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                  <text>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. ·.

�3-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Frida)', May 13, 1m

2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. friday, May 13, 1977
,.

ON TO WASHINGTON - These 17 pupils of the
Tuppers Plains Elementary School will join 700 regional
school safety patrol youngsters with 56 chaperones on a
trip to Washington, D. C. on June 3 for a three day trip of
sightseeing. Pictured are, front (1tor ), Brian Well, Jackie
Brandon, Mark Rice; second row, Pam Murph;;, Kelli
Headley, Lisa Collins, Sharon Griffin , Laurie Lance,

Tammy Cremeans, Cheryl Humphrey, Clarence Pack.
safety and education director of the Automobile Club of
Southern Ohio which plans the trip ; back row, Bea
Douglas, principal, who will be making the trip as i
chaperone; John Davis, Mark Riddle, Gerald Watson,
Elwood Myers, Mark Goodis, Jinuny Bauman and Mike
Connolly.

GAHS edges Waverly
8-7 in makeup match

Social
Calendar

SUNDAY
COUNTY WIDE prayer
meeting, 2 p.m. Sunday at
Bald Knob Gospel Mission
with Glen Bissell as class
leader.
AN NU AL Homecomin g,
Naomi Baptist Church, Sunday . Dinner between 2 and 3
p.m. with guest speaker, the
Rev. Douglas Carter to speak
at 3 p.m. Special music.
Public
i nvited .
PUBLIC RECEPTION for
Mary Kibble, former resi·
dent , to be held Sunday from
2 to 4 p.m. at the Recreation
Hall, Reedsville. All friends
and neighbors invited by
hosts, Mr. and Mrs. David A.
Smith.
MONDAY
.J
SALEM Center PTA
Monday, 7:30 p.m. Special
recognition of grandmothers
and grandfathers. Program
will be presented by band
under direction of David
Bowen, director.
MEIGS Band Boosters last
meeting of the school year
Monday, 7:30 p.m. in band
room al high school. In·
stallation of officers for next
year.

Gallia Academy High
School rallied to defeat host
Waverly 8-7 in a Southeastern
Obio League makeup game
Thursday evening.
Jimmy Harris' double
scored Tim Carman with
what proved to be the winning
run in the top of the seventh
inning.
In the - bottom of the
seventh, Brent Johnson, third
Gallipolis pitcher of the
game, struck out the side to
preserve the GAHS lead ·and
victory.
The triumph left Gallipolis
I~ on the year and 6-4 inside
the league. Waverly dropped
to 3-11 inside conference play.
Today, the Blue Devils wiU
host Wellston (:Hi) in a
regularly • scheduled league
game, starting at 5 on
Memorial Field.
In Thursday's makeup
game, GAHS · ~ravved a 2-ll
lead with single runs in the
first two rungs before
Waverly exploded with four
big runs in the third off
starting hurler Chuck Lane.
The Tigers led o1 after four,
and 7-5 going Into the sixth
rung.
Art Foglestrom relieved
Lane in the third and hurled
two innings before Johnson
took over. The GAHS hurlers

•

'58 CADILLAC RESTORED- Lisa Jett, daughter of Linda Jet!, is the first girl to enroll
in the auto mechanics class at Meigs High School. Lisa, with Tom Harper, restored a 1958
Cadillac owned by Lisa's mother. The vehicle has been owned by four persons, the original
owner being the late Ernest Duerr, who purchased the vehicle from the Karr and VanZandt
Agency in Pomeroy. The car, when Mrs . Jell purchased it, had 37,000 miles on it; today it
has 73,607, and "runs like a top". Lisa and Tom, with the technical ,assistance of Bill
Matlack, restored the vehicle,. Richard Coleman, instructor, above, stated that they
managed to lind a transmission and Uza and Tom with help of Matlack, made the
modifications. According to Coleman, Liza is a solid "B" student in her class. lA are Tom,
Lisa and Mr. Coleman.

Nixon takes credit for
containing Israeli War :~;.~~~~~~~~~~~~-~~~~~..~~.~~~,.
Let's talk about our teens

By PAMELA REEVES
WASHINGTON (UPI )
Richard Nixon , reminiscing
on the foreign policy he saw
as the hallmark of his
presidency, says detente and
his
own
" godfather"
firmness kept Israel in line
and avoided confrontation
with the Soviet Union in the
1973 Mideast War.
Obviously at ease and
apparently happy discussing
with British broadcaster
David Frost Thursday night
the foreign policy he
·, regarded as his best
contribution to history, the
former Pre;sident pictured
himself
not Henry
Kissinger - as the man who
made the big decisions.
Kissinger, Nixon said. was
a genius, but brooded about

decisions after they were
made and had his head
turned by starlets and
Georgetown parties.
Nixon explained why he put
the- nation on nuclear alert in
1973 - while Israel and the
Arabs were engaged in the
Yom Kippur war.
Nixon said Egypt, once the
lighting turned in Israel's
favor, asked' for "a joint
American-Soviet force to
come in and keep the peace."
Nixon said he regarded the
idea as "sheer madness. "
But Nixon said, he got an
"omi nous " note
from
Brezhnev saying the Soviets
would move into the Mideast
by themselves if the United
States did not participate.
It was then, Nixon said,
that he ordered the alert.

Lawrence E. La'!lb, M.D.

Poor diet affects hair

.

milk.
There are two other
possibililles - you lriay have
an iron deficiency wltich' will
cause loss of hair even if you
do not have an anemia or if
you are overdoing lti-potency
vitamins you may be getting
too much vitamin A which
can cause a loss of hair.
About 85 per cent of the hair
follicles have normal hair
growth while the remaining
follicles rest. The resting
follicles are not dead, just
sleeping. Since the scalp hair
has a life cycle between two
and six years this usually
doesn't affect the abundance
of scalp hair.
During the last part of
pregnancy more than 90 per
cent of the hair follicles are
active. Because of the natural
life cycle for hair about two
or three months after
delivery·a larger than normal
amount of follicles enter the
resting stage. The older hair
drops out and is not immediately replaced with a
new growth of hair. The
woman is frantic if she
doesn't know about this. She
is not losing her hair or going
bald but is simply readjusting
to the normal ratio of resting
and active hair follicles. In a
few months time her normal
hair growtll pattern will be
reestablished.
Many diseases can cause a
loss of hair. If a person has
unexplained loss of hair it is a
good idea to see
der·
matologist. In your case I am
sure he will suggest that a
better diet will help your hair ·
growtll regardless of what
other factors may be involv·
ed. '
For information about a
healthy skin and how to keep
it that way send 50 cents for
The Health Letter number
7-10, Your Skin: Sun, Aging,
Spots and Cancer. Include a
long, stamped self-addressed
envelope for mailing. Send
your letter to Dr, Lamb in
care of tlus newspaper, P.O.
Box 1551, Radio City Station,

a

NewYor~N . Y.I0019.

to win

·•rt was because we did not
want to have major powers
rubbing together in a critical
area of the world like the

-at Jackson
'·

•·

Break seen in Rosenberg .case

HEALTH

By Lawreoce E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - I am
an 18-year-&lt;Jld girl with hair
that just about r&lt;:aches my
waist. In the last three weeks
large amounts of 11 comes out
whenever I brush it or wash
it. It has never done this
before and has always been
beautifully thick and it has
never been cut shorter than
mid-back length.
I'm 5 feet 5 and I try to
maintain my weight between
112 and 115. I eat toast for
breakfast, some type of fruit
for lunch and a iarge green
salad with cheese and several
kinds of raw vegetables for
dinner. I also drink a couple
of cups of coffee a day. I eat
' some type of meat usually
once a week.
I gain weight very easily so
I diet pretty severely. Is there
some type of vitamin or
mineral that I'm lacking? I
take a multi-vitamin tablet.
I am very upset about
what's happening and I w.ould
appreciate it if you could tell
me what is wrong or what
type of doctor I should see.
Can you suggest a low calorie
food I can use to replace
whatever I am lacking?
DEAR . READER - This
may be a temporary problem
for you. The most important
feature of your story is your
terrible diet. If you have
given the true facts you have
a protein deficiency. Proteinaeficient diets will lead to loss
or hair, as will semistarvation crash diets or pro- longed illnesses associated
with inadequate intake of
calories and particularly protein. Dieting and hair loss
have a well known cause and
effect relati011Ship.
What low calorie food can
you eat? I would suggest at
least seven ounces and
preferably 14 ounces of lean
meat every day. Actually 14
ounces of lean beef with the
fat removed before cooking
contains less than 600 calories
and will provide the protein
you need. You need calcium
whll:h you shodld get from

can . there be between teen rocks to break the boring for
acceptance,
un· key to successful handling.
in 1971. a moye widely music and law enforcement? silence of simple existence. derstanding and approval.
We in this department
There is a fine line between appreciate what you are
regarded as the most Man~. officers will tell yo~ At this point the youngster is
significant accomplishment that disturbmg the pea.ce trymg subconsciously to " tolerate"
and
per- going through while raising
of . ~is presidency.
frequently
mvoives
tee~s break the home times, and if missiveness . A parent can your teen youngsters and we
Mideast, " he said . 1 '1t was
.I w as the one, as lie. playmg their music at audio the pa:ents show disgust and adjust to hearing the type of will always help make your ·
because of that, that 1 (K.issmger ) of course agrees, ~. levels that rattle doors. repulsiOn , he makes his first music teens enjoy, while at job easier whenever tltis is
decided that we had to take a who raised the ISSue and kept wmdows.. even mmds, break from parental control, the same time demanding possible. We solicit your
strong position."
pressing the issue," Nixon resultmg m neighbors bemg making new associations that sensible volumes in use cooperation
with
this
Nixon said the move said . " But he pursued it with dnven up the wall. Therefore, with outsiders who accept be observed to spare the department where teens are
worked - deterred the enormous enthusiasm."
law . enforcement . and teen those things - music and neighbors and their own involved to make local law
Soviets -because of detente,
Nixon said Mao was in music do come mto direct otherwise - in which he finds tranquility. Parents can enforce.;,ent a smooth funcand because Brezhnev knew control of his country even in confrontation. And, this can enjoyment.
accept, even promote, teen tioning process and an ac·
from previous conversations 1972 after he. apparently be the begmnmg of Granted, to most _adults parties in the home - with all cepted way of life. Such
that "we would not tolerate s"!.fered a partial stroke. .. development of an un· modern t':"n. mus1e IS not , the noise that accompanies- cooperation will make your
actions which would destroy
. Ah, he. wa.~ a colossuh
_cooperative attitude toward dissumlar m Its effect than a while insisting the rights of . teen's growing up years
Israel."
NIXon srud. Mao was m rul~ and laws m general.
cathartic overdose on an peace for others in the family much more enjoyable and a
Nixon, in a scathing put ~harge of himseil a~ he was
It IS not news to parents to empty stomach two hours and people living close by are fond memory when reaching
down
of
American m charge of Chma .
, ":"Y some':"here around the before church, but to forbid not infringed upon. The adulthood. _ Sponsored by
intelligence capabilities, said
He had less kmd words for IIIT]e a child turns 13 he 1s this and other popular teen parent unable to adjust to the wm. (Bucky) Walters Mark
he had been told just before Brezhnev.
attacked by what seems to likes and dislikes in the home noises of teen living, sets the v Store Middleport and
the war broke out that an
'_'Intellectually, not as adults to be a. strange music can have an adverse result. stage for building barriers in provided,by Chief of P~Iice J.
attack was unlikely "which quick as Khrushchev .. : bug. On reachmg th1s age, he The less the parent can all other areas of the teen· J Cremeans
shows you the brilliance of some~hat of a fashion plate is privileged to enjoy a type of tolerate the further away parent relationship. Setting
·Next Week : The No-Good
our intelligence."
·:· he hked ~eautiful cars. He music dating back to the from the family circle the rules and seeing to it they are Kid Down The Street.
And during the war, he liked beaubful women ... has
said, he was able to dissuade a lot of animal magnetism .. ,
Israel from destroying very eartl'ly in his humor ."
Egypt's 3rd Army through a
But he said, though
little reasoning.
Brezhnev was not as bright as
" If I may paraphrase from Khrushchev, he was "a much
the "Godfather/' he said. safer man to have sitting By RICK VAN SANT
~· .. ·············&amp;····.::.
........:--,X•:•;'ll
.. ··~~!!l:'j~
between field office and Russia . After court appeals .':.;~·:·:·.•-•.•-•.•
.•..-.·-•.•.-.-_;.-.v.
"We gave them an offer, ah, there with his finger on the
CINCINNATI (UP!)
headquarter material. Now, and a mercy campaign
that they, ah, could not button. "
Twenty-four years ago Julius an agent has admitted there failed, they were executed in ;-::
~~
refuse. '' '
lt was Kissinger, however, and '- Ethel Rosenberg were is material not sent to New York's Sing Sing prison
Nixon, being paid $600,000 who drew Nixon's sharpest electrocuted after being con~l~~:::
headquarters and in my June 19, 1953.
plus a share Of the profits for barbs.
victed of espionage in one of ' opinion, this cuts the ground
Meeropol was 10 at the
his televised interviews with
While
praising
his the most controversial and right out from under the time. He said he was fully ~~
Frost, said he knew at the secretary of state as a genius, celebrated cases in American
government's defense on this aware of what was happening
beginning
of
hi s Nixon also said he was history.
THAT OLD HOUSE
issue ."
·
and is now seeking to both I'm thinking of an old, old
administration ''We were
jealous . of competition ,
Thursday, the couple's son
house
Meeropol , here on a "clear my parents' name and
going to deal with great decided to resign "maybe claimed a victory in his long
That's ready to decay,
speaking
engagement
to
clear
the
alr
on
an
important,
events."
hail a dozen" times, was search to vindicate his raise money for his lawsuit current issue.' 1
I' m also thinking of the time
He said it was he - not· always having second parents.
When children there did play.
that so far has cost $100,000, is
"My parents' conviction It seenis I see this empty
Kissinger - who conceived thoughts about decisions and
Michael Meeropol, 34, who asking nine government sent a frightening mes5age
house
the idea of developing
"was not a personal uses the name of the family agencies to release 600,000 'through this country that When it was strong and new,
friendly relations with China
friend ."
that adopted him, said there files related to his parents' ·d issent is the same as A family lived within Its
walls,
has been a "breakthrough" in case.
treason," he said. "My Whose love was kind and
depositions his lawyers are
''I'm convinced my parents parents' case formed the
tru e.
taking !rom FBI agents in his were totally innocent of es- foundation for what happened
two-year old lawsuit seeking pionage ," said Meeropol, an in the Vietnam war I see a lovely br ide and
groom
release of government files assistant economics protests.
Wh ile passing thru the door.
on his parents' case.
professor at Western New
" One reason it took the They were so happy on that
" An FBI a·gent has England
day.
United Methodist Assistant - Darrell Cook, lay
College
in majority of people in this
admitted the existence of so- Springfield, Mass. "I believe country so long to believe the E' en tho' they were quite
ministerial appointments in speaker.
poor.
Coolville Charge - Tim called A-1 folders-reports they were victims of fraud Vietnam war protestors is They added to their humble
the Athens District have been
announced by Bishop Dwight Snyder , stud.ent, following from confidential informants and a frame--up."
that they the listened to
home
E. Loder this week showing Wesley Thatcher who goes to and raw material from
Meeropol's parents were · government lies and helleved A little at a time,
investigations-kept in field the first U.S. civilians to be the
protestors
were 1 Then later on, a baby came
19 changes among the 199 Little Hocking.
FBI offices and never sent to put to death as spi~s . Communists and Communist To give them joy sublime.
C.orning
Charge
local churches.
All these "pre-conference" Moxahala, Pleasant Grove, !he Washington headquar- Admitted members of the dupes.
Tbat baby grew and others
came,
·
assignments became official Portersville, Clarence ters ," said Meeropol.
Communist Party, the
"Had the American people
And
each
one
found
.'
.
:_We've
been
trying
to
~et
when they are "fixed" by the Thompson , lay speaker,
Rosenbergs were convicted not been taken in, they would Within the shelter aof place
that
field
repons
and
the
governbishop at the organization succeeding Donald
of turning over American have risen up sooner and
house,
ment's defense has been that atomic bomb secrets to ended the war a lot earlier." Where dwelt much lave and
session of the West Ohio Disbennet, deceased.
grace .
Crooksville Cha rge - there is nothing different
Annual Conference at
I
see the fam ily round the
Lakeside, Monday, June 13. James P. Freshour, !rom
fire,
Any changes in the interim Marietta Christ Associate,
Upon a wintry night.
will be announced at that following Harold Jeffers,
The father reads a message
from
time, according to Wesley taking leave of absence.
The Book that brings delight.
Gallipolis Grace Associate
Clarke, superintendent. The
Award of $9,482 grant to will be an orientation pam- local governments or Ifi·
- Chri stian King from
changes:
see them as they go to'
Ohio
for a project designed to phlet that summarizes basic stitutions of higher education, I Church,
New Marshfield-Union - United Seminary, Dayton,
per s 0 nne 1 rights and benefits in- the admission of State anq Which Is not far away.
Kenneth Slater, retired from succeeding Timothy Heaton provide
management
guidance to formation for county em- local government employees I see them join the others
New York State, following who moves to Dresden. '
there,
elect and appoint county ployees.
to Federal training courses,
Haydenville Charge David Ashworth, who goes to
And
them sing and pray.
officials
has
been
announced.
In
addition
to
grants,
the
graduate fellowships lor Theyhear
Nancy Mumma, student at
Aberdeen.
;Here
so happy and so
The funds will be used by Intergovernmental
Per- employees in administrative,
free,
Chesterhill
Charge METHESCO, following
Florence Arkley who goes to the County Commissioners' sonnel Act provides for the professional, and technical For they had found the Lord,
Association of Oltio to develop temporary assignment and occupations, and technical And fully trusted In His love.
the Logan Parish .
brought a great
a manual of county personnef· interchange of officials assistance in recruitment; Which
Little Hocking Charge reward.
•
the
Federal examining, and other perTHE DAILY SENTINEL
Wesley N. Thatcher from policies and procedures. The between
DEVOTED TO TifE
manual
will
include
the
·
government
and
State
and
I
see
that
couple growing old,
sonnel
management
areas.
Coolville Charge.
INTEREST OF
Their
children
all have gone.
general
policies
and
Maxville, South Harvey,
MEIGS-MASON AREA
I see them as they near the
for
an
procedures
necessary
CHEsTER l.. TANNEHILL
Webb's Chapel - Florence
end,
Elle&lt;:. Ed.
effective
personnel
operation
Arkley
from
Haydenville.
And
one Is left alone.
ROBERT HOEFLICH
But not for long , as Jesus
CilyEdilor
Bethany , Fellowship, as well as those specifically
Published daily e!l(1!pt Saturday
came
Otterbein, Oreville - Gerald required by State law. A
by The Ohio Valley Publi.shing UlmAnd
took fhat one away
illlY. 111 Court Sl., Pomeroy, Oh10
L. Selleck , student at second product of this project
nJe Medical Shoppe at 529 display of surgical and To loin the. others who had
45769. Business Offtce Phone 992tell.
METHESCO, following
21:;6 Ed.itonal Phone 992-2151.
Jackson Pike, Spring Valley diagnostic instrwnents. The
To live with God tor aye.
Karen Chrisley who goes to
Second class postage paid al
Plaza, will hold an open house public is invited to attend the
Pomeroy, Ohio.
Air
Force
chaplaincy.
Saturday,
May 14 and Sun- open house.
Yes, that old house Is empty
National 11dvertising tepri.'..Sen-Marietta Christ Church
SPEAKER NAMED
lative W11rd - Grif!tth Company,
now,
day, May 15 from I to 5 p.m.
Inc., Botlinelli arxl GaiWgher Div.,
Director
of
Christian
Which
once was tilled with
RUTLAND
Peter
both days.
151 Third Ave., New York, N.Y.
love.
Education - Douglas M. Pulkiye, a native of New
10017.
The Medical Shoppe is a
SPECIAL VISITORS
And we can !only think about
Subscription ral.eS : Deltvered by
Hughes diaconal candidate Guinea, and student of God's complete home health care
SYRACUSj;;-Visitors
of The blessi"9S from above
c-drrier where availi.lble IS cents per
from Ashland Theological Bible School at Cincinnati facility for all prescription Mrs. Christina Grimm un That fell upon the ones will&gt;
Wet!k . By Mulor Ruut.e where c-.arrier
loved
service nul ava ilable, One monlh,
Seminary, following James will speak this Sunday at 7:30 and non-prescription and
MOther's Day were her two O,r Lord so long ago,
f;J .25,. By mail in Ohio &lt;tnd W. V11.,
who
goes
to
Crooks·
p.m.
May
15
at
the
Rutland
Freshour
convalescent needs.
Ol1e Ye11r. 122.00: SiJ: months.
sons, Robert of ColwnbWl, But we c:an have His
ville.
Church of the Nazarene. A
II L50: Three months. S7. 00 ;
John
Adams,
area
blessings y•t.
and Mr. and Mrs. Reese
Elsewhere 126.00 year ; SUI. months
Southern Cluster Assistant girls' ensemble from the high representative of Halsom
And
lave we can bestow .
113 .50; Thr.ee months, 17 .50.
Grimm of Groveport, and Mr.
- . Florence Smith, lay school will sing. The public is Medical Supply Inc., wiU be
Sutv.&gt;~:ription prlt't tn c-ludes Sunda~·
and Mrs. Raymond T~uford
By Mrs. Riley Pigott,
Timcit-&amp;nUncl . ~
speaker.
invited~
at the store Saturday will! a l'(inersville .
• Long Bottom.
~

Girls rally

The Poet's
Comer

..,'
.·.
.'
·;
.'

The Meigs Girls softball
team ~aised its record this
week to 10-1 with a thrilling
15·12 win at Jackson after
being down 11-2 going into the
fourth uming. Kim Grueser,
taking over the pitching for
the winners in the third inning with the bases loaded
and no one out, bore down to
allow only one earned run the
rest of the game.
Meigs started the long
comeback in the fourth when
they scored two, got four in
the fifth, two in the sixth, and
won it in the seventh with five
runs. Tracy Burdette started
on the mound for the winners.
together Tracy and Kim
gave up 12 hits and 13 walks.
Burdette led the winners
with lour hits in four at bats
while Pam Vaughan had
three hits. Kelly Burdette
chipped in two doubles. Meigs
entertains Ironton tonight,
and the Marauder girls are
still waiting to get another
crack at Waverly, the only
team that has been able to
bea~ Meigs this year.

Manuel will show policies for persoiUlel

Open house set

'

Falcons win
sectional
championship
WINFIELD, W. Va. Wahama
High School
defeated Winfield &amp;-3 here
'T hursday for the cham·
pionsbip of Class AA baseball
tournament in Section 4,
Region IV, behind the four hit
pitching of Goldsberry and
Tucker, the latter coming on
in the fifth.
The Falcons collected 11
hits off Trlbbel who went into
the 7th when Wahama scored
its final four runs and Goebel,
who. relieved him.
In Section 3, Region· IV of
the Class AA tournament
Buffalo defeated Fort Gay 11&gt;1.
Wahama 100 Ill 4-8 11 0
Winfield
100 020 0-2 4 4
Goldsberry, Tucker (5) and
Thompson, Tribbel, Gobel (7)
and Milton.

Texas

American League
100 100 OOQ----. 2 11 0

Kan Ctv

ooo ooo ooo- o 4 o

Perry (2 -4) and Sundberg ;
Leonard (2 -21 and Porter.

Detroit
030 011 202~ 9 11 0
Milw
ooo 010 ooo-- 1 s 1
RQzema
(3-0l
and May ;
Travers, Rodriguez {6 ) and
Moore. LP ~Tr.:~vers (3·4) HRs
- Detroit, Le Flore (J). Kemp
(S_l; Milwaukee, Money (2l. _
110 01003D-6 13 S

314 ooo oox-

e 11 o

Hunter, Guidry (3}. Patterson
(7.) and Munson , Hea ly; R ic k
Jones, Moore. (2), Laxton (5),
Pagan (9) and Stinson. WP Moore (2-1). LP - Hunter- ( 1-2l ,
HRs- New York , Munson (6);
Seatt le , Meyer (5), Stein (3) .
Bait
001 031 ooo- 5 10 1
Calif
010 100 05x- 7 ll 1
Palmer , Ho ldsworth (8) and
Dempsey; Ross , K irkwood (5) ,
LaRoche (9) and Humphrey,
Hampton . WP- Kirkwood Cl -0).
LP- Palmer (52). HR - Cal ifor nia, Bonds (7)

..
'"

,,

By United Press International

_ROYAL !;.80WN·.
BOffiiNG COMPANY

Frigidaire

8(arof
beytbUYcS

•
-,

Look lor our Stars lor big savings

..

'

American League
East
W. l
Pet. GB

New York
Baltlmor
Milwaul&lt;e
Boston
Toronto
Detroit
Clevelnd

16 12 .571
14 11
14 14

1!;~:

.560

15 15 .500
.500

2
2

u 17 452

31!,
4

11 16 .407
. · .West

41J,

12 16 .429

.
Minnesot
Chicago
Texas
Oak land
Kan City
Calllorni
Se(llttl e

W. l

Pet. G8

19

11

633

18
15
17
15
14
11

11

. 621

'12

12 .556 2'h
14 .548 2112
15 .590 4
II .452 5'h
24 .314 10'h
Thursday 's Results
Texas 2, Kansas City 0
Detroit 9, M ilw_a ukee 1
Seattle a, New York 6
Ca l iforn ia 7, Balt imore 5
TDdav's Probable Pitchers
(All Times EOTJ
Boston &lt;Tiant 2-2) at Seattle
(Pole 0-ll, 10 :35_p .m .
Baltimore (May 3-3)
at
Oakland (La ngf9rd 3-1), 10 : 30

p.m .

New York (Figueroa 3-2) at
California (S impson 2-2L 10 : 30
p.m .
4-2) at
Texa s
( Blvteven
Kansas Ci ty (Gura 2-1), 8 :30
p .m .
,
Toronto (Lemanczyk 2-3) at
M innesota (Goltz 1-2) , 8:30 p.rn
Cleveland (Fitzmorris 2-3) at
Chicago (Stone 2-3L 8:30 p ,m .
Detroit (R uhle 3-31 a1 Mil waukee tCort 1-0L 8:30p.m .
Saturday's Games
Baltimore at Oakland
Toronto at M innesota
Cleveland at Chicago
Detroit at Milwaukee
Boston al Seattle, n ight
New York at Calif ., night
r Te xas atKan City , night

.

