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                  <text>II}-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0., Monday, May 9, 1977
BABY DELIVERED
RACINE - The Racine
Emergency Squad delivered
VeteransMemorlal
Thomas Lipscomb, Mrs.
a baby to Mrs. Don Goode
Sa turday Admissions
Jeffrey Merry and daughter ,
Long Bottom early Sunday
Moore,
Cora
morning. At 5:30a.m. Sunday Charles Ellis, Pomeroy ; Esther
Mrs. Goode was taken to the Robert Manley, Middleport ; Morgan, Pamela Perkins,
emergency station . After the Harold Carson, Middleport . Luther Pittenger, Althea
Saturda y Discharges - Ridenour, Jeffrey Riley ,
arrival of the baby the squad
stopped
by
Veterans Terre Wood, Bruce Gheen, Norman Rose, Otchel Salyer,
Gheen. Lucille Velva Sloan, Lucretia Smith,
Memorial Hospital where Dy. Bryan
John Ridgway cheeked the Gilmore, Daniel Thomas, Carol Thom~on, Eric Vest,
new arrival and the mother. Rita McDaniel, Ca rri e Steven Wandling.
1Birtbs,May61
The mother and her baby Judson, Roscoe Hollon , (
Marvin &gt;Mr. and Mrs . John
were then taken on to Kermit Kilk ey
'
Williams, son, Syracuse; Mr.
Pleasant Valley Hospital by Darst.
Sunday Admissions _ and Mrs. Donald Hartley,
the squad.
Ca rrie neutzling, Pomeroy, son, Wellstoni Mr. and Mrs.
Constance Craig , Pomeroy. George Blanks, daughter,
CALL ANSWERED
Sunday Discharges _ Middleport; Mr. and Mrs.
The Pomeroy Emergency Clara Lavendar, Denzil Robert Priest, son, ,Jackson.
Squad answered a call to Boggess, Alma Frazier,
(Discharges, May 71
State St. at 4:57a.m. Sunday Lo well McNickle, Sharon
Maggie Barr, Henry
for Pauline Bing who was Ferrell, Blanch Gibbs.
Bluebaum,
Esther Brandeberry, Joellen Brown,
taken to Holzer Medica l
. William Buchanan, Birdie
Center.
Holzer Medical Center
Caplinger, Kindra De Lille,
(Discharges, May 6)
CALLED TWICE
John Adams, Earl Barney, Elijah Estep, Sr. , Crystal
'
The
Middl eport
Deborah Boatright, Alvin Harmon , George Keirn,
Emergency Squad answered Cordle, Amber Dayis, John Randall Kent, Janet Lam-.
two weekend ca lls, at 6:06 Davis, Mrs. James Gillen- bert, Steve Martin, Terry
Sunday to North Second Ave, water and son, Fred Hart- Oliver, Sr., Mrs. Charles
for Kathy Chadwell who was well, Golda Helm, James Rece and daughter, Jeffrey
taken to Pleasant Valley Jarrell, Pauline Johnson, Sigmon, Jessica Silvers, John
Hospital, and at I : 18 Monday Kathryn Jones, Justin Sievers, Saundra Tillis, Hilda
to the Lewis Smith residence Kearns, Mrs. Kenneth Williams, Evelyn Winter.
(Births, May 7)
Route 7-143 for William Kersey and daughter, Esther
Mr.
and
Mrs. David EdGrueser, who was taken to Kissel, Alice Lambert,
monds,
son,
Rutland; Mr.
Holzer Medical Center.
Charles Lester, Kerrie Lewis,
and .Mrs. William Foster,
daughter, Jackson ; Mr. and
Mrs. Dwight Bowling, son,
Wellston ; Mr. and Mrs.
Edward Bowling, daughter;
Jackson ; Mr. and Mrs. Fred
M•thcws, daughter, Coalton;
Mr. and Mrs. Dobby Robie,
daughter, BidwelL
(Discharges, May 81
James Amos, Uoyd Baker,
Carol Bush, Margaret
Camden, James Dishong,
Sarah Halley, Mrs. James
Harless and daughter, Mrs.
James Hill and son, Marilee
La they, Janet Morris, Anthony Taylor.
(Births, MayS)
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Lee,
daughter, Rutland; Mr. and
·Mrs. John Barry, son,
Thurman; Mr. and Mrs. Glen
McDaniel, daughter, Ashville.

HOSPITAL NEWS

'

FAMILY DINING

AT ITS BEST

THE INN PLACE

12 dead,
8 missing

Young's murder trial moved

AMSTERDAM , The
Netherlands IUPI) - Fire
roared through the Hotel
•
Polen at dawn today, killing
at least a dozen persons and
possibly trapping others
under flaming rubble when
the building collapsed, police .
said.
'
\
" At least 12 hotel guests
have died. Their remains are
I
t
'
in various hospitals," Chief
I
. Police Inspector Jan Veenstra said shortly after noon (6
a.m. EDT) .
"It is not out of the
_question" there were also
VOLLEYBALl, TEAM - Southern High Volleyball
bodies burned under the · team was honored, 1-r, Pam Brauer, Loretta Holsinger,
debris, he said.
Carla Teaford, Shelly Ward, Brenda Lawrence, Jean
Police and ambulance
sources said eight · persons,

j

\

;

missing.

LIGIITNING HIT
CHESTER- The Chester Fire
Department answered a call
to the Moon residence on the
New Hope Road in Chester
Township at 5:30 a.m.
Saturday. Lightning had
come in on the electrical
system. However, no fire
developed.
GRANDSON INJURED
Mildred · Tubbs, Pomeroy,
received word from her son
Bill, Phoenix, Ariz., that his
son, Billie Tubbs, Mrs .
Tubbs' grandson, had been in
an automobile accident and
was in serious condition, Bill
is formerly from Pomeroy,

Association, Chester Grange,
Farm Bureau and Soil
Conservation.
He Is survived by his wife,

Ewing Chapel with

th~

Rev.

Freel~nd Norris officiating .
Burial will -be in Pine Grove
Cemetery. Friends may call
at the Funeral Home at
anytime .
·

BRADLY ROSS KING

Ross King , infant son of
RicKy R. King and Joyce L.
Roush King of Letart, died
Sunday at the Pleasant
Valley Hospit.al. He Y"as five
·
hours Old .
Surviving bes ides his
parents, are a s.lster. Lisa A.
King. at home ; maternal
grandparents , Marion · and
Mada line Roush, Letart:
paternal grandparents, Ted
and Frances Swartz, Letatt;
maternal
great grandparents , Dorthy· and
Eliza Roush and Mrs. Letha
Llevlng, all of Letart i and
paternal great.grandparen.ts,

First National City~ Checks:

Big May Sale
Save up to 96% of the
uslialfee.
.

Herbert and Esther King ,
Letart.

lSaktnds~Jisd

Graveside services will be
held Tuesday at 10 a.m , at the
Broad Run Cemetery with the
Rev . George We1rick of ficiating . The Foglesong
Funeral Home is in charge of
arrang'=ments.

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

·-

$5.000 -

2.$00
'

1000
. 500

!

u..... , ..

$50 00

2500

l

I ,ooo '
j

•• H

YOU S.W£

$2 .00

96~.

200

,.,..,
~

.

5 00

~oo

2.00

601, ""'

Ollt&lt;QW&lt;!""'l "'U~ --....~- •...r-"ll' ll ' 911

to wai t fnr a rdund . lle causc First Nat ionnl Ci ty
Travc!t::rs Clh.:ck s can give yo u an on-the·spot
refLmd HI ovL' r 4S.OOO locu tions ''-'Orldwidc .
Thnus.ands mnre th;m any other travelers chcC'k.
Buy First Nwi~mal City Tn.t velcrs Checks

now in May. and SU\'C.

Farmers Bank

540,000.00

~mbar

POMEROY, OHIO
~ximum

.-,

l
TRACK TEAM - Ten track squads at Southern High
honored were, 1-r, Tammy Davis, Cheryl Roseberry, ·
Kelly Shasteen, Cricket Cartlenter, Sheila Crouch,

I

r

JerrenaDill, Brenda Ash,Connee Andrews, coach; back,
Suzy Scarberry, Loretta. Holsinger, Brenda Lawrence,
Kim Taylor, Amy Fisher, Absent were Vickie Cundiff,
Becky McGraw, and Peggy Neigler.
,

!

LETART, W, Va, - Bradly

t . . .a a no
... s

·LOCAL WINNER- Cindy Parker, center, ll-year-&lt;5ld daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Parker, Middlepor_t, was t!Je local winner of the Dairy Isle coloring contest. She received an
eight foot down filled with toys, Her entry will be submitted in the National contest at
Uticia, Mich. and on May 21, the winner will be chosen. Shown with Cindy, are 1-r, Jack
Slaven, who judged t!Je contest, and Herschel McClure owner oflhe Dairy Isle in Middleport
who spoosored the local contest. There were 174 entries.

TAKENTOHMC
The New Haven E-R Squad
transported Shannon Barrett,
Letart, to Holzer Medical
Center with a fractured right
arm, and Mrs. Glenna Frey,
New Haven, to Holzer
Medical Center as a medical
patient

Martha ; two daughters. Anna I
.
Norman G. Rose, 64, Rt . 1, Jean Phipers, Denver, Colo .;
Bidwell, formerly of Meigs Rosemary Keller , Pomeroy,
County died Sunday morning two sons, Major Roger Rose.
Burgaberbach. Germany and
at Hofzer Medical Center .
Mr. Rose was born June 13, Don Rose . Racine ,· seven
1912 the son of the late Lew is grandchildren, ot'le sister,
and Abbie Moore. He was Mary Genhelmer, Chester ;
also · preceded in death by ,one brother , Lawrence Rose ,
Reedsville ; one auht, Laura
fou~ bro~hers, Ernest, Julius,
Eiselstein,
Pomeroy, and
Harry and Virgil.
Mr. Rose was a farmer'and several nieces and nephews .
Funeral services wil l be
breeder
of
reg is tered
Hol steins. He was a member held Wed-nesday at 1 p.m . at

of the Central Ohio Breeders

Fs

''

NORMAN G, ROSE

$.295 Plus tax.

on vacation.
And if they get lost or stolen you won't have

Ritchhart , Jerrena Dilland, Connee Andrews, coach.
Absent were Linda Fisher, Joy Neigler and Marie
Pickens.

including one fireman were

Area Deaths

!

Visit our Salad Bar, l:.asnagna,
Vegetable, Hot Rolls, Coffee, Tea or
Milk.

Big May Sale. Buy them 110\\ and :,aH: up to
96% of the fee. Use them wheneH:: r )I)U gn

--Jj· .

r--------------------------,

.1UESDAY NIGHT SPECIAL

H you hul e to wait ~tn d !me tn -;&lt;. 1\ t:'. )tw'll
lo\le First National Ci ty Tr~t\'Cicrs Checks'

.

tnsuranct For Each, DeiiDSitof
Federal O.pOsil tnsuranct Corporation

SVAC CHAMPS - Tbe girls' basketball team at
Southern' High School were SV AC champions, sectional
champions and class Adistrict runners up. L-r are Connee

Southen1 girl

Andrews, coach, Cheryl Roseberry, Jaye Ord, Carla
Teafo~d, Shelly Ward, Brenda Lawrence, Jean Hitchhart,
Amy Souder, and Lisa Allen,

News •. in Briefs

.
(Continued from pa6e I)
a Treasury Department official. · James Abbott, chief
disbursing officer, said there is no way to determine
immediately how many checks reached their intended
recipients - disabled persons 65 and over - despite tbe
RACINE - Saturday night years. The only two losses mistakes.
at Southern High School here came in lournament play.
Michael Naver said, uThe en-or has been corr~ed." In ·
Special awards in this sport instances where payments should have gone to the bank, they
girl athletes of 1976-77 were
honored at a banquet fur- went to.Brenda Lawrence for . went to a home address, and the reverse could have occurred
nished by the athletic best rebounder; Jaye Ord, in a few cases," he said, The errors were nationwide.
boosters . Coach Connee best floor player ; Lisa Allen,
Williams presented awards to best defensive player, Cheryl
LONDON - . PRESIDENT CARTER TOLD French
participants in volleyball, Roseberry , ~st offensive, President Valery Discard d'E.taing today the United States
and Jean Ritchhart, high totally approved of t!Je French decision to send military help to
basketball and track.
Volleyball awards were scorer.
Zaire, French sources said.
·
presented to Jean Ritchhart,
,Other basketball awards , Carter, in a one-llour breakfast meeting with Giscard,
Brenda Lawrence, Marie went to Amy Souder, Shelly reviewed the whole question of Africa figured largely in their
Pickens, Pam Brauer, Ward and Carla Teaford.
talks, t!Je sources said. Earlier, Glscard had said in.a U, S.
Loretta Holsinger,. Linda
Managers Sharon Roush , television interview that be thought "we must pay more
Fisher, Carla Teaford, Shelly Cindy Roush and statistician attention to Africa, to the development of Africa and tbe safety
Ward and Joy Neigler.
Cricket Crapenter were also of Africa.''
This season the Southern given awards.
girls' basketball team was
Also recognized was the
CIRCLEVILLE, OHIO - THE BODIES OF TWO
SV AC champion, Class A track team consisting of Colwnbus teenagers and a car belonging to one of them were
Sectional champ and District Cheryl Roseberry, Brenda rec&lt;ivered Sunday from Deer Creek Reservoir about 15 miles
runners-up. They had a Lawrence , Peggy Neigler, west of Circleville in Pickaway County, Sheriff · Dwight
perfect season of 13-ll .with a Cricket Carpenter, Kim Radcliff identified the two who apparently drowned
42-2 reeord over the last three Taylor, Brenda Ash, Suzy Wednesday night as stephen Minerd, 18, and Jobn Starr, 14.
Scarberry, Kelly Shasteen, Their bodies were sent to Cincinnati for autopsy by the
Sheila Croush, Tammy Hamilton County coroner. •
Davis, Vicki Cundiff, Carol
Radcliff said Minerd, not being familiar with the area,
Gibbs, Jerrena Dill, Amy apparently drove froin Crownover-Miil Road off the boat
Fisher and Becky McGraw. loading dock into 15 feet of water. The car was recovered about
Coach
Williams
was 50 feet from the dock. Minerd's body was recovered Sunday
presented a gi(t of jrewelry night by sheriff's divers, several hours after the younger boy's
from the girls on her three body was found by fishermen. Deputies said the two were
teams.
believed to have gone to the dam Wednesday night to either
fish
or swim. They were not reported missing as the older boy
Johnson, Brett Wilson and
had
indicated lo his parents they would go to F1orida.
Larry George made the 1977
All-Mid-Ohio Conference
"dream team."
Johnson is a pitcher,
Wilson an outfielder , Both are
from Gallipolis. George, a
catcher and designated
hitter, halls from South Point.

athletes honored

Rio baseballers
gain NAJA berth
Coach C. . L. (Johnny)
Ecker's Rio Grande College
Redmen havo received a bid
to participate in the 1977
District 22 NAJA Baseball
Tournament at Mount Vernon
•this week .
The Rednien, 14-9 on the ·
year, will tackle Malone, 15-9,
at12 noon on Thursday on the
Mt. Vernon High School
diamon(! . The tourney, is
double elimination,
In the other opening round
game Thursday, MI. Vernon
will take on Bluffton. The
finals are Friday and the
rainout date Saturday.
The District 22 winner will
advance to the Area 6
playoffs In Michigan. The
1977 NAIA World Series will
be held in St. Joseph, Mo., in
June.
•
It was also announced
toda~. that Rio's Skipper

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

ASK TOWED
Marriage licenses were
Issued to Chris Allen
Wolverton, 19, Pomeroy, and
.Eva Lynn Googins; 19,
Pomeroy; Francis Vern
Wade, 22, and Brenda Kay
Ross, 16, Pomeroy.
HALL CWSING
The Letart Community
Hall will not be open for
public use' until after the
Memorial Day dinner.

WINDOW SHADES
Complete selection of shades from
36 inches wide to 72 inches wide- 6 or 1
foot lengths. Special widths cut to your
measure free of chaJ"9e.
. Choose white, Ivory, light tan or
green in your preferred quality.
Just recieved. too. sea II oped
window .shades for that eleg'11nt look in
white or ivory.

SELECT WINDOW SHADES IN THE
HOME FURNISHINGS DEPT, ON
THE 1ST FLOOR.

N. W.OPTOMORIST
COMPTON. O.D.

OFFICE HOURS: ':30 to 12,2 to 5 (CLOSE
AT NOON ON THURS.)- EAST COURT
ST. POMEROY.

.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

BY NEIL FRIEDER
POINT PLEASANT - A
change of venue for John
Lewis Young, 32, Mason, who
is scheduled to stand trial for
the first degree murder of a
Mason businesswoman, was
granted this morning by
Mason County Circuit Court
Judge James 0 . Hallway.
The trial, scheduled to
begin Monday, will now be
held later this yeat in Wood
County.
It became evident that the
court might have a hard time
finding a jury to tty Young,
who is accused of murdering
58 year-old Mason resident
Mary Berry, when defense
attorney John Anderson
asked a group of potential
jurors:
" I would like to know from
the discussion of this case, or
where you heard it discussed
or from hearing or reading
the papers that have articles
in the newspaper; or from
hearing the news or radio,
AM or FM, the Charle.ton
station or CB,, or whatever,
did the things that you heard
or discussed, leave an im~
pression in your mind where

it would take evidence to
remove that impression in

order for you to give Mr.

Prosecutor W, Dan Roll ,
Assistant Prosecutor Bill
Sixteen of '!/ jurists raised Woodyard and defense at·
·their hands to the question torneys Anderson and Barry
apparentlY giving their nod Casto met behind closed
that they could not give doors to di scuss a cha nge of
Young a fair triaL
venue.
With that, Judge Holliday
Monday's proceedings was
ordered the juri.ts into a · the scene of one of the tightest
small room along with the security situations ever
prosecuting attorney and witnessed in the. county, As
defense attorneys, When they spectators filed into the
emerged, approximately 15 courtroom they were cheeked
minutes later, the judge thoroughly by a metal
dismissed the jury and ended detector
for
possible
the session of court.
weapons. Inside the courtApparently Judge Holliday, room , bes ides noticeable
Young a fair trial?"

• .zn Brzefs(\j

CHARLESTON, W.Va. FMC spokesman, who said
(UP! ) - Tbe FMC Corp., the firm had caused some
already under fire in a carbon leakage of asbestos but has
~trachlorlde
controversy, remedied the problem .
now has been accused of
Light said in a statement
dumping cancer-causing that discharge of the
absestos into the Kanawha chemical at the South
River outside Charleston:
Charleston plant " may
The charge was leveled by represent a possible long·
Ed Light, a research analyst term hazard similar to
for the West Virginia-Citizens carbon tetrachloride."
Action Group.
FMC is involved in a court
His cha rge drew an case with the Environmental
Immediate rebuttal from an Protection Agency over

By Unlted Press International
PITTSBURGH-THE WHITE HOUSE, encouraged that
U.S. Steel Corp.'s 6 per cent price increase undercut that was
announced by two other major producers, hoped the entire
industry would adopt the smaller boosts. "We're encouraged
by somet!Jing closer to 6 per cent than the 7 to 9 per cent we
were hearing about earlier," said Robert Crandall, acting
director of the Council on Wage and Price Stability, "We hope
that U. S. Steel's prices stick."
U.S. Steel delayed its increases on sheet and strip - used
extensively by auto and appliance manufacturers - bar, rod
and plate products until June 19, The increases announced last
week by Republic S.teel and Youngstown Sheet &amp; Tube- 8,8
per cent oo flat-rolled products and 6.8 per cent on bar steel are scheduled to begin May 15.
COLUMBUS- JULL\N BOND, BLACK MEMBER of tbe
Georgia legislature and civil rights activist, said Monday the
argument t!Jat school busing is harmful to children Is nothing
more than a myth. " It's an incredible myth," said Bond,
"Forty-four per cent of all school children in the United States
go to school on a bus. But only three per cent go to school on a
bus because of race."
''The plain fact is that white people in this country don't
want their children to go to school with black children," said
Bond . "Where people find thai busing is the easiest way for
their children to gefto school and back again, no one raises any
objection at all," said Bond ,
WASIDNGTON - THE KROGER CO., third Jargest
supermarkel chain in the country, and three other gr~r
groups have agreed to stock adequate supplies of. item~ offered
at sale prices, the Federal Trade Commission said Monday.
The stores, In a negotiated settlement of an ITC complaint,
also agreed to charge prices no higher than advertised, to
clearly mark sale prices on individual items, and to offer
"rainchecks" .when they run out of sp_ecials.
The order is similar to one signed several years ago by
A&amp;P, the country's No. 2 chain. The ITC also has a case
pending against · s.feway, the nation's largest seller of
grocery, covering the same points. Stores signing the order in
addition to the Cincinnati-lleadquartered Kroger Co. were
Fisher Foods Inc., Bedford Heights, Ohio; Food Fair Stores
Inc., Philadelphia, which operaies Food' Fair and' Pantry
Pride, and Shop-Rite Fooda. Inc ,, Grand Prairie, Tex.

VOL XXVIII

NO. 18

Sheriff James J. Proffitt
said today three juveniles
and one adult have been
arre.ted and charged In the
April 28 breaking and entering of the Lavonna Blak.e
cottage at Indian Run.
Tw 15-year-old and one 16year-old Rt 1, Reedsville
juveniles and 20-year old
Monte Ray Barringer,. Rt I,
Reedsville, have been
charged. The juveniles have
' been released in custody of
their parents
pending
hearings in the Meigs County
Juvenile Court.
Barringer is confined to the

He said some discharges
had resulted with the periodic
cleaning of cells in which
chloride in produced, Cells
are partially made or
asbestos. He said the plant,
on its own initiative, took
co rr ective measures and
leaks have stopped,
Currey disparaged Light's
claims as "an attempt to
create another unnecessary
controversy.''

•

at

enttne

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Meigs County jail on one
charge of receiving stolen
property and two of con·
tributing to the delinquency
of minors. Most of the stolen
property has been recovered.
In other department activity, deputies are checking
out a complaint by Charles
Alkire, Racine, that he had
several stereo tapes stolen
from his pickup truck parked
in front of his residence
sometime Sunday.
James M. Miller, 25 , Rt. 4,
Pomeroy, reported that
around 9:15 p.m. Monday

Three injured
in auto accidents

Shippers will
meet on lith
recently ordered the abandorunent of most of Chessie's
Logan to Pomeroy (via
McArthur and Gallipolis)
line.
ORTA representatives will
have information regarding
when Chessie service will be
terminated and will also
explain what steps can be
taken to arrange alternate
rail service from the Chessie
system, C:onRail or ahother
operator.

