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                  <text>12 - The DallY :sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesda y, May II. 1977

- ---..

SORORITY OFFICERS - officers of Ohio Eta Phi
Chapter were installed Tuesday evening at a meeting of
.the chapter held in the meeting rooms of the Columbus

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

Area Deaths

GEORGE BROWN

LETART, W.Va.- George

w. Brown, 54. Letart . W.Va .,
who died Tuesday was born
Nov. 27, 1922.
He Is survived by his wife,
Addie Bee Biggs Brown ; one
son t M ichael, Ra cine : his
parents, Homer and Caroline

Stonehitt Brown. Letart, W.

Va .; three sisters, Helen
Wiers, Ni fro , W. Va .; Ilene
McDan iel , New York ; Mary

Rickard ,

Denver ,

Colo .;

three grandchildren and
several nieces and nephews.
He served In the South
Pacific during World War II
and In the Korer-n conflict . He

was a member at thP. Mason
Historical Society .
Funeral services will be 3

p.m . Friday .at the Ewing
Chapel with the Rev . Dave

Fields officiating . B~rial will
be In Greenwood Cemetery .

Fire-aid units

called out 41
times in April
The Middleport Fire
Department answered 41
caDs in April according to the
report of Fire Chief C. Robert
Fisher.
-or the total calls, seven
were alanns to minor fires,
one was a false alarm and 33
were emergency-medical
runs.
Of the 33 emergency runs,
2&gt; were in town and eight
· were out of town. Total
manhours for emergency
runs amounted to 158.5 hours
with the emergency vehicles
driven 682.7 miles during the
month. Total manhours for
fire caDs only totaled 104.7
with an average of II men
answering each call.
DaMy Fink, Broadway St.,
was accepted. as a new
member of lh~. fire department.

MASON DRIVE-IN
Fri., Sat., Sun.
MaylJ-14-15

Double Feature ·

MOTHER JUGS
&amp; SPEED PG
Plus

TAKE A HARD
RIDE
PG

MARIE SPURLOCK
Mrs. Mari e Spurlock . 65.
wife of Everett Spurlock ,
Waterloo , died unexpected at

7. 30 p. m. Monday at her
residence.
'
Born March 16, 191 2 in
Cabell County, W. Va., she
was a daughter of the late
Emory and Laura Sowards
Calls. She had resided in the
Arabia . WaterloO area since
19&lt;S.
On Feb . 3, 1932, she was
united in marriage to Everett
Spurlock whb survives in
addition to 10 children :
Emory Spurlock of Mt .

Gilead. Ohio ; Donald and
Haskett (Cub) Spurlock, both

of Patriot ; Cart and Jusi in
SpurLock of Marion, Ohio ;

Jerry and Will iam Spurlock

of tro.nlon ; .three daughters,
Mrs. Arnold ( Eva) Drum·
mond of . Ironton ; Ju l ia
SpurloCk of Ironton; Mrs .
Jacob (Janet) Stanley of
Patriot; 26 grandchildren,
two great-grandch i ldren, a
brother , Tom Call, of lesage,
W. Va ., two sisters, Mrs.
Effie Short of Lesage, and
Mr s. lona Short of Glenwood ,

w. va. ·

The body ts at Phillips

Funeral Home wher e fri ends
may call6-l0 p. m . Thursday .
Funeral s.ervlces will be a"t 1
p. m. Friday at the funeral
home ·w ith interment in Aid
Cemetery .

Five fined in

and Southern Ohio Eleetric Co . Installed were Sheila
Reeves, vice president, Kathy Cumings, president, Unda
King, corresponding secretary, Maurisha Nelson,
recording secretary and Susan Lanning, treasurer.

2 Meigs health
services noted
Meigs County is benefitting
from two subcontracts, both
related to health services, in
programs by the Corporation
for Health Education in
Appalachia Ohio (CHEAO)
which reviewed all its
projects in a meeting of the
board of trustees recently in
Cambridge.
The Meigs County Council
on Aging is producing a
program of seminars and
workshops
on
health
educatiQn topics for senior
citizens, and the Gallia-Meigs
Community Action Agency
has a health education
program for pre-schoolers.
· Meigs County has been
selected by CHEAO as a site
for a student health team this
summer. The project will be
a multiphasic screening
program for all Income and ·
age levels. The coordinator
for the project is Major E.
Joyce Smith (Retired ).
Election of officers and the
executive committee was
held as was the drawing for
terms of office for the new

Weather

members of the expanded
board. Harold D. Brown,
2001'.. West Main Street, .drew
a three-year term of office as
a trustee .
CHEAO is a private, nonprofit organization which
offers health education
programs to health practitioners and the public. It
serves the 28 Ohio Appalachian counties under
funding from the Appalachian Regional Commission. Offices are located
in Athens and Cambridge.

Court hears
nine cases

Two defendants were fined
and seven others forfeited
bonds in the court of Pomeroy
Mayor Clarence Andrews
Tuesday night.
Fined $350 and costs each
and given three day jail
sentences on charges of
driving while intoxicated
were · Charles Burdette,
.Middleport, and Roger
Brown of Cottageville, W.Va.
Brown was also fined $50 and
costs for npt having an
operator's license. ,
Forfeiting bonds were
Juanita Justis, Middleport,
$30, posted on an assured
clear distance charge;
. Raymond Smith, Pomeroy,
$28, speeding; Sheila Hawk,
Hemlock Grove, $30, failure
to yield the right of way; John
Branham, Huntington, W.
Va., ruMing a red light, $30;
Dana Clinton, Belpre, $2&gt;,
speeding; Kathy Fry,
Syracuse, $30, assured clear
distance, and Roy Boggs,
Shade, $50, no operator's
license.

Fair tonight, with lows
between 45 and 50. Mostly
sunny Thursday, with highs
between
75 and 80.
Mayor'~
Probability of precipitation
near z.ero per cent today,
Fined in the court of tonight and Thursday.
Middleport Mayor Fred
Hoffman Tuesday night were
EXTENDED OUTWOK
Virgil V. Glaze, a4, ColumFriday through Sunday,
bus, $200 and costs and three ·fair Friday and a chance of
days in jail on a charge of · shower~ Saturday or
driving while intoxicated; Sunday, Highs will be In the
Donald R. Smith, 19, 70s or the low 80s and lows
Pomeroy, $15 and costs, will be In the 40s or low 50s.
speeding; James H. Garey,
24, Pomeroy, $10 and costs,
TAKENTOVMH
improper backing; Paul
The
Pomeroy Emergency
Reeves, 42, Albany, $2&gt; and
Squad
was called for Mrs.
costs, disorderly manner;
Deborah
Cundiff at 5:18 p. rri.
Bill Reeves, 51, Pomeroy, $25
SQ\JAD CALLED
Tuesday.
A medical patient,
and costs, disorderly manThe
Middleport
Mrs. Cundiff was taken to
ner.
Emergency
Squad answered
Forfeiting bonds were Vida Veterans Memorial Hospital
a
caU
to
Beech
Grove Road at
May Green, 66, Vinton, $25, where she was treated and
11
:07
a.
m.
Tuesday
for 18posted on a charge of running released . AI 8:43 p. m., the
month-old
Shawn
Petrie
who
a stop sign, and Newton A. squad was called to Laurel St.
'was
ill.
He
was
taken
to
Simpson, Flint, Mich., $27, for Mrs. George Nesselroad,
posted on a speeding·charge. Sr., who was ill. She was also Holzer Medical Center.
taken to VMH where she was
admitted.

Court

FAMILY DINING

AT ITS BEST

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admitted - Fred Hill,
Albany ; Clarence Norris,
Racine; William Fortney,
Little Hocking;
Mary
Nesseiroad, Pomeroy.
Discharged - Della Price,
Hazel Curtis.

Thousands of miners
still out on .strike
BELLAIRE , Ohio (UPI) - Thousands of miners in
Eastern Ohio continued a wildcat strike today despite
urgings by United Mine Workers union officials to return
to their jobs.
At least 1,500 miners remained off the job at three
Peabody Coal Co. operations in Coshocton County and
another 1,500 were off the job at four Consolidation Coal
Co. deep mines in other parts of Eastern Ohio.
"They didn't come back last night and we don't expect
them back before at least the first of next week," said a
Peabody spokesman at Coshocton.
"They're stiD on vacation, " said a Consolidation
spokesman at Cadiz. " We have about 1,500 out at four
underground mines. They didn't come back last night and
we don 't expect them to come hack today either ."
UMW District 6 President John Guzek claimed between
60 and 75 per cent of the district's 15,000 striking miners
were back on the job Tuesday.
The strike began about two months ago over a series of
disputes at four mines.
The most serious dispute was at .the three Peabody
mines in Coshocton County where the coal firm has
instituted a stringent absentee policy.
The policy shortens the amo\Ult of time a miner can
miss work without being dismissed.
The miners contended that Peabody's policy violated
their 1974 contract and was unfair.
The UMW executive board meeting in Morgantown,
W.Va. earlier this week declared the Peabody policy at
Coshocton to be ''national in scope" which means the
Bituminous Coal Operarors Association must declare the
policy invalid or renegotiate it .
If the association doesn't respond in 60 days, UMW
president Arnold Miller has the right to call a nationwide
coal strike.

•

Suicide is ruled
LETART, W. Va. - A
Mason County man was found
dead in his car at ap. proximately 12:30 p.m.
Tuesday afternoon in a
private driveway off US Rt.
33 in this community.
George Witliam Brown, ~.
was pronounced dead at the
scene by County Coroner
John Grubb from carbon
monoxide poisoning.
The Mason County Sberllrs
Department received the caD
to the scene at I :04 p.m. and
responding · were Sheriff
James C. Hall, Sgt. N. E.
Benson, and BiU Woodyard,
assistant prosecuting attorney.
The Sheriff's Department
theorizes that Brown con-

nected a radiator hose to the
e1haust pipe of his car, along
with three garden hoses
attached and taped together,
and ran the hoses into the left
front window of the car. The
vehicle was still running and
the defroster was on when the
officials arrived.
The car was parked across
from his parents' residence,
headed into a field . Brown
had reportedly left his
parents' home at 11 :30 p.m.
Monday evening.
Coroner Grubb estimated
the time of Brown's death to
be 4a.m. Tuesday morning. A
note, believed to have been
written by Brown, was found
on the dash of the vehicle.

Visit . our salad ·bar, baked steak,
mashed potatoes and gravy , vegetable,
hot roll, coffee, lea or milk .

3 Pc. Uving Room Suites •••••• • '3991'

at

THURSDAY, MAY 12, 1977

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Repair of road
'becomes concern
. A committee of concerned
citizens appeared before the
New Haven council on
.Tuesday evening to inquire if
the town could repair Layne
Street, which according to the
committee, is in had condition.
The committee, made up
of• Charles Hargraves,
Reba
Vance,
Anna
Fay Roush, Lawrence
Stephens
and
Henry
Perry, was told
by
Mayor Charles Roush to
write to the State Road
Department in Charleston for
more information on the
·road's repair.
The council gave Chuck
Allensworth permission to

Coins stolen
'

out of hank
NEWHAVEN;W. Va .- An
estimated $58.0li worth ·of
coins was stolen from the
Mason County Bank here
some time between Monday
eveping and Tuesday morning, according to West
Virginia State Police Trooper
J. L. Fitwater.
The burglars apparently
gained entry into the bank,
which is located on Layne St.,
by prying open a back door.
Anlong the coins stolen were
five silver dollars. The investigation is continuing.

en tine
PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

•

purchase a new gun for the
town police department and
issued a warning to citizens
that aU building permits must .
be approved by it before
construction is begun. ' If
construction is started before
the permit is approved, there
will be a $&gt;0 fine.
Building permits were
issued to Robert Ciaslin,
George - Lewis, Village
Pharmacy, Rex Roush,
Elmer Wood, Randall Roush
and James King.
Vacant lots are to be
mowed by May 24, council
announced. If lots are not
mowed, a letter will be sent to
the property owner.
Council discussed the
condition of town roads at
great length, and it was
decided to hold a special
meeting, open to the public,
on,May !Sat 7 p.m. at the city
building. All interested
persons are urged to attend.
: The council reminds
residents that no motorcycles
are to be ridden on private
property withOut the owner's
permission, and no motor •
cycles are to be ridden on the
highway or side-streets If the
driver does not have an
qpei-ator's license.
·
Attending were Mayor
Roush, Wendy Divers,
recorder, and Virgil Weaver,
. Harold .Moxley and John
Thorne, council membP.rR.

MARK J. RANDALL (right) described the work of the Ohio Rail 1)-ansportation
Authority (ORTA), during yesterday's meeting of shippers at the Holiday Inn, Kanauga.
Randall Is chief planner for the bRTA. Seated at the head table with him were Clyde M.
,Ramsay (left), president pf the Gallia County Community Improvement Corporation, and
Tom Tope, president of the Gallipolis Area Chamber of Commerce, who presided.

N.
:INews . . . in Briefs\\ IXon no
~
favorite
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qualil y dress shirt. Come in and see the new Class ic

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featuring a new comfortable, slightly lower collar band.
Machine washable and dryable 80 percent polyester-20
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"Vun Heusen ... We Make Shirts !'or Your
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Elberfelds In Pomeroy -

Is This The Scene

you've always dreamed of
yourself in but could
never afford.
Make your Dream

come bue in

1978 by starting a
Vacation aub now

Come in today and start a
Vacation Cl~b. Make 49 weekly
payments and Farmers Bank wiil
make the 50th one for you.
Stop in and be early for that
Dream Vacation l'lext year.

COMPlffi-TWIN
SIZE BEDS .••••••••••••••••••••• SJ2!P

19" Color TV ••••••••••••••••••• $398"

•

Carter, 38-0,and voted $117million more tban the Whi~ House
wanted for a fast breeder reactor at Oak Ridge, TeM. Carter
sought $33miUion to finance the project as an experiement.
The House approved extension of a three-year, $14.5 billion
series of federal housing and community development
programs, including a new formula for assistance favorable to
other cities. The legislation faces Senate action and an
eventual House-Senate conference committee.
A conference committee finaDy resolved a House-&amp;!nate
deadlock on 1978 defense spending. The stalemate over a $3.2
billion dllference in a $120 billion Pentagon budget had held up
congressional action on budget targets for the upcoming fiscal
year.
The House and Senate still must ratify the $4.1 billion

Shippers to look
into rail plans

FREE CWTHING DAY
The Gallia - Meigs Community Action Agency will
hold its Free Clothing day for
low income persons on
Friday from 9 a.m. until 2
p.m. The agency's Clothing
Bank is located in the Old
High School Building In
Cheshire.

9xl2 Unoleum Rugs ·········~····sgsos
'
Sofa Beds ••••••••••••••••••••• $11r

One of the major pieces of legislation to emerge from the
young Congress - the $4 billion public works measure
intended to create more tban 600,000 jobs- was scheduled for
presidential signature. White House sources said Carter would
sign the cornerstone of his economic recovery package Friday .
The Carter plan to limit increases in hospital rates got its
fim hearing and encoontered some criticism before two House
bealth subcommittees. HEW Secretary Joseph Califano said it
would save taxpayers $t9 billion in the first year and
suggested the 9 per cent ceiling on rate increases be boosted.to
10 per cent.
The President's attempt to restrict government support
for plutonium production suffered a more direct setback.
The House Science and Technology Committee defied

e
VOL. XXVIII· NO. 20

BEDROOM SUITES •••••••••••••• '14r

THURSDAY NIGHT SP ..".

BySI'EWART POWELL

WASHINGTON (UPI) - Portions of President Carter's
leglslatiw program advanced in Congress, but the successes
were balan~-ed by at least one setbac~ and the threat of
llllother.
· Coogress also acted Wednesday on a wrlety of money
matters. And there were developments in the ethics
lnvestlption olaUet~ed South Korean bribery on Capitol Hill.
The While House plan for election-&lt;lay voter registration
survived a Republican on-.laugbt in the Senate Rules
Clmmitlee. Majority Deinocrats whipped a GOP attempt to
haul Attorney General Griffin BeD before the panel to publicly
dllcuas the poaalblllty of voter fraud and agreed to additional
salesuatda to prevent IUegal voting.

ELBERFELD$

at The Farmers fink.

THE INN PLACE

Congress holding up parts of Carter's program

~Farmers Bank
•

2

Q

•
POMEROY, OHIO •
$40,000.00 Maximum Insurance
For Each DeposiiAir
Member Federal Depilslt
Insurance Corporation

vwtedPressiDteruauonal
.,.,
TEL AVIV, ISRAEL - GRIEF-sTRICKEN ISRAEL
,staged a daylong series of funerals today for ~ paratroopers
and airmen killed in a military hellcopter crash. Newspaper
· "rePorts speculsted that technical or human error might have
"'eaused the crash of the Sikorsky CH53 during night maneuvers
In the wilderness near biblical Jericho. There were no
,j urvivors in l8rael's worst military alr disaster.
. But the military command declined ro comment pending
lhe report of a higJH-anldng committee of investigation. The
'funerals took place in hometowns from Haifa in northern
~ Israel to Yeruchllm in the Negev Desert.
' Ai the Mt. Herzl military cemetery in Jerusalem, six blue. bereled air force enlisted men and officers carried the coffin of
'·u. Uri Starik, a trainee pilot who had just returned to active
duty after surviving an auto crash.
AUSTIN, TEX. - "OLD SPARKY," the electric chair at
the Texas State Penetentiary at Huntsville which has been
gathering dust since 1964, s®n will be put into ·permanent
storage. The chairfs retirement was made official Wednesday
)'hen Gov. Dolph Briscoe signed into law legislation providing
for e&lt;ecution of criminals by injection of lethal drugs.
Briscoe's action makes Texas the second state to legalize
executions by injection. Oklahoma Gov. David Boren Tuesday
signed iniAl law similar legislation and Briscoe said he thinks
other stales wlU follow suit. "I hope it wiD provide dignity with
death as far as the death penalty is concerned," Briscoe said.
"I see this piece of legislation strictly as one aUowing a
greater degree of dignity in carrying out the death penalty. l
think this bH.l moves in a proper direction."
WASHINGTON- THE NUMBER OF CHAUFFERED
Cadillacs is dwindling on the House side of Capitol Hill but the
net gasoline saving won't help the energy conservation
program much. In their parking places wlU be new
·Oidsmobiles 98s, which get four miles more to the gallon. But
~ere w1U be three instead of two cars being used. Speaker
Thomas O'NelU aMo\Ulced the switch Wednesday.
• The Olds 98 "gets 18 miles a gallon. The Cadillac got only
11.'' he pid. House Minority Leader John Rhodes announced
he alao would switch his chauffered Cadillac for an
Oldsmobile. Democratic leader Jim Wright said he quit using
1its limoosine some time ago, but now also will use an Olds 98.
' O'Neill said he·could not speak lor Senate leaders, but an
(Continuec:I on page 6)

Sheriff Proffitt said:
' Meigs County residents should be wary of persons passing
llirough the co\Ulty wanting to do various types of roof painting
and driveway seal coaling. The sherllf urges the residents to
.deal with local, known persons when having any work of this
type done. A cheap job can be con artists wiU turn out to be
.more expensive in the long run. KNOW THE PERSON THAT
)I'OU DEAL WITH!

• His department has received another complaint regarding
theft of Dowers from cemetarles in various parts of the county .
1'he lalell report Involves the theft of an Azalea bush from the
Rocksprings Cemetary. "Anyone seeing persons removing
any Dowers, or arrangementa, or or other property from any
grave site, please obtain the license plate number, color, make
of aulD and immediately notlly us so tbat a deputy can check it
opt," he said. "It Ia only through cooperation and assistance of
Jbe citizens that any law enforcement agency is able to do its
job."
: . Mra. Otis McClin~k, Racine, has reported her Australian
' blue heeler catUe dOll Is miasing. The dog is light grey in color
·ijld tlbould be dragging its chain. Anyone seeing this dog Is
uk~·ID caD either the McClintocks at 94' 2253 or the sheri~J's
office, 992-3311.

KANAUGA - Shippers Dundas and from Kerr to
agreed at the information GaUipolis and Pomeroy. This
meeting Wednesday to set up was a month ago, and the
a committee in the next two three Ohio Rail Transdays to investigate par- portation Authority experts
ticipation in an arrangement present among the 23 atthat would keep a railroad tending Wednesday
inoperating between Kerr and formation meeting at the
Pomeroy.
Holiday Inn said that they
Federal matching funds had only a couple of weeks to
can help keep Ohio railroads determine financial figures.
operating where they have
"That's why you're hearing
asked for abandonment, but . a lot of lfs and anda and we
the matching must be from don't knows," said WiUiam T.
pt'lvate sources, and the Nielsen, ORTA planner.
meeting at Holiday Inn
Mark J. Randall, chief of
turned up a · few private planning for the ORTA, said
sources unwilling to help.
that application for a matThe Ohio constitution ching setup must come within
,forbids the state's matching_ a 15-&lt;lay period dated from
· federal funds, even on the 90- the filing of the closing order
10 basis which comes out to with the Federal Register.
$2,695 a month from shippers'
A few of the shippers
pockets.
emphasized the speed needed
ICC (Interstate Commerce to meet that deadline.
Commission) approved the
Others objected to what
Chessle system's closing of they
considered
the
Its lines from Creola to parasitical nature
of

.

CINCINNATI (UPI) Former Republican Senator
and Ambassador William
Saxbe
complained
Wednesday that Richard .
Nixon
"wrecked
the
Republican Party."
"I have no compassion for
him/' Sax be said of Nixon. "I'
think he handled hlmsell very
badly,
" He
wrecked - the
Republican Party, perhaps
irrepara bly. I'm hopeful
there can be some recovery. ' '
Sax be, a native · of
Mechanicsburg, Ohio, was a
U.S. senaror from 1969 until
1974, attorney general under
Nixon in 1974 and then U.S.
ambassaor to India until last
year.
Now a lawyer and cattle
farm owner, Sax be nixed
WILUAM T. NIELSEN, PLANNER with the Ohio
speculation he might become
Rail Transports lion authority, was at Kanauga's Holiday
an Ohio gubemarorial canInn, where he discussed abandonment of railroad lines in
didate.
"I have no interest at ·the
Meigs and Gallia counties.
present time in getting involved," he said. "I don't expect
ro be a candidate for gover•
nor."
Silxbe was here to address
Ohio
Trucking
the
Association convention.

Chessle's serving nonparticipants in the $269a
monthly match. It's the law,
however, ORTA officials
said. Chessie must carry on
for 364 days after the closing
order, which, ORTA sais, will
end May II, 1976.
Consolidated Rail Corporation, which serves some
of the shippers on the short
route, has no obligation to
serve others, according to
one opinion.
From Meigs County were
George Amott, Middleport,
chairman . of the Meigs
County Railroad · committee
and J. H. Searey, Pomeroy,
of Midwest Steel.
From G11illa County were
Torn Tope, president and
Thelma Elliott, executive
secretary of the GalUpolis
Area chamber of Commerce;
Don Brown, Gallia Roller
Mill; James Howard,
Howard-Wayne Feed; Lester
Plymale, Kyger Creek Power
Plant; Earl Durham, Central
Soya; Bill Jenkins, O'Dell
Lumber;
Doyel
Rose,
Gallipolis Reduction; cart
Welffenbach, Keener Sand
and Clay; Gary H. Baas,
GQllipolis Reduction, .'and
Hannan Hager, Bidwell,
General WQOds and Veneer.
From Vinton County were
Rudy Adelmann, McArthur;
and Mr. and Mrs. Tom Byrd,
Austin Powder.
There were three news
representatives and Sue
Whittaker from ORTA.
:·:-:-:-:-:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::.;.:·:·:·:=:·:·:·:=:·:·:·:·:

EXTENDED 01JTLOOK
Saturday through
Mqnday," lair and mUd
through the period, with
highs In the 70s or low 1108
and lows It~ the upper 40s or
50s.
.=:= :·:·:-:::-:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:-:-:-:·:·:-:.:·:·:·:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:E-R CALLED OUT
The Middleport E-R Squad
went to the New Lima Road
at 7:20 p.m. Wednesday for
Charles Beller who was taken
to Veterans Memorial
Hospital . where he was
treated and released.

Disadvantaged youths
will have more jobs

Weather
SuMy today and Friday, 7a
to 80. Fair tonight, lows to 50.
Probability of precipitation is
near zero per cent tnrough
Friday.

FELL FROM TREE
The Pomeroy Emergency
Squad answered a call to the
Roger Turner residence at
Langsville at 5 'a9 p .1,11.
Wednesday for 11-year-old
Clinton Turner who had fallen
out of a tree. He was taken to
Veterans Mem11rial Hospital
where he was treated and
raieased.
VAN DAMAGED
The Middleport Fire
Department answered a call
to the marina at 2:30 p.m.
Wednesday where a van
owned by Bernard Orenstein,
Cincinnati, had caught fire.
Damages were set at $200.

Seven mines still closed
in District 6 of Ohio
BELLAffiE, Ohio (UPI) - AI least seven mines in
Eastern Ohio remained closed today ·as 3,000 striking
members of the United Mine Workers Union Distirct 6
refused to report to work.
The mines closed Included three Peabody Coal Co.
operations in Coshocton County and four deep mines of
Consolidation Coal Co. in the Cadiz area of eastern Ohio.
It was not immediately determined if other mines were
~closed today.
"I told them to go back ro work," District 6 President
John Guzek said Wednesday. "That's alii can do. They
just won't go."
Miners were also off the job Wednesday at a Y&amp;O Coal
Co. mine and at an Oglebay Norton mine.
The series of wildcat walkouts began about two months
ago over a series of dt.,putes at four mines.
An absentee policy instituted at the three Peabody
mines in Coshocton County is the most serious of the
disputes.
The policy shortens the amount of time a miner can
miss work without being dismissed.
The miners contended that Peabody's policy violated
their 1974 contract and was unialr.
The UMW executive board met in Morgantown, W.Va.
earlier this week and declared the Peabody policy at
Coshocton to be "national in scope" which means the
Bituminous Coal Operators Association must declare the
policy invalid or renegotiate it.
UMW president Arnold MiUer has the right to caD a
nationwide coal strike If the association doesn't respond in
60 days.

Ohio shorted
• federal pie
m
COLUMBUS (UP!)
House Speaker Vernal G.
Riffe Jr., D-New Boston,
today urged President Carter
to locate a centrifuge nuclear
enrichment plant at Piketon,
Ohio, on grounds Ohio is not
recelvinglits fair share of
federal fUnds.
Rllfe wrote Carter, who is
expected to decide next week
whether to locate the
federally-funded $4 billion
fuel processing facility at
Piketon or OakRidge, Tenn.
11
0hio, for whatever
reasons, i"s not receiving its
fair share of federal doDars
based upon the ·size of its
population and the amount of

taxes its dtizens pay," Riffe
wrote.
"Obi() received $1,182 per
capita in fed era I ·funds for
1976, placing 47th among :the
5Q states. TeMessee received
$1,591 per capita, putting It in
24th place.
"In money for natural
resources, environment and
energy programs, Ohio
ranked seventh among the
states; being allocated, 4 per
cent of the total federal lunda
going to the states," Riffe
continued. ·~Tennessee was
second in the nation with 9
Jl!lr cent of the tAltal."
The Ohio House speaker
said Ohio has 5 per cent of the
nation's population and
receives 3.5 per cent of
federal reimbursements, and
that Tennessee, with 2 per
cent of the country's
population, receives 1.9 per
cent of the federal money.
"I hope you will keep these
facts in mind when coming to
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - An a final decision on where to
Ohio State Uniyersity. place the centrifuge uranium
professor in the College of . enrichment facility," Riffe
Social Work says thousands wrote .
of students who graduate
. from high · school this year
will be functionally illiterate.
Leonard Schneiderman
said by functionally illiterate
REJECT BID
he means that graduates wMl
MOSCOW (UP!) - Another
not have the skills to write a bid to release Rudolph Hess
personal check, address an from Berlin's Spandau
envelope, fill out a job ap- prison, where he's the only
piicatlon, read a recipe or inmate, failed Wednesday
shop for groceries.
when the Soviet Union turned
"The inability to read ef- down a request to free the 83fectively may be among the year-oid former deputy to
most significant of several Adolf Hitler.
factors
holding
some
"We remember evertying
Americans in an underclass about the past," the weekly
!roll) which upward mobility Literaturnaya Gazeta said.
is difficult or impossible," he
Hess new to Britain on May
said.
10, 1941, and parachuted into
Schneiderman tends to Scotland in a wild attempt to
blame the standardized negotiate a separate peace
teaching methods In the with llritain .. He was senoperation of schools.
tenced to life as a war
criminal. Soviet opposition
has frustrated numerous
eflorts over the years to
release him .

Dliteracy
. crea
· se
On m

Program. They will secure
all jobs, supervise the work
programs, pay all wages and
keep the records. ·
These programs were
conducted
last
year,
. however, this year the
programs
have
been
enlarged due to increase of
available funds .
Judge
Webster said
providing work for young
people is one of the best ways
to help solve the "juvenile
A Stop Smoking Program
problem", especially in this will begin in Pomeroy,
county which has few job Sunday, May 15, at 7:30p.m.
opportunities.
and run through May 1~ with
He
ex
pressed
his
a
pa
follow up session on May 23,
AUSTIN, Tex. (UPI)- The San Antonio , showed some
preciatlon
to
the
Ohio
Youth
all
at Veterans · Memorial
next time a steaming plate of imaginative lobbying in
Commission
for
its
assistance
Hospital
in the East-West
chili is placed before you, beating stiff competition
in
juvenile
matters
and
dining
area
.
show some respect. You are from stew, gumbo and
especially
for
its
program
Forty
personshave
signed
about to dig into the official barbecue.
that
made
funds
available
lor
up
for
the
program.
There
is
Texas state dish.
Last month the supporters
Gov . Dolph
Briscoe broke the world record for the job placements for youths room for more. Since it is
Wednesday signed into law biggest pot of chili cooked in who haile difficulties and also important to know how many
legislation proclaiming chili one container over sm open to the Gallia Meigs Com- people to prepare for preas the official state dish.
fire when they served up a munity Action Program for registration is urged. The
Supporters of chili, led by one-ton pot of bubbling, spicy securing funds and the fine program is free . AU sessions
work they were doing in • should be attended for best
Reps. Ben Z, Grant, 1&gt;- chili.
admlnistell\l'g the programs. ·. results.
.,
Marshall, and Ron•ll31rd, D-

Action to coordinate
agencies having responsibility in the employment of
disadvantaged youths in
Meigs County was begun
Tuesday at the courthouse in
the office of Judge MaMing
Webster, juvenile judge, with
DeaMe Dooley of the Ohio
Youth Commission, Doug
Stanley of the Ohio
Association of Community
Action Programs, Tom
Calhoun of the Gallia-Meigs

Community Action Program,
and Carl R. Hysell, Juvenile
Officer of the Juvenile Court.
Employment is provided
through Title I and Title Ill
Funds provided through the
Gallia-Meigs Community
Action Agency, together with
money available to the
Juvenile Court by The Ohio
Youth Commission.
All programs will be administered , by the GalliaMeigs Community Action

target for the 1978 budget, including a national defense
spending ceiling of $118.5 billion.
Federal reimbursement of up to $00,000 for victims of violent
crime was okayed by the House Jud!dary Committee. House
consideration is expected next week on teh three year, $150
million authorization measure to provide som~ federal
reimbursement to stales compensating victims for medical
costs and low wages.
,
The House Ethics Commitlee, sources said, decided to ask
congressmen including committee members to Ust funda, gifts
and favors accepted from South Korean agents. Meeting in
closed session, the committee rejected a more stringent
measure to require the disclosure.

Chili rww Texas' state dish

Stop smoking
program begins
on May 15th

JAIL ART
MIAMI BEACH, Fla .
(UP!) - Despite critical
disdain and snubs from
guests, Watergate burglar .E.
Howard Hunt pocketed $7,500
from selling nine of Ja
paintings on display at his
one-man show, which closed
Wednesday.
Hunt painted the pictures
while at the federal prison at
Eglin Air Force !lase, Fla.
Hunt said he needs the
money to pay a $10,000 fine
assessed as part of his
penalty for the Watergate
burglary and to pay "hundreds of thousands of
dollars" ln,.4efense cost~..

�2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0. , Thursday , May 12, 1977
a- The Daily Sentinel,Middleport- Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, May 12,1977

President to sign $4 billion
public works bill on Friday
By Laumce McQuillan
WASHINGTON (UP! ) President Carter will sign a
$4 billion public works bill
Friday - the congressional
version of a CQrnerstone in his
eeonomic stimulus package,
according to While House

sources.
Carter was meeting today
with reporters in e:~ news

Carter had no tormal
schedule on his first day back
at the White
House
Wednesday. He met with
Mondale and discussed the
London sununit meeting and
the
vice
pre$ident 's
European trip which hegins
Saturday, the spokesman
said.
The President had lunch
with First Lady Rosalynn

Vice President Walter
Mandate and ta ckled a
hacklogof White House work .
His news conference
originally was scheduled for
7:30 p.m. EDT, but was
moved up when it was
learned there would ·be a
conflict with the second in a

series of David Frost interviews with Richard Nixon .

conference dealing with his

first foreign.trip as President
a six-day journ ey
generally viewed as highly
successful. Aides say i( has
given the administration new
international dimensions .

