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                  <text>Laetrile
control
cancer, doctor claims
J .R. KIMMINS
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Laetrile , when used
in
conjunction with a strict diet,
large doses of vitamins and
enzymes, has been an
effective way to control
cancer, according to a Dr.
Phillip Binzel of Washington
Court House.
The Ohio House Health
Committee Wednesday heard
Binzel testify in favor of a bill
to legalize the manufacture,
distribution and sale of the
substance, which is derived
.6y

CIJNIC HELD - A blood pressure clinic was held
Tuesday night at the Syracuse Fire Station sponsored by
Syracuse emergency medical technicians. Shown are, on
left, front to back are, Nita Wisniski, hyptersenion (high

•blood pressure) nurse for the county health department
taking the blood pressure of Arletta Vanover ; on right
front to back, Ralph Lavender, emergency chief, and
EMT, Margaret Cottrill having her blood pressure taken
· by Eber Pickens, EMT.

•

en tine

at
VOL. XXVIIt NO. 34

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

from apricot pits, in Ohio .
In 1953, the Food and Drug
Administra tion concluded
that the substance has no
medicinal value.
Binzel said he had gotten
better results using Laetrile
in a controlled program to
control cancer than he had in
using surgery, chemotherapy
or radiation treatment.
"I have not gotten 100 per
cent results, but my results
are far better than cobalt,
s ur ger y
a nd
chemotherapy,"
said

THURSDAY, JUNE 2, 1977

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

•

Binzel, who has prescribed
the substance for the last
three years to 450 patients
with cancer.
"Orthodox medicine is used
to looking at all diseases as
one variable disease," he
added. "Cancer is not one
variable disease. Unless all
deficiencies are corrected,
you won't cure the disease ."
Nevada, Alaska, Indiana
and Florida have already
legalized the substance .
Binzel said that · Laetrile,
used alone, is useless, and
urged the comm ittee to
amend the bill to ensure that
Laetrile
remains
a
prescription-only substance
and cannot be purchased
over·the-&lt;:ounter.
"Orthodox medicine will
continue to get poor results as
long as it continues to use
Laetrile alone," he testified.
Binze1 prescribes the substance in conjunction with
large doses of vitamins A and
E, various enzymes and a
strict diet of unprocessed
fruits and vegetables.

Ire
egan
)
•
•
In partying e raroon1

"You don 't cure cancer any
more than you cure diabetes.
You control it," said Binzel,
adding that removal of a
malignant tumor did nothing
to "cure" cancer - it only
rel'ftoved the symptom.
B'mzel said the Ohio State
Medl cial Associa t ion
considered action to lift his
license to practice medicine
two years ago because of his
use of the substance.
Binzel said the FDA ca n't
afford to say "we goofed" in
banning the substance 23
years ago because of its
laboratory tests on animals.
" lf the FDA said 'we
goofed' and had been
withholding a form of cancer
treatment that is far superior
to anything else, well, there
would be s.uch a furor that
Congress would abolish the
FDA within a week," he said.
Rep. John D. Thompson
Jr., D-Cleveland, chairman
of the committee, said the
panel would hold more
hearings on Sweeney's bill in
Cleveland , Cincinnati a nd
Toledo.

~

By RICK VAN SANT
Brandenburgh, heading an
SOUTHGATE, Ky. (UPI) investigating team that has
The Beverly Hills been combing the rubble of
nightclub fire that killed at the once-plush supper club all
least 161 persons started in a week. The owner of the club
15-by-30 foot party room carried about $1 million in
known as the "Zebra Room" insurance, according to state
just after members of a officials in Fankfort. ·
wedding party vacated,
As to what touched off the
according to the chief fire and caused flames to
investigator.
.
spread
quickly,
"All we can speak of so far Brandenburgh said, " A
is the origin of the fire," said number of theories are being
Kentucky State Police discussed by investigators.
Commissioner Ken These theories will be tested

·:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:!:::::::::~=~=~=~:::~=~=~=~=~=~=~=~:::~:~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

IJNews . . ·.in Briefsl\

~

~

By United Press International .
COLUMBUS - THE OffiO LOTIERY Commission got the
approval of the Ohio House Wednesday to give away trips,
homes, cars or other prizes as well as cash.
Ulttery Director Gerald Patronite said the lottery could
probably award goods and services under current law, but
wanted the approval of the Ohio General Assembly before
initiating the change. "I'd rather see a hundred people win a
Cadillac and 50 people win a home than one person win a big
cash award," said Patronite in testimony two months ago
before a House committee .
The bill now goes to the Senate.
USBON, OffiO - FORMER COtUMBIANA County
Democratic Chairman Donald Gosney was sentenced
Wednesday to one to five years in the Ohio State Penitentiary
and ordered to make restitution for more than $67,000 41 stolen
license plate fees.
·
Columbiana County Common Pleas Court Judge Richard
Kennedy denied probation for the ro.year~d Gosney saying,
"this court must act to preserve public respect and confidence
in our legal system and the public good does demand that the
defendand be incarcerated."
He pleaded guilty Dec. 8 to prosecutor information that
alleged he stole $67,838 in auto license fees from th~ state be·
tween March 15, 1974, and Feb. 3, 1975, while operating a
license franchise under the guise of his son Fred Gosney, who
was listed as a deputy registrar.

..

COLUMBUS- TO HF.T .P RRPA TR WTNTER·DAMAGED
roads, the state_Bur~~ of Motor Vehicles has already begun
returning $28.7 muuon in 1977 vehicle license taxes to local
officials.
Gov. James A. Rhodes said Wedneday the returns began
less than 24 hours after the May 31 registration deadline, the
earliest the BMV has ever made a first release of license
revenues. Normally it comes during the first week in july.
"We're taking this extraordinary action because of the
excessive damage done to city streets and county roads this
past winter," said Rhodes.

with physical evidence and
evidence
gathered
in
interviews."
Brandenburgh also said
autopsies of victims showing
what fumes were inhaled
would help in tracing the
beginnings of the fire .
Medical officials have said
most of the victims died of
smoke inhalation, not burns.
Kentucky Fire Marshal
Warren Southworth said he
expects an investigation
report to be submitted to Gov.
Julian Carroll next week will
.contain a preliminary
estimate of what caused the
blaze.
Meanwhile, a controversy
developed about whether
Southworth had labeled
Beverly HIUs "dangerous"
nearly a half-year ago.
In Frankfort, state Sen.
Tom
Eastery
said
Southworth told him last
December, " I know it's
dangerous." But Southworth,
on the scene of the
investigation here, replied, "I
don't recall that con·
versation."
Brandenburgh's disclosure
of the fire•s· origin was the
first public report issued by
investigators. J
" Physical evidence
indicates the fire originated
in the general area of the
Zebra Room, used to
accommodate small parties
of about 30 persons," said
Brandenburgh. "Reports and
interviews indicate
a
wedding party was held in the
room earlier and vacated a
short time prior to discovery
of the fire .
"A waitress discovered the
fire and she notified other
employes who in turn notified
guests. We have found evidcence of attempts to
extinguish that fire. We have
not revealed any evidence

SOLEDAD, CALIF. - TWO LOS ANGELES County
supervisors headed north to Soledad prison today to ask Sirhan
Sirhan convicted assassin of Sen. Robert F. Kennedy, why he
did it :Wd whether anyone else was involved.
The meeting was eet up after Sirhan promised, through his
lawyer to break his long silence about the slaYing of Kennedy
in 1968: Sirhan's mother, Mary, said this week the meeting
"may help release my son," but she did not elaborate.
Supervisors Baxter Ward and Kenneth Hahn were
scheduled to fly to Monterey and drive to the prison for a
meeting with Sirhan in a classroom in the administration
building.
WASffiNGTON - ABORTION ADVOCATES estimate
taxpayers wiU be -forced to shoulder a . multi-billion dollar
burden of support for unwanted children if Congress outlaws
$50 million spent annually for Medicaid abortions. The
prediction came Wednesday from a bipartisan coalition of proabortion groups. The group seeks to defeat an antiabortion
provision in the new Labor Department - HEW
appropriations bill, scheduled for a vote in the House June 15.
A similar provision, outlawing the use of Medicaid funds
for abortions, passed Congress last year but was blocked in the
courts. The Supreme Court was expected to rule soon on the
Issue as it applies to the states. The coalition ridicules a recent
letter in which Sens. Richard Scbewiker, R-Pa., William
Prounire, O-Wls., and Thomas Eagleton, D-Mo., argued for
r~ctment of the provision on grounds it would force the
court to clarify the constitutionality of the ban on federal
expenditures for abortlon.
!

that the fire is of a suspicious
nature.
"We are yet to learn the
source and cause and the
method and route (how the
fire
spread),"
said
Brandenburgh. "Numerous
pieces of evidence have been
collected and will be
subjected to laboratory tests.
The evidence includes
paneling, carpeting, ceiling
tile , flooring and other
finished materials."
Brandenburgh also said in·
vestigators are trying to
determine exactly how many

Highway
•

proJects
listed
According to Construction
Digest ,
a
bi-weekly
publication for highway of·
ficials, contractors,
engineers and county com·
missioners, several road
repair projects are upcoming
in the Gallia-Meigs County
area ·
Alan Stone Co. 'dd
of Chester
f
b
I
hill is the ow I er or .a
serious road slip intohthef Oh
Ad10
River on SR 7 nort o
•
dison. The project will cost
$303,444.
.
'ects
Other road repair pro)
slated for completion
·
hthis
summer are SR 124m At ens
and Me.igs Counties.. The
f
pro j ect IS for 21 ·91 mlIes 0
resurfacing work; S.helly .
Company of Thornville IS the
contractor at a cost of
$170,169.
.
US 33, SR 7 a~d SR 338 . m
Ath ens and Meigs Count tes
will be resurfaced by Shelly
Company for $6~,700.
A~other Metg~ Count.Y
proJect calls for brtdge r! patr
work on SR 7 by Shaw and
Holter , Inc. of Lancaster for
$41,83.9·
.
Ulrich Contractmg. of
Lebanon was the low btdder
at $62,914 for route and
gua~drail ~inting in Athensd
Gallt~ , Metgs, , M?nroe an
Washmgton Counttes.

Weather
. KENT KLOES
GRADUATES - Kent
Kloes, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Manning Kloes, Mid·
dleport, graduated May 22
from the Ohio Northern
University, Raabe College
·of Pharmacy, with a
bachelor of science In
Pharmacy. He Is a Meigs
High School graduate of
1972. Atteodlng the com·
mencemeot program were
Mr. and Mrs. Kloes and
daughters, Lori and ~ynn.

persons were in the gigantic,
23-room nightclub when the
fire started. Employe
estimates have ranged as
high as 3,500 to 4,000. There
are questions about whether .
the club was overcrowded.
"We are requesting all

Clear and cool tonight, lows
in the upper 40s. Sunny
Friday, highs to mid · 70s.
Probability of precipitation
30 per 1;,ent toJay, near zero
tonight and Friday.
FIREMEN CALLED
The Middleport Fire
Department was called to
Hamilton St. at 10:20 a.m.
Wednesday where a car
owned by Carroll Mowery,
Middleport, had caught fire.
The blaze was extinguished
before th e department's
arrival.

