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                  <text>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)

'

~

�3- The Datlv Sentinel, Middleoort-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, May 24, 1977
2- The Dally Sentmel, Mtddleport-Pomeroy, 0, Tuesrlay, May 24, 1977

Podgorney fired
MOSCOW 1UP! ) - The
Sovtet Uni on's powerlul
Central Co mmttte e
announced today
thht
PreSJdent Ntkolao Podgorny
was being relieved ol hos
dultes on the politburo

Benefits
raised for
disabled
WASHINGTON (UPI )
The House has approved
three btlls mcreastng
compensation to dosabled
veterans,
desptte
administralton objections to two
of them
The prtncopal measure
would grant a 6 per cent cost
of hving mcrease tn general
compensatiOn for disabtlity
and survtvQrs beneftts, along
woth a $10 mcrease in annual
clothmg allowance for
veterans who must wear
prosthetic devtees
Rep G V Montjlomery, DMtss., floor manager for the
btlls, saod about 2 5 million
veterans and survtvors would
be affected, includmg more
than 500,000 from the
Vtetnam War
The hike m monthly payments
would
become
elfectove Oct I The vote on
the b1ll was 393 to 0
Montjlomery estunated the
cost m the next fiscal year at
$312 5 milhon
Two other bills, which the
admmtstration opposed, also
were passed
One would Increase
compensation to veterans
who lost an arm or leg m the
servoce, then later lost the
survivmg paired lunb later
The other would provtde up to
$3,300 each for some World
War I dtsabled veterans to
purchase spectally eqwpped
automobiles.
The bills were estuna ted to
cost $1 million each m the
next year

Moscow radio announced
the converung ol the 200member Central Comrruttee
and reported , wtthout
explanatiOn. that Prestdent
Podgorny was bemg "freed of
his duties on the pohtburo "
Dtplomattc sources satd reheving the 74-year-old
Podgorny of duties on the allunportant politburo may be
the first step toward hts
rettremenl
Moscow radto satd that the

Hospital News
Holzer Medical Center
!Discharges, May Z3)
Martha Bevan , Kermot
Brown, Julia Caldwell,
Brenda Cremeens, Mrs
Jeffrey Darst and son, Ira
Eggleton, Mark Kearns II,
Janet Matthews, Katherme
Moller, John Miller. Mrs
Herbert Peoples and son,
Fredertck Shiflet, Mrs Dav1d
Shotts and son, Cindy
Waddell, Clarence Wamsley,
Mrs Ralph White and son
Donna Zuapan.
'
(Births, May 23)
Mr and Mrs Gary Norrts,
daughter, Racme, Mr and
Mrs.
Albert
Creech
daughter, Oak Htll
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admitted - Charles Warth,
Hartford, Gaynell McAbee,
West Columbta, Ltnda
Batley, Dexter
Dtscharged - Fred Htll,
John Keck, Myrtle Durst,
Elste Pooler

Central Commottee heard a
report from party General
Secretary Leontd Brezhnev
on the proposed new Sov1et
nallona1 const1tutton
Today's sesston was the
ftrst meetmg of the Central
Cnmmottee smce Oct 26,
1977

Moscow Radio also an
nounced the appotn!ment of
Konstanttn V Rusakov as a
secretary of the Central Cnmmottee
Ru sakov,
67,
prevtously served as a close
atde of Brezhnev's.
Rusakov replaced Deputy
Prune Mmoster Konstantin
Katushev 1 50, who was
dropped from the Central
Cnmnuttee m connection w1th
his new assognment as Sovtet
delegabon to the Comecon the &amp;mel bloc eqwvalenl of
the Common Market
The announcement of
Podgorny's removal from the
ru hng 15-member party
politburo was sudden
The Sovoet prestdent
recently cone luded a long
tour through Afrtca and was
believed to be m good health
Doplomatic sources satd
that the acllon was most
likely the prelude to
announcmg Podgorny's
(ormal rettrement from
offtce when the Supreme
Sovtel meets on June 16

WILLIAM (tADI BOLIN
Wtll1am (Tad) Balm , 82 of
870 S Second Ave , M id
dlepor t dted Monday even1ng
at the Holzer Med rca l Center

Mr Balm was a member of

Mlddleporl

F~re

Department for 34 yea r s and
was a veteran of World War I

having ser ved In the Army
He was a member of the

M•ddleport Firs t Baptost
Church
Born 1n Pomeroy on Dec 9,
18°4, Mr Bol m was preceded
m death by ht s w tfe, Char lotte
Wflltamson Balm , a son,
Wt!ltam
Boltn
thr ee
brothers, and two stste~s
Survtvtng
are
grand

c ht ldren tn clud ing Janet
Loutse Oldaker , New Ha ven,
W
Va , M tc ha el Boltn

Middleporl, Mark, Russell,
L tsa Jo, and twms Carren and

Darrtn Bol tn all of Akron
and two nieces, Mrs T L
Charlo tt e) Morr tson , San

HEALTH
Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.

Embarrassing
gas problem
••
••

DEAR DR LAMB - I suffer from an overabundance
of gas. I have had X rays of
my d1gestove tract, Including
a banum enema and gall
bladder tests. The doctor, a
gastroenterologiSt, says tt IS
a spasltc colon lle has gtven
me three different kmds of
medicmes which have not
helped me at aU
I am 54 years old. I don't
know what to do r pass glts
all day long It ts very annoy·
mg and embarrassmg Could
you please adv1se me what
can be done•
I also have arthrttts m my
spme I am wearmg a
surgiCal gmlle It IS much
worse when I get up m the
mornmg. The gas and the gtrdle combmed are qu1te a pr~&gt;­
blem I have never had so
much gas as m the past few
months
DEAR READER - A
spasltc colon IS often part of
the ptcture of gaseousness
Your colon ts a muscular
tube and the muscles constantly contract and relax m
a rhythmic f~tshion to move
food restdue When these
muscles contract forcibly as
a spasm tt causes pain. This
closes off the colon and traps
any g1ts that ts accumulatmg
m the colon.
Because of the spasm the
trapped ga~ 1s under tensiOn.
That ts what causes the pam.
I am sending you The Health
Letter number 2-1, Irritable
or Spasttc Colon and Consbpalton. It wtll gtve you
baSic mformation on what
you can do to tram your
bowel so you won 't have so
much trouble. Others who
want thts mformatwn can
send 50 cents WJth a long,
stamped, self-addressed
envelope for tt Just send
your request to me m care of
this newspaper, P.O. Box
1551, RadiO City Statwn, New
York, NY 10019.
You may proftt by mcreasmg the bulk m your diet
Cereal bulk, parttcularly
bran, 1s helpful. A large bowl
of bran flakes each day IS a
glfd way to s~rt There ts

more to 11 though than JUS!
eatmg bran Try to stay away
from chemical laxatives as
they cause more harm than ,
good and can cause you to
develop a laxabve habit
Gas comes from several
sources
Many people
swallow atr We know that
because the gas has been
wtlhdrawn and analysed
Because tl 1s mostly oxygen
and mtrogen we know 11
comes from atr In other pe!&gt;ple fermented gases are tmportant These gases are
hydrogen, methane and carbon diOxtde Baclertal act10n
on undigested food ts unportant here Good bowel habtts
wtll help relteve thts problem
mmany cases
Intolerance to mtlk and
rrulk products 1s a rather
colll(llon source of gas As
people get older they olten do
not dtgesl carbohydrates as
well as before You m1ght try
leavmg off rrulk for a. while,
mcludmg ALL molk products
used tn cookmg and see what
happens. Coffee IS also a frequent factor
To gtve you m01 e mlormatJon on gas problems I am
also sending you The Health
Letter number 6-8, Controllmg Gaseousness. It ts
available to readers as noted
about the 1ssue on spasttc colon
Almost everyone swallows
atr and forms some gas. The
amount normally IS not large
and m the absence of a
spasltc colon 11 passes unnottced by anyone. Every
tune you swallow hqwds or
food you are likely to swallow
some atr. The abdomendistended average person
passes between 400 and 2000
ml ol gas each day The pam
that trapped gas causes may
be 111 the area where gall
bladder pam ts expected The
pam may be from the colon
and not the gall bladder You
may be mtercsted to know
that about one m 10 persons
m the general populabon expenence unpleasant symptons from gas So you are c~r­
tamly not .,rare

Metgs County Common
Pleas Co urt has ordered the
Athens Co unty Savongs and

Veto may come
over spending

By STEWART POWELL
WASHIT'IGTON (UPI ) Loan Company to recover
from Charles D. and Kaaron Dtsagreement between ConHa tfleld the sum of $6,439 76 gress and the Whole House on
woth eogh! percent mterest future federal spendmg has
per annum from Feb 9, 1977 gJVen new ltfe to threats
!n other court action popular durmg Republtcan
the
Monte Ray Barrmger, who admtmstrations
presodenttal
veto.
appeared before Judge John
President Carter says he
C Bacon on a bill of onmay
veto an omn1bUS fiveformation, pleaded gwlty to
year
farm
and food stamp bill
recetvmg stolen property. H1s
tf
It
gets
to his desk w1th
case was contmued for prehigher
pme
supports for corn
sentence mvesugahon with
and
wheat
than
he asked for
bond set at $500, although the
And
Budget
Director
Bert
defendant was released on h1s
Lance
says
the
new
President
own recogmzance
Lottoe Smtih was granted a would "have to ser10usly
divorce from Rochard R consoder" vetomg the
Smtih, and appotnted deputy multibillion dollar Labor·
shertfl s were Edward Health , Education and We I I
Templeton , Alan Darlmg, a r e appropriallons bllltf the
Corby Cleek and Charles $1 7 btllion added by a House
Appropnations
Musser
subcomrruttee survtves
Talk ol vetoes comes as
Congress and the Prestdent
COUSINS DIE
square off on another tssue Leona Kohl, Middleport, makmg U S. mthlary atd
has received word of the contingent on human rights
death of two coustns, guarantees
Raymond McDonald, 63,
The House today planned
Grove Ctty, and his s1ster, contt nued debate and
Katherme Gnffttb, 70, of posSJbly fmal action on a $3 2
Columbus Bunal for both b1lllon
mob tary
a1d
woll be tn Columbus Several authonzatton It narrowly
cousins survtve m Mtddleport refused Monday to elimmate
and Pomeroy.
$700,000
for
mthtary
Wucallon and trairung m
Argentina
The admmtstralton request
for $100 moll10n contr1bulton
I to a $1 5 btllion mterna tiona!
fund to help transitton to
and Julia Ga rd Johnson
She ts survtved by her black rule encountered
husband , Wallace , thr ee
res1stance from congressmen
daughters Mrs Wooddraw
concerned
the money mtght
!Julia) Kapp, Rl l, Polnl

r--------------------------,
II
Area Deaths !
the

DINNER NOTED
LETART FALLS - There
wtll be a Memortal Day
donner at the Letart Falls
Commumty Hall, Sunday,
May 29 The menu mcludes
chtcken, mashed potatoes,
noodles, green beans, slaw,
pie, coffee and teed tea
,Servmg wtll begm at 11:30
am

Court orders
judgment for
savings &amp; loan

dcsky. and Mrs Charles

( Betty) L a mbert, Rou te 1
West Co lumbta , a brother.
and sister, Herbert Bolin and

Mrs

Edith Boots, both of

Columbus, and a brother tn
law, Marvin Wtlllam so n,
Bucyrus
Funeral

servtces wtll

be

he ld at 2 p m Thursday al the
Rawlings Coats

Fun e ral

Home wolh the Rev Peler

Grandal officiating Bu ria l
will be tn Mtddleport Htll
Cemetery Frtends may call
at the funeral home from 2 to
4 and 7 to 9 p m Wednesday

EDNA BURDETT

Mr s Edna A Burdett, 85,
2025 Maxwell Rd . Po~nl

Pleasant.
mornmg

died

at

Tuesday

6,30 a m

at

Pleasant Valley Hospttal

A

member
of
the
Pres bytenan Church m Point
Pleasant and a past matron

of OES Chapter 75, she was
born July 29, 1891 1n Point
Pleasant to the lale Edgar

P leasant. M rs Ela1ne Rouse,
Add1son.
M rs
Walter
(Barbara) Kehm, Somers, N
Y , f tve grandchildren and
three
great grandchtldren
Funeral services will be 2
p m Thursday at the Craw
Hussell Funera l Home with
me t&lt;ev Rufus Cromar ft e
offiCiating Bunal wtll be tn
Su nc r est cemetery Fr1ends
may ca ll at th~ funeral home
after J p m Wedn esday
Those wlshtng to may con
tr ibute to the Presby fenan
Chu r ch Memonal Fund !n
lieu of flowers

Other differences on
loretgn poltcy could be
spotltghted Wednesday m
testimony
before
a
congresSJonal sub«&gt;mmlttee
by Mal Gen John Singlaub,
removed over the weekend
for publtcly crtttctzmg
planned troop withdrawals m
South Korea
In other actton on Capttol
Htll, congreSSional reactton
appeared favorable to Prestdent Carter's message on the
envtronment . And Congress
was asked to help keep wild
horses ahve rn the West and
to help eliminate the use of
NtXon and Ford vetoed the
chtldren rn pornography
measure
seven of the eight
Despite Carter's threat to
years
they
held offi'-"'
veto the farm btll, a patr of
The
Prestdent's
message
Midwestern senators want to
on
the
environment
hike support prtces beyond
the levels already brmgmg • emphaSized enforcement of
rumblin gs at the Whtle existing law, but mcreased
House. Debate on the approprlattons m several
measure opened Monday m areas would requtre approval
by Congress.
the Senate.
" U he's prepared to hold
The Prest dent 's wtllmgness
to use the veto m other areas industry's feet to the ftre, tllat
may
be
hts
major
Wits htghltghted tn comments
by hts budget dtrector to accomplishment," said Sen
reporters and editors of the Gary Hart, DColo ., coWashmgton Post Lance satd chairman of the HouseCarter IS prepared to veto Senate Envtronmental study
congresstonal appropriations Conference.
House Interior Chmrman
and cut Cabmet spending
requests to meet hts goal of a Morrts Udall, D-Artz , welbalanced fed era I budget by comed Carter's hacking for
new wilderness areas and
1981
A Carter veto of the Labor- proposed changes tn federal
HEW
approprtaltons mmmg law allowmg almost
measure could spark trouble unlirmted mirung on publtc
wtth Congress. Presidents land

1 JO p m wllh lhe Rev
George We1n ck of11ctatmg
Burial wtll f ollow tn the Unton
Cemetery Friends may call
today from 2 to 4 p m and 7 to
9 p m at the funeral home

(Conlmued from page 1)
the drought this year should mduce mstttutlons to make longterm plans for allocating water.
ALBUQUERQUE, N. M. - TECHNICIANS at Sandia
Laboratortes Monday successfully used more than 70 mtrrors
to melt a quarter-mch-ttuck steel plate wtth what they sa1d was
the strongest beam of solar power ever produced on earth The
demonstration was for the Solar Therman Test factlity bemg
buill at the lab for the Energy Research and Development
Admmtstration
A spokesman said the ~ower generated by tlle beam was
equal to 1,100 suns and was more than double the power ever
generated at any solar facility. As the rrurrors were betog put
mto place, a btrd flew ln front of the beam and was mcinerated.
The solar facility now under construction will consist of 300
rrurrors and a 200-fool tower capable of generating ftve
megawatts of solar power.
COLUMBUS - THE ADMINISTRATION of Gov Janoes
A. Rhodes Monday allocated another $130,000 for training
prospective coal mrners at a school sponsored by the North
Amertcan Coal Corp. w Monroe County Rhodes sa1d that as of
next Sept. 30, his admimstration will have spent more than
$680,000 on the program, whtch utilizes eqwpment from
various coal rmmng compantes m the area.
The governor srud that since the program began, more
than 2,200 mmers have graduated from the SIX-Week course
and more than 90 per cent of them have been hired by coal
companies in southeastern Ohto. Funds for tratntog and
tnstructors are made available through the Community
Employment Trammg Act (CET A)
CINCINNATI- RETIRED NAVY VICE Admiral Uoyd
Mustm has been elected to head the 1 2 m11lion-member
National Rifle Assoc1alton m the wake of the ouster of four top
association offtctals Mustin, of Alexandria, Va ., was elected
preSident Monday and John B Layton of Washington, D. C.,
was selected ftrst vice president.
Ousted over the weekend at the group's annual convention
here were Executive V1ce Prestdent Maxwell Rich, First Vice
Prestdent lrvme Reynolds, Fmance-Vote President Thomas
Btllmgs and Second Vtce Prestdent Alonzo Garcelon. Former
Prestdent Merrell Wrtght was not ousted, but hts term exptred
Monday and he was succeeded by Mustm Rtch was succeeded
by Harlon Carter.
New ofllcers de rued they took over because the old were
gomg soft m the hght agamst gun controls.

By FRED DOWN
UPJ 8)&gt;«11 Writer
It lJ roughly one-fourth of
the way 11110 the season and
llle New York Yankee romp
feared by so many American
Leaguers has yet to
materlallu.
"It's too early to tell," says
Manager Earl Weaver,
whose Balttmore Ortoles
have a haHgame lead over
the Boston Red Sox and a 1¥..game margin over the
Yankees m the AL's Eastern
Division.
He adds. "There ts no
JX"Ospect of an easy Win for
any team"
The Orioles, who were
. virtually wrttten off as a
contender m pre-.season es-

11

~

WASHINGTON (UP! ) Ctting empty western reservoirs wh1ch prove federal
water proJects "do not create
water," Intenor Secretary
Cectl Andrus today outltned a
!li&gt;&lt;Jmt national water pohcy
stressmg conservallon.
" Dams, reservo1rs and
canals do not create water n
s atd Andrus In remarks
prepared for deltvery at the
Naltonal Conference on
Water m St Louts, Mo

RALLY SET
Meogs Area Holtness
Assoctatton rally wtll be held
at Rutland Communtly
Church th1s evenmg at 7:30.
The Rev. R D Brown, pastor
of the Danville Wesleyan
Church, wtll be the speaker.
Spectal smgmg wtll be
provtded by the Commumty
Church The pu bite IS rnvtted

ON DEAN'S LIST
Fatrmont State College
students from Mason County
named to the Dean's Ust for
the second semester, with a
3 2 or better average were
Carol L. Bennett, Matthew B.
Roush and William H.
Wallace.

allocatwn "mto the 20th
century ."
U the states fail m this job,
he said, the federal
government may be forced to
step in.
Andrus said he would encourge wise water use m
several ways, including
reqwrmg mdivtdual meters
for all city residences
receiving water from federal
systems , water effiCiency
reqwrements for trrtgalton
uses for those recetvlng
federal agriculture assistance, water efficiency for
constructiOn projects where
federal funds are mvolved.
Other potnts of his program

BUSY ON WEEKENDS
RACINE - The Ractne
Emergency answering four
calls for help over the
weekend went at 12:03 p m.
Frtday for Nellie Lemley, Rt.
2, Racrne, who was taken to
Veterans Memonal Hosp1tal.
On Saturday at 6:35 p.m
Everet Roush, Racine, was
taken to Veterans Memorial,
and Ethel McDamels, Rt 1,
Racine, was transported to
Holzer Medical Center at
10 55 p m. The squad was
called to Long Bottom Sunday for Sammy Rardin, who
refused treatment.

ASK TOWED
A marrl8ge license was
ISSued to Stuart Wayne
DONATIONS NEEDED
Donations for a chapel to be Pullrns, 21, Pomeroy, and
butlt m the new semor Susan Kay Mash, 19,
ctllzens center are bemg Pomeroy
accepted Donattons may be
sent to Betty Kern, Rt I,
BOARD TO MEET
Shade, Ohio 45776 which will
A
regular
meetrng of tlle
be gtven to the semor cttJZens Metgs County
Board of
center. Those wtshtng ad- Education scheduled for June
diltonal mformabon may call 7 has been changed to June 14
Mrs ern at 992-7764.
at the board offtce, Mulberry
Hetghts, Pomeroy
BAKE SALE SET
LETART FALLS - The
Letart Falls Ball Assoctallon
will hold a bake sale at the
Racme Post Offtce Saturday
begtnning at 9 a.m.
tHE DAILY SENTINEL

DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF

MEIGS-MASON AREA
CHESTER L. TANNEHilL
E~t( Ed.