By DONALD BERNS
Sl'. WUIS (UP! ) - Vern
Rapp, earning a nickname of
Captain Hook, used three
pitchers Thursday in a onehitter, a 11&gt;-1 win for the St.
Louis Cardinals over the
Cincinnati Reds.
"I would have preferred to
stay in, ·• said John
D' Acquisto, the first of the
thtee. " I'm upset about it, but
Vern is the boss. If I yell at
him, I get it off my chest, but
what good does it do. He's the
boss. What he says goes."
D' Acquisto didn't allow the .
one hit and had struck out
five, including two in the
fourth inning, his last.
D' Acquisto was lifted for
pinchhitter Bake McBride,
who drove in the wlniling run
with a sacrifice fly with the
bases loaded: ·
"I could see the pinChhitter
coming," said D'Acquisto,
still looking for his first
decision of the season. "I
breezed through the fourth ,
but Vern pulled the plug on

me."
"Two reasons," said Rapp ,
about
lifting
D'Acquisto. " Jolin had
thrown quite a few pitches,
and I had to do something to
Charleston 14 9 .609 2
create offense. I knew he
Tidewater 13 10 .565 3
would be mad about it."
Rochester
11 12 .478 5
Buddy Schultz relieved in
Richmond
10 11 .476 5
Syr13cuse
9 13 ,409 61!1 the fifth and retired 14
Toledo
11 16 .407 7
batters before giving
Columbus
a 14 .364 71!2 straight
up
Cincinnati's
only hit, a
Thursday's Results
Columbus 9, Charleston 4 double by Ken Griffey. Then
Pawtucket 8, Syracuse 4 after striking
out Joe
Roche-ster 10, Richmond 1 Morgan, Schultz was gone.
Toledo 3, lidewater 2, 12
"I just kind of kicked the
innings .
dirt," Schultz ~id. "Like
Johnny b said, 'we got the
win."'
Even though Schultz had an
8-t lead, Rapp had a reason
for yanking him.
"He pitched three innings
Monday, warmed up Tuesday
Farrell of Fresno Sta te.
and pitched two-thirds of an
Pro Basketball
Phoen ix - Dick Van Arsc:tale inning last night," Rapp said.
announced his retirement .
"He reached the point where
Baseball
Atlanta Club owner Ted I thought he pitched enough."
AI Hrabosky pitched the
Turner was removed as field
I nternatinal League
United Press International
W. L. Pet. GB
Pawtucket 17 8 .690

as~d

You have to give them credit.
Those three games we won
from them ., . they played like
they were in a five-game
winning streak .''
Leon ·drove in the Braves'
first run with a third inning
sacrifice fly then singled in
two more runs to cap a fourrun eighth. He scattered four
hits until the eighth when he
was replaced by Rick camp,
who allowed just one single
over the last two innings.
In other NL action, Los
Angeles routed Montreal, 8-2,
Philadelphia blanked San
Francisco, 3-0, St. Louis
whipped Cincinnati, 11&gt;-1, and
San Diego topped New York,
5-?·
Dodgers 8, Expos 2:
Dave Lopes . and Reggie
mith homered in the first
ming to ~nd I~s Angeles to
Is 24th v1ctory m 30 games.
)On Sutton went 8 1-3 innings
to gain his fifth triumph
witllout a loss as the Dodgers
boosted their lead in the NL
West to 11 games - the
largest the club has ever had
since moving to Los Angeles
20 years ago.
Phillies 3, Glauts 0:
Philadelphia's . Larry
Christenson tossed a threehitter in outdueling .John
Montefusco. Mike Schmidt
hit his seventh homer for the
Phillies and Greg Luzinski
had a run-scoring double.
Padres 5, Mets 2:
Tom Griffin homered and
combined with Rollie Fingers
on a six-hitter as the Padres
handed the Mets their fourth
straight loss and lOth in 11
games. Jerry Koosman
struck out 10 and allowed just
. five hits in a losing effort.
John Milner homered for the
· Mets.

'
hitless ninth . Schultz got
credit for the win, and his
record is 2-ll. The Cincinnati
run came in the first when
Pete Rose walked, went to
second on a wild pitch and to
th(rd on a ground out and
scored on Dan Driessen's
sacrifice fly.
Scholtz said Griffey's rut
was a "fast ball, eye-high and
six inches outside. It was a
ball. He hit ball three for ltit
one."
The big offensive inning for
the cards was the sixth when
they scored six runs. Jerry
Mumpljrey walked, Ken
Reitz singled, and Schultz
walked to load the bases, then
Don Kessinger hit a two-run
double, and Tony Scott hit a
two-run single to knock out
starter-loser Pat Zachry, now
2-5. Reliever Dale Murray
allowed a run-scoring double
by Ted SimmOns and a nuiscoring single by Mumphrey .

Schultz (5), Hr abosky (9) and
Si mmons, R~der . WP- Schultz

third.

The tenth race trifecta
(2-0). LP- Zach'V (2-51
combination of 4-11&gt;-7 was
Los Ang
202 200 02()- B 14 o~ worth a whopping $1,259.40,
Mntreat
ooo ooo 002- 2 8 2 .while the nightly double
Sutton , Garman 191 and
bo f 8-4 'd ••n 20 A
Yeager : Hannahs, Brown {3), com
0
pal "'""'· ·
Terpko (-4J.
Kerr ig an
(4) , cro wd of 4,264, wagered
Atk i nson (7l. McEnaney (9 ) $278 253
and
Car ter . WPLP - Hannahs
(1 -4)Sutton
. HR s-(5-0)
L OS.

••
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BARON PAUL WINS
COLUMBUS (UP! )
Major League Results
Baron Paul covered the mile
By United Press International
National League
in 2:Q2 4-5 Thursday night to
Atlanta
001 100 04o- 6 I! 0 win the featured eighth race
Pitt
000 000 010- 1 4 1
·
Leqn, camp (81 and Pocoro- at Scioto Downs.
ba ,· Kl son, Forster (7) , Teku lve
The winner, guided by Russ
(8), J ones (9 ) and Dyer . WPBaldwin to a three-&lt;juarter
Leon (1 -I J. L P- Kison (3 -2) .
length win over Sweet Sugar
Cinci
100 000 00{)- 1 1 0 Ro
d $3 80 $3 ()()
st. Loui'
ooo
206 02&lt;- to 13 o
se, returne
. , .
Zachry. Murray (61, Borbon and $2.40. Cal Knight was ·
(B J and Plummer ; D ' Acqu isto,

tagged with the loss as three
hurlers for the hosts struck
out four and walked only two.
Meigs goes into district
competition next week ,
They'll be tuning up for that
competition by hosting
Waverly tonight and Minford
on Saturday. Meigs has a 7-ll
record.
M
214 030 0--10 14 I
NL
102 010 0- 4 10 0
Browning and Johnson .
Barnhart, Combs (LP, 3),
Hoffman (7) and Nutter:

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Angeles, Lopes (2) , Smi th ( 6).
san Ogo

100 000 13D- 5 10 0

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000000 02[}- 2 61

APPEARING THIS WEEKEND AT THE

Griff in, F ingers (8 ) and
Davis ; Koosman, Myrick (8),
Apodaca (9} and Stearns WP Griffi n {3-l). LP-:- Koosm&amp;n (2 A). H Rs - San Diego , Griffin
( 1 ); New York, Milner (3) .

INN PLACE

San Fran
000 000 000- () 3 0
Pt,ila
200 ooo lOx- 3 50
Montefusco, Lavelle {8) and
Sadek ; Christenson (3 -3) and
Boone. LP - Monlefusco (5 ).

River-·Brew

tract .
· St. Louis Signed third
baseman Elliott Waller , their

fourth -round choice in the free

agent t1raft.

Hockey
Detroit ~ Signed defenseman
John Taft of the Univers ity of
Wisconsi n .
College Football
Colgate - Named Kurt Van
Val ken burgh as second a r y
coach and Dick B iddle as
defensive tine coach .
Co/lege Basketball
Oral Roberts - Na'med Lake
Kelly as head basketball coach.

3 PIECE GROUP
FROM NEW BOSTON, OHIO

PARK

TONIGHT &amp; SATURDAY

RVED

-. ~

SATURDAY. MAY 14TH
UNTIL 5 P.M. _
11

10-2

FAMILy OUTING"
OF
RESEARCH &amp; DEVELOPMENT DEPT.
AND
SERVICES DEPARTMENT
OF

TEat. CENTER

....•

..

with a &amp;-1 rout of the
Pittsburgh Pirates.
With Turner banished to
the stands and no manager in
the dugout, Coach Vern
Benson handled the strategy
and the Braves won for the
first time since April 22.
Pitcher Max Leon was the
hero, driving in three runs
and scattering four hits over
seven innings as the Braves
snappedihe Pirates' 11-garne
winning streak .
"Their streak ended and so
did ours," said Pirate
Mana~er Chuck Tanner. " ...

Vern Rapp the
new Capt. H 00k

17 cu. ft.
frost.Proof

SALE PRICE
'.

San Diego at Phi Ia , night
St. Louis at Atlanta , nighr
San Fran at Cinc innat i, n ight
Pittsbur:gh at Houston, ni ght

By FRED McMANE
UP! Sports Writer
Atlanta Braves' owner Ted
Turner, who Wednesday sent
Manager Dave Bristol on a
10-day special assignment
and took over managing the
team hirr.sel!, was told
Thursday night by American
League President Chub
Feeney he was not eligible to
manage the team, so the
Braves played without a
manager.
They must have been doing
something right - they ended
their 17-game losing streak

Uke· This

'

·lh

Thursday
Pro Football
Los Angeles - Signed quar .
terback Joe Namath .
washington - Signed as free
aoent wide receiver
KPvi n

Act now during our ...

• .;

home on Brian Hamilton's
single. The hosts got one back
in the bottom of the first when
Wycinske socked a homer
over the left-centerfield
fence, but Meigs got that run
back in the second when
Kenny Young doubled, advanced on a sacrifice, and
raced home on a sacrifice fly.
The Marauders won it in
the top of the third when they
pushed across four base
runners. Hood drew a walk,
Wayland was safe on a bunt,
Greg Smith doubled, Pratt
singled, and Young doubled
again . They put the game on
ice in the fifth by bringinj! in
three more runs on singles by
Browning , Johnson , and
Andrews, and a double by
Hood.
New Lex got two runs in the
third and one in the fifth, but
the Marauders were not to be
checked. They have had a ··
taste of tournament su.ccess
and. they must want to go to
,Columbus again this year.
Wayland led the hitting
with three singles and Young
had two doubles. Hood had a
double and single, Hamilton
had two singles, and Smith
had his double. Pratt,
Browning, Rick Johnson, and
Ray Andrews each had a
single.
Although the hosts had 10
hits, led by Wyclnski's homer
and double, the Marauder
defense turned in fine
defensive work to hold New
Lex in check. Combs was

he exhibited excellent control
in fanning seven and walking
just one : and that was in·
tentional in the last inning,
Meigs jumped off to a 2.j)
lead In the first when Tim
Hood and Mi~e Wayland
singled leading off, advanced
on a passed ball, and came

manager by National League
President Cf1ub Feeney pending
approval of Turner's con trac t .
·~hr..--'lll'llt',_r-jt*lnfi·*'IIr~r*~Ur**'"',_'*'IIr~r**'Ur'lll"~ ·acquired
California - Sig ned recently
relief pitcher Dave
LaRoche to a five -year con -

,,.

••

pounded out 14 hits with
every starter getting at least
one safety.
Crenson Pratt extended ltis
hitting streak to 11 games as
the team of Coach Dale
Harrison won its fifth game in
a row. Righthander Dale
Browning _got another win as

Turner banished
as team's pilot

Sports transactions

•

..

The Meigs Marauders,
defending Regional Champs,
took the first step to another
title when they captured the
Sectional crown Thursday,
defeating a strong New
Lexington club, 10-4.
The Marauders unleashed
an awesome offense as they

•

N.Y .

••

BASEBALL

fanned 12 Tiger batters.
Johnson was credited with
the win.
Maiclr LeiiUt Stlndlngs
Waverly collected seven
By United Press lnternatron•t
National League
runs on 10 hits and committed
Ent
three errors.
w. L Pet. GB
Pi tt sbgh
20 8 . 714
Gallpolls rocked . Rob St
. LOUIS
18 11 ,621
2' ,
Holsinger for eight runs and Chlc,go
15 11 .577
13 12 . 520 5'&gt;
11 safeties. The Blue Devils Montreal
Phl/a
13 13 .500
played errorless ball. ·
New York
10 19 .345 101-'2
Mark Fielder, George
West
W. L- Pet. GB
Birkhimer and Holsinger Los Ang
24 6 .800
each had two hits apiece for San Fran
13 17 .433 11
San D iego
14 19 .424 111;,
the Tigers . Fielder and Cinci
12 11 .414 111-'2
Holsinger each had doubles, Houston
12 18 .400 12
Atlanta
9 22 .290 11 111
Jim Noble a home run.
Thursday' s Results
For GAHS, Cannan was Atlanta 6, Pittsburgh 1
the big stick man with three. St . L.ou is to. Cincinnati 1
Los Angeles. 8. Montreal 2
hits ill four trips. Johnson was San
Diego 5, New York 2
two lor four. Johnson and Ph ilade lphia 3, San Francisco 0
Today 1s Probable Pitchers
Harris had a double. Kevin .
(All Times EDTI
Thompson had a second
Chicago &lt;Bonham 3-2) at
inning home run for the Montreal (War then 1-0J. 7 :35
p.m .
,
Gallians.
Los Angeles (Rhoden -4 -0l at
Other Blue Devils hitting New York (Matlack 1-4), 8 :05
.
safely were Terry Wall, Mark p .m
San Diego !Sawyer 1-3) at
Dobson, Billy Barr and Philadelphia (Twitchell 0 -3),
8 :05 p .rn ,
Foglestrom.
St Lou is (Forsch 5-ll at
Linescore:
Atlanta (LaCorte l ·-4 l. 7 :35 p,m .
San Francisco ( Barr 5-2) at
GAHS
llO 212 1-l! 11 0
Cinc innati ( Norman 1-21. 8 :05"
Wav.
004 120 0-7 10 3 p .m .
P ittsburgh . (Reuss 0-3) at
Batteries: GAHS - Lane,
(Lemongello 0-4 ). 8 :35
Foglestrom (3) Johnson 6, pHouston
.m .
(WP) and Barr. Waverly Saturday's Games
at Montreal
Holsinger (LP) and Leffler. Chicago
Los Angeles at New York

Seattle

Ministerial changes ·
are announced early

Meigs repeats as Se_ctional champions

US 60 WEST

N PARK

THE MEIGS INN
992-3629
•

POMEROY, 0.

•

•

�'

NHL Playoffs
By Unlftd Prtss fntern•tlonal

4- The Dailv Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0. , Friday, May 13,1977

Tributes paid to mothers

Finals

( ae~r of Stvtn)

•,...•

,.

Montreal v1. &amp;oston
{ Montrettl Judt, Ht)
May 7- Montreal 7 Botton 3
May !()---Montreal 3 Boston 0
May 12- Mo ntreal A Boston 2
May l .o4- MOnt reo11 il!lf Bost on
x-May 17- Boston a t Mont reel ..

POLLY·s POINTERS

I

,

x-Mav 19-Montrea t at Boston
x-May 21- soston at Mont rnl

Polly Cramer

•'• t

x- •f neusury

Make c(Jrn meal 'coffee '
Our Interest Is
Greater For You

By Polly Cramer
DEAR POLLY- Years ago
when I was a youngster I
remember my mother made
ucoHee." I do not remember
all the ingredients she l!Sed
but I do remember one was
bran. I do not know what
kind, but know it was not the
btan buds we see today. Also
she put In rnolasses, eggs and
perhaps oatmeal" This was
mixed unttl it made fine
crumbs and then put In bread
pans (not too thick) and bak·
ed. She stirred it occasionally
so it would brown evenly,

5.75%

•

On _9 0-0ay

BA,UMAN FAMILY - The Bauman family will play
and sing country and western songs at a variety show
Saturday night at Tuppers Plains Elementary School at

-

Fairland
advances

lW
l!R~

r(J(

all your home

Entertain·menl and
Appliance N@eds

DOXOL

SERVICE

RIDENOUR'S
. TV &amp; Appliance
Gas Serv1ce
Racine, Ohio
,..,eliter ~"'":.,

RC!Th:;)

ruESnt..Y - MAY

l?tb
@

foOle r oy Tige r s

@ M'iBon

Povell 1 a Giante •
Range r s

Pomeroy Yankees i !\ow Haven Rede

Pir e tes BYE

THti'RS!.A. y - ~J, y

l 0 1,h

Hr:tsor1 Rar.ge r s at A::lwell ' s Gia nts -

Nev

Haven ~ feds

FRI DAY -

~AY

-

NEll IIA I'EN

-

at Pomft r oy Ti gers•

20tb

.

T!JESIJJ.Y - JUN:: 7t h
Powell ' s Gi a nts @ Ma.eon le.ngc!"s
h:fne r oy Ti gers @ New- Ha ven Reds
New Haven Cuba 'i Pboe r oy P'irat el!' ~
Pme r oy Yankees 9YE

TR!Dit.Y ... J UNE lO t h

New Jie.ve n Red a " Po.,ell 'r; Gia nt! •

SAM\D&lt;Y - J UliE llt b

1".1. ~ ' ' th
Gian t s i Nev Haven Reds

New r ~ven Cubs @ Pomeroy Ya.r~ees •
Pomeroy Pira t e s ~ Huon Ral\pre
Pomeroy Tigers BYE

l: R!DA Y - r-'.A Y 27th
Paner oy Ti~r s i New Haven Cubs
N&amp;w Hav en R!oc @ Patero:r Pire tes "'
Mason &amp;:. nge r s ~ PcxnP.rOj' YarJcceeu

Pbwell 1 s

Gi~nts

BYE

Pomeroy Ti gers

@

SATURDAY - :i[Uf;}: 18th
New Havtm Reds @ 1-hscn Fengo_:1,

TUE SDAY - HAY 31st
Jtme roy Ya ni:e e s: ~ Powell ' s Gi.!!.nts.• •
Po:neroy Tigers @ R::&gt;oer o:f Pi rates •
New Have n Cubs @ Ne ~J P..a va r: Reels
Mason Rn ngers ~YE

.M.§.QAY - JU!2: 2~
Nev Haven Cubs Q Pome r oy Tigers •
Paneroy Yankee s ~ P-'n son Iftngere
Pmeroy Pi rato s @ Ne\J Hav en Red s
Pwe ll ' s Cit.n t s BYE

SA 'lURDAY - JU!If. ~t h
Nev Ha vC n Cub ~ (!} t-Eson Ranger !'

...•

SA TIJRI&gt;\ y - JU ,;; 42Jl
Paneroy .Pirates @ Po\Jell' s Gi ant s•

Dle.'llond ~1
Di amo nd li2

Southern edges KC again .
In a sloppy played contest Bobcats dropped to 6-4 .1n the.
at Cheshire Thursday SV AC. All of the Tornado
evening, Southern's league runs were unearned while
leading Tornadoes scored an five of the Bobcats' runs were
S-7 victory over Kyger Creek unearned.
in a game marred by 14
Southern plated a run in the
errors and 13 unearned runs. first on an error, fielder's
The wiri pushed Southern's choice, stolen base, another
league record to 7·1 whlle the

error and walk.
Kyger Creek got two runs
In its half of the first Inning,
on Steve Baird's ,single, a
stolen base, walk, ' Claude
Cornelius' single
and a
throwing error.
The Tornadoes came back
to plate two runs in the
second Inning on a single by
Forbes, a sacrifice, an error
and two run single by John
Sayre.
Kyger Creek came right
back to take a S-3 In the third
Inning in a one out hit by
Baird, a stolen base,
throwing error, walk, another
infl~ld error and a throwing
error .
Southern got three r.uns in
the fifth Inning on an error,
fielder's choice, single by
Hill, single by Richard
Teaford and another error.
In the sixth Inning, an
error opened the gates. Then
came a single by Kelly
Winebrenner, an error and
hit by Wolfe.
Kyger Creek made it close
at the end with two runs on a
leadoff walk to Nibert, a
double by Von Taylor, a wild
pitch and throwing error.
Sayre, the winning pitcher,
fanned 10 and issued five
walks. Todd Taylor, the
losing hurler, struckout eight
and Issued two free passes.
Linescore:
120 032 l}-4l 8 6
Southern
KC
203 000 2-7 5 8
Sayre (w) and Forbes,
Cundiff (3). T. Taylor (1),
Fraley (7) and Baylor.

PRAGUE 1RAINlNG
CINCINNAT[ (UPI) -The
Cincinnati
Stingers of the
· run · he needed and the
Worid
Hockey
ASsociation
Rangers added an insurance
will hold their fall tr\lining
run in the fourth on a single
camp
in
Prague,
by Jim Sundberg and a
Czechoslovakia, in
double
by
· Claud ell preparatior for the 1977-78
washlngtoo .
regular season.
Elsewhere In the American
The decision tn hold the
League, Seattle topped New
camp in Prague was the
York, 8-6, Detroit drubbed
result of a recent visit to the
Milwaukee,
9·1,
and
World Cup Tournament in
California took Baltimore, 7Vienna, Austria, by Bill
5.
DeWitt Jr., team executive
vice president.
Tigers 9, Brewers 1:
The Slingers will' play four
Rookie rightllander Dave
Rozema fired a five-hitter games in a Czechoslovakian
in
late
arid Ron LeFlore and Steve tournament
Kemp hit homers to power September, followed by two
Detroit. The 20-year old games each in Helsinki,
Rozema struck out six and Finland, and Stockholm,
walked two in posting his Sweden.
third win without a loss.
Mariners 8, Yankees 6:
SKATING MEET
Dan Meyer and Bill Stein
CINCINNATI (UP!) - The
hit consecutive pitch home 1979 United States Figure
runs in the first inning and Skating Championships will
Seattle took advantage of five be held at Cincinnati's
New York errors to score its Riverfront Coliseum Feb. 7second straight victory over 11, 1979.
the Yankees. Three of tbe
Some 125 figure skaters will
Yankee errors came In the compete in the national
third inning when the championships, an event
Mariners. chased Catfish expected to attract 45,000
Hunter and scored four runs. people.
Angels 7, Orioles 5:
Ex-Oriole Bobby Grich
victimized Jim Paimer with a
two-&lt;&gt;ut , two-run single which
LEGAL NOTICE
capped a five-run eighth
Columbia Gas of Ohio, Inc. has filed an
inning rally for Callfornia .
application with the Public Uti lilies
Bobby Bonds also drove in
two runs with a homer and
Commission of Ohio requesting that the
two singles. It was Pahner's
Commission cancel its existing requirement
second loss in seven
that all emergency supplemental natural
decisions . Dave LaRoche
gas supplies be priced and delivered on an
registered his first save as an
incremental basis in accordance with
Angel with one inning of
advance
survey procedures, and that the
relief.
Commission authorize Columbia to price
such supplies on a "limited roll-in basis" to
its curtailed customers. The Commission
has scheduled a public hearing on this
application for Wednesday, June .1, 1977, at
9&lt;30 a.m .' at the offices of the Commission,
180 East Broad Street, Columbus, Ohio
4.3215. At the hearing, all interested ..paTties
will be given an opportunity to be heard.
Further information may be obtained by
contacting the Commission.
Mrs . Millard VanMeter )
THE PUBLIC UTILITIES COMMISSION
Open 9 to s Mon.-Sal.
OF OHIO
Randall G. Applegi\te, Secretary
,2-2039 . "2-5721

POMEROY
A.OWER SHOP

TODD LOGUE wiU play an auto harp at the variety
show to be staged at Tuppers Plains Elementary SChool
Saturday at 7: 30p.m. Other numbers include Lisa Collins
and Kelly Hedley io a duet number; Alex Stone piano solo ;
Florence Spencer, vocalist : Usa Collins on the flute and
Pam Murphy the clarinet ; Andrea Batey and Randy
Batey, a dance number , Arlene Connolly and Tammy
Cozart, a duet, and the Boyles quartet.

Meigs Co. Branch

mission of Ohio has set fo r
hearing Case No .

~ (Wbl ic

..@

• 76-535-EL-FAC Subtile A,
to review the operation of

the Fuel Cost Adjustment
Clause and the fuel pro-

1. 95 ; Koosm an , NY 2.33'.
Amer ican League : Blyleven ,
Tex 1.45 ; Figueroa , N Y 1.50;
T idrow , N Y 1.67 ; Slaton, Mil
1.76 ; Stone , Chi 2.00 .
Strikeout s
National
League : . Roger s,
M tl , Koosm an , N Y and M on .
tef usco , SF 45; Seave r , NY 42 ;
N ie kro, ·Atl and Richa r d, Hou

...'"""" .. •.

Commission's off ices, 180

East Broad Street , Cotum·
bus, Oh io. All interesled
persons w ill be given an
opportun ity to be heard .·
Further information may

be obtained by contact ihg
mission of Oh io.

THE PUBLIC UTILITIES
COMMISSION. OF OHIO
~Y Randall G. App lega1e ,
s~cretary

......
'

.

_.IIIII oll41n. " " " ' _ . -

·--

..., _ _ lllllly
'

I •••

,..

•

,

-CWII,
FRUH ...
ODOR-FRIEI

.••. .

