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                  <text>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.

..

�.

•

2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday , May 17,1977

Tax fonns simplified
By DON PHilLIPS
WASHINGTON (UPI)
Three-fourths or American
taxpayers - the almost :;o
million who use the standard
deduction will face
surprisingly simple tax forms
next April 15 and most will
pay less tax under a bill
awaiting President Carter's
signature.
The legislation given final
congressional approval
Monday contains fewer
specia I interest amendments
than most major tax bills but
still manages to provide
· benefits to · the elderly,
independent oil drillers, a
handful of chicken farmers,
and businesses which hire
more employes this year than
last.
Carter is expected to sign
:the bill, which he requested
as an economic stimulus
measure in January. The
economy began recovering
before the bill could wade
through Congress, however,
and its major feature- a $50
per person tax rebate - was
dropped .
The bill still contains $9.1
billion in tax relief· for
individuals over the rest of
this fiscal year and next, and

$3.2 billion for business.
Tax forms for the 1977 tax
year v.;ill be greatly
simplified. Anyone who uses
the standard deduction will
be required only to determine
total income, then look up
taxes owed on a table that fils
the number of family
members.
Exemptions, credit.&lt;; and
the standard deduction will
he folded into the tables,
requiring no calculations.
All couples and many
single persons who use the
standard deduction also will
get an average $121 tax cut as
the standard deduction is
increased to a (!at rate or
$3,:»&gt;0 for couples and $2,:»&gt;0
for single persons.
·
But singles making more
than $13,750 will be hit with an
average $51 per year increase
as part of an effort to reduce
the ''marriage penalty" the amount of deductions that
two single persons lose when
they marry.
Taxpayers who itemize de·
ductions- aout one in four gain nothing.
Other major items are :
- The elderly and blind get
an extra $35 a year tax credit,
and the elderly, for 1976 only,

also will be allowed to
refigure their r etirement
income credit under the old
system and claim a refund if
it would benefit them.
- Businesses gain a " new
jobs" credit of $630 to $1,806
for each new employe hired
above a base level of slightly
more than last year's
employment, to a max imum
.$100,000 credit.
- Actions taken in the )976
Tax Reform Act to ellmina te
the sick pay deduction and
tighten tax breaks for Americans working abroad, all
retroactive to Jan. I, 1976, are
delayed one year.
:_ Certain chicken farmers
hit with big tax increases
because the 1976 tax reform
bill forced them to change
accounting proc'edures wiU
be allowed another year
under the old procedures .
- Independent oil and gas
producers, hit with a $30
million tax increase in the
1976 tax bill, will be relieved
of the increase for one year .
-All current tax cuts for
both
individuals
and
businesses, due to expire at
the end of the year, are
extended through 1978.

Five.killed by copter's blade
high above New York
NEW YORK (UP!)- A helicopter shuttling travelers
between Kennedy Airport and midtown Manhattan
collapsed on a broken wheel gear atop the 59-&lt;ltory Pan
Am Building Monday, slashing waiting passengers wi\tl
its whirring rotary blades and dumping debris into the
canyons of the city's business district. Five persons were
killed and eight others were injured.
"They were chopped up. Legs, heads - it was
messy," said Fireman John McAllister, one of the first
rescue workers on the scene of the accident.
Three men - sliced by the heavy rotors and pelted
with shards of glass - were killed while waiting to board
the craft for Kennedy Airport. A woman on the street
below was knocked dead by a chunk of falling debris and a
man died later at Bellevue Hospital .
Police identified three of the dead as Enrico Gnaga of
Milan, Italy, and Michael Findlay and Anne Barneoott, 29,
both of New York . New York Airways, which operates the
flights, identified a fourth as David Toomey, address
unknown. The fifth is an unidentified male, police said.
The accident drew Immediate cries of " I told you so"
from critics, including Rep. Edward Koch, !).N.Y., who
fought the opening of the heliport for safety reasons.
The flii;hts, which carry some 1,:»&gt;0 passengers a day
to the New York area's three major airports, resumed in
February amid claims they would give a boost to New
York's sagging economy.

company by Guzek.
"We would have had them
all back today (Monday) if
they (officials' of the firm)
had sat down and talked the
damned thing out," he said.
"There's nothing in the law,
nothing in the contract, to
cover this."

A meeting with miners'
committees seeking to set up
guidelines on fighting in the
mines has been adamantly
opposed by Consol,. The
company said there would be
no talks until the men start
working again.

Peabody Coal's four
surface mines in Coshocton
County were reported in
production and without
trouble.
Guzek said he was unsure
what touched off the deep
miners' walkout but said a
"couple of discharge cases
out there" may be to blame.
He and other union officials
have been invited by the
Consolidation workers to a
meeting next Monday to
specify .details of a back-towork program .

Meigs girls .rally to win

The Meigs Girls fastpitch didn't allow another . run as
softball team staged another she went the distance while
dramatic come-from-behind her teammates caught up.
.. victory last night as they heat
Meigs narrowed the score .
visiting Galllpolls 17·12. to 12-11 by plating six In the
Going Into' the third inning, third, and then won it by
Meigs was behind 12-5, but scoring twice in the fourth,
the winning pitcher, Kim three times in the fifth, and
Grueser, settled down and once In the sixth. Kelly
Burdette led the winners as
she had a perfect five for five
night, getting four singles and
a double and driving in four
runs. Pat Vaughan ·had three
)lits for the winners. Grueser
allowed eight hits, struck out
eight, and walked six.
G. Young led the losers
Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
with a double and two singles
as Pat Maynard took the loss.
Maynard fanned 'tour and
DEAR DR. LAMB - About prescription and your drug·
walked eight while giving up
three months ago 1 con- gist will help you. They come
·fifteen Marauder hits. Meigs
tracted a virus. As a result 1 as 66 milligram tablets and
entertains Wellston Wedlost my sense of taste and contain 15 milligtams olzinc.
nesday.
smell. On the advice of my .zinc is an important part of
physician I began taking your diet. It is commonly
vitamin C tablets and found found in meats. If you happen
these of little or no value. I to have been on a protein
POAGE AILS
am still unable to taste or deficient diet you would be
WASHINGTON (UP!) smell anything and bave more apt to have a dietary
Veteran Rep. W.R. Poage,Dbeen told by some people that deficiency.
Tex., 77, the · House's oldest
I may find this lack of senses · Dr. Henkin has discovered
member and its secondpersisting for a year or more. that saliva normally contains . ranking Democrat in terms of
In your experiences bave a protein which he ca~
service, is undergoing tests
you run across either a gustin. The ·gustin stimulates
for a colon lesion and may
remedy or some encouraging the gro)Yih and development
undergo surgery this week at
news on when 1 can expect to of new taste buds. If you are
Bethesda Naval Hospital.
recover my sense of taste and zinc deficient you don't proPoage 's entry into the
smell •
duce gustin and you don't hospital was disclosed
I am interested in knowing develop an adequate number Monday when he failed to
just wbat happened, how of new taste buds.
attend a committee meeting .
physicians treat this loss and
You might as well try the called for a final vote on an
what can be done in the zinc tablets and see if they omnibus farm bill, which he
future to prevent a recur- will help you. I am not sur- had played a major role in
prised that the vitamin
renee.
Th C shaping.
A person never values all of tablets didn't help you. ere
his senses until he is without is rio earthly reason why they
some of them for as long as 1 would. Your loss of taste lias
have been.
nothing to do with a vitamin
MEETs PREMIER
DEAR READER - You Cdeficiency.
MADRID, Spain (UPI)
will be surprised to learn that
Some people with your pro- Vice-President Waller
1 get many letters asking blerns and a zinc deficiency Mondale met with Premier
about the same or a similar are not able to absorb zinc Adolfo Suarez today .at the
problem. ll is not unusual! or properly. It may take sOine start of a one-&lt;lay visit to lend
such a loss to occur in the time to achieve the best U. S. support to Spain's move
wake of a virus illness.
results. Take your zinc tablet toward democracy.
A few years ago Dr. Robert with your food and you may
I. Henkin , now at • take one tablet with each
THE DAILY SENTINEL
Georgetown University's meal three times a day at
OE\IOTEDTOTHE
Center for Molecular Nutri- first. Once you have given
INTEREST OF
lion and Sensory Disorders, yourself enough tlmelo-al&gt;;_
MEIGS.MASON AREA
CHESTER L TANNEHILL
discovered that zinc deficien- sorb zinc then one tablet a
Exec. Ed.
cies were related to many of day should meet your reROBERT HOEF,UCH
City Editor
these problems. There are quirements. Hopefully if you
Published daily eJJ.:ept Saturday
many causes for a zinc deli- regain your taste you will get · by The Ohio Valley Publishing Com·
any, Ill Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
ciency, including a few cases along with a normal well
~769, Business Office Phvne 992~ cancer, so anyone with balanced diet.
2156. Editorial Phont~ 992-2157.
such a problem should cer- . (A relatively new
Se&lt;.'OOd cU.s.s postage paid at
Pomeroy, Ohio.
tainly see a physician.
medicine, cromolyn sodium,
NatiOnal tu.lvertising repre~rr
Doctors often prescribe helps to prevent asthma att.Hlive W!!rd - Griffith Comp~:~ny ,
Inc., Bottinel\i and Gallagher Oiv .,
zinc tablets for this problem. tacks. For an update on
767 Thlrtl Ave., New York, N.Y.
That will work if the loss of · asthma send 50 cents for The
J0017.
Sut.&gt;ct'ipt.ion rales: Delivered by
senses is directly related to a Health Letter nwnber 8-6. lnt:arrlcr wh~re avbilable 75 cents per
dietary deficiency of zinc. elude a long, stamped, self~k . By Molor Route where carrier
And it may work in your case addressed envelope. Send
service! not available, One month,
$3.25. By tRMil in Ottio and W. Va.,
li ti
your request to Dr. Lamb in
·
CA!e Ye11.r, J22.00; SUI:; months,
if your Ioss 18 a comp ca on care of this newspaper, P.O.
Sll .~ ; Thrt=~ monlh!l , '$7 .00 ;
~ the virus Illness that you
Els~wllere S26.00 year ; Si:c months
have now recovered from. .
Box 1551, Radio City Station,
$13.50 ; Three mvnths. SUO.
You can get zinc tablets New York, NY 10019.)
Sui)S(.'riptic~n !Jric~ inclut.les Sund&lt;~ y
1'imc.r&amp;nlincl.
(Uic sulfate}( without a
--,-Jo------'

"

MANITOWOC, Wis. (UPI) evidence that it works
- Federal officials have against cancer," J. Paul Hile,
seized the contents of the only FDA associate commissioner
known pharmaceutical -for complianGe, said in
factory ln the nation that Washington .
.
''They have never done so.
produces the controversial
The FDA, therefore, Intends ·
anticancer drug Laetrile.
Some 12lons of apricot pits to continue to pursue
the
-legal
- a key ingredient in Laetrile rigorusly
requirement
that
it
act
- were seized Monday by
federal matshals and against the production of this
officials of the Fond and Drug unproven remedy and its
Administration. The pits movement in interstate comwere taken £rom Misinee merce," Hile said.
FDA experts estimated
Research Corp. , sometimes
that one ton of apricot pits
called the U.S.
will yield 190,512 Laetrile
Pharmaceutical Co.
Company officials said they tablets with a street value of
would challenge the seizure about $1 a tablet aod said the
if
in a court battle that could materials seized produce a court test of the processed into Laetrile would bave a street value of
FDA ban on Laetrile.
An FDA spokesman ·in $2.4 million.
Government attorneys filed
Washington said the seizure
was probably the largest ever a complaint against Mosinee
in goverrunent crackdowns Research charging the illegal
on the alleged cancer cure. drug was mthe factory and
"The promoters of Laetrile that the factory contained
have been repeatedly urged illegally labeled drugs and
to come forth with ac~eptabie food items unlit for use.

POLLY.$ POINTERS
Polly Cramer

Hand stitch rickrack
DEAR POLLY - When old red bricks. They do not
using rickrack as trim on a have to be painted or
garment hoW can one sew it revamished as the hair spray
on for easr Ironing? - really does the trick . OLIVE.
;~
· .
UNDA.
..
DEAR OLIVE - Rickrack
DEAR POLI;!Y - I want to
can be put oh either by hand tell those wno bake that
or with machine· stitching. putting water in a measuring
Pin on and · then baste. I cup before putting in peanut
prefer applyipg it with hand butter, shortening, etc. will
stitching fo,r easy ironing. make the contents slide right
Sew each pQ,lnt (just catch out with no mess. - LISA.
with one stitch) on each side
DEAR POLLY- I thought
with the thread going under other readers might like to
the Iabrie from point to point. know that a bag taped to the
If the rickrack is large imd side of the sewing machine Is
wide, an extra stitch can be greatlor catching thread and
made do~ between each scraps that are discarded as
point.- POLLY:
one sews. Also, another gond
DEAR POLLY
My
Pet
hint is to use oven cleaner on
I
Peeve concerns the local stainless steel pots and pans.
supermark~. After they have Remove the handles for hest
advertised an item for sale, to results. - ANGIE.
my chagrin I cannot find it on
Polly will send you one of
the shelves and. I am told it her signed thank-you newswill not be in until afternoon. paper-eo upon clippers If she
Then the clerks do not offer to uses your favorite Pointer,
give me the same price on a Peeve or Problem in her
similar item. I find this column. Write POLLY'S
fru.jlrating as I prefer to shop POINTERS in care of this
in the mornings and do not newspaper.
want to make a second trip
back for that special item. CAROL.
DEAR POLLY - I have
help for the reader who found
her windows coated with a
film that several window
cleaners would not remove.
Kerosene is good for
removing some types of film
and dingy coating but only a By STEVE ~EIN
very, very few drops should UPI Sports Writer
be put in quite warm water
LANDOVER, Md. (UP!) (almost hot to the touch) or Muhammad Ali kept his title
else the kerosene will leave a and Alfredo Evangelista kept
film that is almost impossible his pride and the only people
to remove. Using a bit of who might have lost out on
kerosene in window washing Monday night's world heavywater prevents spotting from weight championship fight
rain drops and keeps flies were those who paid, out of
from adhering to the win, their own pockets, to get in.
dows, thus preventing fly
Fortunately, not many did,
spots .
and l'lome television viewers
When typing the zip code on could shut it off anytime they
envelopes type the zip code in wanted.
It was a charitable affair
red. The numbers will be
easier lor the postal em· from start to finish. Ali was
ployees to read and make kintl eneugh to buy ~.ooo
their work faster and easier. worth of tickets for most of
- N. S.
the estimated crowd of 12,000,
DEAR POLLY - I wonder then he restrained hlmseH
if you or any of the readers from seriously hurting the 22have tried using any kind of year-old phantoril challenger
hair spray on their AR- from Spain.
Some people will argue that
TIFIC!AL plants to erase the
dust and make them shiny Afi can't hurt anyone
again. I have and it r~ally . anymore, but despite his 3:i
works. I also appl1.ed th1s to years and 56 professional
my fireplace that 1s built of lights,, he is still the. fastest

WASHJNGTON (UP! ) - unemployment rate over the created in the private sector
State-by..state allocations of past year, The state under Carter's program.
The program promises to
nearly $4 billion lor new governments were expected
pay
100 per cent of the costs '·
public works projects provide to receive an estimated 8 per
for
construction of local .,
as much as $488 million for cent of the total state
!acUities,
including public ·
projects in New York and no allocation.
.
.
buildings,
water
and sewer
less than $30 million in each · b&lt;Jeral offlC!Bls have not
lines,
industrial
sites and
or 24 states and the District of yet determined how much
roads.
Energy·aavlng
Columbia.
each local municipality will
T he
c 0 m m e r c e receive from the ·state projects will be favored, Mrs.,,
Department,
which allocation, nor have they Kreps said.
The
Commerce
determined the state·bY· chosen the exact projects that
rely
state allocation, promises to will he constructed with the Department will
announce by June 3 the exact money approved last week by primarily on some 22,000
unfilled applications it
amount of money for each President Carter.
received
last year when con.
municipality.
Municipalities will be . inAmong the other largest formed of !heir all~llons gress appropriated an initial
allocations were Florida ,.$154 June 3, officials sa1d. Tl_Je $2 billion lor public works.
Many municipalities com-.•
million; Massachusetts, $132 project selection process will
million; Michigan, $197 continue through Aug. 15,-and plained they were treate&lt;lmillion; New Jersey, $217 all construction will be unfairly when the fll'St $2
billion was alloted. Thus Mrs.•
million· Ohio $151 million· underway by Nov. !5.
Pennsy\vania,' $182 million:
The public works prograll,', Kreps said the new money .
and Puerto Rico $164 .7 a key element in Carters will be alloted in a way to ,
million.
'
economic stimulus package, remedy the inequities of the,.
.•
The money for each state was intended to create 300,000 first allocations.
Although
the
Conunerce
was determined solely on the new jobs in the construction
basis
of
average industry. Another 300,000jobs Department retains the right .
were expected Ui develop as a to disapprove any proposed ,
spinoff from these projects. project.&lt;;, Mrs. Kreps sai4 ,
Commerce Secretary each municipality will be
Juanita Kreps conceded the given an opportunity to
ezactly which
program would not bring' a decid,e
proposed
projects
it intends ,
substantial reduction in
to
build
with
federal
funds.
unemployment. But she noted
The materials seized, these are the only jobs to be
officials said, all had been
shipped illegally in interstate
commerce and should be AtHo~rM~lCenwr
destroyed.
.
Last month two officers of
the firm - A.C. !wen, the
firm's president, and Douglas
Evers, the treasurer - were
arrested after trying to block
federal inspectors from
entering factory. A search
was conducted after the
arrests and ·Monday's
seizures were based on the
results of that search.
FDA officials described
Mosinee Research as the only
plant in the nation known to
be producing Laetrile.
A new concept in both in- health programs.
John Couture, an attorney
creasing
and coordinating
Georgie Isaacs will be the
for the drug firm and part
educational
resources
in
this
coordinator of the Holzer
owner of (he plant, termed
the seizure illgal and said the area will become a reality HLRC in Gallipolis. The
· (tomorrow) center will be open from 8:30
firm would challenge it in Wednesday
with the official opening of a .m. until 5 p.m., Monday
court.
"Their allegations are · the Holzer Medical Center through Friday.
For those health prac'totally unfounded. They Health Learning Resource
persist · in calling this Center (HLRC) in Gallipolis titioners who cannot COI\venlently use the center, a
(Laetrile) a prescription at 10 a.m.
The
Corporation
for
Health
slide-tape
viewer wlll be
drug but this is not a drug,"
Education
in
Appalachia
loan at the
available
for
he said. " They are in
Ohio
(CHI;:AO)
is
Holzer
Center.
Those
who use
contradiction of the law."
establishing
a
cooperative
the facilities will be asked to
Some lawyers contend Laetrile is not a drug but a food system· of seven identically complete a short evaluatlqp
substance and thus can be equipped centers throughout form on any materials they
distributed without FDA the 28 county Appalachian view or borrow and this in·
area of Ohio. These centers formation · will he an .aid .In
regulation.
,
Proponents of Laetrile ex- are open to the general health · selecting new titles.
pressed the h&lt;ll'l' the court care public, designed for use
Each of the seven HLRCs
fight would provide a court as audio-visual, self-study being officially opened thi/1
test of the FDA ban on the ceqlers by individual health week will serve a 30 mil~
practitioners and students in radius and are designed to he
controversial drug .
used by health practltionefs
in ll)llnY fielda as well as
students in health progrllllll!.
The public is invited to
attend the official opening.

Health Learning

Resource Center
will begin activities
Wednesday

Relatives attended Faehnle

memorial services Sunday

Sport Parade
T

By MILTON RICHMAN
UP I Sports Editor

Second cousins from out of
Attending memorial ser·
vices from out ·of town for town were Opal Will Kloes, of
Frieda Faehnle Sunday at the Syracuse, who assisted at the
Rawlings Coats Funeral funeral home, and Lucille
OUTOFWATER
Home In Middleport (through Smith, (both through the Will
BRADY LAKE, Ohio (UPI)
the mother of Frieda line) and close friends from - Brady Lake Village
Faehnie, Viola Will Faehnle, out of town, Lena Mae Fels, Council Monday night
sister of William A. Will, Bainbridge, and Mar)' Ann declared
a state of
father of the following Case, Parkersburg.
emergency in the community
Sending flowers from out of because of a shortage of
cousins), Mr . .and Mrs.
Montgomeroy Will and Mr. town were first cousins Col: water.
and Mrs. Victor Will, Canal C. A. Will, 93; Jacksonville,
The Pottage County
Winchester ; Mr. and Mrs. J . Fla., and Dr. and Mrs. R. G. village, with a population of
J . Kilpatrick, Philip Will, Will, Lexington, Mass. ·
450, has about 30 wells, all of
Columbus; Mr. and Mr11&lt; · Donations made to Heath which are dry. Village of·
Milton G. Will, Canal Wfn- United Methodist Church · ficials said the community's
ches(er; Mrs. Betty Louks, where Frieda was a lifelong water table has been dropColumbus ; Mrs. Louis member were by Lena Mae ping for several months and
Fisher, Greenfield, Ohio; Fels, $25; Mary Will that no one knows why.
William L. imd John Will, Kilpatrick and Mrs. James Authorities have been trying
local; and Mr. and Mrs. Weber, each $10.
to ·determine for several
Interment was in Mt. months where the water is
Donald Marsh (via Albert
Faehnle, Frieda's father of Hermon Cemetery, Texas going but without success. • ·
Community, Chester Two.
Cincinnati).