!

carbon Mra·dlloride spills
into the river.
Light said he had a
company docwnent from the
state Water Resources
Bureau tbat showing the firm
was discharging 100 pounds
of asbestos daily. He urged
"speedy action from sta.~
and federal agencies."
"FMC is no longer putting
asbestos into the Kanawha
River. " rejoined FMC
spo,kesman, William Currey,

TUESDAY, MAY 10, 1977

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

Robbery solved

Three persons were injured
and three .citations were
issued following separate
traffic
accidents investigated
WASIDNGTON -AN ANGRY HOUSE COMMITTEE
Monday
by the Gallia-Meigs
chairman threatens to subpoena Richard Nixon to produce a
Post
State
Highway PatroL
letter promising billions of dollars in U. S, reconstruction aid to
The
first
occurred
al 8:25
Vietnam. "If he can talk to a television guy, he can talk to the
a.m.
on
SR
681
at
TR
313 in
Congress," ~id Rep. Lester Wolff, D-N .Y., chairman of the
Meigs
County
where
vehicles
House Subcommittee on Asian and Pacific Affairs, referring to
driven by Florence Wyers, a7,
Nixon's televised interview 'with David Frost.
Wolff told reporters before a committee meeting Monday Rt. I, Reedsville, and Kenbe understands that Nixon, while President, wrote a letter neth Chaffee, 22, Rt. I, Zanesfield, sideswiped in a curve.
promising $4.75 billion in reconstruction aid to Vietnam.
Jer£e,y
Wyers, a passenger in
Nixon has not answered a letter on the subject, Wolff said,
the
Wyers
vehicle, comand If he does not respond he may be subpoenaed. Richard
plained
of
minor
injuries.
Hoi brooke, assistant secretary of state for eastern and Pacific
Chaffee
was
cited
to
Meigs
affairs, testified in the subcommittee that the Vietnam letter.
County
Court
for
driving
left
was among Nixon's presidential papers and 'not in the State
of
center,
There
was
Department files , He said he is trying to have it made public as
moderate damage.
an historic document
Tom Stump, 18, . Rt. · 1,
LOSANGELES - PATRICL\ HEARTS WAS GlVEN five Cheshire, was charged with
years' probation for robbery and assault with a deadly weapon failure to stop within the
because she is no longer a threat to society and probably never assured . clear distance
will be again, according to the judge and proseeutor, And a following a rear end collision
probation report says Miss Hearst, 23, wants to go to work for at4 :10 p.m. Monday on SR 7
Good Housekeeping magazine, a Hearst publication, if she is at the junction to the
freed from a sevel-year federal prison term for a San Bulaville-AddisQn Rd.
·Officers said Stump's truck
Francisco bank robbery.
struck
the rear end of a car
SUperior Court Judge E. Talbot Callister pronounced the
by Janice Sweesy,
operated
probation sentenee Monday, calling it the most difficult
35,
Rt.
I,
GallipOlis. Mrs.
decision of his seven years as a criminal court judge. Although
she coUld have received a life sentence, the judge said he was Sweesy claimed injury but
placing Miss Hearst on probation beeause she had suffered at was not immediately treated .
(Continued on page 8)

Representatives of the Ohio
Rail Transportation
Authority will conduct a
public meeting conc~rning
possible arrangements for
continuation of rail lreig~t
service over !he Chesapeake
and Ohio tracks in the MeigsGallia Area including from
Hobson to Pomeroy, at I D
a.m. Wednesday at the
Holiday Inn in Kanauga.
The
U.S.
Interstate
Comrerce Commission

•

e

·.•.·

It was a series of questions
from Anderson that eventually doomed the jury.
On one question over SO per
cent of the prospective jurist$
said that they had discussed
the case previously.
On lhene&lt;t question, all but
tw.o of the jurists said they
' either subscribed to or read
the Point Pleasant Register
regularly and on the
following question aU but one
said they had read articles in
the Register pertaining to the
Young case.
.
I Continued on p.1ge 8)

Asbestos dumping charged to FMC

il:::;:;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::.:::::~:::::::::·:·:::::·:::::::::~=::::::::::::::;::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::;:;:;:;:::::::::~~~~

~::News.

armed Sheriff's deputies ,
were also plain clothes police,
Sheriff Jim Hall said that
there had been no threats of
violence, but he did not want
to take any chances.
The original 21 potential
jurists were sworn in at '1:45
p.m. by Circuit Court Clerk
Howard Schultz. The first
jurist was dismissed at this
time when he refused to
swear to the oath, Four other
jurists were dismissed soon
after when they noted that
had formed prior opinions in
the case.

Persons and businesses
presently using Che~sie
System service or interested
in future rail service should
attend Wednesday's meeting.
Those having questions, but
unable to attend , should
contact the· Gallipolis Area
Chamber of Commerce, 16
State St, Gallipolis. Phone
614-446-0~96 or the Meigs
County Rail Service CQmmittee, 480 Broadway Street,
Middleport, !!92..?794.

while traveling north on CR 5
in his Buick he struck a deer
that ran into his path. The
deer kept on running. There
was moderate damage to the
auto.
Deputies are investigating
a traffic accident in Olive
Twp, around 3:30 p.m .
Monday at intersection of CR
50 and SR 124 near the Bertha ·
Randolph residence. An auto
registered to Karen S. Crites,
RL 1, Little Hocking, had
rolled over several times
after its unidentified driver
. lost control in an easy curve.
The vehicle apparently was
being driven north at a high
rate of speed when the
unidentified driver lost
co ntrol and the vehicle
skidded sideways off the road
and rolled over several times
in the field. The vehicle
landed on its top. The 1971
Chevy Nova was heavily
damaged. Deputies thus far
have been unable to contact

MRS. GRACE WEBER, PRINCIPAL of the Riverview Elementary School, Reedsville,
presented an "Award of Appreciation" to Charles Hauber, scoutmas~r of Reedsville Boy
Scout Troop.59. The troop, which meets at t!Je school (luring winter months, has performed
vaned services for the school such as planting, handling parking during school events
painting the playground equipment and making flagholders for the classrooms. The 1?
1 member troop has won numerous awards at camporees including the 1976 National
President's Unit Award with Hauber being named a "Leader of Distinction" in 1976 , The
troop is~ member of the Hock-Hocking District of the Kootaga Area CounciL

was minor damage. either the owner or driver.
A motorcyclist , Donald
Wright, Jr ., 21 , Rt. 1,
Gallipolis, suffered injuries
in an accident at 6:4D p.m . on
SR 160 at Evergreen. State
troopers said Wright's cycle
slammed into the rear of a
car operated by Freel
Tackett, 41, Rt. 1, Bidwell.
Wright had minor cuts and
bruises. There was moderate
damage.
Middleport Mayor Fred S. Corps of Engineers.
Before the Corps would
Hoffman was notified today
consider
spe nding iarge sums
.;:::;:;:;:::;.;:;:::;:::::;:;:::::;:;:;;;:::;:::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::;:;: by the United States Environmental Protection Agency of money in preventing
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
·
that
a grant of $21,900 has further erosion in this area, it
Thursday through
been
awarded to the village is necessary to know if ail of
Saturday, fair Thursday
for
preparation
of a Step I this facility will bc in use and
and Friday and a chance of
for what length of time.
·
Sewage
Facilities
Plan.
showers Saturday. ' Highs
This
money
is
for
75
per
Village officials had inet
will be In the 7Ds or the low
with
the Corps and Ohio EPA
of
the
allowable
costs
in
cent
80s and lows will be In the
representatives
in the fall of
preparation
of
the
plan.
Total
40s Thursday and .In lhe low
1975
and
when
it
was agreed
project
cost
is
estimated
at
or mld 50s Friday and
$29,200.
that
a
Facilities
Plan
would
· Saturday.
The proposed project , have to be made before the
.;:;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;: required
by EPA , is Corps could be involved · in
There

$21,900 grant approved for
Middleport sewage planning

Weather
Clear and cold tonight, with
freezing temperatures likely,
Lows will be between 30 and
35. Surmy Wednesday, with
highs in the mid 60s.
Probability of precipitation is
near zero per cent today,
tonight and Wednesday.

necessary

to

whether
the
existing
wastewater
treatment
facilities of the village will be
adequate to handle projected
increases in population in the
area.

This erosion is due, experts

NOW YOU KNOW
A baby born to Burma's
Orang Sakya tribe Is considered 60 at birth and loses a
year In official age on each
succeeding birthday'\&gt;

where. sanitary sewer s ar e

not available to residents and

how service there can best be
attained, A public meeting
will be held in the near future
when residents will be invited
to give o~inions of what is
needed to Improve the village
sewage system .
The engineerinl.'!: firm

nf

Floyd G. Browne and Asso.,
Ltd., of Canton and M:}riont
Ohio, will be doing the plan
ana has been very instrumental in assisting the

vi llage in obtaining this
grant

determine

A further need for this ·
project is the new EPA
requirements for seeondar~
wastewater treatme nt. It
must be determined what is
TRL\L CANCELLED
the most efficient and
A jury trial scheduled for economical ways the village
Wednesday in the Meigs can
meet
thse
new
County Court for Clifford requirements.
Icenhower has been canThe urgency of this need is
celled, Judge Robert Buck caused by the erosion of the
reports. Juror~ are not to south embankment or the
report for duty.
waste stabilization lagoons.

BOYS TO MEET
All boys who have signed
up to play pony league in
Middleport are to meet at the
bail park Wednesday, ~ :30
p.m.

any ·erosion control problems
in the lagoon area,
Many obstacles were encountered before this grant
was finally approved by the
USEPA . It was through the
excellent cooperation and
ass istance of Cong. Clarence
Miller and officials of the
Ohio EPA that all diffi culties
were finally resolved.
This plan will also include
studies of areas·of the village

agree, to the increase in
water level in the Ohio River
as.a result of the ,construction
of navigation dams by the U.
PLACE CHANGED
The Wednesday evening
meeting of the Bend Area
Concerned Parents will be
held at 7:30 at the Wahama
Senior fllgh School building
instead of the gym as
previously announced.

Old street closed off
The end of Rutland St. in
Middleport
will
be
barricaded off to any vehicles
- · including trail bikes ,
motorcycles and/ four-wheel
drive jeeps - under a
resolution approved Monday
night by Middleport counciL
Residents of the area had
complained of the use of the
street, which Is impassable to
cars, by the noisier variety of
vehicular traffic noted above :
In early days Rutland St.
apparently was a heavily
used wagon and automobile
road that encircled Middleport Hill on its north side ·
providing ,access to the
village from Bradbury.
Council informally agreed
to hold off the barricading "a
few days" pending public
reaction to the proposaL
Mayor Fred Hoffman
announced that Cheryl
· Burdette has been employed
to manage the Middleport

'

Commun ity Park
this
summer. The-mayor thanked
members of the CQuncil Carl Horky, Allen Lee ·King,
Marvin Kelly and Dewey
Horton - for attending with
him the recent meeting held
In reference to a coal loading
tipple at West Columbia.
Mayor Hoffman said he holt
the
t own
was
well
represented at the meeting
held at Wahama High School.
Co uncil approved the April
report of the mayor showing
receipts of $83 in merchant
police collecti ons and
$1,515.9!i in fines and fees, for
a total of $1,598.95,
Council also discussed the
lot in lower Middleport where
wrecked cars are located.
Mayor Hoffman said no more
cars are being placed on the
lot He said he had been in
touch with Solicitor Bernard
Fultz on t~e matter and that
Fultz will confer with the

county sheriff's department
on the disposition of the
vehicles now on the lot.
May or Hoffma n said that
three quotat ions have been
received on a hQse drler

which council will purchase
for .the (ire department The
quotations are all within a $50
ran ge and are all from
reputabl~ companies and
deal with the same identical
product Councliman Horky
recommended purchase of
the equipment fr om the
com pany with the lower
price. The price range is
$2,150 to $2,200. Clerk·
Trellsurer Gene Grate read a
letter from Ashland Oil announcing that all gasoline
raised one-half cent a gallon
as of April 2C.
Council also discussed a
parking problem on South ·
Third Ave., and a trash
problem in an alley area In
lower Middleport.
•

�2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0, Tuesday, May 10, 1977

Thousands of miners
~main

outside pits

BELLAIRE. Ohw (UP!) -Thousands of coal rruners
m Eastern Ohio contmued a wildca t strike today
despite action taken by the Umted Mme Workers Umon
executive board m Morgantown , W Va . Monday.
The UMW International Executive Board derruinded
tha t the Peabody Coal Co rescind a strmgent absentee
pohcy which IS the most serious of a series of diSputes
that has kept rruners off the jobs
UMW District 6 President John Guzek S81d he felt the
board action would get the men back to work But
thousands of mmers apparently did not share that
feeling
The policy. which shortens the amount of tune a
mmer can miSS work without being dismiSSed led
directly tv a stnke more than a month ago at three
Peabody mmes m Coshocton County
Those three rrunes remamed Idle today as about 1 500
rruners at those locations contmued the work stop~ge
"They didn't show up last rught and they didn't show
up for the day shift," s&amp;d a Peabody spokesman at
Coshocton
Aspokesman for ConsolidatiOn Coal Co at CadiZ S81d
"some nunes are open and some mines are not" but
refused to say how many employes returned to work
The dispute at the Peabody mme, fueled by local
grievances at three other mines m Eastern Oh10 led to
"ildcat strikes across l}MW DistriCt 6 which ,;eludes
15,000 mmers m Eastern Ohio and the Northern
Panhandle of West Vrrgmm
The mmers contended that Peabody's policy violated
their 1974 contract aod was unfaiT The mmers kept
pressurmg UMW PreSident Arnold Miller and the
executive board to back theiT demand that the wuon
fight the policy
Monday the board did, but Miller didn't
The board's action - declarmg the Peabody pohcy
at Coshocton to be ' national m scope" -means the
BitliiTllllous Coal Operators Association must declare
the pohcy mval1d or renegotiate 11.
The BCOA has 60 days to respond. If 1t doesn't
Miller, wbo voted agamst the move, could serve not1c~
of a nationWide coal strike.
"If this don't get them back I don't know what the
heck Will," Guzek said Monday mght
"I know some of the men are returm ng at m1drught
tomght and I f.Uy expect them all to be back tomorrow
(Tuesday)," he said "This (the board action) 1s Just
what they wanted "
A spokesman for UMW secretary-treasurer Harry
Patrick said he expected the Ohioans to return
The spokesman S81d Patrick, who Is runmng agamst
Miller thiS year for the presidency, supported the
proposal and believes the District 6 rruners know the
board will fight for them
Mmers m southern West VIrg)ma, who had been out
on strike in sympathy with the District 6 nuners, began
returmng to work Sunday
Durmg the strike, Guzek contended the coal
comparues precipitated It by stockpiling high sulfur
coal which they could not sell.

RECEPTION SET
Mr and Mrs David A
Smith, Reedsville, Will host a
reception for Mary Kibble,
former res1dent now of

California on Sunday, May 15,
from 2 to 4 p m at the
Recreation Hall All friends
and neighbors are mv1ted to
attend

HEALTH
Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.

Oteck exercise plan
DEAR DR LAMB- I tried
After you have done thiS for
the exercises of ra1smg my a couple of weeks and have
feet up, out, back together bUilt up your lower aband down I did thiS 35 t1mes donunal strength, then as you
to tighten my belly
straighten your legs With the
After domg the exerciSes feet off the floor m the last
on two occasions, about two half of the cycle you can stop
weeks apart, I question what and hold your heels off the
lam domg wrong. After each floor for a short mterval Be
time my legs felt heavy for sure you are abl~ to hold your
about three days
abdommal muscles tight durI am 43 years old, male, mg this phase
weigh slightly under 150, am
IndiVIduals with weak
5 feet 10 and run a nule 10 backs should check how they
seven mmutes five tunes a plan to do such exercises with
week.
their doctors before startmg
Does lifting the feet cause a program or they may have
the blood to flow m an un- more trouble than you have
natural way and therefore · had For very weak people
cause the problem?
you can do one leg at a tune
When I lift my legs without WJtil you gam more strength
spreading them out and back
And you should be consis·
I don 't seem to have the tent One day of overdomg 1t
tiredness m legs ·
followed by a week or more of
DEAR READER - It domg nothing will not help
shouldn't affect the ciTcula· you and can be harmful
tion to your legs but if you
Smce you want to "tighten
have any tendency to have up your belly" I am sending
hack problems the way you you The Health Letter
are domg 1! may affect spmal number 3-7, Girth Control·
nerves to that area.
Avmdmg the Big Middle
What are you domg wrong• Others who want th1s Issue
Quite a bit F1rst you should ca n send 50 cents WJth a long,
start at a low level - perhaps stamped, self-addressed
f1ve tunes a day and gradual- envelope for It Just send
ly mcrease the amount
your request to me m care of
Then you need to be sure this newspaper ' P 0 Box
you are contractmg your 1551, Radio City Station, New
lower abdommal muscles York, NY .10019
and not sun ply strammg your
DEAR DR. LAMB hack muscles You do that by Would you please explam
,consciOusly tightenmg your what platelets (thromabdommal muscles as you do bocytes) are" What 'effects
the exercise.
do they have on people"
l thinlut IS better to change
DE A R R E ADE R
tlfe way you do vour )eg lifts Platelets are small oval
too. First brmg your feet up shaped cells foWJd normally
to your buttocks, then push m your blood They are unthem up, out and back down portant m blood clottmg
to the floor You will be mak· mechamsms Individuals
lng a circle With your feet Without enough healthy
Since your feet will be up platelets may have blood
with a stiOrt lever arm, clottmg d,Iseases
The
because of the bent knees you platelets tend to clump
won't put so much sudden together at , the Site of
leverage on your back bleeding and also Influence
IIIUICles as you are domg the contractioo of the clot
wltb a straight lift of your
There are about 250,000
feet fl'lllll the floor with your platolets m one IJU!lihter
curn111t method
• There are about three to four
ml ma teaspoon.
•

Carter diplomacy set back by Turkey, Greece

By HELEN THOMAS
UPI White House Reporter
LONDON
( UP! )
President Carter, wrappmg
up hiS first missiOn abroad,
ran mto h1s ftrst diplomatic
setback Wday m a series of
meetmgs before he J&lt;!lted
NATO with a stern warrung
agamst a Soviet m1Utary
buIldup m Europe
Before delivering the
keynote speech to a NATO
mirUsterial meeting, Carter
met With Turkish Premier
Suleyman Demirel and
apparently failed m hiS effort
to solve the TurkiSh-Greek
dispute over Cyprus A U S
Uiplomatic source said Carter
got ~~ nowhere ," though he
predicted
congressional
approval of a major new
arms sale to Turkey
So far, Carter has achieved
a senes of tnumphs He
became a hero of northern
England with a campaignstyle visit to George
Washington 's ancestral
home He patched up serwus
differences with the West
German and French leaders
and he achieved a maJor
breakthrough toward Middle
East peace m a talk with
Synan President Hafez
Assad
Throughout h1s VISit he has
reiterated his stance on
human rights and m a tough
NATO, speech he stressed
that his concern for hwnan
nghts IS not an attempt to
unpose political or social
arra ngements on other
countries but that he wants
the world to know his
stateme nts
are
' an

Variety show
bug success
at Southern

expression of the most deeply
felt values of the American
people "
Carter pledged the Uruted
Sta tes would build up Its
military strength agamst the

James Callaghan opened the
meeting with a warning the
West IS deeply concerned by
the amount the Soviets are
military
spendmg
on

Communist Warsaw Pact's

A familiar fa ce JOined the
stampede of photographers
at Banqueting House as
Carter and other NATO
leader s filed onto the
platform for the openmg of
the sumrmt session
Jeff Carter, the President's
24-year-&lt;&gt;ld son clicked away
at hiS father and the other
leaders who were seated at a
long table
Carter, who f11es back to
Washmgton tomght, met
durmg the day with Derrurel,
Ramalho Eanes and Greek
Prune MirUster Constantine
CaramaniS
Caramanlis and Derrurel,
m London for the NATO
sumrrut, were to brief Carter
on theiT VIews about Cyprus,
• the Mediterranean Island
wi th a Greek Cypriot
maJ or1ty and Turkish Cypriot
minority Turkey mvaded

uorrensl ve

posture It

m

Europe and called on the
NATO &amp;Illes tv do the same
He sought to ease European
resentment at the preponderance of U.S. weapons m
NATO by calling for a
genuine two:way transAtlantic traffic m trade and
defense equipment
Before NATO mJmsters sat
down to theiT first business
sess1on at Lancaster House
today, there was a half hour
ceremonial openmg session
In the
17th Century
m
Banqueting
House
Whitehall where Carter and
the other economic summit
leaders Sunday announced
their program to beat
unemployment and
InflatiOn
Carter listened attentively
as Brillsh Prune MmiSter

purposes

Generation Rap
By Helen imd Sue Hottel

.::

Pot Calls the Kettle Black ...
Rap
These two friends have nice personatllles and are fun to be
with - so far
But one has been on drugs for seven moa.ths and the other
IS mto heavy sex - the !WJ and games-tdtj(J
The doper runs down the sexpot, saymg she'll stay VIrgin
till marriage The sexy number dings her friend -she'd never
~' do

Junk "

Each critiCizes the other to me, unplytng how superiOr her
chOice 1s I'm concerned, but I feel like screaming because I'm
notmto either Should I tell tbem to JUSt shut up , or what" - T
y