The President also was
mtoeting today with Arnold
Miller, president of the
United Mine Workers, in
what was billed as a
discussion of energy matters .
Miller is seeking reelection
and such a visit was viewed

as enhancing his chances.
Congressional sources,
meanwhile ,

said

the

President invited a group of
senators to the Oval Office
today to discuss a pending
military aid amendment

favoring co-production of
U.S. weapons In l5rael.
The sources said the
administration feels the
mention of l5rael could upset
delicate Middle East peace
diplomacy, and also may
conflict wi tl],.a secret study on
curbing an:ns exports .
Backers of the public works
program, which will be
signed Friday, have touted it
as capable of creating at least
300,000 jobs within th e
construction industry and
indirectly another 300,000
jobs in related industries.
In
proposing
the
legislation, Ca rter asked for a
$2 billion appropriation the
first year and an additional $2
billion the . next year.
Congress decided on a lump
sum $4 billiOn authorization .
The program authorizes
the federal goverrunent to '!id
localities with public works
projects, such as schools and .
libraries. The approach was
first authorized in 1975 and
the Economic Development
Administration

received

requests totaling $22 billion.
Carter, described as "very
happy" apout his European
trip, met Wednesday with

By LEE LEONARD
Spanish, would ga ther and
UPI Statehouse Reporter
disseminate information
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The about problems of SpanishOhio House, following a spea king
people
and
current trend , has voted· to programs to help them.
establish three new state
He said the commission
agencies but placed "swtset" would also stimulate public
restrictions on tllem to ensure awareness of the problems of
they witl not be perpetuated Spanish-speaking people ,
without legislative aPJ,roval. cqo rdinate comm un ity
The House Wednesday ap- training and leadership
proved a Commission on programs, approve grants
Spanish-speaking Affairs, a and develop staie programs.
sta te Office of SpanishThe office would help the
speaking Affairs and an conunission accomplish its
Interagency Council on tasks, Camera said, by moniSpanish-speaking Affairs.
toring local programs and
Passage of the bill, which coord inating grants from
now goes to the Senate, ·came

.

·.

•

'

..

•

..',..,"· ..

Carter, something they hope
to do on a weekly basis.
Car ter ' ~
paperwork
included such items as his
environmental conservation
message,
ch;mges
in
procedures for dealing with
illegal
aliens
and
consideration of nominations
awaiting his approval, the
spokesman said.

'

••
•

.,.. .

Camer a

''sWlset'' amendment offered

said

the

interagency council would

by Rep . Richard H. Finan, R- consist of members of the
Cincinnati. The amendment gove rnor 's cabinet who would
would make the agencies help the commission and
expire after four years unless promote the delivery of state
renewed by the legislature. services to Spanish-speaking
Previously, the General people.
Assembly added a "swtset"
Before passing the bill,
clause
to
legislation majority Democrats U!bled
establishing a Civilian several Republican amendConservation Corps to ments, one of which would
provide public works jobs to have
str eamlined
th e
the. wtemployed. That bill is program.
now on Gov . Jamt;!s A.
Rep. James E. Betts, RRhodes' desk.
Rocky River, suggested the
Aside from the sunset conunission aud interagency
amendment, ·the Sp'a nish· council be eliminated and the
speaking bill, sponsored by Office o( Spanish-speaking
Rep. J . Leonard Camera, D- Affairs be placed in the state
Lorain, is virtuaUy the same Department of Economic and
as the measure vetoed last Community Development.
year by the governor on
Betts · said the program
growtds it would proliferate would serve only about I per
bureaucracy.
cent of Ohio's population
Camera
said
the concentrated in CUyahoga ,
commtsston ,

whose

11

members would have to he of
Spanish. descent and speak

......-·-..

" tear the bill up."

The Lorain lawmaker sa id
the Rhodes administration
has already had a chance io
address the problems of
Ohioans
Spanish-speaking

calls for six ounces of meat

daily. I don't like meat. Could
I have cottage cheese or
cheddar cheese in place of
meat or are they much higher
in cholesterol than meat?
DEAR READER- At least
you have demonstrated one
point: if a person is
overweight and loses weight
it will often lower high blood
pressure. Tha.t is why I
always advise people with
hi gh blood pressure to
eliminate every pound of
body fat they can.
To give you more informalion about blood pressure I
am sending you The Health
Letier number 1-8. Olhers
wba want this issue can send
50 cents with a long, stamped,
&gt;elf·addressed envelope for
it. Just send your request to
meincareafthis newspaper,
P.O. Box 15SI. Radio City,
~ew Ywk, l'iY 10019.
._
. I would not advise
substituting c~ for meat
unless your dietitian looks at
your l!ntire diet. The cheddar
cheese COlltains over'twice as
many calories per ounce as

lean ro.und steak so you may
defeat your calorie con trol
program if you use six ounces
of it instead of meal.lt is also
very high in fat and about
half ofthe fat is saturated fat.
It contains a little more
cholesterol than lean heel.
Cottage cheese is fine and
cream~ cottage cheese contains fewer calories per
ounce than lean beef - uncreamed cottage cheese contains even fewer calories.
Both are low in cholesterol.
Uncreamed cottage cheese
contains so little cholesterol
that it can be considered
cholesterol rree for practical
purposes. However, cotta~e
cheese contains less protem
per ounce than lean beer. Uncreamed cottage cheese con~ more prollfin per ounce

over

visiting

Major Lugut Sranclings

Aleunder 24-H.
Tracy Burdette picked up
the win although she needed
relief help · from Kim
Grueser. Together lhey
fanned six, but walked 15, and
those walks produced most of
Alexander's runs . The

Bv United Preu lnternilllonal
Niltionat League
East
W. L Pet. GB

P ittsbrgh
St . Louis

Glenda Brown led th e
Meigs hitters with four
safeties, two triples, a
double, and a single. Mary
Boggs went four for four and
Pat Vaughan had three hits.
The Meigs team, coached by
Rita Slavin, has lost only one
game, and that by just one
run to Waverly. There is no
tournament play this season,
but next year the State of

San

THESE SIXTH GRADERS of Riverview Elementary
School look over an art exhibit of paintings and drawings
their class luis completed. The display was featured

Monday night when lite school PTA met. From the left are
front, I to r, Scott Justis, Kathy Ritchie and Mike Glbba;
back,! tor, Jeff Newell, Clell LaBonte and Brian Collins.

Swedish, Italian, Japanese,

J

Chinese, African, Mideastern
and Asian extractiorl.

'

l

~~ ,
L.

·'""

Lone Eagle would have
passed up the hoopla

Lindbergh . said . " My
husband felt this city was his
home.
" Before he was known, lots
of people backed him here.
They had faith in him."
Lindbergh named his plane
after the city because of the
financial support he received
from local businessmen.

ASK TOWED
A marriage license was
issued to Richard Edward
Scites, 25, Jackson, and
Bonita Faye Johnston, 1&amp;,
Langsville .

2·1 J at

Wedn esday's

results :
RUNNING EVENTS
100-YARD DASH - t-iixon,
I ; Baker, WB ; Wilds , RH ;
F isher, N l; Buckley , NL ;
Mvrray, Wav. - : 10,.C.

220-YARD

DASH

M cGuire, G; Hix on, I : Baker,

WB ; WHds, RH ; Vickers,
WL ; Buckley. NL. - : 23.0.
440-YARD DASH - Unger ,
I ; Forgrave , S; · Lewis,

I;

Sheldon , GM ; Foul , VC ;
M cNichol , VC ; Howard, S;

Gune, NL. - : 51.0.
880-YARD RUN -

John·

son, W; Maple, Wa ; Mike
Maole . Wa ; Fisher, 8 ;

Reichly. NL ; Skaggs. G.-

Ma sle , Wav ; F isher, B ;
Greer . J ; · Ander son, M ;
M cCowen. I - 4: 36.7.

TWO

MILE

RUN

Hilderbttnd , GM ; Fowl er,
Wav .· Skag gs , RH ; M cCowen,
I ; Rucker ,(; Fraley, WB. 10 ; 06.

120-HIGH HURDLES -

McGuire, G ; Crawford, J ;
Hill , S; W i lcoxen. I ; Henry.
NL ; Young , C. - : 14.9.

180-LOW HURDLES

M cGuire. G ; Crawford , J ;
Wilcoxen, I ; Lunsford , I ;
Farmer, RH ; Young , C.

:20.4.
880-R E LAY -

Won

by
I ron ton in 1: 33 ,6. New
LeKington c:;e&lt;: rmrt. South

American dream .
'
Alger ,
a
Unitarian

Point th ird ; Greenfield M cClain fourth ; Wheele r sburg fifth and Hillsboro sixth .
MILE RELAY - Won by
Iron ton in 3: 29.5. Sheridan
second ; South Point th l rd ;
Greenfield -M c Cla in fourth ;
V i nton Cou nty fifth and
Waverly si:rc:th .

FIEL D EVENTS
SHOT PUT - Simpkins, F;

Altier , N L : McWho,.ter. C;
Gro ves . H ; Moore. SP ;
Stewa r t , Mgs. - 50' ·8" .

DISCUS - McWhorter,

C;
Cole, H ; Moore, SP ; Coler in,

B; Jude, J ; Pyles, WB. -

U7' - ll ".
LONG JUMP - Com p s ton,
CG ; M cWhorter,( ; Spalding,
SP ; Smather s, NY ; Cannon.

the 1976 recrwnng

KUBOTA®
••• the right
little · ·
tractor!

meeting. Pictured with the display from the lefl .are
Malinda Wells, Teresa Barringer, Burl Putman and Joe
Young.

'.

rized by the American and deeda. And they think the
Schools
and
Colleges world could do a lot worse
Association which gives · an than to listen to him, even
annual Horatio Alger Award now.
to someone from humble . " Most everyone In the
beginnings who achieves society thoroughly subscribes
great !arne and-&lt;&gt;r wealth, he to the idea that the world was
said.
betier when it was running on
"His heros were not that those notions, and not what
type. They were boys who one can milk out of the
started with nothing, without govermnent," Seddon said.
clothes most of them, and "Nowadays, it's how much
then made it, not in a big way, you have and who you know.
just made a respectable life we·abhor that.
for themselves," Seddon
" But maybe what h.e
said.
preached wouldn't work
The society believes Alger anymore.''
made his impact with words

...

'.

For those 1001
in -between
jobs!

Sea tt le {Jones Q.1), 10 : 35

p.m.

Baltimore (Pal mer 5-l or
May 3·3) at Cal ifornia (Rosso.
2 ), 10 :35 p .m .
Friday's Games
Boston at Seattl e, night
-Baltimore at Oakland , night
Ne.w York at California, n ight
Texas a t Kansas City , night
Toronto at Minnesota . nigllt
Cleveland at Chicag o , nig ht
.. Det roit at Mi l waukee. n ight

Tornadoesnow 12-3 after
9-6 ·s lugfest with Green
RACINE
Southern
raised its record to 12-3
Tuesday night at Green

Celtics plan
sports arena

~.~~

Local, 9-6 winner over

strong Green team. Senior
Steve Hendricks' three-rwt
homer in the top of the
seventh was the big blow, but
fine relief pitching by Greg
Cundiff over the last three
innings held the big bats of
the tall Green team in check .
Cundiff picked up the win.
Southern· broke the scoring
Ice in the third when they
plated three runs, via John
Sayre reaching base on an
error, Hendricks drawing a

QUINCY, Mass. (UP!) George Ross of Braintree,
Mass ., designer of the
Coliseum In Richfield, Ohio,
has been called on to build a.
similar 21,000-seat sports
arena for Boston Celtics
owner lrv Levin and city
officials.
The Patriot Ledger sa ld

B-6000T
• Llqutd-cooled, tough
li tt le 2-cyl~nder diesel that
!h1 nks it' s a btg trac to r.
Btg on wo rk-easy on fu el.
Thrifty buy _
Many other models
and Implements ·available

Wednesday,

a

;' serious

negotiations have taken place
and are still under way ,''

Levin told the newspaper,

Gravely Tractor Sales

"I'm very confident a deal

Phone 992·2975

major announcement wa s
.;,.;.-=:G~::~~""'""'~'""'""""''1'/ made in about 30 days."

F eds will probe charges of fraud,
kickbacks by builders in Cleveland

minister, helped homeless
newsboys and bootblacks .in
Milstein allegedly " has
New York, then wrote several
CLEVELAND (.UP!) hwtdred novels and short Charges of kickbacks, ·falsely certified numerous
stories to dramalil.e their fraudulent applications for subcontractor expenses to
plight and eventual success. F e d e r a I
H o u s i n g HUD.
He died in 1899.
Administration mortgage
" ...Moneys certified to the
Ragged Dick, Tattered insurance anti falsification of Federal
Housing
Tom and Dan the Newsboy expense records involving Administration as paid to
led readers who bought the builders and the Cuyahoga EBP and Epic Steel were not,
400miUion copies of his books Metropolitan Housing in fact, paid when certified
tothebeliefthatanyone could Author\ly (CMHA\ will he and that all of the goods and
do well in America through investigated by a federal.lask services contract for and
and force , it was reported today. certified to were not
diligence, · thrift
honesty.
A Justice Department
"Sure it's nostalgic. And I spokesman was quoted by the
lllll a great believer that luck .Cleveland Plain Dealer as
plays its part . But that saying the task force will
doesnlt get away· from the ~ include FBI agents and rei\USTIN, Tex. (UP!) practical end of it," Goldberg presentatives of the U.S.
said. "Alger· really showed Department of Housing and Laetrile. Ute controversial
life as it is."
·
Urban Development's (HUD) drug that some cancer
The 200 members of the regional inspector general's patients have said helped
Horatio Alger Society, who office in Chicago. Dliecting their condition, soon may he
vary widely in age and the task for will be Assistant legally manufactured and
occupation and come from as U.S. Attorney Nancy C. sold in Texas.
The Senate on a 27.,"! vote
far. away as Japan and Iran, Schuster.
Wednesday
approved a bill to
are holding their annual con·
The investigation . will
legalize
the
drug which is
vention in Waltham, Mass. , continue a federal grand jury
made
from
the pits of
today through Swtday .
investigation of developer
apricots,
peaches
and other
They will trade Alger books Carl Milstein. More than 70
fruit.
and memorabilia, visit the firms which have done
The Senilte-p&amp;ssed bill dif.
old house In Revere, Mass., business with 5S companies
where Alger was born in 1832, associated with or owned by fered slightly from a version
and hold a memorial service Milstein
have
been which passed Ute House,
at his gravesite in Natick. subpoenaed to produce docu· making it necessacy for the
measure to be sent back to
The society started with two ments.
members 16 years ago when a
An FBI affidavit submitted representatives before i! can
retired Kalamazoo, Mich., when two subpoenas served be sent to the govemor.
Under the bill, an
postal einploye met another on EBP Inc. and Epic Steel,
Individual
would need a
Horatio Alger buff.
an EBP division, were
doctor
•s
prescription
to buy
"Alger's stories mean if challenged said documents
,
.
dru~
.
you ~ve, work hard and tell were
needed
because

drop Meigs 15-3
........

delivered toandperfonned at
.the locations certified," the
affidavit' added.
Joseph E. Griffin Jr.,
assistant agent in charge of
the Cleveland FBI office, was
quoted as saying agents
secured CMHA records last
month in an investigation of
irregularities in repair contracts.

Gallipolis' Jayvees scored
six rwts in the second inning,
then went on to hand host
Meigs a 15.,"! loss Wednesday ·
evening .

The victory avenged
Gallla's only loss of the
campaign, and was the ninth
triumph in 10 starts for the
Blue Imps.
Art Foglestrom was
credited with the win. He was
relieved by Hamilton in the

...

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..

•

* In

J

~ddition

Interior Surfac es

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G&amp;J Auto

13

Columbus
7 14 .333
Wednesday-' s Results
Toledo 5, Charleston 0
Rochester 7, Pawtucket J
Richmond 7, Syracuse 5
T idewater A, Columbus 2

" • Parts

.".

16 8 . ~7
14 8 .636 1

Tidewater
Ri chm ond
Rochester

To Value Prices

For All Soft ...

'

Pawlucket
Charl eston

W L Pet. GB

Toledo

Excellent Cle"aner

gives hope. One physician
said it might have as much
poychological value as other

to get underway

Syracuse·

was a ew-e," Brooks said. "It

'

SUPER
VALUES

.
"•
..

Chet Brooks, D-Pasadena,
said Ute amendments the
Senate added to the House bill
make it clear lltat while
doctors cannot be censured
for prescribing Ute drug, theY
are not free to millrepr-nt
Laetrile's potential.
"Nobody at that (Senate
commlttee) hearing said It

FOODS NEEDED
The Chester Fire Depart·
ment Is in need of cakes and
ples for the Memorial Day
dinner. Per11011s may contact
any of the firemen. All
donatlOII$ wili be greatly
appreciated.

PRESENT$ MORE . •...•• .

G&amp;J Auto Parts
Route 33
Mason, West Virginia

Sc:haw. H. Or ick , RH ; Henry.
W6 ; Williams, I ; Groves, G.

-- 6'-J",

POL E VA.ULT -

Shon k.

wHer, M in ; Wh isman, WB ;
Cannon, NL ; Saunders, G;
Smith, WL; Forgrave , S. 12' 6".

TEAM STAN DINGS
TEAM
Points

Ironton
Gallipolis
New Lexington
Ja t:lc.son
Wa verly
Wheelersburg
Chesapeake

South

74
A6

35 1-3
32
32
30
28
26
25
2-11
23 5·6

Poi nt

Greenfiel d
Roc k Hill
Sheridan
Hil ls boro
Be lpre

BILl R.ETCHER
149 South Third Street

Middleport, Ohio
9'1-1155

1-11

We ll s ton

11

Fairland
Coal Grove
AAinford
Vinton County
Nel sonville. York
Warren Local

10
10
10

Wa shington CH
Portsmou th West
Northwest

0

UAtl fAIM

A

t .J

A

Meigs

,.

IMI-UIANCI

4
J 1t 2

STATE FARM

1

0

Insu rance Comnqnies

0

Home 0111ces: B!oominoton, Illinois

RIVERSIDE

after being named to the Ohio
State job in late March, said
his success this year came as
no s urprise.
"We felt at the outset it
would he a good opportunity
for us to recruit several very
talented playe rs because they
would come in with the
opportunity to build a prove ry important part of
recruiting for a young man to
see an opportunity to
contribute." ·

me.

21

se.;~son

gram," said Miller. "This is a

A".

v.w.
AM C.JEEP

THIS SALE
Price Per Gallon

rtl?!? I?I

f1Tffil$l ..

In these days of high fuel costs,

dropped its eighth loss in nine
league encounters.

Rick Whitt was the winnin g
hurler while Evans took the
loss.
Lin.esco re:

Eastern
000 031 0-5..1-5
H. Trace
210 114 x- ]!-9-3
Evans, (L) Riffle (6) and
Bissell. Whitt (WJ and
Dennison.

THISTLE DOWN
· NORTH RANDALL , Ohio
(UP!)- Jug 0 ' Gin took the
featured $10,000 eighth ra ce
at Thistledown Wednesday
with a 1:39 4-5 mile.
The winner, ridden by Gary
Cooper, paid $7.60, $3.40 and
$2.60. Olympic Circuit was
second and Scott's Swapped
was third .
The 11-1-9 ninth race trifect
of Song of Windsor, Miss Sa be
and Tuckered Out was worth
$311 .10 and the 9-9 daily
double of Solar Maid and
K.oshab returned $38.20.
RIVER DOwNS
CIN CINNATI (UP!)
Manys Tulle heat Rare Air by
two lengths Wednesday to
win the $3,800 feature race at
River Downs.
Vince Clark piloted Many 's
Tulle over the 5'h furlongs in
1:04 iKi for returns of $3.40,
$2.60 and $2 .20. Poasten
Peach came in third.
Beach Pad and Rovalo won
the first two races to make a
2-2 daily double worth $591.20.
A crowd of 4,130 bet
$474,963.

think smaH and be an evergy conservationist
WE hln'W
A
F U L
INVENTORY
0 F
0 U R
ECONOMICAL
AND CHEAP TO
OPERATE V. W.
AND
AMERICAN
MOTORS
CARS!!

76 PLYMOUTH

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speed
wi th
overdrive , slant 6
engine.
3

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73 CHEVROLET
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automati c,
power
steer ing ,. v·i nyl top .

72 DATSUN
4
cy l inder ,
a ut omatic ,
the
per fect car" for for
· around to wn dr iving .

$1295

Metro 7 tourney

lnternafiona I league
United Press International

Parts
Plus

Laetrile u.Sers expect Texas to
permit drug's manufacture.

value."

Sayre.
Then Cundiff came in and
threw one pitch with the
bases loaded, and the Tornadoes were out of the jam.
Cundiff went the rest of the
way, and Hendricks crack ed
that homer to put the game
away. Southern had tied it in
the fifth on singles by Stever
Hill' and Sayre and a walk to
Cundiff.
·
other Southern hitters
were Eric Dunning and Scott
Wolfe with a single each, and
the three Southern pitchers
gave up eight hits, struck out
six, and walked six. The
Tornadoes have five games
left, all in the SVAC.
Ken McDavid and J . Neal
led the losers with three and
two hits, respectively .
Gannon took the loss as he
struck out eleven but walked
ten.
s
003 210 3- 9 9 3
G
003 300 0-&lt;&gt; 8 4
seventh.
Huddleston, Sayre (4),
Bill Elkins was charged . Cundiff (4) LP ) and Forbes.
with the loss. Tom Edelmann Gannon (L P) and Neal.
led GAHS with three hlts.
Chuck Derifield had two.
GAHS had 10 safeties. Meigs
had two, one by Troy Griffith
and a double by Wood in th e
last inning.

Gallia Jayvees

will take place and I would
not he at all surprised If a

204 Condor St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

walk, Richard Teaford
singling, and Scott Wolfe
squeezing home the last tun.
But then the hosts tied it in
their half of the inning, the
big swing being a home run
by Neismer.
Southern regained the lead
in the top of the fourth with
two runs. Mike Huddleston
singled, and after three
straight walks, Teaford
. stroked a· hit. Green came
right back in their turn and
regained the lead by plating
three runs; enough to knock
out starting pitcher Huddleston and reliever John

21 '

HIGI! JUMP - Dorsey , J ;

Willians OSU bound

HTdrops EHS

*·

Maybe what Horatio Alger preached
won't work anymore in this America

wanted to come here," Mrs.

(G r iffen

Here 's

2:02.2.
MILE RUN - Skaggs. G;

KERA field

German, Greek, Portuguese,

Mrs. Lindbergh was in St.
Louis to dedicate t he
Missouri Historical Society's
Lindbergh gallery in the
Jefferson Memorial in Forest
Park.
"I think ·all of the places, I

Diego

H erh

captured- the mile rwt.

By GENE CADDES
Columbus Linden McKinley, throughout the recruiting war
Friday's Games
UP! Sports Writer
G-2Carter Scott of Barberton, made no bones a bout wanting
Chicago at Montreal , nigh t
6-6
Marquis Miller of Herb to play at Ohio Slate.
&lt;;:DLUMBUS, Ohjo (UP! ) Los Ang at New York , night
Columbus
St. Charles, along "I'm very happy ."
San D iego at Flh ila, night
"1 can hardly wait," said
St . Louis at Aflanta, nig ht
with
6-4
Kenny Page of
"To have a great team
Ohio State basketball coach
San Fran at Cincinnati. night
today/'
said Miller, ···you
Eldon Miller Wednesday McKee Vocational High
Plltsburgh at Houston , nigh t
need
a
great
athlete at the
School
of
Slaten
Island,
N.Y.'
after G-11 Herb Williams of
The Fifth Annua l Fruth
Williams, who averaged 25 center position. Herbie is .a .
American League
Columbus Marion Franklin
Pharmacy Slo-pitch Softball
E.a s t
points
and 15 rebowtds per great athlete. He's a young
High
School
signed
a
national
Tournament will he held May
W. L Pet. GB
game
the
past season, said he man with a lot to learn, and
letter-&lt;&gt;f-intent
with
the
New
York
16
11
.593
27, 28, 29 and 30 at the KERA Baltlmor
14. 10 .583
111 Buckeyes. "We're going to
made
his
final decision "the he knows that. But there is
Fields in Ravenswood, W. Va. Milwauke
15 14 .517
2
have
some
'fun
."
first
of
this
week," with not a young player in the
Boston
14 14 .500 3
It will , be a double
Toronto
14 17 ..452 4
Maryland
the
last · to he country with more potential
Williams,
who
had
·
long
elimination tournament with Det roi t
11 16 .407 5
at the center position. ''We.'re
been
the
apple
of
Miller's
eliminated.
11 16 .407 5
sponsor trophies being Cleve tnd
11
just excited to have a chance
lt
's
close
to
home,_
my
recruiting
eye,
made
his
West
presented to the top three
W. L
Pet . GB announcement
to work wiUl him."
parents,
and
my
coac
h
at
an
19 11 .633
teams. Individual trophies Mirmesot
Miller, who missed most of
(Lorenzo Hunt 1had a lot to do
Chicago
18
11 .4S71
1 7 afternoon press conference.
will be presented to the top Oakland
17 \4 .548 21 ·2
with it," Williams said in
"I'm
not
up
here
to
make
a
two teams.
Texas
1&lt;1 12 .538 3
15 14 ,517 3lt7 drawn out speech," said Wil- e&lt;plaining his choice.
Entry fee is $45 and two Kanss Ct y
Californi
13 17 .433 6
liams, who had been heavily
Williams ' mother a nd
Dudley balls.
Seat tl e
10 24 .294 11
recruited
by
such
basketball
stepfather,
Mr. and Mrs.
Wednesday 's Results
For Information contact Ed
John
Shephard,
were on hand
powers
as
Michigan,
UCLA,
3, Boston 1
Baer. Home phone is 614-992- Oakland
Cleve lan d 4, Milwaukee 3
as
Williams
,
.
U!bbed "the
Maryland and Louisville. "I
7214 and office phone is 304- Chica go A, Texas 3
just want to reveal my franchise"
by
some ·. Hannan Trace, one-run
Defroit 8. Minnesota 3 ·
273-4322 extension 2224, or Sea
ttle 5, New York 2
decision and that is tO further recruiters, p..1t his signature losers tl)e past two ni ghts,
contact Don Swisher, home Ca lifornia. 6, Baltimor e 0
my education at Ohio State .'' on both the Big Ten erupted ea rl y Wednesday
Today's Probable f)itchen
phone is 304-675·5644 and
(All Times EDTI
Williams was the sixth and Conference and national ni ght to post a 94 victory over
office phone is 304-975-1121.
Texas (Per ry 1. 4) a t Kans as final recruit signed thi s
letters.
Eastern
Clty (Leonard 2-11,8 : 30 p .m.
"I think I had quite a bit to
, Detroit { Rozenia 2-0) at spring by Miller, who also got
The Wildcats of Coach Tom .
Mi lwa uk ee (Travers. 3-3), 8: 30 6-9 Jim Smith of Cleveland
do with it," said a smiling Belville fini shed their league
"i~il::':'ll':"&gt;&gt;l'N:GI:'_,.,""'~:Q:s:IT, p .m
.
Mrs .
Shephard ,
who seas&lt;&gt;n at 4-8 while Eastern
t1
New
York (Figuer oa 3-21 at East Tecli, .:&gt;-9 Todd Penn of

wanted to include programs
for Ohioans of Frenc h,

balance.''

41 ~
51 1

San Francisco (Mon tefu sco 2.
41 at Ph iladelphia (Chr istenson
2· 3) , 7 :35p .m .

Tourney set at

chroder, R-Fremont , who

Lindbergh, who lived in
seclusion in Hawaii in the
years prior to his death in
1974, completed hi s New
York-to-Paris flight in tbe
"Spirit of St. Louis" on May
22, 1927.
Mrs . Lindbergh said
despite the problems that
came with fame, she did not
think her husband regretted
having made the pioneering
flight.
.
" It cost him something/'
she said. " It cost him a lot In
privacy. But ihese thiltgs

) 12

New York lKoosman 2-31 , 8:05

turned down.
So was Rep. Gene Dams-

ceremonie~ ."

11 ,6(17
11 .sn
ll . 5.t2

p.m .

Spanish descent but was

per cent of all used cars sold

.741

Ironton wins Class· AA
District track crown

Cincinnati (Zact,ry 2· 4) at St .
Louis {Denny 5·0) , I :30 p.m .
L os Ange les (R hoden 5-0J at
Montrea l (Hannahs 1-3 ), 7:35
p .m .
.

but has "done nothing ."

"The purpose of this bill ls
not to make Ohio a United
Nations," objected Rep .
James W. Ra nkin , DCincinnati, as the proposal
was tabled.
The
House
also
unanimously passed and
returned to the Senate a bill
setting stiff penalties for
U!mpering with odometers
(m'i lea ge Indicators) on
motor vehicles and authorizing the sUite attorney general
to prosecute violators.
Rep. James L. Baumann.
D-Columbus
said
the
"alarming figure" of 30 to 50

17
15
13
12

]

N l , Patton, W. -

Southeastern "ohio League
champion Ironton ca ptured
13 . 41!0
7
th• 1977 Class AA Sectional
10 11! . 557 101 2
track and field meet at Rio
·• West
W. l
Pet. GB Grande's
Evans Field
los Ange ls
23 6 .793
Wednesday afternoon.
Sn Frncsc
ll ld" .•US 10
Cincinnat
12 10 .429 101•1
The Fighting Tigers tallied
San Diego
13 19 . 406 111 1
74
points in the 15-&lt;!vent meet.
Houston
12 18 .400 11 ' ~
Atlan ta
a 22 . '161 lS1 2 Defend i ng
champion
. __ ,: Wedpesdi1V 1S Results
Gallipolis
finished
second
San Di ego 6, New York 3, l si
with 46 points. Twenty-four
San Diego 4, New York 3, 2nd
Los Angeles s, Montreal 1
teams took part in the meet.
San Fran 4, Ph iladel ph ia 2
Two Blue Devils advanced
Pittsburgh 2. Atlanta 1
Cinc innat i 5, St . Louis 1
to district competition in four
Houston 8, Chicago 2
events. Keith McGuire won
Today 's Probable Pitchers
(All Times EDT I
both hurdle races and the 220Atlanta (Leon O· ll at P itts : va rd dash while Mike Skaggs
burgh (K!son 3-1), 12 :35 p .m .

play .

