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                  <text>African policies
firm says Mondale

D-10-The Swtday Tuncs-&amp;ntlllei , Sunday, May t.!. 19ii

WNDON ( I.IPI )

Vice
President Walter Mondale
said today the United States
and Britain are in "complete
agreement" on efforts to
bring about independence in
both Rhndesia and South
West Africa .
"We are in complete agreement and cooperation could
not be better between our two
governments in the achieve-

••
a floo d at Willia mson, W. Va., this spring, were made
ava ilable for such purposes by the Pontiac Division to any
Pontiac dea ler willing to pay the freight involved. Nelson
agreed and was able w get two of the vehicles for Meigs
High School. The vehicles even after repair are not to be
taken on tile road. With Nelson, from the left, are Supt. of
Schools Charles Dowler, Dwight Goins and Dan Morris ,
administrative assistanls ; Carl Brannon, senior auto
mechanics teacher , and Principal James Diehl . The two
car s will be delivered to the school Monday.

_INSTRUCTION AL CARS - Bill Nelson, left , owner of
Smith-Nelson Motors in Pomeroy, is pictured with Meigs
Local School administrators F riday when he presented
high school auto mecha nics class 2 cars which will be
used lor instructional purposes. The vehicles, damaged in

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AL- COMMERCIAL
St~eakless Machine Wall Washing
pholstery - Windows - Floors
Complete Line of . . . .
Cleanmg Equipment &amp; Supplies

CLINIC SCHOLARSHIP AWARDED - Nursing
students Neesha Smith and Stephanie Brady have been
awarded the 1976-77 Holzer Medical Center Clinic
Scholarship. Present when the women were presented

awarded the 1976-77 Holzer
Medi cal Center Clinic
Scholarship. This is the first
year that the award has been
given to more than one

OH-KAN Coin club

ADVANCED CLEANING SERVICE

will meet on Monday

:

Call 675-5572 After 4 P.M.

MIDDLEPORT - The OH- Monday in the social mom of
KAN Coin Club will hold a the Columbus &amp; Southern
regul a r bu sin ess mee tin.[! Ohio Electric building, Mill
St., Middleport . A social hour
will precede the 8 p.m.
meeting, and a 32 lot coin
auction will follow.
Out-of-town c~in dealers
will be present to buy, Sell or
trade collector items.
Refreshments will be served.
President, Ed Burkett ,
reported that new members
are presently being solicited.

L---- --------------------~I

Bo!d .Cootempo~

~.Of!.Waim Col~~

Two

nursing students have been

RES

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By LEE LEONARD
UP! State house Reporter
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - The
Democ rats' handling of their
voter registration bill last
week was another example of
legislati on
by
panic,
reminiscent of the "Six-Day
-· War' ' of January, 1975, and it
may well catch up to them.
Here's why :
The voter registrati on bill,

Ohio politics

CLEVELAND - L, M. now on Gov. James . A.
Merritt, Director, Cleveland Rhodes' desk, opens up a
Veterans Administration variety .of new registration
Regional Oflice, announced opportunities, including sothat abQut 1,000 VA-owned called ''instant" signups on
homes throughout the state election day _
are available for sale.
The Democrats feel they
Financing at 8¥.! percent need those extra signups,
.interest with low down- especially for the criticall978
payments and up to 30 years statewide election. The more
to pay can be arranged with people that vote, the better
VA as the lender_
_
th e Democrats generally do.
Single family homes as well
th e
Ne v e rth e l ess,
as properties with up to four Dem ocrats also have a
income producing units can plausible "good goverrunent"
be obtained in various reason for pushing their bill
locations and construction which allows a perron
styles. Prices range Irani registe r in Ohio -just about
$1,000 and ilp. Many of these anytime and anyplace he
homes have been completely feels like it.
The more people that vote,
refurbished and are ready for
immediate occupancy : the better the government
others may be attractive to will represent the wishes of
"do-it'yoursel!" enthusiasts, the total populace. That's
and will require repairs. what democracy's all about.
With that in mind, the
Interested parties should
· contact the real estate broker Senate calmly · put the bill
of their choice for a list of tilrough its paces ; expert
testimony, subcommittee
available properties.
work, thoughtful hearings.
sofa, loveseat and chair
Then the measure was sent to
the House for "refining."
You'll
Simple,. sophisticated styling! Tuxedo arm sofa, loveseat
About this time , word
~nd cha1r are designed to llatter today 's smart and comfurtabie
leaked out that the
tract it down
mtenors . Extra plump, reversible seat cush ions , pullover
Republicans opponents were
much faster
back and padded arms accented by weltles s styling .
conceding the bill would
become law even if Rhodes
wi th a
r
vetoed it and were laying
WANT AD
plans for a public referendum

u;

your

choice

il

......

..
Here is Colonial charm
and comfort at its best I Our
sofa , loveseat and chair
are enhan ced by Lawson arms
'
button detailing on the
wing backs , and
tailored box pleats . Plump ,
revers1ble seat cushions for
double wear and superb
sel!ting comfort,

~-77

year and has financial need to
continue his or her education.
Mrs. Brady resides at 610
First Avenue in Gallipolis
with her husband, James,
and three children. She has
maintained a 3.65 grade point
average during her first year
of nursing school.
Mrs. Smith lives with her
husband and two children at
118 English Road in pt_
Pleasant.

per S&lt;m.
Receiving the scholarship
are Stephanie Brady of
Gallipolis and Neesha Smith
of P!. Pleasant. Both are
members of the freshman
class at the Holzer Medical

Center School of Nursing.
The scholarship is awarded
annually to a local resident
who has maintained a high
scholastic average at Holzer
Medjcal Center School ol
Nursing during the freshman

ranic legislation may
backfire on Democrats

1000 VA-owned
homes for sale

their scholarship were, from the left, Janet B:.;ers,
director Of nursing education at the Holzer School of
Nursing ; Dr. James Orr of the clinic staff; Mrs. Smith;
Mrs. Brady, and Robert Daniel, clinic adminlstrator.

Two win nursing awards
GAL LIPOLIS

BUICKS
AND .

PONTIAC$
IN STOCK
READY TO GO

to repeal it.
Heaven forbid the public
should vote on their own right
to register and vote !
, Th.e House Elections
Committee, at tile direction
.of Speaker Vernal G. Riffe
Jr. , D-New Boston, began w
act as if it was sitting on the
business end of a time bomb.
'The bill was voted out after
a meager 11 hours of
testimony _
While proponents and opponents got an even break on
time, the opponents were
scheduled to testify at the
most disadvantageous hours,
when they would get the least
attention from the new s
media.
Although some fresh views
were waiting to be aired,
Rep. Don S. Maddux, DLancaster ,
committee
chairman, abruptly cut off
testimony and began U!king
amendments.
" Everything that can be
said about this bill has
already been said," quoth the
chairman .
Twenty-three amendments
were pumped into the bili and
it was sent to the House floor,
where three more were
added ,
including
an
appropriation.
The money, $2.3 million for
the secretary of state, also
had a plausible purpose. It
was to reimburse local
boards of election for the
increased cost of new
·registration procedures, a
feature Republicans had been
screaming for .
But it had another angle,
one which made Riffe and
Senate
President
Pro
Tempore Oliver Ocasek, DAkron , smile : it appeared w
preclude
a
public
referendum . The Ohio
Constitution forbids
referenda on appropriations.
If there was any doubt the
Democrats were in a hurry ,
that was dispelled the next
day, when they quickly
concurred in 26 amendments
covering 750 lines in the bill,
most of wh[ch !he senators'
hadn't read .
Normally, getting the
Senate . to agree with the
House on anytiling is like
getting the Arabs and Israelis
together .
The House version of the'
bill was printed up in advanceand hustled down to Rhodes,
just in case the ploy to avoid a
referendum doesn't hold up.
If there is to be a
referendum, the Democrats
want it as quickly as possible_
They want tile benefits of
more voters for the 1978
election , and they don't want
the referendum to become a
campaign !$sue. Further, the
law is likely to stand if voters
breeze through the short lines
of an off-year election like
this y'"r's.
In their rush to get the deed
done 1at all costs, just as in
1975 when they rammed
through six bills to the desk of
outgoing Gov . John J .
Gilligan, the Democrats may
have made some proceduta~
errors and hwtg their hat on a
loose nail.
Article II , Section 1q of the
state Constitution forbids a
referendum
on

BEST IN HISTORY OF SCHOOL - Southern High
School's varsity baseball team concluded Its 1977 season
last Thursday evening by defeating Eastern 17-2 which
capped a brilliant season, best in the school's history, with
a 17-3 season overall, 11-1 in the Southern Valley
~ference .. Southern was league champion. Front, 1-r,
Er1c Dumnng, Steve Hendricks, Steve Hill, Mike
Huddleston, Mark Forbes, Greg Cundiff, Herb Ervin and
Kelly Winebrenner; second row, Seth Hill, John West,
Dwight Hill, Scott Wolfe, Richard Teaford, Jim O'Brien,
JimBrinager, Jimmy Powell, and Coach Hilton Wolfe, Jr.
Photo by Bill Francis.

" appropriations for the
current expenses of the state
government and
state
institutions. " That's the $2.3
million .
But Article II, Section lc
permits a referendum on
"any law, section of any law
or any item in any law
appropriating money passed
by the General Assembly."
That's the rest of the bill,
including 1 ' instant"
registration .
Once again, tile Democrats
have generated a stampede
to the courtroom.

l4 State Street
Phone 446 -4290

"See me for car
home, life, health
and business
insurance~'

TO HOST TOURNEY
GALLIPOLIS - Strout
Realty is sponsoring a Men's
and Women's A.S..A. Sanctioned Softball . tournament
June 10, 11, 12. Entry fees are
$50 and two registered softballs for men and $30 and two
registered softballs for
women. For more information call Tom Meadows
at 446-8584.

Like agood neighbor,
State Farm is there.
S ' dll!' '• "" ~u·~~·e l~&lt;rpln e1
~ ~" f 0° f\ BICO"HI Q' Dn Ill

p

nC'

7601

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

VOL. XXVIIt

NO. 27

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

I

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

Reg. 179.95 UPRIGHT
Reg. '19.95 ATTACHMENTS
Total Value '99.90

$

95

MODEL

1446

~

Scott Wolfe gave the
valedictory address in which
he said the graduates have
many bridges to cross and
new challenges to face. He
said more graduates of the
1977 class intend to further
their education than ever
before in the history of the
school.
Wolfe also argued that the
student who comes out of a
smaller s.chool is better
prepared because he learns
more than just what's in a
text book.
Kevin Willford in his
salutatory address commented on the major events
occurring during the time the
'class of 1977 had been in
school.
The presentat.ion of the
class was made by ·Bobby
Ord, superintendent, and
Jack Bostic, member of the
board of education, presented
the diplomas.
The processional and
recessional was played by the
high school band. The band
also presented "Balladair.''
The invocation was given by
Heidi Ashley and benediction
by Bobbi Chapman.

Terrorists seize ~chool of children, train
Weather

Awards presented
at band banquet

Menahem Begin stricken down

Home Furnishings Dept.-1st Floor

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

He urged the seniors to "Pomp and Circumstance,"
EAST MEIGS - Carolyn
Harper was honored as follow a motto of Abraham and the recessional "Fanfare
by
preparing and Recessional. ' '
valedictorian and Susan Lincoln
In his remarks to the class,
-Goebel as salutatorian of the themselves now and waiting
1977 graduating class of for their hour to come. He Gooding expressed pride in
Eastern High School at an urged them to plan for the the schools, the class and in
impressive outdoor com- future and to feel good about the influence of the schools in
themselves . He suggested molding the class members
mencement, Sunday night.
Miss Harper is the that they start · giving to for the future . Jeffrey
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. D. someone, to something or to Hedrick, class president,
L. Harper of \Uppers Plains some service in order to feel introduced Dr. Quick. ·
The
invocation
and
and Miss Goebel the daughter good about themselves."
)&gt;enediction
were
by
the
Rev.
"Let yourself flow out to
of Mr. and Mrs. F. W. Goebel
Eldon Blake for the wellof Route I, Reedsville. Both other people," he advised.
Dr. Quick suggested that attended commencement
seniors were presented
trophies during the. com- the seniors develop a good held in the Eastern. High
l)
mencement by Principal personal philosophy which stadium.
Sunday afternoon the
will engulf doing their best
Chester Gooding.
The other top 10 students of and keeping faith .in God. He annual baccalaureate was
this year's graduating class suggested that they move into held with Susan Hannum
include in their order or active roles in the com- providing the processional
and recessional music.
grades, Rachel Hunter, Juli munity.
The Rev. James Leach,
Presentation of diplomas
Whitehead, Teresa Buckley,
pastor
of the Mt. Hermon
Jayne Smith, Teresa Ed- .was by Douglas Bissell, vice
United
Brethren Church,
wards, Kevin Barton, Marlin president of the board of
delivered
the haccalaureate
EvanS and Jennifer Gain~r· .­ education, assisted by John
address
also giving the
CAROLYN HARPER,left,daughterofMr. and Mrs. D. L. Harper, Tuppers Plains, and
The 10 top students were D. Riebel ,' Sr. , district
invoc.ation.
benediction
and
Goebel, daughter of Mr._and Mrs. F, W, Goebel, Route I, Reedsville, were nained
Susan
given special recognition by superintendent.
The
school
mixed
chorus
veledictorian
and salutatorian, respectively, Sunday night when an outdoor commencement
The Eastern Band provided
Principal Gooding.
sang,
"Times
of
Your
Life."
was held for the senior class of Eastern High School.
The seniors heard a down- music for the processional,
to-earth, short address by Dr.
Thomas J. Quick, a former
president of Rio Grande
College and an associate of
the Ohio Department of
Education
before
his
Authorities said up tv about They said the terror.ists had bostage on tile train, a bright
ONNE;N, The Netherlands · two days before Dutch
retirement. ·
120 children and teachers allowed 15 South Moluccan yellow intercity express
1
general elections.
halted
just
outside
Dr . Quick stressed the (UPI ) - 1Armed South
WiLiw;l;es
said
the were being held an school . children to leave the building. Groningen, authorities said.
importance of giving at- Moluccan terrorists
Between 25 and 50 persons
terrorists who seized an
tention "to little boys and to demanding independence for
were believed still being held They said 34 passengers were
elemen~·~hool in the
their
homeland
seized
a
known to have left tile train,
little girls" and the influence
predominantly Moluccan
::;.::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;. but a number of others were
that adults can have on lives school and an express train in
Cloudy, continued wann
town of Smelde fired shots
also thought to have escaped
of small children. He urged northeast Holland today ,
tonight
and Tuesday, chance
from the school toward the
100
taking
more
.
than
EXTENDED
OUTWOK
United Press lnternatiooal
without notifying authorities.
those attending never to be
night-time
thunWASHINGTON- PRESIDENT CARTER speaks tonight "too busy" to give attention hostages. Gurunen holding crowd of anxious parents of
Wedn~sday
through
CWSED MONDAY
the school fired at anxious gathered outside after some -dershowers. Lows tonight in Friday, generally folr aod
to more than 1,800 people suffering from cancer, strokes, and guidance to children.
the
mid
60s,
highs
Tuesday
in
The
Gallia - Jackson peroons
tried
to
contact
them
parents gathered outside.
quite warm through the .
cerebral palsy and other disabling conditions at the opening
the
upper
80s.
Probqbility
of
Mei
gs
Community Mental
tilrough
megaphones.
attacks
were
The
period, with blghs In the 80s
session of a five.&lt;Jay White House Conference on Handicapped
precipitation
40
per
cent
Health
Center
will be closed
Windows
in
the
school
arid
apparently a replay of twin
or the low 90s. Lows will be
Individuals.
30
per
cent
today
and
tonight,
on
Mond•y,
May
30, in obin
half
of
the
train
had
been
south Moluccan attacks 17
The aim of what may be the largest meeting ever of
In the 60s.
Tuesday.
servance
of
Memorial
Day .
montils ago and came ju.st blacked out.
:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:
disabled persons is to create a public aw~reness of problems
confronting 35 million Americans afflicted With physical and
mental disabilities. Disabled delegates, alternates and
observers re(iresenting more than 25 handicapping conditions
including cancer, stroke, spinal cord injury, diabetes, cerebral
palsy and "litUe person" - a condition which limits physic~!
growth- hQPe wincrease public sensitivity to their problems
through the mass meeting.
Meigs CountY Sheri!!
BELLAIRE, OHIO-ALL OF EASTERN OHIO'S coal James J_ Proffitt's departmines were reported to be in operation tnday for the first time ment over the weekend inin more than a month. Facilities in United Mine Workers union vestigated three accidents
District 6, which covers ~stem Ohio and northern West and a breaking and entering.
Virginia, have been plagued by wildcat strikes that have idled
Friday morning at 7:45
from 3,000 to 15,000 workers. The latest issue causing the a.m. at Racine Sandra L.
walkouts was a dispute over a fight in the Consolidation Coal Booth, 32, Racine, drove a car
Co.'s Franklin 25 mine in Harrison County. A foreman there that struck a car operated by
struck a miner and the foreman was suspended for several Mary K. Holter. The Booth
days. ·
car was apparently leaving
The men contended such an offense by one of them would the driveway of the Chancey
have resulted in dismissal. The men walked out two weeks ago, residence while the Holter
and Consolidation refused to discuss the situation until the men car was enterlrig. There were
MAKE WHO'S WHO - These Meigs High School band students were June Ann Wamsley, Tammy Mossman; standing, I tor , Lisa Nash, Kathy
returned. The miners voted Sunday to go back and they no injuries or citations and
Haley, Teresa Van Meter, Laura Hoover, Keith Bailey, Suzy Samuels, Kevin
named
to "Who's Who in Music," a national organization at Saturday night's
reported to work on the midnight Sunday shift. Several slight damage was incurred
King , Garland Aleshire, and D81)ny Will. Not pictured but named to the
band banquet. They are, front, I to r, Lori Wood, Jeni Grate, Teresa Ellis,
thousand miners bad struck in sympathy with the to both vehicles.
group
was Mark Davis.
Beverly Wilcox, Paige Smith, Trina Gibbs, Carl Gheen, Melody Snouffer,
Consolidation workers but they also ret&gt;~med to work.
At 3 a.m. Saturday Vicky
Dent, Hysell St., Middleport,
LIBERTY, TEX. - AUTRORITIES SAID MOTOR trouble reported she struck a deer on
apparently . caused a speedboat piloted by Houston Oiler CR 53 just off CR 34. There
quarterback Dan Pastorini to crash into a crowd of boat race was slight damage to the car
speC\9tors Sunday, killing a !3-year-&lt;&gt;ld girl and injuring four owned by Wayne Jarvis,
other persons. Pastorini, who could not be reached for Middleport. The deer was
comment, was not injured.
killed.
Liberty County Sheriff C. L. Eckols said Pastorini's boat
The dpeartment is Inlost power in one of its motors and beached into a crowd of ·
vestigating a hits kip accident
most improvea player
about 4,000 persons gathered for the speedboat races at Lake
By Bob Hoeflich
that occurred on CR 34. A
Liberty, "It went right into the crowd," Eckols said. "There mailbox owned by Stanley
Presentations of awards awards; Jana Burson, outwere a lot of people out there and the lxlat just went out Of Johnson, Rt. 1, Racine, wsa highlighted the annual Meigs standing sophomore award ;
control.''
knocked _down some time High School Band banquet Laura Hoover, the Arion
award for a junior with high
during early morning hours Saturday night.
Despite hot weather, qualifications ; Garland
of Saturday. Apparently the
Aleshire, a new award, the
lollowlng a grueling vehicle was traveling south several hundred bandsmen, national jazz award for
TEL AVIV, Israel (UP!)
parents
and
guests
were
on
schedule ol public ap- on a road and went off the
Right-wing leader
outstanding pei-fonnance in
pearances since the road to enter the county road. hand for the event in the high jazz work ; Susan Wright, a
Menabem Begin, slated to
Deputies are looking for the school cafeteria. Girls of the
election victory of bls
become Israel's next prime
vehicle
which should have eighth grade band and trophy for her work as field
rightist Llkud bloc May 17.
minister, sustained on
w' '..........
representatives from the commander, and Suzy
His doctor, Schlomo damage to the front end.
apparent relapse today
Samuels,
the
coveted
John
Proffitt reported that a district hand boosters served
Lanldao, said Begin did not
from a heart attack snfGOINS HONORED - H: Dwight Goins, left, who gave up direction of tile Me1gs Sand
Philip Sousa award to the
suffer another heart at- cabin owned by J . B. O'Brien, the dinner and were outstanding senior of the
lered two months ago, and
several
months ago when he was named an administrator in tbe central office of the Meigs
tack, but said be would Pomeroy, located on Owl hostesses.
was placed In the hospital
Local
School
District was honored at the Saturday night Meigs Band Banquet. Robin
band.
remain In the hospital lor Hollow in Orange Township Winning the top awards for . Randy Hunt, dltector of the
lateoslve care unit.
Dewhurst,
band
president, is shown presenting a plaque to Guins from tbe band while Pat
was entered and several the year were Tracey Jeffers,
several days.
Begin, U, apparently
Wood,
band
booster
president, holds a clock with an engraving lor the former director,
(Continued on page 2)
outstanding fr,shman and
items taken.
\j
.
....
...
y sulfered exbousllon

RACINE - "You are the
best educated class to date in
history, have more opportunity, and a lot of things
going for you," Dr. Paul
Hines, vice president-dean at
Marshall Community
College, told the 1977
graduating class of Southern
High School Sunday night.
Dr. Hines stressed these
'other points:
''There
are
serious
problems in society today
that will change the way in
which we live, such as the
energy crisis."
other problems that will
affect the seniors' Jives are in
the environment, inflation,
job market, changing values,
and an "identity crisis."
- "The easy and pleasant
days are behind you. The
·energy crisis will bring more
opjiortunities. In regard to
inflation and taxes, people
must take back their government.l'
-"Most of you have roots.
Take them with you, know
what you have done, and
what you can do; 1977 is a
good year with lots of opportunity and lots of
promise."

by sheriff

SAVE s29

MONDAY, MAY 23, 1977

I·

probed

95

Monday morning with
Foreign Secretary David
Owen.
Speaking to reporters oo
the Foreign Office steps, with
Owe n standi ng alongside
him, Mondale said, "I wish to
say to Secretary Owen that
mv R:over nment is most
impressed
with
your
(Continued on page 10)

en tine

Accidents,

COMBINATION OFFER!
UPRIGHT WITH CLEANING TOOLS

ta lk at the Foreign Office

ropp~;t;;;iti;;'l Eastern High honors
facing seniors Oass of '77 scholars
~

CAROU K. SNOWDEN

ment of these objectives," a result of his talks with South
Mondale said after talks with Alrican Prime Minister John
British government leaders. Vorster.
Mondale spent nearly four
He took Off at 12.15 p.m.
(7: 15 a .m EDT ) for hours Sunday evening
Washington, where he will reporting to ·Prime Minister
report to President Carter on James CaiJai:han and othe r
his !!venation European trip. British goverrunent leaders
He told newsmen Sunday tilat on his Vienna talks with South
"significant progress" had African Prime Minister John
been made toward , black Vorster _
He had aoother 00-minute
majority rule in Rhodesia as

�3-TheDallvSentinel Middleport Pomerov 0 Monday May23 1977

2- The Datly Sentmel Mtddleport

Pom~t oy

U. S. expects Israel to keep commitments
WA S HI NGTON
Prestdent Carter says the
Uruted States e~ pects ll!e new
Israel! government to abtde
by tis U N comnutments on
the return of occup1ed Arab
lands and says fatlur e w
pursue peace negottatwns
now could mean disasrer
Carter made the sta tement
at Notre Dame Umve rstly
S und ay
a ppar ently
prompted by the remarks of
Menahem Begm who ts
expected to be the new Israel!
pnme mmtster
1n
a
telev!Slon mterv1ew Sunday
The h1ston c frte ndshtp
between the Umted Stales
and Israelts not dependent on
domesh c poltttcs m e1ther
nahon Carter sa1d It lS
dertved from our common
respect for hwnan freedom
and from our common search
for permanent peace
Carter satd th e Um ted
States wtll conlmue to
promote a settlement wh1 ch
all of us need adding we
expect Israel and her
netghbors w contmue to he
bound by the U N resoluttons
wh1ch they have previously
accepted

Thts may be the most
proptltous hme lor a genume
settlement
s1nce
the
hegmmng of the Araz lsraeh
conflict he satd To let th1s
opportumly pass could mean
disaster not only for the
Mtddle East but perhaps for
the mternattonal poll tical and
economtc order as well
Carter had a full schedule
today dearmg the decks
helore he fltes to St Stmons
Island off the Georgta coast
for a stx day holiday
begmmng Thursday
He arranged to stgn the tax
rehef btll today mcludmg $9
btllton m mdtvldual tax cuts
and $3 mtllion for busmess
tax reducttons and greatly
sunplifted tax returns for
those Amertcans who use the
standard deduct1on
He also was sending to
Co ngress proposals and
executtve orders dealmg wtth
the environment focusmg on
th e need for unproved
admantstratton
and
enforcement of laws already
on the books
Hts proposals mcluded an
attack on chem1cals m the