Dear T
We think a firm "Shut Up'" would get the message across
better than lectures Let your friends know you can't take Sides
when you're turned off by what each does. But don't act
RACINE - "Happy Days" superiOr Just state the !acts theiT choices worry you, but
a vanety show mixed with smce you ca n't change them, then "! don 't want to hear about
comedy
presented
at 1t 1" - HELEN AND SUE
Southern Hi gh School In
+++
Racme Friday was termed a
NOTE FROM HELEN I sense these friends are uSing you
huge success The show was to JUStify themselves Be frank m saymg you aren't fascmated
under the direction of Mrs by their escapades If others react Ukewise, peer diSapproval
Lee Lee
may show.them there are better chmces.
•
All numbers were talent
+++
packed Okey Kiser, who Rap
sang "Don't Give Up on Us"
I've been gomg with John for two years Recently Mom
was given a standmg ovatiOn and I had an argument I want to giVe him an expensive watch
His number was mterrupted for high school graduation, but Mom says It's wrong for a gll"l
several tunes by applause. to give such high'prlced presents.- WRONG OR RIGHT
-Usa Allen was outstandmg
m an acrobati c comedy Wor R
number when she formed
"Wrong" Isn't the right word An expensive gift m thiS
ABC With her body Debbie case nught be mappropnate because
Brown acted as a teacher m
1. You (or your parents) can'treally afford it
2 Your boyfriend ought be embarrassed if he planned a
the number.
Other outstanding numbers less costly gift for you (There have been break-ups over such
were " E~erythmg's Commg thingS )
3. He may feel trapped- as if you've put a down payment
Up Roses" by Larry Fisher
who opened the show , Scott on hbn
4. - And should you part, who gets the watch? - HELEN
Wolfe domg a comedy
.
+++
monologue; "The Way of
AWORD FROM SUE And make sure he too understands
Love" by VIcki Boso whose
number was mterrupted by about expensive gifts Unless you're engaged, It's best to keep
applause; "Evergteen" by them down
He1d1 Ashley; a comedy
+++
number by Scott Souder, Rap .
I'm the girl who came back drunk from schoollWJch hour
"Heard It In a Love Song" by
Steve Boso which was m- and my folks grounded me, saying I couldn't date till I was 18
You saJd (m a personal letter) that if I proved myself terrupted by applause,
Donme Duddmg who served and really discussed my feelmgs With them -I'd probably be
as master of ceremomes m a "sprung" before my column-letter reached prmt You were
take off of the TV Gong Show n ght1I'm doing !me now , thanks to your adv1ce.
Believe me, booze isn't worth all the trouble I went
was well received especially
when Duddmg was hit by a through My folks and I are very close again, maybe closer
pie by an Irate loser; "The than ever I'm out of the house - and I can date 1(And I'm not
Way We Were" by Jams 18) - SANDY
Carnahan, also interrupted
by applause, "Don't Go
Breakmg My Heart" by Ktm
Taylor and Denms Wolfe, was
UNITED STATES
has fded here an ad mtenm
DISTRICT COURT
st tp u latlon for value w1th a
well received; Bubs and Tubs
SOUTHERN DISTRICT
su r ety approved by th 1S
a comedy pantomine by
OF OHIO
Court representing the value
Bunm McGr aw and Jeff
WESTERN DIVISION
of the pi a mt•ff 's mterest m
AT CINCINNATI
tne atorementroned
Barg e
Thornton , "Gom' Out of My
C•v•l Act1on No
No 114, p tus p endt ng t re •ght
Head" and "Can't Take My
C l 77:232
tf any, the undertaking of
Eyes Off You" by Larry IN THE M ATTER OF THE whtch s that the ptamf•ff ,
COM PL AI N T
OF
TRI . wrthtn ten ( 10 ) days after t he
Fisher , backed by Heidi STATE
MATERIALS
ent r y of an Order heretn
Ashley and Becky Crow was COR POR AT ION AS OWNER appra rsmo the val ue of the
T HE BARGE NO 11.1
pla rnttff'S rnt.erest •n sa•d
well recmved and mterrupted OF
FOR
EXONERATION
barge, pl us pend.n g f re•ght , 1f
by applause
FROM OR LIMITAT ION OF
any will pay t he emou n t so
f txed m to lh ts Court or wtll
The !mal 50's scene was LIABILITY
f tle m the Court a sttpu tafton
well received featunng Larry TO THE PRESIDENT OF tor value m th e usual form
and.._wlth approved surety
Fisher, Tony Carnahan, Okey THE UNITED STA TE S
YuU ARE THEREFORE ,
THE MARSHAL OF THE
Kiser and Scott Souder and TO
UNITED STAT E S FO R THE
COMMANDED to ctte a!l
SO UTHER N D ISTR I CT OF
persons tn respect to wh1ch
the entire cast
.
WESTER N
tn e plalnttff seeks !rmitat1on
Accompanymg Mrs Lee OHIO
DIVISION
AT
C IN
to file the ir respectiVe cia 1ms
were Pete Sunpson at the Cl f.lN ATI
w tth t he Clerk of Cou rt and t o
MONITION
serve on or m i!t 11 to Gordon c
organ; Dave Spencer on
G reene cop1es ther eof on o r
drums, Terry Norns and Eric GREETI N G
before t he 22nd day of Ju n e,
WHEREAS , a Complatnt
and
cttl ng
such
19 77 ,
Chambers guitars The show
was f lied m the United St ates
c l a ima nt s to appear and
wa~ presented by the choiT at Otsfrtct , Court
for
the
answer the Comp la tnf herem
Southern H1gh.
Sou the rn Otslnct of OhiO,
on or before the last named
Western

THEDAILYSENTINEL
DEVOTED TO 11JE

INTEREST OF
MEIGS.MASON AREA
CHESTER L. TANNEHilL
E~et Ed
ROBERT HOEFLICH
Clly Edltor
Published Wuly eJ:cept Saturday
by The Ohio Valley Publlshint,: Comany, 111 Court St , Pomeroy Ohio
45769 8USU1ess Office Phone 99'2·

2156 Edltonal Phone992·21S7
Second c\us postage JWUd at
Pomero) Ohio
National advertLSmg representative Ward Grifl1th Company,
Inc, BoUmelli and Gallagher DIV
i'S7 Th1rd Av~ Ntw York N y'
10017

Sutwscnr,t.ion rates Dehvered by
cl:lrner w wre ttvaU~tble 75 cenu per
~tek By Motor

Route where Ciirtler

service not ttvatlable, One monlh
S3 25 By nUl II In OhiO !lnd W Va
CW.e Yea r $22 1)0, Stx months'
'II 50 Three montlu; $7 00Elsewhe rt! S26 00 yc1:11 S1x rnvnl.hs
$13 50, Tlu'et rnunths 17 ~
Sub:it:rlptivn pti&lt;;c Includes Sunda)

Timt.'IMSI.:nUm:l

"

Dtv rston , at

em

c tnnatr , on the 26th day of
April , 1977 , t;y Tr l State
Matertals Corporatton , as
owner of the Barge No 114,
for exonera t ion from or
lrmttat Jon of l iability praymg
for eJConera t lon f rom or
limi t ation of ! lability con
ce rnm g any loss or damage
occastoned by or anslng out
or the acctdent or casualty set
forth 10 t he aforesaid Com
ptamt to r th e r eas ons and
causes '" !&gt;a 1d Comptamt
mentroned, and pray1nQ that
a monltron and lntun ct 1on for
t hose reasons be 1ssued ancf,
that all p er sons clar mlng fo r
any and all damage ca u sed
by or resultmg from the
accident or ca su alt Y set for th
rn sa1 d Com pta rn t be th ereb y
Ctted to appear and f i l e th e tr
respective clatms wtth the
Clerk of ttus Court and to
make due process thereon ,
and c l trng them to f ile th etr
Answers to the Com pla int,
and a ll the procet"dtngs bemg
had , tf 11 should appear that
satd plarnttff rS not !table for
any l oss or damage tt may be
so ftn ally deue ed b y th •s
Cou rt and
WHEREAS, S&amp;ld platntlff

~ay or w rfh rn suet'\ fur- ther
f tme as ttle Court may grant,
and what you have done 10 the
prem tses do you then make
return to the Coi.Jrt tog e ther
wtfh thrs wr tt
WITNESS, the Honorable
T1moth y S Hogan, Judge of
the United States Dl sl nct
Court for
the Southe rn
O ts fn ct of Oh ro, Western
Olv 1Slon at Ctnclnnatr. thts
76th day of Apnl

JOHN 0 LYTER
CLERK
By

K L Faulkner
Deputy Clerk

LUCIAN V RAY
1550
Unton
Commerce
Bu lldrng
Clevel a nd , OhiO 44115
and
GO RDON C G REENE
91 0 Athens Bank -9urleling
Ct ncrnnall , Oh ro 45202
Tncst A tt orneys for
Tr• Ste te Mater ia ls
porat•on

lSI

10.

~

2A, 31. Ale

Cor

constructive
assess prospects for an early full and
movement
toward
a discUSSLon on ways in which
negotiated settlement of the security In the region COUld
Cyprus problem and how the be assured by adoptloo of
demilitarized zones or other
Uruted States could help
Clifford concluded that a security arrangements."
Officials said Carter did noe
settlement was possible this
year if both sides showed plan to have a newa
cooference WJtU after he
good !81th
Aa Carter's trip neared its retuniS to Washington.
He was scheduled to leave
end, adminiStration offiCials
Judged 1t a success They said London for Andrews Air
potential confrontations With Force Base at 2.30 p.m. EDT
European leaders were reachmg Washington e~gtrt
avoi ded
and Carter's hours later.
bilateral sessiOns With West
German Chancellor Hebnut
Schmidt
and
French
&amp;·:::..-:.:*::: ··~~ ::.: • ::~~"?" President Valery GIScard
MEETING SET
d'Estamg at least partly
·~
A meeting of scout leaders
soothed stramed relatiOns
With Bonn and PariS.
- and assiStants scheduled for
Wednesday night at the ColThe of!IC18ls sa1d Carter's umbus and Southern Ohio
meeting Monday m Geneva Electric Co. by Mrs. Pat
With Syrl8n Prestdent Hafez
Thoma, semce urut director,
Assad was one of hiS most has been changed to Tuesday,
successful w1th an Arab May 17 at 7.30 p m Camp
leader so far
TUESDAY
folders Will be distributed at
Both vmced hope their taiks
AMERICAN
Legion
that tune and representahves
Auxiliary, Lewis Manley Post had unproved the prospects of all troops are asked to at263, 2 p m Tuesday at the for Middle East peace They tend
home of Mrs. Campbell had what Carter 's national
security assistant, Zb1gruew
Han&gt;er
Brzezmsk1 , called "QUite a
MEIGS CoWJty Chapter 53
DAY Tuesday, at DAY home,
PRACTICE CALLED
Mrs June VanVranken has
Butternut Ave , Pomeroy,
called a practice for the
7 30 p m. District mne
commander, Arthur L. Leach
VoiCes of Uberty Chorus for 8
of Jackson will attend and
p.m. Wednesday rught at the
mstall chapter officers for
Pomeroy Uruted Methodist
ENJOYING VISIT
1977 and 1978
Church
The chorus will sing
MaXIne Michael has spent
at
the
American Legwn's
HARRISONVILLE Chap- time visitmg Mr and Mrs
Memorial
Day semce to be
ter, Order of the Eastern Grover Arnold of Lancaster
Star, Tuesday, 8 p m at the and IS now With Mr and Mrs held at the Pomeroy stadium
temple with practice to follow Larry MIChael and famJiy at All members are urged to attend and others mterested m
regular meeting All offi cers Gallon
Jommg
are mv1ted to the
urged to attend
practice.
MEIGS County Better
Livestock DaiTy 4-H Club,
WARNING MADE
Tuesday, 8 15 at the home of
Syracuse Fire Chief, Clyde
POSTPONED
Davie Burt
Triplett, warned today that
A
meetmg
of tbe Wmding
WEDNESDAY
any youngster found tam· Trail Garden Club scheduled
WHITE Rose Lodge, 1 :W permg With the coke machme
p m Wednesda y at the at the Syracuse Fire Station for torught has been postponed WJtii May 18 at the home of
American LegiOn Hall in will be cited to court
Mrs. Wilma Terrell.
Middleport
POMEROY • Middleport
Lions Club, 12 noon, at the
Meigs Inn Wednesday All
Lions urged to attend
POMEROY Chapter 80,
Roya l Arch Masons, stated
convocatiOn, Wednesday,
7· 30 p m at the Pomeroy
PoUyCramer
Masonic Temple. All regular
comparuons urged to attend
BOSWORTH Council 46 ,
Royal and Select Masters,
8 30 p m., Pomeroy Masonic
Temple
DEAR POLLY- Do you, the dram, loosemng the roll a
MIDDLEPORT Literary or any of the readers, have a bit to allow space for air to
Club, 2 p m Wednesday at method for removmg appli· get through 1!. The cold water
the home of Mrs Bert que glue-ons from a bathtub? nnse stiffens the rubber OcGrunm, Letart Falls Mrs 1 MRS L.RF
CB!!IOnally I go over the back
Robert FISher Will review
With a stiff brush. - ALMA
DEAR MRS L.R.F Golda MelT's book, " My Work the edges loose until
DEAR POLLY - I have a
Ufe " Roll call will be a you can get a firm grip on a Simple and easy cleanmg
famous Jew
corner and then p.U off Add method for removmg chewANNUAL
Mother· water If it IS hard to pull. mg gum from fabncs, hatr
Daughter banquet to be held AdhesiVe and leftover bits and other places where the
at St. Paul's Lutheran Church can be removed With linseed use of Ice IS not effective
for St Paul and St {ohn's oil or lacquer thinner. If you Even bubble gum, which is
Churches at 6 301 p.m do not like to work with either more stubborn than regular
Wednesday
of these because of the fire gum, comes off With a little
MIDDLEPORT Amateur
hazard, use a good household extra tune and effort.
Gardeners, 8 p m Wednes- cleanser - POLLY
Place a small amoWJt of
day at the home of Mrs
DEAR POLLY -My Pet peanut butter on the gum
Harold Lohse With Mrs Peeve IS With those people After~ bit of rubbmg With the
James Sheets as co-hostess, who turn theiT radios down fmgers, the gum IS dissolved
Guest speaker Will be Fumiko but not off It Is so easy to by the peanut butter, Most of
Iwasaki, Japanese exchange forget 11 IS on and 1t uses the resulting mess can then
student at Meigs High school. energy So why not turn It be easily lifted off with a d.U
BEND AREA concerned definitely on or off.
knife A bit of paper towel
Parents, 7 p m Wednesday at
I keep a shoe box With a lid will then absorb most of what
the Wahama H1gh School on tt to hold all the IS left. The !mal step IS to use
GymnasiUm Topics to be guarantees, mstructions, etc. soap and water. Try It. You
covered
Include
the that come with various will come to believe 11 as I
questionnaiTe answered by household Items we buy. did.-EDITH
junior and semor high They are always handy and
DEAR EDITH - I am
students regarding the easily found for reference
already a believer and have
school's drug and alchohol
I had a short piece of rub- been for many years. I can
situahon,
needed Im- ber backed carpet with a remember my mother
provements and other school short pile and cut It m SIX· removmg chewmg gwn from
problems All parents and mch squares that are ruce to a fnend's long red hatr With
mterested citiZens Invited to set bottles on that IJUght drip peanut butter. - POLLY.
attend
DEAR POLLY - One of
on my dresser They would
those foots1es" that we wear
make mce coasters, too THURSDAY
under our shoes when no
HARRISONVILLE Chap- MARTHA
stockings
are worn always
ter, OES, annual mspect 10n
DEAR POLLY - Your
enrls
up
With
a hole on the bot·
Pomter
for
Alice
regarding
7 30 p m Thursday In:
tom
so
I
use
them as dust
spectmg officer Will be Sylvia the black spots on the back of
They
fit
nicely on the
cloths
Midkiff, deputy grand her bathroom mat were very
hand,
are
soft
and do not
matron. Members to take good for a remedy, but I
scratch
!me
furniture.
potluck
would Uke to tell her how to
MRS
BS.
MEIGS County Humane prevent thiS from happerung.
Polly will send you one of
Society, 7·30 Thursday at the After dral1llllg the water out
Thrift shop across from the of the tub I loosen the mat, her signed thank-you
rinse It on both stdes with newspaper coupon clippers if
Post Office in Pomeroy
clean warm water and then she uses your favorite
REVIVAL services In follow thiS with a cold water Pointer, Peeve or Problem m
progress at the Syracuse nnse I roll it up the short her column Wr1te POLLY'S
Church of the Nazarene now way and stand It on end near POINTERS m care of this
through Sunday, May 15, 7 :W
newspaper.
mghtly Evangelist IS the
Rev Gene Clark of Fmdtay.
There will be special music
and something extra special
for the children at each
service The pubhc Is
welcome to attend Pastor IS
Rev Dale T Bass.
eyprufm 1974 after a Greekinspired
coup
briefly
overthrew
President
Archbi.shop Makar1os
-Intercommunal talks
between Greek and Turki.sh
CypTiot representatives
resumed 111 February with
the alUI of establishing an
mdependent, nonaligned,
bicommunal federal
repubtlc.
Clark Clifford, a former
US Defense Secretary,
VISited Greece, Turkey and
Cyprus m late February as
Carter's special envov to

t

I

Social
Calendar

POLLY.$ POINTERS

Bathtub stuck with apPliques

11

Gallia Junior High

tops Meigs, Wellston

FRIDAY
MARY SHRINE 37, Order
of the White Shrine of
Jerusalem, will meet at 8
p m. Friday at the Pomeroy
Masoruc Temple Officers are
to meet at 7 p.m. for a practice sessiOn
SUNDAY
PUBUC RECEPTION for
Mary Kibble, fonner resident, to be held SWJday from
2 to 4 p m at the Recreation
Hall, Reedsville. All fnends
and neighbors mv1ted by
hosts, Mr. and Mrs. Dav1d A.
Smith

The Gallipolis Juruor High
track and field team defeated
viSitmg Meigs and Wellston
m a triangular meet on
Memorial Field Monday
evening
Fmal score was Gallipolis
49~ . Wellston 41 and Meigs35~.

Wellston won five firsts,
GAitS four and Me1gs three
Here are Monday's results:
1110 YARD DASH - King,
12.1
220 YARD DASH - King.
W - 269
4~0 YARD
DASH

w-

•

Montgomery , w - 61 5•
880· YARD RUN - Beaver
'
M - 2 419
THREE QUARTER MILE
- Browning, M - J· 59 6
120· LOW HURDLES
Gauze. G 17 6
440 RELAY - Won by
Meigs in . 58 9
880 RELAY - Won by
Wellston In 1 54 8
SHOT ~.uT - Mitchell. G
37 · 6
(Tied school
record) •
DISCUS - Petrella, G -

107'-7" (new school record)
LONG

JUMP Mon
tgomery, W - 16'-11.4 "
HIGH JUMP - Roberts G
- 4' 10" ( n&amp;w school r"'fr'd)

3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Tuesday, May 10, 1977

Eagles upset favored Tornadoes in tournament
Sport Parade
By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sports Editor

RACINE - In a major
turnaround in Class A sectional baseball tournament
play, the viSiting Eastern
Eagles upset highly favored
Southern Monday evenmg, 64 behind a !me team per·
formance
Sophomore Dan Spencer
tossed one of his fmest games
as he limited the usually hot
Tornado bats to just SIX hits,
fanned three, and walked
eight

Fme
team
defense
prevented the Tornados from
cashmg m on the eight walks
At one tune the Tornados
had runners on !1rst and
second w1th nobody out and
the EagleS" turned th e double
play. In the last mnmg,
behmd by two runs, the
Tornados had the sa me
situatiOn and two !me stops
by eastern shortstop J1m
Davis resulted in key putouts
Southern took a 3-0 lead m

the bottom of the second
when Scott Wolfe, Steve
Hendn cks a nd Richard
Teaford drew walks Then
En c Dunnmg got one home
on a bu nt smgle, Greg Cundiff
hit a sacnfl ce fl y, a nd
another run scored on a
throwing miscue by the
catcher.
Eastern narrowed the gap
to 3-1 m the top of the fourth
when Rusty Wigal was safe
on an error, advanced on a

smgle by Bryan Bissell and
scored on an error by the
ca tcher Southern got that
run back m Its half of the
lr&amp;me when Richard Teaford
Jed off with a tnple and
scored on a sacrifice fly
Eastern won It In the top of
the hrst sconng four times
when David Carpenter and
Joe Kuhn led off with walks,
lJttle smgled m one run ,
another came home on a
sacnflce fly, and other on

