Swi~ Pattem .............. 'l0.29

'7.00 HANDBAGS ....................... SALE '5.50
'12.00 HANDBAGS .. ............ ........ SALE '9.50
'16.00 HANOBAGS .. .................. SALE '12.50

Mother's Day Sale!

GIVE HER
ANEW
TABLE COVER

Women's"'
Umbrellas

8
TRACK
TAPES
You ' ll please her with her favorite

$4.00 Umbrella .... , .. ........... ... Sale 53.39
SS.OO Umbrella .. , .. ........... ..... , ·sate $4 ,39
$6.00 Umbrella ....................... Sale $4.99
$7 .oo Umbrella ....................... Sale $5,79

sale prices
weekend on our entire
stock of tab le ·c overs, vi nyl
coated cover s. and cloth ,
ovals. oblongs rectangular
size. and rounds . Home
Furnishings Depar t ment,
1st Floor .

SALE PRICES

save up to 96%
oftbefeeon
Travelers Checks.

- Polyester and cotton oreno&gt;
- Long and short sleeves,
sleeve less ·
- Sizes 32 to 46
Reg . $8.00 Blouse
Sale $6.49
Reg. $9.00 Blouse
Si!,le $7 .29
Reg . $10 ..00 Blouse .. ... Sale $8 . .09
Reg . $11.00 Blouse ...... Sale $8.89

'189:95 RCA Scanner...................... '169.95 ·
8 crystal (crystals extra)

YOU CAN HELP
Ways you can help your
lotal law enforcement

First_quality Cannon towels in beautiful new
colors that mix -and match, solids and
pattern s, limited quaritit~ -

BRUCE COTTRILL

Cottrill in national welding
$2.29 Bath Tawel.. .............. :. Sale 1.88
,'1.69 Matching Hand Towel .... Sale 11.29
11.09 Matching Wash Cloth ........ ~ ......89'

SALE PRICES
Mother's Day
Clearance Sale

$5,000

• '"
$50.00

2,500

25.00

2.00

92o/o

1,000

1000

2.00

80%

500

500

2.00

60%

Oll•r

'

.

If \•11( h,ol•' I•• "•lll.tthlloo""lt&gt;\.&lt;1\" .

I or~t

\o "It&gt;!

.,,••

Iilii l tl"\1 ._.,111&lt;&gt;11,11 C'111 l r.Lido•l'&gt;
(he·,· ~' n• '" 111 \1.01 · ,o n, I 'J' 1·

\kc.nt\\."

A Home Bank
For
Me';gs County
People

RACINE .
HOME NATIONAL

BANK
RACINE

Mechanic Street
A ·gift Mom will use
years! Select chal
rockers,

chaise

52 .00 Scarfs ............. : ••••••••••••• Sale 51 .79
52 .50 Scarfs .................... ....... Sale $1 .99
$3.00 Scarfs .......................... Sale 52.39
53.50 Scarfs .......................... Sale $2 .79

n~und

un:-brellas.

SAVE UP TO •3300
Mother's Day Sale!

ICED TEA GLASSES

CHAIR SALE

4glasses in a set made by Libby and Anchor
Hocking , fine selection of patterns an~
colors.
·

Buy mom a chair she'll
really appreciate.

2.25 to 12.44 SETS ........ SALE '1.99 set
'2J9 to s3.20 SETS ........ SALE s2.69 set
13.46 and 53.50 SETS ....... SALE 12.99 set

·5

.......,..F......

IN

MEROY

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

FRIDAY, MAY 6, 1977

Bruce CQttrill, son of Mr ,. and Mrs. Don Cottrill, Syracuse,

won the ftrst place gold medal in the Ohio VICA (Vocational

Industrial Clubs of America) Skill Olympics in mig and tig
welding held in Columbus on April 22 and 23. Bruce will
. represent Ohio in mig and tig welding in natlonal .competition
in Cincinnati on June 22 through 24.
Bruce is the lirst student ol Uoe Meigs Local School District's
Vocational Industrial Clubs ol America to receive the first
place gold medal on the state level and compete in the National
Olympics.
.
'
Bruce is a tuition student from Southern Local High School
in Racine.

re-examine" his views in tile wake of Richard Nixon 's

statements to David Frost, it was reported Thursday.
Dean said he has sent telegrams to schools in Georgia and
Olllowhere he was to speak this week and next week, saying be
cannot keep the engagements, said a report by KNXT -TV
reporter Bill stout. Stout said Dean, who has refused to talk to
reporters about the Nixon-Frost interviews, broke his silence
only "to read me the text of \he wire he sent out."

with an orderly basis for
allocating the county 's
linoited financial resources in
a way that best satisfies the
many important needs lor
county capital inoprovements .
over the pe.riod 1978 to 1982.
The analysis determined
that 20 of the 62 potential
projects could be ac·
complished possibly by Meigs
C&lt;&gt;unty fqnds. These 20 high
proprity projects are listed
below:
Buy 3 new, 25-cubic yard,
back-loading trash collection
trucks.
Buy a doclinoent copier for
the County Recorder's Office. ·
Remodel 2,000 square feet
of court-related offices in the
C&lt;&gt;urthouse.
Resurface CR 46 in Olive
and Orange Twps. from SR
248 NW to SR 7. ·
. Resurface CR 1 in
Columbua Twp. from SR 143
north_to Athens County.
Improve the &lt;;R 3-0ld SR 7
intersection west to Mid- ·
dlei&gt;Qrt.
Replace the O~den Run-TR

agencies in case of theft,
suggested by Sberlff Jame!
J: PROFFm:
- Keep an Inventory of
aU your property so you
wlll know at a glance If
something Is mlsslog and
be able to report It im· ·
mediately, giving an accurate 'd escription.
~: Always mark your
By SARA FRITZ
possesoions· wltb an
WASHINGTON (UP! )
ldeoUiylog mark, license
The nation's unemployment
number, or your ooclal
rate declined to 7 per cent in
~ecurUy number.
April, the lowest level since
the early days of the
;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::;:;:;;;:;:;:;:;.
recession 29 months ago, the
Labor Department reported
today.
A total 90 million persons
were employed in April - a
milestone in U. S. economic
history.
Unemployment leU 0.3 per
cent
from March to establish
Bill Scott Patton, Loveland ,
a
new
post-recession low. The
Ohio was released Thursday
April
rate was a full 2 per
and Billy Ray Murr~y.
cent
below
the recession peak
Delaware, Ohio, today from
of
9
per
cent
set in May, 197o.
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Co111ing one day after
following injuries Tuesday
when Murray fell off a poWer gloomy reports of inflation in
April, the employment data
pole near Keno.
Employes ol the Hoossier was welcome news for
C&lt;&gt;nstruction Co., Columbus, Americans . President
under contract to the Carter's economic advisfrs
C&lt;&gt;lumbus and Southern Ohio expect· his new stimulus
Electric C&lt;&gt;., the men were package will hasten the slow
repairing power transmission decline in unemployment.
Some 6.7 million persons
.lines when Murray leU,
landing on Patton. The men were unemployed during
were removed to the hospital April, reflecting a one-month
by the Racine E-R squad decrease of 330,000 . The
which had reported . Wed- decline occurred prinoarily
nesday the " run" to Keno among persons who lost their
was to the site or an last job, many of them
recalled from layoff.
automobile accident.

25 bridge in Columbia TwP.
SW of Dyesville.
Resurface CR 28 in Racine
and Chester Twp. from SR
248 south to Racine.
Remodel the "Old" Jury
Room in ihe Courthouse.
Remodel non-Court olfices
on the third floor of the Court-

house.

Resurface CR 28 in Letart
and Sutton Twps. Irom SR 338
north to SR 124.
Resurface CR I in Salem
Twp. from SR 124 south to SR
325.
Replace the Wolf Run-&lt;:R
33 bridge in Sutton Twp. north
of Racine.
Buy 2, 50-acre sanitary
landfill sites to serve east
and west Meigs County.
Resurface CR 28 in Chester
arid Orange Twps. from SR
248 north to SR 7.
·
Update the County Plat
Books and provide property
records equipment.Remodel the Courthouse
2nd
Floor
(Auditor,
Treasurer, Commissioners,
etc.)
·
'•··

Resurface CR 30 in Sutton
Twp. from SR 7 east to TR
125.
Resurface CR 38 and build
a connector road to the SR
124-SR 7 Intersection.
Resurface CR 18 in Bedford
and Scipio Twps. from US 33
west to SR 143.
The Meigs C&lt;&gt;unty Regional
Planning Commission
(MCRPC) reeently reeeived
this prelinotnary report entitled
CAPITAL
IMPROVEMENTS
PRIORITIES from the Columbus consulting finn of
~ames
M.
Jennings
Associates Company.
Any comment to be made
on this preliminary report
must be reeeived by Jennings
Associates (P, 0 . Box 5762,
C&lt;&gt;lumbus, Ohio 43221) by
May 13.
A copy of this report is
available for public viewing
dufing regular business
hours at the CETA Office on
the third floor or the C&lt;&gt;urthouse.

Unemployment at 7%
-

Workers

recovered

CINCINNATI - STRIKING CINCINNATI teachers and
members of the city school board, meeting for !be first time in
six days, talked for several hours Thursday without reaching
agreement on il new contract.
The negotiation session was recessed about midnight and'
another session was ~t lor today. Although the contract talks
SY-RACUsE-::.: ~eason
were conducted by federal mediator John Wagner behind
closed doors, Cincinnati Federation of Teachers tresaW'er tickets for the new Junior
Kathl Leach said "the atmosphere should be conducive fo~ a Olympic-sized Syracuse
Municipal Swimming Pool
settlement" of the Jlklay strike over pay raise demands.
will go on sale this Saturday,
WASffiNGTON - MORE THAN 2.7 MilLION vehicles Mayor Herman London told
made by Volkswagen, General Motors and Ford are being village · council Thursday
investigated lor safety defects by the Transportation night.
The mayor invited the
Department. The department annowJCed the beginning of the
separate investigations Thursday. The GM inquiry involves public to purchase the season
the power brake boosters on 2.2 million Chevrolets, Pontiacs, passes for the pool which is to
open on Memorial Day.
Oldsmoblles, Buicks, Cadillacs and GMC trucks.
Price of the tickets are $20
The Ford inquiry resulted Irom three reports of the plastic
instrW'flent panel shattering and leaving sharp edges "which per individual ; $30 for a
could lacerate and puncture vehicle occupants." Involved are family of two; $33 for a
more than 192,000 of the 197:i-77 Ford Econoline and Club family of three; $36 for a
Wagons without instrwnent panel padding. The Volkswagen lamUy ol four' $39 for a
investigation, covering 370,200 vehicles equipped with similar· family or live ; . $42
family!
nl
sevthrottle control systems, Is based on owner complaints of lor
en. The $45 figure Is a
design weakness that leads to broken throttle cables .
maxinoum charge Tor family
DAMASCUS, SYRIA~ ONLY DAYS BEFORE meeting passes.
Village officials will have
President Carter, Syrian President Hafez Assad says he is
willing to discuss "demilitarized zones" between Israel and the tickets for . sale in the
Municipal Building council
her neighbors, ap inoportant Arab concession.
"If a Middle East peace agreement requires the chambers between 2 and 6
errtablisluoent of demllitarized zones, we agree to discuss this p.m. each Saturday during
issue, provided that the zones are narrow aoo on both sides of . May .
.
the~border , " Assad to1d reporters after meeting Austrian
· Beginning on May 30, the
a.Anchellor Bruno· Kreisky Thursday.
.i

.

-Large selection of
rockers. recliners, wail -a-'
ways and straight chairs.
-Cloth or vinyl covers.

SAVE UP TO V

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

tickets can be obtained at !lie
pool.
Persons may mail the
appropriate remittance by
cheek made out to the Village
ol Syracuse. Names of . persons lor which the passes are
being purchased must also be
listed.
Dedication ol the pool will
be held on July 4, with ribbon
cutting ceremonies. Village
officials inspected the pool
Monday night prior to the
meeting.
In order business council
approved the first reading of
an ordinance fixing and
regulating the price that may
be charged by Syracuse
Home Utilities Co. for natural
gas to the village of Syracuse
and its inhab!tants,.from and
after July 1 lor.a period of two
years. These are:
For the first 1,000 cubic lee!
used through each meter
each month, the sum of $5.25
(present $4) ; for the next
99,000 cubic reel ustd through

Republic Steel raising
two product line prices
CLEVELAND (UP!) - Republic Steel Corp. announced
today it was increasing prices of two major product lines
effective May 15 as a response to rapidly ina-easing costs.
The price of hot rolled and cold finished carbon and
alloy bars is being increased by an average of 6.8 per cent,
and flat rolled products, including hot and cold rolled
carbon sheets, plate and high strength low alloy sheets, by
an average or 8.8per cimt, the company said.
The increases, applied to industry shipments of the
afleeted ptoducts, would increase the wholesale price
index by less than two~nths of one per cent, the company
estimated.
Presldentaoo chief exeeut\ve officer W. J. DeLancey
said "Rapidly rising costs make an increase at this tinoe
Imperative . The cost-price relationship of steel bas
deteriorated steadily. ·
"This was particularly apparent in the first quarter of
this year," he added, "when operations, . adversely
affected by winter weather and natural gas shortages,
resulted in a net Joss lor ·the quarter.
"To t.hese increases in costs mll$t now be added the
additional employment costs effective under the recenlly
·negotiated contract wiUo the .United Steelworkers Union,
estimated.at more than 30 per cent over the next three
years, including wage increases on May 1 and in August ·
this year. "

·Nixon credited
for frankness

Not since November, 1974, lcent, aod among constructon
when the nation was plunging workers it went down more
into the depths of the than 2 percentage points to 12
recession, has unemployment per cent - the lowest level in
been as low as 7 per cent. _two and one-half years.
Carter has promised to· The construction industry
reduce it to 4 per cent by 1980. thus marked its lhlrd straight
More than a half·million month . of employment
By HELEN THOMAS
lied to the ·American people
persons found jobs during growth, with 75,000 new jobs
UP! White House
on sotne of Ule statements
April for the second straight added to the payrolls. ·FacCorrespoodellt
that he made .
month. The nation's em· tory employment rose by
LONDON . (UP!)
"! think Nixon has
ployed work force has never 80,000 and the . service President Carter silys he convinced himself that he did
before been as high as 90 industries added 50,000 jobs. doubis the public has been not violate !be law. It was an
million.
The number of long-tenn enlightened by the television interesting diScussion but I
Adult 111en enjoyed most or unemployed ~ 15 weeks or intervievvs
or
former doubt if the American people
the reduction in unem- more - dropped by 100,000 to President Richard Nixon were enlightened by it."
ployment during April. 1.8 million . There also was a even though Nixon has been
Pressed by a reporter on
Joblessness among adult men small reduction in the ' 11rank in saying that lie lied whether he believed Nixon
dropped to 5 per cent, also the number of persons forced to to the American people" had violated the """· Carter
lowest level in 29 months.
accept part-tinoe jobs for during Watergate.
replied, "Well, I don 't know."
Teenage · unemployment ' economic reasons.
Carter made tbe comment
Res ponding to another
ThW'sday en route to the question, the President said
fell a full! per cent to 17.8 per
econo111ic summit in London . he might ask Nixon for advice
'
He told reporters aboard Air when Secretary of State
Force One be watched the Cyrus Vance prepares his
mission said Thursday.
first lo aoo the last 15 trip to China later thia year.
WAS!nNGTON (UP! ) "It might be advantageous
The problems apparently minutes ol Nixon's 90-minute
Electrical defects that could
~ have conversations wiUl
cropped
up
in
the
cof·
interview
with
David
Frost
pose a threat or lire have
was
televised President Nixon,' 1 he said. ''I
prompted the Consumer feemaker's upper colllpart- that
would probably not do it
Product Safety Commission ment which holds randomly Wednesday ·
myself ... talking with him
placed
teflon-&lt;:oated
wires
Asked
what
he
though!,
to recall 3.1 million " Mr.
about
the special relationship
which
&lt;an
come
into
contact
Carter
said,
'
_
'Well,
I
didn't
C&lt;&gt;flee" machines.
.with
China
.
.More than 150 consumer with each other or with hot change my . rrund ._ I think he
complaints involving either surfaces and fuse when the was frank m saymg that he
fire, shock or sparking have melting point or the teflon is ·
been received, the com- surpassed.

Mr. Coffee makers called in

Union bosses will try

Syracuse offers
season swim tickets
,,

lounges,

tables, sprlngbase cha irs,
redwood picnic tables or

MOTHER'S DAY SALE

WOMEN'S
SCARFS
Oblong and square,
solid colors and
patterns, 100 per
cent nylon .

At Warehouse On

OPEN SATURDAY 9:30 TO 5:00P.M.

OHIO

•

MOTHER'S DAY
SALE

SUMMER
FURNITURE

gliders , swings,

eompetition in Cincinnati

By United Press International
LOS ANGELES - JOHN DEAN HAS CANCELED his
college iee!W'e tour because he believes he must "completely

Mother's Day Sale!

Pro-dryer 1200 watts with concentration
nozzle. Iightweight, three heat settings, two
speed settings.

1 hn· ~

\I&lt; &gt;I I'll 1• •II

It~, , I.-I IIIIo\

• 6 Colors
• 32 oz. Premium Vinyl

SPECIAL

SCHICK s2995
WOMEN'S HAIR DRYER

SALE PRICE

hcuo

BEAN BAG·CHAIR

Mother's Day Sale!

. Petite . average , and tall
,,_,.,: sizes. r ibbed control top
··· · . : panty for a smooth
' figure
profile ,
· reinforced toe . good
fashion color selec'fion .

r r,IH"kl'&gt; \ h\'1.·1..,

NEW SHIPMENT

SALE PRICES

•·•n•h 1\1• 11&lt;" !)t;on .1m ••thn 1'· "'"'""

\1\"l!l" I L'( ·"'"( Jll' 0 'II I ,I\ ,I(" •11

,\U ti If lh ~l ~~I

1\_,,,, •n;ol ( .,, '

•42.00

Includes our entire stock of
Timex watches, calendar
watches. electrics. an excellent
selection, boxed ready to give .

MOJUD sl 95
PAN'fY• HOSE

Pll'l I; j~~lloll.", ol oprh "'"l'l""k I

I,,,.

1M&gt; ;1\t.o'&gt;C h • "·'U

96%

$49.95.

Mother's Day Sale!

WRIST WATCHES

Misses, juniors and· half
sizes. This sale includes
all of our women 's
·spring · coals and all
weather coats.

\·, uo ~ 1\1' 1&lt;'11 .111 1&gt;1H ii •··•t&gt;tll r&lt;'fund .11

1, ·" ,.1,., ,

~. llt L' \l,tl \.ok IILJI llh'tn no11
111&lt;! '·"'" ,.,p loo'lto'"., , ,ftlw f&lt;-,·
tht"l'l

\0,

$2.00

Excellen! !one, buiil in FM
and AFC, AC
operated, regular price
antenn~

TIMEX

WOMEN'S
SPRING COATS

-

"'u·u1, ., ,. I '"' ;. ·'' '"n"l c,,,
Ch'''

YOU SAVE

PANASONIC AM/FM TABLE RADIO

Mother's Day Sale!

Mother's Day Sale!

MayfH

Mother's DaY Sale!

1

Save Up To 30.00

..

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&amp;IF

survey of Meigs County oflicials and major community
organizations , including
comments by local residents
who responded to a newspaper invitation to participate.
·
The purpose or this work is
to . provide county officials

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M_ATCHING BLOUSES, JACKETS, .
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Amour~1 a1 ~howmuch)QUSlWe.

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Cannon Bath Towel Ensembles

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L1

County trash collection
trucks, C9un!y' Recorder
copying equipment, interior
Courthouse remodeling, and
the resurfacing of CR 28.
These were winnowed from
a ranking of the 62 capital
inoprovements projects in a

Specia I Mother's Day Sale!

Sizes 7/8 to 17/18

VOL. XXVIII NO. 16

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WOMEN'S

en tine

at y
Comment is invited on the
conclusions of a recent local
survey that shows Meigs
County's live priority needs

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•

remarks around Newcastle's civic center were banners
supporting his nuclear policies, Arab studenla demonstrating
on the Palestine issue and placards backing Carter'e human
righla.
'"lbe ultimate answering ol difficult questions Ilea not in
\he identity of polltlcalleaders but In the hearla and souls or
the citizens ·of our nations, who believe that lltrength that
comes from hwnan freedom cannot be denied, " he said.
When Carter picked up and held six-month-old lJerrin
Henderson, bright in knitted blue aoo white w!,&gt;Ol in the chilly,
overcast weather, the surrounding crowd commented on how
good the baby had behaved, oot on the fact t.he child was being
held by the president of the United States .
Carter, well rested and fully breakfuted - s&lt;rambled
eg!IS, sausage and grits aboard Air Force One - spent so long·
oo his meet-th~le mission hi&amp; Nortl)east trip ran far
behind schedule.

Comm-ent invited on priority list

SCANNERS &amp; CB's

to 5

Tl' IYtIt i l Check

NewcasUe's welcome was wann. But Ita problema unemployment above the national average, wage levels below
the national nonn - were a continual background reminder of
the issuea bringing together Carter, Callaglyin and the heads
of state of Canada, West Germany •.Franee, Japan and Italy.
The visit to the north of_England marked the start or a six-

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Carter," not "President Carter ." Most shouts from the crowd
balled him as "Jimmy" rather than "President Carter.''
He carried a surj&gt;rise gift - two views of Mount Vernon,
country home of the first American Presldelit. The prints were
gifts to Washington, D. C.
Almost every yard from the airport to Newcaatle's
towering modern civic center was thronged with people. They
lined most or t.he route 15 deep and packed In their lhousandA
arQund the flower-deeked rostrum before the modernistic
building.
Just outside the airport, Carter stopped his car and waded
into a crowd of cheering well-wishers greeting them with " HI,
y'all." He leaned far over to shlllte bands left and right with
"Geordi""" - t.he nickname for Englishmen living on the
banks of the River Tyne.
Many pecsons in the aowd said ' 'God bless you, sir" as
Carter shook Uoeir hands - ~n six bands grasped one of his.
In the sea of people who listened to Carter's off-the-aU!

with pleasure."

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Large group of styles and colors

BigMay~~-

sprint through this industrial city plagued with high
unemployment. His style with the crowd was old-time
campaign tactics, hand-over-band flesh-pressing, a grin wide
enough to tie behind the ears and frequent "Hi, y'all's."
Carter, who attends a seven-natioo economic sununlt
cooference in London this weekend, visited one of the 111011
depresses areas of England and met Britons whose economic
problems he hopes to help solve. He was made a freeman of the
city of Newcastle before going on to the Washington ll!lcestral
home.
Carter unwrapped and held up to cheers the scroll
inscribing him as a freeman of Newcastle and joked: "I bave
asked the Lord Mayor to make sure I don't bave to pay laat,
but all \he llther privileges of citizenShip of Newcaatle I .-pt ·

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1

as many hands,as he could reach on a triwnDbant four-hour

day diplomatic ""nture dW'ing which Carter also win visit
Geneva for talks wiUo Syrian President Halez Assad and then
return to London for a t~ation NATO meeting.
The President ran into massive security. British
commentators said the marksmen lining rooftops the tons of
communica lions and security equipment, the Secret Service
guard and British police were far greater than the security
planned for Q.leenElizabeth's visit here later this year.
Carter left Newcastle a quarter of an hoW' late to visit the
Coming Glass factory in Sunderland, an American-owned
_plant, and then the George Washington ancestral home of
Washingtoo Old Hall, a 12th Century manor house, where he
planted a tree.
The courtly formallty George Washington maintsined was
notably not part of Carter's style Friday, nor of the crowds he
mot.
The President signed Newcastle's role of honor "Jimmy

each meter each month, the
sum of, on the following
schedule, effective July 1,
1977, $2 per 1,000 cubic feet;
effective July Jan. I, 1978,
$2.05 per 1,000 cubic feet;
effeetive July 1, 1978, $2.10
per 1,000 cubic feet ; effective
Jan. 1, 1979, $2.lo per 1,000
cubic feet: in excess of
100,000 cubic feet, $2.15 for
each 1,000 cubic feet.
A minimum charge to each
c~stomer each month is $5.
It was pointed out that due to
the rue! cost clause the rate at
the present tinoe Is $2.10 per
1,000. This bo what is being
charged after the first 1,000
cubic 'feet is used.
Council win discuss the
matter at greater length and
welcome the attendance of
the residents at the next
regular meeting of counciL
CouPCll 111eets on the first
Thursday or each month .
Councllavvarded a contract
to Mid-Porn Construction Co.,
to build a side walk around

again to settle strike

the front portion of the poo1.
Chief of Police Milton
BELLAIRE, Ohio (UPl) Varian warned dogs rwming United Mine Workers union
loose in the village especially officials )Will attempt again
at night will be caught and · today to end a wildcat
owners prosecuted.
walkout that has idled about
Robert Wingett, coun- 26,000 miners in Eastern
cilman, reported that the Ohio,
the
Northern
backstop for the ball field win Panhandle of West Virginia
be ready some tinoe next and Southern West Virginia.
week.
The strike spread Thursday
Mayor London suggested to Kanawha and Boone
that the curfew lor the parks C&lt;&gt;untles in West Virginia.
be enforced and council
UMW District 6 President
agreed. The parks are closed John Guzek was to meet
to the public from 9:30p.m. to today with officials of all
7:30a.m. Mayor London said locals In his district, which Is
every village official should headquartered here.
do !lis part in enforcing the
UMW President Arnold
ordinance.
Miller said he has no plans lor
Attending · were Mayor a visit to District 6, where a
London, Eber Pickens, series or grievances at five
Robert Wingett, Barry mines triggered the strikes.
McC&lt;&gt;y and Kathryn Crow,
"I don't have any authority
council members, Mary to come down here," Miller
Chancey, clerk, and Chief told UP!.
·Varian, Richard Bailey, Jay
"I've got stri~es in District
Brown, Dick Karr and Jino 6 (Ohio and the Northern
Diddle.
Panhandle ), Distri ct 28
(western Ke~ u ck y) and

District 17 (southern West
Virginia), and when 1' get
them in three places, I stay
here/' Miller said from his
Washington office.
Mill.e r said being in
Washington makes i~ easier'
to coordinate international
commissions in all three
areas, and said commission
members are to call him
' when there is ' a breakthrough.
The most serious dispute is
at two Peabody C&lt;&gt;al Co.
mines in C&lt;&gt;shocton County.
Ohio, where ·the firm has
instituted a stringent absentee policy.
The UMW contends the
policy was not negotiated in
the last mine contract and
therefore, should not have
been started .
Roving bands ol pickets
from district 6 have also shut
down
all
strip-tnine
operations in the area.

'

�'
2- The Datly Sentmel Middleport Pomeroy 0 Fnday May 6 1977

Senators will help education
By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS (UPI J
MaJority Democrattc leaders
m the Ohto Senate are
already plannmg to add
money to the House-passed
$13 2 billton general state
approprtat on lor ltscal 197879 and brmg I to a floor vote
by Ute Uttrd week m June
They also are talkmg about
passmg Ute other hall of
the state budget contatrung
spendmg dinct1ves for the
var1ous agency
appropnat on~ and sending
tl over to the House m two
weeks
Senate Prestdent Pro Tern
pore Ohver Ocasek D Akron
said Thursday the Democrats
plan to add $45 nullion to the
House-passed allocation for
prtmary and secondary
educat on
I d also like to see a httle
more for the local mental'
health and retardation
boards satd Ocasek as the
Senate JOtned Ute House m
weekend adJournment

Ocasek pomted out the
Senate FtnanC&lt;' Conunittee
has been holding regular
budget heartngs for two
months and ts read) to deal
w Ut Ute measure cleared
Wednesday by the House on a
71 26 vote
The Senate leader satd the
socalled language btll
contatntng spendtng
sttpulahons
for
the
appropr allons to var ous

agenctes wtll be passed by the
Senate befor~ the end of thts
monUt
That btll sponsored by Sen
Harry
Meshel
D
Youngstown alters state
budgetmg procedures and
mcorporates some of them
mto
permanent
law
Democrats plan to add provt
stons tymg down some of the
departments and makmg
Utem go to Ute Controlling
Board for money according
to Ocasek
Also to be acted upon are a
$1 I
btlhon
h ghways
approprtalton a $126 mill on
htghway safety allocation

and a $642 nullion capttal
tmpr o\ements

outlay

brtngmg the total budget
close to Ute Sl4 5 biUton
amount
ortgtnally
recommend~td by Gov James
A Rhodes
The Democrats spltt off the
spendtng dtrectives to avotd
ltne"tem vetoes by Ute gover
nor They reason Utat if
Rhodes cancels Ute enttre
measure they can ovemde
his veto
Rhodes wtll still be able to
make !me 1tern vetoes m the
money btll
Before adjourning the
House took final legtslahve
action Thursday on a btU
protecting home buyers and
homeowners from abuses of
mecharucs hens which have
someltmes forced double
payments on constructton
and remodeling projects
The measure cleared
unarumously by the Senare a
day ear her was qu ckly
rattfied by the House 81 to 2
and sent to Ute governor for
Signature

Earth sounds go into space
WASHINGTON (UP!) On the chance tt wlll
encounrer extraterrestrtal
life a spacecraft which thts
summer wtll head for
Juptter Saturn and beyond
may carry a phonograph
record of sounds from Earth
The metal 12-mch dis~ ts
expected
to
contam
recordings of greetings 111
dozens of languages samples
of mustc of vartous cultures
and times natural soWlds
such as the wtnd and surf and
perhaps sounds of ammals
and btrds
Dr Carl Sagan Cornell
Umverstty astronomer
headmg
a
commtttee
planrung the message from
Earth satd the record
probabl~ also wtU contam
digttal mformation recorded
as beats that a technologiCal
CIVIlizahon could convert mto
sctentific data and pictures
ANattonal Aeronautics and
Space Admtntstratton
spokesman conftrmed such a
record
ts
under
constderation but said a final
decLSlOn has not been made
Sagan and hts wtfe
destgned a plaque for the

Pioneer 10 and 11 spacecraft
now on Utetr way out of the
solar system after explormg
Juptter for the ftrst time m
1973 They were the ftrst man
made objects sent on a course
taking them mto mterstellar
space
We do not know tf the
message wtll ever be found or
decoded but tts mcluston on
the spacecraft seems to us a
hopeful symbol of a vtgorous
ctvtlizatton on Earth Sagan
said in a tel ephone mtervtew
Thursday
In addttion to 1ts symbohc
and mformative roles the
record would commemorate
the tOOth ann1versary of
Thomas EdLSon s mvention of
Ute phonograph
The spacecraft ts Ute ftrst
of two Voyagers scheduled
lor launch from Cape
Canaveral Aug 20onan ourer
planet reconnaissance
nusston It ts due to pass
wtUtm 443 000 nules of Juptter
m 1979 and then wtll crutse on
to Saturn m 1981
If all goes well the p1cture
taking probe or tts twm may
he sent on to Uranus and
Neptune before leavmg the

Lawrence E Lamb, M D

Swallowing is eased
By Lawrence E Lamb M D
DEAR DR LAMB - I read
111 your colwnn that anyone
who had trouble swallowmg
should see a doctor for an ex
aminahon I went promptly
to the Umverstty Hospital for
exammabon and X rays
They took a rubber tube
and expanded the esophagus
That ppened up the tube that
goes to my stomach Now I
can eat anything I des1re and
I don t have any stoppage as
before I was starvmg to
death
I don t know what caused tt
as I do not smoke I am well
mto my 70s
DEAR READER - Thank
you for sharmg your ex
pertence wtth other colwnn
readers I am glad you were
so .successful m obtammg
rehef of your obstruction of
the esophagus
The esophagus tube that
connects to the stomach IS
somettmes constncted at tts
lower end JUSt before the
stomach When the constrt~
tion becomes severe 1t may
prevent food from entermg
the stomach
Some of these obstructiOns
are caused by the 1rrttatmg
effects of lhe actd-dtgestive
JUices leaking backward
out of the stomach tnto the
lower esophagus After years
of this the lower esophagus ts
scarred and contracted This
IS one reason why a person
wtlh esophageal reflux pr{)o
blems - which may or may
not be associated wtth a
hiatal hem1a of the stomach
through the dtaphram needs to follow a good preven
t1ve program
To gtve you more mforma
lion on how to manage
esophageal reflux and htatal
hemta I am sendmg you The
Health Letter number 4-8
Others who want this tssue
can send 50 cents w1th a long
stamped
self address~d
envelope for tl send your let
ter to me m care of thts
ne'ISp3per P 0 Box 1551
Raliio Ctty s&amp;twn New

York NY 10019
I would hke to emphasiZe
agam that dtfftculty 111
swallowmg can he a stgn of
cancer of the esophagus
Anyone w1th th1s symptom
must have an examma!ton of
the esophagus
DEAR DR LAMB - I
would like to learn more
about
the
dtsease
amylotdosts I have a close
relattve who has thts dtsease
and as a result hts kidneys
arc almost deteriOrated He
has to have dialysts two to
three ltmes a week
How wtll thts d sease affect
other parts of the body? The
doctors say he wtll never he a
candtdate for a ktdney
transplant Wtll there be a
contmual declme or can he
hope to go back to work?
DEAR READER
Amylotdosts refers to an ac
cumulatiOn of amylotd m the
ltssues Amylotd tS a starchy
like matenal of msoluble pr{)o
tems or protem staraJ! com
bma!ton
As the starchy matertal
butlds up mstde the cells they
lose thetr normal functton It
ts usually a comphca!ton of
some other dtsease - to gtve
one of many examples tuber
culOSlS
The amylotd can settle m
the cells of the kidney and
render the ktdneys meffecltve Thts ts what
happen
ed to your relative t can set
tle tn other organs tncludmg
Ute heart Its abtlity to settle
m many parts of the body ts
probably one reason why the
doctors are not constdenng a
renal transplant
The treatment LS directed
toward correctmg the
Wlderlymg condition Rarely
anltbtottcs and surgery have
removed an underlymg mfec
ttous process and resulted tn
a cure Thts ts qutle rare 111
deed In general the treat
ment ts supporttve such as
the renal dtalysts your
relaltve recetves rather than
ehnunati~f the depostts

solar system on a stlent
JOurney that may last
forever
Sagan sa1d the prec1se
paths of the Voyagers have
not yet been deternuned but
Utat tl would probably he tens
of Utousands of years before
Ute two probes drifted mto the
netghborhood of another star
The most likely sttuatton
as wtth Ptoneers 10 and 11 ts
Utat Utese spacecraft are
condemned to wander
forever he satd
The hkehhood of other
CIVIhzattons to Ute galaxy IS
unknown but Sagan satd tl
appears posstble ctvtltzaltons
much mote advanced than
ours have Ute mealiB of
detectmg and capturmg an
artiftctal obJect drifting m
space
The Pioneer plaque carrted
a destgn etched m gold
anodized alummum It bore
symbols mdicatlng the ortgm
of the spacecraft and when tl
was launched and ftgures of
a male and female w Ut the
man s rtght hand ratsed m a
symbol of good will
Sagan
satd
tf an
extra rerrestrtal ciVIllzatton
has Ute abtlity to capture tt
eons from now they probably
also would have the mteUect
to ftgure out what to do wtth
tt