Watergate trio
denied appeals
WASHINGTON (UP! ) The Supreme Court today
demed a hearmg to John
Ehrlichman H R Haldeman
and John M1tchell - the three
chtef defendants m the 1975
Watergate coverup tnal
The order followed a rare
news report on the JUsllces
secret deliberations, whtch
added w controversy over the
case As usual the court dtd
not mdtcate whtch JUSttces
voted which way
The court s only comment
was that Justtce Wtlltam
Rehnqutst
d1d
not
partictpare He served m the
Justtce Dep&lt;trlmenl Wtth
Mttchell
Natwnal Pubhc Radto
reported last month that the
JUSttces had voted 5 to 3

agamst revtew at thetr secret
conference
w1th Chtef
Jusllce Warren Burger
delaymg announcement m
the hope of wmrung over
another colleague
Smce four votes are needed
for revtew he apparently dtd
not succeed - if the report
was correct
Lawyers for the three had
asked for time to hie a
memorandum dealing wtth
the effect of a news report
about
the
JUsllces
dehherallons on the case but
the court reJected the request
two weeks ago
A mttton
for
re
constderatton of the ap
peals ts permttted and may
be !tied wtthin 25 days

HEALTH
Lawrence E Lamb, M.D

Help hiatal hernia
•

DEAR DR LAMB - About
three months ago I developed
a pam m the regwn of the
heart and also pams m the
nght chest stmtlar to
pleurtsy which I once had
After a thorough examma
twn mcluding X rays after
drmkmg somethmg and hemg on a turn table my doctor
told me I do not have any
heart trouble but rather a
hiatal hernta
He dtd not suggest an
operallon but suggested that
I try to bve wtth tt as long as l
was not unusually uncomlor
Ia ble I have been domg thts
but the pam seems to Jump
around from one area to
another Totlay 11 IS on my
left s1de above the heart
rcgwn Sometunes 11 ts m the
stomach
I have cut down on food
consumptiOn which I think
helps some and I am eatmg a
btl oftener
I am 83 years old and to
think of havmg an operatton
IS something I don t rehsh If
I thought nothing further
would develop I would he
sattSfted to bear the pams as
I m no baby I wouldn t think
of takmg pam ptlls as tliSn t
that bad
From what I have told you
would you suggest that I grtn
and bear 11 or do you thmk by
regulatmg my eating habtls I
could tmprove 11' I have been
wid that diet has a lot to do
wtlh this type of herma
DEAR READER - There
ts a lot you can do to tmprove
your condi It on Most cases of
hiatal herllla do not requtre
an operatton and the symptoms can be controlled by a
change m hvmg habtts
I am sendmg you The
Health Letter number 4-8
Hiatal Herma Esophageal
Reflux to gtve you a more
complete outbne of whal you
can do for yourself
The p~blem ts caused by
unproper closure of the top of
the stomach where tl JOinS
the esophagus (fOod tube )
that ts often assoctated With a
hiatal hemta Wben the
stomach shdes through the
en'larged ho'le tn the

cy's hitters punchless in clutch

0 Monday M•Y 23 1977

dtaphragm the normal
closure mechamsm stops
workmg properly
In effect your stomach IS
bke a collapstble water bottle
wtth the top off If you overftll
11 the actd-digesttve JUICe and
the contents m your stomach
Just sptll out the open top m
to the lower esophagus Thts
causes burmng and pam
Thts may cause the muscles
of the esophagus to contract
patnfully
(esophageal
spasm ) and cause pam
surular to heart pam
Those small meals are a
good tdea And you should not
lie down for at least two
hours after eatmg or drmkmg
anythmg That wtll gtve your
stomach some ltme to empty
If you keep the stomach empty there ts nothmg to spill out
the top Of course you have to
eat If you are overwetght
losmg wetght Will decrease
the pressure mstde the abdomen and decrease the
tendency I or the stomach to
hermate through the hole m
the dtaphragm
When you lte down you
should have yom whole trunk
elevated Thts IS usually ac
comphshed by proppmg the
head of the bed up on blocks
or on two strong chairs Don t
Just prop yourself up wtth
ptllows as that w!ll bend your
trunk forward and compress
your abdomen Thts m
creases the pressm e m the
abdomen and squeezes the
stomach sqmrtmg tis con
tents tnt o the lower
esophagus
Don t wear anything ttght
around your watsl Don t
bend over avotd coffee,
ctgarettes and alcohol These
and other management bps
are mcluded m The Health
Letter that lam sendmg you
(Beca use of the volume of
mat! Dr Lamb ca nnot
answer your letters personal
ly but he wtll answer
representallve letters of
general mterest m his col
umn Wnte to htm m care of
thts newspapel P 0 Box
1551 Radw Ctty Statton New
York

wo rkp l a ce
s trt c ler
enforcement of water and a1r
anhpollutlon laws new
restncltons on dO\ elopment
of federal lands and
destgnation of new wilder
ness areas and scemc ravers

The President also plaMed
today to host a reception for
Kennedy Center fund-ratSers
and dehver a keynote speech
at the openmg of the Whtte
House Conference on the

Hand1capped tomght
Ca rter
recetved
an
honorary doc tor of la ws
degr ee a t ceremo mes m
South Bend, lnd whe re he
shared the platform wtth

hi gh-rankmg Cathohc clergy
who also recetved honorary
degr ees for the tr strong
defense of human rtghls m
Braztl So uth Korea and
Rhodesta

Pirate dugouts emptied twice
By FRED DOWN
UPI Sports Wrtter

The Nahonal League s hrst
confronlatton of the season
between the Ptttsburgh
Ptrates and Los Angeles
Dodgers ended m a draw
The league s EasterJl and
We stern D1vtston leaders
spilt a four game senes over
the weekend and wound up
Sunday domg everythmg
except donmng boxmg
gloves The two dugouts
emptied twtce durmg the
Pirates 11-4 vtctory when the
Ptrates thought Dodger
p1tchers were brushmg them
back The only wounds were
the automatic $250 flnes as
sessed Dodger pttchers Don
Sutton and Ebas Sosa
The humorous s1de of the
sttuahon was that Sutton was

As'Ro • GRAPH
Bernice Bede

Osol

~mr;&gt;

Vl!J\!Ju

charged wtth throwmg at
shortstop Frank Ta veras
Sutton one of the four or llve
best pttchers m baseball felt
msulred
Wtth Dave Parker AI
Ohver and Wtllte Stargell
commg up he argued Am
I gomg to htt a !title 23{).
hitrer ' he asked I m not
crazy
Taveras was restramed by
Dodger catcher Steve Yeager
m the second uuung when he
charged Sutton and both
dugouts emptied agam m the
etghth alter Renme Stennett
was brushed back by Sosa
followmg homers by Parker
and Ohver
Parker htl a grand slam
homer and a solo homer and
Oliver and Omar Moreno also
homered for the P~rates as
John Candelana won h1s
stxth stratght game wtthout a
loss this season Candelarta
went seven mnmgs w1th Kent
Tekulve and R1ch Gossage
flmshmg up The loss was the
ftrst of the year for Sutton
after
SIX
consecuttve

loss Montrea l defea ted San
D1ego l-1 San Franctsco
beat St
Louts
20
Phtladelphta topped Houston
6 3 and Atlanta down ed
Chtcago 5-2
Expos 3 Padres 1
The Expos snapped the1r
11 game losmg streak behind
th e s1x h1t 11 stnkeout
p1tchmg of Steve Rogers who
ratsed hts record w 5-3 Four
wtld pttches by John
D Acqutsto helped the Expos
score all three of thetr runs
Gene Tena ~ s sacnftce fly
knocked m the Padres run
Gmnls 2 Cards 0
Wtlhe McCovey stngled m
one run and Gary Thomasson
homered for the Gtants who
dealt Larry D10rker making
his hrst start of the season
the loss J1m Barr and Gar)
Lavelle combmed m a seven
hitter w1th Barr ptcking up

h1s siXth wm agrunst four
defeats
Phillies 6 Astros 3
Larry Bowa knocked m
three runs wtth two doubles
and Bob Boone tripled home
two runs m the Philhes
victory over the As tros
Larry Chnstenson went 8 1
mmngs to wm hts f ourU.J
game w1th the rebel a1d of
rookie Warren Brusster Bob
Watson htt a two-run double
for the Astros
Braves ~ Cubs 2
Jeff Burroughs hit hts lOth
homer of the season a two
run shot m the thtrd helpmg
Andy Messersmith
stdelmed smce April 30 by a
pulled stde muscle - wm hts
thtrd game Jamte Easterly
took over for Messersmith rn
the seventh and went the last
three mmngs for hts ftrst
save

Enforcement of laws now

I

CINCINNATI (UPI ) Pete Rose couldn't of l&gt;een
more dtSgUsted
'I could of gone w bat 50
times and not got a hit
today ' satd Rose shngmg a
spike shoe mto hlS locker

on the books is prefen ed
WASHINGTON (UP!) - Better enforcement of
existmg atr and water polluuon standards rather than
costly new programs highlights the meMage on the
enwonment Prestdent Carter has prepared for
submisston to Congress today administration sources
report
Carter calls hts 37-!lage message the most far
reachmg envtronmenta! program ever put forward hy any
admtntStration The Carter program calls for strick
enlorcement of atr and water pollution standards as well
as creat1on of new wilderness areas
And 11 would estabhsh new standards for attackmg
chemical discharges
In contrast to congresstonal efforts w relai air and
water pollutton standards Carter s message favors more
rtgorous enforcement of extstmg standards sources sald

stan

Rose hiUess In 10 trips to
the plare grounded out to
shortstop wtth the final out m
the 11th tnnmg as the
Cincumati Reds dropped a 4.J
decision to the New York
Mets Sunday In the second
game of the doubleheader
Thts was after Johnny
Bench htl a three-run ftrst
mnmg homer and Bob Bailey

BALTIMORE (UPI ) - A subjective
evaluation of any horses greatness lS
always open to quest10n but Seattle Slew
wtll reach a smgular distmction if he wms
the Belmont Stakes June 11 w become the
only Trtple Crown champwn wtth an
unbeaten record
The mcredtble value of such an
achievement has not been lost on his 37
year-&lt;lld Ira mer Billy Turner
' It s tough trammg an unbeaten horse '
Turner satd after Seattle Slew stretched
his perfect record to e1ght vlcll:&gt;rtes by
capturmg the Preakness, the second Jewel
In the Trtple Crown
But now this makes tt that much
tougher '
Wmnmg the Trtple Crown wtth an
undefeated record would put Seattle
Slew s stud value between $10 and $15
million Seattle Slew s owners, Karen and
Mtckey Taylor who purchased the colt as
a yearling for $17 500 m partnership wtth
Dr Jun Hill already have accumulated
$808,640 m wmner s purses
The I1'.-rnile Belmont Stakes whtch has
stopped seven other horses from becorrung
Trtple Crown champtons wtll be a test of
Seattle Slew s stamma but Turner lS
supremely conftdent
The horse doesn t stop
he satd
Sunday
Last year Bold Forbes dtd stop m the

other NL games
New York scored a 4 3
YOUR BIRTHDAY
Moy 24 VlClory ln 11 lMtngs over
1977 You may meet someone Cmctnnati followmg an S..l
who s extremely creat ve and

ARIES (Morey 21 Aprll19) You
Impress and wtn people over to
your s1de today because of wt1o
and what ybu are G fts and otl'1er
flatte tng gestures are
su..Jerfluous

l

,. '

Chester
r: , w
News Notes • :t~~,:;t

By Clarice Allen
Mrs R1chard Fr~etag and
Mr and Mrs Charle! Casey
TAURUS (April 20 Moy 20) Lei Akron were weekend guests
compass on rule your actions to of Mtss Luctlle Smtih
Mr and Mrs Robert
day If you want to do something
out of the goodness ol your Maple Akron and Mrs Pa~l
heart go ahead though others Faulkner of Flonda were
feel Its 1\og cal
weekend guests of Mr anq
qEMINI (Moy 21 June 20) Not Mrs Ralph Keller
on ly wil l yov en j oy yourself
Mr and Mrs Walter
more but you II please your
Marnk
Akron were over
fr ends f you overtook their
of Mr and Mrs
mght
guests
minor fau lts and concentrate on
pra s ng their v rtues
Earl Dean havmg been
CANCER (June 21 July 22) Try called here by the death of
not to lets de Issues distract you thetr uncle Norman Rose
r you have an Important career
Mr and Mrs Denver
or t nanc al goal n your s ghts Curtts Mt Hope W Va
today Stay on target
spent the weekend here wtth
LEO (July 23 Aug 22) Use your Mr and Mrs Hobart Newell
w1t charm and lmagtnat on to go and other relattves
afte what yov want today Hard
Mrs Cleo DeTray and Mrs
sel l ta ct cs wi ll be far less
Jesste
Weber were m
successful
Columbus
Monday to see
VIRGO (Aug 23 Sopt 22) Peo
Mrs
Davtd
Belcastro who
pie want to do nice things for you
underwent
surgery
at St
today but don 1 outline for them
how to go about it Let them Ann s Hospttal Fnday
follow the1r own deas
Mr and Mrs Paul Pullms
LIBRA (Sopl 23 Oct 23) of Arkansas were vtsttors of
Someone you know may seek Mrs Allee Dodson
your assistance today Listen
Mr and Mrs Sam Clay
and try to advise this person but
Detrott
were guests of Mr
don t subs d ze your fr end
and
Mrs
Lando Clay They
Money ts not the answer
all
enjoyed
a vacatton lrtp to
SCORPIO (Oct 24 Nov 22)
Myrtle
Beach
S C
You II outstrip your compet lion
Rev
Oller
Mtddleport
was
today n areas you feel strongly
about tn th ngs where you r n a recent dmner guest of Mr
terest Is ukewarm the results and Mrs Lee Cadle
will be sl m Ia
Mr and Mrs Hugh Conroy
SAGITTARIUS (Nov 23 Dec Akron spent a weekend wtth
21) You re e&gt;&lt;tremely competent Mr and Mrs Erroll Conroy
In handling others today where
Mr and Mrs Jack Conroy
you tead by example To took for
of
Columbus vtslted on a
them to do what you can t or
Sunday wtth Mr and Mrs
wont IS fooUstl
CAPfiiCORN (Dec 22-Jon 11) Maynard Bahr and Mrs
No challenge Is too great for you Allee Dodson
Sunday evemng vtsttors of
today f Its tor unselftsh pur
poses You can rise to any occa
Mr and Mrs Lando Clay
s1on prov1ded the mot vatlon s a were Mr and Mrs Kenneth
noble one
Delong Carol Ann and Bob
AQUARIUS (Jon 20 Fob 11) Pomeroy and Mr and Mrs
You may have a situation n
Vtctor Roush and chtldren
volvlng 8 trend that s tougtl to
Mtddleport
resolve Sol c t your mates ad
D D Clelland and Mrs
vice His or her Idea ls different
Carpenter Columbus called
but more workable
PISCES (Fob 20 Morch 20) on Mrs Clayton Allen
Favorable opportunlt es abound Tuesday
for you today Take care not to
Mrs Nancy Smtih Mrs
offend anyone n a pas ton to n
Sara Bailey and Mrs Kay
fluence a raise or promotion
Batley were hostesses for a
To f nd out more about you rself
shower for Mtss Martte
send tor your copy of Bernice Caldwell brtde-elect of Tun
Osol s Astro Graph Letter Ma1l
Baum on Saturday at the
50 cents and a long self
addressed stamped envelope to Baum recreation room
Anna Jean
Phtpers
Astra Graph P 0
Box 489
Rad10 C1ty Station NY ,0019 Denver Colo
Mrs Ruth
Be sure to spectly your b rth Spencer, Bradenton Fla
sign
Mrs Joan Celant Utica
Mtchtgan and Mrs Teresa
TilE DAILY SENTINEL
Bates, Wisconsin were
DEVOTED TO THE
guests of Mr and Mrs Roger
INTEREST OF
Keller havmg been called
MEIGS.MASON AREA
CHESTER L. T ANNEHIIL
here by the death of Mrs
Ex« Ed
Keller
s father Norman
ROBERT HOEFLICH
City Editor
Rose
Pubhshtld da ly except Saturchty
Denzel Cleland called on
by The Oh10 VctUey Publishing Com
illlY 111 Cuurl Sl Pomeroy Ohio
Mr and Mrs George Abbott
45769 BwsLMS!l Off ce Phone mMt Herman Tuesday
2156 Ed tonal Phune992 2157
Mr and Mrs Homer
Second cl~:~ s poStctge pa d at
Pomeroy Ot o
Adkms
Huntmgton were
N ati on&lt;:~! Hd \ e rttsm ~
epn:sen
guests of Mr and Mrs Lando
tal ve W11.rd
Gnfflth Co npany
I n~ Bottlnelli alld G~:~\laghcr DIV
Clay
757 Thrrd Ave New York NY
Mrs Opal Etchmger and
11011
Subscr1plion r11.tes De11verl!d by
Laura Jean were m
c:Hrner where availe~ble 75 tents per
Columbus Sunday to attend a
week By Mutur Routt! wherecHmcr
dinner at her son Denms
serv ce 1 ot liVa !able One mont!
lJ :za By rruul m Ohio and W Y~t
Etchmger s fratermty house
01 e Year $22 00 Six months
Mr and Mrs Clayton Allen
Sll 50 Three months $7 00
ElsewJi(Jrt: $26 00 yce~r SIX months
called at the Rawlings-Coats
$1 I 50
fhr ee months S7 50
funeral home to see her
S I Sl'rtptlon vr ..:c nd ules Su da y
coustn Frteda Faehnle
1'imc~o-St: Unci
~

Belmont slowmg to almost a walk In the
final sixteenth of a nule but had built such
a lead that hlS opponents were unable to
catch him Seattle Slew appears to be m
the same favorable posttlon this year with
none of his probable rtvals likely w chal
lenge him for the early lead
Such has not been the case m Seattle
Slew s Kentucky Derby and Preakness
vlctortes In the Derby For The Moment
kept a lively early pace wtth SeatUe Slew
rtght alongstde and Cormorant did the
same m the Preakness
Iron Constitution who fuushed closer to
Seattle Slew than any horse ever has, wtth
his second-place Preakness flrush only 1y,
lengths behind probably }Viii take another
crack at the Taylors four-legged goldm!ne
m the Belmont
Run Dttsty Run tbe Kentucky Derby
runnerup who showed m the Preakness lS
another posstbihty, although tramer
Smiley Adams satd the dectston would be
made at the end of the week Adams who
strongly cnttctzed JOCkey Darrel
McHargue after the Preakness and
refused to soften hlS crtticlsm Sunday
mornmg dtd nothmg to dtscourage
speculahon Steve Cauthen mtght be
aboard if Run Dusty Run lS m the Belmont
SeatUe Slew, who was rtdden by Jean
Cruguet covered the I and l-16t1Hnile m
I S4 ~ to pay $2 80 $2 80 and $2 20

Today's
AWARDS PRESENTED - Randy Hunt left new
Metgs Band dtrecwr presented many awards at the
Metgs Band Banquet Saturday mght Among those
rece~vmg the top awards ptctured wtth Hunt are I to r
Susan Wnght fteld commander Suzy Samuels the Jolui

Philip Sousa award Laura Hoover the Arton award for
JUruors Tracey Jeffers the outstandmg freshman and the
most rrnproved player Other wp awards went to Garland
Aleshtre the national JBZZ mustctan award and Jana
Burson, the outstanding sophomore award

Sport Parade
By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sports Edltolr

Awards highlight

Damels
Patty Dyers Sm1th Patge Smtih Melody
Beverly Faulkner Suste SnoUffer, Steve Stout Velvet
Granda!
Beverly Hoffman Swtsher Teresa Taylor,
(Contmued from page 1) Haley Teresa Van Meter
Jamte Johnson
Mary Teresa Van Meter Joe
band for the past several Laura Hoover Ketth Batley
Joluison Kevm Kmg Ketth Watktns Jenmfer Wtse
months presented band Suzy Samuels Kevm Kmg
Krautter Terry McDamel Jo Susan Wrtght
prestdent Robm Dewhurst a Garland Aleshire Danny W1ll McKmney Pam Mees Shan
Semors recetved trophtes
g1ft for her help when he took and Mark Davts
Mitch Ltsa Nash Shern and the group mcluded
Hunt presented the awards Oshorn Stephente Radford Garland Aleshtre Ketth
over the band upon the
restgnallon of Dw1ght Goms to freshmen sophomores and Rhonda Reuter Don Rtch Batley Cheryl Barnhart
who was promoted to the JUniors asststed by Jeff Buell
mond Davtd Rtggs Dolhe Darlene Barrett Debbte
admmtstrattve staff of the the junior htgh dtrector and Rousey Ltsa Scaggs Mandy Btrchfteld Brenda1 Btshop
asststant to the semor htgh Stsson Kathleen Smtih John
distnct
Bruce Bumgardner Mark
Goms an mvtted spectal director, wtlh Gotns makmg story Dorsel Thomas L!&gt;rt Davts Robm Dewhurst
guest spoke of the excellent the presentatiOns to the Wood
Barbara Douglas Opal Dyer
leadershtp the band ts semors
Jun10rs recetved pms Paula Etchmger Teresa
Freshmen recetved small
recelVlng from Hunt who he
replicas of the mstruments Ellis, Trlna Faulk, Sandy
M letters and recetvmg they play m the band, and
satd ts htghly qualifted and
Games Jem Grate Kathy
highly mollvated Goms was them were Came Bearhs, these were R1ta Batley Cathy Haley Beth McKmght
presented a plaque ~lo ck by Brynda Black Lynda Black
Blaettnar Cmdy Dorst Jert Vtckte Mtght
Tammy
Pat Wood prestdent of the Mtssy Cale Mark Clay, Faulkner Tem Ftfe Becky Mossman Pam Offenberger
Melinda
band hoosters and a plaque Yvonne Core
Fry, Trma Gtbbs Rory Cole Margaret Provmce Suzy
from the band by M1ss Demosky Sara Dtddle
Randy Roach, Sally Walter Samuels Debbie Taylor
Regtna Dorst Charlene Peggy Gtrolamt Carl Gheen
Dewhurst
Shern Vmmg June Warns
The horn sectton presented Goeglem Roxanne Granda!
Chrtsll Hess Laura Hoover ley Patty Warner, Beverly
a gtft to Mrs Patge Hunt Vtck1 Hood Janet Horky
Kathy Howard Rhonda Wtlcox DaMy Wtll Carolyn
wtfe of the dtrector for her Tracey Jeffers I..ort Kloes
Hudson Ktm Krautter Charles Debbte Osborne
Angela
help during the year and a Rena Lefebre
Jumor McDantels Jom Theresa Brown Theresa Ftsh
Margo Martm
gift was presented by the Martm
Murray Pam Powers Ntta and Teresa Wildermuth
Tammy
McDantel
Ly le
gtrls vocal ensemble to Mr
Rusche! Mark Slater Dtane
Hunt for the asststance he Moon Todd Momson Antta
provtded that group durmg Musser Kathte Qmvey Mark
Connte Romme
Rtggs
the year
Prayer was by George Kelbe Rough Enc Scttes
Glaze pastor of the Mtd Ktm Seth, Vtckt Sheets
dleport Church of Chnst Jamte Stsson Tma Smtih
Jtmmte Sntder
Robm
orgamzatton
Bandsmen named to the Southern Kelly Thoma
nattonal
organtzat10n
Cmdy Thompson Davtd
Who s Wbo m Mustc were Thornton Ktm Warner Carla
Lon Wood J ent Grate
Whaley
Teresa Ellis Beverly Wtlcox
Sophomores recetved large
Gus Thevener 55 Btdwell car stdeswtped a vehtcle
M letters and the group was ctted for DWI and Floyd operated by Robert Jones 39
Patge Smtth Trma Gtbbs
Carl Gheen Melody Snouffer mcluded Carm Batley La ural Gehrmg 61 Btdwell for htt Galhpohs
There was
June Ann Wamsley Tammy Cole Jane Burson Juhe sktp following a headon moderate damage
Mossman Ltsa Nash Kathy Byer Tammy Charles Jeff colhston at 6 45 p m
At 6 05 p m Saturday on
US
35 an auto driven by
Saturday on CR 56 at tis
Garland
Lear 57 Galltpohs
IUnctton wtth TR 40 one and
four tenths mtles west of SR pulled ou to pass as another
operated by Edward Barker
160
According to the Gallta 32 Gallipolts turned left
was
moderate
Metgs Post State Highway There
Patrol the Gehrmg vehtcle damage
A smgle car accident oc
turned east strtkmg the
Thevener vehtcle headon curred at 5 30 p m on SR 33
The Gehrmg car then con north of 681 where Frank B
Champton
Logan
Logau - Harold Peppers tmued on without stoppmg Fteler 45 Athens fell asleep
dominated the 1977 All Jan Myers Brtan Hawk Ed There was heavy damage at his wheel then lost control
Southeastern Ohto Athlettc Bush seniors and Brad
James Roberts IB Btd of hts car whtch ran off the
League baseball dream team Tucker and BtU Heft Juntors
well was charged wtth road striking a mailbox and
followmg Sunday s selections
fatlure to yteld rtght of way sign
Gallipolis - Gary Swain
A !mal acctdent occurred
by league coaches at Jackson Brent Johnson and Ttm followmg an acctdent at 8 10
Htgh School
Carman semors and Terry p m Saturday at the In on SR 124 one and seven
The Chteftams
hrst Wall Juntor
tersectton of SR 180 and 554 tenths mtles east of Racine
SEOAL team to complete
Waverly - Jeff Noble
The patrol satd the Roberts where the steermg faUed on a
double round robm play wtth semor and Mark Ftelder
car pulled mto the path of a car drtven by Blondena
an unblemtshed mark thts jumor who recetved specta! vehtcle operated by Mtchael Hudson 49 Racine Her
sprtng ( 14 0) placed stx ment1on follo~mg an InJury
E Tackett 19 Orlando Fla vehicle ran off the htghway
players on thts year s all star
Ironton- M1ke Brown and There
was
moderate strtkmg an embankment
squad
There
was
moderate
Gary Lowe semors
damage
recetved
damage
Hudson
RuMerup Galltpohs landed
Ktm A Notter
16
Jackson - Paul Haller
four
Ironton Jackson senior, and Jeff Mannermg
Gallipolis was ctted to vtsible lnjurtes but was not
Waverly Wellston two each
JUVenile court for drtvtng left lnunediately treated
juruor
Metgs one and Athens none
Wellston - Ken Butcher of center foUow!ng an ac
NOW YOU KNOW
Members of the 1977 All and Ray Gtlltland junwrs
ctdent at 4 25 p m Saturday
The butterfly and the house
SEOAL Baseball Dream
Meigs - Brtan Hanulton
on SR ii88 one and two tenths fly have taste organs on thetr
Team are
semor
miles west of Bob McCormtck feet which are espectally
Athens - None
Rd The patrol satd the Notter sensitive to sugar
\
•