Ali wins, retains title

Ali's unanimous decision

was so lopsided, not one of the

three officials gave the
challenger more than four
rounds.
UPI
gave
Evangelista only two rounds,
the seventh and 12th. Using
Maryland's liveiJOlnlmust
scoring system, referee
Harry Cecchini gave Ali a 7165 margin while judges Terry
Moore and Ray K!ingmeyer
each scored it 72-&amp;4 for Ali.
UP! had it 73-&amp;2 for Ali.
Ali owes liis victory to the
fact that he trained hard the
last six weeks, shedding 20
pounds to come in at 221Y•. If
he had not been in shape, the
game but ineffective :lllll\\pound Evangelista might
have caught him with one of
his wild left hooks.
Ali never really tried hard
enough. Evangelista never
threatened him. Anytime Ali
wanted he seemed able to
break through the slower
ChalleiJiler's defenses with
quick jabs and capable of
entting him away. But the

few times he jolted
Evangelista, the champion
backed off.
Ali surprised me," Evanw
gelista said through his English-speaking interp'eter. "I
didn'\ think he'd go 15 rounds.
I thought he'd get tired. I
aaked him: 'Why do you run
so much? • I wanted him to
fight, but he wouldn't do it. I
was never hurt. He hit me
hard, but never hurt me."·
II

"l'm

very

happy,"

Evangelista said. "I proved
to the American audience I
am a good fighter and worthy .
of fighting Muhammad Ali."
If Evangellata was right
about Ali, It wu a sad
commentary on the decline of
one of the slickest ring
craftsmen boxing has
known.
Ali put It into penpectlve.
"I'm :!$-years old and I
danced 15 rounda," Ali said.
"It's a tniracle.11

••

By BilL MADDEN
UPI Sports Writer
Less than six months ago.
Wayne Garland was signing a
$2.3 million contract with the
Cleveland Indians and Geoff
Zahn was on baseball's junk
pile "praying for one more
chance."
The two pitchers' roads
crossed Monday night, but as
has been the case all season,
it was Zahn, cast off by two
previous clubs, who made the

•

LANDoVER, Md. (UP!) - No other man in the history of
boxing has ever done as much for it as Muhammad Ali, and
now if he's anywhere near as smart as he says he is, he should
do something for hlmseU.
He should quit. The sooner, the better.
His performance at the Capital Centre here Monday night
against Alfredo Evangelista, an unintimidated and aspiring 22year-old Uruguayan heavyweight who now makes his home in news.
Spain, was, as Ali put it, "not bad fora 35-yearoid man ."
The 36-year old southpaw,
' He was right about that There was no question )Jut that he signed by Minnesota as a free
earned the unanimous !:H-ound decision he was awarded by agent last winter, hurled the
rj!leree Harry Cecchini and the two judges, Terry Moore and Twins to an S.l victory over
Hay Ktingmeyer. But he had to reach back to achieve it.
C.1eveland for his sixth win of
' His manager Herbert Muhammad never has puUed any the season against just one
punches with Ali. He has always been honest with him, telling loss.
him straight out when he thought he was wrong as well as when
" I wasn't sure, but I felt I
he thought he was right. Generally, any time Herbert could still pitch,'' said Zahn
Muhanunad tells Muhammad Ali something, he listens, and who asked the Chicago Q.Jbs
listens closely.
for his release after spending
Ali's manager was waiting for the champion ill the interview last season 'in the minor
area of the arena after the victory over Evangelista and one leagues. "It was my belief \he
· newsman asked him whether he ever talks with Ali about Lord gave me the talent Ill
retiring.
pitch and I didn't want to go
' "Oh, yes,"' he answered.
out that way. I prayed for one
' "How recently?"
more ch3nce.
·. "Well," said Herbert Muhammad, "it could be as recent as
Zahn, who gave up seven
tonight."
hits in hurling his third
He wasn't joking, either, although an Earnie Shavers inatch
at Madison Square Garden within the next 90 days is
· practicaUy all set, after which Ali wants to try "one more"
, against the winner of an eventual Ken Norton.Jimmy Young
fight.
Sitting on the edge of a rubbing table in his dressing room
after the fight, All was informed of what his manager had said
The Meigs Marauders 'had
only 20 minutes before.
their
win streak snapped at
"Herbert Muhammad says he feels you should quit," Ali was
six
last
evening when the
told.
visiting
Ironton Tigers
"He's right," was the ~esponse. "! gotta get out. If the movie
does the 30 million I expect it to, I'd quit next week . You.know, downed the Se~tionai champs
&amp;-2. The Tigers got eight hits
this could be my last fight ."
- The way he said it, Muhammad Ali meant every word. Right off four Meigs hurlers as
~t that moment, anywy. Ten minu.tes later, he changes his Coach Dale Harrison 's
mound crew was perhaps
mind.
.
The movie he's talking about is ''The Greatest," due to he saving a little bit for today's
district contest against
released shortly and starring guess who•
"It'll be bigger than 'Rocky,' Ali said. "They told me I'm a Washington Court House .
Ironton took a 1.0 lead in
natural as an actor. I told them why shouldn't I be, I've been
the top of the first when the
·acting all my life."
. Ali wasn't acting, however, when Evangelista, already lead-of! batter was sale on an
dressed in his street clothes, came into his dressing room with error by the left fielder. After
an out, the next two Tiger
fils handlers after losing the fight.
"' The champ Immediately moved off the rubbing table and batters stroked singles to
embraced the man he had beaten. Evangelista, who speaks no produce that lead they !lever
English and understands little of it, put his arms around Ali in relinquished. They ' vion it in
the second as they got two
gesture which was equally sincere.
·. "He gave me as much trouble as any mali I ever fought," Ali more tallies. Brickey led off
with a single, and then
,tOld one of the men who had come in with Evangelista.
"He's young yet, he should keep fighting,'' said Ali, con· Howard and Royal followed
tlnuing to address the man who interpreted for the challenger. with two straight doubles.
" Evangelista nodded his thanks and left.
The Tigers added an in·
"' "! honestly thought it was close," 'said Ali.
surance run in the sixth.
: Actually, it wasn't. Ooly the referee gave Evangelista as
Meigs plated both of its
:flinch as four rounds; both judges gave him three, which is the runs in the bottom of the
seventh as Ray A_ndrews
same way I saw it.
·
., · Ali seemed to be rather pensive in his dressing quarters .
cracked a single and ad... "I showed 'em 1 could still dance for for 15 rounds, didn't I?" vanced on an error. Pitcher
.Jle said. "l punched all right, too."
Tim Ebersbach smashed a
.. He came out of the fight marked up more than Evangelista, liner that rolled to the fence
:however. There were small swellings above both his eyes from and before anyone could get it
'\he punches he had absorbed, "nicks," Ali called them.
back to the infield , the
" "When I fought Norton and Frazier I didn't have these Marauder hurler had an
;)'licks," he said, running his righthand over them.
inside the park home run.
-. · From time to time, people would come into the dressing · Williams went the distance
room to shake hands with him. · Ali would offer his hand but and picked up the win for the
. 'wouldn't extend it fully because it hurt him too much to shake Tigers as he exhibited ex·hands properly.
. cellent control by Ianning six
He knows he should quit and that he'll have to sooner or and walking no one. Lawless
later. In the end, it turns out that Muhammad Ali, who calls led the hitting department
himseU "The Greatest" is no different tban any of the rest. with a double and two singles
They all say "one more" until there simply isn't anymore.
while Brown had a single and

lour Yankee errors.
Red So• 8, Angels 7:
Dwight Evans, Butch
Hobson and Denny Doyle hit
successive singles with two
out in the lith inning to
provide Boston with the
victory . California tied the
game with lour runs in the
ninth, highlighted by Gil
Flores' bases~oaded triple.
Jim Rice had a two-run
homer and George Scott a
pair of solo shots lor the Red
Sox.
Mariners 8, Orioles 3:
Jim
Palmer 's
· unaccustomed wildness (live
walks) and singles by Bill
Stein and Craig Reynolds
· allowed Seattle to score four
runs in the second inning and
go on to beat Baltimore. Lee
Stanton sealed the victory for
the Mariners with a bases·
loaded double in the seventh .
Phlllies 10, Dodgers 6:
A's S, Yankees 4:
Garry Maddox singled
Wayne
Gross,
Earl
Williams
and
Manny home two runs to key a five·
third inning as
Sanguillen each drove in a run
pair of runs, while rookie Philadelphia won its fifth
sensation Bob Lacey hurled 3 straight game and seventh in
Z-3 shutout innings lor his their last eight. Rookie Barry
first major league victory as Lerch hurled seven innings
Oakland took advantage of and struck out the side with

complete game, looks like the
bil(gest fr"" agent bargain of
them all right now.
Carew supplied the support
Zahn needed by driving home
two runs w1th two singles and
a
double .
Garland ,
meanwhile, never made it
past the fourth inning being
tagged lor the first three
Minnesota runs as his record
slid to 1-5.
The victory was the
seventh str a ighl for the
Twins who lead the AL West
by' two games.
Elsewhere in the American
League·, Oakland drubbed
New York , ll-4, Boston topped
California, 11-7, in 11 innings,
and
Seattle
downed
Baltimore , 8-3 . In the
National League, it was
Chicago over San Diego, 9-&lt;i,
and Philadelphia atop Los
Angeles, 11)-&lt;i.

nmner.s oo second and third
in the fifth to gain his filth

-

-

.

~... :Resume practice runs

,

;: for Indianapolis 500
•. INDIANAPOUS (UPI) _,Just 10 drivers who have not
. yet made the 33-&lt;:ar lineup for
. the May 29 Indianapolis 500~Jllile a11to race made practice
runs Monday and one wiped
uilllt his car in a 130 mile-per-

hour crash.
A veteran track o.bserver
said rookie Gary Irvin, West
Lafayette, Ind., made a
"basket case" of his $100,000
racer when he lost control
coming out of the fourth turn

'"

.;; Houston .to host sixth game
,.
By GARY TAYLOR
when Houston came back

UPI Sports Writer
HOUSTON (UP!) - The
Houston Rockets host the
Philadelphia 76ers tonight in
the sixth game of an NBA
semifinal playoff series that
has changed its tone.
" . At one time early in the
"'Series, players on both teams
uttered nothing but respect
for each other. Now there are
-:·slurs.
1
' They have to wonder now
1":•
:..if Uley can win the series,"
, Said Rockets guard Calvin
Murphy.
~:~ Philadelphia's
George
~ McGinnis, however, rebutted
... ,that his team had not lost
· control following a blown 118.. 115 Joss Sunday.
,_ ' "We're a better club," he
; S&amp;id. "There's no doubt in my
" mind we can win. I think we'll
·. beat them Tuesday."
A sellout crowd of 15,676
::··was assured when the last
: ·, 9,000 tickets were sold within
".,110 minutes of the time the
- Sununit box office opened
"" Monday. Some persons who
. - got in a massive line after 6
, a.m. did not get tickets.
"' Such a crush, the first in the
12-year hi!tory of the
Rockets, was .stimulated
~

from a l7iJOint deficit in
Sunday's fifth game to stave
off elimination. The namecalling between opposing
players did not hurt the gate,
either.
Moses Malone, the quietest
gentle giant in the -game,
even got Into the act in
answering a published
criticism aimed by 76ers
second-string forward Steve
Mix.
Mix reportedly said
Malone, the NBA record
holder for offensive rebounds
in one season, had limited
ability and was "terrible" on
defense .
Said Malone: "How can he
(Mix ) play defense when he's
on the bench?"
More than likely it will be
Malone's rebounding, the
outside shooting of Sixers'
guard Doug Collins and the
foul situation of each team's
frontline players that will
dictate the outcome.
The seventh game, if
be , · in
needed ,
will
Philadelphia Thursday, The
championship series with the
Portland Trail Blazers will
open Sunday in either
Philadelphia or Ho115t on.

'

the wise old owl says

win.

Cubs 9, Padres 6:
Gene Clines went 4-for-4
and drove in five rwts in
leading Chicago to its seventh
win in the last eight games.
Clines had a two...un homer, a .
two-run single and an RBIdoubie. Jim Todd, the third of
four Chicago pitchers, · was
the winner.

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GMAC FINANCING

Triplett (LP), Smith (2) ,
a triple.
The lour Meigs hurlers Browning (5 ), Ehersbach (6)
gave up live walks and and Johnson.
fanned a like number.
B'esides Ebersbach's homer,
Pratt had two singles arid
Mike Wayland had a double.
Greg Smith and Andrews had
a single each to round out the
Marauder hitting. Meigs is
now 8-12 on the yea r and has
two league games remaining,
the dates being detennined
by the results of the district
tournament.
I
122 001 0--&lt;i 8 4
M
000 000 2- 2 6 1
Williams and
Lowe.

it without proper Insurance to

losing

2 DR. HT

Ironton is 6-2 winner

I

hea'i)"Welght alive, if only for
30 seconds a round. That'~ ·
how he fights now, saving his
strength by going into various
defensive
poses
and
mounting only brief attacks
at the start and finish of each
round.
Those short blitzes of Ali's,
however, can still rattle the
brain of most fighters and it
was a credit to Evangelista
that he iasted the fuU · 15
rounds, suffering only a
bloody nose in the sixth and
some puffineSB below his
eyes.
Evangelista, a poor man's
Joe Frazier, showed be deserved to be ranked among
the world's top heavyweights,
who are notably lacking in
distinction at the moment,
but be had as. much chance of
catching Ali as a child
running after a greased pig.

Garland drops fifth tilt

'

'

Laetrile plant seized

6,ooo miners stay out
BELLAffiE, Ohio (UP!) Six thousand workers
remained off the job Monday
at six Consolidation Coal Co.
mines in eastern Ohio and
neighboring West Virglitia
and more than 400 stayed
away from a Peabody Coal
Co. deep mine in Coshocton
County because of what were
termed . unrelated local
problems.
United Mine Workers
District 6 Pre;~ident John
Guzek said he could not tell
when the men would go back
or whether workers at other
mines would walk out in
sympathy,
A fight between a foreman
and a miner at the firm's
Franklin 25 pit is behind the
Consolidation Coal dispote.
The foreman hit the worker
and · as a result was
suspended for several days.
Miners, however, claimed a
similar offense . by one of
th.em would have resulted in
dismissal.
The Consolidation work
stoppage was blamed on the

MillionS spread

3-Tbe Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, Way 1'1, t977

992-5342
Pomeroy
Open Evenings 'til6:00
Till p.m. Sat.

lar;;;~-~~Gr~~i;:;;s ~
INSURANCE AGENCY, INC.

Advertise Your Service

Under Business Services

For Only

SEO standings
SEOA~

TEAM

BASEBALL
W l R OR

Log'a n

13 0 113 39

Gallipoli s
Ironton

Wellston
Athens

Mei gs
Waverly
Jackson

B 4 90
7 6 71

6 8

.s

7

73
51
76 89
58

92

4 8 51 65
4 9 58 89
4 9 58

77

TOTALS

51 51 575 575
Monday 's results =
·

Gallipoli s 10 Athens 5
Ironton 6 M eigs 2
·
Jackson 6 Wellston 4

•3ooo

per month
I'

·.. .. . .. s Servtce
. s
·..' B·ustnes . ·. ·.
.

Today 's games :
Athens at Waverly
Gallipolis at Ironton

Wednesday 's games :
Meigs at Logan
Jackson at Gallipolis

Thursday's game :
Meigs at Alhens

1'oo\

Nob it summit Road
Rt . 1

Middleport, o.

TOURNEY SET
Strout Realty softball team
of Gallipolis will sponsor' a
Men and .Women 's Softball .
Tournament June 10, 11 and
12. Entry lees for men is $50
and two registered softballs;
lor women $30, and two
registered softballs. For
adijitionai information
contact Tom Meadows at 614446-8584.

and hit the retaining wail
International League
twice - in the main stretch
United Press International
ahd at the entrance to the pit
W l Pet. GB
area. Irvin was unhurt.
Pawtucket
19 10 .655
One of the 10 non .qualifiers Charles ton
16 11 .593 2
15 12 .556 3
searching for the qualifying Tidewa1er
13 12 .52Q 4
speed Monday was New Richmond
Rochester
13 14 .481 5
Yorker Janet Guthrie, who is Syracu se
11 15 .423 6lf1
trying to become the first Toledo
13 18 .41 9 7
9 i7 .346 81f1
woman to gain a "500" Columbus
Monday's Results
starting berth.
6, Cha r les ton 2
But Guthrie, like the R ichmond
Toledo 5, Columbus 0
others, .was nowhere near the
Rcx::h~ster 4, Syracuse '1
188-to-189-mph range most
Pawtucket 7, Tidewa ter 0
veterans consider the safe
level! or this year's Memorial
weekend classic.
She ran a circuit of 179.7 on J ohnny Rutherf.ord, Fort
' Worth,
Tex.;
Gordon
the 21'..-mile oval.
"I still feel very confident Johnco ck, Phoenix, Ariz. ,
that with the equipment we and Bobby Unser ail also ran
have that we'll make the above 190.
·Drivers not yet in this
show,'' said Guthrie, who has
year
's million-dollar race
been working on handling
who
were out on the track
problems since she drove her
practicing
Monda'y included
car into the wail a week ago.
Guthrie,
rookie
Rick Mears,
The dozen drivers who
Cali!:,
who
qualified last weekend con· Ventura,
tinued as the speed leaders completed a ''re£resher" test,
Monday, topped by AI Unser, and veterans John Mahler,
Albuquerque, N.M. at193.548 Newport Beach, Calif., and
mph. Defending champion Bob Harkey of Indianapolis.

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4 -The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, May 17, 1m

SUPER
MARKET

Seattle Slew in top shape
BALTIMORE (UPI) Kentucky Derby winner
Seattle Slew has arrived in
Maryland and is in top
condition for Saturday's
Prealmess stakes at Pimlico.
Owners Mickey and Karen
Taylor said Monday their
prize colt had a smooth trip
from New York to Baltimore
and is prepared for the
second leg of the Triple
Crown.
Run Dusty Run , the second
place finlsller in the Derby,
also arrived Monday.
Pimlico officials also announced Monday that Reg a I
Sir becomes the seventh
probable starter in the
$150,IJOO.added race. Other
probable contenders already
at the track are J .0. Tobin,
Sir Sir, Counter Punch and

Cormorant.

The exact size of the
Preakness field is not yet
certain. The trainers of
Sanhedrin and For the
Moment said they ·have not
decided whether they will run
the horses .
Pimlico officials said
another Preakness possiblity
is Hey Hey J .P., who is
trained by John Campo.
Campo's entry last year was
Play the Red which finished a
surprising second.
J .O. Tobin, who has never
run against Seattle Slew, will
benefit from the services of
WiUie Shoemaker, who won
the Preakncss in 1963 and
1967.
Comorant had his winning
streak snapped by Iron
Constitution in the Withers

t,

Blue Devils drop
•

Bulldogs 10 to 5
Coa ch Jim Osborne's
Gallipolis Blue Devils
strengthened their hold on
second place in the
Southeastern Q,.h}o League
baseball standlilgs Monday
night by turning back visiting
Athens 10-5 in a makeup
contest on Memorial Field.
The victory left GAHS 12-li
on the year and 8-4 Inside the
league. Athens dropped to 12·
16 overall and 5-7 In con·
terence play.

KC reserves
too· much for
Southemers
, CHESHirtE :._ Led by the
hlttlng and pitching of Von
Taylor, the Kyger Creek
Reserves
downed
the
Southern Reserves last week
11).3. A big third inning In
whl&lt;:h the host Bobcats plated
.,..ven runs proved too much
.&lt;or the 'llsltors to overcome.
Th• hlghllg)1t of that inning
was a three-run homer by
Taywr that left the hosts in
front~·
Taylor fanned eight and
walked just three while
giving up just oix hlt&amp;.
Beside• Taylor's homer,
Smith and Fife each had two
singles for the winner•.
Jim O'Brien went the
distance and took the loss as
he yielded just seven hits,
fanning olx and walking
three. Dwight Hill and
O'Brien each had two singles
to lead Southern while Tim
Brinager had a
double.
Southern ' committed four
erroro to help Kyger.
s
000 12()..- 3 6 4
K

107 02G-10 7 I

O'Brien and Brinager.
· Taylor and Smith.

Today, the Blue Devil•
travel to Ironton for a
makeup contest. Wednesday,
Gallia Academy winds up its
1977 campaign at home
against Jackson in a makeup
contest.
Monday, Gallipolis banged
out 10 hits off three Bulldog
hurlers to post its second win
of the season over Athens.
Brent Johnson started and
hurled the first five rungs for
GAHS. He was relieved by
Art Foglestrom in the sixth
inning. Johnson was credited
with the win.
Athens picked up eight hits
off the two GAHS pitchers.
Kev Goldsberry slarted.for
Athens. He was relieved by
brother Mark Goldsberry In
the third Inning. Gary Bentley relieved Mark Goldsberry In the fourth Inning.
Athens held a Hl lead going
into the third inning. GAHS
plated four runs in the bottom
of the third, four more in the
fourth and added single runs
in the fifth and sixth Innings.
The Bulldogs plated a
single run In the fifth and
added three more in the sixth.
The Blue Devils had four
extra base hits. Gary Swain
belted a two-run homer in the
fourth. Art Foglestrom had a
solo blast in the sixth. Mark
Dobson and Jim Harris each
had a double.
·
Brent Johnson , Swain,
Terry Wall and Harris had
lwo hits apiece for GAHS.
John Schanzenbach led
Athens atlack with three hits.
Schanzenbach had a fifth
inning homer and Kev Golds·
berry a three-run shot in the
sixth.
Linescore :
Athens
100 013 0- 5 8 4
GAHS
004 411 X-10 10 3
Batteries : GAHS
Johnson (WP ), Foglestrom
(6), Harris, Mink (5). Athens
- K. Goldsberry (LP), M.
Goldsberry (3), Bentley (4) &amp;
May, Tinkham (6).

GAHS wins SEOAL
tennis championship
Coach Larry Prater's
Gallipolis Blue Devils captured the school's first
Southeastern Ohio Athletic
League tennis championship
Monday during the fifth
annual conference tournament at Evans Field, Rio
Grande.
Five teams took part in the
1977 tournament which lasted
approximately 12 hours.
. Final tally showed the Blue
Devils with 40 points,
defending champion Jackson
With 35, Ironton 28, Wellston
14 arid Logan 14.
Each member of the
championship team received .
Individual trophies and the
school re ceived its flrsl
SEOAL championship
trophy.