,

AI ;

American League : Ryan , Ca l
69 ; Tanana. ·cal 60 ; Bl y teven,
Tex 50 ; Pa \mer , Batt .4 3;
Eck ersl ey, Clelf"-,7·.
WHA Playoffs
By United Press lnte·rnational
Final Round
(Best of Seven )
Quebec vs . Winn i peg
May 11 - Wi nn ipeg 2, Oue 1
May IS--Winnipeg at Qu ebec .
M a y 18- 0 ue bec a t W inn ipeg
May 20- Que bec .;~ t Winn ipeg
x -M a y 22 ---Wi nn ipeg at Que
x .M a y 24- Que aJ Winnip e9 ·
x -M a.y 26- Winn ipeg at Que
x -if necessary

and

, the Public Utilities Com-

-.......
·---..-....-..__
- _...IIIIIT OU~ IUNII! I YAC_. -

practices

policies of the Columbus
and Southern Ohio Electric Company on May 16,
1977 at 10:00 A.M ., al the

(A&amp; do·iliJBIII'IIIfpPiCII)
...................
•-

Major League -leaders
By Un i l ~ d Pre ss Internationa l
Batting
(ba sed on so at ba ts )
Na tional League
GAB R . H . Pet .
Park r , Pi t
28 117 2.4 49 ..419
Smns, St.L
28 99 22 39 .394
Scott , St . l.
27 68 8 26 .382
Mthws, At!
19 .68 13 26 .382
Tr il lo , Ch i
25 8.4 17 32 .38 1
Stargll , Pi t
17 51 9 19 .313
Jot,nsn , Ho
23 SB 9 21 . 362
(e y , LA
30 11 2 23 38 .339
Sm ith . LA
27 93. 27 3 1 .333
Yeagr, LA
25 87 13 29 .333
V atntn. Mtl
22 871 1 29 .333
American League
GAB R. H. Pet .
AWods , Tr
25 90 13 35 .38 9
Page , Oak
30 113 2.4 A) .381
Mn k.wsk , 0
19 50 6 19 .380
Velez , Tor
21 86 16 :n .360
Surlsn , ss
25 107 14 JB .3.55
Carew . Mn.
31 120 19 42 .350
Chal k, Cal
27 95 9 33 .347
Fi sk, Bos
27 93 19 32 .34.4
Sm ith , Bat
·19 67 9 23 .343
Lemon , Ch
29 107 19 36 .336
Home Runs
National League : Cey, L A I I ;
Bu r roUghs , At l, Ferguso n , Hou,
Ca r ter , Mtl , K ingman, NY and
Schm id t, Ph i l 7.
American League : Zisk , Chi
10; Gross , Oak 9 ; Hisl e, Min n
and Page, Oak 8 ; Ba y lor,
Bonds and Rud i. Ca L Wil l iams.,
Oa k and vet ez, Tor 7.
Runs Batted In
Nal·i onat League : Cey , L A J? ;
~arker , ~ i tt and Winf ield , SO
J 1 ; Sim m ons , St.L 27; Bur roughs , All 26.
American League : Rudi. Ca t
33; Vel ez, Tor 29 ; Zisk , Ch i and
Hi sle, M lnn 27; Page, Oak 25.
Stolen Bases
National League : Lopes, L A
14; Moreno and Tave ra s, Pitt
13; Cedeno , Hou 11; Con cep .
ci on , Ci n and Cabell. Hou 9.
American League ; Rem y , Ca l
16; l?afek, K C 12; Bond s, Ca l
and Norr is, Cle\1 10; H isle,
M inn , Lin tz , Nort h and Page,
Oak a.
Pitching
Most Victories
National League : Rh oden and
Sull on , LA and De-nny , St .L 5-0 :
R .Reuschel , Chi and Forsch ,
St .L 5·1 i Barr , SF 5-2.
American League : . Garvin ,
Tor 5-0 ; Tanana , Cal. Zahn .
M inn and Torr ez. NY 5-1,
Pal m er , Batt 5-2; Ryan , Ca l S-3.
Earned Run Average
(based on 27 innings pitched }
National League : Cand el aria ,
Pi tt 1.54 ; RQg ers, Mt l 1.57 ;
Suf1on., LA 1.64 ; HOUQ h, L.ll

curement

•

on
aPpet clailll
d. . . . -

fRI DAY - J UNE &gt;4 t h
J'o&lt;.(ell' s Ci o. nt:;~ @ Ne.,. Have n Cub!
~e on Range rs @ F'a!le r oy 11 ~r su
New Haven Re ds @ Panoroy Ya 'lk;ee l!!•
JUneroy Pirate s B'iE

LEGAL NOTICE
The Public Utilit ies Com·

•

The Athens Counly ·
Savings &amp; Loan Co.
296 Second St.
Pomeroy, O~io

JVJ ~

SA 'IVRDAY - MAY 2E!th
fbwcll' fl Giants @ ro:r.e:- o:r Tig-ers •

FRI I&gt;\ Y - JUliE l r d
.Povoll' s G ian t ~ @ Pome r oy PiratesPan8roy Y~ nke e! Iii' Pmeroy Tigers"
. Mu1on Ra ngers \l' Ne\J ii avan Re ds
Ne\J Haven Cub ~ B\~

penallv is
invoked on all certific'!te
a ccounts withdrawn pr1or
to the date of maturity .

Paner ey Ya nkees •

ft,well 's Gi ant s il Pan~roy Y&amp;. n.k:M s•
Pomeroy Pirates 01 Po:ner oy Ti gers••
)lew Haven Re ds @ New Have n Cubs
f.tl son Rangers Bi't

''

'.

A substantial

MSDAY - J W;g l l.th
·
faD e ro y Ti gers ~ Po\lell 1 e Giant s ..
Pome roy Yankees @ Pcmer oy Pir11.tes •
K\s on Ra ngers @ New Kaven Cubs
New ~a ve n Re els BYE

fRJPA Y -

''

5.75 per cent paid on
90 day Certificates of
Deposit .
$1,000.00
Minimum.
Interest
Payable
Quarterly.

Pom er oy Yankees ~ Ne~o~ llaven Cubs

SA ~A Y - }'J.Y 2bt

Ili]SDAY -

NBA Pla yoff&amp;
By United Press lnternal ional
Eastern confer enc e
F i nal Round
{ Best of Se ven)
Phiiadelph ia vs. Houston
( Philade l phia leads, 2· 11
M ay 5- Pflila 128, Hous 11 7
M ay 8- Phila 106, Hous 97
M ay 11- HOUS ll 8, Phi la 9.4
May 13- Phila a t H ous t o~
x .May 15- Hous ton at Ph1l a
x -May 11- Phil&amp; at Houst?n
x -M ay 19- Houston at Phtla

LIITLE LEAGUE SCH!:D!Jll

M!leon Ra nge r s @ Pcrr!e r oy Pira te e . .
Pom e r oy Tigers B'iE

. ~el l' s

· JUG BAND - Presenting old time favorites at the variety show Saturday night at

I'Otii: RCJY

Fb:Deroy Pire tes @ Nev Ha ven CUbs
PCIIl_e roy Yankee s B'tE

. Pane r oy Pira ten i ?anA roy Ya nke e s•

Certificates
Tuppers Plains will be, l..- , Jim Osborne, Betty Osborne and Bob White. Absent was Norma
Newland. Curtain time is 7:30 p.m.

SECOND RCUND

Hev Haven Cub:
~ cr~

Fairland· edged Ironton 3·2
in extra inn ings to capture
the
1977
Class
AA
Southeastern Sectio nal
Tournament a t Ironton
•
Thursday ~vening.
The dragons. now 21·2 on
the year following their 17th
straight victory, will now
take part in the Class AA
District at Athens next week.
FHS will play the Portsmouth
Sectional winner on Tuesday.
Rich Love struck out 16 and
gave up only four hits in
Fairland's victory.
Fairland scored the win·
nlng run in the ninth when
Ken Powers doubled, moved
to third on Steve Hamlin's
groundout and scored on Jeff
Clark's sacrifice ny .
Ironton starter Bill Bob
Ackison also gave up only
four hits, but walked six and
was the victim of three errors
by his teammates. Only one
Dragon run was earned.
Linescore':
Class AA Sectional
Final
Fairland 100 001 001-a 4 3
Ironton
000 001 100-2 4 3
Love and Hutchinson ;
Ackison and Lowe. W Love. L - Ackison.

·By BliL MADDEN
UPI SPorts Writer
Gaylord Perry, who needs
. only one more victory tn
become the second pitcher m
major league history to win
100 games in each league,
hasn't been pitching too well
this season.
But with · the prospect o(
being removed from the rotation for the first time in his If&gt;.
year rna jor league career, he
turned in his 45th career
shutnut Thursday night, tn
give the Texas Rangers a 2-0
Victory over the Kansas City
Royals
"I can only go so far ," said
Perry, who yielded four hits
and struck out five. ~~we've
got a Jot of good pitchers who
would deserve a shot if I kept
struggling. People say I've
been pitching bad and they've
been right. "
Singles
by
Bert
Campaneris, Willie Horton
and Dave May in the first
Inning gave Perry the only

- -·
MASON

to district

Perry
close to
•
magic
'100'

7:30p.m. Proceeds from the show will be used tn send the
school patrol to Washington. Shown l.r, are Junmy, Gary
and Carolyn Bauman and Harold Smith.

''

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112 E. MAIN • POMEROY

~

SYRACUSE BROWNIE TROOP 1120
Brownie B badges were awarded at the Thursday night
meeting of the Syracuse Brownies held at the school.
Receiving the badges for completing the requirements of a
friendmaker, a ready helper, and a discoverer were Heidi
Cobb, Mary Baldwin, Jane Jell, Veronica Provo, Tracy Hu~
bard Sherri Sisson, Kim Adams and Kathy Pickens.
D.;,ing the meeting work was continued ontbe stick treasure
chests. Hanging baskets were made for Mother's Day gifts.
Wendy Triplett led in the pledge to the flag , Mary Baldwin, the
Lord's Prayer, Paula Winebrenner, the girl scout promise,
and the Brownie B's by Shelly Wolfe and Wendy Fry. Kim
Adams led in the Brownie Smile song.
Jill Nease, Regina Nance and Veronica Provo served
refreshments.

When baked, it was put in
covered containers. When she
made the coffee it was in an
old time coffee pot with-water
and then boiled. Now that coffee is soaring in price, I would
appreciate hearing from
anyone who has such a
recipe.- MARTHA M.
DEAR MARTHA M. - The
high price of coffee is on
many of our minds just now.
SYRACUSE JUNIOR 1ROOP 1204
Perhaps the following letter
A bowling party was held Tuesday night at the Pomeroy
will be of some interest to Lanes by Syracuse Troop 1204. The 13 girls met at the Syracuse
you. I have not tried this Elementary School for the Lord's Prayer by Kim Morrow, the
recipe, but thought you might pledge by Shari Cogar, and the girl scout promise before Jeav·
like to. Perhaps other readers ing for Pomeroy. Afterwards they enjoyed hotdogs, potato
have other recipes that they chips and pop.
remember. -POLLY.
DEAR POLLY - Years ago
when coffee prices went up to
30 cents a pound grandma
said "That is way too high "
and she made her own. She
used what she called dripping
pans that would hold four
loaves of bread and were
made of what she called
black steel. She half-filled a
pan with cornmea I, dribbled
two tablespoons of black
Friday the 13th Is Here AgaiD
strap molasses over it, stir· Dear Helen:
red and put it in the oven to
About five years ago, I think, you did a colwnn on
roast. As I remember it superstitions. It was that very day (Friday 13th) when bad
tasted good and was quite
luck hit me in a heap.
dark. The cornmeal she used
I fell In the freezing compartment of 0\11' local food locker,
was coarsely ground. That proke aleg and my elbow. Didn't relish freezing, so I dragged
was a hout 65 years ago.
myself some SO feet to the door, then pulled myself up with my
I enjoy your Polly 's one good leg and rang the buzzer. En route to the hospital tbe
Pointers even if I am a 74- ambulance was hit by a car, but we made tt, finally. And then I
year-old YOUNG man. Keep realized my Insurance policy had lapsed tbe day before up the good work. I wonder when 1 thought the due date was the following month!
what grandma would say
The only slnile of the day came when I read your Friday 13
about Ieday's coffee prices.- column late that evening. So, in honor of my worst of all
MR.J.H.B.
possible days, would you do a re..-un? Thanks Jots.- CLARA
DEAR MR. J.H,B. ..
H.
Thanks for your letter and
those nice worcts. Stick with
us. I am sure grandma would Dear Clara :
Be glad to. Forthwith:
have plenty to say about !&lt;&gt;+++
day's prices .in general. Dear Readers:
POLLY.
This column is dedicated to the Triskaidekaphobes and
DEAR POLLY- Those who Friggaphobiacs among you . I mean (but, of course, you know
still make coffee and hate to that!) those who fear the number "13" and the day "Friday."
throw away any extra they
How do the superstitious ward off evil on this unlucky day?
have can freeze it in ice cube
Naturally,
you must carry along a salt shaker, for sal~, thrown
trays. Then remove and store over the left
shoulder (by the right hand) neutralizes that
In bags in the freezer. Pop
ominous spell of black cats or ladders you can't avoid.
.
one or two into your beef stew
-Don't cross your knife and fork at the table, as 1t
or gravy for a delicious rich symbolizes crosses (hardships) to come. Since "13" probably
flavor. -HOLLY.
derived its unluckiness from the misery that followed the Last
DEAR HOLLY - Sucll Supper (where 13 were present) ; and Friday's dread started
cubes could also be used for with the Crucifixion, you can see why the fearlul av01d any
iced coffee. Have · you ever kind of crosses on that day -even crossing tbe fmgers.
also tried adding a bit of col·
- Leave your bat on while riding in elevators: that's
·fee to chocolate icing - does another Friday 13 must for the wary. Don't eat bananas wtth
wonders for lt.- POLLY.
catsup today though you get the wildest urges.
DEAR POLLY - I have
- Let bay wagons (or trucks) have the right of way, and
always dreaded running the that old jingle, "Load of hay,load of hay, take my wish and go
·sweeper and dusting, Finally away" helps, though you must not look at the load agam_after
the thought struck me that I you say it: if you do, it's worse than putting your tongue tn the
should pretend I was a maid - , place where the tooth was.
·
do the work and then write
_Whistle whlle passing cemeteries, but then who doesn't
myself a check in payment. even on good days?
This really works.- LOUISE.
_Forget the old saw about "see a pin and pick it lip, good
Polly will send you one of luck to you all ;;Jay." It works in reverse on Friday 13. Leave it
her signed thank-you lay - especially a safety pin!
·
.
newspaper coupon clippers if
- Don't take a rake through the living room: YOUf wife
she uses your favorite will warn you about this-any day. And, of course, openmg an
Pointer, Peeve pr Problem in umbrella in the house is a triple threat. Also, don't play cards
her colwnn" Write POLLY'S
with a crosseyed man - you'll Jose.
.
POINTERS in care of this
-An
ancient
admonition:
Parents
should
b1te,
rather than
newspaper.
clip off the fingernails tips of babies born on Friday 13, to save
them from growing up thieves.
·
.
- It's the wrong day to plant potatnes or go hunting, unless
you hunt with a falcon.
.
.
.
.
_On the other hand, it's the nght time to Identify a future
mate by holding a pullet's white egg in tbe mouth, while you run
FINGER IN THE SOUP
outside to listen for the first name spoken. That s him, or her.
DACCA, Bangladesh (UPl)
- Babe Ruth always touched first base for luck when
- Police arrested 13 persons heading to the outfield on Friday the Thirteenth, and some
and sealed up a hotel after a people protect themselves against the witchery of the occasion
retired government official by gluing pennies to their stomachs.
.
found what was believed to be
_And remember this: after six p.m., black cats brmg
a human finger in his Curry, it
good luck today.
.
was reported Thursday.
_ Not all Friday 13s are ill spawned. On Friday,
September 13, 1814, "The Star-Spangled Banner" was wri~en.
Then too I was born Friday, March 13, so the day can t be
all bad. But' the family Bible reports I weighed 13 pounds,
which mighthavebeeli pretty bad for my mother! -H.

Quasar

CALF KILLED
SALT LAKE CITY (UPI)
- A calf has died at tht
University of Utah after
living for a record 184 days on
an artificial heart. The
Holstein calf, named Abebe,
was destroyed at the
university's Division of
Artificial Organs Thursday
because he had outgrown the
heart arid was becoming
progress! vely weaker.

FISH FRY
'''I
•

POMEROY EAGLES
CLUB

The annual moth er daughter banquet of the Rock
Springs United Methodist
Church was held at the
church Saturday night with a
program of tributes to
mothers given at the Sunday
sehool the next morning.
Arrangements of roses, iris
and daisies were used on the
tables for the covered dish
dinner with the church providing the meat, punch and
coffee. Each one there was
given a flower favor made by
Mrs: Karen Sloan.
Group singing opened the
program with Mrs. Beuna
Grueser giving prayer. The
tribute to mothers was by

Social
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MEMBERS, FAMILIES, GUESTS \,.~~

Career
Caurses

FOOD

I

'

Meeting conducted

CHESTER - Mrs. Mae meeting with the reading of
Spencer and Mrs. Goldie the !21st Psaim, tlie Lord's
Frederick were hostesses for Prayer and the pledge to the
a meeting of the Past Coun· nag. Minutes of the last
cilor's Club of Chester Coun- meeting were read l)y Mrs.
cil 323, Daughters of Erma Cleland, with Mrs. Ada
FRIDAY
America, Wednesday night at Neuhling giving the
YARD and bake sale, 9 the hall .
treasurer'&amp; report. For roll
a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday In
Mrs. Mary ·Showalter, call members answered with
Racine United Methodist president , opened the an animal favorite. Mrs. Er·
parsonage garage sponsored
rna Cleland bad entertain· '
by United Methodist Women.
ment using humorous
RELATIVES VISIT
RETURN Jonathan Meigs
William Freeland and Mr. readings about members.
Chapter, DAR, 1:30 p.m. and Mrs. Gordon Babcock Games were played and the
Friday at Grace Episcopal (Dorothy Freeland ) of door prize was won by Mrs.
1
Parish House.
Cumberland, Md. visited his Mabel Van Meter.
MARY SHRINE 37, Order brother and their uncle and
Others attending were Mrs.
of the White Shrine of aunt, George and Alice Letha Woods, Mrs. Ada Mar·
Jerusalem, will meet at 8 Freeland, Syracuse, over the ris, Mrs. Mabel Van Meier,
p.m. Friday at the Pomeroy weekend.
Mrs. Mary K. Holter, Mrs.
Masonic Temple. Officers are
Theima White, Mrs. Laura
to meet at 7 p.m. for a pracIN HOSPITAL
Mae Nice, Mrs. Ada Van
• Dorothy Reynolds of North Meter, Mrs. lnzy Newell,
tice·session.
HAPPY Harvesters Class, Fourth St., Middleport, is a Mrs. Paline Ridenour, Mrs.
Friday night at Trin!tY medical !}alieni at Pleasant Opal Hollon and Mrs. Betty
Valley Hospital, Room 114A.
Church.
Roush.
SQUARE Dance at senior
citizens center Friday, 8:30 to 1
11 :30 p.m. Music by
Stringdusters, admission, $1
for aduhs; children under 12
with parents admitted free.
SATURDAY
.
WORK PARTY at ballfield
for Pomeroy Youth Baseball
League Saturday beginning
. at 8 a.m. Labor and carpenter
MENI.I FOR SUNDAY, MAY 15th
help needed to·finish dugouts
Meat loal, fried chicken. ham,
and equipment building . .
roast
beel, flounder fish,
MEAT:
Parents of youth involved are
hamburger steak.
asked to attend and bring
Lima beans, peas and cerrots,
equipment such as hammers
VEGETABLES:
noodles.
and saws.
SQUARE DANCE SaturMashec:l and hoi'ne fries.
POTATOES:
day at Racine American
Legion Post, 8: 30 to 11 : 30
Peach, apple and . cher.r y .
PIE:
p.m. Music by Ohio Valley
Tossed, slaw, collage cheese,
Music Co.
AI GBC, we nave a course
FRUITS: applesau&lt;e.
&amp;
SALAD
to suit your needs: by day or
. DAN Ha.yman and the
Opening date of the walk-up window is
at night, beginntng or
Country · Hymntlmers
Friday, May 6. Weekly hours, 7 to ·10 p.m.,
advanced . We are CO ·
Saturday at the Prayer and
Sunday" 2 to 10 p.l"
educational a.ccredited .
Faith Wesleyan Church,
Offer
financial
and
WE HAVE SOFT ICE CREAM
empJoyment assistance.
Ripley, W. Va., 7:30p.m.
The date for making a start
MILK SHAKES AND BANANA
VARIETY Sl&gt;ow Saturday
is now. Our career
SPLITS
at Tuppers Plains Elemen·
representative. Mr .
tary School, 7:30 p.m.
Nicewonder,
wi II
be
CHAM-BROILED
STEAKS
pleased to personally
Proceeds for safety patrol
WEEKDAYS6a.m. lo7p.m. SUNDAY ia.m. to 2 p.m
discuss your plans, simply
trip to Washington.
call him at 446 -4367,.· 446·
4373 or 446 -4378 . Terms
CHICKEN
barbecue,
begin on June 41h and Sept.
starting at II a,m. Saturday,
lOih .
at New Haven City Building
by New Haven Volunteer Fire
.. Reaf Old·f'ashioned flame Cookiu~·.
Department Aui&lt;iliary.
3rd St., RACINE, OHIO
HOUSEHOLD shower for
St. No. 75-02·0472 B
PHOfiE 949-2515
Mrs. Ruby Burke; Allred,
36 Locus1 51.
Saturday, 7:30 p.m. at
Gallipolis, OH 41631
Approved For Training
Elmwood
Rest
Home
Veterl.ln1.
building, Alfred, by Paul and
Virgie Buckley . Everyone
Invited to attend. Mrs. Burke
lost all her belongings in a
fire that destroyed her home.
SUNDAY
HORSE show Sunday at
Bar 30 showgrounds located
on SR 7 . south of . Tuppers
Plains sponsored by junior
class at Eastern. Hfgh School.
Proceeds for class trip.
Admission $1 for persons over
12.
DAN Hayman and the
Country Hymiltimers Sunday
at the Church of Christ In
Christian Union, Hartford,
Purina• Horse Chow' Checkers•
7:30p.m.
horse fo od pac ks all the nu tri tion
horses are kn own to need under
normal conditions. Each pellel pro-

.,'

SAT., MAY 14 - 7 P.M. ·
DANCE STARTS 9 P.M.

Tracy J effers wi th her Burton of Middleport, and the
mother, Mrs. Thelma Jeffers, youngest, Mrs. Sherrie Kane,
giving the response. Sue Mar ietta . Mrs. H elen
Zi rkle, Tracy J effers, Gayle, Blackston had the closing
Shelly and Kay Corbitt, and prayer.
At the Sunday morning ser·
Pam and Christi Evans sang
''The Mother's Hymn." Dixie vice, · each mother was
Eblin gave a tri bute to grand- presented a potted begonia by
mothers with her grand- Superintendent Haro ld
mother, Mrs. Virginia Wears, Blackston and his assistant,
Paul Rice.
giving the response.
Recognized and recetvmg
Mrs. Louise Radford read
uWhal is a Grandma ?" a nd hanging baskets were Mrs.
Mrs. Sloan, the poem entitled Lottie Leonard, the oldest
" Horne." Mrs. Kathy Corbitt mother; Mrs. Sally Pierce,
joined by her daughters, the younges t, and Mrs.
Ga yle, Kay and Shelly Thelma Jeffers, the m other
with the youngest child presinging 01 Because He Uves."
sent.
Roses were presented to
Recitations by the nursery
the oldest mother, Mrs. Edith

children included " Best
Mother" ·by Neil Richmond,
"[ Love My Mother" by Mar·
cia King; " Best Gift" by Jay
Humphreys; "To My Mommy" by Tracy Eblin; " Three
Y""rs Old" by Brooke Rad·
ford; "May God Bless Mommy" by Tara Humphrey.
The recitatiOJIS by the
primary children were "A
Day Set Aside" by April
Clark ; " Tha t's Mom" by
Scott Pullins "All Year" by
Tim Jeffe rs: "No Other" by
Clarissa Pierce; " In the
Crowd" by Sally Radford ;
"Only Fair" by Tammy
Eblin ; "Thank You Lord" by
Rhonda Zirkle; "Why I'm
Proud" by Michl King;
"Nothing Better" by Tim
Sloan; " Because" by Angie
Sloan; "Chosen" by Angela
Pierce; 11 She Teaches Me"
by Usa Pullins; ';Something
Special" by Beth Pierce.
The junior class presented
" Mothers" by Shelly Corbitt; ·
"Good Mothers" by Dixie
Eblin i uThank You Mother"
by Jay Evans ; " Loving
Mother" by Kim Eblin ; and
';I Know the Nicest Person"
by Doug Eblin. The Rev.
James Corbitt is pastor of the
church.

~i

reach out and
touch her

~

BIRTHDAY

at part1cipat 1ng Punna dea lers.]_

BOUQUET

MODERN SUPPLY

She11 be delighted

$10 ~~~h

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512.50 Delivered
Middleport, Ohio •

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When you ouy
one 50-lb. bag
Purina Horse Chow
CheckerS. iGet deta&lt;ls

Middleport Book Store
99 Mill Street

992-2641

Middleport,

o.

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

�6- The Datly Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Fnday, May 13, 1977

TRI NITY CHURCH , Rev

W

H

Perrm pastor, Roy Mayer, Sun
doy school sup! church School ,
9· 15 a .m , worshtp service, 10 30
om, ChOir rehearsal , Tuesdor .
7·30 p.m under dtrecltOn of Mrs ,
Paul Neose
POMEROY CHURCH OF THE
NAZARENE Corner Unton and
Mulberry, Rev Clyde V Henders.on, pos tor Sunday school, 9 30
' am. Glen McClung, tupt .. morning worshlp, 10 30 a.m.. evening
s.ervke, 7 30 rn•d-week service,
Wednesday, 7 30 p.m
GRACE EPISCOPAL , The Rev
Harold Deeth, rector Church ser.
vices, 10 30 o.m .. Holy commur'IIOn ftrsf Sunday of month; chw
ch school, 10.30 o . m tor nu rsery
thraugh 12

There ts no denytng that there's much sadness in

the wortd And 1f we let pess1mism get the bener of
us-well. ~ gets m1ghty dark somet1mes1
But some of the darkness IS sell·lnfhcted. The eyes
through whtch we 're trytng to see are obsessed w1th
our own problems The light of hope IS htdden by the
frustrations of hfe.

