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·

ztJ,

urn

Are you looking for finer homes and productive farms? Call Leadingham Real Estate.
We have a large selectiO.n of good farms and nice homes. Call now.
~ .. f ·~

.Willis T. Leadingham

Associate

Ph. Home 446-2885

··

Realtol

Home 379-2184

Gallia County's Fastest

NEW LISTING- I ROOM &amp;RICK .
Looking for a nice one for the money? This beautiful 1ftoor plan has It all. Here ~rea few features of this
almost new home: 3 large bedrooms. living rm .,
14'x24' , family rm . 14'x25' with 42" fireplace. formal
dining rm ., lor mal toyer , kitchen fully equlp~ed · even
microwave oven , This kitchen shou ld please both wlte
&amp; husband. 2 car garage . auto. door opener , large
patio heat pump, air conc;Htloner. Much, m,uch more,
2800 ~q. ft. overall. Appro;'l . 1 ac. locat~ · on a ver,v
pi ctu resque area overlook mg one of Gall ra County s
fastest growing and most widely '&lt;:nown- Bob Evans
Farms.

.

Supper club fire death toll at 160

' DAVID
- L. L.ANGFORD
lr

,.JOtmiGATE, ltf. (UPl) - llwua Saturdlly night lit lora
alt!llmJ ~ wltll tile lheii-ll!ler stm han81ng at
71 doll'- u lbe - .uled behind the Wla on the Kentucky
' lido of lbe Olio Rlftll'.
.
,And acepl lor lbe country elub croWd oolbe Clnclnnallllde
· of lbe rt-, falb arollld here fiCured the place to go wu lbe
Be val) IIIII.SI'per Club,lbe8elliWn«tMIIlly's l!bowplace up
Clii the bllllf.onr Ale•••ta Pllre.
Not a IIIIer nl.,..dab~ llde oiiM Vegu, -wltlllll threeu.,ed Clblnt Roam of ..,.,.. ted ftlftl and gold and crywtal
~- 'Die place cOuld handle aa nwny as 5,000 people in
Ita :11 party - , .
.
.
'Out ~ tJien wu a ~ while dlapel and a formal
. . . . wllb ltM!IH, a follltaln and a gazebo where they
.,......... bad fMC)' weddings.
.
·
. :n&gt;e IIIIey Ia It coil perbap1S8m11Uon to rebillld whesi the old
place IMI Did down ieVtral years ago. Fro Sinatra Jr. put on
. . llnl tlbow.
.
:11ut &lt;r1 MtiiiiOI'IIII Day weekt!lld Jolm David.mn WBI the
b6adUner In the Cabaret Room where aucb stars as Pearl'

..v.

•
Associate

'

SPACIOUS Till-LEVEL
Are r,ou t i red of cramped corners or need some
grow ng room? Then look at this spacious home
featuring a large living room, dining room, modern
built-in kitchen with dishwasher, nice family room
with wood-burning fireplace, 2•12 baths, 4 bedrooms,
two car garage with concrete driveway. City school
district. This home has character, don 't walt to see.

··t'

Bailey, Lou Rawla, Frankie JAne and the Fifth Dimension
have perfcrmed before.
About 3,500 people llarted started wending their way up the
st~ curving driveway on thi.!t Saturday rqht. They came
frotn as far away 81 Allh1and and Colwnbwl and Frankfort,
thtllled up in their evenlni! clothes, long dreues tind silver
l!boes.
•
1be managers were eJpectlng a big crowd, maybe 1,1110 for
David.mn's show. They put In extra chairs in the Cabaret
~m .

.

Anl&lt;tn8 Utose wbo would be standing in line to get a table for

Ills party of four - jlllt before the apocalypse - WBI Peter
Sabino, a Cincinnati fire department captain.
As twlllght fell in the wedding garden, Darla McColllater, 21,
and Mlke.Gcmber, U, became man and wife.
Other private parties started to swing.
A bowllnil team from E &amp; J Truck Service had taken over
one of the Garden rooma, decorated with. thick red carpel and a
plant-lined stairway leading to a slllken dining area.
In one of th.e Venetian dining I'OOIIllJ, 73 persons celebrated
Ronald Zinunerman'a bar mitzvall.

John D. Hoyle, administrator of St. Luke Hospital, was

having dinner with a dozen doctors and their wives in another

Venetian room .
Acrowd of 400 was In the large Empire ~m for an awards
dinner of the S&amp;vlng.s and Loan League of Southwest Ohio.
About 80 members of the Trl.state ROadnmners, a travel
88110ciall&lt;lll from Ashland, Ky., bad ridden a ru., up earlier in
the day for lite Davidson show.
Also In the crowded Cabaret Room were 35 persons gathered
to honor Mrs. Ona Mayfield, a teacher for 40 years in the
'}'renton-Edgewood sdlool district.
"We had people silting in the aisles and standing along the
walls," said Benny Bucalo, 46, for alx years a bartender attbe
Oval Bar oil the main lobby.
About 8:45 p.m. came the first hint of lmpel!ding tragedy.
John Davidson was in_hla dressing room shavittg.
Oruttage in the Cabaret Room, ~ minutes late, the comedy
team of Jim Teter and Jim McDonald had started to wann up
the croWd.
Waitresses bad started to clean up after a small party in the
Zebra ~m.justoffthe lobby. They noticed smoke coming up

from the basement below.
(It was In this same room, Bucalo said, that a young girl
receptionist had complained of fwnes irritating her eyes a few
days before.)
·
Reports of what happened next are confused . Some say
waiters, cooks tlnd waltres~~es grabbed fire ·extingulshers and
tried to put out Ute fire that apparently started In an oilfueled
generator In the basement.
Dr. Fred Stine, the Campbell Cotm!y coroner in charge of the
makeshift morgue at the nearby Fort Thomas Armory, said he
was iold Ron Schilling, managing the club for his father,
squirted the generator with. an extinguisher and was "blown
across the room" in the resulting explosion.

The coroner said smoke and names were sucked Into the
building's air conditioning ducts and "shot through Ute place."
There was no sprinkler system. None was required by law.
Cleaning silver in the kitchen was Tony Warndorf, 13, son of
Newport pollee captain John Warndorf.
"We saw cooks running with fire extinguishers," young
Warndorf said. "We wanted to gel out, but somebody said II
(Continued on page 12)

•

COU NTRY MANOR WITH AN
ARTISTIC SETTING
One of Gallla County's best 3,200 sq. ft . over aiL
approximately 8 acres of land, nice pond. House
consists of 8 rooms, 3 or 4 bedrooms, 3 full baths, 2
showers, sunken living room 15' xl9' with massive
stone fireplace. Kitchen is beyond words. You will have
to see to believe-nice pantry, bay window looking out
over valley. Heat pump for hi!at i ng and cooling, 28'x8'
decking running length of house. 2 car garage and
' ,Un\v.more features . This QQOd family is leaving
"
. Call today for appointment.

LOOK WHAT WE HAVE r EDGEMONT DRIVE
3 bedroom home modern In every way. Fully
carpeted , except kitcheri &amp; bath. Kitchen is comp lete
-all built
ice size. also eat-i n area . Nlte format
living room Is beautlfl,JI - finished off
the fam ily circle. Full basement.
natur.a l gas furnace . Central air,
Seldom ca n you buy a home on
. These fine people j ust don't move,
for Itself. Call now.

HIDDEN CHALET REDUCED T0$58,000
Due to owner' s health lh ls home MUST &amp; IS GOING lo
be sold Immediately . Priced well below markel va lue .
One of Gallia County's most unique homes, 10 rooms
plus 2 baths, featvring 2 bedrooms on t he main level
and t he master bedroom on the second level wlth
sliding glass doors leading to a balcony. Has a sunken
pit with wood -bur ni ng fireplace, dining room and
modern kitchen complete with all bu ilt-i n cabinets,
dishwasher, dispo·sa l and range. Home Is total electric
with central air. The interior of this is very rust ic with
beamed cathedral ceilings . This cou ld be your dream
home setting on 6 a(:res of woodland . Approx . 3 miles
from Gall ipolis. No sightseers please.

NEW LISTING,107 ACRES FARM
ONners anxious to se ll. Th ts is a good all around farm
located on a blacktop road . Appro x. 45 acres meadow &amp;
tillable, 1400 lb . tobacco base, 25 A . ·mosf'ty bluegrass
pasture. The rest is woo ded area . Two streams running
thro\Jah farm, plenty of water . Rural water or wel l for
homesite. Barn approx. 36'x50'. Like new. Two car
b!ock garag e, 2 utility bldgs. House is ver y modern,
covered with alum . siding . Fam il y m ust sell quick .

WOOD-BURNING FIRELACE .
Beautifu l 7 room home located in a much desired
location in Middleport. All city conveniences. The best
grade alum. siding, n ice shaded front P.Orch, modern
kitchen, nat . gas for ced air furnacze w1th centra l air,
ga rage, lots of shrubbery, level green grassy lot. Also a
rental 3 room house on the rear of this beautiful lot ·
br inging in a nice monlh ly income . This propert y Is
priced righ t, call now.

'
ERTY
CONVENIENTLY LOCATED
One block below 1
Park. n ice home, complete ly
restored, you must see the inside to believe the ex tent it
has bee n remodeled and redecorated. 6 rooms, 2 baths,
F.A. gas furnace, new wiring , plumbing, dry w:_a ll,
paper &amp; com pletely carpeted wi~h top grade ta r p~t!ng.
Fireplace, house Is covered w 1th new alum. srdrng ,
garden area, all of this &amp; more. 1his one is ready to
move into. ·

4 BEDROOMS, ROUTE 588
.
Gallipolis School Distr ict. Lots of room, basement,
family room , 21; 2 baths, garage, modern kitchen, wood burning fireplace, large lot and garden space, sto:age
building, approx. 8'x1 0'. Close to Rodney . Priced r~ghl.

~~

This is the one many people ask for: room 2 story
country home located 1n one of the gr eatest and
picturesque farming areas of Gal l Ia County . One acre,
levelland -very,productive. Great level yard. Garden
spot - the best. 5 large bedroom s, pretty remodeled
kitchen. all buill -In, new bath, dining room. L.R .
carpeted , v ery nice firepla ce around front of house,
blacktop road, rural water. Mu ch more.· Be the first to
call. II won 't last.

Beautiful view on the Ohio
from yoUr liv lrig
room . Like to boat, f !sh &amp; relax each evening on your
own Riverfront? 6 rooms remodeled · home, ni ce
modern ki tchen, F .&amp;B. porches, nat gas forced air
furna ce, au rooms are nicely c:arpe led . Your own
water system . White alum . outside covering, 2 large
nicely shaded lots with 3 cherry trees &amp; one peach ~ A
very economic place to li ve.

7 ROOMS, 4 BEDROOMS
Gallipolis School District, basement, 11!2 bat hs,
modern kitchen , complete w ith bir ch cabinets, F.A.
furna ce, carr,ort, 2 wood -burning fireplaces, family
large of with fru it trees, and a l~rge storage
building. Within 5 miles of Gallipolis. Nice home at a

6 rooms &amp; bath, partial
nice front porch,
beautiful view of river.
is properly is clean &amp;
attractive. It has had many man ·hrs . spent on it. It ls
made more beautiful with garden area, Includes
raspberries, strawberries. cherry trees and grapes;
Less than 4 miles of Gal lipolis, so uth on Rt. 7.

This is a n ice home
Ga llipol is. 4
bedrooms, basem ent, 2
nat.
gas F.A. furnace. Th is home
a two apt .
rental building. Close to business .section. Look thl ..~o
over.

CITY PROPERTY, NICE COTTAGE
S rooms, 2 or 3 bedroom s, bath, partial basement,. nat.
gas F .A. fu rna ce, one floor plan. Close to Super
Market, Drug Store, Laundry • .wal king distance to
Down town Stor~s. Good backyard garden space. Call
now, If you want lh GallipOlis. Priced ONLY $23,900.00.

With 3 acres, more or less, of level land . Less than 'h
mi le off blacktop road, 5 bedroOms. 11h bath, fr ont &amp;
. built-I n back porch, large 161f'2'x22 1f'l' liv ing room ,
automatic washer &amp; dryer goes, bu ilt-In cabiriets, s.s
dbl. sink, elec. cook stove. Hot water circulating heat
plus wood -burning fireplace. Has
· own water
This is a nice up-to-date
home.
;~~;-;&gt;;:If:-·

ic&gt;W

..

6 ROOM FRAME ON 2.84 ACRES

In Mer cerville . 2 or 3 bedrooms, r:ural water, 2 car
garage, wood-burn ing firepla ce, barn, smoke house
with .ce llar. Large shade tree, al so pea1=~ &amp; apple trees ,
All mineral rights goes. All of t his ONL.:Y S25.000.1l\1.

RIVERFRONT COTTAGE
1 acre plus 2 bedroom s, .4 other outbu ildings. Has its
own water system . Approx. 230ft. frontage on the @h io
River ; also frontage along Rt. .7. Shade trees , storm
doors, heated with gas, fron t &amp; back porches. Like lo
fish? Boat? or Relax to the breeze of t he r iver?

Located on
home with
bath, liv ing room , eat-in kitchen.
home was
completely re finished last year and looks very nice.
Garage, cellar, extra building lot. Also with this
property is a well established grocery sto re which has
done busines s for at least 40 yrs. House and business
each has new roof . This propert y could be a good .
investmen t property . Call now!

We Advertise Only What We Have To Sell.
We Need A Picture of Your Home or Farm. Call Now For Full Details.

..

23112 A. BY TYCOON LAKE
Just across Eagle R d . from
Tycoon Lake . It has a.
Con crete Blo ck (Large)
Building made Into 3 rooms
with si ngled roof , drilled
well , septic tank , larg e
pond . The land is l~vel to
roll ing . Gr eat ar ea ·ror
developmen t, cou ld make
you some money . Good
Investment property . Call

now.

SMALL FARM LIVING
Today 's choice - ap'prCuc 25
ac. of pasture &amp; farming
land . Nice 7 rot)ms, full
basement , 3 bedrooms.
good barn, '2 other ou ts ide
bldgs . fences fair, plenty
water l or cattle , smal l
t obacco
acreage .
All
mineral r ig hts goes, block
p1.1mp house . We are ready
to sell.
2ACRES

4 ROOM COTTAGE

213 ACRES

t •oom home , F.A. fur ·

wood - bu rning
4 barns, mIlk
mIlk tank,
m inerat
of pastur~
, ••..:_··:_-of tillable .
218.

Remode led, nice l~vel 2
acre lot. city water.
bla cktop rolld, close to
Vinton, land Is In grass and
garden, some frull trees .
Two utility bldgs ., _ nice
extra bu ild ing !ot. House
has 2 bedrooms , liv ing
room , nice size built -In
kitchen, plus a bathroom .
Immediate
possession ,
good buy. ONLY $1'2.000.00.

COUNTRY HOME &amp; 40
ACRES
5 Bedrooms, bath ,. white at.
siding , nice cou n tr y kit chen wi th built -In cabs .
Elec . w al l oven -table top
range . Fuel oil furnace and
a wood -burn ing space
heater. also a wood burning fireplace . Orillect
wel l w ith electric pump .
B ~rn, corri crib, chicken
good
pasture,
house ,
fencing , 15 to 20 acres of
timber , approx. . 20 A.
tillable land . All minerll l
rights goes , several apple
t rees . Call now .

IIOACRES PLUS
vac ant A woodland
wonderland
some
pasture and· tillable land .
Less than 1160 ·per acre.

. lSOACRES
$350.00 PER ACRE

Th is is a good H ill Farm .
Lots of possibilit ies. 85
acres of pastu r e, -tO ac r es
Or more t i llable , some
limber . Line fences ar e
good . 10 rooms remodeled ,
2 story house , 3 well built
barns, 2 sheds and other
ou tb uildings . Call
for
appointment.
5.1 ACRES
5 ROOM HOME

21f2 miles from Gallipo l is.
Ni ce wooded building lot at
the to p· or th e hilL So me
marke ta ble l imber , also
spaces for two mobile
homes . Home
has 3
bedrooms , battl , eat .i n
kitchen , buill -i n cabine ts
and electt ic stove , l ivi ng
room.
In clly school
ctlslrict . Cal l Now.

ACREAGE
BUILDING SITES
65 Acres , located in Green
&amp;
P erry Twp . Small
amovnt Of timber , 50 A
til lable , 2 barns , 40'x30' and
40'x2 4'. If you ar e looking
for va14able la nd for In ·
vestment , here It is . Ca ll
today .
LAND CONTRACT
6 rooms, 2 story, wopd burning firepla ce, tl t y
water on a l arge lot in
Vinton .
$2,000
down
payment and S133 .3,. per
month . Just li ke rent. Call
. for more .in format ion .

S~~18N~~~~·~k~y

vac ant lots - nice size
lots with a II
utilities there . Lot size
191.8' by 171.2'. Better get
'um now ,
bu lid ing

VACANT LAND
3 ACRES M. OR L.
· Level land in Galli polis
City Schoo l Dist. on Clay
Chapel Rd . w~ miles from
. Sta te H lghway 7 . 750 ft .
frontage on eu·r nt Run Rd .
&amp; 150 fl . frontage on Clay
Chapel Rd . Only 53,000.00 .
30ACRES
WOODEO AREA
Vacant land - all mineral
r ights Qoes . A good plac;e to
r etreat . Hunt or just be by
yours~lf . ONLY $1-4 ,900 .00.

MOBILE
HOME &amp; L.OT
ONLY $5900.00 on . Sta te
Hi ghway 554.
1963 3
bedroom Town
Ho1.1se
Mobile Home with drilled
well with electric pump.
~ISo storage bldg . 12'x 12',
loca ted on level lot . . 29
Acre . Quick home f or
someone .

2 VACANT LOTS
Located in Po rter brook
Subdivisi on and priced et
only ss,ooo.oo eac h.
WOODBURN lNG

FIREPLACE

HOUSE &amp; LARGE LOT

Garden space: 2 bedrooms
on Jackson St . in VIn ton , F .
&amp; R . porches, city water,
gar age &amp; stor'a ge area ,
walls are paneled . Cejllngs
are t11 e. On ly 56, VUU .UU .
MOBILE HOME
LIKE NEW

Ki r kwoo d

197-t model
14'X65' .
5 rooms ,
2
bedrooms, bath &amp; Shower.
modern kitchen all built In
with a double wall oven. 5
piece dinette set , living
room fu rn iture, bed roo m
furnitur e, air condltiof')er .
10'X7' metal storage bldg .
Smoke alarm . It all goes. A
qu ic k home for a modest
price . can now .

1 ACRE PLUS

Geor o.es Cree k Rd .
19 75
Kitkwood 12' x 60'
mobile hOme, '2 bedroo m s.
Large
'24'x28'
g arage
(concrete
blo ck
with
shingle roofl li ke new. Has
rural water system, sep tic
tank . Extra nice building
lot. All on l y $15 ,900.00.

On

SUPER BUILDINu
SITE- 27 ACRES
Th is is the one you have

been looking for . Over 27
ac . land . Old homestead,
very little Va lue except
wonderful ch oice area for
building . Rural water li ne
runs the lrngth of approx .
1'2 acres , ready to develop .
Approx. 15 acre_
s timber
land all within S miles of
Galll polfs. Bla cktop rd . to
the area . Th is w ill go fast ,

,.
•

.Fifteen Cents
Vol. 28, No. 32

Deputies busy
on new probes
Sheriff James J. Proffitt
aid today bla department is
lnveatlgatlng a reported
breaking and entering of the
Jobn Murphy retidence at Rt.
4 Pomeruy In which entry
W.. made through a window.
Notblng apparently was
taken.
.However, Mrs. Mable
Pauley, Rt. I, De•ter,
reported to the sherHrs office
that iomeone Friday knocked
the Joek off ller garage door
llid atole a gas can and tools.
:somebody apparently
~rtled too much as around
1:30 a.m. Monday Nonnan M.
!(yoell, Rt. 1, Long Boitom,
reported that bla mailbox was
knocked over by an
anldentlfled auto traveling
eut on Eagle Ridge ROad.
Aod David Reed, Rt. 3,
. Pomeroy, has. reported the
llleft ol a battery from his
!Wdng boat docked on Sugar
Cunp Creek near Reedsvtue.
In two otller thefts, Grant
Boring, Reedsville, reported
that sometime after rnldnlgbt
Wanday a 20" boys bicycle
,._. atolen from .hls front
yard. The bicycle was found
tit Forked Run State Park
~rldng lot. Also stolen. after
· JD.Idnlght was a 10-speed
jl!cycle from the Clayton
Kimes residence on Indian
Run Hill. Both thefts are
Wider investigation.
...Depulles arrested Ricky A.
:rn1or. 18, Lincoln Heights,
Pomeroy, on a charge of
contributing
to
tbe
.di!llnq,uency of a l!llnor by
.f!lmllblng beer to ' minor
!llrl. She was also charged

any 11 W&amp;nts" on him. 'lbe
l'tlply came back that there
was an old warrant on file. He
was arrested and taken to
jail.
When his brother arrived at
the jaU to bond him out, the
brother, Bernard Bay, was
also arreSted Clll a warrant
that had been filed at tbe
same . time .by Tommy
McGuire. Both were released
on bond.

DIGNlTARIES - This waslhe truckload of (llgnilaries taking part in
annual Memorial Day serviceS held on the Pomeroy parking lot along the
Oj!lo River Tuesday.

.- ...

SALUTE FIRED -The firing squad of the Drew Webster Post American Legion under
the command of Edgar Van Inwagen fires a salute to the war dead on Memorial Day In
Pomeroy .
·

:!u:!~~=~e.CIH!:~ ·. M emorial' Day
Jrrested by deputies on an old
Wlrrant ol attempting to
cause physical harm to

:ro;:;:~:~::~rt
Beegle
and DaYid Woolard were in

DG. LOTS
Have you been
a home with a country
setting? Stop loo i
·
It Is. A nice home with 3
bedrooms, bath, Shower, modern kitchen with built-In
cabinets. douPie sink, living room , fuel oil forced air
·furnace . new steel siding recentlY. Installed, ci ty
water ; also has a small barn, outbui d ings and cellar ,
Appro x. 2112 acres . Look thi s over .

enttne

·. Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
. Tuesday, May 31, 1977

'aeedavllle lnveatlgtitlng a
iheft when Bay came driving
along and stopped and
started talking to the
\teputtes, Insisting they were
.Jooklng for blm. He persisted
tillllting that the deputies
· 1R!'e In the looking for
111m, so the deputies ra(lloecl
jlle office to see if there were

marked
p
Ch
m omeroy,
ester·
e

Memorial D&amp;y was marked
in Pomeroy and Chester with
community observances
featuring parades, speeches
and an appearance in both
towns by Charles Green,
Warren, past slate commander of the American
Legion.

For the first time, Pomeroy
services
were held on lbe
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
upper
parking
lot along the
T•aroday tbroa1b
Ohio
River
with Drew
Salanlay, lair ucl cool Weboter Post 39,
American
: .. n.utAty. Warmer wllb a . Legion, again serving as
cllaKe ol •wen maiDiy
sponsor of the services.
II llle ..a. Friday aad
Vaqghan, active in
,..e,. tile otale Salanlay. theFrank
Americanism Program of
111P1 wm be tram tbe low
· to mid .,.. 'l'llanday iad the American Legion, was
of ceremonies at both
: tram tile upper 'ltl to low master
Pomeroy
and Chester and
. . . Friday ucl Salanlay.
Introduced
Green. In his
....... wDl be Iaiiie Slo.
addresses, Green stressed
~~===~~~::::::::::*».:::::::(.:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

tbe Importance of paying
tribute to servicemen who
had given their lives for their
country. He also observed
that the. day IS a good time to
teach young people what
America Is and what ·
America stands for.
Introduced also t some
making short talks and introducing otber members of
their organization were Allen
Downie, post chaplain, who
gave prayer; Pomeroy
Mayor Clarence Andrews,
Who gave an address of
welcome; Mrs. Grace Pratt,
Drew Webster Auxiliary
president ; Mrs. Florence
Richards, Middleport, eighth
district auxiliary president;
Mrs. Carrie Nuetzllng who
presented a poem, "Flanders

:Area's drivers careful
Unlike the nation and most the Hol2er Medical Center
parta f# the state, no traffic where Ray M. McGuire, 35,
latalltlila were recorded over Crown City, pulled off the
.tile long Memorial Day · highway to park and his car
nokend In GaUia and Meigs struck a highway sign
causing minor damage.
Courtlei.
· The Gallla-Melgs Post
A deer was struck in· an
State Highway Patrol, accident at noon Monday on
bowner, from 8 p.m. Friday US 3$, two mill!!' east of the
to midnight
Monday, Gallla County line . Tbe
~IStrafftca~~Mta
animal ran Into the path of an
In wblch three persons were auto operated by Donna G.
Pariseau, Wellston. There
inJured.
· Four mlnor ·accldenta were wu minor damage.
Jnveltlpted Monday.
Bonnie C. Woollson, 25,
' The lint occurred aU a.m. Vinton, waa slightly injured
180 n- the Mtrsnce to in an a~ident at 9:3$ &amp;,m.

Cll .

Monday on CR I, one and
eight tenths miles soutb of SR
124.
The patrol said the
Woollson car went out of
control In loose gravel, ran
off the roadway strtk!ng an
embankment. There was
minor damage.
Altnala~ldent occurred at
10 :40 p.m. on US 35, west of
279 where steven C. Adams,
:ZO, London, apparenU~ fell
asleep at his steering ~heel.
He awoke in time to swerve
his vehicle but it struck a
road. sign.

DEAD SALUTED - Legionnaires from Middleport
Feeney Bennett Post 128 observed Memorial Day with a
three-gun salute to the dead at eight locatiQns In the
Middleport vicinity Moo day morning . Firing squad
members above (with rifles) are Carl Moodispaugh,
Albert Roush, Nonnan VanMatre, Lewis Long and
&lt;llarles Edward are at the Riverview Cemetery on
Middleport Hill. 1be group also tra~eiled to Ute levee, the

Field"; Mr11. Mary Martin of
the 8 et 40, and Sheriff James
Proffitt.
A salute to tbe dead was
given at the river by the post
firing squad where a wreath
was placed on the river and at
the Civil War monument on
Second St. The Voices of
Liberty directed by Mrs.
June Van Vranten ·and accompanied by Mrs. Dorothy
ByUnltedl'realnlenlaUoaal
.
Carr ptesented two patriotic ,,~
AT
LEAST
17
PERSONS
died
in
traffic
a~
ldents
in
Ohio
selections and numbers wel'tl
played by the Meigs High ' during the Memorial Day holiday weekend, the State Highway
Band and the Wlihama Band. Patrol said today. The patrol survey showed one death Friday
:The EUtern High band was night, seven· Saturday, five Stindily and four MoQday.
Two double fatal accidents were recorded. One crash
on hand at bOth observances.
Saturday
killed two m&lt;torcydlsts in Zanesville, and two
A parade followed the
pa99e11gers
In a car were killed Monday in a BuUer County
program in Pomeroy and
eras!&gt;.
Four
motorcyclists were among the victims.
amon~ those taking part
were the Pomeroy Pollee
Department Chief Jed
&lt;X&gt;LUMBUS - STATE ENERGY OFFICIALS are
Webster, the Meigs High consideringa21k:ent-a-ton "use"taxonaUcoalburned In Ohio
drwn arul bugle corps, the to raise money for coal research and development projects.
mayor and sheriff, Girl State Energy Ollef Robert Rj'Bn revealed the strategy to raise
scout, Junior Girl Scouts, and $14 million at a recent meeting of the state Energy and
Brownie Troops Including · Resource Development Agency:
He said that without newftmding, Ohio may not land a $250
Pomeroy Juniors 1180;
Syracuse Brownies 1204, mWion ConocoCoal Development Corp . coal gasification plant
Salisbury 1200, Pomeroy 1254, now in the planning stage for Noble County. Conoco and an
Pomeroy 279, Pomeroy Dllnois firm each received a $25 million design grants from the
Juniors 1276, Harrisonville federal govenunent last week. After a u-&lt;nonlh design stage,
Brownies 1062; tbe Melg.s federal energy officials wiD decide whether to build in Ohio or
Band, the · Drew Webster Dllnois.
Auxiliary, Pomeroy Boy
Ryan said in order to gel Ule federal go-ahead, Ohio must
Scout Troop 249, the Wahaina contribute about lOper centofthe Conoco project cost - or$~
Band, tbe Glo-ettes, the to $30 million. He said aim that energy and environmental
-~
revenue bond programs could be expected to raise no more
Bashan 4-H Merry M....ers than $15 mUlion. Ryan said a use tax for the nexilo years on all
Club, tbe Eas!:ern Band, the 70 million tons of coal burned annually in Ohio could !ill in the
Meigs Order of DeMolay, fire
and emerRency units from gap·
Pomeroy,
Middleport;
Racine, the Meigs High
SAUSBURY. RHODESIA -RHODESIA SAYS its troops
Cheerleaders, Ther• Start and warplanes struck almost 50 miles into neighboring
(Continued on PM• 12)
(Continued on page 12)&gt;

Middleport Hill Cemetery, Park Street Cemetery,
Bradford, Addison, and Cheshire Cemeteries, and Ute
Legion Park on MUI St. Other Legion members
participating and shown above (1-r) , are M. L. Kelly, Sgt.at-Arms; Walter Bunce, chaplain; the firing squad; color
bearers Lanny Tyree and Henry Clatworthy; Raymond
Justice, color guard. Kim Jones and Linda Eason played
taps .