Now !Sol on lbe season,
CGacb Pnater's Blue Devils
bcpu preparallooa for the
Cl.. • · AA Dl•trlct tour·
umeal, scheduled Friday at
Delli ware.
It waa a year of "rags to
riches" for the Blue Devil
netters. In 1976,- the GAHS
wu winless in nine regular
!1!8100 matches, but finished
third In the conference
tournament.
Only regular season loss
thiS spring \\·us tt Li · r •. r;,5
league champion Jackson.
Ia •taaln play, Gallla' s
Mart CoraeU, Mike Cooaen
ud Steve MaiiiDI laDled five
pe1t1t1 apiece. Bob Kt..U.x,
NeD Puderxast and Nate
11Mmu each bad four points.
J

'

'

l.er:(,, ,ilo,

Batting

!basea on 65 at batsl

National League
G AB . R . H . Pet.
Prker , P II
31 129 15 51 .395
Smns , St. L
31 106 '23 41 . 387
MlhWS , Atl
'J2 16 15 29 . 382
Scott , SI.L
28 11
8 26 .360
Vlntne. Mil
26 103 11 37 .359
Trillo, Chi
30 104 19 37 .356
Smi th, LA
31 109 J'O 38 .349
Jhnsn, Hou
'26 69 10 24 .348
Rose. Cin
J2 121 26 41..339
Winfld , so
37 150 30 so .333
Am e r ica n LeagtJe
GAB. R H. Pet.
Bai!r , Tor
26 10 1 20 38 .J7li
Crew,Min
J51J8 2351 .370
AWds , Tor
28 101 14 37 .366
Page , Oak
34 129 26 &lt;~6 357
Grubb . Cle
70 65 5 '23 .354
Kelty, Bat
20 65 8 '23 .354
Fisk , Bos
30 105 n 36 .343
Brlsn , Bos
29 176 17 43 .341
Bstck, M in
32 121 24 41 .339
Velez , Tor
30 91 16 32 .330
H ome ~uns
National L ea gue : Cey , LA 12;
Smith , LA and Kingman , NY 8 ;
Burrough s, Atl, Ferguson, Hou ,
Carter , Mtt, Schmidt, Phil and
Win f ield. so 7.
American League : Zisk , Chi
and Gross, Oak 10 ; Bonds . Cal,
Hisle, Mlnn , Page and • W it .
Iiams, Oak and Horton . Tex B.
Runs Baffed In
Nat ional League : Cey . LA .aO ;
Winfield , SO 36 ; Parker : Pitt
31; BurroughS, Atl 29 : Slm ·
mons, St.L 27.
American League : Rud i. Cal
35 ; H isl e, Minn 32; Velez, Tor
30; Zlsk , Chi 29; Pa 9e, Oak 26 .
Stolen Bases
National League : Lopes , LA
and Taveras, Pill 16 ; Moreno,
Pitt 15; Cabett and Cedeno, Hou
12 ; Concepcion , Cin 11 .
American League : Remy, Cal
11 ; Patek, KC 1'1; North , Oak
11 ; Bond s, Cal and Norr is, Clev
10.
Pitching
Most Victories
National league: R . Reuschel ,
Ch i, and Forsch. St .L 6· 1; Ra \J
and Sulton , LA and Denny, Sf.L
S-0: Rhoden , LA and Carlton .
Phil .5· 1 ; Ler ch . Phil 5· 2: Ba rr,
SF s.J ; Burr is•.Chi 5·4.
American L ~ag ue : . Tanana.
Ca l and Zahn,
Minn
6. J;
Gar vin, Tor 5·1; Brett, Chi and
Torre z, NY 5·'1 : Palmer, Bait
and Col born , KC s.J; Ryan. Cat

5·A.

WE ACCEPT FEDERAL FOOD STAMPS

DEALERS PLEASE I

MIDDLEPORT. 0.
We Resewe the RiRht To Limit Quantities

CORNER MILL &amp; SECOND ST.
We Accept Federal Food Stamps

Linescores

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

FRESH &amp; LEAN

GROUND
BEEF6 91/t&gt;

LB.

American League
Cleve
100 000 000- 1 7 3
Minn
11 0 110 04JC - 8 11 I
Garland, .Monge {4) , Waits ,
(8) and Fosse ; Zahn (6· 11 and
Wynega r . LP - Gar land (1 ·5).
HR- Cieveland, Mann ing {1}.

MINUTE
STEAKS

NO

WASTE

BUCKET
STEAK

GROUND
CHUCK'

Los Ang
300 100 010- 6 9 1
Phlla
105 100 OJx- 10 14'1
John , Sosa (3), Downing {6)
and Yeager ; ~erch, Reed (8)
and Boone . WP - lerch (5 1J.
LP- John (3 ·'11 HRs- Los An.
geles. , Smilt1 {8), Monday (6).

89~

GROUND
ROUND
LB.

N .Y
00220000G-4 94
Oaklnd
501 001 lOx- B 12 I
Holtzman, Tidrow (1), L yle
181 and Healy ; MediC h , Lacey
(4J. Giusti (8l and Wi ll iams.
WP - Lacey ( J.QJ . LP- HOftz .
man &lt;2·31 . HRs Oakland.
Gron ( 10 1, Wi ll ia ms (8).

HOME MADE

HAM
SALAD

LB.

99~

CANDY BAR SALE
HOLLYWOOD, MILKSHAKE, BUTTERNUT,

CATSUP

3

140Z. •
BOffiES

1 00

10

.