ROBERT HOEFLICH
Cltf. EdJtor
Pubh.shed d!Uly eXL-epl Sutunlay
by The Ohm Valley Publishmg Com
any, 111 Court St , Pomeroy Ohio
45769 Bu.smess Off1ce PhOne 9922166 Ed1to na! Phonc992 2157
Set'OOd class postage p~ud at
Pom~ roy , Ohm

BIRTHDAY FETED
The birthdays of Mrs Bert
Grunm and Mrs. Dayton
Phillips were celebrated at
the Gnmm home tn Letart
Falls Sunday Attendmg
were Mr and Mrs Robert
Grunm, Christy and Amy,
Columbus; Mr and Mrs.
Steven Grunm, Canobndge,
Mr. and Mrs Russell
Grunm, Paula and Davtd, St
Clatrsville, and the honored
guests and thetr husbands

Moose Lodge No. 731 wW
sponsor Its Fourth Annual
Men's Double-Ellmlnatlon
Soltball Tournament on June
3-5 at the Moose Recreation
area, along Route 2, one-baH
mile north of Point Pleasant.
Team trophies will be
awarded to the first, !leCOnd
and third place teams while
the ftrst and second place
teams will also get Individual
trophies There will also be a
memonal plaque for tbe Most
Valuable Player.
Entry fee Is $1i0 and two
ASA sanctioned balls. The
first 16 teams will be accepted. Offtctals of teams
wtshmg to enter should call
Don Ward at (304) &amp;?S-2648
after 5 p.m. or Melvin R.
Johnson at (304) 67~24.

mclude·
- A solution to tbe problem
of government tgnorlng
Indian water rtghts and 'lionIndians mvesting money m
the same water
-Eva luatlon of water
quality
and
wastes
management planning wtth
reuse of waste water,
artiflctal groundwater
recharge, minimum
steamflows and safe drinking
water primary objectives
"not just afterthoughts or
appendages "
-Safety "established and
proven" for aU projeCts.

(Continued from page 1)
be.
Edison Baker of Middleport
reported that the Middleport
community has three suitable
sites for a nursing home. He
and Mayor Fred Hoffman
were asked to list tbe sites in
wrtling and forward them to
the county commissioners. It
was
announced
that
representatives from the
local commlsston will meet
with representatives from tbe
Athens commission Wednesday night to discuss
starting a combined project
of listing industrial sites.
John Jennmgs of Jennings
Consultants outlined aspects
of the final report on the
economic capabilities study
which his ftrm is completing.
A combined report and the
!iha! one wlll be presented at
the next meeting of tbe
commlsslon on June 27.
Attendmg the Monday
night meeting were Jennings,
Rtck
Jones,
Harry
Bumgardner, Fred Hoffman,
Davtd Fox, George Collins,
Gene Lyons, Joan Culp,
Edison Baker, Milton Roush,
Arch Stegall, Eleanor
Thomas, Blakeslee, Naomi
Brtnker and Thereon Johnson
who prestded.

tyESD~Y

Ef!Jr».r -

W11rd • Gru f1th Company,
Inc Sottlnelli and Ga llagher Ow,

rJUt.J..Y- June '• 1m
Elberfelds at Ne v lh~n ~~~
Rtruter-Brogan at Dail7 Sentinel

lj6li!ROAY- Jllllt lG, 19'n
Nev ._ven "Mil&amp; t HI eon

757 Third Ave. New Vork. NY
10011
Subscrtptlon rates Oehvertd by

SA TUliDAY - Jg {. 1 1271
New Have n 11 A" at tokleon

~:~dverli.!Jmg

represen-

tMtive

earner where available 75 cents per
week By Motor Route where earner
~rvlct:

not &lt;tv&lt;tLla ble, One month,
13 2S 8}' mali m Ohio •md W Va ,
On~t Year
S22 00 Su months
Sll SO Three munths 17 00
El.st!Wh~oJn: $26 00 ye~:~r Sill: munful.

i!Wl~

Cl~rfelda

rz. 1m

•A,"

KldDIII!IHX ... " - 2~.

ACT NOW FOR DOUBLE SAVINGS
FOR EXAMPLE

Huon at

Sportabout Wagon
6 cyl , aulo, AC, PS, PB.
roof rack. rad10, "X"
pa ckage

Was ,5,691 00

'6209

'5240

77 HORNET
AMX

77 MATADOR
Barcelona Coupe
VB, auto , AC, PS, rad1al s,

AM FM stereo, lilt wheel,
cru1se control. v1nyl roof

Was

'6140

AMC-JEEP
Gallipolis, Oh.

o4, l.2:Z:Z
"M" at New Hawn •A•

t»;l]J- Sent1Ml

!

56,697.00

RIVERSIDE

1977

~!U - · June

V Haven

77 HORNET

'5484

El.berfdd• at. Aaut.llr-Bl'ogr.n

-

any new AMC car equipped with
factory air conditioning between now and
June lOth and receive $400 worth of free air
travel. hotel accomodat1ons, or luggage
from American Motors. PLUS Riverside
AMC-Jeep will deduct the cost of air
conditioning from any car now in stock.

WIS $5935 00

TUESDAY ... June 21 1 ~
01.1\y S.nt1nd at Nev Haven 1114•
Reut.er-Bropn at Muon
Ntv Hav.n "A" at Slberfeldl

$1J SO. Three months S7 SO
SUIISl npt1u11 prtt.'i! mdudes Sunday
I unco.St!nl.mcl

*Buy

VB, auto , PS, bucket seats,
AC, radials

at Dl1l7 SentineL

Reuter-Bropn at Nev Haven

1lJtSDAY - June 7 , lW
Mason at Reuter-Urogan
Elberfelde at New Haven "A"
New Haven 'tot 11 at tally Se.1t~nel

FREE FROM AMERICAN MOTORS
AND RIVERSIDE AMC-JEEP

Was $6,766 oo

New H&amp;YIIIn "•"' at D&amp;Uy Stntlnel

Reuter-Btopn at Elbe1felds
DRily Sentinel at M&amp;son
New Haven "A" at J.tew Haven 'K"

Natiorn~l

AS MUCH AS ~5700 *

grain .

ll!ll!IESDAY - June 11._;,m

... Moy 31 1 1977

I

International league
United Press lnternatmnal
W l Pc:t G 8
22 11
22 13

667

R•chmond

17 16
17 17

515
500

15 16

.484

Syra c use
Toledo

15 18
16 22
11 22

.455 7
421 a•1:r
33 3 11

Charl e st on

Pawtu c ket
T •dewater

Rochester

629

Cauthen is out of Belmont
By IRA KAUFMAN
UPI Sports Writer
NEW YORK {UPI ) - Ap·
prenllce JOCkey sensation
steve Cauthen won 't be ruling
m the Belmont Stakes or m
any other races for the next
stx weeks as a result or
rnjurtes suffered m a nasty
three-horse sptll at Belmont
Pork
Accordmg to Cauthen 's
agent, Lenny Goodman, who
spent much o£ Monday mght
at the jockey 's bedside,
"Steve ts defuutely scratched
from the Belmont He can't
nde as long as he has a cast
on "
The 17-year-old Cauthen,
rtdmg on a day when

Jahbar the best

Standmgs
1

s

S•h
6

Columbus
Monday's Results
PS~wtucket 3 Ttdewater 2
Syra cuse 3, Col u mbus 0
Ro c heste,....., Toledo 1

Results, line scores

AIR
r,
CONDMONING
SPECIAL

At, PS, PB, till wheel,

ll!!:SDAY - June 14, 1&lt;n7
Reut..r-Brog&amp;n at NtN Haven 11"
Huon at Elblrfel da

The vtctory was Halicki's
thtrd of the season while Enc
Rasmussen was tagged wtth
his sixth loss agatnst two
wins McCovey and Gary
Thomasson had three hits
each for the Gtants
Braves 6, Padres S:
Rookie Barry Bonnell's
fourth hit of the game, a
smgle up the mtddle , drove m
Jeff Burroughs with the
wrnnmg run m the top of the
11th and en abled Buzz Capra
to wm hts hrst game The
blow carne off Dave Tomlin,
who lost his second game

The New Haven Cubs rolled
over the vtslting Pomeroy
Porates 13-1, although the
Cubs outhll Pomeroy only Hi
Gilland got credtt for the Wtn,
and he also cracked two
singles Russell stroked a
trtple and single, Weaver got
a home run, and Layne and
Rollins singled once
Ntck Riggs took the loss as
he went tlle dostance, and Rod
Manley got the only Pirate
extra base hit, a double
Gettmg smgles were catcher
Bryan Ztrkle, Ray Justts,
Fred Colburn, Ken McCullough, and Bryan Betzmg
p
0010-163
C
049 x- 13 7 1
Roggs and Ztrkle Golland
and Green

Ftgueroa (5 3) and Munson WP
- Lee (2 OJ HRs - Boston,
Evans (9) Hobson (6) New
York, Jackson (61

LOS ANGELES (UP! ) Los
Angeles
Lakers
superstar Kareem AbdulJabbar feels be has matured
as a player.
Maybe that's why he outpolled all the other top
basketball players
mclud ing Portland's Btl!
Walton - as the 1977 most
va luable player m the
National Basketball Association
But the 7-foot-2 center, who
led the NBA m fteld goal
percentages w1th
579,
ftntshed third m scormg
( 26 2) and second m both
reboundmg (13 3) and
blocked shots (3 18), thinks
he has reached hos linut

Today's

Sport Parade
By MILTON RICHMAN
UP! Sports Editor

NEW YORK (UP!) -Some htgh school kids can get a little
difftcult to hve wtth, particularly when they begtn winning all
kinds of athletic awards and start seetog thetr names m the
paper. They get carrted away sometunes
Pat Kelly Wits that kind of k1d He was so good m baseball
and football at Philadelphta's Sunon Gratz High School, he
made "All Public" in both sports and m hts senior year, 1962,
he earned the Cliveden Award as the best prep school athlete m
the entire CJ!y.
He was a pttcher then and thought he was pretty hot stufl
Any
time he was chpped lor a home run or a key base hot he
16 }, M1lwaukee
Bando (5),
couldn't understand how that could happen to a pitcher like
Lezcano (8)
Boston
~
him andhe'dsulk about It His h1gh school coach, Pete Lorenc,
020 000 020 4 7 2
New y ,k
010 ooo 11o- 3 6 o didn 't go for that ktnd of nonsense
Lee, campbell ra&gt; and F•sk
"Oh, what a terrtble shame, did someone steal your lollipop?" Lorenc would say, applyrng the needle "What are you,
a little haby? Grow up."
It took a whtle, but Pat Kelly d1d. He grew up so well, hardly
anybody would recogntze hun now as the same mdtvidual.
Pot Kelly no longer ts a pttcher He's an outfielder now wtth
the Baltunore Or10les, who he has been carrying wtth hts 337
average and a hitting streak he stretched to 19 games Monday
rught agatnst the Mtlwaukee Brewers wtth an e1ghth-inmng
homer.
Pete Lorenc probably wtU be surprtsed to find this out, but he
has
somethmg to do wtth Kelly's sudden emergence as one of
Ma1or League Standmgs
the Amertcan League's top hitters
By Un1ted Press lnte,.nattOnal
Nal!onal League
"When you played for him, the ftrst thing you learned was
East
GB discipline," Kelly says about hts former high school coach
W l
Pet
P1ttsbgh
25 12 676
"He taught tt to me and I shU remember htm for that You
23 13 639 1112
Ch 1cago
11Ughl
be surprised how much somethtog like disc1plimng
22 16 579 3V&gt;
St lOUIS
19 17 528 51f2
yourself has to do with hittmg a baseball. In hitting, I've come
Phil a
14 21 .400 10
Montreal
to realtze every ballplayer goes through a sktd or a slump.
15 23 395 10 1h
New Yo r k
Those things are bound to happen ....
West
W l
Pet GB
"Normally, thmgs like that wtll get a hitter overly
Los Ang
30 10 750 concerned,
make hun depressed You've got to di.&amp;cJpline
CtOC I
18 20 474 11
Hous ton
16 23 410 131f2 yourseH not to worry and I've learned that I don't think tt's
San Fran
16 23 410 13 11:1
San D1eg0
17 26 395 14 1!~ something you need help wtth Pete U&gt;renc helped me tremenAtlanta
15 26 366 15112 dously. He taught me discipline and With 11 came serentty.
Monday's Results
That 's where God helped. After I found hun, nothmg ever could
N Y at Plttsbgh, ppd , ram
get me down any more.! can go oh-for-four or oh-for-hve, but if
San FranCISCO 7, St LOUIS 2
Atla 6, San D1ego 5, 11 mns
lhe team wtns that pleases me more than getting three or four
Today ' s Probable Pitchers
hits myself
CAll Times EDT )
Montreal (Stanhouse 3 6) at
"I thought I was happy before but actually I didn 't know
Chtcago {R Reuschel 6 2) 2 30 what true happiness meant.! thtnk think fmding God has more
pm
New Yor k (Ma tlack 3 J l at to do wtth my success than anything else "
P1ttsbu,.g h (Reuss 0 5) , 7 30
Pat Kelly talks thiS way so much, he takes some ktdding
pm
from
the other OriOles, but that doesn't upset hun at all
Philadelphia (Underwood 2 0
or Kaat 0 1) at St
lOUtS
"Some ofthe fellows call me 'Reverend,'" he laughs "Other
t Forsch 6 1 l. a 30 p m
Atlanta &lt;Capra 0 4) at San people say I mtssed my calling "
Diego (Shirley 3 S&gt; , 10 p m
Kelly, whose brother, Leroy, twtce was the NFL'S rushing
Houston (lemongello 1 5) a t champ wtlh the Cleveland Browns, ortgmally came up wtth the
Los Angeles ( Rhoden 6 1), 10 30
Mmnesota Twrns rn 1967 after bemg stgned by the late Harry
pm
Wednesday's Games
Gulli us He was Kansas Ctty's fourth-round draft chotce in the
Montreal at Chtcago
1968 expans10n draft and the Royals traded him to the Whtte
Ph1l&amp;delph1a at St LOUIS, n igh t
Houston at Los Angeles , night
Sox m 1970 Last November, Kelly came to the Or10les from the
Atlanta at San D1ego, n1ght
White Sox tn a stratght-up swap for catcher Dave Duncan, no
Cinc1nn at1 at san Fran ntght
longer tn ba~eball .
"I'll tell you the type player he ts," says Baltimore Manager
A~encan l eag ue
Earl Weaver. "He started the season going one-for-18. We
East
W L Pet GB were m Texas on our first road trtp and tl was rammg like bell
Balttmre
21 15
'h No chance at all of the ganoe bemg played Me and my coaches
Bvston
21 16
l
'h went out to the park to see if maybe we could gel tn some
New York
21 18 538
hitting or throwmg, but the f1eld was m such bad shape, we
Mdw
21 21 500 3
Detrott
17 20
~:% called the hotel and told our traveling secretary, Phil Itzoe, to
Toronto
17 24
Cleve lnd
14 21 400 6'h keep everybody back there.
West
GB
" Kelly inststed on commg out, though. Hun and (Jun )
W l
Pet
Palmer They dtdn't care how bad llle loeld was, they wanted to
Mtnn
25 14 64 1
Ch 1cago
22 15 595 2
do some runnrng They ran around m water up to thetr ears
Te~~:as
19 16 543
" Kelly ts hot now I don 't know if he'll stay that way all year
1
Ca l 1f
19 21 475 6 /2
Oakland
19 21 475 6112 lt'skmdofdoubtful he wtU, because he has never hit this much
Kan CtfY
18 20 474 6'h before , but no matter what he hits he's an asset to this club. He
Sea ttle
16 28 36-1 Jl lh
was even when he was one-for-18."
Monday 's Results

" I don 't think I can play
any better or wtth any more
consiste ncy / ' he satd
Monday after he recetved 159
of the 247 votes cast by the
NBA players. Walton, who
spotled the Lakers' chances
tn the NBA playoffs, came m
second with only 29
· ~ smce I've been m Los
Angeles, I believe I've been
getting the most out ol my
potenltal," Abdul-Jabbar ,
who recently turned 30, said
"I've matured as a player
and that's the most unportant
part
of
anybody 's
development "
It was the fifth tune m
seven years and the second
year tn a row that he won !be
MVP award and AbdulJabbar said "tt was a great
bonor to be m the company of
BtU Russell," the former
Celltc player who also won
the award ftve times
However, Abdul-Jabbar
earned hts laurels m only
e1ght years, compared to
Ru ssell, who played 13
seasons

The vtctory was sweeter
because of the wallopmg
Walton and the Trail Blazers
gave the Lakers tn the
playoffs, beating them m four
stratght games to put a
dtSappotntmg end to a
remarkable season m whtch
the Lakers, 53-29, had the best
record m the NBA
"Thts MVP award 1s
espectally satisfymg because
1! went along WJth the Lakers
havmg such a great season/'
he satd
Los Angeles Coach Jerry
West satd Abdui.Jabbar, who
came to the Lakers from the
Milwaukee Bucks at the start
of 1975-76, IS the only person
who could "unprove upon
perfection "

trackSlde fans couldn't even
bet, suffered a broken rtght
arm and r1b and was dazed by
a slight concusston . He also
had a cut m his right hand
which needed 15 stitches and
a deep laceration over hts
right eye whtch required 10.
The broken arm has been set
in a cast whtch the Walton ,
Ky. teen-ager will have to
wear for approxunately stx
weeks
He wtll remain in Long
Island Jewtsh Hospital for a
lew days
Cauthe n, w1th 273 wmners
already th iS year, was
makmg hts Belmont debut
under
unu s ual
ctreumstances
There was no betting at the
track due to a strike of 600
panmutuel clerks, whtch
closed down Aqueduct's
season prematurely last
Thursday The reason the
program was run a tall was to
allow wagerrng to take place
at Off-Track Bettong outlets
and admisston to the track
Wits free . Only 7,514 passed
through Belmont's entrances
- which displayed marching
ptcket lines
There had been growtng
speculation that tramer W E

" Sm1ley" Adams was
doss atisfted wtth jockey
Darrel McHargue's handltng
of Run Dusty Run in
Saturday's Preakness, where
he ftnished third.
THI S WEEK' S

SP!iCIAL

VALUE

RATEC

USED CARS

1971 CHEV.

CAPRICE
2 DR. HT
F ull power , a 1r cond.
ster eo Low m lleag~

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Way of Do1ng Bu51ness

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DOWNING CHILDS
INSURANCE AGENCY, INC.
992 -2342

BASEBALL

cruise control , rad1als, AM
FM stereo, roof rack, wood

TRIUY - Jlllle 10. 1971.
Nev Haven IIM 11 at E:bur:f'elds
Mason at New li&amp;von "A."

fRIDAY - Hoy 27, l'ITZ.
Nev Havon 11 A.« at !euUr-Brogan
I'Jleon at New Hs.ven """

Coach A D. Benedetto's
Symmes Valley Vtktngs, by
edging Kyger Creek 9-j! in a
suspended game Monday
evening at Cheshire, captured second place m the
SV AC behtnd the champion
Southern Tornados
Kyger Creek bounced back
to wm the ntghtcap 3-1 behmd
the pttching of righthander
steve Baird. The regwnalbound Bobcats of Coach Jun
Sprague finished thtrd m the
SV AC with a 7-5 record
Overall, Kyger Creek
completed regular season
play With a 16-8 slate
Symmes Valley ftnished 9-3
In the league, mcluding some
forfeits.
In the suspended game,
Kyger Creek took an 11-7 lead
tn the eighth llllling on a two
out walk to Todd Taylor, two
stolen bases and a clutch
single to rtght off the hat of
catcher Ralph Baylor.
Symmes Valley tied It rntts
haH of the inning on a smgle
by Woodall and four walks
The Vikings won tt m the
ninth mnmg on a leadoff
triple by Galloway and a tw~&gt;­
out single up the mtddle by
Woodall.
Kyger Creek took a 1-o lead
-, In the mghtcap in the first

77 MATADOR
STATION WAGON
IIEDNSSIJAl - June !1.Jm
Daily Sentinel at Nm-c.er-Bropa

We~nnd&amp;! - ~:t '~ • 1271
t&amp;Uy Sentinel at Elberfeld&amp;

third in loop

Support

MAS ON-NEW HAVEN-POMEROY
1977 TEE B~LL BCRBDUL!