House Minority Leader
Char les F. Kurfess, RPerrysburg , attempted to
allow three commission
members to be of non-

20

Ch ica go
Montrea t
Phlladlph
New York

Ohio will initiate post season

in Ohio have their odometers E
set back.
Passed 94 to 2 and sent to
the governor was a bill
A CRAFT TABLE FEATURING items made by
authorizing tuition and
pupils of the Riverview School at Reedsville was on
Lorain and Lucas counties. college grant reciprocity with
display for parents to view at the Monday night PTA
" The r e
is
growing other states.
opposition to the proliferation
The bill, sponsored by Sen.
of boards and commissions," . M. Morris Jackson, D.Clevesaid
Betts,
claiming land, would allow out-of-state
consolidation would "stretch students to attend stale·
the modest budget of the supported colleges and
agency to cover Its wtiversities in Ohio at the
-activities .11
prevailing tuition and fee
The House-passed budget rates for state residents, and
allocates $100,000 to the would give Ohioans the same
office, provided Camera's bill privilege In other states . By JACQUELINE HUARD
the truth, you'll succeed/'
i:i enacted.
BOSTON
(UPI)
says member Richard
State grants to students
But Democrats tabled would he similarly honored. Members of the Horatio Seddon, 73, of Winchester ,
Betts' amendment, 57 to 40,
Both chambers were to Alger Society see themselves Mass. ''It sounds corny
after. Camera satd 1t would reconvene at I p.m. today. as a dying breed - an today, but 100 years ago , it
endangered species that still was the tiling ."
believes in success through
''The man was no great
hard work .
·
intellectual. He wrote homey
And some of them worry stories, no sex or violence. He
thatmayhe Alger, himself, is was like the protesters today.
passe.
He saw evil and tried to
"Everyone has a dream . · correct it. ''
And if you want to have your
Seddon, a retired refrigeradream,
you
have
to
work
for
tion
and a ir co nditioning
year.
By LASZLO K. DOMJAN
it,''
said
Max
Goldberg,
75
,
a
engineer,
said the down.and" I feel pretty sure he
ST. LOUIS (UP! ) - The
11
retired
pharmacist
and
Alger
wrote about
outers
late Charles A. Lindbergh wouldn't, she said. "He
chiropractor
and
a
meiJlber
never made it really big.
might have appreciated the didn 't look back at past acThat idea has been populaobservances of the 5oth an· complishments. He believed of the society.
"That's what Alger belie· niversary of his transatlantic in the future. He would
fight, but he wouldn't have probably be out doing ved," Goldberg said of the
taken part in all the hoo~la, something for the whales or 19th-century author whose
his widow said Wednesday . threatened species rather name became synonymous
in with the rags-to-riches
participating
Anna Morrow Lindbergh, than

than the creamed variety.
And yo u would need to eat
about eight owtces of that a
day to provide the same
number of grams of protein
as you get in s ix ounces of
meat.
I think cottage cheese is a
good item for weight control
diets but it is probably best
for most peoole to still have
. some meat in the diet. Since
there are fewer calories in
the uncreamed variety of cot·
tage cheese it is the better of
the two for this purpose - it
provides both calcium and
protein.
.
Because foods contain dif- widow of the aviation hero,
ferent nwnbers of calories told reporters Wednesday she
per ounce usually you cannot ·
appreciates the Lindbergh
make a straight owtce for observances planned later
ounce substitution of one food
this month in various paris of
for another.
the country. But she doubled
DEAR DR. LAMB - ·I am
whether the "Lone Eagle"
having an argwnent with a would have been part of the
friend · over which organ in
celebration had he lived to
the body causes emotions. He
see it.
says the brain or heart and I
"I think he would not be
read an article that says the
celebrating the past, but
liver. Which is correct?
led us,"
DEAR READER - Do you where the past has
11
she
said.
His · aclove your friend with all your
complishment moved
liver? The ancients thoughts aviation forward to space
the heart was the seat of
flights and astronauts."
hwnan emotions but that was
Mrs. Lindbergh was asked
before we knew inuch about
if she thought her Jmshand
the hwnan body. The heart
would have attended the
was ·even thought to be the
anniversary festivities this
location of the hwnan sou l.
The truth is that the brain
THE DAILY SENTINEL
is the location of all,emotions.
OEVCYI'ED TO THE
or course it must receive inlNTERESTOF
MEIGS-MASON AREA
formation before it can resCHF.STERL. TANNEHilL
pond. You hear bad news and
EKICC . Ed,
R08ERTliOEFLICH
the brain responds emoCity Editor
tionally sending out signals
Published daily excepl Suturtlay
that may result in crying or by The Ohio Valley Publishln~ Comany. lll'Caurt St.. Pmneruy, Ohiu
other physical reactions. Or
4S769. Busine.!i.'i Office Ph one 992:·
you touch something cold and
215tl. Editorial Phone 992·21ft7.
SecOnd otass post.ltge paid at
the signal is transmitted to
Potneroy. Ohio. •
your computer brain to proNaliunal 11dve:rtising representative Ward • Griffith Comp~~n y,
cess the signal and tell your
Im:., Bollinelli and Ga JJ.agber Oiv.,
conscious being that the ob7ft7 Thir;U Ave., New York , N.Y.
jec! is cold. The brain is
10017.
Subscription rates : Delivt:n:d by
much ljke a central computer
t'l:lrrier where IIIV.llihtUle 7 ~ cents per
- it receives all information
week, By Mot()l' Route whe re cttrrier
senk•e nut a\'ailable, One month,
and sends out signals for the
S3.2S. By Jruill in Ohio and W. Va.,
proper responses to what it
One V!:!llr, S22.00; Six months,
Sil.W; Three month~. $7.00 ;
lws received. So really 1f you
Elsewhere S26.00 year; Six month."
love your friend y.ou love him
S \3 . ~0 ; Th re e IR&lt;Jnths, S 7.~0 .
Su iL'&gt;I.Tiptiun price illcludea Sunday
with all your brain.
Tunc!r&amp;nt.ind .
•
·c;;c;;_...::!L-.,----'

rolling

BASEBALL

visitors had nine hits.

Meat ' cheese not · equal. .
By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB- I have
high blood pressure and have
been on medication and a
diet. I have lost weight so I
am off medications. My diet

.• .
..
..

governmental a nd private
sources.

on a 64-33 vote after the House
overwhelmingly accepted the

Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.

......,..
..

Tuesday evening the Meigs
Girls fastpltch softball team
kept up its winning ways by

House invokes sunset rule
in three newest agencies

HEALTH
•

Girls defeat
Alex'der 24-14

LighthousE!' Rest.
Ben Tom
King Builders

ST . LOUIS ( UPi )
Memphis State, the defending
baseball champion in. the
Metro 7 Conference, has a
fir st-round game with
Cincinnati in the conference
tournament beginning Friday
in Memphis.
"
Memphis State, seeded
second in the tournament
with a 32-12 record, drew the
seventh-seeded team, Cincinnati, 1:&gt;-:h, in the pairings
announced Wednesday at
confe rence headquarters.
The winner of the double-

60

eligible for an at-large berth
in the NCAA tourney. The

Evel yns Grocery
51
Team high series Ben
Tom, 2580 ; King Builder!

conference tournament's top
seed, Tulane, 28-8, drew a

Shirley Kays

THE HAHN-ECLIPSE
TOUGH ONES. BUILT

TOUGH TO..MAKE
YOUR LIFE EASY. PRICES STARTING
FROM

78
66 ' elimination tournament is
53

Royal Crown

LAWN MOWERS

52

first-rowtd bye.
Other first-rowtd pairings
Team high game - Ben
Tom, 903; Lighthouse Rest. are Florida State, third seed,
901 ; Evelyns Groc ., 877 ;.
33-12, against' Louisvllle ,
Indi vi du a l high ser ies seed, 26-25, and St.
sixth
Phyll is Cline, 509 ; Mar y
Louis,
fourth, 29-17, against
Voss, 493 ; Flossie Maxson ,
Georgia Tech, · fifth, 17-9.
483.
Individual high game Tulane will•play the winner of
Rhea Wi ll is, 1 177 ; Flossie
Maxson, 174 ; "Phyllis Cline , Ute Florida StateLouisville
game.
173.

UP

2520; Evelyns Groc., 2513.

EBERSBACH HARDWARE
"EVERYTHING IN HARDWARE "

MAIN ST.

*

POMER5)Y, 0.

�•

I- The Daily Sentir-.,1, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Thursday, May 12, 1977

~

parky not too happy
fter 5-1 Reds victory

'ly TOM UHLENBROCK
ST . LOUIS (UPI J- Cincinr4'ti had just won its second
u.1me in a row from the St.
Lours Cardinals bot Reds'
mnn ager Sparky Anderson
· ••as grumbling like a loser in
llle clubhouse.
"Wt.~ haven't been. doing
:mything; we haven't been

.Iggrcssive/' Anderson sa id.
·we·re not getting any
•nilcage out of our hits. Every
· imE." we get a man on base or

average ," Anderson said .
"You lake a guy who hits .340,

unless he knocks some runs in
it doesn't mea n anything.·· Atlanta , where Braves'
Mor gan si ngled in Ken owner Ted Turner took over
Griffey with the winnihg run from Manager Dave Bristol
in the third inning and the earlier in the day.
" I'm luc'ky over here,"
Reds added two runs in the
fourth to take a 4-1 lead. Anderson said . " I don't have
Bench scored Foster with a to worry about some lunatic.
ground-rule double and Cesar Turner didn't do too bad a
Geronimo singled in Bencb. job, though. He only lost by a
Anderson looked at the run ."

B0 b IC
• ~ k never·
had a chance

'he bases loaded we strike out
·
Jr pop it up."
Every starter except
\v inning
pitcher
Ja'ck ·
'Jillingha m, 4-2, hit safely in
the 5-! Cincinnati vi ctory
we r
the
Ca rdinals
Wednesday night with Pete
Hose, Dan Driessen , Joe
orgnn, Johnny Bench and
By IRA MILLER
Dave Concepcion collecting
UPI Sports Writer
RBJs.
NEW YORK (UPI) - To
Rose, Morgan, Concepcion
"nd George Foster had two put it as plainly and simply as
hits each but Anderson still possible, Duane Bobick was
overmatched.
wasn't impressed.
Ken Norton, introduced
"We're getting a lot of hits
but we 're not getting them before Wednesday night 's
when we need them," he said. fight as the " uncrowned
:"I don't care how good a h~avyweighl champion ,''
ptlched a shutout. He still
:Pil ch~r i$, when you've got a
believes
he won tile crown
• rnw1 on third and none out, he
last
year,
and now he's in
' shouldn't be able to get you
position
for
another shot at it.
· Ollt without a run scoring. Not
This
time;
he made sure. It
: wi\h the money these players
was
quick,
58
seconds, and It
~ U1·c making."
was
thorough.
: "Average means nothing
The plodding Bobick, who
Lm less it's a productive
had built a 38-0 record and
No.4 ranking against a string
of opponents that was -to he
charitable ·- S\lS)lect, was
supposed to be the attacker.
" He had talked about
applying lots of pressure, so I
figured I'd go outandsee if he
was gonna come to me,"
Norton said.
When Bobick did not
attack, Norton decided he
would.
"The first thing I was
gonna do was fake a right
hand to the body, and see
where his ey~s would go "
Norton said. " And when '1
dropped down to throw the
right to the bOdy, his eyes
followed my head down. So I
said, 'Well, what the heck, I'll
throw a right hand over the
top . 111

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GOESSLER
JEWELRY stORE
113 E. CouriSt .
Pome.roy, 0.

scores from around the
country and saw consolation
in Pittsburgh's Z-1 win over

. That, for all practical purposes, was the fight. Norton's
right caught Bobick 's
throat.
" It brought tears to my
eyes," Bobick said later, his
voice still raspy and barely
audible.
A couple more rights and
on.e left battered Bobick's
head, and he collapsed In his
corner. Bobick barely
staggered back to his feet
before the count of 10 but
Referee Petey Della stoPped
the fight anyway.
" He really hurt me,"
admitted Bobick, who had
predicted victory , in the
seventh or eighth round of the
scheduled 12-round bout.
"I didn 'I think I would hurt
Bobick that soon," Nor ton
said. "! thought he might
absorb some damage and I'd
wear him down.''
Now Norton, who earned
$500,000 (to $300,000 for
Bobick J, or more than $8,600
a second for his evening's
work, can look ahead to a $2.5
million payday for a title
fight with Muhammad All in
~ptemher. Norton claims to
already have a signed
contract for the bout, which
would be their fourth.
"I am the champion, and 1
want to beat All again to

No QWJrry will ever
say the word 'quit'
NEW YORK (U P!) - Memories offormer heavyweight
contender Jerry Quarry's tearful , emotional retirement
from boxing two years ago came flooding back
Wednesday night when his younger brother Mike was
forced to concede his career was over at 26.
When fighting is in the blood, as It is with the Quarry
family , the word :•quit" kind of sticks in the throat. Mike
Quarry never said it after Mike Rossman stopped him
w1th an . eye cut in the sixth round of their light
heavywetght rubber match, but Jerry said It for him.
''I wasn't out of gas,! just couldn't see," Mike started to
say afterwards, his already distorted face swollen from
the pounding he took, seven stitches sewing up the skin
near his right eye and a sheen of blood and tears on his
cheeks and nose.
"He'sgonna quit, I will make him quit," Jerry said.
"Say it," Jerry said to Mike.
"I'm gonna fight one more to go out a winner," Mike
started again.
"Say it," Jerry said.
Mike nodded with resignation but he couldn't say quit.
The word just wouldn't come out.
Then after a few quiet moments, Mike realized what it
was all about for him. Perhaps it hurt most that, like his
brother, he came dose but never won a championship.

Big Mo leads Rockets
• 118-94 Philly rout
m
By GARY TAYLOR
UPI Sports Writer
HOUSTON ( UPI ) - The
Houston Rockets do not
resemble water buffaloes in
every game , and Moses
Malone has 12 long ..tenuned
roses to prove it.
The red roses the 6-foot-11
forward clutched after Houston's 118-94 rout of
Philadelphia Wednesday
night came from 76ers'
forward George McGinnis.
"Some lriends of mine sent
me the roses," McGinnis
said, "and they had them
brought here (to the locker
room ). I just told them to
send them over to Mo."
There were some other
impressed 76ers after their
two-game lead in the NBA .,
Eastern Cooference playoff
series was whittled to Z-1. The
fourth game Is to be played in
Houston Friday,
"They embarrassed us tonight," guard Doug Collins
said. "People quoted me as
saying we were going to
sweep this series. That's a
bunch of bull. I have more
respect for this team than

•

Meigs High honor students are announced
Principal James Diehl has
announced the f i fth six weeks
period honor roll for Meigs

High School.

Making a grade of "B" or
above in all their subjects to
be named to the roll were :

SENIORS-Cheryl

Birchfield, Mary Blaettnar,

Leaders

NBA playoffs

Ela i ne Corsi, Bruce
John
Dav i dson ,

Dewhurst. Barbara Douglas.

Tony Eblin .
Patricia Edwards Pau Ia

EiChinger , Teresa Ellis ,
Connis F ish , Sandy Garnes

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OCCASIONS •••

Kennedy,

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Raymond Willford, Ronn ie

Tom

Wood, Cheryl Woods.
JUNIORS - Jell Arnold,

Kennedy, Deanna Baker
Knapp. J acquel i ne King ,
Debbie Lambert , Randy
Lyons .
Also , Matthew Marcum,
Duane Mclaughlin , Denise
Marshall , Jerry Matson.
Vick i Metheney, Eugene
Norri son, Scott Napper,
Pam ela North, Pamel a Of.
fenberger, Debra Osborne .
John
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n Kennedy , He le n
King, Paula Klees, Martha
Krawsczyn, Cheryl LeFebre,
Cynthia M cKinney, Lance
Oliver, Mark O'Dell, Danny
M~rrls , Bonnie Morris, Sandy
. M1ghf, Pam Powers, Lisa

Results, line scores

- .-

San F.ran
010 20 1 000- 4 6 1
Phlla
100 100 000- 2 6 3
McGlothen (2 .J ) and Hill ;
Lerch , Reed ( 8 ) and Boone . LP
- Lerch (4-2). HRs- San F ran ·
cisco , Mad lock. (3); Phi!ade! phia , Hebner (1) .
Atlanta
010 000 ooo.. .:. . 1 B 0
Pttsbrgh
101 000 000- 2 6 2
Niek.ro (Q . 7) and Correll ;
Candelar ia , Gossage (9) and
Dyer . WP - Candelar i a {4.0l.
HR - Piltsburgh , Parker {61 .

..•

Stephanie Rought , Nita
Ruschel, Tamela Simms,
Lor ie Sisson, Diane Smith,
Robin
Snowden ,
James
Soulsby , Nan cy Stanley,

·

Gloria Sturgeon , Gina
Thompson, Darlene Thor n·
ton , Teresa VanMeter, Pat
V~ughan , Terr i Vining , Scott
Warner, Jennifer Wise, Lori '

Wyne .
SOPHOMORES -

Carin

Bailey , Greg Becker, Jana
Burson , D iana Davidson ,
Linden Dunn , Patric ia Dyer ,
Beverly Faulkner, Kevin

King. Julie Kitchen. Keilh

Landers, Valerie Matson , Joe
M cCloud.
'James Morrison.
Lisa
Nash , ViCki Pickens , Dollie
Janf:! Rousey, Rick Allen

Priddy, John Stout, ·Craig
Swick . Randy Tacketl .
Frederick ThOmas , Mark
Venoy ,· Roger Wamsley ,

Carol Wilkes, Danny Will.
FRESHMEN - Sonie Ash.
T9nia Ash. Richard Basham ,

Ricky . Birchfle~d ,
Chris
Ebersbach , Tim Herdman,
Janet Horky , Anthony Hysell,
Rick Icenhower, Jenell Kelly,
Cli'fford Kennedy, Robert
M innest
020 000 001 - 3 s 2 K lein .
Detroit
311 200 01x- 8 12 o
Rena LeFebre, Maria
Zahn , D. Johnson arid BOrQ · L~Qar , Pau l Matson . Mikj:o
man; Roberts (J.4l and MaY . M cGuire, Scott M cKinney,
L P- Zahn (S-1l. HRs- Delroit
Og l ivi~ 16), Mankowski ( lJ : Rayrnond Patter son, Kathie
Qu i vey, Jamie Sisson , Tina
Wagner (1) , May {2).
Smith, Mark Lawson , Usa
New Yrk.
200 000 000- 2 8 2 ~ Thomas, K im Warner , Matt
Seatt le
100 002 20x ~ 5 7 2 Wea
v W'lI lf or d.
Holtzman , L yJe
(7) and
ver, an

Munson ; Abboll . Laxton ( 6). - A thought for· the day·. U.S.
Romo (7} and Stinson . WP ~
Laxton 12-tl. LP- Hortzman {2- clergyman Fletcher Dole
2l. HR- New York., Jackson said, "Good will is the
Clncnnt
101 200 001 - 5 12 0 15 1.
mighties! practical force in
St. Louis
100 000 000- 1 11 o
Bafl imr
ooo ooo ooo- o '6 0 the universe."
Billingham, Ca ldwell (7) and

• Bench; Rasmussen, Sch ultz (4),
Carroll (5), c;:apilla (7), Urrea
(9) and Simmons . WP - Bil!ing .
• ham (4-2) . LP- Rasmussen (2·
&lt;1

Prater. Rilla Rhoades.

Billie Stout.

Major League Rilsulls
Bu rriS, P . Reusthel {3 1. Todd
By United Press Internat i onal
( 5) and M ltterwa ld , Swisher ;
N-ational League
· Richard (2 -3) and Ferguson . LP
(1st game)
- Burris· (.4 .4) . HR - Houslon .
San Dieg
220 000 002- 6 11 1 Cedeno (1) .
New Yrk
002 000 001- 3 7 0
Shirley , Spi llner (3 ), Fing ers
Am erican L ea gue
(8) and Dav is ; Seaver , Todd
(4), Apodaca (7) , Lockwood (9 )
Boston
· 000 100 000~ 1 B 1
100 200 OOx __. 3 5 0
and Stearns, Grote (4l. WP ~ Oak lnd
Jenkins
(4·2)
and
Fisk. ;
Spillner (l .OJ. LP-Seaver (4-21 .
Medl ch {2 ·21 ard Sanguillen .
HRs- San Di ego, Winfield (6) ;
HRs- Oakland, Pa~e (61 , Gross
New York, Ph illips (lJ.
(9) , Will i am s 01 .
(2nd game)
100 001 100- 3 9 3
San Dfeg
002 020 000- 4 9 1 Milwi'lk
030 000 01x- 4 50
New Yrk
000 100 020- 3 12 1 Clev!nd
Augustine {3 .4 ) and MoOre ;
Jon es, Fingers (8), Tomlin
Ga,r land , Kern (9 ) and Fosse .
(9) and Davis ; Swan , Lockwood
WP - Garland (] . A). HR ~ M i l ·
(8 ) ancl Stea rns . WP- Jones &lt;3 ·
waukee, Josnua (21 .
4 ). LP --Swan &lt;1 ·41 . HRs- New
York, Kingmaf'1 (7) ,
&lt;10 innings )
100 110 ooo 1- 4 10 o
L s Angl s
000 000 500- 5 10 2 Chicg
030 000 000 0- 3 6 0
Montrel
100 000 000- 1 11 1 Texa.s
Knapp (A·1l and Essian ;
John, Hough (7 ) and Yeager ;
Stanhouse, Atkinson (7), McE - Alexande r , Lindblad (9 ),
D.evlne _
(10) tind 'Sundberg L P·
naney (7) and Carter. WP ~
John {3-ll . LP- Stanhouse 0 - L1ndb!ad (l -2l. HR S.Chicago ,
Limon [5)
41 .

11

4).

000 002 000-- 2 5 l
205 000 Olx ~ A 12 1

Chicago
Houstn_

Callfrn
030 100 02x - 6 7 0
Grimsley, D. Martinez (2), T .
Martinez (7 ), M iller (6) and
DempSey ; Tanana (5.1l and
Humphrey . LP - Grimsley (3-2) .
HRs- California , Bonds
(6),
Baylor (7), Jackson (3), Rud i
lll .

GEMINI CMI)' 21 · June 20)
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COLUMBUS - The eighth
annual Alumni Day for
graduates, fa culty and
friends of The Ohio State
University's Colleg~ of
Agriculture and Home
Economics will be Saturday,
June 4. The event, to he held
in the Ohio Union, 1739 North
High St., will start at 8: 30

set

~
By MILTON RICHMAN
;~::;:·
:-x-··
_
UPI Sportl Editor
::::::::
AND
once supported you is prepared
PAGELAND, S.C. (UP! )- The pbone rang and Van Lingle a.m.
Persons interested in at·
to go to bat again
Mungo picked it up.
tending
Alumni Day should
CANCER IJune 21-July 221 11
It was a lady calling, long distance from Detroit.
write
his
office, CAHENR
you have any trump cards to play
That, in itself, wasn 't especially surprising because in his 14
Alumni
Office,
2120 Fyffe
care~rwis e . lh ls could be the years in the big leagues - II with the Brooklyn Dodgers and
Road
,
Columbus,
Ohio 43210
day You hold a wmmng hand . ·three with the New York Giants - a lot of ladies wanted to
or
phone
614-422·1416
lor
lEO IJuly 23-Aug. 221 Be alert speak with Van Lingle Mungo.
reservations.
The
cost
of
$7
todey . when you're talking to ije was always the rugged be-man type with the same kind of
per
person,
including
breakassoc1ates and In ends. There's a deft chin th t ca
d th
to h
f
strong poss1b.1 1!ty you car spot a
;
a . use
e women
c ase a ter Robert fast and a bullet luncheon.
sizable oppOrtunity .
Mttchum and Kirk Douglas ,
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 221 Joint ca~~en n~w, at 65, Mungo still cuts an imposing fi_gure and
OPEN :
ADDRESSES WANTED
ventures look very promising at
aes himseli w~ll.
·
Thurs.
Friday
this t1me. especially if you' re
"Are you Van Lmgle Mungo?" the woman caller inquired.
LANGSVILLE - Vivian
11
&amp;
Saturday
teamed up with one who wields
"Yes, answered the former fireballer .
Pierce, Langsville, Is trying
considerable influence.
"You're not dead, are you?"
12 til s p.m .
to locate two members of the
LIBRA I Sept . 23-0ct. 23l
"Well, I'm talking to you, aren't!?"
class of 1952 of Rutland High,
Mailers of a ·regal nature are There was an embarrassed little laugh at the other end .
School for the 25th reunion.
4
rav qred lor you today . If you
'How do you like the song?'' was the next question.
Anyone knowing of any
have deals to c l ose or
"What song?" Mungo wanted to know.
documents
to sign , tend to th em
" You mean you haven't heard the song, 'Van Lingle Mungo,' relatives or the address Of
now.
Edith Sheffer and Marjorie
the.one they named after you? They've been playing it all over
Justice
, members ol the
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) II the country. I'm crazy about it."
class,
are
asked to please
there"s a n important prof~ct
By now, Van Lingle Mungo has beard the song any number
notify Mrs. Pierce by May H.
you 're involved in . keep your
of times. He likes it and so does his wife, Eloise.
nose to the gnndstone today .
"!like the ~usic and the rhythm," she says, "but most of all Mrs. Pierce's address is 28924
Returns could eKceed expec ·
I hke the title because it has to do with my favorite SR 124, Langsville, 0 ., 45751
tat1ons.
or phone 614-742-2797.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·Dec. ballplayer."
Composed by Dave Frischberg and distributed by the Red
21) You 're lucky tod ay as long as
you know yo u r limitations Day Division of!Joramus, Inc. , under a CTI label, the song has
Th ings sho uld work out as you am?imted something of a rebirth for Mungo, the Dodgers' No.
hope they will.
I pitcher In his time.
"I have no idea why it was written," he says. "The fellow
CAPRICORN IDee. 22-Jan. 19)
Beneficial cond i ti ons prevail who wrote it must have had something In mind."
where your family Is concerned .
Nobody who ever saw Mungo pitch for the chronically downIf there 's a change you've con under
Dodgers is ever likely to forget him .
templated . try to get it under way
He
could
throw a baseball through a bank vault, his fastball
today .
havmg been clocked once at 118 miles per hour at West Point.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fab. 19)
Mungo won 120 games and lost 115, winning 1~ or more
Aim high to day. e"en if you 're
games
four stratght years during one stretch. What made that
tack ling some thing la rge in
scope. Your judgment won 't let so eye-eatching was that he did it with a terrible team. He was
you overstep the bounds.
the only pitcher the Dodgers could depend on and they worked
·
PISCES !Feb. 20-March 201 him until his tongue hung out.
One day when Casey Stengel was the manager, he sumlnlluen ces rel afi ng to your
materia l security are very in· moned the arm-weary Mungo to his hotel room, telling him he
tere st 1ng today . Gain may come had three new pitchers he wanted him to meet.
through hard work and lucky
, :•Whe~ I got to his room,•: Mungo remembers, "Casey said
breaks.
ARIES (March 21-Aprll 191 . C mon m, son, I wanna mtroduce you to the three new
con centrate your efforts today pitchers.' He introduced me to 'em, all right. Three pitchers of
on your b iggest and mo'st impdr· beer on the table."
tant project. Th is ·iS what you 'll
MWlgO, however, doesn't laugh at all over the famous
MADE FROM YOUR PRINT
be luc&lt;lest at'
"Havana episode" of 1939. The Dodgers were training in Cuba
(Are yo u a Tauru$? Bernice that year and everybody was having a good old time; Too good,
Osol has written a special Astra- sometimes.
FOR
Mungo made headlines when he got into a fight with a man
Graph Letter for you . For your
copy send 50 cents and a sell· wbo supposedly had surprised him in an amorous situation
addressed , Slamped envelope to with the man's wife . So anxious was the Dodger pitcher to
Astro· Graph , P.O. Box 489 .
leave the hotel room where it happened he jumped out the
With Coupon
Radio City Sta tion . New York ,
N.Y. 10019. Be sure to ask for window, the story wen!'.
Not true, says Mungo.
Taurus Volume 7, )
price includes copy negative
·. "Never jumped out of that window or any other one in my
life. We had two days off and the only reason I was in the hotel
room was because Hugh Casey, who used to pitch relief for us
'
invited me in there.
898/828
COUPON
"Casey was with t)le girl, not me. The guy who busted into
the room only knew me, not Casey, so he bounced the whole
May 13, 1977
thing -on me. Casey was in the mid.dle of a divorce at the time
YOu should beg in to experience and he wanted to tell the whole truth later on, but I told him.not
Improving cond i-tions in your
to bother .... "
financial affa irs. The chan·ge wi ll
FROM
Mungo Jives quietly and peacefully here now with his wife;
come about gradual ly.
who holda a masters degree, has laugh! high school 28 years
FAVoRITE PHOTO
•
and doesn't believe for a minute all the wild stories she has
FROM Y_OUA_NEGATIVE $1.79
read about her husband.
not •val, from 110 size ~,
'
'I
know
better,''
she
says.
''V
.L;
is
a
wonderful
person.''
MUST FILE PETITIONS
Vlllld this month only-M•y 71'
MASON, W. · Va. - All
candidates running · for
..
political office in the Town of
For more information
Mason must have petitions
A men's double elimination
liled in the City Building by American Softball Assn. contact Larry Bauer, 312
noon, May !8. The town sa·nctioned slo-pitch.. softball Union .Street (353-2948); Jon
MIDDLEPORT, .OHIO
election will be held on June tournament, sponsored by the Daniels, 151.0 Franklin Ave.
7.
Benny's Softball Team of (354-4798) or Sam Venturino,
Portsmouth i~ to be held 222'!. Court Street (354-3895 J.
Memorial Day · Weekend, Portsmouth.
May 28-29 with May 30 as a
CHADWELL SIGNS
rain date, at Labold field.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) Drawing f9r the tourPaul Chadwell, Galloway
nament
is to be held Tuesday,
Westland's standout 6-2
May
24
at
7:3C p.m. at Labold
guard, has signed a national
field.
Entry
fee is $50 for
basketball letter of intent
sanctioned
teams
and S6(l for
with the University of Texas .
Chadwell, special mention non-sanctioned teams. Inon the United Press dividual trophies are to be
LADIES'
ACK-LADIES
International Class AAA all- awarded members of the
LADIES
championship
team.
Team
Ohio team, averaged 22.7
points per game the 111\St year trophies are to be awarded to
m leading the Cougars to a 16- the top three tournament
teams.
2 regular season mark.
Misses and half sizes .
Sizes B to 20
by Hobnoblers
and Berkshire
And
Reduced
and City Scene

•

SHOPPE

svort arad e

·• ~~~~~~~~~~~

·

GIFT WRAPPING
Saleltema
Ellluded

•· .

,.._pnl 20-Ma)' 20) An ;· J,
ObliQBl!On )'OU we re almoSt ·~..
ready to wnte oil may be repaid
1oday. If 11 1srft, Hy pumng out a : .
gentle reminder
· .~~...:-:·

OH Reg. Price

DUTTON DRUG
MIDDLF.PORT 0. t

Cheryl

Kenneth Stewart, · Donna
Taylor, Becky Thomas, Tim
Da n Granda!, Jeni ,Grate, Thomas, Wheeler Thomas,
Mark Haggerty, Crystal Hall , D iana Thornton , Janie Van
Trudy Hall. Brian Ham ilton, Meter ,. Sherri ' Vining.
Debra Hartenbach , Ci ndy · Pa trlc:ia Warner .
Hindy, Debbie Holsinger .
June Wam s ley , · Duane
Charles Hossler , Jayn e Weber, Trac i Weese, Kenneth
Hutchinson, Brenda Hysell, White. Bev er ly Will , Beverly

Windbreakers

FOR sUMMER SEE OUR LARGE SELECOON OF -INFANT ITEMS,

Karen
Hy sell ,
Fumiko
Iwa saki. Vickie Johnston ,

Randy 'George, Greg Glaze:

SOMETHING IN EVERY SIZE FOR BOYS
AND GIRLS ALL .............................. 20% OFF

Jackets

Mart i n

Mary Sue Durst , Opal Dyer,

Kids

Boys Suits,

Cotterill,

Davis, Robert Davis, Robin

SALE

x-if necessary

Jean

Bruce Bumgardner, Carl
Carmichael , Brenda Caskey,

For

FRIDAY, MAY 13TH THRU
MONDAY, MAY 16TH.

lmo

Browning. Mary Boggs.

NHL playoffs

SALE STARTS ........................

Gene

Blev ins. Teresa Brawn , Greg

THE
SHOE BOX

ct10nSpot...

Blake.

Blankenship ,

•s.Oo

~t
· .~\

Barn-

hart, Darlene Barrett, Dave
Bass , Becky Bego, Debbie

Tammy

m
;~!l

Frank Casto of Pomeroy
head of the MllM District and
his famous Order of the
Arrow Thal-Coo-Zyo Lodge
457 dance team, gave a
performance at the meeting
of Racine Cub Scout Pack
2434 recently.
Dances given were " The
Happy Warrior Dance "
'
" Th e Kula nee", 11 Kansa
Brave Man's Dance" and the
"Pow Wow." Casto provided
the drum heat.
Following
the
enDANCERS - Entertaining the members of Racine
tertainment scout leader
Earl Cleland presented CUb Scout Pack 243 recently were 1-r, Jeff Couch, Dan
Thomas, Mark Casto and Ray Werry.
achievement awards to the
following : Bobcat, Brian
Walker, Kevin Dugan, Ricky g~ologist activity badge to Dugan, Doris Fisher, Steven
Parsons, Ronnie Rice and Ralph Fisher.
Fisher, Linda Parsons, Ricky
Jamey Hensler; Denner
The scouts displayed crafts Parsons, James Cleland,
Cords. Ronnie Hice and Scott they are working on to earn Tracy Cleland, Marty
Wtckllne ; assistant Denner achievements.
Qeland, Beverlee Wickline,
Damon Fisher and Richard
Attending were Cleland, Scott Wickline, Marshall
Gilbride ; Webelos Showman scout master, Jean -Cleland, Roush, Joe Roush, Lois
activity badge and Webelos den mother, Kay Warden, Wolfe, Charles Wolfe, Tony
sportsman activity badge to Brian Warden, Matthew Imboden and Trevor CarTimmy Evans ; Webelos Jewel, Shirley Dugan, Kevin done.

•s.oo

The

Bernice BedE! Osol

perfonnance

move to
district

""''"ll';.;·;·,m· ·~;:@~--..:-~.;::tm-o::··~-w.:·-x-;--.-.-.:-x:............. ... . ....... ... . __ . _

ASTRO ·GRAPH ,~~:~:;;::$;.::::;:,:%::::::s&lt;;,:::~:,:;:;:;.::::::::::::::~:~:::~:=s:::.=K~::::::r:::, Ag-College's Alumni·
TAURUS ,.. .

FRIDAY and SATURDAY
SPECIALS .