~;li'riefo1 Tr~edy blamed
on Cigarettes
today to pick up his car and to
lly RICK VAN SANT
SOUTHGATE. Ky. (UP!) talk with arson Investigators.
"It's conunon practice to
- The busboy who gave the
dump
ashtrays
in
first warning of the fire at the
Beverly Hills Supper Club tablecloths," Bailey told ·
Saturday night said today he newsmen. "That's the first
thoUght the blaze was started thing that came to my mind
by cigarettes dumped into a when I saw tbe smoke. I
tablecloth In a private party figured a tablecloth had
room which he said was a caught fire
" ! remember about six
conunon practice at the plush
months
ago a tablecloth
club.
.
started
smoldering,"
he said.
Campbell County Coroner
"1
think
the
!Ire
started
in the
Dr. Fred Stine tnday revised
Zebra
Room
."
th e numbe r of dead
Deputy Kentucky State
downward from 160 to 158
Fire
Marshal Tom Wald tuJd
because of "an oversight in
said
previously he had
the body count.
interviewed
a waitress who
'There were two nwn~rs
assigned to bodies and there had been cleaning up in th&lt;
were no bodies," sa id Stine . Zebra Room after a party and
Stine said 19 victims said she · told him she saw
. remain unidentified . He said smoke and flames in the
three of the bodies were room and tried to put out tbe
visually Identifiable but the fire with a fire extinguisher.
Bailey said he did not
16 others were badly charred
actually
go into Zetra room
and would have to be
that
night
but as he ran
Identified by dental recor&lt;IB
toward
it
he
saw clouds of
or fingerprints .
smoke
pouring
from the room
The busboy , Walter Bailey,
which
would
hold
about ~ to
18, Alexandria, Ky., showed
up at the r~ins of the club 30 persons.
1

1

�2- The Daily Sentinel. Middleport-Pome roy, 0 ., Tuesday, May 31, 19'ry

.-.

Relations with ••..•
Cuba proposed

I

•

•

•

Memorial Day
•

scenes zn two
• •

communzttes

-

- -·

-

-

*

--

&gt;

PRIZE BAND - The prize winning Wahama High School Band as it ap..,ared for
Memorial Day services in Pomeroy Monday.

•-

..

'

•

f

,.

----

CHERYL ARVIDSON
KINGSTON, Jamaica
(UP! ) - Offictala traveling
with Rosalynn carter on her
twoweek Latin American
mls,91on say Wullington has
formally proposed that the
United States and , Cuba
Install dlplomals In each
other's capitala.
Mrs. Carter, acting as her
husband's good wW emJsaary
in her diplomatic debut, met
for three hours Monday with
Jamaican Prime Minister
Michael Manley on topics
ranging from U.S. relations
with Cuba to Jamaica's rural
development.
The offictala traveling with
her, who declined to ba
named or quoted, said
Monday the U.S. proposal
calls for Cuban diplomats to
operate
from
the
Czechoslovakian embassy In
Washington and for the
Americans to be stationed in
·the Swiss embassy in
Havana .
Currently, U.S. affairs in
Havana and Cuban affairs in
Washington are handled by
Swiss and Czechoslovak elltwo
plomats in the
embassies.
They said the United States
made the so-called "Interest
section" proposal In writing
toHavanaonMay10andthal
the two nations are
discussing the proposal this
week at an undisclosed
location in New York.
Although such an arrange·
ment would fall short of full
diplomatic relations, It would
be a major step toward
normalizing relations
between Cuba and the United
By

-.
J.

COUNCIL MARCHED - Members of Chester Council:, Daughters o,f Amerka,
appeared in their patriotic costume - even down to ''Uncle Sam - m Mondays Memorial
Day parade in O!ester.

FIRST APPEARANCE - Three new majorettes made their farst appearance with the
Meigs ffigh School Band Monday in Memorial Day activities. They are from the left Sherri
Mitch, Vicki Sheets and cathy Blaettnar. On the right is Susan Wright, the band's field
commander . The other new majorette is Nancy Wallace who was not eligible to march with
the high school hand as yet because she is still an eighth grader.

Atomic power said too costly
nuclear power is "a batgain serves pass along to
we can't afford," economical consumers unexpected costs
WASHINGTON (UP! ) Environmentalists say only because the utilities it for substitute fuels during
shutdowns.
In a new handbook spelling
out ways to fight atoinic
IQu•ET I power, the Environmental
Action Foundation said
citizens can · effectively
chaUenge the economics of
nuclear reactors as well as
such traditional issues as
plant safety and siting.
The 98-page handbook,
tltied "Nuclear Power: The
Bargain We Can't Afford,"
said economic challenges
already have slowed reactor
development in Maine and
Iowa and have provided
safeguards for consumers in
Pennylvania and Alabama.
The EAF i.s a private, nonprofit environmental action
group based in Washington.
"We need an hon.est
reassessment of nuclear
power's economics ~fore we
plunge into ... an ambitious
expansion program/' said
Richard Morgan, author of
the
handbook,
noting
President Carter's energy
· plan calls for Increased
reliance on atomic energy.
Morgan, who has written
several other books on how
"Remember lhe good old days when stories began with 'Once consumers can challenge
By EDWARD K. OeWNG

MARCHED IN TWO PARADES- Making two Memorial Day parades Monday was the
Eastern High School, band pictured moving along the parade route in Chester. Earlier the
group appeared in Pomeroy.

Hives

HEALTH
lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - My
problem is th8t I am constantly getting hives on my
face. They vary in size from a
pea to as large as a quarter.
They itch and greatly resemble mOSquito bites . in appearance.
I am 20 years old and have
had these for several years.
There i.s rarely a day that I
don't get one and have had as
many as three in one day.
The problem is that I have
no idea what causes them
although I have tried to
switch make-up and shampoos. I have also tried to keep
track of a particUlar !ood
substance without much success, as I still get them even
if I haven't eaten for hours.
I frankly don 't know how or
where I can go to be rid of this
problem. I would be terribly
grateful for any advice you
can give me as it i.s so
frustrating as well as embarrassing.
.
DEAR READER - Hives
are allergic reactions. The
most common cause i.s a food
allergy. Finding out what the
food is that causes the pr&lt;&gt;'
blem is not always easy.
Some doctors put patients on
a rigid diet with unseasoned
foods least likely to cause
allergies. If the patient gels
along all right then foods such
as milk and milk products are
added one at a time to be sure
it is not the offending agent.
ln the course of time the foods
that a person is allergic to
will be identified. Often it is
some spice that is used In
foOds U..t 18 really the offending agent.
Jf you really want relief I
would suggest that you see an
allergist and Jet him start you
011 a program. Some hives are
.;used by contact with
chemical but not as often as
from food allergies.
l.ess commonlY a person
·111ay be allergic to animal
dander' and contactllwith the

offending animal may cause
hives . People who are
allergic to bees may not be
able to eat honey without the
lips and mouth developing
hives.
·
An insect bite may cause a
hive at the site uf the bite and
also may cause generalized
hives all ove&lt; the body - a
condition doctors call
generalized urticaria. Infec. lions of all types can indu(!j .
an allergic reaction with
hives. So can the medicines
used to treat infections. A
rash induced by an allergic ·
reaction ·to a medicine is
nothing more than generalized hives.
Still other patients develop
hives in response to cold and
others to heat and sun exposure. Screening com- .
pounds used to prevent sunburiUng often help to prevent
solar hives. For information
on screening compounds I am
sending you The Health Letter number. 7-10, Your .Siun :
Sun, Agmg·, Spots and
cancer.
Not all or the so-caUed
screening compounds work
and a person sensitive to the
sun needs year around pr&lt;&gt;'
tection. Others who want this
issue can send 50.cents with a
long , stamped , selfaddressed envelope for it.
Just send your request to me
in care of this newspaper,
P.O. Box 1551, Radio City Station, New York, NY 10019.
The hive is caused by a
release of a chemical
substance In the body t:alled .
histamine. For that reason .
treatment of the actual urticaria ( hives ) usually
employs one of the antihistamine medicines. These
can also be used In prevention , for example, Immediately after you have
eaten something thal you
know causes an allergic reaction.
The drawback to antihistaminies ill tbe side effect

on face
of feeling drowsy. In severe
intractable cases the adrenal
cortex hormone, prednisone,
may be used for immediate
relief.

upon a time' and ended with 'they lived happily ever after'?" ·

NEW ALLEYS
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Sawmill Lanes, central Ohio's
first new bowling alley in 13
years, opens officially this
week.
One of the first attractions
at the 4~ane facility will be
the Professional Bowling
Association's
Carnation
Bowling Classic June 11 and
12. .
Top prize in the regional
event will be $2,000. Eighty
entrants fiun six states are
expected, Including pro Roy
Buckley ol Columbus. ·
Twelve · qualifying rounds .
wW be rolled June 11 and the ·
12 survivors will meet headtohead June 12.

. TIIEDAILYSENTINEL
OEVmu&gt;ro111E
INI1tlmiTOF

MEIGS-MASON AREA

OIESTBk L. TANNEHIIJ.
Em:. Ed.

ROBERT HOEFUCH
·
·
Clb Editor
Published dally ext-ept SalLtrda&gt;
by The Ohio Valley t:'ublishing
any, 111 Court Sl., Pomeroy, Ohlo'
.S7$9. Business Office Phone 992.-

Corn-:

:Zl51. Edi\orilllf'booe~21&amp;7 .,

Second class postage pa1d at
Pomeroy, Ohio.
N.itklnal advertising represen;.
wUve· WMrd • Grillilh Corq».ny,
Inc.,. BotUrielli and Gallagher Dlv., .
757 Third Ave., New York, N.Y.

11017. .

.

Su.blcripUon rates: Delivered by
lWrier where INIJII. ble 'roo cenU per
wee+;:. Br Mot. Route where can-ier
rtervic..~ not avaih1ble, One month,
$.l 25. By n111il ln Ohio l:lnd W. Va.,
One Year, $%l.OO: Six mont.h.9,
$11.5£1; TJ1ree months, $7.00 ;
Elsewllere $26.00 year; Six monlhl
SI :J.SO; Three munth sj Si . ~ .
Sub!Jl•r iption pril.!e Includes SllJ'Idly
:;.;;...._
1'u:n~nlinel.

__
_.,_

_,

"Clean out the still, Zeke,, - we're gonna be rich!"

electric utilities, focused
criticism on the cost of
nuclear plants and provisions
that allow utilities to charge
consumers extra 10hen they
must buy coal or oU for power
during times when atomic
reactors are shut down.

"When a reactor ls shut
down
or
derated
unexpectedly, the utility
must locate an alternative
source of power," Morgan
said. "Most utilities can
generate · their
own
replacement power at an idle
coal or oilfired plant, but at a
substantial increase in fuel
costs.
"The fuel clause permits a
utility to pa:is these increased
costs to its customers immediately . Without this
provision, the cost of
replacement fuel would be
absorbed by the utllitity's
stockholders - at least until
the next rate · increase is
pennitted."
Morgan said nuclear
generators are out of service
about 40 per cent of the time,
more than twice the outage
rate for coalfired plants.

states.
M. Mn. Carter arrived in
Kingston, she was greeted by
hundreds of school children
who lined her motorcade
route and waved flag! 81 she
pa•aed. Shesteppedoutofher
car and greeted the crowd
per110nally at one point.
She was to vlalt a qar
cane cooperative - and
perhaps do liOffie cane cuWng
herself - then meet again
· with Manley before leaving
for Costa Rica today.
Traveling with her was
Assistant Secretary of State
Terence Todrnan, the chief
negotiator Involved In talks
with the Cubans on fiaheries
and maritime boundaries.
'The officials said the .
Cubans, who rejected the
American proposal to station
dlplomals In each other's
country when it was first ·
made early this spring,
suggested during Todman 's
visit to Cuba that the
"interest section" proposal
be put In writing.
Todrnan said Mrs. Carter's
talks with Manley were
''very, very useful" because
Manley's left-leaning
. government has maintained
close ties with Cuba.
American officials said
Manley was receptive to Mrs.
Carter's comments
concerning new U.S. foreign
policy initiatives and
objectives. They said the
hostility that marked U.S.·
Jamaican relations during
the Nixon-Ford years had
been replaced by a desire for
cooperation and consultation.

Reds confident they'll
Portsmouth takes BASEBALL
:.it
overtake
LA's
Dodgers
two from Meigs
MIJ o r Le1 g ue Sland lng'5

By united Pren tnt•rnationat
N• tional Leag ue

e.,,
w. L

Ch icago

,,

...,,

-••
'

...

,"

.

"'

.....

...
"
' '•

-.

..
"

Probe opens
into health ••
care boards ·;
CLEVELAND (UP!) ,.
Boards of directors of Blue
Cross and Blue Shield ••
organizations, including "_..':
those here, are being rk
Investigated by a con- , "
gressional subcommittee for
possible conflict of interest, It
'
was reported today.
.
·•·
The House Interstate and
Foreign Commerce . ,
subcommittee on oversight ·
and investigations was · '
conducting the study of ''the
..
structure of boards and their
.,
composition,"
one of its staff "\,!
.
members was quoted as
saying.
'"
"We alllo are looking at an · ··
overall study into costs and
•
the quality of health care.
One of the componenls is · '
conflict of Interest in the
insuranCe mechanisms;"
staff member EWott A. Segal
,
added, according to the
Clevelan~ Plain Dealer.
He said the investigation
would question whether
banks, hospitals, the medical
profession and nursing homes
benefit if their board ;'
members alllo
on the ~
board of a health Insurer.
. A spokesman for Medical
Mutual of Cleveland, the Blue
Shield plan based here, said
the health care insurer has
required conflict of interest .._
, statement.s from board and · •
staff members for 15 years. ;~
· Most of the 10 such plans In
the United States, he said,
have many health care •
expe~ on their hoards. ·

.

McCLElLAN MENDS
WASHINGTON (UPI)
Sen. John L. McClellan, 81, a
veteran Arkansas Democrat,
Is reported· In "good
condition" recovering from
an '.operation Friday to
implant a
permanent
pacemaker for his heart.
the Ol&gt;'ration, performed
at Walter" Reed Army
Medical Center, was needed
to stabilize an IrregUlar heart
rhythm, a hospital. spokesman said.
He
said McClellan,
chairman of the Senate
"
ApproJ?ri&amp;tlons Committee;
'
underwent the surgery ''with
no complications."
DAD AND GRAD
McClellan, 10ho ranks
SOUTH HAMILTON, Mass. " .
second In Senate l!eniority' (UP!) - Former President
10as hospitalized May 17 after Gerald Ford dellvera the
complaining of unusual .commence!IJenl address
fatigue:
today at his son Michael's
graduation from the Gordon·
Conwell
Theological · ·'
SIDE WITH SINGLAUB
Seminary.
SAN DlEGO (UP!) -The
Ford;
10ho
arrived
former skipper of the U.s.
Thursday with his daughter ' •
spy ship Pueblo, 10hich was
Susan, played a round of golf
captured by the North
·Koreana, IJUilii(JI1s the stand at the exclusive Myopia ·
Country Cll'b Friday before
that got Anny Maj. Gen. John driving
to nearby Eaae~t for a
K. Slnglaub diaclpUned by quiet pregraduation
party at
President Carter. .
·
the
apartment
of
Michael,
26,
Retired Cmdr. Lloyd and his wife Qayle.
BuCher said Friday he agree&amp;
The younger Ford, who
with Slnglaub that carter's
attended
Gordan-Conwell
·planned withdrawal of U.S:
UJroughout
his
father's term
ground troops from South as president, said
he will mill ·
Korea may lead North Korea
Esselt,
where
he and his wile ·
to attack.
live· In a model!, two-lamlly
He said Sln8laub "had an ho-.
.
.
Obllgat!on to ~peak out and let
"I've
been
llo happy here. · ,
the American public know the The people are Wlllderful.
truth."
They haVe reapected m"y
Lt. Cmdr . Steph~n R. privacy and we have
Harris,
tbe . Pueblo's
intelligence officer. wben I( respected them," Michael . .. .
said.
was captured In 1961 off the
He said he hopei to set a
North Korean rout, agreed
ministry
where he can belp '
with Bucher. He said
\,·
Slnglftb "got a bum rap." young people.

serve

3-!he Daily Sentinel, Middlo;port-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, Mlly 31, 1m

ByGreglllllley
The Meigs American
Legion Baseball team started
Its season Sunday by dro)r
ping a pair to visiting Portsmouth 6--1 and Il-l . The
Port.smouth nine promt.ses to
be one of the strongest Legion
teams around In southeastern
Ohio In bsnglng out 23 hits in
the two games.
In the first game, Craig
Tubbs led his team to the win
as he socked a booming
homer in the first frame to
give his team a quick 1~ lead
and the momentum It needed.
Tubbs' blast was a to10erlng
one as it cleared the centerfield fence easily. The
visitors got one more in the
second on two hils, and then
in the third, clean-up hitter
Ken Bailey unloaded a two
run homer to.give his team a
&lt;HI lead.
In the bottom of the third,
Meigs pulled to within two as
Brian Hamilton Jed off with a
walk. Brent Johnson singled
and Tim Carman followed
with a safety that scored the
All SEOAL Hamilton. Mick
Davenport got Johnson home
with a hit and run single, But
Carman was out at the plate
when he tried to score too.
Portsmouth won it in the
seventh when they got two
runs on a walk, a double, and
then two more free passes,
Meigs had a rally going in
their half of the last frame,

but itreU two runsshort. With
one out, Mike Triplett
walked, and losing pitcher
Steve Baird doubled him
home. Rick Johnson then
walked and Baird came hone
on a fielder's choice. Reliever
Call then came oo and fanned
pinch hitter Art Folgestrom ·
to end the threat.
Steve Boyles got credit for
the win as he and Cell teamed
· to fan seven and walk four.
Baird was tagged with Joss,
fanning eight and walking
four.
Brent Johnson had two
singles to lead Meigs, Baird
had his double, and Carman
and Davenport each had a
singletoroundoutthehittlng.
Tom Boden and Tubbs each
had two hits to lead the
visitors.
SECOND GAME
In the second contest,
Portsmouth got all the runs
they needed In the second
Inning 10hen they plated three
on a walk, a double by Bailey,
and two singles. Meigs plated
Its only run in the bottom of
the second when Mike
Wayland walked, advanced
on a single by John Sayre,
went to third on a walk to
Carman, and raced home on
a wild pitch. Portsmouth got
three more in the sixth and
five in the seventh.
Terry Wall, Folgestrom,
and Triplett combined to fan
seven and walk a like num·

ber, with Wall being tagged
with the loss. call . was the
winning pitcher as he went all
the way giving up five 10alks
while fanning eight.
Brent Johnson got a double
for the localll' only extra base
hit, and Hamilton, Sayre,
HoJ!Ier Smith and 'fl:!Piett
each cracked a smgle.
Batley, Cornwell, Kirkee and
Fisher each had two hits to
lead the winners.
Head Coach Charlie
Hmilton Indicated he was
pleased 10ith his team's
debut, although they dropped
both games. Meigs had only
three errors, and made no
mental mistakes. The boys
from the area' s schools
played well together after
going through the high school
season as opponents. Every
boy on .the Meigs roster saw
playing action, and the team
was very aggressive, attempting seven steals and not
being thrown out once.
The next game is Saturday
when Wellston comes to
Syracuse for two games.
First game starts at 4 p.m.
P
112 000 ~ 10 1
M
002 000 2,.-4 5 1
Boyles (WP), Cell (7) and
Thompson . Baird and B.
Johnson.
P
030 003 5--11 13 I
M
010 000 0- I 5 2
CaU (WP) and Simpson.
Wall (LP), Folgestrom (6).
Triplett (7) and Hamilton.

Padres sweep pair
·from San Francisco

P ltt&gt;txlh

St . Lou is

Phila
Montreal
New York

lOS Ang

Pet. GB
28 15 . 651
26 16 619

27 18 .600
2.4

19

.551

18 25 .419

15 29 .341
West
W. l
P et . G B
33 14 .702

Cinci
21 '23 . ~77
San D iego
23 28 .AS1
San Fran
20 26 .-435
Houston
19 27 .413
Atl anta
17 31 .354
.
Mandl 'l't Res ults
Montreal 5, N.Y . l , 1st
Montreal 3. N .Y . '1 , '2nd

10112
12
12112
13111
l6 1 '2

Sa n Diego 12. San Fran 8, 1st
Sa n Diego 9, San Fran 8, 2nd
St . Louis 14,. Chi cago 0
Ph il adelphia 6, Pi tt sburgh 4
Cincinn at i 7, Atl an la 3
Houston 5, Los Angeles 3
Today's P,roblble P itchers
(All Times E DT I
Pi ttsburgh ( Demer y 3-2) at
Ph iladelphia {Lerch 4-2}, 7: 35

p.m .
Montrea l ( Alca la 1.2) llf New
York &lt;Seaver 4-3 ), 8: 05p.m .
Ch icago (J:~onha m 6-Jl at St.
LOU IS ( D enny 6-0 ), 8 :35p.m .
Atlanta (Ea ster l y 2-Jl a t
Ci ncinnati {NOII!In 3-0 l . 8 p .m .
Los Ange les ( H ooton 4. I I at
fi ouston (Rich ar d 3-4) , 8 :35
p .m .

San D iego (G riff in A-31 at San
F rancisco (Barr 6-4), 10 : 35
p.m .
Wednesday 's Games
san Diego at. San Fran cisco
New York a t M on t r ea l, nigh t
Pittsburgh ;:~ t Ph lla, night
Atlantll a t Cincinnati, night
Chi ca go e t St . L ouis, night
Los Ang e les a t Houston, nfgh t

Amer iun L eague
East

W- L
Balti mre
New Yor k
Boston
M ilw
Clev el nd
Detr oit

Toronto

Pet. GB
26 17 .605
26 20 .565 ...,
23 21 .523 3 112

25 25
l'il 22
17 26
18 28

west
W.
28
25
21
23
22
21

.500
.4(&gt;3
.395
.391

6
9
9lh

Pel. GB
.622
,56a 2111
Texa s
.500 5112
Calif
.500 S111
Oakland
.469 6
Kan City
,477 61h
Sea ttl e
21 30 .412 10
Monday' s Results
Milwaukee 4, Chic ag o 3, 1st
Chicago B. Milwaukee 3, 2nd
Seattl e 7, Texas 4, 1st
Sea ttl e 9, Texas 3, 2nd'
Cleveland L Cal ifor nia 0
Kansa s Ci ty 4, Toron l o 1
Oak land 6, Det r oit 3
Baltimore 9, M lnn esola 7
New York 5, Boston 4
Todn's Probable Pitchers
(All Times E DTI
Californi a ( H ar t zel l 1-41 at
Cl eve land ( Gar land 2-5) , 7 : 30
p .m .
Oa kl and (Blu e 3-5) at Detr oit
( Hiller l -51 . 8 p.m .
Bal t imore
(May 6·41
at
M i nnesota ( Redfern J.J ), 8 : 30

M inn
Chica go

L
17
19
21
23
23
23

4112

CIN CINNATI (UP! ) Pole Rose 's eyes swept the
players as lhey crowded
around the television set In
the lounge adjoining the
Cincinnati Reds' clubhouse.
" If this were a couple of
weeks ago, you wouldn 't see
the players watching," said
Rose .
As he spoke, the Houston
Astros were just wrapping up
a 5-3 victoy over Los Angeles
which reduced the Dodgers'
lead to 11).1&gt; games over the
Reds in the Nationa l League
West.
"We've been out to LA and
showed the Dodgers that we
can heat them and we think
we're a better ball club than
they are," said Rose whose
eighth inning single Monday
night broke a tie and the Reds
rallied for lour runs and a 7-3
win over the Atlanta Braves.
"This is going to he one hell

of a season/' added Rose who
is aware that the Reds still
have a long way to go to catch
the Dodgers but is confident

they will.
" What !like about lonight 's

game is that we scored three
more runs after we broke the

tie," said Rose . " That's
something we haven 't done
much or this season."
WalkstoGeorgeFoster and
Cesar Geronimo off rookie
lefty Don Collins touched off
the Reds' · winning rally. A
sacrifice fly and a fielders
choice later Rose singled
home Geronimo with the tiebreaking run.
Ken Griffey followed with a
two..-un triple, his third hit of
the night, and then scored on
a Joe Morgan single.
How good is Griffey going
to he '
" He has great abUity and
his agg ressiveness will
delermine how great he'll
be ," replied Rose .
The Braves don't want
Griffey any more aggressive
than he was Monday. He
singled twice, tripled and
stole two bases.
Rose, with in 200 hits of a
3,000 career total and owner

.,

of just· about every club lead-off homer in the bottom
offensive record, i.s envious of of the sixth .
·The homer was the 11th of
Griffey in just one respect.
"! just wish that we were the season for Foster. Seven
winning ..,nnants and cham- of them have come with tl)e
pionships in the '60s when I bases empty.
"I doo 't csre i! seven of
was in my 20s.'' said Rose
Foster's homers have been
wishfully.
Then his face brightened. solos," said Rose. "They've
" But, " he added as an come at good times., .like that
aft e rthou~h t,
" th ese one tonight tied the score. I
Foster ' s
homers
pennants and
champ· call
ionships we're winning n the adrenatin shots because he
'70s do keep a guy feeling hits them so hard he gives us
momentum."
young."
The Reds and Braves
The Reds had a 2-&lt;l lead and
rookie Tom Hume, making resume their series tonight
his second start since being when Gary Nolan will go
recalled from Indianapolis, against braves knuckleballer
was working on a one-hit Phil Niekro.
shutout when the Braves
scored twice in the fifth on a
THI S WEEK' S SPE CIA L
walk to Gary Matthews, a
triple by Junior Moore and a
single by Barry Bonnell to lie
VALUE
the score.
RATE D
Doubles by Jerry Royster
and · Darrel Chaney gav e
USED CARS
Braves
starter
An dy
Messersmith a 3-2 lead in the
top of th e sixth. Foster
quickly tied the score with a

1973 OLDS
DRTA 88

Game 4 tonight
BY BILL McFARJ..l,ND
PORTLAND, Ore. (UP! ) Philadelphia , somewhat
stunned that Portland has
recovered its aggressive de·
fense and lightnin g-like
offense al home, may resort
to ea rlier taciics tonight in
game 4 to try and void a Trail
Blazer r ush to tie the NBA
championship series at two
games apiece.

winning the first two games
in Philadel phia . That
strategy in volved center
Caldwell Jones and the for·
wards bringing the hall up
court in order 00 keep the
pressure off.
·
Philadelphia guard Henry
Bibby was asked if the 76ers
might do that again in game
4.
0