Although Rhodes vetoed
Slmtlar legtslatton last
sesswn on grounds it was too
complex
the
newer
stmplifted verSion is gtven a
better chance of recetvmg his
approval
I don t know of any
problem wtth 1t
satd
Frederick
Mills
the
governor s legtslasttve liat
son Democrats m both
chamhers have the necessary
votes this session to override
any gubernatorial vetoes
The mecharucs hen btll
sponsored by Rep John D
Thompson Jr D-Cieveland
has been sought as a
consumer

protection

measure for more than a
decade
Current law allows subcon
tractors to ftle a hen against
the owner of a house for
money st1ll due htm by the
general contractor even if
the homeowner bas already
patd the general contractor m
full
Thompson s btllltmtts such
liens to the ortgmal amoWlt
owed the subcontractor and
votds them when the
purchaser has patd the
general contractor m full
In addtlton to the
mechamc s hen btll the
House sent three other
proposals to the governor
They would mcrease fees for
nonrestdent fishmg licenses
mclude utility payments as a
retmbursable weUare ttem
and exempt volunteer rescue
servtces from motor vehtcle
regtstration fees
The Senate reconvenes at
7 30 p m next Monday and
Ute House at 11 a m Tuesday

TEACHER STRIKES
COLUMBUS (UP!)- Rep
Gene Damschroder R Fre
mont Introduced a btll
Thursday to prohibtt teacher
strikes until the end of the
school year
The bill 1s destgned to
prevent any disruption of the
school calendar
U a school board IS Wlable
to reach a suttable agreement
wtth the teachers tn tis
system up to 14 days prtor to
Ute begmnmg of the next
school year Uten the labor
dtspute would have to
submttted to an imparttal
bmdmg arbttrator
Damschroder s bill would
also requtre school boards to
seek a common pleas court
mJWlctton m the event of a
reacher strike

Nixon didn't ask
for any timeout
Ntxon was not comtng off
By VERNON SCOT-I'
well
UPI Hollywood Reporter
BEVERLY HILLS Calif
It was after the break
(UP! l - Davtd Frost dentes Reston satd that Ntxon
Rtchard Nixon asked lor a returned wtth the motst-eyed
ttme out
from the monologue n whtch he adtelevtston cameras to com mitted he let the country
pose himself durmg a grtlltng down that was the emottonal
about Watergate Frost says cltmax of Wednesday ntght s
there was a short break but broadcast
he htmself ordered 1!
All the dectstons about
A member of the television when to start and stop were
crew agreed
mme and my producer s
Frost told reporters Frost rephed Ntxon never
Thursday there may he a fifth satd please let s have a
program m the sertes whtch break - he never satd that
could mclude Ntxon s an Frost satd
swers to questtons about the
Nixon s atdes could not
erasure of 18'h mmutes ol a have asked because they
key White House tape
were not m the same room
He satd he felt Ntxon went Frost sald They watched on
far further m terms of ad monttors tn other rooms of
mtsslons far further m terms the borrowed house where the
of contrthon than I expected tapmg was done
or hoped
ObvtoiiSly tt was a long
Frost contradicted James ttme to talk Frost said of
Reston Jr who helped Frost the four hour sesston There
prepare for the vtdeotaped was tndeed a break on the
talks wtth the former second day of the Watergate
president Reston satd in tape I suppose tt was lor
Chapel Htll N C that as about 10 or 15 mmutes but It
Frost grllled Ntxon his atdes was not ordained by Mr
satd this was the toughest Ntxon and 1! would he very
moment 1n N1xon s life and unfatr to him to suggest that
it was
asked that the mtense In
Wednesdays broadcast
terrog~ ttOn be stopped
because pomt after pomt of was the ftrst of four !!().minute
factual evtdence showed programs edited from
almost 29 hours ol talks
Frost sa1d his agreement
wtth Ntxon allows him to
assemble one more hour long
program - 1! he wants - and
if that is done the program
may mclude Ntxon s answers
on the controversial gap in
the Whtte House tape of a key
conversation between Nixon
and his chtef of staff H R
Haldeman
Ntxon s
long
time
secretary Rose Mary Woods
satd she erased the tape
acctdentally
but tape
recorder spectallsts
challenged her verston as
tmplaustble
Ntxon must consent to uae
of more than seven hours ol
the material Fro!tl said
leaviug the unused tape 111
ltmbo

Television Log

Seattle Slew risks perfect mark

FRIDAY MAY 6 1977
S oo-B g Valley 3 My Three Sons • Brady ,Bvnch 8
Mister Rogers Neighborhood 20 33 Emergency
One IJ Star Trek IS
s J!I-Adam 12 • News 6 Fam ly Affair 8 Elec Co
20 ~J
6 oo-News 3 H 8 10 IJ IS AB(.; News 6 Zoom 20 33
6 JG-NBC News 3 • 15 ABC News IJ Andy Griffith 6
CBS News 8 10 VPOP At't. C:.N
1

n

Camera 6 Treasure Hunl 8 MacNe I Lehrer
Report 20 33 Andy W lllams 10 Name That Tune
IJ Pop Goes the Country IS
oo-Baseball3 4 Donny &amp; Marie 6 13 Sanford &amp; Son

15 Mowgl s Brothers Corfoon 8 10 Washington

Week n Rev ew 20 33

8 3!1--Chlco &amp; the Man IS P lot
9

Dully 8 10 Wal
Street Week 20 33
oo-Mov e Aloha Bobby &amp; Rose 6 13 Rockford
Files 15 Movie Support Your Local Gunfighter
8 10

Lowell Thomas Remembers 20

Woman

Alive 33
9 30- The Way It Was 20

0 oo-Qulncy IS News 20 F ring Line J3
10 J()-Hollywood Squares 3 P lot The Chopped
L ver Brothers 6 IJ Bobby Vinton 4 Lock Stock &amp;
Barrel 20

00-News 3 4 6 8 10 13 IS Monty Pythons Flying
Circus 20 B ack Perspective on the News JJ
11 3()-Johnny Carson J 4 IS Kentucky Derby 6 IJ
NBA Play Ofl 8 10 ABC News 33
12 00-Janakl 33
12 3()-Mod Squad 6 Ironside 13
I oo-Midn ght Spec al J 4 15
1 J()-News 13
11

2 3()-News 3

3 oo- Mov e L fe Begins at 8 30 J
4 30--Mov e
6 oo-FB I 3

P gsk n Parade

By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sparta Editor

?n v 1111 Aleare 33

oo-Truth or Cons 3 To Te I the Truth • IJ L ar s
Club 6 Sl28 000 Question 8 News 10 My Three
Sons IS Ohio Journal 20 Thirty Minutes with
James Haught 33
7 311-- Porter Wagoner J Gong Show 4 Candid

8

Sport Parade

J

SATURDAY MAY7 1977

MILLER

Four Wahama seniors
awarded honor ranking
MASON W Va - Four
semor students have been
chosen at Wahama High
School as honor students it
was aMounced Thursday by
Principal Larry Sawyers
Chosen were Jay Robert
Layne Shirley Kearns
Mtller Chery1 Adams and
Tern Proffitt
Jay ts the son of Mr and
Mrs Harry Robert Layne of
New Haven He is acttve m
the student council National
Honor Soctety a phystcal
educatiOn asststant school
radio station WFAL and
LuUter League
He partictpated in basketc
ball as a freshman
sophomore and JWUOr goU

6 oo-Sunrlse Semester 0

6 45-F un for Everyone 6 TV C assroom 8 Treehouse
7

Club tO Kentucky Afield 13
00-Salurday Report 3 Ch ldren s Theatre 4 Eddie
Sau nders 6 Treehouse C vb 8 U S Farm Report

10 Gill gan 13
J()- Bullwinkle 3 World of Survival 4 Va ley of the
D nosaurs 6 Way Out Games 8 Call II Macaroni
10 Short Story Special 13 Sesame St 20
8 Oil-Woody Woodpecker 3 4 IS Tom &amp; Jerry 6 13
Sylvester &amp; Tweety 8 10
8 3()-P nk Panther 3 4 S Jabberlaw 6 IJ Clue Club
8 10 M ster Rogers 20
9 00-Scooby Doo Dynomutl 6 IJ Bugs Bunny 8 10
1

ADAMS

LAYNE

PROFFm

Social
Calendar

FRIDAY
MEIGS COUNTY Youth
Degree team practice for
Sesame St 20
ftrst degree 7 this evenmg at
0 0()-Speed Buggy J 4 IS Tarzan 8 10 Once Upon a
Rock Springs Grange Hall
Classic 20
preceding 7 45 p m meeting
0 3D--Monster Squad 3 .4 15 Krafft Supershow 6 13
of
Metgs Pomona Grange at
Batman 8 10 Zoom 20
Fock
Springs Grange Hall
11 oo-w Va Reg onal Band Festlval3 Space Ghosts
Frankenstein Jr 4 IS Shatom Isis 810 Consumer
POMONA Grange Frtday
Survival K I 20
rught
at 8 p m at the Rock
11 J()-Superfrlends 13 Big John Little John 4 15 Big
Sprmgs
Grange hall
Blue Marb e 6 Best of Ernie Kovacs 20
SQUARE
Dance Friday at
2 0()-Movle Storm Over Wyom ng 4 Land of the
Racme Post 602 from 8 30 to
Lost 15 Hot Dog 6 V ewpolnt 8 Fat Albert 10
11 ;jO p m MUSIC by Strmg
Act on News for K ds 3 Crockett s V ctory Garden
20
Dusters
12 3()-Ara s Sports World 3 American Bandstand 13
SATURDAY
KldsfromC APE R 15 Po ntof Vlew6 Ark 118
RUTLAND Baseball
Gomer Pyles USMC 10
League tag day Saturday All
oo-Greatest Sports Legends 3 Movie Cheyenne
coaches
parents
and
K d 4 Outdoors with Ju us Boros 6 Children s
chtldren
are
to
be
at
Rutland
F I m Fest vale Movie My Geisha 10 Wrestl ng
Htgh School gym at 8 30 a m
IS Nova 33
FISHING Derby Saturday
and Sunday at Rutland
311--Redscene 77 3 Derby Fest val 17 6 13
2 0()-Baseball Warm Up 3 4 Grandstand IS Racers
American Legton from 7 a Ill
8 Orders from Above 33
to 5 p m Adnusston LS $2 per
2 1()-Baseball 3 4
person or $2 a pole Refresh
2 15--Baseba I 15
ment
stand
2 3()-Goif 6 13 Movie Joan of Arc 8
WEEKEND
Revtval at
3 3()-Ce ebrlly Bowl ng I0 Book Beat JJ
Freedom
Gospel
Mtsston
4 oo-w de World of Sports 6 1J
Bald Knobs from now
4 30--To Be Announced 8 Sports Spectacular 10
through Sunday at 7 30
Montage 33
4 45--Bewltched 3 Scoreboard 4
mghtly Speaker 1s Rev
5 oo-Star Trek 3 Kentucky Derby 6 13 Marcus
Woodie Harper from Blg
Welby MD 4 Space 1999 8 Friends of Man IS
Chimney W Va Special
Catch 33 33
smgmg Public mv1ted
5 3()-To Be Announced 15 Consumer Experience 33
WESTERN Boot CB Club
6 oo-News 3 4 0 Wide World of Sports 6 IJ
bake sale Saturday begm
Lawrence Welk 8 God Has The Answer 1S
6 3()-NBC News 3 A IS ABC News 13 News 6 CBS
mng at 9 a m m Iron! of
News o Lilias Yoga &amp; You 33
Pomeroy Kroger store
7 00-Muslc Hall Amer ca J Lawrence Welk 4 15 Hee
meeting of club Saturday
Haw 6 8 $128 000 Quest on 0 Lets Make a Deal
evenmg 7 p m at Racme
13 World War I 33
Ftre
Statton
7 3()-Pop Goes the Country 4 Woody Hayes Spring
TRUSTEES of Chester
Show 10 In Search of 13 Best of Ernie Kovacs 33
Township Saturday 7 30 p m
8 00-P lot Off the Wall 3 4 15 Pilot Tabitha 6 IJ
at old town hall to pay bills
Mary Tyler Moore 8 10 Fall of Eagles 33
for Apr I
8 3()-P lot Quark J 4 IS Movie Thunderball 6 13
Bob Newhart f Io
HARRISONVILLE Lodge
9 0()-Man FromAtlantls 3 4 15 All In The Family
411
F&amp;AM Saturday 7 30
8 10 American Short Story 33
p
m
at the lodge hall m
9 3()-Aiice 8 10
Harrlsonvllle
They wtll
10 00-Caro Burnett 8 10
observe past masters mght
0 30--Amer cana 33
and there will be degree
II 00-News J 4 6 8 10 13 15 Janakl JJ
11 15--ABC News 6 F lm IS
work All master masons
It 3()-Mary Hartman 3 Weekend 4 15 Move
mvtted
Redan 6 Boxing 8 Mary Hartman 10 Move
JITNEY Supper Saturday
The Amorous Adventures of Moll Flanders
3
at Syracuse Mumclpal
12 00-Mov e Bonnie and C yde 0
Building begmnmg at 4 p m
OG--Mov e Attack of the Crab Monsters 13
Sponsored
by
Ladies
3D-News 3 Peter Marshal 6
Auxiliary
2 oo-Mov e Kentucky 3
MOTHER S Day Bake sale
2 3()-ABC News 13
and
hangtng planters 9 a m
3 3()-Movle Always Goodbye 3
to
3
p m Saturday at New
5 oo-Movle The Great Hospital Mystery 3
6 oo-Salnt 3
York Clothing House span
sored by Ohto Eta Phl
Chapter of Beta StgJDll Phi
Sorority
pr or to de very comply w th
SlJNDAY
a 1
school
dist c
CHICKEN Barbecue
spec f cat ons
a
safety
regu at ons and current Oh o Sunday begmnlng at II a m
LOTIERY WINNERS
M nlmum Standards fOr
Orange
Township
Thlo week o wlnalng Ohio Schoo Bus Construct on of at
he Department of Edu~:at on
FtreboiiSe
Lottery aumben
adop ed by and w th the
PotO Gold
consent of the 01 ecto of
ICE Cream Social and
Highway Safety pursuant to
'three-dlgil number
Sect on 4511 76 of the Rev sed
mus1c
show Sunday 2 p m at
386
Code and a I other pert nen
Racine Junior High MIISIC to
prov s on of law
Three-digit number
be presented will be blue
Spec flcat ons and
in
m
struct ons o b dders may be grass country gospel and
Five digit number
obta ned at the off ce of the
rock Spon110red by Southern
Clerk M dd eport Oh o
57588
A cert fed check payab e Juruor High PTO
o the c e k t easurer of the
MONDAY
above board of educat on or a
satisfactory
b d
bond
FINAL regular meetbtg of
executed by the b dder and year for Eastern Band
the sure y company
n an
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
amount equal to five percent Boosters 7 30 p m at high
PURCHASE OF ONE
Of the bid sha 1 be subm ltted
school band room New of
SCHOOL BUS
w th each b d
FOR
fleers will be elected and all
Sad
board
of
educat
on
MEIGS LOCAL BOARD
eserves
he
r
ght
to
wa
ve
parents of students entering
OF EDUCATION
nforma ties to accept or
Sealed proposa Is w
be
the
junior and senior high
rejec any and a I or parts Of
rece ved by the Board of
any
and
a
t
b
ds
bands
urged to attend
Educal on of the Me gs Loca
Nob ds may be w thdrawn
School 0 str ct of M ddleport
UNITED
Methodist
for at least th rty (30) days
Ohio at the Clerk s office unt
aner
the
schedu
ed
clos
ng
Women
Heath
Church
7 30 o clock PM on May 6
t me fqr receipt of b ds
7
30
Monday
Middleport
1977 and at that t me opened
Board of Educat on of
by the Clerk of sad board as
mght at the church Mrs
Me gs Local
prov ded by aw fo one (1 65
Schoo 0 str cts
Billy
Jo Krawsczyn to have
passenger schoo bus
ac
Jane Wagner
cord ng o spec f Cl!l ons of
devotions Mrs Ruth Euler
Clerk Treasurer of
sa d Board of Edvcat on
Me gs Local
the program Hosteues will
Separa e and ndependent
Schoo 0 str ct
b ds w I br rece ved w th
be Mrs Mae Lambert Mrs
South Third Avenue
respect to he chass s and
M ddleport Ohio .. 5760
f41te
Ketchka Mrs Lettie
body tY~Je and v 1 state tt'lat
w 22 29 (51 6 13
~ung and Mrs Terry Byer
thr bus when assembled ~nd

as a sophomore and junior
and football and baseball as a
senior Jay attended Boys
State won the DAR History
Award LS a member of Who s
Wbo Among Amencan High
School Students and LS a
member of the St Paul s
LuUteran Church
Shirley IS the daughter of
Mr and Mrs Harry J
Keams West ColumblB She
IS a member of the F H A
gtrls basketball team
campmg club Keywanettes
and National Honor Soctety
She attends the Clifton United
MeUtodist Church and LS a
member of the Youth
Fellowship
Miss Adams daughter of
Mr and Mrs Charles AdalllS
of New Haven is active in
F H A student counctl pep
club journahsm club
Keywanettes and National
Honor Society
She LS a member of the
band and pep band and has
been a member of the All
State Band a long with
partlctpatmg in the Solo and
Ensemble She has served as
a sports statistiCian and
attends Bechtel Umted
Methodist Church where she
ls in the youth choir
Terri Proffitt daughter of
Mr and Mrs James Proffitt
IS an active member of the
Keywanettes National Honor
Soctety Who s Who Among
Amertcan Htgh School
Students and Soc1ety of
Dtstmgutshed American H1gh
School Students
She ts vtce prestdent of the
band a majorette and has
been selected for All-State
Band and Solo and Ensemble
She has been a Rotary
Student of the Month and
attends Mason Umted
Methodist Church where she
LS a Sunday School teacher
and ts m the chancel choir

Practice
conducted
Practtce for annual mspection in June was held when
Theodorus Council 17
Daughters of Amertca met
Monday mght at the IOOF
hall
MISs Fay Retbel councilor
prestded wtth Mrs Edna
Retbel Mrs Nettie Hayes
and Mrs Eva Des.!!auer
reporting on the recent Depu
ty Club meetmg held at
Manetta Mrs Dessauer at
tending after a long illness
was mstalled as Jumor past
counctlor It was noted that
Mrs Eula Odegard ~ mother
of Charleston IS ill and that
Mrs Betty Retbel goes to
Uruverstty Hospital this week
for treabnent The 11Jness of
Mrs Edna Rabel was also
reported
1~ Members were asked to sell
three year planrung calen
dars for the National Council
Date for mspection will be announced later
NOTICE ON FILING
OF INVENTORY AND
APPRAISEMENT
The State of Oh o Me gs
County Court of Common
Pleas Probate 0 vision
To the Executor of the
es ate
to such of the
fo ow ng as are res den s of
he State of Oh o v z
the
surv v ng spouse the next of
k n
he beneficlar es under
he w I and to the attorney
o at orneys represent ng any
of the aforement on persons
V vian
E
Johnson
Deceased No 22061 Rae ne
Oh 0 Su ton Townsh p
You are hereby notified
hat the Inventory and Ap
pra semen! of the estate of
he
aforement oned
deceased tate of sa d County
was f Jed In th s Court sa d
nventory and Appraisement
w be tor hear ng before th s
court on he 13th day of May
1917 at 10 00 o clock A M
Any pe son des r ng to f e
eKcept ens thereto must fl e
hem at ent f ve days pr or
o the date set for hear ng
Given under my hand and
sea of sa ld court th s 27th
day of Aprl 1977
Mlllnnlng 0 Webs-ter
Judge
By Ann 8 WatSOI1
Deputy c erk
•

29

(51 6

2tc

TUESDAY
AMERICAN
Legion
Auxlllary Lewia Manley Post
263 2 p m Tuesday at the
home of Mrs Campbell
Harper
f(

'

LOUISVILLE Ky (UPI )- The Kentucky Derby LS all over
m two minutes less time than tl takes to get a good shoeshme
so that if you catch a sudden sneezing ftt or bend down to look
for something you dropped you can blow the ftnish
It doeSII t matter at all to all those thousands ol people who
come here from practically every state m the Union solely for
the purpose of wttnessing Saturday s e1ghtlt rae&lt;' at Churchtll
Downs that they could ve seen tt much better on thetr
l " teleVISlon sets back home and could ve been mftnitely more
+ comfortable dotng so
Nor does tt matrer that some who travel long diStances never
get to see the race for one reason or another The tmportant
Utmg wt!h Utem "' lo be part of Ute Derby scene For them
nothmg can posstbly match betng here
That s why each year on Derby Day the Infield at Churchtll
Downs looks ltke nothmg so much as an unendtng expanse of
wall-to-wall Most of those who oongregate in Ute inlteld
actually see very little of Ute race ttseU and llllllSny cases are
forced to stand on their feetfour or ftve hours But Utey don t
complam They were there for the race That s all Utat really
counts
Even Ute Jockeys m Ute race most of them long-hardened to
all the fanfare pageantry and other aspects of Utetr occupa
tion admit they get goose ptmples when the horses leave the
paddock for the track ttself and the band strikes up the operung
chords of My Old Kentucky Home
Hearmg that song and seemg the horses movmg leiSurely
but regally toward the startmg gaoo IS an emotional expert
ence transcending even that moment before the openmg bell of
a world heavywetgbt champtonship ftght the first ptlch of a
World Sertes or that dramatic gekeady call to the drtvers Gentlemen start your engmes - urunedtately prtor to the
lndtanapohs 500
When tt began m 1875 the Kentucky Derby was only another
horse race Net to ArLSildes the wmner that ftrst year was
$2 850 and only 10 000 fans saw the race Compare that wtUt
Ute $274 000 CaMonade won for his owners m the Derby Utree
years ago and the crowd of betoor Utan 150 000 expected lor
Saturday s 103rd rUMIIIg of the event
Everybody connected wtth racmg tn any capactty -owners
trainers jockeys even exercLSe boys and grooms - seeks to
" be a part of the Kentucky Derby because not only IS tt
constdered The Race but tt also guarantees a certam stature m
perpetuity for anyone fortunate enough to he assoctated wtUt
the wmnmg horse
Ask any jockey his prtme amb1t1on and the first thing that
usually rushes to his mmd IS rtding a Kentucky Derby winner
Eddte Arcaro and Bill Hartack each rode ftve wmners while
tlte great Earl Sande Isaac Murphy and Willie Shoemaker had
three ap1ece At 46 Shoemaker still feels1t s someUttng special
" to have a moiDlt m the Derby and Utat was why he lmmedtately
satd yes when they asked him if he d come from Califorrua to
nde Bwamazon Farm s Get The Axe here Saturday
Braulio Baeza had a Derby wtnner 14 years ago Darby Dan
Farm s Chateaugay and mtght have had another four years
" later had he not ptcked the wrong horse He had ridden Proud
Clar10n and Successor at other tracks and when It came time
for the Derby both horses were entered He had his chotce of
etther and passed up Proud Clarton for Successor Proud
Clarion won Ute race and Successor ftnLShed fiftlt
On the way to the atrport leavtng Lowsvtlle he stopped to
send a wtre of congratulations to Proud Clarion s owner John
Galbreath tlten called his wife Cannen to tell her what time
' he d be arrtvmg home
Leavmg the phone booth he heard some chauge conung
down Ute com return and when he reached m to fish t! out
there were two quarters
I pot m a dime and look what I got back' he beamed at h1s
agent Lennie Goodman outstde the booth Today ts my lucky
day

\ Bucks to end
spring drills
r

By GENE CADDES
UPI Sports Writer
COLUMBUS (UPI)- Ohio
State s football Buckeyes
• wmd up 20 days of sprmg
' practtce m Ohlo Stadtum
Saturday wtth the annual
mtra-squad game
Coach Woody Hayes will
send his No 1 offenstve and
' delenstve umts against the
rest of the squad in the I 30
p m contest
Hayes offense wtthout
bulldozmg fullback Pete
Johnson for Uta itrst tune m
four years wtll take on a new
look wtth speedsters Jeff
Logan and Ron Sprmgs m the
hackfleld together
Logan a :HI 1BO;poWld
semor from North €anton

Meaning of par

has returned
DALLAS (UPI) - The
word
par
suddenly
regamed some of tts meamng
at the Byron Nelson Golf
Classtc Thursday and a
ltmtted number of people
were able to say they had
conquered It
Lyn Lot! was one of those
relymg on a hot putter to post
a three under par 68 over the
treacherous Preston Tnal
Golf Club course and assume
a one-shot lead m hts quest
lor hts ftrst tour tttle
Only ntne others broke par
, Thursday mcluding an al&gt;brevtated group who stood at
two under par 69 - Ben
Crenshaw Ray Floyd and
Fuzzy Zoeller
There were difltculttes on
every shot If t! wasn t the
wmd that gusted to 30 miles
per hour tt was the rough
Utat reached as high as two
feet
If tt wasn tthe rough t! was
the greens that requtred the
t touch of a surgeon
If lt wasn t the sbck greens
there were the new bunkers
~ed on ftve of the boles
&lt;

and the 6-2 195-pound
Sprmgs a htghly touted
JUruor college transfer who
saw limited action as a
sopliomore last season will
alternate between the
fullback and tatlhack spots
Hayes
used
that
combmatton m the Orange
Bowl and lt resulted m an
tmpresstve '!110 wm over
Colorado
But H a y e s still has
sophomore Paul Campbell a
6-1 215-pounder and other
fullbacks available for the
short yardage and goal ltne
sttuattons
Jmnmg Sprmgs and Logan
the Bucks leadtng rusher last
year w1th 1 248 yards m 12
~ames IVill he JUnior Rod
Gerald at quarterback and
senior Jun Harrell gtven
another year of ehgtbility at
wmgback
Gerald nussed nearly ftve
regular season games last
fall wtlh a back mjury but
came back to star m the
Orange Bowl Game
Harrell the starting wmg
back a year ago dectded to
take the extra year s
eligtbtltty which came as the
result ohnjur1es earlier m hiS
career He had ltrst sa1d he
would not be back
Some of Hayes more
promtnent players will miSS
the game due to mjuries
mcludmg all Amertcan
safety Ray Grlffm who tn
jured a knee earlier m the
sprmg tight end Jtmmy
Moore and offense tackle
Doug Mackte
Moore coming off hts
second knee operation m JUSt
over a year dtd not
partictpaoo m sprmg drtlls
while Mackie expected to be
one of the starting tackles
underwent knee surgery last
month
Hayes has done some
posttton swttchmg thts
sprtng wtth Junior Ttm
Vogler takmg over at center
and last year s center Mark
Lalllt movllllt to guarJI On

ByCKRISSCHERF
UP! Sporn Writer
LOUISVILLE Ky (UP!)
- Seattle Slew IS unbeaten tn
stx starts coming to the
Kentucky Derby and there
have not been many
Thoroughbreds able to make
that clatm

Even Secretanat s record
was somewhat marred helore
the 1973 Kentucky Derby but
he was the last of the ntne
Trtple Crown wmners
There IS a great dea I of
conJecture the early !me 1 2
leader Seattle ,Slew will
become the loth

Marauders win
tourney opener
Baseball tournament ttme
LS when fans can expect the
Metgs Marauders to play
good solid ball on a wmnmg
trail
That s why Thursday mght
behind the superb pttching of
Dale Browmng ~nd a !me
team defense the Metgs crew
of Coach Dale Harrison
downed favored host Belpre
2 1 m a ttght defenstve battle
Both teams had four hits
but Metgs got two of thetrs m
the top of the ftrst to get out to
a l..tJ lead Afte the lead-off
batter faMed Mtke Wayland
smgled and moved up on an
i!rror Then sentor Greg
Smtth cracked the only extra
base hit of the mght a double
and Wayland scored
In the bottom of the second
the Golden Eagles !ted tt
after one was out Blake
reached when he was htt by a
pttch and Tanner smgled
Blake then came all the way
home on an error by the
Metgs second baseman
In the top of th~ third
losmg pttcher Bterbower got
wtld and walked three batters
after he had got the ftrst two
out Bnan Hamtlton sand
wlched a ~mgle in that bunch

but tt was a walk to Crenson
Pratt that forced m Wayland
wtth the wmnmg run After
that tt was all goose eggs for
both squads
Brownmg had excellent
control as he walked only two
batters and gave up four hits
whtle lanntng three Hts
teammates backed him up by
t1me and agam cuttmg down
what lew Belpre runners
reached safely They put the
stops to bunts sacrtftces and
squeeze plays Browning kept
the ball down as only one fly
ball was htt to the outfteld
Httters for Metgs were
Wayland Hanulton Smtth (a
double) and Pratt
Gates Stzemore TaMer
and Blake each had a smgle
for the losers as pttcher
Marks walked etght Meigs
batters and fanned mne
Metgs wtll now play Sheridan
m the second round of sec
!tonal play at a ttme to be set
later They 11 play at
Shertdan tak mg a second
step enroute to defendmg
thetr Reg onal tttle
M
101 000 0-2 4 2
B
010 000 0-1 4 1
Brownmg and Becker
Bterbower and Blake

Blue Jays edge
Brewers in fog
By IRA MILLER
UP! Sports Writer
The New York Mets were
obviously to a fog when Casey
Stengel mumbled h1s famous
phrase Can t anybody here
play this game?
The Toronto Blue Jays
were p!aymg tn a fog Thurs
day mght At one pomt 111
their game agamst the
Mtlwaukee Brewers ftve
Toronto players tried to !me a
ball hit by Stxto Lezcano mto
rtght field - and couldn t
The only dtfference bet
ween the Mets and the Blue
Jays ts that the fog tn Toronto
was real

Lexcano wound up wtth a
trtple while the ftve Blue Jays
searched for the elustve ball
That btzafre play con
vmced the umptres who
called an hour s halt unttl the
log lifted When play
resumed Ron Fairly saw the
ball well enough to hit a
bases-empty homer 111 the
seventh inning that gave
Toronto a 9-8 vtctory
Toronto was ahead 4-3 in
the top of the ftfth wtth Robm
Yount on base when
Milwaukee s Cec1l Cooper htt
what 111 ordtnarv ctr
cumstances would have been
a rather routme fly to center
However Gary Woods the
Toronto C&lt;'nter ftelder could
not see the ball and tl went
over hts head for an mstde
the pork homer
defense former lmebacker
Paul Ross has been sWitched
to wtde s1de end
The rest of Saturdays first
offensive umt wlll fmd Greg
Storer at tight end ChrLS
Ward and Joe Robmson at
tackles Jtm Savoca and
Lang at Ute guards and
Herman Jones at split end
Defenstvely the No 1 urut
will have Kelton Dansler at
closed stde end Byron Cato
and Eddte Beamon at the
tackles Aaron Brown at
mtddle
guard
Tom
Cousmeau and Doug Adkins
at linebacker and Mtke
Guess Duncan Griffm Brtan
Schwartz and Len Mills m the
secondary

I saw the pttcher and the
outlme of the hitter that s
all Woods said All I knew
was that 1t was m the atr

Lezcano s triple followed
shortly thereafter and the
umptres dectded enough was
enough
Elsewhere m the Amer can
League the Boston Red Sox
trtmmed
the
Seattle
Martners 5 2 the Oakland
As beat the New York
Yankees by the same score
and the ll:ansas Ctty Royals
edged the Chtcago White Sox
6-5
Red Sox 5 Mariners 2
George Scott and Jtm Rtce
h1t two run homers and
Ferguson Jenkms scattered
seven hits to wm hts fourth
game n ftve dectsions
Scott s homer put Boston
ahead 3-2 in the sixth and
Rtce hit his third m the etghth
mnmg Jenkins d1d not wall! a
batter for the thtrd stratght
game
As 5 Yankees 2
A two-run homer by Mtt
chell Page tn the first mnmg
and o two riDl tnple by B ll
North In the second gave Vtda
Blue the dectston over Jtm
Hunter making h1s ltrst start
smce openmg day Blue gave
up 10 htts but struck out mne
Page s homer hts stxth
followed a smgle by Larry
Murray
Royals 6 White Sox 5
.George Brett struck a pa r
of doubles off hts older
brother Ken the second
drtvtng home Fred Patek
wtth the wmnmg run m the
stxth mmng Joe Zdeb opened
the stxth wtth a smgle and
went to second as Patek
reached ftrst on an error
Buck Martmez smgled home
Zdeb and Brett followed wtth
his second double to score
Patek

EHI

That ktnd of pressure can
he paralyztng to owners
lramers and JOckeys but
Seattle Slew scamp seems to
be handhng tt I ke cham
plODS

Just as \ramer Btlly Turner
asstduously ts schooling
Seattle Slew tn the paddock

CHICAGO (UP!) -Pttcher
Frttz Peterson formerly of
Ute New York Yankees and
later wtth the Cleveland
Jndtans and Texas Rangers
offtctally announced hts
retirement from baseball
Wednesday followmg a
second operatiOn on hlS left

Major League Stand ngs
By Un ted Press Internal ona

shoulder

Nat on~n~eague

w

P I Sbu gh
Sf LOl.l

L

s

Monreal
Ch cago

Ph ade ph a
New York

•

3

West

W l

es

Los Ange

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• o 524
10 o 500
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san F ~me sco
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409

Pet
4 840

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0 4 417
9 4 39
o 8 357
A anta
B 6 333
Thur sdays RBUJts
Ch cago 8 Hou s on 7
Mon re(JI 7 San Franc sco
Ph ade ph a 8 Sl'ln o ego s
Los Ange es 1 New Yo k 2
Tadav s Probab e P tchers
(A IT mes EDT
A t an a Cap a 0
a Ch ca
go K ukow 0 2 2 30 p m
C nc nna
B ngham 3 1 at
P tsbu gh

Rooke

pm
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lou s Fa cone 0 3
8 35

pm

Mon ea
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0p m
Pf1 lade Ph a Ctl s enson 2 2
a Los Ange es Su ton 3 0
o 30 p m
New Yo k Swan 1 2 a t Sa n
Franc sco
MeG o hen
0J
10 35 p m
Sa u day s Games
Ch cago a P sbu gh

At an a a Ch cago
New Yo k a Sa n F anc sco
Hous on a S Lou s n gh

Ph a a Los Ange e~ n ght
Mon ea a San 0 ego n ght

A mer

can league
East
W L

Pet

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4

9

609

New York
Ba t mo e
Boson
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C eve and
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3

0

565

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5~

2 10
2 4
8

3

5.45
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381

8

4

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West
W l
Pet
M nneso a
5 0 600
Kansas c y
4 o 583
Ch cago
3 o 565
Oak and
4
560
T exas
1
9 550
Ca forn a
9 5 375

3
5

5
GB

Seae
9932
Thursda ys Resu h
Kansas C y 6 Ch ago 5
To on o 9 M waukee 8
Bos on 5 Sea e 2
Oak and 5 New Yo k 2
Today s Probab e P tch'e s
(A I Times E OTl
Ca orn a
Rya n J 3
a
Boson T an 2
7 30 p m
Ch cago
Barros 2
a
c eve and Gar land 0 3 7 30

pm

M nneso a
Zahn 4 0
a
Tor on o Lemanc yk 2 2 7 30

pm

e

Sea
t more

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(Gr ms ley 2

pm

Oak and (Med ch
Yo k F gueroa 2 2
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Sa
7 JO

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a 2 0 at
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8 35

Thursday s Games
M waukee a Det o
Ch cago at Cleve and
M nnesota a To on o
Oak and a! NE?w York
Ca fo n a a Bos on
Seaf ~ a! Sal mo e n gh
Kansas c tv a TeKas n gh

NEW YORK (UPl) - Ron
Cey of Ute Western DtvtstOn
lea&lt;Jlng Los Angeles Dodgers
ts Aprtl s NatiOnal League s
Player of the Month for
havmg the most producttve
April of any player m the
history of baseball
Cey set a record when he
drove m 29 runs m the 20
games he played Bestdes hts
RBis Cey belted nme
homers scored 18 runs and
went 31 for 73 at the plate for
a 425 average

arm fell apart

requtrmg

repea surgery Tu esd ay
t

Semor catcher Ralph
Baylor s bloop double to
leftfteld scored the wtnnmg
runs Thursday ntght as the
Kyger Creek Bobcats rallted
for three runs tn the seventh
mmng to edge host North
Gallta 5-! tn an SVAC con
test
The wmmng rally also
featured an error walk and
ground rule double by Claude
Corne bus
Coach Ted Lehew s Ptrates
took a 4..tJ lead n the ftrst
mning as 10 batters marched
to the plate
A walk off startmg Bobcat
rtghthander Todd Taylor
started the uprtsmg That
was followed by smgle off the
bat of Fred Logan a double
by BtJJ Lookadoo and two
walks by rehever Steve Batrd
wtth the sacks loaded
Coach Jtm Sprague s
Bobcats
bega n
thetr
comeback wtth a smgle run in
the third on a walk and
smgles by ¥ Taylor Batrd
and Jtm Westfall
In the ftlth another run

p
o he date of mafur l y

remmds hunters that some of
the 2 000 turkey permtts are
sttll avatlable The $10 &gt;0
permtts are available by mat!
or can be picked up at the
DIVISIOn
of
WlJdhfe
headquarters at Fountatn
Square m Columbus
Hunters must have a valid
Ohto huntmg and trappmg
license m add !ton to the
turkey perrmt

Eat a Honda CB750
for lunch!