WIIA playoffs

For Fridar. May 13, 1977

group gives

kid who came to the · ABA said the 76ers free~ance style
from high school four year~ caused the b• «lkdown .in
ago. He grabbed 25 rebounds rebounding.
"This ldnd of thing can
(11 offensive) to go with a
game-high 30 points, and the happen because we don't
two 761:rs assigned to box him have players who can block
off the boards ran into foul out," he said. ~~we get OW'
trouble. Starter Caldwell rebounds by going after the
Jones and his backup, Darryl ball. Tonight we didn't go
Dawkins, both fouled out after the ball."
Julius Erving provided the
early in the fourth quarter.
Houston center Kevin Kun- only offense for the misfiring
nert grabbed 14 rebounds, 76ers by scoring 28 points.
five more than the leading McGinnis was six of 18 from
the field, Collins four of 12
Philadelphia player.
and
Uoyd Free one of seven
That figure
pleased
before
he left in the second
Kunnert more than anyone
quarter
with an injury.
because he was the target of a
There
was no definite word
story published after the first
whether
Free, the 711ers third
series
game,
which
guard,
would
be able to play
compared the Rockets' front
line to a herd of grazing water Friday. He suffered a bruise
to his right rib cage and was
buffaloes.
"If water buffaloes sit' on In severe pain as he was
you,
what happens?" carried from the court. Xrays showed no broken bones,
Kunnert said.
Philly Coach Gene Shue the team doctor said.

prove it," Norton said.
All first must dispose of
Spaniard
Alfredo
Evangelista next Monday
night at Landover, Md .. but
thatisexpectedtobenomore
difficult for him than Bobick .
was for Norton .
In his own defense, Bobick
(BROKEN SIZES)
Ulat."
insisted, "I was ready. I
The Rockets zoomed to a
expected him to come out like
20-point, first-half margin
1 Group WOMEN'S DRESS SHOES
that, but I didn't expect the
and kept the lead there most
shot in the throat."
of
the
game.
Rudy
Values to $17.99 Now '4.99 to •8.99
Norton now has a 38-4
Tomjanovich gunned in · 24
record
incl uding
31
points and rookie guard John
1 Group WOMEN'S CASUAL SHOES ·
knockouts.
Lucas, an embarrassed man
Values to 510.99 Now '3,99 to '6.99
In
the
featured
after the first two games in
preliminary, Mike Rossman
Philadelphia when he scored
1 Group MISSES and CHILDREN'S SHOES
drove Mike Quarry into
just eight total points,
retirement, stopping him on
Values to 512.49 Now '2.00 to '7.00
responded with 20.
cuts after six rounds ol a
Malone is the 2Z.year-old
scheduled 11-round light
Kyger Creek's baseball three walks, a single by
1 Group MEN'S DRESS SHOES
· heavyweight battle. At the team with a come-from- McCorkle and a fielder's
Values to 522.99 Now '5.00 to '12.99
insistence of his brother, behind, 5-4 victory over Oak choice produced two other
Jerry. a former ranked Hill Wednesday · night · at runs.
.l Group BOYS SHOES
heavyweight who asked for Cheshire, advanced to the
Coach Jim Sprague's
Values to sJS.99 Now
to '8.00
the fight to be stoppeq, Mike Qass A District Tournament Bobcats started
their
Quarry announced his at Chillicothe for only the comeback bid in the third ·
1 Group Youths and Little Gents Shoes .
retirement following the second time in the school's mnmg on a walk, a balk,
bout.
And ·
Olympic history.
WHA Playoffs
another walk and an infield ·
Values to 511 .99 Now
and ,6 ,00
By Uniled Press International
lightweight . champion
In 1968, Coach Johnny hit off the bat of Todd Taylor.
Final Round
Howard Davis Jr. wori his Wickline's Bobcats went to .An error, double by Steve
(Best of $even)
Quebe!= vs. Winnipeg
third straight professional the District but lost a 3-2 Baird and error produced two
May 11- Winnipeg 2, Que 1
fight, scor.ing a unanimous heartbreaker to South more runs in the fifth.
May IS- Winnipeg at Que
decision
over
Carlos Webster.
Kyger Creek tied the game May J8-Quebec at Wi nnipeg
May 20-Quebec at W innipeg
Gonzalez.
Wednesday evening, Coach in the seventh on a walk to x -May 22- Winnipeg at Que
Bill Heines' Oaks managed Jim Westfall, a stolen base, x -May 24- Que at Winn i peg
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
x "May 26-Winn i peg at Que
just one hit off righthanders sa~rifice butit and another
x-il nece~sary
Ron Fraley and Steve Baird bunt. On the play at the plate,
but for live inilings it looked Westfall was rule.d safe as the
Hours: 9:30to5Monday, Tuesday,
like that was enough as Oak catcher Hale dropped . the
Thursday, Saturday. 9:30 to 8 Friday
Hill led 4·1.
.
ball.
NHL Playotts
By United Press International
The Oaks took advantage of
An argument ensued in
Sale Items
Finals
some Bobcat fielding errors which assistant Oak Coach
(Best of Seven)
Excluded
Montreal \.'S , Boston
to put four runs on the John Tipton was ejected by ·
(Montreal leads, 2-0)
scoreboard ·in the first three home plate umpire George
May 7- Montreal 7 Boston 3
~ :; 9".
. innings.
Nesselroad.
May 10- Montrea l 3 Boston 0
r.[.
,£?.,)
May 12- Montrea l at Boston
In the first, the visitors got
Kyger Creek's winning
~ '
May 14- Montreat at Boston
one run on a bases loaded rally began with a double to
x .May 17- Boston at Montreal
x-May )9- Montreal at Boston
balk by Baird.
' leftfield by catcher Ralph
x-May 21 - BOston at Montreal
· Athrowing error, following Baylor.
x-if necessary
A bunt moved Baylor to
a bunt, was responsible for
Oak Hill's second tally. Then third. Another bunt toward
the pitcher was fielded and
· Baylor probably would have
!Jeen out, however, the catcher dropped the ball when
hit by the hard sliw.;g AIISV AC fullback .
Pitching wise, the Bobcats'
By United Press international
Fraley
and Baird combined
Eastern Conference
Final Round
for 14 strikeouts and issued
(Best of Seven I
nine walks. Southpaw Allen
Philadelphia vs. Houston
and righthander Potter
I Philadelphia leads , 2-ll
May 5- Phila 128, Hous 117
fanned eight and walked five.
May a- Ph !Ia 1()6_, Hous 97
Baylor Jed the offense with
May 11- Hous 118, Phila 9.4
May 13- Ph ila at Houston
two hits. Baird, T. Taylor and
Infant Sizes
X·May 15- Houston at Phi!a
Size 2T-4T
Size 2T-4T
Size 4-6X
Brian Sutphin, a pinchhitter,
x ,May 17- Ph ila at Houston
had the other hits.
·.
x -May 19- Houston at Ph i! a
0.23 Mo.
Boys
Girls Jeans.
Kyger
Creek
13-0-1
will
play
Girls
Slacks,
Western conference
All
Boys
Pants,
Southern
this
evening
in
an
Final Round
Pants
I Best of Seven)
important
SV
AC
contest
at
Los Angeles ,.. s. Portland
Jumpsuits and
Jeans
Jeans,
Cheshire.
(Portland leads, 3-0)
May 6------ Portlnd 12 1, Los An9
Linescore:
Slack Sets
Overalls With
109
Oak
Ifill
112 000 00-4 1 4
May 8- Portt'nct 99, Los Ang 97
Slack
Sets
Slack Sets
001 020 11---{; 5 2
May 10- Portlnd 102, Los Ang K. Creek
Railroad
Overalls
long
Pants
97
Allen, Potter (7) (L) and
May 13- Los Angeles at Port Hale Fraley, Baird (1)
land
Girls
Size 7·14
Size 4-7
Boys and Girls
x May IS- Portland at LOS Ang Fraley (2) Baird (3) Fraley
x -May 18- Los Ang at Portland
x-May 2G-Porfland al Los Ang (4) Baird {5) {WJ and Baylor.
Size 7·14
Boys

B0 b ca t s

S.:u~u;;;:~Middleport-Pomeroy, o., Thursday, May 12, 1977

Jump Suits
Reg . Price $30 to $38

Sale . Price~

$21

()()TO

Po~ester

$26 66
Knit &amp;

DRESSES

l?t:ouc~:o

20%

MEN'S WHITE

PAINTER
PANTS
Waist size 25 to 36

Pant Suits

20%
Men's Lightweight

JACKETS
AND

Wind Breakers

20%
MEN ' S DRESS

StrawandHats
Cloth Hats
Sizes 6&gt;/• to 75/8
PRICED FROM

NEW
SHIPMENT
LEVI DENIMS .
In Flares Or
Str~ight Legs
Straight Leg
29 to 46
Flares
29 to 42
ular Prices

BAHR CLOTHIERS
Excellent Selection of Name Brand Merchandise for Men or Women.
MIDDLEPORT

�\

7- The Daily ~ntlnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, May i2, 1977
6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, May 12, 1977

New experiments may delay
sulfure dioxide regulation

"IF '11IF;SE ANIMALS COULD TALK to you they might say, HELP ME . l'm confined

.

m the Meigs County Dog Pound at the Fair Grounds and I don 't want to die. I'm a nice dog
and l 'myoung. Please com~ get me and take me home with you." This picture was taken by
Manon C. Crawford who wntes the colwnn "Hoofs and Paws" each Sunday . She says that if
you go and look at the arumals up at the pound and would like one of them, call her and she'U
get you the one you want. Phone 992-7680.

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

l

Area Deaths

1

Relatives and friends of
Howard Ewing , age 60, of
Duned i n, Fla ., have learned
of his death at Nease Hospita l
in Dunedin on the evenlng of

donated tor medical reSearch
upon his death. The family ' s
mailing address i s P.O. Box
115.4, Duned in, Fla. 33528 .

GLADYS HILL

Sunday, May 8, due to a
massive

stroke

which

oc-

curred eariJer that day .
Ho~ard ,

the son of Glen roy

(deceased)
Ewin~ .

and

Frank

was born on .lincoln

HH J m 'Pomeroy . In June,

1939.
Nanc y

he

was

ma rr ied

to

Rawl i ngS, also of

Pomeroy . He nioved from
~io ~a Clearwate,r , Fla ., with
h1s Wife and three children in
1951 and had lived in Florida
and Atlanta , Georgi a, since

that time.

Howard , known by many as

" Howard The Trader" who
frequently used the slogan,

" Talk To This Old Boy," was

an ex.tremely enthusiastic,
ind':'strious, and energetic
bus1nessma.n during his
working career . He was
especially known for his
unique sty le as an au ct ioneer.
He is survived by his wife,

Nancy ; two daughters, Mrs.

J . Nell (Deanna) Nichols and

Mrs. Frederick P. (Na'tali e)
Thomson ; son, M ichae l ;
seven grandchildren ; his
mother, M rs . Frenk Ewing ,
and a sister , Harriet Ewing.
He was preceded In death by
his fa ther , Glen roy H. Ewjng .
Arrangements previously
were made fC\r his bodv to be

Funeral

se r vices

for

Gladys Hili will be held at
Willis Fune'ral
Saturday with

at 1 p.m .
Rev . J ohn

Utlerback officiating . Buria l

follow in OhiO · ValleY.
M emory Gardens . . Friends
may call at the funeral home
on Friday fr om 2·4 and 7-9
p.m.
wtll

DAWN WILLARD
Infant Dawn Elaine Willard
died at 7:51a.m. Wednesda y
at the Hoi zer Medica I Center.
She was the daughter of
Samuel A. and Ca rol E laine
Jones Wil la rd , 2145 Eastern
Ave., Gallipolis. Survivors
include her grandpar ents,

Mr .. and . Mrs .

Charle s

Willard , The Plains; ·Rev .'

and Mr s. Pau l Jones, Newton

Fall s,
Ohio ;
· greaf·.
grandparents , Mr . -and Mrs.
Samuel Pickens , Pomeroy
and Mr . and Mr s. Ernest

Milcheli , Shipman. Ill .

GraveSide serv iceS were

held today all p.m. at Mound

Hill Cemetery wit h the Rev .
Cha lmer Conley officiating .
Arrangements were under
the direction of the Waugh .
Hal ley -Wood Funeral Home.

Senior citizens
observance set
Approximately 235 senior the center staff will present
citizens and guests have awards to organizations and
registered to attend .Senior individuals who have been
Citizens Day activities at the especially helpful to the local
Senior Citizens Center in senior ciUzens organization.
Residents 90 and over will be
PO!lleroy Tuesday.
The statewide observance given special recognition .
will begin at U :30 a.m. with a There are 46 registered in this
luncheon . others who wish to age category and four of
attend are to · register ~Y them are over 100.
"Local churches will honor
caUing the center no later
their
senior citizens at serthan tomorrow. The phone
vices
this Sunday morning
numbers are 992·7884 and 992·
the
five mayors of Meigs
and
7886.
County
vUlages and the
C. E. Blakeslee will serve
Meigs
County
Commissioners
as master of ceremonies for a
have
proclaimed
Tuesday
program to start about 12:30
"Senior
Citizens
Day".
p.m. Mrs. Eleanor Thomas
and Mrs. Alice Wamsley of

HOSPITAL NEWS
VETERANS MEMORIAL
ADMISSION - Juanita
Olapman. Clifton, W. Va.;
Leonard Koenig, Pomeroy.
. DISCHARGED - Charles
Camer, George Hupp, Raj
Maib&lt;Ua, Carolyn Reynolds,
Dordy Call , Constance Craig.
Pleuaut Valley
DISCHARGES - Edith
McCoy, Racine; Mrs. Densil
Hoburn , Gallipolis: Mrs.
Donald Tucker, Grimms
' Landing ; Tracy Roach, New
Haven ; Rosemary Edmonds,
He!lderson ; Okey Jordan ,
Southside; ana Mrs. Moncil
Good, Long Bottom , 0.

Holzer Medlcal Center
(Discharges, May 11)
Catherine Batey, Garland
Bostic, Marvin Cottrell,
Judith Cox, Debra Cundiff,
Darlene Grady, Georgia
Hale, Paul Higgenbotham,
; Brad Houdashelt, Clarence
• Jones, Allen Kallner, Max
K~, Sr., Sanc1fa Martin,

'

l atton s
l switch to

•

HOWARD EWING

N .

William McClanahan. Mrs.
Gle11 McDaniel and daughter,
Flora
Mullins,
Floyd
Newman, Carroll Norris,
. Chastity Oiler, Glenna Parks,
Donald Phillips, Hershel
Phillips, Herbert Robbins,
Jody Sanders, lfilliam
Sexton, Homer Smith,
William Swanson , · Mary
Swisher, Ellen Vance,
Martha Vititoe, James
Walker, Andrew Walters,
Elinor White, Ethel Wilson.
(Births, May 11)
Mr. and Mrs. William
Bende, son, Addison ; Mr. and
Mrs. Rick Metheney, son,
Vinton.

coal
is
on
WASHINGTON (UP! ) The nationwide switch to coal
is under way.
Fifty.,six heating fuel users
across the country were told
by the Federal Energy
Administration this week
they may be forced to switch
"from oil or natual gas to coal.
Public hearings in seven
cities are planned this month
on the proposal, the FEA said
Tuesday. The agency Is
working against a June 30
deadline when its authority to
order fuel conversions

By J. R. KIMMINS
COLUMBUS {UP! )
George Alexander, regional
dire ctor of the federal
Environmental Protection
Agency, says Ohio may be
allowed a delay in enforcing
sulfur dioxide regulations he·
cause of
experiments
underway on new ways to
legally burn high-sulfur coal.
Gov. James A. Rhodes
asked to meet Alexander
Wednesday after he had heen
briefed by the chairman of an
ad hoc committee appointed
to investigate the "fluidized
bed combustion" of high·
sulfur coal.
Alexander
said
the
technique, involving precombustion mixture of high·
sulfur coal and limestone,
"looks pretty good" and if it
meets federal air pollution
standards, there is nothing to
bar its widespread industrial
use.
Alexander added that the
U.S. EPA "wants to do
everything we can to
encourage .new
(coal
combustion ) technology,"
but stopped short of
promising
a
blanket
exemption from federal air
pollution standards for
industries who decide to
experiement with . new
techniques.
Alexander said Ohio has
until late 1979 to meet the
proposed standards, which
are
being
challenge d
currently by the state 's
electric
utilities
and
industries in the 6th U.S
Circuit Court of Appeals,
Cincinnati.
The chairman of Rhodes'
committee, Firestone Tire
and Rubber · C,o. attorney
Herbert T. McDevitt, said a
program similar to the one

expires.

which put a man on the moon
is
needed
to
spur
technological development of
fluidized bed combustion in
Ohio.
"We have in front of us a
solution to the mining, lifting
and burning of coal. But we
can't wait foUr yearslu said
McDevitt, repeating, an
evaluation he gave Rhodes
last last month that flu idized
bed combustion was the
"most promising technology
to legally burn Ohio (high·
sulfur) coal."
When the mixture is
burned, sulfur . dioxide
pollutants are removed. The
resulting stack gases meet
proposed U.S. E"PA air.
poUution standards.
Alexander said a pending
amendment to the Ieder al
Clean Air Act recommended
by the U.s. EPA would allow
the admi nistrator of the
federal agency to exempt
specific areas of a state from
air quality standards while
new
coal
combustion
techniques
are
being
develoged.
Rhodes was also briefed by
officials of oil and natural gas
utilities.
Jerry Jordan, a Colwnbus
attorney and chairman of the
governor's task force on self·
help
gas
production,'
predicted the "biggest year
yet" on private drillers
exploring for new sources of
gas.
Officials of Columbia Gas
of Ohio, Inc., the Cincinnati
Gas and Electric Co., the
East Ohio Gas Co . and the
Dayton Power and Light Co .
told Rhodes the gas situation
next winter is still cloudy.
East Ohio's Robert Cort
said his utility is well ahead
of schedule developing gas

By JOAN HANAUER
UP! Television Writer
NEW YORK (UP!) -A look at the all-time top moneymaking movies proves only one thing - inflation.
The occasion is the 50th anni~ersary of the talking picture,
celebrating the release of AI Jolson 's "The Jazz Singer" in
1927.
This encouraged NBC to put on "The Billion Dollar Movie."
on May 22, &amp;.9:30p.m., Eastern time.
The show is hosted by the ever-eharming David Niven but
even Niven's cltarm stretches only so far.
'
The problem is the movies the!J)Sel\res. The only real golden
oldie to make the list is "Gone With ')'he Wind,' ' which is in a
class by itself. The biggest grossing movies are all of
comparatively recent vintage because inflation has boosted
their earnings out of all proportion.
Here are the movies discussed by their directors and various
oth~rs (but never the really big stars). The list will be given in
order of their money-making, which is more than the NBC
show does. There also is something peculiar about the list they left out No. 12, which apparently should be "Dr. Zhivago."
1: "Jaws;" 2: "The Godfather I ;" 3: " The Exorcist ;" 4:

Conversion orders to seme
or all oi'the plants may result
from the hearings, the FEA
said.
The industrial conversion
drive "marks another signi(i·
cant step in the President's
to
reduce
program
dependence on oil and natUral
gas and to increase the use of
coal, our most abundant
energy resource," said FEA
chief John O'Leary.
The latest FEA action,
ordered Monday, covered 24
industrial plants already ope·
rating in 17 states and 32 "The~tmdofMusic ;" S : "GW'I'W;"6: "TheSting;"7 : ~~one
other plants in tl1e early Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest;" 8: "The Towering Inferno;" 9:
planning stages in 17 other "Love Story; ' '10 : ''The Graduate ;" 11 : f• American Graffiti ;"
states :
13: "Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid; " 14 : "Airport."
In the 24 existing plants Why "Movies" couldn't present the list in straightforward, if
mostly paper and chemical backward, order, starting with "Airport" and working Its way
company complexes - tbe ·up to "Jaws/' is as much a mystery as why " Zhivago" neve r
~ost to convert to ·coal will made it up the steppes .
total $276.8million, FEA said.
Film clips accompany almost all tbe fiims discussed ~
except "GWTW." NBC showed the film last year on its "Big
MEET FIRST LADY
Event," but the deal was for a one-time showing.
WASHINGTON. {UP!) One interesting note about tbese big money-makers is that
Mrs. Marilyn Crafts of almost all of them had a big star, but the star wasn't
Ridgewood,N. J., and David necessarily human .
Jackson of Moundsville, W.
In 11 Jaws" the star was the shark, in·"The Exorcist" it was
Va., the National Multiple .the Devil, in "Towering Inferno" and "Airport" a gaggle of
Sclerosis Society's mother big-name actors played second fiddle to a fire and an airplane
and lather of the year, were respectively .
greeted at a brief White
There are a miUion stories in the behind-the.,scenes world of
House ceremony by First· movieland, some of them funny, some · obscene, some
Lady Rosalynn Carter mournfuL Unfortunately, you won't bear them here first .
Wednesday.
Instead producers, writers and directors tell the Cinderella
The pair were chosen as stories about how their film almost didn't get made.
part of the society's annual
Then there are the figures of budget overruns and late
MS Hope Chest Campaign, delivery.
which runs from Mother's
All of this Is less than exhilarating.
Day to Father's Day.
To celebrate the half-eentury of "talkies," it might have
Mrs. Crafts has thre e been more entertaining to make use of the show's biggest
children and Jackson has asset, David Niven, and just let him reminisce.
two.
TOTIE COMFORTABLE
STANFORD, Calif. (UPI)
- Comedienne Totle Fields is
resting comfortable at
Stanford Medical Center
following eye surgery.
·
Miss Fields, 47, underwent
surgery Monday to remove
some of the residue which
filled her eye after a
hemorrhage caused impaired
vision.
A spokesman said the eye
prol;&gt;lem was related to the
diabetic condition that forced
the amputation of one of Miss
Field's legs last year.
·

POETESS HONORED
NEW YORK (UPI)
Poetess Muriel Rukeyser ,
author of "The Gates," has
been named winner of the
Copernicus Award of the
Academy of American Poets.
The citation, along with
FUNDS SPREAD
$1,00 she received Wed·
State Auditor Thomas E. nesday , , notes
that
Ferguson reported the May· " throughout her life she has
distribution of $9,586,339.16 in been sensitive to en·
local govem!llent fund money croachments on the freedom
to Ohio's 88 counties and 388 of individuals or peoples. She
cities and villages levying has responded in actions of
local income taxes. Meigs which poetry was only the
County's s?are was $12,500. highest fonn." j ·

e

Why

avoid

anlnsu

Maybe·it's bec·ause they think
of him as a salesman Instead
of the friend he can be.

Pomeroy,

TOKYO - A FIRE AT ONE OF SAUDI Arabia's largeat
oll fields kiUed at least one person and injured 12 others
Wednesday night, the MinistrY of lntematioo;'! Trade and
Industry said today . The Abqaiq oil field, the second largeat
onshore oilfield in Saudi Arabia, was reportedly hit by an
explosion before the fire .
No cause was given for the explosion and no further detalll
were immediately available. With a daily production of 870,000
barrels, the field generates about 80 per cent ol the country's
!Dtal crude oil output -or about10 per cent of tbe world's oil
production - according to oil Industry sources in Tokyo.
COLUMBUS - THE OHIO SENATE EnvlroMU!nt
Committee Wednesday night amended to conform with
proposed federal action and unanimously recommended
passage of a bill to ban the sale of aerOBOI products in Ohio •
which use fluorocarbon propellants. Di3bursement of tbe
chemical bas been linked to decay oft~ ozone layer between
10 and 30 miles above tbe Earth, aUowlng more harmtul
radiation to reach the ground and increase the danger of skin
cancer.
The proposed Ohio law, sponsored by Rep. Dennis Eckart,
D-Euclid, would ban the sale of hair sprays, deodorants,
colognes, pesticides and household cleaners which contain the
chemical after Dec. 31, 1978. After announcement of the
proposed federal action, an amendment was added to make
Ohio's proposed law effective April 15, 1979.

winters.

Rhodes scheduled another
meeting Friday morning with
officials of the British
affiliate of Barberton's
Bab coc~ &amp; Wilcox , Inc .,
which hi.s in use large boilers
using
fluidized
bed
combustion technology.

l

•

Weapon available to
fight liquor nuisance
COLUMBUS (UPI) - City
officials now have a weapon
they can use in an effort to rid
a community of liquor opera·
lions considered a nuisance
or high crime spot, State
biquor Co ntrol Director
·Clifford E. Reich said
Tuesday.
Reich said the General
Assembly last year approved
a bill that gives local governments the right to object to
permit renewals.
Reich said the law allows
officials to ask for a hearing
at which they can provide
evidence why the liquor
department should not renew
a permit.
The director said such
objections must be made no
later than 30 days prior to.the
expiration of the permit.
"Sir)ce all permits expire
Oct. I, local governments
have until Aug. 31 to submit
their objections," Reich said.
Letters will be mailed next
week to police and sheriffs'
departments 'and lo cal
governments advising them
about the renewal period.
In
a.ddition ,
· law.
enforce ment officials will
receive a list of liquor spots in
their area whose tiermits
must be renewed.
"Local goverrunents should
coordinate their efforts with
their law enforcement authorities," Reich ·said. "It is
important that police and
sheriffs' offices maintain log
accounts of enfo rcement
action taken at problem
permit premises. Such
evidence should be presented
at the objection hearing·s."

REVIVAL TO BEGIN
NEW HAVEN , W. Va.
There will be a revival at the
First Church of God in New
Haven beginning Tuesday,
May 17 at 7:30 p.m.
Evangelist will be the Rev.
Bud Wilson of Florida. The
public is invited.

The director said because
there was less than one
month from the date of
enaction of tbe law to the
Aug. 31 du~ date, only five
r~newal objections all
from the Cincinnaii City
Council - were received by
the department.
Reich said objections were
upheld in three cases,
meaning licenses were not
renewed. ·

HONOR SOCIETY TAPPING - Six Wahama lDgh School sophomores were tapped into National Honor Society on
~onday afternoon during a candlelight ceremony. Shown, front row, left to right, are Susan Edwards Joni Clark and Lesa
rimm. Back row, left to right, Mrs. Ja!lles Page, advisor, Mike Roush, Greg Stodola, and Jenny Badgley. '

Second grievance

·VII

STEAMBOAT INN
RESTAURANT

against Franklin County Probale Court Judge Richard B.
Metcalf.
The matter now goes to the
bar's
committee
on
grievances and discipline
MASON, W. Va. - ''United
which will conduct its
Sound," a group from
investigation in private. ·A
Huntington, will provide the
committee representative
music lor the annual
has already requested more
Wahama alumni banquet and
information on Tonti's
dance scheduled for Satur·
complaint.
day, May 211, at the high
The newspapers said
school gymnasium.
O'Neill earlier this year
The banquet to be served
received a letter of
buffet
style at 7 p.m. will
reprimand from the Ohio Bar
consist
of a baked steak
lor intervening in a Stark
lor the
dinner.
Entertainment
County Common Pleas Court
banquet
will
be
provided
by
case. O'Neill as adminisBen
F~anklin
of
Point
trator of the Ohio court
Pleasant, who will present his
system, asked the lower court
well-known magic show.
judge in that case last
The dance will begin at 9
October to delay the start of a
p.m., and is open to the
trial for a lawyer friend, and
general public. Proceeds
that
was
considered
THURSDAY
from the affair will be used
improper by the bar.
PRECEPTOR Beta Beta
· by the Alumni Associatin to
In the latest grievance,
lJ.bursday, 7:45 p.!ll. at the Tonti charges that O'Neill
provide two scholarships to
)lome of Nellie Brown.
deserving college bound
refused to remove Metcalf
FRIDAY
seniors, provide gifts to the
from presiding over a court
MARY SUE DURSI' , ASENIOR at Meigs High School
/ SQUARE Dance at senior fight involving one aspect of
school and finance the
in Distributive Education, works under the direction of
'citizens center Friday, 8:30 to his late father's estate, even
banquet and dance each year.
her father, Willard Durst, at the S.Uindard Oil Bunk Plant
11:30 p.m. Music by though Metcalf admitted his
This is the only fund raising
in Middleport , Mary gains business experience each
~ringdusters, admission, $1 prejudice against ronti.
event held by the association
afternOQn which will be of value to her as she continues
for aduhs: children under 12
at the present time and it is
Tonti's accusation is based
her eilucation at Rio Grande College next fall . Mary is
'with parentS admitted free . · on a Jan . 14, 1975,
important that enough money
also active in extracurricular activities at Meigs. She is a
.
SATURDAY
is raised to cover expenses.
conversation involving his
member of the Q.E.C.A. Cl.ub and a representative to the
WORK PARTY at ballfield attorney .and Metcalf. John
Reservations are avaU$ble
Meigs Student Council.
lor Pomeroy Youth Base baU Adams of the Columbus law
at Gregg's Key Market, '
League Saturday begirming finn of Porter, Stanley, Platt
Mason County Bank, Smith's
at 8 a.m. Labor and carpenter and Arthur, raised the
Grocery, 'II &amp; B Market,
help needed to !inisb dugouts question of prejudice and
The next month O'Neill Nationwide Insurance of
and equipment building. later said, " Judge Metcalf interest in Massillon Savings declined to take Metcalf off Mason, K &amp; C Jewelers,
Parents of youth involved are thought about the problem lor and Loan Association in Stark the case. The chief justice Foreman and Abbott and
asked to attend and bring a minute or two, turned to me County. Tonti contended gave no explanation for his Fruth Phannacy.
during the trial that he owned
Prices lor admission are $6
equipmen~ such as hammers and said, 'By God, he's right.
action.
the
stock
a
gift
from
his
single
and $12 couple for
I am prejudiced against
and saws.
Only the chief justice can
father, Alfred E. Tonti, who
SQUARE DANCE Satur· him."'
banquet,
dance and mem·
remove another judge from a
died
January
1972.
pership dues; $2 membership
daY at Racine Ainerlcan
Metcalf told O'NeiU, "This
Metcalf, however , ruled in case, As a result, Metcalf only; and $3 single and $6
Legion Post, 8:30 to 11:30 may not be an . exact
stayed on the case. Metcalf,
p.m. Music by Ohio Valley quotation, but . it ·is · November 1974 the stock did however, decided to 'remove couple for dance only. A 40.
not belong to Tonti; but to the
channel Citizens Band radio
substantially correct." The estate,
Music Co.
of which his mother, himself from presiding over will be given away at the
' DAN Hayman and the judge said he ,was prejudiced
is the sole beneficiary . other challenges involving dance.
Country Hymntimers against Tonti because Tonti Mary,
After the decision against the embattled Tonti· estate.
Deadlinefor reservations is
Saturday at the Prayer and lied during the trial.
O'Neill assigned a judge from
.Faith Wesleyan Church,
The purpose of the trial was him, Tonti produced evidence another county to preside May 23.
he said showed that his
Ripley, W. Va., 7:30p.m.
to determine who owned which
late
father
actually sold him over the settlement ol the
· VARIETY Show Saturday stock in Tonti Securities Co.,
other matters.
Your " Extra Touch "
at Tuppers Plains Elemen· which holds 93 per cent · the stock.
Florist Since 1957
tary School, 7:30 p.m.
Proceeds for safety patrol
trip to Washington.
SUNDAY
J&lt;· COUNTY WIDE prayer
meeting, 2 p.m. Sunday at
!3ald Knob Gospel Mission
FLORIST
,.-ith Glen Bls~ell as class
leader.
·
PH. 992·2644
; DAN Hayman and the
insurance added $119 to the public more concerned about
WASHINGTON
(UP!
)
Country Hymntimers Sunday
cost of each Ford automobile health care costs than about
352 E . Main, Pomeroy
: at the Church of Christ in The average hospital bill , sold during 1975, he said.
energy.
Your FTD Florist
$350
in
1965,
now
costs
$1,300
: j::brlstlan Union, Hartford,
"America
simply
cannot
and in five years will double
;f:30p.m.
to $2,600 - a "gargantuan ... tolerate hospital costs that
.,
MONDAY
are rising at two-and-&lt;~ haU
;j SALEM
Center PTA galloping . .. intolerable" times the rate of inflation,"
increase , HEW Secretary
; ~Monday, 7:30 p.m. Special
Joseph Califano testified the secretary of Hea lth,
recognition of grandmothers
· Education and Welfare told a
·11nd grandfathers. Program today.
Califano, presenting the · joint hearing of two House
;will be presented by band administration's fir s t health subcommittees.
11nder direction of David congressional testimony on
" If unchecked , hospital
Bowen, dlri'Clor ..
costs
will double Within five
proposed 9 per cent-&lt;~•
,! MEIGS Band Boosters last the
years,"
he iestified. ''The
year ceiling on hospital costs,
~eeting of the school year
time
has
come
to firmly reign
said taxpayers daily pay $48
·Monday, 7:30 p.m. in band million for hospital care in these galloping increases ."
"1oom at high school. In· provided under Medicare and
He said that "gargantuan ...
iltallation of officers for next
intolerable
" increases in
Medicaid.
The cost of health hospital costs have made the

COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
second grievance in six
mon,ths has been lodged
against Ohio Supreme Court
Chief Justice C. William
O'Neill, It · was reported
today.
Scripps
Howard
Newspapers said Columbus
real estate developer A.
Patrick Tonti flied the latest
grievance against O'Neill last
Friday with the Ohio State
Bar Association .
Tonti also filed a complaint
o;,o ·••o•-.:rp"p
'
• '' • •
.....-w
eeu:::e
_: ~-::~·

RACINE, OHIO
Walk-Up Window
Hours:
7 to 10 p.m . .
Weekdays
2 to 10 p.m.
Sunday

Social ·
Calendar

A real Armadillo would never bite your ankle
~. ~\ i" 1

&lt;~ · i t's

softly padd ed from head to tail,

ins1de and out. A real ArmadUlo

will not hide In your
~:loset ·
fiJ -it'll keep
right in step with you
wherever you·re' off to.
beca u.se ...