PAT LEEGAN

Leegan will
work with
' l
area sch00 ~-

persons who were in the
Beverly Hills Saturday night
when the fire broke out to
send us a postcard and tell us
their · name,
address ,
telephone number and their
location in the building
(name of room ) when
informed of the fire," said
Brandenburgh.
Postcards should be sent
to : " Fire Investigation
Team, P.O. Box 10,
Frankfort, Ky., 40601."
State Rep. Larry Hopkins
said if sufficient evidence of
negligence was brought out in
the
inVestigation ,
manslaughter charges should
be filed .
Walter Bailey, the 1S.year
old busboy who warned about
1,000 persons in the Cabaret
Room of the fire, said earlier
he believed the fire started in
the Zebra .Room and
suspected it was touched off
Continued on page 5

.'

TEACHER HONORED - Mrs. Bernice Carpenter
was honored last night with a dinner at the Meigs Inn after
her retirement from 33 years of teaching. A first grade
teacher at Middleport Elementary the past 29 years, Mr~ .
Carpenter began teaching at the Forest Run Elementary
Schoql, no longer in existence, whe~e she had charge of
four grades. She also taught at Letart Falls for a short
time. Robert Morris, principal, presented Mrs. Carpentet
a hand engraved gold locket with her initials on behalf of
her fellow workers and current and former. teachers of
Middleport Elementary who attended the dinner.

Three hospitalized after
•

running into utility pole

Taken to the hospital were Deputies advised Cozart what
Thomas J . Eakins, 16, steps are necessary to follow
believed to hav e been if he wished further action.
Appom
· tment of Pat Leegan
Deputies also received a
driving , Mickey Edward
report
of a theft from Harry
to the sta' ff of the Center's
Eakins, age 6, and Regina
Rae Eakins, age 8, all of Rt. 2, Hewell, Rt.-1, Long Bottom.
Substance Abuse Program
Hewett reported that a wheel
(Alternatives), specifically in
Racine.
charg~ of Educational
The accident is still under was taken from an .auto
investigation. Charges are parked on his property.
Prevention Services, was
announced today by Dr.
pending against the driver, Hewett was also advised the
George Greaves, dt'rector, Gnecessary steps to take if he
the sheriff said.
J-M Community Health
Sheriff Proffitt reported wished furth er action .
Center.
Dillon Taylor, Rt. 1, Long
that a bicycle stolen from the
Pat was born and reared in
Bottom
, reported to the
Clayton Kimes residence at
Colorado .and Kentucky. She ,:,:,:~:;i;;~ri~ri'&amp;t~i16k''''''' Indian Run has been located sheriff's department that he
received her education from
at Forked Run State Park. It had taken from his property a
Butler University in In·
Saturday
through 'is believed that the bicycle five gallon can of gasoline.
dianapolis and graduated in Monday, fair Saturday and
was stolen by the same party Dillon indicated he knew who
a chance of showers
that
1975 from Ohio University Sunday
stole one from the Grant took the can. All incidents are
and Monday. Highs
with a Bachelor of General
·
Boring residence in Reeds- under investigation.
Studies, a self-designed In tbe 80s Saturday and
ville Monday morning.
program in counseling , Sunday and In the 70s
Wednesday
deputies
education and psychology. Monday. Lows In the 50s
received a compla int from
:She worked two years at Saturday an!l mid 50s to
Sanford Cozart, Rt. 1, Long
Nelsonville Day Care Center mid 60s Sunday and
Bottom, in regard to a person
shooting
out his outside light.
and helped to organize and .·. ~.~~~·~.~.:.... ·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·
coordinate Athens Women · .·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·
Against Rape. She as worked
with the Tri-County Drug and
Alcohol Abuse Agency and
The Ohio Farm Burea u
also worked as a volunteer
Federjltion (OF BF) has
phone counselor and trainer
achieved a membership gain
1
and board member of
in every county for the fifth
consecutive yea r , capping
Careline, Inc ., a 24-hour
Meigs County could have recommendation to the one of the most successful
crisis intervention in·
formation · and referral much improved road and County Commissioners ·for stat ewide m ~bers hip
and ca mpaigns
in
the
service for Athens and Vinton bridge conditions,
an co n si d e rat ion
(and formerly Me igs ) upgraded trash collection imp I e m e nt a t ion , as organization's history.
The 3,500 mem bership
program, and a more appropriate.
counties.
The 1978-1982 Capita l drive volu nteers throughout
In her new role she will be efficient and economical
available to do programming County Courthouse if the Improvements Program the state achi eved a total ·
for schools, social service first-year recommendations report was prepared by the membership of over 69,000
organizations or community of a recently completed Columbus consultng firm of members, a gain of over 2,000
M.
J enn ings !rom 1976. It's the 10th'congroups . For more in· Cap ital Impro ve ments J ames
formation , individuals and Program (CIP ) covering the Associates . A co py is secut ive
yea r
the
agencies may contact the period
1978-1982
are ava ilable lor public viewing organization has attained a
at the CETA office on the statewide ga in in mem·
community mental health implemented now.
center in Pomeroy, Gallipolis
These important benefits ¢ ird floor of the Courthouse bership . The membership
and others are available during regul ar business includes 9,300 new members.
or Jackson counties.
Membership lor 1976 totaled
The Center 's Substance without new taxes for an hours.
Abuse Program (Alter· expenditure of about one-half
All comments about the 67,162.
natives ) serves Galiia, Meigs million dollars a year in local report must be received by '· For the fir&amp;t time in the
and Jackson counties offering funds according to the CIP the consultant (P. 0 . Box · history of OFBF, a mcmc6 uns elin g, education , report presented to the Meigs 5762, Coliunbus, Ohio 43221) bershi p ga in has been
treatment pla cement and County Regional Planning by June 10.
achreved during a )'ear of
alternative services.
dues increase.
:
Commission for their possible
Three minors, age 16, 8 and
6 have been hospitalized as a
result of a car ·accident
We dnes day at 3:30 p.m. on
SR 338 in Letart Falls, according to Sheriff James J.
Proffitt.
A car owned by Dimple
Eakins, Rt. 2, Racine, was
southbound when the driver
lost control, went off the roa d
on the right and struck and
broke off a utility pole.

Farm Bureau

shows increase

Improvement program

in membership

cost set $ ;2 million

•

)

�3-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, June 2. 1977

2-"Roe Dally Sentinel. Moddlrport-Pomeror. 0 .. Thursdit) . JWle2. 1977

.r• =;.:---1• Bullpen has

Energy conservation
progress under review
the controversial program, energy agencies and omces
and a separate meeting with in a new Ca bine t-leve l
energy adviser
James dl&gt;pa rtment.
Powell
dis c lo se d
Schlesinger in what While
Wednesday
that
Carter has
House Press Secretary Jody
given
a
ll,O·ahead
lor
Powtll called an effort to
"find out where we are~' in deployment of big new silo·
see king support for the busting missile forces to
maintain .. rough equivalencomplex plans.
cy"
with the Soviet Union .
The House was beginning
Explaining
Carter 's order
consideration of his proposal
for co nsolidating all the for deployment of a new more
a ccurate , more deadly
warhead known as Mark 12A
by 1979, Powell said :
Recipe for Quiche Lorraine
"We do not feel it is
reasonable at aU to expect
this country to unilaleraJjy
using worms wins $500 prize
forego all technologica l
improvements tha t might
POMONA, Calif. (UPI) - A New Jersey school
provide
a
temporary
teacher has won S500 lor a recipe lor quiche Lorraine tha t
advantage _lor us , in the
includes 16 earthworms .
absence of any similar
Lynn Remisovsky 's "quiche Lorraine avec ver de
verifiable restraint on the
terre" woo first prize Wednesday in tbe Ver de Terre part of the Soviets .
Earthworm- recipe contest.
" We
have
indicated
Miss Remisovsky, 31 , of Bayonne, N. J., said she
publicly and privately our
washes, boils and then bakes the worms until they are
willingness to talk about
"crispy," and then crumbles them like bacon bits into the
improvements and we are
otherwise classi c French cheese pie.
still willing to talk al;lout it,"
The recipe beat out Worm Fritters, Magnificent Mess
said Powell.
Cake , Crawling Canape Caps, and Earth Kitchen Bread.
Powell later said the
decision was nla.de when the

By HELEN THOMAS
UP! White HOil'e Report..r
WASHINGTON iUPil President Ca rter undertook a
major review today of the
progress made so far on his
energy program and the
outlook lor its enactment.
He scheduled a breakfast
meeting with members of the
H o use Commerce
subcommittee on energy oo