w£J~JsS .~~ ~~~~

CANDY
BARS

•

l-¥West

W. l
Pet. GO
26 8 .765

I

Last night the Eastern Ci nci
.438 11
BANQUET _ WHOLE
Fr;,n
l14J 18
19 .406
12
Eagles played host to tough San
HoUston
13 20 .394 12112
Symmes Valley and came out
Son Diego
,14
23 .294
.378 13'h
10 14
16
equal on hits (12 for each Atlanta
Monday's Results
team), but lhe crew of Coach Chi ca go 9. San Diego 6
Larry Heines fell by the score Ph ila 10, Los Angeles 6
Today's Probable Pitchers
'
of 18-7. Six Eastern errors
Son b~~~~";~,i~l~nTI 3 11 ol
2 LB. BOX
.
helped .the Vikings had
Chicago (Bonl'!am .4 .2 ). 2·: 30
second place in the SVAC.
The visitors almost ran
Montreal (War then 1· ll at
m.
Atlanta
(L ean 1. 1) , 7: 35p .m .
away with it In the first as p.
Los Angeles (SuttOri 5·0) at
FARM BRAND
they scored six times. Phfladelphia ~Chr ist enson 3·3&gt;.
Eastern committed three 7:35 p .m.
Fran c; isco (Montefusc o 2.
errors in that first frame, but 5 ) San
at New York (Koosman 2·4) ,
the big blow was a three-run 8:05p .m.
Pittsburgh ( Candelari a 4,0 ) at
homer by Malone .
"Cinc innat i
(B ill ingham
4·2) ,
Eastern came back with '8:05p.m .
2 LB. BAG
St . Lou is CRa smussen 2· 4l at
two runs in the bot(Qm of the
Houston {Ban nis ter J.J ), 8:35
second alter the Vikiilgs, had p .m .
Wednesday 's Games
picked up another tally in the
at ,Cincinna ti
TORTINIOS
top of the Inning. Rusty Wigal Pittsburgh
Los A nge les at Phila, night
singled, Steve Little doubled, San Fran at N ew York, night
l at Atlanta , night
SAUSAGE, CHEESE AND PEPPERONI
and Steve Trussell stroked a Montrea
St Louis at H ouston, night
single that drove both runners home.
American League
Symmes won it In the third
East
W. L
Pet. GB
as they plated six more runs. Baltimre
t7 12 .586
Estep had the big blow, a Boston
18 13 \. 581
double, and Eastern pitchers New York
Milw
t7 17 .500
'1 1!2
18 14 .563
lh
gav~ up four walks. Eastern
Detroit
14
18 .438 4lh
14 20 .412 511~
came back with two In the Toron to
RAID REG. 12.13
Clevelnd
12 19 .387 6
fourth and three In the
West
seventh, but It was all over.
W. L
Pet. GO
HOUSE AND GARDEN
Minn
23 11 .676
~~~~~
Eastern pitchers walked Chicago
20 12 ,625 2
eleven and struck out four Te xa~
16 14 .533 5
17 16 .515 5lh
while winning pitcher Miller Kan City
Oak l&amp;nd
17 17 .500 6
fanned three and walked just Calif
15 20 429 81!2
12 27 .Joe I J1t 2
two . Besides Malone's Sea ttle
' s Results
homer, Galloway had a MinnesoMonday
ta B Cleveland 1
tlouble and two singles while Oak land 8, N ew York A
131h
Boston 8, Ca l if 7, ll lnn s .
Taylor had a double and Seattle
a, Ballirrlore 3
single for the winners.
Today's Prol:lal:lle P.'ilchers
CAN
(All Times EDT)
Joe Kuhn led Eastern .with
New Y ork (Hunter 1.2) at 1"'"="-"
a triple and two singles while
Oakland
3·3). 4:30 Q.3J
p.m . al
Toron to(Blue
(Jefferscn
Steven Little had a double
Mi
lWaukee
(Tr
aver
s
3·4),
8: 30
· and single. Getting singles p .m .
were Riffle, Bissell; Wigal,
Cleveland (Fitzmorris 2·41 a t
{Holly 2-0J. 8 : 30p .m ,
T1·ussell, Buckley and Evans. Minnesota
Detroit
{ Rozema
3·0) at
Eastern rounds out · their Texas (A lexander 4·1), 8:35
season Thursday when they p.m.
Boston
(Jenkins
4·'1)
at
host Souihern.
Cal iforni a (Simpson 2·3) , 10 :30

..'

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..·•

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2% MILK

1''
'11 9 ·
1--------------------"1 ·---------------------1
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CHOCOLATE MILK

2

oz. $}69

1--------------loiiiiiiiiiii

S· .
E

616 030 2-18 12 I
020 200 3- 7 12 6

Miller and Payne. Evans
(LP), Riffle (E) , Spencer (5)
and Riffle, Bissell (3).

p .m.
Balt imore
(Ma y
4·3l
at
Seattle ( Pole Q. l) , 10:35 p .m .
Wednesday' s Games
Toronto at Mi lwa ukee . n ight
Kan City at Ch icago, night
Det roi t at TeKas , night

FLYING INSECT

CAN

CAN

99~

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Mon., Tues., Wed. &amp; Sat. - 8:30 til 5: oo
THURSDAY TIL 12 NOON

FRIDAY UNTIL 8 PM ·

COLA
8- 16 Z.:3P"""

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773-5592

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•

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ft

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CHICKEN COMBINATION
OR CHICKEN
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lu oz. CNt 49$ oo.zasl ~::s 69~
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No.

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,l 1:_oz. '3" 124 99$ 125lzoI '1"
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33 OZ. BO II LE
89'

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9e'·.

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SPAGHETTI WITH MEAT DINNER

VALLEY BELL

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49~

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.......~~...~.1··

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SAUSAGE ••••••~•••• 69'
...... ~ ...39'

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REGULAR 33'

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SERO .AND PAYDAY

TOMATO

CANTADINA

Major League Stand i ng s
By United Press International
National League
Ea st
w. l Pet. GB
Pittsbgh
22 9 .710
Chicago
20 ]I .645 2
St . Loui s
20 12 .625 2lh
Ph ita
17 1J .567 4!J2
Montreal
13 16 .448 8
New York ~ 11, 20 .355 l1

79~

LB.

SCOT LAD

( II innings)
~OS
000 005 101 01- 8 14 1
Cal
ooo 021004 QO- 7 11 1
Cleveland, Willoughby {8) ,
Campbe ll 19) .and Fisk ; Ross ,
Kirkwood (6) , LaRoche (9),
Hartze ll ( 11) and Humphrey ,
Efchebarren (10). WP- Camp .
bell [2 .3) . L P- Hart zell ( 1.•0 .
HR s- Bo.sl on , R ice (5), Scott 2
(7),
Evans
(7) ;
Ca l if ornia,
Bonds (81.

QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED

99~

LB.

FRESH &amp; LEAN

Batt
ooo 012 ooo- 3 7 1
Seatle
040 100 30x - 8 8 1
Palmer, McGregor 121 , Mar t inez 18 ) and Dempsey ; Abbott,
Romo ( 6 ), Kekich (6) and
Stinson . WP - Abbotl .i(l ·4l. LP
- Palmer (5"3).

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

NO WASTE

Major League Resulls
By United Press International
Narlon•J League
San Dgo
000 270 100-- 6 10 3
Chicag
104 170 Ohc - 9 II 2
Shirley, Spillner (3), Bernal
{J), Sawyer (4). Metzger (5),
Tomlin (6), Fingers (8) and
5 LB. OR
"
Tenace ; Moore. G . Hernandez
(4) , Todd (SJ. P . Reuschel (1)
MOR E
LB.
and Mitterwald . WP - Todd ( I ·--"!!'~~.iiiiii..iii..ij;,._
1) . LP Shirl&lt;v 12-S) . HR R ESH &amp; LEAN
Ch icago, Cl ines 11 l.

Los Ang

8~1

In opening round doubles,
Kiesling · Thomas downed
Wellston's Steele and Henry,
8-5 . Prendergast-Cornell
downed Ja ckson's ButnerPreston, 9-11 in a tie breaker.

-

BAsEBALL

Vikings
outrun
Eastern

910 10
SUNDAY
10 10 10

PIZZA

In doubles action, KleslingThomas had three; CornellPrendergast and MulllnsCoonen each had five
markers.
In preliminary rounds,
Nate Thomas downed
Ironton's Randy Bishop, 9-7.
Thomas then lost to
Jackson 's Kyle Buchanan.
Neil Prendergast defeated
Wellston' Steele 8-2 and lost to
Jackson's Greg Forsyth. Bob
Kiesling downed Logan's
Fuller 8-3 , but lost to
Jackson's Butler, 8-5. Mark
Cornell picked up his five
points by downing Logan's
Kitts IHl and Logan's Fickle,
8-6.
Mike Coonen taUied five
points by dowolng Logan's
Mosler 9-8 In . a lie breaker
and Ironton's Osborne, U.
Cooneo then bested Jackson's
Preston, 8-1.
Steve Mullins picked up
five
points,
downing
Wellston's Gilliland 8-1 and
Logan's. Helber, 8-2.
In doubles , Jackson 's
Buchanan - Forsythe downed
Gallia's Kiesling-Thomas, 8- ·
2, but Prendergast - Cornell
downed Wellston 's Pugh·
Cheatwood, 8-4 and ConnenMullins defeated Jackson's
• ]J

Major League Leaders
By United Press International

PRICES GOOD THROUGH SATURDAY, MAY 14t11, 1977

OPEN DAILY

·Mile at Aqueduct, but trainer by beihK in the Preakness,
Jim Simpson said he will go but we'D enter him. We had
ahead with Preakness plans planned to all along if he ran
"if he checks out okay."
a respectable race in New
"I don't think he's going to York," said Simpson.
seare the Seattle ~IPW ramp

Leaders

~-TbeDally Sentinei.Middlepon..plnl!l'oy, o .. Tllesday,May 11, 1m

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110.1151 lrOi I'IIG. 69$110.111
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~~

�6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, May 17, 1977

.\~
@

Shower entertains
i\:
Mrs. Carol Sigman
N

~.

Generation Rap
Hy Hden and Sut' Hottd

-II

Prom Time Is Prime Time ...
Rap :
Proms are over, and again, it's time to complain. Maybe
Dottie Davis ami Betty the door pnze. Kctre~hments
enough complaints will help next year's crops or kids.
Ferguson ~ntertained With a ur t'&lt;Jke, l'hips, minls C::lnd
Lots ofusaresavingmoney for college . We may have $100 layette shower for Carul Kool Aid were served. Tam·
but it will be robbed from needed funds. With tux stuff renting Sigman at the Davis home, my Fcrgm;un assisted with
for $40. dinners, flowe~s, tickets (maybe car rental) and after- Middleport.
' the refreshments.
prom goodies, the guy's cost will be around $90. And a girl's
Presenting gifts to Mrs.
Pink, blue and white
prom dress can go $75, I'm told, not to speak of hairdressers, str eamers det:o raled a Sigman besides those named
etc .
bassinet where the gifts were were Priscilla Shuler, Chris
But that's not the worst. Guys at our school can bring their placed for Lhe honored guest. . Shuler, Bemit'l' Durst, Chad
dates, even if they aren't juniors or seniors. And likewise for Games were played with Humphrey, Mr. and Mrs.
girls. So that means a lot of outsiders will be at the prom, but prizes going to Mrs. Sigman,. Jack Bechtle, Judy Gilkey,
many " legitimates'' can't a ttfnd because they have no one to Tarruny Ferguson, Tammy Jane Gilkey, Clifford Smith ,
date .
Oflenberger and Brenda Wanda Gardner and Shorty
How much better if it could be a "no-date" affair, and George. Lucille Shuler won Walker.
· reasonable, so that everyone could come. Or maybe they
should have two so-ealled proms - one expensive bash for
couples only, and another "fun thing" for all of us. - DAVID
AND JOAN
!lear David and Joan:
Sounds Uke a winner.
And the "fun thing" might be more real fun than the
expensive bash . - HELEN AND SUE

BRIAN WALKER

Contributions made Birthda_y
for .medical expenses Ce lebllt'nted
I U

+++

Rap :
.
We have a problem. We 'llcall her Rose. Rose would like to
run track on the school team but her motber won't let her
because her brother had an accident last year playing football,
and was in the hospital two and one-half months. He's
recovered well and wants to play again.
Rose injured her knee in basketball a while back and her
mother about bad a nervous breakdown, though the injury
wasn' t much.
Rose is depressed and easily upset these days. She's a very
athletic girl and we'll hate to lose her on our teams. How can
we help her' - TilE REST OF THE TEAM. .
Dear Team :
. Whydon 'l you get your athletic coach to help? Perhaps she
nughl persuade Rose's mother that girls' track isn't exactly
hoy's football . - SUE
·

+++

NOTE TO ROSE 'S MOTilER : Keeping an athletic girl
away from sports could produce a much more lasting hurt than
would any physical injury she receives from track. I think
yo ur son -and your husband - will agree. Talk it over with
them. - HELEN

+++

PERSONAL TO "HOW?": Billy Rose once said, "It's hard
for a fellow to keep a chip on his shoulder if you ailow him to
take a bow."
Tell this fellow how much you appreciate him - and miss
him at the meetings. I think he'll soon be back. - HELEN
AND SUE
:t=:x;::."'X'!-~'$$&gt;.~~·•• :::.~~:?.:8!~'

: Social ·
Calendar

Contributions wen~ made
to the Senior Citizens Pr&lt;~­
gram and to Christina Smith
for medical expenses when
the Hearthstone Class met
reeently at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Edison Baker.
Mrs. Katie Anthony had
charge of the meeting which
opened with devotions by
Mrs . Frances Smart who us-

ed excerpts from " The
Twelfth Man in the Huddle."
Her theme was '"fheWinners
on God's Team" of the devillions with emphasis on Paul
Krouse of the Minnesota Vik·

Observes
birthday

TUESDAY
CHESTER COUNCIL 323,
Daughters of America, 8 p.m.
Tuesday at the hall. 43rd an·
1tiversary to be celebrated.
Charter members to be·
honored.
SOUTHERN Local School
District Board of Education,
7:30 p.m. Tuesady in high
school cafeteria.
MEIGS Muzzleloaders Club
shoot, 6 p.m. ·Tuesday at
grounds on Laurel Cliff
followed by cookout.
llEVIV AL at First Church
of God, New Haven, begin·
ning Tuesday, 7:30 · p.m .
Evangelist is the Rev. Bud
Wilson of Florida. Public
invited.
DREW Webster Post 39,
American Legion, important ·
meeting Tuesday 8 p.m.
Plans for Memorial Day
para1e. and election of of·
licers:

ings.
Mrs .

Alw ilda

Wern er

reported on the new dinner-

ware and flatware purchased
by the church . She
represented the class on the
kitchen committee.
Plans were made for a pic·
nic to be held at the Chase
home on the river in June. Atlending were Mr. and Mrs.
Harold Chase, Mr. and Mrs.
E. ·L. Hughes, Mr. and Mrs.
John Werner, Mr. and Mrs.
Paul Sma rt, Mr. and Mrs.
Willis Anthony, Mr. and Mrs.
Milton Hood andthe hosts.

Bertha Parker donates
more hospital equipment
Another set of crutehes and
a commode chair were added
by Mrs. Bertha Parker to the
hospital .equipment of the
Laurel Cliff Better Health
Club · at Thursday night's
meeting at the home of Mrs.
Polly Eichinger.
The members planned dur·
ing the meeting to place
flowers on the graves of
deceased members for
Memorial Day. Devotions
were by Mrs. Eichinger on
love with scripture from

AMY PAULEY

7- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, May 17, 1977

joanne Williams elected

~~:-:-:.;.;.;.::::::::::~=:~;:::::::;:;:;:;:;:::::;:;.;.;.:.:·:::::-:~::::::::::;;::;;:;:::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;.;.:::::::::::·:·:·:·:.:·:-:::::

First Corinthians with the
·readings '' What Love
Means" and "Sunbeams."
Mrs. Frick read " The
Modern Grandma"; Mrs.
Eichinger, ' 'Grandmother'':

SHADE - Brian Richard
Walker, who celebrated his
first birthday on May 9 was
honored ·with a party on May
8.

The son of Mr. and Mrs.
Larry Walker, Shade, Brian
served ice cream and a

shaggy dog cake to his
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
!loy Howell and Mrs. James
W&lt;~lker, and his greatgrandmothers, Mrs. Emma
Fox and Mrs. Edna Walker.
Also joining in the celebration
were Mrs. Kathy Currunings
and Amber, Mr. and Mrs.
Leonard Lyons, Leslie and
Christopher, Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Sloan, Timmy, Angie
and Chris, Mr. and Mrs.
Clarence Williams and Walt,
Mrs. Jill Lizon and DeeDee,
and Mr. and Mrs. Danny
Abbott and Jason .

bank women 's secretary

••

Joanne Williams, assistant
cashier of the Fanners B8nk
in Pomeroy, was elected
secretary of the Southeastern
Ohio Gro up of the National
Association of Bank Women
in their spring meeting at the
Shawnee State Lodge near
Portsmouth last Saturday.
The Hon. Vernal G. Riffe,
Speaker of the House of
llepresentatives or Ohio from
New BoSton, addressed the
association.
Other · officers Installed
were, chairman, Mary E.
Thuma, assistant cashier and
branch manager, o'f the
Security Central Bank,
Portsmouth; vice chainnan,
Lola . Mae Suiter, assist~nt
cashier of the Conunerctal

•

·11

Parker,
" Chi Jdhood
Lullaby."
Members exchanged sunOver 140 delegates ,
shine sister gifts and the birthdays of Mrs. Wright ·and parents, and members of the
Mrs. Iva Powell were observ- American Legion Auxiliary
.!d. Games were played with attended the Buckeye Girls'
Mrs. Amber Lohn and Mrs. State tea for Distriet 8 held
Mildred Jacobs winning Sunday at Grace United
prizes. Others attending were Methodist Church.
Mrs. Arnold Richards,
' Mrs. Marjorie Goett, Mrs.
Eighth
District president, in·
Ann Mash, Mrs. Ruby Frick,
·
t
raduced
Mrs. Lester MerRobin Campbell, Mrs .
.
rill,
director
of Buckeye
Georgia Diehl, Mrs. Judy
Girls'
St:ate,
who
conducted
Eichinger and Mrs. Cannan
orientation
for
the
delegates.
Eva~.
Mrs. Mildred Hamilton of the
Gallipolis unit which hosted
the tea had opening remarks.

Rummage sale slated
•
APPLE GROVE-A rum· American Legion Auxiliary's
mage sale was set for June 2 Poppy Day.
and 3 at the conununity hall
Mrs. Dee Spencer and Mrs.
when the Apple Grove United Smith served refreshments.
Methodist Women met . Attending besides those nam·
recently at the church.
ed were Mrs. Dorothy
Mrs. Donna Hill had the Roseb~rry, Mrs. Alice
program which opened with Balser, Mrs. Shirley Ables,
group singing of "! Am Mrs. Dolly Wolfe and Mrs.
Thine, 0 Lord" and prayer. Julia Norris. Guests were
Mrs. Florence Smith was at · Tracy Mearns and Sharon
the piano. "Our Relationship Rhodes.
to God" was the program
topic with Mrs. Lucille
Rhodes giving scripture from
John 15, I to 17, and Romans
UNIT TO MEET
13, 8 to 10. Mrs. Eileen Buck
A Meigs County girl scout
had the closing prayer,
service unit meeting will be
Birthdays were observed held tonight at 7:30 p.m. at
during the meeting and a the Columbus and Southern
donation made to the Ohio Electric . Co. Mrs. Pat

p 'o R T LAND-The
Lebanon Golden Age Club
met recently at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Hilton.
Mrs. Dessie Patterson had
prayer preceding the potluck
dinner and the afternoon was
spent reading poems and
playing games. The neKt
meeting will be June 8.
Others there besides Mr.
and Mrs. Hilton were Darrel
and Carol Taylor, Mary Circle, Dessie Patterson, Garnet
Ervine, Eunie Brinker,
Gladys Deem, Hattie Powell,
Ethel Johnson and three

SQUAREDANCE
HARRISONVILLE- The
HarrisonvillePTOwillholda
square dance and cake walk
at tbe Harrisonville Elementary gymnasium Friday
from 8 to 12 p.m. Evelyn and
The HiUtoppers will provide
the music.

Faith Perrin, senior at

High School,
the

Manasseh ~

Cutler Freshman Scholarship from Ohio University.
It is awarded on the basis
or excellence in academic
endeavors and demonstrated
talent.
Daughter of the Rev. and
Mrs. W.. H. Perrin, Pomeroy,
Faith will major in
psychology at Ohio.
She scored in the top two
percent of students nation·
wide in the National Merit
Scholarship Qualifying Test,
and received the 1977 General
Mills Family Leader ·of
Tomorrow award on the
basis of national test. Miss
Perrin was also the Meigs
High School Good Citizenship
Award winner for the Return

HANGING
BASKETS
~autiful

bloom all
summer long.
. F41TH PERRIN

from

•aoo

cash 'n carry
Jon athan Meigs Chapter of
the . Daughters of the ,
American Revolution·. She
was selected as alternate to
Buckeye Girls' State of the .
American Legion Auxiliary.
She is a member of the Na-

FOR GRADUATION

NOBODY
tells you the time in

"BUFFET' EVERY SUNDAY

12 to 4

~-----·

•

•

;ox J

HELPING YOUNG MUSICIANS- Dan Will (right ) helps Vicki Boyles (left front) and
Fred Young (center) at the Meigs Junior High School. Dan is a senior Distributive
Education student at Meigs High School with a career objective of vocational music.
Supervising Dan is Jeff Buel, standing, left, the instrumental instructor at the Meigs Junior
Htgh School. The experience which Dan receives wiD be of value to him when he continues
his education at Ohio University next year. Will is a member of the OECA club is an Eagle
Scout, and in senior band.
'

brother, Jamey.

billion gain in February.
The 3.4 per cent climb in

total business sales was 0.7 year, inventories jumped $7.7
per cent higher than the billton, compared with a $2.6
February increase, t~e billion climb in the final three
months of 1976.
-depaf'!l)lent said.
Sales, meanwhile, went up
For the first quarter of this

Big sao Trade Allowance

more time to

5.2 per cent in the January·
March quarter, compared
with an increase of 2.1 per
cent in the last year's fourth
quarter .

.,

Mason countians named to board
Two Mason Countians have
been named to the Board of
Directors of the Food,
Nutrition and Dairy Council,
Fairmont, W. Va., at its 55th
annual meeting. Named to
the 20 member board were
dairy producers Dale Nibert,
Apple Grove, and Marcus H.
Weaver, Letart .

The Food, Nutrition and
Dairy Council. a n01iproftt
organization, cooperate~ w1th

edu ca t ors .

health

professionals and eomtnunit;

leaders to emptlasize .a u~efui
relationship between the four
food groups, milk and rlmry
products. meats, frutt s and
vegetables and groin• .

FOR YOUR

OI.Dsum

$1swer charge
'
:COLUMBUS
(UPI) qiumbla Gas of Ohio has
Mked the Public Utilities
cOmmission of Ohio lor a
month's extension of the
deadline for responding to
charges that it declined to
purchase available natural
gas on an emergency basis
last winter.
A Columbia spokesman
said Monday· the extension
from May 18 to June 13 was
requested
to
"alford
Columbia and aU parties
additional time to analyze t)le
very extensive c'omplaint
that was filed."
'The complaint was made
by state Attorney General
William J. Brown, who accused
· Columbia
of
"negligence" in failing tobuy
Louisiana gas in the middle o!
a fuel shortage last
February.
Columbia said it did not
receive a copy of the com'
plaint until April 26, and the
P,UCO did not issue an order
uptil May 6 giving 15 days for
a· response.

DOGS AVAILABLE - Maj or E. Joyce Miller shows
four of the dogs available for adoption through the Mel~s
County Humane Society. One is a year-old " Bird " doij and
the others are puppies tha t resemble shepherds. If
interested, caD the Humane Agent at 843-3009

WASHER &amp; DRYER''fAlR
CHOOSE
CHROME

On

36"x 48"x 80''
-10ne top table.
Rich pwy -.lured
c:hlirc..,on.Gfem&gt;.

'550·00

i"'!chromalogo.

BEAT THE CRUNCH on MONEY, ENERGY,
and INVENTDRY! SHOPand SAVE NOW!

_