Ar'eal
Armadillo
Is made "·
only
by.

. ()Horgan

Quimt~

Marguerite's Shoes
BETTY OHLINGER
102 E. MAIN

POMEROY, OHIO
\

Galloping hospital costs

election, had been vice
president and assistant to the
president of OVEC and IKEC.
Maloney Is a vice president of
AEP and of Appalachian
Power, I&amp;M, and Ohio Power
and their chief financial
officer.
Vaughan is executive vice
president of the Appalachian
Power Company.

MEETING TONIGHT
Preceptor Beta Beta will
meet this evening at 7:45 p.!Jl.
at the home of Nellie Brown,
Rock Springs.

and

bui1ding materials

BUILDING OR REMODEUNG?

LEGAL NOT ICE
The Publ ic Utilities Com·

SEE US FIRST AND COMPARE OUR
PRICES . QUALITY MATERIAL AT
REASONAaLE PRICES.

mission of Ohio has set for
public hearing Case · No .

76 -535·EL·FAC Subfile A,
to review the operation . of

the Fuel CoSI Adju stment
Cla use and the fuel pro·

curemen t

practices

Save up to .8.91 on the No.1 MUL1'1·
VITAMINS with MINERALS PRODUCT
in REXALL STORES! -peXB//
.

SUPER

.'

Mufti.Vltlln•• with MlnerM
BUY 2IIIICI SAVE BUY 2IIIICI SAVE BUY 2 and SAVE
$1.81 2 bolt~ of SU1. 2 boltlel of tu1 2 bot11e1 o1
381n Twin P8ck 721n Twin PICk '144 In Twin P8ck .

and

polic1es of th e Columbus

and Soulhern Ohio Elec·
tric Company on May 16.
1977 at 10 :00 A.M., at the
Commission's offices, 180
East Broad Street, Colum·

bus, Ohio . Al l inte rested

per~pn's will be gi&lt;J en an
opportunity to be hea rd .
Further inform.a-tion may
b e obtained by contacting
. the Public Utilities Com,
mission of Ohio ,.

THE PUBLIC UTILITIES
COM MISSIO N OF OHIO
by Randa ll G. Appl egate,

SATURDAY. MAY 14TH
UNTIL 5 P.M.

FAMILY OUTING

11

A
US 60 WEST

HUNTINGTON

APPLIANCES, ntE ROOM

VE~'70
When You Buy This
. Tractor. and Following
Equipment

E
TERMS
AVAILABL

MOWER
DECK
REG. $389 .95

Sl()OOO
Save $289.95

Kingsbury Home

FRONT
BLADE
REG. $169.95

$10000
Save $69.95

CART

Tlu.ER
REG. 5629.95

.s37500
Save $254.95

REG. 5219 .95

$12500
Save S94.95

How long does it take and how easy is II to put on and

take oil your mower deck? (NOT E-ask for a
demonstration)

5

IMPORTANT
QUESTIONS
TO ASK

WHEN BUYING
AGARDEN
TRACTOR

DECOR YOU.CHOOSE.

Middleport, o.
992-2709
OPEN
7:00 to 5:00 Mon. thru Fri.
7:00to 3:DO ,Saturday

s. 3rd. Ave.

PRE-SEASON
SAVINGS

HOME. IrS LIVING lliE WAY

PARK RESERVED

923

0

YOUR NEW MANUFACTURED

•

VALLEY LUMBER &amp;
SUPPLY
CORPORATION

Secretary

ENJOY lliE GOOD LIFE IN

YOU LIKE. ALL MODERN

WE
DELIVER

CASH&amp; CARRY
PRICES

must slow down--Califano

~~~TE~Di. CENTER

o.

PIKETON - W. S. White, Hawk, vice president·
of AEP and vice president ofl operations; T. N. Ward, vice
the Ohio Valley Electric president, secretary ·
Corporation and its sub· treasurer; A. Joseph Dowd,
sldlary,
lndiana·Kentucky assistant secretary and
Electric Corporation, at the assistant treasurer; J . R.
annual organization meeting Simms, assistant secretary;
of their respective boards of and J . R. Otto, assistant
directors this week in New treasurer. Also reelected as a
York City.
vice president of the JKEC
Also elected to new offices company was B. Hudson
were Ralph D. Dunlevy , Milner,' president of Louis·
senior vice president of both ville Gas and Electric
OVEC and IKEC; Gerald P. Company.
Maloney, vice president of
c.:JEC · and lKEC were
both; John W. Vaughan, a formed in 1952 by 15 investor·
director of OVEC; and White, owned electric utilities in the
a director fo JKEC (he was Ohio Valley area to provide
already a director of OVEC). the
electric
energy
The elections wiU he ef· requirements of the federal
lective upon approval of the government's giant uraniumFederal Power Conunission. enri chment facility nea r
At that time, White will Portsmouth, Ohio.
succeed George V. Patterson
White is chairman and
as president of both com· chief executive officer of
panies and as a director of Ameri can Electric Power
lKEC, and Vaughan will Company and president and
succeed Patterson on the chief executive of its several
OVEC board.
subsidiaries, includlog Ai&gt;"
All inclll!lbent officers of palachian Power, Indiana &amp;
OVEC and IKEC were Michigan Electric, and Ohio
reelected for . the coming Power Companies, three of
year. These are Ivan 0. the 15 sponsors of OVEC and
·
IKEC. Patterson, president
of AEP and vice president of
the three above AEP sulr
sidlaries, is scheduled to
retire from those posts on
August t.
Dunlevy, prior to todaY's

.Wahama
alumni
reuniting

flled on O'Neill

OF
RESEARCH &amp; DEVELOPMENT DEPT.
AND
SERVICES DEPARTMENT
OF

Davis Jnsurarice Service
114 Court St.

aide said "they have been notified" of the decision.

11

You won 't find any salesmen at our agency.
We're insurance age nts, professional people
who specialize in your insu ran ce needs. If
you have any question at all regarding in·
surance. drop in and ask us. We won't try to
sell you a thing.

992-5120

(Continued from page I l

storage facilities and has
been inf ormed by its
wholesale gas supplier thai
curtailments will be further
reduced this week.
Columbia 's Clyde Clay,
bowever , said ljis finn has
done nothing to develop
underground gas storage
areas and is relying on the
capability of the Columbia
Gas Transmission Corp,
Charleston, W. Va .
Rhodes bristled at that
news and told Clay Columbia
of Ohio "had to do something
to get storage in Ohio to
protect Ohio" in future

TV ..•in Review ·

White to head OVEC

News •• in Briefs

SCRIMMAGE PLANS.
BOwtlNG GREEN, Ohio
(UP!)" - Bowling Green concludes sprin~ football drills
Saturday With its annual
intrasquad game and new
coach Denny Stolz promises
"a good, old-fashioned, hard·
hitting footbaU scrimmage. "
" If you like football, you'U
be entertained, " said the
former Michigan State
mentor, who replaced Don
Nehlen after the 1976 season .
"We've been running an
intense football camp this
spring to get us ready lor the
!aU and we don't plan to
change things around for the
sake of entertainment, said
Stolz.''
Game time Is 1:30 p.m.

~ you need to remove the mower deck before
attaching a tiller or front blade on your tractor?

How are at1achments driven with your tractor? How
many belts are needed ?

Do you have an effie_lent two-stage snow thrower or are
you limited to a single stage?
What is the c.ap_a clty of your tractor ' s gas tank? How
many hours of grass cuHing can I get with one tank ~ ·
fu.ll?

The answers to thtse questions and others you' ll want to ask will be very revealing .
Ariens welcomes a thorough comparison and is confident that their G.. r den Tractors

will be stand-out quality favorites when you've made it.

Sales, Inc.

RIDENOUR SUPPLY

"For The Finest hi Manufactured Housing"
1100 E . Milin Streel

•

992-7034

Pomeroy

CHESTER, 0.
•

�8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, May 12, 1m

f'SOCi31"' Banquet
1Calendar is held
THURSDAY
HARRISONVILLE

Chap-

ter, OES , annual inspection,

7:30 p.m. Th ursda y. Inspecting officer will be Sylvia
Midkiff , deputy grand
matron. Members to ta ke
potluck. :
MEIGS County Humane
Society , 7:30 Thursday at the
Thrift shop across from the
Post Office in Pomeroy.
REV IVAL services In
progres:; at the Syracuse
Church of the Nazarene now
through Sunday, May t5, 7:30
nightly. Evangelist is the
Rev . Gene Clark of Findlay.
There will be special music
and something extra special
for the children at each
service. The public is
welcome to attend. Pastor is
Rev. Dale T. Bass.

Auxiliary elects officers

I

Officers were elected and '
plans for Poppy Days made
when the American Legion
Auxiliary of Lewis Manley
Post 263 met Tuesday at the
home of ' Mrs. Campbell
Harper, Pomeroy.
Elected for tbe 1977-78 year
were Mrs. Allen Hampton,
presi dent; MrJ. Charles
Saunders, vice president;
Mrs. Zuele\ia Smith, second
vice president; Mrs. Arnold
Richards, secretary; Mrs.
Ruth Brown, essistimt
secretary ; Mrs. Ernest
Bowles, treasurer; Mrs.
Frank Washington, chaplain ;
Mrs. William Winston ,
sergeant at arms, and Mrs.
Hampton, historian and
pianist.
Serving on the nominating
committee were Mrs .
Winston, Mrs. Harper, and
Mrs. Wa s hin~ton . Mrs.

Tne annu a l mother·
dsughter banquet of St. Paul
and St. John Lutheran Churches was held Wednesday
night at the fellowship hall of
St. Paul Church.
The covered dish dinner
was served from 1ablcs
decorated with arrangements
of spring Oowers and potted
plants. Mrs. Margaret Blaett·
nar extended a welcome to
the members and guests who
were introdu~d preceding
the program.
Mrs. Le nora Leifh ei t
played the organ and san.g
"Suppertime" to open the
prog ra m , with Becky
Eichinger playing a piano
solo entitled "Dreamland."
Ruth Ann Fry's piano solo
was 41 The E ntertain er~~ , Edie
King and Betty Will. sang
"Mansion Over the Hilltop"'
and Mrs. Will played the
autoharp and sang " Mother 's
Prayers." The closing were
readings, "What is a Girl" by
Judy Eichinger, and "A
Mother 's Love" by Becky
Eichinger.
Guests for the banquet
were women of the Meigs
County Inlinnary. Each one
was presented a potted plant.
Flowers were also given to
Mrs. Elva Cotterill, the oldest
mother, and Susan Burgess,
the youngest.

CWU plans
celebration

\

Mothers enjoy style revue

Class gives
center party

Group plans activities

convention at Toledo. The
unit made a donation toward
a gift for her.
Acknowledgments
for
reports on children and youth
and national security were
noted. A bond to cover all persons of the Auxiliary handling
money was purc hased
through department headquarters.
The hostess served a salad
and dessert course.

MOTIIER VISITED
Mother's Day guests of
Mrs. Allen Brewer and
David, were 1&gt;frs. Ma,rilyn
Beall, Ronda and Mark, Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. Clyde
Close and Roy, Waterford ;
Mrs. Louise Brewer, Mr. and
Mrs. Harold Brewer, Long
Bottom; Mrs. Ronald Beegle,
~j:X:::::::::.;~::?.:~$::::::::'$?.&gt;.~~":~?li;&amp;.'&gt;;:::*X:!*.:-;....'J$$.:~~&gt;;::-;;:::;:::::::;::::::::;:::::;:::;:::~::::~:;:;:
Crista and Radney, Racine.
Mrs. Brewer's birthday was
also
celebrated and she
....
....
received flowers, gifts and
~;~
By Helen and Sue Botte1
·cards from relatives and
~:;
:=~ friends. A son, Kenneth
Brewer, Columbus, called
A Piercing Cry for Help!
durin g
th e
da y.
Dear Helen and Sue:
For years I've wanted my ears pierced, but my parents
are against it. Mom doesn't like the way they look, and Dad
says people with pierced ears look like cannibals. Besides,
HOMECOMING SET
when you get older, they say, the lobes sag, like other parts of
Annual homecoming of the
your body that 81'e sort of weighted.
Naomi Baptist Church,
Don'tlhavea right to my own decisions at 17? - FED UP Pomeroy, will be held Sun·
TOMY EARS
day, May 15. The Rev.
Douglas Carter of the South·
Dear Fed Up:
point Church will be the guest
On such a minor decision, seems you should have the right. speaker. He will be acMaybe this isn't a good analogy, but if a 17-yearoOld can get an companied here by his choir
abortion without parental permission, why not pierced ears • for the program which will
- SUE
begin at 3 p.m. Dinner will be
+++
served between 2 and 3 p.m.
To Parents of FUTME :
The Rev. Samuel Jackson is
For Pete's .sake, save your beef for bigger "stews." So pastor. The public is invited.
what if lobes sag (much Iuter on) under weighted ear rings?
What doesn't as we grow older? - HELEN

i1~

FRIDAY
YA RD and bake sale, 9
,.a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday in
Ra cine Unit ed Methodist
parsonage garage sponsored
by United Methodist Women.
~
RETURN Jonathan Meigs
Chapter, DAR, I :30 p.m.
Friday at Grace Episcopal
Parish House.
MARY SHRINE 37, Order
of the White Shrine of
Jerusalem, will meet at 8
STYLE REVUE - Modeling in the ' 'Mother's Labor of Love" style revue at the
p.m. 'Friday at the Pomeroy
Middleport
First United Presbyterian Church's mother-daughter banquet Tuesday night
Masonic Temple. Officers are
were
front,
left
to tight, AmY Satterfield, Allison Gannaway, Kelly Satterfield, and Debbie·
to meet at 7 p.m. for a prac- :;:;:::::::;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:
Coleman
;
second
row, Judy Gannaway, Mary Beth Stein, and Zandra Vaughan, and third
tice session.
row, Mrs. Ruth Zavitz, Mrs. Patty Stein, Mrs. Ethel Lowery, and Mrs. LeMie Haptonstall.
HAPPY Harvesters Class,
Friday night at Trinity
Church.
SATURDAY
CHICKEN
barbecue,
A style revue of homemade ''home-sewn'' garments were
Approximately 70 attended
NEW HAVEN, W. Va. starting at 11 a .m. Saturday,
fashions,
appropriately
titled
the
banquet served at tables
at New Haven City Building The Church. Women United "A Mother's Labor of Love", Mrs. Ruth Zavitz in a tur- featuring flower ar·
by New Haven Volunteer Fire organization of the Bend Area and the recognition of special . quoise and yellow street- rangements and candles.
length dress, Zandra
wUl bold Its aDDual May
Department Auxiliary.
mothers
highlighted
the
anVaugban ,' red denim long Favors were "love letters"
Fellowship celebration at the
nual
mother-daughter
bandress in casual styling, and concluding with the scripHOUSEHOLD shower for St. Paul Luth.eran .Cburch ID
quet
of
the
Middleport
First
Mrs. Lennie Haptonstall, in a ture, "This fellowship of ours
Mrs. Ruby Burke, Alfred, New Haven Friday begluDIDg
United
Presbyterian
Church
red and white checked seer- is with the Father and with
Saturday, 7:30 p.m. at at 7:30p.m. ·
.
Tuesday
night.
His son, Jesus Christ."
sucke
r.
Elmwood
Rest
Home
Theme of tbls year's
Mrs.
Betsy
Horky
was
narWorking on committees for
Recognized
during
the
probuilding, Alfred, by Paul and celebration Is "Gifts To
the
dinner were Mrs. Dorothy
rator
for
the
style
revue
with
gram
were
Mrs.
Roma
HarVirgie Buckley . Everyone Claim" aiMI the leader Is Mrs.
background
music
being
proMorris,
Mrs. Ruth Wood·
rah,
the
oldest
mother;
Mrs.
ihvited to attend. Mrs. Burke Fred Spencer, Mason. A
vided
by
Mrs.
Lennie
HapFaye Wallace,
ward,
·Mrs.
Connie
Bachner
Thompson,
lost all her belongings In a reception wDI follow ID the
tonstall
at
the
ppiano.
Mrs.
Judy
Crooks,. Mrs.
the
youngest
mother;
and
fire that destroyed her home. social room of the churcb.
Several
mothers
and
their
Zavitz,
Mrs.
Carolyn
SatterMrs.
Marcella
Coleman
for
SUNDAY
field,
Mrs.
Velma
Rue,
Mrs.
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
daughters
modeled,
along
having
made
the
most
HORSE show Sunday at
with
one
daughter,
mother
Marcella
Coleman,
Mrs.
garments
modeled
in
the
Bar 30 showgrounds located
and grandmother, two year style review. Mrs. Zavitz, Ethel Lowery, and Miss Lois
on SR 7 south of Tuppers
old Mary Beth Stein, her wife of the pastor, was also Ann Sauer.
Plains ·sponsored by junl.or
niother, Mrs. Patty Stein, and presented a gift .
class at Eastern High School.
Mary
Beth's grandmother,
Proceeds for class trip.
Members
of
the
Mrs.
Ethel
Lowery. Mary
Admission $1 for persons over
Homebuilders
Class
of
the
.
Beth
was
in
long gown of
12.
Middleport Church of Christ green and white florill with
ANNUAL Homecoming, were in Athens Tuesday night matching hat and purse, her
Several activities . were discussed for a future date.
Naomi Baptist Church, Sun· for a party atthe Athens Men· mother in a light blue floral
Prayer and devotions from
day. Dinner between 2 and 3 tal Health Center. Approx- jump suit, both made by Mrs. planned during a meeting of
p.m. with guest speaker, the · imately 65 men and women ·Lowery, who was in a green the UFO of the South Qethel Proverbs 2:i by Mrs. Evelyn
United Methodist Church at Well opened the meeting. Of·
Rev. Douglas Carter to speak attended.
and white floal print dress
the church Tuesday·night.
ficers ' reports were given.
at 3 p.m. Special music.
Games were played with made by Mrs. Stein.
The
group
set
May
18
for
doPublic
invited . prizes being awarded to the
The young daughters of ing spring cleaning at the Attending were Mrs. Wells,
Wanda Findling, Barbara
PUBLIC RECEPTION for Winners. There was group Mrs. Carolyn Satterfield and
Houdashelt home. A yard Well, Linda Well, Lila Van
Mary Kibble, former resi- singing and refreshments of granddaughters of Mrs.
sale was planned along with a Meter, Linda Bentz, Ada Van
dent, to be held Sunday fr\)lll ice cream, cupcakes, Helen Sauer, president of the
visitation day. Padding of the Meter and Kathy Pullins.
2 to 4 p.m. at the Recreation bananas, candy, potato chips Women's Association of the
church pews wa s also
Hall, Reedsville. All friends and Kool-Ald served follow- church, were in attractive
and neighbors invited by ing grace by George Glaze.
jumpsuits made by their
hosts, Mr. and Mrs. David A.
Others going over for the aunt, Lois Ann Sauer.
Smith.
Nilson Gannaway, 23 monparty were Mrs. William
Grueser, Edward Evans, th:l old, in a pink eyelet cotton
Mrs. Dorothy Roach, Mrs. and polyester dress made by
" Reva Beach, Mrs. Martha her grandmother, Mary Gan·
FIRST CHILD BORN
Childs, Mr. and Mrs. Osby naway, from 17 yards of white
Mr. and Mrs. Tim Taylor of Martin, and Mrs. Nora Rice.
eyelet lace, was joined in the
Elyria, former Meigs Coun·
style revue by her mother,
Polly Cramer
• A • DAy
Mrs. ·Judy Gannaway, in a
tians, are amouncing the
late afternoon dress of Ooral
birth of theirfirst baby, a son,
May 1. The baby weighed
knit whichshehadmade.
eight pounds, six ounces and
Wearing long dresses made
by iheir mother, Mrs. Horky,
has been named Jason Allen.
Gr•ndparents are Mr. and
were Janet in green dotted
Mrs. Lewis Taylor, Midswiss, and Sheila in white
DEAR POLLY- Can you did this and it worked just
dleport, and Mrs. Paul
~ with crocheted lace trim. tell me how to get rid of perfectly for her. - MRS.
Johnson , Athens. Greatgreat-grdndmothers are Mrs.
Mrs. Kathy Coleman joined silverfish? Is there anything E .I.T.
DEAR POLLY - I found
Neva Grinun, Pomeroy, and
her two daughters. in long that would attract them to
Mrs. Maggie Caruthers, Mid·
dresses which sbe had made. one spot so it would be easier that if l put a toothpick 'in a
dleport. Mrs. Taylor is the
Becky was in a lavender to exterminate them? At pre- house plant container I can
former Desiree K. Pike of
polyester knit, her sister, sent they pop out first one tell if it needs water. If there
is no dirt on the toothpick,
Pomeroy. Both Mr. and Mrs.
... ... __
s&lt;•
Debbie, in pink polyester, and place and then another even
after making one fUll
bathroom,
living
room,
kitTaylor, who will celebrate "
is your only character Mrs. Coleman m yellow
tum
before
removing· it, the
chen,
etc.
M.A.C,
their fourth wedding amiver- reference - this letter from polyester.
plant
needs
water.
- TINA.
DEAR
M,A.C.
From
sary June 2, graduated from your former boss saying you're Others modeling their
DEAR
POLLY
~ My
what
I
have
been
able
to
Meigs HighSchool.
quite a character?"
learn, silverfish hide during shower curtain rod was
the day, unless the object scratched and shabby lookbehind which they are hiding ing. But since a new chrome
is moved. They move quickly one was quite expensive, I
and are hard to catch. An in· covered the scratched rod
festation of them can play with adhesive-backed paper.
havoc with many houSehold The rod looks very nice, so I
items particularly papers or also covered a towel bar. fabrics that contain sizing M.P.
DEAR POLLY - I do not
and foods that bave starch or
~~~:.~~~:~.~sugar in them. Spray the have a clothes dryer but have
places where they have been contrived something that
seen and around the water works just as well. On cold
piJIC!l with a household insec- winter days and rainy sum·
ticide and then dust on mer days I hang my laundry
pyrethrum powder. Good on three parallel lines in my
l.adder.~~~:.1~~~.SAJ.E
luck!- POLLY.
.
. basement. At one end I put a
DEAR POLLY - Pet large portable window fan on
Peeve is with the cashiers at a small table and tum it on
~~~:.~~~.SALE
the grocery stores that do not high. It acll!like a nke windy
seem to know when an item is day and I can usually iron
on sale and charge one the most of the laundry in a little
original price. Sometimes it over an hour. This costs less
does not seem to pay to buy to run and we did not have the
initial expense of buying a
things you think are 011 sale.
.
drycr.-BVELYN.
- MRS. T.R.P.
Polly will send you one of
DEAR PoLLY - I read
her signed thank -you
that someone wanted to know
newspaper coupon dip1Ji!rs if
how to get rid of fleas in the
house. They should sprinkle $ht! uses your favorite
Pointer. Peeve or Problem in
dry sulphur on the floor and
then vacuuni it up in the mor- her column. Write POLLY'S
POINTERS in care of this
ning. There will be no more
newspaper.
fleas. My si.&gt;tcr 111 Cahlunua
r

Hampton was elec t ed
delegate to both the district
and Department of Ohio con·
ventions.
Final plans were made for ·
hosting the summer convention of District 8 on June 2 at
the Mt. Moriah Baptist
Church in Middleport.
Poppy Days were announced for May 20 and 21 with Mrs.
Smith liB chaim)an. The
meeting opened in ritualistic
form. Communications were
read including the bulletin
from the Eighth District
president. It was announced
that Mrs. Alec Blair of
Wellston Unit 371 is a candidate for district president
to be elected in June.
The retirement of Miss Ann
Eschelman as Department of
Ohio treasurer was noted and
a testimonial dinner for her
will be held during the July

g- The Daily Sentinei,Middleport·PWlt!roy, 0 ., Thursday, May 12, 1977

Generation Rap

~~~

t

+++

Rap :
Last month I read an article by a TV critic. He called
Farrah Fawcett-Majors a · drip, said Ga~ Kaplan is
inunensely untalented, and that the .departure ·of Starsky and
Hutch would be marvelous.
I think it's cruel that one man can slander four of our
favorites. Who gives him the right? - OUGHTABE A LAW
Dear Oughta:
Free speec)t gives him the right. (And you bave just as
much right to answer this critic with a blast that shows everyone doesn't agree with him. He·may even print it in his column,
if he's the "equal time" type.- HELEN AND SUE

,

+++

Soe ahd ·Helen :
My mother sent me to live with my father so he could
"straighten me out." I'm 15. I smoke pot, take acid and
59metlmes pills, but my folks only,know about the pot. ·
I'm used tD staying out till all 'hours whenever I want to .
I've been here eight months and have been allowed out only a
few times. I can't hack it.
I want to get on the pill, but Dad would have a fit. Besides,
if he doesn't let me go with boys, what's the use?
I bave been whipped twice, and tried getting out in a foster
home, but no luck. I look 18 and used to date guys who were
about 20. What can I do?- IN'PRISON AND GOING INSANE
Dear IPAGI:
Settle down and work at getting straight. When you prove
worthy of trust, wethinkyourfather will give it. -HELEN

+++

SUE'S WORD: Remember, your Dad is having a rough
time too. It isn't. easy, straightening out a 15-ye;oroO!d whose
mother evidently Jer her act like a bent 20.

·EARLY
SUMMER
SALE
INFANTS • GIRLS

$3

1A t test :
•J u n e Wa lton

'·

• A T H E. N 5
C0 U N T V
' SAVING S
&amp; LOAN CO . &amp;
OHIO CORP .
PLA I NTIFF

' vs

F RED
B.
GOEGLEIN ,
AND
BARBARA
A.
GOEGLEIN , ET AL
·
DEFENDANTS
NO . 16,05A
•
LEGAL NOTICE
Pursuan t to an Oi"der Of
; sale Issued by the Court of
; Common Pleas of Me i g S
County , Ohio , I w i ll offer for
11 Sale at publi c auct ion -on the
~ '1 s t day of May 1977 at 10: 00
. AM at the Court House st ep s
' in the Village of Pomeroy ,
Meigs County. Oh i o. the
fpllowing described real
estate :
Situate in the Townsh ip of
Orange, County of Meigs ,
' State of Ohio, and be ing Lot
No . 3 in R iggscrest Manor
Addition as recorded in
~ Volume No . 4; Page No . 44 ,
Meigs Col!nty Plat Re cord s.
Ex cepting and reserv ing to
the Grantors, all minerals
under sa ld real estate with
"the right to mine and remove
the same w ithout injury to the
surface .
Terms of Sale : Cash for not
less than rwo .thirds of ap.
praised value , sublect to lien
for real estate ta x es .
;II
Property appra ised at
... $26,000.

PAIR

Simon's
Pick-A-Pair
Pomeroy, 0.

SALE '25.97

Flat Rung .............~~~:.~~~~~- SALE '29.97
20 ft. Ext
'39.97

24 ft. Ext Ladder.. ..........

OFF

36 ft. Ext Ladder............~~~:.~~~-~~- SALE
. '98.97

The Almamc
' United Press International
Today is Thursday, May 1(
the 132nd day of 1977 with' 233
to follow.
The moon is between its
last quarter and new phase.
The morning stars are
· ' Mereury, Venus and Mars.
• The evening stars are
' .Jupiter and Saturn.
' Those born on this date in
~ history are under the sign of
Taurus.
Floren~ Nightingale, the
~ British nurse who founded
::; modem nursing, was born
May 12, 1820.

ON OTHER

...'

KITCHEN CABINETS

'49.97

28 ft. Ext Ladder .............~~~:.~~~~- SALE '62.97

(A) 21, 28 (5) 5, 12, 19, Stc

ON ALL
KITCHEN
DISPLAYS

16 ft. Extension Ladders

Round Rune ........

James J . Proffitt,"
Sher iff
Me igs County , Oh io

ON ALL
FlOOR MODEL
APPLIANCES

refresh

men t conce s.,ion iJI Forked
Run State Pa r k , Me i gs
Coun ty , Oh io . The D iv i sion of
Park: s will furn i sh docks , one
buil d i n g a pprO)( Imately 32
teet by 2D feel. 15 ro w boats
w i th
oars 1
and
one

re fr iger ated Ice ho use .
(2 )
B oa t
rental " and

misc ellaneous
refr eshment
concess i on at Ba r kc a mo
Sta t e Pa rk in
Be l mont
Coun t y , Ohio . Tpe D ivision o f
Pa rk s a n d Rec r ea t ion will
f u rn ish 5 r owboa ts with oa r s
and as signed land for mobi le
unit {to be prov i ded by
co n cession a Ir e) .
{31
Boa t
r en t a l
and
miscella n eou s
ref r eshment
concessi on at St r o udS Run
Stat e Par k , A thens Coun t y ,
Ohi o. The D ivision of Parlt.s
w i ll furni sh 5 r owboat s w ith
oar s a nd as sign ed la nd for
m ob il e u n it (to be p r ov ided
b y concess iona i r e ).
Th e
D e par tmen t
w il l
fu r n ish e x i st ing State own ed
b uildi n gs an d equipment as
l is ted In b id .s pec if icat ions .
M ob i le co nc es sio n u n its to be
prov i d ed
by
tt1 e
co n ·
cession aJr e mUst con fo r m Jo
sta nd a rd s as listed i n bi d

.,

''HOME OF BEAUTIFUL KITCHENS"

w. Va.

BIRTHDAY BARGAINS (OUR PRESENT TO YOU),
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WALKIE-TALKIE

s p ecl f l c .e~t l on s.

The Con c ess i onair e w il t
furn ish a ll ot her eQui p men t.
merchan-di se,
mate r i a ls ,
u ti l ities ,
l a bor ,
etc .•
ne ces sa r y to oper at e t he
con c ess i on s t o a pp r o ve d
sta ndard s-.
It shall b e th e intent of th e
CQntra c t that th e se a son o f
opera tion f or th e mar in a w i ll
be from Apr il 15 to Oc tober
1st , Th e sea son of op era t ion
for the bea ch conces sions w i ll
be from
Memorial .Qay
through L ab or D ay..
The abo ve dat es are in .
t ended to establ iS h only
m inimu m
g u idel i nes
regard i ng
seas on
of
operation .
Ce rta i n
c ir cumstances may ne t esslt ate
extend ing or shorten ing the
operating seasons for the
various faci li ti es . In any
event , sea son and hour s of
operat ion will b e s ublect to
annua l re v iew .
The con tract w ill be lor a
term of four (4) years and
seven (7 ) month s from May
20, 1977 to December 31, 1981 .
Offi ci al bid p r oposals w i ll
be rece ived in the . Office of
the Division of Pa r ks and
Req e ation,
Co n cess io ns
Sec t ion , until 2 : 00p .m .. M a y
19. 1977. Bids w i tt be pub lic ly
opened thereafter by the
Chief or hi s authorized agent.
The r ight is re se r ved to r e ject
any and al l' bids .
ReQuests for b id propo sal
forms shquld be m .ade to th e
Div is ion
of
P a rks
and
Recrea ti on ,
Con ce ss ions
Unit,
F ountain
Squar e,
Build ing C.. T h i rd F loor ,
Co lumbu s,
O h io
4322 4.
Te lephone -(614 ) 466 .3277 .
ROBERTW . TEATER.
Director

s,

12, 4tc

ATHEN S

Reg .

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Me igs County , Ohio
(4 ) 21 , 28 ( 5) S, 12, 19, S IC

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. ;i l 970

Reg.

REALISTIC R;AM -FM STEREO
DIGITAL CLOCK RADIO

SAVE

49QQ

4995

43%

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REALISTIC
HI-FI
SPEAKER
AT BIG
SAVINGS!

Reg . 7950

Reg 5995

CUT

sao

vs

14995

W it h Batts a nd Oa set

1

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Reg

• J ack s f or Ex t Spkr , M 1he l
An t., A C A dapt er-/ DC C h ar ger !

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GET · ~'\tH.; l0f.,,
YOUR ~IJ'~' ,,&lt;::;y
BONUS DOLLAR
f"r!~
' _: ;""l~j ~r;~

&amp; LOAN CO. &amp;.
.OHIO CORP . .
PLAINTIFF

James J , Proff itt .
Sher i ff
Me i gs County , Ohio

.

-

CO U NTY

PEARL SECOY AND
ROSIE SECOY
DEVENDANT
NO . 16 , 366
LEGAL NOTICE
PUrs uant to an Orde r of
Sale i ssued bV tt1e Court of
Com men Pleas of Meig s
Countv . Oh lo, 1 w il l offer for
sa te at pul::}li t au c tion on th e
28th day of May 1977 at 10 : 00
AM ~t the Court Hou se st ep s
in Village of Pomeroy, Meigs
County , Ohio, the follow ing
de scr i bed rea l estal e :
Situated in fhe Town ship of
Bedford , County of M e ig s,
State of Ohio , be ing of the
Ohio Company 's Pur ct1ase.
descr i bed as , th e ea sl half of
the east half of the norttl h a lf
of the southwest Quarter of
Sec ti on 6, Town 3, Range 13.
Terms of Sal e : Cash for not
less than two .third s of the
appraised v alue, subject to
lien for r eal estate ta x es .
Property Appra i sed a t :
$945 .0&lt;1 (nine hundred , fort y .
f ive O.OIIars ).

