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IH()-. The SundayTunes,S.,ntJncl, Sunda). May 15 , 1977

THIS IS THE WAY IT WAS
By FRANK III LJ..
GALLIPOLIS - For many years I have read about and
heard or the many exploits of famous Anne Bailey who died in
Gallia County on Nov. 22, 1825.
After a great deal or research I have arri"ed at the
conclusion that historians have played loosely with the truth in
writing about Anne Bailey . Too many have taken legend,
folk lore and plain gossip to create a colorfu l picture that most
likely, In some aspects, is lar from the truth.
U I am wrong: many of her relatives still living in this area
will be quick tD correct me .

History says that Anne was born in Uverpool , fi:ngland in
1700 and that she saw the crowning ol Queen Anne in 1705
whom she was named for ,
According to my research , Anne was born in 1742, and

what she actually saw at the age of five years was the
execution ol Lord Lovat in 1747.
Had Anne Bailey been born in 1700 she would have been 67
years old when her only son, William, was born in 1767. She
would have been 74 years old when her first husband died,
would have remained a widow for 11 years, and then married
John Bailey at the age or 85 years. She would have been 91
years old when she made .her famous ride from Fort Clendenin
ro Lewisburg, which was a distance of 100 miles, riding day

Pleasant ; Mrs. Roscoe War,

ni~ht !

and

Her first husband 's name was Richard Trotter and not
John Trotter as the history books show it.
1 do not wish to dispute the history books, but I believe
th&lt;'Se are the true facts about Anne Bailey. She married
Richard Trotter in 1765 at the age ol 23. Her son was born 2

WASHERS and DRYERS ..... ....,.,,...., "'""'·

E

The answer to last week's question ;
The steamboat Herald brought Gen. Lafayette to
Gallipolis on May 23, 1825. It was traveling upriver from New
Orleans to Pitts burgh with the G~neral. As the Herald was
appraoching Gallipolis a small cannon aboard was fired to
announce its landing.
Something to think about :
Where wa s the Market House located in Gallipolis many
years ago.

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

... _to_l.,_
SPEED QUEEN

111 1111' SPEnl QWll Wllller IIIII

*JII am.Ntlan •S50.DII 1

SAVE TODAY!

DONALD M . PAYNE
PI NEL LES PARK, F la.
Donal d

M.

res ident of

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•ACINI , OHIO

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Postin , Ravens woo d ; Mrs.

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l _APPUANCE

.,m£GAS

Payne ,

69,

a

Pinelles Park ,

F la., d ied Satu rday ar ound 10
a . m. in Hubert Rutland
Hospita l, St . Peter sbur g, Fla .
He was bor n in Ga lli polis on
May 14 , 190a , son of t he late
M a1thew a nd Ina M ae
Oonn eft Pay ne.

He ma rr ied Iren e A. Sayre,

in Gallipolis. She surv ives,
alon g wit h t wo daug ht er s,
Caro l yn Cheesebr ew and
Ja net Biggs, both of Pinelles
Pa rk ; on e son , Gehe W.
Payne, Mon tgo me ry , Ala .; a
brother. Ra.ymond A . Payne ,

St.

Pet e rs b urg ; , se ven
grandc hildren , and one gre at -

CHIITI., OHIO
tl5o33G'J

grandchild .
.
Mr. Payne was a r etired

View' from the statehouse
By Rep. Rnn James
COLUMBUS - Legislation
designed to prevent mo~o r
vehicle odometer tampermg
was approved without opposition Wednesday by th e
Ohio House of Representatives.

seller of the vehicle would be
required to complete It. The
statement would include the
odometer reading at the time

of transfer and the seller
would indicate either that the
odometer reading is correct,
is in excess of 99,999 miles, or

The measure, SB 78 would is incorrect.
The bill would also require
require an odometer mileage
th
at an odometer repair
statement to be completed
when own ership of the noti ce be attached to the left
vehicle is transferred. The front door drame of a motor
statement would be printed vehicle alter its odometer has
on the vehicle's title and the been serviced.

India citizen won't be
allowed at Boys' State
COLUMBUS

(UP! )

Vishnu Srivastava carries a

3.5 grade average at
suburban Whetstone High
School, is a National Honor
Society member, is the son of
a university professor, is a
member of the cross-eountry
team, and plans to study law
or medicine in college.
And , he was the unanimous
choice ol th e Whetstone

faculty as a candidate to
attend Buckeye Boys State, a
week-long summer lesson In
government sponsored by the
American Legion.
And
the
16-year-old
student, who is described as
amiable and well-soken by
his fellow students, wants to
go.
But, the Legion says no,
because Vishnu is not an
American citizen .

And that has angered
Whetstone principal James
Furgason.
"! appealed on the fact that
· they have never said
citizenship is a qualification
for Boys· Sate," said
Fergason. " It's in none of
their literature. And, in !act,
"grows all over the country in 1968, a . Worthington boy
and pa st experience has wbo had been born in India
prbved there is virtually no was allowed to and there
way of controlling its use or have been others:"
But Legion Post 82 rejected
distribution. "
This makes it "very dif· Vishnu, a native of India.

Drug abuse chief
once tried pot
By CHERYL ARVIDSON
WASHINGTON (UP! ) There 's never been anything

like it in the 63-year history or
the federal government's
drug control effort.
Not only did Peter Bourne,
nominated by President
Carter to head the Office of
Drug
Abuse
Policy,
recommend that federal laws

rerent ",- from

cocaine and

Francis Adams, post ad-

jutant, says Boys State is "a~
American Legion program,
run by the American Legion,
international narcotics rings. not by Mr. Furgason."
carry a nne, not a jail term,
He says Boys State was not
While heroin has a "high
for persons caught with less addictive level" and barbitu- planned for students such as
than one ounce· of marijuana, rates and tranquilizers also Vishnu.
plo"m ber employed by th e
State of Oh io, ha ving had 3Ph
but he also admitted to can be physically addictive,
"People in the United
year s ser vice . The Paynes smoking the stuff himself.
vote. They elect people
States
marijuana
and
c.
o
calne
'
'do
mov ed to Fl or ida from
Bourne
appeared
Friday
and
hold
public office. People.
not
cause
physical
Ga llipol is in 1959.
before
the
Senate
Human
who
are
not Gitizens ·cannot
Funeral servi ces will be
addiction,' ' so any reliance on
held 2 p.m . Wednesday at the
Re so ur ces Committee U1em is ''related exclusively'' vote and can't hold office,'' he
Wesle yan Church, Pinelles
considering his nomination to the mental slate or the explains.
Park . Buria l will be in
and wasted no time in user, Bourne said. ·
· Furgason says he plans to
-..
Mem orial Park Cemeter y in
defending his stand on
No one has ever died !rom keep on lighting for Vishnu.
Sf. Petersburg .
Friends may ca ll at the
marijuana decriminalization marijuana, he $3-id, and "the
"They said it {Boys State)
Thomas -Cooksey Funera l · that has brought heavy criti· m e di c al
damage
was
to iamiliarize young men
Home in Pinelles Park from
cism
from
groups
that
demonstrated
at
this
point
with
the American form of
7-9 p.m . on Monday and from
include the International does not warrant making it a government. I said wouldn't
8-5 and 7-9 p.m. on Tuesday .
Association of Police Chiefs, criminal offense for simple it be good to send Vishnu
·the ultraconservative Liberty possession.''
home with a 'thorough
Lobby
and
the
left-wing
U.S.
Olen
King,
executive
knowledge of the American
.
Labor
Party.
director
of
the
police
chiefs,
fonn
of government," he
·
STARTING EARLIER
Senate sources say never said Bourne should not be said.
CHICAGO (UPI ) - The be lore in a drug control effort · approved because strong
Vishnu, whp has lived in the
dating back to 1914 has a top- enforcement, not tolerance, U. S. since he was six, has
American Cancer Society is
so concerned about young level federal drug officer or is needed to cope with the shied away !rom the publicity
people smoking that a special an administrlltion endorsed nation's drug problems. The in the incident.
lessening the penalties for Liberty Lobby said Bourne's
warning program has been
Furgason says, "The
started for kindergarten marijuana possession.
stand would bring "drastic importance of the individual
Under questioning, Bourne abuses" of drugs and have has been lost . The Legion is
children. "For a long time,"
said Dr . Charles il. P. told a startled Sen . Orrin serious domestic and interna- not living by what it says.
.Westfall, "we used to bit Hatch, R-Utah, that he had tional implications.
Vishnu could have come back
children later on. But we're smoked marijuana ' 1 with
from Boys State and provided
finding out that fifth and sixth some friends " while in
real leadership."
grade children have already Vietnam and that he
picked up the smoking habit., considers pot nonaddictive,
They're using lunch money to not a health hazard and safer
than cigarettes. He said he
buy cigarettes:"
had not experimented with
any other drugs.
Bourne recommended that
persons apprehended with a
NIXON CALLED LIAR
small amount or marijuana
BOMBAY, Inda (UP!) should be fined "like traffic
Defense Minister Jagjlvan violators," not subjected to
Ram Saturday· denied that criminal penalties.
lndia wanted to "gobble up"
He does not favor lessening
Pakistan as claimed by penalties for drug traffi~king
former President Richard or decriminalization or other
Nixon in a nationwide
drugs, and said states should
television interview in the
set their own laws for
United States. He said Nixon marijuana possession.
had a ~~malicious mind."
But, he said, marijuana

Area Deaths

illt.9.c an ..ySf'IID OUIU

~ 'llllhltef (II !lqn r

~~:::O:?r---~1--&lt;... . -,.,""'"·

Vinton; Mrs. Arbin Roush,
Mason; Lori Westfall, Point
Pleasant; Mrs. Daniel Smi~h
and son, Gall ipolis; Gary

vears la tcr .
. ,
Lawre nce · Be n e baum ,
· Anne came to Gallia County in 1818, because William had Reedsville ; Mrs. J ess e
bought two tracts or and in our county. At !irs\ she would not Likens, Gallipolis Ferr y;
live near her son ; instead, she erected a sma ll cabm JUSt below Thomas
Mit chell, West
ClipfX'r Mills. Slw n 1. 1 !... w1t:: ca bin of fence rails and it had a Columbia ; James Belle, Point
thatched roof.
Pleasant ; Sheldon Hill, Point
Her son later bui lt . he r a small cabin near his home in Pleasant ; Brian Turner,
HarrLwn Twp. into which she m.oved . On the ni,ghl of Nov. 22,
1825 two of her small granddaughters, Phebe, age 8, and Jane Hende rson ; Mrs . Howard
Anne, age 5, were spending the night with her. During the night Thornton, Leon ; Mrs. Arthur
Phebe grew cold and she called to her grandmother but_there Reedy , South side; Mary
was no a nswer. Th is great herotne had qUi etly expired m her Barney, Point Pleasant ; Mrs.
Kenn eth Robinson, Point
sleep. She was83 yeqrs old, not 12J, as historians record ..
George Waugh who li ved nearby, mad e her a coffin and Pleasant ; Mrs. DanaChap·
she was laid to rest in the Trotter family cemetery on a high man, Point Pleasant ; Birdie
Blain , Southside ; Mrs.
hill behind the present location of Bailey Chapel on Rt. 218. .
Many yea rs ago her r emains were removed to Pomt Kenneth Bray , CroWl\ City ;
Barbara Snider , Hartlord ;
Pleasa nt, W. Va .
·
These are the facts as ! have round them. II I am wrong, I Mrs. Dole Saunders, Bidwell;
Mrs. Ronnie Higginbotham
stand to be corrected.
and daughter, Grimms
For those who may be interested :
Landing ; Mrs. Dana Jones
Mrs. Carl Wood• ca lled me Monday and we had a very and daughter, Point Pleasant;
interesting talk. She and her husband, Dr. Carl Woods \ bought Worthy
Leach,
Point
and restored the A. P. Kerr home at the corner of F1rst and Pleasant; Douglas Beam,
Grape Streets. The Gazebo is still to the rear ol the house and Gallipolis and Beverly
th ey have also restored it. Thanks for your many kind remarks
Woomer , Point Pleasant.
about t.t ~ writings, Mrs. Woods.
·
People are starting to make patio floors with the old-time
street paving bricks which have name~ on them. A gentleman
was in town recently !rom Iowa hunting lor these bricks lor
thi s purpose. With the various names on them they do make a
beautiful floor which is unique . I have many of these bricks

with various company na mes .

SPEED OOEEN

PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGES - Cynthia
Utchlleld, Apple Grove; Kelly
Bonecutter, Point Pleasant ;
Mrs. Vir ginia Girley, Point

heroin, produced outside the
United States and · often
brought in by large scale

Oil nations could strangle
free world in 4 to 6 years

Persons who violate the
provisions of the bill would be
subject to civil penalties.
SB 78 would give the state
better enforcement power to
prevent odometer tampering.
Federal law presently
prohibits odometer tam·
pering, but many violations
go undetected. An odometer
mileage statement printed on
the vehicle's title would
provide an easily tra~eab!e
history or the vehicle s
mileage.
In other legislative action,
the House passed a biU to
create a Commission of
Spanish-Speaking Affairs and
a Bill to permit tuition
reciprocity agreements be·
tween Ohio and other states.
The Spanish affairs biU,
House BiU 11, is designed to
assist tbe approximately
200 000 Spanish-speaking
pef.'sns in Ohio in their
dealings with state and local
government.
The bill would establish a
Commission on Spanish·
Speaking Affairs to advise
the state on the needs and
concerns of Spanish-speaking ,
Ohioans. Under the Com·
mission would be an Olfice of
Spanish-Speaking Affairs and
an Interagency Council to
review programs affecting
Spanish-speaking persons,
coordinate state services and
information, and prepare an
annual report.
.The tuition reciprocity bill,
Senate Bill 94, would permit
the Ohio Board of Regents to
enter into tuition agreements
with neighboring states.
I was the House floor
manager for the bill. Under
reciprocity
agreements,
Ohioans co uld attend out-of·
state colleges and universities at in·state tuition rates.
Students from a state with an
agreement with the Board of
Regents would receive
similar benefits at Ohio's
state supported institutions.
Reciprocal . agreements
concerning financial aid
could be established also
under Senate Bill 94.
The bill is intended to give
Ohio students, and , students
!rom agreeing states, greater
choice among and access to
out·of·state colleges and
universities.

WASHINGTON (UP! ) World oil demand may
outstrip supplies in as little as
four to six years if the oil
producing cartel deliberately
restricts production as
planned, an international
en~gy study said today.
In a forecast even gloomier
than the one L.sued this
spring by the CIA, tbe study
also said free world oil
shortages will grow to
between J:i million and 2Q
million barrels a day by the
year 2000 even if producers
maintain the !low and
consumers adopt
conservation methods.

By Uolted Press lnterna tiona!
JACKSON, OHIO - THE MALFUNCTION OF A HEAT
chamber caused an estimated $200,000 damage to the Pyro
Division's A. P. Refractories brick plant four miles north ol
Oak Hill Sunday night.
·
Despite the efforts ol eight area fire units, the blaze
destroyed a building and its contents. Plant officials said the
fire would cause it to layoff "10 bJ 15" of Its 58 workers for an
indefinite time .
BELLAIRE, OHIO- UNITED MINE WORKERS District
6 President John Guzek said he expected "pressure at every
mine to go back" to work todlly and end a dispute with the
Consolidation Coal Co. Deadlock conditions prevailed Sunday
in a District 6 hassle with the company that has left 6,000
workers idle over the issue or a foreman striking an employe at
the ljrm's Franklin 25 pit.
According to Distric\6 President John Guzek, although "a
lot of people are tired of striking and really want to go back,"
without a meeting with Consol, the dispute at Franklin 25
threatens to bring a resurgel)c~ ol .the districtwide strike th~t
idled J6,000miners for two weeks .recentiy. "We 'll have to w31t
·!ill tomorrow to see what happens," said Guzek.
WASHINGTON - PRESIDENT CARTER, his schedule
relatively clear today, was preparing a public accounting or
his presidency for delivery Tuesday to a labor group troubled
by some ol his moves. Carter, who spent the weekend at the
presidential retreat, Camp David, returned to the White House
with his family Sunday night.
·
He worked Sunday on the address which will be presented
Tuesday in Los Angeles before some 6,000 members of the
United Auto Workers. The UAW has questioned whether some
of Carter's energy policies have been adequately thought out in
terms of their impact on the auto industry.
Carter "ts going to give an lnvenrory of his
administraiton," the spokesman said of tbe speech. The
President last week indicated he wanted to offer his own
accounting of his time in office so lar. He recently passed the
!IIQ.(Iay milestone.

Like a gwd neighbor,
· State Fann is there.
Farm Ltfe ln1urance Company

Horl,. OHice. BloooungiOrt. lllin9&lt;$

'

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

The·easy way
to take baby
along

HARTFORD, CONN. - STATISTICS SHOW there is no
reason why males under 25 years of age should pay 60 to 80 per
cent more than females for car insurance, according to a
researcher. What students study probably has more effect on
their driving behavior than whether they're male or female ,
says Walter Ziemba, a graduate student at Southern
Connecticut State College.
For his master's thesis, "College Students and Automobile
Accidents " Ziemba studied the driving habits or 336 college
students, half male and hall female, for two years: He said
insw-ance companies are using ligures 20 years old to
calculate insw-ance rates 'and he suggested new studies be
conducted to update the statistics. Ziemba said state agencies
re.ly totally on the insuranc-e industry for figures.

I
I

'

'

YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio
(UP!) - Carla Blair said she
spent the 26 hours she and ner
children were held hostage by
an armed bank robber
doing

than huffin' and puffin goes
into building a house

·77 BUICKS
AND
PONTIACS

. .. it 1'akcs cold hard ca sh! An~' if you're find·
in g th at th e more cash you need, the less yon
have, th en it's time yon learn ed about our low ·
cos tm o rtg~~gc loan s. We'll work out a plan suited
to your'income. Let's talk about it soon!

IN STOCK
READY TO GO

First Mortgage Loans to buy or build.

30 Year Financing ·Available.
Check our many services.

MEIGS BRANCH
ATHENS COUNTY SAVINGS
&amp; LOAN
196 W. 2nd St.

Pomeroy, 0 .

RICHARD E. JONES , Manager

FSLIC

~-• S • v~• l-•

""';''

Shong~

..,, ... ..,.. c,.p

(n ... ...rl Ill

$~0 I
0 00

VOL. XXVIII

NO. 22

Thieves note:
Don't steal from
a deputy's place
SherUf James J. Pro!·
fitt's office received a call
Sunday afternoon that a Illspeed bicycle was stolen
during . the night from a
residence In Racine.
D•puties, who had checked
the complaint around
m idnight tn
Racine,
reported there were a·

couple of boys prowling
around and one was riding
a 10 speed bicycle.
Deputies · learned the
identity of the boys.
Sunday alternoon the
boys ·were questioned and
the bicycle was recovered.
The three Racine area
juveniles were arrested

and released to the custody
of their parents peodlng
hearings In juvenile court.
The bicycle was stolen
from Sherlll's deputy
Robert Beegle's residence!

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Wednesday through
Friday, mostly lair and
warm Wednesday and
Thursday, with a chance of
showers or thundershowers
Friday. Highs In 80s and
lows In upper 50s to low 60s.

hard feelings against" Archie
Reginald Nelson, the 29-yearold Youngstown man who
barged into her apartment
Friday night and kept her,
her lour-year-&lt;&gt;ld son Isaac
and 18-month-&lt;&gt;ld daughter
Danielle prisoner .
Mrs. Blair said she wasn't

afraid during the captivity.
She said she was allowed to
move about and did
housework.
She said she wouldn' t want

to press charges against
Nelson because, "He- didn1t
harm me or my children. I ·
!eel he 'll do enough time for

Goal is to wipe out cancer

FURNITURE EPARTMENT,3RDFLOOR
Main Store and Mechanic Street Warehouse Open Friday 9:30 to B
P.M. Other weekdays 9:30 to 5 P.M.

ELBERFELDS IN

other . housework

chores."
Mrs. Sl~lr said she has " no

'16.95

EROY

become one or the most
precious of our resources."
The study was the first
major attempt to project
energy supply and demand to
the year 2000. It was released
jointly in the United States
and 14 other nations
represented

among

its

analysts - Britain, Canada,
Denmark, Finland, France,
Gerrnany, lran , ltaly, Japan,
Mexico, the Netherlands ,
Norway, Sweden
and
Venezuela.
The brightest spot In the
forecast was a projection that

in comrmmist nations .

Weather

BY ROGER BAILEY
The American · Cancer
Society has received many
questio11s lately about what it
actually does. The main
purpose of the American

There are such things as
rehabilitation of patients who
have had their larynx
removed !rom cancer. They
are tau@ht to talk again. Our
Reach
To
Recovery

Cance.r Society is to wipe out

Program, which is to help

cancer completely. How can
we do that? The only way is
through research. With new
research different types or
success are comine ~. lrOU(:~L
For instance, Leukemia is no
longer such a killer. With
research doctors have round
methods or treating their·
patients so they have a
remission of the disease. This
simply means that the
disease does not develop any
further. Researchers are stU!
working on a complete cure.
Cancer in any form is a tough
disease to beat. We need your
help to be able to wipe out
cancer.
In the meantime while we
are waiting lor a cure the
American Cancer Society
tries to help the cancer
r.jltient. We try to provide
rehabiUtation programs.
·

women who have lost a breast
• to cancer. We also provide $20
a n:onth on medications lor
patients who have no m·
surance to cover this. We
provide $70 a year toward
transportatiOn to and from
doctors' offices and hospitals
to home lor treatments ' or
regular check-ups.
There is also sick room
equipment which we loan out
to cancer patients. How much
does this cost the patient•
Nothing! All any cancer
patient needs to do IS take
time to call our office or
service chairman and set up
an appointment to fill out an
application . Being approved
depends on the type or insurance programs that the
·plltient has, not their income.
II .,yone would like to
cont•ct us they may d~ so by

calling our oflice at 992-7531
or Pauletta Harrison, Service
Chairman at 992-li248.
How can you help the
American Cancer . Society?
Money is very important.
Most of the people in Meigs
· County have been asked
already by our volunteers to
give through our door to ddor
crusade. But, there is much
more to the American Cancer

Society than that. We need
volunteers! Not only during
the door to door crusade but
all year round. This is the
way we are able to make our
services available without
charge.
Soon we will be electing
new officers and chairmen
lor the American Cancer
Society. This is where you
can help. Call us or come to
one of our meetings and
volunteer to help. We can use
all the help we can get. There
are several special events
that we hold throughout the
year and it takes man and
woman power to get them
(Continued on page 10)

Sunny and warm today.
Highs in low to mid 80s. Clear
tonight. Lows near 60. Partly
cloudy and continued warm
Tuesdsy. Highs in mid to
upper 80s. Probability ol rain
near zero today, 10 per cent
tonight and 20 per cent
Tuesday. South to southwest
winds 5 to 15 mph today and
tonight.

:::: sufficient financial incentives

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

:-:· costly intercontinental
:::: transportation methods.
::::
It noted, however, that
'i seven OPEC members
:::: including Saudi Arabia have
) announced
possible
:::: production limits designed to
::::

•

enttne

at

PRICE Fl FTEEN

MONDAY, MAY 16. 1977

CENT~

·

Tax rebate explained
.

WASHINGTON (UP!) Treasury Secretary Michael
Blumenthal told the House
Ways and Means Conunittee
today almost all funds
collected through proposed
energy taxes would be
returned to the public by
direct rebate.
Anyone who files a . tax
return, receives Social
Security 1 welfare or similar
programs would receive

rebates lor the extra cost or
energy brought about by
President Carter's plan, he
said.
Blumenthal defended
Carter's energy program as
the
committee
began
hearings on the tax aspects of
the plan, which include a

standby gasoline tax, a tax on
autos that use excessive fuel,

Meigs County Sheriff
James J. Proffitt's depart·
ment investigated lour ac·
cldents over the weekend, one
breaking and entering, and
the theft of a bicycle.
An unlawful entry and theft
of money from the home of
Gerald "Red" Eblin that

are 'paid and direct refunds
are 'made for increases in
heating
oil
prices,

and an exciSe fax on crude oil
Blumenthal said, receipts
and gas production.
from
the taxes "are to be
Although committee chair·
retutned
to virtually all
man AI Ullman generally is
conswners
on a per capita
sympathetic to most of the
basis."
bill, the proposed legislation
"All income taxpayers, infaces a cool to hostile
cluding
those using the
reception
from
most
earned
income
tax credit,
committee members.
would
receive
tbe
per capita
Giving more details than
credit,"
he
said.
have yet . been made
available,
Blumenthal · ' 'The same per capita
scotr· hed
previous amount would be made
administration statements available to thO$&lt; not paying
that the receipts from the tax but receiving Social. '
taxes might be used for Security payments; to those
welfare reform, tax reform receiving SSI (supplemental
security income) payments,
or other pljl'poses.
Once administrative costs railroad retirement
payments and those on the
AFDC {aid to families with
dependent children)

Sheriff busy
over weekend

occurred Thursday has been
solved with the arrest ol two ·
Rutland area juveniles. The
house was entered through an

unlocked window. Ap·
proximately $40 in coins was
taken. Dresser drawers -were
ransacked.
The youths have been
released to . the custody of
their parents pending a
hearing in juvenile court,
Sheriff Proffitt said.
The first of the lour traffic
the bank robbery," she said.
mishaps
occurred Friday
The FBI was preparing
today to arraign Nelson in about 11 ;30 p.m. on Bedford
U.S. District Court in TR 162. Michael B. Braun, 19,
Cleveland on federal charges Mulberry Hts., Pomeroy,
ol bank robbery. Local traveling west, came around
a curve and met two deer
authorities were preparing
standing
in the road. Braun
chllrges of kiduaping and ·
his
car to the right
swerved
extortion.
and
went
off
the road into a
Mrs. Blair said she was
tree
headon.
There was
sewing Friday when she
heavy
damage
to his car.
heard someone talking to her
Braun
was not injured.
son and a neighbor, fourThe second accident came
year-old Emmett Moore.
about
II :56 a.m. Saturday in
When she went downstairs to
Sutton
Twp .
Mitchell
investigate, Nelson told her
Meadows,
18,
Middleport,
hill
"I don't want to ' hurt
climbing
on
private
property,
anybody. I just robbed a bank
lost control or his motorcycle
and I want to stay here."
and
was pinned under it
She described him as "consurrereing
a fractured leg. He .
fused and just wondering bow
was removed to Holzer
he was going to get out"
during the siege. She said he Medical Center by the Racine
kept his guns in his pocket. E·R squad.
The third accident came
The neighbor, Emmett
Sunday
at 1:10 a .m. when a
Moore, was the first to be
fleeing
driver
turned his car
released, early Saturday in
on
Keebaugh
Rd . just off
over
exchange lor $2,1100 collected
Sumner
Rd.
Calvin
Mayle, 24,
by Mayor Jack Hunter from
RD,
Pomeroy,
driver
his friends.
of
a
1969
Chevy
Nelson held on to his other
was
charged
with
Camaro,
captives, however,
drivin~
under
the
in·
negotiating with authorities
fluence, reckless operation,
lor money and freedom .
11
and fleeing a police officer
Nelson had no cause,"
that ended a chase beginning
said Charles McKinnon,
on
SR 7 just north of the
special agent in charge of the
Shenang
Springs nite club.
FBI's Cleveland office. "He
The
sheri!!
attempted to
simply wanted to escape.
stop
the
vehicle
for reckless
"When he said he wanted
but
the
flashing
operation
two Cadillacs as escape
vehicles, and for both carsto light and siren were ignored.
be driveri by FBI agents Chased onto Sumner road,
Mayle lost control of his
dressed only in their
(Continued on page 10)
(Continued on. page 10)

Hostage victim won't press charges
"cleaning up, washing up and

UMBROLLER. The baby
·stroller that folds and carries
like an umbrella. Opens and
closes in ONE EASY
motion! Perfect for
visiting, shopping
and travelling any·
where. Fits into
smallest compact
car. Weighs just
51bs.

postpone the day when oil
incomes will sag bl.cause
wells are running dry .
Should OPEC limit its maximum production to 33 million
barrels a day, the study said,
the oil crunch could come in
1981 il the free world
maintains a high rate of
economic growth and in 1983
if economic growth is slow. It
made no effort to assess the
impact of energy conditions

period is slim. Time has

.@ to encourage development of

•

"LIFE insurance, too!
Call me for details?'
Slat~

academic leaders with the
hacking or the Massachusetts
Institute of Technology warned that energy gaps
might grow to the point of
causing wars unleSs there is a
prompt global effort to make
the. transition !rom oil to

~
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PROM ROYALTY - Jeni Grate and Steve Randolph were crowned queen and king of
the 1977 Meigs High School Junior,S.,nior Prom Satw-day night in the Larry Morrison
Auditoriwn amid attractive decorations prepared by the junior class. Miss Peggy Girolami,
president ol the junior class, and Principal James Diehl presided at the coronation. Miss
Grate is the daughter ol Mr. and Mrs. Wendell Grate, Rutland, and Randolph is the son of
Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Randolph, Route 2, Pomeroy.