Todd ftrst retired George
Foster on a short fly to LeMy
Randle m left field as the
runners held and then rettred
Cesar Geronimo on an
mn!ng-end!ng force out at
second
In the 11th ummg Todd
retired Bench a plllCh httter
for Bill Plwnmer on a foul
pop-up, struck out pmch
hitter Bob Bruley and rettred
Rose afrer Davey Concepcton
led off the inning with a smgle
to left and stole second
For Todd beating the Reds
was chtld s play
Because Todd Is a guy who
back m the fall of 1974 beat

Seattle Slew's greatness inunense
if he wins the 8ehnont on June II

GmL KJLLED
OREGON Ohio (UP!) JOB CHANGE
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Don Cynthta Ann Wolfe 12
Wtlliams supermrendent of Orgeon dted Saturday of
suburban Grandvtew Hetghts electrtc shock caused by a
Htgh School smce 1972 wtll swumrung pool pump
Offtctals sa1d the gtrl was
restgn July 31 to take a
standmg m about one foot of
pos11lon m Tucson Anz
Wtlltams wtll become water m an above-ground
assoctale supermrendent for pool when a cord from the
mstructton
wtth
the pool pump fell mto the water
Offtctals srud the cord had
Amphttheater School Dtstnct
m Tucson and wtll he m an e~posed wtre
Her
brother
Davtd
charge of the currtculum lor
the 10 000 student school standmg at the oppostle end
of the pool escaped
system

[JnWllidJUl\] Vl'i::'r~!

mag native this commg year I
behooves you to tearn up with
tt1 s person because 1'1e or st1e
can help you create a market for
your own bra nch ldren

added a two-run bases loaded
smgle as the Reds won the
opener 8 I behmd the
combined su:-ltit pttchmg of
Jack Btllingham and Mike
Caldwell
That sat least four or ftve
games that we had m the
palms of our hands and then
wound up droppmg srud an
equally frustrated Reds
manager Sparky Anderson
In the tenth mnlng of the
second game wtth the score
knotted three-all the Reds
failed to score off Jackson
Todd a 21&gt;-year old Met relief
pttcher after loading the
bases wtth one out

Both drivers in
collision cited

Logan dominates
1977 dream team

'

Maaor League Leaders
By Un1ted Press Internal onal
Batt1ng
fbased on 80 at bats)
Nat onal League
GAB R H Pet
Trl lo Ch
35 124 24 48 387
Prker P t
37 155 28 58 374
Scott St L
33 82 a 30 366
Jnsn Hou
32 91 18 33 363
Mtws At
28 100 21 36 360
Smns St L
35 123 24 .43 350
Vlnt n Mtl
32 129 17 44 341
Krnpl NY
33 102 13 34 333
Sm1th LA
37 131 34 43 328
W nfd S O
42 175 34 57 326
Amencan .,L..eague
GAB R H Pel
Balr Tor
28 1(15 21 40 381
Carw M n
40 158 26 58 367
Wash Tex
30118 1141 347
Ke y Bal
26 89 12 30 337
Brlsn 8os
34 146 20 49 336
Ch l k. Cat
36 126 12 42 333
AWds Tor
34 123 17 41 333
Mnsn NY
36 145 27 48 33 1
OsH; M n
36 136 25 45 331
FISk Bos
)4 118 27 39 331
Home Runs
Nat1onat League Cey LA 13
Sm th LA 11 Burroughs Atl
and Johnson Hou 10 Kmgman
N Y Parker P tt and W nf 1e d

cancer
I was pttchmg m the
mstructtonal league m
Flortda when I nottced the
rupple on my rtght chest had
become hard and sore • satd
Todd
Exanunatwns showed that
Todd had cancer of lymph
nodes The mahgnancy had
backed mto the grom area
Surgery was performed
and two weeks later Todd left
the hostptal After Slll moolhs
of chemotherapy Todd agam
was pttchmg
The operation had cost hun
strength and hts fastball
Everyone thought Todd s
pttchmg career was through
Everyone that ts except Dr
Milo Gerber who performed
the operation
He won a hottle of Scotch
from another doctor who bet
him I wouldn t ptlch agam

srud a sm1ling Todd Sunday
Last year Todd was ll-9
tth 2 91 earned run average
pttchmg for Ttdewater while
comptling the best record by
a pllcher m the Mets farm
s:v.stem
II s why he s wtth the Mets
today
Bench s
homer
and
Batley s tw()-run smgle gave
Btllmgham his !ilth vtctor y
agamst three losses in the
!trst game
Fredie Norman who has
been plagued by a seventh
tMing jmx, again was struck
down Sunday
The Red lefty had a l-1lead
gomg mto the seventh when
consecutive doubles by Joe
Torre and Roy Staiger pulled
the Mets w wtthm one run of
the Red s Norman was
replaced by Dale Murray who
was greeted by a thtrd

Meigs girls
•
wm to111-ney
The Metgs Htgh School s
Girls fastpttch softball team
fmtshed tis season over the
weekend m !me !ashton as tl
captured Metgs mvttatwnal
tournament m JUSt three
games
Metgs copped the winners
trophy by beatmg Ironton for
the second day m a row on
Saturday afternoon by the
score of 17-5 Metgs ftmshed
the season wtth a very fme 162 record
Frtday mghl the gtrls of
coach Rita Slavm handled
Ironton handily by the score
of 11-4 Kun Grueser was the
wmnlng pttcher gt vlng up
etght htts and faMmg two
Metgs cracked out ten htts
one a long home run by
Dorothy Chapman
On Saturday mornmg
Metgs had to meet to1&gt;-seeded
South Pomt but another !me
pttchtng performance by
Grueser led the Metgs team
to a five mnmg easy 17 2 wtn
South Pomt got both thetr
runs m the ftrst frame and
from then on Grueser shut the

Pomters out Metgs banged
out fourteen hits, and Kun
Grueser led that attack w1th
four smgles Chapman had
two smgles and a tnple Pat
Vaughan had three Singles
and Glenda Brown had a
stngle and two doubles In
that game Grueser tossed a
mfty s1x httter
Saturday afternoon saw
Ironton playmg tts fourth
game of the day as they had
to flght thetr way up through
the losers bracket The
Ttgers surely ran out of
steam because Grueser once
agam was the pttcher and
allowed etght htls and only
one walk whtle fanmng two
That was her thtrd wm m two
days
Me1gs got 1ts 17 runs on 17
htts Pam Vaughan lhts tune
led the hltters as she had two
smgles a double and a
boommg home run over the
fence She had a total of stx
RBI s enough to beat Ironton
on her own Tracy Burdette
had three smgles and thts
tune Brown and Grueser had
a smgle and double ap1ece

Dr. J. too much
for Walton &amp; Co.

NEW YORK (UPI) -Earl Weaver has this huge Jagged
edged rock he lugs wherever he goes He carrtes tl around
from ctty w ctiY because he likes w have 11 handy for
emergenctes
The rock looks '18 tf 11 wetghs at least 20 pounds and could
eastly crush anybody s skull Any time the scrappy little
Baltimore manager ptcks 11 up from the floor hlS face turns
PIULADELPIUA (UPI ) beet red the vems m htS neck nearly pop and 11 s clearly a
To say Julius Ervtng lS not a
strul!l!le lor hun
pressure player ts like saymg
Earl Weaver has a lot of fun w1th the rock He half frightens
to death those who don t know tl lS made of marshmallow-soft
Prestdent Carter hates to
8
foam rubbery by suddenly lifting tt up and throwmg tt at them soAmerican
smtle
or Muhammad Ah
League Z1Sk Chi
Sometimes he wants to throw tl at Jtm Palmer hts ace pttcher 12 Gross Oak 11 HISle M nn cant talk
and E W IIams Oak 10 Scott
But there ts one man who
only he Wishes tt wasn t made of rubber
Bos and Horton Tex 9
really
believes Dr J does
The Baltimore manager ts absolutely convmced his three,
Runs Batted In
Nat1ona1
League
Cey
LA
A2
time Cy Young winner tsthe best ptlcher m baseball, bar none W nt e d SO 40 Parker P1tl no better under trymg
Similarly Palmer has an enormous regard lor Weaver as a 37 Burroughs At 36 Sm th condtttons than any other pro
basketball player - Ervtng
manager and there s no quesllon how much he respects hun LA 30
Amer1can League Rud Cal
Yet, the two are always argumg Loud too They've been 38 H sle M nn 36 Z sk Ch himself
I don t thtnk I m a
and Velez Tor 32 Scott Bos
hollermg back and forth now for seven years
pressure
player
Ervmg
He doesn t like to come out of a hall game and tt's my job to 19
Stolen Bases
take him out ' says Weaver, who ts surprtSmg everybody by
National League
Taveras satd Sunday after scormg 33
18 Cedeno Hou l7 Lopes pomts
to
lead
the
the way he has the overlooked Ortoles on top m the Amertcan PLA1tand
Moreno P1tt 16 Cabell
Phtladelphta
76ers
to
a
107
League East
Hou 14
Amencan League Remy Ca 101 vtctory over the Portland
A good example of the way Weaver and Palmer are always
Patek KC 15 Bonds Ca
at each other took place durmg the fifth inmng of Friday 18
l2 Norr s c ev and North Oak Trail Blazers and a 1-U lead m
thetr best-of seven NBA
mght s game wtth the Yankees at Yankee Stadium
11
P1fthlng
champtonshtp
senes
Palmer bad a 4-2lead wtlh one out when the Yankees pushed
Most Vactones
My
concentratwn
on
a run across on stngles by Thurman Munson and ChriS
Nat1onal League Cande tana
p
tt
and
Denny
Sf
L
6
0
offense
ts
more
profound
m
Chambliss along wtlh a fielder s chotce Reggte Jackson RhOden and Sutton LA and
the
playoffs
than
durmg
the
followed With a walk puttmg runners on ftrsl and second and Forsch St L 6 I R Reuschel
when Palmer fell behind the next batter Roy White, two-and- Cl'l 6 2 Burri s Ch 1 and Barr season Also the adrenalm
SF 6 4
nothmg Weaver called time and walked out to the mound
Amer1can League
Tanana for these games does cause a
Junmy Iemme tell you somethmg satd Weaver, you re Ca 7 1 Garv n Tor 6 1 Zahn chenucal reactton m your
62 Ryan Ca l 64 ten body •
bemg wo !me You're getting behmd and then you re trymg to Mnn
p tchers t1ed w1th 5 v ctor1es
The 76ers found the
overthrow
Earned Run Average
(based on 36 .nnmgs pitched) chemtstry to be perfect
Palmer had an tdea Weaver was thmking of takmg him out
Nahonal League Candelar a
and he wanted to have his say
P tt \ 62
Hough
LA 2 15 Sunday, gomg to Ervtng tune
Weaver agam told htm what he thought and how he felt he Rogers Mtl 2 28 Hooton LA and tune agam whenever
2 53 Sutton L A 2 63
should ptlch to White
Amer1can League F gueroa Portland made a run at tbem
NY
I 23
T drow
NY 1 80 The strategy worked after the
Earl, tl's not that easy Palmer cut m
Btyteven Tf\X 1 82 Gu dry NY Blazers ran off seven stratght
I m only trmg to help you, Weaver satd practically plea
1 BS Slaton M I l 97
pomts at the begmmng of the
ding The more games you wm the better off I am
Stnkeouts
Nat1onal
League
Rogers
Mtl
fourth quarter w pull wtthm
Weaver left Palmer m and Wbtle walked ftlling the bases,
65 Koosman NY 52 R chard
after whtch Palmer got two strikes on Carlos May then threw Hou 5 1 Seaver NY and one 86-85 With 9 38 to play
Ervmg htt a three-pomt
him a honey of a curve ball Whtre drove tl through the rtght Montefu sco SF 50
League Ryan Cal play and a layup for starters
stde of the lnfteld for two runs and the Yanks went out ahead 5- 89 American
Ta11ana Cal 78 Blyteven
Later, he drove an IS-footer
Te~ 59 Pa mer Ba t 46 Blue
4
and htt George McGmms for
At that pomt Weaver lifted Palmer and the Ortoles eventu- Oak 45
ally came back to wm the game 6-5 wtth reliever DenniS
Martinez gettmg credit for the vtcWry
Usually, Junmy won t talk to me for two days after hun and
DENTIJHt:~ - DENTISTRY
I get mto tt, laughs Weaver On Saturday though I decided
DR RONALD F RIVIERE
w talk to hun Usually I'm the one who has ro approach him
OR A J STAEHLI- DR K H CHUNQ
and start the conversalton, anyway
OR VICTORY L ANQ- DR 0 J STOMBAVQH
He was commg into the dugout after lnfteld practice and I
One or two day
stopped him I took my hat off and told hun to look at my hatr
which you can see ts completely gray In 1969 do you
full denture service
remember I had the same color hair as you I satd ro hun
part1al dentures
Now look at 11 Ten or 12 of these gray hatrs belong ro Earl
Williams All the rest belong w you '
FOR PRICES CALL
Palmer, who was 22-13 wtth the Ortoles last year is 5-3 for
OHIO TOLL FREE
them now and barrmg mJUry Weaver lS pretty sure the 31
1-800·282-6411
year-&lt;lld nght.!Jander wtll wind up a :!().game wmner this
season for the seventh tune m hts career
Weaver honestly gets a ktck out of argumg wtth Palmer and
the Ortole ptlcher feels the same way
It makes the game more enJoyable Palmer laughs Earl
lS an extrovett and so am I He sa good manager and I respect
him To me, the dtSCUSSlOI'lS we have are not on a personal
RIVIERE CENTER 949 E L1v ngston Ave Columbus
basts What we generally talk about has todowtth baseball and
Weekdays 8 '0 A M to 6 30 P M
baseball philosophies I think I m able to divorce the two
Y
o
uli
Smd
tTo mo
lj
f ul f
Maybe so but Jun Palmer stttl should watch out for that btg
rock Earl Weaver carrtes around wtth htm

a layup w make the score 101
93 wtth 3 25 w play and the
76ers held off a comeback led
by Bill Walton
Forward Bob Gross who
was asstgned to guard Ervtng
but fouled out With 6 48 w
play satd he thought he dtd
all nght ' on defense but
knows there s room for
unprovement
I ve got to beheve I can do
better and I got to beheve the
ream can do better Gross
srud
Guard Doug Colhns
contrtbuted a steady but
mostly unnohced 30 pmnts as
the 76ers stuck w1th thetr
Doc and Doug show that
earned them to playoff
VIctortes over Boston and
Houston

stra1ght double off the bat of
Ed Kranepool tymg the score
at three-all
And that s the way the
score stood when Dave
Kingman doubled w open the
lith and one outlarer scored
on Mike Phtlltp s smgle to left
to gtve the Mets thetr 4-3
vtcWry
What makes 11 so tough w
take ts that tf we wm that
game we'd finally reach the
500 mark, srud a deJected
Anderson

Robby
on way
out
CLEVELAND (UP! ) Frank Robmson wtll be dlS
mtssed wtthm the week as
manager of the Cleveland
lndtans the Cleveland Plam
Dealer reported wday
The ftrst black manager m
major league baseball
history wttl be replaced by
coach Jeff Tor borg whom he
brought here m 1975
accordmg w the report
Torborg wtll be the
mterun manager of the
slump rtdden team but
mtghl be retamed tf the
Indtans flrush the season
strongly the report satd
The swttch ts dependent
upon the approval of
pres1dent Alva Ted Bonda
for general manager Phil
Seght to order 11 mw effect,
accordmg to the report
followmg the latlure of Seght
w mteresl former Indians
coach Dave Garcta m taking
the posttlon

M11or Lugue Stoand•ngs
BY Un ltd P r us Inte rnationa l

Amerl clln Lngue
EISf
W L

Nlttonal L e11gue

P ttsbgh

Ch1cago
Sl Leu s
Phlla
Monlrelll
N ew York
LOS Ang
C ncl
Houston
San OiegD

San Fr a n

Atlanta

E ISI
W l
25 12
23

Pc.t
676

GB
1 ,
J

13

63'9

'J'J IS
19 17

5~5

528

14 21

..

15 23

3~5

10 ,

W L
30 10

P et
750

GS

18 20
16 23
17 25

.414 ll
410 13 ~
405 14

oo

s)

10

Ban rmre
Boston
New York

Mlw

Detrol1

Toronto
Clf!velnd

'~ West

15 '23

U 26

395 14

350 16

Satuntav s Res ults

Sf Louis 8 San FranCISCo 5

C nc nnat l 8 New York 5
C1'1 cago 9 A.tta n te~ 3
Sa n Ogo 11 M t 8 '21 nns
Los Angeles 4 Pittsburgh 3
Phi adelph a 7 Houston 4
Sunctav s Results
C nc a New Yo r ~ 1 1St
N Y .4 Cine 3 ?nd 11 Inns
Pit tsburgh 11 Los Angeles 4
Atl anta 5 Chicago 2
M on tr eal 3 san Diego 1
San Francisco 2 Sl Louis 0
Ph ladelph 1a 6 Houston 3
Today s Probable P1tcl1er s
I All T mes EOTl
New York (Matlack 3 3) at
P tts burgh (Reuss 05 )
8 30
pm
San Franc sco ( Hal ckl 2 4) at
Si Lou s ( Rasmussen 2 5) 8 30
pm
Atl ant a (N lekro 2 7) at San
Dieg o (Gr ffm 3 21 10 p m
Tuesdays Games
Montrea l a t Ch 1cago
New Yor k at P tt sburgh n gh t
Ph Iad etph a at St Lou s n Qht
Hous ton at Los Angeles n gh t
At anta a t San D ego n ght

M lnn
Ch cage
TeXas

GA

23
21

Pet
57 1
5$6
553
512
459
425
400

L

Pet

G8

14

64 1

10 15

20 16

21
21
17
17
14
Welt
W
25

17

'20

'20

1

h

1

1/ot

..
5111
6

22 15 595
2
19 16 5.43
4
ca t
19 21 475 6 1:~
Kan Cttv
18 20 474 6'.,
Oak and
18 '11 462 7
Seattle
16 28 364 11 Vz
Sunday s Results
Ban ~')"OreS New York 1 1st
New Vork 8 Batt mor e 2 2ncJ
Bost on l.t M lwauk~ 10 1st
Milwaukee 6 Boston 0 2nd
Detro t l.t en cago 3
Cleve iJnd 7 Kansas C1ty 1
M nne~ota 8 Cat forn l a 5
sean e 6 Oakland 2
Tex&amp;s 7 Toronto "
Today s Probable P1tchers
( A II Tam es EDT)
Oat~; land {La:no tord
3 JJ at
Toronto (Slnger '1 6 ) 7 30 p m
M wauk.ee {S a ton '1 .4 ) at
Baltimore ( Flan aQan 1 2) 7 30
pm
Boston (Lee 1 0) at New York.
( F gveroa 5 2) 8 p m
Tuesday s G1mes
Cat forn a at Det r o t n ght
Seattle at Cleve and n1g ht
M lw at BaH rnore n ght
Boston at New Yor k nigh t

Pioneers in
title role
•
once agam

DENVER (UP! ) - Four
Denver Broncos players m
MARIE'ITA Ohio (UPI)eluding punter Billy Van Man etta College defeated the
Heusen did not take part m College of Wooster 5-3 durmg
the team s four-day camp
the weekend to earn tis fifth
leading to speculation they Ohto Conference baseball
may have been placed on champwnshtp m the past
wa1vers
seven years
Van Heusen defens1ve
J J Tracy had a lrtple m
back Jolui 1:\owser guard the fifth mnmg and Rod Rtcke
Tom Lyons and defenstve and Scott Hollinger each
lineman Jun Whtte were not blasted doubles m the stxth w
on the fleld for the camp the power the Pioneers w
workouts whtch ended vtcwry on thetr home field
Saturday
Saturday
Broncos Head Coach Red
Manetta s Mtke Elston
Mtller would not comment who saved the second game
when asked tf the four of the three game sertes
players had been placed on Frtday mght went all the
wavers but he added that way m Saturday s contest to
league by laws proh1blted a get credtt for the wm
team from releasmg any
Wooster won the ftrst game
Garc1a now a Califorma wruver hst mformation until of the sertes Frtday rught ~
Angels coach satd he after a player was recalled or while the Ptoneers wok the
preferred to slav m cl~uned by another team
second 9-7
Cahforn1a near his fanuly
On Sunday Seghi satd I
am saytng only what I have
l:ieen saymg all along ThallS
BILL FLETCHER
I will not get mvolved m tbe
strtfe and turmotl and
149
speculatwn that s gomg
South Th1rd Street
on my only prwrtttes are to
Middleport
PH 992 7155
get us wmrung that s all I
want to say on the matter,
the report satd
The lndtans are 14-21 for l "~;talte Farm has LIFE insurance too!
the season m last place by
Call me for details."
stx games m the Amertean
League East Dtvtston w1th a
State Farm
team Seght has satd should
L fe In su r an c e Com
pan y
L1ke a good ne•ghbor
challenge for the peMant
Home Ott1 ce
State Farm 1s there
afrer the off season additton
Bloom tngfon !I no s
p 7554
of free agents Wayne Garland
and Paul Dade

NBA
playoffs

IF YOU WON'T TAKE
YOUR HIGH BLOOD PRESSURE
MEDICATION FOR YOURSELF. •.

By Un ted Press tnternahonal
Final Round
(Best of Seven }
Philadelphia vs Portland
(Ph !adelphia leads 1 0)
Ma y 22- Ph Ia 107 Portlnd 10 1
May 26- Port and at Ph a
May 29- Ph a at Port and
May 31- Ph a at Port an d
x Jun~ 3- Por t and at Ph Ia
x June 5 Ph Ia at Port and
x June 8 Port and at Ph a
x 1f necessary

THIS WEEK'S SPECIAL
May 22nd thru May 28th

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'

a

�4- The Dailv Sentinel, Middlcport-Pmneroy, 0 .. Monday, May 23. 1977

Inter national League
Umted Press lnternationa I

Tigers impressive in sweep
By BUJ.. MADDEN
UPI Sports Writer
Jason Thompson, Tim Cor·
coran, Dave Rozema, Steve
Kemp and Fernando Arroyo
are hardly household names
in baseball as yet, but if their
performances in Detroit 's
impressive three- gam e
weekend sweep of the
Chicago White Sox are any
indication, the young Tigers
may be the team to watch as
this American League season
goes on.
Corcoran, a 24-year..old
outfielder recalled from the
minors only two weeks ago ,
was 7-for-12 with lour RBI in
the Tigers' sweep. Arroyo, a
25-year old converted relief
pitcher, won Friday's first
game of the series (in only his
second major league start)
by stopping the White Sox on
a live-hitter. The 22-year-&lt;Jld
Kemp, less than two years
removed as the No. 1
ll!llllteur draft choice, was 6for-12 in the series with three
RBI.
The Tigers completed their
rampage over the White Sox
with a 14-3 victory Sunday,
highlighted by the 21).year-&lt;Jld
Rozema's fifth route-going
performance of the year and
five RI}I by Thompson, the
22-year·old, 6·foot-4 first
baseman who has developed
into the mosl feared hitter in
the youthful Detroit lineup.
"We're finally getting the
pitching from our starters to
go with our hitting," said
T1gers' Manager Ralph
Houk.
Rozema yielded 12 hits,
including Oscar Gamble's
seventh homer and Richie
Zisk's 12th, and was not
nearly as sharp as his
previous games. However, he
admitted he was not used to

the luxury of such big leads.
hHaving a seven..run lead
like today often makes you let
up," said Rozema .
Thompson, who hit 17
homers in his rookie season a
year ago and has seven
already this year, added a
triple and a sacrifice fly to
the Tigers' cause .
Elsewhere in the AL, Milwaukee blanked Boston , IHJ,
after losing the first game to
the Red Sox, 14-10, New York
rallied from a :;..1 defeat by
Baltin:10re , with an 8-2
second-game victory over the
Orioles, MiMesota put away
California , 8·5, Cleveland
drubbed Kansas City, 7-1,
Seattle downed Oakland, 6-2,
and Texas got past Toronto,
7-4.
Red Sox 14, 0, Brewers 10, 6:
Ed Rodriguez, making his
lirst start of the year. tamed
the hot-hitting Red Sox on
just two hits in the nighicap,
while Jim Wohlford knocked
in four runs on a single, an
infield out and his second
homer in tbree years. The
Red Sox came from behind
with seven runs in the eighth
inning to win the opener,
George Scott's grand slam
homer being the key blow .
The firsl game featured a
major league record-tymg 11
home runs.
Yankees HI, Orioles 5-2:
Graig Nettles drove in
three runs with a homer and a
double in the nightcap, while
Ron Guidry and Dick Tidrow
combined on a four-hitter to
earn the Yankees a split. The
Orioles took the first game
behind ex-Yankee Rudy
May's seven-hitter as rookie
Eddie Murray drove home a
pair of runs . with a sixthinning, . bases-loaded single
that snapped a I-I tie.