CLARKSDALE, Miss (UP I) - CharUe Conerly sits In hili
favorite chair, the black leather one m hili livmg room and IS
perfectly relaxed
'
Only for 30 seconds, though
Then he gets up and paces Uke a caged tiger
Go back 25 years or so, and he was no different with the New
In the top or the 2nd, after the game mto the Iaugher biTthday, Wayland his
York Giants
SHERIDAN - True to
When the other team had the bail, he couldn't wait to get form, the Meigs Marauders losmg pitcher Flaut had category with ftve more runs doubl e, and Browmng,
hack•out there agam He'd pace up and down the sidelines advanced to the sectwnal fanned three batters m the m the siXth. The big blow wa s Crenson Pratt and Brian
HamJiton each hit smgles
a double by Wayland
anxtously until the Giants got possession agam
finals m AA baseball tour- first , Meigs got all the runs 1!
Meigs IS at Jac~son tomght
Coach Oale Hamson atNow m hiS livmg room, he tries watchmg Los Angeles and naey competltton by troun- needed by plating three
for
a league contest, then
Portland in the NBA's Western DivisiOn champiOnship playoff
the
tourney
success
tributed
cmg host Sheridan 15-1 m tallies Shortstop Gregg of Meigs, which IS now 5-11 , to returns to tourney actiOn
and It's no use
Morgan County Monday Smith led off with a walk and
Conerly gets up out of his chair.
two other rUMers reached on the winning tournament Thursday
evenmg
tradition as the re gional Sheridan pitchers fann ed
"He's restless," says his WJderstanding wife, Perian.
Ace righthander Dale an error and hit bstsman
"C'mon ," says the 55-year-old former quarterback, "let's go
defendmg champs committed mne but gave up 11 \\alks
Browning turned m another One run scored when catcher
H1ttmg smgles for the losers
downtown I wanna show you my store "
!me perfonnance, I uniting Rick Johnson reached on an no errors and unleashed 10. were Russler, Smith, and
Conerly gets mto hili car and IS at hili store m a few nunutes.
hit attack He also said that
the Generals to three hits m error and Ra y Andrews
The sign on top says Charles Conerly's Name Brand DIScount
Shendan made many mental Flautt The Generals now are
in
t"o
runs
smgled
p1ckmg
up
the
wm,
gomg
the
' Shoes He and hiS partner, Tony MalvezZI, started m this store
Meigs blew It open m the mistakes tbat his Marauders at 5·16
distance, fannmg four and
By innings
m 1964, three years after Conerly had retired from pro football
thtrd, scormg slx times took advantage of
walkmg
four
035 015 0- 15 10 0
Leadmg hitters for Meigs Meigs
followmg 14 years With the Giants
Sheridan took the lead at I· Smith led off with a home run
"People I knew m MemphiS who were m the wholesale end of
over the left centerfield fence were Andrews , three smgles, Shendan 100 000 0- 1 3 3
1 3 3
the busmess approached me about openmg a store here in 0 In the bottom of the first and the other five runs were and Smith, who besides his
when leadoff batter Russler
Browmn g and Johnson
1964," he explams. "We did, and opened lOur more m the next
scored on four smgles and home run got four waiks m
five years SIX years ago, Tony and I bought out the people who smgled, advanced on a walk four walks Meigs added five at bats Junior Kenny Flautt (LP ). Haley (3) , and
got us started. Now we've got stores throughoUt the state In and scored on a fielder's smgle runs m the fifth and put Young had two smgles on his Poole
Grenada, Meridian, Jackson, Vicksburg , Greenville and choice.
Greenwood.''
Conerly goes upstrurs to hili office It contains a desk, a photv
of one of the local Little League baseball teams sponsored by
the store and an unpress1ve color poster on the"all.
The poster shows Charlie, not ln a football uniform but m a
cowbov outfit.
It IS the picture which has been seen by millions all over thiS
coWJtry and others as well. In magazmes, on billboards and on
teleVISIOn It's the picture of the Marlboro Man, adverUsmg
that brand of cigarettes You know "Come to Where the
Flavor IS - Come to Marlboro Country "
Side With the bases filled " rWJs m the second mnin g en Angels 5, Royals 3·
Originally, Jack Landry, a fr1end of Charlie's, told hun he
By FRED DOWN
Terry Humphrey hit his
"The biggest complunent route to their fifth straight
would be paid $100 for hiS picture.
UPI Sports Writer
first
homer of the season, a
VIctory
RICk
Reuschel,
5-l
,
"For what•" mqwred Conerly, still with the Giants.
AI Hrabosky IS pitching on the road IS a standing
solo
shot
m the second mrung,
needed
three
mmngs
of
oneLandry explained but Charlie was still dubiOus
Without his mustache this boo," he laughed "This year,
and
rookie
outfielder Gii
hit
relief
from
rookie
Willie
"Well, c'mon," urged Lllndry "It'san easy way to make year but with the same now that I'm clean-shaven,
Flores
scored
two other runs
d1sconcertmg tactics that they don't recogruze me Hernandez
$100 "
m
the
Angels'
victory. Joe
White
Sox
6,
Rangers
3·
Smce then, the price went up, and although Conerly hasn't gave hun the mckname "Mad They have to waJt until my
Rud1
also
doubled
m an
Jun
Ess1an
snapped
a
3-3
posed for the last four years, hili picture still IS bemg used
HWJgarian" and make hun name IS announced before
rWJ
for
Califorma
msurance
he
With
a
two.;un
Sixth
mmng
"It was lots of fun," says Charlie "I went all over the one of the basebail's most they boo me That hurts "
The wm , m the nationally double whil e Jorge Orta m the eighth, his 29th RBI of
country and m MeXIco, too I enJoyed dOing 1t It wasn't hard effective relievers
drove home three other runs the year Wayne Sunpson,
work and I got to make some mce trips
Hrabosky turned m one of teleVIsed game, moved the for Chicago with a two.;un with rehef from Paul
"I'm not a professiOnal model but I had ridden horses before h1s
most
sensatiOnal Cardin als to withUI one game
I remember one tune we were m this little ole bitty cowtown m performances Monday mght of the 1Irst1Jiace Pittsburgh homer and a smgle Ken Hartzell, was the wmner,
Texas somewhere near Amarillo, and I was up on this horse .. when the Cardinals beat the Pira tes In th e NatiOnal Brett, 4-2, spaced nm~ hits as squarmg his record at 2-2
the White Sox recorded tlierr A's 2, Red Sox 1·
The photographer was trymg to get hili picture and the horse Cincmnatl Reds, 6-5, on Ted League East
Mitchell Page knocked m
wm m !herr last seven
Sixth
Elsewhere, the Chicago
was buckm'. I was hangm' on for dear life The real cowboys Sinunons' homer leading off
both
the A's runs with a !Ir&gt;tgames
all
on
the
road
watchin' were all laughin' . 'l'hey told me to qUit spurrm' him
the bottom of the lOth mning Cubs downed Houston, 6-1, m Blue Jays 10, Marmers 4
mnmg smgle and a fifthAll f was trymg to do was hang on but I was spurrm' the horse and dealt the twotune world the only other National
tnnmg tnple and VIda Blue
Dou~
Ault
hit
a
three.;un
and didn't even know It,"
,
champions thelf sixth League game, while m the homer m the fourth mmng, pitched a Six-&lt;utter for hiS
Before commg to the Giants m 1948, Charlie was an All· straight loss
American League, the
Chicago
White Sox put away his sixth of the season , and third VICtory In five deCISIOnS
America quarter hack at the University of MISSISSippi, 60 mJles
Hrabosky struck out
fellow rookie AI Woods drove Butch Hobson homered for
from here
George Foster, Johnny Bench Texas, 6-3, Torontv romped m two other runs on a palT of the Red Sox as Reggie
They called hun Chuckm ' Charlie With the Giants because he and Bob Bailey with the bases Seattle, 10-4, Califorma
could really whip the ball and was rarely mtercepted. In 1959, filled in the nmth mnmg and downed Kansas City, 5.J, and smgles m the first matchup Cleveland suffered the loss
between the new AL
he threw 194 passes -only four were picked off.
got the extra break he needed Oakland mpped Boston, 2-1
expanSion
clubs Ault now
"Good blockmg, " he offers as the reason
m the loth when right fielder Cubs 6, Astros 1·
has
24
RBI
,
while Woods, who
The Cubs took advantage of
"1 can see more than one receiver What's that word they Mike Anderson threw out Ray
use ? Peripheral VISIOn. Besides, I knew what my receivers Knight With the potential three walkS, a hit batsmen was 4-fot-'i, IS h1ttmg 376
were gonna do That helped "
Wlllllmg rWJ at the plate and a Wild pitch to score four
Conerly, who played WJtil he was 40 and helped the Giants to Keith Hernandez had tied the
the NFL champiOnship m 1956, still follows them and IS score at 5-6 for the Cardinals
distressed at how poorly they've done the last few years. ,
with a homer off Rawly
"It hurts me," he says "I'm sure they're trym' hut 1 don't EastWJck in the eighth
lalow what the answer IS • "
"I dream of these tight
sttuauons," said Hrabosky
after the game "This IS the
first tune I've struck out the
Each tourmg entourage InBALTIMORE (UPi) cludes
three 40.b) -3-foot vans
Preakness
Week,
featurmg
•.
.
with
air
cushiOn suspensiOn
season
more
than
60
events
from
FaiTiand erupted for three
Monday,
Brent
Johnson
and
thiCk
rubber floormg to
parades
to
boat
races
to
a
Tbe Class A Sectional
runs In the second mmng,
was
the
losmg
pitcher.
ease
the
ri
gors of standing
Jazz
concert,
begms
track meet will be held
then held on to defeat
~~
ve
nt
fan
s and msulatwn
went
four
mmngs,
Johnson
Thursday
at
the
Inner
Harbor
beginning Thursday at 9
Gal11pohs 4-2 m Monday's
assure
fresh
air and
Terry
Wall
two
the
Budweiser
a.m. on the Rio Graude where
Class AA sectional sem1flnal
The
Blue
Devils
managed
comfortable
temperatures,"
College
track . Par- Clydesdales w1il make an
baseball game at Fairland.
he smd
·
llelpating teams Include appearance
The Dragons will meet only four hits off Clark One
of
them
was
a
first
1nnmg,
Chip Ferguson of the BalCrooksville, Miller ,
Ironton Thursday for the
tw!Hlut
home
run
by
Gary
Promotion Coun01l
timore
Alexaader
,
Easteru
sectional champiOnship.
Swain
Johnson
and
Wall,
S81d
Monda
y there Will be two
(Meigs),
Kyger
Creek,
Ironton ousted South Pomt 8-7
along
with
Mark
Dobson
also
e1ghthor
se
teams
commg to
North Gallla, the SVAC
Monday evenmg
had
safeties
for
the
lo3ers
Maryland,
one
from
St Louis
track champs; Oak Hill,
The Blue Devils, 9-5
The
wmners
had
only
three
and
the
other
from
South Webster, Ports·
overall, will host rampaging
LE GAL NOT ICE
hits
off
the
two
GAHS
mouth Notre Dame, Ports- Merrunack, N H
lA!gan at 5 today m a
"Transportmg the ClydesThe Pu bl iC U tlil t lesr Com
mouth East, New Boston,
Southeastern Ohio League Hurlers
Linescore
rmss10n of OhiO has se t for
Eastern (Pike) , aud dales Is more mammoth than
game. A wm by the Chiefs
101 000 0---2 4 1
th ey are." he S81d "They
publtc hear1ng Case No
Federal Hocking. Tbe
Will clinch the 1977 baseball Gallipolis
030 100 X-4 3 2
travel m style behttmg theiT
76 535 EL FAC Sub ftle A
Class AA meet is slated
champtonship for Logan The FaiTiand
Batteries
GAHS:
Johnson,
designation
as
'the
King
's
ro
rev1ew the ope rat ton of
Weduesday
at
Rio.
Chiefs are 10-0 m loop play
Wall
(5)
&amp;
Barr
FaiTland.
the
Fu el Cost Adj u stme nt
Horses
'"
GAitS is rUMerup With a 5-3
.• •.
'• •.•. '•'
Clark
&amp;
Hutchmson
Clause
and the f uel pro
mark Logan IS 23-3 on the

Meigs trounces Sheridan 15-1

030 100 0--4 6 6
J ohnny Evans' smgle Southern
Spencer
and
81sseil Sayre
Eastern had an insurance run
(LP)
Cundiff
(5)
and Forbes
m the SIXth when Carpenter
reached on a smgle, moved
THIS WEEK 'S SPECIA~
up on an error, and scored on
a run down

Although both teams had
stx hits, SIX Southern errors
kept the Tornados erased
from the tourney Until this
game Eastern had won only
one game while SoUithern
was 11-2
Leadm g Eastern hitters
were Little and Bissell each
with two singles, Evans and
Ca rpenter each With one.
Losmg pitcher John Sayre
teamed with Cundiff to fan 9,
walk 4 but those s1x errors
ca nceiled out the efforts
Leadmg Tornado hitters
were Kelley Wmebrenner
with two singles and Teaford
wtth his tnple Other hitters
were Cundiff, Wolfe and
Dunnmg, each with a smgle
Eastern w1il play m the
sechonal finals Thursday
with theiT opponent yet to be
decided
By Innings
Eastern
000 141 Q---j) 6 1

VAL..UE

RATED

USED CARS

74 AMC

HORNET
6 cy l • au tomati c , radto

•1995

Karr &amp;VanZandt
You'll Lt k e Ou r Qualtly
Wa y of Ootng Bus.ness

GMAC FINANCING
'92 5342

Pomeroy

Open Evenong• 'tll6 00
Tol5pm Sat

the wise old owl says

SDOM IS ...

Hrabosky turns in most
sensational performance

protection for possessions
Insure your jewelry, stereo equipment,
small appliances and other possessions
against theft We have special pOlicies
for home owners and apartment renters
which offer maximum protection for
your valuables

DOWNING CHILDS
NSURANCE AGEMCY IN

Preakness Week will
begin this Thursday

Fairland upsets Gallia

. .

.

cu remen t pra&lt;;t1ces and
pol tc1es o f the Colum bus

KC, Oaks post A triumphs
Kyger Creek and Oak Hill
posted v1ctones Monday
night 10 Class A Sectional
Tournament action
Coach J1m Sprague's
Bobcats won their 12th game
of lthe sprmg, 16-9 over
Alexander while the Oak Hill
Oaks took a 9-7 contest from
Southwestern In an SVAC
contest, North Gallia edged
Harul8n Trace, !HI at Vinton
Kyger Creek Will battle
North Gallia this evening for
the right to meet Oak Hill m
the championship game of
the Class A Sectional
' The Bobcats plated four
runs In the second mnlng, two
each In tlte fourth and fifth
and five big runs m the
.,..enth. Alexander had three
runs 10 the second and five In
the sixth.
Jading the KC attack
were Von Taylor With a smgle
• aliltdouble; Claude Cornelius
slammed two smgles and

Gary Nibert smgled and
tripled
Alexander got two hits each
from M Turrill and South
Todd Taylor, semor right·
hander, was the winning
hurler He was relieved by
Gary Nibert m the sixth and
then returned in the seventh
Paiii top Hlgblanden
Oak H11l advanced by
defeating Southwestern, 9-7
behind the pitching of Greg
Potter. Kip Lewis and Keith
Grate had two hits each to
lead Southwestern. Jumor
catcher Larry
Carter
slammed a home run.
Leading the Oaks was Steve
Kalinoski with two hits.
Potter walked eight batters.
Gene Layton, the losmg
pitcher, fanned seven while
lssumg six free passes. The
Joss left Southwestern with a
4-14 slate. The Highlanders of
Coach Mel Carter will hattie
South Webster m a ' non-

league game this evemng
Pirates edge Wildcats
Host North Gall1a grabbed
a 6-0 lead before Coach Tom
Belville' s Hannan Trace
Wildcats rallied to make a
game of It only to fall one-run
short in a !HI SVAC loss
Coach Ted Lehew's PITates
reached losing hurler Tun
Beaver for a smgle run m the
first , two m the second, three
m the third and, four runs m
the fourth
Hannan Trace bounced
back with three runs m the
fifth, one m the sixth and four
m the last frame. The
Wildcats had the tymg run on
second as Calvin Mmnls
threw out the !mal batter
North Gall1a's Mike Casey,
m going the d1stsnce, fanned
eight while walking two. Top
Pirate hitters were Casey,
Fred Logan, Ron Plants and
Minnis with two hits each
The !mal WIldcat rally

featured two errors, a walk,
and hits by Paul Shaffer, Jeff
Dennison, Tom Wnght and
David Swam Shaffer and
Swam led the Wildcats with
three and two h1ts respectively Ron McCoy, the
team 's designated hitter,
slammed a home run
Hannan Trace goes to
Symmes Valley this evemng
and will host Eastern Wednesday.

and Sou t hern Oh10 Elec
t r1c Compa ny on May 16,
1977 at 10 00 AM at lhP.
Co mmiSSIOns of f 1ces 180

East Bro ad Streel Colum·
b us Oh1o

A ll Inte rest ed

persons w tll be g1ven an
opportunity to be heard
Fur ther 1nformat1on may
be ob tamed by con t actmg
t he Pu blic Ut1ltt1es Com
m1SS1o n of Ohto

THE PU BLI C UTILI TIES
COM MISS ION OF OHIO
by Randal l G Applegate
Sec re t ary

Get back in the
driver's seat
at City Loan.
When you need money to keep your car running, or for any good
reason, talk to us. We handle Personal Loans qmckly , easily and
w1th corunderat10n. You can borrow with trust where people save
w1th trust. City Loan &amp; Savmgs.
We find ways to help.

125 E. Main Street 992-2171

�'

4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport· Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, May 10, 1977

Club to
provide
flowers

Ten table arrangements for
the Pomeroy Alumni Association banquet will be provided
by the Pomeroy Garden Club ..
Meeting recently at the
home of Mrs. Walter
Grueser, plans for making
the floral pieces were made.
Mrs. Fred Blaettnar presided
at the meeting. " Recognizing
Blight In Our Life" was the
meditation theme presented
by Mrs. Grue&gt;er. Scripture
was (rom I John : 1-5, and the
poems, "Hello Tulips" by
Edgar
A. Guest, and "'Tis
INVOLVED IN ORGANIZING the Toastmasters Club In Gallia, Meigs and Mason
May" by Robert Browning.
counties are from the left, Ron Cornelius, Gallia.Jackson-Vinton Joint Vocational School;
Mrs. Howard Nolan
Gor&lt;\on Amsbary, D.D,S.; Myron (Bud) McGhee , VS Rea11y ; Kent Hanby, Pomeroy
presented
the program on
Sawmill and Gordon Powell, Kaiser Aluminwn.
gardening in May . She said
the lawn should be cut frequently, but not too short,
•
that blooming plants should
,n~ a:shave the old bloom snapped
"' 6 • off leaving the foliage until it
turns brown to nurture the
bulbs for the next year. When
The newly organized Toast- meeting for the first time.
the satisfaction of helping picking tulips, she said, they
masters Club including
Membership in Toast- others improve t~eir commembers from Gallia, Meigs masters provides experience munications and leadership should never be picked with
and Mason Co unties, has in communications, skills while improving their long stems since this
chosen the second and fourth leade rship developm ent, own, and at the same time damages the next year's
Wednesday evenings of the opportunity for personal and encourage better speaking, bloom. Mrs. Nolan discll5sed
flo werin g
.month to meet at 7:30p.m. in occupational recognition , and listening and thinking ability. transplanting
shrubs
and
trees
and
said this
the meeting room of the
should
be
done
when
the
Jackson Pike Office of the
blooms
are
on,
Summer
bulbs
Ohio Valley Bank . .
can be planted until early JuAU those who have atly, and gladioli bulbs should
tended any of the three
be planted every two weeks
organizational meetings that
for
contin uous bloom.
have been held during the
Mrs.
Nolan.discussed fencpast two months, in addition
ing
to
discourage rabbits,
to other men and women who
repo\ting geraniums and
have an in..rest In joining
• sta rting new cutting, alliY
Toastmasters, are urged to
planting Easter lilies 11fter
come to· Wednesday's
blooming,
She said now is the
meeting . .
time to trim poinsettias to six
Details of organizing and
Officers for the next tiU'ee ·Him Praise Him " ·and a inches, to add a little alwn to
election of charter officers years were elected at the litany' of confession.'
blue hydrangea plants, and a
will be discussed at tomorrow May Fellowship Day obserMrs. Dwight Wallace of tl)e little lime to pink hydrangias.
evening 's meeting. In ad- vance of Church Women Mi ddl eport
United If your peonies aren't bloorrdition, a special program is United of Meigs County held Presbyterian church read the ing Mrs. Nolan suggested
being planned that will be of at the Mt. Moriah Baptist scripture for "The Gift of they might be planted too ·
interest to those who have Church, Middleport, Friday. (}race~-Elxtravagance , ''a nd deep. She also said this is the
attended previous meetings
Elected were Mrs. Cordelia Mrs.' Campbell Harper of Mt. time to pinch out the tops of
as well as those who will be Bentz, president ; Mrs. Moriah had a poem, "Judas mums, and begin regular
coming to II Toastmasters Florence Richards, vice and Mary." Readers were picking of panzies to prornote
president; Mrs . Carrie Mrs. Allen ffampton , Naomi more blooms. Helpful insects
Neu~ling, secretary; Mrs Baptist; Mrs. Edith Sisson,
were also discussed by the
Frankie Hunnel, treasurer. Forest
Run United program leader who said that
They will be installed at Methodist ; Mrs. Beuna praying mantis, lady bugs
World Community Day ser- c.rueser, Rock - .";prlngs and dragon flies are the
vice at Heath United United Methodist ; Mrs. Joe gsrdener'sfriend .
Methodist Church.
Cook, Pomeroy, !laptist; and
Mrs. Grueser served a
"Gifts to Claim" was the Miss Erna Jesse, St. Paul · dessert course. For the June
theme of the program whjch Lutheran,
meeting 'to be held at the
centered on the gift of ex" The Gift of Love-- home of Mrs. J. 0 . ·Roedell,'
travagance, which is a part of Mutuality" was presented as members are to take a flower
God's grace; the gift that a parable with Mrs. Circle as arrangement for roll call.
enables us to risk vulnerabili- the narrator; Tina Johnson, a
ty, which is part of God's gift child at her grandmother's
of faith, and the gift ·of death bed, and Mrs. Bernice
mutuality which is part of Evans, the sick one.
God's love.
Prayer before .the; offering
A feature of the program . was by Mrs. Waid Spencer,
was a choral reading Chester United Methodist
presented by Mrs. Carl Church, with the ushers being
Denison, Rutland United Mrs. 'clyde Winebrenner,
A mother-daughter t•nMethodist Church, Mrs. Ethel First Baptist, Middleport,' quet
was enjoyed Saturday
Grueser, Rock Springs and Mrs. J . E. Thoren, St.
evening
at the Pomeroy
United Methodist Church; John Lutheran. The offering
Nazarene
Church social
Mrs. Karl Grueser of $63 will be for the transpor- room.
Minersvjlle
United tation expenses of Christina
Games were played and
Methodist; Mrs. Everett Smith, a burn victim, to and there
group singing
Thomas, Pomeroy United from the hospital for the(apy. folowingwas
the dinner. AttenMethodist, Mrs. Charles
Approximately 60 women ding were Frieda Henderson,
Warth, Enterprise United attended May Fellowship Mamie Stephenson, Pam and
Methodist, and Mrs. Isabelle Day.
Mary Walburn, Lonnie and
Winebrenner , Middleport
A sack lunch was held Anita Van Cooney, Carla and
Baptist Church.
preceding the service with
Mrs. Bentz was moderator the host church providing pie Nancy Aiker, Kay and Karen
Sharp, Jean Templeton, Ruth \
This watch starts our
for a panel discussion on iden- and C&lt;Jf!ee.
Koenig, Nancy Whittekind,
Bulova Caravel la
tifying wilh others in matters
Paulette
Farley, Carol
Collection . It's precision
of openness, risk, vulnerabiliLunsford,
Barb
and Shari
jeweled. Water and shock
ty, and faith, and establishing
Colmer,
Tammy
Johnson
imd
resistant. Styled in
a sense of values through
Lisa
Lilley.
gleaming chrome and
' 'Love in Action .''
stainless steel. With a
Taking part on the panel
DAR TO MEET
sweep second. full
were Mrs. Robert Hite, Grace
Return Jonathan Chapter,
numeral dial, and Bulova
Episcopal ; Mrs. James
Daughters of the American
warranty. Al l for a mere
Criswell, Heath United
Revolution, will meet at 1:30
$t 5.95.
Methodist; Mrs. Dale Davis,
Mrs. Virgie Klein was guest p.m. Friday at Grace
· Enterprise UnitedMethQdist ; of honor at a Mother's Day Episcopal Parish House in
Step up in price and we 'll
Mrs. Arnold Richards,\ Mt. dinner party given by her 15 Pomeroy.
give you a wide selection.
Moriah; with written com- children and 26 grandBecause Bulova Caravella
mentaries from Mrs.· Ben children.
has all the multi-fea ture
MEET PLANNED
Neutzling, Trinity Church,
styles . . . Calendars.
A county-wide prayer
Gifts and flowers were
who was unable to attend due presented to her along with a meeting will be held at 2 p.m.
Day / dates. Automatics.
\oiliness.
Electronics. Pocket
decorated Mother's Day Sunday at the Bald Knob
Mrs. Ernest Bowles of the cake.
watches and pendan ts.
Gospel Mission with Glen
host church was greeter with
The 51 attending the dinner Bissell as class leader.
Mrs. Garrett Circle of the were Charlie Klein, Jr.,
Wesleyan United Methodist Vickie Klein, Charles Klein
BARBECUE SET
Church, Racine, as organist. III, Jerry Klein, . Drema
NEW HAVEN - The New
Mrs. Ervin Baumgardner of . Klein, Connie Klein, Myrtie Haven Volunteer Fire
Mt. Moriah was the leader for Mae Klein, Edna Klein, Department Auiliary will
the responsive readings. In Henry Ray Klein, Trena Kay hold a public chicken bar113 E. Court Sf _
the call to celebration, there Klein, David L. 'Klein, Jess becue Saturday at the New
Pomeroy, 0 .
was group singing of "Praise Buchanan, Donna Klein, Haven City Building .with
Tammy Klein, Henry Klein, serving to start at 11 a:m.
Sr., Bill Klein, Kenny Klein,
Paul Klein, Katie Klein, Tom
LOW PRICES!
Klein,
David Klein, Gene
TRY OUT DELICIOUS
Klein, Sr. , Aunda K. Klein,
Ma..Vin Wise, Mrs. Gertrude
TWIST
Wise, Teresa Lynn Wise,
Rosalie Mae Wise, Shannon
Dee Wise, Gene Kl ein, Jr.,
Michelle L. Klein, Lawrence
' Klein.
HEALTHY STARTER
Pat Klein, Bob Klein, Mary
Klein, Todd Klein, Larry
PLANTS
Klein, Rodney Klein, Kimberly Klein, Angela Klein, Penny
3'; POT
Klein, Kevin Klein, Suzanna
Grueser, Dennis Boyd, Sr.,
each
Darlene Boyd, Jennie Boyd, ..,...-.....:cash 'n carrv
Joe Boyd, Dennis E. Boyd, 1
Jr., Mr. and Mrs. Fred
HRS.: IO : OOA ,M. Iilll :00 P.M. Sun. · Thurs. 10: 00 A.M .
Pullins, Sheila Pullins, Shelly
til 12:00 P.M. Friday and Saturday.
Pullins.
• See -us At, The Pomeroy Bend. Bridge
...