h'UEs!II.Y - J:!!L&amp;.4......ill1
Da.ily Senti nel at Xe w thven "A"
g~v H8.ven "M" at P.:,ut.ar•Brogan
Elbcrfelds at Milson

connected for the Brewers
Second-mnmg homers by
Dwtght Evans and Butch
Hobson and Jun Rice's RBI·
SJngle m the etghth provtded
the Red Sox wtth their
wrnnrng margrn and enabled
BtU Lee to WJn hts second
game of the year wtth the
relie£ help of BtU Campbell
Ed Figueroa suffered hts
third loss against five wms
for the Yankees.
In the other Amertcan
League game, Oakland
defeated ToroniO, 3-o, while
San Franctseo beat St. Louts,
7-2, and Atlanta mpped San
Otego, 6-5, in 11 innings, in
Nattonal League games New
York at Ptttsburgh was
ramed out
A's 3, Blue Jays 0:
Rtck Langford ptlched a
SlxhJtter for hts fourth vtctory
for Oakland, which scored all
1ts runs off Pete Vukovtch m
the second inning The loss
was Vukovtch's lourth
agamst two wtns
Giants 7, Cards Z:
Wtllle McCovey and Tim
Foli each knocked m two runs
for San Franctsco, which
innmg on a fielder's chotce, a backed Ed Halickt and Gary
stolen hase and smgle by Lavelle with a 15--htt attack
Todd Taylor
The second Bobcat tally
came IIl the second on an
error, stolen base and Gary
Nibert's single. Symmes
Valley cut the lead to 2-1 m
the fourth when Christtan
M~r League Res ults
Press Inte rnational
walked, stole second and By)'r\'ffi!d
i
Nat1onal League
scored on Galloway's hit
~ Y at Pttlsbgh ppd , rarn
The Vikmgs had tbe hases
Fran
500 000 101- 7 JS 0
loaded with just one out m the SfSanLouis
000 100 010~ 2 9 1
Hal rckt , Lavel le (8 ) and Htll
stxth, however, first baseman
, U r rea (1) Carroll
Jim Westfall made a runrung Rasmussen
(6), Metzger (8) and Srmmons
catch of a bunt attempt then WP - Halrckr (3 -4) LP - Ras
fired to tbtrd to get the runner mussen (2 6)
who was moving on a squeeze ( 11 mmngs)
Atra
012 100 010 01 - 6 15 1
play
SD
010 200 200 00- 5 9 0
Claude Cornehus, JUruor
N tekro Campbell (7 ). Camp
th1rd baseman, then wrapped (8), Capra (10) and Pocoroba
iffin , Wehrmerster (4), Spil l
up game scormg wtlh a long Gr
ner (8), F tngers (9) Tomlin
blast to leltfJeld. Baird, m (10) and Da vrs WP- Capra ( 1
LP -Tom~ tn (0 2)
HRSgomg the dlstance, fanned 10 4)
Atlant a Matthews (5) , san
and ISsued two free passes Otego, l vle {3)
loser,
Galloway,
the
League
struckout five and walked Oaklnd Amencan
030 000 OQO--.. 3 8 o
Toronto
000 000 000- 0 6 0
two
langford (4 3) and E Wtl
Kyger Creek will meet l1ams
Vuckovlch (2 4) and
Fatrbanks of Umnn County at Ashby HR- Oak land, Arm as
2p.m. Fnday at Grove Ctty m (2 )
the Class A Regwnals.
(10 mnmgs)
M1IW
() 10 001 300 G- 5 12 1
Unescore;
BaJt
()OIJ 202 010 1- 6 a 0
Sm Val.
000 100 0--1 4"4
Slaton. McClure (10) and
K Creek
110 001 x-1 4 4 Moore Flanagan. M 11ier 17l
Dempsey WP- Md ler {2
Galloway (L) and Clary ; 1)and LPSiaton (2 5)
HR s Baird (W) and Baylor.
Ball lmore, Murray (7) , Kelly
t1matea, maintamed thetr
haHgame lead over the Red
Sox Mmday mght when tlley
defeated llle Milwaukee Brewers, 6-8, m 10 umings. The
Yankees, who have lost SIX of
their last nine games ,
dropped a 4-3 deci.&amp;Jon to the
Red Sox.
Pot Kelly, who tied the
game at 5-S with a solo homer
m the e1ghth ummg, walked
wtth the bases filled and none
out m the lOth, forcmg m the
wmrung ron for the Orioles.
Dyar Miller, who pttched
the last 3 2-3 umrngs, received
credit for hts second vtclory
while Slaton was tagged wtth
his ftfth defeat Murray also
homered for the Orioles while
Sal Bando and Sixto Lezcano

Bobcats finish

Moose set dates
for tournament

Conservation is water policy key

Funeral Home on Wednesday

News •• in Briefs

(

II

drought - that people can
when they try - live wtth
considerably less water than
they are accustomed to."
He sa1d Prestdent Carter's
"hit list" of water projects
recomm e nded
for
ehmmalton showed a
'• renewed awareness and
senstttvtly toward water
WILLIE E KAYLOR
resources and a commitment
LETART,.W Va - Wtllte
to examine each water
E (Pop) Kayl or . 86 of
resource and to seek 1ts
Letart, Rt 1. Died Monday at
resolution "
the Holzer Med tcal Center
Born February 12, 1B9l, In
uwe have learned another
Andrus called for adoption
Letprt , he was the son of the unportant lesson from thts
or
water conservation as an
late John and Franc1s Gnmm
11
0bjective"
and for emphasiS
Kaylor
on
plans
to
achteve
economtc
He was a coal mmer and
SPEAKER NOTED
farme r, and preceded 1n
and conservatton goal~
Special services will be through
dealh by hiS wofe. Addte
nonstructural
Johnson Kaylor 1n 1952 and a
held Wednesday night at the means.
son, Edwm P Kaylor
Mtddleport Untied PenIn addtton, Andrus called
Su rovtvors Inc lude three
tecostal
Church when the for shelvmg water projects
daughters ,
Mrs
Veda
guest speaker wtll be the Rev authorized for more than
Ptckens , Letart, Mr s Lorena
Blake, West Columboa, Mrs Paul H Cook, former pastor etght years but not yet
Mary Clark, Columbus, two of the Groveport (Ohto 1
funded.
sons. Thomas and William
Andrus srud states and
Kaylor. bolh of Letarl. a Apostohc Church Center
sister, Miss Florence Kaylor , Rev Cook will go soon to ftll
other non-federal entlltes
New Haven
nme gr and
his new ' position of Foretgn should pay more of a share m
children, four step grand
Missionary Supervtsor over the fmanclng of water
c h1ldren , f1ve step greatthe
European
and projects. He also urged states
grandchildren, and 14 great
Mediterranean
countnes
grandchildren
to reform laws, regulattons
Funeral services will be The publtc ts mvtted.
and
practices brmgmg water
held at
the
Foglesong
al

•

WAUKESHA, Wi.&amp; (UPI ) - "Part-tune male wanted.
Apply at the courtesy counter "
The SJgn appeared in a shopptng centa- and wu
ooti'-"'d by Erna Magnusson, 32, a SwedlBII woman who Ia
taking some courses at the University ol Wisconsin·
Waukesha
She has been named the wutner of the school's
''Mangled Language Contest"- a contest de518ned to call
attention to 11.Sick and sinful sentences.'' "disastr«uu
diction" and "wrmkled reasoning."
Fred Moss, an aSSIICiate professor, supervised llle
contest He said many of the entrtes came from students'
term papers
Some examples :
"He bas a sparse head ol gray hair "
''Trees hung heavy With foamy white snow that no one
had walked on."
"Pornography Is like peekmg mto someone else's
private affali'S~
"Two for five cents each."
"It is rare you will fmd an un)X"etentlous person In
your grasp."
"The Marlboro ad shows a rugged man riding a horse
With a ctgarette hangmg out of hiS mouth."

fall mto the hands of "despots
like ldi Amin . and others
like htrn

Where is heralded Yank romp ?

Contest in mangled language

Baseball summary

4469800

m
m

'

Oak land 3, Toro nto 0
Balttmore 6, Milwaukee 5
Boston A, New York 3
Today' s Probable Pitchers
(All Times EDT)
Milwaukee (Augustine 54 ) a t
Balt tmore {Palmer s 3) , 7 30

pm

Seaftle {Pagan 1 lJ at Cleve
land (Dobson 0 4), 7 30 p m
Boston (Ttant 2 3) at New

Cook uP.
a new kitchen
at City Loan.
When you need money for a new kttchen, other home Improvements,
or for any good reason, call us. We'll handle your loan qmckly and wi th
conmcleration. Amounts up to $15,000 avmlable.
We find ways to help.

CITY LOAN

COMPANY

York (Gullelt 3 2), 8 p m
Callforn1a (Ryan 6 4) at
Oet,.otf (Ht ller 1 4) , 8 p m
Wednesday' s Games
Chtcago at Milwa ukee, n1ght
Calltorn1a at Detrott, ntght
Seattle at Cleveland, ntght

Oakland at Toron to, n1ght
Kan C1ty at Bait, 2 twl night
Texas at New York , 2, twl nig ht
Minn at Boston , 2, tw1 n1ght

125 E. Mam Street 992-2171
•

.,

�4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, May 24, 1977

••

...

PRICES GOOD THROUGH

ALL-STATE CHOIR SENIORS - Carla McFarland,
sitting left,and Carrie Hatcher, right, were recognized
·saturday evening al the annual hand banquet at Wahama
High School. The two senior girls were membel'!l of the
AU..State Choir this past year. Shown standing with the
girls is David Waybright.

SATURDAY, MAY 28, 1977
We Accept Federal Food Stamps

NO DEALERS
PLEASE I
Open Mon. thru Saturday
9:00 A.M. to 9 P.M.
Open Sundays 9 A.M. to 6 P.M.
QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED

THE "EAGLE"

.

..... ---

- ~--

,,

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

•.

~ Hush
by

.

_:t. . . J•u))t '""" . .

EASTERN IDGH SCHOOL BASEBALL VARSITY Front row,l-r, Ebby Crow, Leonard Myers, Rusty Wigal,
Mark Norton, Brian Bissell, Joe Boyles, Jeff Kimes, Greg
Ginther, Mark Gillilan and Jeff Goebel; second row,
Larry Heines, coach, John Evans, "Keith Wolfe, steve

NGCOMFORT

HUSH PUPPIES GOlf SHOES
BUDGET PRICED

. SENIOR BAND STUDENTS - Senior band students were honored at the annual Wahama High Schpol band ban uet on
Sa turday evenmg.Shown, front row, left to right, are Debra Allensworth, Judy Needs, Cheryl Adams, and John Fioendt
- ~:~b~~;;t~eft to nght, are Charles Yeago, Terri Proffitt, Carolyn Rickard, Bob Jarrell, Linda Test, Lora Smith, and David

Hospital News

THE SHOE BOX

Jill Taylor, Tom Haymaker,
John VanMeter, and Tim
Kelly.
Recipients of pep band
patches were Keith Gold·
sherry, Debbie Starr, Randy
Lavender, Stephanie Estes
Chris Richardson, Audre;
Fields,
Terri Johnson ' David
.
.~
Rose and Debbie Alleruiworth.
!

A clock was presented to
George
and
Bonnie
McFarland, outgoing band
booster presidents. Russ
Capehart, a long-time bus
driver lor the band was also
presented wifh a clock.
Carolyn Rickard, band
president, presented Yeago
and Waybright with red and
white chairs, with their names
imprinted on the back, in
behalf of the band members.

.

.' , rII
.I

'
~I

.

•.

c
/

/"

·~

._,/,.,

)

RECEIVES-ARION AWARD -, Robert "Bob" Jarrell was the recipient of the coveted
Arion Award at the annual band banquet at Waluima High School on Saturday evening. To
qualifyfor this award, a band member musfhave been a member of the Ali..State Band, Solo
and Ens.emble and be a first chair player. Shown, left to right, are Charles Yeago Jarrell
and David Waybright.
'
'

Alunmi Chapter
Plans Banquet .

.'

.WHS Band Banquet

Jarrell Wins
Arion Award
Robert "Bob" Jarrell, son of Mr. and Mrs. James Jarrell,
Mason, was the recipient of the coveted Arion AWard on
Saturday evening at the annual band banquet at Wahama
High School.
·
This award is given to an outstanding member of the
band. To qualify a member must have been a member of the
All-state Band, Solo and Ensemble, and be a first chair
player.

Jarrell has participated in
solo and ensemble, has been a
, member of the senior band for
live years, All-8tate Band lor
four . years, pep band, stage
band, alorig w1fh being first
• chair bass player. It was also
•• noted that he was a great asset
to the band boosters, helping
with all types of projects.
Dick Tennant New Haven,
served as the guest speaker at
the affair. He spoke of the
accomplishments of the band
and told many fictional stories
with band members as the
· characters.
Charles Yeago and David

~

J~_....,_....,_..

I

Waybright, directors, made
several award presentations
to band members.
John Froendt was awarded
the drum major award.
Those receiving All..State
Band patches were Bob
Jarrell, four years; Cheryl
Adams, three years; John
Froendt, three years; Donna
Marr, three years; Mary
McFarland two years; Lisa
Gilland, two years; Carolyn
Rickard, two years; Judy
Needs, one year; Linda Test,
one year; and Keith Gold-

_ _._._...._._._._._ ......._..__,_..)

S1mple facts everyone who
owns a home, car or business should know

l

surance policies to protect.
homes.
cars
and
businesses, and it Isn't
practical for you to check
. each and every one .
That's why it 's a good
idea to con Sult ar- in de~Jendent
insurance
agent . An inde!Jendent
agent does not .work; for an
insurance company . He
works for you. Which
means he can plan the
cove rage thai protec.t s you
best. And then place it with
the mosl suitable of the
several insurance com panles he deals with .
Many peo ple milke the
) cos tty mistake of auuming
that insurance polic ies are
all the same. The truth is
th
r N t IV d
ey are no · 0 on
oes
the Quality of coverage
vary from policy to policy,
but the cost often varies
too.
Remember that price is
not the only bil$iS for

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and
claims
payment is critical.
Anel il vou ttave a claim,
your independent agent is
in a position to supJ)ort you .
To be on y·our side in
helping you obtain a just,
equitable
settlement
Promptly,
Because I'll~ is a self emp loyed local business
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independent agent
knows his ·re s pon si bility is
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hi s customers In three key
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1: He provides the best
insurance coverage at the
lowest true cost to you.
2. He is available day and
night to respond to your
needs .
·
J. He handles all tyJ)es of
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and
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through strong, reliable
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To make sure you have
an Independent insurance
agent on your side, loek for
this s ymbol or consult your
Ye,low Pages, It tte un•t
h 1
e P vou,
nobody can .

Reuter-Brogan Insurance Service

Stage band patches were
~ given to Keith Goldsberry,
Delton Huffman, Kenny Bond,
) Bill Wolle, Mark Thompson,
Heidi Huber, Debbie starr,
Judy
Needs,
Mary.
McFarland, and Melanie
S!"sson.

I

992-S llO

'

Pomeroy

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Reg.139ss

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Lighted S/RF meter and dial RF
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SAVE 20°/o
CAR RADIO CB CONVERTER
Hear 40 ch. of C B
thru your car AM
radio and save! No
to buy.

Those presented with band
Jletters were Peggy Douthit,
ackie Ridge~ay, Debbie
Starr, Jerry Oldaker, Kenny
B d M k Th
H
on, ar
ompson, eidi
Huber, Edie Shepherd,
Brenda Gray, Kim Vickers

!

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JEWELRY STORE

'\..

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Reg. 24 95

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Pomeroy , Ohio

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May 23 thru
May 29th

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Pomeroy

RADIO. SHACK'S 19n PRICES ARE ON AVERAGE WITHIN 1"4 OF OUR LOW 1975 PRICES

Mike Willis
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M::;'y

BY MINDY KEARNS ·

•

The Mason County Chapter
sberry, one year.
Receiving medals lor solos of the Marshall University
presented in the solo and Alumni will hold its annual
ensemble competition were banqud on Saturday, June 4,
Debbie Starr John Froendt · be~mmng at 6 p.m. at the
.
Terri Johnso~ Karen Brown' Pomt Pleasant Inn.
Lisa Davis Cheryl Ada ' Dr. Robert Hayes, president
and Lind~ Test.
of Marshall University; will be
McFarland was awarded a· the guest speaker. The cost ts
special silver medal for rating $6. 50 per P person.
superior on solos for three _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
consecutive years.
ThOlle awarded medals for
ensembles in solo and ensemble competition included,.-- ·,..•· • " -·'
the flute duet, Terri Johnson ·
and Karen ~rown; brass
ensemble, Ke•th Goldsberry,
.
Kathy Test, David Rose, Lisa
IS
Reynolds, Carolyn Rickard,
Sarah Zuspan, John Froendt,
Pam Roush, Melanie Sisson,
Brent Hart and Bob Jarrell;
clarinet quintet, LiSa Gilland,
Judy Needs, Edle Shepherd,
Lora Smifh and Donna Marr;
and flute quartet, Jennie
James, Rhonda Kay, Teresa
Jones and Debbie McKnight.
Senior members of the AllState band were given
trophies. These included Bob
Jarrell, Cheryl Adams, John
Froendt, Carolyn Rickard,
T~rri Proffitt, Judy Needs and
Linda Test. Seniors were also
given band pins.
, .Julie Ciark was recognized
as being an all-area band
member.

7:30p.m. and Sunday
10 a.m. and6 p.m.

)

Silver Bridge Plaza

ca .. ~••

• 0'1 • , ,.,, •no oval• ••"
01 OO I&gt;IQ \MO I O ji! OLit&lt;
•O&lt;J• •.,. '"'' 10(; ~

..

"' •Ouo ~• ·'- ~•a. oor

TANDY CORPO"ATION COMPANY
PR!CES MAY VARY Al INOI\IIOUAL !:.lOAf S

T

i

Trussell, Bruce Riffle, Mark Hawk, Dan Spencer, Steve
Uttle, Dave Carpenter, Joe Kuhn, Kevin Buckley, and
coach Wilson. Although Eastern only won two games they
advanced to the sectional finals but were knocked out by
Federal Hocking in a close contest. Photo by Bill Francis.

)

HOLZER MEDICAL
CENTER
Discharges, May 20
Donnie Adkins, Kathy
Adkins, Betty Baisden, Willis
Bentley, ·Jr ., Vernie Blake,
Warren Campbell, Allie
Carman, Helen Dempsey,
Goldie Durham, Robert
Elias, Betty Friend, Claude
Fuhon, Kelli Gray, Samuel ·
Hollback, Sr., Mrs. Donald
King and daughter, Pamela
Linton, Mollie Litteral,
Lawrence Martt, Robert
Mayes, Sr., Gladys McGhee,
Andrew McKee, Gloria
McQuaid, Stacy Pelfrey,
Martha Phillips, Clarence
Schurman, Mrs . James
Sheets and son, Judith Slone,
Raymond Smith, . Mary
Sparks, Goldie Terry, Laura
White, Moneta Woodruff,
Mrs. Richard Young and son.
Births, May 20
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Lewis,
daughter, Middieport; Mr.
and Mrs. Ralph White, son,
Wilkesville; Mr. and Mrs .
Terry Cremeens, son,
Gallipolis ; Mr. and Mrs.
Jeffrey Darst, son, Mid·
dleport; Mr. and Mrs. David
Shotts, son. Wellston; Mr.
and Mrs. Harold Yates, son,
Jackson.
Discharges, May 21
Herman Borland, Mrs .
Dwig!lt Bowling and son,
Nancy Dahse, Larry Dailey,
Amy Elkins, ROlla Griffiths,
Estella lliyman, William
Isaac, Ralph Jeffers, Rex
Jolly, Kathie Lanier, Allee
Lathey, Allison Lee, Kevin
Lockhart, Troy Martin, Joyce
MiUer, Martha Moore, Mrs.
James Neal and son, Janet
Northup, Terri Queen, Alice
Rose, Elsie Shaffer, Shirley
Shaffer, Frances Skidmore,
Wilbur Sorrell, Mrs. Larry
Speakman and son, Ruby
Spurlock, John Thompwn,
Martina Van Maire, Phyllis
Vanlnwagen, Berdie White,
Tammy Wright, . Ivan Zaddack. ·
·Births, May 21
Mr. and Mrs . Gerald
Taylor, daughter, Gallipolis ;
Mr. and Mrs . Michael
Tackett, daughter, Ewington.
Discharges; May 22
Rejeana Atchison,
Clarence Barcus, Brenda
Dickens, Larry Duncan, Mrs.
Basil Greene and son, Mrs.
Paul Hai.Slop and daughter,
Timothy Hammack, Timothy
Harvey, Roy Hayes, Earl
!son, Mrs. Robert LewiS and
daughter, John Massey ,
· Jonathan Pin will, Betty
Spriggs, Mrs. Douglas Terry
and daughter.
Births, May 2%
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Meier;
daughter, Middleport; Mr.
and Mrs. Paul Wilbur, son,
Wellston; Mr . and Mrs.
Julius McGhee, daughter ,
Langsville; Mr. and Mrs.
Larry .J!ond, daughter, Oak
HiU; Mr. and Mrs. Calvin
Pierson, son, Leon, W. Va.

......

CHICKEN LEGS
&amp; THIGHS LB.
QU

••

DELICIOUS LEAN SLICED

DUTCH
LOAF

BOILED
HAM

sOUTHERN BASEBALL RESERVE SQUAD- First row, 1-r, Jonn Pape, Mike Nance,

LB.

99~

SUPERIOR BONESLESS
FULlY COOKED

$1·1 ·
$179 TAVERN
HAMs WHOLE LB.
9

LB.