24 Stale St.

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business , government and

at left

Phone 446-4290

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the century, the new analysis

said.
. The study - produced by 35

other energy sources.
"Failure to act could lead
to substantiaily higher
energy prices as the supplydemand imbalance becomes
more apparent - with the
depressant effects on the
economies or the world and
the consequent frustration of
the aspirations or the lessdeveloped countries," it said.
"The major political and
social difficulties that might
arise could cause energy to
become a focus for confrontation and conflict .
" Even with prompt action
the margin between success
and failure In the 1985-2000

supplies or natural gas can
meet all demands through
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::&gt;::::::;::.: ·,·,:,:::··::..&lt;:&gt;::::::::;:::::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::;;::::::::::;;::::;::::::::::::;;:;:;:;:;::::;;:;:::::::::::;:::::::::::;::::::::::::::::::::::::::· this century if there are

c. K. Snowden

~1A f4

Even concerted efforts now
expected in industrial nations
to conserve energy and
switch to alternate fuels will
not be enough to keep oil'
supply and demand in
balance through the end or

•

program."

The crude oil and gas tax
would yield about $2.8 billion
in 1978, rising to $12.3 biUion
by 1985, he said. Of this, $2.4
billion would be returned to
individuals in 1978 and $9.4
billion in 1985.

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Rhodes plans to btWin
Job Corps in .SE Ohio
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - Gov. James A. Rhodes todsy
signed legislation authorizing a civilian job corps for
young unemployed Ohioans, but said no action would be
taken to establish the ,corps until funds are available !rom
the federal government or In the state budget.
It was the first bill signed by the governor which he
had previously vetoed dw-ing the 1975-76 legislative
session. "This is a greatly improved piece of legislation,"
said Rhodes. " It answers our principal objection to the
previous bill."
That objection, said the governor, was that no money
was provided. The proposed budget, now under
consideration in the Senate, furnishes $5 million for the
job corps. The state Department of Natural Resources has
said it anticipates the federal government to come
through with some money.
Once the money arrives, the Rhodes administraiton
plans a pilot program in southeastern Ohio, with young
employes 16 and over working on strip mine reclamation:
Other programs will include tree-planting, park .
development, insect control, highway beautification,
litter removal and flood and erosion control.

Names of handi~apped
in schools are wanted
A continuing effort to developed for these children.
identify handicapped
Children in need or special
children in the Meigs County education include : hearingschools is underway from impaired ; crippled ; visually
now until the end or the school impaired ; severe or multiply
year.
impaired; learning and
"We are trying to lind behaviorally disabled ;
children aged 0-21, whether severe behaviorally hanthey are presently in school dicapped ; mentally retaror not, who are suspected of ded ; and speech and
having special education language imp~ired .
needs," said Robert Bowen,
"The data gathered about
county school superin· these children will remain
tendent.
c'onfidential," said Bowen.
Information about the " Decisions about the best
children with learning
problems or physical con·
ditions which hinder their
education will be ana lyzed so
that
an
appropriate
educational program can be
'

educational placement will
be made by a team including
a teacher an administrator
and
other
qualified
1

pro£essionals. "

A system of dueA}rocess
procedural safeguards has
been established to protect
the interests of the children, ·
their parents and the school
district in the event there is a
disagreement about the
.assessment or placement of a

child. The system has several ·
(Continued on page 10)

2,100 miners remain

Racine unit on
5 weekend runS
RACINE - Five calls were
answered Saturday and
Sunday by the Racine
emergency squad. Saturday
at 12:05 p.m. the squad trans·
ported Mitchell Meadows,
Middleport, who had been in
a motorcycle accident to
Holzer Medical Center.
On Sunday at U5 a.m.
Elmer Pickens, Racine , was

taken to Veterans Memorial
HoSpital where he wa s
treated and released . At 4
a .m . Pickens was returned to

the hospital and admitted.
At 11:15 a.m. Bret Friend,
Rt. 2, Long Bottom, was
taken to VMH and at I :35
p.m. Ina Robeck, Racine·,
·was alsc taken there.

outside 4 Ohio mines

Consol has adamantly
refused to mee t wtth miners'
committees about the
dispute, saying there'll be no
talks until the men start
with the company over a working again.
After the foreman struck
foreman-miner fight .
Workers at two Consol an employe at the firm's
mines in West Virginia were Franklin 25 pit, he was
suspended.lor several days.
working.
John Guzek , District 6 Miners claim a similar
president ol the United Mine offense would have resulted
Workers, said he couldn't tell in firin g for a miner.
Guzek said although "a lot
when the men would be going
hack or whether workers at or people are tired of striking
other mines would walk out in and really want to go back,"
with out a meeting with
sympathy.
He said "We would have Consol, the dispute at
had .them all back today if .Franklin 25 threatens to bring
they (the coal company) had a resurgence or the
sat down and talked the districtwide strlke that idled
·damned thing out. There's 16,000 miners for two weeks
nothing in the law, nothing in recently.
BELLAIRE , Ohio (UP! ) The 2,100 miners at four
Consolidation Coal Co. mines
in Ohio stayed off the job
today in a continuing dispute

U1e contract ~ cover this ."

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J-.l ne ~y ~uw .... .. -· --- ... -,.

2- The Daily Sentinel, M1ddleoort-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, May 16, 1977

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Senior citizens' activities are
under one roof in Meigs
..

r

Count y Senior are all programs and serPrograms ar e vices in one facility , but they
uniqu e - unlik e many are administered and
co unt ies where various coordinated by one person,
programs are i~ different Mrs. Eleanor Thomas,
locations) i. e., a Retired Executive Director of the
Senior Volunteer Program in Meigs County Council on
one office, a Senior Center in Aging.
Among her duties as
another building, and a
Nutrition Program in yet Executive Director, Mrs.
writes
grant
another location, Mei~s Thomas
County has all programs and proposals for federal and
services in just one fa cility. state fuding or programs and
This eliminates much is resP9nsible lor the imduplication which cuts down plementation of new services.
on operational costs. Not only She is accountable lor all
program funds and fiscal
reports, responsible for
meeting all state and federal
requirements and keeps · upMeigs

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I

Ci tizens

Senior Citizens

THE MEIGS S.ENIOR CITIZENS CENTER provides
transporta tion for senior citizens to physicians, st ores, to

the center and other loca tions. Pictured getting on the bus

from the le[t are Al ice Balser, Bessie Stitt, Gaynell Clark,
Vivian Phelps and Margaret Johnson. The driver is
Wanda Vining.

·

to-date on all legislation buildlng. The increase ln the
which affects older persons. use of services since that
Mrs, Thomas is responsible time has proven the need for
for the procurement or local senior cl'lizens programs fil
funds, which is a requirement Meigs County .
of all federal programs.
The services available at
$22.~ was the amount which
the Center are like an
had to be raised locally lor iceberg, the tip being the
year 1976; of this amount activities. The Center can be
$7,195 .69 was donated by . a "fun" place - but it Is also
senior citizens themselves. a place lor sharing - the
Approximately $10,000 was joys, the sadnesses, the
raised through such lund- problems - a place .to work,
raising activities as dinners, to learn, to join in actlvltles.
bazaars, etc .
The Center is where the
Through the cooperation of lonely find friends and
the ' Mei~s Local ·School compa nionship
the
Board , a Senior Citizens depressed find others worse
Center was opened four years off than they, and in trying to
ago in a former school help them, help themselves.

day is Tuesday

~

in State of Ohio

••

fjoldett.

CJBUckey~

Carfl

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STATE OF OHIO/OHIO COMMISSION ON AGING

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The Golden Buckeye Discount Card is a
program designed to benefit Senior Citizens
65 or over. Participating businesses as well
as the Ohio Department of Natural
Resources recognize holders of the card with
spe~ial discount prices. The businesses
listed below are many of those who honor the
card in this area. They have agreed with the
Ohio Commission On Aging to participate in
this program . You can expect quality
merchandise and service when dealing with
these or any of the . businesses in the
program. If you do not yet have your Golden
Buckeye Discount Card, contact Area
Agency on Aging, Rio Grande, Ohio, Phone
245-5353 Ext. 216. A number of merchants
have not yet been contacted regarding this
plan. Look for the Golden Buckeye program
decal which verifies acceptance of the card.

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HAROLD STEWART, A VOLUNTEER on days off
from his employment, left, and William Quivey of the
Meigs Senior Citizens Retired Senior Volunteer Program ,
leave the center with hot lunches for shut-ins unable to get .
to the center.

Center services
free of charge
There is no charge for any

THERE 'S ALWAY~ AGREATdeal of activity in this room at the Meigs Senior Citizens
Center. One can engage in craft work, games, quilting or just rest.
· ·
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EACH WEDNESDAY FROM 9:30a.m. to 12:30 p.m., a representative from the district
socia.l security ofrice at Athens is on hand at the Meigs Senior Citizens Center in Pomeroy to
ass1st center visitors &lt;With their social security processing. Here Leslie Paster, socia.l
security representative, behind tlie desk confers with John Bailey, Route 3, Pomeroy.

the lum:u progr~m which is

lunded through the Community Action Agency . The
Council provides the site and
other supportive services .
Mrs. Parker supervises the
home-delivered luncrl
program
to
shut-ins.
Presently there are 17 persenior citizens do not have to sons who are benefitting from
become members to take this service. It is hoped that
advantage of any of the in the near future authority
will be given to expand this
setvices .
There is flo income. much-needed service. Mrs.
guidelines lor any service Parker's duties include ·
with the exception of the establishing a program ol
Home Repair service. Mrs. nutrition education , being
Rosalie Sayre, employed two respnsible for all fi sc al
days a week, is in charge of reports and other records
·this part of the program. Mrs. required ol the Nutrition
·Sayre is res ponsible for Program, and meeting all
in- local and state health
collectin g
needed
forti\iltion !row the senior regulation:c:
citizen who ·requests this
There are two other em·
· as.sist'ah ce, co ntact ing a
person to do the work, and ployees on the Nutrition
checking afterwards to see if Program ,. Mrs. Mattie
th e repair work was Lawrence, who works partsatisfactory.
She
Is time ani! Mrs. Ramona
responsible for all records Hawk, who is head cook.
Leading Creek Conrequired for this program. In
addition to her duties with the servancy District, through
Home Repair service, Mrs. their employment training
Sayre also assiSts with trans- program, have furnished five
portation wl\en needed.
other employees for the
An average of 80 persons Center at no cost to the
eat lunch at the Center daily, Council. They are Mrs. Mary
although the site is funded for Ash and Mrs. Delores Powell,
only 41. The $7,380.90 in cooks; Mrs. Dortha Handley
donations by th e senior and Mr. Lewis Williams,
citizens have helped to janitor and bus driver
provide the additional meals. respectively ; and Mrs.
Mrs. Alice Parker suoervises Dorothy McGuffin . who
of the services provided
through the Senior Citizens
Center. Seniors donate acco rding to their ability to pay.
.The yearly membership du es
of $2 from the 1,149 members
·of the Senior Citizens Center
helps with this runding, but

H

BEAUTIFICATION OF THE RIVER BANK across from the Meigs Senior Citizens :
Center in Pomeroy is a project of some of the center visitors. At their chores from the left ~
,;
are Homer Young, Gene McElroy, Kermit McElroy and Dayton McElroy.
,;

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Mrs. Kay Sayre direc-ts activities
The many daily activities . all craft classes, purchase of
at the Center are supervised craft supplies and the
by Mrs. Kay Sayre, the Ac- coordinating of baza.ars.
tivlties Director. The monThe many programs and
thly attendance at the Center. activities offered through the
has increased from 110 m Center would not be possible
Aprll1973 to 1,674 .in March of without the assistance and
this year. Mrs. Sayre is cooperation of the senior
responsible for attendance citizen volunteers in · the
records , summary reports, Retired Senior Volunteer

·MAY IS SENIOR CITIZENS MONTH ·

Program.
=
The RSVP Director, Mr!ij
Alice Wamsley, is respnsibl~
for involving persons ove'o
age 60 in volunteering theil
knowledge, talents, an&lt;l
experiences to serve theiJ:
community in various ways•
Presently there are 260 senioo
(Continued on page 10)

SENIOR CITIZENS TO BE HONORED

Volunteer program coordinated .by
pal'ttime staffer, Mr.s. Jeanne B ra un
As the RSVP Coordinator, a
part-time position, Mrs.
Jeanne Braun, is responsible
for personal contact with
· senior volunteers when there
is a request by a community
agency or organization . for
volunteer assistance . The
c ·oordinator makes
arrangements with the Senior
Volunteers as to their
availability, time and place
of volunteer assignment, and
transportation to and from
volunteer station . Mrs. Braun
is responsible for ma intaining contact with the
volunteer station as to the
need
for
volunteers,
evaluation of volunteers, and
IJ¥!(hods of _ttnproving the
v&amp;lunteer assumment.

Mrs. Susan Oliver, also
employed on a part-time
ba sis, assists the RSVP
Director and Coordinator in
personal contact with
volunt eers and volunt eer
stations in making assignment, and is responsible for
involvement of seniors in
volunteer work at the Cent er .
In conjunction with this, Mrs.
Oliver plans programs and
obtains speakers who are
knowledgea ble in lields such
as health, reiirement, and
other areas of interest to
older persons, and also plans
st:edal ent~rta~ent and
tnps for sen1or c1t1zens. She
Is respons1ble lor a weekly ·
column in the newsoaner a~d
other n&amp;s releases. She and

other starr members present
a weekly radio program on
WMPO-AM , Thursdays at
1 n&lt;
: ~i~~m. Joyce Bunc h,
·
d
h c t
ass1gne to t e
en er
th".ou gh C..
ETA
.. , a county
train ing employment
program, acts as secretary to
the Executive Director. She .
handles correspondence and
mailing of various reports
needed lor the operation of
the programs. She collects
and keeps records or all
monies
received
and
disbursed : federal and local
runds, membership dues ,
donations, and money
received rrom fund-raising
projects.
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NEW YORK CLOTHING HOUSE

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.fenittr

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FRANCIS FLORIST

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CHAPMAN SHOES

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l

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VILLAGE PHARMACY

POMEROY

POMEROY

.;

Gitizttn$~

MIDDLEPORT

DUTTON DRUG CO.

DAIRY VALLEY

MIDDLEPORT

POMEROY

POMEROY

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FABRIC SHOP

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THIS ATIRACTIVE SIGN MARKS the location of the Meigs Senior Citizens Center in ~
the former Pomeroy Junior High School. With the sign are Richard Duckworth left and ~
Curtis Wolfe.
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:
assists with records and daily
activities at the Center.
In addition to the Senior
Citizens Center located in
Pomeroy, there are four
Senior Citizen clubs in
Harrisonville, Long Bottom,
Portland and Rutland. These
active clubs meet weekly or
monthly.

nursing home if someone Mrs. Chasteen is respnsible
hadn 't been found to stay with for all I &amp; . R records and
him reports.
you don't see the person
Mrs. Donna Williamson
whose utilities were a bout to and Miss Jan Shoots, Out
be shut orr because he hadn 't · Reach Workers, 3re superbeen able to pay them vised by Mrs. Chasteen. Mrs.
you don't se~ the person Williamson's main responwho calls one of the staff at sibility in the office is to
their home because she's ill locate persons to stay with
and there's no one else to call home-bound elderly, allowing
them to stay in their own
These examples can be homes as long as possible.
multiplied many times over, Miss Shoots, who is employed
to which the Information &amp; two days a week, assists Mrs.
Referral (I &amp; R) Coordinator, Chasteen in I &amp; R in a variety
Mrs. Leafy Chasteen, can or ways. Out Reach consists
attest. In the two year period of going out in the commUJ1lty
since Mrs. Chasteen has been and contacting older persons,
in charge of I &amp; R, requests especially those who are
have increased from 132 isolated, and informing them
requests for assistance in one of available services and
three-months period to 1105 helping them to take adrequests from January vantage or tbesecsefvlt'i!f.'
through March of thiS year.
For example : Persons
Sometimes all it takes is a have been found "{ho dl~ not
phone call or two to solve a know tbat transportJiion was
problem. other times though, available throu~'\h~ Senior
it may take days or weeks to Citzent Program.
get the person the help he
The buses have daily routes
needs. Confidentaility is of scheauled regularly
utmost importance in I &amp; R; (hrougl)out the countv. each

..

DALE ELLIS SOHIO
MIDDLEPORT

I

Tuesday, May 17, has been make a reservation by cauul
designated by Governor 992-7886. Special recogniticJll
Rhodes as Senior Citizens will go to persons 90 and ov~
Day throughout the State of by the Meigs County CounOil
Ohio. To commemorate this on Aging, the Agency whidh
day Senior Citizens of Meigs has been designated by tljj
County will be honored at a Meigs County Commissionet)l
luncheon at the Senior as the official PlaMing a!f
Citizens Center. Persons who Service Organization !~
plan to attend are asked to Aging in Meigs County. ;

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POMEROY.

MIDDLEPORT

POMEROY

MARGUERITE SHOES

FOREMAN &amp; ABBOTT

RIDENOUR'S TV &amp;·APPLIANCE

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area covered at least once a· month with a ridership of sill.

week.!! a senior citizen needs There are eight to ten out-ertransportation to the doctor, county trips · to medioal
to go shopping, to come to the faclllties each month. Mtj! . .
Center, or for any need, the Amberger receives 40~0
number to call · is 992-7886. phone calls dally in regard~o
Mrs. Margaret Aniberger, transportation and other
the Transportation Coor- programs provided throuih
dinator, is responsible for the the Center. Senior citlz~s
routing and scheduling of all who use this service are )o
vehicles so that duplication is appreciative that they o~
eliminated. The routes are donate more than they f!·
based upon the needs of the· tually can afford.
•
people. Mrs. Amberger is
Mrs. Wanda VIning and ftlt,
also responsible for Center Troy Ohlinger are the reg"*r
and transpo_rtation records bus drivers. The drivers qe
and reports.
also responsible for escortl!!g
Many older persons do not persons who are oot
drive due to poor eyesight, physically able to travel $y
the expense of owning a car, themselves to stores, doctofs,
inability to obtain insurance, and other places. A daily ~g
or in some
having is required for state repof;
•""i~'d..,r.,i1v!fe'y·-nas1riito~tiiihii1etMnurnber of pe....,....
~" and for ..At
important part of the senior purpose. Mrs. Vining, on$1
citizens ~!;OgrJI,ms .• Services the bus drivers, is aJIIo
are of -.use. if-a· ~n •' reapan~e for the comp""g
caMot Kef to them. ' Iii' 1975' " arid rect!HIIrik or all pubUtAy
the buses averaged 3,~ ln relation to senior cittzl,s
miles . a mon,t)' A wit~,_, a ' programs, and sends c111'94o
ridership of 35-1. In 111'18 the senior citizens admitted :f" 1
buses averaged 5,400 miles a hospitals.
:

MIDDLEPORT BOOK STORE

SHIRLEY KAY'S BEAUTY SALON

I

•*

Retirees offer experience, talents
At the l!enter persons who
have reached a retirement'
age ca n channel their
energies by offering their
talents and experiences. By
helping others, those who feel
they aren't wanted any
longer because of age or
physical problems lea rn they
are needed and wanted!
The rest of the iceberg
doesn't show you don't see the person
who but for .meals provided
through
the Nutrition
Program would have not
been able to return to her own
home from the hospital ,-..
you don't see u•e person
who _without the home repair
serv1ce would have had !o
'!love _out of the hom~ shed
hved m ~ost of her life yo1li!on t see the person
whose income was less than
SIOO a month and didn't know
how to apply lor sst ,you don't see_ the person
who is almost bhnd, no near
relat1ves, no way to get wthe
doctor or stores you don :t see the person
who would have had to go to a

.

MAY 17TH

•
•=

~}i~~'~

ORED HERE

MIDDLEPORT

POMEROY

SIMON'S GROCERY

VISTA SERVICE CENTER

heritage house

POMEROY

_,

RACINE

RACINE

MIDDLEPORT

.~------------------------~------------------------~----------------------~
.,
ROSEBERRY PENNZOIL
DAN THOMPSON FORD
MEIGS AUTO PARTS
"
POMEROY

-·

u

"'

MEIGS TIRE CENTER INC.

RACINE

MIDDLEPORT

LINDA'S LADY FAIR BEAUTY SALON

DUDLEY'S FLORIST

RACINE
MIDDLEPORT
POMEROY
-••
...,"'~..' --------------------------------~~-------------------------------- ----------------------------------~
McCLURE'S
DAIRY
ISLE
RIDENOUR'S TV &amp; APPLIANCE
POMEROY
HOME
&amp;
AUTO,
INC.
•
..
,

'

..
i

n

•

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"

MIDDLEPORT

POMEROY
ll

.

CHESTER
..,

~

~----------~-----------._-------------------------------------·-------------~

�4-TheDaUy Sentmel, Middleport Pomeroy 0, Monday May 16 1977

819 T e n

Concorde protesters
tie up Kennedy area
NEW YORK (UPIJ - Hun
dreds of motorists protestmg
the scheduled June 20 start of
service lor the faster-tha n
sound Concorde jetliner used
car power Swaday to brmg
traffic around Kennedy
Airport to a standshll
The result of the protest
was a two-mile-long traffic
jam around the bustlin g
airport that forced aarhnes
passengers to abandon
laXJcabs and buses far from
the termmals to dash for the1r
fltghls
Pohce estimated 200 to 300
cars were draven lo the
atrporl by prote:;ters but
noted at was ampossable to
d1stmguash them from
dravers who merely had been
caught up m the S\\ arm of
traffic
One of the coordmators of
the prote:;t, John Marus
cars
claimed
I 350
parUcapated and Sllld the
protesters came from
sections of Queens Brooklyn
and Nassau County that he
near the aarporl

The demonstration
sponsored by the Emergency
Coaht1on to Stop the SST ,
geared up at 5 p m and was
over by 7 45
Bryan Levtnson pres1dent
of another anta.SST group
the Concorde Alert saad
Sunday s protest was hastily
put ll:tgether and warned hts
group
planned
a
demonstration next Sunday
that would be much more
organized and heavaer '
Hundreds of autos crawled
along roadways around the
mam passenger tennmal at
about 10 miles per hour stoppmg frequently lor
traffic hghts
Many of the protesters
waved Ameracan flags and
held placards protestmg the
SST other honked thear
horns and bltnked thea r
ltghts
Poltce from the Port
Authority of New York and
New Jersey, wh1ch operates
Kennedy said some atrlme
passengers left cabs and
buses to hurry on foot to

Communists in
Finland to have
government role

te rmm als to catch their
planes
The motor demonstration
was organa zed as the start of
a week of protests by
restdents of commumtaes
around the aa rport who
oppose the Anglo French
Concorde because they say
ats n01se and pollutton levels
are excess1ve
Last Wednesday US
DJS!nct Judge Milton Pollack
overturned a Port Authority
ban on Concorde landmgs set
m March 1976
The
Port Authonty
agnonng a 16 month test
authortzataon granted the
Concorde by the Ford
admmistrauon w1thheld the
landmg nghts pendmg
further noise studies
lnunedia!A!Iy alter Pollack
issued his rulmg Atr France
a1ld
Bntash
Airways
announced they wall begm
Ccncorde operatiOnS m New
York on June 2CJ But an
appeal by the PA could
further delay Concorde
landangs m New York

HELSINKI,
Finland
(UPI) - Premier Kalevl
Sorsa has formed Finland's
60th go .. rnment In 59
years, with a pledge to
reduce unemployment and

stimulate the economy
The participating Com
munist party bas promised
full cooperation Sorsa 47,
chairman of the Social
Democratle party gave
the important Labor
Ministry post to Arvo
Aalto the Communist
party's general secretary
"The most important
thing Is to gel our economy
moving" Aalto said "Our
part In this government

will he cooperation " The
Commuolsts brought their
40 parliamentary seats into
the government once Sorsa

agreed there would he no
increases in the Income Ia•
or sales Ia• IJ 1978

New Miss USA likes to show it
CHARLESTON,SC (UPI )
- The new Mass USA
Kimberly Lowse Tomes of
Houston, disagrees with
critics who say beauty
pageants are degradmg lo
women and coniA!stants are
oolv pawns to promoters
• We want to enter a
pageant so they shouldn't put
us down for what we want to
do, because we don't put
them down for thetr beliefs, '
she sa1d Sunday JUSt hours
after WUllllllg the crown
Appearmg m the the MISS
USA Pageant IS showing
yourself, not flaunting your
self," she declared
The 21-year-old Te•as A&amp;M
Umvers1ty semor, whose
lather Ill a carpet salesman
and mother as a teacher,
defeated ~0 other young
women to Will the nght lo
represent the Um!A!d State:; m
the MISS Umverse Pageant
next month
Miss Tomes who IS 5-foot41
and 36-24-36 saad she dec1ded

to enter the Miss Texas
compelttion because she had
heard 1t 'was a lot of fun
She Sllld w10mng the Mass
USA Pageant ISI1 t gmng to
change her perspective
I m looking forward to
havmg a good tune she
Sllld
The blonde, blue-eyed
health and phys1cal educatton
maJor was clearly a crowd
pleaser Saturday night when
she appeared m a dazzlmg
black and seqwned Texas
Ranger outfat m the costume
portton of the pageant
Farst runnerup m thepageant was Mary O'Neal
Contino of Nevada followed
by Debra Jean Cossette of
Mmnesota Pamela Lynn
Gergely of Califorma and
Sheryl Lynn Herrang of
Vargmta
Mass Tomes stayed up to
almost 4 a m gmng through
post11ageant acltvtlles and
calling home to talk to fraends
and relatives