748 E Ma n St
Oh o
992 2184

Pom~roy

77 Kawa$81n

1

APPEARING THIS WEEKEND AT THE

INN PLACE

4 PC. GROUP

FROM BEUAI HE, 0.

TONIGHT
&amp;

s

ce t f ca e

accou nts w thdr awn

Hunters hag 41 turkeys
on season's first day

RIDENOUR'S

5 75 per cent paid on
90 day Cert1f cates of
Depos1t
$1 000 00
Mm1mum
Interest
Payable Quarterly
penal y

North GaUta dropped to 4 2 m NG
400 000 0-4 3 2
the SVAC
T Taylor Baird (1) (W)
Lmescore
and Baylor Mtnms Tackett
KC
001 010 3-S 8 o (L) and Tackett Minnts (3 )

COLUMBUS
Oh o
hunters harvested a record 41
turkeys Monday the ftrst day
of the 1977 season according
to the Ohto Department of
Natural Resources Dtvtston
ol Wtldlife The 12-day turkey
season conttnues through
May 14
This ls the second year for a
contmuous 12 day turkey
season lor Ohio hunters
The 41 turkeys taken
Monday were from 12 of the
14 counttes whrre turkey
huntmg Is permitted Nine
were taken tn Vmton County
seven m Hockmg County s1x
to Ptke County f ve m Ross
County three each m
came -across on Ba rd s Wa shmgton Adams and
smgle an error and Taylor s Ja ckson and one each ln
hit
Athens Galha Lawrence
Batrd and Taylor Jed the Monroe and Sc10to counttes
Bobcats wtth two htts each
A total of 29 were reported
Von Taylor has htt safely m 17 taken dunng the ftrst day of
games
the 1976 w ld turkey season
Getttng Ptrate safeties
The Dtvtston of Wtldhfe
were Lookadoo two for lour
and Logan one htt m four
ror a I your home
tnps After the ltrst tMtng
Entertainment and
Appliance Needs
Batrd ytelded Just one hit and
two free passes the rest of the
way
DOXOL
He struckout 12 wh Je
SERVICE
recordmg hts seventh vtctory
of the season
Calvm Minnts and hts
relief Bret Tackett the
losmg hurler combtned to
TV &amp; Appltance
tssue four walks whtle
Gas Servtce
recordmg 14 strtkeouts
Rae ne Oh o
Kyger Creek 11-6-1 overall
rheo;ter ~"' .... ')
s 6-3 agamst league foes

Certificates

substant a

)lim

Bobcats knock off Pirates

On 90-Dav

SATURDAY
10-2

o

Me.gs Co. Branch

FISH FRY

..@

2PMto6P.M

p eterson sa1 d hIS

Gerald Robms For the
Moment the Uttrd chotce at&amp;1 ls another ezpected to riDl
on or near the lead In the
early gotng onder jockey
Angel Cordero
Jockey Larry Snyder wiU
nde W lliam Farish s 20-1
shot Nostalgta 1n the Derby
Also ltsted at 20 1 were
Bwamazon Farm s Get The
Axe Jean Louts Levesque s
Gtboulee George Stem
brenner s Steve s Frtend
Darby
Dan
Farms
Sanhedrtn and Joseph
Roebling s Western Wtnd
Harbor VIew Fann s Affiliate
was 15-1 and Nasty Stable s
Flag Of!tC&lt;'r 30-1
There was also a threehorse hetttng field of La Luna
Stable s Slr Slr W C Par
tee s Best Person and Marvtn
Warners Papelote listed at
30-1 for a total of 12 bettmg
entries Warner purchased
Papelote f!'Qm LuLS Noble
Thursday whtch LS one - and
maybe the only way of get
ting box seats lor the Derby
at this late date

"BUCK-N-WI NG"

MOTHER'S DAY

Sunday

camp

5.75%

nvoked on a

TAll TIMBER
NITE CLUB

Peterson J5o made the
annoWlcement from his bed
m Skokie Valley Memorta 1
Hospttal here The southpaw
hurler Wlderwent surgery on
his shoulder sept 28 tn Los
Angeles and was mvtted for a
tryout thLS sprmg at the
Chtcago White Sox trallllng

Our Interest Is
Greater For You

A

don t know what you rem lor
but you ll have the time of
your life
Looking for a chtnk in
seattle Slew s record s not
easy but the 3-year-old son of
Bold Reasontng - My
Charmer wtll face the
surprtstng number of 14 other
starters m Saturday s 'I• mtle
race whtch wtll he worth
$267 200 and a $214 700 wm
ner s prize if all go to the post
Mrs Robert Lehmann s
entry of Run Dusty Run who
fmtshed second to Seattle
Slew tn the votmg lor last
year s 2 year old cham
pionshtp and Bob s Dusty
were next m the early hne at
5-1
Bob s Dusty ts charged
wtth settmg a qutck early
pace to wear down Seattle
Slew who always has run on
the lead lor Run Dusty Run s
late charge
However
Mickey Taylor mststs Seattle
Slew does not msist on run
mng m front - tt s just that
none of his rtvals have been
fast enough to keep up w th

and the startmg gate to ward
off any Derby Day ]titers
owners Karen and Mtckey
Taylor sought instructton
from Mrs Penny (Tweedy)
Rmgquist
She s a grand lady
Mtckey Taylor said Thursday
mommg She told us You

The Ath ens Coun y

Sav ngs &amp; Loan Co

196 Second s r

Pomeroy Oh o

ROYAL CROWN
BOffiiNG COMPANY
Mtddleport

a.

1~1

THE MEIGS INN
992 3629

POMEROY, 0.

�~The Daily Sentinel. Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 ., Frida)', May 6, 1977
4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Fnday, May 6, 1977

Far west mountain trek begun

Visitations

Southern wins opener

'Penguin' hot

are begun

By FRED Me MANE
he stepped up to bat against
UPI Sports Writer
Tom Seaver with the bases
After almost a week in the loaded in the fifth inning.
deep freeze, "The Penguin"
Suddenly , il was April
is wanning up again.
again for Cey. The hardRon Cey of the Los Angeles hitting Dodger third baseman
Dodgers, better known as stroked a low 3-2 pitch from
Penguin to his teanunates Seaver over t~e right-center
because of the way he walks, field fence for his second
was hot during the month of grand slam and loth homer of
April and set a major league the season. The blow capped
record for runs batted in with a seven-run inning and
29.
• carried the Dodgers to a 7-2
But, since May rolled victory, which stretched their
around he's been frigid as the lead in the National League
Antarctic Circle. He entered West over Cincinnati to 9\0
Thursday night's game with
the New York Mets without a
hit in his last 15 at bats and
had gone only 1-for-25 when

WHA playoffs

NHL playoffs

Skin testing

Be~als

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Thursday's Results
Tidewater 2. Charleston l
Columbus 6, Rochester 3
Syracuse 3, Toled o o
Ric hmond at Pawtucket,
ppd ., rain

76ers win
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lnternationa 1League
United Press International
Charleston

59 N. Second St .
992-5560

DURING
OUR SALE

0.0.

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fat: toping, topping ond
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College

~

Diego , Wtnf l el ct (_.J

Prtu tntern•tional
nine hits for his third straight Bv United
games. Los Angeles has won the Mets' right-hander down a tw&lt;&gt;-run homer.
Nalionat Lugue
New Y ork
000 000 070- 2 8 o
Hous ton
000 000 5~ 7 9 0 LOS Angeles. 000 070 OOX 1 10 0
21 of 25 games.
In other NL games, win and helped his own cause Ch1c
to his first loss in five
ago
oiJ O 010 OO:oc - 8 9 0
Seever, TOdd (8J end
"Before I went up to the decisions. The big inning Philadelphia beat San Diego, with a pair of tw&lt;&gt;-run singles
Bann ister, N1ekro (2). Le r son STearns ,
Rhoden (5 OJ and
plate, Manager Tommy made things easy for Rlck 8-5, Montreal defeated San to lead Montreal. Gary &lt;OJ. Sambilo 17} and Fer guson ; Oate\, LP- S.eaver 14 u HRsReuschel. P Reuschet (7), New York . M il ner (1 ); Los
Lasorda said to me Rhnden to win his fifth game Francisco, 7-1. and Chicago Carter had a pair of doubles R
Sutter (8) and M it1er wald . WP Angeles, Cey c101. Ba k et" C5l .
for
the
Erpos
who
handed
'Remember, Gnd made you without a loss as he limited edged Houston, 9-a.
~R .
Reusch el
(4 D . L PSan Francisco its loth loss in Bannister ( I 2). HR s- Hous ton.
Amer ican League
to drive in runs,' " said Cey. the Mets to eight hits. John·
Expos 7, Giants 1:
Watson
(3),
Johnson
{51. Ch i cago
100 210 JOG-s 10 1
12
games
et
home
this
season.
"But it can't turn out this way Milner spoiled Rhoden's
Steve Rogers scattered
Fer guson (6),· Chica go , Tr i llo Kan City
101 112 OOx- 6 Ill
Cubs I, ~stros 5:
K. Brett, OaiCanton (6 ) and
(2 ), M or a les (2 ). Mitte_
r wal d
every time. I don't dou)&gt;t shutout bid in the ei~hth with
(2 )
Es s ian ; Spl illodf 1 B ir d {41 .
Manny
Trillo
had
a
double
,
t.a.orda, but I doubt myself
Hat!
0 ),
L i ttell
18)
and
triple and three-run homer to Montr ea t
010 20A()()()-,;- 7 10 0 M art inez. W P - B ir d (2 0 1. LP sometimes."
000 000 lOG- 1 9 3 Br etf t3 2L HRs- Kansas City,
power
Chicago. Jerry San F ran
Dusty Baker also stroked a
Ro9 er s (3 -l l and Ca r ter ; Ofis {4l. Cowens (31 .
Morales
added
a
three-run
Ha lick i, Wil l iams (6J. Heaverlo
tw&lt;&gt;-run homer .off Seaver in
blast and George Mitterwald (6J. CornuU (8 ) a nd Hill L P- Mil wau kee 100 040 200--- 8 12 '1
the fifth as the Dodgers sent
To r onto
040 (13 1 lOx.;- 9 12 0
a solo shot for the Cubs while Hal ic k i (2.3).
10 men to the plate and
Bea re , Cast r o (S), Mc Clure
Joe
Ferguson,
Cliff
Johnson
Ph ila
000 401 01:1- a 10 () {8) an d Moo r e ; Ga r vin , Vu ck
collected six hits in sending
ich (51 and Cerone W Pand Bob Watson homered for San D i ego , 002 100 101- 5 7 I ov
Lerch, Ga rber (7) and Boone ; Vuc kovicl1 (2 -2L LP Castro ( J.
the Astros.
Shir ley , Spi ltner ( 4 ), Met1ger l l. HRs M ilwa ukee , Cooper
(6), Tomlin (6) , F inger s (9 ) ( A); Toronto , ~ ;:,l r ly (1 )
Pblllles 8, Padres 5:
and
enace. WP ~ L e r ch (4 1) .
A throwing error by cat- LP- TShir
200 000 000 2 7 2
ley ( 2 · 4 ) . H Rs- Phi l a· Se a t tle
000 003 02x - 5 7 0
cher Gene Tenace paved the del ph ia , Schm idt (4) ; San Bost on
Seg ul , Paga n (81 and St i nson ,·
United Press International have to rely on your sense of way for a four-run fourth
Jenk ins ( 4. 1) and F isk L Phiaring
and
touch
to
know
Inning to send Philadelphia ·
For a real fishing thrill
Seg u i (Q . o:~ J. HRs - Sea ttle,
M ey el'" (A) ; Boston, Scott ( 4),
past San Diego. Tenace's
during the summer months, when you bave a strike.
R i ce (3 ).
·
Not many things will give return throw to first base on
try surfa ce plugging for
Oakland
n o 000 010-.- 5 8 o
large-mouth bass at night. you the thrill as the sudden an apparent double play ball
New
Yo
rk
000
000 11 0- 2 10 o
During this time of year, crashing splash and pull hit the runner and allowed the
Bl ue (2-2) anct Sa nguil len ,
Newman (9 ); Hunt er (1 -l i and
years at the University of bass try to avoid direct against the rnd so typical of a tying run to score. Jerry
Bv united Press iriternatlonal Munson . H R- Oa k land , Page
Houston. We were 1().2 last sunlight and generally move nighttime strike. You should Martin then singled home the
Eastern Conferenc;e
( 6) .
Final ROUM
season. Beat Maryland in the into deep water during · the set the hook at once, 'but you go-ahead run and Ted
(Best of Seven)
Cotto n Boww I won the day. Unless you're using a won't be able to tell how big Sizemore 's sacrifice fly '
Philadelphia vs. Hcuston
(Philadelphia leads, 1-0l
Lombardi Award. I figured I boat and li depth finder these the fish is until you get him to capped the rally. Mike SchCover her hand
May 5-Ph lla 128 Hous 1,11
might have been the No. 1 holes may be hard to locate. the net. Sometimes even midt hit a tw&lt;&gt;-run homer for M'ay
a- Houston at Ph ita
with glorious
But at night these same fish small bass can feel like the Phillles in helping rookie May ·\1 - PhiiB at Houston
lineman taken."
May
13Phi
ta
at
Houston
Edwards was a defensive cruise the shore lines in hippos when you can't see . Randy Lerch to his fourth win x -May 15- Houston at Phi l a
color
In five decisio ns. Dave K·Mav 17- Ph i ta at Houston .
tackle all through high school search of frogs and insects. them.
'It's possible to catch Winfield homered for San K-May 19- Houston at Ph i Ia
and college, but he played This offers the night
defensive end in the Senior fisherman an opportunity for largemouth at night on live Diego.
western 'conference
Final Round
Bowl and East-West Shrine some exciting catches, not to bait and conventional su!).
( Best of Seven)
games and figures to wind up menlion several distinct surface lures, but the exLos Angele s vs . Port1a11d
citement of hooking large fish
at defensive end for the advantages.
May 6- P'ortland at Los Ang
May 8- P'ortland at Los Ang
It's less likely that even the on a top water plug is
Bengals. Whitley expects to
May 10- Los Ang at Portland
remain at his usual defensive smaller bodies of water will unequalled. Nightime or very
May 13- Los Ang at Portland
x -May IS- Portland at L os Ang
be crowded at night. It seems late evening Is best for this.
tackle spot.
x -May 18- Los Ang at Portland
usually
on
the
The
bass
are
Edwards, a native of Ft. most folks go home for
X·May 20- Portl and at L os Ang
x- lf necessary
Pierce, Fla., said he still supper about the time the prowl anyway and the
temptation of a sizeable
couldn't believe he was the bass really start hitting.
Also, darkness makes it morsel just on the surface
first lineman in the country
more difficult for the fish to may be more than he can
drafted.
"It's just what I've been see you. This is important bear to pass up.
striving for all my life, to be since fishing is really nothing
the best at my position, but more than hunting with a rod
By JOE JULIANO
I'm disappointed my mother and reel. You're most likely
PIDLADELPHIA
(UPI) is not aroWld to see this day.'' to be successful if your
While
may
be
hard
to
confuse
Edwards' mother was quarry is Wlaware of your
the Houston Rockets with the
killed by a hit-and-run driver presence.
more-publicized Bos ton
Largemouth seem to be a
.last October.
INGLEWOOD, Calif. (UP!)
Celtics, the Philadelphia
" It was the worst part of bit more reckless at night,
- If the Los Angeles Lakers
76ers
know
they
have
a
much
my life," s.aid Edwards. "She quickly aonswning anything
tougher fight on their hands. are going to beat the Portland
raised six kids and worked at . that's injured for food. That's
' The 76ers used their Trail Blazers in the NBA .
two jobs. I wanted to buy her why surface lures work so
familiar run-.11 nd-shoot of- playoffs, they're going to
a nice home and settle her well. They often imitate the
fense to break open a tight have to have a ;trong ofdown. Everything I did was actions of a large moth or
game in the third quarter and fensive series, said Laker
other insect that has become
for her."
went on to a 128-117 victory Coach Jerry West.
Whitley, a native of Bren- trapped on the surface. Tbe
"You simply must stop
over the stubborn Rockets
ham, Tex., said it was bass are . quic~ to take
their running ," West said of
Thursday
night
in
the
opening
important to him to be a~vantage of its plight.
1 .1 K
0.
Michels, Ind ., Otto
game of the NBA Eastern Bill Walton and the Trail
You can bave .good catches K ..OtMichels
drafted by a "contending
Exec. ,. Esther E . . Conference finals , but it Blazers.
\vben you fish for largemouth Minder. Ralph Minder. Lola
team" like the Bengals.
"That is the key to the
wasn't all that simple.
"When Cincinnati didn't without a lantern. The light M . Michels, Ind .. Lola M .
w•lh a fab uiO(Is colseries
lor us. They have
"We
did
not
win
easily,
o red stone. n ng f ro m our
pick me first I figured I was itself doesn't spook the fish, Michels, Exec. , Bette M.
Sherrill. Pogue C. Sherrill, . even though the game might tremendous quickne ss.
grea t collec tion' Dressy
headed for New · Orleans, ·but it may make you more Ruth Cigledy, Richard S.
Without a doubt, they're the
have
looked
like
it,"
admitted
or demu re, bold or delibecause I knew the SaintS visible and cause him to be Cigledy . Catherine M.
quickest team in the league.
Coach
Gene
Shoe.
"As
76ers'
ca
te we·ve got lo ts 10
Johnson,
Des
mond
F
_
were interested in me and more cautious. The same is
"Irl order for us to do that,
great
as
we
were
playing,
choose tram to enchan t
Johnson
,
to
Joanne
Tat
they had a pick right befcire true of fishing on the nights
we must execute our ofrense
h er f·o r.yc&lt;HS See !hem a:.ll
Lots, Pomeroy.
they kept it close."
when the moon is particularly terson,
the Bengals' next one.
David
W.
Ohl inger.
better
than
we
did
against
Philadelphia shot 61 per
A Ony x . Drarnond::,
"But I was ,relieved the bright.
Margaret E. Ohlinger to Noel cent in the first halt but led Golden State. If you miss
0
Turq uo rse rnat r1x
Saints didn't take me , Fishing after dark requires J . Miller, Sandra K. Miller,
your
shots,
Portland
can
run
.
only
64-57
as
Houston's
6-10
Lot,
Middleport.
C
Ruoy Ina
because I'd much rather a lot of concent,ation. You
If
you
don't
miss,
they
can't
Paul
E.
Wickline.
Betty
J.
·
Moses
Malone
scored
22
of
his
0
ln t .~ rqurng Opal
come to Cincinnati than New won't be able to see your line Wickline to John T. Pat run.
It's
just
about
that
game-high
32
points
and
/1 1•11 ~ ~~·-; • r•o n~ ch1;oi(.lt'tl
as in the daytime, so you'll terson, linda K. Patterson,
Orleans.
simple."
gobbled
up
five
offensive
Lots. Pomeroy.
The Lakers and Kareem •
reboWJds over the befuddled
Kenneth L. Bass, Ina Jean
·"Maybe I wasn't the first
Abdul-Jabbar host the
Bass .t o Ronnie K. Hubbard,
76er
front
line
.
lineman taken because some
Linda D. Hubbard . Lot,
Darryl Dawkins helped Blazers tonight in the opening
teaJDS would rather have a llMiddleport.
handcuff
Malone in the third game of the Western ConPaul Brooks, Elizabeth
foo~ or ~ lineman instead
quarter
and scored nine ference finals. The second
Brooks to Maywood C.
of my ll-3,!' figured Whitley.
Johnston,
Parcels, Lebahon . . points along with Doug game of the best-of-seven
"But I think I bave all tbe
Collins .and Philadelphia took series Is set here Sunday.
potential."
Maywood C. Johnson to a IQ0-83 into the final quarter
Th9mas Lloyd Deeter , Mary
to seemingly clinch the game .
Deeter, Parcels, Lebanon.
James R. Cunningham. Sr ..
Wrong. The Rockets hit 14
Freda M. Cunningham to
of their first 15 shots and cut
Thomas LlOyd Deeter, Mary
the 76ers' advantage to
Deeter . Parcels, Lebanon .
COLLUMBUS
"I
ate
the
•
seven,
120-113, With 3:33 to
Eugene M . Johrison , Lillie
whole thing. "
·
A. Johnson to Paul R. pla)' befo~e Julius Erving hit
That's a quote from Walter Johnson, C~rolyn E. Johnson, two foul shots and a basket to
C. Hudnell of Cadiz, Ohio. 4.368 a .. Letart.
enable the crowd of 17,507 to
Norm-a H. Harris , dec . to
Hudnell landed a 35-pound Otto
K. Michels. Lola M. breathe a little easier.
channel catfish April 23 while Mic he ls , cert for trans .,
But those who thought the
Mrs . Millard VanMeter 1
,
fishing in Sally Buffalo Park Pomeroy .
76ers would have a picnic
Charles
S.
Beller
tu
Roger
in Cadiz. He cleaned the fish
after their grueling sevenOpen 9 to 5 Mon .• Sat.
R-W. Rutland.
Flowers For
and ate it only to find out later Adams.
game series against Boston
Charles R. Eads, JoAnn
992-2039 • 992-5721
All Occasions
his catch surpassed the state Eads. Jerry D. Eads. Wanda should reconsider.
record for channel catfish by Louise Eads, ·fo Rog er
Adams, R-W, Rutland.
10 pounds.
. Alma Peterson to Roger
Also, Hudnell failed to have Adams,
R·W, Rutland .
the fish weighed on certified
Owen P. Curtis, deed . to
s&lt;;ales, a must according to Martha Curtis. Sarah Curtis, ,
the official entry fonn for James Curtis , Martha
Russell, Margaret Curtis aff .
state record fish maintained for
trans., Salisbury .
by the OUtdoor Writers of
Martha Curtis, deed . to
Sarah Curtis, James Curtis,
Ohio. •
Dale Haney, Chief of the Martha Russell. Margaret
aft . for trans ..
So buy the new Shhl 015 AV while
The new 015AV takes the.shakes
Division of Wildlife of the Curtis,
Salisbvry.
this
Spnng
special lasts. You·n get a deal
out of woodcutting with St1hl·s exclu·
Ohio Department of Natural
Martha Russell. deed . to '
that"ll
shake
you u p.
sive anti-vibration system. And to take
Resources, said, ''Our fish Margaret Staggs . James
On
a
ne
w cham saw that won•t.
Ru
sse
l-l,
aff.
f.or
tran
s.,
the jitters out of buying one were
man~gement
p~ople
Salisbury.
·
offering you over $27 worth of
eramined the head and tail of
James Russell , de c. to
extras - free!
the fish after it was cleaned. Marga ret Staggs, aft. for
!!iTIH~
Without ~ doubt it was a trans .. Salisbury .
Margaret Curt is, dec . to
tdJtntctaalnsaw.
channel catfish. Although the
Sarah Curtis , Margaret
fish will not qualify as a state Staggs. aff . for trans .,
record, the . findings of our Salisbury.
Sarah Curtis to Margaret
fish management section, the
witnesses, and an exce)lent Staggs. James C. Staggs. Lot,
Sahsbury.
,
Custom Designed
photograph make it eligible
Idonia M . Johnson, dec. to
Carrying Casc.
for our Fish Ohio Awards Ma ywood C. Johnston. Ruth
Brooks,. Turla Powers , alf.
contest."
Hudnell's catfish is the for tra ns ., Lebanon.
Chester ·Powers , Turla
current · leader in this Powers to Maywood C.
category.
John ston, parcels, Lebanon.

happy with

By RICK VAN SAN'!'
CINCINNATI (UP! ) They were 8n awesome sight.
The twQ totaled 12-feet-71&gt;
inches and 506 pounds.
Mostly muscle.
' 'They'' were the Cincinnati
Bengals' two top draft
choices - Eddie Edwards
and Wilson Whitley -and the
two defensive linemen
loomed as twin giants when
club officials brought the pair
together for the first time
Thursday.
"This is a lot of beef,"
winced Bengals' head coach
Bill Johnson as he tried to
sandwich himself between
the duo.
Edwards, the 6-412, 248pounder out of Miami (Fla.)
University, was Cincy's first
selection - the third player
taken in the entire draft and
first lineman.
Whitley, 6-3 and 258 pounds
!.rom the University of
Houston, was the Bengals'
second pick - the eighth
player nabbed in the draft.
Cincinnati grabbed the
"two of a kind" to shore up its
defensive line and the duo
looked and talked up to the
job Thursday. They were in
perfect playing shape neither one an ounce
overweight
and as
confident as collegians can
be.
"! don't like to sit still on
the line," grinned Edwards,
his bulging anns about to pop
the sleeves of his shirt. "I
don't like to wait. I like to
rush. To show off my speed. "
Whitley talked the same
way.
"I weighed about 290 back
wh~nl playe&lt;l in high school
but I was still pretty quick
afoot then," the muscleman
recalled. "! started aU four

FRAMING
LUMBER

l*****************************l

else throws
one
conventions
with cards."
that act. ·No .
In 1940 he added something
else new. "It's not really
magic, but an unusual thing,
painting pictures with sand."
Franklin learned it from S.S. ·
Henry,
a
celebrated
chatanqua perfonner.
"He had acquired that from
Navajo Indians. They use it
somehow in religious rites.
Henry first put jt on stage, I
believe. 11
Playing all the way from
Maine to Florida, Franklin
has performed on college
. convocation circuits. For a ·
number of years he per·
fonned on his own, but is•now
a inembl!r of " lhe 'ln:'
ternational Brotherhood of
Magicians. Last year he was
vice-president of the West
Virginia Chapter. He is a
member of the Society of
American
Magicians
(Houdini's organization).
A retired
educator,
Franklin taught at Wit·
tenburg University in
Springfield, Ohio, and at West
Virginia University, taught
English at Point Pleasant
High six years and was
principal for II years.
He has operated the Ben
Franklin Company shoe store
on Main St. here, a family
business, the past six years.

personally

lOth.
'

!

r-,::Jar=•·~=~================~;_-l

to

discuss your plans, simply
call him at 446-4367. 446·
4373 or 446·4378. Terms
begin on June 6th and Sept.

PLANKED
PANEL SIDING

!
!