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

CHOOSE
BRONZE

MAnAG Washers ·Dryers· Dishwashers

tablo, 38"x 48"x 80"
in -tifull'lined
Conldi.., Wllnut top.
Bronze Sunburst

PRICED TO SELL! .

chein. bronzttone
finlth; with ologont
wir•top decoration.

•

•

•

..,...
t•••w•n,

Lunch 11 to 2

Tuesdays thru Saturdays

RICHARD HUBBARD
Richard L. Hubbard, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Roger
Holter, Rl. 1, Racine, and
Larry Hubbard, Rt. 1,
Racine, graduated May z,
from Marine Corps basle
!raiDing al Parris Island,
South CaroUna. Hubbard
will be sent to Camp
Pendleton, CaiU., on May
20.
Attending
the
graduation were Mr. and
Mn. Holter, bls sisters,
Rosemary and Angle and

'

Mondays thru Sundays

Uve Entertainment

,

'

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

• Mondays
Saturdays
Dinner 6 to 10
Tuesdays thru ·Saturdays

Columbia asks

for Porch or Patio

a

Family ·night was observed
Sunday evening at the Middleport First Baptist Church
with approximately 100
members and friends atten·
ding a dinner.
A feature of the observance
was the recognition of
graduates. Presented Bibles
by the Rev. Peter Granda!
and Mrs. Helen Bodimer
were Martin Davis, Greg
Sheets, Janet Ambrose, Dick
Owen, Allen Stewart and Dan
Granda!. A Bible will also be
presented to Pam N~h.
Speaker for the evening
was the Rev. Paul Edie, area
minister for the Ohio Baptist
Convention and director of
Ohio's camping program.

younge!lt wild a,umal trainer,
will keep the audience on the
edge of their seats.
High aerial thrillers in·
elude many International
stars like the Edmundo
Troupe on the high wire; Miss
Graciella, Medco's queen of
the air; The Flying Colom·
bians on the flying trapeze;
and the lovely aerial ballet.
John and Laura Walker
present both African and
Asian elephants in America's
largest
elephant
act .
Paulette's Peerless Puppies,
Yo-Yo the unridable burro,
Hoxie Bros: Military Ponies,
and AmeriCan Anthem, the
Wonder Horse, are Just a few
of the oustandlng acts coming
to Gallia County on June 22
with the Holde Bros. Circus.
Advance tickets are $1.75
for children and $2.75 for
adults are being sold now by
GaUia-Meigs F.O.P.
All members have tickets
and encourage everyone to
buy tickets ebrly, save money
and help them raise funds for
their conununity projects.
Circus Day prices will be
$2.50 for children and $3.50 for
adults.

WASHINGTON (UP!) - $2.8 billion during March
Business inventories in· compared with a revised $2
creased 0.9 per cent in March
and sales surged 3.4 per cent,
bright Indicators of strong
economic growth, the
Commerc;;, Department said
Monday.
The report said total
business inventories -stocks
on shelves and in warehouses
ready for sale - increased

tiona I Honor Society, the
Meigs History Club and the
band, and is a Candystriper
at Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
.
At Trinity Church where
she is a member, she sings in
'the choir and is pianist for the
Sunday School.

has

The legendary Big Top
Circus, featuring a rare big·
foot gorilla, will roU into
Galli• County on June Z2 for
performances at 6 and B p.m.
Sponsored by Gallla • Meigs
Fraternal Order of Police,
tile Holde Bros. Circus will
unfold the large!!! round tent
In the world at the Gallla
County fairgrounds.
In addition to all the Big
Top performers, the main
attraction of the circus
menagerie is a mammoth
lowland gorilla called Mongo.
Mongo is the flrstt!orilla to
tour America in 20 years and
Is doing It in !ltyle as he wUI
enter Gallla County In a
specially constructed $40,000
hard-steel barred 40-foot cage
that boasts a 4-ton air con·
ditoner, hardwood floors, and
its own 17,500 watt electric
generator. For exercise,
Mongo·swings on a tire from
a 12 ton truck.
"Fantasy on Parade"
opens the 1977 program of the
Hoxie. Bros. Circus. Then
attention is directed to the
steel arena, where a mixed
group of lions and tigers
under the direction or
Mlchnel Cecere , world's

'

lnventoria up 0.9% in March on high sales

Faith Perrin receives honor

POINT PLEASANT
INN

"if

•

Mrs. Caryl Cook, Mrs. a couple of baby jackets to challenges to express and
prove the spirit of
Marion Michael, Mrs. Caddie take for the special project.
Wickham and Mrs. Margaret
Mrs. Phyllis Skinner motherhood. She also talked
Bailey will represent the presided at the meeting on women of the Bible. Tak·
Women 's Missionary Society which opened with singing of ing part in the program were
of the Pomeroy First Baptist the theme song, "Lord Speak Mrs. Maria Foster, Mrs.
Church at the Women's Con· to Me That I May Speak." Bailey, Mrs. Harriet Sterrett,
·terence to be held at Gran· The love gift dedication was Mrs. Audrey Young, Mrs.
ville next month.
by Mrs. Ellen Couch. Mrs. Burton Smith, Mrs. Couch,
Meeting Thursday night at Cook presented the program Mrs. Betty Wiles and Mrs.
· the church plans for the con. on Mother's Day" stressing Skinner.
Potluck refreshments were
ference were discussed and the true meaning of
the Society voted to purchase motherhood and the served. ,
a lap robe , baby blanket :md' · countless opportunities and

LETART, W. Va. - Amy
Lynn Pauley, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. James C. Pauley
)II, Broad Run Rd., Letart,
. was honored recently with a
party at her home in obSALISBURY Elementary
servance of her first birth· PTO Tuesday, 7:30 p.m .
day.
Program by fifth and sixth
Cake, ice cream, potato • grade band students. Bring
visitors Marjorie Grinun,
chips, and pop were ,.rved to bottle caps. · Refreshments
Thoma, service unit director, Linda · Grimm and Caroline
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Hanson, will be served.
asks that all troopa be Miller.
Mr. and Mrs. James C.
represented at the meeting
GROUP II, Middleport
Pauley Jr., grandparents;
smce camp folders will be
United Presbyterian 6:30p.m. potluck dinner with distributed.
First
Mrs . Vanna Samples, great"
grandmother, Mason; Mr. Church, 7:30 Tuesday night at the meat to be provided,
and Mrs. Richard Neal and the home of Mrs. Eddie graduation ceremony at 7
Kimberly, and Brandon, Pt. Burkett with Mrs . Karl p.m. and dancing at 8 p.m. at
VISIT HERE
Pleasant; Mr. and Mrs. Owef1S, co-hostess. Mrs. the Royal Oak recreation
Mrs. Richard Fox spent the
Henry VanMetre, Mr. and Joseph Bailey to have hall.
weekend here visiting her
SATURDAY
Mrs. Ronald Wilkenson and devotions and the book study
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Roy
BAKE SALE, Rutland Holter, Route 3, Pomeroy.
wiD be continued.
Russ, Tommy Johnson,
Department Store, 9:30 a.m. She returned to Mason, Ohio
Larry Johnson , and parents,
WEDNESDAY
Saturday
by the United
Mr. and Mrs. James Pauley
WINDING Trail Garden Methodist Women of the but her two children, Bryan
m.
and Jennifer, remained for
Club, 8 p.m. Wedneseay at
Amy received many nice the home of Mrs. Wilma Ter- Rutland Church.
the week.
gilts and cards.
,
rell. Members to take seeda. .
Sending gilts were: Mrs. Mrs. Cora Beegle to have the ll"llnnn'lrrnr1Mr'lnl'lnl-.nnnnrnrnr11TTK'Inl,..,nnnn....,.,
Lottie Pauley, Cedar Grove, ecology report, Mrs. Ruth
v;. Va., great-grandmother, Moore, a paper on planting a
Lucille King, Letart ; Delores garden in a basket. ArrangeJohnson, Letart.
ment to be " Your Pleasure
Using Flowers from Spring
"The Insurance Store"
Bulbs."
~ru
7. Motorcycles
YARD sale Tuesday and
1, Auto insurance
8. Jewelry and other
2. Home Insurance
Wednesday at the comer of
Valuables
SOCIAL SET
3, Mobile Homes
Cole
and
Front
Streets
in
'9 . Business Package
There will be an ice cream
4, Health Insurance
Policies
social Saturday, May 21, at Middleport from 9 a.m. to
S. Life Insurance
10. Liability Insurance
3:30
p.m.
sponsored
by
the
Rock
Springs
United
6. Boat Insurance
11. Farm Insurance
Methodist Church . Serving Middleport Fire Department
will begin at 6 p.m. In ad· Ladies Auxiliary.
You Have It, We Can Insu,:e It"
dition to the ice cream there
THURSDAY
will be cake and pie. ·
PACKAGE POLICY - Put your aulo, home, health
ROCK
SPRINGS
and life insurance Into ONE policy . Save money and
GRANGE, 8 p.m. Thursday,
have one premium due date for all your Insurance.
open meeting with new applicants and prospective
members invited. Program
Some Of OUr Other ServiceS:
tu be presented and the state
Copy Service · Notary Service · Car leasing Service
BOOSTERS TO MEET
baking and sewing contests
llACINE - The regular
to be held that night. A &amp;:30
REUTER-BROGAN INSURANCE SERVICE
meeting of Southern Band p.m. potluck dinner will be
We have over 140 Rooms and
Boo!lters scheduled for May held with the meat to be pr&lt;~­
"The lnsura;nce Store''
17, has been postpooed untll 'vided .
Banquet or Meeting Room for 250 People
214 E. MAIN
May 24, at 7:30 p.m. at the
BELI.ES AND Beaus
PH. 992-5130
Western Square Dam:e \!uh,
higb school.

REUTER-BROGAN

.,

'

Family night
held Sunday

Hiltons.host
Golden Agers

SURGICAL PATIENT
Howard Birchfield of Route
I, Middleport, underwent
surgery Monday at Grant
Hospital. Mrs. Birchfield is in
Columbus with her husband
staying at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Rusty Little,

Co~ference delega.tei. ~~~ed...IIi ·..

received

Cross' '; Jean Wright, '' I S3id
a Prayer for You"; and Mrs ,

NatiOnal Bank, McConnelsville.

·:·.·:-:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:-:·:·:·:·:·:·:···:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·~·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·!·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·

Meigs
Mrs. Parker, 11Granny";
Mrs. · Della CUt11s, ''The

and Savings Bank, GalllpoUs.
and treasurer , Loretta
Wilson, assistant cashier and
branch manager, Peoples
Savings
Bank,
New
Matamoras.
Attending from Meigs
County were Recka McGuire,
IWger Hysell, Joame and
Micky Williams, represen·
ling the Fanners Bank and
Savings Company; Maxine
and
Charles
Griffith,
representing Pomeroy
National Bank, anO•I.ois and
Kenneth
McElhinny,
re presenUng Citizens
National Bank, Middleport.
The Installation ceremony
was conducted by Doris
Po~ell, cashier and _loan
officer of the Cittzens

Big Top Circus
~oming June 22nd

rlve--functlor
LE.D. q\lartr. dla:ll•l
In 10ldlone.
In sllvertone.

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SCIOTO RESULTS
t' COLUMBUS (UP!)
:Seraclytis came out of the
:i)ack In the stretch Monday
:~Pght to win the featured
oelghth race at Scioto Downs.
, : The winner, driver by Jim
:t&gt;ollock to a 2:01 4-5 mile,
~linlshed three.quarters of
:length ahead of Eastern
:f!urton and returned $8.26,
:,~.80 and $3.20. Gay Jubilee
third.
:: The ninth race trifecta
~o mbinatlon of 2-7-9 was
:_,'Worth.a whopping $3,353.10 to
•eight tlckelholders and the
: ~ghUy double of I..S paid

:'*all

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easy to c;:tearl hn t Iiiier • ; ,;..r

o f \.l\1• .''!'IJ,,(l!!f 'j.

vetor.•h

(Pflld IXJ•f~l 1,~·1

~c"'t'o '~'l

,f,r:

qn•)&lt;~. • to·

'*' ,tl

Furniture Company

St:\\ '111(! c1·
.f!.

Wdl 11olr! Ui) lO • !ei.&lt;·n

5pao1s of thr, ilt!, fl,l'&gt;

for SCJS!iJr •i ,11 I
tape. Marie of wiilti,l\

f100h

f1n1Shed WJOr! Wll'l

·' colorfu l pin cu lrju-1.
•
Porfec' for th t&gt; l,o(' .

HERMAN GRATE, OWNER

*
\~

seamstress.

$~~'"

MASON, W.VA.
...

'

! "(

'II

ill'

tl· '' ";(
t'l

SEWING
CAI)DY
71 '2" tall, 6" .v•

1! •

·J I,t' 1 1 '

WOODE N

A l ovely

t

'!"'·.

BIG l•,ilrl~ rit'.! e~
/vir. f0·

,t

II.P'

lra; d'

W il('' ("In ICJ!;. •

.... A crowd of 3,822 wagered
$287,478.

I

h-~

MAYTAG

MASON

773-5592

,

tg ~l "" l"IJ(;.

.

~

well ootllt, Don

e~.,~rlo~~

N

"'

/&lt;·,1

pluA '"M' ookqv~ l'l
drytd d,..t uc•pt

EXAMPLE:
•

DR11~·

~i1d. nt-IIUI~!!,J!~~

Chllirs. Harvest

:'

Nobody!
113 E. COURT. POMEROY

: . NORTIFIELD
: NORTHEI~LD,
Ohio
(UP!) .- · Whata Baron
q.ncorked the fastest time this .
lear at Northfield Park
Monday night in winning the
teatured $10,000 Sarah
~oventry Great Race.
• Whata · Baron, driven by
!olorihfield's all-time leading
feinsman Lewis Williams,
tpUt·ed the mile in I :59 4-5 to
\'&lt;Iter the 2:00 3-li time paced
W Besta Baron on May 14.
:, The winner, a five-year-old
son of Baron Hanover,
(!!turned $2.60, $2.20 and
p .20. Missouri Time was
second and Osborne Creed
linished third.
!;The big triple combination
llf H-1 was worth $304.80.
A crowd of 2,932 wagered
75,965.

·

''''
t

�•
8 - The Dally Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0, Tuesday. May 17. 1977

Let The Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items lnt(J Cash

WANT AD
CHARGES

9- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 ., Tuesday, May 17, 1977

Television log for easy viewing

DICK TRACY

l "'h

I 1\u~

{ lldl)-:1'

100

!da) ~

"'
,.~

'"'

Ida\~

! ~;
I /fl

1110

6da~!.

I 1)(1

1'~1u h ~urd '"''' tht• trumu JJm 1:.

\\Hiili I.'&gt;~ ll~lh jill \\ old po.l d,rl
Ad~ IUIUIIII/;! lrt\M I t}lilll (!IlL" 1 Ulllop

~.I!&gt; ~Ill

daa!j.~t•d

lJ.t•

Lll

!lit

1 dd\

loth•

In llll'IIIVI} t.ud uf J'l.auk!. .wd
Olortb:u, 6 ll'!lh ~· "'un.l $.\01.1
JfiWIUIIUIU ( ~.'lh L/1 itlh,tlllt'

Mvlulc flume
&lt;tit' e~t.:&lt;.:cp!t'(l

t~&lt;tlt~

iHII.I 'u u.l ...tk:,c
~dl&gt;h

unh 'Atlh

111111

ocdu 25tt.'lll d~&lt;•l~t fur ot\h 11111

tut: &amp;.11 :-i'umbl'r In

(.Ill'

tof Tht•

"iL n·

1111t'l

tiro • rrght
tu L'£ill \II lt'/l't'lll/1~ tub tJn llll'd !d).
Jl'l tJUIWI T ll' Pubh!&gt;ho·t v.1ll uu1 1..
11k• Pu[)lp;ht.•l

rt~tl \ot~

1l'~JX;rt~tlllt• fur ruur t•tlt;t rl ••lh me, 1
lt'liUI~l' lliOII

Phum~

99'2 2\!iti

NOTICE
WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES
Mond.r\
NtiiiiiUtlS.:tli.JidU\

'I UL ~d..t\

llu u t r•d·•'
4 p :\1

tlll'ti&lt;t~

ud,•r t pull lit utMJ
~und.11

4 PM
f

IIIJ!l) pflt.' l ll~ll!ll

I:Osrand Found
~

~

FOUND · FEMALE Beagle wrth 2
pups gtve owoy to good home
Phone 949 2413
UTILE TAN femal e Chthuohuo
FOUND on nver bonk front
St , M•dd leport abo ul J yrs old
Phone- 992 3832
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
Case No . 22.099
Estate of Margaret Sm•th ,
Deceased
Not •ce IS hereby g1ven thai
Dale E Sm lt h of 695 Gneves
Lane , Zanesv111e , Oh 10, has
been duly appo1nled Ad
m 1n1strator of the Es tate of
Margar et Sm1th dec eased ,
late of 140 1' 7
Mulberry
Avenue, P omeroy, Me 1gs
County , Oh10
Credi tor s are r e Qu rred lo
file the1r cla•ms with sa •d
f1duc1ary
w1th ln
thr ee
months
Dated !hi ~ 23rd d ay o f
April , 1971
Manning D Webster
Judge
(5) 3, 10, 17 . Jtc

Peabody
mines are

In M..mory

HPJp Wanted

s 3G-Adam 12 .4 ,

A u I o Sale!!

IN MEMORY of our mothor Jesse APPLIA NCE S£RVICE rncn ex 1975 JEE P CHEROKEE , p b , p'li
penenc&amp;d No phone coils ,
O uadraha ck
Good I1Ht$
Yourlg Pnce who pou.ed owoy
Gollro Re lnge rollon Co 611
Phone (304)877 1340
erght yeo rs ago May 17
Th1rd Ave , Goll•pol1s Qhto
Do not ask us rl w~ mru her
1977 GRAN lORlNO
53 000
for rhere s still o vacant place,
OLDER RESPONSIBLE lady to ltve
mrle$ Phone 7•2 '1746
Often we lhrnk we heor her
rn and ca re fo, aged v.•dow tn
footsteps
Rutland Oh1o Not tnvaltd nor 19b6 V W BEHLE $.400 Two new
recap tires good mo tor Phone
And we se'EI her smr!mg f ace
•Hmde L1gh t housework and
985
A"J01
Days of sod,ess still ore wrth us
cookmg
No laundry
Coil
Tears of silence pi ten flow
747 7078 for mtormolton .
1950 CHE VROLET three quarter
But her mem01y keeps her near
ton flo t bed lru clc Fotr cond1
FRIENOL Y HOME Toy Port1es has
us
lion good form lruch Phone
openmgs
for
managers
and
Smct&gt; she left us ergh t years ago
949 2696
dealers rn your o reo Toy Party
Bob .PoiJ Ime lurene Frank and
Pion
e.:perrence
helpful
Cor
1974
CHEVY CORVETTE ~ 500
w.b
ond telep hone necessary Coil
new rod•al ttres, loaded wtt~
e)(tros
Sdver grey fr n1sk
collect to Corol Ooy (518)
Phone 747 221 1 before 5 p m
riendl~
489 8395 or wule
oft&amp;r 5 ca/1742~ 2025
Home Port•es
70 Ro 1lroad
Notices
Ave Albany N Y 1'2205
1975 CHEVY VAN 6 cyl1nder stan
PIANO LESSONS ch rldrens and
GUARANTEED J08 Tra 1nrn g
dord Coll992-.3900olter6p.m
oduils
M rs
Har vey Von
l oca lton
$3 74 40
s1ng le 1974 MERCURY Capn , Ponoson rc
llronk.en 992 2270
$502 80 momed Ca ll Army
Am Fm stereo, 8 track , rod•ols ,
THE RACINE VOL F1re Dept w1ll
Recru1lmg, (614) 593 3022 or
"'
speed , 2600 V·6 Phone
hove a chrcken barbecue on
385 6318 (collec t)
949 2493
Sunday May 1ll at th~ fr re sto
WANTED SOMEONE to do odd
Iron Stort1119 Ot II 00 A M
1975 GMC TRUCK "' wheel dnv e,
jobs on for m Phone 949·2531
three quarter ron
Phone
WA IT RESS WAN lEO apply tn per·
949 2089
UNITED ST ATE S
son
Crow s Steak House- 1974 BLAZER outomo iiC p s 4
OISTR ICT COURT
Po meroy Ohu;1
new 6 ply t•res 2b,OOO m 11es
SOUT HER~ DISTRICT
S4 500 Phone992 71 49 ,
OF OH 10
LIG HT DELI VERY, must ho11e co r
WESTERN DIVISION
No or eo Apply 1n person Libby
AT CINCINNA'f'l
Ho tel Rm 101 10 30 o m hit 19b8 VOLKSWAGON $.:150 Phone
C1\lll Act ton No
742 2267
d()Opm
c 1 77 232
I N THE MATTER OF T HE
LIG HT OFF ICE ond telephone
COMPLAJ NT
OF
TRI
work
Days and even 1ngs , l:amping Equipment
STAT E
MATERIALS
open
App
ly 1n perso n lrbby
CORPORATION AS OW NER
Hotel Room 101 10 30 o m til t LOOt&lt;ING FOR tra vel trorler
OF THE BARGE NO lld
truck camper cornp1ng trarler
d 00 p m
FOR
EXONERATIO N
mlnthome truclo. cap? Travel
FROM OR LIMITA T ION OF
fra iler to rent? COONER S
LIABILITY
CAMPERS on Ro1nbow R1dge
TO THE P R ESIO ENT OF Wrurted lo Buy
open e11en• ngs Toke Me1gs 28
THE U N ITE D S TATES
Or 3'2 to Boshan 'Robe rt
TO THE MARSHAL OF T HE CASH p01d for oil mokes ond
Codner long Bottom Owner
UNITED STA TES FOR T HE
models of mob de homes
SOU THERN DISTRICT OF
CODNER'S CAMPERS on Ro1n
Phone area code 614 423 953 I
OHIO ,
W ESTERN
bowrrdge Sal es Ren tal , Ser .
D IVISION ,
AT
CI N
TIMBER Pomeroy Forest Pro
v rce
Supp lies
l rotlers
CINNATI
du cts Top pr1 ce for s tanding
campers
cops
alum
awntngs
MONITION
sa w l!mbe r Cotl Ken t Hanby
ond porches by Ourobtlt Open
1 4.:16 85?0
evenmgs Me-rgs 28 or 32 to
GREETING
Bo5han Owner Robert Codner
WHEREAS , a Complain t COI NS, CURRENCY tokens old
was fr te d In the Un, ted States
long Botlom
p oc ke t watches ond d'lo1ns
D 1str rct
Cov rt
fo r
the
si lver and gold We need p:~64 1971 LEI SURE TIME Camper, 18ft
Souther n Dtstr.c t of Oh10 .
and o lder silver coms Buy sell
sleeps 6 self ·contotned h1fch
Wes t ern D •v•s•on , at Cm
o r trode Coli Roger Wams ley
etn nat ,, on the 26th day of
and m1rrors rncluded, e:~~ c ellenl
742·233 1
April , 1977 . by Tr 1 S late
condrtton Phone 992 2386
Mat err ats Corpo rat 1o n , as CASH I l l for 11.m k cors Frye s
11~67
LAYTON TRAVEl trader , 21
owner of t he Barge No 114 ,
Tr uclo. and Auto WRECKER SER
for exoneration from or
t I self conlmned good cond r
VICE I Phone 742 2081
ltm .tat.on of l•abd•ty, praymg
lion Cal l Bob f •s her , 949·2378
for exo nera li on from or OlD FURNITURE , rce boxes brass
l•mJiallon of llabfltty con
be d s
e tc
c omplete
ce rn ing any loss or damag e
occ as1oned by or arfsmg out o. households Wr~te M D M1Her.
Rt 4 Pomeroy Oh1o or call
of the a cc •dent or cas ualty set
forth In the afor es aid Com
~2 7760
COAL , limestone and coloum
plamt for th e reasons and
chlonde and colc1um bnne fo r
ca uses rn said Cornp lamt STAND ING TIMBER WANTED
dusr control and specrol mtx•ng
PHONE (614) 1&gt;67 6214
ment10ned, a nd pray 1ng that
soil for formers Excels 1or Soil
a mon•tton and •n1unct ton for
Works Motn Street, Pomeroy,
those r easons be ISSued , and
Oh10 or phone 992 3891
that all pe r sons c larmmg for
1any and all damage caused
$600
Also
horse
by or resulting ,. from the IF YOU ho11e o serv1ce to otter CAMPER
trade r, $450 Phone (614 ) 698·
a cct d ent or casualf.\tset forth
wont to buy or se ll sometl-ung
3290
rn sa •d Comptc11nt b e-thereby
oe
loolung for wor lc
or
c1ted to appear and til e therr
wha tever
you II get results SPRING GARDEN Supplies , Cob
respe c ttve clarms W1fh the
boge
cou l,fl ower , broccoh ,
foster w1th o Senf1nel Wont Ad
Cl e rk of thiS co urt and to
and head lelluoe plants ,
make due proc ess thereon ,
Cal l ~2 2156
and c ltmg them to ftle the•r
yellow wh1te, and red on1on
Answers to tl1e comp la•nt. YARD SALE Monday, Tues
sets on1on plants Kennebec,
Weds 16 17 18th l ong Sf
and all the proceedmgs bemg
cobbler Kolohd•n Red Pontiac
Rutlond Oh10 beh1nd Grode
had , 1f '' should appear tha t
and
Red Losada seed potatoes .
sa1d p \a1nt 1ff rs not liable for
School Tables . h1gh cho 1r
Sulk garden seeds , potting so1l
any loss or damage 1t may be
clothmg m1sc Phone 742 2935
peat moss fru1t frees ond rose
so ftMIIy decreed by th1S
bushe s
M1dwov Markel
Co urt , and
Y,A.RD SALE Th ursday and fndoy
WHEREAS , sa 1d . platntlff
Pomeroy
Oh1o
992 25S2
Moy 19 and 20 ot 1545 Nye
has filed 11ere an ad 1ntertm
Bob s Market Mason , W Vo
Ave , Pomeroy Ch 1ldr en ond
stfpulatron for value w1th a
(304 ) 773 5~ - - - boby , women s. cloth ~-sure ly approved by th 1s
Court , repres e ntmg t he va lu e YARD SAlE Wednesday , May 18 TOMATO
PLANTS
Cabbage ,
of the p1a1ntrff's tnterest .n
broccoli couhflower brussel
9 o m 1111 5 p m D1shes
t he aforementiOned
Barge
sprou ls egg plants hong1ng
gloss wore cloth rng m1sc Tur n
No 11.:1, p lus pendmg fr etght,
boslcets
pots
gero n tums ,
toward
hJII
of
TelCOCO
Gas
Sto
1f any , the tmder tak1ng of
begontos
flats
pelumos
hon
.n
Mason
One
mile
out
WhiCh 1S that the plarntlff.
mottgolds , ponstes
salz1o
_f~llow s1gns
Wtlhrn ten (10) days after the
balsom
d•onthus , snap·
entry of an Order he rein
d ragons alyssum V1nca col
appraising th e value of the YARD SALE . FRIDAY . May 20
Dishes Ele-c slove , clothes
plamtlff 's 1nterest 1n sa1d
eus , Cleland s Gr&amp;enhouse
mens
women s
ch1 ldrens
barge , plus pending fre 1ght , tf
Roc1ne Geraldme Cleland
S1omese klftens , b•cycle, m1 sc