HEALTH
Role of estrogen

•

role of female hormones 111
breast cancer There 1s an
unportant pomt though The
study does support the tdea
that 1£ there as an tncreased
rask for post menopausal
women on estrogen the rtsk
must be qUJte small
Both doctors agreed that
women wath lumpv breasts
were more likely to have pr&lt;r
blcms tf they took estrogen
Thts was particularly true If a
woman developed breast
disease after startmg female
hormones So your breast
lwnpwtll need to be con
sadered by your doctor an
decadmg tf vou should take
estrogen or not Estrogen
does speed up the growth of
cancer of the breast so breast
cancer Jl&lt;lllents should not be
takmg estrogen
Daalv estrogen m small
doses as you are takmg IS less
likely to be tmphcated as a
factor than less frequent
larger doses
In another study of
estrogens and breast cancer
by doctors from Vanderbilt
Umversaty women takang
estrogens had fewer cancers
(all tYJl'\," ), the cancer deaths
"ere much lower and the
deaths from all causes
{mcludmg lleart attacks
strokes cancer) were less
than half than 10 women not
takmg estrogen Clearly
estrogen therapy may be
more of a beneftt than a
curse m seJected cases
What should a woman do•
Because of the utdivaduai
varaatwns at as really better to
let your doctor sort out what
IS best for you m vour In
davtdual
satuat ion
Understandmg thal estrogens
are neither all good nor all
bad wll help avotd confusion
For mformataon on the
change of hfe send 50 cents
for The Health Letter nwnber
:;.12 MellOJl&lt;IU.'ie Send a lon~
stamped, self addre ss• d
envelope for maallnt A~
dress your letter tn r, , r dlltli
m care of ll• • n• oJl&lt;lper
p 0 Box I, ,, r ouw Ctly Sta
taon, N&lt;'l&lt;l Vu rk NY 10019

I

her year s reagn
I want that degree so I wall
have somethmg to fall back
on,
she sa1d although
wmnmg the Mass USA
Pageant 'mtght open some
new doors for me '
Her vtctory brought her a
$7 500 cash prtze a $10,000
personal appearance
contract and a $3,500
scholarship

By FRED DOWN
UP! Sports Wri!A!r
Walhe Horton has the
perfect squelch for fans who
boo him when the Texas
Rangers are orr the road
He tips hls cap Ill them
Boomg IS part of the game
and jtLSt pumps me up,' the
veteran slugger satd Sunday,
after the Rangers' 7-3 vactory
over the Royals at Kansas
City I was booed every time

High

honor list
announced
Pr i ncipal John Mora has
announced the f fth s1x weeks
grad1ng period honor roll for
the Meigs Junior H gh School
Mak ing a grade of
B
or
above mall the r sub1ects to
be ltsted on the roll were
7th Grade Knsttn An
derson John Bea ver Jimmy
Boyer Jack Braley
Dale
Bnckles Greg Bush Pam

Crooks PhylliS Dav s V cky

DeBord Melanie Otllard.
Tammy Etchmger Brenda
Fry
Mary Beth Hawley
Oav1d
Hoffman
Brent

Houdashell

Tony Jewell

Unrecka Johnsen
Robin
K1tchen Chuck M cCloud

Teresa

McCoy

Mark

McGu re Randy Murray
Lynn Oliver Davtd Reuter
Tommy Stmmons
Laura
Smtth Mary Smtth
Greo
Thomas
Dennts Thornton
Becky Tlll1s Denise Turner
Fred Yeung
81h Grade - Conn1e Bailey

Kel ly

Brown

Pally

Cremeans Rob Dav1s Shan
Orehel Lmda Eason
T m

Gore Araka Grate Katrena
Hale Robert Harmon Jayne
Hoeflich
Sheila
Horky

Angela Houchins

Sherrl

Hysell Joyce Janey Br an
Kmg Lmda Kovalchik M1ke
Mtller Carol Morrts Steve
Ohl nger
Angela Payne
Befh Pernn Tony Scott

Bran

Swann

Camtlle

Swmdell Ph1ll1p Thompson
Nancy Wallace Jena Welker
Bryan Wtlco:x Darla W 1ICO)(
Davi d Wilkes Darla W1ll am

son

Salisbury honor roll noted
Pnnc1pal John Ltsle has
announced the ftfth s1x weeks
honor roll for the Salisbury
Elementary School N.aktng a
grade of B or above to be
ltsted on the roll were
FtrSt Grade Dav i d

Beegle Wtll•am Brothers
Donald Dorst
Michele

Folmer

Sue Fry Charlotte
Audra Houdashelt
Art1e Hunnel T1m Jeffers
Enca Johnston Alison Jones
Kev1n Donald Ktng
Kevtn

Hart

Vtctor

Miissmgale

Kong

Tma

Greg

Murray
G1n8 Scarberry
Angela
Sloan Kevin Tanner Tamra
Vance
Se-cond Grade Melan e

Arnold

L1n Chase

Corb1tt

Heather Cullums

Mark

Todd Cullums Harley Ebl n
Carla Kinq Darla Kong

extravaganza in theater
NEW YORK (UPI )- Ethel
Merman and Mary Martm
made thear long awaited
come back to Broadway
Sunday mght tn a one·
performance benefit show
that brought a celebnty
aud1ence to 118 feet a half
dozen tunes
At the close of the $150-a
ticket benefit for the Museum
of the Caty of New York s
MUSIC
Theater
and
Collection Mayor Abraham
Be arne bestowed the caty s
highest honors on the two
veteran performers as The
Two First Ladtes of the
Amencan Musacal TheaiA!r '
BQth mtLStcal comedy stars
were m phenomenal vo1ce m
spate of thetr 68 years Mass
Merman s brassy vocal
trumpet particularly seemed
ununpatred by tune
One advertisement m The
New York Times sold out the
Broadway Theater for a
gross of over $150,000, and an
equal amount had to be

re tu rned to dtsappmnted separately 10 medlies of top
songs dating hack to 'Gtri
Merman Martin fans
Anna
Sosenko
the Crazy" m 1930 for MISS
producer descnbed tt as an Merman and Leave It To
histone event I've been tn Me" ln 1938 for MISS Martiit
show busmess for 45 yea rs The second half encompassed
and there has never been the Hello Dolly" scene and
anyUung hke the response to a recrea!Jon of the duo
these two great stars, she IA!IevtSaon show they dad m
1953 for the Ford Motor Co s
saad
Thousands of fans broke 50th Anruversary Film chps
pohce hnes outsade the were used e•tenSJvely
theater to catch a glunpse of
such audience celebrities as
Frank Smatra Claudette
Colbert Mtke Ntchols, Mabel
Mercer J erome Robbms,
Beatnce Siratght Rrchard
Rodgers and Lauren Bacall
League Stand tngs
Cyral Ratchard was master ByMator
Untted Press lnternaltonal
of ceremome s and Yul
Naftonal League
East
Brynner Burgess Meredtth
W l
Pet GB
Jules SIA!m Geoffrey Holder Pttfsbgh
22 9 710
19 11 633 2 1/2
Joel Gre y Bobby Short Chicago
20
12 625 21h
St Louts
Bobby Van Robert Preston Pt'l
16 13 552 5
Ia
and Mass Martin s son Larry Montr eal
13 16 448 8
11 20 355 ,
Hagman played waaiA!rs for New York
West
the !male Harmoma Gardens
W L Pet GB
26 7 788
scene from Hello Dolly " LOS Ang
14 18 438 11 h
The larst half of the show Ctnc
san F ra n
13 19 406 12 h
presented
the
stars Houston
13 20 394 13

Seminole's life style
described for pupils

Mrs Irene Busch Rt I
Portland, spoke to Mrs
Hysell's hfth grade of
Pomeroy Elementary School
recently for the topac of the
Seminole lndaans of Florada
Mrs Busch said the lndtans
live today much as they d1d m
the 1700s when they settled
there Because they were
sympathetiC to runa"ay
slaves the f1rst governor of
Florada Andrew Jackson
washed to have them sent
west to lndtan reservallons
Many of the Semanole wtlh
drew anto the wtlderness of
the swamps where thear
descendant s stall hve
Because there as no place to
my name was menttoned raase crops they hve on hsh
That's good I w1sh the and on staples that they are
stadiwn was full That s why able to buy w1th the meager
I lipped my cap after each of mcome from the souvenirs
they sell They are not a tded
the homers'
Horton
started
hts by the government 10 an)
bombardment With a solo way
TheJr homes are made of
homer off Paul Sptittorff 10
fallen
cypress logs w1th
the ftrst mnmg, hit a sacriface
thatched
roofs Their dugout
fly m the thtrd, a two-run
canoes
are
hollowed from a
homer m the f1fth and a solo
stogie
tree
The
men stand up
homer m the e1ghth
and
pole
the
canoes
along
Adraan Devane, pressed
Their meals unlike ours
mto servace as a starter when
are
never eaten off a table
Nelson Bnles !wasted an
The
pot of food sunmers over
ankle warmmg up before the
the
fire at all tunes and
game patched no-hat ball for 5
whenever
an 10d1vadual IS
J.J mnings and got his third
hungry
he
dapa
out a bowl of
wm of the season wtth the
II
relief aad of Paul Undblad
Splittorfl suffered his fourth
setback agamst one wm
The Balttmore Orwles
defea!A!d the Oakland A's, 3-2
the Calilorma Angels beat the
New York Yankees 8-2 the
Cleveland Indla!IS shaded the
C!ucago White Sox, 4-3, the
Mmnesota Twins lopped the U'lill'd Press International
Toronto Blue Jays f&gt;-3, the
The Mmnesota Gophers
Boston Red Sox downed the stayed JUSt one-half game
Seattle Manners 5-4 and the ahe8d of the Wolvermes
Mtlwaukee Brewers scored a, Sunday beating Ohao State m
3-2 10-innmg wm atiA!r losmg one game while M1chi-gan
the farsl game of a took a doubleheader from
doubleheader to Ute Tigers, f&gt;. Northwestern
3 m 10 tnnmgs
The Gophers raised thetr
Btg Ten record to 13-2 Sunday
wtth a 3!-0 Will over Oh1o StaiA!
on a two-lut performance by
JU!Uor patcher Brllln Denman
TiiE DAIL.Y SENTINEL
DEVOTEDTOTifE
The second game or the
INTEREST OF
doubleheader was postponed
MEIGS-MASON AREA
by ram and was to be played
CHF.sTER L.. TANNEHILL
"""Ed
today
ROBF...RT HOEFlJCH
The Wolvermes closed the
City F..ditnr
Published Wuly etl'tpt Satuni.a)
gap on Mmnesota Sunday by
by The Ohlo Valley PubUshmg CAlmwtth f&gt;-2 and 3-2 wms over the
any Ill Court St Pomeroy Ohio
4$169 Busmess Office Phone m
Wildcats The v1ctor1es M1
2156 Editonal P~99'l-2t$7
chagan's nmth and IA!nth m a
Sa:ond cla.S!:I postMge pa1d at
row gave the Wolvermes a
PulnerO)' Ohio
National adverlismg represen13-3 conference record
tali\le Ward
Griff l h Com~ny
Meanwhile Jerry Weller
Inc Botli nelli and Gallagher 01\1
757 Tiurd Ave New York NV
smashed a three-run homer
10017
m one game and hat a run
Sub6cnption rnle."' Oehvetl!d by
earner where available 1S cen~ per
scormg lrtple tn the other to
week By Motor Route M&gt;here camer
help Machtg;ln State to a
sernce not available One monlh
doubleheader sweep over
13 ~ By mail Ln Ohio and W Va
One Year $22 00 SLI months
WISCOilstn MSU heat the
Sll ~ Three months $1 00
Badgers 11-6 and !1-7 Sunday
Elsewhere S2tl 00 year SIX months
U 3 50 Three months $7 ~
at East Lansang
Sub.scnptioo pnce Uldudes Sunday
Ohio State had taken two
Times-&amp;nUnel
games from Iowa Saturday
wmnmg 6-0 and 2-1 agamst
the Hawkeyes Iowa got tis
revenge Sunday wath a
M1chl Kmg
Ph lhp Ktng
doubleheader sweep over
~1sa Pullins Sally Radford
Brenda Sonclalr Rhonda lndtana Iowa beat the
HooSiers ~ and 10-1 m Bag
Zirkle Apnl Clark
Thord Grade Jod1 Ten action at Iowa City
Harnson Barbara Hatfield
Iowa's revenge was doubly
Scott Pullms
Ttm Slo~tn
btlter
for Indiana, which had
Anita Smtih
dropped
a doubleheader at
Fourth Grade - Jackie
MUlllesota Sab.lrday The Go
Welker Dentse Stegall Terry
Sm 1th Teresa Pratt Mary
plters had taken a patr 4-2
Ann Moore Charlotte ~yons
and 6-0 over the HooSiers
Shawn Johnson Sandy Hoyt
Northwestern's double
Ruth Fry
losses to Michagan
header
f iflh Grade - Rhonda
Jeffers Mtchael Kennedy
followed dual defeats at the
Angela Pratt Cra1g Stnclatr
hands of Machagan State
Paula Sw1ndell
Michigan
State beat Nor
Stxfh Grade Scolt
thwestern HI and 6·5 ,
Harrison
Angela Hatfltld
J1m Hoyt Valer e Jeffers
Saturday
Natalie
Lambert
John
Wtsconsm's Sunday losses
Lyons
John Smtth
Greg
also
followed doubleheader
Taylor

Booing pumps
up Horton

JUDI•Or

Lawrence E. Lamb, M.C

By Lawrence E Lamb, M D
DEAR DR LAMB - Would
you please comment on the
enolosed article
12 year
Study Links Estrogen Breast
Cancer' 7
Sometime ago you com
mented on a similar article tn
reference to cancer of the
uterus You saad af a woman
had had a hysterectomy 1t
was all rtght to take estrogen
Does this hold true for breast
cancer or IS there a danger of
breast cancer tf one takes
estrogen daily?
I have had a hemgn breast
twnor removed a few years
ago and I nolA! that the arttcle
says \hill breast cancer 1s
seven times more likely af lou
have had a bemgn breast
tumor
DEAR READER - The
breast cancer scare JS really
an oddity The authors of the
scaentifac article that HI&gt;peared have apparently
agreed to disagree about the
meanmg of the study A
scaentJSI from the National
Cancer Institute studied the
patients or a top notch
gynecologiSt The NHI sc1en
list opened the door to the
possabllaty that femal e hor
mones maght ancr~ase the
chances of developmg breast
cancer - tn post menoJl&lt;lusal
women
Dr Laman Gray, Sr the
gynecologJSI disagreed He
pointed out some weaknesses
m the study Basacally the
results showed that post
menopausal women on
estrogen were 1 3 times more
llin!ly to have breast cancer
than women who did not lake
estrogen
Dr Gray pomted out that
the f,gures were nusleading
because the tnctdence of
cancer of the breast m
women was comJl&lt;lred to the
ratA! seen m Southern climcal
centers where the 10c1dence
r1 breast cancer IS lower than
m Dr Grays regaon
Let at sufface to say that the
mearung of the results are
sufficiently m doubt that you
really can't use the study to
answer the quesllon of the

Hav10g breakfast m bed as
reporters and photographers
gathered around Sunday
mornmg she said she sitU
couldn I beheve she had won
the crown
I am stall m shock she
Sllld ' II feels good, but 1t
hasn t really hal me yet '
Mtss • Tomes has one
semester to go before she
' graduates and she plans to gQ
back to school af!A!r fimshang

Aging stars provide rare

Sewmg makes up a good
part of the hie of lndaan
women All garls have sewmg
machines and learn early
how to sew the long narrow
strtps which are sewed
together to make their
tradttJOnal dress The)
fashiOn souvenar dolls In the
same manner
Another tradataon as the
practace of gavang every little
garl haby a necklace w1th an
addi!JOnal necklace being
presented every barthday
unttl when she as old the
whole neck ts encarcled wtlh
beads When a woman gets a
granddaughter she takes off
one of her necklaces for the
baby and any addatwnal
granddaughters
Mrs Busch exhibated ar
tacles of Jewelr) made by the
Seminole lnd1ans
and
sho"ed many snapshots
taken when she was a guest m
their vtllages At that tune
she taught the lnd1an women
how to embrotder
If one as mterested m seemg
these natave Americans
February as the tune when
they have the lndaan Fairs
w1th nattve dances alltgalor
wrestlmg and other events of
thetr lifestyle
Mrs Busch was ac
compamed by Mrs Jeanne
Braun RSVP coordtnalor

Gophers blank
Buckeyes, 3-0
defeats Machigan swept a
tw10 bill from the Badgers
Saturday heattng WJSConsm
9-5 and 3 0 Those wms
allowed the Wolver10es to
break a school record lor
vtctories m a season
In other Saturday actton
ll!inoiS and Purdue split a
doubleheader at West
LaFayette Purdue took the
first game 10-7 but the Illmt
came back m the second for a
71 Will
In 1929, the first Oscar
awards were announced
Janet Gaynor won the best
actress award for her role m
' Seventh Heaven

WAVERLYWINS
Waverly dduted
lroolllo 5-3 Ill a makeup
&amp;arne Saturday The
FlgbtlDg Tlgen remallled
in third place wllb a W
league mart Waverly II 49 In conference play
Today, Alben• is at
Gallipolis, Jackson 11
Wellslon and lronllln at
Meigs in SEOAL makeup
ga111e1 AU tills start at 5
pm

American League
East
W L Pet G02
17 11 607
Balt imre
1h
18 13 581
New York
17 13 567 1
Bos ton
17 17 500 3
Mlw
14 18 438 5
Delrott
14 20 412 6
Toronto
12 18 .400 6
C evelnd
West
W L Pet GB
M nn
22 11 667
Chtcago
20 12 625 1'12
Texas
16 1.4 533 41h
Kan C ty
17 16 515 5
Oakland
16 17 485 6
C•i I
15 19 441 l'h
San o ego
J.4 22 389 13 h
seattle
11 27 289 13 1!
Atlanta
10 2.4 294 16 h
Stlurday s Results
Saturdays Results
Mtnnesota 13 TorontCl 3
Ch tcago 6 Montreal 3
Chtcago 18 Cleveland 2
Lo s Angeles 5 New York 4
Det ro t 3 Milwaukee 2
Ph ladelph•a 9 San Dieg o 5 Balttmore 2 Oakland 0
St Lou s 7 Atlanta 6
Kansas c ty 6 Texas 0
Sa n Francisc o 4 Ci ncinna t i 3 Boston 8 Seatt le 4
P i tt sburgh 6 Houston 2
New York 4 Ca I tfOrnla 1
Sunday s Results
Sunday s Results
Chte ago 4 Montreal 3 1st
Oetrott 5 Mtlw 3 1st
Ch cago 4 Montreal 2 2nd
Mtlw 3 Detro I 2 2nd
Los Ang 4 New York 3 12 ns
Baltimore 3 Oakland 2
Ph ladelphta 5 san 0 ego 2
Mtnnesota 5 Toron to 3
Atlanta 15 51 Lo u s 12
Cleveland .4 Ch cage 3
Ctncmna tl 6 Sa n Fran 2
Texas 7 Kansas Ci ty 3
Pi ttsburgh 3 Houston 1
Californta 8 New York 2
Today s Probable Pttchers
Boston S Se~ttle 4
(A ll T mes eon
Today s Probable Pitchers
san D ego (Sh.r!ey 2 .4) at
cAll Times e DTl
Ch cage (Moore o 0) 2 30 p m
Balttmore {Palmer 52) at
Los Angeles (John 3 1&gt; at Seattle {Abbott 0 4) 10 35 p m
Philadelph a {Lerch 4 2) 7 35
New York (Hol tzman 2 2) at
pm
Oakland (Medlch 2 21
10 30
Tuesdays Games
pm
San D ego llf Chtcago
Boston (Cleveland 2 3) at
Los Ang eles at Ph Ia ntght
Cal fornla (Ross 0 2)
10 30
San Fran at New York ntght
pm
Montreal at Atlanta ntght
Cleveland (Garland 1 4) r.t
P ttsburgh at c nc nnah
M nnesota {Zahn 5 1) 8 30 p m
51 Lou s a 1 Houston n ght
Tuesday s Games
New York at Oakland
Baltimore at Sealtle night
Boston at Caltforma nt9ht
Detroit at Texas ntght
Cleveland at M nn ntght
Texas at M !waukee n ght

Linescores
Major League Resuns
By umted Press International
Nattonal League
( 1sf Gamel
Ch cago
200 020 ooo- 4 10 0
Mntreal
010 000 020- 3 12 0
Burr s G Hernandez (8)
Sutter (9) and M tferwald
Stanhouse Terpko (7 ) Kern
gan {9) and Foote WP- Burr s
(54 ) LP- Stanhouse (3 5) HR
- Monfrea l Foote (1)
(2nd Game)
Ch cago
003 000 001 - 4 11 0
Mntr eal
010 010 OOG- 2 8 0
K rukow P J;... schel (6) and
Bro ... n Ter pko {3)
Sw sher
Hannahs (f
I Enaney (7)
and Car ter v~ P Krukow l3 2)
LP- Brown ( 1 J J
( 12 mnmgs)
Los Angel es
001 000 000
New York

100 000 OOQ

201 ~

' 13 2

201)-.

3 10 1

American League
(1st 10 lnn1ngs)
Detrot
001 100 010 2-5 9 0
MtiW
000 030 000 o- 3 7 1
Sykes Foucault (5) and May
Slaton
M cClu re ( 101 and
Moore WP - Foucault (2 l) LP
- Sl aton
[ 1 4)
HR - Oetrott
Sla!Jb (5)
(2nd 10 tnnlngs)
Oetrot
000 020 000 o--, 2 6 I
Mllw
101 OOQ 000 1- 3 10 I
Roberts
H11!er (10) and
Wockenfuss
Augusttne {.4 4)
and Haney LP-Roberts (3 5)
HRs- Oetrott Wockenfuss {2)
Milwaukee Brye (2 1
Bait
001 no ooo-- 3 s 1
Oaklnd
100 010 ooo-- 2 9 2
Grimsley D Martinez (8)
and Dempsey Bahnsen Cole
man (51 Lacey (6) G ustt (9)
and Sangutllen WP - Grtmsley
(4 2) LP- Bahnsen (1 2)

Hooton Hough (91 Wall (11)
Garmon ( 11 ) and Oates
Seaver Lockwood (10) Apoda
ca {11) Swan ( 121 end Stearns
WP - Garman (1 Ol LP Apodaca {01 1 HR-Los An
geles Cey (121

Tor
000 010 2DO- 3 12 1
Mlnn
210 020 OOx - 5 10 1
Garvm Vuckovtch {5) and
Ashby
Redfern
Surgmeter
{5) D Johnson {5) Schueler
(7) and Wynegar WP - Burg
me er (4 ll LP- Garvm {5 11

San Dgo
001 000 01n---: 2 5 1
Ph Ia
003 100 lOx- 5 11 ~
Jones Ftngers (7) and Dav s
Carlton (5 11 and McCarver LP
- Jones (3 5} HRs- PH lade!
ph a Davs (l) Marin (1)

Cleve
030 000 01o- 4 13 0
000 110 01x- 3 6 1
Cht
Eckersley Hood (6 ) KE.rn (8)
and Kendall Barros Ham lton
(91 and Esstan WP- Eckersley
(3 2) LP- Barrios {3 2) HRChicago J ohnson {2)

St LOU S
010 900 02D-12 18 l
Atlanta
001 035 06x- 15 16 2
Denny ' Captlla (61 Schultz
(6) Hrabosky (6) D Acqutsto
(8) and Rader N ekro LaCorte
(4) C~mpbell (4) Johnson (6)
Camp (])
Collins {9) and
Pocoroba WP - Camp {2 l) LP
- Hrabosky (1 1) HRs- At lan
ta Burroughs (8) Matthews
(3 ) 51 LOUtS McBr de (3)
MumPhrey ( 21
San Fran
002 000 000- 2 4 1
C net
301 100 lOx- 6 6 0
McGlothen H~averlo {7) and
Hill No an Eastwlck (8) and
Plummer WP - Nol an (2 0) LP
- McGlot hen (2 4) HRs- San
Franc sco Madlock (4 ) Whtt
f eld ( 1) c nc nnatr Summers

til

Pttsbgh
010 ooo 011- 3 8 o
000 000 1DO- I 7 0
Houston
Rooker Jones ( 1) Tekulve
(7) and Oyer R1 chard Forsch
(9 ) and FerguSOil WF' - Tekulve
{3 0) L~- Rt c hard (2 4)

Texas
202 020 Olo- 7 14 2
K C
000003 GOO- 3 7 0
Devtne
Ltndblad (61 and
Sundberg Sphttorff B rd (3)
Patt n (81 and Porter WPDev ne (3 1l LP- Sp!lttorff (1
41 HRs- TeKas Fregosi (1)
Horton 3 {8)
Kai"'SBS City
Cowens (6)
N Y

Cal I

OOQ 010 016- 2 5 2

•oo 030 Olx- 8 12 o

Torrez Tidrow (5 ) Lyle (8)
and Munson Tanena (6 ll and
Humphrey LP-Torrez {5 ... )
HR - New York Nettles (7)

021 110 ooo- 5 8 t
Boston
seattle
030 010 ooo- 4 7 2
Lee Campbell {7) and F sk
Rich Jones Moore (4) $egul
(5) and Jutze WP - Lee (1 01
LP- Rich Jones (1 2) HRs-r
Boston
Fisk (6)
Seattle
Ruppert Jones {6)

Sneva most daring
•
zn '500' showdown
INDIANAPOUS (UP!) In the ftrst showdown for the
IndaanapoliS 500 auto race
)oung Tom Sneva was the
most darmg
The former schoolmaster
from Spokane, Wash who
walked away from a halt
ratSmg wreck durmg the 1975
race made Speedway hlslory
Saturday by crackmg the 2IJO.
male per-hour barrter and
111Ming the pole pOStUon for
the May 29 hohday classic
Dravang • a • McLaren
powered by an elght..:ylinder
Cosowrtb engme - an all·
Brthsh combmatlon - he
averaged 198 11M mph on his
10-mile IA!st run wtth a best
lap of 200 535
Those marks erased
Johnny Rutherford s four·
year-old standards of 199 071
and !98 413 for one and four
laps respectavely

Rutherford and his crew
gambled and lost Trying to
get the qualifymg records
back the 1976 champion and
pole s1tter abor!A!d has trtal
run Saturday, because his
speed was too slow to catch
Sneva Rutherford didn't get
another chance that day to
qualify so when he finally
qualified Sunday be wound up
far behmd on the starting
grad lor the May 29 race
None of the other hotshots
-A J Foyt Mario Andretti
the Unser brothers and
Gordon Joltncock - could
catch Sneva e1Uier
We're Just glad we were
able to e&lt;me home like that,
srud the 28-year-old Sneva
who had his problems during
the first few days of practice,
tnCiuding a brush with the
wall the day before his

historic qualifymg run
Si•IA!en cars were qualified
Saturday before an estunated
280 000 fans and five more
joined the tentatave ra~Y
lineup &amp;tnday, leavmg 12
positions to be filled next
weekend
Bobby Unser was the
second fastest qua!tfler
Saturday at 197 618 and
brother At was tltlrd at
195 950 to round out the first
rbw of starters lor the million
dollar race
Foyt,
Johncock and
Andrettl, all a1ao former rare
w!Mers, make up the second
row
Rutherford was the third
fastest overall, at 197 325, but
may have to start as far back
as 17th on race day, because
he failed to qualify oo the first
day or the trials