MISTER BEE

COCA-COLA

POTATO CHIPS

Low cost ~inancing
offered home owners
Columbia Gas of Ohio today perfonn satisfactory work. sulation. These customers
" This is the latest in a are literally spending good
announced it will offer a new,
series
of conservation money with no benefits. It
low cost financing plan to
programs
initiated
by would certainly make sense
encourage its customers to
Columbia
since
1972,"
Koebel
to invest these wasted dollars
insulate their homes.
In outlining what he termed said . "Sin~~hat time in ceiling insulation which
a udollars and sense" ap- residential gas users.in Ohio will in the long run pay lor
proach to conservation, J. M. have receuved . their ·caJ.l: itself many times over. The
Koebel , manager-lor the gas SUIIlptlon 15.3 ,per cent amount of insulation and the
company in the Gallla&gt;Meigs through conservation thereby savings to be realized would
area, said the new celllng making more gas available to of .course be different when
comparing one residence to
insulation financing program industrial users."
uA recent cust~mer survey another."
will be available to customers
The
manager
said
as soon as necessary conducted by Columbia indicates
that
one
out
of
eight
of
Columbia
would
anajyze
the
regulatory approvals are
our
customers
have
little
or
1'f"ogram
acceptance
of
this
secured.
Ceiling insulalion was no ceiling insulation and of before de!']rling if financing
chosen
for
financing the remaining, three out of should be extended to include
assistance at this time four have insufficient in- other conservation activities.
because it offers the biggest
fuel savings at the least cost
to the homeowner. It helps
accomplish the double objective of conserving energy
TIY Our Delicious StraViberry
and holding down heating
Shortcake, w~h or without
bills.
Koebel said Columbia Gas
Whipped Cream.
of Ohio customers with a good
credit rating who own
residential properties may
use the plan to install ceiling
insulation or to increase the
amount of existing ceiling
insulation in their properties.
The plan will be available lor
both "do-it-yourself" or
j'contractor~installed" . sales.
Columbia's financing plan
provides lor a 10 per cent
down payment ilnd a
HRS., 10,00 A.M.Iil11 :00 P.M. Sun .. !hurs. ·10 ,00 A.M.
rna. x!IJ)l!111 ..,r three years to
til 12 : 00 PM Friday and Saturdav
pay ·llut if full payment is
See Us At -, ne Pomeroy Bend Bridge
made within 90 days tliere is
no finance charge.
Koebel said the insulation
financing concept has been
under study for several
months and emphasized it is
designed not to earn a profit
lor the company.
''Our objective is to make it
to the FIRST person fur easier for our customers to
nishing information
leading to the discovery of
have their homes insulated.
a 1970 Chevrolet Impala, 4In addition to offering low
door, white body "(j,lh black
cost financing, Columbia will
vinyl roof and Interior .
provide customers with lists
BLUE HOOD AND RIGHT
of contractors who will
FRONT FENDER lear

VALUES

TASTY SLICED

Jonath~n Rees, Seth Hill and Jun Powell; second row, John West, Dwight Hill, Jim O'Brien
Tim Brmager and Jack Duffy. Photo by Bill Francis.
'

PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGES .:.... Mrs.
Cecil Sines, Point Pleasant;
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,
- CLoTHING OFFERED
Poini Pleasant; .Mrs. Richard
Toliver, Galllpolis Ferry ;
Free clothing day will be
Mrs. Frank E . Carpenter, held at the Salvation Army,
Vinton; Mrs. Stephen Martin 11~ Butterm!LAve., Pomeroy,
and daug)lter, Gallipolis Thursday, May 26, from 10
Ferry ; Dwayne Ohlinger, .!!-"':· until noon . All area
West Columbia ; Eunice residents in need of clothing
Hesson, Point Pleasant; Mrs. are welcome.
William Greer and son,
Mason ; Roger Rymer, Leon;
Mrs. George Swartz and wn, Stout, Middleport ; George R.
Point Pleasant; Lottie Wamsley, Southside; Worthy
Barnett, Leon; Steven Col- Leach, Jr. , Point · Pleasant;
fey, Middleport; Lowell Mrs. Homer Blessing, West
Cook, Point Pleasant; Mrs·. Columbia; Mrs. Harold
Bright,
Point
Wadear Thabet; Point Aaron
Pleasant; Mrs. Jack Lively, Pleasant; Mrs. Orin Hannah,
Letart; Clara Moore, New Point Pleasant; James
Haven; Vanderbut Je_nkins, Leonard, Columbus; Harold
Glenwood; Mrs. W1lllam Clark, Point Pleasant: Mrs.
Flora, daughter, Apple Theodore Melrose , Point
Grove; Mrs. Thomas Fowler, Pleasant and George Warns·
son, MiddlePOrt: Mrs. Eva ley, McDermitt, Ohio.

\

..

32 oz.
BOTilES

BIG 11 OZ. BAG

ALL FLAVORS

CASTLEBERRY

HI-C DRINKS
46

2

oz.

CANS

HOT DOG CHILl
10

4

89~

.,

oz.

CANS

~
ADOLPH'S

DAIRY VALlEY

$1000.00 REWARD

was in acciderlt and parts
replaced - may have been
pain ted by now) , bent front
bumper , licen se plate
hangs on wires as plate
frame is bent. May have
Ohio X WS3S6, Ohio X F&gt; 488,

North Carolina AKA 899,
Michigan
HRV
356 ,
Montana 2 T tS927 , Con"
neclicul TU 7791 plales.
Car belongs to BLAKE
ALLEN WHITE , a student
BLAKE ALLEN WHITE
S.S. No. 284-46-3431

who disappeared unde r
mysterious circumstances
on December 10, 1976 from
Ohio University, Athens,
Ohio,

HUNTERS and HIKERS: Please search all
quarries. ponds, rivers and streams which
are deep enough to conceal a car, in any
area where a car could have been driven or
pushed into said waters.
PLEASE
TELEPHONE COLLECT to 419-668-8467,
Norwalk, Ohio, or contact the Huron Count:J

--

L--S~h~e~r~if~f~a~t-~N~o~rw~a~lk~-------------

COUPON

I

COUPON , ·
MAXWELL HOUSE

COUNTRY TIME

I

I
I
I

L
I
I

I
I

LEMONADE
33 OZ. CAN

•1

49

COFFEE

NO. 155

POUND CAN

---------

Coupon Expires May 28, 1917
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

COUPON

COUPON

POST SUPER

OPEN PIT

oz. BOX

79~

I
NO. 155

Coupon Expires May 28, l977

TWIN CITY GATEWAY

COUPON

I '
I

I

MARZETTI'S

SLAw DRESSING
16

oz. JAR

89C

I

1·-----I
I
I

Coupon Expires May 28 , 1977

TWIN CITY GATEWAY

I

----1I

Coupon Expires May 28 , 1977

TWIN CITY GATEWAY

BRA WNEY

PAPER TOWELS
JUMBO ROLL
49~

I.

------~
.
I"

KEEBLER

Coupon Expires May , 28. 1977

TWIN ClTY GATEWAY

I

'

I

ICE .CREAM CUPS
12 CT. BOX
29C NO. 105 I

I

Coupon Expires May 28, 1971

.

TWIN CITY GATEWAY

. BURGER BITS
DOG FOOD .

I
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I.

25 LB. BAG

~--------------!

II

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COUPON

COUPON -----~----I
COTTPON

I
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II

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11

BARBECUE SAUCE
I
. 18 oz. BTL 39C NO. 1051

+
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II

NO. 305

Coupon Expires May28, 1917
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

SUGAR CRISP
18

•3

29

•3"

Coupon Expires May 28. 1917

I

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I
1
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--------------·
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

�•I

0

6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, May 24, 1977

'

Mrs. Webb gives
friendship program

'•.

Diddle, " An AdvertiSement"
by Mrs. Simpson, "Jiow Can
One Measure Friendship" by
Mrs. Barnitz, and "The
Humanist" by Mrs. Bert
Grimm.
Devotions by Mrs. Barnitz
opened the meeting. She read
lrom the !21st Psaim and talked on "Lile and the Weaver."
Mrs. Circle condu~ted. the
business meeting durin g
which time fund rai~ing projects were discussed. Inspection was announced for June
9. Plans were made for a pi~­
nic at the Shriner 's Park on
July 14.
BOOSTERS TO MEET
The traveling prize brought
Southern Band Boosters by Mrs. Barnltz was won by
will meet this evening at 7:30 Mrs. CWorus Grimm.
in the home economla room
Refreshments were served
at the high IChool. Pla!IB for by the hostess assisted by
money maklnl! projects will Mrs. Grimm.
be discussed.

RACINE - A program on
friendship was presented by
Mrs. Cora Webb at a meeting
of the Past QUipers Club ol
Racine Chapter, Order of the
Eastern Star, at the home of
Mrs. Grella Simpson.
Readings Included "What
is Friendship" by Mrs. Webb,
" The Golden Mean" by Mrs.
Laura Circle, "Forget and
Remember" by Mrs. Bernice
Carpenter, "A Resolution"
by Mrs. Ullian Weese, "In
the Garden" by Mrs. Opal

•
'

MR. AND MRS. RUSSELL LITTLE of Ruiland will
observe their 45th wedding anniversary with an open
house from I to 5 p.m. Sunday at their home. The
observance is hosted by their children, Mrs . Marie Birchfield, Mrs . Sandra Harris and Russell E. Uttle. Frlerxls
and relatives are Invited to ci!ll dll!'lng the open house
houts.

POLLY.$ POINTERS
Polly Cramer

Sparks fly over static
DEAR POLLY - Can
anything be done to control
static electricity? Every
time I touch an electric
switch, metal or another person the sparks fly. Our new
fully carpeted, all electric
home bas a fireplace and I
wonder if any of these things
could cause our problem.
I love the column and keep
the Pointers in a loose leaf
binder divided according to
rooms in the house. I find this
a time saver. - LAURA.
D_EAR LAURA - Cubbing
two different materials
together will cause a friction
that makes static electricity
such as walking across a
carpet will do. This is .not
dangerous and often varies
according to atmospheric
conditions. try putting more
moisture in the air. This can
be done by placing containers

sun.
I put a man's old sock over
my hand and use it as a dust
rag. This makes it easy to do
chair rounds, legs and so on
with no dust flapping around.
When refinishing an old
piece of furniture that .has
been varnished, I remove the
old varnish with a strong
solution of very hot water and
regular ammonia. If doing a
chair, I stand one leg at a
time in a pail of this, quickly
rinse with clear · water and
dry. I do not find this hurts
the wood.- MilS. S.J.P.
Polly wi.ll send you one of
her signed ·. thank-you
newspaper-clippers if she
uses your favorite Pointer,
Peeve or Problem in her column . Write POLLY'S
POINTERS in care of this
newspaper . .

of water on radiators or

Recognition
planned for
graduates

.

MEETING SET
A Black Lung meeting will SONGFESTSET
be held June 5 a\'1:30 p.m. at
A. songlest will be held at
Forest Acres Park, New Kings Chapel Church
Unoa Road, near Rutland. •Saturday at 7:30p.m. Special
There will be a guest speaker singers will Include the Care
in the afternoon. Those at- Gospel Singers from Ravenstending should take a covered wood, W. Va.; Ted Collins,
dlah for a lunch following the Crum, W. Va . and · The
meeting. All Interested Shaffer F amlly, Crown City.
per10ns Invited and those Pastor Ernest Baker Invites
needing tra!IBportatlon call the public.
1192-2392.

Shower entertains Ruth Powers
Mrs. Ruth Powers entertaine-d re-cently w1th a IHyette
shower honoring Mrs. Larry
Wells.
Games were played with
prizes going to Susan Lanning and Lennie Haptonstall.
Kate Bachner won the door
prize.
Gifts were placed in a
bassinet decorated in pink
and blue, and to carry out the
baby theme, storks were used around lhe room. Cake
with pink bootie replicas,
bootie nut cups, punch and
coffee were served.
Others attending were
Dorothy Van Kannel, Audra
Well. Donna Morris and Bonni e, Peggy Kerns and .Jnyce.

Bea Robson, June Eichinger,
Adelle Cullums, Juanita
Bachtel, Carol Tannehill,
Margaret Butcher, J011nne
Williams, Evelyn Lanning,
Martha Mayer, Pam Powers
and Grace Pratt.
Sending gifts were Sue
Stone, Lucy White, Ruth
Anderson, Lucille Leifheit,
Margaret Edwards, Virginia
Scott, Pandora Collins, Betty
Van Meter, Ullian Zerkle,
Frances Spencer, Marty
Gress, Helene Goeglein,
Velma Rue, June Freed,
Mary Pickens, Mildred Karr,
Carol Wolfe, Jean Werry,
Virginia Hindy and Pam Kelly.

AT lTS BEST

ner at noon, Mrs. Virginia
Whitlatch showed wall plaques which the members will
make at the June 16 meeting
to be held at the Davis home.
Benediction closed the
meeting.
Attending besides those
named were Mrs. Evelyn
Murray, Mrs . Kathryn
Werner, Mrs. Oleva Cotterill,
Mrs. Carolyn Searles, Amy
Searles, Suzanna Richmond
and Mrs. Virginia Whitlatch.

lHE INN PIJCE
WEDNESDAY NIGHT SPECIAL
Visit Our Salad Bar. Chicken
Parmesan, Mashed Potatoes and
Gravy, Vegetable. Hot Rolls, Coffee,
Tea or Milk:

Cash 'n

95 Plus tax

~embers gave the club
'creed, collect and prayer.
;- The Pomeroy National
ilank forum for women was
:Mnnounced and a letter about
:O..dering flower bulbs from
;Mary Lou Capps, regional
•&lt;liredor, was presented.
: Mrs. Pauline Atkins won
;the traveling prize and Mrs.
;Nicholson, the hostess gift.
;Mrs. Jolm Welsh displayed a
•seed pod from a palm tree.
I'Mrs. Virgil Atkins lillked on
IPH~~rving flowers and

i\....

'

Generation Rap

[[[j

f

By Helen and Sue Hottel

Never tht •·wain Sball Meet !
Dear Helen and Sue :
•~
I moved home recently after a terrible marriage of six
foliage from the book ''Mak- years. I'm not a child, and I'm oot a "round heels."
in~! Gilts lrom Outdoor
But my parents think I've lost all my morals because Mom
Materials" by Betty discovered my contraceptive pills while she was pultin~ mv
Creekmore. She said the time small son to bed. There was a biB co"!rontation !
to pick leaves for drying is
Now Mom gives me dirty looks every time I go on a date,
before the insects start on and Dad says If he sees my pills around, he'll throw me out of
them. Air drying was
house .
discussed by Mrs. Atkins the How
can I convince them I'm not a bed-hopper, and most
along with sand drying of my dates are "just friends ." (But I'm human.) - NOT
techniques. She said t11at UEASY"
some flowers change colors
In dryilll! and that light colors
N.E.:
are best: for air drying. DearHow
do you face parents who moralize, "Marriage or
Silicagel is used lor drying nothing !" no matter what the age? Unsuccessfully, for the
fragile flowers, she said or a
.
,
mixture of five pounds corn- mostAspart.
an adult, you have a right to say, "This is my life. I m
meal and a 25 ounce of borax not misusing it ." And say no more.
can be used. The time of cutBut as a daughter, living at home, accepting their
l.jng flowers to be dried· i's hospitality and baby care, you're still considered a child.
most important she sa1d.
You're beholden - they can call the tune.
Mrs. Atkins also discussed
Perhaps you may convince &amp;em the pill doesn't mea.n
leaves which can be pressed you're "easy " but we won't offer much hope here. Smce thiS
between wax paper and iron- might he only one of many "bossing" conflictS, we'd suggest
ed with a warm iron .
you look for an apartment soon. -HELEN AND SUE
In the judging of flower ar+++
rangements on display, Mrs.
NOTE FROM RELEN : Moving in with the folks hardly
Waunetta Radekin got first, ever works after you've been out on your own. Parents only
and Mrs. Virginia Nelson, se- adjust to a daughter's "grown-up" status w~_en she is no longer
cond.
under their roof. (Most parents, that is .)
Refreshments were serv+++
ed.
Dear Rap:
I'm 16, a freslunan in ltigh school. Because of illness, I
have had home teachers since the fourth grade. I start school
at the first of each year, but always end up dropplnl! out before
Oxklber. Except this year.
Because I've stayed home so much, I'm shy and
withdrawn. It's oot that I'm ugly, it's just that! haven't been
around kids. Not long a boy asked me to go out with him and I
ran . He must have thought I was crazy .
AJI my life, Mom and Dad have watched o~er me. I never
go anywhere withoutlhem, even.to a gtrl fr1end s house.
.
If 1 want to walk downtoWn, they're afraid I'll get run over
Pauia )Cichii}!Oe•;-daughter·of or raped- even In the daytime. So I stay in my room rather
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Eicltinger. than have them carrying me everywhere. That wornes tbem .
Miss Eichinger was also It worries me too, because the more I stay home, the more
honored for being valedic- nervious I get when I do go out. -HELP, I'M DESPERATE
torian of the Meigs High
School graduating class.
Dear Des :
·
The
Rev.
Robert
It's terribly easy for parents of an ailing child to become
Bumgarner, pastor of the overprotective. They may have almost lost you several times,
Heath United Methodist and they stay afraid, even after you're strong enough - and
Church ,
and
Mrs . old enough-to reach out on your own. Perhaps your doctor
Bumgarner were guests for could pr!'Scribe a· little more freedom as part of your recovery
the service.
medicine. Talk to him abQut the problem.- HELEN
A luncheon was served in
+++
the church social room by the . Des :
women or the church with the
Talk to your girl friend too. She can help you overcome
Rev. Robert Hayden, pastor; shyness . And perhaps her mother might persuade your
giving grace.
parents to loosen up a bit. - SUE

If yo4're comparing plans, sit down
and talk with a Blue Cross and
Blue Shield representative. See
how your health care program
can be strengthened to better
meet your group's specific needs.
It will be worth the time.: . because

Past
matrons
of had charge of the meeting
readings on intercessory Evangeline Chapter, Order during which time a thankprayer. Devotions closed with of the Eastern Star, met Fri- you note was read from the
prayer by Mrs. Sue Douglas. day night at the home of Mrs. family of the late Lillian
· Steiff. Mrs. Glenna Crisp,
Mrs. V-ivian Humphrey • Dorothy Young.
president, conducted the
Mrs. Virginia Buchanan worthy matron, invited the
past matrons to inspection to
business meeting . Reports of
. the card and candle sales seventh graders. in the fall be held thi5ffleek. Mrs. Katie .
were given and the . women . urged to attend.
Anthony will .10111, the next
voted to reorder cards a·nd
OHIO Eta Phi Sorority meeting with Mrl t _..tah
candles . Nineteen shut-in picnic Tuesday, 6:30 p.m. at Hayes to have the devot.v.;o. ,
calls were made and a round roadside p'ark on U.S. Route
Games were played with
prizes going to Mrs. Marie
robin card was signed for a 33.
friend.
THURSDA •
Hawkins, Mrs . Grace
. A surprise birthday party
TWIN City Shrinettes French, Mrs. Mary Hughes
was held for Mrs. Marilyn Thursday, 7:30 p.m. at the and Mrs. Helen Reynolds.
Coulson. Mrs . Douglas home of Mrs. Gertrude Others attending were Mrs.
conducted a Bible quiz. She Mitchell.
Evelyn Lewis and Mrs.
was presented gifts and
FREE Clothing Day at Rosemary Lyons.
cards. The hostesses served a Salvation Army Thursday ,10
decorated birthday cake, a.m. until noon. All area
homemade Ice cream and residents in need of clothing
'
Punch to those named and are welcome. R B. t B~"
PRECEPTO
e
a
.Mr-s. p' atty Martl'n, Mrs.
sda 6""'
30
Alberta Edwards, Mrs. Dolly potluck picnic Thur Y• : ·
. 'Reed, Mrs. Lillian Pickens p.m. at Fi. Meigs, shelter
and guests, Rev. John house number two.
Douglas, Mrs. Virginia
DAY Camp Training SesWalton, Mrs. Marlene Put- sion for persons interested in
Takes the dampness out of
man, Beverly Wigal, Mr. and helping with the Meigs Counyour basement or other
Mrs. Randall Coulson, Joy ty Girl Scout day camp prohigh moisture areas for
only pennies a day in
and Kay. Mrs. Edwards grams. Session will be from
operating cost . Shuts off
received the door prize. Mrs. 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Thursday at
automa t ical ly.
Nell Wilson will have the· Kiashuta . Those battending
1 h
Hum idisteel controls. l5
June meeting.
are to take a nose ag unc .
Sandy Rodman will
pint capacity .
~~:,:.;~;~~~~"iii§.~ demonstrate the craft pro~=
·
·
00
Wpmen and Men's
i-,
Class, Middleport Church of
~Christ, I p.m. Thursday alter- -

ADMIRAL

A, picnic was planned for
July 9 at 6:30 p.m. at th e
Route 33 roadside park when
the Faithful Followers Class
of the Hemlock Grove Chris\ian Chw·ch met recently at
the home of Mr. and Mrs.
IDlberQuivey.
Sara Cullums presided at
the meeting with Mr. and
Mrs. Wallace Bradford giv·
Memhe rs ·were
ing devotions.
·
remindedtosaveand t urnm
bottle caps wltich can be
redeemed. A recent project
of the class was the purchase
of a communion set. Appointed to a conunittee to
secure inlormation on the
purchase of pa&lt;ls for the
noonat1hechurch.
.
MEIGS High School parent church pews were Wallace .
.
teacher forum, 7:30 Thursday
Bradford, Ann Lambert and
Eleanor Douglas.
TUESDAY
in the cafeteria. Purpose to
The class hosted a dinner
MEIGS COUNTY United promote
better
com·
th
·
Methodist
men
meeting
munications
between
school
recent1y honormg e semor
and home. All parents of
members of the church. Din- Tuesday, 7:30p.m. at Heath
ners were taken to Mr. and United Methodist Church, students coming into Meigs
Mrs. Albert Tyler, Lowell Middleport.
High School asked to attend ,
Carper, Mrs. Mina Hart, and
. ..,...,...,.,...,...,.,...,...,.,...,...,.,...,...,.,...,..... ,
Clara . Paulsen by sunday
MEIGS Junior High parentSchool teacher, Mrs. Mildred teacher forum, 7:30 this
Ziegler.
evening, school cafeteria;
Mrs. Phyllis Sltields, a election of officers and
guest at the Bradford home, questions and answer session ·
attended the meeting. The on upcoming tax levy
next meeting will be held. at renewal by Dwight Goins,
the home of Mr. and Mrs. central office administrator.
Dorsel Biggs with Leota All parents especially those
Smith to have devotions.
of children who will be

DEHUMIDIFIERS

~:.