•
GOP featuring Reagan m

nationwide energy answer
interviewing
Eight prominent congressmen
Republicans on the program citizens about energy.
A salesman in Washington,
endorse Ca rter:S ca 11 for
energy conservation , but D. C. tells Rep. Jack Cuncriticize his proposed tax on ningham the proposed 57
gasoline and gas-guzzling cents a gallon standby tax on
gasoline " will just about kill
automobiles.
Republi ca n
National me."
Rep . Jack Kemp is told by
Chairman
Bill
Brock,
moderating the show, says an auto worker at a Buffalo
the GOP favors conservation, plant that " more taxes
mass transit, more fuel- means less jobs. "
An Ohio farmer tells Rep.
efficient ears, tax incentives
lor home insulation, higher Clarence Brown that if he has
production of oil, gas and to pay more for his gasoline;
coal, and development of new and petroleum-related items
energy sources.
like fertilizer, "production
Normally such programs wm go down , there wm be a
by the party out of power are shortage of food and prices to
formal ·shows featuring the consumer will rise.' ~
William Coleman, transmembers of Congress talking
into the camera. But the GOP portation secretary Under
energy show, filmed across President Ford , rides a
the
country,
features Washington subway and says
mass transit - not mentioned
in the Carter. program - ~"' is
the way people should get to
work.''
The Republican position is
summed up by a tanned
Ronald Reagan standing in
front of classic California
landscape,
Lawrence E. lamb, M.D.
"This Carter's program
will bring us to a halt - dead
in our tracks," Reagan said.
" It could cost the average
family $1,000 a year. This is
not an energy program it is a
By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
before the diet, and were not tax program. The biggest tax
DEAR DR. LAMB - My obese because they were program in the history of our
sister went on Dr. Atkins' diet young and active. Certainly country."
and went from 230 to 165 an 800 calorie a day diet in a
Peter Teeley, director of
po_unds in five months. She large woman or man can be communications for the
&lt;l!dn't do it under a doctor's as bad or worse.
Republican National ComJUj&gt;ervision. She got some apPersonality changes oc- mittee, said the RNC and the
•petite depressants and just Ct!rred. Muscle mass loss oc- Republican
Congressional
. went on the Dr. Atltirul' diet.
curred. Pains and aches oc- Campaign Committee agreed
After about lour months curred. Intolerance to cold to pay between $20,000 and
her arms and leg muscles · occurred. Some lost their $25,000 to produce the .
started ache and sbe got ir- hair. Emotional disturbances · program because they
ritable .and had crying spells. · and a tendency toward believed it would attract and
She still keeps her weight' · withdrawal was observed.
hold a television audience.
down on BOO calories but no
In addition to the hannful ,
one can live with her.
effects of the diet there is the
BANQUET S!..ATED
She's ready to crack up. All questlori of what the diet supThe
annual Columbia High
she wants to do .is lie in bed. pression pills .did to your.
.She has no energy to do sister. These can cau.se real School Alu!Illli Banquet will
be held at Albany Elemen·anything. She complains that problems.
:her arms and shoulders ache
I am sending you The tary School Auditorium on
:and her hips and ealf muscles Health Letter number 2-1, Saturday, June 4 at ·7 p.m.
·ache.
Low Carbohydrate Diet Fads with dancing to follow at 9
~- She was a beautiful woman which discUsses llle Atkins' p.m. Music will be presented
but now she has dark hollow diet. You should have your by Marguerite Frank, Claire
circles around her eyes. Her sister read it ii she will. Dudgeon and Walter Swett.
children say .she's not pretty Others who want information Teachers, any Columbia
anymore.
on low carbohydrate diet fads School alu!Illli and guests are
I read an article that may can send 50 cents with a long, welcome.
have been yours that if one stamped, self-addressed
loses weight too fast it will af- envelope for this issue.
CLUB TO MEET
fect the muscles. Can you Remember these diets are
The
Catholic Women's Club
comment on this in your col- . not approved by the
of
the
Sacred Heart Parish
umn ?
American Medical Associa·
will
meet
in the Church
·I lost weight by going to tion. Atony of ~ can inrectory
after
7:30pm. mass.
T.O.P.S. My sister and I were duce weight loss but the goal
bQth in good health otherwise. is tO eliminate weight safely
THE DAILY SErt!t'TINEL
I still feel fine and I'm on 1200 without damaging one 's
DEVOTED TO THE
calories. It took me over nine health. That is not always so
INTEREST OF
MEIGS-MASON ARE.A
years to lose 60 pounds and I simple.
CH.ESTER L TANNEHII.J..
'~on't ache or have pain.
I had hoped these terrible
Exec. Ed.
.I really hope you can help diets were a thing of tbe past
ROBERT HOErt.ICH
ctty Ediaor
her. Sbe is losing the love of and were being replaced by
Published .lilily e.~ cept Saturday
herlamily.
by The otuo VsUey PubUshing Comsane and sensible programs
an}', Ill Cow1 Sl., Pomeroy, Ohio
DEAR READER - Get her with a 1200 calorie a day pro4.57&amp;9. Business Office Phone 992to a docwr last. Those crash gram, similar to what you
2155. Editorial Phooe992-21S7.
$e(:ond class ~ge paid at
diets often do·far more harm have experienced. The dif.
.oruo.
-than good. It Is true that ex- ference in tbe results of the
N111Uona l adventst rtg represencessively rapid weight Joss two programs is a good extal.!vr Wtard • Gnff1tll Company,
fnc., Boumrlll and Gall.agbtr Div.,
will cause a person to lose ample of Ute relative safety
7,7 Third Av~ .• New Yurk, N.Y.
muscle as well as fat.
IOOli
and success of the two dif.
Sut.scn.puoo ro~t.es ; Ot!Uve~ by
- ;In , the early 1940s, Dr. ferent approaches.
carne1' "ili'Mre avaih•bk&gt; 7~ f..'ent.s per
Ancel Keys and associates
Dr. Lamb will answer · ., ~~II. . By Motur Rout.t whtre t;arri~t
lft'VK"t', not '!lvaiblblr, ()ne- monlh,
· proved that young men on a representative let(ers of
SlJS. By nwul In Oloo '!'nd W.. Va ..
, djet of little more than 1600 general interest in his colant Year, S21.00; SiJt roorJtlu,
'''calories a day developed wnn. Write to him in care of
m.so. Thrt:e moothl. S7,00;
~t fliii.OO rear; Su muntla.s
~erious problems. These this newspaper, P.O. Box
SJ.:MO; Thr~e mun th,, $7.50
- young men had been averag· 1~1, Radio City Station, New
.SUIJSI.Tlptiuu ,Kit.~ mctudb Sw.W.y
4
lllno&amp;:fltJ1tCI.
ing around 3600 calories a day York, NY 10019.
•
WAS!flNGTON (UP! ) The Republican Party has
prepared a $20,000 nationwide
television program featuring
· Ronald Reagan and _other
GOP stars to respond to
President Carter's energy
program.
The program - filmed at
coal mines, auto plants,
shopping centers, subways,
farms and gas stations contends the energy situation
Is less critical than Carter
claimed and charges his is a
tax program, not an energy
program.
NBC has given a half hour
to the Republican Party at 8
_o'clock tonight to respond to
.. ·carter's mid-April energy
address .
An
advance
. screening Wednesday
showed :

HEALTH

Crash diets often hann

w

•

,

n·ew administration was
evaluating the final 1978
budget proposal submitted by
Gerald Ford before he left
office.
He said the go-ahead was
given before the Carter administration began its SALT
negotiations with the Soviet
Union.
Powell said the new
powerful warheads to be
placed on the Minuteman III
missile will give the United
States
a
" temporary
advantage" in the nuclear
arms field.
Tanned and rested after a
six-day vacation, Carter set a
busy schedule.
Early Wednesday he ad·
dressed a pep rally of some
200 representatives of groups
supp ortin g creation of a
cons\lffier protection agency
and signed the Pact of San
Jose, an 8-year-old human
rights agreement lor the
Western Hemisphere which
13 nations have s igned but
only two have ratified.
And he was touching base
on a number of fronts
including preparation of the
next fedl&gt;ral budget, meeting
with Budget Director Bert
Lance, and later holding a
full«ale meeting with. fiscal
advisers on the subject.

Twenty-three on .
final listing at
Portland school
PORTLAND ~ Twentythree pupils at Portland
Elementary school were
named on the honor roll lor
the last sixth weeks grading
period.
Students' names in all
capital letters received all A.
B or better was maintained to
be named to the roll. Named
were:
Grade One - Donette
Talbott.
Grade Two - Lorie cor·
nell, Annette Fitch, Joyce
Foreman , Stacy Proffitt,
Krista Sellers , ·KARLA
SMITH .
Grade Three - THERESA
BARBER , Charlie Boso,
Tammi Proffitt.
Grade Four - Richard
McHaffie, Steven Teaford,
Kevin Teaford.
Grade Five - DANNY
WEDDLE , Vicky Barber,
Patricia Pauley.
Grade Six - CINDY
EVANS, BRUCE JOHNSON,
TAMMY MEADOWS, Kittle
Sellers, David Talbott.
·
Individualized Instruction
- Jeff Browning.
Individualized Curriculum
- Sherrie Lawson.

&gt;

I

...:'*,

yo,....

~~

,_

-

'

..

ART PRESERVED - Above are some of the women
of the Middleport Church of Christ who meet as often as
three times a week to preserve the art of quilting, Front, I·

New lottery

Quilt display planned
All women of the area are
invited to a silver tea and
quilt display to be held in the
social rooms of the Middleport Church of Christ from
I to S p.m. on Saturday, June

strictly a "display," not a .
"sale."
Women of the Loyal
Women 's ClassJ with an open
invitation to all women of the
church to help, meet on
. II.
Monday and Friday evenings
Approximately 30 hand- and during the day on
made quilts are expected to Wednesdays each week to
be on display during the day, quilt. Sponsored by the
many made by women of,jhe Philathea Women of the
host church as well as others. . church, the display and tea
The afternoon activity is are open to the public.

game will
start soon
COLUMBUS ( UP!) - A
third "instant" Ohio Lottery
game will begin in late
August or early September.
Tuesday, the state Con·
trolling Board approved an
$870,000 contract between the
Ohio Lottery Commission and
Mathematica, Inc., of Prin·
ceton, N.J ., for th.e game .
A commission · spokesman
said the game would be
simllar to the current "ruboff" lottery game, but the
final design and when it
would begin wouldn ' t be
approved until the lull
comq1ission meeting June
13.
The board also approved a
$5 million loan from the Ohio
Building Authority to the
Ohi o
Exp osi tions
Commission lor repairs to the
stale fairgrounds.
John Evans, director of the
lair, said some O( the work
would be done prior to the
start of the 1977 State' Fair ,
but most of it would wait until
next year.
"We plan -new roofs and a
new heating and air
conditioning system in
various buildings, " said
Evans.
·
The interest rate on the
loan will be determined at a
later dale , he said.
In other action, the board
approved:
- The purchase of a 1977
Ford LTD for $6,919 lor the
state treasurer.
- A $224,000 contract be·
tween the Ohio Department
of Natural Resources and
seven stale colleges to house
and feed the staff for the 1977
Youth Conservation Corps
program . The program is
totally IW1ded by the federal
government.

MORE JOBLESS
COLUMBUS (UP! )
WINS FEATURE
Initial claims for benefits
COLUMBUS (UPI) - T K filed by newly unemployed
Counsel, starting from the persons undl&gt;r regular Ohio
No. 8 post position, came Law increased 5.9 per cent
from second in the stretch to during the week ending May
dl&gt;leat Rio Bravo Hanover by 2B, compared to the previous
two and one-fourth lengths in week.
Ohio
Bureau
the featured $2,000 eighth
of
pace at Scioto Downs Employment Services
Wednesday night.
Administrator . Albert G.
Pats on Time showed.
Giles said 12,296 individuals
The winner was driven in filed lor initial claims last
2:01 1-.5 by Jay Landess.
week while 11,615 filed lor the
The 8-8 nightly double week ending May ~1.
Continued claims lor those
combination of Shady John
and Mannart Shy Ann was \Dlemployed one or more
weeks were estimated at
worth $24.40.
Attendance was 4,7114 and 107,140, a 4 per cent
dl&gt;creased from the 111,611
the handle $318,52B.
wtal for the week before.

Energy issue
New pastor has still unsolved ·
ALBERT DITTES

local church
in Pomeroy
Albert Dittes, who began
his duties as pastor of the
Pomeroy Seventh-day Advent ist Church, Mulberry
Heights Road, Saturday, May
21, is also pastor of the Athens
Sevenih-day Adventist
Church. Dittes succeeds elder
Gerard Seton , who trans·
!erred to the Cleveland area.
He is the son o!Dr. and Mrs.
Albert Dlttes.
The new pastor, a native of
Portland, Tenn., attended
Southern Missionary College,
Co llegeda le, Tenn . and
completed his Seminary work
at Andrews University,
Berrien Springs, Mich.
Elder Dittes has spent two
years as assistant pastor of
two Seventh-Day Adventist
Churches in Toledo, and
served as pastor of the
Seventy-day
Adventist
Churches in Bellefontaine,
Jackson Center and Piqua,
Ohio from 1972 to May, 1977.
Mrs. Dittes, a registered
nurse, plans to teach prenatal classes and work in the
ob"stetrics department at
O' Bieness .Memorial Hospiial
in Athens. Pastor and Mrs.
Dities have two children, a
son, James Alber(, age 6, and
a 4--year-old daughter, Julie
Lynn. They reside in Ames·
ville.