Jesus Chrtst should never be thought of as a sad
man-even though He was cruelly executed. And
the apostles are seldom thought of as trag1c f1gures
even though they all became martyrs And Chrtsttan·
tty has been a source of strength and comfort to

POMEROY CH U RCH OF CHRIST

m1ll1ons tn ttme of suffertng or sadness It has always

Rk hord Evon!On, pastor, Bible
school , 9 30 o. m worshtp , 10·30
a.m . odull worshtp serv1ce oM
yOung people's meehng, 7•30
p.m . Combmed Btble study and
prayer meeting, Wednesday , 7 30
pm .
THE SALVATION ARMY , EnvOy
Roy W Wining officer m charge
Sunday , 10 a . m., Holiness
meeting; 10·30 a m , Sunday
School . Young People's Legton 7
p m,; Thursda-; , I to 3 p m.,
Lad•es Home League 7 p.m Prep
classes.
BURLINGTON SOUTHERN BAPTIST CHAPEL , Raute I , ShadePastor Bobby Elktns
Sunday
school , 5 p.m.: Sunday worshi p
5 45 p.m , Wednesday prayer ser
viCe 7:30pm
ST . PAUL LUTHERAN CHURCH,
Corner of Sycamore and Second
Sts , Pomeroy . The Re v W 1ll1am
Middlesworth , Pastor
Sunday
School at 1hi5 a m. and Cllurch
Services 11 o m
SACRED HEAR.T, Rev Father
Paul D Welton, poster Phone
992-2825 . Saturday eventng Mass,
7 30: SundoyMcss,8 ond IOo . m ~
(ontesstOn, Saturday 7-7 JO p m.
POMEROY WESTSIDE CHURCH
OF CHRIST , 200 W Motn Sf , Jerry
Paul , mmtSier, phone 9fi2-7b66.
(onserYa fly a , non-tns tru men Ia I
Sunday worshcp, 10 a m , B1b le
stud-; . 11 o.m , worshtp , 6 p m.
Wednesday Bcbla study , 7 p m
OlD DEXTER BIB~E CHRISTIAN
CHURCH , ReY . Ro l rh Sm1th ,
poster Sunday schoo , 9 JO o. m ,
Mrs Worley F.-onCis, supeqntendent Preochtng servtces first &amp;
third Sundays tollow1ng Sunday
School

been hailed as a JOyous rel1g1on'
Come w1th us Sunday and lace the Light

GRAHAM UNITED METHODIST.
Preochmg 9·30 o m , ltrs I and se-

cond Sundays of each mon th
third and fourth Sundays each
month, worshJp serviCe of 7 30
p.m . Wednesday eventngs a t
7.30. Prayer and Btble Study
SEVENTH -DAY

ADVENT IST

Mulberry Heights Rood , pomeroy
Pastor, Gerard Seton, Sabbath
School Supenntendent, Clara
Mcintyre . Sabbath School, Saturday afternoon at 2·00, w1th Worship StrvJce following at3 15.

KINGSBURY HOME SALES
&amp; SERVIr.E. INC.
tHo FINE ST IN MQBILo HOMES
Ph 992-7034
1100 E . Main
Pomeroy

BIG JIM'S PLAZA

Servi ng Meigs, Mason

Middleport, Ohto

And Gall Ia Area
Phone 992-2156

'

RACINE PLUMBING &amp;HEATING

LINDA'S LADY FAIR BEAUTY SALON
Call949-2838 For An Appointment

" HElL" DEALER

Racine, Ohio

Ph . 949-2882

Racme

REUTER-BROGAN INSURANCE
SERVICES
Ph. 992-5130

Potmeroy

214 E . Mam

PAUL'S BARBER SHOP
Open a to

s- Closed Thurs.

.

Racine, Ohio

WAID CROSS SONS STORE

ELLIS"&amp; SONS SOHIO

GROCERI ES &amp; GENERAL
MERCHANDI SE
Ph. 949-2550
Rae me

COMPLETE AUTOMOTIVE SERV ICE
Locust &amp; Beech Sts. Middleport Ph 992-9921

BETSY ROSS BAKERY

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT
Nat1onwlae Ins Lo. of totumbus, 0
- Ph. 992-2318
P9meroy
804 W. Mam

BAKERS OF GAY90 BREAD
Middleport
Ph . 992-3030

·-

HEINER'S BAKERY

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE PHAp1ACY
WE FILL DOCTORS
PRESCRIPTIONS

BAKERS OF GOOD BREAD

Huntington , W. Va .

PGmeroy

992 -2955

SEAR'S CATALOG MERCHANT

THIS SPACE AVAILABLE

LOU IS W OSBORNE
Pomeroy
Ph. 992-2 178

Phone 992-2156

220 E. Mam

TWIN CITY GATEWAY

MARK V STORE

Middleport, Ohto
WE HANDLE ONLY
USDA CHOICE MEATS

Middleport, Oh•o

GOEGLEIN SAND ·&amp; GRAVEL
liP

Ph . 992-J2B4

McCOY AUCTION SERVICE
(For a real auction call the Real McCoy}

Middleport

992-2582
MIDWAY MARKET Ph.Mason
.•
Ph.773-572t
~B'S MARKET
tHE I)AILY SENTINEL

Keepsake Diamond Ring s
Pomeroy
Ph . 992-3785
212 E Ma•n St.

MEIGS COUNTY BRANCH

THE ATHENS COUNTY SAVINGS
W.
Ph. 992-3863

SALEM. STREET MARKET

Gerald &amp; Melva Elbl n, Owner

Open8to7dally- 12-5Sun
Rutland
Ph . 742-2424

RACINE PLANING MILL

ROSEBERRY'S PENNZOIL
i'h. 949-9130

Racine

Syracuse

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RACINE FOOD MARKET

RIDENOUR

THE STORE WITH A HEART
Racine
Ph . 949-2626

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K&amp;C JEWELERS

Meigs-Mason Area
Phone 992-2t56

Pomeroy

Middleport. Ohio

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~lcoted to the tnterest!lbt

296 W. Second

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RALL'S BEN FRANKLIN STORE

Pomeroy ,

&amp; lORN

t .O . (Macl McCoy
985-3944

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FRESH PRODUCE &amp; PLANTS
2 CONVENIENT MARKETS

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Chester
985-3307

Ph . 992-3978

TV &amp; APPLIANCE
GAS SERVICE

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FIRST

BAPTIST

CHURCH - Dr•wy Gore , 9upl
Sunday School , 9 30 a m ; morn.
1ng worshtp , 10 45 a m
THE HILAND CHAPEL , George
Casto, pastor. Sunday School,
9 30 a.m .. evening' worship , 7 30.
Thursday evenmg prayer serv1ce ,
7 30 p.m
• POMEROY FIRST BAPTIST . Rev
Peter Grondall pastor, W1ll1am
Watson, Sunday school supt,
Sunday school , 9 30 a .m , BYF . 6
p m , Btble study Wednesday 7
p m. cho~r proct1ce, Wednesday,
8•30 p m

Pomeroy

John F. Fultz

Ph. 992-2101

SUNDAY TIMES.SENTINEL

Third St.

RUTLAND

MEIGS TIRE CENTER, INC.

Racme
949-2020

a.m , '

Sunday
e11ongelisltc
meettng, 7. 30 p.m
Prayer
meet1ng , Wednesday , 7 30 p.m
UNITED
PRESBYT ERtAN
MINISTRY OF MEIGS COUNTY,
Ow•ghtl Zovifz , d1rector
HAJIRISONVIlLE
PRESBYTERIAN
Re v
Ernest
Stmk.hn po siOr Sunday church
sc hool 9 30 o m, Mr5 . Homer
Lee, ~upt .
morning worshtp ,
10 JO.
MIDDLEPORT . Sunday schQol ,
9·30 om , R•chard Vaughan, supt,
Morn1ng worship 10.30 .
SYRACUSE , Morning worship, 9
a m Sunday school , 10 a m. Mrs .
Sampson Hal l. sup!.
RUTLAND CHURCH OF GOD ,

Rev Jomes D. Guynn, pastor.
Sunday school, 10 o m ; Sunday
wOrship 11 o.m : Sundar eventng
serv1ce 7 p m : Wednesday wor shlpservice, 7 30p m
HAZEL COMMUNITY CHURCH .

Near Long Bottom, Edsel Hart,
pastor, Sunday school , 10 am :
Church
7·30 p m ; prayer
meettng , 7:30pm . Thursday
MIDDLE PORT

PENTECOSTAL .

Third Ave , theRe ... . Wtlltom Kmt
tel pas tor . Rono ld Dugan, Sunday School Supt classes for oil
ages. evening serv1ce 7 JO ; Btble
study . Wednesday 7 30 p.m ,
yovth serv•ces, Frtdoy , 7 30 p m .
MIDDLEPORT FREEWill BAP
TIST Corner Ash and Plum NOel
Herrmon pastor Sa turday even
ing serviCe, 7·30 p m Sunday
School 10·30 a m
MEIGS

COOPERATI VE PARISH
METHODIST CHURCH
Rob er t T. Bu mgarner,
Dtreclor
PO M EROY CLUSTER

Re"' Robert Hoyden
Rev . James Corbttl
CH ESTER , Wors.hcp 9 15 o.m
Church School 10 a m
POMEROY , Worshtp, 10 JOe m .
Church School 9 30 a m UMYF
630pm ~
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ENTERPRISE , Worshtp q o m
Church School10 o m
ROCK SPRINGS , Worship 10
a.m Church Sc hool 9· 15o .m
UMYF6 30 p m
FLATWOODS , Worsh1p 11 a m
ChurchSchooi10a m

CHURCH Sundar School s.ervice
10 a.m .. Prayer mee"ng Thursdoy . 7 p . r:n ; Sunday even1ng serv•ce, 7 p ,m
ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST
Pomeroy- Hornsonvdle Rd.. Don
Kennedy , pastor , Btll McElroy,
Sundar school 1upt
Sunday
schoo , 9.30 a. m.: morntng wor~htp and communion, 10.30 o . m.,
Sunday e"en1ng yovth Chrisflon
Endeavor, 6 p m.. worship servlc.e, 7 p m, wednesdar e... emng
prayer meeling and Bible study ,
7 30p.m ,
ST . JOHN lUTHERAN CHURCH ,
Pine Grove The Rev W•ll1am
M•ddtesworlh, Pas-tor
Church
servtces 9·30 o m Sunday School
10:30a m.
BRADBURY
CHURCH
OF
CHRIST. Mr. Donald Roler . pas lOr.
Sunday school, 9·30 o m , worship serviCe, 10·30 a .m . Sunday
serviCes , 7 p.m ; yOuth grOup,
Wednesdoy, 7 p m
ANTIQUITY BAPTIST , Rev. Earl
Shuler, poster Sunday school
9·30 o m , Church service 7 p . m .
youth meeftng, 6 p. m Tuesday B•bleS tudy , 7p m
RACINE CH URCH OF THE
NAZARENE , Rev John A , Coff.
man, postOf Sunday School , 9 30
om Gerald Wells , sup!, MOf'n.
1ng worship 10.30 a.m .. Sunday
evenmg worship , 7 30, Prayer
meet1ng Wednesday , 7.30p .m,
RACINE FIRST BAPTIST, Oon l.
Walker Paslor, Ronnle Salser,
Sunday school supt.. Sunday
school 9 30 a m ; morning war.
shtp 10 40 a m. Sunday evening
worship , 7 30 w ednesday eventng Btbles tudy , 7 30
DAN VIllE WESLEYAN . Rev R
D Br awn, pastor Sunday Sc hool
9 30 a m , morn1ng wors h1p
10 45 , yauth 5ervice, 6 45 p m .
evemng worship
7 30 p m
prayer and praise Wednesday
7 30 p m
SILVER RUN FREE BAPTIST ,
Mt les Traut
pastor
Su nday
school , 10om : Sieve Ltltle , supt
Evening serv1ce , 7 p m. prayer
rneetmg , Thursday, 7 p m

MIDDLEPORT CLUSTER

Rev . Robert Bumgarner
HEATH
Robert Bumga rne r,
Pastor
Worshtp 10 30 am
Cllurch School 9 30 o m UMYF 6
p. m
RUTLAND . Wtlbur H• lt, Pastor
Worsh1p 10.30 o. m Church School

9 30o .m
SY RACU SE CLUSTER

Rev Harve y Koch, Jr
ASBURY . Worshtp 11 om
Church School 9 50 o.m UMW
f.rs t Tuesday. Btble Study Thurs
7 30 p.m
FOREST RUN Worsh1p 9 a m
Church Schoo110 o m .
MINERSVILLE , Worsh1p 10 a m
Church School 9 a m
S"t"RACUSE , Church School 9 00
o m worsh1pserv1ce 7.30 p. m.
SOUTHERN CLUSTER
Rev T1mothy Sm1th
Cluster leader
Rev Sleven Wils on
A ssOC.I ole
BETHANY . (Dorcas), worshi p
9·30 o m Church Sc hool 10 30

om

CARMEL, Chruch School 9 '30
om worshtp 10 30 o .m 2nd and
41h Sundays
APPLE GROVE Sunday School
9 30 am worsh1p 7 30 p.m lsi
and 3rd Sundays , Prayer meet1ng
Wednesday 7 30 p m Fel law s ~·up
supperftrs1Solurday6pl'n UMW
FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST. 262 2nd Tuesday 7:30pm
·
Mulberry Ave ., Pomeroy , Paul J
EAST LETART . Chruch School
White, Pa s tor, Gory Basham, Sun
Jsl, 2nd . J rd Sunday s, 9·30 am
doy school supt Sunday school
fQ\)r th Sunday 10 30 o m War.
9:30 am ; morn.ng worship , sh1p 2nd Sunday 7 30 p m 41h
10 30: evenmg worshtp, 6 30 p m
Sunday 9 30 a m .. Prayer meeting
Midweek prayer servtce , 7·30 Wednesday 7 30 p. m. UMW lsi
p,m ,
•
Tuesday 7 30 p. m.
MIDWAY COMMUNITY CENTER .
WESLEYAN (Rac•ne), Sunday
De»eler Rd ., Langsville, Oh10, Rev
school 10 a m worsh1p 11 o.m ,
Clyde Ferrell , Pastor. Sunday Jr UMYF Wednesday 3 30 p ,m ,
School
11
a .m. Saturday Btble Study Thursday 7 p m. Chotr
preoch1ng serv1ces 7·30 p. m Procf1ce Thu rsday 8 p m.
Wednesday evening B•ble study
LETART FALLS Church School
at7.30p .m .
l si 2nd Jrd Sundays 10 15 am.
FAITH TABERNACLE CHURCH . 4th Sunday 9· 15 am. worsh1p
Batler Run Road . Rev Emmett l si, 2nd , 3rd Sundays 9 15 am ,
Rowson pastor, Handley Dunn, 4th Sunday 7 30 p m
supf Sunday school, 10 a m, SunMORNING STAR , Worsh1p 9 30
day evening serv1ce 7 .30, 81ble am , Church School 10 30 o m ,
leachtng , 7:30p. m Thursday
Mtd-Week ServiCe Wednesday B
OYESVILLE COMMUNITY CHUR· pm ,
CH , Roger C Turner, pastor
MORSE CHAPEL , Worshp } I
Sunday, school, 9 30 o . m , Sunday am .. ChurchSchaol9 ·30o .m
morntng worsktp , 10 30, Sunday
PORTLAND Worship 7 30 p m. ,
el.'ening serviCe, 7·30
Church School9.30 a m .
THE SALVATION ARMY . 11 5
SUTTON , Church School 9 30
Butternut Ave Pomeroy Envo.,- am . worsh1p lsi and Jrd Sundays
ond Mrs Roy Wlntng, off1 cers m 10 30o .m
charge Sunday holt ness meeltng
NORTHEAST CLUSTER
10 a m. ; Sunday school 10 30
Rev, RIChard Thomas
a . m. Leader YPSM Elo•se Adorns
Pas tor
7.30 p.m . sal..-aflon meetmg
Duane Sydens tr1cker
Ladies Heme league , 12 noon to 2
John DOuglas
p.m., Thursday , prayer meel1ng
Assoctates
and B•ble study, Thur!day . 130
JOPPA , w orshtp 10 a m. Churp. m.
ch Sc hool 9 a m , Prayer Meef1ng
MIDDLEPORT
Wednesdoy 8 p m
MT. MORIAH BAPTIST, Corner
LONG BOTTOM Sunday school
FOurth and Moln , Middleport at 9 30 o .m Worst·up ~er... ICes of
Rev Henry Key Jr. pastor Sun- 7 30 p .m Btble study and Youth
day Sc hool, 9 30 a .m .. Mrs . Erv1n meettng at 8
p m
on
Baumgardner, supt,
Mornmg Wednesdays
wOrship, 10.-4Sa .m
NORTH BETHEL , Worshtp II
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH
OF o.m , ChurchSchoollOo m
CHRIST IN CHRISTIAN UNION .
ALFRED . Sunday School 9 30
Lawrence Manley, pastor, Mrs. am .. worship 10-45 om ., Prayer
Russell YOung, Sunday School meettng Wednesday 7·45 p m
Sup! Sunday School 9 30 o m . UMW Jrd Tuesday 8 p.m.
Even•ng
worship ,
7·30 ,
REEDSVILLE Sunday School9 30
Wednesday prayer meelmg, 7 30 am. worsh1p 7.30 p m , Prayer
pm
Meettng 7.30 p,m
Tuesday
MT MORIAH CHURCH OF GOD, Vts i lo 110n7 30p.m lstTilursday.
Roc1ne ROute 2, the Re"' . James
SILVER RIDGE , Worshi p 10 a.m
M Mu ncy, poslor Sunday school, Church School9 o.m
q .45 o m.: mormng worship, II
TUPPERS PLAINS , Worship 9
o . m , eveni ng worship , 7 30
o m. Church School 10 a m.
Prayer meetmg , Tuesday . 7 30
II;ENO CHURCH OF CHRIST ,
p. m .. Young people'! meet1ng
Ge orge Fredenck , supl Serv1ce
7.30p.m Thursday
weekly 9 JO o m on Sunday .
MIDDLEPORT FIRST BAPTIST
Preochmgltrst and lhlfd Sundays
CornerSix1honc:IPalmer, the Rev , of month by Cli fford Smtih, 9 30
Peter Grondal pastor; Mann1ng o.m
Kloes , superintendent Sundav
HOBSON CHRISTIAN UNION ,
School, WMPO Radio program Dorrell Ooddnll , pa stor Sunday
7.45 a.m . Sundov School 9 15 Sc hool
9 30 o . m , Leonard
a m.. Morn1ng Worship , 10 15 Gilmore , tirste lder , even1ng ser
am
Youth acti vi ties
and "'tee, 7 30 p m
Wednesdo-;
fellaws.hip for tunior and sen1or prayer meef1ng , 7 30 p m
h1gh studen ts, 6 p.m. Sundar
MT. MORIAH CHURCH OF GOO
evenmg worshtp, 7.30 p.m. Mid- Racine Route 2. The Rev Charles
week prayer s.erv•ces. , Wednes
Hanc:l. pastor, Sunday school, 9 45
dar 7 30 p .m
a.m. morn1ng worship , 11 o m
CHURCH OF CHRIST . M•d
Eventng services, Tue sday and
dleport 51h and Main George Fnday , 7 JO p.m .
Glaze , ' mtnlsfer , Mike Gerlach
BEARWALLOW RIDGE CHURCH
supenntendenl Terry Yankey , OF CHR IST, OOug Seamon ,
youth m in•sler Btble school 9 30 m1nis ter B1ble study . 9.30 a m ,
om , morn.ng wOf'shtp, 10 30 mornmg wOr5htp, 10.30 a m ,
a m
even•ng worship , 7 30
even1ng worshtp
7 30 p m.
pro rer ser.,.•ce, 7 p m Wednes
WednesdayBtblestudr 7 30p ,m
doy
KENO CHURCH OF CHRIST ,
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF THE , George Fredenck sup!. Sunday
NAZA~ENE , Rev Ene Co. supply morntng serv•ce , 9 JO a m with
poslo1 , Mrs Mary Lo they . Sunday preo t htng on hrst and thtrd Sunsc hool tupl Sunday school 9 JO day of month by George Pickens.
mornmg worship , 10 JO
0 m,
STIVERSVILLE COMMUNITY

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CHESTER

CHURCHOF

Wednesday, 7 30 p. m.
LONG BOTTOM CHRISTI.N,
Bruce sm,th, pastor WolfSce
Oomewood, Supt. Bible School
9 JO 0 m . Preaching service,
10·45 a m Noe'olen.ng serv1ce.
HYSELL RUN FREE METHODIST
CHURCH , Rev. Herbert A.d ing,
pastor, Sunday School9 30 am.,
Morn1ng serv1ce, 10 30 a .m.,
youth
serv1ce ,
b 45
p. m
Evangelistic service 7.30 p,m
Prayer meet.ng Thursday , 7:30
p m.
FREEDOM GOSPEL MISSION at
Bald Knob. Rev
lawrence
Gluesencomp, Sr. pastor , Roger
Willford , Sr , Sunday school supl.
Sundo-; school 9 .30 a , Sunday
e'olening service, 7 p m. Prayer
meeting, Tuesday
7 30 P m
Ernest Dee ter
doss leoder
Youth meeltng , Wednesday , 7·30
pm
with oon ond Martha
Meadows , leaders
WHITE 'S CHAPEL . Cool11ille RD
Rev Roy Deeter, pastor. Sunday
schoo19 30 am., worship serv1ce,
10:30 o .m B1ble study and prayer
servtce, Wednesdo-; . 7:30pm

GOD.

Rev Sobb! Porter, pastor Sun·
day schoo 9 30 a m. wars htp
serv1ce I I o.m , even1ng serv1ce
7 30; yOuth service, Wednesday ,
7 30 p m
LANGSVIlLE CHRISTIAN CHUR CH, Ted Jones , pas tor. Sunday
school, 9 30 o m , Ro.,- S•gman,
sup! , morn1ng worship , 10 30,
Sunder e ven1n~ serviCe, 7 30,
mtd-week serviCe, Wednesday ,
7·30 p m.
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF THE
NAZARENE
Rev
Dole Boss .
pa stor, Bob MOOre, Sunday
Sc hool sup!
Sunday school
cla sses for all ages, 9.30 o. m ,
morn1ng worship, 10 45 o .m ,
NYPS, 6 30 p m , evangel1st1c serv•ce, 7 30 p m
Praye r Qnd
fosl 1ng Tue sday, 10 o m .
M • dwee~
p rayer
ser11JCe ,
Wednesday, 7 30 p m , men s
prayer meehng Saturday , 7 p m ,
miss1onary mee t1ng
second
Wednesday, 7 30 p.m
UNITED
FAITH
NON
DENOMINATIONAL Rev Robert
Sm1 th, pa stor Sundar Sc hool
9 30 a m ., Closs leader Leo H1ll
worship servtCe, 10 30 o. m , cllur
ch 7JO pm .
EDEN UNITED BRETHREN IN
CHRIST. Elden R Bloke, pa stor
Sunday School 10 a m ; Howa rd
McCoy , supt, Mormng sermon
11 a m,; Sunday n1ght serv1ces
Chnst1an Endeavor, 7 30 p m.
song service, .6 p m Preochmg
8 30 p. m. Midweek Prayer
meet1ng , Wednesday 7 p m ; Roy
Adams , lor leader,
CHURCH

OF

JESUS

CHRIST .

Located at Rutland on New L•ma
Road , next to Forest Acre Park ,
Rev Roy ROuse, pas lor Robert
Musser, SUndqy School sup I Sun.
day school , 10 30 a. m .. worshtp
7 30
p m B 1ble
Study .
Wednesday . 7 30 p m. Sofur~ay
night prayer service , 7·30 p m
HEMLOCK GROVE CHRISTIAN ,
Roger Watson, po ster Jessm
White, Sunday school sup! MOrn Ing worship, 9 30 a m. Sundoyschool , 10 30 a m ; e\lemng
serviCe , 7:30 Wedne sd ay B•ble
Study, 7 30 p m
MT. UNION BAPTIST, Re11 John
Elsw1ck pa stor, Sunday school
superintendent, Don Wilson Sunday sctiool , 9.45 o.m ,: e11e ning
Prayer
wOrship
7.30 p ,m
meet1ng, 7.30 p m. Wednesday,
TUPPERS PLAINS CHRISTIAN
CHURCH, Eugene Underwood,
pastor, Heward Caldwell , Jr ,
Sundar School Supt ; Sunday
Schoo , 9.30 o.m ; Morn1ng Sermon 10·30 a m , Sunday a ... en1ng
se rvice, 7 p.m
LET ART
FALLS
UNITED
BRETHREN , ReY . Freeland Norris
pas tor : Flay~ Norns , supt Sunday
school , 9:30 a m ; m9rn1ng ser mon 10 30 a . m Prayer serv•ce,
Wednesday , 7:30 p m
CHURCH

OF GOD OF

PRO-

PHECY 0 J. White Rood off 160
ReY. George Groyle , paslorSundoy School 10 o.m , Arthur Henson, Supt, Morn~ng worship, 11
o m . YOung People's service, 7
p. m , Even1ng serv1ce, 7.30 p.m.,
wednesday M•d-Week Prayer
ServiCe , 7 30 p. m
Youth
meeflng, 6.30 p.m Even1ng worsh tp 7 30 p m
CHESTER CHURCH OF THE
NAZARENE Rev Herbert G rote,
poster worship ser111ce , 11 am
ond 7 30 p m. Sunday
Sunday
School 9·30 a m R1chord Barton,
supt. Prover meeltng, Wednes
day , 730pm
BRADFORD

CHURCH

OF

CHRIST , Gabriel Mtrs , pos tor Bible Sunday Schoo19 30 o . m , mar.
nmg church 10 30 o . m .. Sunday
even tng ser11ice,
7 00 p m
Wed!"esdoy service , 1 30 p m.

RUTLAND

RUTLAND CHURCH OF CHRIST,
Denn1s Smith
pastor; Fronk
Young,Sundoy school sup! Sunday school and communion, 9·30
o rtl 1 worship or'ld comunton ,
10 30 o.m
R UTLAND
COMMUNITY
CHURCH, Sunday School , 9.30
a. m , worship serv1ce 11 o m ,
Wednesday prayer mee ttng 7·30
p. m yOuth serv1ces . Sunday, 7
p m .. Sunday n1ghtworsh1p 7·30
RUTLAND CHURCH OF THE
NAZARENE , Rev , Lloyd D Grtmm,
Jr , pas tor Sunday school , 9·30
am , worshtp serv1ce 10·30 o m
Broadcas t live 011erWMPO ; yaung
people ' s
serviCe ,
6 AS ,
evangel1st1c servtce 7:30 p m
Prayer mee ting , Wednesday , 7 30
p m .. Miss•onory meettng, 7 30
p m. llfsI Wednesday of month
MASON COUNTY

MASON FIRST BAPTIST Second
and Pomeroy Sts ., Stan Cratg
pa stor, Sunday sc hool, 9 45 om
worshtp serviCe, 11 am .. lrotntng
unt on 6 30 p ,m ; even1ng war
sh1p ser11ice 7.30 p,m M 1d Week
prayer serv1ce Wed nesday , 7·30

p m.
MASON CHURCH OF CHRIST, P

0 . 80)( 467 , Miller St. Ma son W
Vo Sunday Bible Study 10 o m ;
w ors hip 11 a.m . oncl7 p. m. Btb le
Study Wednesday 7 p m. Vocol
mu siC.
FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST Corner of Second and Anderson ,
Mason . Pastor, Wolte r Cloud .
Sunday school 9.45 a.m. wor ship
service, II a. m. and 7·30 p m.
Weekly B1ble study , Wednesday ,
7 30p m
MASON ASSEMBLY OF GOD .