Toastmasters schedule

meet

CWU officers
are elected

Banquet
enjoyed

SUPER
MARKET

Mrs. Klein
honored on
Mother's Day

WE ACCEfT FEDERAL FOOD STAMPS

OPEN DAILY
9 TO 10

PLEASE I

SUNDAY
CORNER

OPEN MON. THRU SAT. 9 A.M. TO 9 P.M.

10 TO 10

&amp; SECOND ST.

We Accept Federal Food Stamps - We Reserve the Right To Limit Quantties

FRESH &amp; LEAN

5 LB. OR
MORE
LB.
ESH &amp; LEAN

GROUND
CHUCK
LB.

WASTE

MAO

MINUTE

HAM·
SALAD .

STEAK

LB.

79~

SUPERIOR

POLISH
SAUSAGE

GROUND
ROUND
09

LB.

MR. BEE

REG. 7'1

79~

lB.

RESH &amp; LEAN

POTATO
CHIPS

QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED

ALL MEAT
WIENERS

NO

99~

LB.$}

OPEN SUNDAY 9 A.M. TO 6 P.M.

SUPERIOR

GROUND
BEEF

·109

VALLEY BELL

ICE
" All Flavors $
'h Gallon
CREAM ••••••••••••••••••••
FARM BRAND

FRENCH
59~
2 Lb. Pkg.
FRIES ••••••••••••••••••••

2
POT
4
$1
PIES.................. ,
NIBLETS ·.

79~

COKE
TAB

BONE! ESS

HALf

TAVERN HAMS.................. ~~:.

OR

BONE! ESS

SPRITE

$129

~~~:0 HAM ___ ..... _......-.. -· .. --·---~:. $1
39
~:~s LOAF............................... ~: ...$1
69

$139
LB

QUARTER -

.

TAVERN HAMS ........ --·---·-·-..:

8-16 OZ. BOffiES

USDA CHOICE

CHUCK STEAK ......................J~._]g~
LEAN AND TENDER

.

PORK STEAK............. -.... -........~~:. Br

.JHRim BACON.......... ~~·.-.~~~: ... 79~

iO oz.
Pkg .

&lt;:()R~ ••••••••••
BANQUET

VIETTI
BAR
B·
CUE

10¥z OZ. CAN
REG. 99'

FOR

ARMOUR

BANQUET

12 OZ. CAN
GREEN GIANT

MIXED
VEGETABLES

2

10oz. 89~
Pkgs.

BROUGHTONS

CARNATION

·HOT
CHOCOLATE
12 PAK

OOTTAGE
· oz . 89~
CHEESE••••••••••• ~:~::~
24

BROUGHTONS

~~LK •............~::·::..$1

39

BROUGHTONS

HOMO
·. 79~
'h Gallon
MILK •••••••••••• _
••••••••
BELL

$139

TROPICANA
ORANGE OR GRAPEFRUIT

SHASTA
BEVERAGES.

DAIRY SPECIALS

The good

affordable
watch

PRICES GOOD THROUGH SATURDAY, MAY 14th, 1977

GRADE A
PEE WEE

JUICE-·

99°
COUPON

4 doz.
•

00

TWIN PAK

CHEERIOS

MAXWELL HOUSE
COFFEE

No. 85

No. 605

10 oz. Box

2~b.

All Grinds

Can

$599

Coupon Expires Mav 1·4, 1977
Twin City Gateway

2% .
Gallon
MILK ••••••••••••.•••••••••••

Potato Chips

640%. BOnLE

64 OZ. BOmEs·

EGGS

PRINGLES

BEnY CROCKER
POTATO BUDS

JEWELRY STORE

No. 205
16 oz. Box

59~

c

Coupon Expires May 14, 1977
Twin City Gateway
COUPON

COUPON

GOESSLER

39~

BETTY CROCKER

TONE BATH
SOAP
.
.

ANGEL FOOD CAKE MIX
No. 105

15

OL

Box

69e

No. 245

.

3 age
bath
baJS

Seven-Seas Creamy

ITALIAN DRESSING
8 DL 8ottM

4g~

NEW

HOUSE
PLANTS

77«

ADOLPH'S

DAIRY VAU.EY

_,__ PfffN

'·

TliURSDAY ONLY

R. C.
COLA
8-16 oz. somEs

$109
..

DR. PEPPER
8-16 OZ. BOm.ES

79°

DIET RITE
OOLA
8-'16 OZ. BOm.ES

$129
•

WIND EX
AEROSOL
No. 155
15 .OL Size

49e

Coupon Expires May 14, 1977
Twin City Gateway

BEHOLD
FURNITURE POLISH
No. 155

7 oz. Can

·&amp;'9'

Couj,on Expires May14, 1977
Twin City

No. 105
14'h OL Pllg.
Coupon Expires May 14, 1977
Twin City Gateway

Coupon Expires May 14, 1977
Twin City Gateway

�7_- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, May 10,1977

6- The Dailv Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .• Tuesday , May 10, 1977

Let The Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash

WANT AD
CHARGES
15 Wunls VI ' Untlt'r
Ll 1a r~w

Cu:.b

Ida)
ldan.

1.00
1.50

3®)·:.
6 dii_Hi

1.110

~.~

300

J.l5:

1.25

1.00

Ec.d1 WQI'li •w~ r tht· muHII!WII 15
IWrlb I!&gt; -1 l"t•Ub ~· r Wol\1 pt-1" d.i&amp;_r.
,uh i\JIIIIll~ olht•r til&lt;! II l'OI\St'l' U(IV~
dMi,,S Wtll bt' d lar~t'tl lot tht' I d&lt;t}'
raft'

In mt:mut], Carll ul Thomk.s o.tllll
!)btlu.;tr}

G et'nts ~·· wurd, SJ Oil

tluruu•uu• Cash 111 ~\' IUu't'
Mtobtk IIVI IIr ~1.-s 1111d
lit't • al"t~pt t•tl only w1lh
urtlt•r· 25 t 't'lll t hilt' ~l' fur

Y:m.l l&gt;l:lles
t·us h w11 h

1:1tl.s l'arr~· ·
11\1&gt;( lklx Numlll'r In (m't.' u( Tlw St·rt-

und

Tht• Pu!J lt.~ hl'r n ·twrvl's lht.' n ~tn'
Ill l"&lt;.llt ul' I'I'Jt'i.1 any mls dt't'mt•tl uU.
Jt'lllllllHI Tilt• Publu,ht'r ~·t tl nut bt•
l't'~J..klll!&gt;lble flli' II W I'l' lhil ll Ullt' llll'UI"•
l't'l'l Ul!&gt;t'I"I!Uil .

l'hulll' 99"1-2156

HelpWanled

OLOEA RESPONSIBLE

lad~ to live
in and care for aged wtdow in
Rutland, Ohio. No t inval id nor
senile . Light hotnework and
coolo ng. No laundry . Call
741-2078 for infOfmotion .

LOOKI NG
Yoursel f"
uncertain
portunitv

FOR

some

"Oo-Jt.

Jl,)b securitv i n these

times? Unusual opfor good earnings ,
port -time or full-ti me. For interview. Phone (614) 742·2383.

NOTICE
WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES
Muudily

Noon W1 Sctlunla y
T ~ stlt~y

thru F11da)
.JP.M.
the duy lJdtJn• pubhculiu n
S wl llit)'

4P M.
~" r iday aftcrnou11

RESPONSffiLE
PERSON
Wanted
to
Dwn
and
operated candy &amp; con fection vending route .
Pomeroy and surrounding
area . Pleasant business .
High profit items. Can start
part time . Age or experience not important .
Requires car and S149S to
S499S cash Investment. For
details write and include
your phone number :
Eagle Industries
J93B Meadowbrook Rd .
Minneapolis, Minn . SS416

Locotion. $37 -4 .40 , single :
$.502 .80 married. Coli Army
Recruit1n~ . (b14) 593 -3022 or
385·6318 (collect).

wAct&lt;ENHUT CORP . is now

OC ·

A REWARD in
omo~nt of
$2,000 Is herby offered to any
penon or persons ~ho provides information which leods
to the detection, apprehension ,
and conviction of t he person or
persons res~nsible for the
murder of WeSley Dale Musser.
Any information pertaining to
some should be given to the
Meigs County Sheriff's Deport.
mentby calling 992-3371 . Signed , Frances Muner.
PIANO " LESSONS, chlldrens and
adults . Mrs. Harvey Von
Vronken. 992 -2270.
WILL CARE for elderly women i n
our home. Phone992-7JI4 .
ANY STRAY dogs running loose
on my property, due to the kill ·
ing of sheep on my property ,
etc., w i ll be shot. Gene and
Jerry Coleman , New Lima
Rood , Rutland.

LIST IN Middleport, One-year -old
female toy collie, Answers to
the nome of Chico. Phone

992·5301 .
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT

••

•· ·
•.
.. .

•· .. ·

, ,,

...

'

VISIT ENJOYED
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Houck
·• ' and children, Carol and Lynn,
Marion, were weekend
visitors ri Mr. and Mrs.
Perry Mitch . They also
•,. · visited in Gallipolis with his
,•. parents, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
•.. H k
•.•
,. . ouc .

,.
,..
•• •

··'
.,.,'·

,,,••

,,

,,
:;

.,"·• .

,, ;
,...

VISITING HERE
Carol Foster of Uvonia,
Mich. has spent the past two
...., here visiting Mr. and
Mn. Ralph Webb, and Mrs.
J. Edward Foster and
frlendl, Sunday guests of
l6w. FUller were the Rev.
IIIII Mn. C. V. Williams, Jr.,
Belir llld Dawn, and sMr. and
Mnl.. C. V. Wtlllaws, r ., Col·

, umliia

----

'1'12 ·2878 .

---- 1973 t&lt;AWASAKI 250 . 1600 miles ,
-~

(Min.) Collies , 2 females , 7
weeks old. Shots and wormed .

Phone (614)
367·7112.

367·0292

or

fiGHT PART Collie and port
Shepherd puppies ; one part
bird dog, 6 months old. Phone

_29.~2~·3~2::
89~.~~---­
FREE TO GQOD Home, in the
country., o 3 year old , very gentl e , house broke border Collie .
Great with kids . Phone

YARD SALE : Weds . &amp; Thursday ,
9:00 till 5 p .m. Bob Wo ldni gs
residence . Rt. 124 ocrass from
Racine Planning Mill. Clothi ng ,
glauwore.
baby furnitu re,
fl'1 isc . Items .
SEVERAL FAMILY Goroga Sole ,
Thursday and Friday at Hunnel's on Rose HilL Turn off Rt .
· 33 of sign just beyond Pomerov
Corporation line. '9 a.m. till 3
p. m. Ro ll-away bed , bassinet ,
clothing and many other Items .
GARAGE SALE; Thursday , Moy 12
at the Baum Addition off Rt. 7
by theskating rink . LoTs of
men, women and children's
clothing and o stereo,

992·7762 .

1975 JEEP CHEROKEE. p.b., ps . 3
Quadratrack. Good ti res .
Phone (304) 877 -2340.
, 1973 CHEVY NOVA V-8 , air, nice
cor , · $1795. Phone Harold
Brew&amp;r , Long Bottom, Ohio ,

FAMILY Garage Sole in Chesler
on Main Street, next to grade
school. Wednesday and Thur s-

d

y

0

(61&lt;) 965·355• olle• 6 p.m.
1976 CHEVY 3 quorter ton , 4
wheel dnv8, automatic, 350
engine, only , 7 ,SOO miles , Also ,
Firewood tor so le . Col i

APPLES , FITZPATRICK ORCHARD .
STATE ROUTE 689 . PHONE
~ESVILLE . (6") 669·3785.

992·59&lt;7.
1975 JEEP Cherokee. p.• .. p.b,

CAMPER . $600. Also , horse
traile r. $450. Phone (61-4) 698-

, air,

4

wheel

drive .

Phone

1974 Grand Prix , auto. power
steering and power brakes ,
factory ai r, AM AND FM , tilt
wheel , P .W.. green wi1h white
holf top, 31 ,000 miles , $3700.00
f irm . 992 -3535 till 6 p.m .,
995-3519 after 6 p .m .
TO WHOM IT moy concern: Notice
is hereby g iven that on May 18,
1977 . 10 a.m. a public sale will
be held at Citizens Notional
Bank . M iddleport. OH to sell
for cosh the following coli otero~
2wlt. 1- 1971 Chevrolet Impala
4
d r.
sedan, Serial No.
16&lt;1691 -D-201166. Citi zens Notional Bonk . Middleport, OH ,
reserves the right to bid at this
sole .
-~

1974
OLDSMOBILE
Cutlass
Supreme, oir , p .s., disc .
brakes, rally wheels, excellent
c ondition ,
$3500.
Phone

992·2987.
1972 PLY , GOlD Ouster , 6 cy/.3
speed . vood cond i tion .' $1200.
1966 Che.,elle S.S., needs
motor ond transmiu ion, $125.
Body , good shape. Coli

'192·5972.

·------·-1973 VEGA, toke over payments .
1968

Dodge,

$4SO.

Phone

992. 733
=2::.._ __
1967 NOVA, $300. 1967 Mercury:
. $300. Both in good condition.
at 247C
Mulberry ,
See

~P~•-'"f
_· ~~-1968 International 5-:2 Troclor
truck with sl. .per and J.4 ft . log
bed . A-1 condition . $3000.
Phone; (61.4) 59:2-2605 after 9
~P · ~ -~ eM~~P! Soturday e~ eni~gs .
1976 CHEVROLET Chevetle . Phone

992-7274 .
1972 PINTO Run-A -Bout, low
mileoge . Con be seen ot 100
Beech St. , Pomerov . Ohio after
5p .m'.
~

BUSINESS o

343. MASON FURNITURE COM·
PANY (TN T AREA ) Poi nt Plea·
sont , W. Vo .

NEED A WATER
Let

STEREO, NEW AM -FM stereo
rod1o combination, $129.95 or
·easy terms . Call992-3'965 .

Let us
Free.

1

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

279 •95

test

your

water

W. Carsey, Mgr.
Phone 992·2161

lf.jJack

·

·

USED

FORESTRY

EQUIPMENT .

Fronklin Model 1306 Sk idder;
208GS Skidder;
Timbeqock
Prentice G ·BC Loader with by·
pass grapple . Contac t Dennis
Smurr . Phone (614) 838-5345.
NEW HOLLAND hoy ba'ler ond
gro i n drill . Phone 992-7084 .
REGISTERED MORGAN geldmg ,
very nice riding ~orse . Phone

'1'12·6072.

~~~------~-19000 BTU FEDDERS air condi ti oner, I 11J yrs. old ,-S200 . Phone
992-6165 after 5 p.m.

400 FARMALL tractor . 300 Internati onal utility tractor . lnterncltionol 3 pt. hoy rake , 6ft. Inte rnational disc, lnlerno tionol No.
37 hoy baler. lnlernationol
mowing machine, International
brushhog . 10 If. Transport disc .
Phone 949-2680 .
TRAILER FOR sole, 10 )( 55
Ponderosa, 2 bedroom , man y
extra$. $2500. CB 350 Honda
$300. Phone992-7008 .
--~~~~~---­
BEEF CATTLE . comp lete herd for
one
pri ce ,
Phone
(61.4)

667 ·3668.
l AND H Beams , 8, 9 ond 10 inch.
Call 992 -7034.

-WOODEN HOLLOW core cabinet
doors and drawer fronts f rom
75c up. Coll992 -7034 .

FOR SALE

SMAll form for sole , 10'% down ,
owner finonc&amp;d . Monroe County , W . Va . Phone (304) 77:2 -

3102 or (304) 772-3227 .

Commerci ol property opprox . 17
acres . leve l · lond , locate d of
Tuppers Plains on Oh io, ROute

7. Phone (614) 667 ·6304.
NEW 3 bedroom house, built-i n
kJtc hen , bath and
Phone
742 -2306 or con tact M ilO B. Hutchison, Rutland, Ohio.

Route 3,

Pomeroy, 0 .

Free Estimates
Installation , samples
brought to your home
with no. charge.

New

Co-Op

sof.

water

2·23·1 mo.

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC. .

phone (614 ) 5?2·3051 . ,
REDUCED $2qDC. 3 bedroom, 2 V,
bath s,
double
gorage .
fireploce , air conditionmg , 1
acre lot. Phone 992 -:2492.
HOUSE FOR SALE by owners . 4
rooms and both, panneled , liv ·
lng room and corpoted Wi ll
sell for $6500. Coli 992-6250
after 5 p .m . 10 lynn St., Mid·

SSO

SUrvivor Safes - orily $29 .95

Onion Sets 31bs .

Pomeroy Landmark
,llf'e-Jack W, C~riey, Mgr:

Virgil B. &gt;r., Realtor
21' E. Second Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Phone 992.3325
DRIVE. JN - All equip·
ment necessary for the
business, ample parking,
or can be made into a

home. This really Is a
wonderful buy at $10,000.
NEW LISTING - Nice ~
bedroom
home
with
natural gas, F .A. furnace,
city water and carpeting.

Insulated . For only $16.000.

~

Phone 99l-2U1

·

a

-

-

-

Owner
Shirley (Jeffers) Wolfe

Continuous
one
piece
guMers. We hang it. or do it

LPT 150 x :200 in Syracuse. Phone

Formerly
lola's Beauty Sa Iori
For appointment call
992 -2549 Tuesday thru
Saturday 8:00a.m . to
5:00p. m. Open nights
by appointment.
.rtl-1 mo.

992-3714 . .

LIKE

.

New Shultz Mobile Horne on

2 1h ocre s. level la nd , concrete
porch . 8 )I 35 with gwning,
, astra-turf covered, 20 )( 36 "
block go ro ge , ce llar with utility
room overhead. Shade ond
fruit trees in Longs'lille . Phone

742·2965.
HOUSE FOR Sole , 2story , 6room ,
both , bosement, carport, Iorge
lot on College Rood Syracuse .
Ohio. Phone 992 -7203.

outside of town, 6 rooms ,
bath, partial basement and

1 car garage . $25.000.

A BUTCHER WITH

IF

IN 10, 000

COULD HAVE
DONE WHAT
HE DID··

NERVE, NO DOUBT!

WHERE IS THIS
GLORI FlED TRAMP

600D

HE'S IN

MORNING. DR .

ROO M
·A~ SIR--

I SEE
'i"OU HAVEN'T .
DUB B ·~

HOWERY

AND

MARTIN

Yesterday's

~Rf' 'PU
MARRI~D,

Ex·

696·7331.
HARRISON'S T.V. Repa1r. Service
Colis . 276 SyCamore, St. , Middleport..Phone 992-2522 .
BROWN 'S FIRE and Safety E)(tin·
qu ls hers. All sizes. business,
home , boat. Refilled, tested .
Bill Brown, Rutland, Ohio.
Phone 7 42-2n7.
•

BRADFORD , Auctioneer , Complete Service . Phone 949-2487
or 949 -2000. Racine, Ohio, Crift
Bradford.

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR Sweepers , tOasters , irons, oll .
sma ll appliances . Lawn mower ,
ne)( t to State Highway Garage
on Route 7. Phone (614) 985-

3625.
REMODELING, Plu.m bing, heating
ond all types of general repair .
Work guaranteed 20 years ex perience. Phone 992-2409 .

GASOUNE ALLEY

1]1e fire
inspector'

SEWING MACHINE Repairs , service, all makes, 992 -:2284 . The
Fabric
Shop,
Pomeroy .
Authorized Singer Sales (lnd
Service. We shgrp&amp;n Scinors .

.

reasonable . 572 South Third
Ave ., Middleport . Phone

JUST LISTED- Beautiful

_}92-6306 . .

and secluded, over 3 acres ,
11h story frame home, 3 or
4 · bedrooms, fireplace,

PIANO TUNING, Lone Dan ie ls. 12
years of servic e . Phone

quipped kitchen,

perma ·

~ane · windows,

trailer

ROOFS ANO house pointing. Free
esfimotes. Coii992-S...B2.

ookup. Just 520.000.00.

.

992·2082.

A routine
rhe&gt;.- 11.
1

miss'

EXCAVATING , dozer, lood&amp;r and
backhoe work ; dump trucks
and lo-boys for hire; will haul
fill dirt, to soil, limestone and
gravel. Coil Bob or Roger Jeffers , d~y phone 992-7089,
night phone 992-3525 or 9'92.·

den. 3 BR home with
dining , living , bath, C.B.
room . Ideal for kids .
$19,200.00 .
JUST LISTED with

BR apt.
$27.000.00.

over.

1973 TRAILER 14 )( 70 unfurnished .
Call 992-6688 , 9 till 5 or
'985-3501 after 6 p.m .', or con.
_ toct Tonvo Davi s.

children. 2 car garage .
Only $17,500.
4

bedroom frame home, 1'12

baths. carpeting. elec.

JUST

Ex·

kitchen,

very

brick •. 3 bedrooms,

baths.

formal

1112

dining.

back yard. 116.000. . ·

carpeting , full basement
with large rec , room,

ss,ooo.oo - 5 bedroom.
home on nice corner lot In

garage. 1 level acre close
ln. 137,000.00 .
CORNER LOT - 2'12 story
frame with carport. 2

Orange Township .

1'12

acres near Tuppers Pl.)lns

for 15.000. Several lots at
Five Points, 52,000.00 UP.
GOOD HOMES FOR YOU
TO SEE AT OUR OFFICE
NEAR POST OFFICE .
PICTURES AND FREE
PARKING.
G. Bruce Tuford
Helen L. Teaford

fireplaces,

5 bedrooms,

formal dining. bath, foyer.
garage,

In

Middleport.

Look jusl $8,500.00.
WE HAVE BUYERS FOR
YOUR FARM - CALL
TODAY .
HENRY E. CLELAND
BROKER
Hank· Coth.Leona Cleland
Associates

9n.ns9-H5·4112
"2·25611

•

MASON FURNITURE

River . 2 b•drooms. large

low upkeep. Buy this and
get away from It all. Only
$4,200.00 .
.
JUST LISTED- LOVELY
LOVELY frame and

IT BACI&lt; To

DQ:5PATCH!'

WA5HIN6TOI'-J
WAYr~

'1'12·5658.

FRIDAY UNnL 8 PM

ceflent f ishlns cottage -o~
living and

AH'LL WRAP IT IN
THIS SAC!&lt; AH E3RUN6-

BILl...IO/J -

MOBILE Home Repair , Elec.,
plumbing and heating. Phone

Mon ., Tues •• Wed. &amp; Sat.~ 8:30 til5:·oo
THURSDAY TIL 12 NOON

120.

LISTED.

1 - - - --..l.. GiV6ME:TH'

'

carpeting.

773-5592

WlNNIB
• YOU WERE RIGHT ABOUT
KATIE NC FEA~ER,BILLY.

IN FACT, l WAS SO IMPRES&amp;ED
Wll}l HER I'VE &amp;TARTED
ASSEMBLING NarES

SN£'8 Qti!TE A GAL!

HER LIFE ! ·

FOR A eo::JK ABOUT

GOT~E

KIND OF INIXlMITABLE
CHARACTER I WANT
10 &amp;HON IN MY
FILM !

IT WILL P.&gt;E AN
INSPIRATION
lDPEOPLEOF
ALL A0E&amp;I

Mason, W . Va.