Sport Parade

Base-ball Standmq~
Untte-d Pressl nle..-naltonal

Houston still alive

PHILADELPHIA ( UPI ) The scrtpt said the Houston
Rockets were supposed lo
qUietly lade out of the NBA
By MILTON RICHMAN
playoffs, whale the talented,
UPI Sports Editor
haghly paad Phtladelphla
LANDOVER, Md (UPI) - Like so many other great 76ers marched on to meet
fighters before and af!A!r hun who made tons of money wtth Portland tn the champ1onshtp
thetr fists and then opened them one day only to diSCOver them finals
•
empty, the late Jack Johnson was up agamst1l near the end
But someone forgot to gave
He was dead broke Worse yet he had nobody to turn to for the Rockets a copy of the
the basac needs of everyday livmg - sunple essenuals like scnpt and, mstead, they
food and lodging
chose the one they've been
I remember seemg hun m one of those seedy sadeshows near followmg all year
New York's Times Square
Counted out by nearly
Jack Johnson was puttmg on exhibaUons ' m a place called everyone after thear loss at
Hubert's MtLSewn, where lor 25 cents you could listen to ham HOME Friday, Houston
give a little talk and see him show you the left-r1ght comba· recovered from a 17 pomt,
nation he had used so successfully to flatten most of hiS lhtrd-quarter deficit Sunday
opponents
Eastern Conference fmals
He rated only second b11llng m thiS sadeshow -to a group of
trained fleas Jack Joh!l80n, the man still recogruzed as one of
the most fomudable heavywmght champions ever and who
had made so much money in the ring, was reduced to the
status of some ctrcus freak at the prmcely salary of $13 a day
Muhammad Ali knows all about Jack Johnson and says that
will never happen to him
CINCINNATI (UPI)
At least, that's what he says for public consumption
ThiS IS the year Gary Nolan
Prtva!A!ly ,though, some self-doubts creep m now and then
' I m gonna wmd up with nothing ' he told me m one of those wants to convmce the
rare moments when he was not only probing tnslde himself but Cmcmnati Reds that he s a
also revealing what he honestly feels hes up the road ahead for better pitcher than they say
he IS
him
And even though Nolan
' Why do you say that? I asked hun
nussed almost sax weeks
' Because I'm gonna g1ve tl away ' he sa1d
because of a loot mfect1on
He has an excellent start in that direction
Muhammad Ali 1s such a soft touch he's unbelievable By hiS and mononucleosis, he still
own estunate, he has made appro•unately $42 militon Since he may succeed m attammg has
began fighting professiOnally and mcredibly most of 1! as gone goal
Wtth the Reds making good
The only reason he s defending hiS heavyweight tlUe m a If&gt;.
rounder at the Capital Centre here tomght IS because he needs use of t"e SIX hats they
collected m playmg wtth an
the money
He's getting $2 7~ mi!lioo for gomg m agamst Alfredo Evan aggressiveness they have
gelista, a warm body they dug up expressly for thts occasion often lacked !has season,
somewhere m Spatn and Ali already has given away a good Nolan beat the San FranciSco
Giants 6-2 Sunday wtth a
share of hill purse
helpmg hand from Rawly
How did It happen• Thls way
,
Awh11A! Catholic pr1est came to Ali here a few days ago and Eastwtck
Heck, m 197~ I didn't get
told him about these soup kttchens he was operating ln th1s
area for the needy those who couldn'tafford to buy food of any my f1rst v1ctory until the first
kind The prtest was passing out the soup free and wasn't week of May after they
askmg Ali for any money, all he was asking was that the moved PeiA! Rose to thtrd
champion vwt these unpoverished people, both white and Nolan sa1d And last year I
was 3-3 at the end of May '
black, to glve them a little bat of a lift
Still Nolan wound up each
Ali went munediately, and nobody knew about it
On Sunday, before Ali wetghed In for Evangelista Don King, of the last two years wtth a If&gt;.
the promoter, told hun tickets for the fight weren't movmg too 9 record
Nolan sought a multi year
well All listened then sa1d he'd buy SO of the $SO ltckets and
contract
this season but had
distnbute them to those people m the soup kttchen
In
settle
for
one covermg only
'I have a bet!A!r Idea,' he srud thmklng tt over some more
a
year
"Gmune $200,000 worth of those tackets I'll pay lor em and
Always Nolan has heard
g~ve em to those people who can t afford it God blessed me to
about
the games he did not
make too much money not to help people
wm
but
not about the games
This Isn't the ftrst time All has done somethmg like that
the
Reds
won m which he has
Purely on unpulse he once patd a vwt to a JeWJsh Home of
restricted
the opposation to
the Aged m New York and wrote out a check for $100,000
two
or
three
runs during the
because he was moved by the plight of tis occupants
slX
or
seven
mmngs
ftrst
That was all chanty Divorcing his former wife, Belinda,
'
Sure,
I've
been
Involved m
cost hun another cool $2 million
a
lot
of
close
games
durmg
'I gave her a million dollars cash and $10,000 a month for the
the
10
years
I
ve
patched
for
next SlX years,' he sa1d I also gave her a $400,000 housmg
the
Reds,
'
said
Nolan
And
project and a beautiful Rolls Royce Don I forget, she s the
I've lost more than a few of
mother of my lour children '
Now you know why Ali has to fight fellows like Alfredo those close ones too '
But more than a few times
Evangelista who doesn I figure to gtve him more than a
too
Nolan has been renunded
routine workout
that
good pitchers are
Now you also latow why some of those self-doubts creep m
supposed
to wtn 3-2 and 2-1
regarding his fmanctal future
games
Gene Kilroy his longtune fraend and busmess aade thinks
'All for me ' said Nolan, ' I
about Ali's future and says he d like to see the government
think
a pttcher has lo be
employ him as some kmd of goodwill ambas.sador when he s
pretty
darn
good even to be m
finished fighting
those
3-2
and
2-1 games
Gene Kilroy doesn I want to see hts frtend f10lsh up the same
'I
don't
know
whether I 11
way as Jack Johnson
have the chance, but I'm
hopmg that at the end of th1s
season I'll hear someone m
the front offtce say, Maybe
we overlooked someone s
talent '
The Reds pitcher left no
doubt about whom he meant

Th1s 1s a team of
character and pride ' the
Rockets' Rudy Tomajanov1ch
character anrl p ,J.
the
Rockel&gt;! Rudy TomaJanovach
Sllld 10 a waid locker-room
celebration Its an amazmg
IA!am We've been commg
back all year Character won
thiS game
Rookae guard John Lucas,
who hi I a jumper wtth I 34 to
play to put the Rockets ahead
lor
good
and
tied
Tomjanovlch lor team
scormg honors wlth 21 could
barely contam hts en
thusaasm
• We ve been coming back
from 17 all year," he sa1d

' We ve got a good team and
we don t give up
It was then or never for
Houston after Henry B1bby s
two free throws gave the
76ers an IWHi9 lead w1th 4 19
1o play m the third quarter
However Philadelplua lost
11s !ouch and the Rockets
cap1tahzed
W1th Lucas and Calvm
Murphy workmg outs1de and
Moses Malone establishmg
dommance msule Houston
pecked away at the defacat,
finally taking the lead I~
107, on Malone's turnaround
jumper 10 the lane Wlth 2 45
left
George McGmms came

OOck With a bucket for the
76ers but Lucas hit hiS next
shot down the floor and
Murphy and Malone added
baskets to keep the Trail
Blazers m suspeiiSe as to
whom thear !anal NBA
opponent wall be
'It became too easy for us
JUSt too easy McGinnis saad
oftheSIXers' sleepwalk For
some reason, we lost our
mtensaty when we got the
lead We thought they were
gomg to dae, but they dadn t
They were talkmg a
sweep then talk10g about
they would wln 4-1 and sa)'lng
we had guys that couldn t
make the bag plays saad

M•nnesota

W ~ Pet GB
13 2 867

M IChigan

lJ

Ohio 51
Iowa

Murphy, who sal out 19
mmuiA!s 10 foul trouble but
stall contributed 15 points and
10 asststs
•Thev have to wonder now
if they can wm the series '
the 0-10 backcourt dynamo
sa1d 'If " e he them
Tuesday we II all come back
here (Thursday ) and there
will be a lot of pnde at
stake '
Jubus Ervmg had 37 pomts
to lead aII scorers, 27 m a
brilliant ftrst half but was
only 4-lor 13 tn the second
half when accordmg to
N1ssaike
we dec1ded to
crowd him a hltle more

won by Crenshaw

FORT WORTH, Tex (UP!)
- Ben Crenshaw has won
more than $60,000 10 the last
two weeks, playmg what he
described as poor golf
'I placed second last week
(at the Byron Nelson Classic
m Dallas) and won thiS week
(the Colonial Naltonal
Invitation) without httlmg
any golf shots,
sa1d
Crenshaw
He S8ld he putted well and
had a lttcky back nine Sunday
to catch Califorruan John
Schroeder, and then he won
the $40,000 ftrst prtze w1th a
SlX·foot btrdie putt on the 71st
hole
He saved the
tournament with an 8-foot par
putt on the !mal hole
'I was lucky on the back
mne today and lucky all
week, • he Sllld But the
thmg IS I just didn 'I gtve up
and that won the tournament
for me After that front mne
(four bogeys) one s1de told
me to jump m the lake but
the other s1de said 'Come on
don't gtve up Maybe the back
sade mll be your nme '

I btrdied No 10 and that
really brought me back It
taught me a lesson You JllSt
can't g~ve up and that s what
makes this such a great
game'
Schroeder started hiS round
Sunday one stroke ahead of
Crenshaw and ltve ahead of
Tom Watson
Which brought Crenshaw lo
his explanabon of why he
won
'Somethmg seemed to take
me by the hand and lead me
through that wtlderness out
there, ' he srud
Because he has Jumped Into
the top 10 money wtnners
wath more than $100,000 w1th
faulty sWtllg, luck and good
puttmg, Crenshaw was asked
what he could do if he gets h1s
game together
I've discovered thas game
1s pretty much all mental '
he srud 'If I get my SWJng
raghl, then I would be
sattsf1ed that I was playmg as
well as I could But of course
then my puttang would
probably go '

Tanner in love with
Pittsburgh bullpen
HOUSTON (UPI) - Pttts
burgh Pirates manager
Chuck Tanner has a
wooderful rela!tonship wlth
his bullpen He never
heSitates to bring m ooe of has
relievers and seldom do they
let him down
Tamer's mampulalion of
thi! bullpen worked again
Sunday Kent Tekulve came
on to hold the Houston Astros
tv only one hit durmg the final
2 2-3 Ullllngs and the PlraiA!s

scored m the eighth and nmth
mnmgs to take a 3-1 victory
'I've got 10 patchers and I
believe m usmg them all,'
Tanner satd 'I wouldn t
have used (RICh) Gossage or
(Grant) Jackson today no
matter what I hey both
needed a couple of days off
My bullpen IA!ll me when they
feel they're able to pttch, and
that's the way we go"
Tekulve, who won hiS thtrd
game wathout a loss en!A!red

by someone ..

Home runs by Ball Madlock
and Terry Whitfield m the
thard mmng gave the Gtanls
both thetr runs Sunday and
two of thearfour htls off Nolan
and Eastwack
This was after the ftrst of
two doubles by Pete Rose

7

:r

561 41 1
563 41 2
438 612

Mtch St
Nowesterl"

llltnols

6 8

.429

w ~.sconsm

1 11

389 7 1 '2

lnd ana
Pu,.due

3 ll

214

1 13

071 12 1 2

7

9

61 '2

9'

~

lnternat•onal League
Un1ted Press International

W L Pet

GB

Pawt ucket

18 10

643

Charleston

16 lO
15 II
12 12
12 1&lt;
11 1d
11 18

643 '1
571 2
500 4

T dewater

R• chmond

Rochester

A62 5
.440 5'
400 7
Columbus
9 16 360 7
Saturdo1y s Results
Charleston 9 Columbus 7

Sy r acuse
Toledo

1

'

Pawtucket 3 Syracuse 2
R1 chmond 10 Rochester 2

T dewater 4 Toledo 1
Sundays Re sults
Charleston I Columbus 1

Sy r acuse 4 Paw tucket 2
R chmond 1 Roches ter 5

Tidewater 9 Toledo 0

touched off a three-run first
mnmg for Reds Walks to Ken
Griffey and George Foster a
throwmg error by Jun Foh,
an mfteld hit by Dan Drtessen
and Mike Lum s sacrifice fly

did the remaander of the the bottom of the third when
Joe Morgan tripled and
damage
All for aggressiVeness the scored on a passed ball Rose
Reds stole tbree bases m the doubled home Nolan With the
same f1rst mnlng
Reds' ftlth run m the bottom
The Reds went ahead 4 2 in of the fourth In the last of the

Ali gives ticket to poor
LANDOVER, MD (UPI)Muhanunad Alt, stealing
$2 5 mtllion from the nch
IA!Ievtsaon sponsors for a so
called world heavyweight
champwnshtp fight tomght
agamst unknown Spamard
Allredo Evangelista has
gJven away $200,000 worth of
unsold tackets 'to the poor '
There are poor people who
I went to see the other day
who can t even afford $20, '
Ali saad 'It's a sm lor me to
come mto thiS aroo and take
out $2 75 million for SIX
weeks work and the people
are go10g hungry I feel
guilty
I ve told them ( the
promoters) to put asade
$200 000 worth of tickets and

them away to the poor
people
Tickets for the nationally
IA!Ievtsed but locally blacked
out trtpleheader at Capalal
Centre were pnced at $150
$100, $75, $50 and $W
Also on the card bemg
b1Ued as 'The Parade of
Champaons
junaor
lightweight champ Alfredo
Escalera of Puerto Rtco
takes his boa constractor mto
the rang against Carlos
Becerril of Pomona, Calif ,
m a 15-round IItle bout and
hghtweaghl champaon
Roberto Duran of Panama
faces Javaer Muniz m a 10round non !tUe ftght
Today, All, 35 years old
mth strands of gray an has
g~ve

haar is a trim 22l't'• and he
looks ready to dance all mght
if he has to
He probably won t have to
Evangelista, All s
cha llenger !has tame, is
another phantom, a 22-year·
old Uraguayan native
faghtmg out of Spam The
biggest question about the 6foot 209\'l-pound Evangelista
ts whether he can hght
Don't
underestimate
Evangelista, 'Ali warns He
may be unknown, but he s 22
years old, 13 years younger
than me he has two hands
and I guaraniA!e you he U do
better than Duane Bobtck dad
the other night agamst Ken
Norton

Cubs sweep Expos,
up mark to 19-11
By BILL MADDEN
UP! Sportll Writer
The could he the year the
Ch1cago Cubs go laughing all
the way to the bank - they
currently are the hottest
IA!am tn baseball thanks m
large part to some bargam
basement pickups named
Ontiveros DeJesus and
B1ttner
The Cubs swept a 4-3, 4-2
doubleheader from the Mont
real Expos Sunday, giving
them 10 vtctortes m thetr last
11 games and a surprwng
overall record oll9·11 Jerry
Morales drove m a patr of
runs m each game
Steve Onltveros was 3-for-7
m the doubleheader, while
Ivan DeJesus went 4-for-11
Bobby Murcer, meanwhile
scored a run m each game
and Larry Btltner, acquired
m a deal wtth Montreal a year
ago was 4·for·9 tn the
twinball
'I thmk we ve assembled a
pretty good team by ptcking
up several good players

Johnson sets record
ONTARlO, Calif ( UPI) Gary Johnson of Modesto
Calif , nursed has,.sputtermg
engme from lap to lap m a
record time of 127 713 mtles
an hour to wm the West Coast
250 NASCAR Wmslon West
Grand National stock car
race Sunday at Ontarto Motor
Speedway
The tune beat the mark of
124 69 mph set last year by
Jimmy lnsolo of Granada
Hills, Calif , m the ftrst race
The race was tnlo ats
second lap when tl was halted
by an e1ght..:ar wreck m the
ftrsl turn Glen FranciS of

9

1

813

636 •

'9- 7

Nolan makes it two in row

CNI's $40,000

J

7 '

Bakersfte!d, Cahf , was
hospatahzed w1th a possible
concussion
Sumner McKnight, Rialto,
Calif , was treated for mmor
m]uraes at the track and the
race was halted for 12
rrunuiA!s
Johnson, who turned 37
Thursday sa1d he started
worrymg about the motor
when the green flag dropped
and he heard a burbling
sound as he dropped hiS foot
to the floorboard
' It never was r1ght all
day ' srud JohiiSOn, who won
by 21 seconds over veiA!ran
Btll SchiJlltl of Reddmg,
the game m the seventh afiA!r Calif
When l got to 10 laps from
Alltros starter and loser J R
Richard tripled He gave a the end I fagured I might
smgle to pmcJt.lutter Willie make tt'
He dtd, earnmg $5,450 for
Crawford that tied the game
the
wm
1 1 but dad not allow another
Johnson
managed to build
hit
up
a
three-quariA!rs
lap lead
' We ve got a lot of people m
at
vartous
pomts
on
the 2 f&gt;.
our bullpen who can do the
mlle
oval
JOb Today 1t was my turn, '
Sclumtt satd he gave up
Tekulve said ' When I get
chasmg
Joh!l80n when bts left
ahead of the batters like
today I can rela• and throw rear ttre went flat mth etghl
my pitch My smker and laps to go
1 fimshed the race oo the
slader were workmg and I got
Ulller
liner," Sclunitt satd
them to hat a lot of ground
Gary Mathews of Fresno,
balls.
The PtraiA!s won tt m the Calif , fm1shed half a car
eaghth on AI Oliver's RBI length ahead of Hershel
smgle and added another run McGriff of Brtdal Vet!, Ore ,
m the nmth on Duffy Dyer s for thard place, wanmng
$1 900
•
lilllgle

NHL Playofls
Umte d Press lnternaftonal
Ftn.al s
Best of Seven
Montreal vs Boston
Montreal wins 4 ll

seventh, Champ Summers,
pmchhattmg lor Nolan
homered for the Reds final
run
Idle ll:tday the Reds open a
two-game seraes Tuesday
wath the Pittsburgh Pirates

Tale of the tape
LANDOVER
Tale of th e
M1 hi'lmm;ui AI
gel sta wo r ld
champ onsh p
n Qht

Age

Weight
Height
Chestfn rmll
Chst Cexp nd l
Reactt
Btcepts
Forerm
Wat sl
Thigh
Calf
Fist

Md {U Pl) Tape for the
A frPr10

f?van

heavy w e tght
Monday

May 7 ..... Mon treal 7 Boston
3

Ma y 10
Bost on 0
May 17
Boston 2

May

24

15
6 ;J
44
46

80

42
76

1S

lSI ',

13 '12
36
26
17

121 ,
36
2S
17 1'

13

12

way to Rawly EastwJCk
Dodgers 4, Mets 3
John Hales two-out anfaeld
single m the 12th mrung
scored Steve Garvey w1th the
wmomg run Garvey had
s10gled and gone to th1rd on
another sin gle by Rtck
Monday The Mets tied the
score 3-3 m the loth wath the
help of an error by Dodger
thard baseman Ron Cey

4

2

Boston 1 ol

NEIGHBOR
OF YOURS

209 2
6 2

A4R

Mont r ea l

AGOOD

E v ge11sta
21

2211 2

3

MEET

f gnt

Alt

~ Mil

Montreal

See
h1m
for
all
your
family
msurance ~
needs
BILL FLETCHER
149 South Third
Mtddle por:t Ohto
Ph 992 7155
L1k e a
good netghbor
Sta l e FHm
ts ther e
Sla te Farm Insurance
Com pan ~s
H ome Off ces Bloom ng ton
ltnO ~
6

through trades, 1 satd Cubs' loaded three-run smgle Bake
Manager Herman Franks McBride drove m four runs
'People
hke
Murcer, for St Louts wtth a three-run
Ontiveros, DeJesus Greg double durmg St Loms mneGross and Gene Clmes have run fourth momg and a solo
homer m the eaghth
certamly helped us '
PhiiUes
S, Padres 2
Elsewhere tn the National
The
Ph1ll1es
begmomg to
League, Atlanta outslugged
make
thetr
move
m the NL
st Lows, 15-12 Philadelplua
East,
parlayed
a
two-out,
pot away San Diego 5 2,
three
run
,
third
mmng
rally
Cmctnnatt upended San
FranciSco 6-2 Los Angeles and the f1 ve-lut patching of
edged New York 4-J, and Steve Carlton to gam their
Pittsburgh downed Houston, seventh victory m the last
eaght games Doubles by
3-1
In Amer~can League Greg Luzmskl and Dave
action, 1t was Baltunore, 3 Johnson and Jerry Martm's
Oakland 2, Texas 7 Kansas smgle were the key blows ln
City 3 Califorma 8 New York the third Martm also hit a
2, Cleveland 4 Chtcago 3 Mm solo homer Carlton, who
nesota 5 Toronto 3 Boston 5 struck out 11, ts now f&gt;.l
Seattle 4, and Malwaukee 3-3 Reds 6, Giants 2
PeiA! Rose s first of two
Detroat
25
m
a
doubles touched off a three
doubleheader
run farst mnmg wh1ch staked
Braves 15, Cardinals 12
OVercommg a 10-1 deflc1t Gary Nolan to hts second
the Braves struck back wath straaght wm smce commg
back from a bout wtth
ftve runs an the saxth
Champ
mononucleosis
haghhghted
by
Gary
Summer
also
had
a
pinch
hit
Matthews
grand slam
homer
for
the
Reds
Nolan
homer, and a wmrung s1x..run
rally m the eaghth capped by )'lelded four hits through
rookae Barry Bonnell's bases seven mnmgs before gavtng

THIS WEEK'S SPECIAL
May 15th thru May 21st

FISH &amp;
FRENCH FRIES

79~

'
NEW GIGANTIC 25 FLAVOR
MILKSHAKE MENU
Choose From These Flavors
Purple Cow
Orange Creme
Maple
GrasshopJier
Egg Nog
Candy Spice
Black Walnut
Burgundy

Root Beer
Lemon
Cherry Almond
Blackberry
Blueberry
Cherry
Van111a
Banana

Raspberry
BuUersclltCh
Ptneapple
Strawberrv
Peach
Peanut Butter
Marshmallow

Chocolate Mars.,matlaw

You can stall get cartoon glasses
wath Peps a- They ' re a rea I " s t ea I"
at only 59c filled wath a 16 oz
sparkling Pepsa 1

i daTrylsle ~
,,

Nobody needs loneliness.
Theres ;1 cure fur lunLilllL ~' 111 tl1l
strength th at fam thc" oth 1 In t 11111h \ tluc"
oflove and helpmg RLmtmhcl \Plllc
part of Godsf&lt;m1d\ Anll wuLm tmd thL
strength of t am II) \ .1lu,' 111 \OUr h, 'LN llf
worshtp - \\ Orkmg \\ nh ''the rs .!I\ 111.! ot
yourself Then \OU r c nPI lcll1c lv ,1 11d

�6- The DallY Sentmel. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Monday. May 16 . 1977

7- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, May 18,19'17

Refttli'F planned for planter

Helen
Help
.
Us • • • By Udei• Bottcl
Not Brotherly Love, Sister!

Dear Helen:
My good friend lost his wife about six months ago. We tried
cheering him up : invited him over a Jot, and my wife stopped
by often to bring him food, etc. She hadn't known him very well
before .
The trouble is, she's still doing it, several times a week
and, according to reports, her car is parked in front of his
house a couple of hours at a time.
. I asked )le~ about this and she says, " Where 's your
brotherly love ?" She points out he's a deacon in the church so I
shouldn 't deny him Christian concern.
My concern is, she won't stop seeing him , and she seems
extraordinarily happy these days. So does my friend ! Am I
jealous over nothing ? - LOVE'S lJMITS REACHED
Dear LLR:
Probably not! If this were "Christian concern/' your wile
would concentrate on getting the friend involved with other
people, not exelusi vely hersell.
Why not "drop in" someday when her car is in front of his
house, and have a three-way confrontation• - H.

+++

. Dea r Helen'
J am one of those unfortunate people who cannot find a
reliable health insurance company who will insure me because
I had VD at one time. Where do people like me turn to? PUZZLED MAN
Dear Puzzled:
I don 't kn ow where you got your information, but, unless .
VD has advanced to the point where it drastically affects your
health, I think you're wrong.
Group health insurance usually doesn't require physical
examinations of its members. Those seeking individual
policies need a doctor's examination and the okay of an
underwriter. lf your VD is cured, there should be no problem .
II it's under treairnent, that particular disease will be excluded
from coverage.
Don •t settle lor hearsay . Call various insurance comparues
and get the fa cts, man. - H.

+++

Dear Helen:
I'd very much like to know what part of the country
"Student of Human Nature " hails from, so I can go there. He
says "homo~xual males are pretty well accepted these days,
but not Lesbians."