Dudd1ng Lone. Mason , W Vo
Chester Tennant, Pas tor, Su nday
School 9 AS om. , Chtldren s
Chu rch 6 45 p m YDllng People's
ServiCe 6 45 p m. E vp nge l 1st~e
serv1c e 7 30 p. m women s Mis.s•onory COu nCil 10 am. ftrs l and
thtrd Tuesdays Prayer and Bible
Study, Wednesday 7 30 p m
HARTFORD CHURCH OF CHR IST
IN CHRISTIAN UNION , The Rev
Wdltam Compbe ll, pastor. Sunday
School, 9 30 o m , James Hughes,
supt, eventng serv1ce 7.30 p. m.
Wedn esdq,y eventng prayer
mee ltng, 7 30 p m YOuth prayer
serviCe each Tuesday
FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHUR CH ,
Lefort, W Va , ~~ 1 RoY Charles
Horgra'oles poster. w ors h1 J) servic es , 9 30 a m .; Suhday school
11 o .m; eventng worsh1p, 7·30
p.m. Tuesday cottage prayer
meet1ng and B•ble study, 9 30
a. m . Worship service, Wednes -

doy , 7 30p.m
CALVARV BIBlE CHURCH . 26 N
Secood , M iddlepor l, pastor , CurIts Slephen church school , 9 30
0 m . preachtng serv•ces , 10 30
0 m and 7·30 p.m. Wednesday :
eveni ng Bcbt. study , 7·30 P m.
•
INDEPENDENT HOLINESS CHUR· '
CH. INC . _ corner Fourth and
uncoln Sts. ., Midd leport, Rev , 1
O'Dell Manley , pastor; Sony Hudsl)n, Sunday Sc hool supertnlendenl, Sunday school q 30 am •.
evening wOf'ship. 7·30 p. m.:
proye r and praise serviCe,
wednesday , 7 30 P m
THE PEOPLE S CHURCH OF
POMEROY _ Corner Mai n and
COurt s ts , third floor over
LighthOuse Restouront
Henry
co~ . postor Svndor school, 10
a.m ; morn 1ng worsh tp, I I a . m ..
evening
service
7 30 .
Wednesday
evening ser11ice ,
7 30 lnterdenominofional , full
gospe l
'
RUTLAND CHURCH OF GOD Pastor oenn1s Bole$ Sunday
School , 10 a.m .. worship service,
11 30 a m. and 7:30 p m Prayer
meeling Wednesday , 7 JOp m

7-The Dally Scnhnel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 ., Friday May 13 1977
TKAn

.

'

DEXTER CHURCH OF CHRIST ,

Charles Russell , Sr .. mtnlster.
R1ck Macomber supl Sunday
school, 9 30 a.rn , worship serviCe, 10 3Uo . m S1ble Stud-;, lues·
doy730pm
REORGANIZED

CHURCH

OF

JESUS CHRIST OF LA TIER DAY
SAINTS , Portland Rac1ne Road .
W•lliom ROush, pastor. Tom
Stoborl, Sunday School 0 1rect0f' .
Sunday School, 9 30 a m , Mornmg worship, 10 30om ; Sunday
even1ng serv•ce 7 p m Wednes •
day eventng prayer serviCes , 7 30
p.m
BETHLEHEM BAPTIST , Rev Earl
Shuler pastor Worshcp servtce ,
9 30 o m. Sunda-; school, 10·30
o.m B1b le Study and prayer serVIC e Thursday, 7 30 p .m
CARLETON CHURCH , Ktngsbury
Road Gory King, pasta.-. Sunday
sc hool , 9 30 o .m : evening worshtp , 7 30 p m, Prayer meetmg,

THINCiS FIRSn

LOCKS NEVER WERE
A PI'!OBLEM TO
ZERO NOUGHT.

A&lt;\CK lNG 15 ALL ON
MY SACK, THAT WAY
YOU DON'T FORGET

THEN I'LL .JUST

WAIT.

AN'r'T~ING.''

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rt,S0UL..D

O&lt;T &lt;r'~""" T THAT '~ RI6 HT-- I:M A
LICENSED PRI~ATE'
EYE~ WE VI' HAD AloJ
OPERATIVE WATCHING

BOTH OF

BUT WHE&gt;J we 'SAW 'IOU
LEAVING Md&lt;I'E' INPUS.T RIE?

LOOK: PLEAS!': IT'$ A !IREACH
OF PR0FE7510NAL eTHICS FOR
A PRIVATE E'YE TO TELL WHO

TOC'rETHER .. llOOK OVER:

ONLV lf'.S NOT A ''HE".. IT'S A '' 5HF'!
HER NAt.\E'7 Mil~. CAROL TU88~!

NEVER MI&gt;ID THE "SAM 5PADIO"
ll:OUriN!i ! ... WHICH'LL IT
00
I HAFTA WORK VOU OVER-·O R
00 'IOU TELL. US H15 t.IAMH

11n

HIRED H I M~

'IOU:

RUTLAND APOSTOLIC CHURCH
OF JESUS CHRIST. Thomas l.

Holmes , pastor. 8•ble s tudy , :
Saturday 7.30 p.m .. E"'angehsl1c 1
p m , pr~yer meetmg, Tuesday , :
7•30 p. m 81ble Study, Thursday , ,
1
730pm
·
POMEROY
WESLEYAN ~
HOLINESS - Homsornnlle Road . •
Dewey Ki ng
poster
Edts~n ;
Weaver assistant, Henry EbiH'1 1
Jr , Sunday schOQI supt Sunday •
school , 9 30 om , morn.ng wor- 1
shtp, 11 a m. Sunday eYumng
ser ... •ce 7 30, prayer meeftng,
Thursday , 7.30p ,m
SYRACUSE FIR ST CHU RCH OF
GOD - Not Pentecostal , Rev ,
George Otler, pastor Worship
serv tce Sunday 9 45 am · Sun
dar school, II a m , worshtp ser
vtee , 7 30 p m Thursday prayer
meeftng, 7 30 p m
MT . HERMON Umted Brethren
Church Sunday School 9.30 o m
Wors,htp servtee 10.45 o m.
Preochtng serv tces e"'ery Sonday
alternoftng w1th C E Wednesday
prayer meehng 7 30 p,m Rev.
James leach, pas tor. Da vid
Holter , loy leader
JEHOVAH'S WITNESSES, 1 mde
east ol Ru tland, tunct,on of Rcvte
124 and Noble Su mm1t Rood (T174) Sunday Bible l ecture, 9.30
a , Wotchto-.ver study . 10 30
om ; Tuesday , 81ble study. 7 and
8 15 p m , Thursday , theoc:rof1c 1
sc hool,
7 30 p m , serv1ce 11
1
meetmg , 8·30 p m
HOPE BAPTIST - 570 Grant St , :
Middleport. Bobby Elk 1ns , pastor. •
Sunday School, 10 o .m , worshtp ;
servtce 11 a. m ; even tng serv1ce,'
7.30 p ,m
Thursday
prayer :
mee ting and Bible stu dy , 730 ,
p.m
RUTLAND FREEWILL BAPTIST :
Church - Leland Holey, pastor t
Sunday school 10 6 .m, even•nft.
serv1ce
7.30 p . m
Pray ert
mee t1ng, Wednesday, 7:30pm.
CHURCH OF GOD of Prophecy,j
loca ted on the 0 J White Road l
off h1gnwoy 160 Su nday Sc h oo ~
10 o .m
Supenntendent John
Lo...edoy F•rsl Wednesday night,
of month CPMA serv1ces , second,
Wednesday WMS meet1ng, th~rd ;
thr Ough f tfth y.outh seN ICe 1
George CrOy le, pastor
1
HOPE BAPTIST CH APEL - 57Q;
Gran t Sf , Middleport Rev Bobbyi
Elk •ns Sunday school , 10 a m. 1
evenmg
mornmg wors hip , 11
worsh1p, 7, 30 p JT)
Thursdo~
evenmg 81ble s ludy and proye ~
meeltng, 7·30 p m Aff tl•oted w tl h
S B C.

- -- -LITTLE ORPHA)f

ANNIE-RECRUIT

AH, BUl THINK OF THE
RICHES OF O:PERifHCE t
AliD THE PEOPLE ONE MEt:lS ·
DR DU613 ~ N D A YO UNG
~E ll OW NAMED BlUN T ·~
NICE CHAP ·-

1

ON THIS FLOOR
IS YOUR MOST
f'OOF&lt; LY PAID

BAD FOR. A
Yt::AR -

HE'LP -

·--

the Sermonette
'

THIS FLOOR iS FO' YORE NO'
EXFti&lt;IENCED SBJ&lt;ETAI&lt;IES
- WHO DONE COME 10 WORK

$ /o qoooA

Fo' YD' AT A fRt~MEND£XJ5

TH~ !r-

IMPROVEMENT
S INCE I LA5T

I 'VE e.EEN SO e.tJSY 5ffiiNG UP
il-H5 NEW PLANT 11-lAT !VE
BEEN NEGLECTING ONE

11

e&gt;E5SJ E!

MY

SAW HER !

i&lt;ENI

I HAVE AN IDEA 11-lAT
JUST MIGHT GIVE
HER SPIRITS A

NURSE Te LLS ME SHt:lS
l"tC:LI"'" ' MIGHTY IIJW SEEMS 1D HAVE LOST
"THE WILL TO LIVE!

LIFT I

I

lJ,,
'·~ ;

C:ASO J.INP: IlLLEY
'I I

f'tn belrlQ kicked
out o-f the storeroom, Clovia ~

Clovia. we're
seeinq the end
of an era~

What are

qo1nq

to do 7

The Alamaoac

BRIDGE
Oswald

By
United
Press
United Press International
Today IS Friday, May 13,
and Jim Jacoby
the 133th day of 1977 with 232
to follow.
The moon is between its
tncks becau'e he could only last quarter and new phase.
13
The morning stars are
collec t two tn the heart SUi t.
if South had slopped lo lhmk Mercury, Venus and Mars.
The evening stars are Merbefore play ing to lrtek two, he
would have seen that he need· cury, Mars and Saturn.
ed three hear t tr1cks to make
Those born on this date are
h1 s !iilam He was sure of them under the sign of Taurus.

Curses! Play foiled again
NORTH
• A 86

• A.J13
• KB4
o~o n2

BOI\N LOSEI\

ro N.V rm. rroi3ABU1

~0

Bt; IN 111~
~/&gt;6T fip.,a:
t.!OU LOOK.

1 ~p L(X)j(i~
I FOUIJD

/(IDOiiJb ...VJOVW

W~~S T

EAST

unl ess hearts broke 4-l

• ,) 10 9 3

• 542

would

.

IU9 H2

4-1 break, excep t a smgleton

o1o 10 R 6 5

beaten htm But he could han· ~ ~ ~~

SOUTH (Il l
• K Q1
• Q654

SHU)(.·· I NEED ONE MORE
CUP OF FLOUR -- BUT I ALREADY
BORRitD THReE CUPS FROM
LOWEc"Z.V JEST
THIS MORNIN'

I

6 N T Pass

~~ u~ ~ .--c::::&lt;:-"::-...:-~:-:-'·=-:-·-·~
. ... ·-·---

that appendage above your
neck for thinkmg ," yelled
Norlh .
Soulh had won the spade
his hand , led a small

heart and ftnessed dummy s
JaCk ],;ast had taken the trick
wtlh h1s kmg and some five
mtnut es later South had
wnUPn down 50 pomts on the
: •ppon~nrs s ide of

and Bob l ee

V~

2 N T.
Pa ss

ever get a de.cen l break ?"
" Whenever you start to use

tn

I UMBOX

South

" Blank , blank , deleled,"
muttered South " When w1Ji I

lead

West held K x Bul what •s an

North East

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

LOWEEZY~
.f=
J=

by Henn Arnold

play· Unscramble these four Jumbles,

overtrack when you are try mg
for a slam''

Opf'ning lead - J A

I'D BE PLUMB
AS HAMED TO
SHOW MI./ FACE
OVER THAR

THATSCRAMBLEDWOADGAME
®

nght away Thi s safely play iourord•narywords
would C()Sl h1m an overtrick 1f ..---...,....,--.,

olo A K QJ

' 13MtNEY

that break by simply

rn

Bntish composer Str
Arthur Sullivan (of Gilbert
and Sullivan) was born May
13, 1842
On this day tn history :
In 1607, English colonists
landed near the James River
m Virginia to establish thetr
firJt permanent residence m
the New World. It was called
Jamestown .
In 1846, the Uruted States
declared war on Mexico

mg dumhly's ace of hearts one letter Io esch square, to torm

N~1ther vu ln t"!r&lt;~b l e

11ass
Pass

flfi\JN'}~'\t _

kmg, would have su r ely

die

• A2

West

He

also have see n that any

.K

+ Q I0963

• J 75
• 94

•

Cannel News, By the Day
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur urr of Mother's Day.
Chester called at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Earl
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Lee and _Johnson and daughter Sheryl
family on Sunday.
LeAnn called at the home qf
Mr. and Mrs. William his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Carelton of Racine and Mrs. Douglas Jolmson of Ractne on
Dean Brinker spent Saturday Saturday.
evening with Mr. and Mrs.
There were twenty-four
Arthur Earl Jolmson, Sheryl, present for Sunday shcool on
Patrick and Betty VanMeter. May 8. Each mother wBs
Those at the home of Mary prsenled a lovel y hanging
Circle over the weekend were basket of flowers . Many
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Pierce thanks.
of Athens, Mr. and Mrs.
Mrs. Dean Brinker, Betty
George Circle and James VanMeter, Margaret Ann
Circle of New Haven, Mrs. Johnson , Sheryl LeAnne,
Hattie Powell and daughter Patrick John !!On visited at the
Addie, R.D ., Racine .
home of DQra May Calaway
Mrs. Dean Brinker was on Calawsy ridge a recent
dinner guest of Mr. and Mrs. evening.
William Carelton , Racine, on

TO SEE

AUNT'1

long ago can be restored and once more man can have

communion and fellowship with God.
God is still saying: "Let us make man in our own image,
after our likeness." And God doesn 't make junk! - Floyd
Shook, pastor, Laurel Cliff Free Methodist Church.

W£EKTO

SACF&lt;IF'IGE' '!

SHE HA6N'T SHOHN
"THE SLIGHTEST

·'And God said: Let us make man in our own image, after '•
our likeness.''
'
The Rev. Robert M. Knight, who teaches m Webster :
College's graduate program, tells of an old man whom he knew •
when growing up as a boy in South Carolina.
:
The old man was a remarkable whittier. This gifted crafts. :
man could fashion the most intricate and beautiful objects '
right before !hat boy's captivated eyes With nothmg but his,
pocket knife. The young boy would watch completely •
fascinated as !he old man whittled out an image m front of the~
pot-bellied stove in Vaughn's Service station.
;
But that old man had a sinister sense of humor, for, after :
he finished one of those beautiful sculptored pieces, he would
reach over, open the door of the stove and toss that carved
piece into the flames with a chuckle.
Robert Knight can picture him today tossing that work of
art into the stove with that careless and flippant attitude about
what his hands had created.
When God created man He had no thought whatever of
consigning him to !he fire.ln fact, it was in His own pure image
that He created Adam With the capacity to love His Maker and
enjoy that communion with God which he had In !he garden.
Godandmanathome in the garden! Paradise '
Well, that first man somehow got us into an awful lot of
1rouble when he msisted on domg his own thing rather than
obeying his Creator. Disobedienc&lt;' is sin and sin will always
bring failure, heartache, and disappointment
But !his is where the Gospel comes in! From the beginning
God planned to conform us to the image of His Son. Through
faith m the Lord Jesus Christ that image that was marred so

Wr= PAY ONLY

THATHAINT

LAUREL CLIFF FREE METHODIST

CHURCH , Re11, Floyd F. Shook ,
pastor, Lloyd Wrtght , Sunday
School Supt. Morning worshtp
9·30 o m. Sunday School 10:20
om ., Wednesday Prayer and B•·
ble Stud y 7.30p.m.. Sunday even•ngworship7 .30p.m .. CholrPrac IICeThursdoy , 7 p. m.

'

the score
He t•ould only come to 11

A Nevada reader wants to
know what "Chicane" means
It 1s an archa1c bndge word

to mean vmd of trumps In the
game of brtdg.~ a player who

1_

doubled if bolh partner's were
VOid O[ trumpS

b

_

_L1

I TlI XYS
L
I I r] I ,,
ICRQQPE

t
I I I

.

"'cht cane wa s g1ven a _
small honor bonus. Th1s was
was

1 1

.

-

- -

,

IINGAYP

~

_ ,d

j

1

A 6UYWHO
STEAlS A WATCH
M16 HT E5E E:XPECTE!?
1'0 1?0.

ro o you have a question
lor lhe experrs? Wr~le "Ask
Now arrange lhe ctrcled lene" lo
the ,Jaco by$ " cars of thts
rorm the surpr•se answer, as sug·
newspaper The Jacobys wtfl 1-_J.L....L.~-"r:,_~&lt;L-.L---' gested by ~he e.bove car1oon
ans wer mdiv,dual questtons
tf stamped, self-addressed
Print answer here:
~"
envelopes are enclosed The
~
m os t mreref;tlng questtons
(Answers tomorrow)
w1ll be used in th is column
\ Jumbles HAREM BRAVO CHORUS LIMPID
and wtll rece1ve coptes ol Yeslerday's Answer: Whatthetwotootdoctors

1-..::..;..::::.:,.:..:..;,,...d--r-1
I I V

"V I I y
l - - A

JACOBY MctOERN.J

were - ARCHRIVALS

•

�/

8-~ Daily Sentinel, Mlddl~rt- Pomeroy, 0., Friday,

May 13,1977
Me \lerl~ k

Let The Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash

WANT AD
CHARGES

200 &amp;

Ma nual

Tnms
Hwy -21 City

'ZSO
28

Mustang 11 l 8 Litre 4
Speed Manual Trans . 27
MPG Hwy 20 City

Maver i ck
100
CI 0
Avtomat1c Trans 14 MPG
Hw 18 City

Mustang I I 2 l t.. l trt
Automat ic Tro~~ns 2t MPG
Hwy 23 City

15 Wonb or Undt'r
C.ll!lh
ldlly
2dMys
3dllyli
&amp;dttys

1 00

10&lt;1
1 80
300

Each wort! ovtr lht! muumwll 15
wurtl!J ls 4 cenl'i JWr wont ~r WI)
Ads running utl~ r U116n t'm W~ Utl\' ~
days wtll bt dwr11ed at t!w 1 dll}

r•&lt;e

LOST IN Middleport one-year-old
femole toy ~all• • An•wert to
the nome of Chico Phone
99'1·5301 .
FOUND • FEMALE Boogie with 2
pups, giveaway to good home
Phone 9,.9 2-413 .

RISING STAR KtnMel Boord•ng,
Indoor Outdoor run•, groom1ng
all breedi , clean ton ltory
focl1Ulesoe367 ·711 2 Chethlre
Phone (6141) 367-0292

In memory. Cilrd ot nvmb cud
Obilmuy 6 cenl'i ptt word, f3 00

min unwn Ca!lh Ul a ilv~t~tWt! .
MOO Lie Honw li&lt;llt:¥ 1111d Y111 d SKit!i
11re acctpi.N 1,mly With cM!ih w1tl1
urtkr 2S l'tnl d 111 rgt f\11" Mdi ccu ry·

inl!l Bvx Nwnbi!t In Cc.rt~ ur Tlltl Scu·
Untl

Thl' Pubhsbet reservts tl~ rll!: hl '
to edit 01 rt/t'f.'t Mil)' ~t~WI ~med 00.
j«Uon&amp;tl TIt: Pub lu;h~tr Will nul be
l'tspu! iSiblt fur mon! tha n unt tmm ·
1t:t.1 U!serl.iuu.
Phone992-2156

NOTICE

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES
Monday
_Noon un&amp;!turd!Y
T uesdll)'

thru Fnd~y
IP M
the da)' before pubhcllt ~t,)l' l

Swuluy
tPM
F rtday a fttrnoon '

IN MEMORY of Mr . Clnd Mrs .

Lulie

Hubbard ,
1956·1966 Tho Fomlly

y•ar

IN MEMORY of our mother , Mrs .

James Hazelton, Sr. who d ied
Moy 13, 1968
Dear Jesus, up In heaven above
Take o me11age to the one we
love
a letter or reach
We can't
he-r by phone
,
So tell her we min her
Slnceshelefr our !'lome.
hll her we often gaze of her
choir,
And y.riah many time• tl'le wa1
stllltlttlng there
Tell her too a promise we make,
We'll all be together lntlde
heaven't gate.
Sadly mlaaed by the family

••nd

p
¥;;~
.;A

CARRIERS WANTED
FOR MASON
MEA DAILY
SENnNEL
1-'14-992-2156

m.n60.

-- POMIIt.OY, 0.
PH. m-2176

Y1\RD SALE , Thurodoy. Friday
Sotvrdoy 1258 P-oll St. , Mid·
dlop"'l.
7 FAMILY YARD Solo, Frldoy,
So•urdoy 238 Condor Sl ,
Pomerov
YARD SAlE , 5oturdoy, Moy 14, 10
o.m Water StrHt, Syracuse.
AvOftl, clothes, wh&lt;Jt.not,,
bed,clothes dl1he1 In COM of
rain , cancelled. Teaford, Hall ,
Lawton ,:? Nease . Harden,
Pierce.

Bttch St, Pomeroy, Ohio after 1958 CHEVY, 6 Cyl standard,
5 p.m
-good motor, new battery boy's
1972 NOVA, 2 OR. hardtop with
bike 26 ln., record player and
cragor mags
307 engine,
records
Flower pot
Coli
outamotlc transmlulon Phone ...;7...;4::.
2·..:20
.:.7c.:Bc__ _ _ _ __
992·2257.
C. B RADIO Demeo Sotelite (tube
1976 PONTIAC VENTURA V·8 4
typo) with D·ICU power miko.
dr. sedan. Automatic, power
Call 992-2295 offer 5 p.I'T' or
stHrlng, rad io, $3395 Call
con be seen ot 11-4 Condor Sf ,
992-2837.
Pomtroy , Ohio,
1972 OLDS Cutla 11 , 01r condition· GRAVELY TRACTOR for sole .
ed, factory tope player Very
Mower
included
Phone
good condlllan Call 992-7630
992·5067 ·
af•or 5 p.m.
VERMEER BALERS 6050 A395 . 605C
41995 tHI June 1 M•rrill Cho11
53,000
1972 G RAN TORIN 0
R D 2 'lb
h
(
miloo . Phone 742·27A6
• ~ any , 0 io 61~ )
698·3021.
23 IN . diagonal block &amp; whlte
R.C.A Tell'llt lan. For more In·
formation , call992·7092
LOOKING FOR travel trailer,
truck camper, camping tra iler USED FORESTRY EQUIPMENT
mlnlhome, truck cap'il Travel
John Deere '410 Skidder, Prenlroiler to rent? CODNER' s
flee GOBC Loader w·Pulpwood
CAMPEJ(S on Rainbow Ridge •
grapple , John Deere HOB Skid
o~n evenlng 1 Tok• Melg 1 28
der. Contact O.nnlt Smurr
Or 32 to Bashon Robert
phone (61_,.) 838·53415
Codner Long Bottom, Owner
zeRO TO 6 out1lde micrometer~ ,
COONER S CAMPERS on Rain .
Kennedy tool che~t, depth
bowrldge; Sale1, Rental, Ser·
mikes and other precltlon
vice ,
Suppl le1
tralltrt ,
tools . Caii742·21M
compert, cops, alum owning• ALLIS CHALMER CA Tractor New
ond porches by Ouroblll Open tire•. recenlly ov•rhouled with
ev•n!ngs. Melg• 28 or 32 to
plowJ and utility cart, $1000
Bo•"on Owner Robert Codner.
Phon• (6141) 696·1001
Long Bottom
1971 LEISURE TIME Camper, 18ft. ,__....;._ _ _ _ _ _ __,
liMps 6 , telf.contalned , hitch
and mirrors Included, excellent
(Ondltlon Phone 992·2386.
New Co-Op Wlftr tOf•
ttnera, modtl VC·S¥1.
Only 1271.n
Seve 150.00 on 1 new
3 AND 4 RM. furnl 1h•d and un·
Hotpolnt Rtlrlgerator.
I ~OW 20 CUbic II.
lurni1 he d aplt . Phone 992·
Ctlttt Frttztr
Ult.ts
__:5::34=
4 · - - - - - - - - 1 Now ln~lt,OCK 1 complete lint
COUNTRY Mobile Home Pork, Rt.
of bulk gerdtn sttds 1nd
33, ten mil•• north of Pomeroy.
onion ltiJ.
Lar;e lot• with concrete patios ,
i good McCullough Chi! In 1
sidewalks, runners ond off
SIW
$65
street parking !than• 992·7479
1 Gaod Ustd Poulan Chlln

FOR SALE

s.w

ORCHID ROOM for rent for on·
nlvertorltl , wedding receptions, brldat showert or prlvole
meeting room, Phone 992·397,
or 992·2571.
FURNISHED APT Advlta only , no
polo . Phone 992 ·387~. Mid·
dleport.
BEAUTY SHOll tor rent or l•a•e
Phone 992·3333.
ONE BEDROOM fvrnithed apartment In Middleport
Call
992·5434 or 992·3129.