Maybe,"

sa id

Bibb y,

adding, " We 'knew what
another hole like we did on Po rtl and co uld do with
Sund ay ," said George pressure .. . but we played
McGinnis, the slumping 76er into their hands. "
.Philadelphia star forward
forward . "Portland is a good
Erving saw Sunday's
Julius
doubles and two singles.
who struck out six, is now 6--1.
club and nowt hat the series is
By BilL MADDEN
game
as
one in which "we put
2-1,
they
have
something
to
Fingers
got
the
final
San
Bahnsen,
acquired
lasf
week
UP! Sports Writer
pressure
on otrrselves. We
fight for ."
Aside from using 41 players Francisco out in the O!&gt;'ner in a trade with Oakland, went
were
trying
to catch up the
P o rtl a nd ' s . press ure
Monday in piloting the San and hurled a no-hit inning of five Innings and gave up
whole
way
and
that was the
defense, which ca ptures the
Diego Padres to a IU, ~ relief in the nightcap. Dark three hits.
diHerence
.
They
we re
ball and conv erts th e offense
Memorial Day sweep of his employed a total of 13 Astros 5, Dodgers 3:
outstanding
p.m
.
.
,
early,
got
a
jump
Joacquin Andujar hurled a
into an awesome fast break ,
former club, the San pitchers in the two games.
New York ( P alter son 1- l l at
on
us
and
we
definitely
can't
Francisco Giants, Alvin Dark. . The doubleheader sweep five-hitter for 8 2-3 innings Boston (Clev eland 2-3) , 7 : 30 turned the trick Sunday as
allow
them
to
do
that
if
we
the Blazers won game 3, 129- .
made two key moves in his extended the Padres' winning before giving way to Ken p .m .
Wednesday'
s
Games
expect to win .' '
107:
first day as manager. He streak to four and propelled Forsch as the Astros scored Kan City at Toronto, n ig ht
Portland is riding a ! &amp;them
over
the
Giants
into
four
runs
in
the
second
to
"
We
didn
't
want
to
let
Clev
eland
at
Detroi
t.
night
shifted Mike I vie from fifth to
York at Minneso ta, n ig ht
Portland qo th at - establish game home co urt winning
third in the batting order and third place in the National hand the NL West~eading New
E!alt imore at Ch icag O, n fgh t
Lea·gue
West.
!Jodiers
their
third
straight
control
early, but the Blazers streak. It h'asn 't lost at home
Boston a t Texas. n ight
summoned Rollie Fingers,
Elsewhere
in
the
National
.
Joss.
RBI
singles
by
Enos
Oakland
at
Sea
tt
le,
night
did
,"
said I;'hilad elp ~ i a in eight playoff games·, and it
his most trusted relief ace
League,
Montreal
swept
a
Cabell
and
Art
Howe
Coach
Gene
Shue, who had won the last eight regular
whim he was witH the
designed
some
strategy th at seaso n gam es at home .
doubleheader
from
.
New
highlighted
the
four-run
Oakland A's, to finish Up both
worked
well
for
the 76ers in Co unting the playoffs ,
York,
5-1
and
3-2;
Cincinnati
seoond.
games.
International League
Portland has the best home
downed
AUanta,
7-3;
Houstoo
Pbillles
8,
Plr•tes
4:
United Press International
!vie respooded by tying a
court
record in the NBA,
putawayLosAngeles,S-3;
St.
Tim
McCarver
doubled
·
W l PCT GB
major league record with five
losing
but
six times at home ,
Pawtucket
26
14
.650
doubles In the doubleheader Li:mis put O!icago to rout, 14- home three runs in the first Charleslon
26
14
.650
includi
ng
exhibition s, the
and driving home a total of 0 and Philadelphia bested and Steve Carlton spaced 10 Rochester
22 20 .524 5
regular
season,
and playoffs.
· hits in gaining· his seventh Tidewater
six runs, whHe Fingers Pittsburgh, 1&gt;4 •. ·
19 18 .51 4 5lf2
Portl
and
Coach
Jack
Over in the American victory for the Phillles. Syracuse
19 21 .475 7
notched saves in both games,
Ramsay
said
Sunday's
win
Richmond
.17 20 .459 7 1!~
his 11th and i2th of the League, it was Cleveland 1, Sartlflce Dies by Carlton and Toledo
20
26
.435
9
"means
only
that
we're
1-2.
California 0; Kansas City 4, Bob Boone and a solo homer ' Columbus
season.
12 28 .300 14
There's the second game
Monday's Results
"! had heard a lot about Toronto 1; Oakland 6, Detroit by Ted Sizemore accounted
tonight and we will strive to
7-9,
Texas
_
4-3;
New
for
three
other
Pbillies'
flliiS.
3;
Seattle
Syracuse
8,
Toled
o
3
!vie whUe I was a coach with
play just as hard and just as
In
the
Ohw
V
alley
In·
Charleston
8,
Columbus
2
York5,Boston
4;
Ch1cago
~.
Cards
1«,
Cuba
D:
the Cubs," explained Dark.
Pawtucket 6, Rochest e r 5
persistently." If that brings a
dependent
Baseball
Leag
ue
Milwaukee
4-3,
and
Ken
Reitz
slammed
a
two"The Cubs pitchers told me
Ri chmond 5, T ide wate r 3
win,
then he says there will be
over
the
weekend,
the
host
Baltimore
9
MinneSota
7.
run
·homer
and
Lou
Brock
he was a tough out because he
the
cha llenge
of
Rock
Sprin
gs
tea
m
and
Expos
5-3,
Mets
1-2:
added
a
two-run
triple
during
always gets a piece of the ball
Phil~el phi a 's Spectrum,
Syracuse
split
a
pair,
the
Tony
Perez
hit
a
two-run
a
nine-tun
sixth
inning
for
St.
and hardly ever strikes out."
hosts winning the first 5-4 and
!vie had two doubles in the homer to support the four~it Louis. Pete Falcone, 2-5, was
the
Syracuse team ·gaining a
first game, one of them pitching of Steve Rogers in the beneficiary of a season
split
by taking the second 4-0.
driving home two runs in a the opener. Andre Dawson high 21 hits by the Cardinals
0202 10000--&lt; 51 01
In the first game, Brady N.Y.
seven-run seventh inning , had a two-run homer ·in the who snapped the Cubs'
Boston
110 01 0 OlD- 4 7 0
Huffman got the win as he
Tor r ez (6-31 ancl Munson : Lee
while in the nightcap, he went second game which gave Stan winning streak at five . Brock
NBA Playoffs
fanned seven and walked ('1 - 1) and Fisk . HR s_.;._. N ew
International
5-for-5 with three more 118hnsen his first win as a had a total of four RBI in the By UnitedF i Press
Jack son (8 1. N et tleS (10) ;
nal
Round
nine, but gave up just three York.,
National Leaguer. Rogers, game.
Boston, F isk ( 10 ).
(Best of Sevenl
hits, all singles. Those three
Philadelphia vs . Portland
(Philadelphia leads, 2-11
hits were by Tom Cook, John
May 22- Phila 107 , Por t lnd 101
Baird, and Wamsley .
May 26~ Phi ! a 107, P ortln d 89
For the winners, Mark
May 29- Portlnd 129, Ph ila 107
May 31 - Phila at Port lnd
Tannehill
had two singles
June 3- Portlnd a t Ph ila
while
Roger
Abbott had a
x -June 5- Ph lla a t Portl nd
x -June 8- Portl n d a t Phil a
double. Getting a single each
x-if necessary
Springs.
·
home siretch of· ihe 440.
were Jeff McKinney, Dave
By GENE CADDF$
Actually,
Akron
North
stl)l
Walker,
who
led
most
of
the
Boyd,
and .Eddie Young. Jeff
UP! Sports Writer
way, was disqualified, could have won or tied for the
COLUMBUS (UP!) .
Hubbard took the loss as. he
Jesse Owens had ·one ol his costing him a sure second AAA championship if it had
walked four and struck out
SP.orts Transactions
worst days ever Saturday In place finish, when he hooked won or finished second in the
seven
.
BY Un•ted Press Internation al
Ohio Stadium, although he Alliance's Antone Blair as the mile relay, but the VIkings
In the seco nd game ,
Monday
Aviator speedster was going finished a disappointing
Baseball
Syracuse's John Bai rd pit·
wasn't even there.
Boston _,_ R eact iv ated out sixth.
past
him.
Owens, a ~former Ohio
ielder Rick M i ller ·and. sent ched a line game as he fanned
Holloway took the 120-yard futilityman
The disqualification cost
Da v e Coleman to eleven while walking only
Stater and a track legend the
one, and gi ving up just three
world over, saw his name North eight sure poinls and highs in 13.7 to set a new meet Pawtuc ket (t L ).
hits. Cook, Walbrown , Ash
. struck from the record book the VIkings ended up losing record and won the !~yard
of the state High School the AAA tiUe to Columbus low event in 18.9. •
and Wamsley had singles lor
Other new meet marks 14.
Track
and
Field Linden McKinley by seven,
the
winner~ .
Columbus DeSales and
were set by Columbus Marion
O!ampionships, not once, but 32-25.
F or the losers. J eff
Linden, also the AAA Franklin's Ken Lanier in the Elyria West had 19 points to McKinney too k the loss
twice, records which had
basketball champion this AAA shot put, Mike Lee of tie for fifth in Class AA, striking out eight and walking
stood since 1933.
followed
by
Shelby,
Todd Bell, a muscular ~ll­ year, 10as paced to its win by Columbus Briggs in the AA Circleville and WarrensviUe only two. Boyd and Tannehill
Ohlo football player !J'om Mike Holloway, who won both long jump, Jqhn Boylan of Heights with 14 each.
each had a double while
Middletown who is expected hurdle events and ran a leg of Strasburg Franklin in the
In Class A, Parkway Young singled again.
to be a Buckeye gridiron star the Panthers' winning 8IJ(). aass A high jump and Kevin finished fourth with 22 points, s
202 000 0--4 3 2
Bryant of Bellbrook in he
the next four years, erased yard relay team.
R
401
000 ~ .6 3
Mark Mattison took both Class AA high jump. Five followed by Caldwell with 20,
Owens' «+year-old long jump
Ayersville with 18 and Hardin S
record when he ·leaped 24 the 220 and ~yard dashes new marks were set on . Northern,
130 110-4 5 3
Bluffton and Canal R
and
also
anchored
a
winning
Friday.
feet, 6% inches, three illches
000
110-() 3 1
Other double winners in the Winchester with 14 apiece.
better than' Owens did for mile relay team to help give
Dayton Jefferson the Class meet were C&amp;ld10ell's Brian
Cleveland East Tech.
Later In the day, AkrOii AA championship in a Jonard, who wori both the
Class A one-mile and twoNorth's Jeff Walker, zipped nmaway.
Jeflersiln finished with 54 mile runs, and Mike Smith of
the 226-yard dash in 20.7
seconds, a lenth of a second points, weU ahead of Lorain Yellow Springs who took the
better than the meet record Clearview, Columbus Briggs Qass A 100 and 200-yard
set by Owens the same year, and Cincinnati Mariemont,· dashes.
Dayton Roth, Columbus
even though Owena mark was tied for second with 26.
Marion
Franklin and BrecksAnd
Columbus
Academy,
established
on
the
ville
finished
tied for third in
thanks
to
a
victory
in
the
onestraightaway.
the
Class
AA
team raee 10ith
mile
relay,
edged
out
Galion
But, Walker, despite his
20
points
each while
Northmor
and
Yellow
record breaking 220 and a 9.5
Cleveland
Glenville,
Springs
for
the
Class
A
time In winning the 100-yard
Middletown
and
Alliance
championship
.
Academy
dash, cost his team th~ Class
each
had
18
and
Austintown
¥A team title .w1th an totaled 30 points to 28 each for Fitch and Columbus West had
Northmor and Yellow
un~ely loss of pmse m the

where Portland l1asn 't won
since 1974.
" We know we have to win a

game in Philadelphia to win
the championsh ip ," .said
Ramsay . " I know it is
possible to play well on other
noors. We did in bolh the
De nver a nd Los Angeles

series. But first, we have to
concentrate on the game

Syracuse in

'

windo w &amp; door l ocks .
Cru ise Control, fa c . ai r ,
v inyl roof .

'1595
Karr &amp; VanZandt
You' ll Like Our Quality
Way of Doing Business

GMAC FINANCING
Pomeroy
Ope n EveninQs '1116 :00

9'92-5342

TiiSp .m . Sat.

tonight."

AHome Owner's Policy

You.r Home: Protect · It
Against All Disaster!
Fire, theft, liability ... rest
assured that you can meet
your responsibilities as a
home owner no matter what happens!
A• k Abo11t It

weekend split

Owens' records erased

SEDAN

Fu ll power. i nc luding seat,

" We can 1t dig ourselves

Rock Springs,

Pro playoffs

ROYALE H.T.

DOWNING CHILDS
INSURANCE AGENCY, INC.
Middleport. 0 .

992 -2342

Your next vacation
could cost you $90,000.
Wh~n c amp e rs
g el c areless with
fire. !he y can
start a forest
burning. If you
ever get that
careless. you're
liable for Ihe
damages . You
c'ould end up
p aying I hem.
Every payday for
Ihe resi o f you r
life.

�~The

-

D&amp;ilySentinel,Middleport-Pomeroy,D., Tuesday, May 31,1977

4-The Daily Sentinel. MiddlePOrt-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, Ma}' 31, 1977

PRICES GOOD lHROUGH
SATURDAY, JUNE 1977

Eckersley no-hits Angels 1-0
By MARit FRIEDMAN
UPI Sports Writer
Dennis Eckersley never
doubted for a moment he was
going til throw a no-hitter at
.the Calif&lt;rnia Angels Me&lt;1day
night, and Joe Rudi 's
attempted kiss of death was
certainly not enough to
prevent it.
" After Ray Fosse popped
up for the final out in the
eighth, Rudi was trotting in
and I was already on the
mound," said Eckersley. "He
kissed the ball and threw it til
me." Rudi , with a sheepish
grin, admitted to planting the
smacker . " Dennis is a good
kid "''d I was just kidding
around. He showed no
reaction, though, so I didn't
even think he noticed ."
The name-throwing right·
hander walked Tony Solaita
with two out in the first, then
retired 19 straight batters
Wltil Bobby Bonds reached

homers in tbe second inning
to help Mike Torrez gain his
sixth win in nine decisons for
the Yankees. Carlton Fisk
had a solo homer in the eighth
for Boston to cut the lead to 54and the Red -Sox almost tied
it in the ninth. but Buich
Hobson was nailed at the
plate by Mickey Rivers.
A's 6, Tigers 3:
Dock Ellis pitched eight
strong innings Ill hand Detroit
its sixth sttaight loss and
boost his record to 2-4. Jim
Tyrone hit a solo homer in the
seventh for Oakland as Dave
!Wberts absorbed his seventh
loss in 10 decisions.
Royals 4, moe Jays 1:
AI Cowens rapped out three
hits and scored once and .Joe
Zdeb s ingled home the
winning run in a tw~un sixth
inning to help the Royals to
victilry. Paul Splittorll went 7
1-3 innings to even his record
at 4-4 and Mark Uttell picked
up his sixth save.
Mariners 7·9, Rangers 4-3:
Ruppert Jones put Seattle ·
in front with a tw&lt;H"un double
in U1e first game and Carlos
Lopez banged out two solo
homers and an RBI -double in
the _nightcap to provide the
Mariners
with
a

safely on a thipktrike wild
pitch in the eighth. Eckersley
coaxed l))n Baylor til bounce
into an inningending double
play lo smother that threat
and preserve the 1.() victory.
Virtually ignor~ was the
lrilliant masterpiece thrown
by Eckersley's counterpart
Frank TanWJa. Only a triple
by Kuiper and a squeeze bunt
by Jim Norris in the lirst
inning ruined his shutout bid
as Tanana's record dropped
to 8-2.
• Elsewhere in the American
League, New York edged
Boston, 5-4, Oakland dropped
Detroit, 6-3; Kansas City
cUpped Toronto, 4-1, Seattle
swept Texas, 7-4 and 9-3,
Milwaukee and Chicago split
a-pair, Milwaukee taking the
opener, 4-3, and Chicago the
nightcap, 8-3, and Baltimore
outslugged Minnesota, 9-7.
Yankees S, Red Sox 4:
Reggie JackSon and Graig
Nettles ripped back-to-back

Record Indy 500
sum paid drivers
INDIANAPOLIS (UP!) Tlle Indianapolis Mo\or
Speedway Monday night
distributed
a
record
$1,116,870 among the 33
drivers in the 6lst annual 500mile auto race.
A.J. Foyt, who drove to an
Wlprecedented fourth victory
in Sunday's holiday classic,
split $259,791 with his crew,
the second highest winner's
purse in Speedway history .
It was
the eighth
consecutive year that the
Speedway race paid off a
million dollars. Last year's
total was $1,037,775, with
winner Johnny Rutherford
and his crew taking home
$256,121.
Foyt led only 46 laps
Sunday, including the final
16, after front-running
Gordon Johncock pulled off
the track because of engine
trouble.
The total purse included
$804,800 from the Speedway,
$30,000 in lap prizes and
$212;ooo
in
accessory
awards.
R1111nerup Tom Sneva received $109,946 and thirdplace AI U!lller $66,231.
. Wally Dallenbach, who was
fourth, received $41,191 and
fifth-place Johnny ParSons,
$36,139.
..
: : Rounding out the top 10, in
'order, were Tom Bigelow,
$30,465; Lee Kunzman
.$29,128; Roger McCluskey
.$27,255; Steve Krisiloff
·$26,652 and rookie Jerry
::jneva $25,416.
: Rutherford, last mthe field
·of 33 since he completed only
12 laps, received less than

·:~Results,

. •r

• '" · y .
000 010 ooo- 1 4 1
. ·. Rogers (6 -4) and Foote ;
· 'Espinosa. Baldw in (7). Myrick
• :(8) and Stearns. LP- Espinosa
• .(2 .4). HR- Montreal. Pere-z (6).
'" .

·
71
.
OllD 010 OlD- 2 7 1
·: Bahnsen, Kerrigan 16J, McE .
.nuney {7), Alklnson (8 ) and
Carter ; Todd. Apodaca (61.
Lockwood (8) and Grote. WPBahnsen (l .OJ. LP- Todd (2·1).
HR- Montrea l, Dawson (2 ).
120

, Mtl
.. N.Y .

uoo ooo- J.

c 1st game)

000 100 740- 12 12 0
san Dgo
San Fran
001 010 204- 8 11 0
Owchinko. Sawyer (6 ), Spill ·
ner f7), Tomlin OJ. Wehrmeist .
er (8 ), Flngers 191 and Tenace;
McGiolhen, Moffllt (7J. Cornutr
(8) and Rudolph . WP - Sa wyer
(4 .4). LP- McGiothen {2·.51.
HRs-san Francisco, Evans 2
(5). Clark (1) ; San Diego,
Hendrick (5 ).
(2nd Game}
002 111 1Jo- 9 1. 2
San Dgo
San Fran
104 002 Dlo- 8 12 5
O'A c qui s r o. Splttner (3),
Tom 1 in (41, sawyer (6),
Wehrmelster (7}, Owchinko (8),
Fi ngers (9) . and Davis, Tenace ;
Knepper. Heaverlo (.til. Wil ·
Iiams (7) , Moffitt (8) , Lavelle
{9l and Hill , Sadek . WP-

f.~~r~~i~t~J~~' · o~:;-.M~~i~~
drlck (6): San
Thoma ssOn CSJ.

Francisco,

000 000 ooo- 0 , 6 1
Chicgo
St,Lous
001 309 10x- 14 21 0
Krukow, Moore {S) , TOCSd (6),
Hernandez (7), P . Reuschel (8)
"'"d M i tterwald ; Falcone ( 2 · ~1
and Simmmons . LP- Kru kow
(A.J) . HR-Sf. Louis, Relfl {6) .

002 020

pns"gh

ooo- 4 10 1

Phlla
300 020 01x- 6 8 0
Klson , Jllckson (6 ). Gossaoe
(8) and Oyer ; Carlton &lt;7·2&gt; and
McCarver . LP- Klson ' (J,J) .
HRs- Pittsburgh , Robinson (J) ;
Philadelph ia, Sizemore (2 ).
Atlanta
Cincl

Collins
{7),
C"'mp (8) , Capra (8) and
Correll' P o c o r o b a : Hume,

Messenmith,

Murr~Jy (7}, Eastwlck (9) and

sench Plummer. WP - Murrav
(Q.A ). HR 12-ll. 'L P-CollihS
t
( 11)
F
Cincinnati, os er
·