• TRC 76 With $(1uelch l
• R ead'{ t o U se w t One Ch
Add Cr ys t.1ls for 2 M ore '
• In cludes E1ght 'AA · Ce/f"!;l

24~§

SAVI~GS

F RED . GOEGLEIN ,
AND BARBARA A
GOEGLEIN ET AL
DEFENDANT S
NO . 16052
LEGAL NOTICE
Pursuant to an Order of
Sale issued bv the court of ·
common Plea s of Meig s
County, Oh io, 1 will offer for
sale at publ ic auction on the
21st day of May 1977 at 10 ; 00
AM at the Court Hou se steps
in the Village of ot Pomeroy ,
Meigs County, O~io th e
following de scr i bed real
estate :
Situate in the Town ship of
Rutland , County of Meig s ,
State of OhiO, and b~ing Lo t
No . 20 of th e H ut ct1 i n son
Subdiv i sion as Is recorded in
Plat Book No.4 , Page No . 57 ,
of the Records of Plats of
Me-i gs County, OhiO.
Term s of Sale : Cash for not
less than two .th i rd s of tt1e
appraised value , subject to
li en for real estate ta x es .
Appraised va l ue : $13 ,500.

3495

Reg.J99 5

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3- ke y mem ory !1Qwd crystal d•Sola;
aulo-constant Under Y, 1t1 1n W lh
case &amp; 1209 hr ball

RADIO SHACK 'S 1977 PRICES ARE ON AVERAGE WITHIN 1% OF OUR LOW 1975 PRICES

W . 28 Ill l. 12 , 19 , 26 , Sic

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LOn"- l o• tr.,., •· .;:
rr' .,.().,, 'W• O.:I'IOo••·

STORE HOURS
Mon., Tues .• Wed. &amp; Sat. -8:30 fil5:00
THURSDAY TIL 12 NOON

DALE'S KITCHEN CENTER
I' ,

(1) M ar i ne ( Boa t Ren t aD

and m iscellaneous

-

~------~------------~-:
2119 Jackson Ave.
Phone675-2318
Pt. Pleasant,
"WE SERVICE WHAT WE SELL"

desc r ibed a s follows ;

MASON FURNITURE

WHEN YOU BRING IN
YOUR OWN MEASUREMENTS

.Off

to contract lor th e operat ion

o f thr ee (3) pl.lb lic serv ice
fac i l i ties
tocateCI
and

IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT ,
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO

IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT,
MEIGS COUNTY . OHIO

TO

150 1. 091 of the

(4) 21 , 28 {5)

; (5) 5, 12, 2tc

BIG DISCOUNTS

ALUMINUM lADDERS

1501.09 and

Cl a rence Andr ew s
Mayor

LEATHER
SANDALS

NOTI C E TO BIDD E R S
The- Oh io Oepar , rnent of
N atu r al Re1ources, through
ttle Div is ion Ol P.ark.s and
Rec r eation , pursuant to and
i n accordance w ith Sec tions
Oh lo Rev i sed Code , proposes

Be 11 ordaine d by the
Council of the Village of
Pomeroy ,
O H io ,
th r ~e ·
f ourths of all m~mbers
concurring Hu:r~t o : ·
Sec . 1: Tn a t It is necessary
tor t he pu r pose of pa ving t he
cost s an d ex p enses. of en .
for ci ng a nd ad mi n is t ~ r i ng the
tax prov id ed for In thiS- or .
d in ance, and for p la nn ing .
c ons tr ucti n g,
Improv i n g ,
mainta i n ing and re p Z~ i r i n g
public roads , hlgh w ;,ys an d
st r eets : m al n ta tn i ng an d
rep a i ri n g
b r i d ges
and
v i a d uc ts :
pa yi ng
the
munic i p a l
c orporat i on ' s
podi on of t he cost s a nd ex .
pen ses of coo pera ting wi t h
the depa r t m en t of h i g h w ays
in t h e p lan n in g , Improv em ent
an d con struct ion o f sta t e
high wa ys;
p a y ing
th e
munic i p al
c orpora t ion 's
por ti on of the c ompen sa tio.n ,
dam a g es , costs and ex pens;e s
of plann i ng , c on s tru c tin g ,
recon str uc t in g ,
im prov ing ,
mai nta in ing , and repa lr i no
ro ad and str eets ; pa yi ng an y
c os ts appo r t ioned to th e
m un ici pa l copr oratlon und er
Sect ion 4907.47 of the Re vis ed
Co d e ; pa yi ng debt ser vi c e
cl'l an~ es on not es or bonds of
t he mun i ci pal corporation
iss u ed fo r su ch p urposes ;
p u r c h asi n g , erect i ng and
m a inta in ing st ree t and traff ic
si g n s and marke r s ; pur .
c ha si n g ,
ere c t i ng
and
m a int a i n ing traff ic l ights and
sign als; and to su pplemen t
r evenue alreadv availab le. for
such purposes ; to levy a
m~ tor v eh ic le lic en se tax by
sa 1d mu n ici pality i n a c .
cordanc e with Sec tk&gt;n .4 504.06
of the Re vi sed Code of th e
Sta te of Oh io .
Sec , I I : There Is hereb y
l evi ed an annual l icen se ta x
in addit ion to tt1e ta x lev ied
by Sections 450 3.02, 4503 .07
and 4503.18 of th e Re v ised
Cod e, upon th e oper at ion of
m otor veh ic les on the publ ic
r oad s or h ighways with in t h e
v i llage . Said tax shall be at
lhe rat e of Five Dollars per
motor vehicle on all motor
v ehicles the district of
r eg is tration of whi c h , a s
defined in Section 4503 . 10 of
the Revised Code , is in the
munic i pal c orporat i on of
Pomeroy . Such tax shall De in
add i tion to th.e tax es at the
rates specif i ed in Sections
4503 .04 and .4503 .16 of the
-Revised Code, suD i ect t o
redu ctions in the manner
pr: ov lded ·In Sect fon A503 .13 of
l h e Revised Code and the
e x e.rnplions
pro vi ded
in
· Sections 4503. 16,' 4503 .17 and
4503 .171 of the Revised Code .
Sec . Ill : Be it further or ·
da ined tha t a copy of' th is
Ordinan ce be certified to th e
R e·g istrar of Motor Veh ic le$.
Sec . IV : This Ord inanc e
shall fake effec t and be in
fo r c e. from · and after the
ear liest date provided by law .

LADIES &amp; MEN'S

Silverfish: tough to track

DISCOUNT

POMEROY , OHIO

Passed the 2nd day of Ma y
1977 ·,

SHOWROOM
~~v If! jl , /j\\\1

POLLY'S POINTERS

ORDINANCE NO . 410
A N
0 R 0 I H A N (_ E
PROVIDING
FOR
THE
ESTABLISHMENT OF A
MOTOR VEHICLE TAX IN
THE
V I LLAGE
OF

FRIDAY UNTIL 8 PM

...
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•

SILVER ·BRIDGE PLAZA

MASON FURNITURE
1773-5592

Herman Grate

Mason, W. VaJ

A TANDY CORPORATION COMPANY

1

I

PR ICES MAY VARY A'TII N DtV IDl!Al STORES

•·

�11- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy 0 . Thursday May 12 1977

10 - The Dailv Sentlnel. Middlewrt-Pomer oy , 0 ., Thursday, May 12, 1977

DICK_IRAGY

Let The Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash

WANT AD
CHARGES
liliiV

\00

\$0

6dav:.

E.adt

115

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101
100

lUays
~o~.md 11\l'l

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At~ n.uH\lll!( IJtlll,'r than tutl.!Jt'('!Jll\!t'

Uays .,ill

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rate
Itt rrwnwr}. Catd uf Thnn k.!&gt; &lt;Jnd
0 1.111 uar~ 6 ll'tlls pt'l 1o1 urtl S3 on
llllliii)UI.IIl (a.shUiathante

MuQtll' ll oml' !k!ll',s illld Yar tl ~le.s ,

at t' U&lt;,;tt 1-JLCtl ~.1111\ ~ tlh &lt;,;:iSh IULh

ordl' l 25 • t•ntlltHII\t.&gt; foradstari')Ulf.! Bull t&gt;.uml.lt!r In Cim· t•f Tht' ~~~­
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PubhJo.ht•l v.11l not bt•

I I ~ ~IUII~t b Jc fm JJ)t I ( l h&lt;lll Ollt' hi(OI •
tl'l'I IJI.st•r llllll
fJ hl)tlC 99'l2156

NOTICE
WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES
Mouth!}
Nuon 0 11 S.IL UI dH~

r!H!.sdav

tluu i-1 uiav
! PM
t he da } bdott' pu h\L ~,;, ll l v ll

Suml.n
4P ~
1-'ild&lt;ly &lt;l fle l1\lo()U

- ADVERTI S EM E NT
F OR BIDSF ederal Land and Water
Cons e r vat1on
Fund
Act
Pro tec t No 39 00508
Mun 1c1pa l Pa r k Tennis
Cou r ts, Vil lage of M 1ddlepor t .
Ohro

BtdS Will be rece1ved until
12 oo Noon
0 s T
on
May 26 , 1977 for the co n
st r uc t1on o f M u'"n 1C1pal Tenn 1s
Co u r ts tor t he Vil la ge of
M idd leport. Ohto. at Wh iCh
ti me the b 1ds sha ll be opened
b V t he Cler k o l the V il lage
a nd p u bl ic ly r e ad b y h 1m at
t he V1ll a ge Hall , 237 Race
S t reet , Vil lage o f Midd lepor t.
Oh1 0
B•d s ma y be m a iled to t he
Ma yor ' s Off1 ce. Vil lage ot
Mi d dl eport, Oh10, 457 60 ,
M r Fred Hoff
Atte ntion
ma n, May or
Info r m ati on for b idd e r s ,
for m o f co nt ract, pla ns,
s pec• fl cat lo ns , a nd fo r m s of
bid bond , pe r formance a nd
pa ym e nt bond , and o th er
documen t s may De ex a mmed
a nd oilr e oD tamab le at t he
Village Hal l, Mid d lepor t ,
Oh• o v pon th e paymen t of th e
s u m Of Sl O 00, Whi Ch IS no t
r efu nd able
A ll bids mus t be in p la1n
sealed enve lop es mar ke d on
the
outs1d e
" B1d
fo r
M u n 1C1pal
Pa r k
T e n n 1s
Co urts , Vill'e g e of Middle port ,
Oh10" E a ch bidd e r mu s t
hav e on th e ou ts•de of the b•d
e nve lope hi S n am e and ad
d ress , and e a ch b1d m us t be
a ccomp a n1ed b y a btd bond or
cer t if ied che ck in th ~ a mount
of 10 percent o f the total bid
The bi d bond st1al l b e con
d1t10n e d t hat 1f t he b1d Is
a cc epte d a con t r a ct w 1ll be
en tered Into and Its per .
form a nee prop er ly sec ured
If th e bid e mb r a ce s both
labor and m a te rial s u c h
1te m s s hall be separate ly
sta ted w if t1 the pr ice t her eof
No b 1d d e r ma y w 1tt1draw
h1s bid for a per iod of s 1xty
days fr o m t he da te of b id
openm g
Th e pr ot ec t 1S federall y
ass 1s ted Co n t ra c ts to be
awa rded under th 1s mv ltat•on
for bids will be sub ject to
Presi den ti al E xec ut1v e O rder
No. 11246 , as am e nd e d ,
requ 1r. lng affir m ati ve a ction
for equal em ployment op
Rort unity Contrac to r s a re
fu r the r ad vised t h a t th e
J anuar y 27 , 1972 Equal
Emplo yme n t Opp o rtunit y
Ex e cut1ve O rd er of t h e
Governor of Ohi o Is a lso
appli cab le to th is b 1d In ·
v 1tat1on
Th e o wne r re s e r v es the
r ig ht to wa iv e lnfor m a!i t 1es
or to re ject an y and a fl b ids
Success ful bidder m ust
com pl y wi t h th e Oh• o Wor k
men ' s Comp e n sa ti o n ta w s
an d also comply with al l
o t he r st at e , fede r al a n d loca l
taxes a nd laws
S u cc e ss ful bidder mu s t
procee d w ith th e work w1th1 n
two wee ks ot tt1 e s 1gn mg of
t he contract and t h e pro 1ect
must be fully c omp let ed
wit h in 30 work 1n g Cla y s
there aft e r e)(cept1ng onl y
s uc h d elay s as m ay be oc
cas •oned by s tr •kes , un
.s easonab le weather or ac ts of
God

'.
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VIL L AG E O F
MI D DLE P O RT , OHIO
By Fred Hoff m a n ,
MAYO R
(S ) 12, 19, 2tc

,

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NOTICE ON FILING
OF INVENTORY
AND APPRAISEMENT
The State of Oh10, Meigs
County , Court of Common
Pleas, Prob1le Dlviston
To the Ad m m lst ra tnx of
th e esta te, to s uc h of t he
follow ing a s a r e res id ents o f
the State of Oh 10. viz - t~ e
su r viv ing spous e , th e nex t of
kin , the bene fi ci a ries un de r
the w ill , and to the at torn e y
or attorney s r eprese nt mg an y
of the afor ement ion ed per
sons
Ru th E . Steele, Po mer oy ,
Ohio , R
0
3 , Ches te r
Township , No 22091
You are he reby n ot1 f1ed
that the Inventor y and AP ·
prelsement of the es tate of
the aforement i on e d ,
deceased , late of said County,
was tiled '" thi s court sru d
tnventory and Appraiseme nt
will be for hearing before th iS
Court on the 18th day of May ,
1977, at 10 00 o 'clock AM
.Any person desiring to fife
exceptions thereto must f ile
them at lnst five days pr ior
to the date set for hear ing .
G lvtn' under my hand and
seal of said Court, this Jrd
day of May 1977
Mahn lng 0 Webster
Judge
av;.nn B Watson
Deputy Clerk
(51 5, 12, 2tc

t

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-T'HIS FR IEND HAD

HE ST'AND A SESSION
ON THE LI E DETECTOR ;•
ASKS TRACY.

A FRIEND WHO IS A
AND HAS A PH&lt;~nl

Television log for
T HUR S DAY, MAY 12 , 1971

PIANO LESSONS ch1ldrens a nd
adults
Mrs. Ha rv•y Vo n OLDER AESPONSIBLE lady to live AKC SHETL AND s hee p dogs
Vro nken 992 2270
(Mm ) Coll•es , 2 fe males 7
in and core lor aged widow 11"1
weeks old Shots a nd wo rmed
Ru tla nd , O h1 o Not lnvoltd nor
WILL CAJtE for elderly women in
Phon e (61• ) 367 0292 or
sende
L•ght
housework
ond
ou r home Phone 992-73-.:1_:4:__
367 -711 2
cookmg
No la undry
Coil
ANY STRAY dogs ru nn ing IOO$e
742 20781or inlormo t10n.
ro
BE GIVEN owoy e •ght po rt
on my prope rty. due to the k•ll·
Colhe
o nd port Shepherd pup·
10g ol ~hee p on my property,
p tes one part bird dog, 6 mon
etc wdl be shot. Gene end
lhs old Phone 992·3289
Jerry Colema n, New L1mo
FREE
TO GOOD Home. m the
Jtood . Ru_tlo_ n_d _
'- - coo n try o 3 yeor old ve ry gen
tie house broke border Collie
Great w ith k1ds . Ptl o ne
mn62
WACKE NHU T CORP IS now oc·
REGISTERED FEMALE Boxer 2 yrs
ceptl ng opplicoltons for full
o ld w1th papers $75 00 Phone
t ~r,e
ond po rt time secu nty
902-7675
pos •hons m1 hfa ry background
FOR ADOPTION Pori coonhound
prefe rred bul nol reqUired r-_.t o
mo le Also. 3 puppie s , 2
pho ne calls please . App ly tn
female. 1 male Small su e
penon at Appoloch;on Power
Me1gs Co Huma ne Soc Phone
Pro tect 1301 , New Ho.,.en
8.C3 3009 and m 7680
W Vo We are on Equal Op
_yorlunt ty Employer - Or

CARRIERS WANTED
FOR MASON
AREA DAILY
SENTINEL

Contact 675_1333

1-614-992-2156

FRI ENDLY HOME Toy Po rites has
open{ngs for managers and . ' - - - - - - - - - " ' -dea le rs 1n you r orea Toy party
·
p lan e Kpen ence he lpful Cor
and telep hone neceuory Call
co llect to Car ol Day {519)
489-8395 or wn te Fnend ly CASH pa1d for ell ma kes and
Hom e Po rt1es 20 Rotl Rood
p-todels of mob1le homes
Ave Albany N Y 12205
Phone oreo code 614·423·'9531 .
TEACHERS RETiREES , Paren ts Ex
cellenl ear mngs Worl d Book·
Chddcroft Sales re pres e n·
to tiV"es needed '" Athens Co.J n.
t~
for 1n te r.,.lew call (6 U )
- 592 5991
EXPERIE NCED meo t cu tte r
kn owle dge of qua li ty control D
&amp; D Mea ts , 830 E. Mo1 n St
Pomeroy

HELP WANTED
Executtve type secretary
for profess ional at health
care facility
Med1cal
terminology preferred but
not mandatory.
Typing and shorlhand
sk1lls
required .
Send
resume of tra1ning and
expenence to Box 729-C, co The Datly Sentinel,
Pom e roy, Oh1o, 45769 .

APPLIANCE SERVICE mon, eK·
pe rlenced No phone ca lls
Golila Refngera t1on Co , 61 1
Thtrd Ave G olli po lls , Oh1 o

NOTICE TO BIDDERS
PURCHASE OF TWO
SCHOOL BUSES FOR
EASTERN LOCAL BOARD
OF EDUCATION
Sealed propos al s w11 1 be
rece1ved b Y t~ e Board of
E du c.at .on of th e E a ster n
L oca I Sc h ool D• s tnc t o f
R e edS VIlle , Oh io at t he
Cler k'S Off 1ce until 12 00 noon
Ju ne ~ . l 977 a nd at that t 1m e
op ened by the Cl erk of said
board a s pro v •d ed by law fo r
two (2) 66 passenger sc hool
buse s,
acc o r d i ng
to
s peci f •c~ t i ons o f sa 1d Board
Of Educat 1on
Spec lf 1c at 1on s and In
s tru c llons to bidders ma y be
obtai ne d at th e offi c e of the
Clerk , Ea stern Hig h $ch0ol
A cert1f1 &amp;d che ck payabl e
to the c ler k treasu r er of th e
above b oard of edu cation or a
satisfa ctor y
bid
b o nd
ex ec ut ed bY t he bidder and
t he su r ety co mpan y 1n a n
amount e qu a l to fiv e per cent
ot t he b id shall be s ubm 1tted
w 1th ea ch b 1d
Sa• d Bo a rd of Educa t1o n
res e rves t h e r~ght to wai ve
Informalities to a c ce pt or
r e jec t any and all , or part s of
a ny and all bidS
No bid s m a y be W1fhdraw11
for a t least tt11r ty (30 ) da ys
afle r the s c heduled cl os ing
t 1m e for re ce tpt of b ids
Board of Educ at ion
of Eastern Local
School D istr ic t
Eloise Bos ton
Clerk Tre a su r e r of
Ea ste r n Loca I
Sc hool D ISt ric t
Route 1
Reedsvil le , Oh io 4577 2
(5 ) 12, 19 , 26 (6l 2. 4tc

IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT,
MEIGS COUNTY . OHIO
A TH ENS
CO UNTY
SAVI NGS
&amp; LOAN CO &amp;
OHI O CORP
PLA INTIFF S
vs
F RED B G OE G LEIN
AND B A RB ARA A
GOE GL EIN ET Al
DEF ENDANTS
No 16051
LEGAL NOTICE
P URSU ANT TO AN Order
Of Sale ISS Ued by th e Court Of
Commo n P le a s of Meig s
c ou nty , Ohio , 1 will offe r to r
sa le e t p u bl 1c auction on th e
~ 1 s t d&lt;~ Y of May 19 77 at 10 oo
AM a t lhe Co ur t House steps
In t he Vi ll age of F'om er~• y ,
Meig s Count y, Oh10 t h e
fol lo w in g d esc r ibed r e al
es tat e
Si tuate In th e Towns l"l lp of
Or ange, Coun ty of Me igs, and
Sta te of Oh10 , and being t ra ct
No 2 of th e R 1ggsc rest Mano r
as rec orded in P lat Boo k No
.c. P age No 44, P lat Records
of Meig s Cou n ty
E xce p ti n g o n e h a lt ac r e
sol d to Ro y F R •ffle and
Fr ona K R 1ffle , August 6,
1974 d esc r 1bed 1n VQiume No
258, P age No 371. Deed
Reco rd s o f Meig s County ,
Oh10
Terms of Sal e Ca sh for not
less t han tw o t t1 1rds of th e
a pp r a •sed va lue s ublect to
He n ro r re al e state ta xes
Prop e rt y Ap pr.e11se tt at
El even t h ous and dol la r s
($ 11 .000 )
J am es J Proff Ltt .
Sh er iff
Me 1gs Co unty, Ohi o
141 21. 28 IS) S. 12, 19, Stc

EVERYBODY
Shops the

WAKT AD WAY

TIMB ER Pomeroy forest Pro
d ucts. Top pnce for sta nd1ng
saw timbe r Coil Ke nt Honby
I 4&lt;6 8570
COINS, CURR ENCY tot&lt;ens, old
pocket wo tches and chams,
s1l.,.er a nd gold We need 1964
e nd older s 1 lv~tr co1ns Buy sell,
or trade Coli Roge r Wams ley
742-233 1.
CASH I I I for Junk co rs Frye s
Truck a nd Auto WR ECKER SER·
VICE I Phone H 2· 2081 .
OLD FURNI TURE , 1ce boxes, brass
be d s
e tc
co mplet e
households Wnte M D M1lle r,
Rt ~ Pomeroy , O h1 o or coli
992776/J
GOOD USED baby s tro ller Phone
949 2265

----

----

STANDING TIMBER WAN TED
PHONE [614 ) 667 6214
WANTED · GOOD us ed p1o no
Phone 992-3068 otter 5 p m

1975 JEEP CHEROKEE . p b .. ps
Quodrotroclc
Good lires
Phone [JQ 4) 877-2340
1976 CHEVY 3 q uar te r ton , 4
wheel drive , oulomoflc, 350
eng1ne , on ly 7 500 mdes Also
f 1rewood for so le . Ca ll
992 5947
1975 JEE P Cherokee , p s , p b
otr 4 w Meel d n va Phone
742-2S90
1973 VEGA tak e over payments
1968 Dod ge , $.450. Phone
992-7332
1976 CHEVROLET Chevette Phone
992-7274
1972 PINTO Ru n A Bou t, low
mtleoge Con be s een ot 103
Be&amp;eh St , Pom eroy Oh1o afte r
5p m
1'972 NOVA 2 DR hard top wtth
cro gor ma gs
307 e ngme
automa t•c tronsm •ss1o n Phone
992 2257 - : - 1976 PONTIAC VENTURA V 8 4
dr seda n Automa tiC, po we r
s tee nng rod 1o $3395 Call
992 2837
l 'H2 OLDS Cutla ss a 1r concM1 on

IF YOU hove a serv1ce to offe r
wo nt to buy or sell some t h1ng
ae look~ng for work . . or
wha tever
ypu'fl get results
foster w1 th o Sent mel Wont Ad LOOKING FOR travel tr01 ler
tru ck camper, compmg tra~ l er ,
Coli 992 21 56
m1n1home, truck cop? Travel
HA VING PORCH Sole, Weds.,
tro1ler to ran t? CODNER "S
Thurs , Friday ood Saturday
CAMPERS on Rambow R1dge ·
plus all next wee k 707 OliVe r
open eve nings Toke Me 1gs 28
Stre e t
M1dd le port , Oh1o
Or 32 to Boshan Robert
45760
Codne r, Long Bo lfom Owner
3 fAMILY YARD Sale by the Stole COONER S CAMPERS on Rai n
H1g f"'wa y Garage, Rt. 7 Chester
bowndge Soles , Rental Se r
May 12, ond 13. Who le sets of
v1ce ,
Suppli es
t rad e
d1shes, hnens , screen d oo rs,
campers cops o lurn awn11 ,
same furniture 1ewelry and
and porches by Ourobilt Of
uml a rms M1sc
even1ngs Me•gs 28 or 32
Bos hon Owner Robe rt Codne r
FRIDAY MAY 13 th Wotch fo r
~
ong Bo ttom
s •gns lower end of Syracuse
Mory Gu 1nthe r, Sou thern Band 1971 LEISURE TIME Camper 18 ft
Boos ters,
s leeps 6 self conta1ned, h1 tch
and m1rr0rs 1ncl uded exce lle nt
SEVERAl FAMILY Ga rage Sale .
conditiOn Phone m 2386
Thursday and Fndoy at Hun
nel s on RO!e H1ll. Turn off Rl
33 at s•gn JUSt beyond Pomeroy
Corporot1on l1ne 9 am. t1ll 3
p m RoU·owoy bed , bassinet, 3 AND 4 RM furn iS hed ond un
clothing and many other lteros
furn ished opts Phone 992
5434
GARAGE SALE Thursday May 12
ot the Bourn Add11ion off Rt. 7 COUNTRY Mob1le Home Pork , Rt
33 ten m1les north of Pome roy
by the skating n nk. LoTs of
Lorge lots w1th concre te po t1os,
men . women and childre n s
clo th1ng onda s tereo
Sidewalks runners and oft
stre etpork1 ng Phone9'92·7479
YARD SALE TWO FAMILY Roge r

3

FAMtl Y Yard Selle Mmdy
Seymou r, 308 Page Sf Middleport Thursday and Fnday ,
12 13th. 9 ti ll 4. Clothes ,
boby s, g1 rl 's clo thmg curtom s
bedspreads treadle sew1ng
mach me baby stroller

5 FAMIL V GARAGE Sole, Thurs.
day , Fnday Soturdoy An ti ques,
cl othes ,
baby turm t ure ,
household •fems 1966 4 whee l
dnve tru ck 33 N post parie s
nght on Co. Rd 20 fou rth
house.
YARD SALE Fndoy ond Saturday
the 13th and U th at the Loy ne
res1dence 1n Chesh~re beh10d
Bopt1 st Church from 911115 p m
YARD SALE Mor 11 , 12 13 U or
the IV"on Wei fo rm off Rt 7
Form on nght before gett1ng to
Royal Oak Pork . 9 It II '9
YARD SALE, Saturday and Sun·
doy , 1 00 ttll6 00 Bicycles , fur·
mture, d othmg, 13 W Cave Sf
Pome roy, Oh
GIGANTIC YARD SALE , 522 Grant
St , VanCooney res1dence Frf.
day, 13th one doyonly If rom
cancelled . 9 til l3

Also, horse
CAMPER , $600
tro 1ler $.450 Pfotone (bl") 6'98 ·
3290
SPRING GARDEN Supplles . Cob·
boge, coultflowe r. brocco lt ,
o nd head le ttuoe plants;,
yellow wh1te, and red on1on
~ e ts , omon plants Kennebec .
cobble r, Kotahchn , Red Pont ia c
ond Red Lasodo seed pota toes
Bulk garden seeds , polt1ng sod.
peat mo u . fr01f trees ond rose
bushe s
M1dway Ma rke t.
Pomer oy. Oh10 , 99:2 :2582 ,
Bobs Marlcet Mason W..Vo
[304) 773 5721:: _ _ _ _

Business Services

l-----------------------------------.J

DUGAN'S
-FRONT END
ALIGNMENT

EXPERIENCE_p
Radiator
Service

Alignm e nt.
wheel
balanci 11;;
tune- up ,
t, r11ke . ·~·· :, , minor

ORCHID ROOM for re nt fo r an
mve:rsones , weddtng recep
t1ons , bridal showers or pn vote
mee ting room . Phone 992 -3975
or 992·2571
TRAILER SPACE for rent locate d
sou th of M1ddleport on Rt 7
along the nver. Sewer ond
e lectn c hooked up $40 per
mo nt h Colt 992-2561 aftern oon
o r even1ngs
FURNISHED APT Adu lts only, no
pets. Pho ne 992 387~ M•d
dleporl
BEAUT't SHOP tor rent or lease
Phone '992-3333

1973 TRAILER 14 )I 70 unfurnis hed
Coli 9'92·6688 9 t,ll 5 or
985-3501 after b p.m , o r con.
ta ctTonyo Do.,.,s
1973 GREENBRIER Mob1le Home
65 x 12 3 bedrooms 7 K 13 ' roll
out on IIV'Ing room central 01r
porch and ownmg Call Jol-In
Bentz , 949 2876
3 BEDROOM , 20 ll! 4~ ' double
w1d e trade r W1ll sell furn1shed
or unfurnis hed $6700 or $5500
Stdl has w heels and tongues
Coll 843·2625 o r 992· 3560.