I don't a rgue with the statement that Lesbians are
persecuted more than male gays. But since when are we males
accepted?
Certainly not in Florida - witness the Aruta Bryant affair.
Even less so in my home state of Oregon. Student should hear
about PACT - Parents' Action Team Against Perversion,
which flo'!fishes in Oregon, Washington and Wisconsin for the
expr~ss purpose of denying homosexuals employment,
housmg and pro bably food . So much for "tolerance."
Thank goodness for people like you and "Trying to
Understand" who don't condemn those who have no other
choice. ·We don 't contaminate the straight community . We
simply want to - "lJVE AND LET UVE"

POLLY'S POINTERS
Polly Cramer

" Soap scores on ceramics
POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - What
should I use to clean the white

tile water mark with smooth
peanut butter, let it stand for
a few minutes and then wiped
ceramic tile around my it off with a soft cloth. The
kitchen sink, so it will not.be mark ·had disappeared. harmed? - MRS. F.L.M .
ESTHER.
DEAR · MRS. F .L.M.
DEAR POLLY ~ When I
Ceramic tiles are easy to remove a cake from the tube
clean. Just wash with a pan it . was baked in, I make
sponge wrung out in warm two slits criss cross in the
mild soap suds. Then rinse center of a paper plate . ! slide
with a sponge wrung out of this over the.tube down to the
clear warm water. Rub dry cake a11q turn the pan over
with a soft cloth. - POLLY. onto the cake plate. This
DEAR POLLY - I am keeps the cake from crurn·
answering Mrs. C.C.W. who bling and works very well. asked how to remove burnerl MRS . C.M.L.
food' from aluminum cooking
Polly wlll send you one of
utensils. i always boil them her
signed
thank-you
with a mixture of water and newspaper-coupon clippers if
cream of Tartar. I put about she uses your favorite
one teaspoons of !he cream of Pointer, Peeve or Problem in
•tartar in a quart of water and her column. Write POLLY'S
boil for 20 to 30 minutes. This POINTERS in care of this
is even recommended on th e newspaper .
side of the cream of tartar
can. - L. B.
DEAR POLLY - My Pet
Peeve is with the lack of ink
used on the sales slips at the
grocery stores. I often shop
for others and find I cannot
read the prices on the adding
machine lists. - MILDRED.
DEAR POLLY ~ To have
. shiny and strea-k-free win·
dows, use windshield washer
fluid diluted with equal parts
of water. Apply with a sponge
or spray bottle. Dry with a
RACINE - Mr. and Mrs.
clean lint free cloth or paper Arnold Hupp hosted a cookout
towels. I use this method on at their home at Racine Rt. 2
both the inside and outside of Mother's Day in honor of the
my windows . - GENE· guests of the rehearsal party
of Sharon Roush, daughter of
VIEVE.
DEAR . POLLY - When Mr. and Mrs. Russell Roush
going on a camping trip take and their son, Edward Hupp,
along three plastic dishpans, who were married Sunday,
two of one color and the other May 14 at the Apple Grove
a different color. You ca n Methodist church.
then easily remember that
Attending were Rev. Steve
the two of the same color are Wilson, Mrs. Kenneth Bass,
for doing the dishes and the Corrine and Kenda of Mid·
oihe one is lor washing face dleport ; Mr . and Mrs.
and hands.
Charles Hupp and children of
If the food containers, Marengo; Rocky Hupp, Mr..
refrigerator or ice chest in and Mrs. Jim Hupp, Billy and
yo ur camper have odors Jimmy, Mr. and Mrs. John
present after being stored for · Manuel, Mr. and Mrs. Russell
the wintf r, a good way to get Roush , David, Edward,
rid of them Is to put a few Cindy and Sharon.
Mrs . Nancy Russell,
charroal briquets on a foil
plate, put this inside· of the Mandy and Michael, Mr. and
smelly container and close Mrs. Roger Roush , Mr. and
the lid. - COLLEEN.
Mrs. Herbert Roush, Mr. and
DEAR POLLY- I have a Mrs. Dorsa Parsons, Mrs. Iva
small plant with the pot in a Orr, Steve Riffle, Brenda
saucer Standing on my coffee Lawrence, Mrs. Melanie
table. While watering it, Barnette, Mr. and Mrs .
some ran over from the Arnold Hupp, Edward,
saucer and left a big water Rocky, Mr. and Mrs. Ronnie
mark! on the table, I rubbed Wagner and;Ronnie Jr.

Cookout

enjoyed

l:fWf[:iJ~~~~illi~~~~w;~=~~tm~~~fj~~~~~~~~~~~=~~=~~~r=~~=~=~:~=~=~~~=~=~;~:~~~=;=~=~=~:~:;:;;~~~~;~~~ttii~;~t

NEW PASTOR - The Rev. James Broome is new pastor of the Middleport Church of
the Nazarene; The Rev. Mr. Broome is .a rec ~nt graduateof the Nazarene Bible College in
Colorado Sprmgs, Colo. where the farruly has hved for the past four years. The family is
orlglll8lly from Southeast Oklahoma. Both he and his wife are graduates of the high school
m Atoka, Okla . They have two sons, Stanley, seven, and Brian, five.

Repair of tiM plaQter•OD the Mich., Niagara Falls,
" T" in Middleport and Canada,
MI .
Vernon
pia ntin~ it with summer • Williamsburg, Zoar, Ohio:
flowers was discussoo during and other places in Ohio, and
a recent meeting of the also showed slides taken by
Middleport Garden Club at the Rev. Dwight Zavitz of
tile home of Miss Nellie nowers and plantings in the
Zerkle.
Middleport area.
Mrs. George Anderson was
Refreshments were served
welcomed as a new member
of the club. Plans were made
for the therapy program to he
carried out at the Gallipolis
State Institute on June 23.
For roll ca ll members
described a g·a rden they had
visited. The program on wild
flowers was given by Mrs.
William
Morris
who
discussed some of this area.
She described not only their
beauty but practical uses
made by the Indians and
early settlers. She showed
illustrations of wild flowers
with prints and from hooks
and had some potted plants to
display.
Mrs. Carl Horky showed
slides of public gardens and
plantings in Frankenmuth,

Laurel Cliff banquet enjoyed
The annu al mother daught er banquet of the
Laurel
Cliff Women 's
Missionary Society was held
Tuesday night at the Trinity
Church in Pomeroy with the
dinner being served by the
Happy Harvesters Class.
Mrs. Darla Hawley was
pianist for the program with
Mrs. Joanne Clark having a
solo and Mrs. Mildred Jon es
the invocation.
Following the dinner
mothers were given a

welcome by

~1'rs.

Sharon

Wri ght w1th Mrs. Donna
Gilmore giving a welcome to
daughters. There was group
singing and readings, "The
Mother's Love" by Mrs. Iva
Powell who also had a prayer
poem, "I Said a Prayer for
You Today." Mrs. Brenda
Haggy gave "Be Still," Mrs.
J ean Wright, "Mother's Day
in Mexico," Mrs. Ann Mash ,
14
8end Down and Listen,' '

and "A Mom," by Doris

J@f~~?~~tttJt?~~~~f)~}f}f~~~f~~~~tt~if~J;~~~t~t~~~i;~~it~~~!?~~t~~~!tt~}j

: : : : Blessings turned in

:;:;:;~UTLAND

-

Blessing

noted that a new table and

·j::::;

'~f

boxes were turned .in at th e

new chairs have arrived and

Thursday afternoon meeting
of the United Methodist
Women of the Rutland United
Methodist Church at the
home of Mrs. C. E. Bishop
with M.rs. Russell Little as cohostess.
Mrs. Larry Edwards ,
president, welcomed the II
members and a guest, Mrs.
Vernon Weber.' Reports were
given by Mrs .. Carl Denison,
secretary, and Mrs. Jack
Walker, trea&lt;nrer, It was

that two more tables and 10
more chairs have been or·
dered.
Mrs. Denison reported on
May Fellowship Day of
Church Women United of
Meigs County held recently at
the Mt. Moriah Baptist
Church. A report was also
given on the retreat held at
Logan and attended by Mrs.
Denison , Mrs. Wilber Hilt and
Mrs. Robert Bumgarner .
Mrs. Edwards and Mrs.
Walker gave the program on
women taken from the
program hook.
Refreshm~nt s were served
by the hostesses·. Mrs. Dayton
Parsons will have the next
meeting at her home. ,

Ba~becue

scheduled

Shook.
A voca l number Was
presented by Mrs. Wright,
Jan e Jacobs and Diane
Lewis, and there was group
singing of "Faith of Our
Mothers."
Attending were Mrs. Doris
Shook, Mrs. Iva Powell , Mrs.
Marge Goett , Robin Camphell, Mrs. Sharon Wright,
Mrs. Jea n Wr ight ; Mrs.
Mildred Jacobs, Mrs. Jane
Jacobs, Mrs. Wanda Eblin,
Diane Lewis, Becky Eblin,
Joy Cla rk , Mrs . Roy
Wiseman, Mrs. Joanne Clark,
Mrs. Evelyn Spencer, Mrs.
Vicky Hanson. Sherry Clark,
Mrs. Della Curtis, Mrs. Ruby
Frick, Mrs. Donna Powell,
Mrs. Ann Ma sh, Mrs. Brenda
Gilmore, Mrs. Amber Lohn,
Mrs. Darla Hawley, and Mrs.
Margaret Sheridan.
·

"••

.••
..

..
....
......

Than A
75 watt
light

".

Bulb!

...
'

•
.'
"
::

A-mana

period .

scheduled
A visitation program was

Brands
of
similar size th at
are not des igned

co mpa re d

to

Competitive

pianned when the Light and
Life Men's Fellowship of the
Laurel Cliff Free Methodist
Church met recently at the
church.
Otto Lohn had the opening
prayer and Seldon Baker, Jr.
gave devotions from Romans
10 and a poem, " Pass It On."
Prayer was by Robert
Barton . Others attendin g
wer¢ the Rev. Floyd Shook,
Ernest Powell, J ames
Gilmore, Steve Eblin , Mik e
Wright, Lloyd Wright and Ed
Vaninwa gen.

t o

save

electricity.

·--

~mana's Energy Sav ing Refrigerators have much

more urethane foam in sulation than has ever been
used i n home refrigerators before. Designed to keep
the heat out, the cold in and the electric bill s down .

u"

-· ~·

INGELS FURNITURE

.,,

Middleport, 0.

·'
"

106 N. 2nd Ave.

Social
·Calendar
MONDAY
MIDDLEPORT ,Business
1114 Professional Women's
Cll(b, 7:30 p.m . Monday at
Columbia Gas Co. offices. All
arulual reports wiD be given
and new officers elected. All
member s asked to be
present.
~LEM
Center PTA
MQ!Jday, 7:30 p.m. Special
reeognilton of grandmothers :
ani! grandfathers. Program .
will be presented by band ·
un,'tler direction of David
DONITA MANI.JEL
Bowen, director.
ME IGS Band Boosters last
.
mveting of the school year
M&amp;lday, 7:30 p.m. in band
z~t
r1J
ro9} n at high school . In·
I '
'J ·
llll!llation of officers for next
year.
TUESDAY ·
"'HESTER COUNCJL 323,
Daughters of America, 8 p.m.
Donlta Joy Manuel was
Ttij!sday at the l¥tll. 43rd an· honored on her·seventh birthni~r·sary to be celebrated.
day recently with a pllrty
Ch~ l'tcr members to be
given by her parents, Joyce
honor~.
and Don Manuel.
SOUTHERN Local School
A Winnie the Pooh cake
Dl$rict Board of Educntion, was served with candy and
7:36 p.m. Tuesady in high punch. Games were played
SChool cafeteria.
with prizes going to Kim
JIIIEIGS Muzzleloaders Club Ryan and Tonya Cwmnins.
lhdot, 6 p.m. Tuesday at Others attending were
gr~unds on Laurel Cliff
Donita's sister, Robin, Tim
followed by cookout.
Ryan, Tina Sloter, Brent
Wilson, Tara Wolfe, Dina
REVIVAL at First Church
Shuler, Beth Hart, Lorene
of•God, New Haven, begin· and Charles Pyles and LU
n!Dg Tues da y, 7:30 p.m.
Hart .
Efangclist is the Rev. Bud
Sending gilts were Heather
Wllaon of Florida. Public Salser, and ·Donlta's sister,
blrited.
Rhoda Earl in the U.S. Anny
DREW Webster Post 39,
stationed at Vilma Proving
A.rilerican Legion, important Grounds, Yuma, Arizona.
m'eting Tuesday 6~ p . m.
Pljlns for Memoria l Day
HUTCIIINS DIES
parade and election of of·
SANTA BARBARA, Calli .
ficers.
·
•
(UP! ) - Robert M. Hutchins,
I)A(,ISBURY Elementary president and later chan·
PTO Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. cellor of tile University of
P'}&gt;gram by .fifth and sixth Chicago for 22 years and
grade band students. Bring founder of the Center for the
bo!tle caps . Refreshments Study of Democratic In,
will be served.
·
stitutions, .is dead at the age
GROUP II, Middleport of 78.
First United Presbyterian
&lt;.-11j)rch, 7:30 Tuesday night at
til ~ home of Mrs. Eddie
BEST BUSINESSMAN
Burkett with Mrs. Karl
CLEVELAND (UP!) oWens, co-hostess . Mrs. Joseph G. Bellian, 39,
Jo~e ph Bailey · to have president of the Blcron Corp., ·
detotions and the book study Geauga County, has been
will be continued.
nained Ohio Small Business-·
of the Year by the U.. S.
man
WEDNESDAY
Business
Ad·
WINDING Trail Garde •. Small
ministration.
~,pb, 8 p.m. Wedneseay at
lhf home of Mrs. Wilma Ter·
rell. Members to take seeds.
Mi·s. Cora Beegle to have tile
ec)Jlogy repo1t, Mrs. Ruth
MP&lt;Jre, a paper on planting a
garden in a basket. Arrange·
PIDLADELPIDA (UP!)mCnt to be '' Your Pleasure A public memorial service
Usiug Flowers from Spring 'co nducted
by
Flyers•
Bulbi; ."
chaplain F~ther John Casey
VARD sale T~csda;r and will be today for Barry
Wednesday at the corner of Ashbee, assistant coach of
Cole mid Front Streets in the Philadelphia Flyers, who
died of leukemia last
Middleport from 9 a.m. to
Thursday.
3:~ p.m. sponsored by the
A team spokesman said the
Middleport Fire Department
service
would begin at I p.m.
L!idies Auxiliary .
·
at
the
Spectrum,
•
simultaneously with the
funeral for Ashbee in his
native Ontario area.
Tne tamuy nas requesteo
in 1975, the United States
no
flowers. Memorial
government reported 13
contributions
may he made to
Alnerican servicemen
njissing in the wake of t~ the Cancer Institute at
rescue of the U.S. cargo sh1p Hahnemann H011pilal, 230 N.
"Mayaguez" and its crew. Broad St., Philadelphia.

i.

( The

normal I ife of a
refr igerator)
as

...

Sometimes
you.find the most efficient
energy ideas right under

yournQse.

"

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q

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;: .

"
"'
·'•

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"

FOR YOUNG
DRIVERS

pots by the patients wltll
assistance from the Rutland
Garden Club membera. Mrs.
Betty Mizicko gave a tribute
to mothers and a reading on
"Our Cat, Morril." For roU
call members named a nower
from mother's gar'den. '!be

B • hda ·

Thi s
" Energy
Saving"
refri gerator w ill
save you $258.00
over a 12 year

Visitation

Members of the Rutland
01Nei1 Club were in Athens
' - day for a therapy
.....,.... with the Good Luck
0
*'I Club at the Athens
5' hJ Health Center.
lllanias were planted In

..."'
..,.

Uses No
More Electricity

RACINE - Plans for a
Memorial Day chick en
barbeque were made during
a meeting of the fulcine
Firemen's Auxiliary at the
firehouse.
Young men and women
The barbeque will l?e held
Sunday , May ·29, with the often ask why t hey have to
menu to include chicken, pa y more lor the i r
ob ile insuran ce.
choice of slaw, macaroni or autom
Dr ive r s in their teens and
potato salad and baked earl ier t'wenties cause far
heaJIS. Donations are being
more than their share of
t ;-affic acC idents. Reports ·
accepted now by the mem·
N atJ onc:~l
Safety
bers. The group also th e
Counci l : 21 .8 p er cent of all
discussed whether to serve
motorist s are 24 years of
ice cream at that time.
age or under, -yet the se
The birthday of Mrs . youthful operators are
Beulah Autherson was
involved as d rivers in 38 .6
celebrated and refreshments per cent ot all accidents
served to Grace Roush, Judy and 37.3 per cent of all fatal
mi shaps . .
Bird and Sonny, Mae Cleland,
A great many young people
Jean Johnson, Lou DeLong are ski lled , responsible
and sons, Kay Robert and dr iver s. Obviously, though,
:~.
Angela, Beulah Autherson, qui te a few are not.
There's rio sub st itute for
Jean Cleland, Beverly
Cummins and children, development competence
the right att itudes,
Maxine Rose and Mary and
inc luding
a
pos itive
· approach .to defen sive
Sloter.

"

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".

..
.,

ce1eT brated

'•

SIDE GLANCES

bv Gill Fox

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best policy.

DALE C. WARNER
992-2143
102 W . Main
Pomeroy

DR. RONALD F. RIVIERE
DR . A. J. STAEHU- OA. K. H. CHUNQ OR. 0 . J. STO MIIAUGH

One or two day
full den.ture service,
partial dentures
FOR PRI CES CALL OHIO TOLL FREE

1

liiiiiit

1·800-282·6411

OR RIVIERE

RIVIERE CENTER 949 E. Livingston Ave ., Columbus
Weekdays B·:o 1\ .M. to 6:30P .M.
' You '!l,,mr/,• Tdmorrm· l , .... ·r·, • . , '' f'l11 ou t 'l •• rl ll l mlu~'

=====1:: ~ ...,.,':M::M:IOe4-

table urangement was
prov lded by Mrs. Ralph
Tumer.
A. member of the Good
Luck Club had a readlnc on
MemoriAl! Day alone with
Mrs. MWcko who alao con·
duded lrith prayer. Mrs.
Harry Wlllla!NI)II read from
the Upper Room and the holt
dub prtMDt.d each of the
..tienta with • gift .
S•ndwlcbea, cookies,
JI(Uto chlPI, pickles, coffee
and boat repUca nutcups
filled with CQdy and made
by Mrs. Marpret Ella Lewis
were aervi!d. Going over for
the party were Mrs. Victor
Nei.Hn 1
Mn.
Harry
Wllltameon, Mrs. Carl
Denlaon and Mrs. Harvey
Erlewtne.

•

Minister wekomed

The Rev. and Mrs. Harvey
Koch were welcomed by the

Forest Run United Methodist
Gburdlat a fellowship lburs·
day night at the church.
The program consisted of
songs, readings and a skit by
members of the church.
Homemade ice cream and
cake were served.
Attending were Mrs. Dale
Warner and d a u~hters,
Amber and Connie, Charles
Hamilton , Mrs. Marsha
Arnold and daughter, Jen·
nlfer, Mrs. Ca rrie Grueser,

The Almauc

Valted Preas lnleroatlooal
Today Is Mooday, May 16,
the 136th day of 1977 with 229
to follow.
LAFF_.. ...., .. A- DAY
The moon is awoaching
Ita new phase .
The morning stars are
Mercury, Venus and Mars.
The evening stars are
Jupiter and Saturn.
'!hoee born on this date are
under the sign of Taurus.
~
American
educator
EUzabeth Peabody was born
- May 16, 1804. This is actor
- HenryFonda's72nd birthday.
, " On this day in history:
- ~~"-"
In 1166, the U.S. Treasury
"You'D observe everything you Department was authorized
can on earth. So you won't be to place in circulation the
conspicuous, you will live in a first five-&lt;:ent piece to he
place called Hollywood."
called "the nickel." '

___

___

'f

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.,v..,.,

li:l[j

•

Plans made to attend forum

Plans for a!lending the
Pomeroy
National Bank
Mrs. Jane Harris, Sarah and
finance
forum
in a group
Don Allen, Mrs. Ann Watson,
were
made
when
the Sew·
Mrs. Kathleen Scott. Mr. and
Rite-Sewing
Club
met
Mrs. Allred Yeauger, Lesa
Wednesday
night
at
the
home
Kuhn, Roger Nease, Mr. and .
Mrs. David Nease, Mr. and of Mrs. Betty Wehrung.
Mrs. Pandora Collins
Mrs. Us win Nease , Mrs.
presided
at the meeting with
Mary Nesae, Virginia Davis,
Mrs.
Caro
lyn McDaniel
Mrs. Joanetta Davis and
givin~
the
treasurer's
report,
daughters, Teena and
and
Mrs.
Evelyn
C:ilmore,
the
Tammy, Mr. and Mrs. Larry
sec
retary
's
report.
The
Hollon. Mr. and Mrs. Edison
Hollon , Mrs. Carolyn Salser, traveling prize was donated
Mr. and Mrs. Vernal Black- by Mrs. Ann Browning.
wood, Allen Roush , Mr. and Games were played with
Mrs. Vernon Nease and son, prizes going to Mrs. Lucy
White, Mrs. McDaniel and
Stanley.
Mrs. Joni Hoffman. Mrs.
McDaniel will host the next
meeting.
SERVICES HELJ&gt;
A demonstration on making
Funeral services for Mrs. macrame hangers was given
Devon (Esther ) Tipple of by Mrs. Lenora McKnight.
Lancaster, junior pa st The hostess served a dessert
president of District 8, course to those named and
American Legion Auxiliary, Mrs. Flo Strickland, Mrs.
were held this afternoon in Shirley Baity, Mrs. Mildred
Lancaster. Mrs. Tipple died Wells, Mrs. Nettie Boyer and
Friday afternoon. Calling at Mrs. Martha Hoffman.
the funeral home Saturday
evening were Mrs. Harry
A thought for the day: The
Davis, Miss Erma Smith,
Roman
poet Virgil said:
Pomeroy and Mrs. Grace
"Yield
not
to misfortunes but
Pratt and Mrs. Arnold
press
forward
boldly in tlleir
Richards, Middleport.
face ."

N. W.OPTOMETRIST
COMPTON. O.D.

RT. 62 N., PT. PWSANT
PH. 675-6276
Breakfast 6 to 11

Mondays thru Sundays
Lunch 11 to 2

Mondays thru Saturdays
Dinner 6 tu 10

Tuesdays thru Saturdays
Live Entertainment
Tuesdays thru Saturdays

"BUFFET'' EVERY SUNDAY

12 to 4

OFFICE HOURS: 9:30toJ2,2to 5 !CLOSE
AT NOON ON THURS.)- EAST COURT
ST., POMEROY.
.

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POINT PLEASANT
INN

We have over 140 Rooms and
Banquet or Meeting Room for 250 People

les?
•

If you're comparing health care .
plans for your company, you should
be aware that although two plans
may look alike, they can still be
quite different. Make sure you're
comparing exactly the same cover·
ages ... dollar for dollar . . . benefit
for benefit ... service for service.
Otherw£se, it's like

If you're comparing plans, sit down
and talk with a Blue Cross and
Blue Shield representative. See
how your health care program
can be strengthened to better
meet your group's specific needs.
It .will be worth the time ... because

'

dr iv ing.
Our
ag.ency
provi des
f i na.ncial protection and
ser vice in case of accidents
involving young brivers ...
but
many
of
t he se
accidents
can
be
prevented . That ' s why we
say - prevention is the

DENTURES - ~~NTISTRY
DR . VI CTOfl Y. LIANG -

.,

from a table featuring an
arrangement by Miss Zerkle.
Uly of the valley, white
violets. and wild flowers were
in a crystal container.
Hostesses were Miss Zerkle,
Mrs. Rita Harom, and Mrs.
Horner Rus se ll, a con·
tributor.

Prevention is
the best poli_cy ...

PROMOTED
Calvin B. Simpson, Jr. ;
former' resident of Pomeroy,
has been promoted to cor·
poral after serving three
years on tile police force in
Seymour, Incl. He resides
there with his wife and
daughter.

Therapy program conducted ;1

Take your thermos bottle.
It works on the same principle as a European home h ea~ system we're now testing.
It's called Electric Thermal Storage and
it works like this.
While you're asleep, electric heating elements heat a special, brick core inside a heavily
insulatedcontainerthesizeofanordinaryfurnace.
Heat in the bricks is stored inside this
"therinos" Wltil it is distributed through ordinary ductwork to heat your home.
The beauty of this system is that it uses
less energy during the day, when we have our
heaviest electric demand.
This could let us use our generating equip·
ment more efficiently. Which, in turn, would
help us reduce our costs. And yours.
With the way the cost of everything is
going up these days, that's a pleasant switch

for all of us.
While we've already pioneered the use of
high voltage transmission lines, we're also
continuing to research even higher voltalles to
move even larger chunks of electricity. 'nle
advantage here is that we can move more
electricity over fewer lines. And fewer transrni.s·
sion lines mean lower''..transmission costs.
But, while we continue our search for
ways to keep costs in line there are some things
you can do to keep costs in line, too.
Not just by turning off lights and lowering
thermostats, but by insulating your home
properly,_ using appliances efficiently, and by
coilSldermg the use of more energy-i!llicient
devices that are already available.
Workina: together. It's the only wily we
can hope to lick the problems tliat affect the
cost of electricity today. And tomorrow.

comparing apples to oranges.
Another comparison you should
look at is the balance between
benefits and cost . . . what you need
versus what you can afford. And,
it's especially important to make
sure you and your employees are
adequately protected from gaps
in your coverage that could wipe
out a life's savings. ,

"Registered Marks Blue Cross Association

apples to apples, it's awfully
tough for anybody to beat a Blue Cross
and Blue Shield plan.

BlueOross
Blue Shield
in Ce11tral0hio

~'Registered Service Marks of The National Asso-:iation of Blue Shield PlanS

Ohio Power

Working together is tqe on}y way.
.,. "Ofli.cer, I want to report ali obscene movie!"