PARIS ( UPI ) - !Uch and
poor nations attempting w
Iorge a new world economic
order failed to reach
agreement on the key issue·of
energy today despite an allnight marathon bargaining
session.
But
spokesmen
for
industriali2ed nations said
failure to reach an e_nergy
accord would not jeopardize
agreements reached over the
past four days on iocreased
levels of aid w poor nations
and creation of a $1 billjon
fund to stabilize commodity
prices.
Th e&lt; North-South
~o nference was still in
progress today more than 24
hours after the last scheduled
session began Wednesday.
Secretary of State Cyrus

Reedsville

News Notes

Lt. and Mrs. Michael
Boring of Texas were recent ·
visitors of Mr. and Mrs.
Grant Boring and Mr. and
Mrs. Hugh Martin and sons.
Mr. and Mrs. E. M. Riddle
of Parkersburg, W. Va.
visited with Mr. and Mrs.
Carl
Buckley. · They
celebrated Mr . Riddle's
birthday. Also visiting at the
Buckleys were the Summers
of Portland.
,
JOINS MARINES
Regina Kimes, student in
David Tiemeyer, 18, son of the school of nursing at
Mrs. Loretta Tiemeyer and Nelsonville
spent
the
the late Earl Tiemeyer, has '!"eekend with Mrs. Wanda
recently joined the United Kimes and Klare.
States Marines. As of May 10
Mary Kibble of Aptos,
Tiemeyer has been stationed Calif. visited recently with
at Parris Island, S. C.
Mr. and Mrs. Davia A. Smith
and Diana.
Mrs. Hazel Barton is a
RUMMAGE SALE
patient at Camden-Clark
APPLE GROVE - The Ap- Hospital in Parkersburg.
ple Grove United Methodist
Mr. and Mrs. Dallas McKee
Women are having a rum· of Parkersburg, W. Va .
mage sale today and tomor· visited at the Williams·
row at the community Balderson home on SWlday.
- Mrs. L. Balderson
building, 9a.m. to4 p.m.

Burning coal poses threat
to rain, snowfall

r, are Mabel Walburn, Audrey Swett, Rose Reynolds and
Beulah Roush ; standing, Mary Bailey and Frances
Roush .

pattern~

•
TO BE NOMINATED
Wi\SHINGTON (UP!) ' Thomas Jorling, Williams
College director of tbe Center
lor Environmental Studies,
will be nominated by
President Carter as an
assistant administrator of the
Environmental
Protection

Broecker
said,
the studies suggest such an
WASHINGTON (UP! ) Columbia
University greenhouse effect is one increase will raise the
geochemist Dr . Wallace hazard . that has received atmosphere's temperature
Broecker has warned that a little attention during tbe .:by 4 degrees Fahrenheit. But
Agency.
.
huge iocrease in coal burning current debate over sollrces '. he said scientists have no
A
White
House
to meet energy needs could of future energy.
reliable way . to predict the
announcement Wednesday
"We cannot afford to disre- resulting changes in rain and said
turn the .earth into a
his duties will
greenhouse and change rain gard this long term conse- snowfall for various regions concentrate m water and
quenc.e of a coal economy," of Earth.
and snowfall patterns.
hazardous materials.
In a report Tuesday to the he said.
"Thus, we are about to
Jorling, director at the
Broecker, a geochemist at launch out into the era of coal college _In Williamstown ,
American Geophysical
Union, Broecker said cartx.l Columbia's Lamont-Doherty burning, without knowing Mass. smce 1972. was an
dioxide added to the air from Geological Observatory, said wbere it will lead, " he said.
attorney-advisor with the
coal combustion will act like if global energy usage rises at "We know ooly that whatever · Interior Department lor two
a greenhouse, keeping some the expected rate of several the effects, they will he years and an assistant
of Earth's heat from escaping per cent per year, then during reversible ooly m the time
general counsel lor the
into space and causing the latter hall of the next scale of hundreds of years. Smithsonian Institution in
atmospheric temperatures to century, the carbon dioxidl&gt;
"Our energy habits during 1968 .and 1969.
content of the atmosphere the next IOOyears will dictate
rise .
A Cincinnati native, Jbrllng
This has long been a will be double what it was in the climate of our planet has wrttten several articles
many tens of generations on the legal aspects of
recognized phenomenon of 1900.
Broecker said recent later."
burning fossil fuels, but
_pollution cootrol.

Vance · departed
for
Washington before dawn
today, turning the American
delegation over to top State
Department officials.
Canadian spokesman Paul
Doucet said negotiators
representing 16 rich nations
"decided to pull the energy
question out when we reali2ed
we were getting nowhere."
But both Doucet and.British
-F oreign Secretary David
Owen said tbey hoped the rich
nationi;' pledge to increase
aid to poor nations and help
smooth out the ups and downs
. of raw material prices still
would. stand.
The rich nations sought
agreement from the 19
developing countries for
continuing ''consultations''
between oil producers and
consume~s to
guarantee
stable petroleum supplies.
But oil producers balked at
any interference in their
freedom of action.
Throughout the night, dele·
gates batted the energy
resolution back and forth
between their caucusiriR
groups. Industrial nations
also . pushed the measure
during two years of
bargaining that led up to the
conference, formally known
as the Conference on
International
Economic
Cooperation,
!Uch nations Wednesday
tentatively
agreed
to
gradually increase aid to
poor countries to the level of
0.7 per cent of their gross
national products and set up a
special $1 billion fund w
channel aid to the poorest
nations.
The $1 billion commodity
fund is important because
most developing nations are
dependent lor their cash
incomes on the sale of raw
materials, which are subject
to drastic fluctuations in
price.
Bot!) sides said they "could
not reach an agreement" on
the debt question. The
developing nations sought a
blanket cancellation of the
$200 billion in debts, but the
United States and its partners
insisted the debts be settled
on a case by case basis.

Sununerho~

are announced
Ubraries in Pomeroy and
Middleport will . change to
summer hours dliring. June,
July and Augusi. Both
libraries wUI be open from
10:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. Moodays
through Saturdays. The
Pomeroy library wiU also be
open on Sunday afternoons
from-2 p.m. to 4:30p.m.
During July special film
programs for grade school
children will be held at the
Middleport Ubrary. Every
and
Friday
Tuesday
afternoon short movies will
be shown at 3 p.m. These July
programs will be free and
wUl include story films and
anima I flbns.

Sport,Parade !!fl
~LTON

By BILL MADDEN
UPI Spurts Writer
Although they are not
household names to the
average, baseball fan, Bruce
Sutter and Willie Hernandez
are two primary reasons the
Chicago Cubs are currenUy in
first place in the National
League East.
,Cubs' Manager Herman ·

- l~~

By
RICHMAN
,;, ·
UP! Sporta Editor
S~!~j
NEW YORK (UP!) - Slowly but surely, Tom l)eaver is
g_oing to talk, his way off the Met.., which he says is fine with
him because that's what he wants. That's what he says now
but ask him again a year or so alter be's gone and see what ~
says. Anyway, the Mets are trying to oblige their three-tinie Cy
Yo~ Award-winner, only they've run inw a ·hiteh. Nobody 's
offenng them that much. '"We'd like to have Seaver, but we're
not going w break up our baU club w get him ," says Paul
Owens, general manager of the Phillies. Owens could he
persuaded to give up one of his young pitchers, Larry
Christenson, Tonuny Underwood or Randy Lerch, outfielder
Jerry Martin and a couple of minor league prospects but the
Mets feel Seaver is worth more....
'
Guy Lafleur, the "Golden Flower'' of the Montreal
Canadlens, was Jll'esenled with a new car Wednesday by Sport
magazine for being designated the outstanding player in the
Stanley Cup Playoffs with the Boston Bruins, but in his mind
Bobby Orr still is hockey's finest player. Said Lafleur. "He was
my roommate with Team Canada, and I've never seen a better
feUow or a better hockey player than he" ....
Lee Mazzilli, the Met..' 22-year-old rookie center fielder,
didn't exactly dance lor joy when Joe Torre became his new
manager. Mazzilli isn't only a dose frleod of Torre's, he's
more like his kid brother and when the Mets made the change,
he said w him, rather glwnly, "Well, I guess this means we
can't go out to eat together anymore" ....
Philadelphia 76ers have become disenchanted with George
McGinnis, especially with his horrible performance in the
playoffs. They've let the other NBA clubs know he can be had,
but with that $500,1100-a:year salary of his, nobody has been
beating on the 76ers' door ....
Released this time by Knoxville of the Southern League with
whom he was !kind~, author-pitcher Jim Bouton says he isn't
giving up . When three guys tell you you're dead, Jim, lie
down ....
Richard Todd, Joe Namath's quarterback replacement,
didn't have to think long when someone asked him what was
the most important thing he learned in his rookie season with
the Jets. His answer: "How much punishment the human body
can take." ....
Warner Brothers has come out with what it hopes will turn
out to be another belJ.-ringer like ''Rocky'' in ' 'One on One,'' an
excellent movie that gets inside the head of a naive small-town
kid thrown into the thick of big-time college basketball. Robby
Benson, a 211-yr.-old, wrote the screenplay with his father, and
plays the lead, the same way Sylvester Stallone did in
"Rocky." Picture portrays some of the seamier aspects of
college athletics and for that reason , UCLA and the University
of Southern California said no dice whell the producers came
looking
. for a suitable site to film . Colorado State wasn't that
sensitive and gave its okay... .
Sometimes, A.J . Foyt gets so frosted off, so red-necked, he
·
doesn't wanttotalk to anybody . Mler winning the Indianapolis
500 for the fourth time, though, he was positively garrulous.
Talked.a blue streak. One of the things he talked about was his
image lor being ·~·cooperative and unfriendly, an iniage he
feels is undeserved. In an engrossing pictorial history called
"The 1nd'1anapoIis 500," put together by John and Barbara
Devaney, Foyt is quoted as saying: "Maybe you haven' t
noticed it -about me, but I haven't any close friends in racing.
You can't let anyone get too close to you in this game. If they
getkilled,it breaks yoW' heart, and if you're going to race, you
got to race aloile" ....
Somebody once sa id the nice thing about baseball is you
· d
Cont.m
ue on page 4

PUBLIC WELCOME
The pubUc 11 belnB
welcomed to visit with the
1957 Middleport High
School championship
baseball team which Ia
holdiDg a reunion at the
Meigs lmt beBIDDinl at I
the evening of Juae 3.
The dlmler for team aad
lovlled gueot1 will be
opened to old friend• and
acquaiDtaocea 8:30 to 9
p.m.
Marine Sgt . Ed Me·
Comas ba1 arrBDged the
reunloo. Olhen npected lo
atteod are Bobby Nelaoo,
Eddie Croob, Bob Hennosy, . Wilbur Rowley,
Roger Lightfoot, Dave
Hlndy,
Jim Bowles,·
Tommy Davis, Millon
(Yogi) Wayland, Junior
Kennedy,
Harlan
Wblllaleh, .Steve BaDey,
Henchel