I Results, line sco~

as Dodgers romp, 7-2

new draft choices

NEW TERM

announced

·

aga~·

MljOr Lt19Ut RtiUitl

Sayre (WP), Cundiff (7)
MILLER - Thursday Sayre pitched a fine 6-hitter,
and
Forbes. Riley (LP ), Toth
afternoon here Southern High fanning nine and walking siz.
Tim Glaze. son of Mrs.
School rallied from a 3-2 He got help from Greg (4 ) and Starling.
Belva Glaze of Pomeroy, and
deficit to plate eight rons in Cundiff in the 7th.
Southern's bats cracked out
Tom Beckstrand of Chicago.
the fourth inning on the way
.,
ill., don 't really consider
to a 14-7 victory in first round, 15 safe hits off two Miller
Class A sectional baseball pitchers, tagging Riley with
themselves throwbacks to the
BV Unitt!CI Press tnternationll
Visitation of students to the tournament play.
the loss. Southern was led in
Eute.rn Oiviiion
western Mountain Men
Final Round
Pomeroy National Bank
nevertheless, they eJped to
The win raised Southern's hitting by senior Seott Wolle
f Best of Seven)
began today with the first season mark to 11-2 as John with three singles and two
spend much of the next six
Quebec vs. Indianapolis
grade
of
Pomeroy
I Quebec wins, 4 ~ 1)
walks in five trips. Greg
months enjoying some of the
23~ auebec 3 lndpt s l
Elementary School being the
Cundiff had a single and AA pr
Mountain Men's habitat.
p r 25- Quebec 8 lndpls-3
first .
double, Sayre helped his Apr 28 - 0 ue 6 tndpls 5, ot
,.
Beckstrand and Glaze left
Ap r JG- Indpl s 2 Quebec 0
On Wednesday, Pomcause with a single, and Mike Ma
last week for San Diego,
y 2-0u ebec 8 lndpls 3
eroy Elementary third By United Press International Huddleston and Steve Hill
Calif., where they made final
$emiflnals
each singled. Junior Kelly
grade,.. will visit the inpreparations to leave May 1
Western Division
(Best of Seven)
F-inal Rcund
Winebrenner, once of Meigs,
stitution
and
on
Friday
,
on a 2,600 mile walk of the
Montre-.1 \IS . New York
Houston vs . Winnipeg
I
Montreat
wins,
4·21
had
two
singles.
second
graders
will
make
a
Pacific Crest Trail.
Winnipeg wins, 4· 2
Apr 2 4 ~ Mtl 4 NY ISindrS 3
1•
A p r . 26 - W i nnipg 4 Hous 3,
visitation . On Wednesday ,- Apr 26- Mtl 3 NY lslndrs 0
The ned game is pending
Their trek takes them
make up games of the regular ot Apr . 28 - HoUS 7 W i nn i pg 2
and Thursday, May 18 and 19, Apr 28- NY ISindrS 5 Mfl 3
through the San Jacinto,
Apr 30- Mtl 4 NY !Sindrs 0
schedule, according to Hilton
kindergarten children will May 3- tslndrs 4 Mtl 3, ot
Sierra Nevada and Cascade
A pr . 30 - W inn i peg 4 Hous
3
visit the bank from the .May S- M11 2 f"Y l slndr s 1
Wolle Jr., coach .
Mountain
ranges
of
May I - Winnipeg 6 Hous 4
Pomeroy Elementary School
Southern 002 840 0-14 lo 4
California, Oregon and
May 3 - Hous 3 Winnipeg 2
Philadelphia vs. Boston
May 5 - Winnipeg 6 HOUS 3
and on Wednesday, fourth
Miller
003 000 4- 7 ~ 3
Washington to the Canadian
( BoSion wjns, 4-0J
Apr
2~
Boston
.Ph
i
la
3.
ot
graders of the Riverview Apr 26- Boston 5 Phila 4, 2ots
border.
,.
Elementary School will be Apr 28- Boston 2 Phila 1
Acutally the trip is taking
May 1- Boston 3 Ph i la 0
visiting the bank also.
th~m from the California In conjunction with the
Mexico border north to
visitations, coloring books
Canada. A lot of planning has
NEW YORK (UP!) - Tbe
will be given each student
gone into the trip. The young
surprising
expansion Toronto
and a drawing contest held in
men mai led about 20
Blue
Jays
parlayed a New
each class. Prizes will be
packages of food to various
York; , Yankee castoff, Otto
offered.
places along the way where
Kindergarten classes at the Velez, into April's American
they could pick them up.
Rutland School as well as the League "Player of the
There are sections of the hike
first four grades and kin- Month." The rigbt-handed
about 180 miles between main
dergarten classes of the hitting outfielder, one of those
settlements and where the
Harrisonville School will visit Yankees left unprotected in
travelers may not be able to
the
Rolland Branch in May: last November's expansion,
buy the lightweight foods
Kindergarten classes and the led the league in both hitting
they'll need.
first four grades at Tuppers and slugging during April Despite the planning, the
Plains will visit the Tuppers and is still leading in both
men say that getting ready
Plains
Branch of the areas.
for a 2,600 mile walk took no
Pomeroy National Bank on
more physical training than
May 10. .
getting ready for any walk.
NEW YORK (UP! )
TOM BECKSTRAND, LEFT, of Chicago and Tim Glaze, a native
TWenty-year-old Swedish
They must finish the trek
of Pomeroy-Middleport, check backpacking gear they will carry on
tennis star Bjorn Borg will
before late October or they
2,600 mile mountain trek from the California-Mexico border north to
donate his $20,000 winning
will run a heavy risk of
the Canadian border.
share from the United Bank
getting into big snowstonns.
FEATURES :
Tennis Classic to . the
Also, walking on heights a
~
is
100 per cen t sol id state chassis .
American-Romanian Earthmile or more above sea level be drought which has struck
Beckstrand and Glaze, who · persons who have made that
13,500 volts of picture power,
quake Committee.
all summer threatens them the western states this year, resides in Columbus, met walk. Glaze was drununer for
TUPPERS PLAINS Solid state 3-stage video IF
Borg, who is engaged to
with hypothennia, a lack of possibly making it difficult during a walk on the Ap- the shows of the Big Bend Tuberculosis skin tests will
Solid state VHS and UHF tuners.
ability of the body to produce for the two hikers to get palachian Trail when they Mtnstrei Assn. for a number be given at the Tuppers Rumanian tennis
Reoullated
I
pr
ofessional
Mariana
heat. Another problem may water.
Plains Elementary School
were among fewer than 100 of years.
beginning at 9 a.m. Monday, Simionescu, recently won the
May 23, to pupils in those Denver tournament.
grades not tested earlier.
Mrs. Jane Brown, RN , also may receive a skin test
&gt;
Meigs County Tuberculosis by reporting to the school
•
Clinic
Nurse,
will
be
in
office
tbat
da~.
Tests
will
be
POINT PLEASANT- "It's perfonnance. Dancing with smooth technique as he sends back of the theater. As a charge of the program. checked on Wednesday, May
just a lot of fun, said Ben- mllllic by Gary Stewart's cards sailing through the air, brash boy I just asked him
jamin ("Benji" Franklin IV band from 9 p.m. until I a.m. paints with · sand, and per- how to throw those cards, and
this week as he prepared to condudes the event. Tickets fonns nwnerous pther tricks. believe it or noi, he told me.
Franklin ' s interest in I've been featuring that act
mystify and entertain ·the are on sale at $4 each.
magic
began when he was 12 ever since," Franklin said
As a·professional, Franklirr
audience with his magic at
years
old after he won a with this card trick he is
Saturday's Republican social combines psychology, skill of
11-eFr~Ores.
hand and bndy and special magic .set selling the capable of standing on the
gathering.
M&lt;.
The social begins with a equipment to baffle the Saturday Evening Post on the sidewalk and sailing thein
over the 'Lowe Motor Inn on
6:30 p.m. dlnnerin the Moose keenest eye. Only years of streets of Point Pleasant.
"It
was
fun
and
I
just
kept
.
Main St.
practice
account
for
his
Hall followed by Franklin's
pra cti cing from there . I
It is accepted fact that the
bought books and studied and true art of magic lies in
was able to give a little act performance. Franklin
MOTHER'S DAY
when I was a junior at Point assumes the role of doing the
Pleasant High School" he imppssible when he becomes
SPECIAL
recalled.
magician-entertainer. The
Handsomely embossed rough surface .. .
21 • 96 teJCtu re rn softly-hued umber or moss ,,,
MAY 8th
&gt;t · His early performances magician's tricks alone are
81 shadings . Men-made finish on hardboard.::
took place at the once popular merely puzzles; the thing
7116·· 1(4'1(9 '.
:
Alpine Theater, now the that make them mystifying
location · of the - Anchor and entertaining is the way
Restaurant on Main Street. . he does them .
"I had the good fortune to
About his card trick:
meet Howard Thurston in. Audiences are awed to see
1'•• 12 ••
1931. That winter I met cards cut through three
Thurston at the Hartman sheets of newspaper as they
&gt;t Hrs.: 10:00a.m. tilli:OOp.m. Sun .. Thurs .
10 : 00a .m.tii12:00p.m. Fri.&amp; Sat.
&gt;t Theater in Columbus, Ohio. sail to the back of a room. Not
He was absolutely fimtastic. even the paper breaks the
992-2556
"He was a grea~ card man. momentum. Commenting on
&gt;t W.MAIN
. POMEROY,O. Jt He sent them sailing through the card trick, he said, "I've
paper from the stage to the been on all the national

to bank

•

•

..

MODERN SUPPLY·

399 W. Main St.
992-2164
Pomeroy, 0.
THE STORE WITH "ALL KINDS OF STUFF"- FOR
PETS, STABLES, LARG~ &amp; SMALL ANIMALS, LAWNS
AND GARDENS. .

Half a Pint
ofEr.gihe

Sports transactions
Unitfd Press International

thursday

Pro Footba II

Moe

another. year.
Baseball
Seattle - Recalled pitcher
for

-standard equipment wtth all Stahl saws.

Los Angeles - Signed Rick Jones from Wichi ta and
UCL!\ center Milch Kahn as a optioned Frank McCormack
free agent .
to Toledo.
New York Jets - Signed
College Baskelba tt
Penn State tackle-center
Oral Roberts - Jerry Hale
Dave Shuk ri as. a free agent.'
Washington - Signed free

agent Colgate safety Mark
Murphey ,

"

Pro Basketba It
San Antonio -

tt,e contract

of

Renewed

Coach Doug

1\'l

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

resigned as head bask e tba l l

coach.

Soccer
Washington

-

Traded

defender Tom Galati to Las

Vegas · lor m ldflelder Art
Welch.

500 E. Main
J

Brake Selvice - Front End Alignment
992-2094 '

Pomeroy, 0.

�r;;;;;put;;;,
b
;;d;p;;g;;;,]
Women attend district meeting
POl NTE RS ;:;:

&amp;-The Daily Sentinel. Mlddleport-Pon&gt;eroy. u .• ~' nday. May 6, 1977

Stains in the bathroom
DEAR POLLY - We have
just moved into an old home
in the fOuntry and the tub,
sink and toilet bowl all have
rust stai ns. l have used
bleach, household cleansers,
soap pads and three or four
kinds of toilet bowl cleaners
but none of them helped.
Would you or the readers
have any sugges tions? S.A.M.
DEAR S.A.M.- I think your
best bet is to get a commercial rust remover and follow
dire c ti ons expli citly .
-POLLY.
DEAR POLLY - Stickers
thaI are placed on mirrors
can be so hard to remove but
I have discovered all one
needs to do is apply a good
hand cleaner, wail about 20
minutes and wipe it away
with a tissue. Next clean your
· mirror with a window
cleaner. - LOU.
DEAR POLLY - I have an
inexpensive way for record
en thusiasts to store their
records. Get a box that six 64ounce bottles of soda pop
come· in, with a divider in the
middle, and find it work.s
great. - MARIE.
DEAR POLLY - Carpel
your baby's stroller to cui
down on the clatter and prevent scuffed baby shoes.
Punch holes in the front and
back of a carpet sample and
lace it to the stroller with a
long shoe lace. The carpet
piece is easy to wash and also
keeps baby's feet warmer.
Do not throw away that old
toothbrush. Keep one in the
bathroom to use for cleaning
grouting between ceramic
tiles. A toothbrush kept in the
kitchen will clean crumbs out
of the toaster, deeply engraved silver pieces or the
burners on your gas range.
Spread g)ue with a toothbrush
and find it provides an ideal
gripping s urfa ce .. A
toothbrush in the family shoe

shine kit is handy and one is
/&gt;erfecl for spot cleaning stubhorn stains on clothing .
Put spices in a metal tea
ball and you can add flavor to
pickles without adding the
spices themselves.
Pour a bottle o( inexpensive

Th
bl
· ·
. •. pro ems of mslilut10nahzedwomenandtherole
JTUSSllHlS take
prepa . 1
10. .
th
".~g
. e:". to ent~~ SOCiety ''as
disc-ussed by Kathryn Ph1~on
at ~ meetmg of the East
Letar.t Umt~d Methodis t
~omen Tuesday mght at the
c urch. .
.;
'&lt;Miss Ph1lson told of Chns:
tian.womengOJngmtopnsons
to talk to l.he women there,
and of the support they offer
~oc\~~~ plans for re-entenng
·

:~:;

·
anrl what ll takes to oo a
member. Assisting Mrs.
Donahue with a dialogue on
" Why I Can't Attend" was
Mrs. Eileen Roush.
Mrs. Nora Pearson and
Mrs. Clara Adams served
refreshments to those nam&lt;;&lt;J
and Barbara. Dugan, Foc1e
Hayman, Dons Adams, Mary
Rou sh, Eileen Buck ,
Julia .Nofris., and guests,
Josephine Mowery, Robin
Sauvage, "nd Dixie Duga n.

Mrs. Sue lkegle prc;lllc&lt;l
at the meeting which u!Jt'nl'&lt;l
·th
. .
wl gruupsmgmgoi "Spnng
of L1vmli Water " w1th
Marlene F~s~er at the p~:&lt;no.
Comm umcallons were read
and Mrs. Hazel Fox and Mrs.
F1sher g~vc, the treasurer
an~ secretary s reports,
..
Found Ano.ther Member
was the program topic of
Mrs. Lucy Donahue. She
discussed how to ge t people
mterested m the organir.a tion

nail polish remover into a

small empty cold cream jar
and then hal( fill with lillie
cotton halls, put lbe lid on
tight and shake. When you
want to remove nail polish
wen the jar, take out a ball
and .squeeze excess liquid on
the other balls . This saves
both remover and time. MRS.A.C.
DEAR POLLY - I think I
have found lhe easiest way to
rem0ve cat hair from the cat
and the furniture. After
brushing and combing your
cat run a 12-inch-long piece of
two-inch-wide paper tape up
and down the eat's back,
round its neck and all over.
The cal will be beautiful and
the loose hairs gone.
Heavy necklace chains
make perfect replacements
for broken m· wom .hand bag
handles and last indefinitely.
-GERTRUDE F.
Polly will send you one of
her signe d thank -you
newspaper-eoupon clippers if
she

uses

your

favorite

Pointer, Peeve or Problem in
her column. Write POLL y:Jf'
POINTERS in care ot-' fhis
newspaper.

Young Wives plan parties
Parties for lh~ special
education classes at the
Chester Elementary School
were discussed when the
Young Wives Club met
recently at the home of Mrs.

Linda Well.
A party for one of the
classes has been held and one
for the other class will be he ld
this month. The club donated
$20 to the Easter Seals

Telethon and $15 to the group
therapy program for Personal Advocacy. It was noted
the club members had canvassed Chester Township for
the Cancer Society.
A bake sale was set for May
14 at Chesler. Preceding the
meeting a housewares party
was held. Refreshments were
served by the hostess to Mrs.
Ula Van Meter, Mrs. Sar'l
Ba i ley, Mr s . Norma
Hawthorne1 Jane Coates,
Mrs. Kathy Stone, Mrs.
will return again Tuesday Marilyn Spencer and Mrs.
evening 1 which is "pack a Karen Young.
pew night." On Wednesday
evening, Sharon and Diama
lhle will provide specia l
GIVING SHOWER
music and on Thursday
Paul
and Virgie Buckley
e':'ening "pack a pew night"
will
hold
a household shower,
will be observed with musi c
Saturday,
May 14, at 7:30
by the Meigs ijigh School
p.m
.
at
the
Elmwood Rest
Girls Quintet. Making up the
Home
building
at Alfred for
group are Paula Eichinger,
Mrs.
Ruby
Burke,
Alfred.
Jeni Grate, Laura Hoover,
Mrs
.
Burk
e
lost
all
her
Bev Wilcox and Jo McKiim ey
belongings
in
a
fire
that
accompanied by Teresa Ellis.
On Friday evening youth destroyed her home April 1.
night will be observed with Everyone is invited to attend.
i:nusic by the youth choir of
the church. Donita and Robin
Manuel will also sing. On
HUB BARDS
Saturday night, music will be
GREEN HOUSE
provided by the First Baptist
Church of Leon, W. . Va.
Open Daily
Featured will be ·a trio and a
9!o 6
quartet. On Sunday morning,
Sunday
May 15, the primary and
llo6
kindergarten class will sing
Vegetable Plants
and men of the church will
provide the music oil Sunday ·
Potted Plants
eve ning. Services in the
evening will be at ,7:30 with
Hanging Baskets
the public invited .
992 -5776 Syracuse. o.

Mrs. Nettie Hayes, Mrs.
Edna Reibel and Mrs Eva
De ..
'
· M ·· Ita
ssuuer were u1 ar1e
Sundaylorthemeetingofthe

In l975, President Ford
made a televised appeal to
Americans to welcome the
thousands of refugees
pouring into the U.S. by air
from their Communist
co untry .
He
sharply
criticized opposition to the
Vietnamese resettlement.
.
A thought for the day :
Psyc hoanalyst . Sigmund
Freud said , "The great
question, which I have not
been able to answer despite
my 30 years of research into
the feminine soul ... is 'What
does a woman want?'"

KILLER DUMPSTERS
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Tbe
Ohio House unanimou sly
passed and sent to the Senate
Thursdy . a bill requiring
manufacturers ol trash
"dumpsters" to redesign the
Hawaii was the program
units and made them " tip- theme when Middleport Cub
proof."
Scout Pack 245 met at the
Reps. Dick Fi.nan, D- Feeney,Bennett Post Home
Cincinnati, and Helen Fix, R- American Legion.
'
Cincinnati, told the House of
Two members of each den
several occasions when took part in the pledge of
2nd ANNUAL
children had climbed on the allegiance to · open the
dumpsters and caused them meeting. John Epple and
Chicken Bar·B-Que
to overturn - killing the Scott Gheen won a limho
children.
contest and the Pinewood
The bill also requires any . Derby was announced for the
Orange TOW!lShip
dumpster at a factory, play- . next meeting. Plans were
Fire Department
ground, apartment building made for attending the
or any other place be fitted olympics in' Gallipolis in
Sunday. May 8
with equipment to insure the June.
11 a.m. till p.m .
dumpsters
ca n't
be
Prizes for a sales contest
Mother's Day
overturned.
were awarded and winners
were Charles Davis, first a
calculator; '' Davi&lt;l Hoover,
second, a calculator; Allen
Spaulding ,- third, a mess kit
and back pack,. and Billy
Weaver, fourth , a canteen.
Skits on Hawaii were
presented and prizes for the
best Hawaiian dancing went
to Shawn Baker and Darin
Wolfe.
· Awards .presented by
Cubmaster Jack Bacon went
MilT DUIIIIIil I VAC- IIIt- ,..-.
to .Max Blake, wolf and a gold
]'
arrow; Billy Weaver and
...... .... .-If .. .
Max lllake, one year pins;
Ronnie Denny and Charles
Davis, two year pins and Den
Wr•l
21 Kif
.
III won the "cubby '' award
for having the most parents
present.
\
-CLIAII.

Hawaii used
for program

tfr

DOWNTOWN

GALUPOUS'c·~

,

...

OPEN SUNDAY
MOTHER'S DAY

' .,

11 A.M.- 5 P.M.

DOWNTOWN GALLIPOLIS

LAST

I

•.,.It

...

__ _
.--HIIo·-.--·-.....,._
....
•

FIIEIK ...

ODOMMII

CUMI~II~

...

. . . CLIAIIA LOIIItl

~ IUNII" YACfoftlled,yyouw.m to get your_,....

r..tlr cMn

BAUM TRUE VALUE
•

985-3301

CHESTER, 0.

S&amp;E TWO WAY RADIOS
FACTORY TRUCKLOAD SALE
.

2

.

MONDAY &amp;TUESDAY
MAY 9 &amp; 10 ONLY

DAYS ONLY

SELF.SERVE
COLUMBUS (UPI)- Last
year, the Ohio General
Assembly passed legislation
allowing the operation of
''se lf-serve '' .gasoline
stations.
Thursday, a bill was introduced by Rep. William
Donham, R-Middletown, to
require gas . stations which
have "seH-serve" islands to
make available.an air pump,
water and lubricating oil .

··, l

• With .exclusive built-in 2-way inter-com
'•

WAS $179.95
!

~9-W.

,• $fi4.95 .
•

ROBYN SX-007 PACKAGE
Includes:

WE'VE GOT IT ALL
By Funk's, Pioneer
&amp;Kenworthy

FERTILIZER

adolescents under the age of
18.

· Dear "Mother":
. Let's hope your worries never materialize, but in case
Tom's mother plans a walk-&lt;Jut (knowing the children will go to
you ), I think she should be told definitely this isn't possible.
. When she understands ruming isn't the solution, perhaps,
With your help, she'll learn how to deal with the present. Two
first steps : getting the older children into housework and babysitting: and getting the father off the bottle. - H.

These services include play
therapy, individual and
famil y therapy,
ychological and learning
+++
. i disabilities evaluation and Dear Helen :
working with the Head Start
Adear friend of 20 years died recently. Slie had confided in
Program in Gallia and me, so I knew all about her husband's affair with his secretary,
Meigs counties.
iind how mean the secretary treated her. The relationship was
Among the new develop- abo known by the couple's daughter and her husband who
ments for the Center is the tended to side with the man.
construction of a residential
Naturally my loyalty is with my friend . Now that she is
treatment-group home for dead, this man is asking my husband and me to participate in
children and adolescents to activities, including overnight boat tril", with his secretary
be built on Route 160 in already.
Gallipolis . near the current
I can't accept a woman who made my friend's life
childrens home. This home miserable. The man Is pushing too fast, too soon. Without
will accommodate 10 children losing his friendship , how do I avoid these invitations ? with emotional problems who PERPLEXED
.
could benefit from short term
milieu therapy environment. Dear Perplexed:
Plans are for the residential
If the man continues a relationship you can't accept, you'll
home to be opened in ap- lose his friendship , no matter who tactfully you refuse these
proximately one year.
invitations.
But complete honesty might lead to a better understanding
of the situation. Tell him how you feel, why you reject an affair
which made your friend miserable, and that you can't change
overnight. Perhaps you'll learn his side of the story (as
evidently his daughter and her husband already have). - H.

Nancy Raming is .
in new position
The employment of Nancy
Raming as coordinator of
consultation, education and
volunteer services. at the
Gallia-Jackson-Meigs
Conununity Mental Health
Center was amounced today . .
In this role Raming will
devote considerable tlme to
the development of · comprehensive programs of
inservice and continuing
educatiOn fo r all mental
health staff. She_ will w~rk
· ~1th the commuruty agencies
m the deyelopment of mental
health education p.rogr~ms
for co mmumty agenc1es,
profess1on_ats and parents.
The recrmtment and trammg
of mental health volunteer
work~rs
w11l
also
be~nunport~ntaspect of her
ac\IVIhes with the mental
health c~!'ter.
__A . nabve . of west_ern New
York, Rammg rece1ved her
undergraduate degree from
Kent State Umvers1ty and
M.A. !;rom Oh1o State .
Um~ers1ty.
She
was
previously employed by the
Corporation for H~alth
Serv1_ce as ed~~at1onal
coordinator. In addition, she

I .............. : ...... .... ........... .. , ...

~ 57

SAVE ON OTHER 23 &amp; 40 CHANNEL UNITS

l

Now in Paperback at

t

405 N. 2nd AVE.

992-3748

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

Just In Time For Mother•s Day
SHOP OUR

lfllfllJifllfl

NEW JEWELRY
DEPARTMENT

Th e first m ic rowave oven with a memo ry !
. You tell th e f ouc hmati c RJdarange oven
w hat to d o by touch in g r1umbers and words
on the smoo lh control panel. rhen 11
I . '' Reme111ber-;' how long to defr0'i t

2. "Rcmcr11ber s'· exac tl y how 10119 to coo k
·-w it h splitMs econd accuracy.
3. " R e r nernbcr~ ·· to shut off and to cedi you

that delights ...
MENU FOR SUNDAY, MAY 8th
' Baked steak, triec:f chick-e n, ham,
roast beef, llounder,. fish ,
hamburger steak.

MEAT:

Apple and cherry

7-Up, tossed . slow , cottage

"Real Old-Fas hioned Howe Cookw~"

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

992 -5020

FOOD

~tearpboat Inq

2 DAYS ONLY

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA ·

OPEN :
Mon. thru Sal.
8 : 00 to 5:00 p.in .

A very special gift for Mother,
Bride or Graduate- a truly
accurate Digital Watch
A styl _
i sh electro n ic digital wa lch with Quarl7 crystal
accuracy. Re ports hour s, minu tes .' month. dale. ev~n
second s at the touch of a button . Y Ju migh t call it
perfect ti m i ng. W e t.a ll it a pcrfed gift fo, ~my woman.
. A nd it'~ yours at 1~0 extra charge when you buy an
Am ana rouc hnwt~&lt;.. Rdd ~.Hdng~ ni icrowave oven!

CHAR-BROILED STEAKS
WEEKDAYS6a,m.tro 7 p.m. SUNDAY 8 a.m. to 2 p.m.

I

•

S&amp;E ·ywo WAY RADIO

CONVENIENT
FREE
PARKING

the tim e of day - 1n lights. lnCYcdiblc!

-WE HAVE SOFT ICE CREAM
MILK SHAKES AND BANANA
SPLITS

'•
•

AND ILLUSTRATED DIRECTIONS

HOSTING SHOWER
Mrs. Freda Hartinge r and
Mrs. Iris Kelton will host a
shower for Mr. and Mrs.
Brady Huffman (Teresa
Wildermuth ) Sunday morning during the coffee hour
following the worship service
at Grace Episcopal Church,
Pomeroy.

for di nner wi U1 a ·· beep·:. At the same
instant, 1t even re'mE,&gt;mbers and di&lt;;,play\

cheese, apple sauce and peaches.
Opening date pf the walk-up window is
Friday, May 6. Weekly hours, 1 to 10 p. m.,
Sunday, 2 to 10 p.m. ·

•

5

guestsaUending by Mrs. Barbara Dugan and Mrs. Joan

VISIT US FOR A FREE BOOKLET

NANCYRAMING
health education at Rio
Grande College.
She is interested in
providing information to the
residents of the tri-eounty
area related to the numerous
services available through
their commuflity mental
health center. Interested
conununity organizations are
urged to contact the Center
for program requests. She
resides in Gallia Coilnty.

SALAD &amp; FRUITS:

9

to the 22 members and six

brings ;&gt;utwo
timeless ~ift ideas
for the prtce of one

• All necessary hardware and cable for
complete mobile installation.
.

'

warder. The by-law corrunittee presented revisions to be
voted on at the next meeting.
Refreshments were served

DEPARTMENT

POTATOES:
PIE:

.

on May 19 at 7:30p.m. A letter
HA
CIN
E-Mrs.
Ulah
Swan,
50-year-member
Racine was read by the secretary anOll!pler Order ul the Eastern nouncing the resignation of
·
grand
Star, was honored attbe Man- Mrs. Irene
day night meeting or the
Chapter at the Masonic Temple.
Mrs. Ullian Weese, worthy
matron, extended greetings
to Mrs. Swan, and Mrs. I .eota
Masser, her sister ol the
Guysville Chapter, presented
her with a pin. A gift was
given her and she was
greeted in the dining room
after the meeting with a bouquet of yellow roses by her
granddaughter and greatgranddaughter.
' Mrs. Weese and Ralph
Webb, worthy patron, presided at the meeting with the
altar being draped lor Herm;:m Geist, past grand patron
of the Grand Chapter of Ohio.
A memoria I poem was read
by the worthy matron.
Several inspection dates
were read and all members
were asked to attend as many
as possible. Mrs. Velma
Quillen was reported ill at
home. Mrs. Hazel Carnahan
is in Holzer Medical Center,
Ben Philson is at home with
broken ribs received in a fall,
and Jesse Brinker suffered a
heart attack.
Ways and means corrunittee reported there will be a
bake sale May 21 at 9 a.m. at
the Post Office lot. All
members are asked to take
baked goods for the sale.
Past officers will meet at
Mrs. Grella Simpson's home

NEW JEWELRY

• $ 9.95 value 6'' weather proof speaker

',

Swan honored Monday

SHOP OUR

Mashed and home fries.

.

WllHOUT 2 WAY INTERCOME FEATURE .....

OR. KAUFMAN

:;:;

Dear Helen :
My husband, Tom, and I are five years married. not
wealthy, and plan a lamily of our own.
He has seven younger step-&lt;&gt;isters and brothers and my inlaws had decided if anything happens to them we' re to be the
foster parents. His mother showed me a Jetter leaving us
everything, including the children. She:s had it signed by two
witnesses and it's at their bank.
. I tried talking to ber about it, but she is adamant. Says 'tbe
kids are Tom's responsibility as next of kin.
. What worries me is, it could happen! She complains the
children dr1ve her _crazy, she can't cope with the housework,
e~ . Her husband 1s an undependable drunk-there could be
an accident - or she might just walk away il pressures got too
great, knowing Tom wouldn't abandon the kids .
She's nice, !feel sorry for her and help her a lot, but ...
I can't face being the mother of seven children , ages six to
18. What can we do?- UNDECIDED FUTURE MOTIIER IN
MONTANA:

Green beans, corn, noodles.

WV23P SIMILAR TO ABOVE COMPLETE KIT BUT
\

/

t' t'll
•
Seven lnherlled Troubles?

VEGETABLES:

• $21 .95 value trunk or to of mount antenna

SEED CORN

The appointment of Harriet
Kaultnan, Ph. D. to the
position of Director of
Comprehensive Child Services was aMounced today
by Dr. George Greaves
director of the Gallla:
Jackson-Meigo Conununity
Mental Health Center.
Dr. Kaufman received her
Ph. D. in Clinical Psychology
in December, 1976, from the
University of NebraskaLincoln . Dr. Kaufman
specialized in cllnical-ehild
psychology with minors in
developmental psychology
and personality theory. Prior
to being employed by the
Gallla • Jackson - Meigs
Community Mental Health
Center, she worked in Lincoln
,at · the Child Guidance, and
Well Child Cllnic, the
'•University of Ne braska's
'Psychological Consultation
Center and UNIPROACH (a
wide
inuniversity
'terdlscijllinary child
,assessment team serving 1M
•state of Nebraska), wh~re
'she spent two and one-half
years
teaching
child
assessment and therapy
to. graduate
'planning
,otudents. Dr. Kauhnan did
her APA approved internship
:at the Convalescent Hospital
for children, a residential
treatment and outpatient
'communrty
. mental health
cent~r in Rochester, New
York.
, The Comprehensive Child
:services 'Program of the
Gallia • Jackson - Meigs
.Community Mental Health
'Center offers a wide variety
of services to children and

:: u
:;:;

Mr. and Mrs. Uswin Nease Ag~es Sutton, Mrs. Altona
.celebrated their 60th wedding Karr, Mr. and Mrs. Vernon
.anniversary at their home in Nease and Stanley, Miss
Nease Settlement with their Maud Grueser, Miss Freda
children hosting the obser- Grueser, Mrs. Elsie Forbes,
vance.
Mrs. June Sayre, Mr. and
The · refreshme~t table Mrs. Edson Roush,. Mrs.
f~atured a three bered an- Hilda Schmoll, Mrs. Robert
I ruversary •·cake trimmed m . Schmoll,
Mr. and Mrs.
;g~ld and ~reen and topped George Genheimer, Mr. and
;Will] wedding bells and the Mrs Alfred Yeauger . Mrs
;num~rals "60". White tapers Haz~l Sellers.
'
·
;m Silver holders completed · Kilty Sellers, Mr. and Mrs.
!tl)e table de~or . . Grand- . Clarence Grueser, Mrs.
:daughters Jo Rasch, Lee Ann Margaret Houdashelt, Mr.
;smith~ Rorna Sayre, and and Mrs. Paul Karr and
_Jeanme Nease served at the David, Mrs. Dorothy Smith,
. ,table ass1sted by . theJr Mrs. Mildred Ihle, Mr. and
:mothers. Shelley . Nease Mrs. Virgil Hainm, the Rev.
. . and Mrs . Koch, Mrs.
1regastered the guests.
l Mr. and Mrs. Nease were . Pbilomina Koch, Mr. and
,presented .a dozen yellow Mrs. George Baer, Mrs.
:roses by the Forest Run Kathryn Mora, Mr. and Mrs.
~Church along with several Edison Hollon, Mr. and Mrs.
:other floral arran~ements, Cyril Arnold, Mrs. Inez
;hangmg baskets, gifts and Bentz, Ml's. Frances ROberts,
~~ards. .
.
Mrs. Elma Louks, Mr. and
Attending were Mr . . and Mrs. Vernal Blackwood, Mrs.
ifMs. William Nease, Sandra Patrick Lochary, Miss Glen. ~d Dav1d, Mr. and Mrs. na Rummel, Mrs. Aida
1 Ri~hard Nease, Matthew and Faudree, Jackie Justus, Miss
. Krasten, James Nease, Shoan Sally Landers, Mrs. Barbara
,Gmley,. Mr, and Mrs. Brent Honchell and Miss Jeanne
:Elliott, all of Bellefontaine; Hines, ColumbUs.
. Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Dav1s,
All members of the Nease
;Mr: and Mrs. Roger Risch, family were present for the
!Kristen and Amy, Mrs. celebration except Daniel
jillian Henderson and John Nease of Bowling Green, and
1
! Sta~,allo!Athens.
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Davis,
! Mr. and Mrs. David Nease, Niarada, Mont.
; Roger Nease, Mr, IJnd Mrs.
' Pete Sayre, Mr. and Mrs.
Frederick Nease, Mr. and
; Mrs. Stephen Nease, Mr. and
• Mrs. Jack Smith, Sardis,
l Mrs. Kathleen Scott, Mrs.
NEED ADDRESS
; Ann . Watson, Mrs., (3aroly
The
Pomeroy High School
• SalSer, Miss Helen Baer, Mr.
Class
of
1947 in plaMing its
: and Mrs. Clifford Phillips,
: Mrs. Marcia Arnold, Jennifer 30th reunion · this year has
Arnold, Mrs. Carrie Grueser, located all former classmates
: Albert Zahl, Ruth Luthercin, except one. Her name was
' Mr. and Mrs. Jake Lee, Mrs. Mary Allee Westfall and it is
Marabel Warner, Amber and believed her married name is
: Co.m ie Warner, Mrs. Stella Arnold. If any relatives or
: Grueser, Mrs. Thelma Dill, anyone in the area know her
• Asa Hoskins, Mrs. Elva Cot- mailing address please notify
. terill, Mrs. Virginia Thoren, Joe Struble at 992-3424 or
Mrs. Fred Hartinger, Mrs. Kenny Wiggins at 99z.3344.

WHILE
THEY
I

"'

Couple celebrates
60th anniversary

DR PROHSSIONAl

(A' ltl"it1/BUI'BIIfpPiiiBB)
_,_
............... ... __
_
____

,

'

CIRCLE'S CAFETERIA
AND RESTAURANT

WHILE
THEY

LAST

Dr. Kaufman appointed fiid;;'"''ii';i;:~::::::::::::~:::-~:m-:-:·\' Mrs. Utah
:~
B H I ..,
I ::;::~
or
Cht'td SertJ';CeS ·dt'fi'"CtOf
~:
S• •
Y
uolle
;:::

of District l3 at the REA

CIRCLE'S CAFETERIA
AND RESTAURANT

Revival to start
·at Baptist church.
RACINE - Reviva l services will be held in the new
Racine First Baptist Church
starting Sunday with the Rev.
Don
Walker,
pastor,
speaking.
Sunday morning, Mothers'
Day, will be the first service
with special mu'sic provided
by Janice Salser, Vicki
Cummins , and
their
daughters, To nja and
Michelle. At the Sunday night
service, Betty Wells from the
county infirmary will sing.
On Monday ni ght, the
Gerald Dorsey Family of
Ravenswood will sing and

Past Cou11cilors Association ROute 50 towards Athens at _'
1:30 p.m. All councilors are
buil·"
urgedtoottend.
·
""ng.
Mrs. Wilma Place opened
It was reported that Edna
. the meeting with scri lure Vickers is confined to Riverfrom 1Cor. 13 followed tbe side Hospital, Columbus and
Lord's prayer and the pledge that the husband of Mrs.
to the nag. Officers elected Faye Hoselton is seriously ill.
were Mrs. Margaret Stacey, Mrs. Margaret Stacey
Belle Prairie Council 269, distributed the three year
resident; Mrs. Una McVa
calendars being sold for Nagolden Gleam 254 Marie~' tiona! Council.
vice president; Neitie Hayes:
Mrs. McVay as a tribute to
Theodorus Council 17 , Mother's Day read " When
Pomeroy, secretary, and God Created Mothers" and
Mrs. Bea Moyer, Golden " A Little Parable for
Gream Council, treasurer.
Mothers." The Golden Gleam
A thank you note will be Council server refreshments.
sent to James Shaw, Attending besides those servmanager of the REA ed named were Mrs. Tillie
building, for use of the facili- Clark, Mrs. Hazel Butler,
ty. The aMual picnic was set Mrs. Virginia Evans and
for Aug. 17 at the parkon old Mrs. laura Erb.

7-TheDailySentinel. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., ~'riday, May 6, 1977

--

----

MIDDLEPORT BOOK STORE
BIIU Slim

Jrd St ., RACINE, OHIO
PHONE 949-2515

'RANGES STARTING AT '269.00

INGELS FURNITURE
106 N. 2nd Ave.