OOOJoo 200- 3 s 2

~~~:.~u
04000001x - S 90
;
R.u ' Sosa (7) hand (9)veaoer
and

Andujar,

'

Forse

.,

' NO DEALERS
PLEASE I

....

their last two games, limiting
the opposition to ,a total of

·
Leaders

Major League Leaders
BV United Press International

By ARTHUR fDGBEE
PARIS (UP!) - Two U.S.
pilots landed within IS
minutes of each other at I.e
Bourget airfield Saturday as
part of celetratlons marking
the 50th anniversary of
Charles Lindbergh's historic
non-6\op Atlantic crossing.
David Gray was followed 1~
minutes later by Joe Wolf.
Both had taken off from
Fannlngdale and both flew
F~per Cherokees.

STEW

8READ

Lane-~ed

Dairy

GATEWAY

lB.

-

FIMrs

ICE CREAM

Baked By Betsy Rts

89•

16 oz.

¥zgal:

loaves

WAITING IN LINE -Children and parents waited patiently outside the Syracuse Pool
Monday to enjoy the day swirruning.

Lesson learned well
one day 40 years ago

••

·

MASON FURNITURE

STORE HOURS

'Mon ., Tues., Wed. &amp; Sat. - 8:30til 5:00
THURSDAY Til12 NOON

+ ...H

va.

+ ...H

..

I

ON A 3 LB. CAN OF

I

MAXWELL ~o?~~E COFFEE

GRAPENUT FLAKES

I

1-

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..

'24 OZ. BOX

+
·
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1

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Coupon
June 4, 1977
Twin. City Gateway

.

GRAVY _TRAIN

.

DOG FOOD

'4 99

No. 505

25 LB. BAG

Coupon Expires June4, 1977
Twin City Gateway

Coupon Expires June 4,1977
Twin Ci.ty1111
G.a1te1•w•a1lyill 1

•••••••t

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VANISH

I

CRYSTAL BOWL CLEANER

I

69e

No. 155

48

oz. CAN

Coupon_Ex~ires June4, 1977

I

J

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Twm .C1ty Gateway

I~--------------,--------------~
. FAB DETERGENT
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SKIPPY
I
·1
·
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PEANUT BUTTER
I

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49 OZ. BOX

Sl19

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Coupon Expires June4, 1977
Twm C1ty Gateway

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Coupon Expires June4,1977
Twin City Gateway

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NO. 185 .

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·FAM-ILY

SIZE BARS

69'

like when we bad a · halfmillion people out of work lor
116 days. I heard the people
say, 'We have to find a better
way. We can'tlive this way."'
After Uoyd McBride •is
sworn in as Abel's successor
on Wednesday, "Abe," as~
is known Ill friends, will
reside in Sun City, Ariz.,
away from the noisy, dirty
life of steel mills Wid in the
quieter world of fishing Wid
gardening.
Born Jorwith Wilbur Abel
on Aug. 11, 1908, the white·
· h;lired, squarely ~uilt labor
boss is descended from Welsh
coal miners and was the son
o( a blacksmith.
· He worked side-by-side
with Mexican, Italian and
Slavic immigrants in the
Canton, Ohio steel mills in the
1930s. But as a member of the
union's 'hierarchy lor
quarter-century, he saw the
USW's ranks swell to include
women and even college
graduates.
Abel, who followed Philip
Murray and David . J .
McDonald as the union's
third president and who

a

Berrys World

I
I
I

Coupon Expires June4, 1977
~~.L
_Twin City Gateway
1
1---------------r----------~--HELLMAN'S
I .
.GLAD
I
1
MAYONNAISE
I
TRASH BAGS
I
Twm C1ty Gateway

I
I

II

II

MASON1uRNITURE
Mason. w.

POST

I

By SCOTI MACLEOD
PITTSBURGH (UP! )
LW. Abel, who worked in
smoky eastern Ohio mills at
16 and rqse to become the
mild-mannered president of
the United Steelworkers
union, learned a lesson in
labor history 40 years ago on
Memorial Day.
When 10 workers were shot
and killed by police during a
violent strike, Abel took the
episode as a cue to "find a
better way."
Abel,
68,
retiring
Wednesday after a 1Z-year
tehure, leaves as a legacy a
cooperative relationship with
steel · companies that was
climaxed by a milestone "no
strike" agreement to provide
guarWJteed production and
better wages .
"I've been through it all,"
Abel said. "! know what a
Memorial Day massacre is,
like in the city of Chicago in
1937 when a strike went four
months and was los!, Wid
people were shot down like
dogs.
"And 1 know what the last
strike we had, in 1959. was

99e

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Twin City Gateway

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Twin City Gateway

· euuJ.tlll

•'

·

I ---------------r--------------~
HUNTS
I
HUNTS MANWICH
I

FRIDAY UNTIL 8 PM

HR - Oakland. Tyrone {2).
Ball
011 0'23 2DO- 9 14 1
Mlnn
010 030 Joo- 7 14. 1
G r i m s I e y, Martinez (7),
McGregor (1) and Dempsey;
Thormodsgard , Sch!Jeler &lt;51,
Johnson CH, Burg meier (8) and
773-5592 . Herman Grate
Wyneoar . WP- Grimsley (5 -3).
LP-Schueler (2-2) . HR: s- 6ai · ~...HHI+•..,.H. .+ ...H . .
tlm ore. MBy 2 (4) .
p
-.r-.• .

SAVE •1.00

1

..

1
1

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NO. 125

2

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69C

Coupon Expires June 4, 1977
Twin City Gateway

~--------------

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oz.

CANS

...... ~-.....&amp;""""'

.:.....·~

DiviNG IN - Shortly after the ribbon cutting ·
ceremonies children and adults began to file in and take
. advWJtage of the new pool that people claimed to be the
greatest thing that could happen for the residents of the
village and county.

Harrlson, Brett CarL Brill
King and Ronnie Richard s

a

Ellis ('2·4L LP-R oberts (3-71 .

BEEF

CHUCK
ROAST

44 177 JO 57 .322
J . . R . Wamsley struck out
Pquet, KC
. 32 118 14 38 .322 ten and walked only three
while yleldlng just one hit, a
.
Home RUns
N.at1onal League : Cey , LA IJ: single by Donnie VanMeter .
Sm1th , LA 12 ; Burroughs, Atl Hitters for the Yankees were
and Foster, Cln 11.: Johnson,
.
.
.
Hou, Baker , LA and Winfield, S.c ott ~arr1son _and _Milhoan
so 10.
with tnples, Br1ll ~mg . Jon
American League : Zlsk, Chi Perrin,
Kovalchik , and
14; Scott, eos 12 ; Evans , Bos , Ronnie
Richards
with
Ferguson . t WP -Anduiar (S.Jl. Hisle, Mlnn and Gross, Oak 11 .
doubles, and J . R. Wamsley,
LP- Rau (5· ll. HR - Los An .
Runs Batted In
Kovalchik, Gilmore , and
geles, Baker ( 10) .
~a~lonal Lea~ue: Cey, LA 45: Brett Carl with a single each .
W~nf•eld, ~o 43 .•. Burroughs, Atl
Norm· Laudermllt Tony
and Parker, P1tf J9; Garvey , · S 1
. d T
g'ng
LA 36 .
ey ers an
roy
ug 1
American
League :
H i~!e. combined to fan two Yankees
Mlnn 45; Rudi , Cal 40: Zisk. while walking four .
Chi 38; Munson , NY 35 ; Velez, R
100 00- 1 1
American League
Tor 33.
y
401 51-11 10.
{ U1 game)
Stolen Bases
Mllw
200 001 016-'-- 4 12 0
National League : . Taveras,
·
Chicgo
000 102 ooo-- 3 9 2 Pitt 19 ; Cabell and Cedeno , Hou
In other action. Ray Just is
Haas, McClure (7 ), Slaton (7) 18 ; Morgan, Cln and MorenQ, . drove in Todd Fife from third
.and MGOre ; Knapp , Johnson Pitt 11.
base In the bottom of the
(2). Hamilton (7), LaGrow (8 )
American -League : Remv, Cal seventh inning to give the
and Essian . WP-Siaton ()·5) . i9 ; Patek.. KC 16; Bonds, Cal host Pomer.oy Pirates a
LP - Hamilton (1 .2). HR and Norris, Clev 13 ; Rivers, ... come· from -behind 11 -10 win
Chicago. Zisk (14th) .
NY and Nort~ . Oak 11 .
over the New Haven Reds .
p tchlng
Ond game)
Most' Victories
N.ick Rlg9s. In relief Of B.ryan
Mllw
010 001 001 - J 10 0
N.ational league: . Rhoden, Zirkle, p1c~ed up the wm as
ChlcgO
012 004 lOx- 8 10
LA, carlton, Phil and Forsch , they comQtned to fan five ~nd
Rodriquez , McClure (61 and sr.L 7-2; Burr is, Chi 7-4 ; eight walk foUr. Fife had a tnple
Haney ; Stone (6.3) and Dow- pitchers tied with 6 victories.
and double while Justice had
ning . LP- Rodrlguez. 0 -2). HR
American LeagUe : . Tanana , three singles and a double to
-Ch icago, Garr
(2) ; MH· cal 8-2; Ryan. Cal 8-4:. Palmer, lead the Pirate hitters. Rod
waukee, Hegan (2) .
e~lt . 7 .~; Stone, Cht , Zahn, Manley had two singles and
M1nn. Ftgueroa and Torrez , NV
.~'
d
(1st game)
and Garvin. Tor 6·.3 ; R .May, Bryan Z1rk 1e one 1o roun ou 1
Seattle
001 100 302- 7 9 2 Bait 6-4; Colborn. KC and the hitting .
Texas
200 110 OOQ- .4 10 0 Augustine, Mil 6·5. .
The Reds o~th l t .. the
Pagan , Romo [6L Lalilton {8)
Earned Run Average
winners 11 -9 wtfh Ralph
and Jutze; !Jiyleven. Lindblad (based on 45 innings pitched I
Thompson getting a triple
(7) and Fahey , Sundberg. WPN a,.IOna 1 L eague:. c and ~ !ar·a
-3)
.
LPBiyleven
{4-6).
.
t
,
and
double to 1ea d th_e h Ittl ng .
Romo 5(2
S • {5) c II'
P!tt 1.93 ; Rogers, Mt! 2.09 :
Elvis Zirkle and Jerry
t1Rs- eattle, tem
• 0 tns . Hough , LA 2.25; Fingers, SO sr,radl 'ong had doubles. and
(2 )
2 JO Hoolon LA 2 59
·
· Ainerican 'Leag~e :· Figueroa, Seve Simington, Tim. Gibbs;
C2nd game&gt;
NY 1.61; Tidrow , NY 1.70;
Matt Scott and Spradling had
Sea1tle
012 13~ 2()()----- 9 17 1 Tanana, &lt;;:al 2.09 ; Slaton, Mil a single ea~h. Rob Edwards
Texas
00000030Q-- 3 80 2.1.ot: Blylt · ~en, Tex 2.30.
had three singles.
Montague, Segvi {7) and
Strikeouts
Spradling, Scott and Gibbs
Stinson ; .Perry, Hargan (A),
Nafl~nal League: Roge_rs, Mtl ,combined to fan eleven and
K~~f!g~~ apo4~3T~"f~erop:,~ 73 ; Nlek.ro. Atl 59; R.•chard
, walked thirteen The Pirates
58
(4·51. HRs-Seattl'e, Lopez 2 ~~~m=~~C i~~~man, NY
' had eight erro;s to let the
(.t) .
American League: Ryan, Cal
Reds stay In the game .
113 ; Tanana , Cal 95 ; Blyleven , R
321 202 G--10 11 2
Calif
000 000 ~ 0 0 9 Tex 67 ; ftalmer , Bait 64 : P
220 321 1-11 9 8
Clevlnd
100 000 DOO- 1 50 Eckersley , Clev 56.
Tanana (8 ·2) and Humphrey ;
Eckersley (5·3) and Fosse .
..........~..........~................................1
Kan City
000 102 OlD- 4 111
Toronlo
001 000 000- 1 51
Splittorff, Gura (8), Littell (8)
~Jnd Marlinez; Garvin, Vuck·
ovlch {9) and R~f. Ashby . WP
- Spllttorff 1•·.4) . LP- Gllrvin
(6·31 .

Detro !I

U.S.D.A. BONELESS

U.S.D.A •. BONELESS

for the
J.
R.
Wamsley, and Rhett Milhoan.
Double hitters were Scott

0

Crow, member of council, Mayor Herman London, and Eber Pickens,
councilman; back, Milton Varian, chief of police, Je.S Browning, pool
manager and Roger Hornsby, contractor. Absent were George Holman,
treasurer, Barry McCoy and Jimmy Joe Hemsley, council members.

Pilots retrace Lindy's flight

Discuss POOL - Mayor HeQ~~an London, who along with !Wbert Wlitgett was
responsible m secur111g a federal grant lor tbe pool, is shown discussing the pool ~th Roger
Hornsby, contractor.

walked just three .
Getting tr i ples
YaOkees
were

Munsn, NY

000 soo 1DO- 6 7 0
000 000 021 - J 7 2

-

,-

""' \

RIBBON CUTIING- Ribbon cutllng ceremonies were held Monday
to officially open the new Syracuse municipal swimming pool. Sunday
free swimming was offered with over 300 persons attending. Shown at the
ribbon cutting ceremonies were front, 1..-, Troy Zwilling, councilman,
Mary ~cey, clerk, Robert Wingett, president of council, Kathryn

Cubs who tell 12 -1 behind the
two hit . pitching of Roger
Kovalchik . He fanned 14 and

DINITZ CALLED IN
Batting
while
Scott
Harrison ,
{based on eo at bats)
WASIDNGTON (UPI)
National League
Wamsley
and
Shawn
Gilmore
Secretary of State Cyrus
G AB. R. H. Pet. each got a single.
42 151 25 56 . 371
Vance called Israeli am- TrillO , Chi
Darren Gilland took the
, St.
37 84 21 31 .369 loss· for the Cubs. He fanned
bassador Sincha Dlnltz to the Mphry
Prker. Pit
42 175 31 64 .366
State Department Saturday Scott. St .L
40 104 13 37 .356 eight and walked only two,
Rndle , NY
26 88 15 30 .341 but gave up nine nils. Gilland
for a meetlitg In the wake of Hndrk,
SO
45 159 24 53 .333 also swung the only hot bat
U. S. • Saudi Arabian tall!.s, Broc k, St.L
42 138 19 46 .333 fOr the Cubs as he got their
38 155 W 51 . 329 only two hils. a double and
according to diplomatic of- Vlntn, Mfl
Smns, St.L
41 147 25 48 .327 single.
·
ficials.
Krnpl, NY
38 113 16 37 .327 c
100 0 (}-- 1 2
The unusual Saturday
Amedcan League
011 0 1(}--12 9
R. H. Pet. y
session followed the meeting Carw, Mln G44AB.
176 30 66 .375
between U. S. and Saudi Bl!lilr, Tor
34 125 24 44 .352 · Over
the
Memorial
42 144 37 so ,347 Weekend, the Yankees gave
Arabian officials, the fifth lit Fisk, eos
wash, Te x
31 121 12 42 .347 the Mason Rangers a 1·0 lead
a series of . talks PreSident Fires, Col
29 80 9 21 .338 In the top of the flrsl. but
Carter and Vance have been A.Wds. Tor
34 124 H 41 .331 came back to blank the
Bstok, Min
41 158 29 52 .329
having with Middle Eastern Challo;
, Cal
42 146 .14 48 .329 Rangers the resl o~ the way
Brlsf\, Bas ·
42182 26 59 .32-4 enroute to a 11 · 1 wm .
leaders.

Oaklnd

-

Open Mon. thru Saturday
9:00 A.M. to 9 P.M.
Open Sundays 9 A.M. to 6 P.M.
QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED

LIKE A RAY OF SUNSHINE

Boy:s' league .

Ellis, Torre~Jiba (9) 1 Coleman
000 021 ooo- 3 S 1 (9) and Williams ; Roberts ,
101 001 o•x- 7 11 0 . Crawford (4) and May. WP -

-

We Accept Federal Food StJmps

Tilley third
in NAJA event

line scores

, ,
~•
Major League R.esults
. · ev United Press International
·~·
National League
: ~~~·game) . 000 002 3oo- 5 111

·: i ) nd game)

doubleheader sweep. Enrique
Homo, 2-3, picked up the
initial win in relief and John
Montague pitched six innings
iri the second game to push
his record to 4-3.
Brewers 4-3, While Sox 3-8:
· Ralph Garr belted a tworun homer and Alan
Bannister smacked a twCH"un
single to give the White Sox
the second game of a
doubleheader after Lerron
LaGrow walked Don Money
with the bases loaded in the
eighth inning of the opener t.o
give the Brewers a victory.
Jim Slaton, 3--5, got the win in
the first game while Steve
Stone upped his record to 6-3
with a C&lt;l!llplete game win in
the nightcap.
Orioles 9, Twins 7:
Lee May slammed two
homers, collected four hits
and drove in five runs as Ross
Grimsley pic)&lt;ed up his fifth
win in eight decisions. Baltimore third baseman Doug
DeCinces was carried from
the field on a stretcher after
colliding with Twins' second
baseman Bob Randall when
he tried to advWJce from first
on a grounder. DeCinces
suffered a broken nose and
possible internal injuries.

$20,000.
Remajning breakdown :
John cock $45,013 (including
$19,350 in lap prizes); Bill
Puterbaugh $22,889 ; Eldon
1
Rasmussen $21,092 ; John
Mahler $20,667; Pancho
Carter
$21,678 ;
Gary
Bettenhausen $19,717 ; Bill
Rio ~rande College.COmmunlty College track ace
Vukovich $19,884; Bobby
Bob Tilley became 811 All-American for lbe second time
Unser $22,129; Mike Mosley
$19,153; _ Danny Origais · this year by placing lhlrd In the 1,500 meter event lit the
NAIA finals in Arakadelphla, Ark., over the weekend.
$21,256; Bubby Jones $17,387;
Tilley finished the event In 3:46. Earlier this year, he
Cliff Hucul $17,746; Jim
was named All-American for placing In the top three In
McElreath $22,433; George
the indoor mile run.
Snider $16,649; Bobby Olivero
One other Rio performer took part in the NAIA finals
$17,244; Mario Andrettl
over the weekend. Archie Mundy was lOth in the 10,000
$17,467; Uoyd Ruby . $16,618;
meter run with a lime of 31.35.2.
AI Loquasto $17,447; JWJet
Guthrie .$16,555;
Clay
Regazzoni $15,642; Dick
Simon $15,457; Sheldon
u...a aaaJlaQ.&amp;
Kinser
$15,100,
and
The Pomeroy Yankees three hits . The tirst vlct1m
Rutherford $19,471.
continued .to get S!Jperb last week was the New.Haven
pitching as they kept their
win streak going by taking

-~-

II

99 $

Ex~ires Jun~

I

Coupon_
4, 1977
Twm C1ty Gateway

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

...

".. . The latest rumor about Barbara Walters and
Walter Cronkite Is ... "

I

President wm: visit
home town and family
By HELEN THOMAS
UPI White HoUle Reporter
ST. SIMONS ISLAND, Ga.
(UP!) - Convinced he can go
horne again, President Carter
ordered a sidetrip to Plains,
Ga., todaY for a walk down
Main Street and a visit with
family before returning to
Washington.
The President decided tO
wind up his six-4ay vacation
at this luxurious green island
off the coast of Georgia with a
stop in Plains, which has
become a magnet for tourists
since the election.
Carter displays irritation at
reports that Plains has
become a tourist mecca of
souvenir shops and other
money-making
operations
that have changed the lives of
his family and the neighbors
he grew up with.
But there is no question the
changes are there.
Scheduling a five-hour visit
to Plains, Carter planned a
stroll down Main Street, a
stop by his home to ''pick up a
{ew things" and lunch at liis
mother 's "Pond House" with
Miss Wlian, and brother
Billy and his family.
The President also planned
to look over some family
estate property with Billy,
wl!o bas the first optio to buy
the Carter peanut business
now in the hands of trustee
Charles Kirbo, an Atlanta
attorney.
There
were
indications a decision Is
forthcoming.
Carter is babysitting with
his daughter Amy, 9, while
his wife Rosalynn is on a twoweek Latin American tour.
Seeing her off Monday at
the airport at Brunswick,
Ga., Carter said, "I'm not
accustomed to my wife being
gone. I feel Jonesgme
already."
He said she will send back
messages daily and "we will
stay very close to one another

AMERICAN HELD
NAIROBI, Kenya (UP!) The American director of a
nonpr-ofit children's
organization is being held in
Ethiopia for allegedly carrying antigovernment leaflets,
U. S. Embassy officials In
Addis Ababa confirmed
Saturday.
Leslie Fox, 27, field
director lor Foster Parents that way .'~
Carter kept up to date
Plan International, Inc., was
arrested TueSday in the during his brief vacation and
told reporters Monday he still
village of Arab Minch during
a government sweep for hopes to have a summit
with Soviet leader
11
COunter revolutionaries" in meeting
Leonid Brezhnev later this
:;outhern Ethiopia near the
year if there is progress in the
border with Kenya.
Strategic Arms Limitation
Talks.
He also said there are

..

1

(\

earned $75,000 annually, was
the last ol,the original USW
organizers to sit at the
pinnacle of power.
During Abel's tenure,
wages lor USW members
doubled and pension benefits
improved. In his last
contract, the union won a first
step toward Abel's last major
goal: lifetime job security.
"You'll find tbat most of
our members have moved
into better homes,.. he sald.
"They're out in the suburban
areas now. They are much
more pleased with their lot in
life."
Abel, in marking his own
progress as a labor thinker,
often repeats the story of a
White House-organized
meeting in the 1940s between
William Green, president of
the American Federation of
Labor, and Ernest Weir,
president of National Steel
Corp.
"Mr. Green arrived, and
when they went to introduce
him to Weir and other steel
executives, they refused to
shake his hand or stay in the
same room. Th~y'd have
nothing to do with a
representative of workers.
"Today, I can call Ernie
Weir's successor, George
Stinson, and say, 'Look
George, we have a problem
we ought to talk about."'

-

· "

~

L O

'NOW 'YOU llNOW
The· registration ot burials
In England goes back to the
tirhe of Thomas Cromwell,
who· in 1538 Instituted the
keeping of parish registers.

GE'ITING ASSIST
LAKE MOXIE , MAINE
(JUPI) - - "A nlce, heavy
drizzle" Saturday helped
firefighters control the
largest in a series of forest
fires raging through valuable
Maine woodlands. Residents
of this tiny settlement in a
remote area of western
Maine were ordered to leave
their homes Friday as a
precaution against the fire,
which burned across 2,000
acres of tinder dry woodlands
and threatened to engulf their
homes.

Indications that "in the next
few weeks" the United States
will strengthen diplomatic
relations with Cuba, although
"far short of recognition ."
He apparently re£erred to a
proPosed swapping of
diplomatic observers as
WJother step toward eventual
nonnalization of relations.
· U.S. officials traveling with
Mrs. Carter said -the United
States has proposed to Cuba,
in writing, an exchange of diplomats operating out of
neutral embassies In each
country.
The officials declined til be
named, but said in Jamaica
the United States · has
suggested."interest sections"
·of U.S. diplomats below the
rank of ambassador be
assigned to the Swiss
Embassy in Havana while
Cuban diplomats would u s e
the
Czechoslovakian
Embassy in Washington.
The officials said the
proposal was made May 10

"It ran li ke a sewing be staying at the American
machine," Gray said. He said ambass~dor 1 S resldence,
be ran into headwinds over Gray langhed and said, "I
Englaod but his only problem don't think they're going to
send a battleship for me
was some fog over Paris.
Gray, 28, a bachelor from either."
Asked why he landed at Le
Gloucester, Mass., said,
Bourget
when his original
"Lindbergh1 I've got a
limousine ccmpared to what flight plan called for the
be had. I've got a radio and Toussus le Noble airfield on
an auto-pilot. He had neither. the opposite side of Paris,
You can't cernpare his fllght Gray said he was unable to
take off from Lindbergh's
to mine.
"The only comparison is depsiture point, Roosevelt
that he didn't get any sleep Field, "which is now a
the night before he took off parking lot. I thought I could
and I only got about lour at least make it Le Bourget."
Gray landed at 12 :52 p.m.
hours. I finally had to ask
them to take the telephone (5:52 am . EDT ), 23 hours
after takeoff. Wolf, 34, of
out of my hotel room."
When
a
reporter Lock Haven, Penn., said his
wisecracked ihat Gray, own flight had taken 22 hours
unlike Lindbergh, would not 41 minutes.

11

"The Insurance Store"
Complete
Insurance Service

Reuter:.Biupn lnsurne
· 214 E. Main

and representatives of the
two nations would discuss the
proposal this week at an
undisclosed location in New
York.

POMEROY

"QUALITY and
SERVIC~"

Meigs
Property
Transfers
.Harold Wetherholt, dec . to
Coell Wetherholt, Cert. of
Trans., Sutton.
Coell J . Wetherholt, dec. to
Manning Wetherholt,
Douglas Wetherholt, Cert. of
Trans., Lebanon.
N. S. White, Winnie M.
White to Frances M.
Belleman, Parcel, Bedford.
CARTER FISHING
ST. SIMON'S ISLAND, Ga.
(UPI) - President Carter,
settling into a six-day
vacation, went fishing
Saturday with Charles Kirbo,
longtime confidant and
trustee ·of the President's
business interests. Carter's
visit with Kirbo and a plan
"to pick up Some things" at
his home in Plains Tuesday
lent toe! to speculation a
declslon ls near on possible
disiJ()sltlon of the family's
peanut warehouse.

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

out at
Loan.
When you need money for your kid's Lraces, or any good reason,
talk to us. We handle Personal Loans quickly, easily and with
consideration. You can borrow with tJust where people save with
trust. City Loan &amp; Savings.
. We find ways to help.

CITY LOAN

&amp;SAVINGS
EST 1912
f'::Jc:\

&lt;1 1 1Mo\11(•,1!~~1~1(~o'

\!:Jr!J

U.)~ll(,l)IIJ!ITA((lRJ'O R.A!! (~N

125 E. Main Street 992-2171
T.1~1ns tn .$1 !i.OOO thwu~h Tlw Ci! y l.1 1(11~ Compa nv

�'
7-Thei&gt;!i!L_Sentinel,
Middleport-PcxnerQI,O., Tuesday, May 31, um

6-Tlie Daily Sentinel. Middleport· Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, MayJl , 1977
•

r

SUPER
MARKET

~~

~

OPEN DAILY

Where Old the Good Gays Go?
Rap :
Every lllllll&amp;zine and newspaper I pick up bas atorles about
battered 1rives, alco!lotic W..bands, how to Uve with
"difficUlt"' men, why husbenda go berserk, chlld moleAters and
beaters- and we get plenty of that stuff in movies and TV too.
These things have got me so paranoid I don't want to get
married.
I know nice guys are still around, but what assurance do
girls have they won't go sour after marriage! A lot of ba tiered
wives say they had no clue -before. Do women drive men II)
cruelty? Or is the mean streak already there, and they just
hide it unUI after the wedding? - SCARED

SUNDAY
CURNER MILL &amp; SECOND ST.

We AccepHederal Food

S~mps

!0 TO 10 ·

MIDDLEPORT, 0 .

- We Resei'Ve the RiRht To Umit Quantities
FRESH &amp; LEAN

..,;

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/

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'·•

GROUND
LB.
BEEf .........~..~~:.~.~.~.~~~... 69~

t'J

FRESH &amp; LEAN

f

yl ·. '

GROUND .
c
CHUCK ...................... ~.~:. 89

/

FRESH &amp; LEAN

DONATION RECEIVED - Don Mayer, chief of the
Pomeroy Emergency Squad, receives a check for $255
from Mrs. Mildred Zeigler, Route 3, Pomeroy, secretary •
treasurer of Modem Woodmen of America, Camp 7230.
The money was raised by the camp for the Pomeroy

Squad through a jitney supper staged Friday night at the
Hemlock Grove grange halL With Mayer and Mrs. Zeigler
are Mr. and Mrs. Lowell Zeigler, now of Lakeland, Fla .,
who have been members of the Modem Woodmen of
America .for over 50 years.

BLADE CUT

CHUCK ROAST. •••• ~~~. 57
CENTER CUT

Assembly plans three debates
By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUM BUS (UPI )
Drun k drivers, how to
monitor the state's energy
supplies, and collective
barga ining
by
public
employes will be subjects for
debate by the Ohio General
Assembly this week.
permitting
A · bill
suspension of the autnmatic
three-day jail sentence for
persons convicted of driving
while drunk or drugged if
they· agree to attend an
educational program is
scheduled for a vote this week
in the House.
The bill, on Wednesday's
House calendar, would apply
only to frrst offenders and
would permit the judge tn
decide whether the course
work.would be more effective
than confinement.
The legislation, sponsored

by Rep . Thomas A.
Pottenger, RC!ncinnati, also
would aUow the judge to
permit a first offender to use
his car to attend the program
or go tn work instead of
automaticaUy suspending his
driver's license for 30 days.
The bill was to have been
taken up last week, but floor
action was postponed.
With both chambers taking
Memorial Day off, the House
fo llows the Senate into
seSSion at 4 p.m. today.
The Senate meets at I :30
p.m., taking up a Housepassed bill abolishing the
state
Nursing
Home
Commission and creating a
new one dominated by
legislators.
Today's House calendar in·
eludes a bill aiined at
facilitating state 1J1onitoring
of gas and electric power
supplies in adva.nce of peak

Sport Parade

seasons.
Sponsored by Rep. Rocco J .
Colonna, D-Brook Park, the
bill requires each gas and
electric utility tn furnish the
Public Utilities Commission
with a forecast of service
demands, fuel supplies ;111d
related information each July
1 and Nov. 1. Summaries of
the report would be presented
. tn the legislature.
Also up for a vote tnday is a
resolution memorializing
Congress to fully fund all
welfare, and Medicaid
programs.
A Senate Commerce and
Labor subcommittee is scheduled to meet Today at 9 a .m.
tn consider a lengthy list of