Knapp,

Jan

Jlonck (mgr.) and Coach
Nolan Sw~mer.
::::::::::: :::::::;:::;:;:;:;:::::;:::::::;: :::::~:;: ;:;!;:;:::::::::::: : ; :

BASEBALL
Ma ior League Stand;ngs
Bv

Un i~ea~i~~·:~ 5L1e"~=~~ationat

•

gave up the tyh\g run in the
ninth inning, but still struck
out nine batters over live
innings . Hernandez, the 21·
year old rookie lelt~ander
with a 2.10 ERA, came on in
the lith and proceeded to
strike out five of the six
Cardinals he laced in
notching his second victory .
1
' They 'rejust superb," said
Frank.!. " I felt live innings
was enough lor Sutter. He 's
been just sensational so far ,
but if we didn't have a day off
tomorrow, I wouldn't have

Zachry wms, finally
CINCINNATI (UP!)- The
order came from Pat
Zachry 's future boss - his
wife-to-be.
"Her name Is Sharron, and
she's a school teacher in
Houston," said Zachry
Wednesday nlghi after
pitching the Reds to a ~2
victory over the · Atlanta
Braves while extending the
club's winning streak to five
games,
The two are to be married
here June 23.
11
A couple of weeks ago,"
said 'Zachry, " Sharron
packed most of ber clothes
and shipped them here.
"And the last time I talked
to her, she told me I'd better
get my stuff wgether because
she didn't want to ship her
clothes to some other city
after they tradl&gt;d me."
"When was that?"
"Tuesday /'
answered
Zachry. "We talk on the
telephone every night. "
What
does Zachry's

telephone bill run a month ?
"A lot, but it's worth every
cent," was his reply.
"Tonight," said Zachry,
" she'll hear soll)ething I
haven't been able to tell her
for more than a -month. In·
stead of hearing I lost, she'll
hear I won ."
The victory, which put the
Reds at the .500 level lor the
first time since the fourth
game of the season, was
Zachry's first since April 27
and ended his personal losing
streak of four games.
"l't's really been a night·
mare ...seems more like a
year than a month since !last
wonagame,''saidZachry. ''I
was beginning to wonder
whether I was mentally tough
enough to come out of it."
"Zachry's problem was
mental, not physical," said
Reds pitc]ling coach Larry
Shepard.
Reds manager Sparky
Anderson agreed.
Last year as a rookie,

d •
:mr a kms ready
for Kemper

East
w. L
29 16 Pet
6-4-4 . 27 17
28 19
25 20
18 27 .400 11
w~;t 29 .370 121h

Los Ang
Cinci
san o;e9 o
san Fran

w. L Pet. G~
34 15 .694
23 23 .500 9•;,
24 20 .453 12
21 27 .438 1211,

v.w.

·AMC -JEEP
Weekend
Specials

76 Oldsmobile
Cutlass 'S'
A.C. , V-lop, P.S.. P.B..
radio &amp; tape ·player ,
rad ials, road wheels.

'4795

77 Ford Pinto
"Economy Car''

Dealer's car, aulo.

'3495
194 Upper
River Road
Gallipolis, Oh.

446-9800

Boys I eague
•
summanes

CUSTOM
TRUCK WHEELS
OUR SPECIALTY
WE BUY
DIRECT AND
SEll FOR
l£SS

Sports Parade

n

Rennie Stennett in a three run first inning. Pittsburgh
e nded a livegame losing
strea k.
Mel&amp; i , E•pos , ;
John Steams' first career
grand-slam home run capped
a five-run fifth Inning to lead
the Mets to their second
straig ht win under new
Manager Joe Torre. Dave
Kingman singled home the
first Mets run in the fifth .
Tom Seaver, now 5-3, went 6
1,3 innings for his first win
since April 30.
Glaots 2, Padres 0:
Ed Halicki went the
distance lor the first time in
II starts, struck out 11, and
yie lded six hits in halting the

GEAR UP

FUR THE

TOUGH
JOBS WITH
AliRAVEtY.

Zachry compiled a 14-7 won· ;:;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::;:·
lost record to share Rookie of
THROWER SIGNED
the Year honors with Butch
CINCINNATI (UP!) ~
Metzger, who's now With St.
Tommy Duniveo, a &amp;-2, 21~
Louis.
pouad quarterback from
.
.
"Since the beginning of the
Texas Tech, has signed a
season, Zachry has been
contract
wltb
the
intent upon matching or
Cl nclooatl Beogal s.
bettering his record of last
Dunlven, from McLean,
WtiiJ.: ., ~
year and aU he did was put
Tex., was the club's sixth ..
When you
•
pressw-e on himself. We were
round
draft
pick.
have real work to do. pul
losing and he thought he had
"He made a very fine
our exclusove 8-speed, allto pitch a shutout every time
impression on us at our
gear transmt sston on your
he went to the mound. He
recent rQokle camp,"
sode. Wrth no belts to shp,
tried to pitch carefully. You
Bengals General Manager
come loose or break And
can't do that and win," said
Paul
Bruwo
said
posrtrve power Slrarght 1nto
Shepard.
Wednesday. ''He's by far
the mower attachment.
"I know Zachry has been
the best youog quarterback
Woth a choice ol 40- or 50worrying," said Anderson.
candidate we . have had In
onch cenler mount Or 40"I'd have been too if I had a
several years.?'
onch. front-mounl mowers.
5.00-plus earned run average . :;:;:;:::::::::::;:::;:;:::;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::;:;:::::;:;:;:;::::::::: You'll cui a wode, smoo"lh
When guys stop believing in
swath. And Gravely has
themselves, they ' re in
attachments for
trouble. Zachry was reaching
compostong, hauling, leaf
that point."
removal- a whole lot more.
Zachry wound up tossing a
Those are some of the
four~itter Wednesday night.
reasons why Gravely os the
He made 121 pitches, but 80 of
"choice of lhe pros." Come
COLUMBUS (UPI) - The
them came in the first six
in and see for yourself.
innings. So did six of the state high school girl track
meet opens Friday in Ohio
walks he issued.
Three double plays, giving Stadium and records are
the Reds a tote,! of 10 dilring expected to tumble as 17
the three-game sweep of the qualifiers have bettered
Braves, helped Zachry out of existing state marks.
There are 19 individual and
trouble during the first six
204 Condor Sf.
tearru~ returning to
relay
innings.
Pomeroy, Ohio
He was nicked for a run in defend titles.
Phone 9?2-2975
The defending Class AA
the second inning and the
OPEN
Braves added another on Jeff and A state champipns 9-5 Mon.-Fri .
Burroughs' 12th homer of the Dayton Jefferson and Min·
9
til Noon Sat.
ster
are
favored
to
repeat.
season in the third. ·
Defending Class. AAA
The Reds scored twice. in
the second and added a third ·champion Toledo Rogers is
:t
run in. the third inning. Cesar expected to get some strong
Geronimo singled home a challenges from Upper
.
fourth run in the fourth inning Arlington, Kettering Fair"'··
and Davey Concepcion mont West, Solon and.
doubled home the Reds' final Brecksville. ·
Darlene Kemp of the
run in the sixth.
The Reds, still trailing the Columbus School for Giris
Dodgers by nine and one~aU an~ Lisa Graeff of Arcanum,
games in the National League two .(Class A schools, qualified
West , open a four -game · in four events and will be .
series with the Houston matched in two of them when
the running preliminaries ~ Choice of tha PI os. .
Astros tonight.
start at I p. m.

W~~ :j~ - ~~:% By JERRY MITI'CHELL normal ," said ' Rik
Wednesday's Results
CHARWTTE, N.C. ( UPI) Massengale. "The greens are
"San
Fran_
cisco
2,
san
Diego
o
Lanny Wadkins, who has real good.
New York 6, Montreal 4
·finished second in two . "It's a long golf course and
Pitt 3, Ph ila o, 7•;, inns. rain
Clnclnnotl s Attonto 2
tournaments and saw his lead you have tO drive It straight
Los Angeles 6, Houston 2
slip away in the Atlanta - il boils down io driving and
Chi 4. st. Louis J , 13 inns. ·
Today•s Probable Pi1chers
Classic, feels "ready to go" putting," he said .
New ~Ad:kn(r:,:~a~&gt; 3.51 at for a first ..place showing in
Massengale, who has won
Montreol !Warthen 2-21.. 7:35 the $250,000 Kemper Open. $93,897 on the PGA tour this
P·HOuston
"'
' g •season, predicted "a 1Q.to 14-(Bannister J.SJ at "It's gom
w happen, " th e
Cincinnati ( Bi'lllngham 6-3l. confident ex·Wake Forest under will win it, depending
a:o5 p.m .
golfer said on the eve of on conditions . .Anything
Friday's Games . .
toda '
ning und "If 1 better than !!Hinder will be
St. Louis at Montreal, night
. Y s ope
ro
:
Ph il_a at New York , night .
didn't think I was gomg to good."
.The POmeroy Yankees Chicago at Pittsburgh, night . play well [ wouldn't be
San Fran at Atlanta , 2, tw1. he ,
'
·
pic:ked up another wi n as they
night
re.
romped over th e host
Houst!?n at Cincinnati, night.
'Wadkins' two second-place .
Powell's Giants 25-1 behind sa
n
Otego
at
Los
Angeles.
n1ght
showings
and the fourth·
the hitting and pitch ing of
Roger Kovalchik . Kovalchik
American League
place finish he managed after
went the distance to get the
e:,;_r L Pet. 08 losing his putting touch in
win as he fanned eleven ,
Baitimre
26 19 .578
Atlanta last weekend have
walk~ just two , and tossed a
Continued !rpm page -3 ·
Boston
three -hitter . He chipped in New
~~
l~l
helped him eah rn $82th
. ,OOOPthGis can't beat the hours. Oh, yeah' Johnny McNamara Jet out as
York
with a grand slam homer , Milw
25 2s .500 31
; , year - 121 on
e
A San Diego manager last Saturday, has been in p;ofessional
double an d single. Scott Cl!!velnd
20 23 .465 5 money list and more than any
Harrison also had a good Detroit
baseball 26 years. He'll be 45 Friday and It'll be the first .time
8 2! ·400 8 other pro has aecumulated
J8
2 ' .383
night at the plate as he Soc ked Toronto
9
he
has ever been home for his birthday in all those 26 years. On
west
without a tournament
two doubles and three
Sunday,
his 13-year-old daughter, Susan graduates from
w.
L
Pel.
vicwry
.
si ngl es, and J . R. Wamsley
Minn
30 17 .638
Th
schooL McNamara has three other children and this
grammar
had two doubles . Ronnie Chicago
26 19 .578 3
e top six PGA money
Ri chards had a double and
will
be
the
first one he has ever been able to see graduate ...
24 23 .511 6 winners are sitting out the
sing le. and Rhett Milhoan 6:~:and
~~ ~~ :::; ~ Kemper, and mly three of the
and Brett Carl each got a Kan City
single .
Texas
21 22 .488 7
Ulp 10 are competing.
21 31 .404 11 1;, S
·
F'or the lose rs , Randy Seattle
Wednesday's Results
e v e r e W I n. t e r
Stewart and Mark Boyd Kansas
City ll , Toronto 3
temperatures kUlec;l much of
pitched two innings apiece
Chicago
4,
Ball;
more
2
the
fairway grass at Quail
and combined to fan six and BosiC!n 7, Texas S
walk seven. Stewart got two Cleveland 6, Detro;, 4
Hollow Country Club, but
of the Giants' three hits, both Minnesota A, Ne~ York 3
greens are in good shape and
singles, while John Mc Kinney Oakland 6. Seattle 3
players will be allowed to use
Today's Probable Pitchers
got the other single. · ·
CAll Times EDTJ
winter , rules for fairway
y
41065- 25140
Oakland
1·1) at P1acemen t s. Recen t ra1ns
·
G
0 0 1o-1 37 seattle
(Pole (Norris
2. 0 , 10 :35 p.m.
Boston (Jenkins S·A) at Texas have left parts of the Course
The host Pomeroy Pirates I Briles 2 21 . 8:3S p.m .
soggy and golfers said the
scored five runs in the first
New York (Figueroa 6. 3) at da
Minnesota
(Holly
2·
1
),
8:30p.m
.
mpness will prevent much
inn ing enroute to an 8· 1 win
Baltimore (Flanagan l .JJ at roll.
over the Pomeroy Ti9ers .
Chicago (Barrios 4·3 ), 8:30p.m. "The rain is makina the
N;ck Riggs and Todd Fl·fe
Cleveland (Dobson 0.-4 ) at
.. -e
teamed vp to fan a big sixteen Detroit
(Rozema:
4·2), a p.m.
course
play much longer than
Tigers while walking just
Fridi!iy's Games
four , and. limitjng the Tigers New York at Chicago, night
to [ust two hits . Fife ·got Boston at Minnesota, night
cred it for the win. Bryan Baltimore atKan City, night
Zirkle led the hitters with two Milwaukee at Texa s, night
triples whfle Riggs. Fife, and TorontQ a t Oakland, night
Bryan Betzlng each got a Cleveland at Seattle. night
three.bagger . Getting sinQies