\
\

comparing apples to oranges.
Another comparison you should
look at 1s the balance between
benefits and cost ... what you need
versus what you can afford. And,
it's especially important to' make
sure you and your employees are
adequately protected from gaps
in your coverage that could wipe
out a life's savings.

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

Blue Cross
Blue Shield
in Central Ohio

Socia I
caIendar

STORE HOURS
Mon .• Tues., Wed. &amp; Sat.- a: JU 111 s: oo
THURSDAY TIL 12 NOON

- ....

OFF

~

~

59 N. Second St.

gr~~YAL

MIDDLEPORT,

We Accept Federal Food Slam P5 - We Reserve the

Herman Grate

Mason, W.Va.

Quant.tias

~~~~~~.................~~. _gge
. S ............
12
WIENER
.59e

PICNIC HAMS

SUPERIORS All MEAT OR BEEF

59~

WHOLE
LB.

Ol

SUPERIORS

ALL MEAT
e
WIENERS. _............ ~:. 79

SLICED
LB.

69~

HOMEMADE

HAM
79e
SALAD.................... ~-.

6 PAK CANS

SPRITE,

$119

TAB,PIBB, or
MR.
FRESKA .••••••••••••••••
HIGHLAND MEADOW

4

BANQUET

PAPER JUMBO
TOWELS .••..~~!!..
NESTEA

FRIED

$}99
CHICKEN........ ~~.... .
MOM PLEASER

99~

EACH

DINNER ••••••••••••••••
RICH'S

.WHITE BREAD

.POTTED MEAT' OR
.VIENNA SAUSAGE

3

2 LR

BANQUET

$}49

LARGE 3 Ol
JAR
ADMOU .

CANS

5PAK

gge

'1 00
MISTER BEE

POTATO TWIN PAK
REG. 79'
CHIPS......... .. ... ..

BROUGHTON'S

2%

.

MILK .......... -;~~t ~i
BROUGHTON'S
HOMO
.
MILK......... -.. ----~.~~~~~ ....79e
49

BROUGHTON'S

BUTTER
MILK ...... _.. _._ ....~.~.~~~~ ... 59e

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

VALlEY BELL

89~

OMBERGLOW

CHARCOAL
5LB. BAG

$

1 09

CONTADINA

TOMATO SAUCE

TOMA~ 0PAST£~_ .. _.....4cANS $1

5 LB.

TMURSDAY ONLY
8-16

oz.

R.C. COLA
8-16 Ol BOffiES

BOTILES

DR. PEPPER

DIET RITE
COLA
8-16 OZ. BOffiES

$75 Year
$}()()Year

i.~~....~~o.~.E~N~IN~Gr+J~~E~l~st~. .-~~-'·

9¢
5

BANANAS

COnAGE CHEESE

YearlY Dues

FAMILY

Um~

FRESH &amp; LEAN

POOL MEMBERSHIPS

MASON FURNITURE

Marks Blue Cross A s~ation . *' Regiskred Service Marks of The National Association of Blue Shield Plans

To

GROUND . LB.
BEEF......... -~.~~:.~.~-~.~~~--· 6ge
FRESH &amp;LEAN
GROUND
e
CHUCK ...................... ~-~:. 89

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

SINGLE

Ri~l

o.

SUNDAY
10 ffi 10

FRESH &amp; LEAN

'129

FRIDAY UNTIL 8 PM

773-5592
·1

CORNER MILL &amp; SECOND ST.

POINT ·PLEASANT
··INN

MASON FURNITURE

%

OPEN DAILY
9 TO 10

at .church service

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

SUPER
MARKET

'•'•

·-•
:seniors recognized

REEDSV!Llli- The May
meeting of the Reedsville
United Methodist Women was
held at the home of Mrs.
J_,orraine Wigal with Mrs.
Mamie Bucl&lt;;ley, co-hosteS$.
The meeting opened with
members naming their
·
favorite hymn. Devotwns
were led by Mrs. Sandy
Cowdery. Several hymns
were sund followed • by

·~Re~istered

'

$2

.

COMBINATION BOXES AND POTS
VASES OF GLADS AND CARNAJIONS

20

DEXTER - New officers
were elected at a meeting of
the Star Garden Club at the
)tome of Mrs. Robert Jewell.
• Elected were Mrs. Robert
Holliday, president; Mrs.
';Henry Turner, first vice
J!resident; Mrs. James
;Nicholson, second vice president; and Mrs. Orion Nelson,
oaecretary and treasurer.
, Mrs. Goldie Epple was a
guest at tbe meeting. Devo1-ions by the hostess included
''Thoughts and Smlles" and

k

•

May meeting held Past matrons gather

MEMORIAL DAY FLOWERS

GERANIUMS

Star Garden Club
elects new officers

The Angelaires of Sugar
Grove ~nted the morning
worship sei'Wie at the
Pomeroy United •.ft!thodist
Church Sunday.
A feature of the service
was the recognition of seniors
and presentation of Bibles.
Recognized were Pam
Vaughan, daughter of Mrs.
Reva Vaughan and Frank
Vaugha~;
June Ann
Wamsley, daughter of Mr.
. and Mrs. James Wemsley ;
· Kim Sebo, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Jolm Sebo; Mary
Sue Durst, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Willard Durp; ....ref

heaters. - POLLY.
DEAR POLLY - Does
sl&lt;itic electricity get the best
of you? Try carrying a sheet
of that fabric softener that
. one puts in the dryer in your
pocket, or keep it handy when
removing your nylon coat
prior to hanging it in the
closet. Sparks used to come
out of the switch platlls when
Special recognition will be
I touched them' and scared given those graduates of
me near)¥ to death. Just rub Chester High School of more
such a sheet on your slacks or than 55 years ago at the
dress. This really works. alumni banq11et of the
MARIAN.
Chester Alumni Association
DEAR POLLY - My Pet to be held June 4 at the
Peeve is with those amateur elementary school.
photographers who stand so
The reunion classes this
far back ·that the picture year ate 1922, 192'1, 1932 1937,
shows lots and lots of 1942, 1947, 1952, and 1957. For
·background but a magnifying those who have not received
glass is needed to identify the invitations due to Incorrect
people in the picture. -MRS. address, but plan to attend
J.H.
the banquet, reservations are
DEAR POLLY - I have to be made with either Mn.
three nice sweaters that did Fred (Bertha) Smith, Rt. 3,
not have pockets that I really Pomeroy, 985-3360; or Mn. ·
need. I hit on the Idea of using Roger (Rosemary) Keller,
lining · material the color of 985-3949. · Ali reservat!OilS
the sweaters, cut it to pocket .must be made· hy June I.
size and neatly overcast a Each alumnus rna',. t,ake a
pocket to the underside of guest.
.
each sweater. This works
The dinner will be served
perfectly for carrying a han- at 6:30 p.m. Music for dancdk~rchief, tissues and other
ing from 9 to 12 midnight will
light things.- MRS. H. W.S.
be provided by the Country
DEAR POLLY - I have Bunch from Marietta.
found a good way to raise
· The officers are Mn.
dough in the summer when Smith, president; Howard
the bouse is cool and I do not Knight, vice president;
want to heat the Qllen any Blaine Milhoan, second vice
more than necessa~ , T put president; Roger Keller,
the covered bowl of dougb.ip third vice president;
the car with the window clos- Rosemary Keller, secretary;
ed and with it sitting In the Norma Hawthorne, assistant
secretary; and Jolm Reibel'
treasurer with Clarice Alien
as his assislilnt.
BACK HOME
Serying on the decorating
Mrs. Julia Grim is home conunittee are Dale Kautz,
from Tulsa, Okla. where she Bob Woods, Betty Dean, Don
has spent the winter.
Mora, and Maxine Goeglein.

BLOOMING MUMS

o • '• •

:i''His Image and Hands."

Hilda King hosts
meet on Thursday
Mrs. Hilda King entertained the Bradbury Variety Club
at her home Thursday.
Mrs. Bernice Winn presided at the meeting which opened with scripture and devotions. Mrs. Arline Davis read
the minutes of the May
meeting and had roll call.
There was a flower fund
report from Mrs. Evelyn
Murray. A picnic to be held at
Point Pleasant in August was
discussed.
Following the potluck din- ·

FAMI~Y DINING

1
7- Tbe Dallv SentiMI. Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 .. Tuesday •May 24•::.:•«-:•:•:0:•:-:•:•:&lt;:•J'
• ~:': ··-···.w·&gt;:'""··
·&gt;&gt;·ou&lt;&lt;&lt;·······'w.·.·.:,;,:·:·:·:·&gt;:·:·:·:·:·:-:·:·:·:::::::·&lt;::::::·:':·:·:·:·:·&gt;:::::
....-, ,•,•,y~..'.Yo'•
• ' • .-. -""'-' •'•._.• ..,.,A • • • • • • • •' '

••

•

�8 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Ptmeroy ,_0 , 'fuesday, May 24, 1977

I$Wurd!iv1 Undl;'r
t"'l~&lt;~r~r~e

~~~

100

1 tiM)
2dit):.
3 dil.~ ~

190

'"
'"

300

idit~S

Eo~u.: h ,. ~.,~rd u\.~r tl'll: Ulllumwn 15
.,.;vrdi IS 4 c~ ut.s per wu1d p.:r ili!.y.
Ads runnhlfi Ul.ht-t Uum l'OfllJt."(utwt'
dl:i)s ""'11 be l'lwr;{etl ttl thr l dit}

l'l:llt'

In 11~morr. C¥rtl Ql Thanks and
Olllttuu-y 6 tents pt&gt;r word, SJ 00
null unum C&lt;t~h 111 ad~&lt;~Jll'e

DURING THE 11lness ond deo1h of
W1lhom Houdashelt we thank
0\it
fnends , neighbors ond
rela tives who sen! cords . food
and flowers , the Ewing Chapel ,
Or Raymond Boice, Dr Telle
the nur1es
and stoft ot
Veterans Memor1ol Hos p1to l
Rev Harvey KCKh ond the
Pomeroy Amer.con legion
The W1lltom Houdos~lt Fom1ly

ll'l&gt;i! I"Vt:~

U1e r1gh'
to L'tillm I IJ)t'd etll) cu.b lil't:Hied ubJt't:liWJ.al Tl~ Publl.~ht:r Wlllllut bt!
rellpum;lble lur ruw t' U1&lt;111 une mt.mI t!ll UIM!I11UII

Phullt&lt;00'.!·2156

NOTICE
WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES
Muntlay
Noon on &amp;Hurtbt\

TUII!scfuy
thllJ r,ml~t)
IP M

the ilia) bi:f01 e publu:uuvn

Ft~tlity aftet11001l

UNlTED STATES

OISTR ICT COURT
SOUTHERN DISTRICT
OF OHIO
WESTERN DIVISION

AT CINCINNATI
Crvll Action No
(177232
IN THE MATTER OF THE

COM PLAINT
OF
TRI
S TATE
MATERIALS
CO RPORATION AS OWNER

OF THE

FOR

BARGE

NO . 114

EXONERATlON

FROM OR LIMITATION OF

LlABlllTY
TO THE

PRESIDENT

THE UNlTED STATES

OF

TO THE MARSHAL OF THE

UNITED STATES FOR THE

SOUTHERN DlSTRICT OF
OHIO ,
WESTERN
DIVISION ,

AT

ClNNATl

CIN

MONITION

GREETlNG

WHEREAS, a

Complaint

was filed In the Un 1led S tates
District
Court
tor
the
Southern D rstnc t of Ohro,
Western Div i sion , at Crn
• cJ nnat r, an the 26th dey of
April , 1977' , by Trr -State

Mater rats Corporatron, as

owner of the Barge No . 114,
tor exoneration from or
limitation of lrablllty, praying

tor exoneration from or
llmltatron of llab rllty con
cernlng ahy toss or damage
occasroned by or anslng out

of the a cciden t or casualt y set
forth m the aforesa•d Com
plaint tor the reasons and
ca uses m said Complamt
ment.oned, and praying that
a monition and l nlunctlon for
those reasons be •ss ued, and
that all persons cla1mlng for
any and all damage caused
by or resulting from the
accident or casu alty set forth
in sa•d Complaint be thereby
ci ted to appear and tile their
respective claims with the
Clerk of this Court and to
make due process thereon ,
and c:ltlng them to file their
Answers to tl'le Com plaint ,
and all the proceedmgs be i ng
had , tf !t should appear thllt
said p!&amp;lnfl ff Is not l11tble for
any loss or damage , 1t may be
so finlllly decreed by this
Court, and
WHEREAS. sa1d plaintiff
has f1led here an ad mter1m
stipulation for value w 1th a
SIJrety approved by this
Court, representing the value
of the pla1nt 11f'S 1nterest In
the aforementioned
Barge
No 114, plus pending freight,
•f any , the undertaking ot
whlch IS that the pla l nt 11f,
within tell (10) days after the
entry of an Order herein
appraising the value of the
plaintiff 's Interest In said
barge , plus pending fre i ght, If
any , Will pay the amount so
fixed Into this Court or w •ll
file In the court a stipulatiOn
for va l ue In the usual form
and w•th approved surety

YOU ARE , THEREFORE,

COMMANDED to cite all
persons In respect to wh ich
the pla intiff seeks l1m1taflon
to f 1le their respect•ve claims
with the Clerk of court and to
serve on or mall t o Gordon C
Greene cop•n thereof on or
before the 22nd day of June ,
and
crt.ng
such
1977 ,
ch!11mants t o appear and
answer the Complaint t)erein
on or before the lest nllmed
day or within such further
lime as the Court may grant ,
and what you have done In the
prem ises , do you then make
return to the Court together
w1th th1s wr•t
WITNE:SS, the Honorable
Timothy S Hogan , Judge of
the un ite d states District
court for
the Southern
O•s trict of Ohio. western
D •·•' slon. at Clnclnnllll, this
2t n day of April.

JOHN D. LYTER
CLERK
By K L Faulkner
Deputy Clerk.

LUCIAN Y RAY
1550
Union
Commerce
Build ing
Cleveland , Oh io 44115
ond

GORDON C GREENE
910 Athens Blink Bullding
Cinc i nnati , Ohio 45202
Trial Attorneys for
Trl State Mat4!rlals
porat ion

Cor.

(5) 10, 17, 24 , 31. 4tc

A thought for the day :
Elmer Davis, American
writer
and
radio
cunmentator and head of the

World War II Office of War
lnfonnatlan, lllid, ''1'h!J will
remaill the land of the free
only 10 long as It Is the home
of the brave,"

3290

Gain recognition and prestige through a career In

A position here will give you economic security. The
PIANO lESSONS , ch1ldrens and
(ldults
Mrs
Harvey
Von
Vronken , 992·2270
THE RACINE VOL F1re Dept will
ha\l'e a ch1cken barbecue on
Sunday . May 29 ot the f~re sta tion Startmgot 11 OOA M
ATTENTION Me1gs H1gh Semors .
Full color ptlotos 1n your cop
and gown g raduot1 on settmg,
Two 5 x 7 s m folders, $.4 50
payable when p1cfure taken
Ttle Photo Place 109 H1gh 51 ,
Pomeroy
For appomtment ,

consumer flnanc;e busin ess Is stea dy - even during
recessions .
You can w in promot i on rapidly You will be pa id a
good starting salary and receive exceptional employee

benefits

There are

Branch Repr:esentat ive positions open

now

for high school 9raduates. Must have auto
Phone Mr . Snodgrass today for a confidential,
personal Interview Call 992-2111

(304 )773 5721

CAPITAL FINANCE SERVICES
300 Wesl Second Slreet
Pomeroy, Ohio
AN EQUAL OPPOIHUN ITY E MPLOYER

992 5292
ANYBODY CAUGHT f1sf'lmg or
sw 1mm1ng
on
Tr1 - St ote
Molenols Corp property ot Ap - OLDER RESPONSIBLE lady to i1ve
ple Grove Ohio w1ll be proin and core for aged w idow 1n
secuhtd to the fullest extent of
Rutland , Oh1o Not 1nvohd nor
sen• lv L1ght housework and
the low
Supt Tri State Moten ols
cook mg
No laundry
Call
742 2076 for mtormo;.c':.:
'o.:.;
n:_
, ~-

CASH potd for oil makes and
models of mob1le homes
Phone area code 61-4· &lt;4 23·9531
TIMBER Pomeroy
ducls Top pnce
sawhmber Call
Kent Hanby, 1 446

Forest PrQfor slondmg
992-5&lt;165 or
8570

COINS, CURRENCY , tokens old
pocket watches and chQ ins
si lver and gold We need 1964
and older sliver co.ns. Buy . sell.
or trade ' Call Roger Wamsley ,

742 2331
CASH 11! for 1unk cars Frye s
Truck and Auto WRECKER SERVICE I Phone 742-2081

SOMEONE TO clean up cars ond
do body repo1r work Haro ld
Hysell, Rutland across from

LEGAL NOTICE
TO RONALD D THOMAS,
whose last known address Is
2012 Cleneay Avenue. Nor
wood , Ohio , and whose exact
address 1S unknown
TO Karen L Thomas ~ whose
last known address IS 2012
Cteneay Avenue , Norwood ,
Oh i o, and whose exact ad ·
dress is unknown
You are hereby not ified
tha t you have .been named
defendants in ., legal action
entitled
Athens
Coun ty
Sev•ngs &amp; Loan vs Ronald D
Thomes, et al This action has
been ass rgned No ~ 16,3 63 in
the common Pl eas Court
Meigs County, Ohio
The object ofthl s com pla1nt
I s to acquire tu dgment
agamst Ronald D Thomas
and Karen L Thomas In the
amount of $18, 382 18 plus
1nterest and costs, and for
foreclosure of mortgage on
the following described real
estate.
Sa1d real estate be1ng
situated I n ttJe Village of
Middleport, County of Meigs
and State of Ohio .
Being Lot 21 In sa1d Village
loc ated on second Street be tween Rutland and Walnut
St reets Also all the r1ght t1tte
and mterest 1n an.d to the six
Inch strip of land and the
party wl!lll therein off of the
north side of Lot 22, also m
said village of Middleport .
said strip of land ad ]olnmg
and being cont iguous to sa id
lot No 21
You are required to an
swer the complaint within 28
days after the last publication
of thiS notice , which w111 be
published once each week for
six consecutive weeks The
last pubtlcat•on will be made
on June 28 and the 28 days for
answer will start on that date
tn case of your failure to
answer or otherwise respond
u required by the Ohio Rules
of Ci v i l Procedure judgment
by default will be rendered
against
you
for
rel 1ef
demanded on this complamt

LARRY E SPENCER

WOMAN TO hve m and help core
for tnvohd lady Wr1te Box 274 ,
New Hoven , W Vo 25265
CHILD CARE needed for summer
for two boys . 8 and 11 yrs
langsville
ar e a
Phone
742·2090 after 6 p.m.

FOUND • ONE Mole bluet1ck
hound weonng collar No tog
1n Wolfe Pen oreo . Coil
992 7312 offerS 30
FOUND
FEMALE Norweg1on
Elkhound Coll985·4130 check
of John Bennett's, Mt Olive
Road, long Bottom.