YARD SALE, Sot , May 14 10 t1fl 6
1972 Honda Motorcycle, Sl175
Lombretta motor scoo ter , boy's
clo t hmg, btcyde m11 c, Don GOING OUT OF BUSINESS
Johnson s Portland St. Rt 124
Anorted V"onety of occos1onal
tables. WoOd shelv1ng w1th
YARD SALE , 9 fill ~ . Fndoy
plas tic s urface 10 tn wide by
Clothes, 2 8 &amp; W telev1s1on
ff long $2.00 eo p•ece, olso 8
d1shes. re cords &amp; otl\er mise
m w1de by 8 ft long, $1 75
items On old Rt 33 Between
each p1ece Form1co surface
Ch1pper N Sow M1ll Wa lc h for
s helving 10 tn . x 12ft )(5-8 In
s1gns
$5.00 each pt&amp;ee , 10 1n x 8ft
5 FAMI LY VARD Sale behind old
$4 00 each pla ce Flokeboord 4
Rizer Service Sfot1on Sy racuse
ft ll! 8 tt x '/1 m $l 20 aoch
friday, Saturday 10 hiI 4 p m
sheet
Hardboard
Form1co
furn •lure clothmg, oppl1onces
, She e ts
Assorted furnitu re
miSC
hardwa r e
pul ls
cabine t
-·'= ' - - - - - - - I'Hnges,
etc. Screws , bolts and
YARD SALE, Fn ond Satu rday
nu ts , $1 00 per pound Pe rm1 t
Mo y 13 a nd U m Bradbury
343 MASON FURNITURE COM·
Nex t to WMPO Cerom1cs T V
PANY {TNT AREA) Pomt Plea
Avon , all kmds of clothmg
sont, W Vo .
Cancelled •f It ra1ns
YARD SALE , Thursday . Fndoy USED FORESTRY EQUIPMENT
Fronkl1n Model 1308 Sk1dder
Soturdoy 1258 Powell Sl , Mrd Tl mberlock 208GS Sk•dder
dlepo rt.
Prent1ce G ·BC loader w1th by
pass grapple Contact Denms
Smurr Phone (614) 838·5345

a

NEW HOLLAND hay baler and
RISING STAR Kennel Boarding ,
gra1n dnll Phontt 992 708.4 ,
Indoor-Outdoor runs grooming
oil breeds , cle an somtory REGISTERED MORGAN geld;ng
very nice nd•ng horse . Phone
facd•f•es oe 367-7112 Ch•sh.re
Phone (614 ) ~ 02'12.
__m
~~~60
~7~2~
· ~~------~
HOOF HOLLOW Buy, sell, trade TRAILER FOR solo , 10 • 55
Ponderosa , 2 bedroom, many
or tram horses RUTH REEVES,
ex tras ' $2500 CB 350 Hondo
tromar Phone (614 ) 698 3290
-~~hone~ 7008__ .!-~-All BREED Dog groom1ng
reasonable ra) es Coli lor op BEEF CATILE, complete herd for
one pr~ c n
Phone (614 )
po.n tme nl, Jf &amp; D Kennels
667
3668
742-3162

ECO NOMY TRACTOR w1th oil a t·
lochme nts L1lce ne w as.k1 ng
$2250 Phone [614) 698 3290
FOR MEMORIAL DA Y Beou hful
selection of flowers Baskets
sprays , wreo ths va ses Foy s
No... elty Shop N Second St
_ Mld~lep_?~:r~'--~---,-~­
HOMEGROWN Tomato plan ts 1m
pro.,.ed Mex iCan early Vto len l
go lde n Jubdees Also go lden
Ac re ca bbage Across fro m the
s w1rnm1n g poo l
Th o ma s
Haymon , Syra cuse , Oh1o
GOOD RICH Top so1l Charles R
Hotf•eld Bock Moe Se rV' I&lt;e
Phone 742 2008

I

1279 ,95

-et us test
Free.

your wale.

Pomeroy 1..1ndmark

I'.~Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
..

Phone '92-2181

.D H Beams, 8 9 o nd 10 mch
Co ll9'92 7034
WOODEN HOLLOW core cab•ne t
doors ond drawer fronts from
75c up Col l 992 7034
1958 CHEVY, 6 Cyl standard ,
good mo to r new battery boy s
b1ke, 26 10 record player and
record s
Fl ower po t
Coli
742-2078.
C B RADIO Demeo Satehte {tube
type) w1th D 104 power m1ke
Coli 992 2295 after 5 p m or
con be seen at II~ Condo r St ,
Pomeroy Oh10
GRAVELY TRACTOR fo r sal e
Mo wer
1nclud e d
Phon e
992-5067.
VERMEER BALERS 6050 4395 605C
~995 1111 June 1 Mem ll Chose,
R D 2, Albany Oh1o (614)
698·302 1
23 IN d1ogo nol black &amp; wh1te
R C.A Telev 1s1on For more 1n
formo t1on, call '992·70'92.

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

Blown illwWols UttKS
$10111
WIIIDOJIS&amp;OOOIS

BISSELL SIDING CO.

IEP~EIT

111-

A local contractor
Phone 949-2801
or 949 · 2860
Free Est imates
No Sunday Calls Plea5e
4-24-1 mo

AlUIIINUII

SIOIJIS.SOFFITT
GUTTE!IS.IW!!IIGS

lARRl,.\~.~~~DER
Ph. "2·3993

4-10 I

Superior ,
Steam Extraction

Shirley's Beauty Nook
John St .

Young's Carpeting
Route J, Pomeroy, 0.
Carpet &amp; Upholstery
Phone Mike Young
At
992-2206 or 992-7630
"The Originators
Na1 The Imitators"
2·23· 1 mo

.

-~yracuse

Owner
Shirley (Jeffers) WoHe

Formerly
lola ' s Beauty Salon
For appointment ca II
992-2549 Tuesday thru
Saturday 8 : 00a.m . to
5 : 00p.m . Open nights
by appointment
4-15-1 mo.

Co -Op water softeners, model VC-SVI.
Only S279. t5
Save UO . oo on a new
Hotpoint Refrigerator
1 New lO CUbic· ft
Chest Fre""""
U 19 95
Now •n- stock~ ..... mplete 1m~~:
of bulk garden seeds and
onion sets .
1 good McCullough Chatn
Saw
S6S
1 Good Used Poulan Chatn
SSO

S_urv1vor Sales only S2V.9.5
On•on Sets 3 lbs.
Sl 00

Pomeroy 1..1ndmadl
Jack w. Caruy 1 Mg rl
Phone 992· 2181

Comme rcial property app rox 17
a cres level land locate d a t
Tuppe rs Plom s on Ohto, Rou te
7 Phon• [614) 667 6:!04
NEW 3 be droom house, buill 1n
k•lche n both and 1/, , Phone
742 2306 or contact MilO 8 Hut.
ch1son Ru tland , Oh•o .
VA FHA 30 yr f1non c1ng. Irela nd
Mortgage 77 E Slota , At he ns
phone (614 ) 592·3051
HOUSE FOR SALE by ow ners 4
rooms and both panneled ilv·
1n9 room ond carpeted W1 ll
sell for $6500 Call 9'92-6250
offer 5 p m l O Lynn St , M1d
dlep~
orc:I:___~---,.--BEAUTIFUL TWO story home w1th
two car garage 5 bedrooms
dmmg room , large livmg, room
mode rn k 1tchen , 2 111 baths
Io rge recreohon room , fully o1r
condlftoned
% m1le from
school One quarter m1 le off
State Rou te 30 year fmonc lng
avatloble Call 9'92 3863 bet
ween 9 o.m ond 3 p m
HOME IN Pomeroy 2 story , cen·
tro l heotmg, some carpeftng
ond ponn el ling Bath &amp; '(,
Pho ne 992 70 7~ or 992 3~65
HOUSE FOR sole In Syracuse, 2
bedrooms an~ bath, lot 100 x
150 Garage , cement dnve and
small storage bldg Fu rnis hed
or uMurn1shed . Call992·7147

HOUSE IN Tuppers Plams , 2
bedrooms elec hea t, double
garage , 2 lots Phone (61• )
667-3065 or 667 33bO
13 A and l'il7~ Mob •le, home , one
o ther mob•le home s1te On lied
we ll , on 68 1 neor Tuppers
Plo1ns $10,900 Phone (614)
667·3668
TWO LOTS tog e ther on State 12.. .
Syracu se m•ddle of town Ideal
for mob1le home or new home
Sept1c tonk and water top
Pho ne 992· 7402, o r 7~2 2194
4 BEDROOM House natural gos
Mealing, Oh1o Power
law
uti11ties. tn Rutland Phone
742 3031
REDUCED AGAIN 3 bedroom, 2 1!J
bath, b1-level, 1 mi le north of
F1v6 Potnt, $.42 ,500 Phone
992 2A9~
2 '----~
15 ACRES OFF New limo Rood
ne~ Forrest Acres Pork Phone
7.2 2336

"L

(6141 985-4155
Chester, OhiO
10-17·1 mo(Pdl

CARPENTER &amp;
BUILJ)ERS

'ft1t'i}1.\£t f8}'il

~THAT SCRAMB"ED WORD GAME

~ ~ ~~ ~

NEW HOMES

byHenri ArnoldandBob lee

Uns cramble these four J umbles.
one tetter to e ach square, to form
fou r ordmary words

&amp; REMODELING

HARLEY HANING

KI I

Phone 992-3339
oi-13-1 m o pd

r J
tSHORUCj
J I K
I I

GUTitR SERVICE
Continuous one
ptece
gutters. We hang it, or do it
yourself. Special pr1ces to
builders.

,. - 11

U'ITLE ORPHAN ANNIE

Phone 949-2814
9 a . m. to 5 p . m .
4-28-1 mo.

Young's Carpeting
Route 3, Pomeroy, 0 .

TEAFORD
VtrgiiB . sr:, Realtor
216 E . Second Slreet
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Phone 992-3325 '
DRIVE-IN - All equip·
ment necessar y for the
business, ample parking,
or can be made Into a
home. This really is a
wonderful buy at SlQ.OOO.
NEW LISTING - Nice ~
bedroom
home
with
natural gas, F.A. furnace,
city water and carpeting .
Insulated Fpr only $18,000.
NEW LISTING - Good old
8 roam frame home on a
corner lot. 3 bedrooms with
closets, T. P . water and
natura I gas .
Heating
Furnace. A good buy at
NEW LISTING - Ph acres
with a 3 bedroom home just
outs ide of town, 6 rooms,
bath , partial basement and
1 car garage $25,000
NEW LISTING Good
older home on quiel street
near schools 3 bedrooms.
dln1ng , large living room
w ith fireplace, carpeting in
all rooms, and yard for the
children . 2 car garage .
Only $17,500.
NEW
LISTING
4
bedroom frame home. 1112
baths , carpeting , elec .
baseboar d heat, nice ki tchen , family room and nice
bock yard $16,000.
$5 ,000.00 5 bedroom
home on nice e:orner lot In
Orange Township .
BUILDING LOTS 1V2
near Tuppers Plains
lor $5,000 Several lots al
Five Poinls, $2,000 00 UP.
~Jeres

GOOD HOMES FOR YOU
TO SEE AT OUR OFFICE
NEAR POST OFFICE .
PICTURES AND FREE
PARKING.
, G . Bruce Teaford
Helen L. Tuford
Associates

~

Free Est1mates
Installation, samples
brought to your home
with no charge.
tarpei- Ltno.•Tile
Phone Mike Young at
992·2204 or 992-7630

by THOMAS JOSEPH
NobJISummll Road
Rt. 1
Middleport, 0 .
992-S724

BORN LOSER

I ::::~.~~el~~

~ r-!lbHT,

SiR ...
\-1AVB A t-liCE:

\lllll/

NEW 3 bedro om house , 2 baths,
oil elec , 1 acre Middleport,
close to Rutland, Pho ne 9"il2·
7481
SMALL fo rm for sole, 10% down ,
owner fmanc ed Monroe Coun
ty W Vo . Phone [JQ4) 772·
3102 or [304 ) 772-3227.
COUNTRY fo rmlo nd w1th secl ud ·
eel woods water ond good oc·
cess '" Mon roe County W Vo
$1 000 d o wn coli [JO.I) 772·
3102 or [30.0 ) 772 3227

MAIN
POMEROY,.J),
JUST LISTED- Beaulilul
and secluded, over 3 acres,
Ph s tory frame home, 3 or
A bedroom s, f i r e place,
qu ipped kitchen, perma
pane windows, trailer
hookup Just 120,000.00.
JUST LISTED - About 7
acres In Pomeroy , 3 A
fenced, 2 A. In woods.
balance in yard and gar.
den 3 BR home with
dtn lng , livmg , ba th, C B
room
Id eal for kid s
$19,200 00 .
JUST LISTEO Lovely
home with income, e)(cellent neighbOrhood, J.4
bedrooms, living , dining, 2
baths, 2 car gorge with 3
BR
apt
ov e r .
Jus t
$27,000 00

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR Sweepers, toasters ~r o n s a ll
small oppl1on.::es lawn mowe r,
nex t to State H1ghwoy Go ra ge
on Rout e 7 Phone (614) 985·
3825

I!J61"~ ~ j.()UJ MOOr

lOMOf&lt;ROW~

I Bayone t

S Levy

Z J ewelry

You

mean
Tm

were
the onh~ one!
l1 it.e

LJOU

too!

beinq
kicked

EXCAVATING , doze r, loader and
backhoe work dump trucks
ond lo-boys for h.re, w1ll haul
f1ll d 1rt, to sod ltmestone end
gravel Coli Bob or Roger Jeffers
doy pho ne 9'92·7089
n•ght phone 992-3525 or 992·
5232

out

of mtj
room?

EXCAVATING , dozer, back hoe
and d1 tc her. Charles R Ho tf, e ld
Bo ck Hoe Service ,
Rutland , 0 1-l io Pho ne 742-2008

weight

12 More paltry

3 H oweve r

13

( 4wds )
4 Actor
Danton
Turkish
Hospic e
6 Anc ient
Pers ian

20

7 N .Z. fort
8 Identical

23 Most

Bohemia n

s

Yesterday's

19 Fmch or

Answer

27 Peggy

Fonda

Flenung,

Su~

eg

16 Father

s omber
24 Nelson
Eddy hit
s ong
ZS N e phew 's

3Q Embankm en !'
32 " The
La s t - "
34 Watch over
36 Tow ns man
37 " Both ·

( Fr. )

fa vorite

S1des - "

s equently

( 4 wds. )
Obsequious

9
10 Pic ked up
the ch eck

1 4G- News 13

2 3()- News 3
3 . oo-Movle " Moonlld e " 3
4 JG- Movle " If I' m Lucky " 3.
6 · oo-F BI 3.

BRIDGE
NORTH 10 1

·• 964

• A 98 6 3
. A 10 972

33 - sail

SEPTIC TA NKS cleaned Modern
Son•fal1on, 992 39.54

ULABNER

WILL do roofmg , constru ct1on ,
plumbmg and he a ti ng No 1ob
too Iorge or too small Phone
742 2348

l..AL.JE'j-jABL E=: $:Qcco
.A ')IEOJ&gt;R -BUi

THIS BUILDING
IS FO' YO ' .AN'

CARPENTER , tl oormg , ceilmg ,
ponellng Phone 992-2759

NATCHE~LY ' HE

&gt;bRE

MOBILE Home Repo.r, Elec ,
plumbing and heo ltng. Phone
992-5858

HIS - -&lt;"r-..'l'l''

EAST
4 QI0 8 7 3

WEST

35 B r ing forth
37 Wheel hub b--t---f38 Figure of
s peech
39 Foreshadow
40 Wobble
41 Tend a
garden

4 J5

" J 10 8

t KJ 54
• K J 83
SOUTH

• Q54

3·2 .
TI1e e ssence of a sa fety play
IS th a i 1t gu ards you aga m s t

" KQ7 6 543 2

t 1

something, whale not expos1ng

..,

yo u

Both vulncr&lt;J ble

.A'SSISIANIS -

West

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work It :
1s

contra ct when trumps broke

4 AK2

.6

North Ea st

Pass

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

Pass

South

d ummy lor a mu.nen t turned

to the Professor and sa1d ,

WINNIB

JFGNF U I I
NO, MR5. WINKLE
SHE SHE -.JUS T
SEEMS lD HAVE
l06f THE: WILL

10 LIVE!

.I ~,~~~~
U~

KWU

RI

I U R

VI

KWRK

G H
PG K
G H

F VAU F I " You ' re g01 ng to be pro ud o f

me "
R l

X R P

g r eate r

had

gu a rd e d

a ga 1ns t one

Th e n t he stude n1 took the
spade a nd le d his de uce of
K G hea rts
Wes t won and led a second

F RJ•

spade for the student to "'m

UF F GF - AGZKRVF U
Now h e le d h1s qu ee n of
Yeslerday' s Cryploquole : OURS IS AN AGE WHICH IS hearts Eas t took h1s ace .
PROUD OF MACHINE S THAT TH1NK, AND S USPI CIOUS OF c ashed t he queen of spades
ANY MAN WHO TRIES TO.- HOWARD MUMFORD J ONES a nd led a fou r th spade T he
s tudent r uffe&lt;l . Wes t o verrull0 1171 Kina Featwes Sy nd icate , Inc.

~Q~~
A Bntls h Co lumbi a read e r
asks af there 1s such a sys tem
as Canadian Acol.
Yes , th e re IS 1t IS use&lt;! by
Keh e la a nd Murray a nd some

oth er top Canadian pa1rs
Stra nge ly enoug h . 11 IS base&lt;!
la rge ly on 1931 Culberts on , but
1t IS ve r y effecti ve m t he
ha nds o f Murray a nd Ke he la
(For a copy of JA COBY
M ODERN send $ 1 to " Win
a r Br~dge ," c / o th r s
newspaper P 0 Bo x 489.
RadiO Crty Statton. New York,
N Y 10019)

\

W1U do odd jobs, roof ing, po inting , gutter work Phone 992·
7;j(l'l

S EWING · AL TE RATION s · •
Uph o ls ter i ng ,
d r ope 1
reasonable 572 Sault- Th1rd
Ave , M1ddlepo rt . Phon e

'192·6306.

•

,.
•

FIRE !l

•

PIANO TUNING , lone Oo nle la. 1:2
years of serv1ce
Pho ne

EVER~

BALL'I'OLI GU'/5
HAVE HIH IA5 BEEN OUT,
EVER'I' BALL WE'VE HIT
14A5 6EEN IN!!!

~- 2082

BABYSITIING IN my home with
pre school child ren Expen e nc·
•d
M~s
G lenn
Smit h ,
m -3613.

LOST IN Middleport, on•· year· old
f•tnal• toy collie Answ•rt to
the nome of Chlc&lt;f Phone
m -5301.
•

811LLS 0'

,,...
••

HANGINTHERE, PARTNER,
WE'RE GONNA WIN !!

da n ger

Uanger, but exposed h1msel f
to a greater one

Pass Pass Pass
Opemng lead - J A

CRYPTOQ U OTES

to a

somewhere else The student

One le tter s 1mply stan ds for a no ther l n th is sam ple A Ia
u s ed f or th e th ree L' s, X for t he two O's, etc S1ngle letter s , L--------,--,.~..J
apos trophes, the length a nd format iOn o r t he wt,rds are all By Osw a ld &amp; J a m es J aco by
h mt s Each d ay t he code le llcrs arc d ifl'erent
T he s tu de n t studi e d t he

HARRISON S T V Re po1r ServiCe
Calls 276 Sycam ore , St , Mid ·
d lepo rt Phone 99'2 2522

ed a nd a nothe r sure · fJre plan
had gone Eas t w1th th e ge~e
" Wha t w e n t w ro ng?" as ke d
the s tude n t " I thought I was
mak m g~ s af et y Play '
" No , you made a n uns afety
play Your play would hav e
s ucce ed e d aga ms t a s mg leton
ace of t ru m ps 1t would nol
have helped agam st a ny other

(our-one br eak and as you
ha'.'e JUSt seen at cost you your

" A9
• Q 10 2

12

HOWERY AND MARTIN E•
co votlng, s e p t1c syste ms ,
dozer, bockMoe , dump truck ,
limes tone, grovel
blacktop
pa.,.•ng, fU 143 Phone 1 (614)
698-7331

EXCAVATING, BACKHOE , dozer,
trencher Low Boy. dump truck
trucks , sept1c sys tems Bil l
Pull
phone 992-2478 doy or

thrust

or vail
17 G~rl' s name
18 Mescalero 's
abode
20 In a( agitated)
21 SpaniSh
pamler
22 Loafing
23 Scr eech
25 - up
...::---.,.-..._
( fe d
the kitty
26 Pmza's
birthplace
27 " - Good
Fnends"
28 Son of
Jacob
29 Prepare
to be
knighted
31 CIStern
32 Floor
cove rmg

Poor Sl im
must move

But it isn't

SEWING MACHINE Repo1rs , ser·
V'I CU, ell makes '992-2284 The
Fabn c Shop
Pom e r oy
Autl-lonzed S1nge r Sales and
Servtce We sharpe n Sc1ssors

JUST LISTED
Ex·
cellenl l lshtng collago - on
R1ver . 2 bedrooms, large
living and kitchen , very
low upkeep Buy this and
get away from II all Only
$.4,200.00
JUST LISTED - LOVELY
LOVELY frame and
brick . 3 ·bedrooms, l lh
baihs, formal
dining .
carpeting , lull basement
with large rec . room ,
garage , 1 level acre close
ln . $37,000.00.
CORNER LOT- 2'h story
frame Y(.lth carport . 2
fireplaces , 5 bedrooms,
lormal dining, bath, Ioyer.
garage, in Mlddleporl .
Look just $8,500.00.

DOWN

14 Cling
IS Nonse nse'
16 Before v iew

iCi&amp;\-'?

"

REMODELING Rlumb1ng, heo h ng
ond oil types of general repa ir
Wo rk guaranteed 20 yeors ex
pe nance Phone 992 2409

BROWN S FIRE and Safe ty Extl n·
qu• s he rs A.ll &amp;lzes, bu si nen,
home , boat Re filled , tes ted
Btll Brown
Rutland , Oh1o
Phone 742·2777.

"2..ZUI

flOW ABOUT' ~~T

N£ lO

BRADFORD , Au ct1onee r, Com
plete Serv1ce Pho ne 949·2487
or 9-49-2000 Rac1 ne Oh1 0 , Cntt
Bradf ord

JUST LISTED 1 floor
plan 3 bedrooms, bolh,
na l. gas heal. carpeting.
Leve l lot 60
x 120
$18,000 00.

WE HAVE BUYERS FOR
YOUR FARM CALL
TODAY.
HENRY E . CLELAND
BROKER
Hlnk-C.th-Leon• Cltr.nd
Assocl•tes
992-2259-H5-(J1Z

UMIT

CIJE 6Vf'tJI~'? ~OW

E:;VBNI~ .

HOME SITES fo r sole , 1 a cre and
up Middle port, ne or Rutland .
Coll992 7481.

ACROSS
1 Battle
m e m e nto

11 Cherrio

Sales
and
and Supphes .

2 23-1 mo

13 ACRES, 3 bedroo m, all uh lihes ,
Rt 124 Cook s Gap H1l l Pho ne
9'92 5626 after 5 30 p.m.

su,ooo.
LIKE NEW Shu ltz Mob•!e Home on
2 1/ , ocres leve l le nd concrete
porch, 8 x 3S w1th awnmg,
astro- tu rf covered 20 x 38
bloc k garage , ce lla r witt-. ut1l 1ty
room overhead Shode ond
fru1t tre es In longs.V" ii le Phone
___7~4~2~-2~
965
~~---------­
HOUSE FOR Sole, 2 story . 6 room,
both, basement, carport, Iorge
lot on College Rood , Syracuse
OhiO Phone m 7203

OU NNO Vn ·SUT WE
~OON
FlfJD OIJT ~

viewing

F R IDAY , MAY 13, nn
6 oo-Publ lc Affa irs 10.
6· 15- Fatm Report 13
6 20-Not For Women On ly 13
6 30--Columbus Today 4 , News 6. Overseas M iss ion
10
6 ~5-Morn l ng Report J
6 50-Good Morning, West VIrg in ia 13
6 .55-Good Morning. Trl State 13.
7 oo-Today 3,A, 15 ; Good Morning Amer ic a 6. 13, CBS
News 8; Chuck White Reports 10
7 . 05-Porky Pig 10.
7 · 3!f-School le s 1o
8:0Cl-Howdy Doody 6; Capt Kangaroo 8, 10; Sesame
St 33
B 3!f-Big Valley 6.
9.oo-A .M 3, Phil Donahue 4, 13, 15; M ike Douglas 10,
Andy Griffllh 8
9 3()-Cross-Wils ) , Edge of Night 6, Concentration 8
10 oo-Sanl ord&amp; Son 3,4, 15 , D inah 6 , Here 's Lucy 8, 10,
M ike Ooug las 13
10 3!f-Hollywood Squares 3,4,15; Price Is R ight B,10
11·oo-Wheel ol Fortune 3,4, 15, Ha p py Days 6. 13.
11 : 3!f-Shool fo r the Slars 3,4,15; Family Feud 6, 13;
Love of Life 8, 10; Sesame Sl 20,33.
11· 55-CBS News B, Ms Fl•ll 10
12 oo- News 3,4.6.10, 13, Name Thai Tu ne 15; Olvorce
Court 8
12 : 30-Chlco &amp; t he M an 3,15 , Ryan's Hope 6,13 , Bob
Braun 4, Sear c h for Tomorrow 8,10
1·oo-Gong Show 3, A ll My Chil dren 6, 13 ; News 8,
Yo ung &amp; the Rest less 10; N ot for Women Onl y 15
1 3!f-Oays ot Our Lives 3,4, 15, As l he Wor ld Tu r ns
81 ' 10 .
2 oo-s 20,000 Pyram id 6, 13
2· 3()-Doclor s 3,4, 15 , One Life to Live 6,13 , Guiding
L ight 8, 103.oo-Another Wo rld 3,4,15, All In T he
Fa m tly 8,10i Cr ockett ' s VIctor y Ga rde n 20
3 15-G enera l Hospll al 6,13
3 3!f-M atch Ga m e 8,10, Li lias. Yog a &amp; You 20
4 oo-M isler Car toon 3; Litt le Rasca ls 4, Gong Show
15, New M ic key Mouse Club 6; L ucy Sho w 8;
Sesam e Sl 20,33, Mov ie " Cal l )-ler Mom " 10 , Dinah
13.
4 ·15-Litt le Rasca ls 4
4 3!f-M y Th hree Sons 3, P a rt ri dg e Family 4,8;
E m e rge ncy One 6 , F l1ntston es 15,
5 oo- Big Valley 3, M y T hree Sons 4, Bra dy Bu nch 8,
M tster Rogers' Ne ighbor hood 20.33; Eme rg en cy
One 13; Star T re k 15
5 3!f-Adam 12 4, New s 6, Family Affair B, E lec Co
20 ,33
6 oo-News 3.4.6.8,10,13, 15; AB C Ne ws 6 , Zoo m 20,33
6 3!f-N BC Ne ws3,4, 15, ABC News 13. A nd y Gr lll lth 6,
CB S News 8 ,10; Ve g e tabl e Soup 20, Vil la Aleg r e 33 .
7 oo-Tru t h or Cons . 3, T o Te lllhe Trulh 4, L iar ' s Club
6, E mm y Hopef ul s 8, News 10; To Te ll the Tru th
13 , My Three Sons 15, Oh io J ou rn a l 20. Bl ack
J o urnal 33
7 Jo- Port er Wagoner 3; Gong Show 4, CaAdld Came r a
6, Treas ur e Hun! 8. Mac Neil Lehrer Reporl 20,33,
And y Will iam s 10 ; Name T ha t Tune 13 , Pop Goes
the Co untry 15
B·oo-Sanlo rd &amp; Son 3,4; Movie " The San Pedro
B u m s" 6, 13. White Seal Spec\11 8, 10, Was hing ton
Week In Revie w 20,33 , To Be Announced 15
8 3!f-Movie " T ime lo Run " IS, Dr Suss 8, 10, W a ll
Street Week 20,33
9 .oo-Roc kford Fl ie s 3,4; Mov;e " F ear Is t he Key"
8, 10, Lowel l Thomas Re members 20; Woman Al ive
33.
9 3!f- F eathe r &amp; Fathe r 6.13, The Way It Was 20
10 ·oo-Qulnc y 3,4, 15 , Ne ws 20, F ir~ng Li ne 33 .
1~ 3!f-Loc k. Stoc k &amp; Barre l 20
11 oo-News J ,4,6,8,10,13,15; Monly Py lhon's Flyi ng
Circ us 20 . Blac k P e r s pecti ve o n t he Ne ws 33
11 3!f-Johnny Car s on 3,4, 15, Borella 6.13; NBA Pla y
Oft 8,10; ABC New s 33
12 oo-Jana k1 33
12 . 4!f-Mod Squ a d 6, Irons ide 13
1 OQ-MJdnlght Spec ial 4,15

-

New

_!aw

!OWn

CAPTAIN EASY

KEN GROVER
PHOTOGRAPHY

1'-

· l'lt 99Z-2171

LOT ISO x 200 m Syracuse Phone
~2 3714

FOR SALE

Commercial
Schools
Weddings

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

lnsulltion Semces
FlltlncinaA•IIble

NEED A WATER
SOFTENER?
let Pomeroy Landmark
soften &amp; condition your
water and a Co· OP water
;oftener, Model UC-XVI ,
Now Only •

Ae~al

repair .

1 ~2 m cost 1ron k1 tchens 10k I
bos 1n ond 1 dra 1n board , ho ng

on wo ll type w h1 te 1·3 bu rn e r
gos , hot plate . Pho ne 992- 5 7 1~

PHOTOGRAPHY

tilt liqlll
.....,;tttllt ....ootKOII

Beh i nd Rutland Gr•de
School. Even ing work by
appointment. Ph . 742· 2005 .
1973 JEEP CJ5, good cond1t1on, L- - - - - - S--'
6-;;,1_m..;o."::..p.=...J
d
Plus extras $~ Bunker H•ll
Rood a cross from cemetery

TOMATO. PLA NTS
Cob boge,
broccolt, coul•flower brussol
sprou ts , egg pla nts, hongmg
baskets , po ts
geron 1ums
begon ias , fla ts, petum o s ,
mo ng olds
pons1e s , so ll1o,
bo lsom , d•o n thus
s nap
d rago ns, a lyssum Vinca , col
eus , Cleland's Green house
Rac1ne Gero ld me Clelond .

PROFESSIONAL

r-

~

e d foclory tape playe r Ve ry
good cond ttton Coli 9"il2·7630
offe r 5 p m.

Mowery re Siden c"' first house
on 143 a cross from Jock"s Club
Ti"lunday.and Fndoy

COAL. l• mes tone o nd colc1u m
chlonde ond co lc1 um brine for
du• t con tro l ond special mtKm 9
sa lt lor torme rs . El:c.els10r Soli
Works Moin Street Pome roy .
Oh1o or phone 992- 38'91 .

e~sy

12 oo-Movle " Easy R ider " 10, Janak ! 33.
12 A!f-M cC ioud B
I ·OD-Tomorrow 3,•
3 oo-Nows 13.

5 30-Adam 12 4, Ne ws 6, F a m ily Affa ir 8; E le c . Co
20.33
6 oo-News 3.4.6,8, 10, 13, 15, Zoom 20,33
6 30-NBC News 3,A, 15 , ABC News 13;; Andy Gr lll llh
6; CBS New s 1.10 , On ce Upon A Classlc20,33
7 : ()1)-Trulh or Cons 3; To Tell the Truth 4 , Muppet
Sbow 8, News 10; To Tell the Truth 4, 13, My Three
Sons IS , Almanac 20, Consumer Survival Kit 33.
7 3!f-Hollywood Squares 3; N,.on &amp; the World 4, Oh io
Slaler Lottery 6. Price Is R ight~. Mac Neil Leh r er
Report 20,33 ; Wild K ingdom 10 ; Nashville on the
Road 13; Dolly 15
8 oo-Baa Baa Black Sheep 3 ; Welcome Back, Ko t ter
6, 13; Walto ns 8, 10; Music Hall Ame r ica 15: Classic
Theatre 20, Masterpiece Thealre 33
B 30-What's Happening 6 , 13.
9 : ()1)-Mov le " Danger In Paradise" 3,4,15, Barney
Miller 13, Testimony of Two Men 6, Hawaii Five 0
8 ; Classic Thea Ire 33 ; Movie " Tony Ro me" 10; .
9 . 30-P IIot 13
lO ·oo-Streets of San Francisco 131 Barnaby Jones 8;
News 20
10 3()-Woman 20
11 . ~N ews 3, 4,6,8.10, 13, 15, Ma c Neil Lehrer Report
33
11 3!f-J ohnny Carson 3,4,15 ; P la yboy' s Playmate
Part y 6 , Koj a k 8 ; Mary Ha r tma n 10, W Va
Cha mpionshi p Horse Shoe 13, ABC News 33

Pebl fur Sale

(.1-.J~l'

2Wi.)lo

'

OF FAMOUS

I~WuJo.lltnrUndtt

Ca:.h

'

FIX IN ' TO SET roOT
OUT OF 1 H ' HOUSE
10DP.V

�1! - TheDailySentinel, Middleport-Porneroy, 0 ., Thursday, MaY1~1~2•.;1~97~7--------------------------------------------------------,
ATHEN S
SAVINGS &amp;
OH IO CORP

-vs

COU NTY
LOAN CO &amp;

PLAINTIF~

'FRED B GOEGLE IN
AND BARBA.RA A
GOEGLEIN , ET AL
DEFENDANTS

NO 16.053

LEGAL NOTICE

Pursuant IQ an Order of
Sate issued bV the Court of
Common Pleas o f Me igs
County , Ohio, 1 will offer tor
sa te at public auction on the

21st tlay of May , 1977 at 10 : 00
AM at t he Court House steps
fn t he Villagf" o f Pom ero y,
Meig!&gt; Col!nty , Oh i o the

follow ing

des c dbed

real

es t a te :
.
Situate i n the Towns hip o f
R.u t_land . Coun ty o f Meig s.
Stare of Ollie , itnd being LOt
f\l o. I? of the H utc.,h inson
Subs id iv ion as is re cord ed in
Pla t Book N o . .4 , Page No . 57
o f th e Reco rd s of Plat s of
Me igs County , Oh io .
Term s of Sate : Cash not not
less than two -thi r d s of ap
pra ised Ya!ve , su biect to lien
tor r eal estate lotutes .
PROPERT Y appra ised at

$1 ),000 .

J ame s J . Prolfitl ,
Stleriff

Me igs Cou nty , Ohio
{ 4) 71, 28 {5) 5, 12, 19. 51c

FOR 8105

ana

Fede ra l Land

Conserva l ion
Fund
Act
Proiecr No l9 00431 end HUD
Com n, un i ty
De11etopme-nt
Bl ock Gran t Pro j~cr No 8 75
D N 39 002'1
Mun lc1 pat Park Tenn i s
&lt;;ourtS , V ~ !lagt&gt; of Svra&lt;:use,
OhtO
B tdS wilt be rc&lt;"eived untd
11 · 00 Noon on May 26, 19 77 , for
the cons truct ton o f Mun i ci pal
Ten nis Courl s for the V i llage
of Syracuse ,' Ohio, at wh ic h
Time the bids shall be opened
by th e Clerk. of th e Village and
publ i cly read by t:.e r at the
V i llaqe Hall , State Route 124,
V i llage of Sy ra cuse, Oh i o.
· Bids may be mailed-" to the
Villa ge of Sy racu se, Oh i o
45779 , Atten t ion Mr . Herman
Loncto.n , Mayor ,
In f ormation tor bidders,
form o t b i d , torm of con fract .
plans. specif i c ations , and
form s of ·bid bond , per
formance and paym ent bond ,
and other documents, may be

examined and are obtainab le
at tt1e Village H all , Syrac use,
Ohi o, upon t he paym E-nt of the
s um or SlO 00 . wh i ch is not
refundab le.
All bids m ust be in plain
sealed emrelo pe s ma rk ed on
tn.e outs id e " B id for Mun icipa l
Ten n is Cou r ts , Vi ll age o f
Syracuse , Ohio . " Each bidder
m u s t have on the outs. ide of th e
b id envelope hiS name and
address, and each bid must be
accompa n ied bY a bid bond or
c erti f ie d check in amount o f 10
percent of the total b id , The
bid bond shall be co nd i tioned
tha t If the bid i s accepted a
contra ct will be entered Into
and It s performan ce proper ly
If the bid embraces both
labor and matela l s such Items
shall be se-parat£&gt;1y sl ated with
the pr ice thereof .
No bidder may w ithdraw his
bid for a per i od o f si x t y days
from the da te of the b id

opening .

,

Th i s pro l ec t is f ederally
assisted
Contra c ts to be
awarded under thi s irwita tion
for b!ds w i ll be subjec t to
Presidential Exec utive Order
No . 11246
requiring .a f .
firmlll i ve a ction for eqUal
employment

opportunity .

Contractors are further ad·
vised that the January 25, 1972

Equal

Employment

Qp .
portun i ty Execufiye Order of

the GoYernor of Ohio is also
to thi s bid In -

appli cable
vitation .

The owner reserve s tt1e
r i ght to wafye informa li t ies or
to rejec t any and i'lll bids .
svccesstul b i dder ,must
proceed w i th the work wi th in
two weeks. of the sing i ng of the
contra.ct and the project must
. be fully completed wilh in 30
work ing days ther ea fter ,
: e~cept _ing only suct-1 delays as
may be occasioned by st r ikes,
unseasonable weather or acts
Of God .
VILLAGE OF SYRACUSE.
OHIO

By Herman H . London , Mayor

(5 ) 12 , 19 . 2tc

DRIVE-IN

Fri ., Sat., Sun.
May 13-14-15
Double Feature

MOTHER JUGS
&amp; SPEED PG
Plus

TAKE A HARD
RIDE PG

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

water

sec ured .

On this day in history :
In 1922, the magazine
1
'Radio
Broadcast "
conunented : " ... the rate of
increase in the number who
spend at least part of an
evening listening to radio is
almost in~omprehensible. ''
In 1937, George VI was
crowned king of England,
succeeding his brother
Edward, who abdicated to
marry American divorcee
Wallis Warfield Simpson.
In 1949, Soviet authorities
announced the end of a land
blockade of Berlin that had
lasted 328 days and whose
effects had been neutralized
by the famed "Berlin
Airlift."
In 1975, the White House
disclosed that a cambodian
gunboat had fired upon the
U.S. cargo ship "Mayaguez"
in the Gulf of Siam and forced
it into a Cambodian port.

~WASON

TO WIN PATCHES
NEI1i0NVILLE - Medical
Assistant students who have
successfully completed their
first year at Hocking
Technical College will have a '
Patching Ceremony at 2 p.m.
Sunday in HTC's Lecture
Hall,
Among students
receiving their patches will
be Barbara t&gt;.ndrews, L&lt;&gt;ng
Bottom.

'

Save upto96%
ofthefeeon
Travelers Checks.
Buy up to 15,000 worth of
First National City Travelers Checks
for only a 12fee during the Big May Sale.

~

Neck sizes 14 112 to 17 112. Sale includes our
entire stock -

!

l
!
!
l

white, solid colors. patterns.