any , wtlt pay tl1e amount so
I 42 m cos I 1ron kilc hensl nlc 1
fr )l:ed mto th1S Cour t or w11!
I 1m!e Eon 248 , Chester
bosm and I dram board, hong
fil e •n t he court a s l •pula t•on
YARD SAlE Thursday and fnday
for value m tl1e usual form
on wall type whrte 1 3 burner
9 ttl l dark baby clothes boby
and w it h approved svrety
gos , hot plate. Phone 992 5714
YOU ARE , THEREFORE.
wollo.er, baby both tub ch1 ld s
COMMANDED to C1te all
ECONOMY TRACTOR wtth all at
pool table clothmg d1shes
persons 1n respect to wh•ch
tochments like new , osk1ng
avon bottles F1rsl house on
the plarntrff seeks l1m1tat •on
52250. Phone (6 141 698 3290
nght Happy Hollow Rood off
to file the •r respect.ve cla im s
Rl 124 near Rutland 742 2694
With the Clerk of Cou r t and lo
FOR MEMORIAL DAY Beout•ful
serve on or mal\ to Gordon c
seled1on of flowers Baskets
BASEMENT SALE Across from
Greene copres thereof on or
sprays wreaths vases Fay s
Hubbard s Greenhouse 1n
before the 22nd day of June ,
No11e lty Shop N Second St ,
Syracuse
Thursday
fndoy
Sot
1977 .
and
clfmg
such
Middleport
cla1mants to appe.;H and o1 10 1,11 4 Tools good cloth,ng
avon , 1ew!ery, lots of m1sc GOOD RICH Top so1l Char les R
answer the Complamt herem
on or before the last named
Nothrng sold before I0 00 a m
Hatfield Boclo.hoe Ser111ce
day or w tthln such further
Phone 742 2008
CARPORT
SALE
11
b5
Vme
St
lime as th e Court may grant ,
Weds , Thursday , and Frrday 1 AND H~Beams 8 9 and IQ mch
and wha t you have done 1n the
premises , do you then make
_M •sc_~lems , toys lots of books
4:_
. ""-- ,---,,..,--Call992· 703::_:
r eturn to the Court together
with th is wrrl
woOoENHOLLOW co;e cab1net
WITNES S, the Honorable
doors ond drawer fronts from
T rmothy S Hogan , Judge of
75cup Coll~2·7034:.:_._ __
the Un•ted States D1strrct
RISING STAR Kennel Soord1ng ,
Court tor the Southern
VERMEER BALERS 60SD 4395 60SC
Indoor-Outdoor run s, groommg
D1strtct of Oh10 , Western
4995 trlf June I Merrill Chose,
a ll breeds , clean san1tory
DIV IS IOn , at Ctnctnnatr, thiS
R 0 . 2 Albany Ohio (614)
fa CIIrltes oe 3b7 7112 Chesh1re
26th day of Aprt l
698·3021
Phone (614} 367 ,0292
- - - --J OHN 0 LYTER
USED FORESTRY EQUIPMENT
HOOF
HOllOW
Buy
~ell
,
trade
CLERK
J ohn Deere 540 S~tdder Pren
or trarn horses RUTH REEVES
tree GOBC Loader w· Pu lpwood
tra iner. Phone (614) 698 ·3290
By K L Faulkner
grapple
John Deere 440B Sktd
Deputy Clerk
AKC SHETLAND sheep dogs
der Contact Denn1 s Smvrr
(Mm ) Coll1es 2 fema les 7
phone (61.4) 838 5345
LUCIA N Y RAY
.
weeks old Shots ond wormed
1550
UniO n
Commerce
Bulldmg
Phone (614 ) 367 0192 or 1974 3b0 MX YAMAH'A good con
$675
Phone (J0.4 )
dttton
Cle\leland, Ohro 44115
367 7112
882·3297
REGISTERED FEMAlE BalCer 2 yrs REFRIGIOAIRE REFRIGERATOR
and
old, w1th papers , $75 00 Phone
General Electrtc sweeper
GORDON C, GREENE
992 7675
metal
wardrobe
Phone
910 Athens Bank Butld •ng
AVAILA BlE
FOR adoptiOn
992 6208
Cmcrnnati, Oh10 45202
beaut1fu l male block and whrfe
HONDA 750 8,000 mtles
Tria l Attorneys for
dog long silky ho1r med tum 1975
W1ndshteld and forrrng wtlh
Tr1 S tate Mafe rral s Cor
s 1ze- one year old Severa l cute
crash bars , s1ssy bar w tlh pod
porat .o n
puppre9 of m1lCed breed Mergs
Luggage rock , $1500. Excellent
County
Humone
Soc1ely
Phone
{5) 10, 17 , 24, 31, 4tc
cond1tton Coli 992 3287 or
992·7680 or 843 3009 local
~92'2496 .
number
FARMALL
CUB w1th plow
GIVE A WAY Mole Col he dog to
cul hvotors and mower Would
gtve away . Ron Cowdery
cons1der troding for Gravely
phone 985 3581
and equrpment Phone Vtctor
Bohr , 985 4240

FIIH: WOOU

GELDJ NV
e.o:·
pcJJenced rtder Bobycr rb, mol
tress and bumper pod $50
•--H tg h cho ir
Phone {61.4 )
696· 1036
• I
1976 HONDA MINI TRAIL Z50
rnotorc y&lt;le e:.cellent c::ond•
l1on
$250 RCA Whrrlpool
refngerotor, good condttion
$100 t&lt;enm ore go s k1tchen
range good cond1hon $50
Phone ~2 5606

AflPALO O~ A

ROTOTILLER , RIDING Mower, 302
Ford mower 1967 Ford $lofr0rl
wagon o r I drums , 55 ga llon
ports for Ford Ptckup , 19b5
model 4 speed truck tronsm1s
stan
old buffet
Phone
742 217.(
A 0 SMITH Hydromc Bo1ler . Per
•
moglos l1ned Phone 992 3442
Syroc u5e

-

..

..
~

.'
·~
'

..

BELLAIRE, Ohio (UP!)A strike that began more than
a mooUt ago at three Peabody
Coal Co. mines in Coshocton
County ended Friday when
employes returned to their
JObs .
Denstl
Hughes ,
superintendent of deep mines
for Ute company, said the
workers went hack to work at

4 p.m.
Ptts remaimng closed
Friday Included loW' deep
mines
owned · by
the
Consolidation Coal Co . In the
Cadiz area of eastern Ohio.
The series of wildcat walk·
outs began over a sertes of
disputes at four mines An
absentee pohcy mstltuted at
the three Peabody mines in
COshocton County is the most

serious.

v•
"',,

"'
;

.

.....
u

"'

The policy shortens the
amount of time a rruner can
mtss work wtthout being
dismissed
The
mtners
contend the Peabody policy
VIolates !hell' 1974 contract
and is unfair
·
UMW District 6 Pres1dent
John Guzek sa!d the mmers
at the Peabody facUttles were
apparently convmced the
union is going to fight the
absentee policy .

A CAREER JOB IN
CONSUMER FINANCE

Gain recogn ition and presttge through a career 1n
consumer finan ce Consumer ftnance is an Integral and
Important force m our country' s economic growth and
progress
A position here w11i give you economic security The
consumer finance business is steady - even during
recesstons.
You can w1n promotion rapidly You will be paid a
good starting salary and rece 1ve exceptional employee
be he fils
There are Branch Representative posttlons open now
. for high sc_!lool Q.r.aduates Must have auto
Phone Mr Snodgrass today for a confidential,
personal interview Call 992 2111

CAPITAL FINANCE SERVICES
300 West Second Street
Pomeroy. Ohip
AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER
•

'•

ANTIQUES AND Collector s 1tems
c hina ook cupboard b leg oolc
table Gateleg drop leaf kit
chen table chestnut , 100 years
old , Dunca n F1fe gloss top cof
fee toble wtth bras s feet
Oecon lers cool mme r ond J1m
Beam Some depress 1on gloss
and He1 sy 660 Hrgh Sf M1d
dl eport, 992·7b66
SWEET POTATO Plan ts Phone R
W Lew •s . 843 2432, RaCine.
OhiO

1975 HONDA 125 Call 992 6688 9
hi lS 985·3501 after 6 or contoct
Tonyo Dov ts

-

-

MA YTAG DISH wosher for sole

S100 Phone 992·3966
YARD SALE Fndoy on Rt 325
Donv1 lle Electnc oven, rod1o
record player baby clothes
_many oth~1te,...ms _

.

-

----

---

----

-

-

Furllent

-

-~

3 AND 4 RM furn tshed and un
furm shed opts Phone 992
5.434
COUNtRY Mob1 le Home Pork Rt
33 ten m1les ,orth of Pomeroy
Lorge lots w•lh concrete paltos,
srdewo lk s runners and off
slree-t pork1ng Phone992.7479
ORCHID ROOM for rent for on·
n •11ersones wedd.ng recep
Irons bridal showers or pnvote
meehng room Phone 992 3975
or992 2571
FUR NISHED APT Adults only, no
pets Phone 992 3874 M1d
dleport,
BEAUTY SHOP for rent or IE&gt;ose
Phone 992 3333

.
ONE BEDROOM furnished aport.
ment , 1n Middleport
9'115•34 or992 3129

Call

FOR SALE
New Co-Op water sof .
teners, model VC-SVI.
Only 527,.95
Save uo.oo on 1 1 new
H otpolnt Refrrgeretor.
f
1 New ·20 cubfc ft:
Chest Fre~tzer
'319 95

Now in 1tuu. complete line
of bulk o•rden seeds and
onion seta.
1 good McCullough Chain
saw
S6S
1 Good Used Poulan Ch11n
Saw
SSO
S_urvivor Sates only nt 95
On1on Sets llbs.
Sl 00

Pomeroy Landmark

9a

-J4Ck W .

1..-..:

Clr~if'f, Mgl"

PhOne 992-2111

Shirlefs Beauty Nooll
John St.

Shirley (Jeffm) Wolfe
R-llgo

- · spo(i.list--'l

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.
~h. HZ.Z174

~""'"'

GUMR SERVICE
Conttnuaus one
ptece
guh'ers. We hang tt, or do 1t
yourself. Special prices to
builders.

Nob1f Summ1t Road

1!1.1

Middleport, 0
992-5724
Complete
Sales
and
Serv1ce and Supplies.
3· 14 1 mo.

Young's Carpeting
Route 3, Pomeroy, 0 .

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

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

Carpei-Lino •. T1le
Phone Mike Young at
992-2206 or 992·7630

4· 28 1 mo

2 23-1 mo

Superior
Steam Extraction

Let Pomeroy Landmark
soften &amp; condition your
water and a Co-op water
softener , Model UC . XI/1
Now Only ,

279 •95

Let us
Free.

test

yo~r

water

Pomeroy Landmark

lnsulalloo Sel'lices
FinanctnJ A•atlabl•
Blown 1nto Walls &amp; AH•cs

Young's Carpeting
Route 3, Pomeroy , 0 .

StORM
RE~IAUMENT

WINDOIIS
AWMIRUM
SIOING-SOffm
I

"The Ortgtnators
Not The Imitators"

OWN YOUR Own Bus1ness Area
D•s lributor for Rand McNally
Mops No Selhng Servrce preestablished accounts Invest·
ment $12 500 secured by mven
tory and equ1pmen t Wr~te 1n
clu~e
nome
address
telephone and 3 references to
Personnel Dtrec tor , NAMCO ,
Brrm ,
3928 Montclotr Rd
,ngham, AL 35213 or coli col·
lect (205) 870·4228

aFT X 40 H trOller 2 bedrooms
.
good condlfJon, Phone 992·2941 NEW ALL elec hCime rn Syracuse
or~2 2689
Lorge lo t oium1num s1d1ng 3
bedrooms , k1tchen
d•nmg
1972 2 BEDROOM Mob1le home
oreo , oil fully carpeted both
completely furn1shed near
ufrl tty room and garage Phone
Golltpolrs $3500 Phone (304)
992·7419.
882 2466 onyf•me
7 ROOM ::C
H-ou-s~e-,-;b~o-;th no lurol
1974 TWO BEDROOM mob1le
gas
,
2
acres
Rutland on
home completely furnrshed 1n·
Beechg ro ve Rood
Phone
dud.ng, wQsher and dryer two
742·J031
ownrngs wtth enclosed 9'10roge
b u•jd•ng W1ll rent IJJ ocre ,
mobde home 5l fe w ith woter, ;---~:;;;i;;;::l~~n
e lectnc and septtc system , I
Phon e 992·2508 or 992 3.435

Space reserved for your
property.
SOMETHING NEW Large Showplace home .
Rooms
and
closets
everywhere, 3'h baths and
nice gameroom with buill·
'" bar and
restroom
facilities Large lot with
beautiful trees
KENO 2 acres, 3
bedroom home , bath ,
furnace. garage. on good
country road. S25,000
DEXTER
Storage
bu ilding 30'x40' . W1ll sell on
time
MIDDLEPORT
2
bedroom home in good
location , natural gas heat,
bath and yard . $12,000
8 ACRES - Just outside
Pomeroy . 8 room home
with bath. central heating
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
room house with bath and
2:V.. acres of land near
Rutland . 59.500.00.
Buy now wit~ only l F'l!r
Cent down. A few hundred
and you lNIII own your own
home.
G Bruce Teaford
Helen L. Teafdrd
Assoctafes

- .r.r.s.1 mo

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
Siding,
Storm
Windows
&amp;
Insulation .
Ca II Professiona Is ,

410 1 mo

MAIN
POMEROY, 0.
JUST LISTED 4 Lots
with nice home 6 room
frame has 3 or 4 bedrooms,
bath, carpeting, porches,
workshop , garden space
$13,000 00.
JUST LISTED - 2 Lots
wtth house , 2 or
3
bedrooms, 2 have 1ust been
remodeled. bath . porches,
still needs some repa ir,
ASKING JUST $4,850 00.
JUST LISTED - 4 Ac res
lays close to the mines,
water tap paid 11h miles
off Rt 124, Ideal for home
or tratler. 54,600.00
JUST LISTED - HI ON A
HILL- 1 floor plan has 3
bedrooms, bath, formal
dining. k1lchen w.range &amp;
ref.,
some carpeting,
storage
bldg ,
part
basement $14,000 00
JUST
LISTED
3
bedrooms, bath, own water
system,
porches,
basement ,
RiVER
FRONTAGE Ideal for
fisherman or boatsman, 2
fireplaces ASKING JUST
$7,300, 00.
JUST LiSTED Lovely
log cabin. 2 bedrooms,
bath , dining room, porches,
basement, large fireplace
In llvtng R Forced air hot
water heat, porches, 2 car
garage, 1 acre of ground . A
STEAL
AT
JUSf
512,000.00
JUST LiSTED - Close In
2 story frame , 3
bedrooms ,
bath,
full
basement , kitchen has
Range, Ref and other
Almost furnished. ASKING
JUST $13,500 00.
ROUTE 124 - Very lovely
brick &amp; frame . About 4
years old. Must sell, owner
moving. G . I. APPROVED
4 bedrooms, bath , central
gas and air cond. 'h acre
GOING
AT
A
LOW
$28,500 00.
BUYING OR SELLING
LOOK
TO
CLELAND
REALTY FOR HELP.
HENRY E. CLELAND
REALTOR
Hank•Cleland
Associate
992-2259- 915·4112

HOMESITES for sale l acre and
up M1ddleport, near Rutland
Coll992·7481
NEW 3 bedroom house, 2 baths
oil elec , 1 ac::re Mtddleport,
close to Rut land Phone 992·
7481
SMAll form fOr sole , 10% down
owner fu-ianced Monroe Coun·
ly . W Va Phone (3041 "772
3102 or (304) 772 322~_7.,..---:CO UNTRY farmla nd w 1th sedud ·
ed woods water and good oc
cess m Monroe County w Va
$1,000 down co li (304) n'l·
3102 or (304) 772 3227
CommerCial property apprO)( l7
acres level lbnd . located ot
Tuppers Plotns on Qh1o Route
7 Phone (614) 667· 630.4
NEW 3 bedroom house bu 11t. 1n
lo, 1tchen bath and •; 2 Phone
742 2306 or contoct M•IO 8 Hut·
ch 1son Rutland oh 1o
VA FHA 30 yr f1nancmg Ireland
Mortgage 77 E State, Afhen$,
phone (614) 592 3051

---

~

----

ALLEYOOP

A local contractor
Phone 949-2801
or' 949-2860

! SEBEOb

I I

Free Estimates
No Sunday Colis Plene
4-24·1 mo .

• ,,., ,..

FRONT END
ALIGNMENT

LYons Addition - Located
on the hill In Mason C1ly,
W Va (close to Wahama
High School). All brick.
extra large k1khen w·wood
burntng
ftreplace ,
3
bedrooms , 2 baths, dining
&amp; fam•ly room, large livtng
room (ftreplaceL (over
3500 sq ft of floor space)
Large
porch
(patio).
double car garage, 2 acres
of land (chain link fence)
Lots ol extras . Upper
bracket. Priced on in ·
spection Call or .see.

J. H...Jake"
Somerville
Real Estate Broker
212·Sth Street
Point Pleasant, W.Va .
25550
Phones: 675.3030 Cofftce)
675-4232 (evenings)
675·3431 (evenings)

I,

I

A CR:IIICAL ~'TATE
OF AFFAIRS! 60 OUT
ANI? LOOK.
Now arrange the ctrcled lene rs to
form !he surprtse an swer , as suggested by the above cartoon

LITTLE
SO HE
HE TOOK A
WOto!'T
LOOK AT HER ··
OPERATE
SAID IT WAS
A HOPELESS
AGAIN?
CASE. ·-

Df1 . ZEE, YOU'VE

t'~

NOT SURE, BUT

Answer: "[ 11 I

I TH11'1K 11 15
AN Ol HER CASE
vm ERE DUBB

WANT..$ TO COVtR
HIS OWtJ
IGNORAUCf -

Yesterda

s

Y

I

XXJ-'D' -C I I J"
(Answers lomorrow)

Jumbles C RAWL

DOILY

ADDUCE

SLUICE

How those gangsters sometimes took the1r
enem1es-FOR A SLAY RIDE

An swer

~;;=~~

~am

"

THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
2 Posllton
by

I One of the
3 B's

PAJ.AY. f'BT SfPP ~
!-IST!:I-l ,l

ORA.

1\IIS CA~l{
I.(OU SOW

Mf:

~~1{

fi.IIG OOB

..

LAo'-'b 1

&lt;

'

L------~---L----~

'
~
• L-~--L--1---.:.'...:
· 1 1,:___

·

favorite

12 Francis or

AONJl.I'R

..-rm""-

1sland

4 Sandwtch

mcantation

WHAI CO
4DJWAfJT,

Ji.l'5T

fJOTICEt/

on ship

3 Greek

5 Hearhes
11 Start of an

,. BORN LOSER

5 Im1tat10n
Golonka
fabr1c
13 Appear odd 6 Box-scor~
(2 wds.)
entry
Yesterday's Aoswer
15 Lilly Dache 7 Wmghke
27 Tap
23 Fragrant
creatwn
part
flower
dancer
16 Mov1e hon
8 Threatens
(2
wds
)
29
Hag
17 Ending for 9 Etch
·
24
Fervent
30
Curtain
stew or cow 19 Haystack
25
Rue,
fabrtc
18 Forte
1tem
31 Patios
tansy,
20 Presidential 14 David's
35 Concermng
thyme, etc
nickname
weapon
(2 wds,)
21 Tahar,d or 19 Delicate hue 26 Stlverware
37 "- lost' ''
Jtems
Garter .
22 Words for
'
38Rwde
(2
wds
.)
22 Snow f1eld
Nanette

1 opened m4 biq
mouth and mlj
brains spilled
out!

Seventt.l-five'
Slim, we could
afford that!

Oswald and Jim Jacoby

gear

NORTH 101
• A 10 3

26 Campsite
sight
Consume
29 Ctgar shape
32 Land

llo ¥ 96a42

33 Ptllage
34 Author

• Q 10

&lt;~oJ 8 64

.. Q 10 2

SOUTH
.- KJ96&gt;4

Levm

36 Canttcles

¥ AKJ
t 92

39 JewiSh

.,

.." '"

PHOGBOUND

WHAT

SAID. IF AH PUSHES TH IS

'MJUW

BuHON, MAH SE:CI&lt;ETAI&lt;'/

')OU

UJ&lt;S

WILL

SOME CCFFEC
AN'T\\0

$300 Fi:)f&lt;lREIUJSHNUfS I'LL TIP HIM 11&gt;500- NO

SENSG

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-

Here's how to work
AXYDI. BAAXR

OVE'R-

COM£
IN-

"' 7 3
Norlh·SQuth vulner able

ascetic
40 Source
41 Vactllate
42 Upon
DOWN
I Wild party

2 CO R:::R THE' COFFEE-

TiPPINS
HIM

Is

It :

WINNIB

YOU KN OW THE

U 1H

COMPANY BE:TTE:R

'

..

111AN ANYBODY. .
INCLUDING ME I

West

Nor th Easl

South

Pass

1•
3•

Pass
Pass

3N T

Pass

4•

Pass

Pass
Pass

6•

Pc~ ss

Pass

Pa ss

1.-

••
7 .-

Open1 ng lead - 4 "

QUH

AND REMEMBER
WHAT A GREAT
TEAM WE MAKE/
BE3SIE,

EF

I NEEP

FHDFZH

MEPPHMMYEZ
VIH

DKHM

VIWKCM

DY

VlH

YOU

NDUZA

YOU Ill

JEMG

QV . -

ADK

NID

VI H

the Culbertson four- and flvenotrump co nventiOn OLher
expert patrs d1sdamed a n y

four-notrump

co nv entw n,

V 1 W K L although Bla c kwood was
becommg popular in the mtddle We s t
U H M V In any event , t h ey reached

V D

seven spades and 1t was up to

LHliF West to lead He g r oan ed a nd
s1ghed • " What am I s upposed
XQUR E WM
to lead They b1d seve n

wtthout usmg thear conven-

.'

Yesterday's Cryptoquole: HE WHO MAKES A FIRE OF tion '
Th e n h e studied a wh1le a nd
STRAW HAS MUCH SMOKE, BUT LITTLE WARMTH. fmally led the four of hearts
PROVERB
C) 18117 K.lnl F••luru Syndlca\.e. lne:.

-•
•

BARNEY

GIT UP, PAW !!
I

•

WHEN ~OU 1411 AVOLLE'f,

-

''THONG! " NOT

..
•

IT'S SUPPOSED fO

w

•

.-"'

5- 1 1'

South, a great player , had
one weakness H1s psychology
was way below normal He
l ooked
over
dummy ,
wondered just why West was
ta lkmg and fmally dec1ded
that West wa s trymg to
protect three trumps to the
queen . So. South led h&lt;s kmg
of s pades at trtck two West
showed out and the slam was
gone to no man 's land
Soulh demanded a rulmg
about West's remark He got
one quickly. It wa s pomted out
to h1m thal there was a cor·
rect play . That wou ld be Lo
play dummy 's ace of s pades
lf both opponents followed he
m1ght try to ·master m1nd a

seco nd -round

fme sse. but

whe n West s howed out h1 s
proble m would have been

over

By Oswald &amp; James Jacob y

I.ONGFEt.J.OW

One letter simply stands for another In this sample A is
Here IS a hand that cau sed
used for the three I.'s, X for the two O's, et c S1nglc l etters some great excitement 1n the
apostrophes, the length and formahon of th e \\ nrds are all fmals of the 1936 Spmgold
htnis Eac h day the code letlcrs are dtfferent
North and South were usmg

VI H

NONSENSE/

• 10 8 7 3

• J5 43

(3 wds )

....•

EAST
• Q872

wEST

measure

ULABNER

17

t AK 876
o!o AK9a

28

~

thought costly

• Q

27 Biddy

W1ll do odd 1obs, roofing patn·
ling gufler work Phone 992·
7409

PIANO TUNING Lone Damels 12
years of ser11tce
Phone
992 2082

BRIDGE
alk cheap -

Ftreman's

CRYPTOQUOTES

SEWING · AL TERATION5
Uphohte-r1ng
drope1
reasonobf 572 South Thtrd
Ave
•ddleport . Phone
992 6306

S·!»-Big Valley 3 ; My Three Sons 4 : Brady Bunch 8,
Mister Rooers' Neighborhood 20,33. Afterschool
Special 13 , Slar Trek IS
5.3o-Adam 12 4: News 6 , Family Affair 8, Elec Co
20,33
6 !»-News 3,4,6,8,10.13.15. ABC News 6; Zoom 20,33
6·3o-NBC News 3,4 ,1 5, ABC News 13; Andy Grlftlth 6,
CBS News 8.10. Vegetable Soup 20. Lilias Yoga &amp;
You 33
,
7 oo-Truth or Cons 3. To Tell the Truth 4, Liars Club
6, Pop Goes the Country 8) News 10; To Tell the
Truth 13, My Three Sons 15; Consumer Survival Kit
20, Big Green Magazine 33
7 Jo-Dolly 3. Minor League Baseball 4; Match Game
PM 6, $25,000 Pyramid 8: MacNeii·Lehrer Report
20,33, The Judge 10, Break the Bank 13; Wild
Kingdom 15
8 oo-Movle " Pine Canyon Is Burning " 3,15 : Pilot
" Archie" 6,13, Good Times 8,1 0, Nova 20,33.
9.0D-Charl le's Angels 6,13; Movie ·•King Creole" 8,
Great Performances 20,33 ; Movie ·· Red Alert" 10
9 JG-Movie "Cover Girls" 3,15
10 OO,Charlle'sAngels6.13; Bobby Vinton 4 ; Shadows
on the Grass 33. News 2Q
10 3~$100,000 Name That Tune 4, In Search of the
Real America 20. Book Beat. 33 .
11 :00-News 3, 4~6,8~ 10, 13,15, MacNeil Lehrer Repoort
33, Monty Python' s Flying Circus 20.
11.3o-Johnny Carson 3,4,15;
12 oo-Movle "The Rae~" 10 ; Janak ! 33 .
12 4o-Mystery of the Week 6, 13
1 oo-Tomorrow 3,4 .
2 . 1o-News 1J

..-------.,........_ 23 iiitii,:pitched rnrn~-

GASOUNE ALLEY

-~~~--c---~~-------

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••
: BUY, SELL OR TRADE? !
••
LISTEN TO THE
••
•
•
:
SWAP SHOP
:
••
••
: 7 PM - WMPO • 92.1 FM· :
••
••
:
92 in the Country
:
••
•
•
L--~!3.:!~---...l • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • •
•

J

UTILE ORPHAN ANNIE

EX~AVATING . BACKHOE. dozer

trencher, low Boy, dump tru ck
trucks sept•c systems. Btll
Pvlhns phone 992·2478 day or

.... _ ,.......

I MERD~P±

B.h,nd Rutland Grade
School Eventng work by
appomtment. Ph . 742·2005.
5-6-1 mo pd

BROWNS FIRE and Safety Exftn·
quishers All s1zes, busmess
home. boot. Refilled tested
Bdl Brown , Rutland
Ohio
Phone 742 2777

r

c.~..,.,, .....,.

rJ r

BEAUTIFUL TWO story home wllh
two car garage 5 bedrooms,
d1mng room , large lr11ing room,
modern klfchen, 2'/, baths,
Io rge recreol•on room, fully atr SEPTIC TANKS cleo ned Modern
SonJtoflon, 992·395.4
condt tion ed
lj,
mr!e from
school One quorter mde off WILl do roofing , construcl1on,
State Route 30 year fmoncmg
plumb1ng and heat1ng. No jOb
a 11a1loble Call 992 3863 be ttoo Iorge or too small Phone
ween9o m 'ond3p m
742 2348
HOME IN Pomeroy 2 story , cen- CARPENTER , floonng , ce1ilng,
tra l heotmg some corpet1ng
ponelmg Phone 992·2759
and ponnellmg Bath &amp; 1/ 2
MOBILE
Home Repair, Elec ,
Phone 992 7074 or 992 3465
plumbing and heating Phone
HOUSE FOR sole tn SYracuse 2
992-5858
bedrooms , and both , lot 100 x ·~.:.c.::-=::=:_~.....,,....---150 Garage cement drrve and HOWERY AND MARTIN Ex·
smal l storage bldg . furntshed
cavating, sephc svstems
or unfurnished Coll992·71.47
dozer, bockho~ . dump truck
limestone , gra11el , blacktop
HOUSE IN Tuppers Plorns, 2
povrng , Rt 143 Phone 1 (614 )
bedrooms elec heot double
698·733 1
garage 2 lots Phone {614 )
667 3065 or 667 3360
HARRISON S TV Repa1r Servrce
Calls 276 Sycamore St , Mrd
dleporl Phone 992·2522.

New Home

WEDNESDAY. MAY 11,1977
6 ·oo-Summer Semester 10.
6 :1s-F arm Report 13
6 : 20-Not For Women Only 13.
6. 3o-AG · USA ~; News 6 , Summer Semester 8;
Christopher Closeup 10,
6 4s-Mornlng Report 3
6 50-Good Morning, West Virginia 13.
7 00--Today 3.~.15; Good Morning America 6, 13 , CBS
News 8 , Chuck While Reporh 10
7 05-Porky Pig 10.
7 3o-Schoolles 10
8 !»-Howdy Doody 6: Capt Kangaroo 8, 10; Sesame
St 33
8.3o-Big Valley 6