LONG BOTTOM General Stare,
Building and stock plus approx·
lmately 2 acres . Locoltd In
Long Bottom State route 2_.8
and T2... 2 mil" from Forked
Rvn State Parte Call 985·3306
before 8 p.m

FOR MEMORIAL OAY : Boou'lful
selection of flower~ Baskefl ,
1pray1 wreaths , vases. Fay'•
Novelty Shop N Second St,,
Mlddleport
HOMEG.-OWN Tomato plants , Improved Me~~~:lcon early Violent,
golden Jubilees. Al1o, golden
Acre cabbage Acrou from lhe
1wlmmlng pool. Thomas
Haymon. Syracuse. Ohio
GOOD RICH Top ooll. Chorloo R.
Hatfield Backhoe Service
Phone 7412·2008.
NEW HOLLAND hoy bolor ond
groin drill. Phono992·708A .
REGISTERED MOIIGAN gelding.
very nice riding hone. Phone
99'1·6072
TRAILER FOR oolo, 10 • 55
Ponderota, 2 Mdraom, many
oxlroo . $2500. Cl 350 Hondo
$300. Phone 9'12·7008.
BEEF CATTLE , complete herd for
ono prlco . Phone (614)
667·3668.
lAND H homo, 8, 9 ond 10 Inch
Co119'12·7034.
·
WOODfN HOlLOW caro coblnot
doon ond dra..,.er fronts from
_7~ up, Co11.~:'7~ c - · - ·

~.urvlvor Sl~ts

Onion S.h llbt .

sso

only 129.U
Sl .OO

Pomeroy Landmark

1P.;.
w. corioy, Mg~
.lill•JockPhone
9U·~III 1
LIKE NEW Shultz Mobile Homo on
2 111 acres levelland , concrete
porch, 8 x: 35 with own1ng
astra turf covered, 20 x 38
block garage
, cellarShade
with utility
room
overh•ad.
and
fruit tree• In Lang1vllle Phone
74 2·2965
HOUSE FOR Solo , 2 olory broom ,
bath, basement carport, large
lot on College Rood . Syrocute.
Ohio. Phone m 7203
HOUSE IN Tupper~ Ploln• , 2
bedrooms , elec kflot, double
garage 2 lots Phone (61 ,.)
667·3065 or667·3360
13 A. and 1974 Mobile home , one
other mobile home tlte Drilled
well. on 681 near Tuppers
Plain• $I0,900 Phone (6!4)
667·3668 . .
TWO LOTS togo thor on Stoto 124,
Syracv&amp;e, middle of town Ideal
for mobile home or new home
Sohptlc ,!ank and water top
P ono ~ 2·7A0 2, ot142·2194.
4 BEDROOM Houtt. noturol goo
hoollng, Ohio Power, lew
utilltloo. In Rullond . Phone
742·3031 .
REDUCED AGAIN, 3 bedroom, 2'11
bath, bl·level, I mile north of
Fivo Point, $42 500 Phone
99'1·2492.
15 ACRES OFF Now Limo Rood
neor Forrest Acres Pork . Phone
742 . 2336 .
NEW ALL elec . home in Syracuse.
Lorge lot olumlnum oldlng, 3
bedr-oomt , kitchen , dining
o,..,, oil tully corpelod, bo•h.
utlllly room ond gorooo Phone
·
99'1·7Al 9---·--~
----- ·4 ROOM · HOME with bolh, 115
Locust St. , Pomeroy. $3500

P_h~n·-~2·30~6 ,

Business Services

HOMESITES for sole, 1 acre and
up M1ddleport, near Rutland.
Coll992-74::,
81:.;__ _
NEW 3 btidrOQm house, 2 botht ,
all elec I acre, Middleport.
clo1e to Rutland . Phone 992·
7481.
~ :::::.:.---SMAll lorm for sale, 10 ~. down,
owner financed. Monro. Coun·
ty. W Vo. Phone (304) 772
3102or (3CU) 772 322l .
COUNTRY farmland wllh seclud
ed woodt . water and good oc
cess in Monroe County, W Va
$1 ,000 down, coli (304 ) 772·
3102 or (lOA) 772·3227
Commercial property approx 17
acres , level land . located at
Tuppers Pla ins on Ohio, Route
7 Phone {614}667·63041
NEW 3 bedroom house, bullt. ln
kitchen , bath and •;., Phone
742·2306 or contact MilO 8 Hut.
chl1on, Rutland Ohio

EXPERIENCED
Radiator

HOUSE FOR SALE by owners _,.
rooms and both , ponnel~ Hv·
1ng room and carpeted Will
sell far $6500 Call 992·b250
after 5 p m 10 Lynn St. Mid·
dleport.
BEAUTIFUL TWO story -home wtth
two cor garage , 5 bedrooms ,
dining room, Iorge II ving room ,
modern kitchen 2'1, baths ,
large recreation room full{, oir
conditioned, 1/ ,
milt rom
school One quarter mile off
State Route 30 yltD( f1nanc lng
ava ilable Call 992·3863 bet
ween9o m. ond3p m.
HOME IN Pomeroy , 2 story , cen·
tral heotlng, some carpeting
and pannelllng Both &amp; 1h
Phone 992 707.. . or 992 34165
HOUSE FOR sole In Syrocu1e , ~
bedrooms, ond both lot 100 x
150 Garage cement drive and
small storage bldg Fvrnlshed
or unfurn ished Coll992·71417

PHOTOGRAPHY
Ael!ial
Commercial
Schools
Weddings

--

KEN GROVER

SMITH NELSON
MOTOIS, INC.

PHOTOGRAPHY

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

CARPENTER &amp;
BUilDERS

1'11.ttHI74

(414) 915-4155
Chtsllll', Ohio
10· 17-1 mo(Pdl

,._

BISSEll SIDING CO.

0

&amp;

A local contractor
Phone 949-2801
or 949-2860 .
Free Estlinltts
No Sundoy Coli• Pltllt
4·24· 1 mo.

Shirley's
John St.
•
Shirley

HARLEY HANING

.......

GUMR SERVICE

Owner

Continuous one
pltce
gutters. Wt .hong It, or do II
yourstll. Speclol prlctl to
builders.

Wolfe

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

"'-

....,._

Phone 949-2814
to 5 p.m.

MAIN
POM.EROY,

JUST LISTED- B. autlful
and secluded, over 3 acres,
11!2 story frame home. 3 or
_,. bedronms , fireplace ,
quipped kitchen, permo ·
pane windows, troller
hookup. Just $20,000 110

Superior
Steam Extractton_

Young's Carpetina

JUST LISTED - Aboul 7
acres In Pomeroy, 3 A.
fenced , 2 A. In woods,
balance In yard and gar·
den. 3 BR home with
dining, living, both, C. B.
room. Ideal for kids .
$19.200110.
JUST LISTED Lovely
home with Income, ex·
cellent neighborhood, 3·~
bedrooms, living, dining, 2
bolhs, 2 car gorge with 3
BR
apt .
over .
Just
$27,000.110.
JUST LISTED - 1 floor
plan 3 bedrooms , both,
nat. gos heal, carpeting.
Level lof 60 x 120.
$1B,OOO 00.
JUST LISTED _
E_•, .
n

cellent llshlng cottage on
River. 2 bedrooms, Iorge
living and kitchen, very
low upkeap. Buy this and
get away from II all . Only

$4,200.00.

JUST LISTED- LOVELY
LDVEL Y frame and
brick. 3 bedrooms, 1'12
bafhs. formal dining,
car~etlng , full basement
wit
large rec . room,
garage, 1 level acre close
rn . $37,000'.00.
CORNER LOT- 2112 story
!rome with carport. 2
fireplaces. 5 bedrooms,
lormol dining, both, Ioyer,
garage, In Middleport.
Look lust $8,500.00
WE HAVE BUYERS FOR

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

"Tllt Orlglnotors
Not Tht lmltotors"
2· 23·1 mo.

Young's Carpeting

YOUR FARM CALL
TODAY.
HENRY E. CLELAND
BROKER
Hank·Cith-Loono Clelona
Anoclotes
, 92•2259 _ 985 _() 12

Free Estimates
Installation, samples

brou~ht to your home
Clrpet-Lino •• Tile
Phone Mike Young ot
9'12·2206 or 992·7630

992-2U8

R.I. 1

Bthlnd Rutlond Oradt
School. Evtnlng work by
oppolntmont. Ph . 742-2005.
5·6·1 mo.

NObii Summn Kaod

SEPTIC TANKS cleaned Modern
SonJtatlon, 992·395-ll.
WILL ' do roofing, con&amp;tructlon
plumbing and heoflng No job
too lorQe or too small Phone
742·234B.

NEW LISTING- Good old
8 room frame home on a
corner lot . 3 bedrooms wlfh
closets, T.P. water and
natural
gos.
Hooting
Furnace. A good buy at
$1~.000

CARPENTER , flooring , coiling
paneling. Phone 992·2759

NEW LISTING- I 'I• ocres
with a 3 bedroom home just
outside of town, 6 rooms,
both, partial basement and
1 car garage . $25,0110.

MOBILE Home Repair, Elec ,
plumbing and heating. Phone
992·S858.
HOWERY AND MARTIN . EK·
c:ovatlng, septic system•.
NEW LISTING - Good
, dozer, backhoe, dump truck,
older home on quiet street
limestone, gravel , blacktop
neor schools. 3 bedrooms,
povlng, Rl. 143 Phone I (61~)
dining, Iorge living room
698·7331
wllh fireplace, carpeting In
all rooms, and yard for the
HARRISON'S T V. Repair Service
children . 2 car garage
Calls 276 Sycamore, St , Mid·
Only $17,5110
dloporl. Phone 992·2522.
BROWN
5 FIRE and Safety blln
I
NEW LISTING
4 1
qul•hers
All slzel, butlness.
bedroom fro me home, 11!2
home, boat. Refilled, tested.
baths, carpeting, elec.
Bill Brown, Rutland, Ohio
baseboard heel, nice kll·
n•~7~4=2-=·2~77~7~·-----chen, family room and nice : ~P~h~o~
back yard. $16,000.
EXCAVATING, BACKHOE. dozer,
trencher, Low Boy, dump truck
5 bedroom
trucks 1eptlc 1ystems. B1ll
home on nice corner lot In
pt'lone 992·2&lt;478 day or
Orange Township.

I

ss,ooo.oo -

GOOD HOMES FOR YOU
TO SEE AT OUR OFFICE
NEAR POST OFFICE .
PICTURES AND FREE
PARKING
·
G. Bruce Telford
Hl~n L. Tteford
AtiOCIIttl

,:::::::::::.;::;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~::;

CENTRAL RrAI 'JY CQ
I;,IU,.

1

Nlc8 2 story country home, containing 7
rooms and 1'12 baths, mostly carpeted. Kitchen hos all
new bullt.ln cabinets with br011ze stove and
refrigerator to match, new porches and all new
aluminum siding and storm windows, forced air
natural gas furnace and drilled well, garden space.
This ~house Is warm and ready for Immediate
occupancy, come take a look, just Sl8,900.

BASH AN -

FREE GAS - Nice modern 11/2 story farm house
contolnlng 4 bedrooms, dining room, kllchln with buill·
In appliances, basement, clly end well water, 2 barns,
work shop and other buildings, large pond stocked with
fish, approximately 23 acres tillable and .46 acres
fenced. Good location Call for appointment, price
$80,000.

CHESTER -113 acre form. 80 acres tillable lend, nice
2 story farm house, 7 rooms and beth, all hlrdwood
floors and basement. Barn and othor outbulldl~s. 2
ponds, e nice laying form priced 1o go, localed near
Chester. Call for appolnlmenf.
CHESTER - Ever drem of owning your own golf
course? Here's your chlnco for you or your trlonds to
own a nice rolling golf course, 5011:~~crn, 9 grHOs, nice
modern club house. outbuilding with 111 spraying end
Medlng equlpmenf, r1tee1s some mowing and a little
repair work "" golf course. This could be purchased
with the 113 acres listed above end developed Into 1
beaullful 18 hole golf course. Call for appt.
WE ARE SELLING PROPERTY AND NEED YOUR
HELP, LIST WITH US. WI HAVE BUYERS FOR
VA CANT LAND, FARM AND RESiuENTIAL
..
PROPERTY.
Call Jimmy Diem At

949-2388

0.

Mlddliport,l).
992·5724
lcomplete
Sales
and
Sorvlct and Supplies.
3·1 4·1 m ,

Pool

NEW LISTING - Nice :
bedroom
home
with
natural gas, F .A furnace,
city woler and carpeting.
Insulated. For only 118,000.

BUILDING LOTS - 1'12
acres near Tuppers Plains
f or S',, 000 . Severe I Iot s • t
Five Points, $2,0110.00 UP.

0.

Alignmenf;
wheel
balancing,
tune-up,
brake work, minor,
repair ,
'

"You'll Like Our Quality Way
Of Doing Business'
992-5342
GMC FINANCING
Pomeroy
Open EveningsUnti16:00-Til5p.m. Sat .

iLWOOIJ

BOWERS REPA IR Swet~rs toasters irons, oil
small appllancet . Lown mower,
next to State Highway Garage
on Roulo 7. Phone (614) 985·
3825
REMODELING, Plumbing, hooting
and oil type1 of general repair.
Work guaranteed 20 y.ar1 ex ·
perlence. Phone 992·2409

~
by

Quaker
DOWN
10 Lothario's
1 One kind of
look
geometry
11 Arhst
2 Nunble
13 Hold on
3 Spotless
property
4 Golf's
14 Bogart f1lm
Venluri
15 Dock hands' 5 Opera's
16 union
Wk. day "' 6 Slepi
Eared
17 "- my
..
..
7 _ h'~~eJ•.
word'"
"'""
18 Pla~
8 Johnny ,
'20 Russian jet
Appleseed s
21 Valuable
real name
rock
9 Leading
22 PriScilla
lady
Lola or '
12 Forester
Rosemary
16 Unfailing
23 Social
'
position
,: 26 Ocean

EXCAVATING, dozer , loader ond
backhoe work , dump trucks
ond lo·boyo far hlro. will haul
fill dirt, to soli, llmettone and
grovel Call Bob or Roger Jef"
fen , day phone 992·7089,
night phone 99'1·3525 or 992·
5232.
EXCAVATING, dozer backhoe
and dltchar Charle1 R Hat·
field , Bock Hoe Strvlce.
Rutlor'!d, Ohio. Phone 7412·2001.

SAVE ON

CARPETING

~ •

7 09

NowThru

May 1, 1977

SEWING ALTERATIONS
Upholotorlng ,
drop01
roooonoblo. 572 Soulh Third
• vo
Mlddlo o 1 Pho
~ ·'
P '
no
.....:99'1=·.::
63::06
::::....- - -- - -PIANO TUNING , Lana Daniels 12
yean of &amp;ervice ., Phone

Cindy Strip
Rubbtr Back
Regular ~ . 95
Stvt $4.11 S.,. Yd.

_B....:..:
A992·2082.
B.::Y5_:1::.
TT::IN::..G
_ I_N_ m_y_ h_o_mo
__w_it-h
pre·•chool ~hlldren bperlenc·
•d. Mn . Glenn Smith ,

__:992~·~361~
3. ;;;;;;;;;;;;::;;;::;;~~
;;;;;;

1973 TRAILER 14 x 70 unfurnl1hed

Coli 992-6688, 9 till 5 or
985-3501 after 6 p.m .. or con·
tact Tonyo Dovl1
1973 GREENBRIER Mobllo Homo.
65 K 12, 3 bedrooms, 7 x 13" roll
cut on living room, central air,
porcl'l an~ owning, Call John
Ientz, 9-49·2876.
3 BEDROOM, 20' • 44' d&lt;&gt;ublo
wide trailer Will tell furnl~hed
or unfurnlsl1ed, $6700 or S,$00,
Still ·ho• wheel• and tongue1.
Co11803·2625 or 99'1·3560.

Installed with pHcflng, no
utre to fiiY·
-cill742-2211
TALK TO
WENDELL ORATE
CARPET CONSULTANT

dog
22 Scourge
of serge
23 Reaso~s
24 Elame s
home
25 Barren
26 Debark
28

fabnc
31 "Warpamt"
1tem
32 Woody
is one
33 Memonze
38 Townsman
39 Not
"square"

• U Czech river 1-::-::+--i-+-t--1--

1

•w 42 Wyoming
~
mountain
range
•
~

•

•

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it:
AXVDLBAAXK

MASON fU.,.ITURE

STORE HOURS
Mon., Tues., Wed. &amp; Sat.~ 8:30.tli"S:OO
THURSDAY TIL 11 NOON

Ia

FRIIMY UNnl: 8 PM

CKYPTOQUOTES

773-5592

Herman ikate

Mlson,W. Va.

985·4100

RHLRKH

WCH

GL

5 3o-Adam · l2 4; News 6; Fam ily Affair B, Elec Co
20,33
6 DO-News 3,4,6,8,1 0,1 3,15, ABC News 6, Zoom 20,33
6 3o-NBC News 3,4, 15; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8.10, Vegetable Soup 20, VIlla Alegre 33
7 DO- Truth or Cons 3, To Tell the Truth 4, Liar's Club
6, Emmy Hopefuls 8, News 10, To Tell the Trulh
13; My Thr~ Sons 15, Ohio Journal 20 ; Black
Journal 33.
7 3D- Porter Wagoner 3, Gong Show 4, Candid Camera
6; Treasure Hunt 8, MacNeil Lehrer Report 20,33,
Andy Williams 10; Name That Tune 13; Pop Goes
the Country 15.
B·QO--Sanford &amp; Son 3,4, Mov ie " The San Pedro
Bums" 6, 13; Wh1te Seal Spec tal B. 10; Washington
Week In Review 20.33 , To Be Announced 15
8 3o-Movle " T1me to Run " 15, Dr . Suss 8,10, Wall
Slreel Week 20,33
9 .QO-Rockford Fites 3,4 , Mov1e " Fear IS the Key"
8, 10, Lowell Thomas Remembers 20. Woman Al 1ve
33
9 : 3o-Feather&amp; Fatller6,1 3; The Way 11Was20
10 OO-Qu 1ncy 3,4, 15 , News 20. Fir ing Line 33
10 3o-Lock, Stock &amp; Barrel 20.
11 06--News 3,4,6,8, 10,13, 15, Monty Pyt hon' s Fly1ng
Circus 20, Black Perspective on the News 33
11 3o-Johnny Carson 3. 4.15; Baretta 6, 13, NBA Play
Off 8, 10, ABC News 33.
12 00-Janaki 33
12 ~o-Mod Squad 6, Ironside 13
1 00-Mtdnlght Spectal 4, 15 .

GHMGQ ·

SATURDAY, MAY 14,1977
6· 3o-Matters of Llle 6, TV Classroom 8, Treehouse
Club 10; Kentucky Afield 13
7 ·00-Salurday Report 3, Children's Thealre 4; Eddie
Saunders 6, Treehouse Club 8, U.S Farm Report
10; Gtlllgan 13
7 30.....Bullwlnkle 3, World of Survival 4; Valley of the
Dinosaurs6 , Way Oul Games B. Man From C .O . S I
10; Oddball Couple 13; Sesame St 20
8 00-Woody Woodpecker 3.4.15 ; l;om &amp; Jerry 6, 13,
Sylvester &amp; Tweety 8, 10.
8 3o-P~nk Panlher 3 , ~ . 15, JabberJaW 6, 13, Clue Club
8,1 0; M1ster Rogers 20
9 00-Scooby Doo, Dynomull 6, 13 ; Bugs Bunny Road
Runner 8, Bugs Bunny &amp; Friends 10; Sesame St 20
I

~

J

-•
~

MASON FURNITURE

LONGFELLOW

One letter simply stands for another In this sample A is
-. used for the three Vs, X for the two O's, etc Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hants Each day the code letters are different

: GLJH
XQDH

• YHT

XPWX
Ql

WM

2 3

Litre

P lntc waoon 2. 3 Litre
Automaf lc Trans 21il MPG
Hwv .· 21 C1ty

4

Jl

....

I HHK

GMF V•

HRQTHJQU

LD H C•

XPHB

. KLLZG
XPHJ.-ZQM
PFYVWCT
•
Yealei'day'a Cryploquole: THE PROGRESS OF RIVERS TO
•~ THE SEA IS NOT AS RAPID AS THAT OF MAN TO ERROR. VlfTAIRE

..

10 oo-Speed Buggy 3,4,1 5, Tarzan 8.10 , Once Upon A
Classic 20
10 3o-Monster Squad 3,4, 15; Koroffl Supers how 6, 13 ,
Batman 8, 10, Zoom 20
11 ·00---SpaceGhosts, Frankenstein Jr 3,.4,1S , Shazam
Isis 8, 10, SSI Redetermination 20
1J.Jo-Atg John , Lttlle John 3.4.15, Superfrlends 13;
Big Blue Marble6; Best of Ernie Kovacs 20
12 :00-Land of the Lost 3, 15, Movie "Lawless Valley"
4; Hot Dog 6, Vlewpolnl e. Fat Albert 10; Action

con o1 1ne Van &amp; Club
Wagon 300 C l D Manual
Trans 25 MPG Hwy 18
C1ty

OTHER GREAT .GAS SAVERS IN STOCK

76 ELITE •••••••••••••• }5295 76 MUSTANG •.•••• ~.$2995
75 LTD ••. .~~-~:o.u·g·h:.'': $4495 76-PINTO ••••.••••••• $2995
2

••

COME TO MPG HEADQUARTERS

Dan Thompson Ford
.

Free oil change for one year with any new or used car or truck. 2000 miles
before changes.

Ray Riggs
Chester, Ohio

I :40.....News 13
2.3o-News 3.
3 DO-Mov1e " Moontide" 3
4 3()-Movle " If I 'm Lucky" 3.
6 co-FBI 3

•• 40 dance
Salty

RUTLAND
FURNITURE
Rutland

Yesterday's Answer.
19 Doro thY' s 30 Colton

(2 wds.)
28 Interdict
29 Colorado
•
Indian
30 Pivotal
! 34 Spanish
l~
composer
,35 Suffered
. from
=· 36 Viva tor·erct!h;ot--J-: 37 Draw out
:: 39 Wahine's

30 rollo at carp1t In stock.
Goad nltcllon 111 on 101e.

II

If you 1ook1ng tor good &amp;5
milage, check the f1gures on ________...;:
th1s page Pinto traditiOnally 1
Amen ca's bes t sel ling s ub
Ford F .
compact not on ly has good
Based on all veh•~le
Trans
milage r at.ngs bul also ex
engines and transm1ss1on
Ctty
ce llen t performan ce Th e
comb1na11ons wtth an EPA
larger s passenger Granada
combined c11y . n,gt'lwav
has good m1leage rat.ngs and
est,mate of 20 MPG or
1ts compared m looks fo
better, as reported In th e
Mer cedes Benz Ford PICkups
EPA Buyer's Gu1de of
ha11e the best 6 cylmder MPG
January , 1977
ra t1 ngs either manval or
automatiC
.
and
the
Couner
p1ckup rs unbea ten ' nits class ..._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _. ._.;:
Your Ford De a ler ha s what
Pm to Wagon 2 8 Litre
you're tookmg for
Pmto Wagon 2 3 Litre 4·
Automat1c Trans 23 MPG
Speed Manual Trans 33
Hwy 18 Ctf y
MPG Hwy 23 Ci ty
More about m 1leage
............;~
M1l eage f1gures are
EPA est1mates
Your
ac tual m1leage wd t vary
d epend1ng on
your
ve h rcle's
condd1on,
optional equipmen t end
how and where you
dr 1ve

~---TRUCKS----~
74 Ford Custom 'h Ton • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • .. • • '2995
73 Chev. Cheyenne Auto ••••••••••••••••••• '2895
73 Chev. Custom V-8 ..................... '2695
73 Chev. Custom, 6 cyl ................... '2395 .
73 Ford Explorer ...........................'2295
72 Ford Custom, AM/FM ................. '1895

FRIDAY, MAY 13,1977

., 27 Regarding

1 Roi!Tiue"lhat
I Roll Brown Sholl
Both Rubbtr lack
Regular$8.95
Slit SUI Sq. Yd.

75 Ford LID 4 dr.......................... '3695
75 P~. Valiant 4 dr, 6 cyl.. .. ............ SAVE
74 Ford Galaxie 4 dr ••••••••••• •• •••••••• '2695
74 Ford Gran Torino 2 dr ... .............. '3295
74 Chev. Vega, As Is ••••••••••• •• ••••• ••• '1300
74 Pontiac Catalina 2 dr •• •••••• •••• •• ••• '2895
,74 Buick Regal 2 dr•••••••••••••••••••• • '2895
74 P~. FUJY Ill, 4 dr ••••••••••••••••••••• 12295
73 Buick Century 4 dr•••• J. .•••••.••• •••. '2495
73 P~. Fury 4 dr Wagon . . . ............. . 11695
73 Pontiac leMans 2 dr ................. '1895
73 Ford Gran Torino 2 dr .. .............. '1895
73 Ford LTD 2 dr ..........................'2495
73 Ford Ranch Wagon 4 dr ••••••••••••• •• 12495
72 P~. Fury 4 dr . . ......... ..... ..........'1495
72 Ply. Satellite Sebring 2 dr ............ '1695
72 Chev. Impala 4 dr ••••••••••••••••••••• '1295
72 vw 4 cyl, 4 speed ••....•.•..•.•••.•.• '1495
72 Pontiac LeMans 2 dr•••••••••••••••••• '695
71 Pontiac· Catalina 2 dr ...................'695
70 Cadillac Coupe DeVille ................ '1295
71 Ford Mustang 6 cyl. auto...... ... ....'1000
69 Buick 4 dr. . . .. ...... ... ...... ... . ... ... '395
-&amp;7 Mer. Cougar. As Is..................... . '275

See

Television Log

crosser

~

Mu~lang

Speed Manual Trans
MPG Hwy 23 C1IV

43 Illustr!DUS

I Kind of race
5 Athletic VIP

SEWING MACHINE Ropolro, 1111'·
vi~•. all make1, 992·22841 . Th.
Fabric Shop,
Pomero1.
Authorized Singer Sales ond
SeN Ice We sharpen Sclstars.

RIGGS USED
CARS

Roger R1ebel
Located on St. Rt . 7

THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS

Pinto 2.3 Ll trt AufOmll rc
Trans 3 2 MPG Hwy . 23
Ctfy

......

Karr &amp; Van Zandt

BRADFORD , Auctioneer, COm·
plete Service Phone 9419·2!487
or 9_,.9·2000 Racine , Ohio, Crill
Bradford

250 CIO Automahc
23 • MPG Hwy 18

4 sp, AC •••.••• 13695

See one of these courteous salesmen: Pete
Burris or Marvm Keebaugh.

- --

•Will do odd l•b• roofing, poln·
ling, gullor work . Phone 99'1·

.'3800

76 Plymouth Volare 4 dr. 6a~r~~~r~c
'3795
76 Olds Cutlass Sup. CDe, Power and air. '5495
75 Chevy Monte Carlo . ~?:!~~.~~~-~~r;.......14695
74 Olds 88 Royal Cpe. ~~e;,.a.~~.~i~...... '3595
74 Chevy Vega GT Cpe. 4 spd .............11995
74 AMC Hornet 2 0......................... 11995
73 Olds Cutlass Supreme 4 dr. ~~~e~lr .... '3295
73 Cutlass 4 dr., air .... . ..... . . ............ '2495
73 Olds 88 4 Dr., power &amp; air........... '1595
73 Buick ReRal HT Cpe••••••••••••••••••• 13495
73 Monte Carlo power.-~~~·.~~~- ~~.f •••••• '3495
72 Chevy Impala HT Cpe.... .......... ... '1495
72 Buick 225 Umited 4 dr HT =~~':.'ir '2495
72 Chevy Impala 4 Dr., air • •••••••••••••••• 11295
72 Olds 98 4 Dr., air ..................... 12295
72 Buick Elec. HT Cpe••••••••••••••••••••• 12295
72 Ford Torino 2 dr••••••••••••• •• •••••••••• '1395
72 Pontiac Safari Wagon, air ••••••••••••••• 11595
71 Ford 'h Ton PickuJ1 ..... . ............. .' 11695
71 Olds 98 Lux., power &amp; air ............ '1995
71 Dod~e Demon 2 dr., 6 cyl .............'1195
· 70 Ford LTD 4 Dr., power &amp; air .•••••••••• '895
70 Buick Skylark HT Cpe., air •••••••••••••'1495
70 Olds 98 HT Cpe -~~~~!:".":'~!'.~~~-~!~ .... '1495

,-.ltZ·Ittl

Routt 3, Pomoroy,

II

Mustang
Cobra VB,
VB, 4 SDeed. air C0!1dltloning

DUGAN'S
FRONT ENII
ALIGNMENT

TEAFORD
0.