•

�a- The Daily Sentmel, "'!Jddleport-P omeroy, 0

ASTRO·GRAPH
Bernice Bede Osol

, Monday, May 16, 1977

Let The Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash

9-- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Mooday, May 16. 1977

IL.E HQ PRESSES ITS

A"h&gt;Sa.le-

WANT AD
CHARGES
1~\l.urtbtrl Uml~;l

May 17, 1977

t.:ll&lt;ll ~~

('&amp;II

You may team up 1n a commercial venture thiS year with
someone you ve previously
~nown only soc•atty, Th1s could
be based on an unusual product
or 1dea

2 d.ay~

180

3 d.a)~

"'

100

6d.a)li

J75

F...at.h l'urd vwr the 1111/llll'WII 15
~ UI lb r ~ 4 1.~11l.S ~~ 'ol. vr'tl per lillY
Ads

TAURUS (April 20-Moy 20)

12.\
!01

100
I &gt;&lt;I

I d.a}

ruwunl{

vll)t' l them t.'iJI!.lKt:U\1\~

Uii).S ~ rll ~ d~ar~t.'t1 .at tiM.• l

d.wy

1ah:

Cnarttable Impulses should be
heeded today They could take a
unique twiSt You cou ld ac tually
oe the reci pient rather th an the

Oblt!U61)

GEMINI IMoy 21-Juno 20j An

an• a~t:cpted uuly "n h l'11..'1h 'lillh
urd~tr Z5 tent r hurgc fur atb cmlj·

In

IIICIIIllf)

Ce~rd of Thonks aJ id\

6 t.._.tllS per wurtl, SJ 00

rmu unwn C&lt;tsl1111 aJvam:t•
.MoOI It' Hunu· !&gt;IIICl&gt; and Vurd sal~~&gt;

occas1on could ar 1se today
where you could lend moral support to one you re fond of Your
back in g could g•"e him needed
con hdence

CANCER (June 21-July 22) If a
friend does something oulstandlf)Q today be smcere and glowmg In your pra1se. What you say
will not soon be forgotten

~~~ &amp;x NumUu In Car~ uf Thu &amp;n·
und

The l)ubh!-ilreJ 1 t!M!I \'l'~ tlu: ll!(ht
tu t'C.ht 11r 11.'/tll :ill)' ads th..'t.•mt'tl ubJt't uumrl T M.' l~lrhllhel ""!II nullA·
1 ~spun ~•hll

PliOIIC 992-!!1;.6

NOTICE

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Vo u do '
thmgs Wltl'l you r customary fla•r
and ttour1sh today. but no one
w111 be offended You perform so

well others w111 be envious
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sopl. 22) Your
1deas are art is tic and creat1ve to·
day and cou ld also be
moneymakers Don't s 1t on yo ur
hands and do noth•ng with them
LIBRA (Stpt. 23-0ct. 23) Others
are Will ing to give you thmgs to ~
day because they sense If the
roles were reversed you'd do
the same for them

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADUNES
Monda y

CAPRICORN (Doc. 22-Jan. 19)
A secret adm~rer who has long
looked at you from afar may to~
day let you know hiS or her true
1ee11ngs It would come about
su btly
AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Fab.U) InVI le to your home one to whom
you owe a soc1a1 obligation . .
rather than taking that person
out He or she w1ll be more
flattered
PISCES (Fob. 20- Morch 20)
Play 11 cool today •f something 1s
m the olf1ng that spells promo·
liOn or more pay Th'e less asser·
ttve you are, the betler you'll
fare
ARIES (March 21 - Aprll tl)
Unlike yesterday your matenal
perception 1s really twoeen today . lf
~ou have an tdea that could
better you by aH means try tt
To ftnd out more about yo~,~rsell ,
send for your co py of Berntce
Osol s A s tro~ Graph Leuer Matl
50 «;:ents and a long self·
addressed. stamped envelope to
Astro·Graph , P 0 Boll. 489 ,
Rad io City Station, NY 10019.
Be su re to specify your blfth
SIQO

Mltor Le1gue Lnelers
av Un1ted Press lnternattona:l

4P M

frtLiar t~ft ~ rnoon

New Home

Lyons Addition -

GAB. R H

...

...

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J .

Crew, Min
Page , Oak
Brlsn , 8os

Pet.

26 101 20 38 376
28 101 14 37 366
JA 133 22 48 361

33 125 25 45 360
28 120 16 42 350
FISk, 80S
29 100 22 35 350
Bstck , Mn
31 116 23 39 336
Velez, Tor
30 97 16 32 330
Snglfn , Bl
21 70 11 23 329
Bn IStr 1 Ch
32 128 23 .4~ 328
Home Runs
National League · Cey, LA 12.
Ktngman, NY 8, Burroughs,
Atl r Ferguson, Hou. Sm•th. LA,
carter. Mtl. Schmid t. Ph il and
Wmt1eld. so 1
American League Z1Sk, Ct11
10 , Gross , Oak 9. H1s1e, Minn.
Page, Oak and Horton, Tex 8.
Runs Batted In
National League : Cey, LA 40 ,
Wmfield, SD 35, Parker , P1tf
!11 . Burroughs, Atl 29, S•m
mons , St L 27
American League• Rud l, Ca l
35; Ht sle , Mlnn 32 , Velez, Tor
30; Zisk, Chi 29 ; Page, Oak 26.
Stolen Bases
National League Lopes. LA
end Taveras, P trt 16, Moreno,
P1tt 15, Cabell and Cedeno. Hou
12, Concepcion, Cln 11
American League : Remy, Cal
16. Patek, I&lt;C 12 , Bonds. Cal.
Norns. ctev and NOrth, Oak 10.
Hisle. Minn. Lmtz and Page,
Oak 8
Plfchtng
Most Victories
National Lugue : R Reuschel ,
Chi a nd Forsth, Sf L 6-1. Rau
and SuHon, LA and Denny, S1 L
s.o, Rhoden , LA and Carlton,
Phil 51; Barr , SF 53 . Burns ,
Ch• 54
American League : Ta nana,
Cal 6· 1 ; Zahn, Minn and
Garvin, Tar 51 ; Palmer, Bait ,
Brett , Chi and Torrez , N Y 52 ;
Colborn, I&lt;C 53; Ryan , Cal 5 .t
E1rned Run Average
'bltecl on 27 lnninlt pitched)
Natlonll Le1gue : Sutter, Chi
0.6-i . Goss•ge, Pitt 0 96 ; Can
dellr il , P itt I 54 ; Suttoo, LA
Rogers, Mil 1 80
Amerlun Le11ue : Figueroa,
NY 1.26 . Blyleven , Tex 1 54,
Tldrow. NY 1.80; Flanagan,
Bait 1 as . Staton, M•l 1.96
Strltleouts
N•tlonll Leltu•· ROOHS , Mtl
52, Richard , Hou ,.,, Seever,
NY 47 ; Koosman. NY and
Montefusco . SF 45 . N1ekro, All

1."'

I~

'f '.
,.

•2.Amtricln Le1gue : Ryan. Cat

77 ; Tanana, Cal 70, BJ yleven,
Te)( 55. Palmer, Bal l &lt;43.
Eckersley. Clev 39

'

In 11112, u.s. farces arrived
In 'DIIIIand to bolller IIJB
Allan n.tkJa eptnot a IIM'IIIId
af ftghllntl from nelghiNlrfnl

Located

on the h rll In Mason City,

w. Va

{close to Wahama
High School) All brick.
extra large k1fchen W·Wood
burning
firepla ce,
3
bedrooms, 2 baths, dining
&amp; fa mily room. large living
room (fireplace). (over
3500 s q ft of floor space).
Large
porch
(pat io),
doub le car garage , 2 acre'S
of land (cham l1nk fence)
Lots of extras
Upper
bracket P riced on in ·
spectlon Call or see

J. H. "Jake''
~erville

Real 212-51h
Estate Broiler
Street
Poont Pleasant, W.Va.
25550
Phones: 675-3030 (office)
675-4232 (evenmgs}
675-3431 (evenings)

NOTICE OF REQUEST
FOR RELEASE OF
FUNDS
MP.Io:o. C"o untv Com m ISS1oners
Mergs Coun ty Courthouse
Pomerov. Ot11o A5169
614 .992·2895

L,eoe.

MBIOS County
The to tal
est1mated budget of the
program 1s $80,000
An Env rronmenta ! Review
Record res pect• no t he w1th1n
protect has been made by
Me igs
County
wh•ch
documents the environ .
mental review of the proJect
This Environmental Review
Record •s on file at the above
address and Is available for
pUblic exa m ln a tton and
copymg. upon request
Meigs County wtll un
dertake the project described
a bove w1th Block Grant funds
from t he U S Department of
Hausmg and Urban Develop
ment (HUDJ. under T1lle I of
the Hou sing and Co mmun1ty
Development Act of 1974
MetgS County is cerf1fying to
HUO that Meigs Co unty and
fienry Wells, In his offic1al
ca pac ity as M ei g s County
Com m Jsstoner, c on se nt to
accept the ju rtsd lctlon of the
Federal co urts it an qctton Is
brought to enforce r espon
Slbillt•es 1n relation to env•ronmef"lal
revtews,
dec1slon making , end acfion ;
and that these respon ·
slbititles ha'tle been satisfied .
The legal effect ot 1he cer.
tlficet10n •s that upon Its
approval. Meigs coun1y may
use the Block Grant funds.
and H u o wlll have satisfied
its r~spons•bilit1es under the
Nat ional
Env.ronmental
Policy Act of 1969 HUD Will
accept an objec tion to 11s
approval at the release of
funds a nd acceptance of the
cert if ication only If It Is on
one o f the following bases
(a) That the ce r tificatio n was
not m fact executed by the
chief executive off•cer or
other offtcer of e ppl lcant
approved by HUO ; or (b)
that applicant environmental
review record for the project
indu:ates om Is stan of e
required decision, finding, or
step appl•cablt to the prolect
In the env 1ronment1l rev iew
process Obltcttons must be
prepared and submitted In
accordance wtth ttle re(lutred
procedure [24 CFR Part 58 ),
and may be addressed to
HUD at u s Department Of
Housing
and
Urban
Deve lopm ent.
C OBG
Program Management , 60
Eas t Main Str eet. Columbus,
Ohro 43216 Objections to the
release of funds on bases
other ttl an those stated above
will not be considered by
HUD . No objectton received
after June 9, 11il77, will be
con11dered by H U D

(51 16, lie

•

CAMPER ,
Al$o, horse
tro.ler , $450 Phone {bl4 ) 698-

-

SPRING GARDEN Supplies Cab
boge. cauliflower. broccoli.
ond heod lettuce plant&amp; ,
yellow whtte and red onton
sets , onron plonts , Kennebec ,
cobbler. Kotohdln. Red Pont1ac
and Red Losoda seed potatoes
Bulk gorden seeds J)Oifmg sod
peat mou fru1t trees and rose
bushes
M1dwoy Mer kel ,
Pomeroy, Oh10 , W2 -258'1
Bob s Markel, Meson , W Vo

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(~) 773-572.!.:.._ -

TOMATO , PLANTS, Cabboge
broccolt caul1llower , brussel
sprOuh egg plants hangtng
baskets
pots
geramu ms
began•os, flats
petun1as
mangolds , pons1es, soltia
bahom
d ianthus-, snop
dragons . alyssum, V1nco, col
eus
Cleland's G reen house
Roc1ne Garaldtne Cfeland

1 42 m cast iron k1tchensmk: , 1
bos1n and I dram board , hang
an woll type , wh1te, 1-3 burner
gas hot plate Phone 992 5714
ECONOMY TRACTOR wtth all attachments ltke new oskmg
$2250. Phone (614) 698 3290

--

-WAITRESS WANTED · apply 1n per·
~~

Craw's Steck
P~11ero!- Oh1o,

House

CASH po1d~ for all makes and
models of mab1le homes
Phone area code 614 ·4'23-9531

A 0 SMITH Hydronic Bo•ler, Per·
m99las hned Phone 992 34~2
Syracuse

FOUND · FEMALE Seagle wtth 2
pups. g1veoway to good home.
Phone9,.9 2413

FOR SALE

TIMBER , Pome roy Forest Pro
ducts Top pnce tor standmg 3 AND 4 RM furn1shed and un
furnished opts . Phone 99'1·
sawf•mbe r Call Kent Hanby
I 446 8570
5434:'-~-:-::--:-:--::~
COINS CURRENCY tokens, old COUNTRY Mobtle Home Pork . Rt
33 ten mtles north Of Pomeroy .
pocket watches ond cho1ns
La~ge lots w tth concrete pot1os,
s1lver and gold. We need 196-'
s1dewolks
runners and off
ond older s1 lvercoms Buy sell ,
street parkmg Phone 992-7479
or trade Call Roger Wamsley ,
ORcH ID ROOM for rent for an7•2-2331
n•~ersones,
weddrng recep
CASH I I I for 11,Jnk cars Frye's
tlons
br1dal
showers
or pn va te
1
Truck ond Auto WRECKER SER ·
mee
tmg
room
Phone
992 3975
VICE I Phone 742-2081
0,992 2571
OLD FURNITURE , 1ce l)oxes, brass
FURNISHED APT Adults only , no
beds . etc , cOmJlle te
pels . Pkone 992-3874 . M1d
households Wr1te M 0 Mtller,
dleport
Rt .4 , Pomeroy , Oblo or ca ll
BEAUTY SHOP for rent or lease
9'12-771/J
Phone 992 3333 .
STANDING TIM BER WANTED .
PHONE (61•)667 621'
ONE BEDROOM furnished ap(lrt
ment 1n M1ddleporl
Cal l
992 543.1 or 9'12 31 29.

1

IF YOU hove a service to offer .
want to buy or sell somethmg ,
ae looking for work
or FOR MEMORIAL CAY Beouhful
whatever
you'll get results
select1on of flowers Baske ls,
foster with o Sentmei·Wonf Ad
sprays , wreoths voses. Fay$
Co ll992 2156.
Novelty Shop N Second St ,
M1ddleport
YARD SALE , Monday
Tues .
Weds , 1b, 17 18th, Long Sf , GOOD RICH Top sotl Charles R.
Rutland . Oh1a beh1nd Grade
Holf1eld Bockkoe Service
School Tables , ~·ugh chcu r,
Phone 7A2-2008
clothing, m1sc Phone 74'2 2&lt;135
I AND H Beams 8 9 a nd 10 tnch
Colt 992, 703.4
WOODEN HOLLOW core cobmet
doors and drowe r fronts from
,RISING STAR l&lt;ennel Boardin g
75c up Call 992.703.4
Indoor Outdoor runs , groam1ng
a ll breeds clean san1tory VERMEER BALERS 605D • 395 60SC
A995 11 11 Ju ne I Merrdl Chase
foc1l1hes oe367 7112. Chesh~re
R.D 2 Albany Oh•o (61•)
Phone (614) 367 0292
698-3021
HOOF HOLLOW . Buy , sell trade
or tra1n horses RUTH REEVES, USED FORESTRY EQUIPMENT
Joh n Deere 540 Sk1dder Pren
tra1ner Phone ( bl~ ) b9B 3290
t1ca GOBC L-oader w· Pulpwood
All BREED Dog groom1f1g,
grapple Jokn Deere 4,.08 Sktd
reasonable rates Coil for ap
der Confect Denms Smurr
p01ntment, J &amp; D Kennels
phone (614)838· 5345
742 3162
ZERO TO 6" outs1de m1crometers ,
AKC SHETLAND sheep dogs
Ken nedy tool ches t1 dep1h
(Mtn,) Call•es , 2 fe ma les, 7
m1kes ond other prec1s1on
weeks o ld Shots and wormed
tools Call7~2·2159
Phone (614 ) 367-0292 or
ALLIS CHALMER CA Tractor New
367-7112,
l1res rece ntly overhauled with
REGISTERED FEMALE Bo)(er 2 yrs
plows ond utdtty cart $1000.
old wtth popers $75 .00 Phone
Phone(61•)696-1005
992-7675 ,
1974 360 MX YAMAHA, good conAKC REGISTERED Cocker Sponte!
d1t1 o n, $675 . Phone (304)
Puppies , $75 Coll992 7059
882-3297
AVAILABLE FOR adop hon , DOUBLE DRAIN Sink w1th cabtne l,
beautiful male black and wk1te
5 1/ Jft long. Also 5'h ft lo ng
dog , long sdk: y hair , medium
cab1net that goes D\ler sink
s1ze , one year ajd. Several cute
New ly pa1nted , ask •ng $100.
puppies of m1xed breed Me1gs
Phone 992-2969.
Coun ty Humone Soc1ety Phone
992-7680 or 843-3009, local REFRIGIDAIRE REFRIGERATOR ,
General Electric swe~pper
number
metal
ward ro be .
Phone
992 6208.
1969 HONDA 350, 2 helmets to
match, $475 Coli ~2 b138
LOOKING FOR trove l tro ller.
truck comper, campmg trader 1975 HONDA 750, 8,000 m1les .
m1n~home . truck cop? Travel
W.ndsh•eld and farnng w1th
trader to rent? CODNER S
crash bars, sissy bar w1lh pod
CAMPERS on Ratnbow R•dge ·
luggage rock $1500 . Excellent
open even1ngs Take Me1gs 28
cond1h0n , Call 992-3287 or
Or 32 to Bashan . Robert
__
99_2_2496~~----~~~
Codner Long Bottom Owner
FARMAll CUB w1th plow
COONER S CAMPERS on Rotn·
cultivators and mower Would
bowridge Soles, Ren tal Ser
cons1der tradmg tor Gra'&gt;~e ly
vtce ,
Supplies .
trollers,
and equipment Phone Vtc tor
campers, caps alum awnings
Bohr, 985·42.40
and parches by Du robih. Open
evenings. Me1gs 28 or 32 to FIREWOOD FOR SALE PHONE
742 2131.
Bashan Owner Robert Codner ,
long Bottom
APPALOOSA GELDING , e• ·
perienced rider Bobycrlb, mot1971 LEISURE TIME Camper 18 fl
t ress and bumper pod , $50
sleeps 6, self contained h1kh
H1gh chatr , Phone (b14)
and m1rrors mduded, excellent
696-1036
cond1t1on . Phone 992-2386
1967 LAYTON TRAVEl trailer, 21
t I self con tamed , good candt
t1on Call Bob F•sher , 949-2378

NEED A WATER
SOFTENER?
Let . Pomeroy Landmark
soften &amp; condrtion your
water and a Co-op water
•SOftener, Model IIC-XVI
1
Now Only ·,
~.~S

27

N BA Pllyotfs

By United Press tntern1tlon11
Eastern conference
Fm11 Round
( Btst ot Seven)
Phltldtlphil n . Houston
&lt;Philldelphia leads, 3·2)
May 5-Phila 128, Hous 117
May a- Phfla \06, Hous 97
MIY 11- Hous 118, Phlla 9.4
May 13- Ph• la 107. Hous 95
May 15-Hous 118. Phlla 115
May 17- Phlla at Houston
x Mav 19- Houstan at Ph!la
Western Conference
Fin1l Round
(Best of Seven)
Los Angelt~ vs. Portland
( Portl1nd wins, 4-0)
May 6-Portlnd 121 , LA 109
May 8- Portlnd 99, LA 97
M:ay 1G-Portlnd 102, LA 97
May 13-Porflrld 105, LA 101
11-1f ntceuaf

Let us test

your

water

New Co-Op water sof teners , model VC-SVI.
OnlvU79. U
Save UO.OO on • new
Hotpalnt Refriger1tor .
1 New 20 cubic ft
Chest Freeze r
5319 95
Now ln stock, compttm~ u .. ;
of bulk garden seeds and
onion sets.
t good McCullough Cha1n,
Sow
1 Good Uud Poulan Cha in
Sow
sso
5urv1 Yor Safes aRtv S29 95
Onion Sets llbs
J1 oo

'"

•de W. Carsey , Mgrt
Phone 992 -2 111

TWO lOTS together an State 12_. ,
Syracuse, mtddle of faw n Idea l
for mob•le home or new home
Sep tic tank and water top .
Phone992 7402, or742 '1194

REDUCED AGAIN , 3 bedroom 2 1h
both, b1-level , 1 m1le north of
F•ve Poml, $.4'1,500 Phone
992 -2•'1'2 .

FRONT END
ALIGNMENT

3.•.

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

CAPTAIN EASY

..:.:. ~tll!l--1

~air.
Behind ' Rull~rnd Grade
SchOol. Evening work by
oppotntment. Ph . 742-2005.
5-6 1 mo. pd

• P~. t9Z-%174

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

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

Restaurant

Be independent and make a
reasonable lhnng
All
equipment Seats over 75
Quick sale for only 513,500
Centrally located.
RUTLAND Large 3
bedroom
home
with
equipped
kit c hen,
basement. 2 car garage
and nlce yard.
MIDDLEPORT Good
Investment 3 apartment
brick building with garages
near
shopping
Only
$17,500!
Space reserved for your
property.
SOMETHING NEW
Large Showplace home.
Rooms
and
closets
everywhere, 311:2 baths and
nice gameroom with buillIn bar and restroom
lacllllles. Large lot wit~
beautiful trees .
KENO 2 acres , 3
bedroom
home , bath ,
furnace , garage, on good
country road $25,000
DEXTER
Storage
building 30'x40' Will sell on
time.
MIDDLEPORT
2
bedroom home In good
location, nalural gas heat,
bath and yard . $12,000.
I ACRES - Just oulslde
Pomeroy 8 room home
with bath, central healrng
and rural water $20,000.
NEW LISTINGS 2
Bedroom , bath, natural
gas, city water and 2 large
lots, garden space. $11,000.
NEW LISTINGS 4
Bedroom house with bath
and 2~.. acres land near
Rutland 58,500.00.

Phone 992-2181

I

Buy now with only 3 Per
Cent down. A few hundred
and you will own your own
home.
1
G . Bruce Teaford
Helen L. Teaford
Associates

Not The Imitators"

JUST .LISTED - 4 Lots
with nice home. 6 room
frame has 3 or 4 bedrooms.
balh, carpeting, porches,
workshop, garden space .
$13,000.00.
JUST LISTED - l Lots
with
house.
2 or 3
bedrooms. 2 have just been
remodeled, bath, porches,
still needs some repair,
ASKING JUST $.4,850.00.
JUST LISTED - 4 Acres
lays close to the m ines,
water tap paid 1112 miles
off Rt. 124, rdeal for home
or trailer $.4,600.00.
JUST LISTED - HI ON A
HILL - 1 floor pion has 3
bedrooms , bath , formal
dining, kitchen w -range &amp;
ref. , some
carpeting,
storage
bldg ..
part
basement . 514.000.00.
JUST
LISTED
3
bedrooms . bath, own water
system,
por c hes ,
basement ,
RIVER
FRONTAGE Ideal for
fiSherman or boatsman, 2
fireplaces ASKING JUST
$7 ,300 00.
JUST LISTED Lovely
log ( abtn, 2 bedrooms ,
bath , din ing room, porches,
basement, large fireplace
In living R Forced air hot
water heat, porches. 2 car
garage, 1 acre of ground. A
STEAL
AT
JUST
512,000.00
JUST LISTED - Close ln .
2 story frame , 3
bedrooms,
bath ,
full
basement , kIt chen has
Range, Ref
and other
Almost furnished ASKING
JUST S13,500 00 .
ROUTE 124 - Very lovely
brick &amp; lrame About 4
years old. Must sen. owner
moving . G I APPROVED
4 bedrooms, bath, central
gas and air conct,. Vz acre.
GOING
AT
A
LOW
$28, 500 00
BUYING OR SELLING
LOOK TO
CLELAND
REALTY FOR HELP.
HENRY E. CLELAND
REALTOR
Honk Clel.ond

Associete
"2-2259 - t15 -4112
~OME

IN Pomeroy , 2 story, cen·
trol heotmg , some corpeh1ng
ond pannelling Bath &amp; It
Phone 992-707' or 9'12·3•65.

~~·~
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
1 Medtocre
5 Plantation

LARR~,,W~DER

(614)985-4155
Chester, OhiO
10-17-1 mo CPdl

Ph. t9Z-3t93

SEWING MACHINE Repo1rs , ser·
vtce , all makes, 992·2284 , The
Fabr ic Shop , Pomer oy
Au t honzed Smger Sales and
Serv1ce. We sharpen Sein ers
W1ll do odd tobs , rooftng po•nllng gutter work Phone 992.
740'1

EXCAVATING, da:rer, loader- and
backhoe work dump trucks
and lo. bovs for h1re, w1ll haul
ft ll dtrt, Ia sot! , li mestone a nd
9rovel Call Sob or Roger Jef·
fers
day phone 992-708q,
nig ht phone 992 3525 or 9925232.
EXCAVATING , do;rer, backhoe
and ditcher Charles R. Hat
l1eld , Bock Hoe Servrce
,
Rutland Ohto Phane 742-2008
.

SEWING - ALTERATIONS .
Upholstertng ,
drape s
reosonoble. 572 South Th1rd
Ave .. Mtddleporl . Phone
9926306
PIANO TUNING , lane Ooniels . 12
years of ser~o&lt;tce . Phone
992-2082.

___

SEPTIC TANI&lt;S cleaned Modern
Son1totion 992-3954
Will d o roof1ng. -c~
Of-,.-:,,u-c-:co,-:o::n,
plumbmg and heotmg No 1ab
too Iorge or too smoll Phone
742 2348.
CARPENTER
floormg, cedmg,
paneling Phone 992 '1 7_5_9_ _

OWN YOUR Own Business Area
Distr1butor for Rand McNally
Mops No Sellmg Service preestablished a ccounts. Invest·
ment $12.500 secured by inven·
tory and equ1pmenl. Wnte, include
name,
address
telephone and 3 references to
Personnel Otrector , NAMCO
3928 Montdolr Rd , Birmingham , Al 35213 , or coli col
loci (205) 870-•228

8FT. x ,.0 fT tro1ler , 2 bedrooms,
good cond1ttan. Phone 992 294\
or 992 2689
1972 2 BEDROOM Mobtle home,
completely furn1shed near
Gallipolis , $3500. Phone (304)
88'1 2&lt;466 anyttme.

1974 TWO BEDROOM mobile
home, completely furn1shad in
cludmg wosher and dryer, two
owntngs w1th enclosed sfaroge
building Will rent 1/t ocre
mob1le home slte wlth wotar,
electric, and septtc. system.
Phone 9'12-2508 or 992-3435

MOBILE Home Repatr, Elec ,
plumb1ng and heahng. Phone
992-5858
HOWERY · -A
:-:N
-::D
:--:M
-:A
:-:RTIN E•·
septtc syste ms,
cavot1ng
dozer, bockhoe, dump truck,
limestone
grovel , blocktop
pav•ng, Rt 1-43 Phone 1 (614)
698-7331
HARRISON'S TV Repa1r Sent1ce
Calls . 276 Sycamore, St., M•d·
dleport Phone 992 2522 .
BROWN'S FIRE and Safety Ex:tm
qutshe rs All &amp;~zes, bus1ness,
home, boat Ref1lled , tested
Btll Brown, Ruflond
Oh1a.
Phone 742·2777
EXCAVATING, BACKHOE. dozer,
trencher, l ow Boy dump true"
trucks , sepl 1c systems Bill
Pullin! phone 992-2478 doy or
-

mg~----

...

TDPi.BSS .l'JI~T I

"

·'·
;

teal case

•

••
•

•
:

:~

.

Mon •• Tues., nea .
a:ootil5:oo
Thursday 8 til Noon

•. •

:a •

,:

~

......

... . ................. "-.:-.
:

Close Sat._At 5 ~ .M.

~-

v ,.

RUTLAND FURNITURE _ .1:

e 742-2211

fill '(tAN~

·\ •.-.... ....... ~. •••-411••·····

•.

ARNOLD GRATE!'

1

~

!

GASOLINE ALLEY

"'

·-

f1 Xll'\(j

up this

apartment!
I
can't
rent

.
,•

"=:::&gt;-e-:---...

Hold
And there are
so few of them Clovia.
nowada4s!
That
stool
is

1 don't
know
whLJ I'm

11 Miss

24 Lacquered
metalware
26 LI!e-weary
28 Prest dent
Grant's
l!rst nam e
29 Pretext
30 Large one's
m ckname
35 Caddoan
lndtan
36 Htgh note

Amenca
m eas urement
15 Part ol
an epee
18 - qua
non
21 Covenant
22 Pamler's
gad get
23 Bovtne

..

POOR SOJLS IN
DOSPATCHr-

......

;

WEST
• J 943
• 10 8 6 2

t JS

• AKQ

k-+--;-

• K Ql
t AK98
• 913
East Wes t vulnerable

mne

West

sacr1fice

DAlLY CRYPTOQUOTE-Here's how to work it:
AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

Is

hmts Each day the cooe Iclters are dafl"ercnt
CRYPTOQUOTES

-·-

YOU DON'T IMIN K YOU
COULD HANDLE IT
QUITE YET, EH?
WELLJ7-{INK

OH, WINN IE , I
APPRECIAT E
YOUR OFFER,
BUT..

ABOUT

RUN

IT.~--~d~~

"I

~

Qi~~~2~

UHM B V

JGS

VPEHJ

...

T L p P T B

GHV

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H E U P G . -

H

S N

NLEB

VUSMB,

0 F P

Y E S X BE 0

Saturday's Cryptoquote: WE ALWAYS THINK THAT ADVICEBESTTHATIS LEAST SUITED TO OUR SITUATION. VAUVENARGUES
C) 1917 J{.lrq P'ta\\.lres Srndic•te, Inc.

Pa-Ss
Pass

6t
Pa ss

Pass
Pass

Opemng lea(! -

~

•

•

•.,
a

•~

'~ ,. '

HOW'S THE
MATCH
601NG?

I THINK SNOOP'!' AND
MOLL'/ VOLLE'/ JUST
WON THAT GAME ..

IT WAS

OUT!

IT

WAS OUT B'l FORTV
FEET!IIIHAT IS IT WITH

I(OU?CAH'T 1l'SEE?!

AT L£A5T T11E'I'vE WON
ALL THE AR6UMENT5 ..

Sou lh
4N T
5N T
6N T

2•

J1m " Lasl week we doscussed safely plays Let's Lalk
about somethmg almosl Lhe
same Lh1s week "
Oswa ld
" Best plays'
Someumes there may be lwo
safety plays at your dosposal
as declare r In s uc h cases you
want to use the one that gtves
you the best chance lor an extra Lr1ck "
Jtm
"Sou lh needs lour
clubs Lo make hos slam He
ha s no worne s or problems
except tl one opponent holds
lo ur or live to the queen-Jack
II East ho lds Lhem South w1il
go down , II West holds them

"

_,

...

GB

Pass
Pass
Pass

Nort h Eas t

1•
5•

By Oswald &amp; James Jaco by

One le tter simply stands f or anoth e r . In this sample A 15
u sed for the three L's, X for the two O' s, etc Smg lc le tters,
apostrophes, the length and form ation of the wo rds are aU

GOT A NEW LINE OF FASHIONS
THE MAnJRE WOMAN AND
5UIZE COULD USE YOU T:J

. J4

SOUTH

38 Season ol

11 11

EAST
• 10 12
• 9 53
t Q 10632

olo Q52

36 l'repare
cop y
37 Group or

1

16

t 74

Cw-les

.,,,"

.

NORTH {D )
• 865
• AJ7

"' A K 10 8 6

Valera 's
cowllry
(a bbr )
33 Turmeric
34 One or the

••

...-·

BRIDGE
Nine receives proper nod

31 Accouter

ULABNER

..'

Monday, May 16

Oswald and Jim Jacoby

32 De

EVEf&lt;&gt;l CENT WE SAVG
ME';ANS /llORG. FCR lT lOSE

~

oo-

(2 wds . )

't'

...

Yesterday's Answer

TUESDAY. MAY 11, 1977
6 ()0-700 Club A; Summer Semester 10
6 . Is-Farm Report 13
6 . 20--Not For Women Only 13
6 . 3~Focus on Columbus A; News 6; Summer
Semester 8. Concerns &amp; Comments 10 6 . &lt;4~
Morning Report 3
6 5()-Good Morning , West VIrginia 13.
6 5s-Good Morning , Trl Stale 13
,
,
7 oo-Today 3.~ . 15 ; Good Morning America 6,13;
Chuck White Reports 10; CBS News 8
7.os-Porky P 1g 10
7 30-Schoolles 10
8 oo-Howdy Doody 6 , Capt Kangaroo 8, 10; Sesame
~t - 33 .
8 31)-Big Valley 6
9 ·Q0-9·QO-A M 3; Phil Donahue 4, 13. 15; Andy
Griffith 8
9 : 31)-Cross-WIIs 3; Edge ot Night 6
10 :0l)--Sanford &amp; Son 3,4, 15; Dinah 6 , Here's Lucy 8,10;
Mike Douglas 13 .
10.31)-Hollywood Squares 3,4,15 ; Price Is Right 8,10
11 -QO-Wheel of Fortune 3,4, 15. Happy Days 6,1 3
11·31)-Shoot tor the Slars 3,4,15. Family Feud 6, 13;
Love of Life 8,10, Sesame St 20
11 5s-CBS News 8; Ms . Flxlt 10
12 oo-News 3.4.6,10,1 3; Name That Tune 15; Divorce
Court B.
12 31)-Chlco &amp; the Man 3,15, Ryan's Hope 6,13 , Bob
Braun 4 ; Search for Tomorrow 8, 10.
oo-Gong Show J, All My Children 6, 13. News 8;
Young &amp; the Restless 10. Not For Women Only 15
1 31)-Days of Our Lives 3,4, 15, As The World Turns
8. 10.
2 oo-s20.000 Pyramid 6,13
2 31&gt;-Doctors 3.4.15, One Life to Live 6,13; Guiding
Light 8, 10.
3 GO-Anothe r World 3.4,15, All In The Family 8, 10;
Consumer Survival Kit 20.
3·15--General Hospital 6, 13
3·31)-Malch Game 8,10; Lilias Yoga l!o You 20.
4 oo-Mlsler Cartoon 3, Lillie Rascals 4, New Mickey
Mouse Club 6; Lucy Sho:.V 8, Sesame S 20,33;
Movie " Getting Away from It All" 10; Dinah 13,
4 1s-L11tle Rascals 4.
4 31)-My Three Sons 3; Partridge Family 4,
Emergency One 6, P a r tridge Family 8, Fllntstones
15.
5 GO-Big Va lley 3, My Three Sons 4, Brady Bunch 8,
M is ter Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33 ; Emergen c y
One 13 , Star Trek 15 .
5 · 31)-Ad
5· 31)-Adam -12 4; Newws 6, Family Affair 8. E lec . Co
20.33 .
6.oo- News 3,4.8,10,13, 15; ABC News 6, Zoom 20;
Airport 33.
6 31&gt;-NBC News 3,4,15, ABCNews 13; Andv Griffith 6,
CBS News 8,10; Vegetable Soup 20
7 .oo-Truth or Cons 3, To Tell the T ruth 4, Liar's Club
6,, Counl ry Carnival 8; News 10 , To Tell th e Truth
13 , My Three Sons 15; Anyone for Tennyson? 20,
Lowell Thomas Remembers 33
1 30.:.Hollywood Squares 3,4; Let' s Deal With It 6,
Match Game PM 8, Mac Neil -Lehrer Report 20,33,
In The Know 10, Wild Kingdom 13. TV Honor
Society 15
8 oo-Man from Atlantis 3,4,15, Happy Days 6,13, Pilot
" Mc Laren' s R1ders" a. lo: Nat ional Geographlc
20,33
8 3Q-Laverne &amp; Sh1rley 6, 13.
9 QO-Rich Man , Poor M a n 6, 13. M -A-S-H 8,1 0 ; In
Search of the Real America 33, Oasis In Space 20
9 3()--Qne Day at a Time 8,10; Besl of Ernie Kovacs
20,33.
10 Oil-Pollee Story 3,4,1 5: Kojak 8, Ellon John 10;
News 20; The Wav II Was 33 .
10 30--8\ack Per specti-ve on the News 20: Americana
33 .
11 oo-News 3,4,6,8, 10, 13,15, Mac Nei l Lehrer Report
33.
11 31&gt;-Johnny Carson 3, 4, 15; Movie "rh e Night
Strangler" 6, 13, Columbo 8, Mar y Hartman 10;
ABC News 33
12 oo-Mov le "Cool Hand Luke" 10 , Jana kl 33
1
Tomorrow 3,A
1 11)-News 13.

~cr7"'. 28 Delay

I .

""

-·
...
: .~ FRIDAY TIL 5 .1· -...

·= "!'.

ary
(a bbr )
rule
L___;:__..:"'::.:;":;";"•;.:~:;•:;"::;'_·::;';;;'';':..;."';.'.;.'..;'-"-------' 20 Be fa 1th less (2 wds)
21 Morsel
8 Successively
22 Feat
arranged
24 - down
9
Suttable
m".'.:lrr I
(moderated)
h ' "',- r l 25 Enghsh
..--r::"-rr""1rrSlim~
rebel,
Jack26 Gong
sound
27 Pers~an or
shak4~
OrtenLal

..

.... . . .

-·!. . ... . ., . . ~

IT'&lt;; JU?T A
11ARM~~S

- ~

- ·-·

Afl. a:w.E' CJJ ..

'"

---

:

ol th e
Old

Testament
40 La-dt·da
Amatona"
DOWN
poet
1 Boom or
11 Squandered
barner
12 Observe
2 Moldtng
13 Turkish ctty 3 Arbolrale
14 As tan rtver
13 wds.)
15 Haslen
1 Poem
16 Btle
5 French
11 - or
pamte r
l tnclude)
6in qutre
19 Grammat- 7 Parliament

'"

BRADFORD, Auclloneer, Com
pl ate Serv1ce. Phone 9-49·247
or 9.49-2000 Roc• ne Ohio, Crltl
Bradford

'

39 Jumper

---------'--j 10 boss's
'title
" Ars

BORN LOSER

1-10 I

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR SweeRers, toasters, lfOns, all
small appliances lawn mower,
NEW 3 bedroom kouse , 2 batks ,
next to State H1ghwoy Garage
ott elec , 1 a cre, Middlepor t,
on Route 7. Phone (614} 985·
dose to Rutland Phone 992
3825
7•81 .
:c-:-::~-:c--~--:------c-~
REMODELING
, Plumb1ng, heat1ng
SMALL farm for sale, 10% down,
ond oil types of general repair
owner lmanced Monroe CounWor k guoronteed '10 years exty , W. Vo. Phone (304) 772pnrience Phone 992 2409
3102"' (304) 772-3227

.

{Answe rs tomorrow)
Jumbles DICED AUGUR NEWEST ANYHOW
Answer Whose chrns are never shaved?URCHINS '

STORM
IIIII'DOIIS &amp; OOOIIS
REPifoCEIIIEIII
lllRIIOIIS
IIUIIIIRUII
SIDflfGoSOffln
GUTTEWIIIIIRGS

KEN GROVER
PHOTOGRAPHY

...

IN MY lA130RATOR'Y··

ENEMIE5.

Blown IWWols &amp; AH&lt;S

HOMESITES tor sole. 1 ocre and
up Middleport nea r Rutland
Coll992-7481 '

MAIN
POMEROY, 0.

THEI~

xxxJr r xx)

Answer: FOR At

TO"''ING AROUND Wl1t1
FOR SOME TIME ·· HEY,
SHOUl0N'1 YOU BE GETTING
READ'( FOR BED '7

' lnSIIIalion Somces
Fiftii'C"'I Aable

Commercial
Schools
Weddings

VA FHA 30 yr f1nonc1ng Ireland
Mortgage 77 E State , Athens
phone (b14) 5t;l2-3051

lH lNGS 1'1/E BEEN

HE'S GO UlG TO
6E:. CONDUCTING
50ME EXPERIMENTS

Hlown

Ae~al

&amp;OMETIME!:&gt; lOOK
Now arrange the ctrcled le Hers to
form the surprise an~wer, as suggested by the above cartoon

OH, A FEW

YES-HE'S

Ar611E, I
REALLY DOri'T
WAitT Y'OU TO
WEAR YOURSELF

OUT··

PHOTOGRAPHY

NEW 3 bed room house bu1l t m
kitc hen , both and '11, Phone
742-2306 or contact M1IO 8 Hut.
chisan Rutland, Ohro

•

2-23-1 mo.

PROFESSIONAL

0

HOW IHO!&gt;E 6ANG5T"ER5

UTTLE ORPHAN ANNIE

"The Originalors

4131mopd

Commerc1o l property' approx 17
acres , level land , located at
Tuppers Plams on Ohio Route
7, Phone (614) 667 -6304

IDACUDEI
[] I
SCULIE

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

Phone 992-3339

rx 0

I ..._I___,_I...............t""""""J 1==;-r---H
~

RQute 3, Pomeroy, 0 .

HARLEY HANING

byHennArnotdandBoblee

YOILD

Young's Carpeting

NEW HOMES
&amp; REMODELING

COUNTRY formlontl w1th seclud
ed woods , woter and good oc
cess m Monroe County , W Vo
$1 ,000 down, ca ll (30.0) 772
3102 0' (304) 772-3227

1

Superior
Steam Extraction

BUILDERS

Free Est1mates
No Sunday Calls Please
4. 24-1 mo

ALU:YOOP

2 Z3-1 mo.

CARPENTER &amp;

~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

Unscramble these tour Jumbles.
one letter to each square, to form
four ordmary words.

1

Co rpet- Lino.-Tile
Phone Mike Young at
992-2206 or 9'12-7630

4281mo.

A local contractor
Phone 949-2801
or 949-2860

'iffl\11Ml fij),-}

~ ~ ~~ ~~

Installation, samples
brought to your home
with no charge.

4CTS-1 mo

BEAUTIFUL TWO story home w1th
two cor go raga, 5 bedrooms HOUSE FOR sale tn Syracuse . 2
bedrooms and both, lot 100 x
dinmg room , large llvi ng room,
150. Garage, cement dr ive ond
modern kttchen . 2 Y, bolhs,
smoll ~toro9e bldg Furnished
large recraohon room , fully o1r
or unfurnished. Coli 99'1·7147 .
cond1 ftoned, 'h
mile from
school Ona quarter m1le off House IN Tuppers Plains , 2
State Route 30 year ftnonc:tng
bedrooms alec. heot doub'•
ovailoble Call 992-3863 bet garage, 2 lo ts Phone (614)
ween 9o m. and3p m.
667·3065 0 ' 667 33600 :....--

•

Fre~ Estimates

Phone 949-2814
9 a.m. to 5 p.m.

BISSEU SIDING CO.

SHI' AND HEll HU~BY THOU.,HT
VOU MIGHT HAVe liEEIV IN ON
HER FATHE~ '5 K.ION/IPIN(;!

Rou1e 3, Pomeroy, 0 .

Continuous one
piece
gutters. We hlng it, or do 11
yoursell. Specill prices to
builders.

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

WELL.W!I. L.WoLL .,,,;o THI' PoF&lt;SON
WHO Hl~oD YOU WA5 A!ll:oS. CAROL.
TUBBS., I'H~

Young's Carpetins

GUMR SERVICE

Syracuse·

Owner
Shirley (Jeffers) Wolfe

Nobil Summot Road
Rl. 1
Moddl"port, 0 .
992-5724
•
Complete
Sales
and
Service and Supplies.
'

SMITH NILSON
MOTORS, INC.

Shirley's Beauty Nook
John Sf .

NEW ALL elec home rn Syracu5e .
lar9e lot, alum 1num s idmg 3
bedrooms . k1tchen , d mm g
oreo oil fullv carpeted bath,
uttllty roo m and garage Phone
9927419
4 ROOM HOME with both , 115
Locust St. , Pomeroy S3500
Phone 992 ·3026

w Pomeroy Landmark
I'T.',: Jock W.C.riey, Mgr.
1976 HONDA MINI-TRAIL ZSO
motorcycle cucce llent cond1
han
$250. RCA Wk1rlpool
retrtgerator, good cond1hon
$100 l&lt;enmore gas k1tchen
range, good condittan $50
-~·P_ho~•-99
_
2-_
5606
:::.._ _ _ __
ROTOTILLER RIDING Mower . 302
Ford mower, 1967 Ford station
wogon ail drums 55 gallon
parts for Ford Pickup, 1965
model, 4 speed truck transmts
slon
old buftet. Phone
742 217•

EXPERIENCE_{)_

Pomeroy·Landmark

FrPflo

~

DUGAN'S

329()

~

Batting
(based on 65 at bats)
TO
ALL
IN TERE STED
National League
AGENCIES , GROUPS , AND
GAB R H Pet
PERSONS
Prker. Pit
31 129 25 51 395
On or about Ma y 21, 1977,
Smns. St
31 106 23 41 387 the above named County will
Mlhws, At
22 76 15 29 382 request the u S Department
Scott, Sf L
28 71 8 26 366 of Housrng and
Urban
Trillo , Ch t
29 99 18 36 364 Developmen t to release
Vtntn , Mt!
26 103 12 37 359 Federal Funds under Title I
Sm1fh, LA
30 1&lt;16 29 37 349 of the Housing and Com
Jhnsn , Ho
26 69 10 24 34 8 munlly Development Act Of
Rose , Cin
32 121 26 41 339 1974 ( PL 93 383) for the
Wnlld, SO
36 146 28 49 336 fol lowin g proJect · Hous1 ng
American League
Rehabilitation Program 10
Ba llr , Tor
A Wds, Tr

-

l----''--· ------------------------~-----'

S600•

- -

~I,M

Sum I&lt;'&gt;

Worksor, phone
Matn Street,
Ohto
m 3891Pomeroy,

MONDAY, MAY 16,1977
6 .GO-News 3,4,6,8,10,13,15,; ABC News 6, Zoom 20
6 . 31)-NBC News 3, • • 15 ; ABC News 13; Andy Gr llfllh 6;
CBS News 8,10; Vegetable Soup 20
7 oo-Truth or Cons. 3 , To Tell the Truth 4 ; Liar' s Club
6; Buck Owens 8, News 10. To Tell the Trulh 13, My
Three Sons 15, To Be Announced 20. Know Your
Schools 33
1 30-ThatGoodOie Nashvllle Muslt3; In Search of&lt; .
Muppet Show 6 ; Gong Show 8; MacNeil Lehrer
Reporl20,33 ; Price is Right 10; Candid Cameral),
Nashv ille on the Road 15
15; To Be AnB oo-LIItle House on lhe Prairie
nounced 6,13. Movie " Cold Turkey " 8.10 ; Decades
of Decision 20,33.
"
8 31)-BoxinQ 6, 13
9 oo-Movle " Ale.ander The Other S1de of Dawn
3,4, 15; ; Palllsers 10, 33
IO :QO-Andros Targets 8, 10; News 20; Austin City
Limits 33
10: 31)-Farm Digest 20
11 oo-News 3,4 ,6 ,8,1 0, 13 , 15; Monty Python' s Flying
Circus 20, Blac k Journal 33
11 : 3D-Johnny Carson 3.4. 15. Streets of San Francisco
6,13 , Kojak 8, Mary Hartman 10. ABC News 33
12 QO-Movle " The Prize" 10; Janak! 33
12 41)-Toma 6, i3, McCloud 8
l oo- Tomorrow 3.4.
1 50--News 13.

HIS

THE AIGGS'IS SHEER

Business Services

COAL hmestone , and calciu m
chlar.de ond calclu m bnne for
dust control ond spec1al m1x1ng
solt for formers , h:cels•or SQII

-

rllt'st.ia)
1111 u F'nclo)

llto:Jcn bd rr: pulJ1Jt:at run

FOR ZERO NOUGHT,

PIANO lESSONS, childrens ond 1975 JEEP CHEROKEE . p b , ps
Ouodratrack . Good t1res
adults
Mrs. Hor~er Von
Phone (J().j ) 877 23.10
Vranken 991-2270
1q7.5
JEEP Cherokee. p s . p b.
THE RACINE VOL F1re Dept. w1ll
o tr, _. wheel drtve, Phone
hove a c h~eken borbecue on
742 2590
Sunday, May '19 at the fire sto
tton Starting at 11 00 A M
!976CHEVROLET Chevette Phone
992-727•
1971 PINTO Run A Bout low
!Ulp Waiiled
mileage. Con be seen ot 103
Beech
St , Pomeroyt Oh1o offer
APPLIANCE SERVICE man, e~&lt; ·
per1enced No phone calls
Sp ~· -- - - Gallta Ret n gerahon Co, 611 1972 GRAN TORINO , 53 000
Tl-urd ~vt ..:_Goth~~ Ohio
miles Phone 74'1 2Ub
OLDER RESPONSIBLE lady to live 1966 \1 W. BEETLE . $.400. Two new
in ond core fo r aged w1dow 1n
recap tires, good motor Phone
Rut1ond 1 Oh10 Nat invalid nor
9B5 4'101.
senile l•ght housework and
t"OOking
No lc;~undry
Coli 1954i CHEVROLET three·qvarler
ton flat bed truck Fo1r cond l·
74'1 2078 for 1nformolton
.
fron , good fo rm truck Phone
FRIENDLY HOME Toy Parftes has
9•9- 2696:.__:-=--c:~
opentngs for managers and
197•
CHEVY CORVETTE , 2'1500
dealers m ydur orea Toy Porly
new rad1ol hres, loaded wtth
Plan e~&lt;pe n ence helpful Cor
extras
S1lver grey f1nlsh
and telephone necessa ry Coli
Phone 742 2211 before 5 p m
&lt;;oltecl to Carol Doy (518)
ofler 5 caii742·202S
489 8395 or wnte
nendly
Home Partie' 20 Ro•lroad 1975 CHEVY VAN , 6 cyl1nder stan.
A'&gt;~e , Albany NY 12 ~ _
do rd. Call 992 3900 after 6 p m,
GUARANTEED JOB Trmnmg 1974 MERCURY Capn . 'Panasonic
locatron
$374 40 , s1ngle
Am-Fm stereo 8 track, rad1o ls
$502 80 momed Call Army
4 speed , 2900 V 6
Phone
R ecrUihn~ . (b14) 5t;l3 3022 or
949-2493
385-6318 (collect)
- 1975 GMC TRUCt&lt; A wheel dnve
WANTED SOMEONE to do odd
three quarter ton . Phone
jObs on form Phone 949 253 1
9•9- 2089'-"----~son

'lw11 ull S..!UI &lt;l&lt;t)

SCORPIO (Ocl. 24-Nov. 22)
Bonds with a new and valuable
ally may be forged today You
mtght be able to do thmgs with
th 1s person to fatten your
bank. book
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-0oc .
21} Cond 1f1ons are now ripe to
launch that Imagina tive under·
tak•ng you ve been con·
templa ttn g Waste no more time

fu1 l!)tlltl thau vnt' 1mur

ll'L'I IIIS.C I U UI!

elevision log for easy viewing

DICK TRACY

DOC PRITCHART
SAliS I. CAN'T ·
HAVE NO MORE
SUGAR COOI-&lt;IES , 1 ,-.;c~
CHAWKLIT CAKE
OR PEACH
C088LEf3. • ·

there are tM safety Jllays
availa ble '
Oswald "The l1rst can be
found m old books on play lL
1s to play dummy's ace and
then to come to Lhe Soulh hand
m order to lead the mne and
let ol nde This lead s to an e xtra tnck of East holds the
s mg le ton qu een o r Jack "
Jont " The modern play IS
equally sale It IS to run the
mne ftrst If 1t loses to an
ho nor , play t he ace next T hts
play only produces,lour tncks
1! Eas t holds Lhe smgleton
queen or Jack, but ot produces
all f1ve If East ho lds one or
two small cl ubs Hence, tl )s
p r eferable "