Herman Grate

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••
: BUY, SELL OR TRADE? :
!
•
:

.•

l I I I I I )"

IAnswenlomorrow)
Jumbles: EXACT VALUE DITHER ESTATE
Answer: Where charily always begins-AT THE
LETIERC

LISTEN TO THE

SWAP. SHOP
-

.•

: 7 PM - WMPO • 92.1 FM :
••
••
:
92 in the Country
:
••
••
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••
•

LET'9 GET A FEW
TI-IING5 STRAIGI-IT ...

I HATE TO LOSE !

·'

AND JUST ONE SMART
REMAAK ABOUT M'f FAI
LEG5 GETS 'r'OU A
KNOCK ON THE NOGGIN!!

10: 00-- Sanford &amp; Son ·3,_.,15; D i nah 6; Here's Lucy

B,10: Mike Douglas 13.
10 o3()-Hollywood Squares 3,4,15; Price Is Righi 6,10.
11 :DO-Wh"eel of Fortune 3.4.15; Happy Days 6.13; Elec .
Co. 20.
11 :3o-Shoot for The Stars 3,4.1 5; Family Feud 6,13:
Love ol Li fe 8,10; Sesame St. 20,33.
11 o55-CBS News B: Ms . Flxll 10.
12 :()()-News 3,4,6,10,13; Name That Tune 15; Divorce

Court B.
12 :3Q-Chlco &amp; lhe Man 3,15; Ryan 's Hope 6,13; Bob
Braun 4; Search for Tomorrow 8.10.
l :oo-Gong Show 3: All My Chlldre• 6,13: News 8:
Young &amp; the Restless 10: Not For Women Only 15.
1:3()-Days of Our Lives 3, 4,15; As The World Turns
l'l oOD-$20,000 Pyram id 6,13.
2o3()-Doclors 3,4,15; One Life lo Live 6,13; Guiding
Light B,lO.
3:0D-Another World 3.4.15; All In The Family B.lO; On
Aging 20.
3: Is-General Hospllal 6.13 .
3o30-Malch Game 6,10; Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20.
4·DO-Miste• Cartoon 3; Little Rascals 4; Gong Show
15; New Mickey Mouse Club ' ' Lucy Show 8;
Sesam e 51. 20,33; Movie "T he Bridge on the River
Kwal" 10; Dinah 13 .
4 : 1~Litlle Rascals 14.
4:3Q-My Three Sons 3: Partridge Family 4:
Emerge~cy One 6; Partridge Family 8; Fllntstones
15.
S:OD-Big Valley 3; My Three Sons 4; Brady Bunch 8;
Mister Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33; Emergency
One 13; Star Trek 15.
S:3()-Adam.12 4; News 6; Family Affair 8; Elec. Co.
20,33.
6oOD-News 3,4,6,8,10.13.15 : ABC News 6: Zoom 20,33.
6o3()-NBC News 3,4,15; ABC News 13; Andy Grlffllh 6;
CBS News 8,10; Vegetable Soup 20; Lilias Yoga &amp;
You 33.
7oOD-Truth or Cons. 3; To Tell the Truth 4; Liar's Club
6; Pop Goes the Country 8; News 10 ; To Tell the
Truth 13: My Three Sons15: Consumer Survival Kit
20 ; Big Green Magazine 33.
·
7:3()-Dolly 3; SIOO,OOO Name That Tune 4; Match
Game PM 6; $25.000 Pyramid B; Break the Bank 13;
The Judge 10; Wild Kingdom 15.
B:OD-PIIol " McNamara's Band" 6,13; ; Good Times
8,10; Nova 20.33.
Bolo-Movie " The Cowboys" 8,10.
20,33.
• lO:OD-Charl ie ' s Angels 6,13 : Celebrating a Century 33;
News 20.

Yesterday's Answer
19 Disfigured
22 Church

23
24
25

27

30 Brit.

official
Oregon city
Approaching
Take on
cargo
Prefix for
diction
or band

weight
unit
31 Savor
33 Sunday
punch
(sl.)
34 Clarinet
piece
36 Conceit

10 :3()-Montage 20; Book Beal 33.
11 :oo-News j ,4.6.B.10, 13,15; MacNeil· Lehrer Report
33:. Monty Python' s Flying Circus 20.
11 oJ()-Johnny Carson 3.4,15: Rookles6.1J; Movie "The
VIrginia Hill Slory" 6; Mary Hartman 10; ABC
News 33.
12 :()()-Movle "Career" 10; Janakl 33.
12 :4()-Mystery of the Week 6,13.
1:oo--Tomorrow 3, 4.
2:10-News 13.

BRIDGE
Oswald and Jim Jacoby

Helen Sobel never did learn
10
NORTii .
• A7
¥ K 93

• JB62
. A6 43
WEST

EAST

•J B642
¥J 75
tK
•Q 985

"'1093
.QB 64
tQ 975
• J2

SOUTH \D)

• KQ 5
¥ A 10 2
tA 104 3
• K 10 7
Both vulnerable

38 Lookalike

West

North East

Pass

3 N T. Pa!is

South

I N. T.

39 Being ( Sp.l
40 Greek
'=+-+-+-+--l~
market·
place
41 Feat

Pa ss

zo

PLOWIN' SHORE
15 HARD ON
TH' OL.: DOGS,
AIN'T IT,
AUNT SUKEV ?

later became known as Helen
Sobel Smith , the greatest
woina n player of all time.
A male chauvinist player
said, "You were lucky. The
correct play would have been
to lead a diamond from dum·
my and put in your ten."
Of course, he was wrong .
Her play was sure to produce
two diamond tricks for her
aga insL a ny and
diamond
combinations.
A couple of months went by .
Helen was [aced with the
sa me car d co mbination.
Again she played her ace .
Again she made the two tricks
she was sure to make and the
male chauvm ist sa id , ' 1You 'll

all

never learn." .

Pass
Opening lead - 4 4

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE .:_ Here's how to work It : By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
A perfect safety play is one
AXYDLBAAXR
that
is going to work against
Is LONGFELLOW
any and all car d com ·
One letler simply stands for anoLher. In this sample A l1 binalions. He re is one that is
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters. not well known in spite of the
apostrophes, the length and f orm ati on of the words are all fact that it has appeared in
hints. Eacli day the code letters are different.
tllis co lumn before.
A story goes with it . Some
CRYPTOQUOTES
40 plus years ago a young girl
RFD
F T 0 • played for the first time at
BII
QWEF
aNDRRG
New York's Cavendish Club .She
became declarer at three
RFD
RNWRF · RDIIZOK
DYR
notrump and won the fi rs t
EFZIPNDO. tr ic k.
HG
PTOD
XTNIP
ZY
Then she played her ace of
diamond s. The king fell from
-TIZSDN
XDOPDII
FTIQDY
the West hand and it was a
Yesterday's Cryptoquole: AFTER LEARNING THE TRICKS ' simple matter for the girl to
OF THE TRADE MANY OF US THINK WE KNOW THE score two diamond tricks and
TRADF.. - WILUAM FEATHER
make her conLract. That girl
t.&gt; 1977 Klnl Futures S)'ndle•t.e, lne.
BARNEY

!
•
:

WEDNESDAY , MAY 11, 1977
6:0D-Publlc Affairs 10.
6 : 1~Farm Reporl 13.
6: W-Not for Women On I y 13.
6o3()-AG-USA 4; News 6: Chrlslopher CloHup 10.
6 : 4~Mornlng Report 3.
6:50-Good Morning, West VIrginia 13.
6 : 5~·Good Morning, Trl Stale 13.
l oDO-Today J,A,15; Good Morning America 6,1 3; CBS
News 8; Chuck While Reports 10.
7 : 0~Porky Pig 10.
7:3()-Schoolles 10.
8oll0-Howdy Doody 6; Capt. Kangaroo 8,1 0: Sesame
St. 33.
8:3Q-Big Valley 6.
9oll0-A.M. 3; Phil Donahue 4,13,15; Mike Douglas 10;
Andv Grllfllh 8.
9:30-Cross-Wlts 3: Edge of Nigh! 6; Concentration 8.

9 : oo-Boxlng 3,4, 15 ; Baretta 6, 13; Great Performances

35 The East
;:~-r;:-;-;-;--;:::;::::--;:"JlF';;:-;-::;::;-;;-;:::::;:::;:;::::-;:::::;-;::=1--:~:::::-I
r-J' TAKE
IN TH' 600D OLE
~ Wet down

STORE HOURS

Just

x

Sanitation, 992-3954.
WILL do roofing , construction,
plumbing and heating. No job
too Iorge or too small. Phone

MASON FURNITURE

ex.-

JUST LISTED - 1 floor
plan. 3 bedrooms, bath,
Level lot 60
$18,000.00. .

SEPTIC TANKS cleaned. M&lt;&gt;Oem

CARPENTER , flooring , ceiling,
paneling. Phone992-2759.

Lovely

Income,

EXCAVATING , dozer, backhOe
and dltcher. Chgrles R. Hat.
field , Bock Hoe Service,
Rutland , Ohio. P~one 742-2008 . ·

-2~~2~~~87·~~~----~

JUST LISTED - About 7
acres In Pomeroy, 3 A
fenced , 2 A . in woods,
balance In yard and gar-

11

ACROSS
DOWN
I Punctuation I Office
mark
furniture
5 Throw out
2 In motion
10 Punta del - 3 Lady's
11 Veal specialty gannent
13 Portico .
t Advantage
14 Cling
( 2 w.ds.)
15 Film and
5 Card game .
TV M.D.
6 The BeaUes'
11
17 Prince
Hey - 11
Valiant's
7 Addis Ababa
is here
son
18 Bowling
(abbr.)
alley button 8 Explain
19 Engendered
(2 wds.)
20 Three, in
9 Eartllly,
Palenno
old style
Zl " Clair
12 Compassiollde-"
ate
22 Philippine
16 Ethereal
island
25 Outcast
26 Son of
Jacob
27 Rotating
part
28 Ending for
thermo
29 Poet
32 Sub's
weapon
(abbr.)
33 Brigadier
general's
symbol
(2 wds.)

I).QftN LOSER

41-28- 1 mo .

.

covating , septic systems ,
dozer, backhoe, dump truch
limestone, grovel , blacktoP
paving, Rt . 143. Phone 1 (61-4)

0.

l

A

. l!l~:ew~tlt'

SEWING · ALTERATIONS : _2~~~·~~---------­
Upholster i ng,
dropus

MAJN
POMEROY,

Print answer here:

CHANGE D A
611 -·

7

to

Phone 949·2814
9 a.m. to 5 p.m.

tlllg, gutter work. Phone 992-

nat. gas heat,

NEW LISTING - Good
older home on quiet street
near school s. 3 bedrooms,
dinirig, large living room

'

1 DOU6T

o•e SURGEON

MJ...INJ..~

baths, 2 car garge with 3 ·

Associates

WHAT'S THIS
I HEAR ABOUT

by THOMAS JOSEPH

Wil_l do odd jobs, roofing, pain-

cellenl neighborhood, 3·4
bedrooms. living , dining. 2

BUILDING LOTS -

HE WOULD.

13 ACRES , 3 bedroo~ . all utilities ,
Rt. 124 Cook.'s·Gop Hill . Phone
~5626 alter 5:30p.m.

prices

Now arrange the circled letters to
form the surprise answer, as aug·
aested by the above cartoon.

LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE-IT SHOULDN'T RAPPEN

GUTIER SERVICE
yourself. Specia I
builders.

(J

UTILE ORPHAN ANNIE

SVracuse·

.

( I I

.S· tO

2·23· 1 mo.

Shirley's Beauty Nook·
John St.

natural
gas.
Heating
Furnace . A good buy at

baseboard heat, nice kit·
chen, famlly room and nice

--

0.

OR. lEE•

home

LISTING

~meroy,

3,

Fear" 6,13; Movie " Scream ol fhe Wolf" 8; Mary

Hartman 10; ABC News 33.
12 :0D-Movle "A Fine Madnoss" 10; Janakl 33.
1:DO-Tomorrow 3.4 .
1:30-News 13.

8, 10,

I I

Young's Carpeting

4-13-1 mo. pd .

closels. T.P . water and

NEW

I I I

1

with fireplace, carpeting in
all rooms, ·a nd yard tor the

Sl . OO

NOPEY

"The Originators
Not The Imitators"

7409.

1 tilew ·2&lt;f cubic..ff

_Saw

Unscramble these tour Jumbles,
• one tetter to each square, to form
four ordinary words.

ALLEYOOP

Superior
Steam Extraction

Phone 992-3339

HOUSE FOR sale in Syrocuse, 2
bedrooms , ond both , lot 100 x
150. Garage, cement drive. and
small storage bldg . Furnished
or unfurnished. Call992·7147 ,

TEAFORD

~THATSCRAMBLEDWORDGAME
~ ~ ~~ "
byHenriAmoldandBobLM

Carpet &amp; Upholstery
Phone Mike Young
At
992.2206 or 992·7630

HARLEY HANING

4-24-1 mo.

'ft'fi\l1.\.41ID'ft

1 GANGa

Route

NEW HOMES
&amp; REMODELING

Free Estimates
No Sunday Calls Please

33.
.
.
ll :OD-News 3,4,6,6,1 0,13,15; MacNeii·Lehrer Reporl
33.

410·1 m~.

Ph. 112·llll

CARPENTER
&amp;
•
BUILDERS

A local contractor
Phone 949-2801
or 949·2860

Near You 20.

· lARRl.!!Y,~DER

_gT~e .::---c-----,~

NEW LISTING- l'h acres
with a 3 bedroom home just

Saw
us
1 Good Used Poulan Chain

~~~­
AWMIIUM
SIOIK-SOFfm
Glmtii$MIIIIIIGS

Chester, Ohio

BISSEll SIDING CO.

ME!

9:31)-(lne Day at A Time 8.10: Best of Ernie Kovacs
20.33.
.
10 : OO.,...Pollce Story 3,15 : P llol " The Cabot Connection"
8,10; News 20; The Way II Was 33.

AEPIACEIIIEIII
~~~-·­

10·17-1 mo(Pd)

BEAUTIFUL TWO story home with
two car garage , 5 bedroom s, . HOUSE WITH 5 lots , 279 Brood·
way . Phone992-5585.
din1ng room , Iorge liVi hg room ,
modern kitchen , 2 V, baths , HOUSE IN Tuppers Plains , 2
Iorge recreation room , fully air
bedrooms, a lec . heat , double
cond itioned. 1/ ,
mi le from
garage, 2 lots . Phone (6 14)
school. One quarter mile off
667-3065 or 667· 3360 .
State Route, 30 year financing
ava ilable . Coli 992·3863 bet- 13 A. and 1974 Mobi le horne, one
other mobile home site. Drilled
ween9 a. m . and 3 p .m.
well. on 6el near Tuppers
HOME IN Pomeroy , 2 story , cen Plains , $10,900. Phone (614 )
tral heating . some corpeting
667·3668.
and pannelling . Both &amp; 1/ 1 •
fwo LOTS together ·on Sta te 124,
Phone 99'2 -7074 . or 992-3465 .
Syracuse, m1ddle of town. Idea l
56 ACRE Form , house remodeled ,
for mobile home or new home.
plenty of outbuildings, cattle
Septic , tonk , and water to p .
and equipment included . Phone
Phone 992 -7402. or 742 -2194 .
247· 2241
f'or appoi r'lfment

$14,000.

Chest Freezer
Slit 95
Now in- ... ucK , compter.. ,;n~
of bulk garden seeds and
onion sets .
I . good McCullough Chain

KEN GROVER
PHOTOGRAPHY
!614) 985·4155

Vinyl &amp; . Aluminum
Sidi.ng,
Storm
Windows
&amp;
Insulation.
Call Professionals

_ _:,'P·.r.

5HAOOWED?!

Shoorl Story 20,33.
8:3()-Laverne &amp; Shirley 6,13; Baseball 4.
9:0D-Rich Man. Poor Man 6.13 M·A·S·H 8,10: World of
Franklin &amp; Jefferson J3; Opening Soon at a Theater

lnsulatiol s.mces
TIUtKiftt: ......
Blown illtfw... I Attics
SlOfiM

I

f&gt;OTH G!:TTIN~
PARANOID!

6,13; Who's Who 8,10; Redscene '77 4; American

NOT IF I SPOT
THAT SAME GUY
STIJ.L WATCHING

lO:Jo- Biack Perspect ive on the News 20; Americana

Aefiial
Commercial
Schools.
Weddings

Pll.ll2·2174

MAV&amp;F; WI!!"RE

-n

FREE

PHOTOGRAPHY

Radiator
Service

~

YOU ACTUALLY
THlt&gt;lK 50!.\W~JE:S
l!oJ;EN ~AVIN ~ YOU

Rutlond Grado
Schoof. Evening work by
appointment. Ph. 742·2005.
. _ 5·6·1 mo:.J&gt;d..:

PROFESSIONAL

EXPERI

7:30-Hollywcod Squares 3,4: Let's Deal With It 6:
Match Game PM 8; MacNeil . Lehrer Report 20,33;
In The Know 10; Wild Kingdom 13 ; TV Honor
Society 15 .
8 ~ 00---Movle "Jeremiah Johnson" 3,1.5; Happy Days

Behind

Complete
Sales
and
' Service and Supplies.
3-1 4-1 m .

VA -FHA , 30 yr. finan ci ng. Ireland
Mortgage , 77 E. State , Athens .

teners, model VC-SVI.
Only S279.t5
Save $50.00 on a new

Hotpoint Refrigerator .

TUESDAY , MAY 10, t977
5:3()-Adam·12 4; News6: F"itmlly Affair B; Elec. Co.
20,33.
6:DO-News 3,U ,8,10,13,15; Zoom 20: Fire &amp; Ice JJ.
6:3()-NBC News3,4,1 5; ABC News 13: Andv Griffith 6;
CBS New• 8,10: Vegetable Soup 20 .
I :DO-Trufhor Cons. 3; To Tell the Truth 4; Liar's Club
6: Country Canlval 8: News 10; To Tell the Truth
13; My Three Sons 15: Anyone for Tenny!iOn 20;

CAP!' A1N EASY

Alignment,
wheel
ba Ia nci ng,
tune- up,
brake work, minor
repair.

Nobil Summit Road
Rl. 1
Middleport, 0 .
992·5724

Carpet. Lino.-Tilt .
Phone Mike Young ot
992,111W or 992,7,30

v,,

corner lot. 3 bedrooms with

~

-

NEW J bedroom house, 2 baths ,
oil elec., I ocre, Midd lepor t ,
dose to Ru tland. Ph one 992 7481.

8 room frame home on

1·42 1n. cost iron kitchensink 1
basin and 1 drain board. h~ng
· on wall type, white, 1-3 burner
gas . hot plate . Phone99:2- 571 .. . LOOKING FOR trovel trailer .
~-truck camper , camping trailer,
ECONOMY TRACTOR with all atminihome
, truck cap? Travel
tachments. Like new , asking
froi ler to rent? COONER" S
$2250. Phone (614) 698·3290.
CAMPERS on Rainbow Ridge" .
~
FOR MEMOR.lAl DAY: Beautiful
open evenings. Toke Meigs :28
selection of flowers . Baskets,
Or 32 to 8oshan . Robert
sprays, wreaths , vases. Fay's
Codner, Long Bottom, Owner.
.
- -·--·
N~elty Shop. N. Second St.,
COONER'S CAMPERS on ~o i n­
M1ddleport,
bowridge; Sales, Rental, SerHOMEGROWN Tomato plants , imvice ,
Supplies ;
trailers ,
pro-ved Mexican early Vio lent,
campers, cops, alum . awnings
golden Jubilees . Also , golden
and porches by Ourabilt. Open
A cre cabbage . Across from the
evenings. Meigs :28 or 3:2 to
swimming
pool.
Th o mas
Soshon . Owner Robert Codner,
Haymon, Syrrocvs,, Ohio,
long Bottom .

---

Coll992 ·7481 .

NEW LISTING- Good old

Cabbage,

broccoli, cauliflower. brussel
sprouts, egg plants , hanging
baskets , pots , geraniums ,
begonias , flats , petunias ,
marigolds , pansies , solzio,
balsam ,
dianthus ,
snap dragons , alyssum, Virico , col eus , Cl4flond 's Greenhouse,
Recine. Geraldine Cleland .

Landmork

Pomeroy Landmark

SPRING GARDEN Supplies, Cob·
boge, cauliflower. broccoli ,
and
head l&amp;ttuOe Plants ,
yellow, white, and red onion
sets , onion plants , Kennebec,
cobbler, Katahd in, Red Pontiac
and Red Losodo seed potatoes.
Bulk garden seeds . potting soil.
peat moss , fruit trees and rose
bushes . Midway Market ,
Pomeroy , Ohio, 992 -25B2 .
Bob : s Market, Mason , W . Vo.
(3Q4) 773·5721 .

PLANTS ,

Pomeroy

'Now Only ·.

1973 JEEP CJ5, good condition.
Plus ex tra s, $2900. Bunher Hi ll
Rd . across from cemetery.

1973 JEEP CJ5 , good condition ,
Plus e)(fros. $2900. 1 8unker Hill
Rood across from c;e'm etery.

HOMESITES for sole , I acre and
up . Middleport, near Rutland.

J !_eport ·- - - , - - - , - - FOR SALE - NEW oil elec. home i n
Syracuse , Iorge lot, oiiJrT!inum
siding, 3 bedrooms, kitchen ,
din1ng area , ful ly carpete-d
bot~ .
utility room, garage.
___f hone 992·7-4 19.

soften &amp; condition your
water and a Co-op water
,softener, Mode l UC-XVI .

3290:...
. ~------­

TOMATO,

OF

Assorted variety at occasional
tables . Wood shelving with
plos l ie surface 10 in wide by 8
ft . long $:2.00 eo. pie&lt;;e, also 8
in . wide by 8 H. long, $1.75
each piece. Formica surface
shelving 10 in.)( 12ft. x 5·8 in .
$5.00 each piece, lO 'in . I( 8ft.
$4 .00 each p iece . Flakeboord 4
ft )( 8 ft . )( 11, · i n. $3 20 each
sfleet. Hardboard; Formica
Sheets. Assorted furniture
hardware · pulls , cabinet
hingeS, etc. Screws . bolts and
nufs , $1.00 ~r pound. Permit

FRIDAY . MAY 13th. Watch for
signs , lower end of Syracuse .
Mary Gu111ther, Southern Bond

742 · 31 ::
62:.:·~---"c"---- _]o~te~r~··~--~--~----­

AKC SHETLAND sheep dogs.

OUT

SOFTENER?

RISING STAR Kennel Boarding, 2 FAMILY Yard Sole, May II , 91ill
4. Rustic Hills , Syracuse .
1
Indoor-Outdoor runs . grooming
all breeds, clean sanitary 3 IAMIL Y YARD Sole by the State
focilitiato ~ 367-7112. Cheshire .
Highway Garage, Rt. 7 Cllester .
Phqne (61A) 367 -0292.
May 12, and 13. Whole sets of
dishes, linens , screen ' doors,
HOOF HOLLOW. Buy , sell , trade
some furniture, jewelry and
or train horses. RUTH REEVES,
uniforms. M isc.
trainer. Phone (614)698-3290.

ifeal=EStaii!JiliiSiib.
=

COUNTRY Farmland with sedud ·
&amp;d woods, water and good aclong topper, luggage rock on
cess 1n Monroe County, W, Vo • .
tap, cabinets inside. $300. ·
S1.000 down, coli (304) 772·
Ph one '985 -3860.
~ 3~2 o• (304 ) 772-3227

GOING

1JoJ()-Johnny Carson 3,4,15; Movie " Journey Into

Amer ican Issues Forum 33 .