Twins 8, Angels S:
Pinch-hitter Craig Kusick
hit a three.,.un homer to cap a
five-run sixth innin g,
enabling the Twins to
increase their AL West lead
over Chicago to two games.
Glenn Adams was 2-for-4 with
three RBI for Minnesota.
lodians 7, Royals t:
Buddy Bell rapped out four
hits, scored l wo runs and

drove in another in the
Indians' win. Paul Dade's
bases-loaded single scored
two runs to ignite a four-run
firth inning for Cle¥eland
which broke the game open
Winner Jim Bibby, J..l , went
the distance on a sevenhitter.

lllini win
track,
field meet

to win hockey's MVP

Results, line scores

Pawtuckf;! t
T1dewa ter
Roches ter

W L Pet.
22 II .667
21 13

.618

17 15 .531
16 17

.485

GB
I' '1

-4' '

6

Marlneni S, Athletics 2:
Rich m ond
15 16 . 484 6
Danny Meyer went 4-for-4 Syracuse
14 18 .438 7' 2
16 21 .432 8
and knocked in tbree runs as Toledo
11 21 . 344 J01 1
the expan sion Mariners Colu m bus
Sunday' s Games
banged out 13 hits against Charleston 3, T idewater 0
three Oakland pitchers, Toledo 12 1 Columbus 2
including Vida Blue. The A's Roc hester 5. Sy ra cuse 4
managed only tbree singles Rlchmong 6, Pawtucke t 4
off winner Dick Pole, who
NEW YORK (UPI )- If the
went five innings for his first
600
striking parimutuel
win with Seattle, and reliever
Enrique Romo, who finished clerks at Belmont don't
return by Monday morning,
up for his second save.
ail
bets at the track will have
Rangers 7, Bluejays 4:
to
go
through OTB offices.
Juan Beniquez, hitting .231,
Belmont
will be open
homered and tripled and
Monday,
offering
free admisrookie Lew Beasley hit safely
in his first three major league sion to its customers if the
at-bats to highlight a t7-hit
Texas attack. Beasley
singled in a run in the first
and scored after doubling in
the third. Beniquez led off the
fourth with his second home
run and tripled in Jim
Sundberg in the seventh, then

United Preu lnternation•l
W L Pet. GB
Minnesota

15 3 .833

Michigan
Ohio S.t.

1.4

4

7 4

Iowa
Mich. St.

10 8
10 8

Illinois
Wi scons in

7 q
6 8
7 11
3 11

Northwe~tern

Ind iana
Purdue

.778
.636
.556
.556
.4:19
429

1
4•11
5
5
7
7

.389

8

.214 10
1 13 .071 12

strike 't!ontinues, track
officials said, but no bets will
be made at the track itself.
The clerks struck the New
York Racing Association
Thursday night, and forced a
premature end to Aqueduct's
racing season.

Five Comers, Charleoton,
W. Va., captured the first
annual Robbins &amp; Myer&gt;
Open slow pitch softball
tournament over the weekend
at Price Memorial Field,
Gallipolis.
Strout Realty of Gallipolls
finished second, Fruth's
Phannacy was third and
Ouidoorsman
finished
fourth.

Guy Art.hur of Fruth'•
Phannacy received the MVP
award; Gary Clark, Fruth's,
received the most hits award,
he had 15; D. Meadows of
Five Comers received the
most home runs trophy with
three round trippers.
The •port.amanship trophy
went to Skyline Lane•,
Gallipolis.

N. W.OPTOMETRIST
COMPTON. O.D. .

OFFICE HOURS: 9:30 to 12,2 to S !CLOSE
AT NOON ON THURS.&gt;- EAST COURT
ST.• POMEROY.

Oakland - Traded pitcher
Stan Bahnsen to Montreal for

Reg.gggs

The 1977 SEOGA Tour·
nament will be held at
Cambridge on June 17, 18 and·
19. The annual pro·am
tournament will precede
team plaY on Friday, June 17.
Local qualifying for the
Gallipolis team will begin on
Sunday, May 29, and con·
elude on Monday (Memorial
Day), May 30.
Any senior member of the
Gallipolis Golf Clu b in·
teresled in playing in the
local qualifier should sign up
in the clubhouse by 8 p. m.Jon
Thursday, May 26.
Tournam ent detajls are
posled in the clubhouse.

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dust rial gas and then mcreas·
ed the rate for residential

aspects of funding welfare,
higher educatwn, and
pnmary and secondary
educatiOn. He said that the
lottery and the Ohio int'Ome
!ax do not provide enough ad·
dilional dollars to fund
education .
Rep. James also talked or
highway repairs and the bond
ISsue for that. He concluded
by slating that we need to
find reasonable answers at a
reasonable cost without a tax
increase for the next two
years.
Mrs. Betsy Horky presided
at the meeting attended by 26
members and guests. Dev&lt;r
lions and grace preceding the
dinner were given by Mrs.
Maxine Wingett.

Prevention is the

Sl11l 1n college? S1ar1.
yOLir 1ra1n1ng on a p art

Store Managers who completed our training program in 1974. averaged $11 215 Iota/ earnings tor
lhetr ttrSt year. S t 8,533 in the second year. and
$22 .605 their third year. Those Managers from our
1975 program averaged $10,245 ltrsl year and
518,533 rn lhe second year. Our 1976 program
Managers averaged 514.273, l1rsf year.

$1 000.00 REWARD

•
hda
·BZ""t
ce"e brat ed

INS.

SAVE
EUREKA

Ch.,ntJer C/'·

plans dinner

I
I

INQUIRE NOW:

9 and 12 months Career P.-ograms and 18
months Associa1e Degree in Specialized
Business Programs.

We will guaranlee those

qua l1l1ed people who
s lay 1n th e program,
$!0,000 mminJUm !Oiai

.

\

Real Estate
Jr . Accounting
General Office

Business Administration
Executive Secretary
Secretary

earn ings 1or the ltrst full
year a s Mana ger and

$14,000 ihe second .

l1me bctSIS.

G

ALLIPOLIS
BUSINESS
COLLEGE

Coni act me lor further
info• rnat•on:

DALE C. WARNER

Gr'ange holds
open meeting

I

ltadte

A limited number Qf memberships are now
being accepted for our pool .

~~

Turpentine tackles spots

TUESDAY
RA
CINE
American Le g10n
Til&lt; energy cns1s and the
Dear Helen:
Auxiliary,
Post 602, 7:30
DEAR POLLV - I would nm . Put the material o'·~r
Our town's volunteer fire deparbnent is nothing more than slate budget were discussed cuslom~rs.
Tuesday
night
atthe
hall.
like to know how to remove the bottom circle. Snap the
a men's club, Our husbands go down there to get away from by Rep. Ron James. speaker
He
t.aiked
of
conservahon,
MEIGS County Better some white paint from a top one ove r It and have
home. They play cards, drink beer and no doobt cook up at the recent meeting of the of the weatherization bill
small hoops that work great.
Liveslock Dairy 4-H Club black vinyl sofa. -JANICE.
Middleport-Pomeroy Area
wilder parties for later on.
'
which
would
set
standards
DEAR JANI CE - Harden· - MRS. L. W.
meeting, 8:30 p.m. Tuesday
While horsing around one night, somebody put a bullet hole Branch of the American for insulating homes and
DEAR POI..I.Y - When "
ed specks of paint can be
at the Bob Lee Farm.
Associati011 of University
through the front door.
allow a tax incentive, and of
rathe r difficult to · remove. cake recipe caib for chopped
Women
held
at
the
Meigs
Inn.
WEDNESDAY
Maybe twice a year, they light a big fire. How can we light
Rep. James went into House Bi1114 which deals wiU1
FREE cervical cancer You m1ghl first try to see if nut mcf;lts sprmklc &lt;.t pmch of
this kind of fire department? - FIRE WIDOW
detail on the energy crisis taking the sulphur out of coal.
clinic for Meigs area women, some of them will come off flour through the nut meats
Wednesday, 12:30to3 :30 p.m. w1th your fingernaiL A cotton (or fruit ) and add to the
and how it came about and Rep. James al~o talked brief·
Dear F.W.:
ly about the atomic plant pr&lt;r
plans
for
coping
with
similar
at
Veterans Memorial tipped stick might also be batter last, The nuts go
Why not form a women's auxiliary? (If you can't light the
Hospital. For appointment dipped m turpentine and then through the cake and not to
problems should they ar1se mised by President Carter
fire department, join it.) - H.
applied to the specks. After the bottom . - MRS. E . D.
call 992-7~31 or 992-3382.
again. He talked of the shor· for Ohio which now will
'
.
+++
removing: spots, go ov(&gt;r area
\ages durmg the last two perhaps be moved to the Oak
Dear Helen:
POMEROY
Lions
€1ub,
Ridge,
Tenn.
region.
with cotton dipped in clear
weeks in October when the
Polly will send ) ou one of
noor1 Wednesday at the Meigs water. - POLLY.
Talk about labeling! I often hear people describing
The
speaker
also
discussed
Colwnbia Gas Co. obtained 21
her
si gned t hank -yo u
someone as "the elderly 70-year-&lt;Jld." Or in newspapers billion cubic feet of gas from the 14 1·2 billion dollar state
Inn.
DEAR POLLY - My Pet newspaper-coupon clippe rs 1[
OHIO Valley Commandry Peeve is with the dirty
they'll give his age, then refer to him as "the oldster."
' the Washington-Baltimore budget which Gov. James
24, Knights Templar, stated language we so often hear. shf:' uses vour ravun te
We never hear "the young 28-year-&lt;Jld," or ''middle-aged region lor emergency m· Rhodes has proposed,
conclave, 7:30 p.m. at the Why should a well groomed Pointer, Peeve or Problem m
4&gt;year-old." So why the redundancy when we ~et up in years?
her colwnn . Write POLLY'S
No one would think of referring to Bob Hope, Margaret
Pomeroy Masonic Temple.
man or woman not be PO INTERS m care o[ this
MIDDLEPORT Literary as
Mead, Rooald Reagan, Rose Kennedy in thia way. It should not
prous
of
the
:.:::·:·:=:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:=:=:=:·:·:=:=:·:·:·:=::::;.;::::·:=:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:· Club, 2 p.m. Wednesday, at
newspaper.
be pennitted for us ordinary people either. - NOT AN
words that come out
the
home
of
Mrs.
Bernard
"ELDERLY 61).YEAR.{)LD"
TO HOLD BANQUET
of his or her mouth as of their
Fultz with Mrs. Dorothy personal appearance' Words
HARRISONVILLE
Derry Shaw, Gaillpolis, guest mirror one's thoughts and
Dear Not:
The Harrisonville • Scipio
Nor would it, if you and other 61).plus people would
speaker.
Alumni Assoeiatlon will
thoughts shape that act that
WILDWOOD Garden Club, will follow sooner or later. complain mightily each time you hear or read such
bold its annual banquet on
8 p.m. Wednesday at the BESSIE .
discriminatory phrases.
May 28 at 7 p.m. at the
(They aren't used on Bob, Margaret, Ronnie, Rose, etc. for
home of Mrs, Mae Holter- with
Harrisonville
School
when
1
got
rich
I
would
have
DEAR POLLY - Fran
NEW YORK (UP!) Mrs. Evelyn Hollon as C&lt;r wanted to know how to
good reason : These folks move so fast that age can't catch up There's a maxim among lots of loud colors, flashy
auditorium.
hostess.
with them. It should happen to all of us!) - H
Classes of 1917, 1927,
remove crayon Illlirks from
singers: Don't bring counlry clothes and laney jewelry
+++
1937,
!947
and
1957
will
be
EVANGELINE Chapter, wood paneling. I had the
music to New York; the because I didn't have any of
Dear Helen:
honored. Music for the
Order of the Eastern Star, same problem and my sisler·
that when I was growing
people won 't like it.
I have one of those workahholic husbands too, but unlike
danee following the dinner
Wednesday, 7:30 p.m.; in· in-law suggested just rubbing
Dolly Part.on proved the up.
"Wife" I don't consider this all bad.
wUI be provided by the
"When I was jusl getting
spection al the Middleport with a dry cloth . This
You can help cu t down Of1
maxim wrong. A recent
My husband is a loyal and faithful man, and I thank God he three-night stand at The started I decided that I would
crime losses ... losses tha t
Country Buneb from
Masonic Temple.
worked great for me and
d ir ectly
aff ect
you,
enjoys earning mooey so that he can care for his family.
Marietta. The publle Is
AMERICAN Legion Aux· removes crayon marks from
Bottom Line in Greenwich dress in gaudy, outrageo\IS
whether they happen to you
I have also found this leaves me with time to develop Village was the hottest ticket clothes because that fit my
Invited to the danee wbleh
Illary, Feeney-Bennett Post any surface that IS SMOOTH
or not
myself as a person. Instead of complaining, I do my besl to be in town with fans and the outgoing personality. Slhce I
will be held irom 9 p.m. to
128, 7:30 p.m. Wednesday and SHINY better than a
• pleasant when he i8 around, and when he must work (which media. There was npt even already had other parts of my
mldolgbt with a $2 ad·
night at the hail. No supper cleanser. And there's no
Tak. ~ th e cr ime of arson .
sometimes seems always) I move to hobbies, friends, my own standing room.
You ' re
pa yi n g
an ,
mission ebarge.
body that were extreme, I
will be served.
damage to the paneling. incr ea si ngly hea vy su bsidy
endeavors.
·
I
might
as
well
be
figured
LYniA.
I'm not surprised. I
lor deliber ately set fi r es
1 find he begins to stay home and notice me more when I remember . Dolly Parton totally extreme. Now if I
DEAR POLLY - Campers
through your insu ran ce
get busy and involved elsewhere. - HOPEFUL
or those with back yard
before she was a star. We want to wear two wigs at a
premi um s
swimming pools often need a
went to the same high school time piled 40 feet high on on
Dear Helen:
my
head
I
feel
free
to."
dressing room. A simple one
In suran ce
costs
ar e
back in Sevier County, Tenn.
Better a workaholic than an alcoholic, dameaholic, She was already strumming a
adversel y a ffecte d by
She writes the music
ATHENS - The fourth . ''Let students experience ca n be made by hangmg a
burglaries. rob beries' and
betaholic or shifUess man. Since you can't change hia type, guitar and singing on local herself and it has a new annual fiber art. show, setting up a show. It's a lot of large wnbrella from a tree
car thefts ... plvs the
"Wile," setUe for small concessions. Without criticism, tell radio.
sound: A new back-up group "Exhibition in Fiber" will be fun," she noted. ul've never branch and then hooking a
countless CB radios and
had a sludent who said, 'f plastic curiam to the lips of
him you love him too much to always be separated from him,
The first timelsawher was called Gypsy Fever has . held Tuesday, Ma y 31
bi c y c l es tha t tu r n up
and ask for certain "family nights," "together days ," etc. He's at a high school football game broadened her appeal to rock through Tuesday, May 313 don't want to be a part of the umbrella ribs.
missing .
a programmed person, and he'll probably respond to in the early '60s. Her figure audiences.
through Thursday, June 9 at that.' We learn a lot from it." MELODY.
11 SCheduling," 'where he won't make time for spontaneous
Of the work to be exhibited,
one thing you can do is to
Now, Dolly Parton is off in MIU Street, Athens . Ad·
DEAR POLf,V- I have ar·
and yellow curls, even then ,
supp o rt
programs
she
said,
"One
student
is
Europe. On Tuesday, she was mission is free and open to
events. - HAS ONE TOO
thnt1s m my knees so I wear
attracted attention.
providing stiff er penalties
working
on
a
series
of
por·
only pants smts and slacks.
Some of the boys visited backstage at the the public .
for
wron gdoe r s
and
traits of family members. In Instead of buymg expensive
Kings
Theater
in
Glasgow,
The
show,
sponsored
by
proposa ls for st ren g then~
snickered : Why'd she want to
crime in\lesti gat ion efforts.
community members and no way are they pictorial, tunics to go w1th them I cut
carry that silly old guitar Scotland by Prince Philip.
though. She is using the color off some nice, no longer worn
The
current
tour
is
students
in
the
fiber
program
around with her• They
HESTERS MOVE
You can also rna k e 1t
stopped laughing long ago. designed to give her greater at the Ohio University School and quality of the fiber to di:esses at hip length and then
tougher
for croo k s Use
res
ide
at
2215
North
N.E.
express
how
she
feels
about
Mr. and Mrs. Eugene
hem them . They look nice
Until lasl weekend in New exposure in the rock market. · of Art., will showcase student
good, strong locks. Mar k
Sixth
Place
and
Hester
is
each
member
of
the
family
."
Hester and children, Jill and
"I have already been to all works using fibers . The
with slacks for every day
possess io ns w tth your
York, I had not seen her,
"Another sludent is taking wear. -A.F.
Heidi, who has been residing general manager of a new Ol&lt;Cept for a few brief glances the places where country fans gallery will be open from 9 to
soc! al secur ity number
a kind of Pop Art. viewpoint
in l:luntington, have moved radio station there.
are
and
!'II
be
going
back.
DEAR
POLLY
-1
needed
a
~daily
and
noon
to~
Saturday
on television, since she got
and taking female types of pair of embrOidery hoops but
Our
ag ency
pr ovides
hack to Ocala, Fla. They
out of high school in 1964. At a But now I get a chance to and Sunday. The opening is
finan c ial pr otect 1on an d
soft
objects
potholders,
meet
the
more
contemporary
had none, so I came up with
on May 31 at 7:30p.m.
champagne breakfast after a
ser vice wh en crime losses
and an idea of my own. I took the
Over 30 pieces by 25 student dishtowels
midilight performance, I got audience on their own turf. It
occur ... but many can be
has been exciting to see that I artists will be presented, with exaggerating their size.''
lid of! a round plastic
prevented. That' s why we
to chat with her .
"The area of fibers is margarine contamer and cut
say prevent ion is the
"! graduated from high can touch all kinds of the majority offered for sale.
area
where
probably
an
best
pol
icy
.
different
people
with
my
out the inner circle all the
"Fibers have become a
school on Friday night," she
women
art.ists
have
been
able
way to the outer edge and
much broader medium than
said. "I left early the next music."
to the F.IRST person furto gain recognition," she then cut off the bottom of the
morning
on
a
Greyhound
bus
they
have
been
before,"
said
nishing information
added, "because in other dish so there was only a piece
for Nashville. I went there
leading to the discovery of
'1/
Carolyn Thomas, inslructor areas,
the art s are ' left at the lop that was about
a 1970 Chevrolet Impala, 4I '
'.)'
of Art 1n the program .
because that's where my
traditimlally
male oriented. f.lle width of the cut-off top
992 -2.143
door , white body with black
"Although mosl of the work
:nliSic co uld come to life. I
102 W . I'V\atn
Pomeroy
In fibers," · she said, ' 1it is
vinyl roof tiJMd interior ,
left home because the
T
that 'will be sown is based on more equal ... There is not the
BLUE HOOD AND RIGHT
mountai ns couldn't hold the
traditional techniques, we kind of lopsided recognition
FRONT FENDER {car
transform them into a con·
dreamB I had."
was in accident and parts
that occurs in other arts."
replaced - may have been
Her appearance is outThe second birthday of B. temporary visual statement
painted by now) , bent front
rageo\IS. Blonde wigs pile J. Hackett, son of Mr. and that has more to do with idea
bumper, license plate
atop her head . Flashy, tight· Mrs. George William Hackett than function." Ms. Thomas
hangs on wires as plate
fitting clothes emphasize a lll , was celebrated recently s u g g e s t e d
IhaI ,
frame is bent. May have
Mae
Wesl·type
body.
She
kids
with a dinner at the home of "businessmen become aware
Ohio XW5356, Ohio XP 488,
Mr. and Mrs . . Geo r~e of the possibilit ies of
North Carolina AKA 899,
about it.
Approximately 50 persons
Michigan
HRV
356,
" I once · tried to be Hackett, Jr., grandparents of tapestries rather than
Montana 2 T 159'27, Confashionable/' she said . "But B. J., and with a party at the paintings" in considering attended the open meeting of
necticut TU 7797 plates.
011ly once. It was hac~ when home of hi s great· office decor. "They should the Rock Springs Grange
. Car belongs lo BLAKE
women's liberation was a big grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. think in terms of fiber Thursday night at the hall on
ALLEN WHITE. a student
thing, and I was one of the Paul Smart..
sc ulpture rather than s1eel the fairgrounds.
who di sappeared under
A potlucK dinner preceded
first to burn my bra . It took
For the outdoor party a sculpture," she added.
mysterious circumstances
the
meeting with .Mr. and
DL~"· ~ ALLEN WHIT,E
the fire department four days circus motif was carried out.
on December 10, 1'76 from
She said the show would,
5.5. No. 284-46-3437
Ohio Universi1y , Athens,
Mrs. Amos Leonard presento put it out."
Homemade ice cream and
Ohio.
ting the program. A prayer of
How does she play the
were served and gifts
.l..
Thanksgiving
was giVen by
guitar with all that heavy cake
were presented to the
u
UV
HUNTERS and HIKERS. Please search all
Mrs. Amos Leonard with
jewelry and long fingernails? honored guest.
quarries. ponds. rivers and streams which
Ray, Lisa and Scott Pullins,
~~ Pretty good," she said.
Attending besides those
a·re deep enough to ·conceal a car, in any
Ruth Ann and Sue Ellen Fry
"But occasionally one of the named were Mr. and Mrs.
area where a car could have been driven or
stngmg " West Vtrgima."
nails get in the way as I play Gene O'Brien, Deg raff; Mr.
A
dinner
at
the
Ponderosa
Fred Goeglein read ''Li lacs
pushed into said waters . PLEASE
and I' ll tear it out.''
and Mrs. Terry Stidham,
TELEPHONE COLLECT to 419-668-8467 ,
Seriously, She explains, 11 1 Emmy J o and Andy, in Vienna, W. Va. was plarm· on H1ll Roads" with Mrs.
have always wanted to shine Woodstock; Mr. and Mrs. Joe ed lor July 14 when the Chat· Beuna Grueser giving a
Norwalk, Ohio, or contact the Huron County
and glitter. I always thought Buck, Shari and Joe, Jr. , ter Club met recently at the humorous reading, and Jim
Sheriff at Norwalk .
West Liberty; Mr. and Mrs. home of Mrs. Hattie Fisher. and Betty Conkle prese ntmg
Ho s te ss g ift s wer e a sk1t.
John Goodwin, Columbus,
INCLUDED: 6 PIECE ATIACHMEN T SET
There was dulcimer music
and Melanie Hackett, and presented to Mrs. Fisher and
Mr. and Mrs. George Mrs. Lee Enoch. Mrs. F1sher by Amos Leonard and B1ll
Hackett, Sr. , Middleport, and Mrs. Dorothy Roach Grueser joined by Ray
received birthday gifts. Mrs. Pullins on the guitar.
·great-grandparents of B. J
-Susan Cleland presided at the Twenty-two persons took
CHINA TRIPS
busmess meeting. Games part in a contest entitled
BOWUNG GREEN , Ohio were played with prizes g&lt;r Movmg the Junk" and the
PROVIDES
(UP!) - Margaret Whitman, ing to Mrs. Lola Harrison' deputy master and juvenile
THE TRAINING YOU NEED
who
has made four trips to Mrs. Mary Starcher, Mrs. matron, Elizabeth and Men·
FOR THE BUSINESSWORLD
Chma, will speak Monday at Betty B1ggs, Mrs. Marie dal Jordan, both spoke bnd·
Bowling Green Slate Univer- Leifheit, Mrs. Opal Biggs,
GREAT CLEANING FEATURES !
Months
ly.
sity.
Inspection was announced
• Exclusive 6~way Diai· A-Nap"'- rug height
and Susan Cleland. The door
Not Years Prepare You
Her first visit to China was prize was won by Mrs. Betty for June 29. The baking and
adjustment cle:ans any carpe t f rom th e
To Earn!
lowest nap to the thickest shag
in 1973. During her tripa , she Biggs.
sewing contests were he ld
visited with Teng Ying.chao,
Sandwiches, chips, cake, with Mrs. Helen Blackston,
Top~lilllng dispOsable dust bag pteven-ls
wife of the late Premie r Chou pop and coffee were served.
clogs, keeps suction slrortg
taking first, and Louise Had·
'
En-La1.
For Day
ford, second in the wrapEdge Kleener cleans that last lotJgh
Or Evening Classes
aro und sk~rl ; and Mrs .
Inch along lhe baseboards
Frances Goegiein, first,
Amos Leonard, second, and
CALL: (614) 446-4367
~I
Barbara Fry, third in the apNOW ENROLLING
ple bars. Prayer by the
chaplain , Mrs . Beuna
FOR NEW TERM
Greuser, closed the meeting.
Fire Department or Men's Club~

I

BUY THE COMPLETE SYSTEM

Graduating fro m col lege ? Beg 1n your ca reer now In learning
ho w l o manage (I

OPE NIN,G JUNE 1st

24 95

19~~00

RT. 62 N., PT. PLEASANT
PH. 675-6276

FAMILY
$1()() Year

on energy -cnsts, budget

Fiber art show set

host golf meet

$75 Year

~
'•'•

•

CRIME LOSSES

REALISTIC TRC-468 FOR UNDER '80!