Coll992-2156
YARD SALE between Chester ond
T P on Sumner Rood Tuesday
and Weds • May 24 , 25, 9.00 till
4 liv.ng room sude kitchen
table, Signature frost Free
Refrigerator antiques of oil
' kmds .ron gas. sepator stone
tors and 1ugs, al l k 1nds of
d•shes draperies, cloth1ng of
all k•nds . m1les down , fifth
troller on left on Sumner Rood
commg from 7 outs1de of
Chester
YARD SALE , 322 Grant St , ro1n
cancels Thursday 26. Fndoy
27th Women 's, cl'll fd ren 's and
be by clothing

LEGAL NOTlCE
TO · RONALD D THOMAS ,

3 FAMILY Yard Sale, Thursday,
Fr.doy. Soturdov . May 26. 27 ,
28 four mlles out at Raci ne off
Rt. 124, • m1les out County
Rood 35 Clothing, gas stove ,
m1sc. fuel 011 furnace 9 00 t1ll

LARRY E SPENCER
Clerk of Courts
Commo.n Pleas Court.
Meigs County.
Pomeroy, Oh io ,.5769

(51 24, 31 161 7, " ' 21. 28, 61c

AKC COCKER Spome l pups
sole $75 Phone 992 7059

~

pm

1966 MUSTANG 351 W 4 barre! USED FORESTRY Equipment
cor b
re ce nt lv
rebutl t
Tlmbeqock Forwarder M odel
outomot1c
slot mogs, FM
230 Sk idder Prent 1ce H RM
stereo 8 frock tope player ond
loader, Prenhce F· BC l oa der
more call 992 -2995 after 5 00
p m
w 1th bypass grapple Contact
Oenm s Smu rr Phone (614)
1972 PLYM.OUTH S&lt;omp 6 cyl
836-5~
3 4::5::,,----~
outomotfc power steenng 01r _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _:___ __,

Phon e

(614 ) ,

1964 FORD y, ton !ruck $350 Lois

1971 OLDS CUTLASS 350 G~
con d1t1on Phone '992 -2636 dfter

5 30p m

CB SPECIAL
ROBYN WV-23

A local contractor
Phone 949-2801
or 949-2860
Free Esltmates

992 5465

1958 CHEVY , new battery other
new port s. Electnc 30 cu p cof
fee pot, electnc Ice cream
freezer , record Player and
records anti que meat gnnder ,
gallon crock 1ors Other Items

Phone (304)773 5583

DUGAN'S

COUNTRY Mobile Home Pork Rt
33 len miles north of Pomeroy
Lorge lots w1th concrete pot1os,
s1dewolks runners and off
street pork.ng Phone 992 7479
ORCHID ROOM for rent for on
nl\'&amp;rsones , wedd1ng recep·
hans , bndol showers or pnvote
meeting room Phone 992 ·3975
or 992 2571
FURNISHED APT Adul ts only, no
pets Phone 992-3874 M•d·
die pori
ONE BEDROOM furmshed cportment 1n M 1ddleport
Call

NEED A WATER
SOFTENER?
Let

Pomeroy LandtTiark
soften &amp; condition your
water and a Co-op water

1sottener, ModAl UC-XVI.
Now Only
Le1

us

•279,95

test

your

water

Pomeroy Landmark
FOR MEMORIAL DAY Beautiful
selection of fl owers. Baskets,
sproys , wrea t hs , vases Fay's
Novel ty Shop N . Second St ,
' :------M1ddlepco::r:.:
GOOD RICH Top soli. Charles R.
Hotf1eld Backhoe Service .
Phone 742·2008

CAMPER

I AND H Baomsi 8, 9 and 10 1nch

ELECTRIC POWER
WEED AND
I . GRASS TRIMMERS
Cuts *'"h h~avy duty nylon
line - as good as I he best.
ATONLY
·

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

Rutland

-

A~L

YOU'RE 50LJt.I01N6
VERY MVSTERIOUS,
SHlVAUN! ... ~OW ASOUT
GETTlNG TO TH&amp;
..._.__:.P.::_O 11\1 T ~

33.
•
cana
11 . oo-News 3,4,6,8, 10, 13,15, MacNeil-Lehrer Report

IIIOWn
lnSIIIaiKlll Senites
Fl...,.'"l AYiillb~

33.

fl l}'j)Nf )e)~ ~ THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
~ ~ ~~ ®
byHonnArnoldondBobLoe

I !own 1ntO Walk' AttiU
SlOtll

WlfiiiOWS I Dl1(lt1S
UPIAC(,ENT
WINDOWS
AUIIIINUI
SIOliiC-SOFFin
CUITE11S-M1111NGS

ALLEYOOP

j

HILTE

IARRl,r~~~h~DER
Ph 9!2-3993

lowell Thomas Remembers 33.

11 :oo-Wheel of Fortune 3,4, 15; Happy Days 6, 13; Elec,
Co 20; living In a nuclear Age 33.
11 : 3Q-Shoot for the Stars 3,4,15; Family Feud 6,13,
Lovew of Life B, 10; Sesame St 20,33.
11 : 5$-CBS News 8, Ms Flxlt 10.

Unscramble these four'Jumbles,
one fetter to each square, to form
four ordinary words

12 : DO-News 3,4,6, 10; Name That Tune 15; D ivorce

Court a, Mldday 13.
12 ·3Q-Chlco &amp; the Man 3,15, Ryan's Hope 6,13; Bob
Braun 4; Search for Tomorrow 8,1 0; Elec, Co. 33,
1 0&lt;&gt;--Gong Show 3; All My Children 6, 13; !"ews B;
Young &amp; the Restless 10, Not For Women Only 15;

4-10-1 mg.

School. Evenmg work by
appointmenl. Ph. 742 ·2005.
5-6-1 mo. pd .

--

s,.doiio~--

Pl. H2-Zl74

,_,

1967 2 door lmpollo Chevrolet
Mag wheels o1r shocks com
plete
ove rhaul
Phone

HOUSE IN Tuppers Plom s 2
bedrooms 1 e lec heot. doiJble
garage 2 lots Phone (614 )

667-3065 or 667 33W.
REOUCEO AGAIN , J bedroom , 2 '12
both b1 le..,el 1 m1!e north of
F1ve Po1n1
$42 500 Phone

992 2492

sa

ACRE S more or less on
K1ngsbury Rood Me1gs Co
M1nerol r~ghU mcluded For
more mformohon , call 1 (5 13)
399-5981 or wrtfe G E Bowers
160 Floral A'w'&amp; Spnngf1eld .
Ohlo45SQ.4

~

145 ACRE FARM 7 room house 1n
Rutland Lo ts of prtvacy Phone
742 3057 after 6 p m or on
weekends
6 ROOM HOUSE . 686 Brownell ,
M1ddleport Oh10 522 000 See
R1chord M Reuter , Boll Run Rd
Pomeroy , Oh, Rt 2

R.2 Boll Run Rood Pomeroy
TWO .BEOROOM house located on
locust St M1ddlep ort $1-4 .500
Coli 9'i12 5248 or 992 3436

992-6482 or 992 7W5
HOME FOR sole by owner, well to
wall carpel , 3 bedrooms , full
basement, goroge on 2 acres of
land , -4 years old
mde south
of Tuppers Ploms on Slate Rt 7

v,

Coli (614 ) 667-3644

_l'h~·

50 H P MOTOR boot and tro1ler

Coll9•9-2853
550 SUZUI&lt;I motorcycle , 2
helmets , crosh bars, ond 51ssy
bar ,or $800 or best olfer Coli
992· 3988 or see of 883 Maple
St , Middleport

2 SHAMPOO BOWLS, $100, 2 combout stations . $70, 2 rotlobout
roller trays $15 , 4 hydrauliC
choirs, $100 dryer, $85 dry
sterhzer. $5 40 m Hotpomt
electr~c
range
$25 ,
Westinghouse elec oven $20
cobn'let and gnll, Kenmore 60CI
spoce
heater, $60
Phone
992 -7495
HOMEMADE POWERED Go Cart
su1toble forchdd 3 to 7 yrs Best
offer
Call
God
Miller ,

992-3!96.
1973 CHALLENGER w•lh 46 000
miles end two
Registered
Arab •on
Horses .
Phone
1
/,

992-7559
REO BARN utility bu i ldmg Phone

992 2719.
TWO MORSE horse tro1ler. $:700.

Phone (611)698-3290
KAWASAKI 500, very good cond1
han S6000 Coli 949·2628 or

949-2626

(614)592 3051

Coll992 ·7461
NEW 3 bedroom house 2 baths
oil elec , 1 acre , Middleport
close to Rutland Phone 992

7481
SMALL form for sole, 10% down
ow n~r fmanced Monroe Coun
ty , W Vo Phone (304) 772·

3102 or (304) 772·3227
COUNTRY farmland w1th seclud
ed woods . water ond good access m M onroe County W Vo

$1 000 down, &lt;oil (304) 7723102 O&lt; (304) 772 3227
Commerc1 o l property opproK 17
acres, le"el lond located at
Tuppers Plo ms on Oh1o Route

7. Phone (614) 667-6304
NEW 3 bedroom hoiJse, bull1-.n
k1fchen, both and 1/, Phone
742 2306 or contact M1IO 8 Hut
ch1son Ru tland , Oh1o.

Rl.l

J

Complete

Sales

WHAT 50ME 'TRASHY
L.rrERATURE APPEARS
TO BE WRITTEN

tMARROBj

IJTTI.E ORPHAN ANNIE

Middleport, 0 .
992-5724

Now arrange the ctrcled leHers to
form the sur~mse answer, as suggested by the above cartoon

and

Servtce and Supplies.

Answer: A"[Ili I

r---~:;;~-:-i~il

MAIN
POMEROY. 0.
JUST L:ISTED - Close to
school 3 bedrooms, 2
baths , lovely equipped
kitchen, large Rec . room
cond
2 car
garage ,
basement. Many other
features .

LISTED -

Very

dining , bath, basement,
garage,

NEW LISTING -

WalK to

the
stores
from
this
renovated 8 room home. 3
bedrooms, and 2 baths , c1ty 1
water, natural gas, and on
Ohio Power 517,000

4 YEARS OLD - Nice 4
bedrooms , bafh with
shower . closets , eat.Jn
kitchen, disposal , natural
gas F .A furna ce and level

lot . Only S16,000
ENORMOUS

lot

runs

from

street to street $23,500 oo.
LOVELY
FRAME
&amp;
BRICK - Close to Meigs

216 E. Second Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Phone 992-3325

4

bedrooms , lots of closets. 2

Hi. 3 bedrooms, l'h bath s,
ntce kitchen w range &amp; dish
washer, formal dining,
lovely Rec. room , full
basement, garage , 1 acre.

535,000.00.
CLOSE TO FORKED RUN
LAKE - 6 acres. double
wide (occ upied tust 11h
yrs . ) . L1ke new , garage, 2

buddlngs $17,000 oo
ABOUT 3 YEARS OLD Lovely split entrance (the
house of the future). 3-4
bedrooms,

1lf:z

baths ,

dream kitchen. corner lot 1
acre . JUST $37,500 00
SOUTHERN
STYLE
HOME - Beautiful kitchen

baths , nat, gas F .A. fur-

has

na ce,
basement
with
family room and shop 2
porches and garage on

dining, 5 bedrooms , 4

large lot . $27,500
NEW LISTING

5

bedrooms, lots of closets,
11J2 baths, nat gas central
heating , city water , and

Ohio

Power

Full

basement 524,000.

CORNER LOT - 2 church
buildings on State Route 1
concrete block in good
condttlon. Would you buy

these for $11,200
QUIET - Level lot w1th
street on each
bedroom house ,

bath ,

and

2

end, 2
modern

porches

$15,000.

NEW LISTING - 51 acres
- 6 room house, bath,
furnace. 2 dri lled wells,
COUNTRY - 2 wooded lots
with water
ava i lable

and

electric

BUY A HOME TODAY
AND
BE
SAFE
TOMORROW. WE HIWE
DOZENS.
G. Bruce Teaford
Hefen L. Teoford
Associates

A1Jcf1oneer, Com·
ple te Serv1c11 Phone 949 24S7
or 949 2000 Roc1 ne, Oh1o, Cntt
Bradford

REMODELING, Pl umb1ng heo f1ng
and all types of genera l repo1r
Work guaranteed 20 years e~~;
penence . Phone 992-2409

2'' KXXI l X)

everythmg ,

formal

baths , utlf 1ty, basement,
carpeting S24,000 DO

DROP IN - HAVE A CUP
OF COFFEE - DISCUSS
YOUR REAL ESTATE
PROBLEMS WITH US.
HENRY E. CLELAND
REALTOR
Hank, Kafhy
&amp; Leona Cleland
992-2259-985-4112
992-2568

BORN LOSER
lJJH~T l).IOOl.D

!&gt;.

11-i!:'f'Half;

50-I.(FAR-

IJUMB~R?

QI..D

ARI' AI-1.DXTOR&lt;;;!

HlifOl~OOORiAC­

OOWITH A
WT~~

Bl-UK
BOOK~

EXCAVATING dozer ba ckhoe
and d1tcher. Charles R. Hot·
f1eld . Bock Hoe Service
Rutland , Oh10 p:,v. ,.. , . '"~IYI8 .

742 2346
CARPENTER
f loormg
ce dmg
paneling Phone 992 2759
MOBilE Home Repo 1r
plumbmg and heot1n9

Elec
PhOne

992 5858
HOWERY AND MARTIN
Ex
coveting
sept1c systems
doter , backhoe , dump truck
ltmestone
grovel
black top
paving , Rt 143 Phone 1 (61-4)
698 7331

GASOIINF. AJ.Il&lt;;Y

our
first date? We
were twelve!

Nobod11
can sa4
we're
rushinq
into
this
thinq!

I'

=~-

dance! 1
rode 110u home
on m4
handlebars!

!

r;:w=;;._~------\

HARRISON S TV Repo1r Service
Coll9 276 Sycamore , St M•d
dleporl Phone 992 2522

EXCAVATING BACKHOE , dozer,
tren cher Low Boy dump truck
sept1c systems
B1ll
trucks
Pulf 1ns phone 992-2478 day or
n1gh t

MOTHER BENUMB
Answer What everyone 1n the doctor's wait1ng room
seemed to be suffering from "RUMOR-TISM"