amendments tn the public
employe collectiv e
bargaining bill .
The Senate Finance

Committee has scheduled a
We dnesday afternoon
meeting to cons ider the
subcommitee report of the
" language" half of the
proposed state budget for

ocrats hop
override veto
.

COLUMBUS (uPI)- Gov.
James A. Rhodes has
chopped three crucial items
from a landmark voter
By MILTON RUllMAN
registration bill, but majority
UPI Sports Edllor
Democrats in the Ohio
NEW YORK (UPI ) - Last rn\lflager tn go was John General Assembly can be
expected tn try and override
McNamara over the weekend: Next one will be Joe Frazier.
He's no more completely tn blame for the chaotic state the the vetnes.
Rhodes
signed
the
Mets now are in than McNamara is altogether responsible for
legislation
expanding
the Padres' disappointing showing, but when a ball club goes tn
pieces, who are you going to frre, the 25 players? Of course not. opportunities for voter
registration in Ohio and
You fire the manager.
When is the last time you ever heard of an owner or some requiring registration in all
88 counties.
other boss in the front office firing himself?
But he vetned three major
That simply isn't done, either in baseball or any other
.
sections
of the bill sought by
industry.
the
Ohio
Democratic party
Frazier had to work with what he was given. He knew that
organized
labor,
when he took the job. But the Mets' farm system has produced and
next to nothing the past few years and Frazier can hardly be including voter registration
at the polls on election day.
blamed for that.
Also vetoed by Rhodes
Nor can be be faulted for the resentment expressed by several of the Mets' players tnward BOard Chairman M. Donald were sections allowing voters
Grant. Frazier told a couple of them to shut up and play ball to register at deputY motor
more than once, but it didn 'I help much. What else could he do, vehicle registrars' offices
and providing for permanent
hit 'em?
1n the old days, a manager occasionally achieved results by voter registration.
Any override would require
fining a player. Now if a manager tries that, the player, often
vote in both the
a
three-fifths
making more than five times what the manager is, merely
Ohio
Senate
and House.
pays the fine and laughs at him.
Democrats
have
the
It's easy for outsiders tn say the manager should be tnugber
necessary
votes
in
each
on the players, kick some rear en&lt;kl now and then, but that
doesn't always work either. Sometimes a manager will get chamber if they can hold all
tough on a player and the Qll!y thing that happens is they wind their members when they
up not talking to one another and the player only goes from had reconvene this week.
Despite a $6.8 million
tn worse.
The Indians and Tigers hit on what they thought was an appropriation in the bill,
original idea in 1960. Neither was going anywhere, so they including $2.3 million tn pay
decided to swap managers in mid&lt;~e&amp;son . Joe Gordon for for administering the new
registration procedures,
Jimmie Dykes.
Bill DeWitt, president of the Tigers then, recalls the details. Secretary of State Ted W.
"Frank Lane was general m11.nager of the Indians and one Brown said the legislation
day when we were tallcing about trading some players, he told would be .treated as a regular
me he didn 't care too much for Joe Gordon as a manager," !Mklay bill, meaning petitions
says DeWitt, who wasn 't that enchanted with Dykes as his own could be gathered to repeal it.
Democrats, citing the Ohio
manager, either.
Constitution,
have
"'Why don't we try something new?' Lane said tn me,"
maintained
an
DeWitt remembers. "'Why don't we trade managers? '
appropriations
bill
is
effec" I asked him to let me think about it and then I talked with
Rick Ferrell and Jim Campbell. Ferrell said 'What can we tive inunediately and not
subject tn. repeal through a
lose?'
" Ferrell and I theri sat down with Dykes and talked to him. I · referendum. It is likely the
tnld Dykes we weren't going well, Lane wasn't happy with entire matter will end up in
whether
over
Gordoo and maybe both clubs could pick up by switching col!rt,
managers. 'Now, Jim, you doil 't have to do this,' I said to him.
'U you don 'tagreetoit, wewon'tdo it.'
"He said he didn't see anything wrong· with it. The whole
thing would be fine with him. He said he thought the change
might help both clubs. I then called up Lane ~ let him talk
SOUTHGATE, Ky. (UP!)
with Dykes right there in the room and I think Lane agreed tn
Before this weekend it was
give him $2,500 more.
·
a
smart, spacious multi" I told Lane I wanted tn talk with Gordon and he arranged
for me to do that. I asked him how he felt about the whole thing million dollar nightclub filled
and he said good, he'd be there tn take over our team the next with happy people who had
come for drinks, good food
clay."
.
The swap stimulated interest in both clubs - for awhile, and big name entertainment.
The Beverly Hills Supper
anyway. The managerial switch itseU proved nothing because
the Indians were fourth when Gordon left and that's bow they Club, which billed itseU as
lini!lhed while the Tigers were sixth at the time of Dykes' "Showplace of the Midwest"
perched high on a hill in the
~e and wound up in the same position under Gordon.
suburb
of
At the end of that season, DeWitt got a phone call from Cincinnati
Southgate,
Ky
.
GordQn one day at 6 in the morning.
Monday, a towering crane
"I'm goona resign," said Gordon.
"How can you resign when you have a contract for another knocked down walls that once
echoed Peggy Lee's voice.
year?" DeWitt asked him.
A giant bulldozer pushed
"If I don't wanna manage your club, you don't want me, do
steel
and bricks across an
you?" said Gordon.
DeWitt released him from his contract whereupon Gordon area that was once a stage for
went with Kansaa City to work for Olarlie Finley, who fired John Davidson.
"I even remember ," sighed
him 1n June of his first year.

CHUCK ROAST••••• ~~; •• 69

~

Just memories
· Southgate Fire Otie£ Dick
Riesenberg, "coming here
years ago tn see Jimmy
Durante.
"It was quite a place," said
the weary fire chief, tilting
his white helmet back on his
qead. " Now look at it. And
look at what happened here."
What happened was the
suffocating death of 160
persons in a fire Saturday
night.
The conlinuing search for
even more bodies means
turning the remains of the
night club literally inside out.
"We're taking this building
apart piece by piece," ·said
demolition superintendent
Jim Lanagan . .

WIENERs ... 79

ENGLISH OR BONELESS

UEGGS:~....~..49

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gg~

$

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TAB,PIBB, or
MR.
FRESKA.................

at law, was guest speaker at
the recent meeting ol the
Middleport-Pomeroy Area
Branch of the American

Alaociation ol University
Women held at the .Meigs
High School library.
ll'ltrolluced by Mrs. Belly
Horky, preaident, Mrs.

Racine Social Events

By Mn. Fraocla Morris
Mr. and Mrs. Norris Sims
and Mrs. Jim Brace and
children of Crown City visited
Mrs. Mabel Brace May 18.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Blosaer
of Flat Rock, Michigan called
on Mrs. Douglas Johnson
Dear Scared :
Saturday afternoon.
Peaple who go paranoid about what they read and see
Mrs. Mildred Hart, Mrs.
reported should remember - if everybody were doing it, no Marjorie Grimm and Mrs.
one would write about it because then it would no longer be Linda Grimm visited Jean
"news."
at
Pleasant
Kiser
Perhaps one man in 100 is a potential wife or child HllliCaonvalesclng Home at
batterer. A woman can usually spot violence signals In him Piketon and presenttd her a
before marriage , if she isn 't blinded by love. She should watch Bible from the Ruth
out if he:
Missionary Circle.
Is easily angered, especially when someone threatens his
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Beegle,
authority.
Gretta Simpson, Vera Beegle
Is moody, quick tn take offense.
and Helen Simpson attended
Drinks too much. Gets obnoxious and bullying at such a program presented by the
times.
Gallla Christian &amp;hool at a
Would rather use his fists than reason - and brags about Vinton church. Billy Beegle is
the fights he's won.
one of the teachers.
Is tense, nervous and impatient most of the time. Also
Mr. and Mr•. Pete Gould
unkind to animals and children.
spent Sunday with her
Has a history of violence in his family. (It doesn't always parents, Mr. and Mrs.
follow, of course, but all too often a sadistic father begets the Francis Morris.
same kind of son.)
•
Mr. a11d Mrs . . George
· Granted intense, brooding, macho men are sexy, but Rhett Nelgler Spent the weekend
Butler not withstanding, they often make lousy husbands. -H. with their son-in-law and
. - +++
.
daughter, Mr. and Mrs.
NOTE FROM SUE : Perhaps only one man in 100 is a Robert Palmer at Goldsboro,
batterer (I'd guess it happens oftener : many wife beatings go N. C. and attended the
unreported), but this adds up to an awful lot of dangerous graduation exercise• at
lnlsbands or companions aroWld the country.
North Carolina Wesleyan
I'm glad we're finally getting aroused to the problem College when Mr. Palmer
even though articles about it makes yoo "scared."
received a B.A. degree in
Much needed are better legislation to protect beaten Business Administration.
women and children, and more cente~s which not only offer ·
counseling but shelter, and help in starting new lives. Too often
•
bettered women stay and take it because they have no safe
place to go.

Mr. and Jotra, Artbur
Woodgerd and son of
Marietta, Mra. Frances
Bamhart of Chauncey, Paul
Woods, Betty Davia· and
Gettle VIa of Dayton vlalted
their parento, Mr. and Mrs.
William w~ recently.
Mrs. Patty Lou Boltoo and
children, Tabateth and
Darcbell and Mrs. Donna
Brace and Diane of Parker•
burg Spent Saturday . with
Mrs. Mabel Brace.
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Adams
called on Bobby Joe Adams
and daughter, Melanie
Sunday afternoon.
.
Mr. and Mrs. Solon Butcber
of :Spencer, W. Va. apenl the
weekend with her slater, Mrs.
Gre«a SimJ180D.
Mrs. Audrey Schroeder of ·
Columbus and son, First
Ueutenanl Steven Schtoeder
of Offutt . Air Force Base,
Omaha, Neb. spent Wednesday, May 25 with her
parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Francis Morris.
Mrs. Raymond Butcher of
Calvin, W. Va. carne for the
graduatiol) · e:rerclses of her
niece,
Mi9S
Patricia
Autherson.

Members to work at museum

Knight diOM• ~ the ERA
IUDelldment, functional and
aeeondary' differeDCe~, tbe
bringing ol auita and prateclive cla"'eo, 111 well u tbe
constitutlon.
Mrs. Knl&amp;ht. .- practlcil1g in Melp CGunty, Is a
native of a.veland, al1ended
Oblo Univenlity and while her
husband, Charla Knight,
allo an attamey, cumpleled
law ICbool, worktcl (or Ohio
Bell. Following hll gradualion she atlmded law ICbool.
A quati111 and uawer
period . on legal matters
followed Mrs. Knight's talk.

Preceptor Beta Beta Acres Park following a
Chapter ol Bell Sigma Phi potluck dimer, several sumSorority membeis lriJl donate mer socials were planned.
.....-.1 hours one day a week The members lriJl attended a
to the Meig.ll Musewn during perfonnance of "Tecumseh"
at Chillicothe and will also go
· the lllllllller IJJOIIIIJa.
The · MWJelllll work I!U to "Gallla Country". A swim
taken 011 by the chapter as a party was set for August at
spedal aervlce project to the the home of Mary Pickens.
A report on the stau concommunity. Volunteer belpiB
vention
or Beta Sigma Phi
nulled to keep the musewn
held
in
Akron
recently was
open.
given
by
Mrs.
Mildred
Karr.
Owing the meeting held
Mrs.
Betty
Ohlinger
and
Mrs.
Thursday night at Forest
Velma Rue.
Committee reports were
.
given by Mrs. Ruby Baer,
social; Mrs. Pickens, ways
.
'i' .
c;.and means; and Rose Sisson,
services. lt was decided to

Courh/e W'"d
:!u~cru:..~ tn
. Apn'l
awelcoinetoMrs. Knlgbt.

Mrs. Martha Hlllted, chair- --~T co• ,...,.lA w va
man ol edw:allon conducted
"""'
""""" ' •
·
the installation
the three · - Mrs. MarliJD Cundiff and
newly elected officers They . Maurice GaiiJICIII were united
·
in marriage Ailril 18 at the
are Mrs. Fay Sauer, first vice Salem E.U.B. dlurch at West
president; MI.. Te~eaa Columbia wltb Rev. George
Cud, second .vice p~dent lfolcbar officiating.
and membenlllp cbainnan,
Attendants wre Deama
and Mrs. Kathryn Knight, and Raymond CundUf of

oi

u-:'::;:dues are .to be sent .
to Mrs. Kathryn Knight, Jrl
Beach Sl, Middleport. They
are f13.50 plus '~ for the· .
educational !OWidtltlon fund.
Mrs. Horky announced a
work se8atoo for officers ·and
committee . .cllalnnan, 1:15
p.mHos.00
te:f.u:.'"w15e!! heMrsr Nelli.·e

Maaoil. Members of the
immediate famUies attended
aloog wtth a few friends.
The new Mrs. Gagnon is the
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Mark St.ewart of Mason and
Gagnon IS son of Mr. and Mrs.
~"::e Gagnon of Muscoger,

immediately following
.
the
_
,.
Vale,Mrs. AnnaTuriler,Mrs. . ceremony, a reception was
RDberta Wilson, Mrs. Maxine held at the borne of Deanna
wlrigett and Mrs. · Dorothy and jlaymond Cundiff and .
Woodard.
1011 John of Mason.
h. o m e

have lecl'ft listers durlnc tbe
llOIIIinC yerar. New cammlltees appointed were social,
Mrs. Baer, Betty Ohlinger,
Teresa Swatzel, Lllllan
Moore, Jane Walton, and
Tana Simonton; ways and
means, Mrs. Picken!, Mary
Morris, Reva Vaughan,
Lucille Williamson, and
Margaret Follrod; service,
Rose Sisson, Clari~ Kraut·
ter, Eleanor Thomas; progrwn, ~ellle Brown and
Pearl Welker; publicity,
Mildred KaiT and June Van
Vranken; telephone, Roberta
O'Brien and Vera Crow; sunshine girl, Jean Werry ; and
scrapbook, Ann Rupe.

TIJ Our Delicious Strawberry
ShorltaM, with or without
Whipped Cllam.

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filled with divorced fathers taking their kids on the weekly
outing.
Here's your chance, girls, if you don 'I mind being
stepmothers. I found my wonderful guy when my 4-year-old
daughter pushed his ~year-old son out of a swing. - HAPPY

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'

,.

DEAR POLLY - I hope water tn cover them, add
someone has an idea about an some anunonia. and then let
inexpensive way to fix win· them soak about 45 minutes.
dows so I can see out but pe&lt;r They are then easy to clean
pie outside cannot see in. My with a plastic scrubber and
two windows measure 30 in· the black wipes right off. The
ches by 40 inches and the gas burner rings 'on top of the
paint store wants about $40 stove can also be cleaned this.
for each window covering. - way. -LAURE.
Polly will send you one of
HAZEL.
her
signed thank-you
DEAR HAZEL -I am sure
newspaper
coupon clippers if
you will he hearing from
some of our ingenious she uses your favorite
readers who are always so Pointer, Peeve or Problem in
gracious about· sharing their her column. Write POLLY'S
POINTERS in care of this
ideas. - POLLY
DEAR POLLY- One of my newspaper.
Pet Peeves is getting to the
door. of a store or other
business place to find it is
SON BORN
closed even though there is a
Mr.
and
Mrs. Don Swisher
sign saying "Open" on the
of Birch ·Ave., Pl. Pleasant,'
door.
Another is the clothing are announcing the birth of a
Friday at the Holzer
displayed on racks by color son
Medical
Center. The eight
instead of by size. I hate to ·
pound,
four
infant has
have to look through an entire been named ounce
Eric
Davis.
Mr.
rack of jackets to lind my size and Mrs. Swisher have
and then go through slacks
and skirts and not be able to wtother . son, Phillip, four.
are Mr. and
find matching ones in my Grandparents
Mrs.
Wayne
Swisher,
size. I do not want to look at Pomeroy,'andDr. and
Mrs. J .
all those cute smaller size. - J. Davis, Middleport.
MRS. J .K.W.
DEAR POLLY - Some
)
time ago a reader asked bow
,,,
she could use the many pretty
handerkchiefs she .had accwnulated. Having ' collected
so many '!luring the years I
was a teacher I, too,
wondered what could be done
with them. While visiting my
Mom In Nebraska I asked her
Mrs. Thelma Holter
if she thought a quilt could he
'
McKelvey
and son Michael
made with them. She agreed
Holter
and
SOII9, Pat ·and
that if could. She made me a
David
of
Huntington,
W. Va.
beautiful quilt and I am en·
joying this new use for the visitild with Florence and
lovely bits ohnaterial that Elsie Circle on Saturday.
Mrs. Robert Lee, daughter
came my way as gifts
through the years. - WIS. Becky, called at the home of
DEAR POLLY - We are all Paul Orr of Bashan Sunday
interested in helping by doing afternoon.
Miss Francine Perry of
our bit in the present crush of
energy conservation. I sug- Holland, Ohio spent Thursday
gest a dab of red nail polish and Friday of last week with
on each HOT water faucet to her grandmother, Mary
help remind . us •that cold Circle.
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Patwater might do as well. Often
we really do not need or want terson and sons of Spiller
the hot water but turn it on visited Mr. and Mrs. Douglas
from habit. Then as soon as it Circle recently.
Mr. and Mrs. George Circle
runs hot we temper it with
and Mrs. James Circle spent
cold.
Shaving in rwmlng hot Sunday at the home of Mary
water ia another undesirable Circle.
William Carleton of Racine
habit of which many of us are
called
at the home of Eunie
guilty. The basins in our
ownhomes are clean so we Brink!!l" and other relatives
should use them. -CLYDE.
recently.
DEAR POLLY- I have an
Junior Johnson of Racine
easy way to clean my oven called at the home of Arthur
racks. I put them in the Johnson and family a recent
bathtub, run enough hot evening.

l

I

Mr. Ray Russell of
Washington C. H. and Mr.
Lincoln Russell visited
recently with Mr. Dale
Russell an&lt;! family and Guy
Russell of Columbus.
Mr. Ray Russell and Mr.
Lincoln Russell enjoyed
watching the Cincinnati Reds
play recently at the Cincinnati ball stadium.
Mr. and Mrs. Brady Knotts
and family of King Hill were .
recent visitors of Mr. and
Mrs. Eugene Haning.
Kevin Knapp was weekend
visitor of his grandmother,
Mrs. Lena Knapp of Langsville.
Mrs. Geneva Shumate
speijt a few days last week
.with Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Pierce, Randy and Scott of
Mason.
Mr. Robert Reeves, Bryan
and Jamie spent Sunday
afternoon with Mr. and Mrs . .'
James Reeves.
Mr. Lincoln Russell was
Saturday evening visitor of
his sister, Mr. and Mrs.
Harley T. Johnson.
Mr. and Mrs. Harley
Johnson, Tammy, Cheryl and
Terry visited Saturday with
Mr. and Mrs. Sheldon Rowan
and family of Athens.

Final honor
.

In a study conducted by the Blue Cross
..AsSQclation, Blue Cross of Central Ohio has
been ranked Number One nationally for
overall perlonnance in serving our
customers.

.

list made
RACINE - . Principal
Robert Beegle has announced
the final six weeks grading
period honor roll for the
Racine Elementary School.
l\1aking a grade of "B" .or
above in all their subjects to
be named to the roll 'were:
Grade I -Angela ·Bostick,
An.nett Cardone, Patrece
Circle, Marty Cleland, Una
Curtis, Chris Diddle, Tammy
Holter, Donald Riffle, Kim
Stobart.
Grade 2 - Damon Fisher,
Matthew Jewell, Marty
Maynard, Rachel Reiber ,
Harold Rose, Diana Simpson,
Tamara Theiss, Brian
Warden, . Tamara Wolfe,
Larry Powell, Richard
Parsons, Wendy Wolfe.
Grade 3 - Lori Adams,
Kerri Beegle, Tonya Cum·
mins, Dixie Dugan, Mandy
Hill, Melissa Ihle, Alana
Lyons, Douglas Powell, Lisa
Parsons, Kelly Rizer, Kenda
Rizer,
Robin Savage,
Rebecca VanMeter.
Grade 4 - Alan Crisp,
Ralph Fisher, Deborah
Holter, Lois Ihle, David
Powell, Lori Simpson.
Grade ~ - James Bush,
Trevor Cardone, Kevin
Curfman, Teresa Hill,
Rebecca Johnson, .Linda
Proffitt, Rhonda Smith, Tony
Wolfe, Randy King, Loren
WoUe.
Grade 6 - Kathy Baker,
. Becky Lee, Terry Patterson,
David Parsons, David
Salmons, Lori Warden,
Melanie Weese.

1be study concentrates on tbings like turnaround

time-how long it takes us to process a claim ...
backlog-1/le number of claims waiting to be processed
. .. acknowledgement of inquiries ... and error rate. in all,
there are 53 standards appijed to us. And, in the most
recent rep&lt;)rt, against every other Blue Cross aftiliate in
the country... large or small ...we came out on top.
We're certainly not saying we're perfect, but we are out
to do the best job we can for the people we serve.
·We're committed to doing everything we can to
stay at the top in service to you.

Blue Cross
of Central Ohio

Thr: 8luf Cl'lm Astonllioll" tilt 111tiiQI ~~lor • .,_..,_ ,. ~ S.
Croll Orplimk!n. t~t lht Uril ed Slatet. Ont at ll'e AIIOdltiorl'• r~hn .rvalwi:Jf1C U., po!l'kltmlnu Ill thr llldil'ldwli .tUlle..
,
• RtMIIImd'Mark• Bhor tm~~ .O.t10011tJ&lt;&gt;n

•

Cil

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Wolfpen
Dear Helen and Sue:
Many women write and
you how tn meet marriageable News Notes
men. One place you've overlooked is the park on weekends. It's

.

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HRS.: 10:00 A.M. tilll :00 P.M. Sun .• Thurs. 10:00 A.M.
til 12 :00 P.M. Friday and s.turdoy.
See Us At The Pomeroy Bend Bridge

+++

'

implementation
or
a
referendum .
Brown, a Republican like
Rhodes,
has
been
sympathetic to the idea of
repealing election day
registration if it becomes taw
tMough
a legislative
override.
Democrats are calling for
election day registration to
increase voter participation
in the 1978 statewide election .
While the measure was
undergoing the legislative
process, Democrats insisted
election day registration was
. the heart of the bill.
Rhodes signed a fivei)age
. explanatory message of his
action on the bill Friday but
did not release it until Sunday
morning. He said the vetoed
portions would "seriously
jeopardize the continued
integrity of Ohio's elections."
As signed by the ,governor,
the bill provides for
registration by mail and
door-to-door signups for the
first time in Ohio.
It also expands the r.egular
registration period from 30 to
21 days before an election,
eliminates the
30-day
residency requirement to
vote in counties and
precincts, and provides for:
-Boards of election to
remain open Saturdays and
one week night for three
weeks preceding the close of
registration.
-Registration at the
offices of various county
officials and at mass
registration drives in public
places.
-A voter to change his
address within his own
precinct on election day.
· -Elimination of barriers to
the handicapped at all polling
places by Nov. 1, 1980.

ALL MEAT

.
LB. 79~
ARM ROAST
••••••••••••

1978-79.

The subcommittee added
language designed tn bring in
an extra $45 million in July to
divert
toward
ba sic
education.
The Sen;~te Highways and
Transportation Committee is
expected to vote Wednesday
morning on a bill requiring
periodic auto inspections in
Ohio.
And the House Health and
Retirement Committee takes
up for the first time
Wednesday morning a bill
which would permit the use of
laetrile by cancer victims in '
Ohio.

GROUND
•
ROUND ...................~:. 99

~

Barbara Knight, attorney

BY Helen and Sue Hottel

·~

9 TO 10.

lawyer speaks to AA uw

Generation Rap

t ..••

�&amp;-The Dail~ Sentlntl \'

'. 0. Tuesday M ~&gt; 31, 1977

Sharon Baker
:receives·_award

.
. ··-·
. .
RACIN£ ~' Sharori Baker
was recipient of ,Uje 12th Arf.
·nual · Paul H. Carnahan
Memorial SCholarsrup· and ·
Heidi Ashley was crowm&gt;i
the Nwnni Queen at the·
Saturday night banquet of the
Racine High School Alwruii
Association. .
Daughter of Mrs. Edna
Baker, Sharon was presented
the sciJQiarship . of $500 by '
Mrs. Barbara Pierce ; ·
Association se~retaty #f • •
treasurer.
" .
·
Crowning of the ' queen , ·
daughter of Mr . .and Mrs.
Robert Ashley, was by
Ronald Holter, ·Association
president. The other contestants were Lisa Allen,
Brenda Lawrence, a1)d Traci
Weese.
·
. SHARON BAKER was
Approximately 3l;O.persons
the
recipient of tbe 12th
reunion with
1 attended . the
annual
Paul H. Carnahan
Herbert (Pete) SQields of the
Award of $500
Scholarship
Class . of 1~ being' the
presented
at
the Racine
speaker. Shields retired after
.
Htgb
School
Alotmnl
43 years with tbe Department
&gt;
Auoclatioo
banquet
of Agriculture' and ·through
CELEBRATI' ; 'l
••lt. .uminrsary of graduation from Pomeroy High School
Saturday night.
the years !Jiis been active in
Saturday weco e at«l &lt; r1&lt;
ul!li!ig, left, and Oleva Cotterill, and standing, Harold
numerous community and
\t noon Saturday, Martin of Fort Lauderdale, Fla. hosted a
Mart in, left and \trn &gt;;
civic
affairs and was recently
luncheon at (:roW':- St\•aJo. ,~,lc u -l fc1r th,. F.raduates and several other guests.
ruimed ."man of the year" by Stump, Akron; Mr. and Mrs.
the Pomeroy O!amber· of Carroll Harris, Cairo; Mr.
Commerce. He is lifelong and Mrs. Paul Wagner,
resident·of East Letart. ·
. Lima ; Mr. and Mrs. Gary
' New officers elected for the Gibbs, Mason, W. Va.; Mr.
' 1977-78 year were 13arbara and Mrs. Larry Pullins, New
Dugan, president; , Dennis Carlisle; Mr. and Mrs. Lewis
.Eiiai)S, vice president; Jack Darra·h,
Parkersburg ,
Bostic, second vice presi- w.v:a .; Mr. and Mrs. T.
dent; Libby Fisher, third vice Dwain Sayre, McCutchenpresident; and Barbara viUe; Betty Brickles and her
Ove r 350 Pomern~ fll~!IJ
Eleanor Smith Walter, Pierce, secretary-treasurer. ·. husband, Gallipolis; Mr. and
School graduates Jttt-n~~·i
Toledo.
Mrs. Maxine Wingett gave Mrs . ,Jack
Turner,
the 59th annuHI h&lt;lllQIWl
Richard R. RQsenbaum, the invocation preceding Ravenswood, W. Va.; Emma
dance of the Pomrrll) \lumlll
Danville, Calif.; Charles thedinner served by the English, Coolville; Ruth
Association ~tagt'd Saturdm
Baird, Monona, Wise.; Betty junior class. Holter extended Frank, Coolville; Etta Parry,
ni ght in the PonF·ru1·
·
Gilkey, Columbus; · his welcome and Ja.ck Columbus; Margaret Cole,
Elementary S• •hool
Roush Honchell, Bostick presented the queen New Matamoras, W. Va.;
The PHS colors of pl!rplt·
Gahanna; Charlene Smith candidates. Presentati011 of Audrey Boichyn and son,
and white were mwd cxtcu
McClung, Marion; Betty classes was handled by Den· David, St. Clair Shore, Mich.;
sively in the decurattons of
Tedrow Dobbins, Wellston; nisEvans.
Carol Young, Columbus;
the auditorium whcrt· JUP
Paul E. Jacobs, South Shore,
Gifts were presented to Mrs. Michael Elmore, Glen
Struble . served as master of
Jean Lee Eckard, In- John Eichinger, Sarasota, Burnie, Md.; Ivan Sayre,
ceremonies for the 'prog.ro1n.
di~~:2~olis~ Ind.; Joseph E. Fla. the graduate traveling Carrollton; Mildred Coll)pCarrie Neutzling was at tho
F
Livonia, Mich .; the farthest, and Ann Coe of ton, Akron ; Marilyn Beal,
piano for group ·singing ut
EvEJlyn Fick Young, Sidney; the class of 1910, the oldest Columbus; Marcia Wells,