.-:~--~----~-

Middleport, 0.

�CHURCH . Sunday School service,

8- The Daily SentUJel, M iddleport-Pomeroy . 0 .• Friday, May 6. IWI

IHOWDOES S~l[lE DO 1?

10 a .m.: Prayer meeting, Thurl doy . 7 p rn .; Sonday evening service , 7 p . m.
ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST,
Ponlel Oy -Horrisonvllle Rd . , o on
Ken~ . pastor; Bill McEiror.
Sundar sch~ iiupt. Sunday
TRINITY CHURCH , Re..,, W. H

Pernn. postor , Roy Moyer. Sun-day Jchool su pt. Chvrch school,
9l5am , wOr"shipservicc, 10 30
o .m . Choi r rehearsal, Tuesdov .
1 30 p. m. under directi on of Mrs .

l&gt;,nitting is Mom's lhing . .. sweaters. skir ts .
sca rves. the works. Somehow in her s pare tim e she
keeps house. raises a family. pa rticipa tes in h er
c hm.i:h activiti es, coll ects for th e co mmunity fund ,
is a den moth er , and on and on .

m .;
sundoy
""'ongelistlc schoo , 9 30 a.m .. morning wor.
meeting, 7·30 p m. Prayer ship and com munion, 10:30 a .m :
meet,ng. wednesday . 1 30 p.m. Sunday evenmg yOuth Christian

0

U NITED
PRESBYTERIAN
MINISTRY OF ME~ S COUNTY ,
OwlghtL . zovi tz, dir'3ctor .

Endeavor, 6 p.m.: worship service , 7 p. m. Wed,.sdoy evening

wednesday , 7.30p.m.
•
~ONG
BOTTOM CHRISTIAN.
Bruce Smlth, pastor, Wallace
Damewood, Supt. Bible Sch~ .
9.30 a.m. PrttOching tervic•.
l 0:45 o.m. No evening s•rvlce
HYSELL RUN FREE METHODIST
CHURCH , bv. Herb•rt Ailing,
postOf . Sunday School 9:30a .m.,
Morni ng service, 10·30 a.m.,
youth sery lce . 6:45 p. m.
Evangelistic service 7.30 p.m .
Prayer meetin;, T""r~oday , 7:30
p.m.
FREEDOM GOSPEL MISSION at
Bold Knob, R•v. lawrene:e
Gluesenc:Qmp, Sr., po!lfor; Roger
Willford, Sr., Sunday school supt.
Sunday school q:JO a .. ; Sunday
ev•ning tervice, 7 p.m. Prayer
meeting , Tu•sdoy, • 7:30 p.m.
Ernest OHler, cla11 leader.
Youth meeting, Wednasday, 7·30
p.m. with Don ond Martha
Meadows, leodert .
WHITE'S CHAPEL , Cool,lllo RD.
R•v . Ray Deeter, pastor. Sunday
school9·30 a.m. ; worshtp s•rvice.
10.30 a.m. Bible study and prayer
service , Wednesday, 7.30p ,m.
RUTLAND
RUTLA ND CHURCH OF CHRIST .
Dennis Smith, pastor; Frank
Young,Sundoy school supf. Su nday school and communion, 9:30
a. m Worship and comunion,
10:30 o.m.
RU TL A ND
CO MMUNI TY
CHURCH. Sunday School, 9:30
a . m.; worship service, 11 a.m.,
Wednesday prayer meeting, 7;30
p.m. Youth services, Sunday, 7
p m.; Sunday night worship, 7 30 .
RUTLAND CHURCH OF THE
NAZAREN E, Rev . Llo;d 0 . Grimm,
Jr ., pastor. Sundoy school, 9:30
a . m .; worship service, 10:30 a . m.
Broadcas t ltve over WMPO. yeung
pe o pl e's
• •rvlce,
6:A5 ;
evangelistic service, 7:30 p. m.
Prayer mee ting, Wednesday, 7·30
p.m ; MissiaAo ry mee ting, 7 .30
p.m. l lrstwednesdoy of month_
MASON COUNTY
MASON FIRST BAPTI ST. Second
ond Pomeroy Sts ., Stan Craig,
pastor . Sundoy school, 9·45 a. ria.:
wart hip service, 11 a.m.; training
union, 6 ·30 p m.; evening worshtp servic:e, 7:30p.m. Mid Week
prayer service, Wednesday, 7.30
p.m.
MASON CHURCH OF CHRIST , P.
0 . BOx -4B7 , M iller St., Mason, W.
Vo . Sunday Bible Study 10 a. m.;
Worship 11 a.m. and 7 p.m. Btble
Study Wednesday 7 p m ., Vocal
music
FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST, Car.
ner of Secood ond Anderson,
Mason, Pastor, Wolter Claud.
Sunday school9:-45 a.m : wors hip
service, II a.m. and 7:30 p.m.
Weekly Btble study , Wednesday,
7·30p .m.
MASON ASSEMBLY OF GOD ,
Dudding Lane, Meson, W. Va .
Chester Tennant, Pastor. Sunday
Sc hool 9:45 a.m.; Children's
Church 6·45 p. m. YOung PeOple 's
Service 6:-45 p ..rn. Evangelistic
Service 7:30 p.m. women's M isstdnory council 10 a.m. first and
third Tuesdays. Prayer and Btble
Study, Wednesday . 7.30 p.m.
HARTFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST
IN CHRISTIAN UNION , The Rev.
Wtlliam Cb mpbell, pastor, Sunday
School, 9·30a .m.; James Hughes,
sup f. , evening .seNice, 7:30 p .m,
Wednesday evening prayer
meettng. 7:30 p.m. Yautn prayer
service eacn Tuesday .
FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH ,
Letart, W. Vo. , Rt. I, Rev. Ctlorles
Hargraves, pastor , Wors htp services , 9.30 a.m. , Sunday school,
11 a.m ; evening worship , 7:30
p, m, Tuesday cottage • prayer
meeting and Btble study, 9:30
o_.: m. worshtp servic!_ We9._~s ·

doy. 7:30p.m.
CALVARY 81BLE-CHURCH, 26 N.
Sec;ond, Middleport, poster, Curlis s-.phen. Church school , '9:30
o. m.: preachin; serv""· 10:30
a.m. and 7:30 p.m. wednesday
ev•ninu 8ibles1udy . 7:30p.m.
INDEPENDENT HOliNESS CHUR·
CH, INC . - corner fourth ond
Lincoln Sis , MickUepOft; Rev.
O'Dell Mant.y. pastOI', Sorry Hud·
50tl, s..,nday School superintendent. Sunday school , 9.30 am.:
evenl ng worship , 7:30 p .•m.;
prayer and praise serv tn ,
Wednesday . 7:30p.m.
THE PEOPLE'S CHURCH OF
POMEROY' - Carner Main and
(Qurl Sis .,
third floor over
Ltghthau5e Restaurant. Henry
Ct;&gt;Ok, pastor. Sunday school, 10
a.m., morning wc:wship, 11 a .m.;
evening
serv ic e . 7 : 30 .
Wednesday •venlnu service ,
7:30 . Interdenominational, full
go.pel.
•
RUTLAND CHURCH OF GOD Pastor Dennis fS&lt;:JI•s. Sunday
School, 10 a.m.: worship ser...-ice,
11 ·30 a.m and 7:30p.m. Prayer
meeting, Wednesday , 7 ·30 p.m.
RUTLAND APOSTOLIC CHURCH
OF JESUS CHRIST, Thomas L.
Holmes. pastor. Bible study ,
Sa turday. 7:30p .m.; evangelisti,
p.m.: prayer meeting, Tuesday,
7.30 p.m., Bible Study , Thursday,
7:30p.m.
PO M EROY
W ESLEY AN
HOIJNESS - Horrlsonville Road:
Dewey King, pas tor; Edison
Weaver, auis ta nt·l Henry Eblin,
Jr., Sunday schoo supt, Sunday
tchoal, 9:30 a m ; morning worship, 11 a.m. Su nday evening
service. 7 :30; prayer meet1ng,
Thursday, 7·30 p.m.
.SYRACUSE FIRST CHURCH OF
GOO - Not Pentecosta l, Rev.
Geor~e Oiler, pastor Worshtp
service Su nday , 9:_.5 o m.: Sunday school, 11 a.m.; wors hip service, 7:30 p.m. Ti'lursdoy prayar
mee tinu. 7:30 p.m.
MT. HERMON Uni ted Bre thran
Church. Su nday School 9 30 a.m.
w orship service 10:-45 a.m.
Preaching services evary Sunday
olterno ting with C. E. Wednesday '
prayer mee ting 7·30 p m. Rev.
Jome.s Leach, pas tor, David
Hoi tar, loy leader
JEHOVAH'S WITNESSES, 1 mde
east of Rutland . junction Qf Route
124 and Noble Summi t ROod (T1 7~). Sunday Bible Lec ture, 9,30
o. : Wa tchtowar 1fudy , 10·30
o.m. ; Tuesday, Btble study , 7 and
8.1 5 p .m.; Thursday, theoc ratic
sc hool , 1 30 p . m ; service
meeting, 8:30 p.m.
HOPE BAPTIST - 570G rontst.,
Middleport, Bobby Elkins , pgstor.
Sunday School, ro a.m.; worship
servtce, 11 a.m .. evening servtce,
7:30 p ,l'n . Thursday prayer
rnaeting and Bible study, 7:30
p. m.
RUTLAND FREEWILL BAPTIST
Church - Leland Haley , pastor, •
Sunday school, 10 a. m.: evening
serv tce, 7:30 p m, Prayer
meettng , Wedne sday, 7.30 p.m,
CHURCH OF GOD of Prophecy,
located on the 0 . J. Wt1ite Road
off highway 160. Sunday SchoOl
10 a .m. Superintendent John
Loveday . First Wednesday night ;
of month CPMA serYtces, second
Wednesday WMB meeting, third 1
thraugh fifth you th service.
George Croyle, pa stor.
HOPE BAPTIST CHAPEL - 570
Grant St., Middleport, Rev. Bobby
Elk ins . Sunday school , 10 a.m.: 1
morning worship, 11 ; evening •
worship , 7.30 p.m., Thursday
evening Bible study and prayer ,
meeting, 1 30 p.m. Affiliated with: .
S.B.C.
1

prayer meeting ond Blbl• study,
Povl Neose
H A R R I S 0 N V I L L S 7:30 p .m.
POMEROY OlURCH OF THE PRESBYTERIAN , t Re v. Ernest
ST. JOHN LUTHERAN CHURCH,
NAZARENE : Corner urnon ond Str 1cklin, pastor, Sunday church Pine GrOye , The RaY, William
Mulberry, Rev. Clyde V Hender- .school, 9·30 0 m , Mrs. Homer Middlesworth , Pastor. Church
son pastor, Sunday school, 9.30 lee, supl. , morn 1ng worship, services 9:30a .m. Sunday School
o.m ., Glen McClung, sup I , morn10 30 m
•
How does she du it'' She evades thi s question .
10 30
1ng worst1ip, 10:30 o.m.: ~venu\g
Mu)OLEPORT, Sunday school .
BR:D aURY
CHU RC H
OF
service, 7·30: mid -week service, q:30 a.m ., Ricl\ard Vaughan , sup( CHRIST , Mr. Donald Ro ley , pas tar.
If you ask me, a lot of people aren 't like Mom .
Wednesrlny , 7.30 p.m.
Morning wOI'shtp, 10:30.
•
Sunday school, 9:30 o.rn.; worThey s tick to one job. one hobb y, o ne project - a nd
GRACE EPISCOPAL , The Rev .
SYRACUSE . Morning wotshtp, 9 shtp service , 10.30 o.m., Sunday
Harold Det~th . rector Chu rc h ser- 0 m, Sunday sc hool, lOam Mrs servicas , 7 p .m ; yOuth irOUp,
freq u e ntly turn th e ir back o n o th ers.
vices, 10·30 o.m.; Holy commu - Sampson Holl . supt
W4Kfnesdoy, 7 p m.
mon hrs t Sundoy of month churRUTLAND CHURCH OF GOO .
ANTIQUITY BAPTIST , R•v . Earl
It 's peopl e like Mom who make "community "
c:h school, 10:30 o.m for 11ursery Rev . James 0 . Guynn , pastor, Shuler, pas tor. Su ndoy school
mean so mething. From her , th e young learn that
through 12.
Su ndoy school, 10 0 m.: Sunday 9 30 a. m.; Churchurvica, 7 p.m,;
ad ding- no t dividing-b rin gs us together. Tha t's
POMEROY CHURCH OF CH RIST , worshtp, 11 a.m.; Sunday evening yOuth meeting, 6 p,m,Tuesday BiRichord Evanson, pastor Bible service , 7 p m ; Wednesday wor - bleStudy , 7p m,
what the churc h is all ahout ... LOVE.
RACINE CHURCH OF THE
school. 9:30 o.m., wors htp, 10.30 sht p service, 7:30p.m
o m ,. odu!t worship ser-.- tce ond
HAZEL COMMUNITY C!1URCH, NAZARENE , Rev . John A . CoffyO\ing people '5 meett ng, 7.30 Naor Long Bottom, Edsel Hart, man, pastor. Sunday School , 9:30
p.m Combined Bible study ond pastor . Sunday school, 10 a.m.; o.m., Gerold Wells, sup l. M orn.
prayer meeting, Wednesday . 7 30 Church . 7·38 p .m.; prover tng worship, 10·30 a.m.; Su nday
Copvr.gnt 1977 K81s1er M ~en.smg SeNK:e Strasburg, Vlrglma
p.m
mee t•ng , 7.30p .m , Thursd ay .
evening worst-lip, 7.00; Prayer
Sc" ptures selecteQ by The Ame11can BtlliC Soc1e1y
THE SALVATION A RMY . Envo.,.
MID DLEPORT PENTECOSTAL . meeting, Wednesday , 7·30 p .m
Roy W. Wining, officer In c: l\arge
Third Ave . the Rev. Wi ll 1om KnitRACI NE FIRST BAPTIST, Don l .
Sunday , 10 a.m , Holiness te l pastor. Ronald Dugan, Sun- Walke r, Pastor, Ronnie Salser,
meeting, 10:30 a.m., Sunday dey School Sup t. Classes for all Sunday sc hool supt., Sunday
Sc hool Young People's legton, 7 ages, evening service, 7·30 Bib le school, 9:30 am ; morning warp .m., Thursday, 1 to 3 p.m ., study , Wednesday , 7:30 p.m .. ship , 10·-40 a.m.. Sunday evening
Lodtes Home leogue 7 p.m Prep youth services, Friday , 7·30p m .
wor.s hlr. , 7:30; Wednesday even.
classes.
MIDDLEPORT FREEWILL BAP- ing Bib e study, 7:30.
BURliNGTON SOUTHERN BAP- TIST , corner Ash and Plum; Noel
DANVI LLE WESLEYAN , Rev. R.
TIST CHAPEL , ROute 1 51'\odeHerrman , pastor Saturday ev'en. 0 Brown, pastor, Sunday Sci-tool,
Pastor Bobby Elkins Sunday 1ng servict~ , 7:30 p.m., Sunday 9.30 a.m.; morning Wors hip
school , 5 p.m .. Sunday worship , School , 10·30 a.m
10·45; youth seN ICe, 6:45 p.m.;
5.45 p.m., Wed~sday p rayer serMEIGS
eveni ng worshtp, 7.30 p.m.;
..-ica , 7·30 p.m.
COOPERATIVE PARISH
prayer and prai se, Wednesday,
ST PAUL LUTHERAN CHURCH ,
METHODIS T CHURCH
7 30 p m.
Corner of Sycamore and Second
RoberfT Bumgarner
SILVER RUN FREE BAPTIST ,
Sis , Pomeroy, The Rev Wdliom
o1rec tor
Mdes TrOul, pas tor. Sunday
POMEROY CLUSTER
school, 10 a .m., Steve Li ttle , supt.
M iddlesworth, Pas tor Sunday
School at 9.-45 a.m. and Church
Rev Robert Hoyden
Evening service , 1 p.m.; pray•r
Rev James Corbitt
meeting, Thursday , 7 p.m.
Services 11 a.m.
SAC RE D HEART, ReY Father
CHESTER , Worship 9:15 o.m.
CHESTER CHURCHOF GOD ,
Pau l D. Wel ton, pas tor. Phone Churchschooi 10a .m.
Rev. Bobb! Porter, postor . Sun992-2825 Saturday eventng Moss
POM EROY , w orship, 10·30 a.m. dey sc noo , 9·30 a m ; wor.sh tp
7 30 . Sunday Mon . 8 and 10a .m.. church school 9 30 o.m. UMYF ser vtce, 11 a .m.; evening servtce,
Confession, Satu rda y, 1 -7 30p m. 6.30 p.m .
7.30; youth service, Wednesday,
POMEROY WESTSIDE CHURCH
ENTERPRISE. Worsh 1p 9 o.m 7·30 p m.
OF CH RI ST , 200 W Main Sf , Jerry church school lOa m.
LANGSVILLE CHRISTIAN CHUR ·
ROC K SPRINGS . Worshtp IQ CH, Ted Jone.s, pastor. Sunday
Paul, mints ter, p~one 992-7666
conservo five, non-t nstrumental
a.m. church School 9. 15a.m. sc hool, 9.30 a.m.; RC?r S•9man,
Sundoy worshtp , 10 am ,; Btble UMYF6.30R m
·
su pf.; morning worship , 10:30;
stu dy , 11 a.m., worship, 6 p.m.
FLATWOODS, w ors htp, 11 0 ,m, Sunday event ng seryice, 7:30,
WednesdoyBib lesfu dy , 7pm .
Chu rcn sc: nooi10 a .m.
mtd-week service, Wednesday ,
OLD DE XTER BIBLE CHRISTIAN
M IDDLEPORT CLUSTER
7·30 p m.
CHURCH , Rev. Ral pn Smtfh ,
Rev . Robert Bumgarner
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF THE
pastor. Sundoy sc hool , 9 30 a.m.
HEATH
Robert Bumga rner, NAZARENE , Rev . Dale Bass ,
M rs, w orley Francis su pertnlen. Pastor. w orsh tp 10:30 a.m. pastor . Bob Moore, Sunday
~~ dent Preaching services fnst &amp; Chu rch School 9 30 0 m UMYF 6 Schoo l supl,; Sunday school
third Sundays f o ll o-wing Sunday p m
cla sses for oil ages , 9:30 a.m.,
School
RUTLAND , Wilbur Hilt, Pastor. morntng worship, 10.-45 a m.:
GRAHAM UNITED METHODIST . worsh 1p 10·30 a.m. c hu rch Sc hool NYPS, 6:30p.m., evangelisttc serPreo c: hing 9:30 o.m ., firs t ond se- 9 30 a .m
vice, 7:30 p,m, Prayer and
cond St•ndoys of eacn mon tn
SYRA CUSE CLUSTER
fa s ti ng luesday , 10 a . m ;
tn•rd and f eu r th Sundays each
Rev . Harvey Kocn . Jr.
Midweek
pra ye r
sery ice,
mon th, w orship servtce o f 7·30
ASBURY, Worship 11 a. m. Wednesday , 7 30 p m., men's
p.m Wednesday eventngs a t Churc h Sc hool 9·50 0 m UMW prayer meet111g Saturday , 7 p.m.;
· 7.30 . Praye r ond Bible Study
ftrs t Tuesday . Bible stud y Ti'lurs. mintonory meettng , second
Wednesdoy , 7'30p .m.
SEVENTH-DAY A DVE NTI ST, 7-JO p .m.
Mulberry Heights Road, pome roy .
FOR EST RUN , w orst1ip 9 a. m.
UNITED
FAITH
NON ·
Pastor, Gerard Se ton, Sabbath Chu rch Sc hool 10 o.m
DENOMINATIONAL, Rev. Robart
School Su pertnle ndent, Clo re
MINERSVILLE, wors h1p 10 a. m. Smith, pastor, Sunday School,
9.30 a .m., Class leader, Leo Hill;
Mcin ty re, Sabbath Sc hool, Satu r - cnu rch Sc hoo19 a.m.
day afternoon a t 2.00 . wtth Wor.
SY RACUSE c hu rch school 9:00 wor shtp se rvtce, 10·30 a.m.; chursh&lt;pSe rvlce f ollowmg at3 ·1S
L
·
7:30 p. m.
cL
servtce
n 7 : 30p •m
• '
a.m. wors n1p
RUTLAND FIR ST BA PTI ST
SOUTHERN CLUSTER
EDEN UNITED BRETHREN IN
CHURCH- Orewy Gore , supt.
Rev Tim othy Smith
CHRIST. Elden R. Bloke, pastor,
Sunday School, 9·30 a m.; mornClus ter Leader
Sunday School 10 a.m ; Howard
T HE FINE ST IN MOBILE HOM ES
Ph. 992 ·2101
John F , Futt~
Pomeroy
ing w orship, 10,45 o.m.
Ro Y Steve nWtlson
McCoy, supt., Morntng se rmon,
Ph . 9'12-7034
1100 E. Main
Pomeroy
THE HILAND CHAPEL , George
Assoc iate
11 a .m.; Sunday night services
BETHANY, (Dorcas), W orshtp (hris lion Endeavor, 7:30 p.m.;
Casto, pastor. Sunday School,
9,30 a.m.: ev~ ning worship, 7:30 9 30 a.m. Chu rc n Sc hool 10 30 song service, 8 p.m. ; Preaching
Thursday eve nt ng prayer serv tce, 0 m
8.30 p m
Midweek Prayer
7 30 p. m.
CARM EL . Chruch School 9:30 mee ti ng, Wednesday . 7 p.m.; Roy
POMEROY FIRST BAPTIST, Rev . a. m. w or, t1ip 10 30 a.m. 2nd and Adams , loy leader.
Middleport, OhiO
Peter Grandal l, pas tor. Wil liam ' 4 th Sundays.
CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST,
Wats on, Su nday sc hool sup t ;
APPLE GRO VE, Sunday School Loca ted .of Rutland on New Limo
••
Sunday sch ool 9.30 a. m.. BYF. 6 9·30 am Worship 7:30p .m. 1st Rood , nex t to FOrest A cre Park ;
p.m., Bible study , Wednesday , 7 and 3rd Sundays , Prayer meetlng Rev , Roy Rouse, ~stor, Robert
p .m., choir practice, Wednesday, Wedne"Sdoy 7·30 p.m Fellowship Musser, Su~oy SchOol supt Sun1.
830p .m.
•
supperft rstSa tu rdoy6p. m, UMW day school, 10.30 Q,m,, wor5hip
f iRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST, 282 2ndTuesdoy 7·30pm
7 .3 0
p '"' . Bible
Study ,
SONGOFSOLOMON!:1~12
" HElL " DE A LER
call949-2838 For an Appointment
Mulbe"Y Ave., Pomeroy, Paul J.
EAST LETART, chru ch School Wednesday, 7·30 p.m.: Saturday
lwassleepingonenightwithmywindowopenwithall this
Ph. 949-2882
Racine, Ohio
Racine
Tllird St .
Wt1ile, Pastor; Gory Bashom, Sun- 1st. 2 nd , 3rd Sundays , 9.30 a.m. ntghtprayerseNice, 7.30 p.m.
Y
day school sup! Sunday sc hool, Fovdh Sunday' 10·30 a.m. WO(·
HEMLOCK GROVE CHRISTIAN , Warm We&amp;therwehave had when about 1 a.m. I heard this sllly·
9,30 a.m.. morn ing worship, ship 2nd Sunday 7·30 p.m. 4th Roger watson, pastor, Jessie b!rdjustslnglngawayllkemad.Itmusthavebeenamocldng
10:30; eve ni ng worship, 6·30 p .m. Sunday 9 30a.m ., Preyer meeting White, Sunday school sup f. Morn. bird. It was wonderful.
I
M idweek prayer service, 7.30 . Wednesday 7·30 p.m. UMW 1st ing worshtp, 9·30 a.m.: Sun....._
1 t think'
h
of
toda
be
p.m.
Tu esday 7.30p ,m.
dayschoal, 10'30 a.m. : evening '
wen go to
lllg: OW many
US
Y remem r ;,
Open 8 to 5 - Closed Thurs.
MIDWAY COMM UN ITY CENTER ,
WESLEYAN (Raci ne), Sundoy service, 7,30_ Wednesday Bible the chilling COld of Ja1111ary? Snow and cold, frozen pipes and '
Dex ter Rd . Langsv ille, Ohto, Rev. School10 o.m worship 11 a.ryl., Study , 7·30p.m
nipped noses and toes. We are at the end of
Lo, the .
Racine, Ohio
Ph. 9'12-5130
Pomer oy
214 E . Main
Clyde Fe, el l, Pas lor Sunday Jr. UMYF Wednesday 3 30 p.m.:
. MT . UNION BAPTIST , Rev . John winter is past, the flowers appear on the earth, the time of the :•
•
Sc hool
11 a . m. Saturda y Bib le.S iudy Thursday 7 p m. c hoir Elsw ick, pastor; Sunday school slngingofbirdsiscome . ltstirewasthatnight.
,
preaching services 7:30 p . m Practice Thursday 8 p, m.
superintendent, Don Wilson . $u"·
Wed nesday eyenmg Bible study
LETAR T FALLS , Church Sc hool day sc hool, 9·45 a .m .; evening
Spring is a wonderful time of the year. The trees thicken 1
al 7. 30p.m.
1sl, 2nd , 3rd Su ndays 10·15 a .m. w ors hip, 7-30 p.m. Prayer upandburstforthwithsprlngyellow.green. 'lbedark brown of
G ROCERIES&amp; GEN E RAL
COMPLETE AUTOMOTIV E SE RVICE
FAITH TABERNACLE CHURCH, . 4 th Sunday 9,15 a.m.. worsh &lt;p meeting, 7.30 p.m. Wednesday .
the ground shows slashes of yellow, purple and while. Spring ,
MER C HANDISE
Bailey Run Rood,
Rev.
Emmett 1st, 2nd, 3rd Su ndays 9: 15 0 m ·,
TUPPERS PLAINS CHRISTIAN f1 owersg ivingus thesi ""a!win teriSover.
•
• showing man· ,
Locust &amp; B..th Sts.Middteport Ph. 992.9921
dl
G od IS
,
H
Rawson, pas or
on ey 0 unn, 4 th Su nday 7:30 p.m.
CHURCH, Eugene Underwood,
~YPh. 949· 2550
Racine
supt Sunday school 10 a.m Su nMORNING STAR; , Worship 9·30 pastor; Howard Caldwell, Jr., His power once more.
'
day Levening servlceh 7,JO, B•ble o.m .. chu rc h school 10 30 a.m., Sundar School Supt. , Sunday
In the country along the roads, in the fields and along city
teoc11 ing, 7·30p m T ursdoy .
Mid -We ek Servic:e Wednesday 8 Schoo , 9:30 o.m., Morning Ser. streets we see the bestirring of nature, its the new growing
DYESVILLE COMMUNITY CHUR· p.m.
mon, 10:30 a.m.: Sunday evening
I, the tim f
•
""'
'
BA K ER S OF GAY90 BREAD
Nation wl d~ lns . Co. of Columbus. 0.
CH , Rogehr C. Turner, pastor
MOR SE CHAPEL , worshp 11 se rvice, 7 p.m.
season, t S
e 0 re))irth. &gt;ue power of the Almlghty
Ph. 992·3030
Middleport
Sunday sc ool, 9:30 o m.: Sunday a.m., Chu rch School 9 JOo .m.
LET ART
FALLS , UNITED displayed once more for all mankind.
Ph , 992-2318
Pomeroy
804 W. Main
morntng worship, 10.30. Sunday
PORTLANDI WDfs h1p 7:30 pm ; BRETHREN , Rev. Freeland Norns ,
How can we forget Easter 80 soon? We can see the apple
e-..enlng service 7:30 .
Chu rc h sc noo C) 30o m.
pastor . Floyd Norris, supt._ Sunday bloSBOms, red bud, dogwood, wild cherry and trilli~ .
THE SAL VATION ARMY , 11 5
SUTTON, Chu rch sc hool 9·30 school , 9·30 a.m.: mornmg ser- · Certainlyspringishere winterispast · thesind'inrrofbirdsis•
Buttern ut Ave , Porneroy, Envoy a. m w ors htp 1s t and 3rd Sundays mon, 10:30 a m., Prayer service, heard In
~
'
ahand Mrs. Rnd
ay Whlnling, officers 10 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday , 7 30p m.
our
land. Gods in His Heaven, ails right with the
WE FILL DOCTOR S
B AKt: R S OF GOOD BREAD
c rge. Su ay o tness mee tmg ,
NORTHEAST CLUSTER
CHURCH OF GOD OF PRO- world.
"R E SCRIPTIONS
Huntington, W. Va .
10 a m : Sunday school, 10·30
Re, , Ric hard Thomos
PHECY, O.J . Wh1te ROad off 160.
How true thia is.' God this spring is outdoing h.lmseU. It's
Pomeroy
992-2955
o. m leader YPSM Elotse Adam s,
R
G
G
I8
t 0 rS
7.30 p.m sol vation meeti ng.
Pastor
ev. hearlge rot ' pothu
s
un- such a beautifUl sight 1 or is it just the melriory of the sub-zero
Duane Sydenstrick er
day Sc oo , 10 a.m., Ar
r Hen,
,
Lod tes Home League, 12 noon to2
John DQJglos
son. Supt.; Morning Wc:wst11p , 11 cold and snow Of this past wmter?
p. m., Thu rs day. prayer mee ttng
Ass OCiates
a.m. : Young PeOple'~ service , 7
Maybe it ls Dot any better a spring in God's sight, but it Is
and Btble ~ tudy , Thu rsday , 7·30
JOPPA , wor5hip 10 a.m., Chur- p.m. : Evening s~N tce, 7:30p.m.; iniiW'I'S. Maybe we are more appreciative of God'S loving gift
LOUI S W .OS BORN E
p.m.
ch School 9 a.m ; Pra ya r Mee ting Wed~esdoy Mtd-Week Prayer of spring this year HN..:.Iully ~will f-1 God's presence in
Ph. 992-2178
Pomeroy
220 E . Main
MIDDLEPORT
Wed nesdoy 8 p,m,
Ser YtCe, 7·30 p. m. ; Youth
' ~
t .
•
~
MT . MORIAH BAP TIST, corne r
LO NG BOTTOM , Sunday school meeting, 6:30p.m. Evening wor- everyseuonevenas~do~
elia!;~springs.
FOurth a nd Matn, Mtddlepor t. a t 9:30 0 m w orship serviCes at ship, 7:30p.m
OVer the years we tend· to gtow Ctlllplilcent about the
Re' . H en ~ Key , Jr · pas lor Su n· 7,30 p.m. B&lt;b le study ond You th
CHESTER CHURCH OF THE Almighty. Spring should always make US aware of God's love
~ATEWAY
dayschao , 9.30om , Mrs. Erv tn m eeti ng at a p . m
an NAZARENE , R~v. He~bertGrate , formankind. ltisatimeofnewbirthtroundaboutus
Middleport, Ohio
Baumgardner, supl., Morning Wednesdays.
pastor worshtp servtce, 11 a. m.
•
·
wors h&lt;p, 10.45 a.m.
NORTH BETHEL , Wars hip 11 and 7 .30 p.m. Sunday . Sundoy
I pray this will be true for our spiritual life 88 well. It is
Middleport, Ohio
WE HANDLE ONLY U .S .D.A . CHOI CE
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF 0 m.: Churc h Sc hool10 a.m.
Schaal, 9·30 o.m. Richard Barton, always time for the singing of birds and the voice of the turtle
MEATS
CHRIST IN CHRISTIAN UNION ,
ALFRED . Sundoy Schaal 9.30 supt. Prayer meeting, Wednes- in our life. The winter is over and the rain has stopped when we
law rence Manley , pas tor, Mrs. om., w orship 10:45 o.m.: Preyer day 7 30 P m
becune Christiarw W ar alwav. in the 1 liest of
.
Russell You ng, Sundoy Sc hool mee ttng w ednesday 7:45 p.m.;
BftAoF0R0
CHURCH
OF
' e
e
~w
ove
Supt Sunday School 9,30 a.m. UMW 3rd Tuesday e p.m.
CHRIST , Gabroel Mzrs , pas tor. Bl· for God is with US, we are alone no longer. Both day and nighf
( For a rea l auction call the Real McCoy J
worship ,
7 .30.
REEDSVILLE. Sunday sc hool9 :30 ble Sunday School 9:30 a.m.: mar- we must be singing. This is God's world.
Even i !'l g
1.0. (Mac) McCoy
Middleport
Wednesday proye r mee ting, 7:30 a.m. w orsh1p 7.30 p.m.; Praye r ning church 10.-30 a.m.; Sunday
Look around at the blooming of spring tbis year ,
Ph , 992·3284
985-3944
P · ~T MORIAH CHURCH OF GOD, Meeting 7:30 p.m Tu esday ; evening servt~e, 7:00 p.m. remerqber God is here. 'nte flowers appear on the earth
Vtsi ta tiOn7. 30 p. m. 15 tThursday.
Wednesdoy servtee, 7:30p.m.
•"- tlmeof lnglngblr~-ls
List
Ope
'
FR ESH PRODUCE &amp; PLANTS
~aclne Rou te 2 tne Rev, James
SILVER RIDGE. Worship 10 a.m.
LAUREL CLIFF FREE METHODIST I.J'e
8
W!l
C&lt;m.e.
en!
n your eyes! It' s
2 CONVENIENT MARKETS
' CHURCH , Rov. Floyd F. Sho&lt;tk , the Lord speaking to us, -Rev, Wm. Middleswarth, St. Paul
M. Muncy, pas tor. Sunday sc hool, Chu rc h Schoal9 a.m
Q· 45 o.m.: morning wor.ship, II
TUPPER S PLAINS, W orship 9 pastor. Lloyd Wrt ght, Sunday Lutheren Church, P&lt;Uleroy.
Dedi cated to t.he Interests of
t'Ome~~v ~
Ph . 992: 5B2
o.m., event~g wors hip, 7 00. a.m. Churc h Sc hoollO a.m.
School Supt; Morntng Worship
Meigs-Mason Area
Mason~.
KENO CHU~CH OF CHRIST, 9 30 a.m.; Sunday School 10:20
Preyer meettng, Tuesday , 7:30
Pnone 992·215&lt;1
p.m.; Yaung peOple's mee ting, George Frederick , su pt. SeNice a.m., Wednesday Pray~r and BiPh. 773·5121
weekly, 9:30 a.m. on Sunday ble Study: 7·30 p . m .~ 'Sundew even7 30 p .m. Thursday .
spent Tuesday with Mrs. Dale'
MIDDLEPORT FIRST B~PTIST , Preachtng first and third Sundays ing worship 7.30 p.m.; Cho)r Prac.
Randall
and Kelly, o C
Corner Stx lh ond Palmer the Rev
of mon th by Clifford sm1 th, 9:30 ti ce Thursday, 7 p.m.
Furnilure &amp; Hardware
Pet"!r
Grandol
,
pastor,
'Manning
a
m.
DEXTER
CHURCH
OF
CHRIST,
GaUoway,
otUo
.
,
Hom el ite Saws
Ser. lng Meigs, Masor1
KIOes
,
supenhlendent
Sunday
HOBSON
CHRISTIAN
UNION
,
Charles
Russell,
Sr.,
mintsler;
Chester
A nd Gallla Area
Ph . 98S·l308
Thursday evening callers,
Mrs. Daniel Worley, and
School. WMPO Rod to program Darrell Doddrd l, pastor. Sunday Rick Macomber, supt, Sunday
P hoM '192·215&lt;1
of
Mrs. Daniel Worley, Stacy·
'
1 ·45 o m ; Sunday School, 9· 15 School, 9.30 o.m ; Leonard school, 9:30 a.m. ; worship ser- Stacy of Beckley, W. Va.
.
a.m.. M Orntng Wors hip , 10. 15 Gi lm ore, ftrsl elder· eve ning ser- vic.,, 10 30o .m. Bibl• Study , Tu•s- spent laat week with her and Mrs. Charley Smith were
MEIGS COUNTY BRANCH
o. m hYouth octtvi ties and v1ce. 7.30 p.m. Wwunes
_.J
day do y , 7 .30p .m •
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Smith of,
parents, Mr. and Mrs .
REORGANIZED CHURCH OF
fe llows ip for tunte)f ond sent or prayer mee tmg, 7:30 p.m
Rocksprings Road.
Kerm 's Korn er
hig h s luden~ . 6 P m. Sundoy
MT MORIAHCHURCHOFGOD , JESUS CHRIST Of LATTER DAY Charley D . Smith and her
Mr. and Mrs. Ivan Shwnate :
Ker mit Walton
eveni ng worship, ?·30 p.m. Mid- Ra cine ROute 2. The Rev. Charles SAINTS, Portklnd Racine ROod . slater, Mr. and Mrs. Doyle
Pomer
oy
and
sons of Mansfield were •
prayer
servtces.
Wednes·
Ha
nd,
pastor.
Sunday
sc
hool,
9
45
Willtam
ROush,
pastor,
Tom
week
Ph. 992-3863
Pomeroy
Knapp, Kail, Charles and
296 W. Second
day, 7:30p.m
m.,
morn
ng
worshtp
,
11
a.m.
Stobart,
Sunday
School
Director.
weekend
visitors of Mrs. :
1
0
Kevin.
CHURCH OF CHRIST, Mid-. Evening services , Tu esday and Su !ldoy School, 9:30 a.m. ; Morn.
Shwnate
and
Mr. and Mrs. :
Mrs. Howard 'lboma and
dlepor t, 5th end Motn George Friday ,7· 30 p.m.
ing worthip, 10.30 a.m., Sunday
Larry
Johnson,
Gina, Tahnee '
Gloze . m1n1s ter, Mike . Gerlach,
BEARWALLOW RIDGE CHURCH ev•nlng service 7 p. m. Wedne s- Mrs. Iva Johnson were recent
Church and d ffice supplies and
Brady.
Also
visiting were •
super,ntenden t. Terry Ya nkey, OF CHRIST , DOug Seaman, day evening prayer services, 7:30 visitors of Mr. and Mrs.
gi fts
·Racine
l'h. 94f.91JO
~Outh minister. Bible school, 9:30 mi ntster. Btble study, 9:30a .m.: p.m.
Randy and Scott Pierce of '
Larry · Barr and family of
Middleport
99 Milt St.
a . m . ~ mormng wors hip , 10·30 morning wOrship , 10·30 o.m.;
BETHLEHEM BAPTIST, Rev. Earl
Mason.
,
Rutland.
a.m., evening wors htp , 7.30. eve ning w orship, 7.30 p.m. Shuler, pastor. worship ••Nice,
A
cookout
wu
enjoyed
at
'
prayer service 7 p.m. wednes - WednesdoyBib lesludy , 7·30p.m. q_JO a.m. Sunday school, 10.30
Kevin Knapp spent a
RA&amp;Ir~E
day .
KENO CHURCH OF CHRIST, a.m. Btble Study and prayer ••r- weekend with his grand- the home of Jama Reeves. ;
MIDOLEPORT CHURCH OF THE , George Frede rick, sup f. Sunday vtce Thursday , 1·30 p .m.
mother Mrs. lAma Knapp of 1boae attending were Mr.
Ray t-4: tgg s
R09'=' Kiebel
THE STOR E WITH A Ht A ~ T
NAZA~ E NE , Rev Erte Caw: , supply morning service, 9:30 a.m. with
CARLETON CHURCH . f(lngtbury
Robert Reevu, Bryan and •
Chester
St . Rt. 7
·
Ph. 949·2626
pas to•, Mrs. Mary Lo they, Sunday preaching on first and thi rd Sun- Rood . Gory King, pastor. Sunday Lanasvllle.
R•cine
Ph . 985·4100
school supt. Sunday sc hool , 9·30 clay ofmonthbyGeof'ge Pickans . school, 9:30a.m.: ttvenlng worMrs. Daniel Worley, Stacy Jamie and Mr. and Mrs. Paul •
· ~
o.m.. morning wor:; htp, 10.30
STIVE RSVILLE COMMUNITY ship, 7:30 p.m. Pro'f'er ITIMftng, and Mrs. Charley D. Smith Darnell and Jeff.