SINGLE

:ll

Social
Calendar

FOR CURBING

Cambridge will

POOL MEMBERSHIPS

By Helen Botte1

~

'Y:.:: •o

best policy. • .

infielder Mike Jorgensen .
New York Mel s - Recalled
reliever Rick Baldwin from
T 1dewater
of
the
In ternational LeaQue ; qave
utility Infielder Leo Foster
his outr ight re lease to
T idewater
Boston Brought up
pttcher Mike Paxton from
Pawtucket
of
the
In ternat ional League to replace
Jim Willoughby, who broke
his right ankle during pregame drills.
Houston - Signed catcher
Joe Ferguson to a five year
contract.
,
Montreal - Optional pit cher Gerald Hannahs to
Denver of the Ame r i can
Association

POINT PLEASANT
INN

ooo-

~ US. • •

•

··~~-;!:' ...

country to city

Sunday
Baseb.lll

Although winning pitcher
Spradling gave up 12 walks
and 12 hits. his New
Haven Reds Boys League
,team downed the host
Pomeroy Tigers 11-9. He also
fanned II but cracked a
double and single to help his
own cause.
Other hitters for the win·
ners were Scott a triple,
Edwards, Simington, Zerkle
and Scott, .all doubles, and
Thompson , Edwards and
Zerkle, all singles. Thompson
had four safeties.
Icenhow er took the loss, but
he tossed a fine game, fan·
ning 13 and wa lking jusl four.
He also got a triple and two
singles in the losing cause.
John Smith had two singles, a
triple and double, Brian Will
had two doubles and a single,
and Ron Denny and Tony
Gilkey had a single each.
R
ISO 032- ll 13
T
022 212-- 9 12

r H:'cle;Hcl;'=-, James speaks to AA uw

Parton brings

Sports Transactions
United Pre55 Inte rnational

Angeles, Baker {7), Lacy f2l ;
Pittsburgh , Moreno c:n, Parker
2 (8), Oliver (4).

Oet
A30 002 401- 14 16 0
Ch1cgo
000 011 010- 3 12 1
Rozema (4-1) and May ;
Ct1icgo
000 01 0 010- 2 10 1 wood, DaiCanton (2), H&amp;m ilton
202 000 1lh&lt;-'- 5 8 1 (6) , LaGrow (6) and Downing .
At lanta
Bonham , P . Reuschel (1l and LP- Wood (0 ·1l . HRs- Detro 1t.
Mi1terwald ; Messer smlth. East - Thompson (7); Chicago ,
erly (7) and Correll . WP Gamble (7). Zisk (12) .
Messersm ith
p.1) . L P Bonham (5 -ll .' HR -Atlant~, Cleve
002 040 010- 7 12 0
Burroughs {101.
Kan City
001 000 000- 1 7 2
Bibby (3·1) kand Kendall ;
Sen Dgo
000 000 100- 1 6 1 Leonard. Gura (5) and Porter
Mntrel
200 000 10x- 3 4 1 LP - Leonard (2'4). HRS O' Acqusi to , Spi llner (8) and Cleveland , Manning (J) , Bell
Davis; Rogers (5-Jl and Foote . (3)
LP-D'Acqu(s-to (0.1) .
M inn
010 005 200- 8 10 1
Sen Fran
100 100
2 6 0 Calif
200 110 010- 5 11 1
St.Louis
000 000 ooo- 0 7 3
Redfern, 0 . Johnson {51. T.
Barr , Lavelle (8) and Hill ; Johnson (0) and Wynegar :
Dierker , Schultz (6) , Met-zger Simpson , Scott (6). K1rkwood
{8) and Simmons. WP - Barr (6- (6) , Hartzel l {7) and Hum .
-4) LP-- Dier ker (0-1) . HR- San phrey . WP - T Johnson (4-2l.
Francisco, Thomasson (3) .
LP - Sco1t (0 -2). HR - Min nesota, Kusick {3.) .
P~lla
020 012 OlD- 6 12 I
Houston
001 000 002 - 3 7 1 Seattle
010 201 020- 6 13 0
ChristenSon, Brusstar (9 ) and Oakand
000 100 010- 2 3 3
Boone ; Bannister , Pentz (9)
Pole. Laxton (6), Romo {6 )
and Herrmann. WP- Christen and Jutze ; Blue, Torrealba (8 ).
son (4-4). LP-Banni$ter (1 .4}.
Giusl l {8) and Williams . WPPole (1 . 1). LP - Biue {3-4)
- AmeriCin Lngue
c1st game&gt;
020 020 000- .4 11 0
Bolt
000 103 001 - 5 8 o Toronto
102 200 20x- 7 17 1
N.Y .
010 000 000~ 1 7 1 Texas
Lemanczyk , Bruno (4), John
R. May {5-.4) and Dempsey ;
Hunter, Lyle (6), Patterson (8) son (8) and Ashby ; Alexander ,
and Healy . LP- Hunter (l . J). Oev1ne (61. Knowles (9) a'nd
Sundberg WP- Aiexander (6
HR - Baltimore, Singleton (3).
ll. LP- Lemanczyk (2 41 HR Te)(as. BeniQuez (2)
C2nd game•

Baseball Standings

scored.

BLOOMINGTON,
Ind .
(UP!) - Charlton Ehizuelen
leaped 53 feet, 8'\it inches to
win the triple jwnp Saturday
and lead Illinois to the
championship of the Big
Ten's 77th outdoor track and
field meet.
The Nigerian leaper also
won the long jump.
Two defending league
champions from Illinois Craig Virgin in the S,IJOI).
meter run and Doug Laz in
the pole vault - also won
their specialties as the Illini
rolled to a 19-point victory
over host Indiana.
Michiga n, which lost the
mdoor title to Illmois by a
single point last wmler ,
finished fifth in the outdoor
meet. Michigan State and
Wisconsin were third and
fourth. Pordue was sixth,
followed in order by
Minnesota, Ohio State, Iowa
and Northwestern.
The meet produced a rare
dead heat in the 400-meter
dash and a brilliant duel
NEW YORK ( UPI) -Five- diques' Real Cloutier and down the stretch in the 3,®
foot-nine Robbie Florek has goalies Don McLeod of the meter steeplechase.
overcome many physical Calgary Cowboys and John
James Grace of Michigan
obstacles in his hockey Garrett of the Birmingham was originally awarded the
career, but now he has Bulls.
4()1).meter crown in a Big Ten
hurdled an entire tradition.
Florek, 25, scored 117 meet record time of 411.42
Mond~y, the !50-pound points this year despite
seconds. But the result was
center became the first playing for the last.place protested
and
judges
American-born hockey Phoenix Road runn ers. reviewed electronic photos of
player in history to win a Phoenix is no longer in the the finish line, then declared
major league most valuable WHA and Florek will play for Grace and Tim Peters of
player award when be edged the Cincinnati Stingers . in Indiana the co-champions in
out Anders Hedbe1 g for the 1977-78, the second-highest identical times.
Gordie. Howe Trophy, scoring team in the league.
In the steeplechase, ·Steve
symbolic of the MVP of the
With the folding of the Pershing of Iowa overtook a
World Hockey Association. · Roadrunners, Detroit tiring Steve Kolodrubutz of
Florek compiled 168 points General Mana~er Ted Northwestern in the final 10
in edging out the Winnipeg Lindsay is reportedly trying yards of the race and edged
Jets' Hedberg by a single to woo Florek back to the him by tbree-tentha of a
point in the MVP tabulations , NHL.
second . Defending champ
chosen by a vote of the WHA The diminutive Florek is Greg Meyer of Michigan, who
media. Hedberg actually not afraid to mix 11 up - he won the IO,()(J().rneter run
garnered more first-place spent 86 minutes in th e Friday,
finished
a
votes, 12-10, but was nosed penalty box last year - and disappointing fifth .
out despite setting a new he rejects any hints that he 's
He wasn't the only
professional hockey record too small to be pla yi ng defending champion
with 51 goals in his first 49 professional hockey.
dethroned Saturday.
games.
"I weigh 150, but the other
Indiana's Phil Stapp,
Rounding out the top five, guy's stick only weighs as seeking his fourth straight
in order, are the Quebec Nor- much as mine does,'' h,e said. 110-meter · high hurdles
crown, finished third. Rich
Hands of Wisconsin won in
14.33 sec011ds.
Iowa's Bill· Hansen, last
Major Lelgue Results
Bait
000 010 001 - 2 4 o year's high jump winner,
By United Press Internation al
N.Y .
002.00330x - 8100
National League
McGregor, Hcldsworth (7) , leaped 6-11 and finished
(1st Game)
Miller (8) and Skaggs ; Guidry , fourth. Noel Ruebel of
New Yrk
000 100 000- 1 6 2 Tidrow ( 9) and Healy , WPPurdue won the event at 7-1.
Cinci
310 040 oox- a 1 1 Gu idry {3 -0) LP- McGregor { 1
Defending champ
K o o s m a n, Apodaca (SJ. 1) , HRs- New York. Nettles (8) ,
Mynck (7} and Grote; Bill ing - Balt imore. OeCinces (7).
Lawrence
Johnson
of
ham. Caldwel l (8) and Plum Wisco
nsin
edged
Randy
mer . WP- Bdlingham (5-3l. L P (1st game)
- Koosman (J-5). HR- Clncin · Mi lw
000 150 310- 10 12 1 Smith of Michigan State by
na t i, Bench (7)
Boston
121 000 37x- 1.4 1.5 3 inches at 10:86 seconds in the
Beare, McClure (7), castro
&lt;2 nd. 11 innings)
(7 ), Folkers (8) and Moor e; !()!).meter dash, but .Smith
N Y
000 100 200 01- A 10 1 Clevela nd , Wi se (5), Campbel l carne
back to replace
Cl nci
ooo 102 ooo oo- J 10 2 (8) and Fisk WP- Campbell (3 Johnson
as titleholder in the
E spi n o sa, LockwoOd (6) , 31. LP- Folkers (0-ll. HRsTodd (10) and Stearns. Boston , Lynn 2 (.4), Hobson (5), 200-meter sprint with a
Norman , Murray (7), Eastw!ck Yastrzemski (A) , Evi'lnS (8),
(8). Borbon ( 101 and Plummer. Scott (9) ; Milwaukee, Money 2 victory in 21.68.
WP- Todd {2-0J. LP-Borbon (5), Lez cano {7) , Hegan ( 1L
Mike Murei of Wisconsin
(0-2). HRs- New York, Stearn s Joshua (3).
repeated
in the 4()1).meter
(51 ; Cincinnati , Morgan (S)
intermediate hurdles and
(2nd game)
Los Ang
100 010 011 - 4 12 1 MiJw
000 210 300- 6 18 1 Herb Lindsay of Michican
PtrsDg
040 500 02x - 11 11 0 Boston
000 000 000- 0 2 0
Sutton, Downing (41), Sosa (7)
Rodriguez (1 OJ and Han ey ; State in the I ,SO().meter run.
and Yeager, Candelaria, Te- Jenkins, House (7] and Mont -· They won in IU stadium
kulve {8), Gossage {9) and gomery
LP - Jenkins (4-41.
Dyer . WP- Candelaria (6-0). HRs - Milwaukee , McMullen record times of 50.68 seconds
and 3:45.3 respectively.
LP-Sutton
(6-1). H Rs- Los (21. Wohlford (1).

Ftorek first American

Charl esto n

Five Cnmers R &amp; M champ

Big Ten Final

~'fhP Daily Sent~ I, Middleport.-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, May 23, 1m

ftad1e lhaeli
'I

.

Meeting,
May 23 thru
May 29th

at Westside
church of Christ
West Main St .
Pomeroy

NAME---------------~

PHONE ___ IIP'----~
ADDRESS------------~

-.-CITY

• IJ J. l,!!,.t ' J1'1 '" liJI JII T

I
I
I
I

STATI·-----l

..

Mike Willis
speaker
7:30p.m. and Sunday
10 a. m.

an~

6 p.m .

JUDGE DIES
CHILLICOTHE, Ohio
(UP! )- Newly elected Ross
County Common Pleas Court
Judge Robert Perdue died
Saturday at the age of 57.
Cause of death was not
known , but sources said the
vic tim had begun to
hemorrhage unexpectedly .
Perdue · took office in
January.

FOR ONLY

INCLUDES 13 PC.
ATTACHMENT SET

INGELS FURNITURE
106 N. 2nd Ave:

MiddleDOrt. 0,
•

�0-Tile Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Mondav , May 23, 1m

WANT AD
CHARGES

Let The Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash

U Wunb or Under
1.00
1.00

2W.)s
Jl.lays

1.10

61ht)'l!)

~ . 00

Eat:h word ov~r the mUmnwn 1$
wvt\J.Ij ts 4 l'ents per word p!:r Je~y,
Atls ruq.Jll~ other tlvin &lt;'OII.!i«UUVe
t&gt;Mr~o:..U lll tl~ I day

d!lys wl.IJ be
raw

In rnettwr) , Com! ur Tlwnks &lt;~.nd
OIJttuary ; 6 L~ lls ~r word, SJ.OO
nwtunwn Cash m&lt;~dvllnt•c
Mutnlc HVIlltl bales 11ml Y&lt;~.t tl sale~
... t" a~'ll!plcO only wt th ~.:&lt;~:.h With
on.lt:r. ~ cem l'llll!Ke f~ ads Cllltyu•.c Bull :'iwnt..·r In C11te ufThe &amp;&lt;ntmd

The PuUILsher reserves lht• 11gh.
to edit or fCJt!l'lltny aW ~lllt:d otJ..
jt..&gt;ctwnal Tl~ Publisher w•ll nul llc
r;:sponstble fur• mor·e than urw Jnll!f•
re&lt;.1 li1St' I'UUI\

PIIIJIIt" 992-21 56

PIANO LESSONS. d'ul drens and
adults . Mr5
Harvey Von
Vronken. 997.-1270 .
THE RACINE V'Ol. F1re Dept will
have a chJCken barbecue on
Sunda~ . May 29 at tl'le f1re sto·
han Starlingalll ·OOAM
-.nENTION -·MeJgs Htgh S.niors .
Full color photo'f. In your cop
and gown, groduot1on setting.
Two 5 :w: 7's 1n fo lders , $&lt;1 .50
pgyoble when p1clure Ioke n.
The Photo Place, 109 Hi9h St ,
Pomeroy
For oppomfment.
992-5292

LITTLE TAN female CI'IJhuohua
FOUND on river bonk. Fron t
St, M1ddleport obou t 3 yn old
Phone 992·3832 .

---

NOTICE
WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES
Munday
Noon un ~turd~y

TLJrsilily
thru Fr tday
4P M
Lite da y l&gt;tJfur c pub)t!;&lt;lhOU
Swtday
4 P.M
Ftttlll}

•

.,

... J•'

. ··,
,, - '
'.

'

uflemoon

LEGAL NOTICE
OHJO DEPARTMENT
OF AOMJNISTRATIVE
SERVICES
CETA TlTLE Vl
PROJECTS
The Off ice of Manpower
Development is requestmg
proiec t proposals for man .
power programs under Ti tle
VI of the Com prehensrve
Employment and Tra1ning
Ac t of 1973 (C ETA J. Em ·
ptovment and tra lnmg OP ·
por t unlt•es would be offered ,
under
these
pro iec ts ,
pr1mar il y to the long . term
unemployed
or
AFDC
rec1pients and Whose family
1n comes are 70 percent or less
of th e lower 11v1ng standard
Income tevet. Participants
must be certified by the Ohio
Bureau of
Employment
Se rv 1ces and must meet
certain ei•Qiblllty criteria
Spec ial considerat ion for
enrollment should be g1ven to
Veterans and CETA T1tle I
part ici pants .
All
OP ·
portunit 1es will be made
ava ilable withOut regard to
race, creed , color , nattonal
origin . sex , age , hand •cap ,
political affitiat!On , or beliefs
Pro !ects are to have a public
service obiective , result In a
specifiC product or ac .
comp/tshment , and shall Of"!IY
be In addition to emp loyment
which would otherw ise be
fund e d without assistance
under this Act Top priority
w ill be given to projects
des igned- to ass1st In the
recovery from weather and
energy related crises ex perienced this year , or to
pro!ects designed to relieve
such posslble emerfilencles
dur i ng the next w inter
season Projects ere to run
trom August 15, 1977, or
thereafter. to September 30,
1978, not exceeding one vea r .
See
below
listing
for
allowable dollar size for
poiects in each county . Any
Jndtvidual or organ tzat •on
may submit a proposal.
ttowever. the reaulations
d 1sallow the fundtng of a
program
whiCh
would
produce profit for the con ·
tractor . The geographic area
served t.S RMSC Area No. 7
which
inc ludes
Athens,
Gallla, Hocking , Jackson,
Lawrence. Me-lg.s. and Vinton
counties . Proposal packages
may be recruested from Larry
Hlvnor , T1t1es 11 and VI Field
Representative, 12 west
Fourth St .. The PlainS, OhiO
45780 at {614) 797 . .4953 or
Doubles B. Martin, Special
Planner, Office of Manpower
Development , 30 East Broad
St .. 27th Floor, Columbus,
Ohio ~3215 at (614 ) 466·8297 or
1· (800) 282-1050
{tall -tree).
Proposals must be submitted
In trif)llcate on the form
provided bY request on or
betore May 27, 1977 These
are to be sent to Douglas B.
Martin at the same address.
An Equal Opportunity
Emf)loyer
(Male -Female)
Athens
100,000
Gallia
$100,000
Jackson
SlOO,OOO
Me igs
$100,000
Vinton
S 50.000
IS ) 23, lie

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ADVERTISEMENT
FOR BIDDERS
Project No . 1
BOARD
OF
COUNTY
COMMISSIONERS , OWNER
separate sealed bids for the
construction of Steel Beam
Br idge, 42' Span located on
County Road C -29 over
Bowman Run Will be received
by the Board of County
Com m iSS1oners of Meigs
county, Ohio , at Its office in
the courthouse , Pomeroy,
OhiO .45769 unt 1l 4· 00 PM
opened 7.00 PM . June 7, 1977,
and then et said office
public ly opened and read
aloud
The Information for Bid ders. Form Of Bid , Form of
contract ,
Plans.
Specific at ions and Forms of
Performance and Payment
Bond ana otl"ler contract
documents may be examined
at the office of the Engineer
or commissioners , Court house, Pomeroy, Ohio . Non .
returnabl! co~:~les may be
obta ined upon payment of
$10.00 for each set .
BidS shall be accompan ted
by a bond or certified check
on a solvent bank In· the
amount of S percent of the
bid In addition , the sue .
cesstul bidder shall post a
Conlracror •s
Bond In the
l!llmount of 100 percent of his
bid .
The owner reserves the
right to waiVt any form a lilies
or to reject any and all bids
No bidder may withdraw
his bid within 15 davs after
the actual date of the opening
thereof
BOARD
OF
COUNTY
COMMISSIONERS
Meigs County, Ohio
Henry Wells
Richard Jones
James Roush
(5) 23, 31, 2tc

FOUND - ONE Male bluehck
hound wearing collar . No tog,
10
Wolfe Pen a rea
Coli
992·73 12 after 5·30
FOU ND FEMALE Norwegia n
Elkhound . Call985·4130, cl-!eck
at John Bennett's , Mt Ol1ve
Rood . l ong Bo ttom.

-

--

60 x 11 MOBILE HOME with 10" 16

Add ·A Room owning, under
pmnmg . storm w•ndows ,
storage building . Contocl Oervl
Well. Tupper Plo1ns. (bl4 )
M7 3951 a fter 4

IF VOU have a service to offer ,

wan t to buy or 'f.ell someth ing ,
oe look1ng for work
or
whatever . .. you 'llget results
taster with o Senhnel Wont Ad
Coll992·21 56
GARACE SALE , O ld Enterpme
Slat 1on Route 33. Monday thru
Fnd,2y lo ts do tl'l ing 9 11114 ·
YARD SALE betw~n Chester ond
T P. on Sumner Rood. Tuesday
ond Weds ., May 24 , 25, 9·00 till
" Llvmg room su1te , kitchen
ta ble , Slgno&gt;ure lrost Free
~ efngerotor onhques of a ll
kmds, iron gas • sepator , stone
ro rs and tugs . all k•nds of
d;shes, droper!es , clothong of
oil
kmds
miles
down, Road
fifth
tro•ler
on left
on Sumner
coming from 7, ou ts1de of
Chestet .
~

ACAREER JOB IN
CONSUMER FINANCE
Gain reeognlllon and prestige lhrough 4 c areer In
consumer f inance Consumer f i nance Is an lntt!g raland
Important force fn our country's economic growth and
pr-pgress
A poslt lon here will give you economic security. The
cons umer finance business Is steady - even dur ing
recessions , ·
·
You can win promotion rapidly. You will be paid a
cd starting salary and receive exceptional employee

T~~~::-are Branch Representative positions ope_n now

for h igh school _graduates. Must ha~e auto.
Phone Mr . Sriodgrass today for e confidential,
personal interview . Call 992-2111 .
CAPITAL FINANCE SERVICES
W
Se
d St
t

300

est con
ree
Pomeroy, Ohio

AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER

l-------------------------'

-------

FOUR FAMilY Yard Sole, 253
South F1fth Ave , Middleport, COAL, limestone, and colc1um
ch londe and colc1um brine for
Monday and Tuesday , Moy 23,
dust con trol and special m1x1ng
24, 9 a .m
till 4 p .m.
CASH pa1d for a ll makes ond
salt for formers . ExcelSior Salt
Glassware, dish es, odds ond
mode ls of mob1le homes .
Works , Main Street , Pomeroy ,
ends, children's and women's
Phone areo code 614 ·.423·9531.
o~ ~rphone992 · ~9 1 .
doth•ng, old oak sewing
TIMBER, Pomeroy Forest Pro.
rocker Much more not listed CAMPER
$600
Also, l'lorse
ducts. Top pnce for standing
In case c.: rom . l'le ld nexl 2
trailer $450. Phone (614) 698·
sawtimber Coli 992·5965 or
days
3290.
_ K_ent Honby, 1 -446- 85~ _
YARD SALE . 322 Grant St ., rain
COINS. CURRENCY . tokens . old
cancels . Thursday , 26, Fndoy
pockel watches and chains ,
27 1h Women's, children's ond
silver and gold . We need 1964 ~oby clothing
and older silver coins . Buy sell,
or trade' Coli Roger Wam sley,

NEED A WATER

7A2 · 233l-'-c--c---~CASH I I l for junk cars Frye's
Truck and Auto. WRECKER SER RIS ING STAR Kennel Boord1ng ,
lndoor.Qutdoor runs , grooming
VICE l Phone 74 2·208:.:1.:__~-~
oil breeds . clean sanitary
OLD FURNITURE , ice boxes, brass
faci!Jhes oe 367-7112 Chesh1re
etc ..
com plete
' bed s.
Phone (614) 367 ~02'12
households . Write M. 0 M•ller,
Rt. 4, Pomeroy . Oh•o or cal l HOOF HOLLOW . Buy , sell , trade
or train .,orses . RUTH REEVES
992-77b(J
tro1ner Phone (61"} 698·3m.
STANDING TIMBER WANTED
AKC SHETLAND sheep dogs
PHONE (614) 667-6214 .
(Min .) CoiiJBs , 2 females , J
GOOD USED sw1mming pool ot
weeks old. Sl'lots ond wormed
leost10 x 3 . Caii949·2B05
Phone (61.4) 367 0792 o
367 ·7112 .