"Purple and White' which
Fn••l•r Cotterill, Carroll; graduate.
Washington; Mary 13urnette
preceded the serving of llw
A. Yeauger, Enon; Lily
During the program Ben Patriot; Wibna Sayre, Colbanquet by lh e .h,b';
Gilrohuni' Strickland.
Philson sang "Carolina umbus; Ralph Bradford, ColDaughters. Charlc" Dorn1gHn
John S. Foster, Oroville, MQOn" and "Can't You Hear umbus; Ralph Ross, Colurngave the invocation.
. Ann Piersall Smith, Me Calling Caroline." Larry bus; Ralph Ours , New
A history of the alunml
~;:~~;W . Va .; Phyllis Meir Fisher, Becky Crow and Brighton, Pa. ; Olive Wolfe,
association was pre&amp;nled hy
K
Mason, W. Va.; Lois Heidi Ashley sang "Going Columbia Station; Phil Hill,
Mrs. Neutzhng. The $.100
A. Campbell Jones, Colum· Out of My Head" and "Can't Athens; Ann Perine,
alumni scholarship was
bus ; Helen Forbes Jones, TakeMyEyesOffofYou."
Lebanon, Pa.; Dixie Circle,
PAULA EICHING ER
awarded to Paula E1clungcr,
"Garden With Memories" Cleveland; Mrs. Glen Wolfe,
Belpre; Guy E. Guinther,
daughter of Mr. and Mr&gt;.
Gallipolis ; Gail J. Wears was the theme of the banquet
Paul Eichinger, Pon!ero}.
Chase, Shelby; Jean Joachim decorations and providing
Classes recogniZed werl' HuLL"iiJ, .K.adne.
Wolfe, Belpre; Charles · musiefor dancing was "Blue
1917 with a 60th t·eunion : 1922,
·i\ large display of PHS Roush, Whitehall; John H. Eyed Soul." Carla Shule was
55th reunion ; 1927, 50th; 19~2, memorabilia was in the foyer Tubbs, Washington C. H. ; pianist. ·
· 45th; 1937, 40th , 1942, 3oth: &lt;lf thr school along with the Richard Friley, Columbus;
Out-of-eounty residents at·
1947, 30th; 1952, 25th; 1!107. rtcrrology report.
Steve Hill, Battle Creek, tending were Mr. and Mrs.
roth; 1962, 15th; 1967, loth.
The Big Bend Minstrel Mich.; Harry L. Brown, Robert Grueser, Caldwell;
Officers elect~&gt;(! were Ltrtdu Association under the direc· Orange, Texas; Danny West, . Mr. and Mrs. Glen Swartz,
LET US REJOICE
Mayer, president : Lila tion of Bob Hoeflich, Dover; Sue Struble Cramer, Dixon, ill.; Mr. and Mrs. Sam
When
many buds of nature
Mitch, first vice president; presented a musical pro- Marion ;
Jerry Curtis, Norwalk; Sue Are bursting into biOQm,
Marlene Wilson, second vke l~il m . Hoeflich opened the Snowden,Atlanta,
Ga.; 13orkenhagen, Norwalk; Mr. We think of that first Easter,
presid ent ; April Smith , prugram with ;&lt; Breezin ' Roger C. Hines, Gallipolis, Jo and Mrs. Allen Graham, And of the empty tomb.
secretary-treasurer; and Along with a Breeze'·', backed Ann Snowden West, Dover; Wilmington; Mr. and Mrs. 'We seem to see our Saviour
Marcia Arnold, a s~.istant by tile Big Bend dan.cers. Joy Smith Staam, Chico, James McClaskey, Industry, A standing just outside,
secretary-treasurer,
Other vocals, several with Calif; Bill Sheridan, Waver· Pa.; Mr. and Mrs. Don Shive- And hear Him speak to Mary,
Named to the executive tlance lines, were "The Way ly; Robert F. Roberts, Union· ly, Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. · As she stOQd there and cried.
committee were Robert Bur- We. Were" by Linda Mayer; town; Ted M. Beegle, Wor· Dean Earich, Westerville;
. ton , Danny Morris, .j{~nny ·:r AiJ,t't Got Nobody" by thington; Raniora C. Boice, Mr ..arid Mrs. Elmer CampWiggins, Don Milyer,. Thomas Ali ce Nease; ''If My Friends Columbus; Brenda Strauss ton, Urbane; Mr. and Mrs .. The tomb's forever empty,
And death had lost it's power,
Smith and Gene Milch. Could Sec Me Now" by Linda Eimer, Columbus; Milton B. · George Wallace, Columbus;
For Jesus, death had
Flowers for thu table" wct·e King: and " OWhatltSeerned Lambert, Cincinnati; Bar· Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur Holter,
conquered
provided by the Winding to Be" by J1rnSouisby. Clown bara Donovan Hines, Akron; Mr. and Mrs. John
Within that very hour.
Trail Garden Club. the comedy was provided by Gallipolis; Ruth Ann Horak Rowe, Lebanan, Pa.; Mr. and Sad hearts turned into
Pomeroy Garden Club and Susie Suulsby and Charlene Lewis, Bellefontaine; Rita Mrs. Vernon Harrison, Lad·
gladness,
the Wildwood Garden Club.
Hoeflich, and Debbi Buck and Neulzling Davis, Jerry M. son, S.C.; Mr. and Mrs. Ver· And tears were wiped away,
The over 50 year graduat\'S Linda King as Raggedy Ann DaviS, St. Andrews Air Force· non Counts, Westerville; Mr. And there was great rejoicing
attending the reunion W&lt;'re,
and Andy presented "Give Base, Maryland ; Everett and Mrs. Donald Bradford, On that first Easter day.
· Class of 1917· G. H Mart1I1, Me A Little Kiss."
Ray Johnson, Dublin; Gary Davisburg, Mich.; Mr. and
Ft. Lauderdale, Fla.; Carrie
Jayne Hoenich sang "FOQt· Cannan, Pataskala; Herbert · Mrs . Norman Ro.ush , 0! let us look to Jesus,
Ebersbach Ncutzling, Vernon b;i}l Hero" and Paula Michael Ohlinger, Albany; Charleston, W.Va.; Mr. and
And give to Him our love,
Nease, Pomeroy, and Mrs. Eichinger's number was Mary Jane Eichinger Gibbs, Mrs. Bill · Stewart, Athens;
For He's our great
Oleva Gotschall Cottrill, Mtd- •(G mduation.'' Miss Hoeflich Parkersburg; Edith Riggs Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Redeemer, .
. dleport.
gavo a readlllg dealing with Heckert, Ravenna: William Beegle, Barberton; Mr. and With power from above.
Class of 1918: Hortense Ar· memones of Pomeroy High A. Woodard, Jackson; Artie Mrs. C, L. Robinson, Norfolk, He'll give us joy and glad·
nold Epling, GalUpoli;, Fn'tl Seltool and this led into the Hendricks Hite, Malta; Alma Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Doyle Mutness,
Goeglein, Pomeroy.
patriotic finale by the cast. Reynolds Slayton, Northup; ti, Mansfield; Mr. and Mrs. And wipe our tears away ,
Cla8s of 1919: Eli~bcth Dancer&gt; for the program James R. White, Dunbar; Floyd O!apman, Pittsburgh,
If we will only trust Him,
Lochary Chase, Dayton
were Kathy Blaettnar, Velvet Robert Eastman Beckley; Pa.,; Mr. and Mrs. AI Sprin- And ever watch and pray.
Clara Quivey l'!Jomas, ~wisher, Jane Sisson, Jayne Donald E. Smith, Canton; ger, Vinton, Va.; Mr. and
Pomeroy.
lhefhch, Susan Wright, Earlene Renshaw Bumgard· Mrs. E. D. Harden, ·Canton;
Class of 19ro : E. }'. Robin· Patgc Smith, Shari Mitch, ner, Mason; Rachael Mr. and Mrs. Gayla Walk, So, let us at this Easter,
When nature is in bloodrn,
son, Pomeroy.
Stephame Rought a nd Becki Genheirner Sherican, Waver- Sandusky; Mr. and Mrs. Russ Throw open wide our heart's
Class of 1921: Marie Schflrn I•'ry.
ly.
Little, Columbus; Mr. and
jioor,
Robinson, Marie BirJm1~m.
·\ceompa nists were Mrs.
William L. Sterrett, Mrs. Robert Barnes, Colwn- And give our Saviour rOQm.
and Maye Crary Mt•ra. all of Oh1•e Wcbet, Laura Hoover Wadsworth; Ann Icenhower biana; Mr. and Mrs. Kyle His love keeps growing
Pomeroy.
13ai'nitz, Belpre; Betty Ham
·
·
'"'d Kathy Johnson.
sweeter
Class of 1922: Mana Skm;
Mu"'r for duncing was pro- rn Johnson, Dublin; Sheila
To all who know its worth,
ner Foster, E:ilison Ui1hstct· vtd&lt;:d by 'l•'eelings."
Strau$8 Easbnan, Beckley, Pleasant ; Naomi Smith Because
He
broug)lt
ter, Raymond E. Boice,
Other
out-o f-tow n W. VA. ;Linda Crow Beegle, Worley, Beckley; Marcella
Salvation
Elmora Stark Boll", Gc:·· graduate~ rdurning for for Worthington; Sarah Foster Reibel 13aker, Gallipolis; Unto this sinful earth.
trud e Smith Mit&lt; hell, tlw rl'union were George H. Williams, Columb-us; Helen W. Williamson Boster,
Pameroy ; Earl L. Clark. Reuter, Ponllac .Mich. ; Cecil Michael G. Roberts, Newark; Gallipolis; Wilhelmina Smith Let us rejoice on Easter,
Reedsville; and Millin•t·l Hetlman, Canton; Charles H. David Brown, Richfield; Maier, Monclovia; Audra And sing our Saviour's
Roush Haynum, Dayton.
WLnebrenner, Marietta ; Larry Morarity Hopewell, Delay Thompson, New
praise,
Class of 1923: Edna Arnold bvcly11Quails Woolfolk, Hun- Lancaster; Jean Casto O!ap- Albany; ·Ruth Kaspar Let us forget the worries
Gettles, Gallipolis: H1rhard tington: Vtrginia Smith man, · Parkersburg; Mike Mescher, Grundy, Va. ; Of all our former days.
E. Duckworth, Syracw;e
Heilman, Canton;. Esther Werry, Belpre; Mary Beatrice Holter Stelzer, Col· Let's keep our garments
Class of 1925: Harriet fJ Thomas Daniels, Miami, Patricia Smith 13ates, Tren- umbus; Tracey Goodwin,
spotless,
Sterrett, Edna Fi,·ller !·Ia., Stanley Houdashelt, ton, 1\lich.; Terry Ohlinger, Cincinnati; Ch8rles Richard Keep pure and sweet within,
Schoenleb, Pomeroy: Lunll&lt;&gt; Ga!hp&lt;Jlis; Hoba rt Young·, Duncan Falls; Charlene Crow, Warren; Hazel Holter Transfonned by our dear
Swackhammer, M&amp;sdn, W Sidney: Lu'cien Ca&amp;to, Colum· Zundel Nevans, Cleveland; Winkoop; Johnstown; Jack
Saviour,
c. Va.; James D. Euler Wd- bus: Mary Bishop Casto, ColCrew Bro\vn, Rosenbaum,
Glendale Wbo frees from every sin.
dlepot't.
nmhus; ~:dith Kaspar Perry, .
Ruth Harbrecht
Clai8 ofl926 : Edson Roush, Colwnbus; Paul
Car::and every day,
Bljejne; George Conr~y, 11lichael, Souther ~·,~~:..•t
of prayer ,
&amp;8ac Bottom; and Mary Anna Marie Shorr
kindness,
,...Reibel, Pomeroy.
Ln~an,
Thomas
•.ciliA tJ 1927: Nonga F Smith, Columbus;
lli(aiiU, Marion Ebersbach, Jay, Columbus; Vh·••h1il
J'red S. Blaettnar, Elizabeth C"lurth ''rcw, Re:~~:~~:~:··~
Stvry M
IPk.i;, Edwin Wehrung, ,~he•'
"ilh; ~:Iaine
Smith Nease, Hattie Avic·e
Smith Frecker,. Pomerfly; H.ugers. Ne1~on·" 1
"''
,bus; Bill
Virginia Kaspar Mye rs, KltJ'
t&gt;olis, Ill .;
Gambier ; Mary Damels I

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•

HEIDI ASHLEY was crowned Racine High School Alumni Association queen In
ceremonies at the annual banquet held Saturday night at Southern High School. The other
candidates were Brenda Lawrence, Traci Weese and Lisa Allen.

Winning sales team awarded
Helen Yeager, Avon
District Manager for District
149, honored Charlotte Gibson
and her winning sales team
with a special luncheon
recently.
Each tea m member
received a carnation in a bud
vase and a trophy engraved
with the words, " Team
Competition - Campaign 7
over 6, 1977" and the individual's name. The corn·
petition involved 13 teams
throughout Gallia, Meigs ,
Jackson and Lawrence
Counties.
Attending the luncheon
were Marguerite Johnson,
Mable Niday, Edith Boster,
Charlotte Gibson, Team
Leader ; Verna Evans, Mrs.
Yeager, district manager and
Wanda Beaver. Not attending, but on the team at

Columbia Station; Lillian
13arnhart, Columbus; Paul
Sayre, Columbus; Mildred
Jewell, New Haven, C. W.
Jewell, New Haven, and John
Eichinger, Sarasota , Fla.

the time of the competition,
were Hazel Carr, Penny
McKean, Janet Warren and
Gaillynn O'Dell.
On Thursday, two mem·
bers of this winning team,

Charlotte Gibson and Wanda
Beaver,
won
special
recognition at the Avon plant
in Cincinnati for their sales
achievements in campaign
10, 1977. They were presented
a leather billfold and mat:
ching key case.

HE'S DISAPPEARED
MOSCQW
(UP!)
Western diplomatic analysts
Saturday expressed surprise
at the dispatch and apparent
ruthlessness with which
President Nikolai Podgorny
was consigned to obscurity by
his lonner colleag11es in the
Communist party . . The 74·
year-old Podgotny has
vanished from Soviet public
life in the four days since his
ouster from the ruling Polil·
buro, virtually assuring his
removal as president of the
Soviet Union and rapid
political ba nishrnent.

"

'

"

____..
149 South Third
Middleport, 0.
Phone 992-7155

T.O :

I

'"

'.

partial dentures
IN FINAL STAGE
WASillNGTON (UPI)
Congress is entering the final
and critical stage of drafting
a youth employment bill, the
one major job program It is
designing from scratc_h this
year. AU the others-public
service and public works jobs
and anti-recession aid to local
governme nts :.... have in·
volved extending, expanding
or tinkering with existing

FOR PRICES
OHIO TOLL FREE

...,,

1·800-282·6411

•
,_

RIVIERE CENTER 949 E. 'Livingston Ave .. Columbus
Weekdays 8:30A.M . to 6:30P.M.

' You'llSmd e Tomorro w lf 'lou TfJk c Cure 0; &gt;'ou.' Ft•clh to d(l.~·

....
'

EVERY NIGHT AFTER
4:00 IS SAVINGS NIGHT
AT
.COUNTRY COUSINS
Tuesday Is Super Saver Fun Night
ICE CREAM is
SUPER SUPPER ·
HAMBURGER
Trlpte Treat, large fre~ch
MEAL DEAL
15' Per Dip fry
and a large soft drink.
Hanburger, regular frenCh Special Price on
fry and a large soft drink.
Super Saver
Fun Night

Super Saver
Fun Night

No Coupon Necessary

8 delicious flavors to
choose from.

Special Price on
Super Saver
Fun Night

89*
No 'Coupon Necessa;y

Wednesday Evening •• Platter MCidneu
BIG BEEF PLAntR
One· th ird I b. Ground Bee t
Steak with golden french fires
or baked Idaho potato. onion
ring s, hot buttered bread and
$ill~.

FISH All fT PlAlJER
2-pleces of deep frt.cl filet wt11

b"*'lltd&gt;I•••
c:ate -

fl'ench fries ,
hot buttered bread
slaw .•

.

.

· · · ~ c»-NNy ThrM Son~ '3{ AHer&amp;c:ho61 · Spee!ai 6; Par·
. trld9e Family 0 ,~; Fllnlsl-15.
·
s:00-8tg yauey 3i. My Throe '&amp;ons ·4; Brady !lunch B;
. MlsftF Rogers' Nelghbitrhi&gt;ocl ·20,33; ~&gt;,Herschoot
Sl!Klal 13; .Star Trek .15,. .
.
· . · ·
5 : ~Adam - 12 ~ ~ News 6; Family Affair W; ElK. Co.
20 33 ·
·. .. .
'·
.. ·
6: 00,..:~ws 3;U.i,10,t3,15 f ABC N~ws 6; ZOQIII 20,33.'.
6: 30-N 8C News 3 .~. IS; ABC: News 13; Andy G~lfflth 61' :
· CBS N&lt;!ws 8. 10; Vegetable Soup 20; Ltlln Yoga &amp;
· . You 33.
·. , ·
7:oo-Trufh'Ot' Cons. 3; ·To Tetlthe Truth 4; Liars Club
. 6: Pop Goes tho Country I ; New$ 10: To Tell the ,
Truih 13;. My Thleit 5on~15; Consumer S~rvlval Kit
20: Pfol&gt;le a. Placfs 33. ·
·
·
.·
.
l :»-Dolty 3; !11)0.000 N.,e that !une ~~ Match
'Game PM 6; $25,000 Pyraml~ 8; ('1\o&lt;Neii-Leliror .
Reparl 20,33: T~e Judge 10; Break the Bank .13;
Wild KingdOm 15.
·
·
· .·
,oo--Movle.
''Uvtng
Free"
3,4,
15;
Qonny
.&amp;
Marie
8
6,13 : Good Times 8, 10; N!&gt;ve 20,33. ..
8:Jo-P.Itot "You're Gonno LoveJt Here 8.10 ..
9 :oo-Baretta 6;13; Movie " F.Scott Flt1gerald and
'The Last of the Belles' ~~ Great Performances
20,33; Movie "Goldenrod" 10.
.
. 10:DO-Kingston-: COolftdentlat 3,..., 15; Ch~rlle,' s Angels
6,13; News 20 . .
l0:3o-Montage 20; Book Beat 33.
,
1l'fl0-News 3,4,6,8,10,13,15; Monty Pythons Flying
· Circus 20; MocNell · Lelir~~ eport 33. ..
11 :3o-Johnny Carson 3,4,15; Rookies 6,13; Movie
"Fort Utah" 8:· Mary Hartman 10; ABC News 33.
12 ioo-Movle "Guns of the Timberland" 10; Ja.nokl ;13 .
. 12:4o-Mystery ot the W0&lt;1k 6, 13.
l:~Tomorrow 3 , ~.

Thomes.4ta l. This action hn their sales forecast upward

been n•lgned No . 16.363 In and
,_....,. to top last
Pteet . court ·
now .....-.....
·
Meigs· c:otinty. Oh io: · · · Y'!ar's pace by better than 17

"the common

The o.blect of t_hfs comptt~lnt

Middleport. County of Meigs ~ .i'i"':
and State of Ohio .
year.
Being Lotl1 in s~ i d vntcrge
The four

north side of Lot 22 , also In
said Yiltage of Middleport.
seid strip of land adlo •nino
and being cont iguous t o said
l ot No . 2L
Vou are required to an .
swer t he complaint w i thin 28
days after the last publication
of thiS nQtlc e, wh•cl'l will be
published once each we-ek for
six_ consecuHve - weeks. The
l(tsl publication will be ma:de
on June 28 and the 28 da vs for
answer will ~tart 0r1 that date .
· In case of Your "failure to·
answer or otherwise respond
as reQuired by the Ohio Rules
of Civil Procedure judg_
m ent
by default will ' be renclered
agalns.t
you
for
rel i ef
demanded on this compla i nt.

"

·~

t·oo-·GQng Show 3; All My Children 6,13; News 8;
Young &amp; the Restless 10; Not. Fpr Women Only 1~:
... Ftre &amp; Ice 33.
.1:3o--Days of Our Lives 3,4, 15; As The Wor.td Turns
8,10 .
.
2:()0--$20,000 Pyramid 6,13; Turbulent Ocean 33 . .

2:3o-Dodors ,j,4, 15: One Life to Live 6, 13; Guiding
Light 8,10.
3:0Q--Anofher World 3,4,15; All In The Family 8,1 0: On
Aging 20; Great Performances 33 .
3: 1rGenerol Hospital 6, 13.
3:3Q-Mafch Game B. 10; Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20.
4:0G--Mlsfer Cartoon 3; Edge of Night 4; Gong Show
15; New Mickey Mouse Club 6; Lucy Show 8;
Sesame St. 20,33: Movie "On The Double" 10;
Dinah 13.
4: 1rltttte Rascals 4.
getting· yourself Into deep water
today. prlnclpatty. because you

.

\lbm

ul!A!Jl1

mnm

trucks thas year, c'Oillpared
with just under 1.2 millim in
1976.
ImPorted cars accounted
for an all-time monthly
record of 206,278 sales in
April on top of a record
188,388 cars In March.
In the 'first four months of
the year, they grabbed an 18.2
per cent share of the !Dtal
U.S. sales market and in the
threecpunty Los Angeles area
took nearly 40 per cent of
sales.
"We really didn't expect
tl1is great a year," said
Robert 0 . Link, vice
president and general
managet for Datsun. A.E.
Hagen, corporate marketing
manager for Toyota, said
"just matching 1976 is all we
expected ID do and now we've
added another 40,000 units to
our projections."
Spokesmen
for
Volkswagen , the German
autornaker that will begin

ADIOS SKIPPER WINS
COLUMBUS (UP!)
Adios Skipper , driven by Don
Irvine Jr ., beat Bullet
muecrest' by a neck Monday
to win. the feat~d $12,500
ninth race at SciotO Downs.
. Adios Skipper returned
$4.80, $3.40 and $3. Dins
·Skipper came in third.
A 1-2 daily doubie of Mt
LARRY E . SPENCER
Clek o f Courts Eton Fashion and Marmarg
Com man PI eas Court
Meigs Countv. Ohio Susan paid $181.80.
. Pomeroy , Ohio 45769
Sam The Timer, Buford
(5) 2A, 31 ('6) 7 . 14, 21. 28 , 61C llaron
and Can Tree
combined in the tenth race
for a 3-7-t trifecta worth
$1,519.50 to the 30 winning
ticket holders.
LEGAL NOTICE
A crowd of 7,507 bet
.TO : RONALD D . THOMAS. ·
whose IUt known address iS
2012 Cleneay · Avenue, Nor ·
wood , Oh io, and whose exac t
address Is Ur"!known
You are hereby notif i ed
that you have been named
defendant In a legal acton
entitled Pomeroy Cement
Block company vs Ronald o.
Thorn as , dba A l l Weather
Roofing &amp; Construc t ion. et al.
ThiS action has been assigned
No . 16,402 ir1 the Common
Pleas Court. Meigs County ,
Ohio .
·
The oblectof fhis complaint
Is to acQuire jul;igment
against Ronald .o . T.homas ,
dba All Weather Roofing .&amp;
Construction and Ronald D .
Thomas In the amount of
$2,668 .05 plus interest and
costs.
v,ou are requii-ed to answer
this complaint within 28 days
atter the last publ icat i on of
thiS notice, which witl be
published once ea.cil week tor
six consecutive weeks . The
last publication will be made
on June 28 and the 28 days for
answer will start on that date .
In case of your fa ilure to
answer or otherwise r espond
as required b'f the Ohio Rules
of Civi l Procedu re judgment
bY default will be rendered
against
you
tor
repef
qemanded in this comp laln1.

LAR RY E : SPENCER
Clerk of Courts
Common Pleas court ,
Meigs County,
Pomeroy·, Ohlo 45769

on-more than you can ha_n ·

AQUARIUS (Jon. 2D·Ftb. 11)
It's possible someone In tho

BerniCe Bede Osol

•

.

whichaccoun.tfor
:acea:~d :~~~~~e:":n~tr~e~,~~f nearly t~O·thlrds of all
Streets . Also oil the right tit!• · Imported ·auto sales, expect
and interest In and to the Stl( to sell 14 milliCil cars and
Inch strip of tand and the
·
party wall therei n olf . of the

Bollen

· ASTIO•GIAPH:~~

cent

estate
. . · es!ate be i ng and trueks •' ·sal es
s~ J d. real
w the tr
&amp;ltuated I n the Vlllago of '"'O""'tlons lor the entire

Court 8; Midday 13.
the Man 3,1S; Ryan's Hope 6,13; Bob

by THOMAS JOSEPH
-'
• ACROSS
39 Evil and
I Love seat
private
5 Intended
DOWN
10 City of the 1 Barrel part
"Iliad"
Z Bay
lJ Box
window
12 English
3 Gold digger
river
(2 wds.)
13 Fourteenth t Sallor's
U.S. Pres!-'
assent
dent
5 Indigo plant
1t Old-timer
6 13artender's
15 Neighbor of
rocks
Venez.
7 What
11 Criminal
3 Down
charge
would do
17 Baffled
(3 wds.)
19 Category
I Got away
ZO In nature's 9 Less
garb
shallow
21 Southwest ll Poem
wind
15
ZZ Withered r.--r.-T.-,r%3 WaJI&lt;:ed on
24 Yearn
25 Late resi:au-lb-4--...J.--+rateur
26 Kind or
cream
27 .Shorthand

per

11 to". ,cqUire l udgmen t
·
eg111ns1 Ronald o . Thomas
.Top Toyota , Datsun,
aM K•r•n L. Tilomas In th• Volk.swagen and Honda
amount of ·s18.38'Z.18 plus ·
. . .
.
Interest and costs, ~nd l&lt;&gt;:r ·executives S8ld m mternews
foreclo~urt Ol .mortgage _pn tbJ.s week that they have
the following descri bed·, r eal added more than lOO,OOO·cars

12 ' 3~htco &amp;

~'6td

Auto sales are up

TO ' Kon!rrL .· Thomu, whose By EDWARDS. LECimiN
last known eddren Is 1012 UPI •"to Writer
. Cleneay AvenUe, Norwood ,
,..
Oh io: and wMse exact . ad · UlS ANGELES (UPI) .
Flushed with their two most
dress ls tlnknown
You are hereby nOtlheCI
·
:: t ho~~~t you have' bee:n named .J succe88fUl sales month ever.,
. dotllfldants In • legal ··~tlon the top foreign automakers
enlltled Athens County
timlstl all
··
Savings &amp; LOll'\ vs . ROll aid D t are op
C Y TeV1Sl08

·

WednHCt•~· June 1, 1177

RO~ALO 0 T~OMAS ,
11st known addceu l$

'lb12 Cleoeay . Avenue, No,.
wood , Otl fo , .and whose exect
•d&lt;trns Is unktJOwn

· 2:1Q-News 13.

FUNNY. BUSINESS

NOTICE

~ose

Braun 4; Seardl for Tomorrow 8,10.

Social ·
Calendar

DENTISTRY

WEDNESDAY, JUNE 1,1977
6:0()"-Summer Semester 10.
6: t~F arm Report' 13.
6:2o-Not For Women Only 13.
6 : 3o-AG·U~A 4; News 6'; Summer Semester . 8;
Christopher Clo58up 10.
6:4s-Mornlng Report 3:
6:50-Good Morning, West Virginia 13.
~: SrGood Morning, Trl State 13.
.
7:0G--Today 3,4,15; Good Morning America 6, 13; CBS
News 8; Chuck White Reports 10.
7:05-Porky Pig to·.-.
·
7:30-Schoolles 10.
8:0G--Howdy Doody 6; Capt . Kangaroo 8,10; Sesame
Sf. 33.
..
8'30-Big Volley 6.
.
~ : ~A.M. 3; 'Phil Donahue ..4,13,1S; MacNeti.Lehrer
.
Report 33.
~'3~ross-Wlts 3: Edge Qf Night 6; Concentration 8;
Bit with Krilf 33.
.
ul ,oo-Sanford &amp; Son 3,4,15;. Dinah 6; Here's L.ucy 8,10;
• Mike Douglas 13; Oursfory 33. .
0:3o-Hollywood Squares 3,4,15; .Price Is Right 8,10:
Lowell Thomas Remembers 33.
11:0G--Wheelo!Fortune3,1S: HappyDays6,13; Know
Your Schools 33.
11:3o-Shoot for the Stars 3,4,15; Family Feud 6,13;
Love of Life 8, 10; Sesame Sf. 33.
11 !5rCBS News 8; Ms. Flxlf 10.

•

i2:~News 3,.4,6, 10; Name That Tune 15; Divorce

PERFECT MARKS
This is my Stale Farm office , .
RACINE - THe following
where I can serve yo~ with the ·
Racine Elementary School
best
value in car, home, lite
students have been presented
and health insurance. I invite · · ·
perfect attendance ceryou tocall or drop in any lime.
tificates for the past school
' "
~:~&amp;"%..~-=».~~:~:~::»'=!· year: Wendell Clark, Tracy
Cleland, Becky Hudson, Billie
Jean Rice, Rebecca Johnson,
Zane Beegle and . David
Parsons. Receiving certificates for being absent one
day or less were Marty
Cleland, Tammy Holter, Tina
Sloter, Jeffrie Evans, Harold
TUESDAY
.,
Rose, Diana Simpson,
Bl i.LFLETCHER
MEIGS County Pioneer an&lt; Tamara Wolfe, Tamara
r,,-..-..;;;..•,;..;
Historical Society meetin@ TI]eiss, Wanda Adins, Teena
Tuesday at Meigs Museum. Rose, Rebecca Van Meter,
Business meeting, 7 p.m. with Ralph Fisher, Melody West
program at 8:15. Film of and Mike Gheen.
Meigs County in early 1930s to
p 7190 1
be shown; public invited.
SOUTHE!{N Local School
Board Tuesday, 7:30p.m. in
"
the cafeteria at the high
DENTURES~
school.
••.'
DR. RONALD F. RIVIERE
FREE blood pressure
• OR. A. J. STAEHLI - OR. K. H. CHUN GOR . VICTOR V. LIANG- OR. G. J . STOMB,AUGH
clinic TUesday, 5:30 to 7:30
p.m . at Syracuse Fire
'
"
One or two day
Station. Sponsored by
full denture service,
Syracuse EMT's.

I

.
·
·
TUESDAY,MAY31, lt77
6:30-NiiC News ~.4, 15; A8C Nows i3i Andy Grlffflfh
.. , , 'cBS.· News 8,10; Vegetable Soup 20.
7:0G--Truth or Coits. 3;· Probe ~~ L!lt'' s Club 6;
Country Carntvall; News 1ti: To Tell ihe Truth 13:
My Tl\r.. ·Sons 15; Hollts Summers 20: Lowell
Thof1"a~ R8(11embers :13.
.
7:30-Holtywood .Squares 3,4; LeJ's Deal With If 6;
Match Game PM 8: MaeNeii·Lehrer Report 20.33;
In ttie Know · JO; ·Wttd Kingdom 131 TV Honor ·
Society 15.
.
.
·
a,oo--Bu Baa Bleck Sh~ 3A, 15; Happy Days 6, 13;
Fami.Jy Holvak '8,10; ~ittonal GOo!lraphtc 20.33. ' ·
8:30-laverne· &amp; Shirley 6,13.
·
·.
9:oo:-Potlce Woman 3,4,15; Rich Man, Poor Man 6, 13; ·
NBA Play.Ofi 8,10; Oasis i'n Space 20; · Queen's
. Sliver Jubllfi&gt; Gala ilt Convent Garden 33.
9:30-Best of Ernie Kovacs 20.
.
10:Qi)!-Poll&lt;:e.S.fory 3,4, 15; Barbaro Walters 6,13; ' N&lt;!ws
20.
·
·.
10:30-BI.ack Perspective on the News 20.
·
ll:OG--Nows 3,~; 6,13,15 ; MacNell·Lehrer Report 33. •.
11 :»-Johnny Carson 3.~. 15; Movie "Punch &amp; Jody"
6,13; News 8,.10; ABC News 33.
12:0G--McMtllan &amp; Wtle.B; Mary Hartman 10; Janak!
33.
12 :»-MOvle "The Quick Gun'' 10.
I:OG--Tomorrow 3,4.
1: to-News 13.

group may single you out fo r

(5) 2A, 31 16) 7,

14, 21.

building cars in tl1is country
laSt year, said the projectioo
for the sale of 346,000 VW,
Porsche and Alldi models ,
has not been officially revi.sed
upward ,
" but
we're
expecting · something above
that now."
Cliff Schrnillen, awtant
director and field sa Ies
manager for Amer ican
Honda, the distribu!Dr of the
fastest growing import,
irereased an original year
end projection of 180,000 sales
ID 200 000 for this year and
expects ID hit 240,000 in 1978
when production capa city
increases.
Another
Japane se
Importer, Mazda, said sales
of its rotary-engine and
piston~ngine cars have been
above estimates In each
month so far this year.
Sales of the small Imported
cars was in sharp contrast ID
the
domestic
models .
Because of continuing slow
sales the Ford Motor Co. and
Arne;ican Motors Corp. this .
week will idle more than
17,000 workers at six plants
that build small cars.

Yepsi . You can still get cartoon glasses
with Pepsi - They're a real ''steal" at
only 59' filled with a
16 oz. sparkling Pepsi!

$522,954.

TIUSTLE RESULTS
NORTH RANDALL, Ohio
(UPI) - Fred Acridge
guided Bold Sailing ID an easy
victory Monday in th~ lith
nmning of the $26,800 Shaker
Heights .Handicap
at
Thistledown Race Track . .
The three-year.:Old winner
covered the mile ·i!nd onesixteen til in I : 46 2-5 over a
fast track and paid .$12.20,
$5.80 and $4 . Trenthor's
Cornet placed and the odds-on
favorite, Royal Potion,
showed .
Our Pirate and Dad's
Reflection returned $26.80 oo
the 3-7 daily double and there
were 35 winning tickets on the
446 combination of Deluz~
Jo, Misty Fields and Woolie
Lou in.the loth race trifecta,
each worth $2,666. 10.
The crowd of 7,611 wagered
$802,847.

.THIS WEEK'S
SPECIAL

14 lb. Beef Sandwich
&amp; French Fries

1

ONLY

99~

I dairy :sle ®
&amp; Four1tl

28, 6t c

.some particularly abrasive com·

ment today. lf thiS happens, walk
· away from lt.

June 1, 1177

PISCES (Fob. 20·Morch 2D)
Achieving goals won't be easy
today. You may have to tak~ a
whole r,ew approach . If you re
persistent you can attach at least
partial successes.
( NEWSP~ER ENTERPRisE ASSN .)

A General Telephone Communications Consultant is a highly trained communications specialist.