ACROSS
I Ask help of
6 Freeman
Gosden role
10 Greemsh
yellow
11 Fnendless
chap
13 Assail
14 Overhead
15 How awful !
16 Coiffure puff
18 Fmal'
19 Thus far
( 2 wds.)
21 Assam
silkworm
22 Far East
staple
23 Russ1an
VIP of
yore
~~~~~ 24 Formal
neckwear
26 Oar
fulcrwn
27 Stupefy
28 Gloat over
left ' 29 Perched
stranded 30 Thistles
b,. the 32 Subside
..,
33 Munch
qu4
34 Possessed

,

Will do roofmg, construc hon
plumbmg and haotmg No ]Db
too Iorge or too sm oll. Phone

TONIC

1Al"i'Ti=&gt;TT

by THOMAS JOSEPH

EXCAVATING do1er . loader a nd
backhoe work , du mp triJck s
and lo-boy s for h1re w1ll houl
fill d1rt, to sotl i1mestone and
grovel Call 8()b or Roge r Jeffers
day phone 992 7089
n1ght phone 992 -3525 or '992

Modern

Jumbles USURP

~

SEWING MACHINE Repo1rs . ser
'w' lce oil makes 992 2284 The
Fobr1c
Shop .
Pomeroy
Author~zetl S1nger Sales and
Service We sha rpen Sc1ssors

c:---'-~-:---:- ~-

I

• Yesterday's

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR Sweepers toasters . 1rons oil
smo ll oppllonces lown mower
nex t to State H1ghway Garage
on Rou te 7 Phone (61&lt;4) 985 3825

SEPTIC TANKS cleaned
San1tot•on , &lt;192 -3954

JUST

TEAFORD

BRAD~O R O

5232

mce . 3 bedrooms , formal

barn , 3 car garage, crib
and minerals 529,000.
BEAUTIFUL TWO story home w1th
two co r goroga 5 bedrooms ,
dmmg room , Iorge livmg room ,
modern kllchan, 2 1t , baths,
large recraahon room , full(, oor
conditioned
'!, m1le
rom
school. One quarter m1le off
State A:out• 30 year fmonc10g
ovailobfe Coli 992 ;J863 bet ween9~m ond_3pm

HOMESITES for sole , 1 ocre and
uj) M1ddleport near Rutlond

24x28, has FA heat &amp; a or

965 3839
1974 KAWASAKI 175 D1rlb1ke
$400 Reg1stered imh Setter ,
no papers, $50 Call e'w'enmgs
949 2463 after 6 p m.

Nobil Summ•t Road

tf, IU

what
brunQ

me'

DOWN
I Beach wear
2 Choose
3 Suggestion
to dawdlers
( 4wds )
4 Early
gardener
5 Draw
back
6 Wmged
7 Lawless
group
8 lndependently(4wds )
9 Various
12 Go on
pension
17 Had
lunch

Yesterdafs Answer
20 - C8SSlUS,
Roman
historian
23 Thursday 's
namesake
24 Evaluate
25 Augean 26 Racehorse
28 Oriental tea

lJLABNER

??-YOKOO'S MOON!"- ITS RAYS
6/VE: THAT ROTTEN MCD\1 GA L 17-1'
POWER 1D MAKE' ANY MALE
YOKUM DO-

BRIDGE
Oswald and Jim Jacoby

Restricted choice sets course

"-

Paradise

1

NORTH

'

EAST

614 2
9K6 62
t J 95I
... J 6

SOUTH (D )
... A K8

• Q J 91
t K 62
... A 9 4

work

East-West vulnerable

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work II:
AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELI,OW

West

North East

South
INT

Pass

3 N T. Pass

Pass

Pass
Opemng l ead -

O ne letter stmply st ands for another In this sample A is

J •

used for the three I.'s, X for the two O's, et o. Si ngle letters
apostrophes, the l ength and f orma ti o n of the wo r ds are all

992 6306 .

hmls Each day the rode letters are different

PIANO TUNING lone Oontels . 12
~ears
of se r"1ce
Ph one

CRYPTOQUOTES

992 2082
OQL

WATER WELL Dnfl mg, W
T
Grant. Ph o!"'e 742 -287~ after 6

pm

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••
•: BUY, SELL OR TRADE? :•
:
, LISTEN TO THE
:
•
•
:
SWAP SHOP
:
••
••
: 7 PM - WMPO • 92.1 FM :
••
••
:
92 in the Country
:
•
••
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

WEST

... JI096
¥AI0 5
t 10 7
... Q 10 53

French
41 Gnaw
t2 Photocopy
43 Did garden

Uph o lsten n g
drop e.s
reas onable . 572 South Th1rd
A ve . Middl e po rt
Phon e

24 1

•Q 53
• 73
+A QB 3
... K 87 2

~;iYJHN(3:5H'EwAI-m~~)~:;;:~tO river

7409
SEWlNG - Al TERATlONS

FOR SALE Or trade $late roofed
born , stond1ng to be tore down
Phone 742·27 -46

Mary Hartman 10; ABC News 33

12 OQ-Movle " The lllustrated Man" 10; MacNeilLehrer Report 33.
12 ·4o-Mysfery of the Week 6,13
I oo-Tomorrow 3,4.
2 1Q-News 13.

(2 wds )

W11J do odd jObS rool1ng, pa1n
ling , gutter worlv. Phone 992·

WILL DO yard work and pomtmg
. Reasonable Coll992-5214

30 Pnnc1ple
31 Famed
Jockey
35 Expl01t
:11 A pig poke
39 Feast famine
(2 wds.)

34i Done m
38 p~ ·s
in

-

2.0&lt;&gt;--$20,000 Pyramid 6,13, Once Upon a Classic 33.
2 3~Doctors 3,4,15 ; One Life to Live 6.13. Guiding
Light B, 10.
3 ()()-Another World 3,4, 15; Allin The Family 8,1 0; On
Aging 20, Great Performances 33.
J 1s-General Hospital 6,13
3 3~Match Game 8,10, Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20.
4 · OQ-Mister Cartoon 3; Edge of Night 4; Gong Show
15; New Mickey Mouse Club 6; Lucy Show B.
Sesame St. 20.33; Movie " Flaming Star" 10, Dinah
13.
4 1s-L1ttle Rascals 4
4·31)-My Three Sons 3; Partridge Family 4;
Emergency One6; Partridge Family 8; Fllnlsfones
15
s 0&lt;&gt;--Big Valley 3; My Three Sons 4, Brady Bunch 8;
Mister Roger.' Neighborhood 20,33, Emergency
One 13; Star Trek 15
S 3~Adam - 12 4; News 6, Famlly Affair 8, Elec . Co
20,33.
6 0&lt;&gt;--News 3,4,6,B,10, 13,15, ABC News 6; Zoom 20,33,
6 3~NBC News 3,4,15; ABC News 13, Andy Griffith 6,
CBS News B, 10; Vegetable Soup 20, Lilias, Yoga &amp;
You 33.
7:0Q-Testimony of Two Men 3, To Tell the Truth 4;
Llar' s Club 6 ; Pop Goes fhe Country 8; News 10; To
Tell the Truth 13; My Three Sons 15; Consumer
Survival Kit 20; Big Green Magazine 33.
7·3Q-Final Days and Other Highlights 4; Match Game
PM 6, 525,000 Pyramid a; MacNeil -Lehrer Report
20,33, The Judge 10; Break the Bank 13, Wild
Klngdom 15
B oo-Movle "The Life and Times of Grizzly Adams"
3, Brady Bunch 6, 13, Good Times B. 10, Nova 20,33,
Music Hall America 15.
B· 3o-PIIot " Roosevelt &amp; Truman" 8,10.
9 .0Q-Baretfa 6, 13; Movie " Paradise, Hawallan Style"
4, Movie " Jane Eyre" 8; Great Performances
20,33, Movie "Red Sun" 10; To Be Announced 15.
10·0Q-Dean Martin 3,15; Charlie' s Angels 6, 13, People
vs Inez Garcia 20,33
11 :oo-News 3,4,6,B, 10,13,15
11.3Q-Johnny Carson 3,4, 15, Rookies 6, 13, Columbo B,

(Answers tomorrow~

VA FHA 30 yr. t 1noncmg Ireland
Mortgage 77 E State . Athens

Pomeroy Landmark

rx

1

LJ()-Days of Our Lives 3,4,15; As the World Turns

[j

] I (

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

Grade

$29.95

z:iJack W. C.ney,Mgr.
1
Phone 992-2181

Coll992-7034

SUDDENLY
BECAME
CLEAR--WHEI\1 TIIAT
COLLECTOR FOR
THE; LOAN SHARK
BI&lt;ACED YOU
BACl&lt; THERE!
IT

FRONT END
ALIGNMENT

Virgtl B. Sr., ReatTor

54J.&lt;

~AD MIO PUZZL6D FOR AWHl~E .
EASY;- I!IUT 1\!IOVER MlND THAT 1\!DW!

'iOlJ

EXPERIENCED

HOUSE . 2 bedrooms 2 cor garage
w1th
room upsta•rs
fully
corpeted ond pcnnelled In
tersect1on of 7 and 124. Phone

Jack W. Carsey, Mgr
Phone 992 -2181 .

3 AND A RM lurn1shed ond unfurnished opts . Phone 992

Match Game PM 8; MacNeil-Lehrer Report 20,33 ,
In the Know 10; Wild Kingdom 13 , TV Honor
Society 15.
8·0&lt;&gt;--Movle " The Man wllh the Power" 3,4, 15; Happy
Days 6, 13, Pilot "S am 0 8,1 0, Key to the Un i verse
20,33 .
B : 3~Laverne &amp; Shirley 6,13, Mash 8,10
9 oo-Rich Man, Poor Man 6, 13; Fight Against Slavery
8, Movie " The Cheyenne Soc ial Club" 10
10 :0&lt;&gt;--Suzy Visits 3,4, IS, Movie " Divorce His" B;
News 20; In Search ofthe Real Amerlca33
10 3~Biack Perspective on the News 20· Amerl

CAPTAIN EASY

FREE ESTIMATES

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

WEDNESDAY, MAY 25 , 1977
6 oo-Summer Semester tO
6 · 1s-Farm Report 13.
6 ·20-Not for Women Only 13.
6 30-AG-USA .C ; News 6, Summer Semester B;
Christopher Closeup 10.
6. 4s-Morn1ng Report 3. _
6 50-Good MornlnQ, West Vlrqlnla 13,
6 55-Good Morning, Trl State 13.
7·()()-Today 3,4,15 ; Good Morning America 6,13. CBS
News B; Chuck Willie Reports 10.
7•0s-Porky P ig 10.
7 · 3~Schoolies 10.
8·oo-Howdy Doody 6; Copt Kangaroo 8,10; Sesame
St 33.
B::JO-Big Valley 6
9 oo-A M 3; Phil Donahue 4,13,1 5, Andy Griffith 8,
Ml ke Douglas 10; MacNeil-Lehrer Report 33
9 30--{;ross-Wits 3; Edge of Night 6, Concentration 8,
Bit With Knit 33.
10 ()()-Sanford &amp; Son 3,4,15, Dinah 6, Here's Lucy 8, 10;
Mike Douglas 13.; Ourstory 33
1 0 . 3~Hollywood Squares 3,4,15; Price Is Right 8,10;

Tennyson' 20. lowell Thomas Remembers 33
7 · 3~Hollywood Squares 4; Let' s Deal With If 6 ;

2.23-1 mo.

-

2-23-1 mo

$69.95

Coll742 2078 .
1974 CHEVY y, ton p1ckup.
350-V-8 standard sh1ft, $2 100

Pomeroy, 0 .

mo .

96 A TIMBER land m Salisbury ,
1
some bonom
/,
m1nerols
$300 See R1ch ard M Reuter ,

ONLY

1966 GMC VAN , runs good
needs body work $500 Phone

Installation, samples
brought to your home
wrth no charge.

mo.

''The Or1g1nators
Not The lmttators"

c B Mobile Transce 1ver
co mple te W1 th weather
proof PA speak er , 2 way
base loaded c s antenna,
for roof top or trunk m oun t
Power cord. coax . antenna
f.abl e and a l l hardware
m cl ud ed.

1967 PlYMOUTH 4 dr V 8 stan dard , 4 new t1res, new brakes ,
shocks , exhaust , boflery .
Phone 7..42 2114

CODNER'S CAMPERS on Rain
bowndge Soles, Rental Ser..,,ce ,
Supplies ,
trollers,
campers. cops , alum. awn1ngs
c..nd porches by Durob1h Open
even1ngs Me1gs 28 or 32 to
Bas han Owner Robert Codner .
~ng Bottom0c.:-:-::--::--~~-c-1';171 LEISURE TIME Camper. 18ft
sleeps 6 self.contomed, httch
and m1rrors •ncluded. excellent
cond1hon Phone 992-2386
self -

R D 2 Albony , Oh&gt;o (614)
698-3021

992 7274

~;-~~~~-ner

28 ~ 1

Young's Carpeting
Route 3,

Free Estimates

Phone

Superior
Steam Extraction

BISSEU. SIDING CO.

4995 till June 1 Mernll Cflose

~~!!!~

Free.

Shasta ,

VERMEER BALERS W5D 4395 605C

TURN OF Th e Century , sol1d oak
motchmg d.n 1ng room cho ~r s
Bentwood Supports , str.pped
and ready for fm1 sllmg $175
1976 CHEVROlET Chevette Phone
for set Phone 992·2 4 13 after 5

+

FT

4

I

Pomeroy, 0 .

1. ()0-Tomorrow 3,4

1, 3s-News 13.

7·0&lt;&gt;--Testlmony of Two Men J , To Tell the Truth 4;
Liar's Club 6. Country Carnival 8; News 10; My
Three Sons 15, To Tell the Truth 13, Anyone for

carpei-Lino.-TIIt
M1ke Young If
992-2106 or 992-7630

9 a.m . to S p.m .

Jack W Cars~:y, Mgf'\
Phone 992 · 2111

for

BlG CARPORT Sole Weds., 25lh,

16

sso

Pomeroy Landmark

2 FAMILY Yard Sole thru Sclturdoy , May 28th. 1973 Harley
Oav1dson
motorcycle
1973
Mercury Comet Colt 742·2516
after 5 p m

C_2nta~ned Phone~~!~·

Saw

TROPI CAL FISH and F1sh Supphes
Hompste rs , robb1 ts
gu1neo
pags gerb1l s b~rds and other
small pets and pet suppl1es
The Vonety Pet Shop, Racme,
Oh10.

dork. Phone S43-2513

3 FAMILY Carport Sole, Thursdor,,
10 am . tlll4 p .m. 1668 Linco n
Heights . books
pictures ,
drapes , spreads , c lothing ,
misc .

N ew Co - Op Wdler so f teners, mod el VC -SVI
Only S279 95
Save SSO 00 on a new
Hotpo~nt Refrigerator
1 New 20 cubic ft
Chest Free1e r
$319 95
Now •n stock , complete line
of bulk garden seeds
1 Good McCullough Chain
Saw
us
1 Good Used Poulan C1'1a10

1 Good Used UAICO
Dryer
sao oo
1 Good Used G E Dryer SSS
1 Used Lawn Mower
sso

992-5434 or 992-3129

Thursday, 26th , Fndoy , 27th at
391 South Second Middleport
9 hfl 4 p m Compl•te C. B. outf it, lots of clothes
oven,
dis hes . shoes , toys , b1ke ,
lownmower books mise:

Phone 949-2814

Rou1e 3,

11 : 3~John ny Carson 3.4.15; Movie " Diary of a Ma&lt;J
Housewife" 6.13, Movie "Li nda" 8; Mary Hartm"n
10; ABC News 33
12.0&lt;&gt;--Movle " Boeing Boeing " 10; Janakl 33,

Leonard Bernstei n Conducts 33

HEAlTHY ADOPTABLE dogs k1t
l ens , pupp1es Wormed and
shots Me•gs County Humane
Soc1ely 843 3()[)lil or 992 7680

AKC REGISTERED Black Cocker
Spomel pup . 6 months old very
fnendly Phone 7&lt;42 -2648 .

piece

uilden.

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

..._..._

one

We hlng it, or do it
&amp;ourself. Special prices to

Young's Carpeting

FOR SALE

367 -7112 ~ - - - - -

--~·~-

IF YOU hove a serv1ce to offer,
want to buy or :r.ell someth1ng
oe look.ng for work
or
whote.,.er
you 'll get results
faster w1th a Sen Mel Wont Ad

--

Contlnuoua
gutters.

Formerly
lola ' s Beauty Sa1on
For appointment call
992-2549 Tuesday thru
Saturday 8 : 00a .m. to
5:00p . m . Open nights
by appointment .
4- 15· 1 mo.

ECONOMY TRACTOR w1th oll at
tochments l1ke new , osk1ng

RISING STAR Kennel Boarding
Indoor Outdoor run s groom•ng
al l breed s
clean son1lory
foc11 111es oe 367 -7 112 C"'est·u re
Phone (61 4) 367 0292

1970 FORD VAN , new po.nl good
t 1res, new ports and hmeup
co 11 after 6 9G12 3259

le&lt;l (205)870 4228

-

Owner
Shirley (Jeffers) Wolfe

4- ~4- 1

of eKtro ports Coll949 2273

OWN YOUR Own Business Area
D1 stnbutor for Rand McNally
Mops No Selhng ServiCe pre·
established occoiJnts Invest.
ment $1:2 500 secured by mven
tory and equ1pment. Wnte , •nclude
name ,
addre ss
telephone and 3 references to
Personnel O~reclor NAMCO
3928 Montclair Rd
B•rmtngham , Al 35213 or call cot

1 42 1n cost Iron r.,,tchens.nk , I
basm ond I dram board hong
on wall type wh1 te I 3 burner
gas hot plate Phone 992 571 A

GUTTER SERVICE

Syracuse·

No Sunday Calls Plea se

742 3186
ATTENTION

MANGERS &amp;
demonstrators . Fnendly Home
Toy Parties hos openins for
managers and dealers m your
oreo. Toy Partr. pion ex ·
penance helpfu
Car and
telephone necessary Colt col lect to Carol Dey (518) 489 8395
or wnre Fnendly Home Port1es ,
20 Railroad Ave Albany N Y

TOMATO
PLANTS
Cabbage,
broc.coh, coulll lower brussel
sprouts egg plants , hong.ng
ba skets
pots
9eron 1ums .
b(!g o n•o s,
flats
pelun1os ,
mor~golds
panSieS , soltla ,
balsam ,
d1onthus
snap
dragons a lyssum Vmco , co leus
Cleland s Greenhouse,
Roc1 ne Goroldme Cle land

-

Shirley's Beauty Nook

S2250 Phone (6 14 ) 698-3290

AKC SHETLAND sheep dogs
(M1n ) Col l 1es 2 f ema les , 7
weeks o ld Shots and worm ed
Phone (614 t 367 -0292 or

--,----,--HOUSEKEEPER TO hve 1n and toke
care of 3 childr en Phone

Clek Of COtJrts
Common Pleas court
Meigs county, Ohio
Pomeroy. Ohio -45769
CSJ 24, 31 {6J 7, u, 21, 28, 6tc

whose last known address Is
201.2 Cleneay Avenue , Nor
wood , Ohio , and whose exact
llddress Is unknown
You are hereby notified
that you have been named
defendant In a legal acton
ent1tled Pomeroy Cement
Block Company vs Ronald o
Thomlls, dba All Weather
Roof i ng &amp; Construction , et al
Th•s actiOn has been assigned
No 16,402 In the ~ommon
Pleas court, Meigs County ,
Ohio
The obtect of thiS com.,lalnt
rs to acquire lvdgment
against Ronald D Thomas,
dba All Weather Rooting &amp;
Construction and Ronald D
Thorn as In the a mount of
52,668 05 plus Interest and
costs.
You lire requ.recl to llnswer
fhts complaint within 28 days
after the last publication of
fills notice, which will be
published once each week for
slK consecutive weeks The
last publication wilt be made
on June 28 and the '28 days for
llnswer wtll stnt on thllt dllfe
In c~se of your failure to
answ4!r or otherwise respond
as required by the Ohio Rules
of Civll Procedure judgment
by default will be rendered
against
you
for
re1 1e f
demanded In this compla1nt

l Ox 16
Add A -Room owning underp lnnmg
s torm wmdows
storage bu•ld1ng Contact Oe ryl
Well . Tupper Plo ms , (61..4 )
b67 3951 offer 4

_!~!9~" ~hool

12205.

GOOD USED JWimmmg pool ot
leo st10 K 3 Call949 2805

60xi2MOBILEHOM~w l lh

HOOF HOllOW Buy sell. trade
or t rain horses RUTH ~EE V ES ,
~o i ner Phone (614 } 698 3290

OLD FURNITURE , 1ce boxes bross
beds ,
etc
complete GUARANTEED JO B Tro•n •ngLo catJon , $374 40 s1ngl e
households Write M D. M 1ller,
$502 80 morned Coli Army
Rt 4, Pomeroy, Oh1o or coli
R•cru1 t1ng
593 -3022
or
9927.7cW
~----~----~385 6318 (collect}

STANDlNG TlMBER WANTED
PHONE (614) 667-6214

Mobile _ J:loJDel! :fut Side

'

John St.

SPRI NG GARDEN Suppl1es , Cob
boge, c'Ouliflower, broccol•
and
head
Je ttuoe plants ,
yellow, whtte. and red on1on
sets on1on plants Kennebe c,
cobbler, Kotohd1n Red Ponhoc
and Red La sodo seed potatoes
Suit.. garden seeds potrmg so1l
peot moss, fru1l trees and rose
bu shes
M1dwoy
Market .
Pome rov . Oh1o, 992 2582
Bobs Market . Moson , W Vo

consu mer finan ce. Consumer f inance Is an Integra l and

THE PERSON who left the gas WAITRESS WANTED · apply 1n per meter at the Harold G Roush
son
Craw 's Steak House,
res •dence Portland Please let _!om&amp;roy Ohio
me know vour nome._ _ __
WANTED BROKERS. Late Model
Tractors Coli 992 6666 Must
posa r.C .C Requirements

Swnlay
IP M

CAMPER
$600. A lso
hone
tro1ler $A50 Phone (614 ) 698

progress

Htt' it('l't'plt'&lt;J Ofll)' Wllh l.'li.Sh Wtlh

1'he Pubh.sncr

ACAREER JOB IN
CONSUMER FINANCE

TUESDAY, I,V.Y 24.1971
5:0&lt;&gt;--Big Valley 3, My Three Sons 4, Brady Bunch B;
Mlstr Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33; Emergency
One 13 ; Star Trek 1S
S· 30-Adam 12 A; News 6; Family Affair 8,·
6 oo-News3,4,6; News8 ,10,13,15, ABC News6 . Zoom
20; Trafllc ln Babies l,'!.
6 3()-NBC News 3,4, 15, Alft News 13, Andy Grlffllh 6,
CBS News 8.10, Vegetable Soup 20.

I

Business Services

COAL , l1mestone and calcium
c:hl011de and calc:1um bnne for
dus t control ond speool miKing
sa lt for formers , EKcels1or Salt
Works , Mo•n Street, Pomeroy
Oh1o or phone 992 3891

Im portant force In our country's economic growth and

Mol,nlt· Uumc 80t.$atKl Y.anl ~ll'lJ1

ordt'r 1!i ccnl elm • ~e fur oub uu ry·
Ull!: BoK Nw'nbcr in Cll1 e uf The Scnunt'l

~·or Sale

Help Wanled

Help Wantt!d

1:1&gt;

1"'
1110

Television log for easy viewing

Let The· Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash

wANTAD
CHARGES

YE5TERD~~ SHE OOT

• Ml55 WINKLE '?YOU

I'.OULDN'T BELIEVE
THE CHANGE THAT'&amp;
COME OVER MR5.
MURTAGH!

OUT OF IJI:D fOR
1!1E FIRST TIME
IN MOiffiiS I

THSL

ZCOLG

MRD

AND IDMY1

SHE to AC1\JALLY

HK

ZCSG

PRIMPING

OQL

MG

YRZLS

BLT C RHR

GCI L

L C 0-

J L -

0 Q L
CG

H F LS

ATHERVANilYI

T CWL Z

TLCRG

HBMFLS

MR

XLR ZLBB

THGOHR
QHBJLG

Yesterday's Cryploquote : CONVERSATION IS THE
SLOWEST FORM OF HUMAN CO MMUNICATION . - DON
HEROW

•

tJ 1971

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
If today's hand were played
thousands of llm es the
chances are that every South
player would f10d htmself m
three notrump aga10st a spade
lead by West
He wms that spade lead m
dummy and plays a heart
East follows w1th the deuce
and South plays the queen or
Jack only to have West wm
With the ace and lead a second
spade South w1ns that 10 h1s
own hand, e nlers dummy w1th
a d1amond and leads a second
heart East plays the s1x and

South must dec1de whether to
play the mne or the remammg
face card
It looks like a guess, but 1t
isn ' t The pnnc1ple of
restncted chmce apphes here
If West had been dealt both
ace and kmg he m1ght well
have won the flrst heart Wllh
the kmg Hence the odds arc
that East holds the kmg and
South should play hJS face
card
If he does play the face card
the rest of the , hand 1s easy
and he wmds up making e1ther
mne or 10 tncks If he plays
the mne he may still scramble
in that ninth tr1ck , but he may
also wmd up w1th JUSt e1ght

~~~
A New York reader wants to
know 11 modern players st1ll
play the JUmp response 10 a
new sult by an unpassed hand

as a force to game
The answer is that except
for a small , and m our opm1on,

a lmost lunat1c fr1hge they do
(Do you have a quest1on
to r the e•perts? Wflfa "Ask
the Jacob v•" ca re of !h1s
ne wspaper The Jacobys wil( '
answer md1v1dual questtons
11 stamped, sell-addressed

envelopes sre anclosed The

mos t mteras tmg questtons
will be used m th is
and Will

reC61V6

JACOBY MODERN I

Kina Fe•hnes Svndu:ate, Inc

ti-\RNEY

--

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IT5 THREE
TO FOVR
IN niE TIE~EAKER ..

FOUR-ALL IN ~E

TIE-BREAKER!

WHAT
AILS I.(QU ,
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DADBURN

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IN

MY

EARS, DOC

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COp ieS Of

DON'T

HERR
NOTHIN'

�Tax cuts shown
in bffi signed

Local pornography ·control
trimmed by highest .court

RAINTREE
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NOXZEMA
SKIN CREAM

Q·TIPS
COTTON SWABS

6oz. Jar
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F.I.P. Price .. ,

88's
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•

STYLE
SHAMPOO

HAIR BRUSH
by Stance
Choice of Styles
'1.00 Value
F.I.P, Price . , ,

~

49

Essence · Grass
Rain Forest
20 oz.
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F.I.P. Price

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-

By CHARLOTIE MOULTON
WASHINGTON (UP!) The Supreme Court has put a
brake on its deference to local
communities in dealing with
distribution of hard-core
pornography .
In a busy, multiple-&lt;iecision
day Monday, the justices
ruled 5l&lt;l 4 that a federal jury
in Iowa must look to high
court
guidelin es
for
determining whether
material is offensive and not
state law, whi ch now
punishes only dissemination
of obscenity to minors.
The American Library As·
sociation a nd the Association
of American Publishers
expressed disappointment at
the ruling . Their lawyers had
suggested that the whole
thrust of a major obscenity
decision in 1973 was to give
states more leeway, and that
if States wished to accord
additional First Amendment
protection .the federal
government need not meddle.
But the co w'! upheld the
conviction of a Des Moines
man on charges of sending
obscene material through the
mQil within the state.
The opinion said a state's
right not to regulate in the
obscenity field cannot compel
the federal government to
allow in-state obscene
mailings.
In another case, the court
ruled unanimously that states
may pattern union security
provisions in contracts with
labor unions after the Jaws
that apply to private
business.
In a Detroit teschers' case,
it held that employes who do
not wish to join a union may
be compelled to pay the
equivalent of dues but that
the money may not be used
for ideological caus.es to
which the individual objects.
The aggrieved person may
demand a proportional
refund, the opinion said.
In a 7-2 decision the court
held that a grand jury witness
need not be advised that he is
a target for indictment, and

said the testimony he gives
without this warning may be
used against him at trial.
In a series of free press
actions the court agreed in a
California case to decide
whether news reporters and
cameramen should have
grea ter access to priso n
inmates than the public, but
refus ed to lift a n order
restricting news coverage of
the trial in Florence, S.C., of
former state Sen . Ralph
Gasque on char ges of
misappropriating federal
funds.
The justices also denied
hearings on the one hand to a
Jacksonville, Fla., woman
who objected to press
photographers entering her
home with fire investigators
and on the other to Penthouse
magazine , which claimed
that operators of a California
resort who filed a $540 million

By WESLEY G. PIPPERT
WASHINGTON (UP!) President Carter today was
welcoming Prince Fahd of
Saudi Arabia for Middle East
d i s c u s s io n s
n e wI y
complicated by a right-wing
victory in Israel and
Egyptian threats of another
oil embargo.
Fahd, the deputy prime
minister, was due at the
White House for a morning
meeting with Carte r. A
"working dinner" at the
White House tonij!ht also was
planned. The prince is the
fifth Middle Eastern leader to
meet with the new President.
· On the eve of Fahd 's
departure for the United
States, Egypt ian Foreign
Minister Ismail Fahmi said
the Arabs will not hesitate to
repeat their 1973 embargo on
the West if Israel's new
leadership
refuses
to
surrender captured lands.
"The President ha s no
comment
on
those

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SARAN
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VAPORETTE
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For Dogs

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992-3106
~, ~·

i

to an ahortion .
- Unanimously ruled that a
state may not discriminate
against nonresidents by
barring them from fishing in
its waters nor stop aliens
from commercial fi shing
within the threemile limit.

statements," sa id White
House Press Secretary Jody
Powell. " His position has
been stated in the past and
has not changed." .
Powell refused to repeat
thaI position, a strongly
worded one. During a 1975
television interview Carter
said the United States should
consider another embargo as
"an economic declaration of
war" and should cut off
shipments of food, weapons,
oil rigs and pipes )n
retaliation.
But Carter has had tough
words for Israel in recent
days, too.
At Notre Dame University
Sundsy, Carter warned be

ROSALYNN'S CAUSE
PHILADELPIUA (UP!) First Lady Rosalynn Carter
today opens the first of four
public hearings around the
country on the treatment of
the mentally ill.
Mrs. Carter, who is
honorary chairperson of the
20-member President' s
Commission on Mental
Health, said one of the
commission's jobs will be .
defining what mental health
means.
''There are no boWldaries
on what ni.ental health is/'
she said. "We just have to
define it. "
The commission goes from
Philadelphia to Nashville,
Tenn., for a hearin g Wednesday. Other sessions are scheduled next month in Tucson,
Ariz. , and San Francisco.