·

RIVERSIDE

gone that far with him."
Elsewhere in the National
League, Pittsburgh blanked
Philadelphia, J.O, Cincinnati
downed Atlanta, !&gt;-2, San
Francisco put awa'y San
Diego, ~ . New York edged
Montreal , 6-4, and Los
Angeles stopped Houston , 64 .
Plrales 3, i'lullies U:
In a game shortened by
rain alter 7\\ innings, John
Ca ndelaria halted the Phillies
on two hits while AI Oliver
tripled home one run and
scored another on a single by

•

GBW

Ct1icago
e;ttsbg h
St. Lou is
PhUa
Mon.treal
New York

~fJ~~t~n

Frank.! had to gloat over the
latest performaoce of his
bullpen stars Wednesday
night. It was Steve Ontiveros
who singled home Jerry
Morales with the winning run .
in the 13-inning, 4-J Cuba' win
over the Cardinal!, but Sutter
and Hernande2 were even
more impressive, combining
for 14 strikeouts in seven
innings of relief work.
Sutter, who has i4 saves
and a leagu...Jeadlng 0.98
earned run average in 24
appearences this season;

Cubbies on top

Padres' wmmng streak at
live. Jack Clark singled home
the first Giants' run in the
. sixth and they added another
in the eighth on a double by
Rob ' Andrews and Derrel
Thomas' single.
Dodgers 6, Astros 2:
Relief ace Charlie Hough
hurled three shutout innings
to earn his 14th save while
Ron Cey drove in three runs
with a double and a single in
helping Los Angeles snap a
four-game losing streak, Ted
Martinez, filling In for tbe
injured Bill Russell at
shortstop, singled in the firs!
Dodger run and scored two
others.

::::

GB

-""·, .,.

t~~ 1!,~
· .~ 1~

Ferns will
run Friday

GRAVELY

TRACIOR SAl ES

.

:~·:17.

· TIRE
SHOPPER DELITE
From

MOORE'S

TRENDSETTER

FULL4 PLY
POLYESTER
CORD

Fraternal Order ·of Eagles

SP.orts Transactions
· By Un1ted Press International
Wednesday
Baseball
Knoxville - Released pitcher
Jim Bouton .
San Francisco· - Suspended
pi tcher Jim Barr for 'hree
days .
Pro Football
Cincinnat i - Signed QUarter·
back Tommy Ouniven, their
sixth ·round draft cho ice from
Texas Tech .
Chicago - Signed QIJ&amp;rter ·
back Vince Evans, their sixth .
round draft choice from Sou th ·
ern Ca lifornia , to a series of
one.year contracts.
College Basketball
University of New Or leans Names Bulc:h Van Breda Kolff
as basketball coach and athletic
director.
Hockey
Detro it - Signed left wing .
!1efenseman Dave Hanson of
CUmberland , Wis.
· were Ray Just iS, Fi-ed
Colburn , and Ken Me .
Cvllovgh.
For fhe Tigers, Tony Gilkey
tossed a fine game in faking
the loss as he walked on ly one
while striking out ten. John
Sm it h got the only two Tiger
hits. a triple and a 5ingle.T
T
000 001 - 1 2 3
P

511 10•-8 B 2

INSTALLATION OF OFFICERS SUNDAY,
JUNE 5, 2:00 P.M .
SPECIAL ORDER OF BUSINESS

FREE HAM. DINNER

••

MOUNTED FREE

$30

77
878- 13

$1.82 F.E. T.

WHITEWAllS EXTRA

Mashed Potatoes &amp; Gravy
Green Beans

Cole Slaw
DANCE 5:00 PM TIL 9:00 PM

MOORE'S
992 -2848

124 W. Main

Pomeroy , 0 .

�Erving wishes smaller -. c rowds
By JOE JULIANO

PHILADELPHIA (UP!) Julius Erving knows he 'll
never be left alone on the
offensive end of a basketball
court , but · be's drawing
bigger crowds than usual in
the NBA championship
finals.
The Doctor has remained
his specmcular self even in
!he two ove rwh elming
defeats the Portland Trail
Blazers
handed
his
Philadelphia 76ers to squ are
the best-&lt;&gt;f-seven series at
two games apiece.

But with George McGinnis
hopelessly mired in a
shooting slump and center
Caldwell Jones offering little
more on ofFen se than
bringing the ball upcourt,
Erving has drawn two, and
Sometimes three, Blazers
around him each time he's
touched the ball.
Coach Gene Shue protested
early in Tuesday night's 13098 Portland romp that the
Blazers were playing a zone
defen se bul the referees
disagreed. Erving, however,

thinks his coach wa s right.
" If a player is within six
feet of another player, it's not
illegal," Erving said. "But
theY. played a lot of zone and
that 's illegal. It kind of
stymied our offense when we
tried to run plays. And when
we tried to freelance we
missed more often than we
made it."
Shue tried to open up the
offen se for Erving by
working the ball inside to
McGinnis. But McGinnis was
guarded effectively by

Yazz certain Yankees heatable
By FRED DOWN
UPI Sports Wrlter
Like most other American
Leaguers, Carl Yastrzemski
was aghast last winter as the
New · York
Yankees
apparently put together an
invincible team . But now the
season is approximately onethird over and , again like
most
other
American
Leaguers, he thinks the
Yankees can be beaten.
"This club has bounced
back all year , tt said
Yastrzemski Wednesday
night after hitting two
homers in the Boston Red
Sox' 7-5 victory over the
Texas Rangers. ''Everybody
on this team has a lot of pride.
Everybody is putting out."
The victory, combined with
the Yankees' 4-3 loss to the
MirmesotB Twins, moved the
Red Sox into second place in
the AL Eastern Division, only
II&gt; games behind the firstplace Baltimore Orioles. It
was a particularly satisfying
win because the Red Sox
rallied from a 5-0 deficit.
Yastrzemski opned the
sixth with a homer off Doyle
Alexander cutting the Red
Sox' deficit to 5-.'l before
George Scott singled and
Dwight Evans walked. Rick
Miller drove in one run with a
double and Rick Burleson put
the Red Sox in front with a
t w o' - r u n d o u b I e .
Yastrzemski's second homer
came with one out in the
seventh inning .
Reliever Mike Paxton, who
worked 1 2-3 shutout innings,
won his first game with the
relief help of Bill campbell
while Alexander suffered his
· second loss against six wins.
It was the eighth loss in II
games for the Rangers,
In other AL game~. Kansas
City · routed · Toronto, 11-3,
Chicago beat Baltimore, 4-2,
Cleveland topped Detroit, 6-4,
and Oakland downed Seattle,
6.-3.
Twins 4, Yankees 3:
Rod Carew singled with two
out and the bases filled,
capping a three..-un ninthirming rally, which lifted the
Western Division leaders
over the Yankees. Carew's
blow came off Sparky Lyle,
who had relieved Rob Guidry
with none out in the ninth and
retired the first two batters
he faced. Chris Chambliss hit
his sixth homer for New
York.
Royals 11, Jays 3:
John Mayberry hit three
homers and drove in five runs
and George Brett hit a tworun homer to spark Kansas
City's lii-llit attack. Dennis
Leonard went 7 2-3 innings for
the win while Bill Singer,
tagged for six runs and six
hits in 4 1·3 innings, lost his
seventh game against two
wins .

Wblte Sox 4, Orioles 2:
Ralph Garr's two-run
single in the seventh inning
snapped a 2-2 tie to push
Chicago past Baltimore. Ken
Brett pitched a seven-bitter
for his sixth victory while Jim
Palmer dropped his fourth
decision compared to seven
wins.

Indians S, Tigers 4:
Duane Kuiper drove in
three runs with two singles as
Cleveland dealt Mark
Fidrych, super rookie of 1976,
his second straight loss this
season . Jim Bibby, aided by
Sid Monge, won his fourth

l!l.ltbnd Ar~lr C "'-ll'r

~-~
Ht.tao~~

llo~&gt;t•r-ln

r

,.,..,

"""'n

"'"~ ~ t :.our ,s,.r.~t""l
ll.,.en CUIII (· .!G:n.)f Plra t. o ' ' '

lk'-'

,..w

· $y,ouuM &amp;' Jtnerey ·~· ~·

••••

:'Announce winners of i\:
:.
': decorated by
: 3 Rio alumni awards :':
' Air Force

::

RIO GRANDE - Three Rio
Grande College-Community
College alunmi and a 12 year
veteran of the college staff
have been selected to receive
special awards at an Alumni
Day banquet Saturday, June
· 4, 6:30 p.m., in the campus
dining hall.
The alumni honors will be
given to J. Sherman Porter,
Gallipolis; tdrs. Loredith
Lowe, Pl. Pleasant; Pauline
Lindley Wallace, Huron,
Ohio; and Don Garrett,
Newport, Kentucky.
Porter, a former State
Senator, will receive the Rio
Grande College Alumni
Award. He was selected for
his long history or support of
Rio Grande. Porter is an
assistant professor of
political science and will he
named Professor Emeritus at
Sunday's commencement
exercises.
He is a former director of
alumni and director of admissions. In addition to his
other responsibilities, Porter
writes regularly for the
Gallipolis Daily Tribune. .
Mrs. Lowe will receive a
certificate of appreciation
and be named an honorary
alumnus.
"She has earned the admiration of faculty, staff and
students," Director of
Alumni, Peg Thomas, said.
"She is deeply devoted to the
college ."
For 12 years, Mrs. Lowe
has been assistant dlrector of
admissions and records at
Rio Grande. She received her
business training at Wiseman
Business School in Huntington and is a member of

,.,.r.e,.