SOFTENER?
let Pomeroy landmark
soften &amp; condition your
water and a Co-op water
soltener,
Model UC-XVI.
1
Now Only ·,

279 •95

Let us
Free,

test

your

water

Pomeroy Landmark

¥.;~Jack W. Carsey.Mgr.
~

AND THE' WEAPON
THAT ~ILLED
DuE

Phone 192 -2181

OLDER RESPONSIBLE lady to live
in and ... are for aged widow m
Rutlan~ , Oh1o . Not invalid nor
semle Light housework and
cook1ng . No laundry Coli
742 2078 for informat1on.
WAITRESS WANTED - apply m per son
Craw's Steak House ,
Pomeroy . dh.o .
WANTED , BROKER-S-. ~L~
o~
,.-M~od
-:
el
Tractor"' Call ~2 6M6 Must
po11I.C.C . Requtrements .
sOMEONE TO cleon up cor$ ond
do body repair work Harold
Hysell Rutland ocron from
h•g~'~ 5ckool
HOUSEKEEPER TO live 10 and toke
core of 3 children Phone
742-3186.

Business Services
Shirley's Beauty flook
John St.

---~-

-~

Syracuse

Owner
Shirley (Jeffers) Wolfe
Formerly
lola's Beauty Sa Ion
For appointment call
992-2549 Tuesday thru
Saturday 8:00a .m. to
5:00p.m . Open nights
by appointment.
4-1)·1 mo

Nobtl Summit Road
Rt. I
Middltport, 0 .
992-5724
Ca mplete
Sales
and
Service and Supplies.
3-14-1

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

Young's Carpeting
Roule l , Pomeroy, 0 .

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

BISSELl SIDING CO.
A local contractor
Phone 949-2801
or 949-2860
Free tstimates
Na Sunday Calls Please
4-'14· 1 mo.

Carpet. Lino.-Tile
Phone Mike Young at
992-2204 or 992.7630
2-23· 1 mo.

DUGAN'S 1
FRONT END I
ALIGNMENT

lllin.IJ

Insulalion Services
fi~tantlnl Araiilbk!

Blown iol611alb &amp;•nics
ATTENTION
MANG ERS
&amp;
STOIM
demonstrators . Friendly Home
1111111011Sl0001l$
Toy Po rhes has openins for
REP~ItiENT
managers and dealers in your
oreo Toy Party plan e xWINDOWS
pe rience helpful. Car and
AUJMINUM
telephone necessary Call col·
SIOING-SOFFITT
lect to Carol Day (518} 489·8395
GUTTUUWNINGS
or write Fr1endly Home Porlles ,
20 Radrood Ave., Albany , N,Y
12205
Ph, !192-l!IU 4-1~1 m",
GUARANTEED JOB Traming
locahon . $:374 .40 Single,
$502 80 married Coli Army REMODELING, Plumbmg h&amp;ating
Recru1t1ng .
593·3022
or
ond all types of general repair
365·6:318 (co llect),~~-c-Work guaranteed 20 years e xWOMAN TO live In ond help core ,...!P:;ec_r::;
'e,::n:;:
c•::.:·..:P..:h::;o.:.:n:o
e ..:9:;,
92:.·::
24~'fl
:.:.:,·_ _
tor 1nval1d lady Wnte Box 274 , SEWING MACHINE Repo~rs , serNew Hoven , W Vo 252cc6_S . ~vice all makes , 992·2284 Tl'le
Fobflc Shop , Pomeroy .
Authorlted Singer So les and
Serv1ce We sharpen Sc1ssors .

EXCAVATING , doter, loader and
boc~hoe work
dump trucks
ond lo. boys for hire; will haul
hll dirt to so1l, hmestone ond
grovel. Call Bob or Roger Jef fers , day phone 992-7089,
mght pl'lone 992-3525 or 992·
5232
EXCAVATING, darer .. backhoe
and dttcher, Cl'lorles R Hat.
field , Bock Hoe Service ,
Rutlond 1 Ol'l•o. Pl'lone 742 -2008.

CAPTAIN EASY
A CD"f.CTOR FOR ~OA N
SHARKS! .,, GOOD GRIEF-,
EASY, YOU Nf.V~R TOLD
ME YOU WERE lN A
FINANCIAL S.lND!

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

YOU EXPECT ME
TO ANNOUNCE IT
TO THE WORlD 1

4-28· 1 mo.

NO.. I\UT A5 YOUR
PRlVATE 5ECRHAR'f,
I SHOULD THINK I
MI6HT HAVE BEEN
C LUI'D lt.J 50ME·
WHERE ALON£5
THE LlNE!

Superior
Steam Extraction

Young's Carpeting
Route 3, Pomeroy, 0.
Carpet &amp; Upholstery
Phone Mike Young
At
992 - 2206 or 992-7630

ALLEYOOP

LET'S~~ DOWN !
WANT 10 LOOK
AJWUND!

lT 1$ A ~VER ,
ALLE;Y! SEE'!'
OVER ~ERE!

"The Originators
Not The lmllllon"
2-2J.1 mo.

'\1jf\}~ ~'ft ~ THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
~ ~ ~~~ ®
byHennArnoldandBoblee
Unscramble these four Jumbles,
one letter to each square, to form
four ord1nary words

EXPERIEN(ED
Racllat~

¢, lt171or!l.'""- l•...._ M . .... -....

Service

COl NT

tJ

I KJ
tMETROH

J KJ

AHD B'&lt; GAD W11H

ood p., FLASHLIGHT
TO SEE 8'1' - WE
NEED FELLOWS

I [j

IUNMEBB±

I I [

LlKE '(OU-

BRADFORD . Auct1oneer , Complere Serv~ee . Phone 949-2487
or 949-2000 Racine, Ohio, Cntt
Bradford

J I

WHAT EVE~ONE IN
THE t:'OC10~~ WAiiiN5
ROO\'\ SEEMED TO
6E SUFFER1N5 FRC'N
Now arrange the Circled letters to

form 1he surpnse answer, as sug-

L-L-L-:~~';:~:,:::',.,...!g:•s:t~e~dby the above cartoon.

"[X I XI J-[ III J"

Answer:

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR Sweepers , toasters, lfons. all
small opphances . Lown mower .
next to Stole Highway Garage
on Route 7. Phone (614) 995 ·
3825

S t d
5
a ur ay

j

(Answers tomorrow)
J~mbles; CRESS BLANK ELDEST INFORM
Answer. Goes from mouth to mouth-A KISS

~
by THOMAS JOSEPH

HOMESITES for sole , I acre and
SMALL form for sol e, 10% dawn ,
up. M1ddleport. near Rutland
owner finance d Mon roe Coun·
Caii992-74Bl .
ty , W , Va Phone (304) 772NEW 3 bedroom house, 2"6aT~
3102 or (304) 772
c::_·3
~2c:2:_
7 c__c-c
all elec .. I acre, Middleport,
COUNTRY farmland with secluddose to Rutland Pl'lone · 992ed woods, water and good ac·
7481
cess m Monroe County , W. Va.
$1 .000 down, ca ll (:304) 7723102 or (30A) 772·3227

ACROSS
I Italian
bell town
5 Send back
10 Welcome
beneht
11 Balanced
13 Famed
conductor

BORN LOSER
liJE;~~, THIS

\HIS IS 1\\c I/05T

IS Wfiel&lt;e

1))8 CAM'€ it,J... ~ET'S'

OISbUSTit¥:&gt;1..\l

w.

FIL.1fN FIL.M
l'V!i C:V~R Sl;EN I

TEAFORD

(2 wds . )

15 Summer,

Vlrgtl B. Sr .. Realtor
216 E. Second Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Phone 992-3325

in Na ntes

16 Frog's
perch
17 Last
LLS:...LJ..::::....l.JIL__L_-l.t.....,...:....L-' Sparush
queen

•

E;,
MAIN
POMEROY,

0.

JUST kiSTED - Close to
school - 3 bedrooms, 2
baths, lovely equipped
~ ,kitchen, large Rec. room
24x28, has F .A. heat &amp; air
cond. 2 car garage,
basement. Many other
features .
JUST LISTED Very
nice. 3 bedrooms, formal
dining, bath, basement,
garage, lot runs from
street to street . $23,500.00.
LOVELY
FRAME
&amp;
BRICK - Close to Meigs
Hi. 3 bedrooms, 11h baths,
nice kitchen W·range &amp; dish
washer, fo,.mal dining,
lovely Rec . room, full
basement, garage. 1 acre.
$35,000.00.
CLOSE TO FORKED RUN
LAKE - 6 acres, double
wide (occupied just 1'12
yrs ). Like new, garage. 2
bu ildlnJJs $17 ,ooo 00
ABOUT 3 YEARS OLDLovely spill entrance (the
house of the future), 3. .4
bedrooms,
1'/2
baths.
dream kitchen, corner lot 1
acre: JUST $37,500.00.
SOUTHERN
STYLE
HOME- Beautiful kllchen
has everything, formal
dining, 5 bedrooms, 4
baths, 4tlllly, basemen!,
carpeting. $24,000.00.
DROP IN- HAVE A CUP
OF COFFEE - DISCUSS
YOUR REAL ESTATE
PROBLEMS WITH US.
HENRY E. CLELAND
REALTOR
Hank, Kathy
&amp; Leona Cleland
992·2259-985-4112
992-2568

or

Pomeroy Landmark

MASON FURNITURE CORPORATION

5 ·00-Big Valley J ; My Three Sons 4. M ister RogerS'
Neighborhood 20,33; Brady Bunch 8; Emergency
One! 13; Sta,. Trek 15
5:3D-Adam· l2 4; News 6 ; Family Altair 8; Electric
Company 20,33
6 00-New s 3.4.8.10.13,15, ABC News 6; Zoom 20,33 .
6.3D-NBC News 3,4,15 ; ABC News13 ; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS New• B, 10. Vegetable Soup 20, VIlla Alegre 33
7:00-Testimony ot Two Men 3, To Tell the Truth 4;
Liar' s Club 6 ; Buck Owens 8; News IOJ To Tell The
Truth 13; My Three Sons 15, Americana 20 ; Know
Yovr Schools 33
7·30 - In Searc h Of .4 ; Muppe1 Show 6 ; Gong Show 8;
Mac Neii · Lehrer Reporl 33, Price 1s Righ t 10]
Candid Camera 13; Nashville on the Road 15; While
House Tr~nscrlpls 20 .
8: 00-Little House on the Prairie 3,A,15; P ilot 6.1 3,
Movie " Hello Dolly !" 8. 10; Decades of Dec1s1on 33 .
R· 3o-Baseball 6, 13.
9 oo-Movle " Rosetti and Ryan : Men Who Love
Women ," 3,4, 15; Palllsers 20.33 .
10 :0Q-News 20; Ausll n City Limits 33.
JO:Jo- Farm Digest 20 .
JI ·OQ-News 3,4.6,8,10,13,15; Monty Pylhon's Flying
Circus 20; Black Journal 33
11 :Jo-J ohnny Carson 3,4, lS i Streets of San Francisco
6, 13. Kojak 8; Mary Hartman 10; ABC News 33.
12 :00-Movle " M ickey One" 10; Janakl 33
12 : 40 - Toma 6.13. McCloud 8.
1:oo- Tomorrow 3, 4
1· SQ.-News 13

Continuous one pi1ce
autters. We Ilona it. or do II
you,.self. Speci•l pricn to
builders,

Bentnd Rutland Grade
School. Evening work by
appointment, Ph. 742-2005
S-6-1 mo. ocl.

Pomeroy Landmark

PUBLIC AUCTION

MONOAY , MAY ?3, 1977

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

LARHl,,.~Y~~bER

FOR SAU

NOW WE KNOW THE
BEAST FOR WHAT HI' IS '

Television ·log for easy viewing

GUTTER SERVICE

L------·-

FREE ESTIMATES

GIVE· A-WAY Mole Coll 1e dog to JR . SIZE set of drums Jr. s1ze
give owoy Ron Cowdery,
typewriter , Jr . sire guitar ond
phone 985·3561 .
omphf1er. Lorge metal warOWN YOUR Own Busmess Area
drobe , two record players , 78
Oistnbutor for Rand McNally HEALTHY , ADOPTABLE dogs , kot·
reto rds . Antique 'h s1re iron
tens puppies Warmed and
Mops . No Selhng . Service pre
bed , onttque coffee toble, anti established accounts . Invest.
shots. Metgs County Humane
que centerslond , ant1que cor.
SocJety , 843·3009' or 992 7680.
men! $12,500 secured by inven
ner &lt;;koin , naw rug shompooer
tOry and equ1pment , Wnte, in- TROPICAL FISH and Fish Supplies
and waxer Call992·6034 .
clude
nome ,
addreu ,
Hompsters , robb•ts , gu1neo
telephone and 3 references to
p1gs , gerbil'S , t; irds and other 1li167 2 door lmpallo Chevrolet
197.11 BLAZER . automatiC, p.s .. 4 SEPTIC TANKS cleaned Modern
Personnel D.rector, NAMCO ,
Mag "'(heels , o tr sl'lodo:s , com.
smo
ll pets and pet suppl1es .
new 6 ply tires, 26 ,000 m1les
SonJtot1on , 992 ·:3954 .
3928 Montdmr Rd , B.nnplete ove rhaul
Phone
The Vanety Pet Shop, Rec ine
$4 ,500. Phone9Cil2·7149
inghom , Al 35213, or coli colWIL L do roohng , cons truct iOn,
985-3839
Ol-uo
led (205) B70·422B .
1976 CHEVROLET Cl'levettv Pl'lone
plumbing and heating No job
197.4
KAWASAJ(I
175
D1rtb1ke
AKC REGISTERED Blo ck Cocker
992-727A .
too Iorge or too sma ll Phor]e
$.400. Reg1sfered lnsh Setter,
Spontel pup, 6 months old , very
742-23A8
1966 MUST'-:A-:N-::G
:-:3::57"
1 "w:-:-C"
4 7barrel
papers
,
$50.
Coli
evenmgs
,
no
fnendly Pl'lone 742-2646 .
corb
recently rebutlt , CARPENTER
fioor1ng , ceiling,
_
9A_9_2A~
63~ ofter 6 P:cm:.c·c_~-AKC COCKER Sp,on•el pups , for
automatic,
slot mags, FM
poneltng . Phone 992· 2759.
COONER'S CAMPERS on Roin sole $75 Phone 992 -7059
stereo 8 track tape player and
bowndge, Soles , Rental Sermore. coli 992-2995 after 5·00 MOBILE Home Repo1r Elec.,
VICe ,
Supplies ,
trailers ,
plumbing and heotmg Phone
campers, cops alum awnmgs
p m•~-----..,.----.,992 585B .
oJ'(I porches by Ourabllt . Open
1972 PLYMOUTH Scamp , 6 cyl
New Co -up wautr nt·
evemngs . Me1gs 28 or 32 to
outomotlc pc;~wer steenng, o~r HOWERY AND MARTIN Ex·
teners, model VC-S VI.
coveting . septic systems ,
Boshon Owner Robe rt Codner, SPRING GARDEN Suppl1es , Cob
",
Onlv 1219.95
condttlone r. Phone (b l4 )
dozer. backhoe . dump truck,
bage, cauli flower, broccoli,
Long Bottom
S;nre UO.OO , on a new
367·7AOI.
l1mestone, grovel, blacktop
Hotpo1nt Refr.gerator.
and head lettuce plants ,
1971 LEISURE TIME Camper , 18ft.
1~ FORO 1/ r ton truck, $350 ~ats
1 New 20 CUbiC ft.
paving, Rt 14:3 Phone I (614)
yellow, white, ond red omon
sloeps 6, self -contoinod , hitch
Chest Freeur
Sl19,,5
of eJ~:tro ports. Coli 949·2273.
698-7331
s-ets on1on plants , Kennebec,
Now 1n stock, complete hne
and m1rrors mcluded, excellent
cobbler, l&lt;otol'ldin, ~ed Pont•oc
1970
FORO
VAN.
new
pamt,
good
HARRISON'S
T V. Repoir Service
of
bulk
garden
seJ!ds.
cond1tion . Phone 992· 2386
and Red Losada seed potatoes
f1res. new ports and tuneup.
1 Good McCullough Chain
Calls. 276 Sycamore . St , MtdBulk garden seeds, pot1tn9 soil,
CAMPER 16 FT Shosto , selfsaw
S65
coli after 6, 992-3259.
d leport Phone 992·2522
peot moss , fruit frees and rose
contained Phone 99'2·5473
1 Good Used Poulan Chain
1971 OLDS CUTLASS 350. Good EXCAVATING, BACKHOE , dozer,
buskes
M1dwoy Market ,
Saw
S50
condition. Phone 992·2636 offer
1 Good Used Unico
trencher, Low Boy , dump truck
Pomeroy , Ohio , 992 2582,
Dryer
no.oo
5 30p m
trucks , septic systems . Bill
Bob·s Market, Mason W.Vo
1 Good Used G . E. Dryer SBS
Pulhns , phone 9Ci12·2478 day or
(304) 773·5721.
1967
PLYMOUTH
4
dr
.
V-8
,
slon1 Used Lawn Mower
sso
:3 AND 4 RM. furnishod and un n•ght,
dord , 4 new tires, new brakes, ~~
--~-·
furnished opts Phone 992- TOMATO, PLANTS , Cabboge,
shocks
,
exhaust
,
battery
broccol1
,
cauliflower,
brussel
5434.
Phone 7.42-2114 .
sprouts, egg plants , kangtng
COUNTRY Mobtle Home Pork, Rt.
baskets , pots , geraniums
1967 NOVA~ cyl 3 speed; post·
33 ten miles north of Pomeroy.
begon1os , flats , petun1os
traction $290 OBO See at 247 CommercJal property opprox . It
Jack
w.
Carsey.
Mgrl
Lorge lots w1th concrete pahos ,
mor.golds , pons1es , solzia ,
C Mulberry , Pomeroy.
acres , level land, located at
Phone
992-2181
Sidewalks , runners and off
balsam , dianthus,
snap
Tuppers Ploms on Oh1o, Route
1966 CMC VAN, runs good ,
street parkmg. Phone992·7479.
dragons, alyssum, Vinca , col7. Phone (614) 667-6304
'
needs
body
work
.
$500.
Phone
eus Cleland's Greenhouse
ORCHID ROOM for rent far an 992-5465 .
NEW 3 bedroom house, built.Jn
Roc tne Geraldme Cleland
SO H.P MOTOR. boot and tro1ler
niversaries. wedding recepk1tcl1en , batl'l and 1h , Phone
Coli
949·2853
DODGE
CHARGER
Phone
1976
tions, bridal showers or pnvote 1·42 1n cost 1ron k1tcl1ensink,
7~2-2306 or contact MtiO B Hut.
949 2107 after 5 30 PM
meeting room . Pkone 992·3975
bosm and 1 dram board , hang 550 SUZUKI motorcycle , 2
ch1son , Rutland, Ohto
or 992 2571
on woll type , wl'lite, 1-3 burner
helmets, crosh bars and sissy
VA-FHA , 30 yr fmancing . Ireland
gas , hot plate Phone 992-5714
bot ,or $800 or best offer. Coli
FURNISHED APT . Adults only . no
Mortgage , 77 E Stole Athens,
992-3988
or
see
ol
88:3
Maple
pets Pkone '992·:3674 , Mid- ECONoMY tRACTOR with al l at.
phone (bl4) 592 -JOSl.
St
.,
Mtddleport.
dleport
tocl'lments, Ltke new , asktng
BEAUTIFUL TWO story home w1th
$2250 . Phone (614) 698-3290
WHITE 2 dr refrigerator, $50. 23
ONE BEDROOM furni shed aport·
lf•llll do odd 1obs , roofmg, pointwo car garage, 5 bedrooms ,
in blo ck ond wh1te TV $50
ment 1n M•ddleport. Coli FOR MEMORIAL DAY Beou f1ful
ting, gutter work Phone 992dming room, Iorge ltvmg room,
Sears
wosl'ler
dryer,
$50
Large
selec tion ot flowers Baskets
992 543.4 or 992 3129'-~-­
74'11.
modern kttchen , 2 Y, baths ,
gos heater, $100 Bed , spr. ,
ts proys , wreaths , vases Fay's
FOUR ROOM furn1shed apartment
Iorge recreation room , full{, olr
matt
.
$25
Cal
l
9'92·5706
after
6
SEWINGA
L
TERA
TlO
N
S
.
Novelty Sl'lop . N Second St.
end bcitl'l , no pets. Coli
rom
condthoned, 1/ii m1le
pm
Upholstering ,
drapes
M•ddleport
992 5908
5choal
One quarter m1le off
reasonable . 572 South Thtrd
Stole Route, 30 year finonc1ng
GOOD RICH Top soi l Charles R
Ave . Middleport
Phone
ovoiloUe Call 992-3863 bet.
Holt1eld Backhoe Serv •c e
CB SPECIAL
992-6306 .
ween 9 a .m. and 3 p.m
Phone 742·2008 .
ROBYN WV-23
PIANO TUNING , lone Oan1els. 12
HOUSE
1N Tuppers Plains, 2
AND
H
Beams
,
8
,
9
and
10
1nch
I
years of service
Phone
FOR SALE Or trade slate roofed
CB
Mobile
Transce
1ver
bedrooms,
ele&lt; . heat, double
Coll992-7034
,
992-2oe2
.
barn , standing to be foro down
complete w rth weather
garage , 2 lots Phone (61.4)
Pl'lone 7.42·2746.
WOODEN HOLLOW core cobmet
proof PA speaker , 2 way
WATER WELL Drilhng, W. T.
667-3065 or 667 ·3360.
base loaded ca antenna ,
doors ond drawer fronts from
Grant Phone 742·2879 alter 6
for
roof
top
or
trunk
mount.
REDUCED
AGAIN, 3 bedroom , 2 '/,
75c up . Call992·703.4.
pm
Power cord. coax. antenna
both , bi-level , I mile I'JOrth of
VERMEER BALERS 6050 4395 . 605C
cable and all hardware
WILL DO odd jobs. outs1de or m·
F!v&amp; Point, $42 500. Phone
in c luded .
4995 ti ll June 1. Merrill Chose,
~ Phone992·3357, Ryan 0•11 .
992-2492
ONLY
R.D. 2, Albony , Ohoo (614)
7 ROOM House , both , noturol
698 -3021
$69.95
TheAimaoac
gas. 2 ocre.s . Rutland on
Jq76 CS 750 Hondo , 1800 mi. with
United Press lnleroatlooal
Beechgrove Rood
Phone
ace Like new condttlon . Call
Today io Monday, May 23,
742·3031.
~o1!,!." 7 £.:.m1 985· 3:.9c_l.:.9~--~­
ELE;CTRIC POWER
lhe H3rd day
1977 with 222
58 ACRES. more or less on
TURN
OF
Tke
Century
,
solid
oak
WEE:DAND
to follow.
Kingsbury Rood Meigs Co
96 A. TIMBER land in Sol1sbury ,
motci'I!Mg d1mng rOom chairs
Mineral nghts included For
1/ 1
The moon io BPJX'Oachlng
GRASS
TRIMMERS
some
bottom
,
m1nerols.
Bentwood Supports , strtpped
more Jnformot1on, call 1 (51:3)
S300. See Rtel'lord M Reuter,
its first quarter.
ond ready for fmtsh1ng $175
399·5981 or write G E. Bowers
Cuts
with
heavy
duty
nylon
R.2,
Boll
Run
Rood
,
Pomeroy
.
for set Phone 992·2413 after 5 line - as good as the best
The morning stars are
160 Florol Ave. Spnngfield,
AT ONLY
Venus, Mars and Mercury.
lWO BEDROOM house located on
Ohio .4550.11 .
--"'-"'·-~-~Locust St .. M•ddleport. $14,500.
1975 HONDA 125 Coll992-6688 9
The evening stars are
$29. 95
145 ACRE FARM , 7 room house in
Coll992·5248
or 992·3436
tillS,
985·3501
after
6
or
con
tact
Jupiter and Saturn.
Rutland. Lots of privacy Phone
Tonyo Dav1s
742·3057 offer 6 p m. or on
Those born on thio dale are
FOR SALE by owner, 6 yr . old
weekends.
MAYTAG DISH washer for sale
under the sign of Gemini.
home, 3 bedrooms , Iorge liv1ng
S100. Pl'lone 992·3966
room , modern kitchen, cen tral
Ambrose Burnside, a Union
q x IS tent , stove. table etc .. d1n·
heat, 1 '/, botl'ls, fully carpeted , 6 ROOM HOUSE, 686 Brownell ,
Jack w . Carsey, Mgr.
general in the Civil War, was
lng room su1te, walnut, 13500 air
Phone 992· 2111
garden space, fruit trees , on .4
M1ddleport Ol'!to, $22 000 . See
born May 23, 1824.
cond1tioner, Dodge, wl11te ,
acres land. 3 mile&amp; north of
Richard M Reuter, Boll Run Rd
On this day In history:
steel wheels and frame hitch , 2 SHAMPOO BOWLS, $100: 2 com·
Chester off W Shade Rood. ___i_omeroy , Oh, Rt , 2.
motorcycle
helmet ,
SBE
Don Pooler, Phone 985-3897 .
In 1701, Captain William
bout stot1ons, $70, 2 rollobout
s1debonder
II
Mob
de
radio
with
Kldd was hanged in London
roller trays $15, .11 hydrauhc
HF Hustler antenna Phone
chairs , $100, dryer , $85 , dry
on charges
piracy and
992-7066.
s terhter, $5 , .110 1n, Hotpomt
murder.
elec trt c
range ,
$25 ,
USED FORESTRY Equ•pment
In 1939, tjle U.S. Navy
We5hnghouse elec . oven $20.
Timberjack
forwarder
Model
submarine HSqualus 11 went
cabinet and grill , Kenmore bOO
230 Sk1dder ; Prentice H·RM
West Virginia's
ipoce heater, $60. Phon's
loader, Prentu:e F·BC loader
down off New Hlimp8hire in
Largest Woodworking Plant
992-7495.
w1th bypass grapple Contact
240feetofwater. Thirty-three
Denn1s Smurr. Phone (6 14 ) HOMEMADE POWERED Go Cort
To be sold piece by piece May 25, 1977.
of the 59 men aboard were
838-5345 .
sut toble for ch1ld 3 to 7 yn Best
rescued with a diving bell.
offer
Coli Gad M•ller,
NEW IDEA Rake and Fedder.,pull
In 1960, Israeli agents captype good rubber tires and
992-3196 .
tured Adoll Eichmann in
steel teeth, extra parts , ready
1973 CHALLENGER woth 46,000
to rake, $100. Also hove good
Rt. 62 N. (TNT Area)
Argentina and spirited him
m1les and two y, Register.d
day
eor
corn,
any
amount
Pt. Pleasant, W. Va.
back to Tel Aviv. He was
Arab10n
Horse'f.
Phone
ovo1loble . Market pnced . Paul
992-7559.
convicted there of being a
E:dward Bilbruck, Inc.
Sayre , Rt . 338 Mile below
mass killer of Jews dW'ing
Ferry .
Phone
84:3 -2286 . REO BARN uhilty butlding. Phone
Auctioneers, Brokers, Appraisers
'il92 2719 .
Portland . Ohto.
World War n and hanged,

or

DTCKTRACY ,

HelpWanled

Mobile Howes for Sale H,.Jp Wanted

C..h
ldily

7-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, May 23, 1977

.........,

~

:
•

...
, .,

=·:\

. •.