DRAWING POWER
.NEW YORK (UP! )
F rank Sinatra and Dea n
Martin got tqgether on stage
again Monday, but the star of
·the show was a 61-year-old
Long Island widow whose
name the singers drew in the
finals of the New York State
instant lottery.
Maria A. Bisulca won the
top prize of $1,000 a week for
the rest of her life. She and
. her heirs are guaranteed at
least $1 million.
· Mrs. Bisulca also got embraces from "Old Blue Eyes"
and his former "Rat Pack"
sidekick.

LADIES.

I

I

1

~".6

"THE

By Uulted Pressluternatlonal
NEW YORK - A FEDERAL JUDGE HAS struck down a
Ne)V York state law allowing strikers to receive VOL. XXVIII NO. 29
POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
WEDNESDAY. MAY 25, 1977
PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS
Uilemployment compensation after the first eight wee~ of a - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - walkout, saying the provision "causes an employer to fmance
its own strikers." U. S. District Court Judge Richard Owen
ruled in Manhattan Tuesday that the provision "is in conflict
with federal labor law policy and is therefore .
unconstitutional."
.
The judge scheduled a hearing for Wednesday " to discuss
interim relief " but the state attorney general's office said it
would appeal Owen'sdecision in the case. The ruling dealt with
a lawsuit filed in 1973 by the New York Telephone Co.; Western
Eleclric Co., and the Long Lines Department of the American
Telephone &amp; Telegraph Co. in connection with a 1971
nationwide strike by 500,000 employes of the Bell system.
lly RUTH E. GRUBER
LAS VEGAS, NEV. - TWO KIDNAPERS escaped
ASSEN, The Netherlands
Tuesday with more than $1 million ransom for the release of
(UP! ) - The deadline by
former western comedienne Polly Possum, paid by her bank
which Moluccan gunmen had
executive hushand who took the money from his bank's vault.
threatened to start executing
The FBI launched a search throughout the West for two white
more than 160 hostages
men who collected the ransom money in Pahrump, near the
passed today . with no
California border, and fled by light plane to North Las Vegas.
apparent action by either the
After the money was delivered by Reno H. Fruzza, a vice
terrorists or the goverrunent.
president of the First National Bank of Nevada, his wife Polly,
As the 8 a.m. EDT deadline
50, was found unhafllled, handcuffed to a bedpost in an old
arrived, authorities tried
section of theShowboat Hotel in Las Vegas, the FBI said. Mrs.
without much success to open
• - ,. '·1
Fruzza under the name Polly Possum, headed a county
'
up lines of negotiation with
comedy group popular on the western nightclub circuit in the
the gunmen, who are holding
\
late I~ and early 1960s.
105 children at an elementary
school and at least 55 other
KHARTOUM SUDAN-U.N. AMBASSADOR Andrew
hostages aboard a hijacked
: ~ ....
Young today w~d up a 16-day, eight-nation tour of Africa
train 15 miles l&lt;l the north.
aimed at underscoring the American commitment to black
The authorities allowed the
nationalist movements and left for home via London.
MRS. JANE BROWN, RIGHT, R.N. Tuberculosis
two gro ups of gunmen,
SCOTT LUCAS, ADMINISTRATOR of Veterans Memorial Hospital, received
Young met Tuesday with Sudanese President Gaafar
Nurse and coordinator for Meigs County's first Stop
thought to number 13 or
recognition for his notable assistance to last week's Stop Smoking Program at awar~s
Nurneiry, who said afterward ~e had asked for .sophisticated
Smoking Program, was honored Monday night ·when an
more, a direct telephone link
ceremonies Monday night. Mrs. Jane Brown, program coordinal&lt;lr, is shown presenting
U. S. anns. Numeiry, whose natton Is the largest m Afnca, last
awards ceremony . was held for the program's 47
so they could communicate
Lucas with two certificates of appreciation, one honoring him personally, the other thanking
week ousted 70SQvietmilitary advisers and ordered the Soviet
participants. Mrs. Rheha Hysell, executive director of
between school .and train.
the hospital for its contributions to the program. The presentationwas made on behalf of the
Union to reduce its embassy staff in Khartoum.
The American Cancer Society, is shown presenting a
Control of the terrorist
Meigs County unit of The American Cancer Society and the Tuberculosis Clinic. The Daily
plaque of appreciation to Mrs. Bro\\'11.
operation appear to be
COLUMBUS - AN INDICEMENT for receiving stolen Sentinel also was recogn ized for its assistance in publicity.
aboard the train, where the
property was handed down Tuesday against Fr'fllklin County
hijackers told authorities
Treasurer Herliert J , Pfeifer, defeated in his bid for re-election
they would not allow the
last November but whose current term runs through the end of
release of the children
August. Franklin County Prosecutor George Smith said the
because
they . were.
indictment indicates Pfeifer "purchased a front-end loader
considered guarantees for the
and traller that had been stolen from Worthington Tool
safety of the gunmen .
Rental."
The governme nt stated and
Smith said the person who rented the equipment and then
A fatal accident occurred Radcliff, a coal drill operator member of Local Union 1886
restated its position that it
stole it hilS been convicted of theft. "The charges are that he at the Southern Ohio Coal was electrocuted while United Mine Workers of
WEST COLUMBIA , W.Va. Columbia; his wife, Sandra would not consider any deals
,dlsposed'of It by selling it to Pfeifer and ~rank J. Janlln," said Co.'s M,eig~ Mine No. 2 at oj)Crating · his coal dt'li.i.. u,,... Americo and had been a coal - An Appalachian Po&gt;wer Co.
lliggins Mattox; a son, An- until all the children were
Smith. "Janlin was asaociated with Pfeifer, I believe, as an approximately I a.m. tOday. cording to DavidBaker, mine drill operator since Sept. 27, employe died Tuesday af- thony Ta6fas, at home ; a released. Premier Joop den
1976.
employe on his farm."
Anthony Louis Costello, official.
ternoon on Cross Creek Rd. in daughter, Cparity Dawn, at Uyl has also said the
Costello, 24, had been · A joint investigation will be Putnam county near Buffalo home ; two sister s, Mrs. government will not allow
WASffiNGTON - AS ESPECTED, FORMER Attorney
employed at Meigs Mine No. -conducted by Southern Ohio while attempting to set a Delores Long and Mrs. Betty any o.f the hostages to leave
General John Mitchell and former Nixon White House chief of PRODUCF LIABD..ITY
2 since AprilS, 1975. He was a Coal Co. officials, the Ohio primary line of 7;200 volts McKinley, both of Mid- the country as the terrorists
staff H. R. Haldeman are asking for another chance to appeal
Division of Mines, the Mining into an insulator.
COLUMBUS (UP!)- Ohio
dieport; a brother, David, · demand.
their Watergate cover-up convictions.
Enfor cement and Safet y
retailers
and
small
E lectrocuted was Willia m West Co lumbia, and two
Working
thro u gh
On Monday the Supreme Court rejected their petition for manufacturers will be
Administration
and Tabias (Joe ) Mattox, Jr., age grandmothers, Mrs. Emma psychiatric
experts,
review of their convictions, and on Tuesday lawyers for both seriously hurt unless · a
representatives.of the UMWA 30, of West Columbia. Mr. Green, Lancaster, Ohio, and authorities tried without
men asked Chief Justice Warren Burger to delay the effect of product liability insurance
in an attempt to determine Mattox was working on a high Mrs. T. 0. Mattox, Clyde, much success to open
that rejection !lO they can ask for reconsideration of the case. A reform bill is enacted, the
Cloudy tonight, chance of the cause of the accident.
negotiations with the gunmen
current voltage, ,secondary Ohio.
request for reconsideration by the Supreme Court is almost House Insurance Committee evening · sho wers. Lows
The mine was closed fm· line, when he came into
Funeral services· will be at and, at the same time, put
.
never granted,
.
was told Tuesday.
tonight in the upper 50s. mediately after the accident contact with a loose, hot wire, the West Colu:nbia United pressure on them through
The third major defendant, John Ehrliclunan, voluntartly
Charles R. McDonald, Mostly sunny Thursd~y, and was io rema in closed· it is believed. The incident is Methodist Church Thursday thei r , own
Moluccan
began his sentence some time ago.
president of McDonald highs in the low 80s. until midnight tonight.
under investigation by p&lt;llice at 11 a.m. with the Rev. corrununity.
Equipment Co., WillQughby, Probability of precipitation
George Hoschar and Rev. 0.
Shortly before the deadline
and company officials.
WASIUNGTON -TO MEET RISING COURT· caseloads, said a survey in northeastern 30 per cent today and tonight, · :,::::•::::::::::::::::::&lt;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: : · Mattox was born April 6, B. Hatche r in charge. Burial gunmen
holding
the
the Senate has voted to substantially expand the federal Ohio showed . that product 10 per cent Thursday.
1947, in West Columbia. He will follow in the Suncrest schoolchildren at gunpoint
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
judiciary by creating a new Eleventh Circuit Court, 113 riew liability insurance premiums
was a Class A lineman for Cemetery and graveside (ites forced some of the youngsters
district judgeships and 35 new circuit judges. The measure, increased by 106 per cent in a
Friday through Sunday, Appalachian Power Co., an will be conducted by the to stand at an open window
generally fair and warm anny veteran, and a member Masonic lodge. Friends may · and chant, '" Van Agt, we
sent to the House by voice vote Tuesday, would also create a single year and are now
CLOSED
MONDAY
through the period, with of the Clifton-Mason Lodge call the · Foglesong Funeral want to live."
new circuit court by dividing the existing Fifth Circuit Court of taking an average of 24 per
The Gallia - Mei gs Com·
highs mostly In the 80s and No. 23.
cent of net profit.
Home in Mason after 3 p.m.
Dries Van Agt, the Dutch
Appeals,
·
I
. . ' . Alab ama, Georgta,
.
munity Action Agency offices
Uilder the bill's
pan,
MlSStsstppt,
"This rate of increase indi- will be closed Monday, Ma)• lpws in the upper 50s or low
today
and
at
the
church
until
justice
minister,
is
Surviving are his parents,
F'Jorida and the Panama Canal Zone would form the cates a situation which is out
60s.
time
of
services.
responsible
for
handling
the
William P . and Bess ie
refaahioned Fifth · Circuit. Loui$iana and Texas would of control," said McDonald . 30, in observance of
crisis in which South
Coleman Mattox, Sr., W.
comprise the new Eleventh Circuit. Ohio would get two new •'H nothing is done, many Memorial Day.
Moluccan terrorists have
federal district judges. Kentucky woul~ also get a patr, plus small businesses wiU cease to
seized more than 160 hostages
one temporary, and the 6th U.S . Ctrcutt Court of Appeals m exist and the products and
in the school and on a nearby
Cincinnati would get two more judgeships.
jobs they provide will go with
train.
them."
Until now there have been
SEOUL, SOUTH KOREA- THE UNITED STATES today
no negotiations between
assured South Korean President Park Chung-hee .that the
authorities and the gunmen.
JACKSON CONFIRMED
withdrawal of 33 000 American ground troops in four to five
All contacts between them
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
years will not ~ allowed to disturb Korean security. Gen.
have been confined to strictly
Tuesday
George .Brown Chairman of \he Joint Clerks of Staff, and Ohi&lt;&gt; Senate
technical discussions ahout
Philip c. Habib under-secretary of state for political affairs, unanimously co nfirmed
needs for items like food and .
arrived in Seoul,Tuesday to consult with South .Korean officials Richard D. J ackson as
blankets, or about minimum
director of the state
on the pullout.
demands
for
starting
Department
of
Ad·
substantive talks.
ministrative Services.
Observers near the. two
siege sites described the
situation as "quiet."

.. ,..

Miner killed in No. 2

ARMSTRONG OUTDOOR CARPET
-12FT. WIDE
We have these carpets "IN STOCK" .
at the Warehouse on Mechanic Street.
Stop by and select the s!Jie

and color for your porch or patio.

I•

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

,,

Due to the great demand

In reservations, will be
held at the
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
DEPOSITS INSURED TO $40,000

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

Wo~rker killed

Weather

PATIO lURF-6 and 12 FT. WIDTHS

FRIENDLY BANK"

en tine

•

CARPET

FOR WOMEN

y

Deadline
threat
passes

INDOOR-OUTDOOR

POMEROY
NATIONAL BANK

30, then 10 cents an hour more every six months thereafter. By
June I , 1979, hourly wages would range from $7.01 for 'he
lowest-grade employe to Sll .61 for the highest, not including
automatic cost~f·livin g adjustments.
- l,onger and broader coverage of suj&gt;plemental unemployment benefits.
-Gua ranteed income continuance for employes reduced to a
lower pay grade.
- A new holiday in the third year of the conlract.

'

~

'

•

Reynolds spokesman Bob Shalfer said he knew of no other
industry with such wide-ranging gua ranteed income and job
security provisions in their conlract.
The major contract provisions include :
- A formula by which an employe 45 years old with at least
20 years of service could become eligible for a, full pension
after being laid off for two years.
- An across-the-board wage increase of 80 cents an hour
within three years, beginning with a 4fkent..an-hour b(Jost May

.i1News. . •in Briefs\1

•

FINANCE FORUM

Member Federal Deposit Insurance
Cnrporation

*'*********

an official 's written consent

The contract covers nearly 30,500 workers at the five
companies.
Other aluminum manufacturers not involved in the monthlong contract negotiations also are expected to accept the
contract, a union spokesman said .
Bruce Thrasher, chairman of the union's aluminum industry
conference, called the contra&lt;~ 's income security program ." a
breakthrough beyond the steelworkers' contract for protection
of our (aluminum ) workers."

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

Dog warden

Jaycees' best

is employed

famil ies have found security when savi'lg with

'

libel suit against it should be
considered "public figures"
and thus subject to tougher
standards of proof.
In other actions the court:
- Agreed to consider
Housing SecretarY Patricia
Harris' claim her department
need not pay operating
subsidie s to owners of
federally assisted projects l&lt;l
offset certain rent hikes for
low-i ncome tenants .
-Struck
down
a
Con nec ti cut re gulati on
requiring neglec ted and
dependent girls committed to
the care of the state to obtain

MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (UP! )- The steelworkers' union has
accepted an alwnlnurn industry contract that contains a land·
mark package of job security and income guarantee benefits
along with 80 cents an hour in wage increases over three years.
The contract with five major alwnlnurn makers - Alcoa,
Reynolds, Kaiser, Ormet and Conalco - was approved i7-1
Tuesday by presidents of United Steelworkers of America
locals. Reynolds and Alcoa have signed the agreement, which
takes effect May 30, and the three other companies were
expected to follow .

WASIUNGTON (UPI ) " The following table gives
examples of the Individual
tax cuts or increases
projected under the t4Jt law
singned by President Carter
Monday.
The table assumes that the
standard deduction Is used
although many in upper in·
come levels itemize deductions and would get no new
benefit. Figures in paren·
thesis represent a tax in·
crease.
SINGLE PERSON
PVT. SAHYONNE
Income Tax Cut
POMEROY
Army $3,000 $43
Private
Douglas
A. $5,000 $85
Sahyonne, whose wife, Linda, $8,000 $85
lives at 702 E. Front . St., $10,000 $119
Logan, Ohio, has completed $12,500 $19
training as an armor, $15,000 ($58 )
crewman at Ft. Knox, Ky . $20,000 ($68)
His father , John Sahyonne, $20,000 ($76)
lives at 109 New St., $27,5001'$80)
Pomeroy.
$30,000 ($90)
MARRIED, NO CHILDREN
Income Tax cut
$3,000 none
$5,000 $130
$6,000 $117
would not permit his peace $10,000 $137
$12,500 $209
efforts to be affected by
"changes in leadership in any $15,000 $182
of the countries in the Middle $20,000 $100
East"
an obvious $20,000 $128
reference to the victory of $27,500 $128
hard-liner Menachem Begin $30,000 $144
MARRIED,
in Israeli elections.
TWO
CHILDREN
Carter said permitting the
Income
Tax
cut
current opportunity for peace
$3,000
none·
to pass " could mean
disaster." He told editors two $5,000 none
days previously he hoped $8,000 $174
Begin's elections "will not be $10,000 $205
$12,500 $213
a step backward."
During a busy day Monday, $15,000 $172
$20,000 $100
Carter:
-Signed bills providing $25,000 $128
more than $5 billion in $21,500 $128
permanent tax cuts for low $30,000 $144
and middle income taxpayers
and simplifying tax returns
for most taxpayers, and
providing $175 million for this week.
-Got a rousing ovation loans and grants in droughtstanding, from those who
hurting communities.
-Told executive budget could - when be told the
officers he is "deeply White House Confer~ce on
committed" to zero base Handicapped Individuals
budgeting, under which every "the time for discrimination
federal program has to against handicapped is
justify itself each year, and over, and said he wouid
will devote 25 to 30 hoilrs of enforce the 1973 Rehabilihis time to a series of tation Act which is the
l)'leetings with agency and foundation of ciyil rights laws
department heads starting for handicapped persons.

President welcoming F ahd

Slog·

DIAL VERY DRY
Solid Anti-Perspirant

bv Mr. Carter

Steelworkers accept Aluminum contract

Keith Wood, Chester, was
employed as the new Dog
Warden for Meigs County
when the Meigs Co unty
Commissioners met in
regular session Tues da y
night.
Meeting
with
com·
missioners Henry Wells and
James Roush were County
Engineer Wesley Buehl and
Dave
Spencer,
office
manager of the County Highway Department.
Buehl submitted the
engineer's estimated cost of
construction of a bridg&lt;
project on C-29 in Sutton
Township and an up-t&lt;Hiate
report on dust control applied
to various county and
township
roads
was
presented by Spencer. There
has been $8,069.26 spent thus
fat!:lm dust control.

committeeman

Three major
•

is Mick Oillds

e

proJects m
Pomeroy
Three major building
projects are underway In
Pomeroy this summer.
They Include, at left, the
Stiffler Building, W. Main
St., which replaces the old
store destroyed by fire
January, 1976; at right the
Meigs County Branch of
The Athens County Savings
and Loan 1 W. Main St. ;
and, above, the. Pomeroy
Cliffs Ltd. apartment
complex, Union Ave. , being
built by Prime Builders of
Ohio. The apartments
should be ready for oc·
r upancy by Septe~ber .

MEiGS COUNTY BRANCH
·"'''
·:J• ....

.'

'

Mick Child s has bee n
named "Committeeman or
the Year" by the Meigs
County Jaycees.
Others receiving awards
we« J . T. Rue, J •ycee of the
third quarter, and Rich~rd
Roseberry, Jaycee of the
fou rth quarter. An award was
made in memory of the late
James l{ay Hill, and the
"exalted rooster " award
went to Charles Wayland .
The Jaycees extend ap- .
preciation to The Dail y
Sentinel, Athens Messenger,
WMPO
Radio ,
Meigs
Equ ipment, Hank Cleland,
Larry Powell, Bob Thompson, Pomeroy National
Bank, Tom Taylor, Ben Tom
Corp.. and Roy Armes .
~·
~

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