His primary job is to help business customers like
you plan, maintain and improve your phone syslems.
Efficiently and economically.
He knows his business. And yours. H e's backed up
by a team of experts in all fields of telephone conununications - from engineering to operator tram mg. sys·
temanalysis to maintenance. So he can analyze every
phase of your business, determine your requirements

and recommend the system that will work the best
and cost the least.
And even when all that is done. he's not. H e's avai lable to answer questions, solve problems and provide
an ongoing analysis of your needs.
·
In fac t. yo u ma y find that he
work; almost as lwd at your buSIness as you do. ·

-This man can show you .
how to improve your business
byphone.
·

ll8!Tl('

.,

38·My (Fr.)

3l'Cardpl.ayer's
call
3Z"Saii,Ship or
State"
33.Ralment

'r ' ...

3$'0klahoma

,city
3t,Was In a
·
whirl
37 Prefix for

~+--+--+-~~=:~od~(JUIJ

'

23-Aug. 22)
hoping for Is

It won't be as easy
You have to be very

~scope

31; Set in

1how you develop It today.

l&gt;. AlLY Cft YPTOQUOTE 1

to

Here's how to work ll: VtRGO (Aug. 23-Bept. 22) Outsiders could bun lnlo a family ofAXYDLBAAX R
fair today and cause comL0 NGF E LL 0 W
pllcatlons that otherwise
. wouldn't exist. Don't leave the

One letter simply .stands for another. In this sample A II door open tor this to happen.
' d f th tli e L's X for the two O's etc. Single letters,
:~~tr~~hhe:d. th~h~engdth a~t~r~o;~"Jln~r~~ the words are all ~:a'!"a~:-::;y!'~r:~,,:&gt;thi~~~
hints. Eoc ay l e co e •
may seem nifty to you. but others
.:
CRYPTOQt!OTES
won'l neco8Sarlly be Impressed . ·
Don'! be surprised If you get op"'
' Hp
zL
y V C D E A T A J, W S W I A position.
'
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
E
w
T
D
tJ
H
J
1
N
A
Thtnk
twice at this th!le before
LW WCT
•' R V S B
'
assuming any extra financial
·
obligations. Be extremely rell·
E
W
C
D
U
F!
A
S
W
I
A
cent
to take on burdens for
NA
.f D A Z N ,

1

...

1

others as well.

JAEZYVYATIVJ

V R R A SAGmARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) Important manors require
~1 H s N w J J A V C
skillful negotiating todoy. ll's not
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: I DO NOT KNOW THE METHOP !~~~uro.:;~~~~:\~~~r~~~:s·~~
,Of DRAWING UP AN INDICTMENT AGAINST A WHOLE concessions.
PEOPLE. - EDMUND BURKE
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22..Jon. 11)
C&gt;

(

•

.TV Log for ·(#Jsy vzewzng_.

"·-

alumni .celebration Saturday

•

•

'

Over 350 attend PHS

LEGAL

The Pail~ Ser1tlnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuell&lt;bty, May 31, 1977

JI

.

-

t9'7'J Kin&amp; Feall.nes Syndk•t,. , lne.

kill

Yo4r wedang ring is import·
ant, make it something spec·,
ial for you alone. 19 procious
diamonds In 14K two tone
gold_.
ONE CARAT •
OF DIAMONDS

.......

i.J

o ' I I I

' '

81\Ml
W

GOESSLER'S

liji=t

JEWELRY SlORE

GEOERALTELEPHOOE

Pomeroy, Ohio

The complete comnumications comp:my

You have an unfortunate way of

'

J,... l

\

'

�•

-'

•,

Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, May 31,

-·'

1977

~

'

I day

1.111

I days
Sday1
&amp;day&gt;
1

Clwn&amp;•

l .~

lM
3.00

1.2&gt;
1.10
L2&gt;
3.7$

Elich word rwtr the minimum l$
wunil is 4 cenu per wocd Pft' day .
Ads runnirw other thin COflltC.'Ulive
dan will be charged 11\ the l da.y

""·

ln lnen)Or)', Clrd of l'NI.nkl and
Obituary : I cents per word, $.UO
minimwn. Cash ln advance.
·

Mobile Horne 11111les and Yanl sales
llre aeceptftl only with t.'llBh with
ordn. Z5 cent chafKe foc ada ClifT)"·
ing &amp;lt Nwnber In Care ufTI~e:Sen­

tintl.
The Publl8her reserve~ the right 1
L'dit or rejeli.any adli ~lnedob­
ja'Lional. The PubiWwr wiU nul btl'
respooJillltl rur nwrelhas1 une ilk.vr·
red UIJt!rtiou.
Phone 992-2156

tu

IN lOVING Memory of Harriet S.
Nelgler who paned owoy 3
y~~ars ago , May 301h .
We do not for a-t her, we love her
too de-arly
For her mem5rv to fade from our
lives like o dream ;
Our lipt ~ not" s~k when our
kearts mourn sincerely,
For grief often dwells where it
seldom is •""·
Dou~ter Mory , Husband, Guy.
Grandchildren and vreat
grandchildren.
IN MEMORY of our deor loving
husband , the Rev. Floyd Wise
who poned away 'i y110rs ago,
May31at.
He is vone but not forr.tten .
Sadly ml11.d by wi e, Garnet.
children . and grandchildren .

Monday
N1111n rm Saturday
'luud•Y

tbru Friility
4P.M.

the day before putili.cation

AITENTION·MEIGS High Seniors.
Full colof portraits In your cap
and gown. graduation se"ing.
Two S :w 7's in folders, $.4 .50
poyoble wh.,. picture token.
The Photo Place, 10'i High St.,
Pomeroy . For appointment,

m .5m.
GIVE-A-WAY
Dahlia
roots
(plants) , from thow stock , not
ld.ntlfied. Phone 992 -231A .

Sunday

4P.M.
FrlUay aftemoon

UNITED STATES
DISTRICT COURT
SOUTHERN DISTRICT
OF OHIO
WESTERN DIVISION
AT CINCINNATI
Civil Attlon No.
C· 1·77·232
IN THE MATTER OF THE
COM 'PLAINT
OF
TR I ·
STATE
MATERIALS
CORPOR#ITION AS OWNER
OF THE BARGE NO . 114
FOR
EXONERATION
FROM OR LIMITATION OF
LI#IBILITY .

LEGAL NOTICE
TO BIDDERS
Sealed proposals will be
received bV the Veterans
Mem&amp;rlal Hospital, Me i gs
County. Ohio. a t the veterans
Memorial
Hospital,
Pomeroy, Ohio until 12 :00
Noon. Eastern
Daylight
Savings Time. Wednesday
June 29, 1977 and at the time
will be opened publicly and
read. for the furnishing of an
TO THE PRESIDENT OF
labor and material necessary
THE UNITED STATES :
for the Remodel of the In -TO THE MARSHAL OF THE
tensive Care anel Coronary
Care
Units,
Veterans · UNITED STATES FOR THE
SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF
Memorial
Hospital.
OHIO ,
WESTERN
Pomeroy, Ohio. All W1&gt;rk
DIVISION,
AT
CIN ·
shall be done according to the
CINNATI :
drawings and specifications
MONITION
as prepared by Hayes,
Donaldson, Wittenmyer &amp;
Partners , Architects, 601
GREET I NG :
WHEREAS , a -Complaint
!E ighth Street, Portsmouth,
was
flied ln".lhe United States
Ohio .
Dfstrlct Court for
theSeparate proposals will be
Southern District of Ohio,
recel.ved for General Work ;
Electrical Work i Plumbing
Western Divi sion, at Clnclnnatl, on the 26th day of
Work; Heating , Ventilating
April, 1977, by Tri -State
and Air Condltlonlnp Work.
Proposals shall be sub- Materials Corporf!tlon , as
owner of the Barge No . lU,
mitted on Proposal Form
for exoneration from or
contained
In
the
11m ltatlon of liability, praying
spec i fications and other
for exoneration from or
contract documents, which
11 m IIIII on Of lla b lilly con · .
documents are on file at the
cernlng any loss or damage
Hospital and Jl the office ot
by or arising out
occasioned
the Architect , and are
oftheaccldtntorcuualtyset
available to all prospecttv'
forth In the aforesaid Com bidders during regular office
plaint for the reasons and
hours until the closing of bids.
one complete set of bid' .causes ln. said Complaint
mentioned , end praying that
documents, for the pu.rpose of
a monition and Injunction for
bidding, mav be obtained
those reasons be Issued. and
from Haves . Donaldson ,
that all persons claiming for
Wittenmyer &amp; Partners,
an·v an"d all damage caused
Architect, 601 Eighth Street,
Portsmouth, Ohio , UPOI'l
by or resulting ·from the
deposit' of FillY 1150.00)
accident or cisualty set forth
Jn said Complatnt be thereby
Dollara. which deposit will be
cited to appear and file their
refunded upon rtturn of bid
respective claims with the
documents In good condition
Clerk of thIs court and to
within a period of flftetn (15)
make due process thereon,
days after opening of bids .
and citing them to file- their
Contract documents , will be
Answers 1o the Complaint,
mailed COLLECT , upon
and all the proceedings being
written request and deposit
had , If It should arpear that
submitted .
said plaintiff Is no liable for
All proposals must be
any loss or damage, It mar be
accompanied by a Bid Bond
so finally decreed by this
bound In the specifications
Court ; and
and executed by a bonding
WHEREAS, Slid plaintiff
company licensed . by the
hiS filed flere an ad Interim
State of Ohio payable to tht
order of the Owner In an , stipulation for value with a
surety approved by this
amount not less .than five (5
Court . representing the value .
pet .. ) percent of the amount of
of the pta lntlff's Interest In
the bids. The bond or ~heck
ttle aforementioned
Barge
she II be forfeited If the bidder
No . 1u, plus pending freight ,
falls to enter Into a contract
If any, the undertaking Of
With said Owner . The bonds
which Is that the plaintiff,
or checks of the three lowest
wlthln ten (10) days after the
bidders will be held until " "
entry of · an Ord•r herein
execution of the contract and
appraising the valut of the
the furnishing of the rtQulred
plaintiff's Interest In said
performance bond, etter
barge, plus pending freight , If
whi ch they will be returned
on demand. The checks of any, will pay the amount so
fixed Into this Court or will
other bidders Will be returned
file In the Court a stipulation
on demand efter the blels are
tor velue In the usual form
canvassed.
and with approved surety .
A performance bond end a
YOU ARE, THEREFORE,
labor and materiel payment
COMMANDED to tllo all
. bond, both ol 100 per cent of
persons In respect to which
the amount of the contract.
the plaintiff seeks limitation
with satiSfactory sureties.
to fife thtlr respective claims
Will be required from the
with the Clerk ot Court and ·to
successful bidders for the
serve on or mall to Gorelon C.
faithful performance of the
Greene copies thereof on or
work for each contract
before the 22nd day of June,
awarded .
1977 ,
and
citing
such
Bids shall be submitted to
claimants to appear ana
the Owner oniT upon the
plans and speclf cations that
answer the Complaint herein
have been obtained from the · on or before the lest named
day or within such further
office of the Architect.
time as the Court may grant,
The right Is reserved by the
and what you have done In the
Owner to reJect any and all
bids, anel no bidder may with - prem lses, do you then make
return to the Court together
(lraw his bid for a period of
Si&lt;ly (60) days.
with this writ .
WITNESS, the Honorable
By Order of the
Timothy S. Hogan ~ Judge of
Meigs CountY Hospital
the United States District
Com rh ltslon and
court for the Southern
veterans Memorial Hosp.ltal,
District of Ohio~ Western
Inc.
Pomeroy,Ohlo
Division, 11 Cincinnati , ttlls
15l 31, 161 7, u, 21 . •tc
26th day of April.
JOHN D. LYTER
CLERK
ADVERTISEMENT
FOil II DOERS
Project No. 7
BOARD
OF
COUNTY
COMMISSIONERS, OWNER
Separate sealed bidS for the
construction of Steel Beam
Bridge, A2' Span locattd on
County Road C-,29 over
Bowman Run will be- received
by the Board of County
com m Intoners df Meigs
county, Ohio, at Its office in
thl courthouse , Pomeroy,
Ohio ;5769 until 4:00 P.M .
opened 7:00P .M . June 7, 1977,
and thtn at said office !
publicly opened and read
aloud .
The Information for Blddera, Form of Bid, Form of
Contract.
Plans ,
speclflcltiOnl and Forms of
Pertorm•nce •nd Payment
Bond lnd other contract
dO&lt;iuments
~ exa.,lned
et the offlct o the ~nglneer
or Commluloners, Court hOuse, Pomero.-, OhiO. Non retvmlbll copies rftiY' b~
obtained upon paymllll o .
S10 00 tor aach oat.
Bldt ohall " accompanla:
by a bond or cerlllltd chac
on • tolvent benk In the
•mount of 5 perctnt of tht
hid
In addlllon, lha ouc·
C.situl bidder shall post •
Contr•ctor'l
eond ln the
•mount of ~00 percent of hll

By: K , L. Faulkner
Deputy Clerk
LUCIAN Y . RAY
.
1550
Union
Commerce
Building
Cleveland, Ohio 44115
and .
GORDON C. GREENE
910 Athens Bank Building
Cincinnati, Ohio ;5202
Trial Attorneys tor
Tri - State MattriiiS
poratlon

Cor ·

{5) 10, 17, 2A, 31. 4tc

owner reurvea " "

Will LfASE D~ buy young polled
hereford bull. Ten cow hard .
Will pickup and deliver . Phone
Cheahire, 367 ·7SU.

1976CHEVROLE1 Cheo,~elte . Phone

Wl-127 4 .

197-4 GRAND Prix , air condition·
ed, p .w., p .b ., p.s. tilt wheel ,

dust control and special mixing
salt for formerJ, Excelsior Salt
· Works, Main Streat, Pomeroy,
Ohio or phone 992· 3891 .
CAMPER , $600. Also, horse
trailer , ~50. Phone (6U) 698-

s•:w.

ATTENTION
MANAGERS
&amp; --d~l~e~po~r~t·~~~--~~--~ I AND H Beams , 8, 9 ond 10 inch.
Demonstrators . Friendly Home ONE BEDROOM furnished oportCall 992-70J.t.
h
f
ment In Middleport.. Call
Toy Parties as openings or
99:2-5-43-4
.3129 .
,
VERMEER BALERS 6050 ;395. 605C
0 992
managers ond dealers In your
4995 till June 1. Merrill Chose,
arao . Toy Party Pion ex· JUNE 1st, one smoU efficiency
R.D. 2 . Albany , Oh;a (614)
perlence helpful. Car and
apartment for one, lady pr"efer698 ·3021 .
red. Coli 992-3lo40.
telaphona ne&lt;:anary, call col·
le&lt;l to Corol Doy (518) AB9.839S
TURN OF The Century, solid oak
or wrlte.Friendly Home Parties , CHOICE RETAil store bu ilding f or
matching dining room choirs ,
lbo
y
lease In downtown Pt. Plea·
Supports, stripped
Bentwood
20 Railroad Ava., A ny, N. ·
•ant. Write Box l.oi7, Point Pleo·
and ready for finishing. $175
1220S .
sont, W.Va. 25550.
for set . Phone 992-2.oil3 after S
p.m .

CASH paid for all makes and

SMAl~

NEW IDEA Manure
spreader; 1959 Chevrolet 1 ton
truck with von body and power
TIMMR, Pomeroy Forest Protoilgate, good condition: Neow
ducts. Top price for standing
Hoiland Manure spreoder, 163
sawtimber. Call 992-5965 or
bushel , good condition . 3 point
Kent Hanby, l ·o4o46-BS70.
hitch, mower, 7 ft . cut, good
COINS, CURRENCY, tokena, old
condition: Tandem trailer tvpe
pt)(ket watches and chains, , ferllliler spreader, good condi·
silver and ...,..ld. we need 1964 . ticn ; Model 64 International
....
combine. good condition: Will
ondoldersllvercolna . Buy , sell ,
takelrodes, phone 'i49-2770.
or trade' Coli Roger Wamsley ,
7-42·2331.
F ·
CASH 111 for junk cars. ryes
Truck and Auto. WRECKER SER__ V~I!::C:!E:_:
1 P:_:h:::on::.::_o:,7•:::2:.:·208
:::;:::.;
1._ - ; - - TWO HORSE horse trailer, $700.
E
bo
b
OLD FURNITUR , ice )Cas, ross
Phone (614) 698·3290.
beds , •~c .,
complete
households. Wrlta M. D. Miller, KAWASAKI 500 1 very good condi·
tion, $600. Call 9A9-2628 or
Rt. A, Pomeroy, Ohio or coli
9;9.2626 .
99'1-nM:J.
modelt of mobile homes.
Phone area code 614-423-9531 .

right ~o waive any fOrmalities
or to rejtct any and Ill b_ldl.
. No bidder may withdraw
hll bid within 15 days lfter
the actual date of the openlno
thereof .
BOARD
OF . COUNTY
COMMISSIONERS
·Meigs County, Ot'llo
Henry Wells
R !chard Jone-s
James Roust'l
(51 23, 31, 21C

Let Pomeroy Landmark
soften &amp; condition your
water and a Co-op water
!softener, Model UC. XVI.
Now Only•,

279 •95

. Let us
Free.

test

your

wat~1

Pomelo1 Landmark

~~Jack W. "Carsey, Mgr.
~

Phone 992·2181

WANTED · CHIPWOOD Poles, NEW DELUXE GE ronge, $250.
Phone ·Kingsbury Home Sales ,
Mox. diameter. 10 Inches on
m ·1030 .
largest end, $8 per ton: bundl·
ed slat;s, $6 per ton . Delivered ONE NEW Ideo pull type HOMESITES fOf sale, 1 acre and
to Ohio Pollet Company, Rt. 2,
wheelroke, one Ford 7 ft .
up. Middleport , near Rutland ,
Pome-roy,
Ohio . Phone
mower, 3 pt., One Early · Caii992-7A8i.
,_,._.,
.
n.1. • 689
American 2 piece living room -. ._:E::
W~J:.:b:.:e_:_::
d roo
=m-h_o_u_se-.-2-b-at"'hs,
suite . . Free kitten s. Cell 1"
all
elec.
,
I
cere,
Middleport
,
9~- 3805 clos~ to Rutland . Phone 99:i!·
7481.
IF YOU hove a service to offer,
CB SPECIAL
HOUSE IN Tuppers Plains, 2
want to buy or sell something,
ROBYN
WV-23
bedrooms , alec. heat, double
ae looking for work . . . or
garage , 2 loiS. Phone (614)
whatever . . . you 'll get results
CS Mobile Transceiv er
667-3065
orM7-3360.
foster with o Sentinel Want Ad.
complete wlth weather
Call m·2156.
proof PA speaker, 2 way
REDUCED AGAIN , 3 bedroom , 2 1/,
base loaded CB antenna,
both , bi· level. 1 mile north of
THREE FAMILY Gorage and Boko
tor root top or trunk mount .
Five Point , $42 ,500. Phone
Sole, Thurs ., and Frldoy,-Jun.e 2
Power cord, coax, antenna
992· 2492 .
and 3 from 10 a.m. till 9 p.m.
cable and all hardware
Included.
1 1!. mile north of Chester on At.
ONLY
7 . Household items, dishes and
glassware toys, good baby.
$69.95
children and adult clotklng.
Watch for signs.
YARD SALE, Frldoy and SoNrday,
Solem StrMt, Rutland. Clothing
girl's 7 • 12 slim, books, avon,
moe rome, crocheted items, etc.
YARD SALE: Used solo, clothing,
misc. Items. June 2, 3, 4 Starl•
ing Mentor on Route 7, second
house on right abo\le Eastern
High Schooh 9 till 5:00.

Superior
Steam Extraction

$29.95

Pomeroy Landmark
RISING STAR Kannel Boarding,
Indoor-Outdoor runs. grooming
Jack W- Carsey. Mgr .
all breeds, clean sanitary L--....:.P..;h;.::o~n;.::•..:'~':.2·;.::2~ll:.l;__ _..J
lac! lilies 011367·71 12. Cheshire .
USED FORt:S I It 'f t:qu1pmenr.
Phone (610) 367-0292.
Franklin \32 AXL s·n .8395
HOOF HOLLOW. l!luy, tell , trade
Detroit Diesel Engine; John
or train han•. RUTH REEVES ,
Oaare 4~08 s·n 1o45506T; Husky
trainer. Phone (61;) 698·3290.
Brute Model 125-8 Hydraulic
loader. Contocl Dennis Smurr.
AKC SHETLAND shoep dogs .
(Min .} Collies, 2 females , 7
(61') 838·s:J.I5.
weeks old. Shott and wormed. GOODYEAR TOWN &amp; Country, 2
Phono (614) 367·0292 or
tires , like new. 800-16.510 ply
367·7112 .
with 8 hole rims. $50 each. Call
m .6398.
MEIGS COUNTY Humane Society
Animal Coreline, m -7680; or i25 INCH Calor T.V. RCA . Call
after 6 p.m., 992-5A27.
9.49·2131 anytime offerS p.m.
1975 KAWASAKI ;OO StrHiblko.
like n•w. low mileage, many
extras . $800. Phone992·350ol .
CODNER'S CAMPERS on Ra;n. PIGS FOR Sale. Phone m·3l3'1.
bowrldge; Soles , Rental , Sertrollers , B WEEK OLD Pigs. Phone,
vice ,
Supplies :
9~9·2857.
campers, caps, alum. awnings
ond porchn by Durabllt. Open . -LO
..:Sc:E:_::W:::E:.:.IG;_H_T_FA
_S_T:ci~
Ta"'"k_e_N""ow
ev•nlngs. Meigs 28 or 32 to
Alglness diet" /ilan and
Boshon. Owner Robtlrt Codner,
Aquovop ''Water Pi Is." Village
LongBottom.
Pharmacy, 271 N . 2nd Ave.,
1975 APACHE Mesa complng _:M
::Kl
= dl:o!:
:: pa
:.:r.::
l·c__ _ _~traller. Never; used, save.
·Pomeroy Motor, m -2126.
1972 DODGE 200 , full powor.
Camper Speckll. 360 automatic,
low mlt.age wllh deluxe topper and slide·in with table bed
unit, $2100. Phone992-6398.

1976 TRAVEL TRAILER, 18ft. long, I
fully contolned, cost $3700 '
new, will sell lor $3100 or bttst .l
offer. Coli oft..- 5 pm 992·7375. ,
'
13FT. BONANZA camper trailer, )'
sleeps 4. good condition . Also,
12 x 60 Mobile home with 12 x
24 trailer rooms attached.
Makes 6 rooms and bath; 9 x 2A
"Hurricane awning. Heat tapes
and underpinning Included.
located ot 510 N. Second St.,
behind French's Sunoco Station.
Phone 992·11 05.

FOR SALE
New CO·Op water sotteners, model VC -SVI.
Only $279.95
S•ve uo.oo on a new
Hotpolnt Refrigerator.
1 New 20 cubic ft .
Chtst Freezu
$319.95
Now in 1tock, com plett line
Of bulk guden seeds .
l Good McCullough Choln
Sow
us
1 Good Used Poul•n Chain
Saw
ISO
'I Good Used Unico
Dryer
SIO.OD
1 Good Used G .E . Dryer 115 '
1 U11d Lar~~n Mower
ISO

rom.., Landmall

JUST LISTED Small
house. small yard , small
price. 4 rooms. bath, plus
storage build i ng . Only
S5400.00.
JUST LISTED - 3 BDRM
ranch type home
In
Middleport,
financing
available if you qualify .
Sl4,000.00.
JUST LISTED The
French Povlncial Interior
of this 3 BDRM home Is
delightful. 17'x26 liv i ng
room, modern kitchen,
dining room and den. Fully
basement. A .C. &amp; working
fireplace are only a few of
the unique features you can
have for only S22.900.00.
MINI FARM Over 3
acres
near
Chester ,
modern ranch type home
w .3 BDRMS. 2J'x23 living
room, dining roam, large
kit. w -lots of cabinets. 1 car
detached garage, Insulated
cold storage bldg . 2 other
bldgs., patio, many extras.
S34,900.00.
'
GOOD BUY - Knotfy Pine
paneling, carpeting, buill·
In kltchen 1 dining room, &amp; 2
bdrms . Really nice at
Sl6.500.00.
NEW HOME This 3
BDRM. home has 2 baths, l
acre of ground, all modern,
$30,000 .00.
COUNTRY 2 acres, 1
room frame home. 2 car
garage, block storage bldg.
Ol]ly $10,500.00.
OUR SALES HAVE BEEN
GOOD AND WE ARE NOW
IN NEED OF GOOD
LISTINGS. ALL PRICE
RANGES .
ACREAGE,
FARMS, AND HOMES.
HENRY E. CLELAND
. REALTOR •
ASSOCIATES
Hank, Kathy
&amp; Leona Cleland ·
9P2·22S9, 985-4112
992 ·2568

•

ltlAtlltitlt Slnkel

.--.._...__&amp;Aitia

Young's Carpeting
Route 3. Pomeroy, 0 .

510111
lltfiDOIIS l DOOfiS

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

•,.'

·-.......

DUGM'S
FRONT END
NJGNMENT

IIIRn

Ill_,

IIWIIIIU.

SIOIIIfPICIIfiiT

Rutland Grada
School. Evening work lry
appolnlmanl. Ph. 742-2005.
H -1 mo. pd ••

2·2J.l mo.

••

.......

. 8thlnd

"The Origin•tors
Not The lmit•tors''

LEMME G~r
THI!&gt; STRA IGHT!
'IOU 5TA(;E'(} THI5
PR IVAT E ~YE SCENE
T' MAKE SHI·VAUN
THINK 'IOU'"'E
UNDER SU$PICIO&gt;J
YOURSEL F ~

...
"

ot

Ct..

'~

~

Alignment, wheel
balancing, tune-up,
brake work, minor
t:•pair.

lfi'\G¥111'1

,·

Nowv

'.

&lt;;He FELL.( AND HOw: sHE's
\FOR IT ? PRQP0$1~6 WE FOOL THE

~~

)

\[

KIDNAPERS AND l&lt;EEP
ALL. THE RAN$0M!

l'i.

•I'

'•

' &lt;,

;'::

·!'!".
• w

_Shirley's Beauty Nook
John St.

.Radiator
Service

---

Nobll Summil Rood
Rl. l
Middleport,
992·S724
ICom••lelle
Sales
11.d
I ' S&lt;orvice and Supplies.

o.

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC. ,

111. ttz.zm

..

', r VI

,_

1

GUTTER SERVICE
Continuous one
pitce
guners. We hang il, or do It
yourself. Special prices to
builders.

. ''

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

"

~.

••

' ''

Route 3, Pomeroy! 0.

Automatic
Transmission Service

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

Carpet. Llno.-Tile
Phone Mike Young ot
992·2206 or 992-7630

4·28· 1 mo .

m

TOOK CFFI I ... OH . OH.

•
'
1'

•
. '
'
' '

. UTI'LEORPHAN 1\NNIE

' l' •I

GUARANTEED

LITTLE ORPHAN AN NJE-CHILDRENI• S AID

. .......

REASON~

RA'IES
Reedsvltte, 0.

WELL, AT LEiAST SHE GVT
A Fi~ GOIN ' BE~ SHI"

"TlN&lt;S 1416 CA'lCH,GO
WASTI!i.

'·'
'

PARTS- LABOR

2·23·1 mo.

WELL, I CAN'T SEE
ANY SENSE IN LeT·

''
.-

SWAIN'S

Installation, samples
brought to your home
with no charge.

NOT -roo LONS AGO, Em! Ell.'

••'

Young's Carpeting
. Free Estimates

l..001&lt;S LIKE SOMEBOOV HAD
'THE SAMI! IDeA I HAD ... AN '

'

'

.c-15-1 mo. r

-

~I

.}

Shirley (Jeffets) Wolfe

F-llto ....

'

. ''"...,

Syracuse

Owner

ORPHAN
IT'S OtJR OLD
NEIG!-iBORHOOD · ·
MRS. RAFFERTY

w

ri

••

IS AWFUL POOR·
SAME AS WE

,...,"'

..

Ph. 371-625D
5-21· TFC

~

~·9UT

6EIH ' POOR

DOfSM' T SEEM
TO MAKE AHY
DI~FERENCf:

TO YOU··

WERE ··

YOU MD
'fOUR

MAPIIA'RE.

ANNIF. -- TROUBL E SHOOTERS

I

_,,l•fK !lite

PRf.....UDICED,

SMALl form for sole . 10 "/o down,
owner financed . Monroe Coun·
ty, W . Vo. Phone (30A) 7723111.1 or (304) 772-32V.

145 ACRE FARM , 7 room house In
Rutland. Lots of privacy. Phone
7o42-3057 after 6 p.m. or on
weekends .

:OUNTRY formlond w ith seclud· HOUSE, 2 bedrooms . 2 car garage
with room upstairs, fully
ed woods, water and good occarpeted and ponnelled. In ·
cess in Monroe County, W. Vo .
ters8ction of 7 and 12-4-. Phone
$1,000 dawn, call (304) 772·
m
.JA82 or 992.7605.
3102 or (304) 772-3227.
Comniercia I properly approx . 17 HOME FOR sole by owner, wall to
well carpet, 3 bedrooms, full
acres. level land. located ot
basement, garage on 2 acres of
Tuppers Plains on Ohio, Route
land , .oi years old. '/, mde sou th
7. Phone (614) 667·6304.
ofT uppers Plains on StateRt.1.
NEW 3 bedroom house, built-in
Call (61') 667·3644 .
kitchen, both and lh, Phone
HOUSE
, 6 rooms '!Y"ith bath, new
742·2306 or contact M1IO B. Hut·
fuel
furnace , If, ocre ground
chison, Rutland, Ohio .
letart,Township Contact V'foyne
VA -FHA, 30 yr . financing. Ireland
"Butcll' Wilson, 2~7·2552 .
Mortgage , 77 E. State, Athens,
NINE
ROO~E. bath , corpel,
phone (614) 592·3051 .
fireplace , twO ROrches, double
BEAUTIFUL TWO story home with
carport, 'h ocra, 'O~ildings .
two cor garage, 5 bedroof"l'l8..
Desire sale by Ju
. Priced
dining room; lorgeli~ing_G.-5r,, ,
to move . Phone
· 0 for
mode"rn kitchen, 2'6.'-·:baths,
·
appointment.
Iorge recreat ion~~ · iully oir
TWO
EXCELLENT
building
lo....J
conditioned , .Vt mile from
lions, Eastern School District ,
school. n~ \.:fUOrter mile off
on good rood . T.P. water ,
Stote _j6U1e. 30 year financing
acreage if desired. Pkone
avoitoble . Coli 992-3863 bet9A9-2770. Owner will llelp
ween 9 a.m. and 3 p.m.
finance if necessary.

TEAFORD

REALTOR
Virgil B. Sr .. Ruttor
216 E. Second Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Phone 992-3325
ALL ELECTRIC - Owners
moving out of town leaving
a newer 3 bedroom ranch
style home. Has modern
bath, nice Birch kitchen,
and level lot, partly fenced ,
COUNTRY HOME - Plus
almost 3 acres of level
land; new 4 bedroom home,
2112 balhs, heat pump,
family room with fireplace.
Man'l other
features .

$46;000.
NEW
HOME
3
bedrooms.
bath ,
full
basement, nice kitchen. air
conditioning, carpeted, and
acre lot. $32,000.
COUNTRY HOME 2
bedrooms , balh, family
room, garage and cellar on
large lot . Wantonly$16,500.
MIDDLEPORT - 2 nice
bedrooms, new bat~. and
F.A. furnace. Near schools
and stores. Will sell for
S12,000 .
NEW LISTING - About 4
years old. 3 bedroom ranch
style home. Lots of closets,
large eat.in kitchen. utility
room and nice level lot.
Only
OUT OF TOWN - Nice 3
bedroom home with central
heating .
Garage
and
partial basemen!. Big lot ,
room for garden. Price
reduced $2,000.

.su,ooo.

Your Neighbor Seldom
Knows The Value Of
,Property, Talk To A
Protesslonot, A lleottor.
G. Bruce Teaford
Helen L . TelfOrd
Assocl•tes

LARGE COUNTRY store, olways a
money maker, upstairs could
be mode into an opt . Owner
will help finance if necessary.
Phone 949-2770.

Si ing,
Storm
Windows
&amp;
Insulation .
Call Professionals

l.t x 70 MOBilE HOME, Governor,

3 bed roann, fuiiT corpeted, 1 y,
baths, partiol y furn i1hed,
underpinned . Can be se&amp;n at
Country Mobile Home Pork on
Rt. 33. Priced on Inspection or
take over payments . Phone
m.2514.

SEW 1-N G · ALTER AT I 0 N 5 :
Upholstering ,
drapes
reasonable. 572 South Third
Ave ., M i ddle'p ort. Ptlone
992·6306.
·PIANO TUNING , Lane Daniels . 12
years of service. Phone

m.20a2.
WATER WELL DriiUng, W. T.
Grant. Phone 7o42·2879 ofter 6
p .m.

I"M AfRAID THIS IS THE

· h'WH 1tH

PLACE -

HOUh'

tmo•

.,.,....... SIDING CO.

•

-·
:,.....

THSY St&gt;.Y ONCE:

...

'-......
,...,
-..
.~

SHE 6/TS 'EM 1D
''MOON VALLEY/C..

' !'t

Free Estimates
No Sunday Caflo Please •
4· 24·1 mo.

~· ~~

' "''
.,
.,;J::
'"'

BRADFORD, Auctioneer, Complete Service. Phone 9.49-2487
or 9A9· 20PO. Roclne,· Ohio , Crltt
Bradford .

_,

ELWQ0e?"BOWER5 REPAIR '"
Swtoepers, toasters , irons, all
"
small appliances. Lawn mower ,
'
'