~~~~
A Montana reader wants to
know what we lead wtl h
• Q52 . 853 +9 632 olo 814
alter the biddmg has gone t
N. T -pass-3 N T -pass-passpass
We ope n the deuce of
spades We have to try to play

our partner's hand smce he tS
marked w1Lh qu1te a lew
pomls II he has s pades our
queen will help him

("or a cop y o r JACOBY
MODERN send $1 ro 'Win
a t B r1dge
c l o th1s
newspaper P 0 Box 489,
Ra d10 City StatiOn New Yor,.,
N Y r0019 !

�10 The Datly &amp;ntmel, Mtddleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Monday, May 16, 1977

HOSPITAL NEWS
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Sa t urday Admissions Ethel Sarson, Racine.
Sa turd ay Discha rges Beverly Thompson, James
Sheets. Robert Roush , Jerry
Ward , Brenda Elliott.
Sund ay Admissions Elmer Pic kens, Raci ne;
Linda Bragg, Vinton; Brett
Friend, Long Botlom; Phyllls
Bailey, Racine; Ina Hoback,
Racine.
Sunday Discharge - Floyd
Buck.

LEAVE JUNE '11l!RD - These Chester Elementary
&amp;hool sixtl1 graders. taught by Miss Ca rolyn Smith, will
leave June 3 (or a three day sightseeing trip to
Washington, D. C. The trip is a reward for their ha ving
worke~ as school safety pa trol members during the school
year. They will join over 700 other regional safe ty pa trol
members fo r U1e trip staged by the Automobile Club of
Suuthern Ohio. The group includes: front (1 to r ), Nathan
Boatright, Billy McClure, John Ridenour , Ray Maxson,
Rodney Tnpp, John Hein, Leonard Koenig, Roger Bissell ;

Names of

Hostage

(Conti nued fr om page 1)
levels of review in cluding
hea rings before an impartial

(Continued from page 1)
underwear, we didn't take
that demand too seriously,
although we did not menti on
it after Nelson had first said
it, McKinnon added.
In the middle of the FBI
negotiations, while Nei'&gt;On
was joking with the officers
about his muscles, Mrs. Blair
saw her chance and took her

hearing o£ficcr.

11Je ident ification system
was developed in response to

fede ra l and sta te laws
rega rding the edu cation of
handicapped children. Under
the current Jaws; the schools
intend to provide a free and
appropriate educa tion to all children into anoth er room .
She · nimbly tossed both
ha ndica pped children 0-21 by
children out a second-storv 1
1960.
.
The cur rent identifi ca tion window into the waiting anns

effo rt, which is part of an
identification system started
a year ago, Is the fir st step in
rea ching t he go al of serving
all handicapped children.
or the 92,000 school age and
pre-school child ren in
so uthea stern Ohio, 11 ,000 are
suspected of bein'g h a n·
dica pped . Many of these
children are not receiving the
special education they need
because they arc unknown to
the local school districts.
Other school districts in
Southeastern Ohio are also
conducting identifi cati on
activities according to a plan
they developed to meet ttie
needs of the region and
comply with the guidelines
for ser vin g hand icapped
. children.
NOW YOU KNOW
Ther e are nO crematories
in
Mississ ippi ,
South
Carolina, South Dakota or
Wyom ing.

Mrs. Sayre
(Continued from ~ p~ge 2)
volunteers, who donated over
40,000 hours in 1976.
The Director is responsible
for the coordination of the
Vo lunteer' Program with
other
se nior
citizens
progra ms . The volunt eers
assist with many aspects of
the programs at the Center,
as receptionists, instructors ,

in craft making, friendly
telephoning, serving mea ls,
delivering meals to home·
bound elderly, and in visiting
shut-ins at home and in
·nursing homes. Mrs. Warns·
ley maintains all fi nancial
records and submit s all
federal and state reports for
the Council prog rams. ~h e IS
responsible for the editing
and mailing of the monthly
Newsletter to approximately
2,400 senior citizens.

of FBI agent Gordon John·
son. Danielle wa s slightly
jostled, but Issac boasted to
hi s · i earful grandmother ,
Joan Brown:
"Grandma , you see me
The
children
were
examined by police medics
th en treated to cookies and
milk

in

Mrs.

Brown 's

apartment.
Also waiting below was
Mrs . Blair's common law
husband, Leonard Mayo , who
declined to talk with
reporters.
It was three more hours

before Mrs. Blair got away,
again with the help of FBI
agents.
AB she put it, " I was
standing in the hall eating . I
just decided I was going and
ran down ·the stairs.' '

With no hostages left and
police threatening to use tear
gas, Nelson gave up.