_
9 !»-AM 3; Phil Donahue 4, 13,15 , Andy Griffith 8;
Mike Douglas 10
9 31}-(ross Wits 3. Edge of Night 6 ; Concentration 8
10 · 00--Sanlord &amp; Son 3.4. 15, Dinah 6; Here's Lucy 8,10,
Mike Douglas 13.
10 3o-Hollywood Squares 3,4 ,15, Pric e Is Right 8, 10
11 · !»-Wheel of Fortune 3,4, 15 , Happy Days 6, 13; Elec .
Co20.
11 : 3o-Shool for the Slars 3,4,15 ; Family Feud 6 ,13;
Love of Life 8,10; Sesame Sl 20,33.
11 55-CBS News 8; Ms Flxlf 10
12 oo-News 3,4.6.10.13 ; Name That Tune 15, D ivorce
Couurl B
12 3o-(hlco &amp; the Man 3. 15; Ryan' s Hope 6,13, Bob
Braun .4,' Search for Tomorrow 8, 10
1 oo-Gong Show 3, All My Children 6,1 3; News 8,
Young &amp; the Restless 10. Not For Women Only 15
1.3Q--Oays of Our Lives 3,.4, 15 , As The World Turns
8. 10
2 !»-$20,000 Pyramid 6,13
2 3o-Doctors 3,4 , 15 , One Life to Live 6, 13, Guiding
Light 8,10
3 oo-Another World 3.4.15. All In The Family 8, 10: On
Aging 20
3 15-General Hospital 6,13.
3 Jo-Match Game 8, 10 , Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20.
4 oo-Mister Cartoon 3, Little Rascals 4 . Gong Show
15. New Mickey Mouse Club 6. Lucy Show 8:
Sesame St 20,33; Movie "They Got Me Covered"
10. Dinah 13
4 15-Liftle Rascals 4
4 3o-My Three Sons 3, Afterschool Special 6 , Par
fridge Fa 1 .:y .u:; Flintstone' 15

Unscramble these lour Jumbles,
one !etle r to each square to form
four ordtnary words

BISSEU SIDING CO.

BRADFORD, Auctioneer Com
plete Servtee Phone 9-49·2.487
or 9.49 ·2000 Rocme Ohio Cntt
Bradford
=E"Lw
"=oo'='o= ::s"o "w"E::Rc:S-:R
::E::Pc:
Ac:IR:-oSweepers toasters ~rons oil
small oppl1ances. Lawn mower,
next to State H1ghway Garage
on Rou te 7 Phone (614 ) 985
_::3::82:::5:;__~-,-...,.~--,--:REMODELING. Plumbmg heating
and oil types of generol repatr
Work guaranteed 20 years expenance Pkone 992 2409
SEWING MACHINE Rep01rs, s~r·
v1ce all makes, 992·2284 The
Fobrlc Shop , Pomeroy
Authonzed Smger Soles and
Serv1ce We sharpen Sc1ssors
EXCAVATING dozer, loader and
backhoe work , durl1p trucks
and lo-boys for fl1re w1ll haul
f dl drrt, to so1l , limestone and
gro vel Call Bob or Roger Jet
fers
day phone 992 708'il
ntght phone 992·3525 or 992 ·
5232
EXCAVATING, dozer backhoe
and d1tc~er Charles R Hot·
f,eld , Ba ck Hoe Ser-.11ce
Rutland , Ohto Phone 7.42 2008.

oo-

'i1' 11\frut ID'\1

FAVOR--

3 bedroom , 2 '1,
1 m1le north of
$.:12,500 Phone

POMEROY - Restaurant.
Be Independent and make a
reasonable living. All
l:!qUipment SeatS over 75
Quick sale for only $13,500
Centrally located
RUTLAND Large 3
bedroom
home
wtth
equ1pped
kitchen.
basement 2 car garage
and nice yard.
MIDDLEPORT Good
tnvestment 3 apartment
br ick building wtth garages
near
shopping
Only
$17,500

__

A N5W OIJ5! ... LOOK" Lll&lt;l' We'RE-

,., IN THE- SAME BOA" eA?Y!

BEEN 50 GOOD
TO ME, I HATE TO
ASK ANOTHER

•tiJUICtu AG·Ait~ ,

l/irg1l u. Sr., l&lt;ealtor
216 E. Second Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Phone 992-3325

BUT H5lt 5L!;;P5 CTIN15 YOII· ·T HAT ·o;

Alignment.
whee~
balancing,
tune-up 1
brake work, , minor
reo air.

WIIIIIOWS6DOORS

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

LJackW Carsey,Mgr.
Phone 992 . 2181

TEAFORD

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

DUGAN'S

2· 23·1 mo

NEED A WATER
SOFTENER?

Syracuse

Owner

1976 CB 750 Hondo 1800 mt w1th
ace lrk e new cond1h0n Coli
ofter7p m 985·3919
TURN OF The Century sohd oak.
motch 1n9 d tnrng room cholf9o
Bentwood Supports, stfl pped
and ready for f•n• s hrng $175
for se l Phone 992 24 13 oiler 5
pm

Newws 6, Family Affair 8 , Elec . ,Co
20.33.
6 .!»-News 3,4,8,10,13, 15 . ABC News 6 ; Zoom 20;
Airport 33
6 3o-NBC News 3,4,15. ABC News 13. Andy Griffith 6:
CB5 News 8, 10. Vegetable Soup 20
7 oo-Truth or Cons. 3 ; To Tell the Tr uth 4. Liar ' s Club
6,, Country Carnival 8; News 10, To Tell the Truth
t3 , My Three Sons 15; Anyone for Tennyson? 20 :
Lowell Thomas Remembers 33
7 3o-Hollywood Squares 3,4, Lefs Deal With II 6 :
Match Game PM 8 , MacNeil· Lehrer Re porl 20,33 ;
In The Know 10 , W1ld King dom 13; Tl/ Honor
Society 15
8 oo-Man from Atlantis 3, 4. 15: Happv Days 6, 13; Pilot
" McLaren ·s R iders" 8,10 : Nat ional Geographic
20,33
~.Jo-Laverne &amp; Shirley 6, 13.
9 oo-R ich Man, Poor Man 6,13, MASH 8.10 ; In
Search of the Real America 33, Oasis '" Space 20
9 ·3()--()ne Day at a T ime 8,10; Best of Ernie Kovacs
20,33
· 10 oo-Poll&lt;e Story 3,4,15, Kolak 8; Elton John 10,
News 20, The Way II Was 33
10 3o--81ack Perspective on the News 20 , Americana
33
11 oo-News 3,4,6,8 ,10,13,15; Mac Nei l Lehrer Report
33
~ THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
~ ~ ~~~ ~
byHennArnoldandBoblee

Business Services

J'HON E

f..Oit .)AU:

7.4 2 2131

making Coal
...
..

tl.Jo-Johnny Carson 3 .~ . 15 : Movie "The N ight
Stfangler" 6. 13; Columbo 8. Mary Hartman 10;
ABC News 33
12 ·oo-Movle " Cool Hand Luke" 10. Janak! 33 .
1
Tomorrow 3,.( .
1 . 1o-News 13

TUESDAY . MAY 17 , 1977

15'fturtl''" Umb:1

GOT TO MAKE
TH' BED -II

PRW

A T exas reader wants to
know 1f a T e x a n mvented the

'' Texas '' conventlon . The
answer 1s '' No ' It was m·
ve nLed by Dave Cart er o l St
Loui s, bul at a Forl Worlh
tourname nt

(Do you have a quasttOn
lor the experts? Wnte . "Ask
the Jacobys · care of rf'fiS
newspaper Tne Jaco bys w•ll
answer md1v1dual qu esttons
d stam ped sefl-addressed
envelopes are encfosed The
most Interesting quesr1ons
w tlf be used .,, th iS column
and ws/1 rece1ve co p1es or
J ACOBY M O DERN I

�10- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Tuesday. May 17, 1977

National health insurance is

----! Seven miShaps probed .

r----A.~~a -:De~ths
I
BLANCHE YEAGER

Carter project early in 1978

Blanche Yeager , 85, leta r t,
died Monday evening at the
residence of her daughter .
Born Mar ch 31. 1892, i n
Po int Pleasant. she wa s the
daughter of the late Le11i a nd
Genora C 1bbs. Roush, and a
member of the St. Mark

two granddaughters, Mrs :
Sharon Grbb:ii, Rt . 1, Letart ,

Mrs .

Beverly

Jordan ,

I
1

Monday by Q'Lw"
Patrol_.
r1
..

Salisbury. N . C.; two grand·
sons. Edwin and Paul Cross,
both of Rl. 2, Racine, and two
1
d h'ld
grea
.gran services
c o ren. will be
Funeral
held Thursday atl :JO r .m. at
lutheran Church.
the Foglesong Funera Home
She wa s preceded in death with the Rev . George Weirick
by her husband , Archie A. officiating. Burial will follow
In the Suncresl Memorial
Yeager in 1958.
Survi11ors
lnclvde . a Park .
daughter , Mrs . Andrew
Friends may call 2at the
(Nora) Cross, Racine ; one funeral home after
p.m.
son , Clarence, Rt _ 2, letart : Wednesday .

Seven accldenls were in· the side. There was slight :
"estl•ated Monday by the dama•e to "-'' vehicl.. No •
• "
•
""'"
·
Gallla·Melgs Post, State injwi.. were reported.
T
Pa'L
l
··'d
a
rock
slipped
•
Highway Patro1. wo persons
1&lt;1&gt; . . .
were cited. Noe one was up off the roadway from the •
LOS ANGELES (UPI ) national health insurance.
" It 's not legitimate used as "an exruse for not
seriously
injured.
wheel of an auto driven by •
Answering liberal critics in a
" I am committed to the spending on hwnan needs cleaning up our air."
,..,. Rio •
ma jor spee ch, President phasing in of a workable that causes our deficits,'' said
Michael R. Clevenger, 18, Grace E. Ellyson, "•
•
"!have proposed tough but
Rt. 2, Bidwell, was charged Grande, and struck the :
Carter today promised to national health insurance CarU!r. "It is principally fair air pollution standards,"
will! assured clear ciJstance in .Wtndshltld of 8 Vehicle driven :
submit a national health system," Carter told the auto inadequate revenues from a he said. "We have got to
a three-car accldent at I p.m. by George W. BUer,ll, Rt. 1, :
insurance plan early next workers. "We are aiming to sluggish economy that create improve tlle efficiency of our
"".. of a BidweU , arounci •o:50 p.m. on :
year and said tlle welfare submit legisative proposals them.
on Rt. t60, two-tenu..
cars. "
mile north of Rt. 35.
Rt. 160, one-tenth of a mile •
system must be "thoroughly early next year."
He also laid heavy
According to patrol, autos north of Rt. 554. Noe one was ;
redesigned."
He also declared that the emphasis on tile need for
But "we cannot do every- welfare system ''must be support for his energy
driven by Nella A. Seyler, 37, injured or cited. There was
Pomeroy, and Wanda M. slight damage to the Baker :
thing," he said, warning lllat thoroughly redesigned."
program . "You know that
hard choices must be made
Patterson, 27, Rt. 2, vehicle.
•
"Tinkering will not be meeting our energy goals will
by Americans to reach his enough, " said tile President, be tough, " he said. "It will
Pomeroy, were stopped on
A similar accident oc· •
goals of a s\ rong economy who has alfeady asked for · require sacrifice fro.m
Rt. 160, waiting to turn into curred at t :20 p.m. on Rt. 7, 7
and a balanced federal sweeping revisions tighten eve.rypne in the coWltry .''
the Holur Medical Center four-tenths of a mUe north of •
budget by 1981.
controls over the food stamp
parking lot. Patrol said the Gallta County line ill •
But he told tile union that
A research project aimed demonstration plant The sulfur in the coal Is Clevenger, northbound on Rt. Melgo County. Patrol said a ,
" I believe we can be program.
the fuel crisis could not be at enabling Ohio's high-sulfur
somewhere on the seven· largely absorbed in the bed so 160, apparently failed to see vehicle driven by Jam.. A. •
fiscally responsible and still
coal to comply with environ· state AEP System. Ohio lllat the waste gases are the stopped vehlcl... The Westfall, 50, Patriot Star. :
satisfy the needs of our
mental regulations will be Power said that If the
people. And I believe we
almost free of sulfur dioxide. Clevenger vehicle hit the Route, filpped a stone from •
reviewed at the May 24 research project Is located in Electricity is generated as Seyler auto in the rear, the roadway, striking the •
cannot satisfy our needs
meeting of the Power Siting Ohio, it will be installed at its air heated In the combustion forcing the Seyler vehicle into windahltld of a vehicle driven •
unless we are competent and
Eddie
Blankenship's
threeBlankenship
limited
the
Commission
of the State of existing Tidd Paint at device is fed at high pressure the Patterson car.
efficient," he said in remarks
by Betty J . Pugh, 41, Addison . .
Ohio.
·
run
double
and
gutty
pitching
power-hitting
Falcons
to
six
Brilliant, now in deactivated to the gas turbine and steam
prepared for the United Auto
Damage was slight to the There was allght damage to :
Ohio Power Company Is reserve status.
Monday lilted Buffalo of hits and personally drove in
Workers convention.
generated in the fluidized bed Clevenger vehicle.. and the Pugh vehicle. No one was '
Wayne
to
a
4·3
Class
AA
the
runs
necessary
for
his
conducting
a feasibility study
Total ca pacity of the flows to the steam turbine. moderate to the Seyler and Injured or cited.
Carter flew here early
:
today for the speech , Region 4 semifinal victory ninth win in II decisions with of a facility employing the project would be 177,000
According to Ohio Power, Patterson cars. Patrol said a
At 10 a.m. Monday, a twoobviously
aimed
at over Wahama at St. Cloud a booming bases-loaded pressurized fluidized-bed kilowatts, including a 110,000. the prospective plant would passenger in the Seyler auto, car colll.sion was probed on :
combustion (PFBC) process kilowatt generating unit at have a higher generating Angle Barton, 14, Pomeroy, Glenn-Summit Rd.,' one and •
double in the sixlll.
answering Democratic crit- Park.
With the tying run on third, whi ch not only would permit Tidd, plus the gas turbine efficiency than conventional claimed injury, but was not nine-tenths of a mile west of •
ics such as Sen. George
Blankenship got catcher Tim burning more Ohio coal but unit.
McGovern who claim he is
plants, would have lower inunediately treated.
Rt. t60. Patrol said a car •
Thompson, a 400-plus hitter, would increase power
The facility would test the emissions
foregoing welfare reform and
and
would
Jacquelin R. Graham, 44, headed west and driven by
to hounce weakly to third to generating efficiency as well. 'PFBC technique which calls eliminate the necessity of Rt. I, Northup, was cited for David A. Shaw, 16, Rt. 1, :
oilier social programS to
Ohio Power is an operating lor the burning oi coal installing complex, power· failure to yield from a Bidwell, slld to the left and :
give the history-making
halance tlle budget.
i:ompany
In the American at high pressure in a consuming gas scrubbing driveway foUowlng a two-car struck a vehicle headed ;
Bison
a
chance
to.
chart
new
Before flying back to WashElectric
Power
System, one bed of inert mater· facilities which are costly to collision at 2:50 p.m. on Rt. eastbound and driven by :
MASON,
W.
Va
,
An
waters:
ington early Wednesday, he
of
three
partners
engaged In ial, such as limeston e. conswners.
application
to
the
State
Road
In
th_e
first
regional
also arranged to answer
141, one-tenth of a mile west Maggie Logan, 6t, Rt. 2, •
a
joint
research
study to
Department
was
signed
by
baseball
tourney
in
school
" questions from Los Angeles
of the Fairfield-Centenary Vinton: There was slight ~
-, citizens on a regional members of the Mason Town history, Buffalo is now one determine the commercial
Rd.
damage to boll! vehicl... No :
television broadcast and to . Council Monday evening victory away from making its and technical feasibility of
Patrol
said
the
Graham
one
waa injured or cited.
(Continued from page I)
a
full -scale
take a close look at drought when the council met in first State Tournament ap- building
vehicle was pulllng from a
One accident which took •
pearance in any sport. The demonstration plant em- Shade . It was agreed to permit.the child to continue the year at private drive headed west place at 11 :30 p.m. Monday •
conditi ons in crop-rich reguh;ar session.
an
improved that school.
Th e application requests .Bison 22·7, face the Lenore- ploying
Southern California.
when struck by an auto on Rt. :Mil In Meigs County :
Sen. ~ward Kennedy, [).. that permission be given to Gary winner lor the regional technique for burning coal
The board set a value of $50 on some 34 electric typewriters driven by Keith C. Brown, 19, seven and two-tenths miles !
while
controlling
the which are no longer needed. It was agreed that some of the Rt. 2, GaWpolls. Brown was east of Rt. 7 was stW under :
Mass.. in a speech to the the town to work on the road title.
UAW Monday, asked Carter in order to · undertake the
Thompson's run • scoring emission of particulate and machines will be placed in the elementary ochool offices and heading west on Rt. 141. His investigation today by the. ,
to set a target date for water system project in double in the fourth and Jerry gaseous pollutants. The other the others will be offered to students. A request from the senior auto hit the Graham car In patrol.
•
which a $250,000 Colll1]1unity Tucker's pitching gave two partners are Babcock &amp; citizens In regard to kitchen equipment at the Pomeroy Junior
••
Development grant has been Wahama a Hl lead entering Wilcox, Ltd. of Great Britain High School was discussed with Dwight Goins. Goins said
•
and STAL-Laval Turbin AB, several schools had indicated IIIey wanted SOII)e of the
the sixth.
obtained.
'
•
All permits will be com·. · Tucker, who shut out the a turbine manufacturing equipment. It was agreed that the senior citizens group will get
(Continued from page!)
.
!
pleted when ~pproval ·is given Bisons In the regular season, subsidiary of ASEA of the equipment not requested by the other schools.
fell outside tile water supply storage 11rea and most of the;
to the town by the State Road gave Up a single to Chuck Sweden.
The board also discussed with 'Goins a fence at the Meigs
111
Department. After It Is Angie to open the inning. · The feasibility study is to Junior High, tile repair of tile parking lot at the high school, ~::."J :f :,~~to~~~~ ro:_::~::f.~aTtf
received, blds will be taken White Falcon manager be completed this summer. possibly gs tes for the high ochool and the condition of roofs at drought In California is expected to reduce river levels this
on June 20.
Muidon Spencer inunediately At that time AEP will tlle schools. Goins will gather more information on all of the smnmer to tile loweat ever recorded, tile govenunent said. The
to projects.
The council asks that all called up liCe lefthander Mike determine whether
!lrolll!ht is now two years old.
proceed
with
the
design
and
lots he mowed and trash Goldsberry.
The board approved trips for the Pomeroy Safety Patrol,
cleaned from yards. A free
Goldsberry, 4-2 entering construction of a 67,000- to Cedar Point later tllis month, and for sixth graders at the
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Flowers, Letart; Judy Willet,
gas
turbine Harrisonville Elementary School to Cincinnati later In the
trash pick-up will be held on the game.-walked the bases kllowatt
ADMITTED- Iva Howell, Point Pleasant; Thomas
May 26 and 27. Council also loaded between a sacrifice
summer. There are no board expenditures involved. A letter Rutland; June VanVranken, Byus, Point Pleasant, and
reminds residents that BB and pop out. The wiry lefty
from the Meigs High Athletic Boosters was read pointing out Pomeroy; Doris Haynes, Melinda Waugh, Huntington.
guns are not permitted ln then hit Jeff Rowe to lore
tlle need for visitor bleachers on the foothalllleld, the , la~k of . Pomeroy; Madolyn Chaffin,
DANCE NOTED
town.
home the tieing run.
There will be a square manhole covers between the school and the field, and the need . Pomeroy ; A.mos Cross,
Holzer Medical Ceutet
Attending were Mayor
Wahama gave the Bisons a dance Saturday at the Racine lor the development ol a track so that some track competitions Rutland ; Cleatus Arnott,
(DIIcbargea, May 16) '
·
Fred
Taylor,
council two-out .scare in tile seventh. Legion Post Home from 8:30 can be held here instead of at other schools.
Pomeroy; Donald Covert,
Gary Allen, Jr., Angela .
It was reported lllat tile manhole covers are being made, Pomeroy ;
members, Catllerine Smith, Tucker kept the White to 11:30 p.m. Admission 1&amp;._$1.
Maggie Canada, Mrs. Parris Cofer·
tllat
the bleachers must be purchased by next fall and tlle need Rosenkranz ; Pomeroy ; and son, Lillian Gladman, .
Lawrence
Roush,
Ed
Perry
Falcons
alive
with
a
walk
and
Middleport
for tlle development of the track was recognized by the board . Martha Taylor, Middleport; William Hamsgen, Mrs.•
and Charlotte Jenks. Also scored when Tim Sayre
MEETING CALLED
present was Calvin Smith.
followed with a triple. An
SYRACUSE - A special but cannot be done at this time due to.tlle money which would · Juanita Wamsley, Mid· David Martin and daughter.~
error brought home another meeting of the Syracuse • be required.
·
dleport; George Conde, Denver McLaughlin, Amy
l
The
board
approved
acceptance
of
one
kindergarten
run before Blankenship--got Minersville Athletic
Syraclise.
Metzler, Oliver Ousley,
Thompson to end it.
Associalion to plan money student on a tuition basis ant! acknowledged a letter from Jack
DISCHARGED - Elmer Virginia Perry, Laura
Wahama, a regionaL making projects has been Slavin, art teacher, suggesting an eight week program for Pickens.
Poling, Mary Smith, Robert
semifinalist last year, had Its . called for Wednesday, .May elementary and junior high students next year with a
Spangler, Debra Via, Roy
season end at 18-12.
18, at 7 p.m. at the Syracuse · substitute teacher to be named for the high scbool during that
PLEASANT VALLEY
. WaiJ!ier, Loretta Wriston.
Municipal building. AU in· perind. Supt. Cherlea Dowler said that there are chances of
DISCHARGES - Mrs.
. (Births, May Iii)
.
terested persons are urged to hiring an art teacher for the elemenll!rY schools next year but Cecil Phillips, Galli~olls :
Mr. and Mrs. Gary Adkins;
attend. The association asks If that doesn't work out, the Slavin suggestion, which Dowler Ernest
Fetty,
Point daughter, Rio Grande ; Y&gt;:fr.
public support for the benefit commended, might be followed.
Pleasant; Venneda . Smith, and Mrs. Charles Moore;,
The attend;mce of Karen Goins and Led&amp; Mae Kraeutter, Point Pleasant; Mrs. Dennis daughter, Hamden.
of the association which
Cloudy tonight, lows in the benefits all children of the home I!C()nomics, to a seminar In Athens this month was
mid 60s. Chance of showers two communities.
approved along will! attendance of the two and Mrs. Frances
Wednesday, highs in the
Roberta to a state home economics conference in Columbus in
upper 80s. Probabillty of
August.
LODGE TO MEET
precipitation 20 per cent
The board· took no action on hiring Esther' Black for a
Past officers of Racine
)
today and tonight, 30 per cent Eastern Star will meet at the kindergarten route. The route has been driven by Norman
TONI
Wednesday.
Wood.
Mrs.
Black
was
the
only
driver
to
bid
on
the
route.
It
home of Gretta Simpson
TODD
was pointed out that Mrs. Faye Manley, also present, had not
Thursday at 7:30 p.m.
YOUTH ARRESTED
been rehired as a regular kindergarten bus driver but is still
driving her kindergarten bus route as a substitute. Both
POINT PLEASANT - A
SALE NOTED
juvenile has been arrested in
RACINE - Racine Eastern women had attempted to resign the routes last fall along with
connection with the theft of Star will hold a bake sale several other kindergarten bus driver! for ''personal
over $400 worth of stereo Saturday at 9 a.m. on the reasons." Neither driver would comment on those personal
equipment from the Mason Racine Post Office parking reasons last night.
County Youth Center at lot. . Any member wishing