76

2· 23· 1 mo.

VI raJ I B. Sr:, Rtollor
216 E. Second StrHI
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Phone 992·3325
DRIVE-IN All equip·
ment necessary for the
business, ample parking.
or •can be made Into a'
home This really Is a
wQ!1derful buy ot $10,0110 .

'8800

Cpe. DeVille .......... .........
Full power and a lr.

.s:::::s
LARRZ~eDER

by appointme~no;.;t'..-=
4.15.1 mo.

76

73 Cadillac

with no charge.

9 a.m.

'8900

Cadillac Cpe DeVille ....................
Full power and a ir .

IUIIIIIIUIEI'\*Etl(lll

4·13·1 mo.pd

!.yracu•"

J

SIVIIII

Routt 3, Pomtroy •.

76

Cadillac Sedan DeVille ................ .
'Full power and a ir .

--···nlcl
~

Trans
Crty

USED CARS

•1.-lltfatl s.ntc:•

Phone 992- 3339

Beauty Nook

(Jeffers)

NEW HOMES
REMODELING

Gf~Mflo~

.....

PROFESSIONAL

Service

VA FHA, 30 yr financing Ireland
Mortgage 77 E. State, Athens ,
phone (61A) S92.3051

mileage Con be ... n of 103

Contact 675-1333

Equlpmn a..

CAMPER , 5600
Also, horse
trailer, $-450. Phon, (61 41 ) 698·
3290
SPRING GARDEN Supplle• . Cob.
boge cauliflower brOt;coll
and heod lattuae plants
yellow , white, a nd red on ion
sets onion plants, Kennebec,
cobbler Katahd1n, Red Pontiac
and Red Lo1oda seed potatoes
Bulk garden seedt, potting soil,
peat moss, fru1f trees and rose
bvthll . Midway Market,
Pomeroy, Ohla
992 2582,
Bob • Markel, Moton . W Va.
(lOA) 773·5721
TOMATO
PLANTS , Cobbogo,
broccoli, caul ifl ower brunel
sproul• egg plants hanging
baskett
pots
geranluln1,
begonia• , flats
pefunlas
marlgo ldt, ponslet , toltla,
baltam , dianthus , 1nop·
dragons , olynum , Vinca , col.
ev1 , Cleland'• Greenhouse,
Racine Geraldine Cleland

APPLIANCE SERVICE man ex perienced . NO phone ca ll•.
Gollla Refrigeration Co , 611 HOOF HOLLOW Buy, sell trade
Th1rd Ave , GallipOlis , Ohio,
or tra in hortes RUTH REEVES,
trainer Phone (6141) 698 3~
OLDE~ RESPONSIBLE lady to live
in and core for aged widow In ALL BREED Dog grooming,
Rutland , Oh1o Not mvalld nor
rea10noble rafes Coli for op·
semle . L1ght housework and
polntment, J &amp; D Kennels .
cooking
No laundry
C:oll
7A2·31 62
742 2078 for lnforma t10n
AKC SHETLAND theep dog1.
WACKEN HUT CORP. l1 now ac
{Mln.) Collies, 2 females 7
ceptmg appllcotlont for full
weeks old Shott and wormed
time and parttlme 1ecurlty
Phone ( 61~ ) 367·0292 or
posttlons , mili tary background
367-7112
prtferred but not required No
phone co lts plecne. App ly In REGISTERED FEMALE B ower,~ yrs
old with popen , $75.00. Phone
penon at Appoloch1an Power
99'1·7675
Project 1301 , New Haven,
W Va. We are on Equal Op· FOR ADOPTION Port coonhound
portvnlty Employer
male. Also , 3 pupp1es 2
female 1 mole. Small slza
FRIENDLY HOME TQy Parties has
Meigs Co Hvmon• Soc Phone 1 412 In ca1t Iron kltchen•lnk , I
openings far manager. and
8-43·3009 and 992-7680.
d~talers In your area Tot party
ba1 ln and 1 drain board , hong
plan experience helpful Car AKC REGISTERED Cocker Spaniel
on wolf type, wt)lte 1 3 burner
and telephone nece1sory Call
gal hot plate Phone 992·571,.
Pupploo , $7S Coll992-7059
collect to Carol Day (51 8)
ECONOMY
TRACTOR w1th all at489·8395 or write Fr1endly
tachmen t• Like new, asking
Home Parties 20 Roil Rood
$2250 Phone (61A)69B 3290
Ave , Albany N.Y 12205
1975 JEEP CHEROKEE p b po
Ouodratrock
Good tires. NEED A WATER
Phone (304) 877·2340
HELP WANTED
SOFTENER7
1976 CHEVY 3 quarter ton, 4
wheel drive, automaflc , 350
engine, only . 7,500 miles . Alto.
Ex:ecutive type secret•ry
Let Pomeroy Landmork
Firewood for sole
Call
for professional at health
soften &amp; condition your
992 .5947
care facility . Medical
water and a Co-op weter
terminology preferred but
1975 JEEP Cherokee, p s. p b. !softener, Model UC-XVI
not mandatory.
olr 4 wheel drive Phone
Now Ot1ly ·•279,f5
Typing and shorthond
7A2·2590 .
skills
required.
Stnd
Lei us test yaur wate•·
1973 VEGA toke 0\ler payments.
resume of training ond
Frte.
1968 Dodge S•50
Phone
oxperltnct to Box 729-C, C·
992·7332
d
rk
o Tht Dolly Sontlntl ,
1976CHEVROLETChovelto Phone
Om8111J l.an ma
Pomeroy, Ol!lo, 45769.
992-727~ .
Jack W Corsey, Mgr.
992·2111
1972 PINTO Run· A-Bout low , ,__ _ _Phone
;..;,;;;.:.:::..:,:.~::.:.-...J

PIANO LESSONS, chlldrono ond
odultt . Mn. Har'ley Van
or
Vranken. 992·2270.
ANY STRAY dog• running loose
on my property , due to the kill·
lng of theep on my property ,
etc. will b. 1hot. Gene aod
Jerry Coleman, New lima
Road, Rutland .
CASH paid tar all mok" and
model• of mobile hornet .
NOTICI TO BIDDERS
Phone area code 61o4·&lt;423·9531
PURCHAU D~ ON~
SCHOOL BUS
TIMBER. Pomeroy ForHt ProFOR
duel• Top prlc• far standing
IMI!IGS LOCAL BOARD
sawtimber Call Kent Honbv.
OF EDUCATION
1·A46·8570.
Sealed proposal$ will be
received bv the Board of COINS CURRENCY, takono , old
e:aucatlon of the Meigs Local
pocket watches and choln1,
School District of Middleport,
sliver and gold We "-ed 1~
Ohio at tl'le Clerk's office until
and oldersil'ler cains Buy, aell ,
7:30 o'clock PM on May 16,
1977 and at that time opened
or trade' Call Roger Wam1ley ,
by the Clerk of sa id bollrd as
742 2331.
provided by law for one (1) 65
CASH II I for junk cart , Frye'•
pusenger school bus, ac
cording to sfeclf!catlons of
Truck ond Auto WRECKER SER·
said Board o Education .
VICE! Phone 742· 2081
Separate and Independent
bids will be received with OLD FURNITURE, ice bo~re•. bra11
respect to the chassr. and
bedt,
etc , complete
body tvpe and will state that
households Write M 0 Miller ,
J.h.Uua when asaembltd and
Rt o4, Pomeroy , Ohio or coli
prior to delivery comply with
all
school
district
specifications, all safety GOOD USED boby otrollor. Phone
regulations end current Ohio
949·2265 .
Minimum Standards for
School Bus Construction of STANDING TIMBER WANTED.
the Oepartl'l:1ent of Education
PHONE (614) 667·621A .
adopted by and with the
WANTED
· GOOD used plano.
consent of tht Director of
Highway Saftty J)ursuant to
Phone 992-3068 after 5 p m.
Stctlon A511 .76 ol tht ReviSed
Code and all other pertinent
provision of law
Specifications and In
structlons to bidders mav be
obtained at the office of the IF YOU hovt a ~trvlce to offer,
want to buy or sell something ,
Clerk, Middleport, Otilo
A certified check, payable
oe looking lor work . . or
to tl'le clerk.treasurer of the
whatever
you 'l l get results
above board of education or a
foster with o Sentinel Wont Ad
satisfactory
bid
bond
Coll992·2156.
executed bv the bidder and
the aurety company. In an 3 fAMILY YARD Solo by tho Slolo
amount equal to five percent
Highway Go rage, Rt. 7 Chester
of the bid she II be submIt ted
May 12, and 13 Whole ••'• of
with each bid
•
dlthea, llnen1, scrHn doors,
Said board of education
some furniture. jewelry and
reserves the right to waive
uniforms Misc.
Informalities, to accept or'
relect anv and all, or parts of
5 FAMILY GARAGE Solo Thuro·
any and all bids
doy, Friday Saturday. Antlqutt,
No bids may be withdrawn
tor at least thirty 130) doys
~lathes
baby
furniture
after the scheduled closing
household Items 1966 A wheel
tlmt lor receipt of bid!
drive truck . 33 N. past parka,
Board of Education of
right on Co. Rd. 20 fourth
Mtlga Local
haute
SChO(II Olstrlcts
Jane Wagner
YARD SALE, Friday and Saturday,
Clerk . Treasurer of
the 13th and 141 th at the Layne
Meigs Local
r11ldence In Ct'tetMire betlind
School District
Baplltl Chvrch from 9 t1115 p m
South Thlrc;t Avenue
Mlddleporl, Ohio A5760
YARD
SALE , Mar 11 , 12 , 13, 1A at
(AI 22, 29 ; 15) 6, 13
the Ivan Wei form oft Rl 7
Form on right before getting to
Royol Oak Pork . 9 11119.
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
YARD SALE , Soturdov and Sun
Cllt No. 22115
day, 1.00tlll600 Bicycles , fur·
•atate af Daniel J. Humphrey ,
nltvre, clothing , 13 W Cave St
DtCIIItd.
Pomeroy, Oh
Notice Is hereby given that
Betty Gilkey of Middleport ,
Ohfo, has been duly appolntt&lt;l YARD SALE. Sat , May lA 10 11116
1972 Hondo Motorcycle, Sl 1?5
as Admlnlstr~trlx of the
Lombrettc motor tcooter, boy's
Estate of Oenltl J. Humphrey,
clothing , bicycle, mite . Don
deCtlltd, lift Of Meigs
County, Ohio
Johnson's, Portland , St Rt. 1241
Creditors an re(lulred to
file their claims with said 5 FAMILY YARD Solo behind old
Rizer SeN Ice Station. Syi-ocust.
ffduclerv within three months
Frldoy , Saturday . 10 tHI !(p.m.
Doted this 10th doy of Moy ,
1977.
Furniture, clothing, appllonce1 ,
Mannina D. Webater
misc .
Judgt
(5) 13, 20, 27 • 3tc
YARD SALE . Fri. ond Soturdoy,
IN&gt;y 13 ond 14 In Brodbury.
Next to WMPO. Ceromlu, T.V ,
Avon, oil klndo of clothing.
Cancelled If It 'Oino

MEIGS

YARD SAlE , Friday. May 13th. COAL lime5tone, and colc1um
chlor1de ond calc tum bnne for
Soturdoy, Ufh m Bradbury,
dust control and spec1al mix1ng
new and used clothing Mise
salt for formers , bceltior Soh
1tem1 .
Works , Ma1n Street Pomtroy,
Oh1o or phone 99'1 3891

992-2196

Pal Hill, Rocky Hupp
or Darrel Dodrill
For a good deal on a new or used vehicle .
Open evenings tii6 : 00
Except Thursday and Saturday
Closed Sunday

News for K1ds 13, Croc~ett's Victory Garden 20
12 30.....Kids from C A P . E R 3.15. American Band·
stand 13 , Soul Tram 6, Ark II 8, Gomer Pyle,
USMC 10
l Oo-Ara 's Sports World 3, Movie "Cyclone on Hor
seback " 4. Children' s F 1l m Festival 8. Movie
" Four for Te)(as" 10, Wrestling 15. Nova 33
1 3o-Greatest 'S ports Legends 3, Pro Bowltng 6,
Movie " Jumcing Jacks" 13
~
2 !»-Grandstand 3,4,15, Racers B, A1rport 33

2
2
3
3

15-Baseball 3,4, 15
3o-Movle " The Runaway Bus" 8
00-Cancer Life or Death 33.
3D-Movie "South of St Lou1s " 6, Movie " R1d1ng
Htgh " 13; Book Beat 33
4 oo-Golf a, 10. Woman 33'
4 3D-Anyone for Tennyson' 33
5 Oo-S tar Trek 3, W1de World of Spor Js 6, 13, Marc u s
Welby. M. D 4; Space 1999 8. Sports Spectacular
10. To Be Announced 15, Catch ·33 33
S 3o-Consumer Experience 33
6 OD- News 3,4,10, Lawrence Wel k 8, God Has the
Answer 15
6 3o-NBC News 3.4,15. ABC News i3. News 6, CBS
News 10, Lilias Yoga &amp; You 33
7 Oo-Muslc Hall America 3; Lawrence Welk 4, 15 , Hee
Haw 6,8 , $128.000 Quest ton 10. Let' s Ma ke a Deal
IJ , Wor ld War I 33
7 3G-Pop Goes the Country 4, Follow the Sun 10, 1n
Search of 13, Best of Ernie Kovacs 33
8 00--Movie 1 'E arthquake"J,4, 15, Wonder Woman 6,
, 13, Mary 1yler Moore 8, 10 , Fall of Eagles 33
8 3o-Bob Newhart 8,10
9 oo-Starsky &amp; Hutch 6,13; All In The Family 8,10;
Amencan Short Story 33
10 oo-Dog &amp; Cat 6, 13, MISS u s A Beauty Pagean t
8,10, P 1ccad lll¥ C~rcus 33
11.0o-News 3,4,6, 13, 15, Jana k1 33
11 15-ABC News 6; Film 15
11 3D-Mary Hartman 3, Saturday N1ght 4,15, Movie
" Tomb ol the Living Dead" 6, Movie " Circus
World" 13
12 oo-News 8, 10
12 30---Movle " Lady lee " 8, Movie "Cactus Flower "
10
I 3D-Peter Marshall 6
2 oo-Movie "Th ieves' H1gh way" 3, Mo vie " Blood &amp;
Black Lace" 13
3 3o-Movle " Two F lags Wes l " 3, ABC News 13
5 oo-Movle ''Carnival m Costa Rica" 3

ROOKIE BENGALS
CINCINNATI (UP!) - The
Cincinnati Bengals opened
their annual rookie camp
Thursday with 13 draft
choices on hand.
The rook1e group was
headed by Cincmnati's three
first round selections,
defensive tackles Edd1e
Edwards ofthe University of
M1arm, 'Yilson Wlutley of the

University of Houston, and
tight end Mike . Cobb of
M1ch1gan State
Several veterans also were
on hand to work out with the
group, according lo Jack
Donaldson , offensive
hackf1eld coach and rookie ,
camp coordinator. Two on·
field workouts will be held
Friday ~d one on Saturday

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT

Case No 22108
E s tate of Thomas J Cook,
Decease d
Not 1ce 1s he r eby 9111en that
E ve lyn
Coo k
Cla r k of
Pom e ro y, Oh10 , has been duly
appo•n.ted Exec;utnx of the
Estate of Tn omas J Cook .
deceased late of P omerov .
MeiQ S Cou nty Ot110
Cred1to rs are reQuired to
frle their cla1m s With sa 1d
frdu c1ary w 1fhm three mon th s
Dated tnrs llth day ot May ,

Middleport,

0.

IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COUR:T
PROBATE DIVISION
MEIGS COUNTY I OH 10
IN THE MAT T ER OF SE T
TLEMENT OF ACCOUN T S,
PROBA T E COURT. MEIGS

COUNTY . OHIO
Account s and vou cher s of
ihe
t o l low',ng
named
f iCUCiarles ha'le been f1led 1n
the P robate Courtr Me,g s
County , Oh 10 for approval
and self lemenf
CA SE NO 11,397 Sec ond and
F1nal Acc ount of Edw 1n
Mcleod . guard1a n of the
1977
Mann ing D Webster Guard 1ans h1p Es tat e of Lula
Judge Wheaton Dav 1s
CASE NO 21 , 6 2 6 F~rst ,
Covr t Of Common P leas,
Probate DIVISIOn F 1nal and D l str~but 1 ve Ac
count of Robert Molden ,
{5 ) 13 , 20 27
3t c
Ad m1 n1Stra1or of the Estate of
Wilbur La w r enc e Molden ,
Decea s ed
CA SE NO 1 1.79 7 F1 rst and
NEW OPPONENTS
Frnal Acc oun t ot F re d W
ATHENS, Ohio (UP! )
Cr ow , Jr
An ci l lary Ad
Oh10 Uruvers1ty w1ll fa ce mm1 s trator of th e Estate of
J an e The rs s , Dec eased
several new opponents rn Olga
CA SE NO 21,827 FtrSt and
their 1977-78 season
F1nat Acco unt of Edward R
OU Athle!Jc D!l'ector Bill Burk e Ex e ct,~tor of the Estate
of Hale! 0 Bvrke . De ceased
Rohr sa1d Thursday that
CASE NO 2 1.856 F ~r st and
bes1des a 16-game Mld· Frnol Acco unt of Robert Lee
Jr , Adm 1n 1s trator
Amencan Conference wJ a1thcobt hse Wil
l Annew.ed of tne
schedule , the Bobcats will Estat e of Robert L Jacobs
ased
take part in tw'o tournaments, Dece
CA S E N O 1 11 9 16 F~rst and
at Clemson Nov. 25-26, and F•nal Accov nt of Nor m a M
the Bayou Classic at New la nd . Execu tr r:.. of the
E s tat e of Lou,s a M Newland ,
Lafayette, La., Dec 16-17.
Dece a sed
Un less exceplion s ar e f iled
In those tournaments will
ther eto , sa id acc ounts w il l be
be such new opponents for the for
h ear 1ng be fore sa•d Court
Bobcats as Texas Chnstian, on the 9th da y of J un e. 1977 , at
Rhode Island , Clemson, whrch' t 1me sa 'd a c covnts will
be cons rde r ed a nd cont 1nued
Nebraska and Southwest from day to day unt• l fmally
d ispos ed of
Louisiana .
person Interested may
Also on the OU schedule for f ileAny
wr 1tten ex c:; eptfons to sa1d
the first tune 15 • Southern ac counts or to matters per
ta 1nmg fO the exec u tion of th e
Methodist: who the Bobcats trust
, not less tnan 11ve •J . ys
will meet Dec. 20 m Dallas, pnor to , the dat e set for
hear,ng
Tex

Other non-&lt;:onference opponents mclude Cleveland
State , Youngstown State ,
Marietta, Marshall, Loyola
( 01. 1 and Virginia Tech

MANNING D WEBSTER

J UDGE
COMMON PLEAS COURT .
PROBATE DIVISION
MEIG S CO UNTY , OH 10
(S&gt; l3 l tc

O.D.
OFFICE
12,2
S(CLOSE
AT NOON ON THURS. ) - EAST COURT

�1(1- The Dailv Sentinel. Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 ., Friday, May 13, 1977

News •• in Briefs

Mideast peace
is touch, go

Meigs
Property
Transfers

(Continued !rom page I)
refused to discuss his case.
Producer A. C. Lyles, a Cagney friend lor many years,
however, said Cagney had been hospitalized a week ago lor
transient ischemis anemia, a circulatory weakness caused by .
an infection in his inner ear. "Cagney's condition is serious, ··
he said, bul the veteran entertainer ''feels good, can walk in
Charles A. Wagner , leopha
his room and telephones friends."
Wagner to Jerry F . Powe ll ,

Eisler C. Metheney, Ellen
L. Metheney to Elster C.
Meth eney,
El len
L.
Me th eney, 18 . 16905 a cres.
Sa lem.

WASHINGTON (UP!) President Carter ·says the
Palestine
Liberation
Organization may break its
stance and recognize Israel's
right to exist, but any
"reasonable" solution in the
Middle East must include a
Palestinian homeland.
Carter, during a wide..-anging, nationally televised
news con£erence Thursday,
cautioned tbat peace in that
troubled area remains ''very
much in doubt."
"We have a long way to go,
but I do believe there's a
chance the Palestinians
might make moves lo
recognize the right of Israel
to exist," he said. "We· are
trying to add our efforts to
bring this about, but I have no
assurance that it will be
accomplished."
When asked if Israel should
be willing to accept a
Palestinian state in return for
PLO recognition, Carter
said: 11 Yes."
"I don't think Ufere can be
any reasonable settlement of
the Middle Eastern question
... without a homeland for the
Paleslinians," he said. "For
the Palestinians to have a
homeland and ror the refugee
questiol) to be resolved is
obviously
of
crucial
importance, " said Ca rter,
who has been meeting witb
leaders in the Middle East in
hopes of he !ping reach a
settlement..
"It 's absolutely crucial that
no one ... ever doubt that our
No.1 commitment in the
Middle East is to protect the
right of Israel to exist," he

Mining

R 0 bert

Margaret Powell , 40 A.,

Harrisonville
Society News

In 1956, 73 Indonesians
were drowned in a pleasure
craft sinking in the Java Sea . ·

Sunday diruJer guests of
Ava Gilkey were Mr. and
Mrs. Bobe Whaley, Terry
.Whaley , Mr . and Mrs.
Howard Gilkey , all of
·columbus ; Mrs . Jackie
Davies and daughter Jami
Leigh, G~llipolis; Mr. and
Mrs. Bob Alkire and Ray
Alkire, Athens. Afternoon
callers were Lola Clark , Mr.
and Mrs. Larry Clark and
.daughter Tamra, Penney and
Wendy and Bob Gibson and ·
Robin, Columbus; Mr. and
Mrs. Asa Jordan, Mr. and
Mrs. Clinton Gilkey, Karen
Gilkey, Kathy Jordan and
Joshua -.
Mrs. Clara Hull Waldo is
visiting a week with Mr. an d
Mrs. Bud Douglas and Mr.
and Mrs. Dale Williams.
Mrs. Norma Lee was
Sunday djnner guest of Mr.
and Mrs. Gene Young.
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Starkey
was Sunday dinner guest of
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Wiseman.
Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Jewell
and Mrs. Pauline Atkins a nd
Mrs. Ruby Halliday were
dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Bob Jewell Sunday.
Mrs. Bess Musser is
staying with her nephew, Mr.
and Mrs. Don Cotterill and is
much improved.
Mr. and Mrs . Rodney
Withers and
children,
WelMon and Mr. and M~s.
John Musser and son were
Sunday visilors of Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Sheets.

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This c~rry·MOme Fedd ~ rs Blco ntenn1al SpuW lll
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1han a comparable c apaCily !.lland ard Fedd ers
model. Com e In now tor the spi rited value of '76

In 197&gt;, the United States
regained possession of the
"Mayaguez" in the Gulf of
Siam after American planes
had
destroyed
three
Cam bodian gunboats that
had participated in capture of
the carRO vessel.

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adj ustable au tomi:lt tc thermostat , va n abl e .w
direc tion , air e "'change r, and accord 1on·lype.
pull- ou t stde panele tor Slrnplihed dO ·It· ~O \H Se lf
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'
TWO GREAT FEDDERS FULL WARRANTIES
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Fri., Sat., Sun.
May !3-14-15
Double Feature

·Tile New Vorl\ Time$ e oo ~ Rl ~'e w. No• 23. 1975
· ~&lt;l .. l .,,rr OOor apen· pl e&lt;'l erus dapend•ng , or course. on
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MIDDI.IPORT, 0.

Sutton .
Montie C. Sanders. Glenna
J. Sanders tD Montie Richard
S~nder s, lola Faye Sanders,
1. 72 A .. Olive.
Michael L. Barr, Margaret
J . Barr 10 William B. Ledlie,
Emme~~ A. Ledlie , Parcels ,

Rutland .

Chester Gooding , Dorothy
Good ing to Oeryl Eugene
Well , Doris Ann Well , 0.43d A,
A.

0.19.47 A., Orange .
William Motley, dec. to
Sarah C. Motley. Gertrude
Van Cooney. John Motley ,

Grace Ca ll, a fl . for trans .•
Middleport .

Sarah C. Motley , dec . to
Gertrude VanCooney, John
Motley. Grace Call . Aff. for
lrans .• Middleport .
Gertru de VanCooney ,
Charles VanCooney, Grace
Call, Woodrow Call. Sr. to
John H. Motley, Lot,
Middleport.
Charles L. Collins, lola A.
Col lins, Larry Col tins, Teresa
F. Collins. George M. Colli ns.
Nancy Jo Collins, Robert G.
Edwards,
Shi r ley
M.
Edwards. to Celia Elizabeth
Coliins, Parcels. Olive .

Drew Webster Post No. 39
Am . Leg . to Meigs Co.
Commissioners, Meigs Co.
Agr . Society, Meigs Co.

Engineer, Ease. Agree.,
Meigs.
Donald Yoho, Erma Yoho
to Effie Norman, Parce ls,
Salisb ury .
Henry H. Graham, Mary L.
Graham to J erry W.
R lchards.
Bonn ie
S.
Richards. Pa rce ls, Olive.
Fa rmer5 Home Adm. to
Robert w. Sisson, Iva M.
Sisson, .51 acre, Rutland .

(Continued from page I)
mineral resources.
Co pies of " Mineral In·
dustries Map of Ohio," are
available for a cost of $1 plus
four cents tax and ID cents
mailing fee, a total of $1.14
from the . Division of
Geological Survey, Ohio
Department of Natural
Resources, Fountain Square,
Columbus 43224.