DUG.lJ'S
FRONT END
ALIGNMENT

Young's Carpeting

~l(te ll en t con dition, $500. 8ft.

45760.

BREED Dog' grooming ,
reasonable rates . Call for op·
poin tment, J &amp; 0 Kennels,

R.

Serv ice .

1975 FORD 3000 lroclor Mode l
KA- 114-C in excellent condition . Used about 2 hours . For
mo r e
info rmati on ,
co li

Coll'l'l2·2156.
HAVING PORCH Sole , Weds. ,
Thurs .. .Friday and Saturday plus all ne)(t week . 707 Oliver
Street , M iddleport, Ohio .

Ch~rles

Buick Cen tury , 4 dr. air , Both In
excellent c_onditio n, Co li
992 -5516

IF YOU hove o service to offer,
Wont to buy or salt something,
ae looking for work .. : or
whatever ... you 'll get results
foster with a Sentm&amp;l Wont Ad.

All

_dt_~o~~-~-~--

1975 HONDA 750, man{, extr;; ,
Only 3500 miles , A so, 1(/73

AREA DAILY

742·2590.

SUNDAY VISITORS
Mr. .and Mrs. Charles
Vroman and daughter, Mary
and son, Mark, home on leave
from the U. S. Navy, . were
Sunday dinner guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Fielding Ha&gt;ykins.
Mternoon visitors of the
Hawkins were ·Mr. and Mrs.
William Popp and Shannan,
Zanesville; Mr. and Mrs. Neil
Clark and Mrs. Edith Dunlap,
Conrlng.
·

GooD RICH Top soil.
Hattield Backhoe
Phone J..-2 -2008.

_ 1 49-2265.

or

TRAILER SPA CE for· rent located
sou th of Middleport on R1. 7
along the river . Sewer and
electr ic hooked up , $40 per
month, Ce ll 992 -2561 afternoon
or evenings ._ _ _ __

COAL , limestone, and calcium
ch loride and calcium brine for
dust con tr ol ond special mixi ng
salt for formers , EKcelsior Sa lt
FOR SALE or trade. Reg. Polled
Works , Main Street , Pomeroy,
Hereford bull . Phone 843 -319.3 .
Ohio or phone 992- 3891 ,

GOOD USED bob-,. strol ler. Phone

Contact 675-1333

ORO-tiD ROOM tor rent for an niversaries, weddi ng rece p·
lion,, bridal showers or private
mee ting room . Phone 992 -3975
or 992 -2571 .

-~

Standing timber. Phone 667 -6214 .

C•se No . 22,099
Estate of Margaret Smith,
Deceased .
Notice Is hereby given that
Dale E . Smith of 695 Grieves
Lane, Zanesville , Ohio , has
.been du ly appointed Ad ·
ministrator of the Estate of
Margaret Smith deceased ,
late of
U0 1h
Mulberry
Avenue, Pomeroy , Me i gs
County , Oh l o .
creditors are required to
file their claims with said
fiduciary
within
three
months .
Dated this 23rd day of
April, 1977 .
Mann ing D . Webster
Judge
( 5) 3, 10, 17 , 3tc

~~

'1'12·2689.

SENTINEL

COU NTRY Mobile Home Pork , Rt.
33 , ien miles north of Pomeroy.
Lorge lots with co,crete pot1os,
sidewa lks, runners and ptt
street park ing. Phone 9'92-7479.

FURNI SHED APT . Adults only, nc
pets, Ph one 9'92-3874 , Mid -

!~ -=~~~~~

FOR MASON

5434.

CAPITAL FINANCE SERVICES
300 West Second Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
AN EQUA L OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER

ce pting applications for lull CASH paid for al l makes and
time and parttlme security
models of mobile homes.
posi tions , military bockgrovnd
Phone area code 614 ·4:23 -953 1.
preferred but not required . No
phone calls pleose. Apply in TIMBER . Pomeroy Forest Pro·
ducts . Top price tor sta nding
person at Appalachian Power
sawtimber , Coli Kent Honby,
Project 1301 , New Hoven,
1-446--857 0
W .Va . We are an Equal Op ·
~~un i tv_:E:::m:!p:::lo:!Y:•~.::
• ·c __ __
COINS , CURRENCY , tohens , old
pocket w atches and cha ins,
FRIENDLY HOME Toy Parties has
si lve r and gold . We need 1964
openings for managers and
and older s1lver coins . Buy . sell.
deolers in your area . Toy porty
o~ trade' Call Roger Wamsley ,
plan experie nce he lpful. Cor
742·2331.
and telephone necessary. Call
collect to Carol Day {518) CASH! ! ! for junk cof5 . Frye's
489·8395 or wr ite Fr iendly
Tru ck and Auto. WRECt&lt;ER SERHome Parties, 20 Ro il Rood
VIC.E I Phone 742 -208 1.
Ave., Albany , N .Y.I 2205 .
OLD FURNITURE . 1c e boxes , brass
TEACHERS, RETIREES, Parents Exbeds ,
etc .,
co mple te
ce llent earnings . World Bookhouseholds . W ri t' M . 0 , Mi ller ,
Childcroff Soles re presen Rt . 4, Pomeroy , Ohio or cal l
taf ives 11eeded i n Athens County . for i nterview call : (614)
WANTED - CHIPWOOO Poles ,
592·5961.
Mo K" . ciiometer, 10 inches on
EXPERIENCED meat
cutter,
largest end , sa per ton , bundl·
k nowledge of qua li ty control. D
ed slobs . $6 per ton . Oel1vered
&amp; 0 Meats , 830 E. Main St.
to Ohio Polle t Company , Rt 2
Pomeroy .
Pom eroy .
Ohio .
Ph one

ERS

3 AND ~ RM . fvrnis hed ond vn·
furnished opts . Phone 992-

1m portant force In our country's econom ic secu r ity .
The consumer f inance business Is stead y - even
during recessi ons.
You c~n win promotion r apidly . You will be pa id a
good startmg salary and rece ive e~ c eptional employee
benefits.
There are Branch Representa t ive positions open
now for high school graduates. Must have auto.
Phone Mr. Snodgrass lod.;Jy for a con fidentia l,
personal In te r view . Call 992 -2111 .

9'12-7311.

FRIEND WAS HAVINO YOU TAKE OFF TV
MEANT TROU6LE !
( ((

Business Services

•-.,..Rent

Gain recognition and presHege through a career in

NEED FEMALE to live in with
elderly lady and do cooking in
U)(chonge for
tree room .
Trons porto tion
preferred .
reference s required . Co li

-:::;iiiilb~;::;:;:;::::::;-:::-;:::::::;:;-:;:::--:::;11/";l:-"K;:;N;:;E;:W:;-:T;::l-17,E;:S:;E:-'~'CELEBRITY' PICTURES YOUR

~....-:1

COUPLE WITH 4 daughters need o
3 or 4 bedroom home . Must be
nice, Phone m -4294 .

~onsumer finance . Consumer finance is an Integral and

,.Television log for easy viewing

-

Wan led to Rent

ACAREER JOB IN
CONSUMER FINANCE

APPLIANCE SERVICE man ex·
perienced . No phone coils .
Golho Refr igeration Co .• 611
Third Ave ., Gallipol is , Ohio.

GUARANTEEO"Joe -Tr~ining­

..

D1CK.TRACY

A North Dakota reader asks
what we rebid with :
• Ju:: • xx + AKxxx •KQx
alter
our
partner
has
responded one spade to our
diamond opening.
We raise him to two spades.
We would like Lo have better
spades , but we are stuck with
the ones we were dealt.
(Do you have a question
for the experts? Wrlfe "Ask
lhe Jacoby•" care of this
newspaper. The Jacobys w/11
answer individual questions
if slam ped. self-addressed
"envelo pes are encloJ&amp;d. The

most in teresting questions
will be used in this column
and ""~'" receive copies of
JACOBY MODERN.)

�--

8 _ The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, May 10, )977
,
---------------------------I
VETERANS MEMORIA 1·
I
Admitted
Charles
1
I
1 Canter, Sy racuse: Deatra Jo
I
1 Simms. MinerS\•ille ; Mary Jo
I
' Peck .
Rutland:
Raj
FREDA FERN DEETER
CENA PARSONS
E
st

Area D eath s

LO NG BOTTOM - Fr eda
Fern Deeter . 75. Rt . 1. Long

Cena
Parsons. 82 . a
resident of Rt. 2. VInton . d ied

Malhotra, Pomeroy ; rne
Cullums, Pomeroy ; Edward

BoHom , died Sunday at M t.
Carmel
East
Hos pita l.
Columbus . She was born Nov.

in Holzer Med ical Center
Ntonday evening .
She was born in Carter

Bowen, Pomeroy .

Rare stamps
are stolen

Wahamahand
rated with
the finest

Regatta Queen wanted

The Wahama White Falcon
Band, under direction ol
Miller in 1925 and contains Charles Yeago and David
28, 1901. a daughfer o f the l ate
County. Ky .• daughter of the
By MOLLY CARRUTH
Chapman and M yrta Ker
late Christopher and Amanda
NEW YORK ( UPI ) - Au- U.S. postal stamps dating Waybright , received all
wood Hil l.
Litt leton Sloan . She wa s
thorities say whoever stole from 1845 to 1926.
superior ratings for the 13th
She was also pr eceded in
preceded i n death by her
The
collection
is
on
permapart
of
a
$t
mi!Uo~
rare
consecutive year Saturday,
death by lour . brother s.
husband , John G. Parsons, in
stamp collection from the nent display at New York at the Regional Band Festival
Floyd , Herman, and Charles, . 1959.
PLEASANT VALLEY
and an Infant ; four si ster s,
· Three
sons and two
New York Public Library had Ci ty's main library and is
DISCHARGES - Richtird "detailed information" which considered by experts to he in Huntington.
Laura Mart in, Ora Hill , Pearl
daughters surv ive : Frank ,
The band performed
Erv in and Addie Hill , and five
Columbus ; Gene , Hilliard ; Richmond, Charleston; Mrs.
one
of
the
greatest
of
its
kind.
may
have
been
supplied
liy
"Devertimento
for Band" by
grandchil dr en .
_
Jack . Rl. 2, Vinton : Mrs . Ithiel Harper, Gallipolis
"It's the history of the United Vin cen t Persechetti, and
insiders.
Surviving
are
t hese
Herb (Lucille) Thomas ,
Nmne'-----------------------------children . Violet Eddy , Dale
Westervi-lle ; and Mrs. Ted Ferry; Jerem y Franklin,
Police Lt. Harold Smith of states postage stamps," a " Festive Overture" by
and Elden , al l of Col umbus;
(Wilma) Evans , Dubl in. One Gallipolis ; Mrs. Archie
the Manhattan Burglary library spokeswoman said. Dmitri Shostakovich, for the
Glen and Ernest. both of Long
son preceded her in death. Logue, Bidwell; Mrs. Everett
AdM~--------------------------Police said a protective panel ol three judges Friday
Squad sa id the burglars
Bottom ; Argy le, Ra ci ne ;
Fourteen grandchil dren and Watterson, Point Pleasa nt;
"were not totally unfamiliar plastic cover over the morning, graded by the West
Pa t ric i a Hayes . Ashvil le ;
six
great -graridchildren
Mrs.
Glenn
No
rman
and
Jimmy, Johnstown : Marion,
survive .
with what they were doing." collection had been melted Virginia
Bandma·s ters
Centerburg ;
20
grand
One sister su r vives , Mrs. daughter, Bidwell; Clarence
The theft of an estimated away with a blow torch.
Association, Judges, Francis
&amp;~'--------------------------~
children ,
10
great Edna Jones , Graham , Ky .
Hoffman, Letart; Linda $100,000 to $250,000 worth of
Selected •tamps had heen Borkowski of
Perdue
grandchildren . and t wo
Mr s . Parsons was a Rodgers, Point Pleasant; Asa
PboM-------------rare stamps from the highly removed from 12 of the 100 University, Harry Clerk,
Age - - sisters -in -l aw, Mrs. Gl ady s member of the Little Pearl
Johnson,
Crown
City:
Carrie
Hills and Mrs . Mattie Hill,
Regular Bapti st Church, Rt .
praised Miller Collection was sliding panels, police said. University of Kentucky, and .
Ward, Lakin; Basil Deweese, discovered by a library
Among the missing stamps
bo th of Columbus , and
2, Vinton .
Campbell of Winseveral nieces and nephews .
Funeral servi ces will be Point Pleasant; Mrs. Charles
were
the 1909 Lincoln Charles
security guard about 5:30
chester, Ky., praised the
Mrs. Deeter , a member of
held a t the chur ch Thursda y, Nestor and son, Pittsburgh,
a.m. Monday when an alarm Memorial Collection, valued band for performing these
White Chapel Church at
2 p.m. with Brother Ivor y
Pa
.;
and
Mrs.
Roy
McClure,
Tuppers Plains , was a re t ired
Sowards officia ting. Burial
sounded. The guard last had at more than $2,000, and a · cballenging musical nomE-R, fire ~its are called out
school teacher
w i ll be i n Mt. Tabor Letart.
seen the display intact at 2 "very rare" 1918 Inverted 24- hers.
Funeral services wi ll be 2 Cemetery.
BIRTH - A daughter to a.m.
cent air mail stamp worth an
Wahama and a school from
p.m . Wednesday at the Whi te
Friends may call at the Mr. and Mrs. Dale Smith,
The PomerOY E-R Squad found that the truck apThe collection was donated estimated $75,000.
Chapel Church with the Rev . M cCoy -Moore Funeral Home
the
Wood County area were was called to Butternut Ave., parently had been serviced ·
Mason
.
"There
was
some
obvious
to the library by Minneapolis
Roy
Dee ter offi ciating . in Vinton on Wednesday frbm
the only hands rated superior at 9:38 Monday for Edw.ard over the weekend arid
Bur ial will be in the
7-9 p.m .
lawyer Benjamin Kurtz selectivity, I am not prepared by all three judges, playing Bowen who ·was taken to someone had left a rag lay on
Weatherbee cemetery In
oo say just how exacting they
Athens County . Friends may
Veterans Memorial Hospital the frame. In the movement
were. It's obvious they didn't grade VI music.
On
Saturday,
the
bands
call at the Ew ing Funeral
where he was admitted. At of the vehicle, the rag feU
\
just pick at random," Smith
Home any time .
paraded
through
Huntington
12:16 p.m. Monday the fire onto the exhaust system and
said.
(Continued from page I)
to
mark
the
end
of
the
threedepartment
went to the upper was smoking considerably.
Smith did not say library
ASK TOWED
On the next questions, most
day
festival.
'fhe
students
of
parking
lot
where a truck Pomeroy Fire Chief Charles
were
under
A rna rrlage license was employes
said they listened regularly to
all
bands
are
to
he
comowned
by
the
Lambert Co. of reported there was no fire
but
said
either WMPO or WJEH iss ued to Theodore Paxton suspicion,
mended
for
their
dedication
Belmont,
W.
Va.,
appeared to damage to the vehicle.
By combining your Auto
radio ; and on the follow-up Hayes, 22, Rt. 4, Pomeroy, "somebody intentionally or
and
hard
work
which
conbe
on
fire.
However,
it was
unintentionally may have
t~nd
HomeDwne rs
A clerical error is blamed question said theY had heard and Debra Ann Moog, 20, heen
tinually
makes
the
festival
a
insurance into ONE policy
feeding them details
for mistaken identity in a about the case over the radio. Athens.
success.
... You may be able to
that
they
put to good use."
Three potential jurists. on
report of names in connection
DEPUTY NAMED
with a conviction last Friday the fifth question, answered
According to an entry in
in Meigs County Court, affirmatively that they were
On your yearly insurance
reported in The Sunday personally acquainted with Meigs County Common Pleas
court Gary Joe Wolfe has
the late Mary Berry.
premiums .
Times Sentinel.
(Continued from page l)
It
was
only
last
week
that
been appointed deputy
The case was reported as
We will review your
the hands of her kldnaP.rs, would be in danger from other
the fining of "Herbert" DuM, Judge Holliday denied a sheriff.
insurance
program
prisoners because she has helped prosecutors, had already
motion
in
Young's
behalf
for
Vinton, $100 for possession of
with you free of
spent
13 months behind bars and is "neither a present nor
BOOSTERS
TO
MEET
a
change
of
venue
following
a
marijuana. This was not true.
charge any day of the
future
law enforcement risk." ·
hearing
in
which
his
atRACINE
Southern
The case involved, instead,
POINT PLEASANT - Mid transporting dangerous and
week .
Junior
High
Athletic
Boosters
torneys
attempted
to
show
Eugene Dunn, 32, Box 99E,
Ohio Valley Industrial toxic chemicals.
AHIDJAN, IVORY COASf - ANDREW YOUNG, U. S.
Pomeroy (Rock Springs) who there was too much un- will meet Wednesday, May ll Emergency Planning Council
Outlined in the seminar will Ambassador to the United Nations, arrived today from
·favorable
pre-trail
publicity
at
7:30
p.m.
atthe
junior
high
was fined $100 for possession
is plaMing a seminar May be the identification of Washington on tbe first stop on a 12-&lt;lay tour 9f Africa which be
in the Register.
in Racine.
·
of
marijuana.
CALL OR STOP
and
toxic said will include a controversial visit to South Africa.
Hlth and 11th at 7-10 p.m . eac)l hazardous
Herbert DuM of Rt. 2,
AND SEE US
evening at the Nationa l chemicals in transit, visual
· In Abidjan, Young will have a three-day meeting with 38 U.
Vinton is a special deputy
Guard Armory, north of here. t a n k - t r u c k s h ut o.H S. ambassadors to African countries at the liJXUl'IOus Hotel
sheriff of Gallia · County ·
According to a spokesman procedures, the handling of d'Ivoire. Asked about h~ trip to South Africa before leaving
presently studying police
for the organizaiion, the LP gas emergencies and Washington Young told reporters, "I'll be going. What I do ·
work at his own expense in a
seminar is fashioned for any others.
there depends on the people who Invited me." He said he was
310 hour course at Beverly,
All .area law enforcement confident he would be admitted to South Africa and says
emergency related group
Ohio.
singled to make it 1-0 that would be concerned with officers, emergency squads · President Carter wants him 'oo be controversial.
BY GARY CLARK
" The
accidents involving vehicles, and fire departments are
Wahama.
Insurance
cordially invited to attend.
DOOR OPEN ON 11TH
The Bend Area nine made. it
The Wahama White Falcons
HONOLULU-U.S. STEEL COMPANIES are at "war"
Store"
Registratiop will be during with developing countries whose output will likely grow fout
A representatl ve from edged out the Buffalo Bisons ~ with a lone tally in the third
the first session on May 10. times laster than industrialized nations, Industry leaders
Congressman Clarence E. of Putnam County by a slim 4- without the aid of a base hit.
Certificates will be awarded warned Monday. Robert Welch, president of the Steel Service
Miller's office will conduct an 3 margin in the opening round Jerry Tucker led off with a
Phone 992-5130
Athens
Livestock
Sales,
for
those completing the two · Institute told its 68th annual meeting that it is time for
open
door
session
from
10
of Region Four Section Four base on balls followed by
214 E. Main
Inc.
evening
sessions.
a.m.-12
noon
in
the
courtAmerica~ steel producers to contest trade practices that favor
Sectional Tourney play another free pass to Tim
Pomeroy
Saturday, May7, 1977
house
in
Pomeroy
on
May
ll.
their foreign counterparts . .
Sayre
a
sacrifice
bunt
by
Ken
.
Monday evening by corning up
Feeder Steers - Choice 39U. S. steel producers are "engaged in a devastating war ...
Riggs
moved
both
baseruri·
with two seventh inning runs.
43; Good 31-38.75. Feeder
a
violent
economic war ... one which is being waged from
ners
up
a
notch
where
Tucker
Rick Buuard delivered a
Heifers - Choice 29.75-34.50 ;
within
as
well as ,frorn without," Welch said. ''When foreign
two out single to bring home stole home for the . White Good 23·2ll.50.
steel
producers
ship metal Into key geographic markets In lull ,
Duke Smith with the winning Falcons second run of the
Slaughter Bulls (Over 1,000
knowledge
that
such shipments are going to sit in warehouses
lbs.) 31 .90-34,
tally to enable the White game.
or
on
the
docks,
that's the same as shooting U.S. troops in the
Mike
Goldsberry,
Feeder Bulls - Good 2ll.25Falcons to advance to the
trenches.
That's
war. Yet, that is precisely what is happening
Anria M . Ryther, Comm .•
sectional finals to be held at who started on the mound for 3!1.
today.
Slaughter Cows: Utility Arthur Elwood Koenig, dec.
Thurs~ay Wahama, was breezing along
Wahama on
"That's why it's getting tougher and tougher to make a
.Ruth Frances Koenig,
with a four hit shutout when 26.75·30.30; Canner-Cutter to
evening.
22.747 ' acres, 11.21 acres,
decent profit and develop capital for expansion, modernization
Orange - Chester .
Buzzard's game winning disaster struck in the 22. 75-26.SO.
and research. That's why American industry is bleeding."
Mir iam Suzanne Weaver
Veals
(Choice-Prime)
45Bisons
half
of
the
fifth.
Two
safety was his thircl base
.
Kuhl. to Billy Dean Kuhl.
knock of ·the game maklrig walks and a single plated one 57 . .
dec., Affida vi t, Orange.
Hogs (Barrows-Gilts, 200Hil da Olmstead to Odessa
him the big offensive weapon run and sent Goldsberry to the
230
lbs.) 39-:)9.35.
Pr"Offitt, 1 acre, Lebanon.
lor the victorious White showers , bringing on Jerr}'
·James E . Willis , Martha R.
Sows - 32-32.85.
Tucker In relief. Another base
Falcons.
Willis
to Claren.ce
D.
Pigs
(By
the
head)
19:41.
Buffalo's John Eich mat· on balls and the second hit of
Mcintyre,
Patricia
D.
Boars
23.lll-26.SO.
Mc intyre , .992 acre, Salem.
ched Buzzards' feats at ' the the innlrig prod.uced two more
George R. Young, dec . to
plate with three hits or' his own Bison runs to give Buffalo a
Richard M . Young, Edward
In four tries but unfortunately suprtsing 3-2 lead.
A. Young ,· Cert. of trans. ,
Salisbury.
lor the Bisons they were Buffalo's Mike Smith surADDITIONS MADE
defeated for the third time this vlved the Falcon sixth and It
Dr. Daniel H. Whiteley, M.
r
season by the bend area team. looked as U Wahama was ·D., ·Gallipolis, was elected to
BAD LUCK GROWS
In the two rivals first two going to bite the dust but a two serve on the board of .
CARSON
CITY, Nev .
encounters the White Falcons run seventh frame kept their directors, and Mrs. Charles
(UPI)
Gamblers
In
blanked Buffalo on con- tourney hopes alive.
Grant, Gallipolis, and Mrs.
Nevada
casinos
,lost
$347.7
. secutlve no-hitters by Mike A walk and a hit batsmen Charles Hayes , Pomeroy
' Goldsberry and Mark Smith spelled the difference for were added to the executive million during the first three
months of this year, an Inbut when "the do or die Smith as both rwmers came in committee when the South crease
of 19.4 per ·cent
situation arose ihe Biso~ Ul score .with the later racing East Ohio Lung Assn. held its compared to 1976, the state
gave Wahama all they could home with the winning run on annua l meeting. recently at Gaming Control Board
handle.
Buzzards' safe blow to give The Sportsman 10 Athens.
Put your prized possessions,
reported Monday.
The locals broke on top 1n Wahama the narrow victory.
your irreplaceable documents
the opening inning with a
Wahama now advances to
where you can get to them but
single tally on two hits. After the sectional finals against the
harm can't . .. a burglar-proof,
Tim Sayre had grounded out survivor of either H81Ul8n,
Ken Riggs singled and swiped Harts or Winfield on Thursday
fire-proof safe deposit box.
second. Puke Smith flew out to evening beginning at 5:00
Yearly Rentals
right field but Tim Thompson p.m.
We Offer You Quiet .and Privacy
As Well as Complete Protection
Disc harged Rober,t
w ll5
Manley, Timothy e ·

Rail subsidy would be
about $2,695 monthly

The Meigs County Olamber of Commerce is looking for
the 1m Big Bend Regatta Queen.
Rules have been chang~ this year and now any urunarried
girl from 16 through 19 years old is eligible. Previously, only
senior girls were permitted to enter. Even though the age
requirement has been relaied, contestants must be from
Meigs County. The new queen will be crowned during regatta
weekend on June 17.
Girls wishing to ent.,- may complete the accompanying
application blank and mailing it to Tanya Davis, Route 3,
Pomeroy, Ohio, 45769. Anyooe needing any more information
may call Mrs. Davis after 6 p.m. at 985-3501.