~

KINGSBURY HOME SALES
&amp; SERVICE. INC.

MEIGS TIRE CENTER, INC.

TliiS SPACE AVAILABLE
PHONE 992·2156

BIG JIM'S PLAZA

RACINE PLUMBING &amp; HEATING

REUTER·BR'OGAN INSURANCE
SERVICES
WAID CROSS SONS STORF

·P. J. PAULEY, AGENT

HEINER'S BAKERY

SEAR'S CATALOG· MERCHANT

MARK V STORE

GOEGLEIN SAND &amp; GRAVEL

.

DUST OFF A NICE

THE ATHENS COUNTY SAVINGS
&amp; LOAN CO.
ROSEBERRfS PENNZOIL

FOOD MARKET

-

.

WE'LL LET YOU LEAVE 6Y

THE STAI~. THEN WE'LL
DEMAGNETIZE THE AII~·(:AF~.[

QF EAATH
00\NN THERE FOR
ME TO KISS-

~OR THAT 1,\UCH
MONEY Mci&lt;EE CA~

~TA V

J.OSTI ... I'll"

THANKS FOR

KNOW WHAT HZ::
T~INKS OF US!

'lOUR CONFIDoNCE,
6ENTLEMEN ...

BUT SI&gt;JCE I AM PRESIDE&gt;JT. THE RANSOM WILL
SE PAID •. , AND THERE'LL
NO PUB LICITV TILL
MoKEE IS S.AFE!

A~V VELPS
FRO\! THE 50 AI::D'
OF DIRECTORS
ASOUT THE SIZE;
OF McKEES
RA&gt;.ISOM;

A FEW· · BUT
THEY'LL PAYL ..
HOW ABOUT
LUNC H·

I KNOW IT SOU ND$ PHONY FOR
A SECRETA!'&lt;.¥ TO FLATTER HER

! Mt=AN IT:
6t;.TTIN6 S IX
MILL ION OUT
OF THE;
B OAR D-

~O$S ,

EASY-· BUT ~OU'RE REALLY
A S MOOTH OPERATOR~

'5HIVAU"' ~

WAIT A SEC.! .. ,
BLAZES , I HOPE' I 'M
NOT G ETT!Net

PARANOID!

1

?,

'

OHPHAN "NNI E

LITTLE

ORPHAN

ANNIE-THE

LIONS' DEN

LITTLE

ORPHAN ANNIE-BY HE

R

.....-....
....,..

SIDE

. ~.

I HEARO

HE

SHE Will!! U~
ON.,..

I SEE 'ooiHm'

"TO~-

.., ... "'l't'C-

\"ESI m0""""'

'•'
r

YOU MEAM,
PADR£ • · '&amp;liT
I DONT WMT

OARELV
MOOO&lt;O

NE!Ci ~~'

.'

n n!

IMACiiiNE!

??-YOU

RE-FUSED To RIDE: WITH

THAT PRE'TlY 61RL- EO
COllE. &gt;bll'RG
RIDING WITH ME 1--

f36CAUSG lti IS Dll&lt;f'YYo' 15 SMOKIN' A FoLJL.
CIGAR. IN OTHER

Yo' IS SAFF. WE
1&lt;1/'J TALl&lt;

BUT I:M A WOMAN ~~
-ALL.. WOMAN

I MAY L..COK L.IKE.' A
MAN r.r- I MAY S!v'ELL..

MAN TO/'MN

LIKE.: A

'v\ORDS-

rr-

N-

AND)QJ AREA
MALE CHAUVINIST
PIGr'f"-

.....••

rr...IT WOULD

BENICE ... BUT
ONLY IF YOU

PAUL'S BARBER SHOP

WAIVTED TO!

AJXil.

YOU 'D HAVE TO FEEL
YOU HAD A FAIR
CHANCE OF GEITING
A DECENT I'IE1UR N

ON YOUR INVESTMENT / '

PS/fAW!
ME AND MY
HUSBAND WERE

PROSPECTrJRo!

\OU DON'T GET

I?ICH BY BEING
AFRAID OF

KATIE ARE
YOU TELLING

IF YOl/ WERE
INVOLVED IN

ME YOU1RE

IT!

RloK r , -,._ INTERE6TEO?

WE T=K

CHANCE{) /

ELLIS &amp; SONS SOHIO

BETSY ROSS BAKERY

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE PHARMACY

:"&amp;"-"-&amp;

THIS SPACE AVAILABLE
PHONE 992-2156

I could live in it
one week and t;ou the
next. or... ...--=--

One of us !;hould
arab
this
apart·
ment,

.·BRIDGE
Oswald and Jim Jacoby

Sharyn Kokish played safe

Slim!

NORTIT

lWIN CITY

McCOY AUCTION SERVICE

'

IIORNLOSER

aeasona

RIDENOUR SUPPLY

!flAT'&lt;; WHAT I SJI,IO ...
WH"i DQj.J'T we B'&lt;JE;R
DISCUSS 11-IJ:; MCAI&gt;li!Jt.;o
OF l-IFE' ?-

SOMF. Froftt.~ ldJ

Fl f&lt;ST. flOWABOUT HE\..Ptt.lb

GLE:AR 1D IIJO!A

rtt' FiboREO OJf HOW lD M
THE' BATTE&gt;~! ~ IIJ

TO

~EAI&lt;!J

MIDDLEPORT BOOK STORE

•

ltU !JbS

t..tKE' THAT.

-

t. -~

• 987

"' Q 7

• QIO

•

" est
Pass

No rl h East
1•
Pass

So ulh
2 .a,

PJSs

2•

P ass

3•

!'ass

P&lt;.lss

3A

Pas"

3V
4 "'

Pass

6A

1-'ass

Pass

Pass

Opening lead -

10

w

By Oswa ld &amp; Jam es Jacoby
I n Loday 's hand taken from
the 1976 O lym piad prac ti ca lly

BARNEY

•••

• JUGHAID -- WILL 'IE
,.AKE ELVINE\/ '5 SPINNIN '
:WHEEL BACK
~ FER ME?

every pair reached a spade or

'IES'M

club slam All slams m ade
easily w hen a hearL wa sn "t
opened , a ll spade slams went
down agai nst a heart lead
because the defenders did no t
see those four spades m the
East hand
The hea rt lead also bea t

•"

most of those in six clubs.

RIGGS USED CARS, INC.

•

EAST
... .15 3 2
• Q 6 52

• ,) 7
t AK63
o!o A J LO 6 2
North-South v ulnc t'&lt;~ b le

Tl11&lt;5 TH IIJI'o.

.

1r

I

WE~T I il l
.. 7
¥ KI0984
• Q.I 10 2
... 9 8 4

SOUTH

Wolfpen

NEW YORK CLOTHING HOUSE

6

(01\K98G4
¥ A3
• 54
-"t K fl3

THE DAILY SENTINEL

SUNDAY TIMES.SENfiNEL

o.. Friday, May s.Jm
PIECE

and

MIDWAY MARKET
BOB'S MARKET

Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy,

-.

the Sermunette

LiNDA'S LADY FAIR BEAUTY SALON

6Jc1llf.R:r'

iiii;;~~::J
I

dt sca rd when West showed out

T he Almana c

Bv

PrP:~s

tJnUed

United Press International
Today is Friday. May 6, t he
!26th d ay of 1977 with 239 'o
-follow.
The moon is bet ween its full
phase and last quart er.
T h e mo rn mg stars are
M er cury, V enus and Mars.
The even ing s t ars are
Jupiter and Saturn .
T hose born on this date a r e
under the si gn of Taur us.
Sigmund Freud , Austrian
neurol ogist and founder of
psychoanalysi s. was born

May 6, 1856.
On this day m history :
In 1816, the American Bible
Association was organized in
New York C1 ty .
In 1935, th e Work s Progress

Admimstrati6n

~

known as

the WPA - was established
provide work for the 'u nemployed.
In 1972, an armed man who
hijacked a plane in Pennsylvania
t he
day
before
parachuted .over Honduras
wi th $303,000 collected in