~~~tr~" :e~~~~t_er blends. double knit. all

with

Men's 56,95 Dress Shirts.. . .. .. ........ ... s5.65
M ' sa 95 Dr
sh· t
s7 25
en s ·
ess 1r s .. • .. •• · • • • •• • •• • ·
Men's$10.00 Dress Shirts ............... 58.15
Men'sS12,50 DressShirts .... , .... .. ....$10.15
Men'sS14.00DressShirls .•.••••..••••• S11.J5
Men'sS16.00 Dress Sh1rts .. . ........... 512·.95

4

~

PATCH POCKET

WRANGLER WESTERN JEANS

•
Sizes 29 to 40 waist , lengths 30 to 36 il)ches.
100 per cent cotton blue den im, flare leg.

+

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

BOY;w~~~~ s;~~RTS

.
$11.:5 Regular Demm .•_. ................. $8,99
512 , 5 Pre- Washed Den1m •.••.••.•...•.• $9,99

!

Short sleeve knits in solid colors, rugby
stripes. smart color. combination . Sizes 8 to
20. Boys tank tops and all of our boys short
sleeve knit shirts are included in this sale .

/~

..

.

-~~~~~~~~~.:.:::.:.::.:.S!~+~:::~~~~:-----~
. TWO DAY SALE!

DENIM

ON THE 1st FLOOR
-SMAU.lDTMEN'S AND WOMEN'S .

~ IHJw much .)00 S8\te,

.l

I ·

·~

$5,000
2,500

i,ooo
500

'
If

M1y FH

'I'OU SAVE

$50.00
25.00
10.00
5.00

$2.00
2,00
2.00
2.00

96°/o

1!

QUADRIGA PERCALES
Regular price $1,69 yd. Includes our entire .
stock of Quadriga solid colors and patterns.
36 inches wide. 100 per cent cotton.

.I
!

I'''' h.•h: I• • " ·"' ,, n.ll·" ~ ., ,..,, ,,.

\l lli" lll•" ~ I 1!'.1

N,n10111.1l C111 11 ,1\ &gt;" ii.·r•

1

.r-, -.;,,,,.,L,t &lt;·;,\ r.. ".-~ ,...... &lt;·lh.·,·k·

,·,m I! IW

\" " . 111

"n·IIW·•t••l rdunol .u

(·he&lt;~' 1\of!M,ol \ ,ol.' U1" I I~&lt;"'""' "'
, ln d \,IH'U ill! l'lf• "~ nf lll\'kl" I ~~· rho.; tn .

, ",.~ -1 ~ IKKif, •·:11 " "" "'' lfi &lt;IIi i, lo• ll u111

"-h..:n..·•c·r )'HI !'' ••"' ' ·''·'' "on

''""'"
~
lh11

. And rf lht:l ).:&lt;"1 \,,.,, ,,r •1• •ku I • ~·

-.d ;, h.o1·~ h &gt;11 .111 h&gt;l ,/ r.-l uud

Hq&lt;. tiiW

1,n1d• "'' ""l" th:m ,&gt;Ill ·~ l k"l

(."1;...•

I 1N

~10&lt;'"

!'· "'"'-""

/1. .II IPI\. ol ( "tt 1 I1;II ,·lo·r.
Ill \1.1\ ·''"''·' ' ' "·

ss~

SJ~

HOME NAnONAL

BANK
RACINE

Reg. 56,00 ............................. Sate 55.10
Reg . .$7.00 ............................ Sale$5.95
Reg. $9,00 •••••••••••u ••••••••••••••• Sale $7.65

·

12•48

GENERAL ELECTRIC $15.95
STEAM

&amp; DRY

IRON

Has non stick coated .saleplate famous G. E.
quality,

$J245

I
.
r----~-;wo--;;;ys;~;-

"''

DECORAtOR INDUSTRIES
CUSlOM MADE DRAPERY SALE

SAVE 30%
. Buy your cuslom drapes now. big selection
of colors, patterns. bring in your
.measurement.
Save so per cent on custom made
bedspruds available inc!ividually or

n.40

NO-IRON

BED SHEETS

50% Polyester 50% Cotton - Solid Colors.

t

-Excellent selection of styles and colors
-Junior and women's sizes 5-6 to 13 and 8 to
14,

PRE~;;i~y ~~~~OS

I
!

Solids &amp; Prints
Sizes 3/6 to 11!14

!

Reg . $11 .00 ........................... Sale $9.35

LimE
and

REG. 120.00 to 123.00 ................ SALE 116.49

I!
I

PEARL JEWELRY

By United Press International
. aJLUMBUS -THE OffiO GENEIU.L ASSEMBLY is in
weekend recess, having placed a major Democratic-drafted
voter registration bill in position for a House Ooor vote next
week after inserting some safeguards against fraudulent
registration and voting practices.
Before pushing the bill out of committee on a party line
vote of 8 to 4, the Democrats sought to nullify a pair of prime
Republican objections by requiring the state to reimburse
local goverrunents for the increased cost of the new liberalized
registration procedures and compromising on th~ deadline for
closing the regular pre-&lt;!lection registration period. But the bill
still contains its most controversial provision - voter
registration at the polls on election day .
CINCINNt&gt;.TI - THE FEDERt&gt;.L ENVIRONMENTJ\L
Protection t&gt;.gency has been urged by the Ohio River Valley
Water Sanitation Commission (ORSANaJ) to help pay for a
"critically needed" $304,000 early warning system to detect
poisons in the Ohio River.
·
The OHSt&gt;.NaJ move came Thursday in the wake of
complaints earlier this year about inadequate warnings for
carbon tetrachloride spills in the river. The early warning
system proposed by ORSi\NaJ would consist of 10 monitors
placed at "strategic locations" in the river. The monitors
would detect unusually high levels of poisons and give water
treatment plant officials time to take anti-poison measures.
aJLUMBUS - THE PRESIDENT OF THE Ohio Electric
Utility Institute said Thursday President Carter's energy
program is "an important step forward" in meeting fuel
shortages, but raised objections to several portions of the plan,
"The President is to be admired for facing the energy
crisis squarely," said John R." White, president of the Ohio
Edison Co. and representing Ohlo's eight investor-owned
electric companies. ''We are in favor of some of the
President's proposals and concerned about others," White
said. "We believe a soWld and workable energy program can
be developed on tile basis of Mr. Carter's program if energy
producers, legislators and regulators work harmoniously
toward realistic goals."
HONG KONG - A STRONG EJ\RfHQUt'.KE has struck
the area of northeast China where thousands were killed by a
devastatirig quakes last July, a dispatch from Peking said
today.
.
·
Chinese officials today confirmed. the Thursday quake,
. saying it measured 6.6 on the open-ended Richt~r scale,
according to the dispatch by the West Gennan news agency
DPA from Peking. DPt&gt;. said the quake had its epicenter at
Winho, near . the industrial city of Tangshan which was
virgually flattened by last year's tremors. Tangshan is about
100 miles southeast of Peking and about 1,200 miles north
northeast of Hong Kong.
HOLLYWOOD -ENTERTt&gt;.INER JIMMY Ct&gt;.GNEY, 77,
whose far-canging talents encompassed both gangster movies
and musicals, was ho!!Pitalized today and hospital employes
(Continued on page 10)

,\BIDJt&gt;.N, Ivory Coast
(UP!) - U.N . Jl.mbassador
t&gt;.ndrew Young says the
United States and other
Western nations should begin
a Marshall plan for i\lrica to
stem
the
s.p read
of
conununism arid upgrade the
economies of poOr nations.
Young, on an t&gt;.frican tour,
left Abidjan today for t&gt;.ccra,
Ghana without making a
statement at the airport.
Later in the day he was
scheduled to fly to Monrovia,
Uberia and on Saturday to
Usbon for weekend talks with
Vice President Walter

- NECKLACES AND EARRINGS
- SIMULATED PEARL

COATS

3 Piece and 2 Piece Suits Sizes 2 to 7
REG. 114.00................... ,....... SALE '9.19
REG. '17.00 .......................... SALE '10.99
REG. 119.00...........................SALE '11.99
REG. '21.00 .......................... SALE 113.59
REG. '23.QO ........................... SALE 114.99 I
REG. '29.00 .......................... SALE '18.79 I

l

BAG

BEAN

CHAIR

- Heavy Vinyl

Gold, blue, brown, green, black or red.

By DEBORAH FRAZIER

DENVER (UP!) - Old cowboys
like Roy Rogers don't retire, they
open restaurant chains and wait for
another good script.
Speaking with ihe twang three
decades of children came to know
and iove, Rogers outlined his return
to films after a 20-year break· and
· enumerated the activities that have
kept him busy in the interim .
"Some of the pictures out now 1
wouldn't let Trigger see," said
Rogers, still wearing a white hat and
his eyes crinkling into the familiar
smile, which has graced millions of
breakfast fond packages.
t&gt;. fihn called "MacKintosh and
T.J." put the 66-year-old cowboy
back in the saddle. Shot ·in West
Texas, tile movie has a washed-up
cowhand (Rogers) befriend a
wayward and fatherless boy, Clay
O'Brien. Rogers was in Denver on a
promotional tour.
t&gt;.ctually, Rogers never quit being
a cowboy. Mter 188 films, he stopped
making movies in 1957, but
maintained a brisk pace of rodeo

SALE $3588

TWO DAY SAlE!

&amp;

GIRLS DRESSES
COATS
-'- Entire stock on sale ,
·
- Sizes ·2 to 14
-And 3 mo. to 18 mo . .
_

REG. '7.00.•.••••••••••••..•••••••.•• SALE 14.59
REG. '9.00........................... SALE '5.79

REG. 113.00 ••.• •. ••. •· •............. •SALE '-49 _
'15.00:........................
'9.69
RE~. '18.00 ........................ SALE 111.69
· I REG. '21.00 ·---................. . SALE 113.59

REG.

SALE

·------·~----·---~. ~. ~~--~~-----· ______ ___1__·--··"-·~"-·~-·-------------~·~-·~~~-.---~----------~
OPEN SATURDAY 9!310 TC\ 5:00P.M.
I

'

,_

ELBERFE DS IN POMEROY

Mondale,
Young spent two days in
Abidjan meeting with U.S.
envoys posted in i\lrican
capitals and With President
Felix Houphouet-Boigny. ·
The outspoken bla~k
diplomat told a news
conference Thursday he
agreed with HouphouetBoigny that the problems of
Rhodesia and South i\frica
should be solved through
dialogue and "wltllout bloodshed."
Young said Western
nations must launch a
coordinated development
program that might do for

j

mind for the home. The
nursing home would contain a
chapel, recreation, therapy
and laundry facilities. He did
not further discuss sites.
The
committee
unanimously approved the
application of t\meritel for
reimbursement eligibility of
expenses related to capital
expenditures for the proposed
nursing home. The approval
of the committee will now be
subject to approval by the
trustees of the OVHSF.

The discussion brought out
that another firm has a
"certificate
of
need"
required for the construction
of a nursing home in Meigs
County but apparently is not
going to act on the project.
The approval of that firm
expires
on Aug. 10, this year.
President Walter Mondale,
George Meany, president of Presiding over the Thursday
the M'L-CIO, and Commerce night meeting was J. B.
Vanity, Jr., chairman, an
Secretary Juanita Kreps .
Mrs. Kreps praised the Athens attorney.
wblic works program and
t&gt;.ttending from Meigs
pointed out the money will be County were Charles Blakesused for such efforts as lee executive director of the
libraries and city halls. "This M~igs County Regional
long term legacy is as Planning Commission, and
important a part of the Robert Hoeflich of The Daily
legislation· as job creation," Sentinel.
she sa·id,

Jobs bill signed
By Laurence McQuillan
WASHINGTON (UP!) President Carter today
signed a $4 billion public
works bill to create 600,000
new jobs and also signed
a bill authorizing $20 billion in
revenue sharing funds .
" We've still got a long way
to go" before the economy
recovers, Carter warned at
the Rose Garden ceremony
attended by congressional
and labor leaders, governors
and mayors.
Carter hailed the public
works program, a key

Firemen put out

fire near Darwin
The
Pomeroy
Fire
Department Thursday was
called to SR 681 west of
Darwin to extingUish a brush
fire: t&gt;.t 3:49 p.m. the E-R
squad went to Homer Hill for
Margaret t'.llen who, suffering a dislocated shoulder,
was taken to Holzer Medical
Center.
At 10::'&gt;5 p.m. Thursday, the
lire department went to the
Whittekind residence at the
intersection of Butternul and
Brick Sts. where a clothes
dryer was on fire. Damage
was light.

i\frica what the Marshall
plan did for reconstruction of
war,devastated Europe.
"The Unlted States has to
do to help 1\frica some of the
things it did in Europe at the
end of the second world w~r, "
Young said. "Expansion of
communism was contail)ed
by a policy of development
through the Marshall plan."
"&amp;ld I think that what we
see now in Africa is the
beginning of a development
strategy for this continent,
which involves all the West ,
not
just
Western
governments but Western
business interests as well. "

element in his fiscal recovery
strategy, as a move ''to start
our national economy to a
normal
growth
in
prosperity.''
The Labor Department has
estimated the public works
program, which will be
administered at the state and
locallevel, will create at least
300,000
jobs
in
the
construction industry and an
additional 300,000 jobs in
related industries.
Carter said the unemployment rate had dropped I per
cent since he took office but
said it was not a tribute to his
administration but a return of
consumer and business confidence in the fiscal outlook of
the nation.
The general revenue
sharing bill releases $20
11
many legal arguments"
billion in funds for states and By CHARLES M, MADIGi\N which could be used to defeat
IL\RRISBURG, Pa. (UP!)
localities.
-Gov.
Miltpn J. Shapp said the commission's demand ·
Those crowded around
that he return the $300,000 in
Carter
included
Vice today he was appalled to federal matching funds,
learn of illegal contributions
"But as the law is written
to his presidential campaign
and pledged to return $300,000 that repayment is my responin federal funds the campaign sibility," he said.
Shapp left the news conferreceived because of the bogus
ence after reading the statedonations.
Shapp read a brief ment.
Michael McLaughlin, the
statement disclaiming any
involvement in the illegal governor's press secretary, ·
fundraising scheme said Shapp would not answer
Wlcovered by the Federal reporters' questions beq~use
Meigs will play Washington Election Commission but " he considers the matter for
personally
Court House at 10:30 a.m. refused to answer any himself as
about
the closed.''
Tuesday and Portsmouth questions
The FEC Thursday ordered
West will play Fairland in an coiill11iSslon~s report.
"I am appalled by what I Shapp· to return $300,000 in
afternoon semifinal contest of
the 1977 Class M District have read. t&gt;.t no time during presidential campaign funds
even
though
the
Baseball Tournament at Ohio the cilmpaign did 1 have any
millionaire·
governor
was
not
knowledge
of
improper
fundUniversity in t&gt;.iheris.
implicated in what the FEC
Meigs defeated New raising," Shapp said.
Shapp said !here were said was the first stage of an
Lexington Thursday to
ongoing investigation.
capture the Northeast Sec·
tional while Washington CH
won the Northwest Sectional.
Portsmouth West won the
Southwest Sectional and
Fairland downed Ironton to
Oeadl ine for getting money
Local Board at Education w i ll
capture the Southeast Sec- in from pledges for the Hike be he ld al 7: 30p.m . Tuesday
Bike must be In by Saturday, in the h i ~h school ca f eteria .
tional Thursday.
The 1977 Class t&gt;.A cham- M.ay 14 in order to qualify for
prizes. This money w ill be
The Pom eroy High School
pionship contest for district the
turned in to Mrs .. Rea Roush. Class of 1947 will meet
honors is 1 p.m . Thursday. Mrs. Jesse Might , Meigs Su nday, May 15 al 2: 30p.m .
This year's wirmer advances Community Menta l Health at the Royal Crown Garage
to Trenton (Butler County) Center in Pomeroy , or to on North Second Ave . in
Cleland Realty. The names of Middleport to ma.ke final
for the Class t&gt;.t&gt;. Regional. riders
and sronsors will be plans for Its 3ot h r eunion . All
Meigs is defending district announced a a later date .
members of thi s class are
and regional champions.
invited .

·Shapp will give
back $300,000

Meigs to
meet CH

Local notices1 briefs

CHESTER -

Roy Rogers, now 66, back in the saddle

1

Reg. s45•

Meigs County may be
Sam Calabretta, architect, profit in the first year of
representing
The Am.eritel operation.
farther today on the way to
gaining a new 100-bed nursing Corporation of Co lumbus,
Stalling the new facUlty
home facility.
met with the committee last was dlscuosed and although
M least this was tile in- night to outline the proposal the area does bave a demand
dication Thursday night when of the Ameritel firm .
for ounes and aides, It was
The presentation stressed felt that people could be found
the area wide Review
Committee of the Ohio Valley tile rommunity's need bas.ed to stall the home, There
Health Services Fo\llldation, on a Ohio Department of would be some 75 employes
1nc., met at the Meigs Inn. Health projecton of 205 needed, Calabretta said.
At this present time Meigs nursing home beds needed in
The projected rates for
County has no nursing home Meigs County and of 3,600 occupancy would be $28.50 a
facility and when tile last two population of 65 years of age day lor a private room (only
such establishments were and over in 1982.
four in the hoiile), $26 for a
Ameritel's
application semi private room (80 of
closed, aged residents had to
be sent as far as 150 miles projected an occupancy rate these) and $23 a day for a
from the county for ac- of 95 percent after the second ward. Caiabretta told the
quarter of operation and a committee he has two sites in
commodations.

Barbecued

served by the Chester
Volunteer F i re Dept . on

REG. 13.00 NECKLA,CES ............ SALE '2.19
REG. '30.00 to '34.00 ··.... ·· ........ ·SALE '23·49 I REG. 14.00 NECKlACES ............ SALE. '2.59

·,

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

chicken and spare r i bs will be

REG. '2.00 EARRINGS":' .......... SALE 11.49

TWO DAY SALE!

FRIDAY. MAY 13, 1977

Afro-Marshall Plan asked

~~~~00.~~~~ ..~~=~~~-~~~+~G·.::~ ~~lACES:: ...... ~... SALE 319

BOYS'

SUITS

TWO DAY SALE!

TWO DAY SALE!

l

Reg. $10.00 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Sale $8.50

- - - - - - - - - - - - - · .....

OHIO

lm ...........

TWO DAY SALE!

$7'11

, JUMP SUITS

TWO DAY SALE!

RACINE

Lee 14•49 14 oz. ue

40

!
I
!

..-----·-------------..----

Meigs County
People

L

$1

Reg. $17.00 .......................... Sale $14.4.5

A Home Bank
For

'16.95

1 Pre-Washed No Fault .Denim: ........ ..... '14.88
· ! Wrangler 114.95 No Fault Denim ......... '12.88
.
. ,
Bl Den..
,

Reg. saoo.....................:. Sale '5.99
$6.99 Full Bed (Flat or Fitted)
$5.90
1
I
Reg. $1 tOO .:.. -. --............. Sale '8.29
. I $S.49 Twin Bed ( Flal or Fitted)
. $4.60
1
59,99 Queen Bed ( Flal or Fitted)
$8,50
19
I $13.99 King Bed (Flat or Fitted)
$11 90
! Reg. 115.00 .................... Sale 111.29
I 55.49 Pair King Pillow Cases
$4.60 ~r.
!
120.00 .................... Sale 114.99
.,__.._.... "~ ,:__ _ _~~------+-.::~:::~:::w Ca~=-~4·~.0 ~r··--f-Reg. .______ _..._,.._..__ .....__I

Reg. ss.oo ............................. Sale 54.25

QnJv "1 US lind Pv&amp;rto R&lt;eo-11nd ends May ::11. 1977

~i~~L~ENIM

Sizes 27 to 42 waist, select your correct
length .

JE'.IS

CANNO;o~~~s;~~~LLO

TWO DAY SALE!

- Tanks. sleeveless and half sleeves
- Sites S,M, L and S-6 to 48.

92%
80%
60%

10A9

en tine

Meigs nursing home
proposal is accepted

•

_j,_~-~!J~~~.:~.::.::.::.::~~!~.-11-····~o~o·r-d_i,~~o.~-"m~·_"a~•:,..h,_y_o"u_r.d_r.a_p.e_r_i:~--

WOMEN'S TOPS

lllual Fee

!.

Boys sur Jeans ••••••• ··• •• sgao
· ·~••••••
.
sg50,
Boys s1195 Jeans •••••

!

Denim ............

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

'12•99
'1199

STRAIGHT LEG JEANS

Jeans •••••••••••••• Sfi I
l Boys $895 Jeans••••••••••••••.s7a
. ....•.•. ..••.
l
Boys sg95 Jeans
Boys

Radiant control for uniform toasting, 2 slice
size for bread, waffles, muffins , heal'n
serve foods .

___

1.

Regular sizes. slim sizes, husky sizes 8 to 1.6
and student sizes 26 to 30 waist .

s29

..........

Denim ................ . 1

All of our boys jeans .included for this
special sale.

95

----------,~---"

I '14.49 lee 14 oz. .

AND

---~~~~~~~~ Boys Sfi95 Jeans..............

$2100

.·

!

Corduroy, blue denim. 100 per cent cottons,
. cotton polyester blends .

SUNBEAM

1

1 115.99 Wran&amp;ler 14 oz.

Dent"m

----- !~~~~~~?:~~~:::.:::.~-

. , Y S FASHION JEANS

! I.UE.

DEPARTMENT

1 '16•95 Wrang1er .No FilllIt

Wrangler

Me , Pr
Included m th1s sale, small lot of
n s
eWashed Denim Jackets. Regular price

l

•

MEN'S

PRICE

1~

!I

IN THE NOTIONS"

to -16.

0

Blue denim. corduroys and brushed denim,
sizes small, medium, large and extra large .
Regu 1atr Price $11.95 and $12.95. Limited
quijn 11 y .

!

TWO DAY SALE!

!

Five-digit number 71000,

Unlined, authentic Western styling, sizes 36

TWO~~YN~~;~~;~LE!

1

BOYS '3.95 KNIT SHIRTS................. 1319
.
,419
BOYS ,4.95 KN IT SHIRTS .................
.

•

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

!

BOYS 12.95 KNIT SHIRTS................. 12.49

833,

WESTERN JACKETS

I

NO. 21

L01TERY WINNERS
'l'blo week's winning Ohio
Lottery numbers:
'l'hree-dlgit number 000,
'fhree.dlglt number -

-==~~hlsTo~~;.,~~~BWt~~~M

.TWO DAY SALEI
Amoonl ol
,.,.. Ct&gt;t&lt;:kt

VOL XXVIII

FRIDAY, MAY 13th- SATURDAY, MAY 14th
OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT TIL 8

~

Big May~~

at

TWO DAY SALE

AUTOMATIC TOASTER

ll"

•

ADVERTISEME NT

IN THE

COMMON PLEAS COU~T .

parades, opening 200 Roy Rogers
restaurants across the coWltry and
setting up his museum in Victorville,
Calif.
Snowmobiles and motorcycles
have replaced Trigger, who resides
in the museum. When the horse died
in 1960 at the ripe old age of 33;
Rogers said he couldn't part with the
friend who starred under him
throughout his career.
"I knoiv what happens to them
when you bury them, and 1'd seen a
lot of animals in museums, so I had
Trigger stuffed," he said. " I told
Dale tllat when I died to just skin me
and put me up on Trigger and I'd be
happy. " .
The golden palomino rears
eternally in a case along with Bullet,
the now-stuffed Wonder Dog and
Buttermilk, Dale's mount.
Between stops on the rodeo circuit
and charity . appearances, the
Rogers' relish time on their ranch,
visits ·from 16 grandchildren, hope
for a Kentucky Derby winner from
their race stable and plan new
restaurants.
·
t&gt;. daily l~utine of exercise keeps

'' America's Favorite Cowboy" flt
and he Oexes an firm bicep for an
autograph seeker to prove it. His
face is smooth, except for wrinkles
aroWld tile eyes from squinting intQ
countless sunsets.
Rogers said the first time he sang
" Happy Trails" was when he bid his
father and a job in a Cincinnati shoe
factory farewell for Califorpia,
Peach picking with migrants,
driving trucks and picking tunes on
his mandolin and guitar kept him
alive. When he heard Republic
Films was casting for a new singing
cowboy, he "saddled up my guitar
and went on over."
The rest is Western history.
Rogers remains the prototYPe
cowboy. Hand-tooled, two-tone
leather boots, embroidered shirts, a
gold ring l!haped like ai saddle.
"Ma'am" and "honey" dot his
conversation, soft spoken as ever.
"I've had some happy trails and
there isn 't too much else I want to
do. I love riding my motorcycles. I
guess I'd make another film, if I
could find a good story, but I'm
happy," said Rogers.

'

Memor it}l Day. Activ ities will
begin at 10: 30 a .m . w ith a

The

final

meeting

to

orga nize the Meig s Girls '
So ftball League, both junior
and senior divi ! fons , will be

Sunday. Ma y 15 at 4 p.m . at

tractor pull and serving to
fol low at 1 1: 30 p.m . A parade

the Royal Crown Garage on

wilt be held for memorial

dleport. Every team to be in

services at 1: 30 p .m .

th e league this

North Second Ave . in Mid-

have a

•
PJ\MVt&gt;.UGHP.N, RECIPIENT of a basketball scholarship
at Rio Grande CollegH:ommunity College, is the first girl
from Meigs County to win an athletic scholarship. She is a
5!'nior at Meigs High. •

Pam Vaughan signs to
play for Rio Redwome
RIO GRANDE _ Pam
Vaughan, Meigs High School
girl's basketball team caplain, win receive an athletic
scholarship from Rio Grande
.College-Commumty College .
Redwomen coach Diane
Lewis _said the 5:8" forward,
who wtll enter R10 Grande ~s
a freshman in the fall, Is the
first girl from ·Meigs CoWlty
ever to r~ceive an athletic
scholarship.
"Pam has a nice outside
shot and moves the ba 11
well/' Lewis said. "We're
really happy that she decided
to come to Rio Grande."
Vaughan, Who averaged
18.9 points per game her
senior year, received· AA t&gt;.llState, team
honorable

By CRAIG A. PALMER
WASHINGTON ( UP!)
Organized medicine joined
the nation 's hospitals today in
opposing President Carter'~
proposed ceiling on hospital
costs as "not ... in the best
interests pf patients."
In congressional testimony,
th e American MedieaJ
Association
said
the
administration plan offers no
cost protection for individual
patients.
1
'1t seems inescapable to us
that the 'cap' on spending will

Yo.u•h night is
being planned
Youth night will be observed at a revival at the
Racine Baptist Church this
evening . The youth will sing
and Donella and Robin
Manuel will present a
specialty number .
Saturday night a choir from
the Leon Baptist Church,
Leon, W. Va ., will present
vocal selections and specia l
numbers will be presented by
a trio and a quartet from !hat
church. Services start at 7:30
p.m . and are open to the
public.

year must
tt'lere .

·M ining map is
available now
lt is interesting to note
that each of Ohio's 88 counties
11

tias mineral production,· ~
said Horace R. Collins, Chief
of ODNR's Division of
Geological Survey.
Compiled by Susan L.
Duffield, of the Division of
Geological Survey, the map is
based
on
information
provided by.the Ohio Division
of Geological Survey.
The ptlblicalion will be of
interest to commercial users
of mineral products, land-use
planners , geologists and
others concerned
with
(Co~~tinued on page 10)

mention .
"Pam will be adding
strength to an already good
team," Lewis noted. The Rio
Grande Redwomen posted a
15-3 season and, with the
signing of Vaughan, are
looking forward to an even
better record next year.
Lewis said two other high lb
school sen iors have been
accepted to try out for t)le Rio
team, Candy Pfeifer, 5'5"
guard from Waverly and Kim
Ramsey, 5'1().' forward from
Springfield's Northwestern
High School, will also receive
scholarships.
Vaughan is the daughter. of
Frank and Reva Vaughan
who live in Pomeroy.

Doctors oppose
·limit on costs ·

r~presentative

A meeting of the Southern

COLUMBUS - t&gt;. map
showing the lbcations of coal
and other mineral mining and
quarry locations in Ohio is
available to the public from
the Ohio Department of
Natural Resources (ODNR ).
"Mineral Industries Map of
dhio," ·locates the un~
derground and surface coal
mines reporting production of
5,000 tons of coal or more
during 1974, The map also
shows the distribution of
gy psum, limestone, salt, sand
and gravel, sandstone and
shale or clay mines and
quarries.

'

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Sunday
through
Tuesday, lair Sunday and a
chance of showers Monday
or Tuesday. Highs wl11 be
In the upper 70s or the 80s
and lows will be in the SOs.

result in second.,.ate care,
and some care may simp ly
become unavailable for many
people," lh e J\M't&gt;. told a
House hea lth subcommittee
considering
Carler's
proposal.
The President wants to
limit hospital revenues l9 an
annual rate of !Hl per cent,
dependin g on economic
cOnditions. and to allow no
more than $2.5 billion worth
of new capital expenditures
at the 6,000 affected faci lities.
This is half the level of capital
improvements in recent
years.
Hospitals uniformly have
opposed the plan, but the
i\MA's position had not been
spe Ued out in detail.
The runerican Hospital Association. which said earlier
that doctors and hospitals
would unite to fight the cost
control bill in Congress, also
w.a s scheduled to testify
today .
i\Mt'. argued in prepared
testimony that Carter's bill
singles out the health care
L~dustry for special controls
as Richard Nixon did with his
"discredited ., opprobrious"
ec onomic s tabili 2:atio n
program which began in 1971.
" In our view this legislation
would not be in the best
interests of patients,' '. said
Dr . Raymond Holden, a
Distri ct
of
Columbia
physician and chairman of
the t&gt;.Mt&gt;. board of trustees .

Middleport E-R
unit is called

:·:·:·:·:-:-:·:·:-:-:-:-:·:·:·:·:·:-:-:-:·:·:·:·:·:-:·:-:·:·:·;·:-:-:·:-:-:··

Weather
Cloudy Saturday wi th highs
between 75 and 80. qoudy
tonight, lows between :;() and
55 .
Probability
of
precipitation 10 per ce nt
today, tonight and Saturday.

APPLY FOR LICENSE
Making application for a
marriage license Thursday in
Gallia County Probate Court
were Homer Junior McMillin,
18, Bidwell , cook, and Sheila
Jean Harrison , 17, Gallipolis,
waitress.

The Middleport E-R Squad
was called to 312 Pearl St ., at
7:47 a.m. Friday fo r Susan
Veith who had fallen . She was
ta~en to Holzer Me .: :~ al
Center by private car.
At 10:45 a.m . Thursday th •
Middleport unit wept to 522
Grant St., lor Mrs. Florence
McLa ughlin , ·a possibl e
stroke victim . She was taken
to Holzer Medical Center . At
2:28 p.m.,. the squad answered a ca ll for Pomeroy to
Main St. for J erry Ward,
Middleport, who also had
suffered a possible stroke in
his auto. He was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital
where ha was admiteyd. ·.

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