next to State Highwcy Garage
on Route 7. Phone (61A) 985- . ~
3625.
REMODELING. Plumb;ng, hoat;ng
ond all types of general repair.
Work guaranteed 20 years ex"
perience. Phone 992-2409.

'

.'

·-

......

ILL BET &amp;HE'o FULL OF
CURIOSITY ABOUT OUR
NEW PlANT AND ll-IAT
.JOB L OFFERED HER!

•

i'DW WHO CAN

WINNIE/:~'

THAT Be, JUST .
AT DINNER

&amp;O G00CJ 10
S':.E YotJ !

A()ORA(3Lt ! 1!

'

your foll&lt;.s!

BRIDGE
NORTH (01
o11AQ J76

:-&gt;,"!.

•Q 2
+A K 4 2
"' 9 2

......
Lj()U ro.l1T IV&gt;.VI?. TO f&lt;E;f'I;AT
14()t)R~t..F 1

J

trencher, Low Boy, dump truck •,
trucks , s•ptic systems. Bill ·
Pullin1 , phone 992-2-478 day ar
night .

WEST

EAST

o11Kl0&gt;3

"' 9 42

• 10 7
• 10 8 6
... Q J 7 3
SOUTH
oll8

I 1/i~... THAT
VJA&lt;; 1}11:0 B'tHO!

• QJS

North-South vulnerable

1

Will do odd jobs, roofing, painting . gutter work. Phone 99:2·

•

7A09.

·::

..... ·:

·: .:::~~·

• r:
.:~:~l:. . ,
c' 1

...
: •••••••••••••••••••••••••• !·:

• ••,.
.I; I

•

+Y 72
oiiK BH

"'A 10 8

. "•

.

• 985

¥A KJ643

West

,

31

~:.

Pass
Pass

North East
1•
Pass
3•
Pass
4
Pass

Pass
Pass
Pass

5•
6+
Pass

+

Pass
Pass
Pass

South

3.

3 N: T.

4¥

s•
6.

Op•nlng lead - Q oil

I CAN'T GIT.
JACK TO SPRING OUT
OF HIS BOX

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
In studying the significance
of ordinary bids the simple
rebid of your own sui t i s in the
nature of a sign-off unless you

I'I'A1W--

. 5"- 30

a re rebidding m a situaUon
where your parlner is not go-

ing to pass . Under those ci rcumstances this rebid may be
just denying any additiona l

values

or it

may be tem -

porizing to see what your
parlner will bid next.
North's three·spade reb1d
was of Lhis temporizing
nat ure . He hoped to get a
spade raise. but South rebid to
three nolrump. Now, North
went to four diamonds. South
signed off at four hearls and

'
asstgnment
in AUanta.
Starling ,June 27, Singlaub
will be chief of starr of the

C::ute r stressed
11
•• k to;&gt;t he had not
Hit' I M \ 1 ·nf·n
,John
S11)~ i"l.11h fnr n itirizmR: 11.S.

A beautiful ·play for 7

MOBilE Home Repair, Ele&lt;:., :~
plumbing and heating. Phone ~ ~
99:2-5858.
HOWERY AND MARTIN Ex:· _. ~
covali ng, septic systems ...;'""""
doter , backhoe, dump truck, ~
limestone, grovel , blacktop '-':
pa ving, Rt . 143. Phone 1 (614) • · •
698-7331.
- · .......__

to Gen. Singlauh

IV \\oiiNt, IIJN 1UP I )

P11 ~r1 ·

·--

HARRISON'S T.V . ~"'. :....... :~
Colis. 276 Sycamore, St., Mid·
dleport . PhoneiJCn-2522 .
•· 1
-EX::.CA?V:::A::_::TI~N:.;G::,"=IIA
'-'cC:'K'::H:::O
::E
:','-d"Co_z_e_
r , : ,• •

u;;~ igumenl

l'hun

said 401.1 just

CARPENTER, flooring , calling,
paneling. Phone 992-2759.
• :;:

i,.

&lt;

Oswald and Jim Jacoby

.
.tP
.·: 7 PM - WMPO • 92al FM
'

OH,BIRDIE,IT'S

HE'S

GASOLINE ALLEY

''
:
1

.

SON!

...... ,.. ,,.__ ,,...,
.........

··························~ - !.
: BUY, SELL OR TRADE? : ·-:
•:
•• ~·
LISTEN TO THI

•

Y0c 7

,.

WILL do roofing , construction, • t
plumbing ~nd heating. No job ~too Iorge or too small. Phone •
742·2348.
'·

92 in the Country

N'D rHIS .\lUST 3E

!}!ROlE:(('

..

•

·:

S?-1

r ' .-'/

''

•

,

'\-.::r;:·.
. JJ ,•. )

SEPTIC TANKS cleoOed. Modern
Sanitation, 992-395-i .

•

1.. lo 1

{ .~

·m

-- ..;

,

(

l

TIME?

' ''

SEWING MACHINE Repairs, service , oil makes , 992-2284.." The
Fabr ic Shop, . Pomeroy .
Autl\orized Singer Sales and
Service. We sharpen Scissors.

•

THf

I ~

A local contractor
Phone 949-2801
or 949-2860

SWAP SHOP

H~

M~•Htli~~G-

"

WILL DO babyalttlng In my home .
Phone (6lA)667·3653.

:

('I' FRY

l'lt B[;

• v.J,,

Will DO yard work and pointing .
. Reasonable . Coll992·5214.

PIANO TUNING by Electronic·
Comparison
Accurate .
Reasonable 992·3718 .

1HOUCH I FIND
'fOU WHEREVER
fHUU.'S TROUB LE,
Pf).DRE ·•
./'"'·'"

'

. ..

EXCAVATING, dozer , looder and
backhoe work; dump trucks
and lo-boys for hire; will haul
fill dirt , to soil, limestone ond
grovel. Coli Bob or Roger Jeffers , doy phone 992-708'i ,
night phone 992·3525 or 992·
' 5232 .
114'TING, dozer, backhoe
7 ROOM HOUSE , bath , natural
-ond ditCh.,.,_ Cbgrles R. Hot·
gas, 2 acres ond Ohio Power
field , Bod. · l1o1 ~tee ,
Electric , Phone 7A2-3031 .
Rutland, Ohio. Phone 742-:lCDr.

FOR SALE by owner, 6 yr ." old
home, 3 bedrooms, large living
room, modern kitchen, central
heat. 1Y2 baths . fully carpeted ,
garden space , fruit trees , .t
acres of land . $28,000. 3 mife1
north of Chester off Wes.tStlade
Rood. Don Pooler, 985-3897.

SEEMS AS

Jfl.t~f. -­

\ • ,, CD (,ff{l
I' If!' 111 f. t'JAPM
t

'"\....._

ELECTRIC POWER
WEEDAN.D
GRASS TRIMMERS
Cuts with heavy duty nylon
line - as good as t he best .
AT ONLY

'I.'

,_

1973 CHALLENGER with 46 ,C()O
miles and two 11:. Registered
Arabian
Horses .
Phone
992.7559.

NEED A WATER
SOFTENER?

....·,

Business Services

COAL, limestone, ond calcium
chloride and. calcium brine for

31.000 miles , $3.400. Ph011e
985-3519 afte.- 6p .m ., oncf alter
12 on wHkends .
1971 CAMARO v .B, OUIOmatlc, _:3~:290~·-----c:--::-:­
power tleering, air condi· SPRING GARDEN Supplies, Cabtloner, AM ·FM radio, rope
boge, coulillower, broccoli ,
player . Phone 992-2338.
and head lenuoe plants ,
yellow, white. and red onion
OlDER RESPONSIBL E lady to live 1973 CAPRI S~rts Coupe, -4
speed . Good shope .. $HXlO. Call
sets, onion plonts , Kenn•bec,
In and care for oged widow in
Rutland; Ohio. Not Invalid nor
2~7 -~ .
cobbler, Katahdin , Red Ponlioc
sen He. light housework and
and R&amp;d lasoda seed potatoes .
Bulk garden seeds , potting soil ,
cooking. No laundry. Coli 1969 CHEVELLE Malibu. 'SJ7
engine, outo. transmission,
peal moss , fruit trees and rose
7.. 2· 2078 for information.
power tteerlng. low mileage,
bushes . Midway Market ,
CHILD CARE needed for summer
$500. Phone992-7 158.
Pomeroy . Ohio. 992-2582 ,
for two boys, 8 ond 11 yrs . 1973
Bob:s Market, Mason ; W.Vo .
Langsville
area .
Phone
(304)773·5721.
742·2090 ofter 6 p .m.
TOMATO , PlANTS , Ca,bbage,
LOCAl INSURANCE Agency needs
broc:coli , cauliflower, brussel
on agent to service and sell on
sprouts, egg plants , hanging
a established territory. (Former
baskets , pots, geraniums ,
agent being promoted) Good
begonias , flats , petunias.
wage• and benefits. Send 3 AND .oi RM .. furn is.l-led and un·
marigolds , pansies , sol:zio,
Resume lo Box: 672 , Pdmeroy ,
fumished opts. Phone 9Cn·
bolsom , dianthus , snap ·
Ohio.
dragonl . alyssum , Vinca. col·
eus , Cleland's Greenhouse,
$200 WEEKlY Possible Stuffing COUNTRY Mobile Home Pork, Rt.
Racine . Geraldine Cleland.
Envelopes.
SEND
Self ·
33, ten miles north of Pomeroy,
oddreued stamped envelope
Lor~• lots with concrete pottos, 1·42 in. cost iron kitchensink , I
to : Edroy Moils, Box 188BV
sidewalks, runners and off
basin and 1 drain board , hong
Albany, M064402.
street parking. Phone 99'2-7-479,
on wall type 1 white, 1-3 burner
gas. , hot plate. Phone 992-571•.
MATURE PERSON wont~ for ORCHID ROOM for rant for anbobl(sltler and tlousekeeper.
niversaries , wedding recep- ECONOMY TRACTOR wi th oil at·
Good salary, benefits and
tions, bridolshowera or private
tochmenls. Like new, asking
separate hous_
lng provided.
meeting room. Phone 992-3975
S2250. Phone (614) 698·3290.
Position best suited for single
or 992-2571 .
girl desiring security and own FURNISHED APT. Adult s only, no GOOD RICH Top soil. Cha rles R.
Hatfield Backhoe Service.
place Ia live. Pkone (30-4)
pets . Phone m -387A , Mid·
863·6088 after 6 p .m.
Phone 7•2-2008.

10 1A ft. TRUCKCAMPER,siHpsA,
gas , alec, refrl~rator, cwen,
lloar heater with mono-matlc
toilet. $900. Coll992-6398.

m•r

bl~-he

PIANO LfSSONS, chlldrons and
odulh . Mn.. Horvey Von
Vronken. 992-2270.

-~~~~;;J_~~[~:

NOTICE
WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES

A , , \IANACoF. S TO
•,r,,~1··0~• rH PORcH LIGHT
10 AI fRAC r A TFNTION .

...

1$Wurdi ur Undrr

Call&gt;

j;Eil SHOUI.OE R 1

WE FORO
AN EN TRANCI'i 'i'

SHOULD

•
"·•'·

1

North rrused to h\C'
S()u th "~ snH·Iu b bul "how1·d
the are , North's SIX d1amrmd
showed thal he w ~1s mtt'H' t1·11
in a grand sla m hul 'i ftl

lrw ' l'llh&lt;lr.tw"l ·poli cy in
suulh
K• rea
He had

dec ided not to lnd rl

(•;I'
pub

n1

\•'tll

(I

The game

\VB'{

nnjf'lr

duplica ttl and ~o uth

\\,1

pollll
!il'IJ~

ing- at 12 Pasy tTu·k.-..

fht

same 12 we r•· lhPif'

~~

nulrump ~u Snuth w,~r I
pl ay safe 01 n•asonat~l'. ";tl
for six whilE' t rytn~ h,r
l
1
lt e wl)n till? clui.J. it'd a "'Jl t •

to the ace. rul frd :1 ~p~d,,
cashe-d the &lt;l&lt;' tl nf tru111pc ·, i

rr

~a~nt·

I ~1nglaub,

the

l&gt;ri•\Hkm_l. SJI!l

F "h' •I» &lt;ld&lt;uls of that
~~ I•J 1c,
we-re made

I

tltil11i. flf P rmlJtary

"'til

A Minnesota

rt'ad~'t

1

t:l

.t' ('

plum

b

"

t

lllllf

rh

m

l C101NJ

~md

'

DASSif_}n

~

;

I

-m
'

r

I

r~1=.1

I

the NorU1 hand af(~r ptu·tm•r's
lhree-hearl n·~pon s1• t1 llr~&gt;
I
one-spade opcnmg

We answE&gt;re-d hJJn

I

j

s . "31

.

-

YAFFOL}

roo you "ave a question

for:
fhf1 experts? WHta "A~Ji rile
Jacobys '
cnrP- ol tltls
newspaper Tll9 Jar;ohys w1J1
answer tnd/llld ulll quttstm11:: I

I '-

Tl

l'rmt answer here:

(

-

SPF&lt;:EAD AT
IH E PAI&lt;:TY.

-·

m1-:tde

up thi s hand to f1t

srsmpB d. seff add res· 9 1
envelopes are et1closod
·e
mosr inter6stmg auestlorts tHII
Oe used In tr11s column and w1/l
rece ive coplfts oJ JACOBY
MODE RN )

othc·r

.hJ•1tbll'&lt;i

lrf' [I I

f PROODl_

h t'(~
.Jo

about a half d ozen

officers .

c t l ( " ' : \ f' ")l t ~ II:'~ lfiAr SCRAMBL ED WORD (;liME
'lJ .!:,} ~ ~,j,:..!!J~~ , by Henrrllrnold and Bob LPe

I

asked u!) wha t wt· 1£"htd

eommandi ng ge neral amt

h1'' ··how the 5~
nhlh'r IS gt:tting
I

a

trump to the quoen. " I d
that both o ppo r01•nt. k1d
followed , ruffed a thud 'l'"d"
high , pulled F~~sl's ;,,I trump.
overtook hr s qu(•t•n 'f
diamonds, ruffe d uut t11r king
of spad es and had his 1:1 frl&lt;'k
when drarnonds br•1~r :\ 3

U.S Army Forces Command,
covermg m ore than 10,000
~niles and 296,000 acti ve
personneL As chief of the
staff headquarters, not a
.:omrnand post, Singlauh will
be
outran ked
by
th e

Now arrange the c1rcl ed letters 10
form tl\c surpn!ie answer ,

'

y

sug

fY
- .-'t -r·"'i
_ t ~ ~Ll-......t
__
(An~WPf"&gt;

EX I OL

tl$

4-)n::;terJ t&gt;y ihe above c~rtoon

BlOOD

ACCESS

IOmQifCWi

JOY f Ul

Whal h~ppcned when h1s air conditioner
conked out on n hal summer's day- HE
~ OST HIS COOL

�12- The Daily Sentmel, Mtddleport-Pomcroy. 0., Tuesday, May 31. 1977

Weather

E-RCALLED
The Pomeroy E mergency
Squad was called to Five
Points at 4:05 p.m . Saturday
for Sue Ann Kauff who was
taken to VMH where she was
admitt ed . At 2:36 p .m .
Monday the squa4 went to
East Main St. for David Clark
who had a head laceration.
He was taken to VMH. At 6 :27
a .m . Tuesday , the squad went
to Rock Springs for Mildred
Arnold who was taken to
VMH .

Thunders t o r ms li k e ly
t onight, endin g, becomin g
clo udy Wed nesday . Lo ws
tonight t o 60. Highs Wednesda y fr om 75 to 80.
Probability of precipitation
50 per cent today, 70 per cent
tonight, 50 per cent Wednesday .

FOUND DEAD
SYRACUSE
The
Syracuse E-R Squad was
called Sunday at 3:20p.m . to
the Irene Cundiff residence.
Mrs. Cundiff was found dead
·in a wooded area on a hillside
behind her home as the result
of a self-inflicted gunshot
wound in her head.

Prevention is
the best policy . . .

FOR YOUNG
DRIVERS

1

Young men and women
often ask why they have to
pay more for the ir
;~utomoblle Insurance.
Drivers In their teens and
earlier twenties cause far
tnore than their share of
t.-aftlc accidents. Reports
the
National
Safety
Council : 21.8 percent of all
motorists are 24 years of
age or under, yet these
youthful operators are
Involved as drivers In 38.6
per cent of all accidents
;md 37.3 per cent of al l fat a I
mishaps.
A great many young people
are skilled, responsib le
drivers. Obviously , though,
quite a few are not.
There's no substitute for
development competence ·
and the right attitudes,
Inc lud ing
a
posi tive
approach to defensive
driving.
Our agency provide s
financial protect ion · and
service In case of accidents
Involv ing young drivers ...
but many
of these
accidents
can
be
prevented. That's why we
say - prevention is the
best policy.

JUDGMENT GRANTEI)
In Meigs County Common
Pleas Court the Georgia
Pacific Corp., is to recover
$801.80 from the Ohio Valley
Mfg. Co . Deborah Ferguson
was granted a divorce from
James E . Ferguson .

UNIT CALLED
The Middleport E-R Squad
went to 294 PParl St. at 9:19
p.m. Monday for Clarabelle
Riley who was taken to
Holzer Medical Center.
Saturday afternoon the squad
took Candace Lambert, 3,
North Secon d Ave., to
Veterans Memorial Hospital
where she was admitted.

LODGE TO MEET
Pomeroy lodge 164, F&amp;AM,
will meet in regular session
at 7:30 p.m . Wednesday. All
Master Masons are invited.

DALE C. WARNER
992-2143
102 W. Main

Pomeroy

GET OFF
GOOD START

---------------------------,

!
I

Area Deaths

GOREY BURNETTE
Gorey M. Burnette, 71, a
resideni of 499 South Waverly
St .. Columbus. died Saturday
in Grant Hospital.
A ret Ir e d defen s e con .
strucli on Supply Center
em ployee of Columbus. he
served with the U. S. Navy 23
years as a chief petty officer .
He was a member of the
East Columbus Christian
Church . a charter member of
the Fleet Reserve lodge No.
199.

Mr . Burnette was born In
Gall la County on Nov. 26,
1905, son of the late Richard
W . and Amer ica Sheets
Burnette.
He is survived by his wife.
Anna lee Burnette ; one
daughter , Angeline Burnette,
leupp ; one sister , Mrs . Mary
Thornton ;
two
grand children ; several nieces and
nephews .
· Funeral services were held
this afternoon at the Evans
Funeral Home in Columbus
with Dr . Brother Joe
Belcastro officiating .
Burial was in Forest Lawn
Cernetery .
VIOLA CUNDIFF
SYRACUSE - Viola Irene
Cundiff, 41, Syracuse, died
Sunday afternoon at her
residence. Preceded in death
by her father, Morris Moore,
s he is survived by her
mother . Evelyn Berry Moore.
Syracuse ; two daughters.
Dianna Lawson. Syracuse,
and
Debra
Neace;
Alamogaordo, N. M .; two
sons. Tim Cundiff. Pomeroy ,
and Todd Cundiff, Syracuse;
two brothers. Bill and Ed ·
ward Moore, Pomeroy; one
sister , Michelle Hysell.
Pomeroy, and three grand ·
chi ldren .
Funera l serv ices will be at
1 p.m. Wednesday at the
Syracuse Church of the
Na zarene with the Rev . Da.le
Bass officiating . Burial will
follow in Letart Falls
Cemetery. Friends may call
at Ewing's Funeral Hom e
any time .

RICHARD EVANS
Richart A. Evans. 76, a
resident of Columbus and a
nat ive 'of Gall Ia County, died
upexpectedly at his home
Sunday morning .
He was founder and owner
of the Evans Funeral Home
In Columbus. Mr. Evans was
born at Peniel (Greenfield
Twp .) on March 4, 1901 , son of
late David C. and Margaret
Evans .
He married Esther George
of Thurman . She survives
along with one son, Richard,
Columbus ; two · grand daughter s and a sister,
Margar etta W i lliams,
Ga llipoli s.
Funeral servlces will be
held Wednesday at Brook·
wood United Presbyterian
Church In Columbus with
Rev . Ted Hanna officiating .
Burial will be In Greenlawn
Cemetery jn Columbus .
Friends may call at Evans
Funeral Home at 4171 East
livingston Ave ., Columbus
from 12 noon today .

!
I

CLLARENCE HOFFMAN
LETART , W. Va . Claren ce
Hoffman . 75 ,
Letart. died Monday In the
Cabeii -Huntlngton Hospital.
Born here October 5. 1901 , he
was the son of the late
William R. and Augusta E.
Smith Hoffman .
A ret ired river boat
engineer and member of the
IOOF. he was preceded In
death by a son , Eugene .
Survivln~ are his wife,
Myrtle Wtnebrenner Hoff .
man ; a son. Glen. Letart ; a
daughter , Mrs. Doris Gun·
noe,
Huntington ;
two
brothers, Paul Hoffman and
Dale Hoffman . letart ; 11
grandchildren and two greatgrandchildren.
Funeral services will be at
the Asbury United Methodist
Church, letart, on Thursday
at 2 p.m. with the Rev. Tim
Allen and Rev . W. I. Fiber
officiating. Burial will follow
in the Evergreen Cemetery,
letart.
Relatives may cal l at the
resi dence and fr iends at the
church one hour prior to
services.
Funeral
arrangements are under the
direction of the Foglesong
Funeral Home .
NELLIE KETTER
Harrisonville Nellie
Ketter, 85. Harrisonville, died
early Sunday afternoon· at
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
The daughter of the late
James and Emma Martin
Hutchens, Mrs . Ketler was
born in Vinton County and
lived most of her life In the
Porneroy area after being
raised in Athens County.
Preceded in death by her
husband , Ernest, in 1976, she
was a member of the
Pomeroy Church of Christ
and D.A. R. Two brothers ,
Ralph_and J im also preceded
her in death .
Surviving
are
five
nephews,
Waldo
Neal.
Harrisonville ; Oscar Neal .
Palsey, Fla .; Albert Hutchens, lancaster ; Harry
Hollingshead, Buckeye ,
Ariz .• and Ernest Hollingshead, louisville, Ky ., and
four nieces, Mrs . Gladys
Babs, Ind ianapolis ; Mrs .
Dorothy Davidson, Colum bus ; Mrs . Emma Cochran,
Illinois, and Mrs. Ruth Wlson ,
Indianapolis .
Funeral services will be
held at 11 a.m. Thursday at
the Jagers Funeral Home in
Athens with the Rev . Ernest
Stricklin officiating . Burial
will follow In the Rock
Springs Cemetery. Friends
may call at the funeral home
after 3 p,m . Wednesday .
HALLIE MILLER
Hallie R. Miller, 87, a
resident of the Wellston
Nursing Home, died at 7: 45
a .m . Monday at Holzer
Medica I Center. She had been
health
apin failing
proximately eiQht vears.
Born in Gallla County to
the late Harry and Ellabelle
Mar.!Jla. she married Hugh
lfffifer ·who preceded her In
death. Also preceding her in
death was her son , Dan.
Survivors Include one

FAMILY DINING

AT ITS BEST

Supper

granddaughter and two
great-granddaughters . One
brother and one sister
VETERANSMEMORIAL
e e
preceded her In death.
Saturday Admissions (Caotlnued frGm ..,, 1)
She spent most of her life In
Gallia County, and was a Carl
Parker,
Pomeroy; was Wlder control. TfMin tbe cciob l&amp;an.d f'IIDIIinl beck.
member of the St. Peter and
Harvey
Hobbs,
Dexter;
":I'heY said, 'lt'a 8 real ftrel Get out!"' Paul' s Catholic Church In
Ha r o I d D uc k w o r t h ,
Head bartender .,__ Beble, wbo bid 1111!111114 one ol1be
Wellston .
•...........,
Funeral services will be 9 Syracuse; · Sue Ann Kauff,
a .m. Thursday at the Waugh. Pomeroy; Ftoyd B~. New . extlngul.ttl..,, ran blck to Buc-lo and uid, •'dey, we've IGt to
get theee people out ol ~Mire."
· ·•. · · -'· ·
Halley-Wood Funeral Home
Mary
Howell,
Busboy Walter Bailey, 11, beard tbe tt""F9ilm andtNDt to
with the Rev . Fr . Mike Haven;
Elllfrltz officiating. Burial Pcim,e roy.
· cbeclt. He law amote aeepiD( UDder tbe clolld Ibn ol tbe
will be In Mound Hill
Saturday Discharges - · Zebra Room. For a few mnatea be
arOIII)d 1ft.
Cemetery . There will be no Teresa Renllbaw, Bert Board,
calling hours .
Pauling Cunningham, Steven
what to do," be llid. "IW..
r

Hospital News

•

•-*ed

~~;uan"t bow

easu.

~to

flgureOinlfbattodo,looJdn&amp;fortbeSrtimnp

,'. ·

aturday Admissions ~
. ..1 asked Paula, tlie. , ...... wbo
tbe c.t.:
. et Room, if.I
RALPH ROSS
Candace Lambert, Mid-.y
........_
ZANESVILLE - Ralph
011 tbe . . .. mel tell tbe people. 8be _ , · ~
dleport;
Clement
Cooper,
~e.';
(Hobby) Ross, 78, Zanesville,
died Tuesday morning In
Syracuse; Kelly ·Powell, anBy
. 11 p~.
ftre .m .:..W..h-.k,wird ibe w .. i~M ;r~.
Zanesville. Born Jan . 21, 1899,
Racine.
.... _......
....
the son of the late Frank and . Sunday Discharges At
11:02
p:m.
.
.
.
.
.
.
~
tbe
Fort
Tbomal
Ph
Depertmeat
.
.
•
1 •
• .
•
Mattie Wllcoxlen Ross. he
was preceded In death by his
Vlrgl.nla Rees, John Maxey,
The ~.....~ ~ ID.· tab. bJa cnfii·, act~oa.
wife, Bessie Conway Ross;
Nellie Lemley, Leona Wise;
-"
Clarence Norris; Mary
He rnolllted.tlie lUI•
1111' red :cioat'aoil black bDtt ·
one son, James F. Ross; one
daughter, Wanda Ross; one
Derenberger, Carl Park~. Ue, and took tbe·mae frGm tbe' CCJQdci.. Wbo bild j111U111d tbe. ·
sister, Ulden l. Davis, and
audieJice, "Five mlnutel to -.t~ow.tim8." 8alJey IDid ~ clrori
two grandchildren .
Monday Admissions therewluftrnndbegiodlrctlliatimtotbullita. · · · •
Surviving
are
one
Discharges - . "I wu·acared ml I ltultered
aome of tbe peOple·'
daughter, Mrs. Paul (Mattie)
Allison, Zanesville; two step- Steven Eblin, Hazel Curtis, laughed. 'lbey ~~,I wu ldddini. Otber peaple-llld, 'NO,
sons, Russel and John
Morr ison, Ashtabula ; two
Hazel
Shain,
Madolyn.
Ule·mlke, crackeci few.Joae
grandchildren; four greatChaffin, Marvin Darst.
the tenstori, and urged the crowd to move orderly town tile
grandchildren, and several
exits.
.
. .
.
step-grandchildren .
Funeral services will be at
Two mlnu~ later black, ac:rlchmolre ltarted aeepUI8 Into
PLEASANT VALLEY
1 p.m . Thursday at the Ewing
Discharges .
Jackie the big room. ·Flames were ~n. 'lbe - llgbta ructered. A
Chapel with buria l In Green Blake,
Point
Pleasant;
Mrs. woman ac:reamed.
wood Cemetery. Calling
Hersel
Turner,
Ona;
Panic.
·:
.
.
·
·
hours will be any lime after 7
'lbe terror«rlcan ·mob surged' for tlie doon-, . pi!4hlnl;
p.m. Tuesday .
Adkins, Point Pleasant;
Hattie Roush, NeW- Haven; llhovlng, ldcldng, acreamlng. Scme stumbled, fell and wwe
Mrs.
Donald
Sprague, trampled. A dozen bodies woul!l be found later llllftocateclln a
Wt'LLIAM E. ROUSH
·
·
MASON . W. Va . - William Tuppers Plains, 0 .; Robby · c1oaet they thought wu an exit.
E. Roush, 23, Mason , died Mathews, Gallipolis; James
Fireman Peter Salino and hill famlly were turned back
Saturday in St. Marys Snodgrass, Gallipolis; Mrs. beforetheymaclelt to the Cabaret Ro&lt;m. But In the nelt lbree
Hospital. Huntington. as a
hours he flgure8 he,saved mote lives than In an bla
u
result of injuries suffered In Okey Roush, Letart; Detner
an automobile accident May Roush, II, Point Pleasant; a fireman. UnW a1rno1t 2 a.m. be and his' lOll ~
17.
Thomas Jones, Cheshire; cardio-pulmonary and mouth-to-mouth reiUIICitatlon to the
Roush was involved In a Steven
. .
..
.
. .
.
Martin,
Point Injured.
high -speed chase on Rt . 62. Pleasant; Raymond Mount,
· At the rear of the building Sabino found a doorway ,stacked
along with Mason patrolman
Mrs.
Elza · with corpses·
larry Duncan, 18, who was HendersQll;
also Injured, but later Watterson, Pliny; George
released .
Payne, West Columbia; Pt{rs.
Born October 4, 1953, In Louis Taylor, Gallipolis;
Mason, Roush was the son of
(Continued from page 1J
·
_
Harold E. and Rosalie Van Clyde Hill, Point Pleasant;
Mrs. George Payne, West Mozambique thlJ weekend, deltroylnc tine black guerrilla
Meter Roush .
Surviving are his wife, Columbia; Mrs. Blllle Clarke
Terri Glover Roush ; a son, and daughter, New Haven; bases and kllllng ·~ inlurgenta. A Rbodeslan !DII1WY
communique said the troops and planes entered Mollmblque
Anthony Robert Roush, at
home ; three sisters, Mrs . Carmen Anderson, New befare dawn &amp;Jnday and overran a "major · terrorilt
Rose Ellen Lee, Rutland, Haven; William Londree, admlnlatrative baae" three miles from the border, ldllln&amp; ~
Ohio ; Mrs. Vickie Jeffers, Robertsburg; George Nutter,
Bradbury, Ohio ; Miss Sandra Henderson; Carolyn Chap- defenders.
The RhodeSian command said Ita forces destroyed two
Roush. Mason; two brothers,
David and Timothy Roush , man, Crown City; John IDOI'e bases Monday,Jncludlng one said to be a :"headquarters
bOth of Mason ; maternal Knapp, Jr., West Colum- and main supply base" controlling an guerrilla incunlonllnto
grandparents, Okey and bia; Mrs. Joseph Ballard, southeast Rhodesia. It said another 7AI guerrl1lu were.t@ed In
Katie Van Meter, Mason, and
0.;
David the attack on the camp,located 47 miles
of the RbOdeelan
the paternal grandparents, Reedsville,
Hazen and Vannie Roush , Grinstead, Racine and Mrs. border, and large quantities of weapooa, ammunition and
John McCarty, Apple Grove. explosives were found.
New Haven .
. Funeral services were held
today at 1: 30 p.m . at the
Foglesong Funeral Home
with Rev . George Hoschar
officiating . Burial followed In
the Graham Cemetery .
I"
. UUII

11

the

·

,· ' .· ,

w....mc

NC:~~day

~

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to~

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21,...

News •• in Briefs

east

ELBERFELDS lN POMEROY

SAMUEL: SAYRE
Samuel V. Sayre, 94, a
resident of Florese, Pa ., and
a former resident of
Cheshire, died Monday at his
home In Pennsylvania.
He was born In Jackson
County near Evans, W. Va .•
on Sept. 23, 1882, son of the
late Oscar· and llza Jane
King Sayre.
He was a retired farmer
and also worked as a carpenter for the Ashland Oil Co.
Mr . Sayre was affiliated
with Belpre Heights United
Methodist Church.
His wife Ora preceded him
In death In 1947. He later
married leah Spencer. She
preceded him In death In 1969.
Survivors Include one son,
J. F . Sayre, Florese; four
grandchildren I five greatgrandchildren ; one sister ,
Florence Sayre, Cottageville,
W. Va .; two brothers and four
sisters preceded him · In
death .
Funeral services will be
held at the Spencer Funeral
Home . In Belpre at 2 p.m.
Thursday , Burial will be In
Cheshire Cemetery.
Friends may call at the
funeral home after 7 p.m .
Tuesday.

FURNITURE

DEPARTM~T

• 3RD R.OOR

SALE! OCCASIONAL TABLES

20% OFF

Memorial
lHE INN PLACE
WEDNESDAY NIGHT SPECiAL
Open a Joint Savings
Account at Citizens
National Bank
We wish all of the young ne wl ywed s
a happy ar1d pros perou s future.
You can start with a joint savings
account and when you are ready for
yo ur first homt•. a new &lt;~ar or a "pe rsonal loan , S('{ ' us too. We art• here
to help.

..._"_b

Visit our salad bar, shrimp, french
fries, coffee, tea or milk.

$2

95 Plus tax

(Continued from page 1) .
Meigs
County
United
Teenager finalist, and the
Meigs County Mounted Posse
In Its firSt public appearance.
Taking part In the Chester
parade were Drew Webster
Post, the auxiliary .u nit,
Racine
Fire
Depart·
ment,
Eastern
High
Band, the Bashan Mery-ry
Makers 4.· H Club, the
Chester Frrel'5epai-tment,
Chester Council Daughters of
America, Chester children
ca rrylng flowers to the
cemetery', a bike group, the
Riggs Royalettes, a group
supporting a tax levy in the
Eastern School District, and
the Chester Brownie Troop.

•

MERSMAN
KROEHLER
LANE

BASSm

uTHE

FRIENDLY BANK "

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
Member Federai Deposit Insurance
Corporation
.

DEPOSITS INSURED TO $40,000

Maple - Cherry - Pine - Pecan - Oak
Tops of Solid
Maple, Pine, Cherry, Walnut, Pecan, ,Vinyl, Formica,
Glass, Romarco Marble. Large Selection of Styles. Over
60 Tables.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
..

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