w

on lhe second spade lead and
paid o rr to tha t bad spade
break .
Wh en Sharyn Kokis h of the
Canad tan lad tes' team held
the So uth cards she decided Lo
tr y to guard agamst .tha t bad
spade break .
ransom .
Therefore, after t he queen
of c lubs dropped, she cashed
her ace and k ing or d1amonds,
ruffed a d Jall'jond with dummy 's l ast club , re turned to her
hand w1Lh the queen of spades,
drew th e las t trump and had
fe}'\f ~ ~ THAT SCRAMBLED WOAD GAME
12 tricks.
~~~~~~ if,
byHenri Arnoldanaeob Lee

'ftft\irul

Thi s sa fe ly play was sure to u nscramble these tour Jumbles,
work If diamonds broke as one letter to each squa(e , to form
wel l as 5~2 since East wa s four Ofdlnary words
kn own to be out of clubs. If r-::=-:,-,::::-:-=:-1
West ruffed the t h1rd club ,
Sha ryn would have be.en ab le .
~
to d 1scard dummy s l as l
~

I ZARUE
V "J V'

heart

l J

wh y th e revoke penalty i s JUSt
one tnck m duphcate and two
tn c k s m rubber brtdge the
answer JS t h a t t h e new
duplicate laws are m effect
now. the new rubber bridge
taws aren't ready as yet

(Do you flave a q uestion
lor the expe rts? Wr~te "Ask
the Jacobys " cara o l lhis
newspaper. The Jaco b ys will

Declarer wo uld win the heart
lead du mmy's k i n g or club~
and a second cl ub from dum·
m y wo ul d pr oduce the queen

answer individua l questions
11 slam ped, sel l-addressed

frtml East.

most interestmg questions

Al th is point m ost declar ers
played another c lub, star lcd
on spades. could on ly get one

will be used in lhis colu mn
and wtll receive copies of
JACOBY MQOERN I

envelopes ara enclosad. Tho

0_

'- "" ....... c.... _,................ _ ....

~~ ~N.:;~ I TEBER
F o r those who want to k now

j

t'

I I I J:: J J~~~~~
.

.

·

-- -

\YESURT±

kMERPE
J l

I I

Now arrange the ct'rcled lerters to
lorm the surpnse answer, as suggested by the acove cartoon

A=rI xxxxxI rr x)
~~

(An swers tomorrow)

I

Jumbles LOATH

Yesterday's

GIANT

ARTERY

BUSHEL

AnsWII" Wha1all rulers ought 10 be- STRAIGHt

�10-The Datly Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Fnday, May G, 1977

Let The Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash

WANT AD
CHARGES

CARRIERS WANTED
""
FOR MASON
AR£A DAILY
SENnNEL

lS Wilrds t.•rUUdt•r
C¥:.11
(.1uu l!t
I U.)
1 dil~
J u~~~

100

IHl&lt;t~~

f.itdl ""'LIItl uVel

" url.b:

Ali:.

....

IS&lt;l

101

IO&lt;J
3 00

l l$
J ,.

tJtt" HIUIIII Wll I~

u; ~ ~t'llls ~~

wo11J

~~

i..l.ay

IUlllllll~ uU~t:r tl~u (Ufi:M.'t.Ulrvt

~~li wrll ~ d ar ~4rt II~ 1 da.)

Contact 675-1333

In m~umry C&lt;lrt.l of Thanks mwl
Obrhwry 6 cents per word POO

or

mmunum C11sh mudvan4ee
1l l i' JJC t.'t'IJI-t&gt;d Ullh With t:IISh Wtth

order 25 u•nt dw.rt:t: fur ads ~~~try
il\!o( Ao~ Nu mber In C&lt;tre uf Tlrt&gt;&amp;rt-

-=

~~-

Und

r~:~.t ur~r1 1o11

Phone 99'.1 2156

NOTICE

1968 GTX 44• speed Evcellent
cond!f1on
S IOOO
pho ne

m37S9
!973 CHEVY NOVA V 8 olf mce
car
$17q5
Phone Horold
Brewer tong e a n om OhiO
{6U }985 3554of ler6p m
1976 CHEVY 3 quarter ton -4
wheel dnvp a u tomatiC 350
e ng1n9 only 7 SOO m1les Also
Coli
F'1rewood f or sale
992 59.47
19720LDSCUTLASS mogwheels
Phone 992 2941

-

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES
Munday

Noon urr S&lt;lt lu day
Tuc s,JH}
1hru F ntl.H)
&lt;PM
thet.lHy bd ur e pubiJci!liUil

Sw rtlii y

-

---

3 FAMI::'L:-:
V- G
c::A
-:-:RA
-,--=-:
GE- So
- :le- ,Th" u-,-, ORCHID ROOM f or re-;j for an
n1versones weddmg re cep
day and Friday Berna rd Dtd
l1ons bndol shOwers or pnvole
die res•dence 9 a m Electnc
meeting room Phone 992 3975
sewmg mochme 8 &amp; W T V 6
or 997 2571
alec razors amplifier clothes
cht ldrens men and womens TRAILER IN Pome roy 2 b~-;;
Many othe r useful1fems
Phone (61&lt;) 367 7101
tloe- t;d
YARD SALE Thursday Fndoy and TRAILER SPACE for "r'"'o'-n~
Saturday Mart1n St Rutland
sou th of Middleport on Rt 7
Boy S 26 1n b1ke record player
along the nver Sewer and
lots of other 1tems Phone
electric hooked up $40 per
7&lt;2 2078
month Cal l 992 2561 afternoon
or
evenmgs
FOUR FAMILY Carport Sale at

0

&lt;PM
t rrday after nw n

During the 1llness and death of
Moggle Smlth we w ish to

OeLangs Fr~doy and Soturdo'f
10 00 tt ll 5 00 O[l Rf 143 1 mde
thank our fnends and relottvtp
off Rt 7
'
wtlo sent ca rds and f!Owert
The Ewmg Cl1apef Dr Tefle, 5 FAMILY GARAGE Sole Port A
Cnb library tab le toys ap
nut'$Gs at Veterans HOspttol
p lta nces motorcy cle seat baby
especia lly Sue T1lhs LPN Rev
tlems
mens
womens
Perrin and Amos Tillis We also
c h1ld ren s clotMlng and m1s c
wist! to thank the netgllbors of
tfoms Fndoy and Saturday
Mulberry Avrt and especially
May 6 &amp; 7 from 9 00 tdl 3 30
Donna and Rich Jones her best
Wh1te Garage behmd Syracu se
of fr.end John E1ch We con 1
Drrv1n In 9.49 2178
thank you enough for your
klndneu during the Illness and GARAGE SALE 295 Wngh t Sl
death of our deor mother Your
Pomeroy Foot of Mulberry Htll
k1ndneu will never be forgot
May 5 6 &amp; 7 startmg at 9 om
ten May Gods love shtne upon
Clolhtng
lo wnmower
thee always
housetlold tfems
Chtldren Sylvta Corman Dole
Yard Sale
Marvtn McGu tre
Smtth Oon Smtth Guy
restdence
off
Rt 7 bypass
Smlthond Georgia Scroggs
Thursday Fnday and Saturday
WE WISH to thank our fnends and
relottvas for the beoultful YARD SALE Carroll Teof ord s
restdenca Corner of Broadwoy
flowers , cords and g•fts that
and
Matn St Ractne from 9 00
ware gt~o~en or sent to us for our
ftll S 00 Sa turday only G E
60th Weddmg Anniversary; We
Dryer one rechner one pla1d
chertstl aoctl and e very one So
rocker drapes ex rra n1ce
happy to hove aU who cOme to
ch1ldren s clothes ond other
call on us
Items
Leah ond Usum Nease
GARAGE SALE Fnday ond Solur
day Laure l Cl1tf road 9 ttl l ?
Gravely tractor for sale
LOOKING FOR travel trotler YARD SALE MAson Across from
Pteken s Ha rdware Collectors
truck camper, comptng trotler
1fems motors bottles seals
mln1home tru ck cop? Travel
unb
roken etc
Frtday and
trailer to rent? CODNER S
Saturday 9 00 ftl l?
CAMPERS on Rainbow R•dge
open evenmgs Toke Matgs 28 YARD SALE Saturday and Sun
Or 32 to Boshon Robert
day 9 ftll 5 Cancelled 1f rarn
Codner, Long Bottom, Owner
Rote Globe lamp ~pewnter
12 piece set Ruby Crow n Stem
1963 YELLOWSTONE eompong
wore Kanawha gloss vases
troller 16 fl good condtlton
lots of ottler miScelloneovs
Self contamed s leeps 6 Call
Turn t~ord hill at Texaco Gas
S1olton '"Mason one mtle out
Fallaw s•gns

9922963 ~~~~§

APPLIANCE SERVICE rnon, ex
perienced No phone calls
Golha Rafrtgeratton co 611
Third Ave , Gallipolis Ohio

RISING STAR Kennel Boordtng
Indoor Outdoor run s groOmtng
a
ll breeds
clean santtory
OLDER RESPONSIBLE lody to love
lacilltJes Cheshire Phone (6 U )
tn and care for aged wtdow 1n
367 0292
Rutland Ohio Not !nvalld nor
senile Light housework and HOOF HOLLOW Buy sell trade
cooking
No laundry
Coli
or from horses RUTH REEVES
"'
7"2 2078 for tnformat1on
trainer Phone (614) 698 3:2'90
PERSON TO mOw lawn tn Mtd All BREED Dog groomtng
dleport Phone 985·3930
reasonable rates Coli for ap
potntment J &amp; D Kennels
NEEDED an operator Contact
742 3162
Jane t ' s
Ho~r-Go-Round,
Moson,W Va (JO.i)773 SAO&lt;t
AKC SHETLAND sheep dogs
(M•n ) Colltes 2 females 7
NEED FEMALE to live m wtftl
weeks old Shots and w9rmed
elderty lady ond do cooktng tn
Phone (614) 367 0292
• '
eJCchonge lor free room
Tronspartotton
preferred MEIGS CO HUMANE SOCIETY
referan~es
requtred
Call
For odoplton
2 pupptes
9927311
female I med1um Sizes 1
s mall s•re shots and wormed
NEED WOMAN to sloy wtth elder
Metgs Co Humane Soctefy
ly lady In Syracuse Room and
8 4 3
3 0 0 9
bc;tard on~ reasonable wages
Coll9'12 3914 of tor 4 00

,,
CASH patd for all makes and
models of mob1le homes
Phone orea code 61.t .423 9531
TIMBER , Pomeroy Forest Products TOp pnce for standtng
sawt1mber Call Kent Hanby,
I 446 8570
COI NS CURRENCY , fohns old
pocket watches and chains
•liver and 51old . We ne.d 196&lt;t
and older silver cotns Buy sell
or trade Call Roger Wamsley
742 2331
CASH III for 1unk cars Frye s
Truck and Auto WRECKER SER
VICE' Ptlone7.A2 2081
OlD FURNITURE , 1ce boves brass
beds
ate
co mplete
households Wnte M 0 Mtller
Rt ... Pomeroy , Ohto or call

COAL l1mes tone and coic tum
chlo11de and calciu m brme for
dust control and spectal m1xmg
soh for farmers Excels 10r Salt
Works Matn Street Pomeroy
Oh1a or phone 992 3891
APPLES FITZPATRICK ORCHARO
STATE ROUTE 689 PHONE
WILKESVILLE (61&lt;) 669 3785

---

CAMPER
$600
Also
horse
trat !er $450 Phone (61-4 ) 698
3290
STEREO
NEW AM FM stereo
radto combtna t1on $129 95 or
easy terms Coll992 3965
1973 JEE P CJS good cand1t1on
Plus eJ~: tra s $2900 Bunk e r H1ll
Rd across from ceme te ry
SPRING GARDEN Suppl•es Cab
bage
cou l1f10W' er
broccoli
and ~ head le ffuae p la nts
yellow wh1te and red on1on
sets on1on plants Kennebec
cobb ler Katohd1n Red Ponftac
and Red Lasoda seed potatoes
Bu lk garden seeds poft1ng sod
peot moss frut t trees and rose
bushe s
Midway Market
Pomeroy
Ol1to
9'92 2582
Bob s Market Mason W Vo
(30&lt;) 773 5721
1973 JEEP CJ5 good cond1t1on
Plus e x tras $2900 Bunker Hill
Road across I rOm ce metery
TOMATO
PLANTS
Cobboge
b roccoli caul1f10wer brussel
sprOuts egg plants t\ongtng
baskets
p ots
geran1ums
begon tas
flats
petunias
mangolds
pons tes
salz•a
balsom
d ianthu s
snap
dragons! alyssum V111eo col
eus
C e land s GreenhOuse
Roctne Gerald me Cleland
I .42 In cas t 1ron k1tchens1nk 1
l:iasln and 1 dro 1n board hong
on wall type whtfe 1 3 bu rner
gas hot plate Phone 992 5714
ECO NOMY TRACTOR wtlh all at
tac hments L1ke new osk tng
S2250 Phone (61&lt;) 698 3790
FOR MEMORIAL DAY Beouftful
selecti on ot flOwe rs Baskets
sprays wreo ths va ses Fay s
Navelty Shop N Second Sl
Mtddle port
HOMEGROWN Tomato p lants 1m
proved Mexican early Vtolent
golden Jub ilees Also golden
Acre cabbage Across from the
swtmrn.ng pool
Th omas
Haymon Syracuse Ohto
CARLl ON TRUMPET 1 $50 Western
saddle 15 tn seat, S60 Phone
742 3019 Or7.42 2066
12

FT STARCRAFT alummum
ft sh1 ng bOot wtth 7 Ya h p
motor Phone 742 2965

8 FT CAMPER top fa r p iCkup
truck 40ft extens1on ladder In
good condltton 1970 Su•ck a1 r
1975 JEEP Cherokee p s p b
conddloned one Owner Phone
otr, .4 wheel dr1ve phone
985 .4181
7&lt;2 2590
1976 HONDA CB7SO 1800 mtles
Excellent condtflon w1th ac
1977 COUGAR XR 7 p s pb o1r
candr
tilt steenng whee l
cessortes Ca ll 985 3919 afte r 7
cruiSe control Am Fm stereo
rodto wtth 8 track tapa rear -2~. ~-----------+--~
GISTE RED
APPALOO SA
wtndow delrosfer
$6,000 REGeld1ng
good
conformalton
Phone 742 2826
flashy
needs upertenced
1970 FORD VAN new pamt
nder Phone99'2· 7735
rod 1al ltres Also 1972 Ford
1973
750 KAWASAKI a sk1 ng
Ton no Phone '742 2746
$1 000 Phone 992 75.. 8 116
1976 CHEVROLET Chevette phone
Vale Sf Pomeroy
7274
GOOD RICH TOp sotl Charles R

m

1972 GRAN TORINO A C p s
p b 351 engmo good conch
rt on Sl.ofOQ Phone 9926115
after5pm

Halfteld Ba ck hoe
Phone 742 2008

Servtce

1975 HONDA 750 many extras
Only 3500 mtles Also 1973
Bu iCk Century ""dr a•r Both tn
exce ll e nt co nd 1t1on
Coli
992 5516

1972
MERCURY
MARQUIS
Braughoms 62 000 mt /es 4
new ttres
$1850
Phone
992nw
992 5623
GAS RANGE. for sa le SIS New
WANTED
CHIPWOOD Poles,
e lec Hot Point table tap water
Max dtameter, 10 Inches on 197.4 Grand Prtx auto power
tank $25 Hot Pa1nt elec
steertng
and
power
brakes
large-st end, $8 per ton buncU
factory 01r AM AND FM flit
clothes dryer
$20
Coli
ad slobs $6 per ton Delivered
wheel.
P
W
green
w1th
wf1ite
992
2969
to Ohio Pollet Company Rt 2
hc;H top 31 000 moles, $3700 00
Pomeroy
Oh1o
Ptlone
JOHNSON 35 Super Seahorse
fi rm 992.3535 hll 6 p m
New ly
moto r
Outboard
992·2689
985 3519 afte r6 p m
over hauled
$425
Co li
Standing timber Phone 667 62U
1972 PINTO Run A Bout low
949 2560
mtleoge Can be seen at lOJ
Beech Sf Pomeroy :.,----,-I
NHfl A
1975 CUSTOMIZED Fo•d Von
Completely carpeted wtth T \1
ref ngerator, and tape deck
351 au toma tic $6000 Phone
992-5183
let Pomeroy Landmark
soften
&amp; condttton your
1%9 CHEVROLET&lt; dr good work
water and a Co-op water
I'OMIIIOY, 0.
cor Phone 992 3141 Zuspon
PH.ff:l-1176
softener, Model UC XVI
Hollow Road J im Provtnce
' low Only
1973 CHEVROLET IMPALA 4 doo•
IOwmtleogeOneowner $1299
let us test your water
Phonom 7530
Free
.
fdu Equipment 19'71 FORO Tormo 351 engine law
ITlileage 10 good cond1tt on
;.ullo(ll
Chain
Phone 992 3194 "' ~JackW Carsey,Mgr
$1000
...~
992 3459
~ Pho. .99NISI

--

r--iEiGs--1
!I ~ipment
Co.

Ii

, flilterllltiOINII
fHirvtst•
,.

GOOD USED t. elf propelled LOST 00G in Fort Me1gs area
block Doberman wtth long
Ecl1pse 21 u cut law r-. m0v.rer
ear~ has bumps an legs $50
enlliH.nt condlf!Ot1
phone
Rewo rd Phone 7"2 231.6
9922860
J975 FO~D 3000 tractor Model t0ST MALE DARK red h lsh Safler
In the F1va Po1nts or.a Lost
KA 114 C tn excelle nt cond •
seen w ednetdoy Apr d 20th
l1on Used about 2 h au r ~o For
Answers to the f\Qme o4 ZACK
more
1nformot1on
call
Reword PhoneW2 6072
992 7878
1973 HONDA 250 2600 m1le, e.~t LOST- TWO FEMALE Fo)(hounds
one BWT one SW nome on c:ol
cellent c0f1d ttton $500 8 fl
Iars 1f fQUnd wnte Emory Gor
long topper luggage rock on
don RR I Cheshtre Oh.lo, w ill
fOp cobmets Inside $300
~ for trouble
phone 985 3880

--

l~pvi!S lble for UlUI t' t/!.&lt;1 111)!\t: llll.U I

.·

1975 JEEP CHEROKEE p b P'
Ouadra trock
Good ltre,
Phone (304) 877 2340

IF YOU hove a serviCe to offer
want to buy or sell someth1ng
oe loo6ong tor work
or 72 VEGA $000 00 72 Pl V $900
whatever
yOu II get results
Ph 9A9 2307
faste r with o Sent1n,1 Wont Ad
_ Call_!l7c1-:.:.l:_:
56::__
~ADV TO l1ve 1n and ca re for 2
ch1ldren ages 3 &amp; 7 m West
Columb1a oreo Must ho"'e 3 AND "" RM fur, tshed ond un
fu rntshed opts Phone 99'1
refe rence
Call
1 (304 )
5434
8877740
-=:--'--~--,--­
COUNTRY Mobtle HOme Park Rt
HAVING PORCH Sole Wed•
33 len miles north of Pomeroy
Thurs
Fndoy and Saturday
la rge lots wtlh concrete pof10s
plus all ne~~:t week 707 Ol1ver
Sidewalk$ runners and off
Street
Mtddlepart
Qh10
streetpork1ng Phone992 7479
45160

T h~ Pullhsher reSt&gt;t"\u tl11.1 n~hL
tu t'tllt ur re/et1llll) ads dt.•cmt tJ ~
Jt'ttlllllill TIt' Pulllll)hcr wrll nut hi'

...

F"rSa le

--

1-614-992·2156

Molule Hmrw. s.a les li.IKI VHrd Sllle.ll

AulvSale.

E

.________

WmR SOFfENER 1

I
I

1
1.
I'

1

•279.9.5

'

-- - - -- ---

.

Y. !omeroy l.andmalt

TOMATO PLANTS Seven dtf
ferent varlet•es transplanted
SOc: dozen Phone 992 2954
Out5enberry Syracuse Ohto
- -

EXPERIENCED
Radiator ,__-...,
Service

CASE LOT
CAN GOODS
Stnckly wholesale to all.
Nat less than 112 case

Miller Produce
&amp;

NEW 3 bedroom hOuse 2 tJoths
all e lec 1 acre Mu:kllepod,
close to Rutland Phone 992
7481

Not The 1mlt1tars"

,_

2 23-1 mo

I

~

WIIIDOWSIIIOOIS
REP\AC(fllliiT
WIIIDOWS

AI.UIIUIUI
SIOI5mm

Free Est1mates

NEW HOMES
&amp; REMODELING

HARLEY HANING

.TEAFORD

NEW - Everythmg here is
10 peak cond1hon 3 love ly
bedrooms.
atr
cond 1tionq1g ,
Full
basement and 1 acre of
land $32,000
COUNTRY HOME 2
bedrooms
plu s
bath ,
lead1ng
c r eek
water.
garage w tth a cel lar Two
lh 1rds acre of land $16,500
2 BED ROOMS Near
school in M iddleport New
bath, new nat ural ggs F A
furna ce 2 porches Want
$12 ,000
OUTSKIRTS OF TOWN 2 9r 3 bedroom older home.
Has ci t y w ater.
full
basement, llh baths, l
porches , and mce lot
Needs a lltl )e work, bul a
good buy at iUS! $12,000
SOMETHING NEW Large 4 bedroom home ln
town , n ice doUble lot on
c orn er, 2 car garage.
Owners ar e going south,
better look today
WANT TO SELL YOUR
F,RM AT A BIG PROFIT
CALL US
WE HAVE
CLIENTS WANTING 100
ACRES UP.
G Bruce Teaford
H@len l Teaford
Associates

__

_.

CENTRAL REALTY CO.

BAS HAN - Nice 2 story country home, containing 7
rooms and 1'12 baths, mostly carpeled Kitchen has all
new built In cabinets W\fh bronze stove and
refrlgerator to match, new porches and all new
aluminum- siding and storm windows. forced air
natural gas furnace and drilled well , garden space
Thi s house Is warm and ready for Immed iate
occupancy, come take a look just $18 ,900.
NEW LISTING- FREE GAS - Nicemodern 1'12 story
farm house contalnJng 4 bedrooms, dlnlng room ,
k1tchen w ith built In appliances. basement , cltv and
well water , 2 barns, work shop and other bulld ln9s,
large pond stocked with fish , approxlmately 23 acres
tillable and &lt;6 acres fenced Good location, call for
appotntment, price $80,000

n_:l:n

RACINE - Good 3 br (.
utflli)es, even a garden' ~

dining room . low

:'\1!_ at only $8,500,

CHESTER - 113 acre farm, so acres t illable land , nice
2 story farm house. 1 rooms and bath , all hardwood
floors and basement Barna and otHer outbuildings, 2
ponds, a nice laytng farm priced to go, located near
Chester, call for appo intment
COOLVILLE- Nice modern brick home containing
three bedrooms, dining room. l lv)ng room with
fireplace, fullbasement with garr~G'arge front porch,
natural gas furnace, city --~o' dOd well water, a
beauf)ful home w•lh aPJ&gt;i, ~~ .otely 5'12 acres of land,
fruit trees and sha~p.\.. , .s surrounding It, plenty of
garden space, good .~nlng area close by , located In
Coolville, Oh io, priced at only $32,000. Call now
WE ARE SELLING PROPERTY ANO NEED YOUR
HELP, LIST WITH US. WE HAVE BUYERS FOR
VACANT LANO, FARM AND RESIDENTIAL
PROPERTY
JIMMY DEEM REALTOR

(614)985-4155

Chester, Ohto
10 17 1 mo ( Pdl

GUTTER SERVICE
Continuous one
p1ece
gutters. We lla119 It, or do tt
yourself. Spec111 prices to
butlders

TRUCKS

Phone 947-2814
9 a.m. to 5 p . m.

1974 Ford f.lOO Custom 360 •••'2995
Std

Phone 992-3339

Auto , P S , P B tilt wheel , rear step bumper,
~ L w B Twin gas tanks , hea vy duty suspension

1973 Chevy Custom 307 V8 ....~2695

DUGAN'S .

Std

EXCAVATING dOzer ba ck hOe
and dttcher Chorles R Hot
f1eld
Back Hoe Servtce
Rutland, Ohto Phone 742 2008
SEPTIC t NK S cleaned
San1ta an 992 3954

Modern

3 speed. L W B , rear step bumper

1973 Chfft Cu~m ••••••••• '2395
6 cyi , std , L W B

Alignment,
wheel
balancing,
tune-up,
brake work, minor•
reoair,

1972 Ford Custom •••••••••• '1895
L W B , V 8, standard

1967 Ford

Roger Riebel
Located on

BRADFORD Aucttoneer, Com
plate ServiCe Pt'tone 949 2487
or 9.49 2000 Racine Of1fo, Crllt
Bradford

CARPOING
Ca~cly

Strip
' Rubber Back
Regular $6.95
SavtSUI Sq. Yd.

Coll742-2211
TALK TO
WENDELL ORATE
CARPET CONSULTANT

RUnAND
FURNITURE

•

•

:•
:

Rutland

1

Cad~lac

Cpe DeVille .................... '8800

Full power and air

Manual Trans
Hwy 26 C1 1y

...........

••

Close Sal At 5 P.M.

'

ARNOLD ORATE _

.....

MVSfang II 2 3 Litre .4
Speed Manual Trens. 33
MPG Hwy 23 City

31

73 Cadillac Cpe. DeVme ....................'3800
Full power and a ir

1&amp; Mustana: II Cobra V8, 4 sp, AC .......'3695
v.s, 4 speed, air

condihon•ng

-FORD DEALERS OFFER MORE H H

......

76 Plymouth Volare 4 dr. 6a~r~:::~~~c
'3795
76 Olds Cutlass Sup. ~- ' Power and air S5495
75 Chny Monte Carlo ~?:-':~~-~~~.~!~ .......14695
74 Olds 88 Royal Cpe. ~~~.":..a.~~.~~.r...... 13595
74 Chevy Vega GT Cpe. 4 spd .............'1995
74 AMC Hornet 2 Dr....................... '1995
73 Olds Cutlass Supreme 4 dr. ~~~e~lr .. '3295
73 Cutlass 4 dr., air .............. ........ .. '2495
73 Olds 88 4 Dr., power &amp; air........... 11595
73 Buick Re~l HT Cpe................... '3495
n roof
:-....... .'3495
73 Monte Carlo power••.Aor.....su•••
72 Chevy Impala HT Cpe................. '1495
72 Buick 225 Umited 4 dr HT ~~;''!'ir 12495
72 Chevy Impala 4 Or., air ................. 11295
72 Olds 98 4 Dr., air ..................... 12295
72 Buick Elec. HT Cpe..................... '2295
72 Ford Torino 2 dr......................... '1395
72 Pontia'c Safari Wagon, air ............... '1595
71 Ford 112 Ton Pickup ............ ....... ! 11695
71 Olds 98 Lux., pqwer &amp;air ............ 11995
71 Dodge Demon 2 dr., 6 cyl .............11195
70 Ford LTO 4 Dr., power &amp; air .......... 1895
70 Buick Skylark HT Cpe., air .............'1495

MILEAGE CARS AND TRUCKS JHAN.~ ANY
OTHER DEALERS IN AMERICA.

If you lookmg for ~ood as
milage check th e f1gvres on
fh1S page Pmto trad itiOn ally
Ameflca's bes t se lling s ub
co mpact not only has good
mi la ge. r at1ngs but also e)(
c eHent performan ce
The
larger s passenger Granada
has good mtleage rat 1ngs and
Its compar ed m looks to
Merc edes Benz Fo rd p 1ckups
have t he bes t 6 cyl mder MPG
ra tm gs either manua l or
automat1 c and the Cour~er
p1ckup •s unbea ten m Its c lass
Your Ford Dea ler has what
vou re lookmg for

495

r--------Cour~er

Ford

Manua l

1 8 L1tre
40 MPG

~ord Cou r rer
Manu~ l Tran s

2 3 Li tr e

Tran s
Hwy 28 Ctty

Hw y 25 C1ty

35

Ford F 100 300 C JO Manuel
Trans
Hwy 19
Ci ty

MPG

1-iliiiiiiOI...IIii;.ww--w+wO::
Pmto Wagon 2 8 Ltfre
Au tomatiC Trans 23 MPG
Hw y 18 C1ly

Mor e about m deage
M tl eage ftgures are
EPA est1mates Your
actual mileage Wtl l vary
depend lng
on
your
ve h iC les
co nditiOn
opt1onal equ1pme nt and
how a nd where you
drtve

~

Pm to Wagon 2 J L1tre 4
Speed Manual Trans
33
MPG Hw y 23 CtfY

~,.-~:
...'L:
...;;
=:='f:!::P.;J;,iil
. _-.
*\

E co noltn e Van &amp; Club
Wagon 300 C 10 Manual
Trans 25 MP G Hwy 18
(tty

't;;e.&lt;P

OTHER GREAT GAS SAVERS IN .STOCK

Ray R1ggs
Chester, OhiO

that all persons cla•mlng tor
any and all damage ca used
by or resu lttng t ram the
a ccident or casua lty s e t forth
1n sa1 d Comp la tnt be tt,ereby
c1 ted to appear and fil e thetr
respe cttv e cfa1ms with the

~~=~~ ~~eth~~o~~susrt ~~~rdeo~o ,

See one of these courteous salesmen:
Burns or Marvtn Keebaugh.

Pete

Karr &amp; Van Zandt

75 GRANADA •••••••••••• s2996
75 ,..USTANG••••••••••••s2995.

Dan Thom,pson Ford

"You'll L1ke Our Qualrty Way
Of Doing Bustness'
992-5342
GM't FINANCING
Open Evemngs Until6:00- Til

76 MUSTANG ••••••••s2995
76 PINTO •••••••••••• s2995

COME TO MPG HEADQUARTERS

Pomeroy
. Sat.

5 p .m

and etl1ng them to ftle thetr
Answe rs to t he Complatnt
Free 011 change for one year w1th any new or used car or truck. 2000 m 11es
and a ll the proceed.ngs be 1ng
had, tf 1f should appear th at
before changes.
sa•d pla tn t•ff 1S not l1able for
an y loss or damage 1t may be
so ftnally dec r eed by th•s
See Pat H1ll, Rocky kupp
Court, and
by THOMAS JOSEPH
WHEREAS
,
sa
1d
p
la1ntlff
FLOWERS FO..R Mothers Day to be
or Darrel Dodrtll
has ftled herein an ad 1nt enm
41 Russ1an
, sold by the Ru tlond EMS Mom
sttpulat •on tor v alu e w1th a ACROSS
For a good deal on a new or used vehicle.
St 1n Rutland
sure ty approved by tht s I New Hamp
veto
Open evenmgs t1I6 : 00
Co urt , represent ng th e valve
A .. REWARD tn the amount of
sh:ire
r1ve
r
DOWN
of t h e platnl1ff s mterest 1n
Except
Thursday and Saturday
$2 000 11 herby olfered fa any
the aforementioned Barge 5 One kmd
I Ev 1l
person or persons who pro.
Closed Sunday
992-2196
Na 11A , plus pend ing freight
of key
Middleport, 0.
B1 bh cal
vt des mfarmafton wh1ch leads
1f any , the un~ertaktng of
to the detec tion opprehens1on
wh+ch 1S that the pla •nt tff 11 Expre&amp;sed
City
wtfhtn ten (10) days after the
m words
and can vtcf1on ot the parso n or
2 Maca\\
e ntry of an Order heretn 12 I
•
persons responstble for the
appra
•smg
the
va
lu
e
of
th
e
n
one
s
3 Exagge r a t e
murder of Wesley Da le Musser
pf a• nt lff 's In teres t m sa td
element
somethmg
~-.
Any mformat•on pertoimng to
barge , plus pend ing freigh t , tf 13 Challenge
Yesterday's Answer
same should be gtven to the
( 4 wds )
any wtll pay th e amount sa
Me1gs County Shenff s Deport
foce d tn to this Court or will 14 Enter
9 L ofty
25 Ser v ing of
4 V1va
menlby calltng 992 3371 S•gn.
ftle m the court a sttpulat .on
(2 wds }
Arab
medi cme
matador
'
for value 1n the usual form
;:·~
ed Fronces Musser
and with approved su ret y
15 Hockey
pos 1L10n
2i Ens nared
5 Go lf club
~ SPRING CLEANING? You need a
YOU ARE THEREF ORE,
name
10 Ba ck ed
29 F o lk or
IN THE COMMON
6 Rose ml
...
Breok serve the fam1ly a
COMMANDED to e~te a iii&amp;Sh t
PLEAS COURT OF
.
down
s word
denvat1ve
persons tn respect to wh 1ch
m O
bucket of cht cken from the
MEICS COUNTY, OHIO
the
platnt
lff
seeks
ltmttat
on
temple
Do•ry isle 1n M1ddleport
16 European
30 Coque tte
7 Haggard
PROBII,JE DIVISION
ftle thet r respecttve cla tms 17 EnglisH
JAMES E SlMPSON AD We are roundmg up the best deals 1n town and are offenng them to you m our corral at
' LETART FALLS Ceme tery lot care to
r1ver
31
Ant
work
w 1th th e Clerk of court and to
MIN ISTR A JOR Of th e Estat e
Maso n County Motor Company'" pt Pleasant, W Va .
serve on or ma 1llo Gordon C
rtver
fee 1s payable nov.,. Cost 1s
19 As a sample 36 Ready
8 Without
of BERTHA N EIMEYER
Greene cop 1es thereof on or 18 District of
$7 50 per lot l or one year
DECEASED
22 Cav1l
for war
exagge ra·
The stampede on new cars has left our corral full of quality used cars Because we
be,ore
the
22
nd
day
of
June,
Lo
d
,
Money 1s to be sent to the Sex·
Pla•nt1tf ,
1977
and
ct
ltn
g
such
n
on
s
23
Perse
ve
re
37
P
oet
s
have a new car dealershtp our tnventory of trade ms has Increased beyond our
I•
t1on
vs
ton Clarence 1 Norrts Rt 2
clatmants to appear and
Wes t End
expectation
IRI
S
TRACY
AUSTIN
24 He 1g hte n
mghtfall
(4 wds )
Box 114 Ra cme Ohto45771
ans wer the Comp la tnt herem
Children's
Address Unknown
We Will b e offermg them to you at tremendous savmgs Our e)l( pertenced sales staff
on or before th e last name 20
~~~~ FISHING
DERBY
Rutland
THE UNKNOWN HEIR S .
D1ck Jackson , Rt c hard Kntght, Ronald Whtte, Rush Parrt sh and Garland Pars ons are
day or w 1th 1n such further
game
DEVISEES
LEGATEES
Amencon Legton Saturday &amp;
lookmg forward to se rvmg yau on Saturday , May 7th
tim e as the Court may grant 21 " Dtes _ ,
OISTRIBUTEE S
AD
•
Sunday 7 d m ~ t1II S p m Njay 7
and what you have done In th e
MINIS \RATORS
...
and 8th $2 00 per persaa or
These are 1ust a lew of the " pnme nbs." m our corral :
prern •ses, do you then make 22 Quote
EXEC UTORS I F ANV OF
&lt;;
$2 00 per pole ~ Ref reshment ~ return to the cou rt together 23 Sellers
BER THA
NEIMEYER .
w1t h lh1s wnt
:
stand
DECEASED
W ITNE SS lhe Honorable 25 Outmoded
THE UNK, NO WN HEIRS .
:
PIANO LESSONS cht ldrens and
T'molhy S Hogan, Jud ge ot 26 Bemg (Sp)
DEVISEES , LE GATEES
12 12 12 000 m iles or 12 month
All new brak es and battery good
.-.
adults
Mrs
Ha rvey Von
th e Un tt ed States Dts t r1c \ 27 Stand d
D I STR IBUTE ES
AD
hani ca l In surance COverage Book
Mec
condition
Book
Prtce
$2
200
Cour
t
f
or
th
e
Southern
ar
Vronken, 992 ·2270
M INI STRATORS
Pr
1ce
S4 800
D1str •c l of Oh10 , western 28 Between pi
EXECUTORS IF ANY OF
WILL CARE for elderly women In
1
1
D1 v 1S10n at Ctncmnat l, th1s
and
stgma
BIRO
0
ROMINE
.
ALSO
Our home Phone992 731-4
26th day of April 1977
•
Kf'IOWN AS BERT ROMINE '
JOHN D LYTER 29 Notw1th·
----J-+----J--1 DE
CE AS ED ,
•
CLERK
st d
El al ,
•
~
~
Bv
K
L
Fau
lkner
an
mg
Defendants
•
Sp
1rlt
of
76
Ed
ltlon
s harp, clea n tr u ck
UNITED STATES
Deputy Clerk 32 - Paulo ,
NOTICE
LU
V
P
1c
kup
12
12
Mechan1
c al
"
DISTRICT COURT
w1fh only 18,000 mtles 12 12 Mechan tcal
LUCIAN Y RAY
Brazil
SERVICE BY
'
Insurance
Coverage
SOUTHERN DISTRICT
Insura n ce Cover£_ge
~'
1550
Unton
Comme r ce 33 Devoured
PUBLICATION
•
OF OHIO
Bu ddmg
P
lam
ttlf
has
brought
th1s
1
1
WESTERN DIVISION
Cleve l and , Oht o 4.4115
34 Man' s
act1on nammg ea c h Qf you as
AT CINCINNATI
= + -+ - l one of t he defendants tn the
mckname
~
CIVIL ACTION NO C 1 77
and
abo ve nam ed co uri by fdmg
It Makes Good CENTS To Buy Where You Get The Sharpest Prod uct, Best Servtce
.... 232
35 Babe
h1S complaint on February
101
IN THE MATTER OF THE
And The lowest Proce Come In and See Us AT MASON COUNTY MOTOR
GOR OON C GREE NE
16th, 1977
37
Dutc
h
*' COMPLAINT OF TRI
COMPANY On Corral Day Saturday .
910 Alias Bank Bulldtng
The obtect of tt1e compla1n t
c heese
•1 STATE
MATERIALS
\
C• n c1 nnat l. Oh10 45202
To the ftrst 25 customers 9et a set of four htstoncal baseball p1ctures ~amted by
,..+-+~f----It
s
that
the
rea
l
es
tate
CORPORAT ION AS OWNER
38 Hard to lmd lo;;;;,.-t-------11---+--t-t---1
-:;
herlnafter desc r •bed be sold
Robert Thom . Ltve Entertamment to make your v tstt more pleasanl furms ed by The
¥~ OF THE BARGE NO
114
Tnal Attorneys fo r Tr 1 State 39 Otherwis e
1n tiS enttrety , and tQ pay the
OhloValleyMuslcCompany . Saturdayfrom9 OOtol1 00
"'~ FOR
EXONERATION
Matertals Co rpor atton
~+-+-I--I debts of the decedent. Bertha
~! FROM OR LI MI TA TI ON OF
40 Character·
Ne1m eyer , dec eased , I hat the
"' LIABILITY
'---'--..l...-..,...,..0
nghts,
1nterests and l1ens of
tzed
.,
TO THE PRE SI DE NT OF
all parties may be fUl ly
THE UNITED STA TE S
det e rm 1ned , ad lusted and
TO THE MARSHALL OF
to work it pro tected , tha t p la1nflff be
DAILY
CRYPTOQ
UOTElle1
e's
how
THE UNITED STATES FOR
authortzed and ordered to sel l
...
THE SOUTHERN DISTRI CT
A XYDL R A AXR
sa id real es ta1 e a cco rd ng to
OF
OHIO ,
WESTERN
me statutes m such case
is ' I. 0 N G F E I I, 0 W
_,.
OIVI S ION .
AT
CIN
made and provtded and tor
~&lt; CINNATI
One le tter simply s tands for another In tim; s .tmp le \ 15 such other and furth er relie f along sa td run 472 feet ta the ot the Records of Deeds of
com plamt
' ~ GREETING
as hem ay be e nt 11i ed to that place of beg tnn•ng , con
Me1gs County , Oh10
Mann ing D Webster ,
r
WHEREAS , a Comtlatnf
u se d f or t h c t h r ee L s, X for the two 0 s, ('LC s m g lc l e tte r :-&gt; Sa1d real estate 115 des c r •bed ta.n•ng
95 100 acres , more or
Reference Deed Vo l 129 ,
Proba te Judge
apostrophes the length and form.t l lo n o f the \\ Or d!'; ,lrL' :~.11 as follows
1 1
tess
.
sav1ng
ancr
except
1ng
Page 132 , Me 1gs c oun ty Deed
Meigs County , Oh1o
..-: ~fs~:;~~dc ~u r~e,~,n','~2 s;~\~s
hmt s Eac h d av t h e code letters nrc differen t
T he follow i ng descr ibed fhe coa l and other minera ls Records
(4) 1 8 15 n. 29 ISl 6 6tc
....:! ern D •s tr lct of Oh io, western
rea l es ta te sttuated In th e meretn and the nght tom me
You are req utred to answer
OtV ISton, at Cmctnnah, on the
State
of
Ot'!tO
County
ot
C'RYPTOQUOTES
the
same
w.thout
'"
me complatn l Wllhtn twenty
._ 26th day of Apr~ I 1977, bY Tr•
Me tgs and ln the Vtllage of cu mbran ce to the surface and etgh
t days after the last
State Mater•als Co rporat1on.
Pomeroy , t o w If
all ways and r ights of way publ 1catlon of th 1S not.ce
•
as owner of the Barge No 114.
A
T
J
W
A
B
B
•
Be1ng
the
to
llowmg
real
SAQAHM
MC
W A HS T
along any m 1neral seam a r e
for exone rati On from , or
estate 1n the east half af 100 hereby excepted from th is whi c h will be publ is hed once
each week for SIX successive
..
llmllatton of liability, pray ing
acre Lots Nos 306 and 307 10
the aforesaid betng the weeks
and
the
last
H F M
for n :onera fiQn from or
HWW
J A· the County o f Metgs and Sta te deed,
OCPSBAWX
MC
reat estate conveved to Ja cob
.,.
l•m•taflon of l•abtltty con
of Ohio described as foliQws , Dorf) fc k by the deeds of Sarah pub ltcatfon w!ll be made on
May 6. 1977
NOW YOU KNOW
to wtt
""
ce rn ln g any loss or damage
H Dabney and Cl a ra p
In case ot your fa 1lvre to
IF J A
C T
NA "
H T J SA
Q A TJ B
ft
occas •oned by or ar ts mg out
Beqlnntng at the North Dabney , et •I
In
pre-Clvll
War years the
by
deeds
answer or otherw 1Se respOit Q..
of the accident or casualty set
Yesterday's Cryptoquote : SHE GENERALLY GAVE East corner o t
James bea nn g date respect 1vely of
as
perm
ltted
by
the
Oh10
hallmark
of
excellence
for a
:
forth 1n the afore sa 1d
1 April 9, 1877 and Marc h 1876 ,
0
Rules of CtVII Procedure
Complaint tor the reasons
'Dor t you t hmk u·s about llmr HERSELF VERY GOOD ADVI CE (THOUGH SHE SElDOM :i."J'r~~~· ~ ~ th ~~c~e~~u~~ ; which deeds are re corded
Thoroughbred
was
the
abUlty
ln tile t 1me stated,
and causes m sa1 d Compla •nt
FOLLOWED IT) - LEWIS CARROLL
stump, thence North B9 respect tvely 1n Volume 58 . W+fh
judgment by default will be
to outdo the competition ln
degrees 177 feet
thence
mentioned, and praytng that )OU •aught mt· hm~; lo handlt·
0 19'7i Kin&amp; Feat.we1 Syndlcat.e, In\:
t
North 67 1h d egr-ees Ea st 254 Pages 615 and 616 and rendered aga.nst you for the
• monlt 10n and m1unct10n for women PopOJ
races o~ 4-mlle heats,
feet to a run , thence up a"d Volu me~. Pages 616 and 617 reltel demat1ided tn the
Jhose rea sons be Issued. and

'

THIS COMING SATURDAY

.,
,=

RU fjloAND;:J

····~·······~··········~~
~

1973 PLY. FURY

1975 CHRYSLER CORDOBA

CORRAL PRICE 1650
1975 DODGE TON PICKUP

CORRAL PRICE 4266

1974 CHEVY ECONOMY

TON

CORRAL PRICE 2195

-+-+----l

MASON COUNTY MOTORS

lOll Viand St.

LAFF- A . DAY

RUTLAND FURNITUB

I

75

*

FRIDAY TIL s·

e 142-~11

Full power and air

CORRAL PRICE 3355

..

: · •.

~

76 CadMiac Sedan DeVille .................'8900

•

••
•••
•••

::~

(tfj _._
~").

. -Q_@fo_

.

••

.. ..
=·

985-4100

t""

P 1nto Wagon 2 J Litre
Automat ic Trant 29 MPG
Hwy 21 City

.

30 rolls of carpet In stock
Good stloctlon all on salt
lnstolled with paddi1J9, no
extra to f!!Y .

742-2211

Rt.7

c

Ptnto 2 3 L1tre Automaftc
Troans 32 MPG Hwy 23
C1t y

.

M.ay 1, 1977

SEWING ALTERATIONS
Uphol ster tng
drapes
reasonable 572 South Thtrd
Ave
M iddl e po rt
Ptlone
9'126306

FURNISHED TRAILER tn Rutland ar
Langsv1lle a rea I adult Phone
742-2014

Short bed

USED CARS

P into "2 8 Litre Autom at 1c
Trans 32 MPG Hw y 23

·-..,

NowThru

Wtl l do odd robs roofmg ' pa1r1-1
tmg gutter work Phone 992·
7009

COUPLE WITH .4 daughters need o
3 or 4 bedroom home Mu st be
ntce Phone 992 6294

Ton

Gl:t.Ht1t "250 CIO Automat1c
Tratns 23 \ MPG Hwy 18
City

CORRAL DAYS ARE HEREI

SAVE ON

1 Roll Blue ~hog
1 Roll Brown Shog
, Bolh Rubber Back
' Regular $8 95
SAieS.S .II Sq. Yd.

PIANO TUNING lone Dantels 12
years of serv~ee
Phone
992-2082

~

SHIRLEY Jeffers Wolfe ts nOw
the new Owner of lola s Beauty
Salon tn Syracuse Oh1o John
St
Sh~rley
was former ly
emplOyed of ltndos Lody Fair
Rac1ne Ohto Any of my former
patrons wtshmg oppom tmenfs
may call 992 1549 Phone nOw
It s led under lola s Beauty ShOp
unttl new dtrecforles are •ssued
ol whiCh hme the name wtll be
Sh~tley s Beauty Nook

m

EXCAVATING BACKHOE doze•
tre ncher low Bot dump truck
septiC sys te'fls Btll
Pullins. phone 992·2478 day or

Hwy 13 City

1

RIGGS USED•.CARS~

Behind Rutland Grade
School. Even1119 work by
appolnlment. Ph . 742-2005
56-lmo pd

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR Sweepers, toasters trons all
WILL do roofmg, cons truclton
small appltonces Lawn mQwer
plumb1ng and heoltng No 1ob
nex t to State Htghway Garoge
too Iorge or too small Phone
on Route 7 Phone (61-4) 985
742 23.. 8
3825
CARPENTER
floonng
ce thng REMODELING Plumbing heotong
pane i1ng Pho~e992 2759
and all types of general repatr
Work guaron te&amp;d 20 years ex
MOBILE Home Repa tr
Elec
penance Phone 997 2409
plumbtng and heat1ng Phone
msas8
SEWING MACHINE Repotrs, ser
vtee all makes 992 2284 The
HOWERY AND MARTIN Ex
Fabr ic Shop
P o mer oy
cavaftng , sep tiC systems
Authorized Smger Sales and
dOzer backhoe dump tru ck
Servtee We sharpen Sctssors
limestone
gravel
bla cktop
povmg Rt 1.A 3 Phone 1 (614) EXCAVATING doter loader ond
698 7331
backhOe work dump trucks
and
lo.bays for h~re will haul
HARRISON S TV Repa tr ServiCe
ftll dlff to sotl limestone and
Calls 276 Sycamore St M1d
gravel Call Bob or Roger Jef
dleport Phone 992 2522
fers
doy phone
7089
BROWNS FIRE and Safety httn.
n1ght phone 992 3525 or 992
qutshers All mes busmess
5232
home boat Refilled tested
Btll Brown Rutland
Ohta
Phone742 2m
FREE ESTIMATES lo rid property at
males roaches ants s ilver hsh
and term1fes SQuthern Pest
Control 9-49· 2803

L W B , 4 new !~res

1973 Ford Explorer 360 V8 •••••12495

FRONT END
ALIGNMENT
Nobtl Summtt Road
Rt. I
Middleport, 0
992-5724
Complete
Sales
and
Servtce and Supplies
3I

new tires, L W B rear step bumper

1973 Chevy Cheyenne ......... '2895

4 28 1 mo .

A13-lmo pd

FOR SALE

Pomeroy l.andmalk

KEN ,GROVER
PHOTOGRAPHY

4-10 I mg,

CARPENTER &amp;
BUILDERS

0

REDUCED $2000 3 bedroom 2 Y,
GOING OUT OF BUSINESS
bath s
double garage
Installation, samples
Assorted var1ety of occas tono l
l 1rep lace otr cond1t1ontng 1
brought
to your home
tables Woad shelv1ng with
ac re lo t Phone 992 2492
Jllas tte surface I 0 tn w1de by 8
w1th no charge.
·
ft long $2 00 eo p1ece also 8 HOUSE IN Mtnersv tlle 5 rooms
and bath Forced a1r heat
1n wtde by 8 ff long $1 75
C•rpet-llno -T 1fe
natural gas 3 porches and
eoch p 1ece FormiCa surfoce
Phone
Mike Young at
basement
Phone
992
5833
shelv1ng 10 tn x 12ft x 58 1n
9'12 -2206 or 992-7630
$5 00 eac h p1ece 10 In )( B ft
Sol 00 each ptece Flokeboard 4
2231mo
ft x e ft x y, 1n SJ 20 each
sheet
Hardboard
FormtCa
Sheets
Assorted furn1fu re
hardware
pu lls
cab 1net
hinges etc Screws bolts ond
HOUSE FOR SALE by owners 4
nu ts $1 00 per pou nd Permtf
rooms and bath ponneled l1v
343 MASON FURNITURE COM
mg roam and carpe ted W1ll
PA NY (TNT AREA) Point Plea
sell for $b500 Co II 992 6250
san I W Va
after 5 p m 10 Lynn St Mtd
608 E
USED FORESTRY EQU IPME NT
dleport
MAIN
Franklin Mode l 1308 Sl&lt;.1dder
~ 1/z ACRES WITH 12 x f:JJ Mobde
POMEROY, 0 .
T•mber1ack 208GS Sk•dder
home Garage bwldtng WI th
Prent~ee G BC loade r w1th by
JUST LISTED - N1ce 3 05
cellar LQCa fed 1M La ngsvi ll e
pa ss grapple Contact De nnts
acres - love ly newer home
Phone 7"2 2965
Smu rr Phone (614} 836 5345
has 3 BRs , bath, formal
bROOM and bath 7 yrs old full
dlnmg R , 23x23 living R ,
basement 3 acres ground 1n
uhl1ty R AI) carpeted
Chester Phone 985 3950
eJCcept kitche-n , large
FOR SALE NEW all e lec home tn
garage w•fh workshop, cold
Syracuse Io rge lot alummum
room
,
pole
bldg
,
chicken
New CoOp Wiler sot
Sldtng 3 bedrooms ki tchen
teners , model VC SVI.
house $34,900 00
d1n1ng area fully carpe ted
Only 1279 ts
bath u lll1~ room garage
Save $.50 00 on a new
JUST LISTED - 45 acres ,
Phone 9927419
Hotpo lnt Refrigerator
good 3 bedroom house , part
1 Good Used M.cCuiiDugh
BEAUTIFUL TWO story home w1th
basem en t , out cellar , barn
Chafn Saw
U5
two car gorage 5 bedrooms
&amp; other bldgs , garage
Now in stock, complete line
dlntng room Io rge hvtng room
Tobacco base
Fuel 0 11
of bulk guden seeds and
modern k1tchen 2'h baths
onion seh
hea t $10,500 00
large recreofton room fully a 1r
1 good McCullough Cha.n
JUST LISTED Ranch
1/a mtle from
condtl1o ned
Saw
165
type jus t 3 yrs old I acre 3
One
quarter
m1le ofl
school
1 Good Used Poulan Chatn
bedrooms ,
lV2 baths .
Str;~te Route 30 yea r fmanctng
Saw
uo
dmmg area , uti lity, car
ovatlable Coli 992 3863 bet
Survivor Safes only $79 95
petmg, all electnc, garage.
ween 9 a m and 3 p m
On ton Sets 3 lbs
11 DO
brick &amp; frame Askmg 1ust
I New 15 Cubic Ft
~ BEDROOM hOu se tra1ler 1n
$32,000 00
Freezer
$299
Pomeroy Good rental Invest
JUST LfSTED - 6 ac r es,
ment Reason for selling too
has 2 year old doub le w1de,
for from home phone (614)
2 bedrooms , la rge closets,
367 7 101
Jack W C.arsey, Mgr
dining r oom . ve ry large
Phane 992-2181
15 ACRES off New L1ma Road near
llv.ng R
uttltt y space,
Forrest Acres Park Phone
garage and 2 other bldgs
742
2336
Located close to Forked
Run Lake All for 1ust
HOME IN Po merOy 2 s tory ce n
trol heot1ng some corpettng
$17,000 00
and pannell lng Both &amp; 1/2
MIDDLEPORT
Phone 992 7014 or 992 3-465
Broadway,
Ph
s tory
frame. 2 bedroom s, bath ,
29 ACRES mas tty woods m Tupfireplace m living room., 2
pers Pla tns Chester water on
large porches, basemen t,
property septte tonk and leac h
Vtrgil 8 Sr , Realtor
lovely level lot Ask mg
bed l ocated on Co Rd 33 I
216 E Second Street
514,000 00
mtle north of Ra ctn e For more
Pomeroy, Ohta 45"9
1nformof10n
call (614 )
OLD
ESTABLISHED
Phone 992 3325
9&lt;9-2735
BUSINESS - Rea lly need s
2 m e n to operate Owner
3 YEARS OLD All
56 ACRE Fa rm hOu se re modeled
ret~r lng, Hom e and Auto
eledrtc 3 bedroom home m
plenty of ovfbulldmgs cattle
business Pr ice d Equ1p
town wtth c tty water. nice
ond eqUipment mcluded Phone
k1tchen and fenced yard A
ment plus Stock at time of
2.47 22&lt;41 for opp01ntment
nice home for on ly $22,000
sale
anyhme
BUYING OR SELLING
HOUSE FOR sole tn Syracuse 2
EXTRA
SPECIAL
REAL ESTATE - LOOK
be&lt;:lrooms and both lot 100 x
Large sunny kltc hen w1th
TO
CLELANDS
FOR
ISO Garage ce mentdr~ ve and
many wood cabmets,
HELP
small
s torage bldg Furmshed
central air and heating.
HENRY E CLELAND
arunforn1shed Ca11992 7 1..7
large dtntng, 4 bedrooms,
BROKER
21J2 baths. fam lly room with
13 ACRES 3 bedroom all ut1ilt•es
Hank-Cathy-Leona
Cleland
fireplace an d pool table
Rt 12-4 Cooks Gap Hill Phone
Associates
2 3!.t. acres $46 000
992 5626 after 5 30 p m
992-2259 - 99:S 4122
LOT 150 x 200 1n Syracuse Phone
992-2568
LARGE ROOMS
3
992371&lt;
bedroom s, large dining .
fireplace ln llvtng , bath and
a ha lf Gas F A furnace
and oulceilar 517 500

I

LARRT~~~DER

Young's Carpeting
Route 3, Pomeroy.