•• · •• ·

•

Thursday 8 ' til Noon

•

.~ .•.• •··••••••

:·
:

1 742·2211

ARNOlD GRATE"

e•••~··~•••••••••••~••t•

...-

7 Sportswriter 22 - graces
Durslag
8 MeantLITie
9 Adolescence
(2 wds )
12 Retract

(2

23 Private eye
24 RegLITient's
commander
25 Lace
together

wds )

14 Think

26

Buckskin
thong
28 Black eye

30 lU will
31 Sheeplike
32 Canteen

I :Jo-Days of Our Lives 3,4,15; As the World Turns
8, 10.
2:00-$20,000 Prramld 6,13 ; Turbulent Ocean 33.
2.30-Doclors 3,4, 15 ; One Life to Live 6.13; Guiding
Uqhl a, 10.
3 QQ.-Another World 3,4,1 5; All In the Family 8.10 ;
Consumer Survival Kit 20; Once Upon A Classic 33.
3· 15-General Hospllal6,13
3.3Q-Match Game B. 10; Lilias Yoga &amp; Yov 20 .
4.00-Misler Cartoon 3; Ultle Rascals 4; Gong Show
IS. New Mickey Mouse Club 6; Lucy Show 8;
Sesame St . 20.33 ; Movie "Hey, There, It' s Yogi
Bear " 10; Dinah 13.
4 ls--Liltle Rascals 4
4 Jo-My Three Sons 3; Partridge F~mlly 4;
Emergency One 6: Paf trldge Family B, Fllntstones
15
S ·OO-Big Valley 3, My Three Sons 4; Brady Bunch 8;
M1ste Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33; Emergency
One 13; Star Trek 1S.
S: 3D-Adam -12 4, News 6. Family Affair 8 ;.
6 oo-News 3,4,6; News 8, 10, 13, 15 ; ABC News 6, Zoom
20; Traffic 10 Babies 33
6 3D-NBC News 3,4, 15; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8, 10; Vegetable Soup 20
7 :00-Tesllmony of Two Men 3; To Tell the Truth 4;
liar ' s Club 6. Country Carnival · 8; News 10; My
Three Sons 15; To Tell lhe Trull\ 13; Anyone lor
Tennyson? 20 ; Lowell Thomas Remembers 33
7 · 3Q-Hollywood Squares 4, Lei' s Deal With II 6;
Match Game PM 8; Mac Neil -Lehrer Report 20,33;
In the Know 10; Wild Kingdom , 13 ; TV Honor
Society 15
8 .00-Movle " The Man with lhe Power" 3,4,15; Happy
Days 6, 13; Pilot "Sam" 8, 10; Key to the Universe
20,33
~ . 3D-Laverne &amp; Shirley 6,13 ; Mash B,10.
9 QQ.-Rich Man, Poor Man 6, 13, Flghl Against Slavery
8; Movie "The Cheyenne Social Club" 10.
10 :0D-Suzy Visits 3,4, 15; Movie "Divorce His" 8;
News 20 ; In Search of the Real America 33
10 3()-Biack Perspective an the News 20 ; Americana
33.
11 ;Oo-News 3,4,6,8, 10, 13, 1S; MacNeil-Lehrer Report
33.
11 · 3o-Johnny Ca r son 3, A, 1S; Movie " Diary ol a Mad
Housewife" 6, 13; Movie "Linda " B, Mary Hartman
10; ABC News 33 '
12 .00-Movle "Boeing Boeing " 10; Janak! 33 .
l . DO-Tomorrow 3,4,
1 35-News 13

contents

36 "- that
has, etc ."
38 Hebrew
letter
39 Intellect

Monday, May 23

BRIDGE
Oswald and Jim Jacoby

b--1--+--+- t:

Restriction determines choice

measure
29 High ( mus )

~~=:c;~~rfj ao

33 Follow
Use a
scythe
34 Kegler's
target

NER

WEST

•K 976
t10 153
olo 9862
.1 5 4
SOUTH IDI
• A 10 8 6 4 2
• QJ
• QJ
olo A K J
Both vu lnerable

35 CJstern

THEY IS 50 PROMPT
WIF Tl-IEIR MAIL..,._

DE:LIVERY
f1j.ol;\ TH I

(2 wds. )
D
group
41 Arrow

to c.

TO · A TOK'UM.
-COSPATCH
[)EAR MR. YOkUM THE EXPENSeS FDR Dt5TRIBUTIN6 Tl-lAT
BIL..Lial DOLLARS 10 THE: STARVING OF
[)OGPATG-1 HAS ~E 70 A BIL.L/0~
DOLLARS IN PDMINISTRATIVG COST'S. "E.;o
MD !HE SIARVING OF D06PATCH
DIDN'T QUin:: 6E.T A~Y.

WINNII!:
• WI NNif 'IOU MUST

BEOUT OF

lOUR cxJuRD! WHAT POSSESSED
1

YOU 10 OFFER

A JOB HE:RE?

k-+-+-+++-

polson
42 Crowbar,
e .g.

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE is

Here's how to work it:
AXYDL8AAXR
LONGFELLOW

North East

Pass
Pass

2•
Pass

Openmg lead -

RAilNEY

I FINALL'I GOT
TH' HOUSE

HOW'S THE
MATCI1

I

NOW?

DON'T DO AN'{THING

STUPID!!!

Pass
Pass
6 If

One lett er 5 1mply stands for another. In t hts sa mple A is By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
used f o r th (' thr e e L's, X ro r the tw o O's, etc Smgle letterii
Jim . " Since we ment10ned
apost ropt 1e s , the len gth and format~on of the v. ords are a
the
prmc1ple of restricted
hints Each day th e cod e lette rs are diff ere nt
ch01ce last week , we ought to
CRYPTOQUOTES
try to explain it this week ."
Oswald "Try, Js correct.
D
F
W
V
•
X
1
P
We
Wlli devote a few ar\Jcles
OD
QWCKPNDJXOWC
to Jt th1s week . If any readers
QWZZS· don ' t understand it alter our
1szJ c
WA
AWN Z
POX
explanations , we ask them to
take Jt on faith . There are
IPNWFH
HWC
C OQJXOWC
plenty of top players who
don 't understand it either "
Saturday's CrypLoq uote : DRIVE CAREFULLY . REMEM·
Jim "South finds himself m
BER IT'S NOT ONLY A CAR THAT CAN BE RECALLED BY
a normal four·spade contract
ITS MAKER. - SOURCE UNKNOWN
Eas t wins the first tric k with

•

•

West

e 1917 K..inl Futures Synd h:a te , Inc

•

EAST
. J53
•AJ 852
t A2

•Q

LU~L=A~B~~:::]Oi:t'BL:8SSTI:{(SOVAWi::Jf~1~-~~ill~d~~;t:~~=;;;;d;D;-z.--37 fo~~~g
[
o H BL.fSS TH'60/AMINPUnited States Finanoa l DeP::, .
ASPECIAL

23

NORTH
• K 91
• 10 4
tK9 8 64
oloQ 10 3

dry

!:

I&lt;U~ND\e

Yeslerday's Answer

on

••

RUTLAND FURNITURE

20 Cold and

segment
Bull session
s ubject
Whetstone
28 Japanese

•

.

Complete

money

6 Shun

1 know... bt.~t
. blustery
19 Melody
I'm such Gl exacU,"' compared
.1.
21
And
(Ger.)
.
_..,.,.-.::--r-:rjerl&lt;. 1
me ;0 22 Caron film "
Einstein! Opera

•

Close Sal At 5 P.M.

~

NobodtiS ever

L

Mon., Tues., Wed.
8:00til5:00

FRIDAY TIL 5

..---:--:--:--:---- 18

1

-

.,,~~~~~~~~'~Rfn··
onvenient
Shopping Hour

:
•

NEW LISTING - Walk to
the stores from this
renovated 8 room home J
bedrooms, and 2 baths , city
water, natural gas. and on
Ohio Power. 517,000.
4 YEARS OLD - Nice 4
bedrooms ,
bath
with
shower, closets , eat -In
kitchen. disposal, natural
gas F .A furnace and level
lot . Only $16,000
ENORMOUS
4
bedroom$, lots of closets, 2
baths. nat. gas F.A. furnace,
basement
with
family room and shop. 2
porches and garage on
large lot . $27,500.
NEW
LISTING
5
bedrooms, lots of closets,
1112 baths, nat: gas central
healing, city water, and
Ohio
Power.
Full
basement. $24,000.
CORNER LOT - 2 church
buildings on State Route . 1
concrete block in good
condition. Would you buy
these for $11,200.
QUIET - Level lot with
street on each end, 2
bedroom house, modern
bath, and 2 porches.
$15,000.
NEW LISTING - 57 acres
6 room house, bath ,
furnace, 2 drilled wells,
barn, 3 car garage, crib
and minerals, 529,000.
COUNTRY - 2 wooded lots
with water and electric
available.
BUY A HOME TODAY
AND
BE
SAFE
TOMORROW. WE HAVE
DOZENS.
G. Bruce Teaford
Helen L. Teaford
Associates

43 Designate
DOWN
I French
clenc
2 Rich cake
3 Frencn
c1ty
4 Hostelry
5 Prize

TUESDAY, MAY 24, 1977
6 .00-Summer Semester 10.
6 15--Farm Report 13.
6 2Q-Not For Women Only 13.
6 :3o-Focus on Columbus .4; News 6 ; Summer
Seme:dPr A: Con cerns &amp; Comments 10.
6 45--Mornlna_ Report 3.
6:50-Good Morning, West VIrginia 13.
6:55-Good Morn ing , Trl State 13.
7:00-Today 3.4.1 5; Good Morning America 6, 13; CBS
News 8, Chuck Wh ite Reports 10.
7·05-Porky P ig 10.
7: 3D-Schoolles 10.
8· 00-Howdy Doody 6. Ca pt. Kangaroo 8.1 0; Sesame
51 . 33.
' 8·3Q-Big Valley 6.
9:00-AM . 3; Phil Donahue 4,13, 15 , Andy Griff ith 8;
Mike Douglas 10.
9: JD-G•oss·Wits 3 Edge of Nigh t 6, Coocenlrallon 8;
Bit with Knit 33 .
10 : 00-Sanford &amp; Son 3,4, IS, Dinah 6; Here' s Lucy 8, 10;
Mike Douglas 13 , Ourstory 33 .
JO :J o-Hollywood Squares 3,4, 15. Price Is R ight 8, 10;
Lowell Thomas Remembers 33 .
11 ·00-Wheel of Fortu ne 3,4,1 S; Happy Days 6.1 3;
Llvlng In a Nuclear Age 33.
11 : 30-Shoot for the Stars 3,4,15; Family Feud 6,1 3;
Love ot Life 8, 10; Sesame St . 20,33 .
11 55-CBS News 8; Ms Flxlt 10.
12 oo-News 3,4,6, 10; Name That Tune 1S; Divorce
Courl 8; Midday 13.
l2 : 3Q-Chlco &amp; the Man 3.15 ; Ryan ' s Hope 6, 13 ; Bob
Braun 4, Search for Tomorrow 8, 10.
1 QQ.-Gong Show 3, All My Children 6,13; News 8;
Young &amp; the Restless 10, Not for Women Only 15,
Leonard Bernstein Conducts 33

ALL CLEAN
A~J' Tl DY.
PAW

'IE FERGOT
ONE LEETLE
THING, MAW

the ace of hearts and returns
the deuce to hlS partner' s
kmg . West shlfts to the deuce
of clubs South wins and leads
a trump toward dummy . West
plays the queen and South puts
up dummy ' s kmg . Then if he
knows about restncted
chOJclt , he !messes against
East's jack and makes h1s
contract."
Oswald
" The reason for
thJs is that when West played
the queen , he was either play·
mg 1t from s ingleton queen or
doubleton queen-jack . 11 he
had held the doubleton he
m1ght well have played the
Jack , not the queen . Hence , it
was more likely that the
queen had been a smgleton

and the fines se was indicated "

A Flor ida reader wants to
know 1f the Lrick on which a
s ade revokes IS counted as
after the revoke and therefore
s ubject to the revoke penalty .
The answer ts that it certainly is
("or a copy of JACOBY
M ODERN . sent;! $ 1 to · ~ Win
at Br~dge.
c l o lhis
newspa per, P 0 Box 489,
Rad10 C1fy Stat1on New Yor~
N Y 100 19)

�8- The Dailv S&lt;&gt;ntinel. Middlepo~t-Pomcroy. U., Monday, May 23 1977

PLEASANT VALLEY
---------------------------1 CecilDISCHARGES
- Mrs.
Local notices, briefs
Sines. Point Pleasant;

Probe weekend
area shootings

!

Robert Bateman, 36, Point
Pleasant, is listed in stable
condition in the Holzer
Medical Center's Intensive
Care Unit where he was
admitted Saturday afternoon
following an apparent selfinflicted gunshot wound to the
upper abdominal area.
The shooting, according lo
the Gallia Sheriff's department, occurred at a home on
the Kerr-Harrisburg Rd.
A second person was also
hospitalized
over
the
weekend as a result of a
separate shooting incident.
Both cases were investiga ted
by GalJia sheriff's deputies.
Oscar A. Cordell , 52,
Gallipolis, was an apparent
shooting victim following a
quarrel on the Glen Summit
Rd. at 6:15p.m. Saturday, He
is in good condition.
According to the report,
Cordell told deputies he went
to the Morrison residence in

director of the Gallipolis

the Bidwell area to help r~covered by Deputy Willard
Odessa Morrison build a coal Sheets on Lower River Rd.
shed.
. and deputies Jay Cremeens
Odessa's mother, Gladys and Leo John son ex·
Gehring and Floyd Gehring tinguished an auto fire while
came th en an arg ument patroling on Route 7 in the
ensued. Cordell offered to Kanauga area.
leave, but Mrs. Gehring
Oil spilling on a hot
apparently picked up a manifold was blamed for the
ga rden hoe and attempted to fire in a 1974 Oldsmobile
strike him , She allegedly got owned by David Mullins, Rt.
a .22 pistol and fired it, with 1, Galli polis.
the bullet striking Cordell in
The car was parked at the
the back. He was rushed to Save More Service Station.
the Holzer Medical Center by Deputies used fire exDeputYCarl Langford. It was tinguishers to put out the
believed the bullet punctured blaze . It possibly prevented
a kidney.
major fire since the car was
Sheriff's deput ies also within two feet of a gas pump.
investigated an attem pted
Deputies were also called
breaking and entering at the to quell a disturbance at the
home of Ray Moore, Rt. 2, Blue Fountain Motel and to
Vint on. According to th e investigate vanda lism of a
report , someone attempted to car owned by Lester Lewis of
enter the house, but was Bidwell.
unsuccessful. Pry marks
were found on the front door.
A 26 inch Huffy bike was

African

(Continued from page 1)
efforts and with tne
commitment of your government to an independent
Zimbabwe (Rhodesia ), based
on justice and liberty and we
are wholly committed to the
suc cess of your efforts and
see them·as instrumental in
bringing about a stable,
secure southern Africa ."
Owen said "historically,
the mass! ve shift" is the
extent of the Ca rter
administration's
com·
mitment to Africa.
"The fact we are working
together jointly on some of
these very difficult problems
offers a very real prospect of
getting a peaceful transition
to majority rule both in
· Rhodesia as an independent
Zimbabwe and also in
Namibia
(South West
Africa )," Owen said.

FAMILY DINING

AT ITS BEST

THE INN PLACE
TIJESDAY NIGHT SPECIAL
Visit Our Slad Bar, Pepper Steak.
Potatoes and Gravy,
Mashed
Vegetable , Hot Roll s, Coffee. Tea or
Milk.

$295

BOATER DROWNS
CLEVELAND (UP!)
Carl Napper Jr., 35, who
moved to Cleveland from
Columbus last week, drowned
in Lake Er ie Saturday.
A spokesman lor the U.S .
Coast Guard said Napper fell
from a 16-foot power boat
Saturday about a mile northwest of Cleveland's harbor
entrace. Two friends of the
victim who were on the boat
at the time said Napper did
not kriow how to swim.

I

Plus tax

r.rsi National City Travelers C~

Big May Sale
Save up to 96% of the
usUal fee. ·
{S.If tftdoi~Jhl.l

Area Deaths

I

DR . KENNETH UPP
Dr . Kenneth L. Upp, 51 , a
r esiden t of

Athens , died

Saturday at II : 11 a .m . from
an apparent heart at1ack
while treating a patient at the
Fa'mily Planning Center ,
Athens . He was
medical

State Institute .

Dr . Uoo was bor n_Auo . n .
1925 in Oklahoma , son of the

late

Ray

E.

Upp

and

Elizabeth E . Leighow Upp.
Dr . Upp was gradua te of
the Universi ty of Kansas
Medi ca l Schoo l College. He
served in the U. S. Navy from

to 1946, and served in the
U. S. Air Force Reserves

1943

from 1962 un til 1967.
He was a member o f
various Masonic bodies in
Gr eenfield , and of the Oh io
and
Am er i can
M edical
Assoc iations and the Athens
Coun t v M ediCal Societv .
He was a lso current cl inica I
associate
professor of
med icine, Ohio University
College of Osteopathy.
He is su rvived by his wi fe
Carolyn , a son, Dav id L . Upp,

Overland Park, Kansas ; a
daughter, Karen , Athens ,· one
grandchi ld ; one sister , Mrs.
Robert (·Jeanne) Ri c hart ,
Oakland , Ca lif ., and one
brother , Dr. Donald Upp,
Hanford , Calif . One daughter
and a sister preceded him in

dea th .
'
Funeral services will be
he ld 2 p.m. Wednesday at the
First Presbyterian Church in
Greenf ield wi th Rev . Clair S.
Emerick dfticia1ing. Burial
w i ll
be
Cemetery,
F rie nds

in

Greenfield

Greenfield, Ohio.
may call at the
funeral home 4-9 p.m . on
Tuesday at the Anderson·
Strueve Funeral Home in
Greenfie ld . Masoni c services
wi ll be held 7 p .m Tuesday' .
Those who wish may make
memorial contributions to the
Ohio Uni versity School of
Os teopathy .
·JAMES ROUSH
James Perry Roush, 72,
was found dead at his home
on Li t tle Kyger Rd ., In
Cheshire Twp . early Sunday
morni ng.
He was

born Oct . 9 1904 in
Cheshire Twp , son of the late
Orestes and Lottie Ann Vance
Ro us h.
· He attended the CheShire
schools and was ~ 192:1
9raduate of Cheshire High
School.

He attended

Rlo

Grande College. He .worked
tor the New Yor k Central
Rai lroad in Toledo, and also
worked at the Hobson Yards
in Middleport .
He married· Anna Louise
Starcher in Cheshire on . Fe~ .
13, 1932. She preceded h1m '"
death on Ja n. 27, 1970.
To thi s unio.n one daughter
was born , Ja ne Ann (Mrs.
Merrill Brooker) of Mt.
G1lead , Dh1o. Two grandsons
surv 1ve.
He was ~ mernber of the
Little Kyger Grange and the
Cheshire Baptist Church.
Jn .addition.to the daughter,
he I S surv1ved by three
brothers : Lester .. Gallipolls ;
Lloyd, Cheshire; and Alva ,
Mogadore, Ohio; four sisters :
Mrs . . Goldie Cremeans,
Gallipolis; Mrs. Earl ( Irene)
Grapes, st . Petersburg, Fla .;
Mrs . Thomas. (Florence)
Ragen. Gall ipol is, and Mrs.
Leona Whitt, Gallipolis.
Funeral serv1ces are
tentatively set for 2 p. m.
Wednesday a.t Miller's Home
tor Funera ls with Re v.
William Uber officiating. .
Burial will be 1n Gra\lel Hill
Cemetery. Friends may ca ll
at the funeral home from 2·4
and 7.9 p. m. Tuesday .
~all bearers will be Merr ill
Bnggs, Bob Thompson, Joe
Thompson , Huber Fulton ,
John Fellure and Dan
Swisher.

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

~how much you sa'!(.

n • of

\o...... ct&gt;..:u

u.. .. ,..,

55.000

S5000

2500

2500

200

.,..

1000

1000

200

SO'•

soo

100

500

"'"'
If you hate to w&lt;.~ il and l o ~ t: tn -.~• \ t.:. }t lu'll
Jove Firsl Nati on&lt;.~ I City Ti·;Jvcl~r~~ Checks'·
Big May Sale. Bu y them now and ..,u' e up ll 1
96%of the fee. Use them wht:nevt:r ytlll gP
on vacation .

And if I hey get lost lir stnlcn yuu

\\-(l!l't

h;l\'1.!

. ..... \

~·.

,...,,..

I

S200

""''k· ,...,

·'~'••II,

vous.w~

gso·.,

60'·

''·'Y l' "''

w \\;ti t

ft1r a rdund . Bt:c:lu"e First Na tilma l Ci ty
Tr;~\clcr:-; Checks c.: an give Yl)U nn O! Hht:-s po t
rdund 'at (Wl'r -1 ).000 llll'&lt;H it ms wml(hv ide::.
Thtl U'-&lt;1 nds p1nrc than any t}l her trave lc rs &lt;•.' ht!ck.
Buv First N:1tiona l City Travelers Checks
m)\\ i-n Mu). and ... ave.

Farmers Bank

Fs
t ..............
a u s1

POMEROY, OHIO

540,000.00 Muimvm lnsvranc• For Each. ~slfot
~mber F~er•l Oepo$it Insurance CorporatiOn

I

Mr. Maue was a member of
the Manuel Lutheran Church,
Germantown ,
Dis abled

Amer ican Veterans, aJ'ld the

Albany VFW Post 9693.
He is su r\l ived by his wife,
W1majean ; one son , Joel. and

a daughter , Janel. both of

Albany ; a bro ther. Warren,
Germantown, and a sister ,
Mrs ,
Lawrence
Wetz ,

Miamisburg, Ohio.

Funeral services will be
Wednesday at 2 p. m. at the
Blgony . J ordan Funeral
Home here with the Rev .
Paul Yeun off ici ating. Bur ia l
will be in Germantown
Cemetery. Fr iends may call
at the funeral home Tuesday
fr om 6 to 9 p. m . Memorial
services will be held Tuesday

al 7:30 p. m . by VFW Post
9893.
GUY D. BOLIN
HARR ISONV ILLE - Guy

Mrs. John Greenlee and son,
Point Pleasant ; Marie
Harris, Point Pleasant ; Mrs.
Russell LePort, Henderson;
Reva Riddle, Culloden; Mrs.
Price
Patrick ,
Point
Pleasant;' Clarence Kerr ,
Point Pleasant ; Mrs. Richard
Toliver , Gallipolis Ferry ;
Mrs. Frank E. Carpenter.
Vinton ; Mrs. Stephen Martin
and daughter, Gallipolis
Ferry: Dwayne Ohlinger,
West Columbia: Eunice
Hesson, Point Pleasant ; Mrs.
William Greer and son ,
Mason ; Roger Rymer, Leon ;
Mrs. George Swartz and son,
Point Pleasant ; Lottie
Barnett, LeOil; Steven Coffey, Middleport ; Lowell
Cook, Point Pleasant; Mrs.
Wadear Thabet, Point
Pleasant ; Mrs. Jack Lively,
Letart; Clara Moore, New
Haven ; Vanderbilt Jenkins,
Glenwood; Mrs. William
Flora, dau ghter, Apple
Grove; Mrs. Thomas Fowler,
son, Middleport ; Mrs. Eva
Stout, Middleport ; George R.
Wamsley, Southside; Worthy
Leach, Jr., Point Pleasant;
Mrs. Homer Blessing, West
Columbia; Mrs. Harold
Aaron
Bright,
Point
Pleasant ; Mrs. Orin Hannah,
Point Pleasant ; James
Leonard, Columbus; Harold
Clark, Point Pleasant : Mrs.
Theodore Melrose, Point
Pleasant and George Warns·
ley, McDermitt, Ohio.