FINAL PASSAGE
COLUMBUS (UP!) :._ The
Ohio House gave final legislative passage Thursday and
sent to the governor bills to
increase the fee for notaries
public and place Chautauqua
Assembly grounds under the
state traffic code.
·

POMEROY
NATIONAL BANK
INVITES YOU TO AnEND
A
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FINANCE FORUM
FOR WOMEN
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WITH BERNARD FULTZ, ATTORNEY, SPEAKING ON

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

FORUMS WILl BE HELD AT OUR:
Rutland Branch on Tuesday, May 17, Phone 742·2888
Main OffiCe in Pomeroy on Tuesday, May 24, Phone 992-2133
Tuppers Plains Branch on Wednesday, May 25, Phone 667-3161
ALL FORUMS WILL START AT 7:30 P.M.
Reservijtions are requested but not required. If possible, return the
reservation below or phone your reservation, two days prior to the
event.

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1 plan to aHend the Finance Forum for Wom~n at . your
Rutland Branch, Tuppers Plains Branch, or Mam Olf1ce of
the Pomeroy National Bank in Pomeroy. (Circle one)

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NAME

---------R;freshments Will Be Served

· - Richard Nixon was
guilty of breaking the Jaw
during Watergate. The
interviews with David Frost
"didn't change my opinion
about President Nixon. I
think he did violate the laws. I
think he was guilty of
impeachable offenses."
The seven-nation
diplomatic summit that just
concluded in London was a
~~substantial success.'' .
- He backs Attorney
General Griffin Bell's
investigation ·or FBI officials
suspected of wrongdoing in
domestic surveillance cases.
"No special excuses should
be given lor officials in the
FBI," he said.
-There is no timetable for
establishing lull diplomatic
relations witb China, but he
expects Leonard Woodcock,
tbe United Auto Workers
president, "to be ambassador
to the People's Republic of
China" when the time comes .
- There are no definite
plans to go to France at the
end of the year , although he
has an invitation from
President Valery Giscard
D'Estaing.
- He agrees with his top
pollster , Patrick Caddell,
that it is important to stress
style rather than just
substance to ga in public
trust. "The confidence of
people in government is a
crucial
eleme nt
of
· leadership," he J;aid.

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By VERNON SCOTT
HOLLYWOOD (UP I )
Robert Young and his
television family of a
generation ago are reunited
May loin a !JO.rninute special
titled "The Father Knows
Best Reunion. "
It marks the first time
~ince the series left the air 17
years ago that the fictional
of
Anderson
family
Springfield (somewhere in
the
midwest)
has
reconvened.
In addilion to Young, the
gathering of the clan includes
the entire original cast: Jane
Wyatt , who played Margaret
Anderson, and the three kids,
now grown to maturity,
Elinor Donahue (Betty).
BillyGtay (Bud) and Lauren
Chapin (Kathy ).
. On AprilS they trickled into
a Burbank Studios rehearsal
haJJ.
Actor Young marveled at
the depth of family feeling
and affection the band of
actors experienced when they
met after the many years
apart.
" It was a tremendously
emotional moment when we
gathered for the first
reading," he said. "Jane,
Ellie and Lauren were all in
tears. There was so much
hugging . and kissing I felt
self-conscious.
"The association wasn't
one that struck me as going
that deep. We did do 209
episodes lor six years covering 19&gt;4 to 1960 - but I
wasn't aware just how close
we'd b~n .
" After aU, I hadn;t been in
contact with any of !hem in 17
years. And I don 'I think the
kids get in touch with one
another either. !learned Jane
heard from the kids from
time to time."
Young spoke of the "kids"
almost possessively, as if
they were indeed his own
offspring.
Elinor, in her 30s now, has
been the wife of television
producer Harry Ackerman
lor many . years. She is the
mother of four sons. Since
"Father Knows Best" left the
air she has appeared in
movies and television roles.
"Ellie keeps as busy as she
wants," Young said. "Billy is
now
a
professional
motorcycle racer. He's
deadly serious about it and
very good at it. He also
promotes races. Show
business is secondary to him

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

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protect tllemselves."
On other issues he said :

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! Area Deaths !

Veterans Memorial Hospital
Admitted - Paul Wolfe, I
Racine ; Susan Tracy,
FRIEDA F4EHNLE
Pomeroy ; Emma Lyons ,
Miss Frieda Faehnle, 84.
Racine ; Brenda Elliott, well known Middleport
Guysville ; Meryle Lawton. resident, died Friday mor New Haven ; Jerry Ward, nin-g at 1he Kimes Con·
valescent Center, Athens.1
Middleport.
Miss Faehnle was a lifelong
Discharged
Nancy resident of Middleport where
Manley, Harold Carson, she was born /!Aay .4, 1893 to
William Buckley, Paul Wolle, the late Albert and VIola Will
.
Mary Peak, Ernest CuUurns. Faehnle
Miss Faehnle was an active
PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGES - Mrs. Otis
Neal, Leon; Mrs. Sherry
Hall, Apple Grove; Mrs .
Allen Gemm, Pomeroy; Mrs.
Nellie · Bennett,
Point
Pleasant; Mrs. Dale Smith
and daughter, Mason;
Melinda Van Matre, Mason ;
Vivian Mayes, Masoni Debra
Mowrey, Point Pleasant;
Darrell Northup, Clifton ;
Mrs. John Roach, Letart;
Elvis
Russell,
Point
Pleasant, and Mrs. Donald
Russell, Mason.

member of the Heath United
Methodist Church and was
secretary of Its official board
for several years. She also
belonged

to the

Return

.Jonathan Meigs Chapter.
Daughters of 1he American
Revolution, and ·the Mid -

dleport Garden Clul;&gt;. She was

employed In 1he office of the
Meigs Wholesale Co . In

Middleport

during

her

working career ,
Funeral services will be 2
p.m . Sunday at the RawlinRS-

Coats Funeral Home. Burial
will be In Mt. Hermon
cemetery. Friends may call
at the funeral home 2 to 4 and
7 to 9 p.m . Saturday.

Teachers ask
for mediation

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DONALD R. SHRADER

PHILO Donald R.
Shrader. 53. died Wednesday

afternoon at hi's home at 177

Market St.. Philo. following

an apparent heart attack .

Mr . Shrader. a retired Ohio
Power Co . employ~, was

formerly a resident of Meigs

County who re•lded In the
Nease Settlement area and
later In the Salem Center
area . He graduated from
Rutland High School In 1941 .
Born July tO, 1923 In
Clark•burg, W. Va. to Robert
S. Shrader. Rt. 2. Malta, and
the la te Lyda Prop• Shrader.
he moved to

Holzer Medical Center
(Discharges, May 12)
Ossie Auxier , Robert
Barcus, o Twila Bentley,
Rachel Borton, Mrs. Edward
Bowling and daughter, Byron
Bryan, Kevin Butcher, Heidi
Carr uth ers,
Dickey
Christian, William Clark,
Mrs. David Edmonds and
daughter, Ollie Elliott, Todd
Fisher, Vada Greenlee, Clara
Huston, Sheila Lanham, Mrs.
Clarence Lee and daughter,
Marlene Lucas, William
Lucas ,· Richard Martin,
Samuel Miller, Charles
Niemeyer, JoaruJa Ousley,
Shawn
Petri,
Cathy
Roseberry, Mary Roush, Lige
Shields, Everett Simms,
• Gathel Swann, William
Theiss, Marion Thomas,
JearuJe Wallar, Barbara Will,
Craig Wise.
.
(Births, May 12)
Mr. and Mrs. David
Martin, daughter, Crown
City; Mr. and Mrs. Claude
Smith, son, Ravenswood, W.

olant In Philo in 1969 because

ot Ill health. He •erved In the
U.S. Army during World War

II In the· European Theater ,
and was a member of the
Duncan Falls · Philo Lions
club.

EDITH SISSON, left, is the first woman to join the Gallla-Meigs Fraternal
Order of Pollee. In July Mrs. Sisson will mark her 12th year as a dispatcher lor the
Pomeroy Police Department. For the past eight )OOBrs she has been a breathallzer
operator, answering caDs at all hours. She is the mother of tbree children, Harold,
Ed, and Jane. Shown with Mrs. Sisson is Ray Manley, secretary-treasurer of the
FOP. Thursday night tbe FOP accepted another new member, Robert Hill, who is
with the Gallipolis Police Department. The meeting was held at Pomeroy Village
Hall. Members .of the FOP are selling tickets to Hoxie Brotbers Circus which will
come on June 22. Proceeds from the circus will be given to charitable
organizations.

Surviving, In addition lo his~

fa ther, are his wife. Mary L ..

whom he married Aug. 26,
19.U; two sons, Steven R. ,
Athens. and Michael L.,
Columbus ; a daughter, Mrs.

of a married couple in a big
house alter the children have
departed.
Betty, the oldest daughter
is widowed . and Uving in
Chicago with two children.
Bud is married with one son
and lives in Minneapolis.
Kathy,
the
youngest
daughter , is single and lives
in Kansas City.
The script was based on ~n
idea .by Young's wife, Betty.
"I refused to do the show
until they came up with a
script," Young said. 11 Why
would anybody stay tuned
after the initial meeting took
place and viewer curiosity
was satisfied about the way
we all looked. Then Betty
came up with the natural idea
of the empty nest
"As for the cast, alter the
initial excitement wore off we
exchanged ·notes on what
we'd been doing. We brought
one anolher up to date on our
lives.
" About the second day of
rehearsals , one by one, we
began to relate our feelings
about the reunion . It's
amazing, but none of us felt
there'd really been a time
lapse.

NOW YOU KNOW
There is no difference in
nutritional value of flavor betwee n brown-shelled eggs
and white-shelled eggs.

Pem~roke

Pines. Fla . and Mrs. Nor man

STILL A STAR
BEVERLY HILLS, Calif.
(UP!) - Mae West was
honored · Thursday night as
"Star of the Year" by After
Dark magazine, which
presented her its " Ruby
Award," named after the
first recipient, Ruby Keeler.
Miss West , 84, recently
finished her 12th movie ,
"Sextette," adapted from a
play she wrote in 1961.

HANDICAPPED
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
Ohio House Thursday passed
a bill requiring at least I ow- of
the seven members of the
Rehabilitation ~rvices Com- .
mission to be handicapped
Ohioans.
Before the ss.to-7 vote, the
House shouted down an
amendment which would
have required that only three
of the commission members
be handicapped.

negotiaUons . We are willing to meet all
sununer long. I just don't think we have

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT TIL 8

William Bahr, president of the
Blevins also expressed similar views
GCLTA, said the request was made under saying :
a provision of the old master contract
" I don't think it's time to go to
signed in 1974 which stipula(ed that, if mediation, but we must abide by the
negotiations are not completed within 60 teachers' requ~ . "
days alter they begin, either party may
. The board n~goliatlon team, of which
request and receive assistance from the Wilham Carter, 1salso a member, made it
mediation service.
perfectly clear that negotiatons were· not
Bahr said the teachers' executive broken off and that they were wilJimz to
committee had recommended thai a continue negotiations, but the teachers
mediator enter negotiations since no elected to go ~o ~he mediation st~ge under
progress was being made,
the old association agreement.
However, his view was not shared by
Bahr pointed out that just four items
the board's chief negotiator, Thomas on a hst contommg over 25 proposals had
Hairston , and James V. Blevins, board been agreed upon.
member and another negotiator.
Jt was learned that the four items were
Both expressed the opinions that proced ure , agreement , evaluation
negotiations should continue without going
(Contmued on page A-2)

Saturday.
• Preteen Gauchos Reduced
· • Womens Tops Sale Priced.
• Womens Jump Suits on Sale ,
• Pearl Jewelry Sale.
• Girls Dresses and Coals Clearance Priced •
• And Also Little Boys Suits and Coats
• Big Sale of Mens Dress Shirts
• Wrangler Patch Pocket Men's Jeans.
·• All of our Boys Knit Shirts are on Sale .
•. Plus Boys Denim and Fashion Jeans .
• Sale Prices on Sunbeam Toaster and GE Iron
. • Save Plenty During Our Sale of Quadriga Percaies
• Save 30 per cent on Custom Made Draperies
• And 50 per cent on Custom Spreads .

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

VOL. 1£

GALLIPOLIS- POINT PLEASANT

NO. 15

SUNDAY, MAY 15, 1977

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sPEciAL PROGRAM PLANNED - GallipoUs City Manager M. Harold
Brown and Ruth Miller, Gallia County chairperson' for Senior Citizens Day, look
over the program of activities planned for Tuesday. Pictured behind them are, left
to right, Florence McDaniel, Edith Gilkey and Ethel Robinson. Mrs. Robinson is
chairperson for Senior Citizens Day in Area 7 of the Ohio Area Agency on Aging .
Brown has signed a proclamation declaring Senior Citizens Day in Ga!Ua County .

Activities listed
GALLIPOLIS - A day full of special
activities will honor Gallia County's senior
citizens on Ohio Senior Citizen Day
Tuesday.
The day's program will hegin with a
prayer breakfast at 9 a.m. at the Grace '
United Methodist Church followed by an
open house at 10 a.m. at the senior citizens
center located on Jackson Pike here. A
program is plaruJed at both events.
A picnic lunch will he served on the
center's grounds at noon , and the senior
citizens' art exhibit at the Gallipolis city
park will open a! I p.m. Crafts will be
exhibited in the window at VS Realty, 428
Second Ave., Gallipolis.
Highlight of the day will be a program
iiJ the park at 2 p..m. with mistress of
ceremonies, Dene Wagner,
WJEH's
"Chatterbox." Among those to be honored
are Margaret Carter, 96, and Margaret
Hardin, 97, oldest women in Gallia county;
Anderson Robinson, 99, oldest man; Mr.
and Mrs. Eimer Niday, couple married the
longest (67 years); Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Straight who have.been married 64 years,
and Susan Lusher, 63, one of the oldest
retired teachers.
Special tribute will also be paid to Eno

Senior Citizens are Ohio's outstanding
natural resou~ce and the Meigs County
Council on Aging and the stall of the Senior
Citizens Center are proud to be a part of
this observance.
The day will begin with lunch at II : 30
a.m. with the following program at 12 :30
p.m.:
Welcome - C. E. Blakeslee.
Invocation - Rev. Robert Bumgarner.
Senior Citizens Chorus - God Bless

OVER 50 PATTERN BOOKS TO CHOOSE FROM
SOME PAITERNS ORDER ONE DAY RECEIVE THE NEll
CONVENIENT
'
oi&gt;EN :
FREE
Mon. thru Sat.
PARKING
B:OOto 5:00p .m .
•

405 N. 2nd AVE.

MIDDLEPORT-POMEROY

Grange 2080 who has ·six co uples married
more than 50 years in its membership.
They are Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Murray1
Mr. and Mrs. Harley Denney. Mr. and
Mrs. Harry Wagner, Mr. and Mrs.
Maurice Thomas, Mr. and Mrs. Allie
Stamper, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Leesburg
and Mr. and Mrs. Clinton Jones.
Singers will include Gladys Trainer,
A. K, McCallaster, Ed Parkins and R.ev.
Tim Heaton. Scheduled speakers are paul
Dean Niday, James Saunders and John
Belville, Gallia County commissioners.
Prpsecuting Atty. Joseph Cain will be the .
main speaker. The"re will also be a
presentation by the Senior · Citizen Olde
Tyme Chorus and Kitchen Band.
Senior citizen essay winners and those
who were awarded prizes in the retail
merchant contest will be announced. A
quilt will also be given away.
Today, churches all over the county
are honoring their senior citizens with
programs and observances.
Ruth Miller is chairperson for Senior
Citizens Day in Gallia Collflty and Ethel
·Robinson is in charge of plans for the Area
Agency on Aging, Area 7 observance.

America, Jleautiful Ohio.
Recognition of those over 90.
Reading - Nellie Tracy.
Jazz Band - Meigs High School.
Recognition of persons under 60 and
orga nizations· who have contributed to
Senior Citizen Programs.
Recognition of volunteer statiOnsi
Alice Wamsley, Retired Senior Volunteer
Program Director.
Recognition of volunteers.
A square dance will be held following
the program. A total of 300 persons. have
registered for lunch. We are looking for· ·
ward to seeing all of our " Senior Citizen
Friends."

JOHN H. BUDD, M.D., Presidentele ct of the .· American Medical
Association, speaker for the Fifth
Anniversary Banquet of the Holzer
Medical Center to be held on May 26,
1917 at 7:30 p.m. In the Rio Grande
College Caleterla .

GALLIPOLIS- The filth anniversary
celebration of the mDve from the old
Holzer Hospital on Cedar Street in
downtown Ga llipolis to the new Holzer
Medical Center on Jackson Pike will be
observed on Th ursday evening, May 26 at
a banquet in the Rio Grande College
Ca fetetia when the speaker will be John
H. Budd, M.D., president-elect of the
American Medical Association.
Dr. Budd was educated at Dalhousie
University, Halifax, Nova Scotia, from
which he received pis medical degree.
Subsequently he interned at Victoria
General Hospital, Halifax, and St. Vincent
Charity Hospital in Cleveland, Ohia, where
he has been in practice since 1937. He
completed residencies at St. Vincent and
Evangelical Dea co ne ss Hospi.t als in
Cleveland .
Listed .among his accomplishments
are .many professional af!iliation membershipS1and this extraordinarily involved
physician has been the recipient of
numerous awardS:.
As a member of the active stall at
Deaconess Hospital in Cleveland, he also
Serves on the Honorary Staff or'Panna
Comm unity Genera l Hospita l and the
· Consulting Stall of St. Vincent Charity
Hospital in Cleveland. He has also served
(Continued on page A-2 )

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PRICE 25 CENTS

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HUGH P. KI RKEL, President of the Holzer Medical Center, (lelt ) reviews a
brochure on the speaker, John H. Budd, M.D. with Max W. Morrow, chairman of
Ute hoard of trustees of the Holzer Hospita l Foundation, as they discuss plans lor
tbe May 26th Banquet marking the fifth anniversary of the move to the new Holzer
Medical Center location on Jackson Pike .

Petitions
Farm house damaged
to assure
referendum
POMEROY - Over 300 signatures
have been obtained on petitions to place
befo:-e the voters of Pomeroy a refel-endum on Pomeroy Village Council's recent
passage of a $5 permissive auto license
tax.
Petitions have been prepared by a n
attorney for a group heading the at1 ion to
take the measure to the P1JllS. Only 97 valid
signatures are neetled but a spokesma ~ for
the group said it will secure ove r 400 before
the petitions are filed, The spokesman
indicated ·the group is securing the
signatures, not necessarily in opposition to
the tax measure, but to place the matter
he!ore the people.
All residents will have th e opportunity
to eXpress their opinoin on election day,
the committtee states, whether or not they
have had the opportunity lo sign the
petiiions.

GALLIPULIS - Loss was set at over
$6,000 in a fire at 2: 19a.m. Saturday lri a
farmhouse on the Butler Farms, 15 miles
south of Gallipolis .at Swan Creek.
Accor ding to the Gallia Co unty
sheriff's department, the lire of un·
determ ined origin started in the stairway
of the seven. room frame house owned by
Paul Butler , Rt. 2, Crown City, rented to
th e Charles Dillon family .
No one . was injured. Crown City
Firemen responded as did the Gallipolis
Volunteer Fi re Dept. under their mutua: l
aid agreement. Gallia sheriff's deputies

were also there.

A discarded traffic flare was blamed

for a fire at 9:38 p.m. Friday on the

railroad tracks at Pine St. Gallipolis Fire
Chief James A. Northup said the blaze
burned a IO' x50' area.
Firemen were called e~rlier Friday at
i2:18 p.m. to the new kitchen ar the
Ga lltpolis State Institute where a heat
riser over a dishwasher overheated . There
was no ignition .
They were the !loth, .lllth and 112th
runs of the year for the Ga llipolis fire
fighters.

KRISTAL HASH

Science award
is announced ·

Goodyear Plant No. 5
hit by $45,000 fire .

BIDWELL - Th e Holzer Scie r; ce~
Award, conferred upon Miss Krista} Hash
at the .annual Awards Day ceremonies at
North Ga llia High School recently, is given
eac h yea r by ph ysicians of the Holzer
Med ical Center Clinic to an outsta nding
sen ior in the fi eld of science and
mathematics.
TI1e· award w;:ts presented to Miss
Hash by James Oiler and Roy Mullins of
the science and math departments of
North Gallia High Schoo L
Kri ~1a l is the dau ghter CJf Mr. and Mrs.
Oarence R. II ash of Bidwell . She has been
accepted at the Holzer School of Nursing
and will beJ!,.in her training with th e lresh·
man class or 19;7,

AKRON, Ohio (UPI ) - Damage was
estimated at $4&gt;,000 F riday night in a lire
at Goodyear Tire &amp; Rubber Co.'s plant No.
5.
The blaze broke out in the area of a
wood-&lt;:ove red water cooling tank on the
roof of the plant and spread UJ some wiring
and the roof itself. No one was injured.
Fire lighters said the cause of the blaze
was not immediately determ ined.

Summer job interviews begin May 23

PRE-PASTED WAu.PAPER

992-5020
992-3748

tntint

AMA' s Dr. Budd will speak
on 5th anniversary of HMC

Day."

VINYL-COATED

daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Berkeley Sallflders. Absent was Brenda Saxton, second
place winner from Cheshire-Kyger Elementary, the daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Leslie Saxton. Their posters will be on display in the district's booth at the Gallia
County Junior Fair in August.

•

POMEROY - Tuesday, May 17,
Senior Citizens of Ohio and Meigs County
will be recognized on their own "Special

FABRIC-BACKED
VINYL WAU COVERINGS

wirmer from Washington Elementary, son of Mr , and Mrs. Charles: Scouten, and
right, Usa Saunders, first place county winner, Hannan Trace Elementary , the

tmts

Day!s program planned

WALL-lEX

POSTER CONTEST WINNERS - Becky Small.left, prese nted cash prizes to
Gallia S.W.C.D. County Poster Contest wiMers, center, David Scouten, third place

•

Take advantage of the special sale prices
during our TWO DAY SALE this Friday and ·

been given a fair chance to complete
negotiations."

•

"There wasn't a sense of

deja vu. !twas as if we'd done
the last episode only the
previous week. Not in 1960.
Those 17 years simply
evaporated. It's an incredible
' feeling that '~ hard to
describe. All five of us fell the
same way.
"We worked in a time warp
that took us all back to the
original show."
The fact that they
performed on a set that was
an exact replica of the old
Anderson house helped
provide an atmosphere of
continuity. The designers
rebuilt the sets from
blueprints of the ortginal.
The exterior of the house,
moreover, still stood on the .
back lot and was used in
several scenes. The cast was
delighted to see the old place
and marveled at how high the
trees and shrubs had
grown.
TheJ'e is talk that if the
reunion show records high
ratings "Father Knows Besl "
may return as · a series.
Robert Young, however,
doubts it.
"I don't think it would be
valid," he said. "You have to
have a central figure in whom
viewers have a rooting
interest. Such a series would
now.
be fragmented with the kids
"Lauren would Jlke to get living in different cities
back in sho,w business, which leading separate lives."
isn' t easy for a child star who
has siepped out. She's
divorced now and has a :;..
year-old son."
A thought for the day : The
The Sunday night special is French writer Voltaire said,
based on the :l:ith wedding
"Common sense ·is nol so
anniversary of the Andersons
and the emply nest syndrome common."

Association in a request for the

contract .

Ph no .from

DONAHUE WINS
(Helen) Peshek, Stafford, Va.
CHICAGO (UPI) - Talk
The body Is atlhe Clyde E.
show host Phil Donahue Thompson Funeral Home at
began an early lOth· Duncan Falls. Friends may
aruJiversary celebration for call there until 9 this evening .
his nationally syndicated
television show by winning an
Emmy Award Thursday as
DINOSUED
" best host of a daytime
LOS ANGELES (UPI )
variety or talk show."
Producer Dlno de Laurentls
"It's taken us 10 years to and Paramount Pictures
get the esta blislunent head to were sued for $6 million in U.
turn," said Donahue, who S. District Court by author W.
described his show as "a Ware Lynch, who charged
press
conference
for that their movie· "LipStick"
housewives, " featuring was taken without his per·
" popular people with un- mission from his book
popular ideas."
"Rape! One Victim's Story."

to mediation.
Supt. Hairston said :
"I think it is silly to go to mediation at
this time. We haven't broken off

Teach~rs'

Ruraldale In 196t . He retired
from the Ohio Power Co.

(Lucille) Cook,

By Dale Rothgeb
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia County
!.Deal Board of Education here Saturday
afternoon joined the Gallia County Local
Federal Mediation and Conciliation
Service to help negotiate a new master

Suzanne Walker , Providence,
R. I. ;'two sisters, Mrs. J . Don

oung · ,aml•ty '
having reunion May 15va.

LADIES...

I1

said, ". .. and obviously part
of that is to make sure Israel
has adequat~ means to

Hospital News

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CHESHIRE - The Gallia-Meigs
Community Action ~gency said Saturday
interviews will begin this month for the
forthcoming Summer Program for
Economically Disadvantaged Youth
(SPEDY ).
The program will provide qualified
area youth, between the ages of 14-21, with
· up to 32 hours of work per week. In addition, the program will provide intensive
job counseling, labor market information,
and orientation. Applications will be taken

during personal interviews oy Agency
stall members. Beca use of stalling
limitations, interviews will be conducted
at all area high schools: The interviews
will begin May 23.
·
Announcements will be made in each
area high school concerning the exact date
and location lor the SPEDY program

through June 3, 1977.
Selection lor surimler jobs will be
based on economic need and not a firstcome-nrst-serve basis.
All prospective applicants must h8ve a
Social Security card when interviewed.

The Gallia. Meigs Community Action
Agency
is an equal opportunity employer.
interviews.
AU other youth not atten~ingarea high It is the policy of the agency to hire without
schools will be interviewed in the Gallia· regard to race 1 color, religion , national
Jl!eigs C.A.A. offices beginning May 30 origin, sex, age, political affilitJtion or
· harldicap.

A-WATER FOUNTAIN is a challenge for a youngster to reach, so it helps to
have a good instructor. Jamie SheeL&lt;;, left, showed Billy Mullins this week the best
way to get a refreshing drink from the fountain in the Gallipolis city park . Also
• pictured is Billy's sister, Belinda. Picture by Sarah Carsey .

SQUAD CALLED OUT
MIDDJ.EPOHT - The M(ddleP1Jrt E·
R Squad was ca lled to 541 High St. at 9:30
a.m, Saturday for Reed Grandee, a
medicii.l patient who was taken to Holzer
Medical Center. At 10:36 a.m. Saturday
the Pomeroy squad went to Lynn St. for
Sarah Osborne, who had fall en. She wsa
taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital
Where she was treated and released

MIDDLEPORT, 0.
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