Goal is
(Continued from page I)
done . If you or a fri end would
like to volunteer call our
office or executive director of
our unit at 992-3708.
Please don't forget the
Cervical Cancer Clinic. This
is a service that is ava ilable

to area women free of charge
and in part is sponsored by
the America Cancer Society.
We will also in part sponsor
the Stop Smoking Program.
This is a first for Meigs
County and we feel it will be a
success. We also plan to
sponsor a dance on June lB.
Plans at this time are in·
complete . Further in·
formation will be released
later.
NURSES PICKET
AJOWN, Ohio (UP! )
More than 100 striking
members of' the Nurses
Association of Genera l
Medical Center in Akron
picketed the hospital today as
contract negotiations were to

PLEASANT VALLEY
Discharges - Mrs. J ack
Hudson, Point Pleasant ; Mrs.
Kenneth Haley, Gallipolis;
Jean Ann Meadows, Point
Pleasant ;
Mrs. Lacie
Wolford, Vinton ; William
Shobe, Point Pleasant ;
James Belcher, Gallipolis;
Elizabeth Fisher, Point
Pleasant; Emmons Selby,
s~ond row, Keith Bentz, Barbara Sprague , Tina Spencer,
Point Pleasant ; Lucille
Ke1th Bro2an. Missv Van Meter, Andrea Batev. Lisa
Mooreland, Point Pleasant ;
Wilson, Becky Eichinger , Beth Teaford ; back row, Pam
Mrs. Lawrence Youpg,
Miller, Reva Persons, M.elissa Thomas, Becky Ambrose
Glenwood ; Mrs. Walter
Da vid Gaul, Julie Elberfeld, Randy Stewart. Six mother~
Schoonover , Gallipoli s;
of class members will accompany the group. They are
Elmer Henson , Buffalo ;
Mrs. Richard Gaul , Mrs . Phillip Werry, M.rs. John
Dean Smith, Hartford; Mrs.
Teaford, Mrs. Raymond Maxson, Mrs. James Ridenour ,
Claude Thornton, Leon; Mrs.
and Mrs. John Bentz.
Wendell Barker , West
Columbia ; Harold Parsons.
Evans ; Mrs. James Leport,
Henderson ; David Kimes ,
SONNY AND SUSIE
New Haven ; Mrs. Norman
HOLLYWOOD (UP! )
Searls,
Buffalo ; Mrs. Paul
Sonny Bono ha s rec eiv~
Keaton
,
Given; Heather
permiss ion to marry hi s
Nibert,
Point
Pleasant ; Seth
roomma te.
Montgomery,
Crown City ;
The twice-married and di·
vorced singer is planning a Thomas Gardner, Gallipolis;
church
wedding wilh Susie Clifford Lear II, Gallipolis
VIRGINIA SHRIMPLIN
V irginia ·M ae Shr i mplin , 63, Coellw, 23 , the girl he 's been Ferry ; Shaw.n Capehart,
and Margaret
Mt. Ver non; form er res ldent living· with since 197&gt;. Bono, Mason;
of Mason , W. Va ., d ied 42, officially proposed to his Hammack, Mason.
Saturday a t he r res iden ce fiancee Saturday night and
Birth - A son to Mr. and
following a six month i l lness.
Mr s . Shr implin w a s a asked her father's permission Mrs. James Ashworth, Point
Pleasant.
member of the Mason Unit ed Sunday. Both said yes.
Method is t . Church and the
Sonny and Susie hope to be
lad ies au x ili ary of the Eagles
married at the Catholic
at Mt. Vernon .
Holzer Medleal Center
Church
of the Good Shepherd
She is survived by her
mlscharges, May 13)
hu sband ,
Gal e ;
eight in Beverly Hills, Calif., "if
Eva
Amsbary, Wyman
daughter s, Mr s. Norma they can work it out."
Cramer and Mrs. V irgin ia
Barcus, Deborah Bays,
Smith, both of Mt. Vernon;
Blanche Carney, Violet
Mr s.
Pat
Gre hnell ,
Carter,
Doris Childers,
Freder ickt own ; Mrs. Mary GOSSIP MONGERS
Albert
Finley
, Charles
Cur t l s;' Chilli co th e ; Mr s.
NORWICH, Conn. (UP!) Ruth Ann Whi t t. Point
Gilfilen,
Joseph
Breer,
Lottie
Plea sant ; Mrs . Rebecc a Sen . Lowell Weicker, R· Hively, Junior Johnson,
Sho c kle y·, Schweinfurt , Conn., says public interest in
Ger many ; Mrs. Di xi e Hunt, Richard Nixon 's televised Janet Lambert, Steve Oney,
Columbus; Mr s. V ic t or ia Watergat e
interview Mrs. Samuel Perkins and
Scol eS, Virginia Bea ch, Va. ;
to
"gossip·- daughter, Evan Plymale, Sr.,
fi ve sons, Grover , James and amounts
Kennah Pridemore, Wilodine
Ronald , al l of Mt. Vernon ; mongering " and a "morbid
John, Bladensburg and Gale, fascination with the carcass Riggle , Mrs. Bobby Robie
and
daughter,
James
Jr ., Ma son; three sisters, of a dead scandal."
M r s. Sue Rine, Mt. Vernon ;
Rodgers,
Michael
Sheets,
"Today, while so many are
Mrs. Jessie Fortune and Mrs.
watching
Richard Nixon· and Holly Shepherd, Mary Short,
Laura Dee Harris, both of
Mansfield ; 34 grandchildren, savorlng their warmed..over Ernest Sisson, Sr., Bertha
and five great-grandchi ldren. indignation, the abuses he Snyder, Jean Thienel, Carol
Funeral services w i!l be committed continue to be Willard, Golda Wiseman,
Tuesday ,. 1: 30 p.m . at the
Joshua Wood.
Dowds -Wiggins
Fune r al committed by our govern(Births, May 13)
Home in Mt . Vernon with the ment," he said fn a
Mr.
and Mrs. Michael
Re v. Nolan Turner of - commencement address at
fi ci ating . Bur ial will be in
McCarty,
son, Vinton; Mr.
Mohegan Community College
Mound
View cemetery .
and
Mrs.
Richard Young,
Eag les servi ces will be held Sunday.
son,
Pomeroyi
Mr. and Mrs .
Weicker, a member of
th is .ev_ening at 8.: 30 . Friends
may call today frdm 3 to 5 and the Watergate Committee in Donald Nunley, son, Junction
7to9p.m.
1973, also said Americans City; Mr. and Mrs. Parris
"blinded themSelves to the · Cofer, son, Jackson.
(Discharges, May 14)
sins of Watergate" before
Stella
Bachtel, Mrs. John
ASK TOWED
and during the scandal.
Barry
and
son, MrB. Bert
A marriage license has
Browning
and
son, Judson
been issued to Robert Eugene
NOT
OPTIMISTIC
Clark,
Pearl
Coleman,
Mary
Gros~nick l e; 22, Reedsvill e,
NEW
LONDON,
Conn
.
f::remeens
,
Rev.
William
and Lisa Jo 'Masters, IR,
(UP! ) - Former Black Curfman, Martha · Deck,
Reedsville.
Panther Lpnnie McLucas has Charles Faulkner, Angie Hill,
until Friday to get up $25,000
or go back to jail. He might
ACTIONS FILED
have raised it seven years
An action for dissolution of ago , but ·he's not optimistic
marriage ha s been filed tn now .
Meigs County Common Pleas
McLucas, 31, is free on bail
Court and a divorce granted. while he appeals his
Filing for dissolution was conviction for the 1969 slaying
Donald E. Wood and Debra of fe ll ow Panther Alex
M. Wood, both Rt . I, Rackley to the U.S. Supreme
Pomeroy.
Martin
M. Court.
Connecticut's
Markham was granted a Supreme Court rejected his
divorce from Linda M. appeal and last week his bond
Markham on charges of gross was raised from $10,000 to
neglect of duty.
S3&gt;,ooo.

Area
Death

Charlotte Hinkl e, Tamara
Hoffman, Thelma Houck,
Mrs. Lonnie Hutchinson and
son, Herbert Ja rrell, Wade
Lo uks, Alva Mahaffey, John
Mayes, Homer Mor gan ,
Lemma Niday, Micha el
Racer, Margaret Rinehart,
Ma ry Shropshire , Hershel
Smith III, Robert Vickers,
Unda Walker, Debrh Young.
(Births, May 14)
Mr. and Mrs. Michael
Franks, son, Oak Hill; Mr.
and Mrs. Curtis Chaney, son,
Dexter; Mr. and Mrs. Ronald
Fisher, daughter, Gallipolis.
(Discharges , May 15 )
Mrs. William Bende and
son, Mabel Brewer, Aaron
Bryan, Sandra Davis,
Rebecca Dov enbarg er,
Connie Karschnik, Mildred
McAfee, Hilda McDaniel,
Mrs. Ricky Metheney and
son, Joy Mitchell, Carolyn
Nicholson, Rignal Phillips,
Mrs. Claude Smith and son.
I Births, May 15)
Mr. and Mrs. Jon Karschnik; son, Pomeroy ; Mr. and
Mrs. Lundy Crownover, son,
McArthur ; Mr. and Mrs.
Ralph Ros s, daughter,
Mason , W. Va.

Medal awarded Sgt. Drenner
Chief Master Sgt. Darrell
D. Drenner, whose mother is
Mrs . Lee Drenner of
Pomeroy, has received the
MeritorioiiS Service Medal at
Homestead AFB, Fla.
Sgt. Drenner was cited for
outstanding perfonnance as
Noncommissioned Officer in
Charge of the European
Central Atlantic Reservation
Facility, 1 1945th Com·
munfcatfons Group at Rhein·
Main AB, Germany. He now
serves at Homestead as an
air traffic control superintendent with the t942nd
Communications Squadron, a

Today is Senior Citizens
Day across Ohio and a special

celebration was underway al
the Meigs County Senior
Citizens Center in Pomeroy.

,t . . . ...

.......

Four senior citizens were

MRS. MARY DIEHL OBSERVED her 100th birthday Feb. 25, this year. She resides on
the Harrisonville Road with her two daughters, Rudy Diehl and Mrs. Eugene Atkins in the
original Atkins home place on Harrisonville Road. MrB . Atkins was physically active until
she was 98. Her health now is failing. Presenting the corsage and certificates to Mrs . Diehl
is a long-time friend, Mrs. Elsie Roush , of the local council on aging.

unable to attend and un·
derstandably so- they're all
100 years of age or older.
In recognition of the day ,
two members of the Meigs
County Council on Aging - C.
E. Blakeslee, and Mrs. Lula
Hampton, and Mrs. Elsie
Roush - a retired senior
volunteer - visited the four
aged residents Monday. They
presented each of the three
ladies corsages and the one
gentleman with a vase and
flower. All four received
certificates of recognition
from the local council and the
Ohio Commission on Aging.
The four honorees:

(Continued from page I)
vehicle which hit an em·
bankment on the right, and
flipped over on its top. Mayle
was not injured, but there
was heavy damage to the
auto.
The fourth accident was a
hitskip involving a mailbox
owned by Marcus Johnson,
Rt. 4 Pomeroy. A mailbox
and newspaper tube were
knocked down Sunday about 5
a.m. by a yet unidentified
auto traveling north on SR
143. The incident is under
investigation.
Saturday afternoon· at
approximately 3 p.m. Eric
Thorne, 9, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Pete Thorne, Rt. I
Minersville, was riding his
bicycle on CR 34, near the
intersection of CR 30 in the
Nease Settlement when he
lost control of bike in gravel
and hit a rough spot in the
road and fell, receiving

SAVE

5

•

95
VOL XXVIII NO, 23

GIVES YOU A CHOICE
SO YOU CAN SET THE
CLEANER FOR THE
CARPET NAP.

UPRIGHT

Several resignations were accepted, 13 continuing
teaching contracts· were granted, and a high school band
director was hired when the Meigs Local Board of Education
.
met In regular session Monday night.
The resignations of Bernice Carpenter, long time
elementary teacher-, and Annette Knight, the county''s first
woman school bus driver, were accepted. Both are retiring.
other resignations accepted were those of John Bentley,
wrestling coach; JeaMie Taylor as cheerleading coach, and
Deborah Ohlinger as junior high school girls' basketball coach.
Teachers granted continuing contracts were Eleanor
Blaettnar, Jeanne Bowen, Victor Bumpass, Dorothy Chaney;
Ida Diehl, Charles Downie, Janice Enslen, Beverly Gaul,
William Gibbs, Leo Kennedy, Jr., Maurita Miller, Emalene

abrasions to face .

ROBERT .OURS OF STIVERSVILLE is making his
home at the Russell Nursing Horne in Albany. He
celebrated his tOOth birthday in April. Although confined
to the nursing horne, he is able to be up some. He said last
Winter was his " toul(hest one yet.'' He has a daughter,
Mrs. Mae Van MeterofStiversville, D. E. Blakeslee of the
Meigs Council on Aging presented Mr. Ours a flower and
vase, and a certificate.

Home Furnishings Dept.-1st Floor

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
Is This The Scene

yoll've always dreamed of
yourself in but could
never afford.

come true in

AT ITS BEST

1978 by starting a
Vacation Club now

Come . in today and start a
Vacation Club. Make 49 weekly
payments and Farmers Bank will
make the 50th one for you.
Stop in and be early for that
Dream Vacation next year.

~Farmers Bank
0

a

"

POMEROY, OHIO
$40,000.00 Maximum Insurance
F.o r Each Depositor
Member Federal Deposit
lnsurance Corporation

~

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

TUESDAY, MAY 17. 1977

Teacher contracts are
continued; two retire

Reg. '19.95 ATIACHMENTS
Total Value '84.90

Being more scared than
hurt, Eric started walking to
his grandmother's residence
just a short distance away.
Bill Nease, a neighbor, came
along and gave him a lift. His
mother was called. After she
checked and found no serious
injury, they went to scene to
pick up the bicycle. When
they arrived - no longer than
10 minutes after the accident
- the bicycle was gone.
The bicycle is a 26-inch
Western Flyer, with a red ·
frame and silver fenders·. It is
hoped that someone picked
it up for safe keeping and
will return it to the owner.

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

MRS. LAURA BRADBURY , A NATIVE of Meigs
County born near Langsville, for many years a resident of
Middleport, resides at Veterans Memorial Hospital where
she is given excellent care. Presenting her with a corsage
and certificates Monday was Mrs. Lula Hampton of the
Meigs County Council on Aging. Mrs. Bradbury
celebrated her IOOth birthday in March. She has three
living children, Mrs. Ruth Arnold and Cecil Bradbury of
Mlddlport, and Mrs. Esther Greer of New York and
F1orida.

en tine

at

19

Reg. '64.95

~

MRS. DElLA CARNAHAN of Route 1, Long Bottom,
at 102 is Meigs County's oldest citizen, She lives alone In a
mobile horne, does her own housework, cooking, even
occasional cookie baking. She spends a great deal of her
time reading. She is a lifelong resident of Meigs County
and credits her wonderful neighbors with her ability to get
along so well. She has two living children, a son, Ray, in
Bucyrus, and a daughter, KathrYn, Cottageville, W. Va.
Presenting Mrs. Carnahan with a corsage and certificates
is a long time friend, Mrs. Elsie Roush.

COMBINATION OFFER!
l
UPRIGHT WITH CLEANING TOOlS

FAMILY DINING

Visit Our Salad Bar. Cream Baked
Chicken over Biscuit Vegetable, Hot
Rolls, Coffee. Tea or Milk.

area's homes

.... ;

at The FarmeJS Bank.

9xl2 Unoleum Rugs ••••••••••••••sggs
Sofa Beds •• ~ •••• ,.~· ••••••••••• s11r
19" Color TV ••••••••••••••••• ·•• s39r
3 Pc. Uving Room Suites ••••••• s3ggoo

in hospitals,

CLUB TO MEET
The TOPS Club, OH 570,
wiU honor Miss Springtime
Tuesday evening at the
r egular meeting place ,
Pomeroy Village Hall at 6:30
p. m. Members are to take a
$1 gift for Miss Springtime.
Anyone . interested in TOPS
can call the president, Mrs.
Ellen Rough, 992-$37 for
more infonnation.

Make your Dream

.rnE INN PLACE
TUESDAY NIGHT SPECIAL

Four visited

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

resume.

BEDROOM SUITES •••••••••••••• s14aoo
COMPLETE-TWIN
SIZE BEDS .••••••••••••••••••••• s12goo

Centennarians honored

part of the Air Force Com·
munications Service.
Sgt. Drenner is a 1950
graduate of Pomeroy High
School.

Three ordered
llrN;~;;;;,,,:,., , ,.:,,.,.,, :, ,i';,.,.:,Ji;i;/;1 into state pen
•!•'

·~·-·

By United Press International ·
LUSAKA, ZAMBIA - ZAMBIAN PRESIDENT Kenneth
Kaunda says his nation is in a "state of war" with neighboring
Rhodesia and his armed forces on full alert to repel any
attacks by the white government.
"!have told our boys to shoot anything on sight," Kaunda
told a news conference Monday. Rhodesian Prime Minister
Ian Smith threathened last week through British diplomatic
channels to send his forces across the Zambian border for preemptive strikes against bases of Rhodesian guerrillas.
Tbodesia's security forces, who have made similar forays
against guerrilla cam~ in Mozambique, launched their first
sizable raid into Botswana Monday in pursuit of guerrillas and
clashes briefly with Botswana regulars.
WASHINGTON - THE AVERAGE CONSUMER, shown
In a new study to be increasingly dissatisfied with the quality
of products and services, may be more radical than the
nation 's professional consumer activists. That possibility
emerged In a poll by Lou Harris that showed, for example, that
78 per cent of the public would endorse a short-term ban on
advertising by a company found guilty of false and misleading
advertising. ·
Only 59 per cent of consumer activists ~urveyed in the
same poll endorsed that idea. Harris told a news conference
Monday the poll "shows consumers are disenchanted with the
marketplace on a rather widespread basis.'' They have "paid
through the nose" because of shortages and are mad about
"questionable products and even more questionable quality
and safety," he said.
MIAMI - AN $80 RELAY SWITCH "MISREAD"
electrical signals at a nuclear power plant Monday while
Florida •s brand new fail-5afe system against power failures
was shut down for adjusiments and it blacked out much of
South Florida for seven hours . More than 2.5 million persons in
a IO,OOO.Square mile radius were affected.
·
Scores were trapped in stalled elevators. traffic lights
'failed, causing hundreds of minor accidents. Air conditioning
systems shut down in steamy 81-degree heat. Stores, offices,
faclllries and schools were left without light. Pum~ at some
water purification plants stopped, bringing urgent calls to
conserve water In some areas and warnings to boll tap water in
others.
While firemen and rescue workers raced from one
emergency to another and doctors in one hospital performed
open heart surgery by flashlight, eight persons huddled in an
elevator trapped between floorB at a 32-&lt;itory Miami bank
building.
WASIDNGTON - THE WATER SUPPLY OUTLOOK in
the West ranges from "bleak" to "grim," according to federal
water experts. "The drought outlook in the Western United
States shows llo improvement," said a joint statement Monday
by ell))erts from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric
AdmlnistratiM and the Agriculture Department.
The tbree.to.four Inch rainfall In Southern California
earlier this month had virtually no effect, they said, because it
~
(Continued on page 10)
\1

Pratt and Anna Turner.
.
Tlie board hired Bobby R. Hunt as high school band
direclllr on a one year supplemental contract effective July 1.
Hunt has been serving as acting high school band direCtor
since Dwight Goins, former . director, was named to tbe
administrative staff several months ago. The board approved
paymg expenses for Rtchard Roseberry, teachet, and Bruce
Cottrill, who was recently winner of the state championship in
welding, to take part in the national competition June 22-24 in
Cincinnati.
Approved by the board for graduation was a list of 199
seniors and Cindy Wetteran, a teacher, and Darlene TirnS a
coo.k, were hired as substitutes.
'
F1orence Barrett was granted a leave of absence as a cook
for the remainder of the school year. The board discussed a
request from the Children's Service Board of Athens County in
regard to a child placed in a foster home. The borne is in Meigs
County b\11 the child has erroneously been attending school at
(Continued on page 10)

POLLY KARR MATTHEWS

Polly Karr Matthews

Hole knocked in house
honor
receives
ABW
A
prohatfon for one year.
Terry Brewer, on a charge by auto at Crossroads
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH Selection is based on the
of arson, pleaded not guilty.

Entries in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court today
show Bryan Eugene Bass and
Kim Hayman each have His trial was set for June 13.
Meigs County Sheriff the corner of the Ruspleaded guiliy to six counts of
The divorce action of Ralph James J . Proffitt today sell residence. A hole
.robbery and were sentenced Rose, Sr. from Christy Rose reported damage to a approximately 24" x 24" was
by Judge John C. Bacon to was dismissed and the house by an unidenti- knocked in the siding. The
prison terms of not less than · marriage of .Julius Belle lied auto, a theft at incident · is under in·
two years and not more than Wright, Rt. 2, Pomeroy, and Chester, and the arrest of a Vestigation. Deputies found
lo for each count to run Charles C. Wright, Jr .• Rt. ·1 Minersville man,
pieces of a parking light lens
concurrently. In other en· Middleport, was dissolved.
The hosue, owned by at the scene.
tries:
Barbara Lynn Warden was Wayne Russell, Louisville,
Deputies are investigating
Earl Phelps, who pleaded granted a divorce from Ky.,
the the theft of a mirror and
located at
guilty to carrying a concealed Richard Wilson Warden on Crossroads on SR 124 was connecting anns from a 1973
weapon, was sentenced to not charges of gross neglect of daffillged by an unidentified pickup truck at the Riggs
less than one year and not duty and extreme cruelty. auto. Ed Templeton, who Used Car lot at Chester. The
more than 10, and Wesley She was restored to her lives across the road from the sheriff also reported today
David Qark, pleaded guilty maiden name of King.
Russell house, advised that the arrest of John Runyon,
Apjlointed deputy sherifls sometime between 9 p.m. Rt. 1, Minersville, for
to forgery and was sentenced
to rtot less than six months were Robert Porter, James Sudnay and 6 a.m. Mon· possession of marijuana in an
and not more than five years, Miller, Sam Shaine, Louis day
an
auto
went · amount less lhan 100 grams.
the sentence being suspended Osborne and Joseph Young. off the road and struck He will appear Friday in
and the defendant placed on
Meigs County Court.

Polly Karr. Matthews,
office manager at Plastic
Molder's Supply in Norwalk,
has been selected as Woman
of the Year of the Sandusky
Bay Charter Chapter of the
American Business WOmen's
Association.
The daughter of Mr. 'and
Mrs. Charles R. Karr, Sr.,
Route 2, Pomeroy, she and
her husband, T,edJI!atthews,
reside in Huron.
In October, Mrs. Matthews
will be hOnored ilt the
National Convention of the
ABWA in Salt Lake City,
Utah. Each ABWA chapter
selects one of its members for
this
award
annu a lly.

Pomeroy would use $5 tax to clean streets
Pomeroy Council Monday
night approved 5-l a
resolution that stipulated
money received from the $5
permissive tax would be used
exclusively
for
street
cleaning and tbe purchase of
cleaning equipment to be
· used on streets.
·
Harry Davis, councilman,
voted no on the resolution,
contending the money was
need~d to repair the streets . .
He contended that holes In
streets should be taken care
of first, then clean them.
There was a long discussion
on the issue before it was
brought to vote. It was
pointed out that a referendum
petition on the permissive tax
is being circulated In
Pomeroy.
Ralph Werry, councilman,
said people are misinformed
about the Issue, that people
are of the impression that
council Intends, If the $5

Lou Osborne, councilman,
suggested that residents
c0ntact Mayor Clarence
Andrews or any council
member and get correct
Information. Council feels
that residents, if they fully
understood council's interest
in passing the tax would
understand the action taken.
Mayor Andrews observed
that residents want cinders
on the streets during the
winter months and it takes
money to clean them up, and
If residents want council to
continue to take care of the
streets in the winter they will
have to have additional
revenue.
Councilman Larry Powell
said he thought the tax was a
worthwhile
thing
for
Pomeroy.
Representatives of Rutland
St. met with council and
asked that council close their
end of the street, stating that
permissive tax remains as is Middleport has closed its
and not voted down, to add a section.
city income tax. He said this
Mayor Andrews and Davis
is not true.
agreed to look into the
situation .

Kober! Arms, Pomeroy
Scoulrllaster, asked for a
permit for the scouts to sell
on the streets for the entire
year. Also, to sell popcorn on
June 4. Council suggested
that he contact !he mayor's
secretary for opening dates
and to check with Charles
Legar, fire chief, for the use
of the popcorn machine.
Meeting with council for
the second time in as many
meetings were the cemetery
trustees. Trell Schoenleb said
tHere are several very old
stones at the cemetery that
have fallen over. He asked
that if people who have lots
next to those fallen stones
know who they are to direct
the infonnation by letter to
Dorinda Nardi.
Aaron Kelton asked council
for two shovels and pitch·
forks to be used at the
cemetery. Davis ·said they
would make the pl\rchase.
Kelton also thanked council
for the work it did on Welch
Town Hill.
Powell told council that he

had been informed that H&amp;H
Sanitation had. increased
garbage pickup rates.
Council stated that rates are
not to be inc!j!.!ased unless the
owner of \he sanitation
company, Ba~il Haynes, met
with council for its approval.
Powell stated that he had
been' infonned that rates had
been increased as much as 40
percent. Powell is to in·
vestigate lhe matter.
In other busine"" council
.agreed to check the water
coming down a hill in front of
Carrie Neutzling's garage
and write the people who
have signs at Nye Ave., and
East Main Street, to see if
they can be removed. ·
Councilman Phil Globokar,
asked if council could
possibly check with the C&amp;O
Railroad to repair the streets
at the crossings. It was
pointed out that it is a very
bad situation.
David reported that the
w~ll going up Wyllis Hill is
oWned by Mrs. Helen Lyons is
badly in need of repair and it
would up to Mrs. Lyons to

lit

repair it.
Osborne reported that he
had located a man interested
in taking out a huge tree at
the cemetery for $250.
Osborne also reported that
he is purchasing the building
on the corner of Sycamore
and East Main Street and is
moving his Sears Catalogue
store to th e new location. He
asked council to consider
placing a truck loading and
unloading sign alongside on
Sycamore Street. Council f)lt
this could be done for a
certain period of time.
The mayor's report for
April showed receipts in the
amount of $2 ,276. 70. The
report was accepted. \
· Attending were Mayor
Andrews, Werry , Osborne,
Davis, Globokar, Powell and
Brown, council members,
Jane Walton, clerk , Chief of
Police Jed Webster, Ca pt.
Henry Werry Jack Krautter
and the Rev. William Mid·
dleswarth who opened the
meeting with prayer, and
Phyllis Hennessy, treasurer.

member' s achie ve ment in
her . fi eld of bu siness,
education, participation in
th e associa ti on·, and in
community actlvities.
As a Woma n of the Year,
Polly will enter competition
for the 1977-78 Top Ten
Business Women of ABWA
and 41 Amer ica n Business
Woman of the Year" awards.
Ann oun cement
of
the ·
national award recipie nts
will be made at AB WA's 1977
National Convention, Oct. 2023 in Salt Lake City.
In 1967 Mrs. Matthews wAs
the Woman of the Year of
Rose Capital Chapter IIBWA
in Columbus and as suah was
presented in Las Vegas, Nev.
at the national convention
that year. She ha s also appea red in Outstanding Youn~
Women of America, Corn·
munity Leaders of America
and the National Register of
Prominent American s.
A gradua te of Middleport
Hi gh School, Mrs. Matthew s
had t wo years at Michigan
State Busi-ness University,
plus several da ta processin~
a nd credit union cou rses. Il cr
work exper ience has been as
a cashier at Pontiac Motor
Fede ral Credit Union .
assistant treasurer of Jeffrey
Manufacturing Credit Uni un.
and .at Saxton's in Sandu ·ky,
a dats processiqg se rvke

Following 4 a
shor t
r etireme nt to becorn C' a
housewife after her marriA ge
to Ted Matthews, she began
wotking at Molder's Supply
in Norwalk and was recently
promoted to office manager.
She is responsible fo r all
general business and 'a ccounting funct ions of thr Ohio
Division;
NOWYOU KNOW
Coffee beans are nol reall)
beans, They are the pits uf the
cherrylike fruit of the coffee
plant.

..

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