KANAUGA - A subsidy
payment of approximately
$2,695 per month would have
to be paid by local shippers if
rail service is to be restored
from Kerr in Gallia County to
Pomeroy .
That .was the statement of
Mark J. Randall, chief of
planning for the Ohio Rail
Transportation Authority
(ORTA ) during an information meeting at the

1---------------------'

Error blamed

Personal!

Market Report

.

.Property
Transfers

for ALL your banking needs .

CITIZENS NATIONAL BANK

'

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

·we Keep YourValuable11
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FAMILY DINING'

legance in any roo1111

AT ITS BEST

,THE INN PlACE

WEDNESDAY NIGHT SPECIAL
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
Our NEW Telephone Number Is

992-6661
Installment Loan Department Number Will
Remain the Same 992-3007.
·Member Federal Deposit Insurance
(Mporation

DEPOSITS INSURED TO $40,000

Visit OUr Salad Bar, Ground Sirloin,
Home Fries, Vegetable, Hot Rolls,
Coffee, Tea or Milk.

MEN'S KNIT SHIRTS
Perfect example is this knit jersey rugby stripe
sport shirt with Allen Solly placket and white
fashion co llar. Easy-care Kodel polye ster and
co tton in navy /red, navy/gold, navy/green.
Sizes 5-M-L-Xl .
Be sure to see all the fine styled mefis knit
shirts, solid colors, patterns - also tank
tops. Men's and boys sizes.
·

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY.

Traffic congestion in the
area of the proposed multipurpose building to be
erected on Mulberry Heights
near Veterans Memorial
Hospital may become a
problem it was learned
Tuesday night at a meeting of
Meigs County Board of
Commissioners.
The commissioners and the
hospital board discussed. the

MULTIPLE BffiTHS - Out of a total enrollment of 171 pupils, the Riverview
Elementary &amp;hool at Reedsville has four sets of twins and one. of triplets. The group
includes, front,! tor, Amy and Angie Young, children of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Young, Route
1, Reedsville, third grad~rs; Deena and Diana Connolly, children of M_r. and Mrs. Dale
Connolly, Long Bottom, ftrst graders; Caralyn and Maralyn Barton, chtldren of Mr. and
Mrs. Richard Barton, Route 1, Reedsville, first graders; hack row, Richard and Sally
Smith, chiiMim of Mr. and Mrs. Richard 5mith, Reedsville, third and fourth graders,
respectively, and last but not least, the triplets, Mike, Mark and Ann Jones, children of Mr.
and Mrs. Frank Jones, Reedsville, fifth graders.

•

News.; in Briefs

Falcons win 4-3

Reuter-Brogan

subsidy. Asked how much
this would he .in money,
Nielsen estimated the figure
to be $2,695 per month. He
said this is only 10 percent of
the expected deficit cost of
operating the line.
Nielsen also said the
percentage of subsidy to be
required from local sources
will increase in future years.
Next April first (1978 ) it will
rise to 20-80 per cent, the

following April first , to 30-70
pet., under present law.
Tom Tope, president of the
Gallipolis Area Chamber of
Commerce, welcomed those
present and introduced the
visitors. Assisting with maps
at the meeting was George
Amott ol Middleport, a Rio
Grande College student who
is chairman of the Meigs
County Railroad Committee.

Traffic may pose problem

for mistaken
Dunn identity

Emergency planners
will conduct seminar

Randall was one of three of
the rail authorities fielding
their questions. Assisting him
were William T. Nielsen,
plannerfor ORTA, and Miss
C. Whittaker, also with
ORTA .
The rail authorities explained that under federal
statute a railroad can be
required to continue service
if the shippers or local
agencies pay the rPOuired

l

Young's

Save 10% to 25%

Holiday Inn here Wednesday
morning . Randall was
meeting with interested
shippers who had indicated
an interest in returning
railroad service Ul the line
mentioned. The U. S. lntcnaate Commerce Com·
mission has authorized the
Chessie System to abandon
service on the line.
Twenty-one persons attended the meeting and

en tine

at

WEDNESDAY, MAY 11, 1977

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

VOL. XXVIII NO. 19

~,:,-.,i;·n;;;J~carter to
By United Press International
WASHINGTON - IT TOOK SOME PERSONAL lobbying
by Vice President Walter Mondale before tbe consumer
By HELEN THOMAS
protection agency bill squeaked through the House Govern- . UPI White House Reporter
men\ Operations Committee by a single vote.
WASIDNGTON (UP! ) With some furious lobbying on both sides from business, President Carter, back from
labor and consumer.groups, as well as the administration, the a successful six-day London
measure was approved Tuesday, 22 to 21, surviving summit trip, tackled a desk
Republican attempts to knock out key provisions. A similar full of paper work today and
measure earlier won overwhelming approval In the Senate planned to ~eport to Itt•
Government Affairs Conunittee where only Sen. Sam Nunn, D- nation on his talks with
Ga., voted against it. .
European leaders at a news
conference Thursday.
DETROIT - PRICE TAGS ON 1978-:MODEL cars will
Carter arrived at Andrews
probably range $300 to $350 higher than on the current models Air Force Base outside
in dealer showrooms because of climbing steel prices and Washington at 10:2Q p.m.
inflationary pressures. Industry and financial analysts who EDT ·Tuesday in a "very
were auestloned Tuesday after only recently announced steel happy" mood and said he was
price hikes said increases in the auromobile struck by the "genuine exmarket are a certainty, though they probably won't come pression of friendship toward
hefore the new models are introduced this fall.
our people" in both London
Arvid Jouppi, Detroit-based analyst for the Wall Street and Geneva.
firm of Colin Hochstin Co., said the retail price of the averageFrom all reviews Carter
equipped car- $5,7SO on 1977 models -will _vrobably rise to scored personally, not only
tA: 1M urh~n thfll '71tc; .are introduced. &gt;~The prtces won't go up · with the British people but
before the new models are introduced," Jouppi said. "U the also with many of the
companies r~auy needed the price hikes now; they would take European statesmen whom
tpem."
he met for the first time while
attending the seven-nation
OKLAHOMA CITY - A FEDERAL JUDGE has ruled economic summit, the four·
cancer patients can import the banned drug laetrile if they power summit talks and the
have a doctor'S affidavit that they need it. U.S. District Judge NATO ministerial meeting.
I..nther Bohanon made the ruling and prepared a standard
Carter had scheduled a
form lor the affidavit Tuesday after meeting with atoorneys for news conference for 7:30 p,m.
the Food and Drug Administration and cancer patients.
EDT Thursday, but moved it
Kenneth Coe, an attorney representing cancer patients up to 2:30 p.m. EDT alter
who want to import the drug, hailed the order as a victory for learning the evening hour
pro-Laetrile forces. He said Bohanon's order overturns FDA clashed with the second in a
guidelines on who can import the MUg. The FDA had ruled that series of David Frost inpatients must have been examined within the past three terviews with Richard Nixon .
months and be expected to die of cancer within several
Carter was welcomed home
months.

--

.

WASHINGTON - PIPEIJNE CONSTRUCTION pushed
Alaska's individual income to $10,!781ast year for the highest
earnings In the nation, but Michigan made the biggest
perceniage gain because of rehired auto work~rs. Although
most other A!l1ericans fared less well than those 10 Alaska and
Michigan incomes in only five states - Hawaii, Montana,
Nebraska', and North and South Dakota- failed to keep pace
with Inflation.
These developments were revealed in the Commerce
Department's 19'16 report on per capita income for the SO states
and the District of Columbia, released Tuesday. Ohio ranked
well up among tlie SO states with an increase of 10.3 pet. to
$6.432 frcim $5,a:J2.
WASHINGTON-RESULTS OF A SURVEY by United
Mine Workers President Arnold Miller indicate nearly pne·
third of the union membership is undecided regarding the·
union election June 14. The poll, purportedly based on 311mlnute telephone interviews with 32Q union members, gave
Miller 33.3 per cent of the vote, but 28.3 per cent were
undecided and 9.1 per cent refused to Indicate which candidate
they support.
Challenger Lee Roy Patterson of Kentucky had 17.6 .per
cent and Harry Patrick, 11.3 per c,e nt. Campaign atdes
acknowledged that Miller's apparent advantage could eastly
dwindle during the final month of the campaign.
Miller also released Tuesday a list of his campaign
contributors, claiming that over 90 per cent of the rota! $28,748
contributions came from union members. Among the b1ggest
contributors was $1,000 donor Harry Huge, union pension fund
trustee.
'

COLUMBUS - STATE AUDITOR THOMAS FERGUSON
said Tuesday that the Licking Valley Local School District
faces a possible deficit of as much as $88,000 by the end of the
year which could mean the closing of sc~ls in the district.
Fer~n told school officials that his office could n.ot cer.tify a
definite school closing date because of tnsufftclent
information.
"Howev.,-, we can definitely attest that your school
district will have insufficient funds oo remain open for the
entlrecalenclaryear,Jan. 1,1977,through Dec. 31,1977," said
Fergullln . state examiners said the projected $88,000 deficit
did not include unemployment compensation which would
ha,le oo be paid teachers and nonteaching employes shoul~ the
~oo~cm~ .
.

loca tion of the proposed Ave. to the new building to be
building and the traffic followed by another meeting
problems that n\ight be between commissioners and
the hospital board to recaused at the hospital.
The architect's site examine the traffic problem.
ln other matters, Mrs.
recommendation for the
building Is south of the Gene Lyons of the health
existing old Children's Home. department met with the
Commission decided to board to discuss the departproceed with preliminary ment's budget . She was
design work on the proposed advised to request a meeting
access road off Mulberry with the budget commission.

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

report to nation Thursday

by First Lady Rosalynn
Carter and by Vice President
Walter Mondale, who leaves
Thursday for an Euorpean
tour of his own.
The President's aides were
highly pleased at results of
the trip.
On the homeward flight,
presidential assistant
Hamilton Jordan said "this
was the first time any of us
· has really had a sense of the
international dimensions of
the American presidency.',' .
Carter has an invitation
from French President
Valery Giscard D"Estaing to
visit France in the fall. While
making no commitment,
Carter said he would try to
take up the invitation.
National Security Affairs
adviser Zbigniew Brzezinski,
summing. u·p results of the
economic summit, told
reporters that a mechanism
· for coordinating effective
cooperation among the advanced Western industrial
democracies had been
established for the first time.
He also said the summit
reflected a reaffirmation of
the close collaboration between the United States,
Western Europe and Japan.
Brzezinski said one important consequence of the

Republic cuts
'
its price hike

CLEVELAND ( 0PI) Republic Steel Corp. tOday
rolled back a previously announced 1·9 per cent price
hike on flat rolled and bar
Steel to stay competitive with
U.S. Steel Corp., which plans
Ul hike prices 6 per cent.
"Republic steel Corp. announced ooday that it will
. reduce
Its
previously
announced price increases to
a level competitive with those
of a major competitor,
effective June 19," Republic
said in a one sentence
statement.
Republic Steel . President
W. J. De Lancey said last
Friday, when the firm first
announced its intended price
·increases , that "rapidly
rising costs make an-increase
at this time imperative"
because " the cost-price
relationship of steel has
deteriorated steadily.''
Youngstown · Sheet and
Tulle Co. also backed down on
its announced 7-9 per cent
increase on flat rolled and
bar steel products Tuesday,
falling into Jine with a 6 per
cent hike initiated by No. I
producer U.S. steel.
Youngstown also said it
was pushing back the date the

Thompson Ford, Middleport;
Smith Nelson Motors,
Pomeroy and Pomeroy Motor
Co., Pomeroy; on the pickup,
Smith Nelson Motors and Dan
Thompson Ford ; on the
passenger car, Tom Rue
Motors, Pomeroy Motor,
Smith Nelson Motors and Dan
Thompson Ford.
·
An agreement between the
Meigs
County
Com·
missioners, the county
engineer, Meigs County
Agriculture Society and Drew
Webster Post 39, American
Legion was signed giving an
easement to use and maintain
TR 79 on American Legion
property.
Attending were Henry
Wells, Richard Jones and
James
Roush ,
ComNOW YOU KNOW
missioners, and Mary
The state bird of Penn- Hobstetter, acting clerk.
sylvania is the ruffed grouse.

A resolution was made by
the commissioners declaring
Tuesday, May 17, Senior
Citizens Day.
The commissioners opened
bids for a self-propelled
bituminous paver, dump
trucks, pickup truck and a
passenger car for the highway department. All bids
were tabled for further study.
Submitting bids on the
paver were Columbus
Equipment Co., Columbus :
King Euipment Co., Dublin,
and the McLean Co.
Columbus; on the dump
trucks were Meigs Equipment,
Pomeroy ;
Dan

increases become effective,
from May IS to June 19, the
same day U.S. Steel's hikes
take effect.
Republic Steel and Youngs·
town Sheet and Tube were the
first two major producers to .
trigger the current round of
price increases.

summit was that it indicated
a beginning of " the
restoration of confidence in
the West.''
The foreign policy adviser

said the long gallery where
the delegates gathered was
hushed when Carter spoke,
and every ·European leader
wanted a bilateral talk with

him about mutual problems.
''There was no doubt that
the
unknown
former ·
governor of Georgia simply
impressed these people by

two things: one, he knew his
facts, and two, his facts were
part of a larger picture which
he co uld articulate effectively, " Brzezinski said. '

W. Va.'s .Secretary ~f State
to kick-off Pomeroy cleanup
A. J . llianchin, West
Virginia Secretary of State,
will be guest speaker at a
dinner to kick off the cleanup
campaign in Pomeroy. Fred
Crow, president of the
Pomeroy Chamber of
Commerce, announced
Tuesday at the regular noon
luncheon of the chamber at
the Meigs Inn.
The dinner will be May 19
at 6:30p.m. at the Meigs Inn.
Tickets to the dinner at $5
each may be purchased from
Barbara Chapman,
secretary; the office of Crow,
Crow and Porter, Paul
Simon, C of C vice 'president,
and the New York Clothing
House.
The dinner will be · cosponsored by the Pomeroy
Citizens Action Group. Jim
Winebrenner of the Graphic
Arts and Design Department
at Ohio University will offer
suggestions
on
the
beautification of Pomeroy.
Bill
Young
said
Winebrenner deals with
restoration of buildings and
can give sugge~lons and
show pictures 'of what
Pomeroy could look like.
There are 58 buildings on
Main and Court Streets
Young said.
Ii was pointed out that

Virgil Teaford and Lorenzo · but will be larger than last
Davis have already begun year. The programs will sell
restoration to properties they for 25 cents each.
own
and
11
other
In reporting on the Regatta
businessmen plan to restore parade Jim Frecker told the
their buildings , it was chamber it Is believed there
disclosed.
will he new additions this
President Crow suggested year and letters have been
some form of recognition be . mailed to organizations ingiven businessmen who viting them to participate ..
restore their buildings. The Everyone interested in enChamber agreed.
tering a float in the parade is
The cutting of weeds from to contact Mrs. Chapmarl.
Nye Ave. down river through
Simon said thus far there
Pomeroy
was
again are ll confirmed concessions
discussed as was the cleaning which will be stationed along
of weeds between the curb Main St. Mayor Clarence
and the railroad tracks and . Andrews said senior citizens
possibly placing limestone ~n will have · concessions this
the parking areas along Mam year and LyM St. will also be
St.
used for the Regatta, the
Since the cleanup will take parking lots being left open
money , (approximately for parking.
$3,000 for the summer) the
Bill Quickie said the
matter will be studied and ·a crowning of the Regatta
decision on what approach to Queen will be Friday night on
take will be given at the next Lynn st. 11 gospel sing will be
meeting. .
·
held on Lynn St. Saturday
Crow reported that he had night.
permission from the C&amp;O
Quickie also reported that
Railroad to clean up the
railroad tracks.
In regard to the Big Bend
Regatta, Mts . Chapman
reported that $2,955 in ads has
heen pledged. Ads are up $700
BOYS TO MEET
over last year. It was pointed
All boys who have sign~d
out that the programs this up to play pony league m
year will cost more money Middleport are to meet th is

Notices, local briefs

evening at the ball park at

5:30 p.m.

Festivals begin this week
Columbus, Sept., ro-22.
July 8-:10.
Onitcd Press International
Ohio Hills Folk Festival,
Apple Festival, Jackson,
Ohio kicks off its summer Quaker City, July 14-17.
Sept. 21-24.
.
of festivals this week with the
potter y F est i v a 1
Mining and Manufacturmg
town of Barberton hosting the Crooksville, July 11&gt;-17.
Festival, Cadiz, Sept. 22-25.
Cherry Blossom Festival.
Salt Fork Arts and Craft,
Grape Jamboree, Geneva,
The blossom festival runs Cambridge, Aug . 12-13.
Sept. 24-25.
from
today
through
Ohio State Fair, Cohunbus, · Ohio Swiss Festival, SugarSaturday.
Aug 16-28. .
creek, Sept. :JO:Oet. L
Other festival and dstes
PotaUJ Festtval, Mantua,
Canal Festival, Coshocton,
are:
Aug. 19-21.
Sept. 3Q.Oct. 2.
Moonshine Festival, New
ParadeoftheHUis,NelsonAntique
Festival
straitsville, May 27-30.
ville, Aug. 21-27.
Millersburg, Oct. 8-9. .
National Clay Festival, UhSweet Corn Festival,
Apple Butter Festlval,
richsville, June 12-18.
Millersport, Aug. 31-Sept. 1. Burton, Oct. 8-9.
. .
Festival
of
Fish,
Melon Festival , Milan·,
Sauerkraut Festtval,
Vermillion, June 16-19. Sept. 3-li.
· Waynesville, Oct. 8-9. _
Big
Bend
Regatta,
Tomato Fest iva I ,
Bob Evans Farm Festtval,
Pomeroy, June 17·19.
Reynoldsburg, Sept. 7-11.
Rio Grande, Oct. 14-16.
Swiss Chees.e Festival,
Honey Festival, Lebanon,
Fall Festival of Leaves,
Middlefield, June 18-:19.
Bainbridge, Oct. 14-16. .
Sept. 8-10.
Old Fashioned Fourth 'of
Johny Appleseed Festival,
Pumpkin Show, Circlevtlle,
July, Ashville, July 1-4.
Lisbon, Sept. 11&gt;-17.
Oct. · 1~22 .
Canal Days, Ca'tl Fulton,
Farm Science Review,
._,.

the Coun.try Cousins, in
conjunction with the Jaycees,
will sponsor a hamburger
eatiug contest on Saturday
and added that discs will be
given to the winners in the
boat races rather than
plaques.
Bill Mayer reported that he
has a Big Bend Regatta sign
to be placed across Main St.
He stated that the Sugar Run
FloUr Mill donated plastic
sacks for the sign.
It was announced that
tickets to the frog jump imd
derby are now on sale. Bill
Downie is this yea r's Grand
Croaker
and
Charles
Wayland is Grand Croaker in
charge of vice with Bill
Young in charge of the frog
events.
Attending were Crow,
Simon, Mrs. Chapman, N. W.
Compton, Mr. and Mrs. Virgil
Tea ford, Frecker, Vernon
Weber, Young, Mayor Anmews, Mayer, Quickie, Joy
Young and C. E. Blakeslee.

at the Raci ne leg ion Post

home Saturday fro{Tl 8: 30 to
11 : 30 p .m. Mus ic lw"fill be
provided by Ohio Valley
Music Co.

A square dan ce will be held
at the senior citizens cen ter

The Sou thern Junior High
Friday, May 13, from 8:.30 to
Athletic · Boosters will meet . 11 :30 p.m. Music by the
this even ing at 7: lO p.m . at St ringdu sters. Adm issi on Is
the (\Jnlor high ~uild ing In Sl tor adults, children under
Racine .
12 will be admitted free if
accompanied
by
th eir
A va riely show wlll be parents .
presented Saturday evening
at Tuppers Plains ElemenThe Mei gs Band Boosters
tary School at 7:30 p.m. will meet for the last time th iS
Proceeds will be used to send school year Monday, May 16,
the safety patrol
lo at 7:30p.m. In the band room
Wa sh ington.
at the high school. . In Among the people lak ing stallat ion of officers for next
part in the show are the year wi ll be held .
Bauman
fam H~.
Betty
Osborne and Robert WHite.
A work pady at the
Rog er Balser , Floren ce bal lfi eld for the Pomeroy
Spencer . Boyles quartet. Youth Baseball League will
Batey children , Alex Stone. a be held Saturday, May 1&lt;,
m ale chorus line. and Todd beginning at &amp;a .m. Labor and
Logo e.
carpenter help is needed to

.-

Mary

McAngus. 846 E.

Main St.. Pomeroy , entered
Un i ters ity_ Hospital ,
Columbus Tuesday . Her
address is Means Hall r60m
25 1 for those who wish to send
cards . She will undergo eye
surgery Thursday .
A squa re da'h~ will be held

finish the project of building

dugouts and an equipment

building bef ore the start of

the season . All parents of
youth involved in the summer
ba!eball program are ask,ed
to attend and bring eqUipment suet) as hammers ,
saws, etc. ,· to help complete
the pro ject .

·~

•'

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