'

~IUIIIIIIIG$

Ph H2lttl

1973 Ford LTD 2 dr. •••••• ••• 12495
1973 Ford Wagon 4 dr•••••••• 12495
1973 Pontiac leMans 2 dr••••• 11195
1973 Ford Grand 1Torino 2 dr••••'1895
1972 v.w. 4 cyl 4 ~ •••••• 11495
ThiS Week Onl~.
1972 Chevy Impala 4 dr••••••••'9:D
1972 Ford Grand Torino 4 dr••••11295
1972 Pontiac leMans ••••••••••'695
1972 Ply. Duster 2 dr•••••••• '1295
1971 Pontiac Catalina 2 dr•••• '695
1970 Cad~lac Cpe. DeVille ~····'1295

Aeli!al
Commercial
Schools
Weddings

fiuo&lt;lflllllowo ifltiW.. IIt1ics
S10III

A local contractor
Phone 949-2801
or 949-286('
Free Est1mates
No Sunday Calls Please
4 24 1 mo

Syra-cuse

PHOTOGRAPHY

lnwlltion Senites

BJSSELl SIDING CO.

1976 Chevelle 305 V8 .........'3695
1975 Plymouth Vaiant Cust 4 dr. $AVE
1975 Ford LTD 4 dr• ••••••
•-•• 13695
Th1s we ek
1974 Olds Cutlass 2 dr••• ~'!1l ••'2895
Ford Grand Torino Brougham13295
,
Th'b Week
1974 Buick
Regal, 2 dr. ••• ."~Y•• 12695
1974 Pontiac Catalina 2 dr.•••• 12895
ThiS Weok
1974 Plymouth Fury Ill 4 dr. 'l'!1l 11995
1973 Buick Century 4 dr.••••••'2495

PROFESSIONAL

Blown

Must an~ II 1' 3 Litre
Automatic Trans 29 MP(;

Her Very Own Top Quality Car or Truck

Formerly
lola's Beauty Salon
For appomtment call
992-2549 Tuesday thru
Saturday 8 : 00a . m . to
5:00p.m. Open nights
by appointment.
4· 15-lmo

" The Originators

V~nyl &amp; Aluminum
Siding,
Storm
W1ndows
&amp;
Insulation.
Call Professionals

VA FHA 30 yr hnanong Ire land
Mortgage 77 E State Athens
phone (bl&lt; ) 592 3051

1210 Washmgton Blvd
Belpre, Ohio

H!!l74

Pomeroy, 0

Must•no 11 1 8 Litre 4
Speed Manu-al Trans 27
MPG Hwy 70 City

Brina Mom In and Let Her Pick Out

Owner
Shirley (Jeffels) Wolfe

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

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.
P~

John St.

Young's Carpetina

.....--

NEW 3 bedroom house butlt 1n
k ttchen bath ond 1/t Phone
7.41 2306 or eonlocf MtiO 8 Hut
ch•son Rutland Oh.a

Garden Center

••

Shirley's Beauty Noci

Superior
Steam Extraction

Route 3,

HOMESITES for sale 1 acre ond
up M•ddleport near Rutland
Ca ll r/Cn 7481

SMAll lorm for sole 10% dOwn
owner hnonced Monroe Coun
ty W Va phone (304 ) 772
3 1_02_ o_•_(304) 77.:.
2 ..::
3::22::_
7 :__~COUNTRY farmland w1th 'ec lud
ed woods water ond good ac
cess tn Monroe COunty W Vo
Sl 000 dawn, eo ll (304) 772
3102 o• (30Al_?7 2 3E?.__ _
Gommerc lol property app rox 17
ac res level land located ot
Tuppers Ploms on Oh10 ROute
7 Phone (6 14 ) 667 6304

•

Business Services

FUll COLOR Photog raphy for
weddmgs portra1ts onn1ver
sar1es s pet~al occos10ns Coli
l he
Photo Place
(Bob
Haeflt ch) Pom_e~oy
16'h H Day Cruiser 100 h p
Johnson OutbOard ~ eng tne
rebutll lower untt t1 lt tra de r
excellent c:onc:ht1on
$ 1800
Phone 992 2280

Mavenck
LOO
CID
Autometlc Trans 14 MPG
Hw 18 City

wo

01 2

Ph. 675-3370

�.•

.

12- The Daily Sentinel , Middleport-Pomeroy, 0. ., Friday, May 6 1977

from county,
town councils

CONTRACTS SIGNED - Robert Wingett, ch~irman of the non-profit Mason CoWtty
Development Authority, seated, right, signed contracts on the $600,000 plus project to
develop 20 sites for industry on a 60.7-acre tract of land 10 the TNT area Wednesday. The
project is in conjunction with the Poi~t Pleasant Water project ~hich used the Industrial
Park as justification to get its $1.9 million EDA gran~. The Industrial Park also h8J! $313,800
10 rmHA grant funds. At left, also seated, is Authonty Attorney Ron Stem; stand10g, from
left Charles Jefferson. representing the J. H. Milam Engineering Co., Authority Legal
Co~ncil Jack Burdett and Local FmHA representative Griffin Boggess. J. H. Milam is also
engineer for the city water project.
Weather
Chance of showers tonight
and Saturday. Lows in the
low 60s, highs Saturday to the
mid 70s . Probability of
precipitation 60 per cent
today, 50 per cent tonight and
Saturday.

MASON DRIVE-IN
Fri., Sat., Sun.
May 6-7-8

DIRTY MARY
CRAZY LA~RY- PI;
PLUS

VANISHING POINT
Barry

Newman,

Dean

Jagger, Cleavon Little.

Hospital News Alfred
Social Notes
VETERANS MEMORIAL

Labor evicted

LONDON
(UP I )
Triumphant ConservQtives,
riding a wave of anger over
soaring living costs and
government • imposed pay
curbs, ~wept to a landslide
victory today in local govern·
ment elections, ousting Labor
from control of city and
county coWtcils throughout
the country.
The Conservative s won
power in Greater London,
Manchester, the Liverpool
area, Birmingham and the
West Yorkshire industrial
towns.
They took control of a total
of 37 out of 46 metropolitan
and county councils in
England, winning more than
1,000 new coWtcil seats.
Conservative party leader
Margaret Thatcher, scenting
the chance of becoming
Britain's first woman .Prime
minister in the next national
parliamentary elections,
said, "The results are
splendid. The country has
served notice on the Labor
government to quit."

Admitted - Kermit Gilkey,
Shade.
Discharged - Billy Patton,
Ma'ry Greer, Janet Hayden,
l..inda Fields, Doyle Ord, Bob
Bishop, Sonia Parsons.
PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGES - Charles
Elliott , Point Pleasant ;
Herman Kincaid, Mid·
dleport; Mrs. Roy Turner,
Henderson ; Eliza beth·
Johnson, Point Pleasant; Jeff
Holley, Apple Grove ; Roy
Smith, III, Henderson; Alfred
Roush, Mason ; Patricia
McCoy , Leon ; William
Bonecutter, Point Pleasant.
Birth - A daughter to Mr.
and Mrs. Glenn Norman,
Bidwell.

Holzer Medical Center
(Dischargeo, May 5)
Carla Aeiker, Marsha
Boshell, Angela Bush,
Wilbert Busler, Patrick
Denny, Clyde Hammons,
Vivian Jones, Mrs. Roger
King and daughter, Mrs.
James Lambert and son.
Lucille Lambert, Clarence
Martin, Sean McWilliams,
Clarence Miller, Gertrude
North, Patricia Pape,
Randall Purkey, Ralph
Radcliffe, Charles Roach ,
Teddy Russell, Dorothy
Sheets, Mrs. James Shriver
and daughter, Renee ·~one ,
Lavada Swindler.
•,
(Births, MayS)
Mr. and Mrs. James Hill,
son, McArthur ; Mr. and Mrs.
Baxter was cited to Dale Vickers, daughter,
Gallipolis Municipal Court McArthur; Mr. and Mrs.
for failing to stop within the James Harless, daughter,
assured clear distance.
Ewington.

•

Two citations issued after accidents
Citations were issued struck the rear of a car
following two separate traffic operated by Donald V. Ours,
accidents investrgated 65, Crown City. There was
Thursday by the Gallia-Meigs moderate damage.
Post State Highway Patrol.
The first occurred at 9 a.m.
Thursday on SR 7 at its
junction wjth SR 248. A
vehicle driven by Kathy D.
CIRCLEVILLE, Ohio
Dill, 22, Lon~ Bottom, struck (UP!) ·- Pickaway CoWlty
another auto operated by Common Pleas Court Judge
Larry Montgomery, 26, William Ammer Wednesday
Langsville. There was · found former Morgan CoWlty
moderate damage. Dill was Prosecutor Harry Donovan
cited to Meigs County Court Lowe guilty of using property
for failure to obey a stop sign. without permission of the
A. Gallla CoWtty accident owner, dereliction of duty and
occurred at 4:48 p.m. on SR failure to report a crime.
35 at CR 57·B where a semi
Lowe pleaded no contest to
rig driven by Charles L. the misdemeanors in ex·
Baxter, 26, Charleston, change for dismissal of 14
felony counts.
Anuner lined Lowe $200
and sentenced him to 30 days
in jail on the unauthori2ed
property use charge, which
concerned Lowe's secretary
and a stenograph machine.
Lowe · was fined $700 and
given a 90-day sentence for
failure to file a required of·
lice inventory.
The charge of failure to
report a crime was not explained, but it is believed to
involve Morgan County Wood

.Ex-prosecutor found guilty
Chips, Inc., for which Lowe is
a former secretary-treasurer
and attorney.

Police cite
auto driver
Two cars had medium
damage in an accident on E.
Main St., at 12:25 p.m. Thurs·
day.
Pomeroy P.,!lce said a ~ar
driven by Diane Bartels, 28,
MinersviUe, was struck in the
rear by a car driven by Kathy
Fry, 24, Syracuse. Both cars
were eastbound and the
Bartels car had stopped when
a car in front of it was making
a left hand turn.
.. Mrs. Fry was cited for
· failure to maintain assured
clear distance. Stacie Fry, 3,
was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital where she
was treated for minor in·
juries and released.

HOME IMPROVEMENTS
COLUMBUS (UPI)
Home improvements would
be eligible for tax exemptions
for up to five years under
legislation offered In the Ohio
Senate Thursday by Sens.
Thomas A. Viln Meter, R·
Ashland, and M. Ben Gaeth,
R-Defiance.
. The exemptions would be
made on a sliding scale
according to the value the
Improvement added to tbe
real property of the owner of
a
home,
duplex
or
condominium.
If an improvement were
worth up to $1,000, that
amount would be exempt for
one year. A five-year
exemption would be gtan(ed
for improvements worth
$4,000 or more .

Sunday school attendance
on May I was 48. The offering
was $23.68. Plans for
Mother's Day were made at
the close of Sunday School.
Worship services were held
at 10: 45 with the Rev.
Thomas speaking from John
6: 1·14 on " Christ Feeds Our
Faith." Attendance at the
·above service was 26. Ninll
Robinson was pianist,
Howard Flanders, song and
choir leader. Mr. and Mrs.
Thomas, the parents of Rev.
Thomas, were guests.
The County
Councll
meeting will be held here on
Monday evening, May 9 at
7:30p.m.
On Tuesday evening, May
10, t~ Bible School staff will
meet at 7:30 to outline their
work for the Bible School In
June.
There was an attendance of
15 at last wednesday
evening's prayer meeting
including several from
Tuppers Plains. A time of
fellowship and refreshment
was afterwards enjoyed in
the basement, observing
several April birthdays.
Spending last weekend with
Genevieve Guthrie were
Mildred Story and Dan and
Grace Ryan from Columbus.
Several from this and
adjoining communities attended the baby shower for
Matthew Douglas, infant son
of Rev . and Mrs. Douglas
Seaman, at the Burlingham
Hall, last Sunday evening.

The Seaman's pastor, the
Bearwallow Ridge Church of
Christ. Best wishes to the
family.
A baby shower for Nancy
Swartz will be held at the
home of Juanita Swart% at
1:30 p.m. on May 12 with
Sandra Wright asslstlng and
invited guosts.
Mrs. Ella Yost of Sugar
Grove, 0 . Is visiting
Genevieve Guthrie and
others in the community t.hlJ
week.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles D.
Woode and Nina Robinson
attended the Cluster Hymn
Sing at the Joppa Church
Saturday evening. At·
tendance was 25. Mr. and
Mrs. Randy Koehler also
attended. The next one Is
scheduled for the last
Saturday evening in 'May at
North Bethel.
Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Spencer went to Mansfield,
Ohio on Sunday, May I, to
attend funeral services for
the wife of his brother,
Quentin, there.
Garland Caldwell has
returned to his .home here
from University Hospital,
Columbus, after a stay there
recuperating from heart
surgery.
Charles and Helen Woode
attended the 50th wedding
anniversary celebration for
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Stout at
their ho~pe at Keno on Long
Bottom road Sunday afternoon. Mrs. Woode boarded
at this home, the old James
Torrence home, taught her
second term at the Keno
school · in 1925-26. She an\1
Mrs. Stout are close 10 age,
and were both married in

Mrs. Evans
appointed
enforcer

1927.
Word has been received by
relatives and friends here
that Marie Bentz Hopkins baa
recently undergone surgery
in a hospital In Dayton, 0 .
Our prayers are with her and
the family.

Laurel Qiff

''

GALLIPOLIS - Gallla Co unty
Prosecuting Attorney Joseph L. Ca in
announced the appointment Friday af·
temoonof Martha Hay Evans to the post of
Assistant Prosecuting Attorney, Child
Support and Welfare Fraud Division.
The oath of office was administered by
the Honorable R. William Jenkins, Judge
of the Gallia County Common Pleas Court,

News Notes
Attendance at the mominll'
service at the Free Methodi51
May I was91. Choir members
present was 13.
Mrs. Betty Ann Jacobs,
Columbus, spent the weekend
with her mother, Mn. Tina
Jacobs.
Paul Stahl, Columbus,
Fritz Stahl, New Marshfield,
Mr. and Mrs. Russell
Jackson, Bellvlew, recently
called on Mr. and Mrs.
Norman Schaefer.
Mrs. Mildred Story,
Columbos, recently visited
with Mr. and Mrs. Vern
Story.
Mrs. Mabel Tracy returned
borne SWlday from VMH
where she had been a patilmt
for two weeks.
'!'he Gospel-Aires, Parkersburg, entertained at the local
church Friday evening to a
large audience.
Harry Stahl has been
returned home from Pleasant
Valley Hospital.
Mrs. Edna Howell, formerly of this place has been
released from MoWlt Carmel
Hospital, Columbus, and is
staylng with her daughter,
Mrs . Fred Zimmerman,
Columbus.

Probate and Juvenile Division, in his

HEARING TESTS GIVEN - Some .270 Meigs County senior citizens
underw~nt extens1ve hearing tests Thursday and Friday at the Senior Citizens
Center m P?ffieroy. A unit fj'om "Impact" was in Pomeroy through the GalliaJackson-Melgs Mental Health program to do the testing which included three
phases-test of hearing, a record of the subject's case history and testing for any
~~r e~r problems. The mental health group will refer those found havmg any
diffiCUlties. Several senior citizens are pictured above inside a mobile unit which
came to Pomeroy as a part of the program. Outside of the testing area are Libby
Cherrington, Gallipolis, coordinator of speech and hearing for the Tri-Q)lmty
. Mental Health Program and Bill Jireh, audiologist.

-

VOL. lt

NO. 14

chambers.
Earlier Friday. Mrs. Evans was sworn
in as an attorney by Ohio Supreme Court
Justice C. William O'Neill in special
ceremonies in Columbus. Three hundred
fifty-two attorneys were admitted to the
practice of law after successfully passing
the February -Bar Examination.
putative fathers , establish paternity of
Mrs. Evans will be in charge of en- children born out-of-wedlock, determine
forcing child support obligations under the parent's abilities to support their minor
TitleJV·D Program. The IV-D Program is children, and secure compliance with
a combined effort of the Gallia CoWJty court orders for support.
In the past, due to a shortage in perWelfare Department and the Gallla
County Prosecuting Attorney's Office as a sonnet, irresponsible behavior on the part
result of Public Law.93-ll47 and mandates of fath~rs who failed to support their
set by the Ohio Department of Welfare. children was overlooked. fn many cases,
Michael L. Swisher is the !V·D Coor· mothers were forced to seek welfare lor
dinator in the Gallia County Welfare themselves and their children under the
Department. Mr. Swisher will refer cases · Aid to Dependent Children Program. The
needing legal action to Mrs. Evans.
absent fathers caused a traumatic Impact
The purpose of the program is to on their families and put additional burden
secure financial support for minor on the taxpayers whose money helps
children by locating absent parents and finance the welfare rolls .

-

INVITES YOU TO AnEND A

FINANCE FORUM
FOR WOMEN
WITH BERNARD FULTZ, A'ITORNEY, SPEAKING ON

ESTATE PLANNING &amp; ESTATE TAXES
including such subjects as wills, deeds. survivorship property,
trusts, and estate taxes. both state and Federal.

GALLIPOLIS-POINT PLEASANT

SUNDAY, MAY 8, 1977

SALE! MOTHER'S DAY GIFTS
.OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT TIL 8
I .

FORUMS WILL BE HELD AT OUR:

of

Rio Grande

College-Commu nity

College, comp lete with Civil War
uniforms, cannons, and Abraham Un·
coln's Gettysburg Address.
The project began with Bob Leith's
Civil War- history class to have · a few
students walk through the battle, but
mushroomed as students and faculty got
wind o!the idea. Now, on Wednesday, May
18 at 1 p.m., nearly 200 students and
!acuity will gather on the 26 acre Stanley
Evans Athletic Field to dramatize the
event.
" Rickett's Charge was the beginning
of the end for the South," history professor
Leith said. "This is the big one. It insured
the North would .win the Civil War. This
battle ranks as one of the most important

ELBERFELDS IN· POMEROY

Turn yourself into a proud Frigidaire owner and save!

in history.''

In preparation · for the

battle,

Rutland Branch on Tuesday, May 17, Phone 742-2888
Main OffiCe in Pomeroy on Tuesday, May 24, Phone 992-2133

--------------------------------·
l
Wom~n
I
I

I
I
I

I
I

1

I

I

I
I
I

NAME

------ Refreshments Will Be Served

:

. --------------------------

SHOW TONIGHT
A variety show, "Happy
Days," will be presented this
evening by the choir of
.Southern High School in
Racine. Curtain time Is 8 p.m.
Director is Mrs. Lee Lee.

• This washer gets
clothes cleaner than
the best selling
brand's best
washer.

• Rugged Heavy
Duty components
in washer
• Knits/ Permanent
Press/Regular
•

POMEROY
NATIONAL BANK
And Its
Rutland and
Tuppers PUains
Branch~s

will have Free Gilts

For Mother's on
SaturdaJ, May 7

mitted by Legea Glassburn, 9, a third
grader in the Bidwell-Porter Elementary
SChools.
Her essay read: "f nominate Jacalyn
G\assbum because she helps me with my

LC·3

WC/DEC

Laundry Pair

Reservations are requested by not recjuired. If possible, return the
reservation below or phone your reservation, two days prior to the
event.

l

This year's winning essay was sub-

· popular 1-18-lb

AU FORUMS WIU START AT 7:30 P.M.

1 plan to attend the Finance Forum for
at . your
Rutland Branch, Tuppers Plains Branch. or Mam Off1ce of
the Pomeroy National Bank in Pomeroy. (Ci1tle one)

GALLIPOLIS-Mrs. Arnold (Jacalyn)
Glassburn, Bidwell, was named Gallia
County's "Mother-of-the-Year" Saturday
in the fifth annual Mother's Day contest
sponsored by the Downtown Gallipolis
Retail Merchants Association.
Approximately 20 candidates were
entered in -the 1977 contest by their
children. Judging was completed Friday
afternoon.
i!:ntries consisted of all-word essays on
why the child's mother should be
"Motber-of-the-Year." ·Judges were
R v. Tim Heaton, Mrs. Rober! Brenneman
· arid Mrs. Paul Wagner.

Save 152.95

Wash cycles
Gentle Flowing
Heat Dryer with
Knits and

Save 150.00
Frigidaire's most
popular 100%
Frosi-Prool
Refrlgerator-Frae:zer
• 17.0-cu-ft total
refrigerated volume
• 4.75-cu-ft freezer

compartmer.t .
o 31ully-adjustable
cantilever shelves
• Meat Tender and
tw in Veg etable

Hydrators
• AUtomatic lea .
Maker, available at

extra: charge

loading and

unloading

SALE
ss&amp;9 ·

was Mickey Roy, Gallipolis, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Roy.
On behalf of the Gallipolis merchants,
Dan Thomas and Roy Chose, co.chairmen
of the event, presented Mrs. Glassburn a
dozen red roses furnished by Ruths
Flowers. Mrs. Glassburn also received a
$20cash prize. The daughter received a $10
cash prize.

Frigidaire'• ex:clutiYt
L•undry Center

Frigidaire's most·
popular Electriclean Range

• Family-size

• ~lectri-clean Oven
• Automatic
Cookmaster oven
controls
• Ea sy-V iew Surface
Unit controls
• E)! elusive Radiantube surface units
• Full-width storage
drawer~

SALE s429

95

CollP9City

• Complete home
Laundry Center t
just 247 wid.e

·• Regular /Delicate
~ash cycles

.,

• 4-posi tion Water
Temperature
Selector
• Automatic Qry cycle
• Cycle-end signal

Frigidaire
· Electri·SOYor
Mobllt Dlohwithor
• Once-a-day dish·
washing capaclly
tor an average

lamlly ol four
• 3 Energy Options,
il\cluding Extra Hot
wash Temperature
• 16 cycles end

somewhat from previous events.

variations in all

• Flipdown cup
rae hi Clean
·indicatbr; cycle
operating light

-

SM '100 on the

T•

Cerama
Touch
· &amp; Cook Ranp

Not Pictlred

GALLIPOLIS - Dates for the 12th
annual Gallipolis River Recreation
Festival were announced Saturday by
Mike Kaman, festival chairman.
• The 1977 Independence Day
celebration is scheduled Saturday, Sunday
and Monday, July 2, 3 and 4.
According to Kaman, fonnat for this
year's celebration will be changed
The chairman said more activities are
being planned for the youth of ihe com·
munlty this swnmer. Too, more water
events will be held according to Kaman.
Otber new ideas include a change in
the queen pageant activities , -skate board
races and possibly the addition of stern·
wheeler river boat and helicopter rides.
New rules and regulations on the queen
pageant will be announced later.
As In the past, other activities include
coWttry and western, barbecues, gospel,
and bluegr'ass music, patriotic.
ceremo nies,. a festival parade and
fireworks display.

. DON'T MISS. !he specia l
trlbule Gallla-Melgs residents are
· giving lheir mothers on 1).3 in the
classified section ol today's paper.

Mrs. Richard Thomas, Gallipolis, was
\he first winner in 1973. other winners
were: Mrs, Joe Plantz, Kanauga, 1974;
Mrs. Alice McAllister, Gallipolis, 1975;
Mrs. Lynne Tawney, Gallipolis, 1976.

All civic and serviCe groups are invited to take part in the festival.
The fe stival planning committee's
next meeting Is 7 p.m. Wednesady, Mayll,
in the Gallipolis Area Chamber of Com·
merce office, State St. The meeting is open
to the public.

BARN STRUCK
GALLIPOLIS - Lightning struck a
bam causing $300 worth of damage near
here Friday night. Gallipolis volunteer
firemen were called to assist the Vinton
Volunteer Fire Department in the fire at
the barn owned by George E. Carter, Rt. 2,
Bidwell (Buck Ridge Rd. ). Fourteen
Gallipolis firemen responded along with
seven members of the Vinton department .
PULL CANCELLED
TUPPERS PLAINS - The Orange
Volunteer Fire Department's tractor pull
scheduled for today has been cancelled
due to bad weather .. However, the barbecue will be held.

Olclahoma woman

is top U. S. mother
NEW YORK (UPI ) - Mrs. Francis S.
Langdon of Tonkawa, Okla., was named
"The American Mother of the Year"
. Friday at a ceremony where the mother of
l?resident Carter was hOnored with a
citation.
The 50-year-old mother of five
children, who is a columnist for the
Tonkawa News, was presented the award
by the American Mothers Committee Inc.,
during a ceremony at the Waldorf-Astoria
Hotel.
At the same time, Mrs. Lillian Carter
was given a special citation by the committee, as did members of · television's
''Waltons1' ,. family for playing ' 'in the best
family viewing prOgram on the air," the
committee said.
·

and sororities are making costwnes and
guns, two carmon have lined up and horses
are being reserved.
Earl Thomas, Rip Grande speech
instructor, will portray Abraham Lincoln
who will deliver the Gettysburg Address at
the end of the drama.
Two other faculty memberS will a~o
be Involved. Dr. Jack Hart will he Civil
War hero John Burns who, after hearing
about the Impending battle, rushed out
alone with one gun to take on the rebels.
Jake Bapst will act out the part of the
crusty Union officer who kept his men
(rom running in the heat of battle.
According to Leith, more than 50

Fulks speaker for
school graduation
annual graduation exercises at the Souihwestern . Local High School on Sunday,
May 22 at 8 p.m.
Fulks, professor of Education at
Marshall University, grad uated from
Mercerville High School in 1951. He attended Rio Grande College and received
· his B.S. Degree in Elementary Educatio".
He also attended University of Arizona,
Tucson, where he did additional work in
elementary education.
He graduated from Marshall
University, in 1961 with a Masters Degree
'i n Educational Administration ·and
received hi!&gt; Doctorate in Education from
the University of Tennessee in
Educational Administration.
Fulks has held positions of elementary
teacher, Hannan Trace Elementary
School; elementary principal, Hannan
Trace Elementary School ; elementary
principal, Obetz, Franklin County, and is
currently, employed as assist~n\ and
associate professor of Education at
Marshall University. He ha s been I
recognized in Elementary Education for
numerous articles he has written and had
published. He now has a book on
Elementary Education in the final stages
to be published. He is married to Sandra
(Belville) Fulks, formerly of Mercerville,
Gallia County. They have two children,
DANNY G. FULKS
Candy Sue, 10 years old and Cathy Lynn,
four years oid. They currently reside at 820 :lrd Street, Huntington, W. Va ..

,

MIKE KAMMAN

Gallian elected to
District K -1 post
with Ohio·.Jaycees

GALLIPOLIS - Mike Kamman.
immediate past president of the Gallipolis
Area Jaycees, has been elected District K·
I Director of the Ohio Jaycees.
District K•1 is composed of 8 chapters
throughout Southeastern Ohio. Kammam
GALLIPOLIS -The public is invited
succeeds Lin YoWlg also from the local to attend the Sunday, May 15 open house of
chapter .
the Pinecrest Care Center, a skilled
GALLIPOLIS - An election scheduled
Kamman has been a member of nursing facility recently constructed on
Friday at the Bob Evans Farms Bidwell Jaycees for 2'&gt;\ years and has served as Rt. 35 near the Holzer Medical Center.
plant did not take place a company spokes- chairman of nwnerous Jaycee projects
Tours of the three-story, 116-bed
mBn said Saturday .
including two years as head of the Fourth facility will be conducted between I and S
The spokesman said employees were of July parade. This year he Is general p.m. Owners are Gallipolis physicians
to vote on whether or not they would be chairman of the River Days Recreation Gene H. Abels, James A. Kemp, Mel P.
represented by .the Ama lgamated Meat Festival, and is currently serving the Simon and Gerald Vallee: Richard Vallee,
Cutters, Local 347, Charle&gt;ton, W. Va.
Gallia County Citizens Committee for Blanchester and Medical Management
The spokesman added that on Thurs- Mental Retardation as publicity chair- Systems, Westerville. The official &lt;Jpening
day, one day prior to the election, Union man.
· date has not been announced.
Local 347 withdrc&gt;v from the election,
The Gannon College of Erie , Pa.
The nursing center is the first of its
llobviously atlticipatin~ a defeat. "
graduate is employed as a performance kind in the area, and is the only MedicareUnoin r~pre s entatives were not engineer at the Gen. James Gavin Power approved skilled nursing center within 50
available for comment.
Plant at Cheshire.
miles. Architects from Touchman-Frost

Union pulled out
o{ scheduled vote

students gatqered for an initial planning
last Wednesday. He also said high
school students from southeast Ohio would
be invited to the campus to watch the reenactment.
Reminiscent perhaps of a Cecil B.
DeMille production, music will be added to
the·drama even though it wasn't part of the
original event. At the end of the drama, the
Rio Grande College "Grande Chorale"
located on a distant hill will sing \he
"Battle Hymn of the Republi~ . "
If the students' excitement during
preparation is any indication, the reenactment of Pickett's Charge will be a
unique event.

~ssion

PATRIOT - Danny G. Fulks will

with." ·
· Receiving honorable montion this year ·:::::·:::::·:::·:::::·:·:::·:·:-:::::·:::::::·:::·:::·:·:·:·:·:·:-:·:·:·:::·:-:·:=::;:;:;:::::;:;:;:;:::;:::

Festival on July 2-3-4

Save *50.00

Save 140.00

Permanent Press

selling
• Big qver-size door
opening for easy

homework, doing things I like to do like
baking cakes and making crafts. She p)ays
games with me and goes horseback riding
and bike riding. I enjoy doing things with
my mother because she is a lot of fun to be

DWM-4

Save '50.00

PRICE 25 CENTS

deliver the. Commencement address at the

Gallia mother of year selected

Frigidaire's most

Tuppers Plains Branch on Wednesday, May 25, Phone 667-3161

1

MRS. ARNOLD (JACALYN) GLASSBURN, Bidwell, wa's- - Metchants Association. Pictured with Mrs. Glass)lurn are
naffled Ga)lia Coun~y's "Mother-of-the-Year" Saturday in
..J;ier daughter Legea, front; Dan Thomas, left, and Roy Chose,
the fifth annual contest sponsored by the Gallipolis Retail
right, co.chairinen of the 1971 event. Mrs. Glassburn displays
a dozen red roses flU'nlshed by Ruths Flowers.

RE-36

failing to name the fatners of their
illegitimate children, will face a reduction
or tennination of their ADC benefits.
The Child Support Enforcement
Divisi011 wlll not limit its services to
(Continued on page 2)

MIDDLEPORT-POMEROY

RIO GRANDE - Pickett's Charge, on
the last day of the battle of Gettysburg In
1863, will be re-enacted by the student body

Save on gifts you'll want to buy for your Mother on her
day Sunday. Be sure to see our selection of Hallmark
. Mother's Day cards, gift wrapping, also Fanny Farmer
Mother's Day candy.
·

FPCI-170T·7

•
•·

reenact
Students
Pickett's charge scene

"
SERVICES SET
HEMLOCK GROVE , Funeral services for Emmett
Hawk, 85, Hemlock, Grove,
who died early ThursdaY
morning at the Holzer
Medical Center will be held at
3 p.m. Saturday at the Ewing
Funeral. Home with Mr.
Roger Watson officiating.
Burial wlll be in the Hemlock
· Grove Cemetery. Friends
may call at the funeral home
at any time.

surance records, social security records,
the Internal Revenue Service, Department
of Defense and Veterans Administration
records, as well as many other sources of
information. If the Ohio Parent Locator
Service carmot locate the father in Ohio, it
would resort to the Federal Parent
l&lt;Jcator.Service, for further investigation.
Mothers who refuse to cooperate with
these investigations, either by withholding
pertinent information on the fathers , or by

•

TO GET TOUGH
SYRACUSE - Syracuse
Village Councll Monday night
informally agreed it no
longer would tolerate lots,
vacant or otherwise, growing
up in weeds. The ordinance in
regard to weeds being cut will ·
be strictly enforced, effective
immediately. Reslde.nts are
'aware of the ordinance and
should take heed because
backsliding property owners
can be cited to court.

NATIONAL BANK

Service has access to unemployment in-

-

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

••

POMEROY

will, in many cases, be able to locate
missing fathers. The Parent Locator

tntittt

representatives of RFC-CC's fraternities
'
.LADIES.

With the establishment o! a Parent
Locator Service in each state , counties

GALLIA COUNTY PROBATE and
Juvenile Judge R. William Jenkins,
right, administers oath of office to
Martha Evans, assistant prosecuting
attorney, child support and welfare
fraud division. Looking on at left Is
Gallia County Prosecutor Joseph L.
Cain. The ceremony took place Friday
evening in Judge Jenkins' chambers.

Public tours invited
Associates, Columbus, and general contractor was Wallick Construction Co., also

of Columbus.
The center will serve patients of all
ages p;oviding convalescent as well as
long-term nursing care. It offers private
and semi-private rooms, all with bsths and
direct communicaUon to nursinK stations.
A smoke detection and sprinkler system
has also been Installed.
The facility wl!l provide physical and
occupatlonai therapy and a beauty and
barber shop. Meals will be prepared to
meet patients' special dietary needs and
family and friends may join patients for
meals in the dining room .

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