U.ml.~U!l
""ftt. !:&gt;)U .. !. H.,r!ol ~ o
!It'-' ~...en "'"" • R~v~\l ' • Ol•.,t• ...

the Association of Collegiate
Registrars and Admissions
RACINE
Master
Officers.
Sergeant Ivan Powell of
Mrs. Wallace, a 1934 Rio Racine has been awarded a
Grande graduate, will commendation medal for
receive the Distinguished service in Greenland.
Alumnus
Award
for
Sgt. Powell is the son of ·
meritorious service in her Mrs. Wanda Powell and the
community, specifically for late Curtis (Dobbin) Powell
her service to the blind in the of Racine and he is married
Sandusky, Ohio, area.
to the former Carolyn
Struck with blindness at the Cleland, daughter of Mr. and
age of 50, Mrs. Wallace not Mrs. Frank Cleland, Racine.
only learned Braille to Sgt. and Mrs. Powell have
ov.ercome her own handicap, two daughters, lvaunna and
but also worked to establish Lori. The family is now
an organization and a Braille stationed in Italy which will
library to help other blind be his final tour of duty before
people.
he retires in 1978.
The citation reads as
Before her retirement' in
1971, she served 23 years as follows :
"Master Sergeant Ivan C.
supervisor of the Erie County
Schools and 13 years as a · Powell distinguished himself
part-lime instructor at by meritorious service as
Bowling
Green
State contract mon'itor for power
University. She taught 10 productions operations and
years in Urbana, Berea and maintenance branch,
directorate
of
civil
Erie county schools.
.Garrett, a .1949 Rio Grande engineering, 4683rd Air Force
graduate, will receive the Group, Thule Air Base,
Atwood Achievement Award. Greenland from 29 Dec. 1975
Currently a teacher in thl&gt;-" to 15 Dec. 1976,
"During this period the
Princeton School District,
outstanding
skill, leadership
Cincinnati, Garrett is being
and
ceaseless
· efforts of Sgt.
honored for his . work in
Liberia with International Powell resulted in a sustained
high levy or efficiency and
Voluntary Services.
He was given an award by ensured the continued
the President of Liberia for availability of electrical
establishing one of he first power. · The distinctive
schools in Liberian bush accomplishments of M-Sgt.
Powell reflect credit upon
country.
Garrett has also been himself and the United Slates
responsible for establishing Air · Force.''
M-Sgt. · "Bowell
was
Boy Scout units in Europe,
of
the
presented
the
award
Morroco and Liberia for
Air
Force
Commendation
which he received awards
.from Queen Elizabeth and the Medal at ceremonies on May
Commissioner of Scouting in 12 by Site Cmdr. Larry Hess.
Morroco.

CHICAGO (UP! ) - A
simple female sterilization
method, already widely used
on women in other co~tries
but almost unknown m the •
United States, will be
expanded under a program of
loans from two population
control groups, the two
organizations said today.
Spokesman for the Planned
Parenthood Federation and
the Association lor Voluntary
Sterlllzatio~
said
the
~ration is sunple and cheap
enough to make voluntary
sterilization available to
person_s who cannot · now
alford tl.
The procedure lakes only

COOL IT!

FRIGIDAIRE .
BEST BUYS
SPECIAL MODELS
SPECIAL VAWES!

remowe up

Mrs. Maurita Miller, music
instructo1.
The morning class at
Middleport graduated on
May 26. Daniel Morris,
director of curriculum and
instruction was the guest
speaker. Part of his speech
included Snoopy cartoons

1

I "'~'"' "'

shown on an overhead
projector.
At the morning class
graduation the invocation
was given by the Rev. George
Glaze of the Middleport
Church of Christ. Robert
Morris made the presentation
of diplomas.

........ f.

RETURN HOME
Mr. and Mrs. Wyatt Gilbert
returned to their home in Urbana Tuesday after spending
several days visiting
relatives in Pomeroy, Middleport, and Mason, W. Va.
During their visit Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Chapman and
daughters, Bobbi and Lori
entertained relatives Sunday .
evening at their home in
Syracuse. Their guests were
Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert, Mrs.
.Chester Hutton, Mr. and Mrs.
Mike Roush and son, Tony,
Mason; and Jean Anne Ritchart, Syracuse. The Gilberts
were guests of Mrs. Gilbert's
niece and her family, Mr. and
Mrs. Mike Roush and Tony.

.

lsaiflin

I

ASCRII'TIN

--

Asprrrn Wrlh MaaliY'

Tab5 100

"'99~

.........-·

c:~ir

window roOm

w rfh lt!it

1lidinv ond
condiliootor .

Amount and ,,,..1 ol tooling, .t¥Wn o
br•oth of fresh air, ar• o• fiOty to 0-'
twiSI a l a dial. A.nd it often A-way

S24US

Middleport, 0.

Mto

I

List~~

25

72c
from your neighborhood
ASSOCIATED DRUGGISTS
JUNE 1-7,1977

The Western Boot C. B.
Radio Club will meet at 7 p.
m. Saturday at the Racine
Fire Station.
' The dub won trophies twice

The · R Pn · degree of your

A D PharmacrsiiOOk some
live years ot drltgenl
umversrly,sludy. That's why
your A D ~harmocisl is
protessronally quall fred 10
serve you ,

' recently taking first place for
the most members present at

the Big Bend break on MIJy 8

and second place at 'Roane

•

County, W. Va . on May 15.
The club welcomes new

n 1 ~S~O~FT~ 1&amp;~A~I~I·-~
Roll On

•members. A coffee break Is
planned for Aug . 28 at

. ~ing

O~odorafll

rthe

Scented or Unscented
Twrn PI Dl 211 5 Do!
fJ I~ l1SI $Z78 eaCh plo

Portland . Elementary

,School. The club has
. . members gaining

95~, ...

;members since

'

Results, line scores
By United P.ress lnternatfonal
Nltional League
San Ogo
000 000 000- 0 6 2

Cleve
002 111 001 - 6 11 2
De.t
1HI 000 020- 4 6 0
San Frn
000 001 Oh:- 2 8 1 · · Bi bby, Monge {8) and Fosse;
Shirley, Spillner
(7)
and Ffdrych , Sykes (7), Grilli (9)
Dav is; Halicki (.S-5) and Hill . and M . May . WP - Sibby (.t -2).
LP- Shirley (.S-6l.
LP - Fidrych (0-2) .
001 050 000- 6 50
Mntral
001 100 200- 4 7 1
Seaver , Lockwood (7) and
Stearns ; Brown , Terpko ( 8) ,
McEnaney (8) and Carter . WP
- Seaver (5 -J) . LP- Brown (1 .
4) . HRs- Montreal , Valentine
(8); New York, Stearns (6) .

rain)

Pttsbrgh
300 000 00- 3 6 0
Ph il dlph
000 ooo ox- o 2 J
Candelaria 17 -1 J and Ott :
Christenson , Garber 171 and
Boone . LP- Christenson (4 -5) .

Bait
010 001 000Chic go
020 000 020Palmer and Dempsey ;
and - Essian. WP- Brett

LP - Palmer

.

HELP WANTED

~sac

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' " •·~., C..uo
tJ t~l • "•'""" U....o

••••

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(17)

-1

or Write Veterans Memorial Hospital

Boston
Texas

000 20-4 100- 7 10 1
005 000 000- 5 9 2
Tiant. Pa xton (5). campbell
(7J
and Fisk; Alexander,
Devine (61 , Lindblad (7) and
Sundberg . WP- Paxton (1 .1J.
LP - Aiexar,der
(6-2).
HRsBoston , Yastrzemsk.i 2 (7) .

.- -

COOLVILLE
The
Coolv ille Volunteer Fire

Oeparl"r'hent will hold a
tractor pull beginning at 2 p.

m. Sunday. Signs will be

posted in Coolville marking
the way to the grounds where

the event will be held. Classes

to be Included are 5,000, 7,000,
and 9,000 field stock and a

5.000 pound modiiied class.

Refreshments
will
be
available. All proceeds will

go to the fire department.

Box 749, Pomeroy, 0. E.O.E.

BUILDING OR REMODEUNG?
I
"M

A.R.M.

AllfRGl'
IIIli II
MlOLC INI

CASH&amp; CARRY
PRICES

.Ail

Alleri)Y Relrt!
Mertlt:IN! lOs
1.11\l liSt$\ 95

RUBBER
CLEAT BASEBALL

Mitter -

l
Amer-ican Le•gue
Kan Clly
020 1.50 102- 11 15 '0
Tronto
CIO 000 020-- 3 8 I
Leonerd,
Gura
(8)
and

Porter ; Slnoer , Johns.on C.5J.
Willis (5), DeBarr (8), Bruno

(PI end Ashley . WP - Leoo&amp;rct
. (3 5J. LP - Singer (2 n . HRs -

Kansas City, Bretr (2 ). Mayber
ry 3 17 &gt;.

WE
DELIVER

Sizes 12-6
White with red stripes
Black with . white stripes.

_

sg99

heritage house

SHOES by CONVERSF
AND POLL PARROT

OF SHOES

OPEN :
MondiY thru Thursday &amp; Saturday t : lO to s

'--------N. 2nd Ave.

-

Middleport, 0.

Frld•Y 9: 30 to 1

\

AYDS
VARIETY PACK

. Reducing candy

''IT'S NEW" I!!
1'4 lb Box ol Four

Assorted Flavors

l!l!!\ii~
•

Mig list $4.50

~.49

BLISTlX
Up 01nUnenr
Mig l r!159'

14 o.z

3 sac
..

VILlAGE PHARMACY
271 N. 2nd Ave.
601 5th Street

992-5759
882-2005

o.

•

'

VALLEY LUMBER &amp;
SUPPLY
CORPORATION
923

Middleport,
New Haven, W. Va.

the

Maggie

Allison

off.

'

Rev .

James - Parrish of .
Cemetery ,

PAULA TALBOTT

BOWLING

Mrs. Paula Virginia Gregg

Talbott, tormerly of Mfddleport, died Wednesday at a
hospital in East Llverpool.