DEH UMIDIFIERS

•129

There will be a meeting of Theresa Ann

the Me igs

Jun ior

High Guysville.

Parent-Tea cher Forum at
7: 30 p . m . Tuesday in the

Buffalo
man dies

LADIES...

Street repair program will.
set up in Middleport soon

Schweller, 251

'
One marriage dlnol ution

.

school cafeteria. Middleport. action and two suits for
Election of ofllcers will be divorce were flied In Meigs
held and Dwight Goins, ad· County common Pleas Court
minlstratl'-'e assistant of the Saturday. Ri chard R. Young
district will be present to and Patricia L. Young, both
answ~ r questions concern ing of
Syracuse , flied for

an upcoming la x 'le\1')' d i ssolut i on while divorces
renewal
for
school were asked by MArv Ellen
operations . All parents are Smi th, Racine. from Adrian
welcome and especially those Keith Smith, Racine, and by

whose chil dren will be Linda M. Moore. Syracuse.
seventh graders 111 the fall. from Terry 0 . Moore,
Syracuse.
Marr iage li censes have
In other court action, the
been issued to Stuart Wa yne Racine Home National Bank
Pull ins. 21 , Pomeroy, and was ordered +o recover the
Susan Kay Mash , 19, amount of $8,290.33 plus In·
Pomeroy, and to David Clair terest and costs from
Bradley, 28, Guysville, and Rudolph T. and Erma J .
Riffle, Syracuse, and The
Athens County Welfare
Cars damaged
Department. acting in the
interest of Nina Darlene

in Sunday wreck

'Hawk, Athens, was awar ded

Two ca rs had medium
D. Bolin 1 77 , Harrisonville,
damages
and a driver was
d i ed Saturday at Sou th
cited to mayor's court as the
Vienna, Ohio . Mr. Bol in was
result of an accident on West
Porn Sep1. 21, 1899, the son of
the tate Monteville and Sa ratl
Main St., at2 :40 p.m. Sunday,
Reeves .
He was
a Iso
Pomeroy volice reported.
preceded in death by his wi fe,
Police say a car driven by
M.ary Graves Bolin in 1972.
&amp;bert Davis, Minersville.
Mr . Bolin was a sawmill
operator and farmer in Meigs
struck the rear of a car
Cou nty.
driven by Chester Knight,
He is su rvived by two
Pomeroy, who was stopped in
sisters, Mrs. Bess Mer iner,
a lane of traffic. Davis was
Athens , and Mrs. Verna
Haning , New •Albany ; a
cited on charges of assured
brother -in-law, F r ank E .
clear distance.
Graves, Akron , and these
Police reported also that at
nieces and nephews, Kenneth
11 :15 p.m. Friday on West
Bolin . Mrs. De Lena Moles,
Re v . Jack Graves, and
Main St., a car driven by
Ri ch ard Graves, a ll of
Chester
Hudson, Gallipolis,
Akron ; Mrs. Emma Cade,
pulled
into
the path of an
The Plains; Mrs. Lois Wash eastbound car driven by
burn,· Athens ; Haro ld
Han ing , New Albany ; Fran~
Donald Hood, Middleport.
and Ann Graves, St. Johns,
Both cars were heavily
Mich igan ; M rs . Lillian
LOONY BALWONY
damaged;
Hudson was
Poste n, Barberton; Mrs . . . LANCASTER, Ohio (UP! )
charged with failing to yield
Dorothy Rembo ld , Stow ;
Mrs.
Shirley
Lau\ler, - A young girl inhaled too right of way at an in· Ma cedonia ; Richa rd Bolin , in much "Loony Balloony" at a tersection.
the Army , and Els ie Geornor , slumber party recently and
Ci ncinna ti.
began having hallucinations.
Funeral services will be
Wednesday at 1 p. m. at Lancaster police are now
Ewing Chapel with the Rev. asking area businesses to The Taiwan-made product
Ja ck Gra ves offi ciat i ng .
remove the toy from their comes in a two-inch tube with
Burial wil l be in Wells shelves. Police spokesman a picture of Popeye on the
Cemetery . Friends may &lt;;: all
Sam Hutsler said the girl front and oontains polyvinyl,
at the funera l home after 7
this evening.
· hallucinated for five hours. acetone and certified colors.

A 19-year-old .Putnam
County man became Mason
.
County's second traffic
fatality of the year when the
van he was riding in plunged
over a 25·foot embankment in
·
Arb~ckle Sunday at_ approxunately 2:15 a.m., according to Mason County
Sheriff's Deputy E. F .
Crump.
Pronounced dead at ,
Pleasant Valley Hospital was
James M. Graig 19 Buffalo.
' ·' · d ·
Two other persons mjure m
the accident and also taken to
PVH were the driver, Paul
Wayne Buck 1 Sand Hill Rd.,
.
d Ca 1
Pomt Pleasant, an
r
. Baker, 18, Rt. 3, Leon.
Baker was treated and
released and Buck who was
. '
'· f
adm~t~ed , was in salls actory
condttlon today.
According to Crump and
Deputy Thomas E. Roush,
·
li
the 1977 Dodge van, trave ng
north through Arbuckle, went
off the road returned to the
road then w'ent out of control
'
. .
·
over to. the left stde of the
road where it struck a power
pole owned by the American
Electric Power Co. and
HAROLD B. MAU E
plunged over an emALBANY - Harold B. bankment. At the bottom it
Maue , 60 , Snowville, Rt. 2,
Albany, died Saturday evenlg struck two rails and turned on
at hi s residence . Mr. Maue its side with the driver's side
was born at Germantown,
on the ground. Graig was
Ohio, the son of the la te apparently killed at the time
Charles and Letha Mumby
of the accident, officials said.
Maue.
Damage to the pole was
estimated at $300.
Funeral services for Graig
were held today at Otter
Branch JUnited Methodist
Church , Buffalo, W.Va. with
· the Revs. Loren Price and A.
S. Smith officiating. Burial
was at the Old Acre
cemetery.
Takes the dampness out of
your basement or other
VETERANS MEMORIAL
high moisture areas for
Saturday Admissions only pennies a day i n Ernest Lambert, Rutland;
operating cost. Shuts off.
Danielle Roush, Middleport;
automatically.
Steve
Eblin, Pomeroy;
Humidisteel controls. 15
Everett Roush, Pomeroy ;
pint ca pacity .
RickY Hawley, Cheshire;
Ruth Smith, Pomeroy .
00
Saturday Discharges Dorothy Rea, Lewis Smith,
Cleatus Arnett.
Sunday A.dmissions Benton Phillips, Racine;
Loretta Bush, Letart, W. Va.;
Virginia Rees, Racine ; Ocie
McCune, Rutland ; . Carl
Autherson, Syracuse.
Sunday Discharges Betty Baronick, Ricky
Hawley, Oanielle Roush,
Amos Cross.

ADMIRAL

Big May~~

!

the sum of S7,360 from
Po_meroy.

Ernest

M,ax Cale,

RECEIVES COVETED AWARD- Bobbi Chapman,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Chapman, Syracuse,
was presented with the coveted John Philip Sousa award,
for outstanding senior musician. Presenting Bobbi with
the award is Jess Browning, Southern Local High School
band director.

The
Middleport
Emergency Squad was called
to Route 2, Pomeroy, at 9: 37
p. m. for Ruth Smith who w.as
taken to Veterans Memonal
Hospital where she was
admitted.

· Middleport village council's street committee, chalred by
Marvin Kelly, was asked Monday night by Mayor Fred
Hoffman to make a study of the town 's streets and recommend
which should be resurfaced this year.
The town has tax revenues available now for street repair,
although no figure was proposed at the regular meellng last
night to spend on the streets. The levy is 11&gt; mills . Kelty is
expected to report at the next meeting of Council.
John Koebel, local Columbia Gas of Ohio official, met with
council and outlined a public demonstration program dealing
with the use of gas which the company will have presented in
the town if desired. Koebel will cbeck with Fire Chief C. Robert
Fisher on the matter.
Koebel also pointed out that tbe company does have a
brochw-e published on safety with gas and he left several
copies with council. Koebel stated also that residents having
·any indication of a gas leak should notify the company at once
so that tbe situation can be checked oUt.

CHESTER- Esther Mays,
chairman

of

the

•

Ohio

Association of Mental Health
here, said a door to door fund
drive wil l be held In Chester
this week. Florence Guinther
will handle most of the
community but she will be
joined by at least one other
volunteer. All proceeds go to
the state organization .

VOL. XXVIII

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

NO. 28

Shots fired
in school

invited .

The Twin City Shri.neltes
will meet Thursday at 7:30 p.
m. at the home of Mrs.
Gertrude Mitchell.
Ohio Eta Phi Sorority
picnic will be held Tuesday at
6:30 p. m. at the roadside
park on U. S. Route 33.

POMEROY
NATIONAL BANK

FINANCE FORUM
FOR WOMEN
Due to the great demand
In reservations, will be
held at the

'

I'•
I

POMEROY ELEMENTARY SCHOOL
TUESDAY ONLY, MAY 24th 7:30 P.M.
INSTEAD OF THE MAIN OFFICE LOBBY

ASSEN, Netherlands (UP! ) - Six shots rang out today
inside a schoolhouse where 105 youngsters are bein~ held by
South Moluccan terrorists demanding a flight to freedom for
themselves and 21 jailed comrades in exchange for thelr
hostages' lives.
There was no inunediate explanation for the shots, which
were preeceded by tbe sound of children crying. About 30
minutes later, several more shots were fired from inside \be
school as two Moluccan women tried to bring in fresh food on
pushcarts.
Both women left the carts and approached the building,
shouting through megaphones. A few more shots rang out and
the women the!\ went back for their cards and delivered the
food.
Another band of South Monday appeared patterned
Moluccan terrorists was after those incidents.
holding as many as 80
The attacks threw the
hostages aboard 1a hijacked government
into a crisis the
train
in
the
Dutch day before general elections.
countryside . All was reported The opposition Liberty Party,
quiet at that sc.ene.
which has been pressing for
The · Dutch radio said more law and order, and the
ear\ier the two group5 had governing
Labor
and
warned "hostages would Christian parties suspended
bave to su!fer with their their election campaigns.
lives" unless their demands
However. Prime Minister
were met by 2 p.m. (8 a.m.
Joop
van Den Uyl said the
EDT) Wednesday, the day of
elections
would go on as
Dutch general elections.
.
scheduled.
Witnesses said six · shots
About
35,000
South
were heard at 9 a .m. this
morning
inside
the Moluccans have been ·living
elementary
school at in Holland since their
Bovensmilde in the far north homeland became part of
of Holland. One of the shots Indonesia in 1949.
Radical South Moluccans
hit the window of a nearby
have
turned to violence in a
house.
bid
to
force the Dutch govern·
They said just before tbe
ment
to press Indonesia .for
shooting, children were heard
independence
for their
crying inside the modern, homeland, formerly
plateglass building seized as the Spice Islands, known
in the
Monday by about six eastern part of the Interrorists armed with
machine guns. Five or six donesian archipelago.
In December 1975 South
teachers also are among \be
Moluccan
terrorists held a
hostages.
trainload
of passengers
No further details were
hostage
in
the
same area for
immediately available.
12
days
and
took
over the
Dutch authorities were reIndonesian
Consulate
in
ported
studying
the
for
15
days.
Four
Amsterdam
terrorists' demand for a fully
fueled Boeing 747 and the perSons died in those attacks.
The train, halted all day in
release of 21 South Moluccans
jailed for terrorist activity . hot spring weather, stood
. Fourteen of the 21 were with lights glowing opaquely
sentenced in connection with through drawn shades in open
twin attacks 17 months ago in countryside that made it
which four persons · died. difficult for troops to apOfficials said the takeovers proach unnoticed.
c

SUMMER
FASHION

MWEAR

l

I'

t
I

One and Two Piece

·Bathing Suits
in Colorful Prints
or Solid Colors.
WOMEN'S .SIZE
32 THRU 40

PRE-TEEN SIZE
3/6 THRU 11114

Elbertelds
In _Pomeroy

en tine

at

The Meigs Area Holiness
Association will hold its rally
at the Rutland Community
Church Tuesday, May 24, al
7:30 p. m. The Rev . R. D.
Brown, pastor of the Danville
Wesleyan Church, will be the
speaker. Special singing will
be provided by the Community Church . The public Is

By Uolted Presslnte1'118tlonal
SAN FRANCISCO - UNIVERSITY OF CAUFORNIA
scientists bave successfully persuaded an insulin gene to
reproduce itseH in bacteria, marking a major step in efforts to
mass produce hwnan insulin. Scientists at the university's
medical research facility said Monday they were able to
isolate the basic genetic cbemical of the insulin gene in rats
and put it into bacteria where it reproduced itseH in large
quantities.
" These experiments are a major ·step . toward mass
producing human insulin bacteria, a m~ch publicized goal of
the new recombinant-DNA technology, the uruvers1ty sa1d.
Insulin is a life-&lt;13ving hormone created by the pancreas,
which mtlst be supplied artificially for iliabetics: It is now
obtained from beef and pigs, but these sources are tnsufftctent
to meet the worldwide demand, and some diabetics are
allergic to beef and pig insulin .
ST. LOUIS - TilE DROUGHT THAT HAS withered the
West and dried up water resources is "only a test run" of what
the nation will experience by 19!KJ, a water expert has warned.
Jack Barnett, head of the Western State's Water Council in
Salt Lake City, told a conference Monday that water problems
will be common in other regions in the future.
. "The 1977 drought is only a test run of what will be
experienced in other areas of the United States by 19!KJ, when
every year will be a short water year," Barnett said. "The
troblem will not be limited to the Western states because
demand for water will increase all • ·er the natiCin." He said
~
(Continued on pab ~ 2) ·
·
"

He asked council to cooperate with the company in the
resurfacing of streets so that the company can survey tbe
streets to be resurfaced before the resurfacing is done to see if
the gas company bas to do any work which might disturb these
streets. If there is any work to be done on the designated
streets, it would be done before the resurfacing.
Clerk-Treasurer Gene Grate read a letter from Ashland Oil
announcing the increase of all grades of gasoline .7 of a cent a
gallon as of May 18. Grate also announced a local government
·seminar to be held in Marietta on June 8 by the Buckeye HiltsHocking Valley Regional Development Commission.
Allen King, chairman of the fire conunittee, recommended
to council that three new radios be purchased for tbe fire
department. These would be used in the new fire depariment
network which will soon be put in operation by the fire
department. This will enable the fire department to operate
separate from the police frequency and will also provide a
frequency whereby village vehicles, such as water and street

TUESDAY, MAY 24, 1977

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

District 6 chief is
hoping miners will
continue on the job
BELLAIRE, Ohio (UPI ) - John Guzek, president of
United Mine Workers District 6, says he hopes members
of the union will continue to work the eastern Ohio coal
fields and discontinue sporadic wildcat strikes that have
virtually halted production for the past month.
" We've got them all back, so now we just hope they'll
stay back," Guzek said Tuesday. Miners in all of but one
of the eastern Ohio mines returned to their jobs Monday
morning for the first time in more tban a month.
About 400miners at the Y&amp;OCoal Co. Nelm'sMine No. 1
near Cadiz who stayed off the job Monday returned at
midniRht Monday.
No progress was reported after a meeting between
District 6 officials and representatives of the
Consolidation Coal Co. over an incident at Consol's
FTanklin 25 mine in Harrison County, which triggered the
wildcat strike by up to 15,000 workers.

•

•

JAYCEES INSTALL - The Meigs County Jaycees
beld their installation of officers and awards night
Monday at the Meigs Inn. Officers installed were, 1-r,
Mike Mullen, president;· Jeff Howell, ~xternal VICe

president; Richard Roseberry, parliamentarian; J. T.
Rue, internal v.ice president, and Ricbard Pullin, director .
Absent were Ken Hoffman, secretary, and Bill Nease,
treasurer, and Mick Childs, J . D. Story and Gregg Gatrell,
·
directors.

Vandals
are busy
Folir new acts of vand~lism
in Meigs County are under
investigation today by Sheriff
James J. Proffitt's deputies.
One is a complaint by
Pauline Wolfe, Rt. 2, Racine,
(Blind Hollow) that during
the weekend someone vandalized her mailbox.
Deputies also tOQk a report
from Buell Jones, Rt. 3,
Albany, that early Saturday
evening someone entered a
bam on Columbia TR 3 where
he had corn stored. The
vandals threw the corn
around in and outside the
bam.
A third complaint came
from Ardward McMillian of
Columbus, · who
owns
property on SR 681 east of
Tuppers Plains. He reported
that someone had knocked
down a gate on his property
and adde&lt;l that this was not
the first time it had occurred,
though he never reported. the
other incidents.
Then, finally , Adrian
Smith, Rt. 2, Racine, (Biine
Hollow)
reported
his
residence was entered some
time Saturday. The only thing
apparently taken
was
medications.

department trucks, can legally operate . The fire department •
would give the three radios, which would be replaced, to the
village for installation in other vehicles. Establishment of this
radio network would also enable the vi!l8ge to have a hack-up
radio system in case of power failw-e or faill!"e of the county
system.
Council members agreed to: delay action on tbe matter
until next council meeting, though it was the consensu,s of
council members they were in favor of the project.
Mayor Hoffman said the sheriff 's department has secured
titles on several junk autos parked on a lot in lower Middleport,
the subject of a number of complaints. This is an indication
that the vehicles will be moved out soon. Councilman Carl
Horky suggested minor repair to the exterior of village hall,
and it was agreed to secure prices for the repair work which
will tie in with sandblasting done recently,
Attending the meeting were Mayor Hoffman, ClerkTreasurerGrate, and Councilmen Horky, King , Marvin Kelly,
Dewey Horton and William Walters.

PLAQUE FOR JAYCEE OF THE YEAR ~ Sill Young, left, was named Jaycee of the
Year at a dinner meeting held at the Meigs Inn Monday evening. Young, also named state
director, is a past president of the local chapter. Presenting Young the plaque is Rick
Collins, outgoing chairman. Certificates of appreciation were presented to news media
r~resentatives : by Bill Young.

Support given
nursing home
The Meigs County Regional
Planning Commission in·
dicated enthusiastic support
for present tentative plans for
construction of a nursing
home in Meigs County.
This was apparent when
the group met Monday at the
Farmers Bank Building
agricultural conference
room. C. E. Blakeslee,
executive director, told of
attending a meeting of the
review committee of the Ohio
Valley Health Services at the
Meigs Inn recently at which a
representative
of
the
Ameritel Co ., Columbus,
indicated interest in the
building and operation of a
local
nursing
home .
Residents who must be
confined to nursing homes
now must go out of the
county.

Middleport pool opens on Saturday
The Middleport Pool will
open Saturday, Mrs. Cherole
Burdette , pool and park
manager, announced today.
Pool hours on all weekends
will be from I to 6 p.m., and
on weekdays until June 8
from 3 to 6 p.m. After June 8,
the weekday pool hours will
be changed to noon to 5 p.m.
with night swimming times to
be aMOUnced.
Prices will be as follows:
General admission, $1 for
adults, 17 and over; 75 cents
for students, and 50 cents for
pre-school children. Season
passes w!ll be $25 plus $2 for
each child in school.
Plans call for offering
swimming lessons again this
summer although as of yet an
instructor has not been hired.
Applications are currently
being accepted by Mrs.

REVENUE DOWN
Retail sales tax collections
in Meigs County for April
were down 27.57 percent
under receipts for April last
year according to the report
ol State Treasurer Gertrude
Donahey. Collections for the
month totaled $43,803.93
compared to collections of
$60,477.79 for April, 1976. •
Sales tax collections on motor ·
vehicles , however, dui-ing Patrol charges
last month were up 27.64
percent. Collections for April, HWI to driver
1977 totaled $55,831.23 while
Richard J . Burkhamer, 44,
collections for April, 1976
Chester,
was charged with
amounted to $43,740.99, an
DWI
following
a rear end
increase of $12,094.24.
collision at 2:40p.m. Monday
on SR 7 at CR 52 in Meigs
County .
The Gallia • Meigs Post
State Highway Patrol said
Burkhamer's car struck the
CLOSING MONDAY
rear of an auto making a left
The Gallia • Jackson
turn operated by Sue A.
Meigs Community Mental Kauff, 21, Pomeroy. There
Health Center will be closed · was· moderate damage to
Monday, May 30 in ob- both cars. Both drivers were
servance of Memorial Day. injured. Kauff was taken to
Regular hours will resume Veterans Memorial Hospital
Tuesday morning.
for treatment of injuries .
~

Burdette. Swimming lessons
will cost $7,50 for 45 ·minute
classes for a two week period.
Life saving classes for the
required hours will be $10.
The season tickets can be
purchased at the pOol any
time after Thursday.
The Middleport Recreation
Commission "'has set $40 for

two hours for the rent of the
pool facilities and lifeguards.
All adults interested in
after noon swinuning lessons
to begin May 31 and continue
two weeks are asked to call
Mrs.. Burdette.
Life guards hired by the
Commission are
Beth
Vaughan, Kellee Burdette,

Motorcycle law
will he enforced
Sheriff James J. Proffitt General Assembly to help
warned today citations to prevent injuries to the cycle
court will be issued to riders operators. We hope to help
operating motorcycles prevent injuries to the
without license plates ·or not motorcycle operators and
wearing helmets anrt some their riders by warning them
before hand that we will be
type of ear protection.
Sheriff Proffitt again ad- enforcing these laws !," said
vises residents that it is in Sheriff Proffitt.
violation of Ohio Revised
Code to operate a motorcycle ·
on any road or highway or on :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:::;:::;:;:;:;:;::
private property frequented
by the public unless the cycle
COFFEE ON TAP
operator has a motorcycle
A M emorlal
Day
endorsement and is wearing weekend coffee break will
safety equipment such as be offered at the two parks
helmet and eye protection on Route 33 North by the
and is displaying a valid Big Bend Citizens Rand
license plate. Said the R a d I o
C 1. u b .
sheriff:
Members will be on hand
"This means on graveled from 6 a.m. to 10 p.m.
township and county roads as Saturday, Sunday and
well a.s the paved roads aJl..d . Monday to serve coffee and
state highways !"
' cold driaks and to give
"Licenses, safety equip- Information and assistance
ment, and other regulations to motorists.
were passed by the Ohio

Tracy Burdette, and Mary
Blaettnar with Jamie Scally
and John Stewart as substitutes. Major repairs have
been made to the pool, according to the Commission
which is made up of Ruby
Vaughan, Paul Gerard and
Mick Childs.

EXTENDED OUTL.OOK
Thursday through
Saturday, generally fair
and warm through the
period, with highs In the 80s
or low 90s and lows ID the
60s.

Weather
Cloudy, continued warm
tonight and Wednesday,
chance of thundershowers.
Highs Wednesday in the low
80s, lows tonight to the lower
60s.
Probability
of
precipitation 40 per cent
today and tonight, 30 per cent
Wednesday.

NOW YOUKNOW
Classical Greek and
Roman sources list virtually
every kind of berry or fruit
eaten today , exce pt the
· strawberry, whi Ch ap·
parently was Unknown as a
food until much later. It made
its first appearance in a lOth
century English manuscript
reference to "strca berize."

.

Councy Conunissioner Rich
Jones said the county commissioners had met also with
Amer!tel representatives on
the matter of a nursing home.
Ameritel would prefer th.e
commissioners to build the
nursing home and Ameritel
would lease the structure and
operate the facility. Jones
indicated that he feels
progress is being made. The
review committee did approve the Ameritel plans for
a nursing home here at the
recent me~ting .
The commission discussed ·
at length the problems in the
transfer of lands through sale
and the problems of getting
the transfer papers to the
necessa ry public offices for
approval particularl y in
relation to the se wa ge
requirements involved.
It was generally agreed
that more planning will be
needed to work out a system
through which land purchases can be made and the
necessary sewage approvals
granted. The matter was
returned to committee for
further study. All public
agencies invol ve d in th e
processes will be represented
on the committee.
The commission rev iewed
several clearinghouse items
ie relation to grants applied
for by agencies outside the
county . The group agreed to a
"no comment" status on the ·
matters which will mean
approval without a lot of
paperwork involved.
The commission approved
payment of $317.30 to Blakeslee, the executive director,
for labor, mileage and expenses since the fi rst of this
yea r. It was agreed to request
from the county budget
commission, $2,650 for the
1978 business year, the same
amount asked for as in 1977.
I\ was informally agreed to
ask the Jennings Consultant
fi rm to codify regulations on
property transfers when the
procedures to be followed are
worked out.
Jones reported that the
architect is progressing well
on the design of a multipUrpose buildi ng to be located
on Mulberry Heights. This
building will house the senior
citizens, mental health offices and other agencies. The
co mmissioners have con·
ferred
with
hospital
representatives on parking
and roadways in the area
since the hospital is located
on the same county owned
land as the new structure wll1
(Continued on page 2)

'

~

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