The board had asked Mrs. Manley to appear before the
Harmon Park, according to baked goods to be picked up board and explain why she resigned last fall but later bid on a
Point Pleasant Police Chief for the sale are to call 994-2:i61 kindergarten bus route. Dowler pointed out lllat he had
recommended Mrs. Manley earlier to be hired lor the route
Jim Gaskins.
or 949-2051.
and was ri!C()mmending Mrs. Black at last night's meeting.
Dowler pointed out that Mrs. Manley has filed a grievance with
tile board in the matter and he said lllat he is seeking ·legal
PLEASE I
If it's a worthwhile loan to you
counsel on the problem.
·
The bOard set a special meeting for next Tuesday evening
The must· have
- it's worth seeing us first. We'll
at which time tile legal advice is expected to be available.
white dress by'
start processing your loan without
The meeting concluded with Dowler reporting lllat a 7.5
Toni Todd.
delay. Your banking business is
mill levy will be placed before voters of the district at a special
With the newest
election of June 7. All of the millage is a renewal. Unless It is
taken seriously, here.
look in fashion passed this year, the state foundation moneys will be cut off
pleats! Permanently
Jan. 1, 1978, Dowler said, leaving tlle district with only 12.5
Give Us Cl Call
pleated skirt
mills on which to operate. The district could not operate on
such funding, Dowler salq.
fanning out from a
"THE
Board members attending the meeting were Wendell
5lim top accented
Hoover, Dr. Keith Riggs, Virgil King and Joe Sayre. Principals
in bold contrast
present were James Diehl, high ochool; Bob Morris, Pomeroy
color. White with
FRIENDLY BANK"
and Middleport elementary ochools, and John Mora, junior
black, red or green
high school. Charles Downie represented the teachers of the
polye5ter knit.
district. The board took no action on a request from Mrs.
Machine
wash-dry.
Bernice Hollman for a supplemental pay Increase for extra
..
printing dulles for the district.
·
8· 18. '30.1;10
~

Ohio Power taking part
in high sulfur coal studies

Proposal to vote
7.5 mills gets
cool reception

o d warns board
~

schOols needing mon
Ro\ClNE - The Southern
Local School Board in regular
session Tuesday night
rejected a proposal to vote on
a 7.5 miU levy at a special
election, granted contracts to
non-teaching personnel and
adopted a new school
calendar.
Based on projected income
and expenditures for the
coming
school
year,
Superintendent Bobby Ord
recommended to the board

that a 7.5 mill levy be placed
on the ballol at a special
election in August. The board
voted 4· 1 to reject the
proposal. Ord said that unless
the millage is passed soon
there is no way that Southern
Local Schools can keep their
doors open past October.
Supt. Ord told The Daily
Sentinel today the levy would
be in addition to the 20 mills
the district presently has lor
support of its schools. Since

20 mills falls short of the
minimum required by the
state for lull participation in
the Foundation Program. the
additional 7.5 mills of local
taxation actuall y would
produ ce approx imate ly
$190,000
annuall y
lor
Southern schools.
Supt. Ord proposed the levy
for a three year period.
He declined to say what
steps - if any - he would
proposed to the board next

tall when there is no money.
Given u continuing contract
was bus driv er Romaine
Frederick. Don Smith, also a
bus driver, was given a one
year contract.
Cooks rehired lor the '77-"78
sc hool year were Alm a
Johnson , with a continuing
contract ; Helen Diddle, two
year contract, and Ann Boso,
one year. Isabelle Lewi s
received a two year contract
(Continued on page 16)

.Falcons edged

•

/.

•

en tine
VOL. XXVIII NO. 24

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

WEDNESDAY, MAY 18, 1977

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

Application
is signed

. Teachers •••

QUALITY HOME
FURNISHINGS •••
AT THE

News •• in Briefs

LOWEST

POSSIBLE PRICE

BAI&lt;ER
FURNITURE

.,.liio,_________________..,.

OUR LOANS

A FULL
SERVICE

HELP TURN

BANK

Weather

ON A "HAPPY f.ACE"

..
•~·

"
..,

,,' .

.,

vJ
.0

"'

'"

"'
vi
C)

"'

ELBERFELDS ·IN . POMEROY

PLEAn,

FAMILY DINING

AT ITS BEST

THE INN PLACE
WEDNESDAt NIGHT SPECIAL
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
Our NEW Telephone Number Is

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

DEPOSITS INSURED TO $40,000

Visit our Salad Bar . Fish and Ch ips,
Coffee, Tea or Milk .

'

Try Our Delicious Strawberry

Shortcake, with or without
Whipped Cream.

~
ADOLPH'S

·'

~

"

Main Store and
Mechanic Street
Warehouse
Open Friday
9:JOto I p.m .

Other
Weekendays
9:30 to 5 P·~ ·

DAIRY VAUFt
HRS. ' IB ,OO A.M. Iiili ,oo P .M. Sun . Thur&lt;. 10,00 A.M.
hi 12 :00 P.M. Fridl)' and S.turday.

See Us At The Pomeroy Bend Bridge

ELBERFELDS

t
'.,

•

~

'

.

MRS. ALICE WAMSLEY, Mrs. Jeanne Braun and
Thomas, I to r, of the staff of the Meigs
Seruor Citlzens Center kept the program rolling du ring t!JC
observa~ce of Senior Citizens Day Tuesday .
Mr~ . El~nor

By United Press International
BRUSSElS, BELGIUM - DEFENSE MINISTERS of the
Norlll Atlantic Treaty Organization today approved a
sweeping program to build up the alliance in the face of an
"increasingly offensive" Soviet military expansion. The
ministers, in effect, fully endorsed proposals made by
President Carter at the NATO swrunit meeting in London last
week.
They also agreed to aim for a large increase in defense
spending equalling the inflation rate pius 3 per cent every year
from 1979 to 1984. But they said allowances might have to be
made for I!C()nomically weaker members. U. S. Defense
Secretary Harold Brown, in a news conference after the
meeting, warned NATO is planning to meet tlle Soviet
challenge.
"I would hope that today's decisions would convey to the
Warsaw Pact.countries the tllought that in the absence of an
agreement on reduction and equality of forces In Europe, the
competition is not going to be one-sided," Brown said.
WASIDNGTON - A MEMBER OF THE HOUSE Ethnics
Committee invesiigating the alleged South Korean bribery
scandal in Congress says a potential witness had bee n asked to
testify two days before he was found murdered.
The congressman, declining to be identified, also said
Tuesday "it would be only circumstantial" to suggest Alex!
Goodarzi, 36, was slain to prevent him from testifying. But he
said Goodarzi, maitre d' of the Rotunda restaurant on Capitol
Hill, ''was very afraid' ' to go before the committee.
· The congressman said in an Interview that one of his aide s
contacted .Goodarzi a week ago to try to line up. his testimony
because 11 We were checking out rumors of wrongdoing,
including by members of. Congress, at the restaurant. "
•
NEW YORK - FEDERAL INVESTIGATORS have
recommended inspection of all Sikorsky ~I helicopters
because they suspect the failure of a small landing gear
attachment caused the Manhattan skyscraper helicopter
accident that claimed live lives on Monday.
Such a wide inspection program could include even the
helicopter used to shuttle Pre,sident Carter about. The
presidential craft is the same model as the one that toppled
over on the roof of the 59-story Pan Am Building in midtown ·
Manhattan. There was no immediate indication from the
White House of whether an inspection of the President's
helicopter was planned.
CHEYENNE, WYO. - THE STATE BUREAU of Land
Management said Tuesday there would be no "massive"
development of federal coal land in Wyoming although some
untapped coal deposits may be leased to energy companies.
Dan Baker, Wyoming BLD director, said the moratorium on
new leasing - In effect lor tlle past several years- will not be
broken until detailed environmental impact statemen~ were
finalized.
Leasing new coal lor strip mining has come under heavy
criticism from environmental groups and Sen. Malcoim
Wallop, R-Wyo. Environmentalists contend existing leases are
sufficient to supply coal for the nation's expanded needs, and
Wallop , has called for a moratorium on major new
development pending an energy review.
COLUMBUS - SIZEABLE APRIL COLLECI'IONS of
sales, personal income and corporation franchise taxes
boosted the .state's revenue receipts for the first 10 months of
tlle fiscal year more tllan 10 per cent beyond tile corresponding
figure for 1976.
State Treasurer Gertrude W. Donahey reported Tuesday
lllat corporation franchise tax collections in April totaled
$108.6 million- an increase of $25.8 million over the previous
year's figure. Mrs. Donahey said sales tax collections totaled
$100 billion and exceeded the previous April fi gure by $5.7
million, while personal income tax receipts totaled $94.7
million,ahikeof$15.8million overApril, 1976.
Thesecollectionsbroughtthe state$275 millionaheadolits
1976collections, a gain of 10.4 per cent, Mrs, Donahey said.
'

Citizens' Day in Pomeroy
By Bob Hoeflich
Harry Swan, Florence
Approxima tely 400. persons Michael, Lelia Forrest, Essie
turned out Tuesday to take Russell , Martha Robinson,
part in, a sta tewide ob- Sarah Perry, Walter Archer,
servance . of Senior Citi zens Laura Eise l s t~i n, George
Day.
Russell Newlun; Annie Price,
Staged outdoo rs at the Floyd Richards. Mary
Meigs Senior Citizens Center Sharon, Nancy Walker, Birtle
in Pomeroy, the local ob- Wyatt, Edna Wilcoxen, Mary
servance included a dinner, Bowman , and Clayton
recognition of many senior Tuppie, all over 9Q.
citizens, organizations and
Mrs . Alice Wamsley,
others for their work with the director of the Retired Senior
local program, music by th e Volunte·er gave recognition to
·senior citizens chorus . and volunteers of ·that program.
last but not least, a square
All
volunteers
were
dance.
presented a white carnation
The heat of the 80 degree worn with a ribhon to denote
day failed to discourage their . participation in th e
attenda nce at the observance program. New ·vol unteers in
or the enthusiasm of par· the p·ast year who received
ticipants in the celebration. pins and certificates include
C. E. Blakeslee, a member Pal Ingels, William Quivey,
of the Meigs County Council Lula Mae Lynch, Wilma
on Aging and chairman of the Sargent, Hugh Rousey,
Regional Commission on Lillian Demoskey , Homer
Aging, presided as master of Young, John Wickham, Iva
ceremonies over afternoon J ohn son, Edna _Carman ,
activities. Blakeslee, who Jerome Cook, Ann Cook, Ida
was also observing a birthday Young. Myrtle , Wilson,
Tuesday, said celebraHon Cres ton Newland, Phyllis
was the "best birthday party Newland, Leverett Roush,
I ever had."
Hazel Hilt, Rev. Wilbu r Hilt,
Senior citizens given Violet Jarrell, Mildred Riley,
specia l recognition - ·some Lucy Chipps, Vivian Phelps,
could attend, others couldn 't Sylvia Curt is, Virginia
-were Della Carnahan, 102; Thorne. Elva Cottrill, Cecil
Ma ry Diehl, 100; Robert Bradbury, Alma Young,
Outs, 100, and Laura Brad· Josephine Smith, Paul Burns,
bury, 100; Simon Newland, Helen Bloomer, Irene Busch,
Emma Scho ~nberg er, Goldie Edna Schaefer, Orville
Co lmer, Elizabeth Gardner, . Hogue, Garnell Clark, Lucille
Martin Mollohan , Ruth Clay, Paul Smith, Blythe
Parsons, General Hall, Ida Theiss, Helen Slack, Virgil
Christi e, Glenna Milhoan, McElroy and Mary Buck.
Lula Murray, Charles Smith, Those )"ith over 500 hours of
Bertha Lasher, Anne Grim, ~.rvice in 1976 include Betty
Nellie Groce, Belva Groce, Christopherson, Marcia
Edna Roush, Dana Hanun, Denison, . Faye Dunlavey,
Christy Baer, Anna Vaughan, Ruby Erb, Rose Ginther,
Jane Smith , Eunice Sprague, Alice Grant, Stella Grueser,
Mae Pearson, Frances Iles, Nettie Hayes, Charles Hilton,
Pearl Niday, Lois McKenzie, Jestie Molden, Alma Newton,
Cora Nichols, Clarence L ~ n co ln Russell, M~uie
Nichols, Sarah Brown, Oma Steiner, Nellie Vale and Mae
Winebrenner, Willie Cross, Weber. The oldest volunteer
Anna Hudson , Maude Bailey, is Britie Wyatt, 90, with

Local notices, briefs
OVer 50 wom en attended
the first forum on es tate
ma tt ~~s

he ld

Tuesday

e......,•ng a t the Ru t land
Bra nch of the Pomeroy
Nationa l Bank .
William J . Hobsletter ,
ma nage r of the bran ch,
extended a welcome and Mrs .

Maxine Gri ff ith spoke briefly
. on the forum before in.

LOS ANGELES- HENRY. KISSINGER says he's "hurt" · tradu cing Allorney Bernard
that Richard Nixon thinks Kissinger was delighted to find Fultz , speaker for the
evening . Joan May of the
(Continued on page 16)
Rutland

Branch

spoke on

Quarters leased
for BES office
The ~eigs County Com·
missioners Tuesday night
signed a lease with George S.
Hobstetter for the rental of
office space at 107 Sycamore
St. in Pomeroy for an un·
disclosed amount.
Also Tuesday night, a lease
was signed between the
commission and the Ohio
Bureau of Employment
Services subleasing the office
space for use as an unemployment office.
business
In
9ther

qualifications for the dog
warden job were discussed in
detail and a decision on hiring
will be made soon a com·
missioner said.

'County engi neer Wesley
Buehl was authorized to buy
asphalt materials from
Guernsey Asphalt, Big Sandy
Asphalt, Ashland Petroleum
Co., and Asphalt Materials
Co .. at his discretion, but with
a variance or no more than
$5,000 between the co m·
panit"·.
On o'r commendation lif the

Weather
Cloudy tonight, chance of
thundershowers, lows to 65.
Cloudy Thursday, highs to
upper 80s. Probability of
precipitation 69 per cent
today, 50 per cent tonight , 20
per cent Thursday.

engineer a PF"'5 bitwninous
paver will be purchased from
the Columbus Equipment Co.
for use by the copnty highway
depa rtment . Buehl also
presented plans for a steel
bridge to be constructed on
CR-29 in Sutton Township.
The project will be advertised
for bids.
. Attendinv were Henry
Wells, Richard Jones and
James
Roush.
com mi ssioA·crs, and Mary
Hobstetler, acting clerk.

servi ces of the bank . Han·
dling regis tration and fa11ors
were Georgene Grate and
Teresa Brown , bra nch em .
ployes . Sharon Barr , another
employe. jo ined other women
employes for serving of
r efreshments.
A marriage . license Was
issued to Clarence Arthur
Lawson , 19, Long Bottom ,
and Rema Rae Chafin, 18,
Pomeroy .
A $ulf ask ing $20,400 has
been flied in Meigs Coun t y
Common Pleas Court by Ida
Margaret VanMeter ,· Mid d lepor t , aga inst the Cin ·
d nna ti Insurance Co ., Cin · ·
ci i'mati . The suit is for loss of
dwel l ing and contents by f ir e
on Marc h 28 . 1977 . The
proper t y was located in
Chester .

A square dance being
sponsored bv Ra cine Legi on
Post w il l be held Friday night
a t the Post Home , not
Saturday , as wa~ announced
earlier.
A " kids Crusade " is being
held at Chester Church of God
entitled ' ' Come On and
Praise t he Lord " , t h is
evehing. 'Thursday, and
Saturday at 7: 30 p. m . There
w ilt also be a puppet show .
The pub l ic is invited .

The

Middleport

Baseball l eague
Thursday , May 19,
in
t h e former
chambers ol city
parents of player s
to attend as their
needed .
\

Yo uth

will m eet
at 7 p. m .
c oun c i l
haiL All
ar ~ asked
support is

Lessie Lusk, 89, the second
oldest . The oldest male
volunteer is Da na Howett, 88.
Mrs . Eleanor Thomas,
exec uti ve director of the
Meigs County Council on
Aging. presented certificates
of award to the Meigs Local
Board of Education , Barhara
Van Meter. Charles Barrett.
Ke nn eth Imboden, Or is
Smith, Gracie Wilson, Fern·
dora Story, the Cheste r
Yo ung Wives Club, the Meigs
Co unty Fa ir Board, . th e
Un ited Methodist Men, Bob
and Charlene Hoeflich :
Gera ld Powell, .Joe Struble,
the Southeastern Ohio
Emergency Medical Service
and Ja ck and Glenna Crisp.
Mrs. Thomas also paid high
tribute to her staff and introduced the group.
· Blakeslee was introduced
by Mrs. , Lula Hampton, a
member of the local and
regional aging groups, and a .
voca l quintet from the Meigs

High
School ,
Paula
Eichinger, Beverly Wilcox,
Laura Hoover, Jo McKinney
and Jenni Grate, accompanied by Teresa Ellis
presented musical numbers.
Invocation was by Clarence
Struble. first president of the
Meigs Council on Aging.
Pomeroy Mayor Clarence
Andrews ex tended greetings
as did Molly Varner. area
agency director on aging., and
Joan Brewer Dobbins, for·
mer ly of Meigs County ,
assistant specia I events
coordinator of the Ohio
Comm issio.n on Aging.
Jeann e . Braun, a · stall
mem ber with the RSVP
program, spoke preceding
the presentation of volunteers
by Mrs. Wamsley.
Randy Hunt directed the
vocal quintet from Meigs
Hi gh School on be~alf of his
wife, Paige, and Mrs. Hazel
Thom son , provided ac·
complmirnent for th e senior

citizens
choir
whh:h
presented several selections.
Leader of the group, Mrs.
Carrie Neutzling, is a patient
at Veterans Memorial
Hospital. Mrs. Nellie Tracy
gave a reading.
Co unty officia ls Auditor
Howard Frank, Treasurer
George Collins amj Judge
Buck were recognized.
Favors fo r the tables were
made by Ma rga ret Ella
Lewis and Dorothy Will and
flower arrangements for the
dinner were . prepared by
Mrs. Lewis, Grace Turner,
Janet Bolin, Pauline Atkins,
Juanita
Radekin .
Recognition was given local ·
counc il members . Closing
prayer was by the Rev.
William Middleswart.
After the dinner tables
were cletfred away and
seniors wrapped up the observance with a square dance
with music•provided by Carol
and Darrell Taylor. ·

C. E. BLAKESLEE, of
the Meigs and llegionnI,
organizations on agiug
was
mast er
t1f
c e remoni e s
fur
Tu e sda y ' s
Se ni or

Cilfz e n s

Day

observan ce .
T hP
audience was singing the

birthday
song . to
Blakeslee as this picture
wa! snapped .

SE LECTIONS were presented by the Senior Cilizens Choir with Mrs. Hazel Thomson accompanist du ring U1c
Senior Citizens Day observance.

Commencement speaker for
Eastern graduation announce(l
of Edu cation from Rio College Registration and was Pamela Congrove, llehl&gt;io
Grande College where he · a member of the Boa rd of Conn oll y, Etrmw Df!r.:;.t.
served as interim president Directors ,
Appalachia Jeffrey Day, Belinda lleetm·.
Cindy Dill . IJorr cl Drnk&lt;·.
from J uly 1976 th ro ugh Educational Laborat9ry.
February 1977.
Quick is a member of the T er es a E dwl!rd!'-1,, Hobin
In addition to vario us Local and Area Teachers Eikins, Mel an ie En&lt;'\"qld~rn
teaching positions, Quick has Associations , the Ohio Diana Epple. John Fvnns.
been superintendent in Education Association , th e Ma rlin E vans, Terry l"~u r a r\
Fi t1' h, Ku lh;
several Ohio school districts National
Educati o n Tamm y
F
oll
rod
,
J
c
nn ifl'r CHim·r.
and was assistant Superin- Association. and the Ohio
.
S
usa
n
Goe
bPl,
Df'h hi~· (; ri rfill,
lendent of Public Instruction Association of School Ad·
Mark
Gro
ss
nick
lf', .Jcur~t••,
for Administration in 1967. ministrators.
Ha
ll
,
Carolyn
ll nrper.
His community interests
NOw retired, he served on
the ·Ohio Board of School and include work with the Young Marcella Hartm an. Stephrn
Men's Christian Association Haube r, Jo F:llen ll"''ko.
Also, MMk H&lt;l wk, PAUl
(YMCA),
Lions
In ·
Hawk
. J am es I1 &lt;1 wth on1r,
ternation·al, Ma soni c and
Jeffer
y Hedri c k, H~Hh~Ha
Eastern Star Lodges. Ac·
Hend
erson
, J ohn l-h•nder~nn.
li vely involved in the Boy
Susan
Henderson.
t'onniP
Scouts of America as a
HO
ff
man
,
n
aPh('l
!lnnnr.
committeeman and camp
director, Dr . .. Quick is a Noah -ll ncll. ' llt•lonrl"
· member of the Presbyterian J a ckso n, Deannn Knapp,
Ph il lip l.cCo rn b. 11ro•nd;o
Church.
Baccalaureat e se rvi ces Lanha m. Mark L~w~tln,
will be conducted by Rev. La rr y L o n~en c t te. Tt&gt;rP•w
The Meigs County Commissioners released the following James Lea ch, minister .of the Longenctte-. r...:lm&lt;!l r,y&lt;mt;,
statement today concerning dust control on unpaved t;ounty Mt . Hermon United Brethren Robert McCl ure. l."n
and township highways.
in Christ Church at 2 p.m. and Ma st e rs,· .Ja ne Mi \lhoru•,
" During lhe last few day~ several people have advised the graduation will be at 8 p.m. David Mtlls. Richord Morn.
county commissioners that they have inquired at the county
·seniors to be awarded Jimmie Putman . Jr .. Br Uf'C
highway garage as to why dust control has not been placed on diplomas are Janet Ambrose, Rime, Cynth !~ Htlthi t•. .IO&lt;R&lt;
unpaved county and township highways and they have been
Cynthia Anderson , Ri ck Schm uck er, Jaynr Sm1th.
told by the county highway department that the reason no dust Barringer , Kevin Barton, Mi &lt;; hael Sm ith , I crP&lt;.;n
control has been used is because the commissioners would not Diana Benedum , Robert Smi th , .Juli a Sprnn·r,
accept bids or provide money for this expenditure.
Bennett, Jim Bing, Jewell P a m ela Spurl ock. Luonne
· "This is simply not true.
Blake , Patri cia Boston, Staats, Gatl Thonw, St nTn
"On May J, 1977 a resolution was introduced and
Bob
W
Gregory Browni ng. Gr eg Tru ssell .
unanimously passed for dust control. The county engineer. If
VanKampen
,
t'nug
Vt)nuy,
Bucha.nan, Teresa Lynn
he had chosen to do '!"· could have started inunediately to
Wh ite,
Ju li
Buckley, David Carnahan, Ken neth
apply tllts material. To say otherwise is not only untrue, but a
Whitehead,
Do
ris
Wells
Julia Carpenter , Teresa
clear misrepresentation of the facts."
.
Carr. John Cau sey. Timothy Willi ams, Br inn Wind on.
Chaffee , L&lt;&gt;tha Clark , Bonn ie Wood, ~ ni H Ynunu.
Dr. Thomas J, Quick ,
former president of Rio
Grande Community College,
will address t he 1977
grad uating class of Eastern
High School at the 20th an·
nual Baccalaureate and
Commencement exercises
Sunday.
The recipient of Bachelor
and Master Degrees from
Ohio University , Quick
completed his graduate work
at Ohio State and was granted ,
an honorary degree of Doctor

Dust controls
are available

.

\

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