Tuesday Morning Women
May tO, 1977

A graduate of Middleport
High School , Mrs. Talbott

member of New Hope Baptist
Church, Harris, Ohio.

moved from Middleport to

She was married to Gall

Columbus where she resided

Morgan, who preceded her In
death . To this union was born

for several years before
moving to Las Vegas. Nev .,

Mason Bawling Lanes

was

8 0
8 o

Team~

Team 2

6

Team5
Team 1

where she has resided for a
number of years. She was an
accomplished pianist and
artist .

Talbott

W. L.

Team8

and laler to Anaheim, Calif ..

Mrs .

2 6
0 8

o 8
High individual 9ame
Sandra Grimm 169; Phyllis
Gilkey 168; Patti Williams

Anaheim until recently when
she became seriQusly ill and

was flown to East Liverpool

and Connie Dodson 166.

where she was to have made
her home with a cousin, Mrs.
Glenn
f Kay
Heines)
Gilkinson . However, she had
been hospitalized for almost

High series - Phyllis
Gilkey 437 ; Patti Williams
432; Shirley Mitchell 423.
Team high game - Team 1
723; Team ~ 6t8 ; Team 2 688.

all of the past few weeks since

Team hi gh series - Team 8

arriving at East Liverpool.

2000: Team
1963.

Mrs . Talbott was the
daughter of lhe late Charles
Gregg and Mrs. Elhel Gregg .

~

1'1'17 ; Team

May 24, 1977

Mason Bowling Lanes

W. L.

Green Ghost
Team 4
Cline Construction
Team 3
Team 2
Team6
Middleport First Baptist --Team I
Church, officiating.
Team 7

~ers

22
20
18
12
8
8
6
2

2
4
6
12
16
16
18
22

High individual game Lena Howard 210; Ann

GaWpolls, Ohio
MayZS,Im
Saleo Report ol
Olllo V1Uey Ll•eotock Co.
STOCKER CATTLE STEERS - 250 to 300 lbs. 35
to 41.75; 300 to 400 lbs. 36 to
42.50; 400 to 500 lbs. 34 to
41.25; 500 to 600 lbs. 32 to
39.50; 600 to 700 lbs. 32.50 to
39; 700 lbs. and Over 31 to
39.25.
HEIFER CALVES- 250 to
300 lbs. 25 to 31.25; 300 to 400
lba. 24.50 to 32; 400 to 000 lbs.
25.50 to 32; 500 to 600 lba. 26 to
33; 600 to 700 lbs. 2S to 34; 700
lba. and Over 26.50 to 34.25.
STOCK COWS &amp; BULLS
(By Tbe Head)- Stock Cows
125 to 240; Stock Cows and
Calves 175 to 330; Stock Bulls
19() to 'lfl~; Baby Calves 8 to
52; (By the Pound) _ Canners &amp; Cutters Cows 19 to
23.85; Holstein Cows 24 to
27.90; Commercial Bulls
(1,000 lbs. and Over) 30.50 to
34.
VVEAL CALVES- Tops
220 lbs. to 250 40 to . 48;
Medium 200 lbs. to 300 32 to
39.50; Culls 31 down.
Sows- 350 lbs. up 31 to 35.
Plgo - 6 to 39.

Athens Livestock Sales,
Inc.
Howard 55S; Sandra Gr imm
489 ; Connie ChaPman 466 .
Saturday, May Zl, 1977
Team high game - Team .r1
Feeder Steers - Choice
729; Green Ghost 717 ; Cl ine
35.76-40; Good 26.25-35.50.
. Construction 711.
Feeder Heifers - Choice
Team high series - Cline
Constructl on 2051; Team 4 28.75-.'l!.7S; Good 22.50-28.50.
2048; Green Gho•t 202~.
SI~ughter Bulls (OVer 1,000
lbs.)
32.110-34.50 .
TueSday Morning Glories
Feeder Bulls - Good 27.70.
May 17 1977
Mason Bowling Lanes
39.
·
W. L.
Slaughter Cows: Utility 26Green Ghost
16 0 29; Canner-Cutter 111-25.80.
Team~
16 il
Veals (,Choice-Prime) 35Cline Construction
14 2
Team 2
6 10 51.
Team 3
6 10
Hogs (No. I) BarrowsTeam 1
4 12 GUts, 200-230 lbs. 43.40-43.80.
Team6
2 14
SoWS - 31.50-36.40.
Team 7
0 16
High Individual game Pigs (By the head) 21-39. ·
Wanda Tealord 216; Shirley
Boars - 24.25-28.
Mitchell 181; Lena Howard
Baby
Calves (By the head)
179.
High series - Wanda 14-40.
Teaford 513; Lena Howard
512; Shirley Mitchell ~97 .
series

-

s. 3rd. Ave-

992-2709
Middleport, 00PEN
7:00to5:00 Mon. thru Fri.
7:00to 3:00 Saturday

said.
Because of the anguished
memories, many parents
have said they will never
send their children to the
seized school again, the
official said, adding "Many of
the children do not want to
retum there - ever. '
A spokesman said the
Moluccans , who want
liiJI!ependence for their Spice
!slilnds homeland, have not
dropped their demands to be
flown out of the country with
21 Moluccans jailed after
previous terrorist actions.
"When they answer their
phone, they say '747
speaking,"' an official saidan apparent reference to the
Boeing 747 jumbo jet the
gunmen want as a getaway
plane.
But the newspaper de
Volkskrant said it was
possible some of the 21
prisoners did not want to
leave the country. It said that
wh!ln four jailed MoJu~ns
were brought to the
government crisis center at
Assen last week "for
consultations," they said the
idea of leaving with the
gunmen did not appeal to
them.
The government was
continuing a crisis cabinet
session while authorities
bring stepped up their
psychological pressure in a
bid to break the gunmen's
will and bring the siege to a
quick and bloodlesss end.

HEARING SET
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
Public Utilities Commission
of Ohio today set June 'lii for a
public hearing on an application by Monongahela
Power Co. for a $2.89 million
rate increase. The utility
serves 22,125 customers in
· southeastern Ohio. ·
, . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .~

WRANGLER "NOfAULf'
COl ION DENIMS WITH
SANFOR.SEJ PLIDGE
ntEY'll FADE GREAT

~~~ver 197; Shirley Mitchell
High

Trans l.'

2

Tuesday Morning Women

Mrs . Gregg is presently
resid!ng in ·E ast Liverpool .
Besides her mother a number
of cousins survive.
Graveside services will be
held at 2 p.m . Saturday at the
Gravel Hill Cemetery in
Cheshire with the Rev . Peter
Grandal. pastor of the

Prop·e- rt·y

2

6 2
2 6

Team6
TeamJ
Team 7

in

Metg"S

'

Market Report

ficlatlng . Interment was in

Eastlawn
Columbus .

ASSEN, The Netherlands
(UP!) - South Moluccan
gunmen wandered today outside the train they hijacked 11
days ago, taking snapshots,
but authoril\es did not dare
move against them.
The knowledge that other
terrorists were in the train
polnti':lg guns at the 56
hostages
prevented
authorities from taking any
action against the gunmen as
they strolled near the tracks
"taking several pictures," a
witness said.
At
the
Bovensmilde
·e lementary school, other
Moluccan gunmen continued
to hold four teachers after
releasing more tllan 100 child
captives last Friday, when a
mysterious Ulness felled
many of the children.
The children will return to
class next Monday at a
nearby church school,
authorities said , But 15
Moluccan chUdren who were
released on the first day of
the twin sieges will not be
going with them, "in their
own interest," an official

: =~~~~y ~~~~t~

Lena

.

Bernard Lavalley, Bernice
LavaUey to Roy W. Dowell,
Beverly Dowell, Parcels,
Sutton.
R. Clifford HiU, Pauline M.
Hill to Ohio Power Co., Ease.,
Letart.
Earl Adams, Doris Adams,
James Adams, Carol Jean
Adams to Ohio Power Co.,
Ease., Letart.
George Don Stobart, Velma
Stobart to Charles Myers,
Joyce Myers, ¥• acre, Annormal conditions was "like a tiquity.
maze."
Robert E. Myers, Evalee S.
Team high game - Green
Myers
to Carter's Plumbing Ghost 763; Cline Construction
"We went from room to
room - I can imagine what it &amp; Heating, Inc., Lot, 756 ; Team 4 - Team 3 701.
Team high Series - Cline
would be like without lights Pomeroy.
Construction
2132; Green
James
E.
Fletcher, · Ghost 2083; Team
and with smoke ,pouring in,"
4 2064.
Fletcher
to
said Easterly. Investigators Penelope
have said some of Saturday Penelope Plesset, Parcels,
night's victims ·piled up at Colwnbia.
Clyde J. Morlan, Ethel
exits and died of smoke
Marie Morlan to Michael R.
inhalation.
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Easterly said he reported Kincaid, Charlotte A. · KinAdmitted - Lena Nesselcaid,
Lot
19
Hickory
Acres
his
observations
to
road,
Pomeroy; Clarence
Subdivision,
Orange.
Southworth and Southworth
Norris,
Racine; Gerald Hall,
Rosemary Ga goon I o
told him, "l'mawareofitand
Racine;
Clinton Pierce,
I know it's dangerous. I've Ronald G. Jacobs, Alice L.
Syracuse;
Regina Eakins,
got the documents ln my files Jacobs, I acre, Chester.
Racine;
Thomas
Eakins,
Matthew C. Estep, Pearl D.
to cover me."
Asked
about
the Estep to Ralph Bales, Connie Racine; Mickey Eakins,
conversation reported by S. Bales, Merrill's Add., Racine.
Discharged
Mary
Easterly, Southworth said, "I Rutland Village.
Thomas L. Bentley, Linda Nesselroad, Shirley Bishop,
don't recall that conversation
with Mr. Easterly. I know S. Bentley to Amos Sorrell, Harold Dewhurst, Juanita
Hoschar, Juanita Hoschar,
Sen. Easterly. He's in the 5.95 acres, Orange.
Kenneth Young, Nara
office weekly. We receive
Nonnan 0. Weber, Vera A.
Hartman.
llUI!lY complaints and I refer Weber to Raymond W.
them to be investigated."
Larkins, Nancy J. Larkins,
Asked If he recalled
.364 acre, Olive.
receiving complaints about
Norman 0. Weber, Vera A.
the
Beverly
Hills,
Weber to Raymond W,
ALl TOWED
"Southworth said, "I knew
Larkins, Nancy J. Larkins,
LOS ANGELES (UP!)
nothing prior to the fire."
1.008 acre, Olive.
World
Heavyweight
Asked about Easterly's
Paul P. Simon, Allie M.
recollection that Southworth Simon, Guido J. Glrolami, Champion Muhammad Ali
said he had "documents in his Vidia Glrolami to James will marry model Veronica
Porche, his girUriend for two
files" about Beverly Hills,
Bailey, Cella E. Bailey, Louis
Southworth said, "I don't W. Osborne, Thelma · V. years, on June 19 at the
Beverly Wilshire hoteL It will
recall a conversation like Osborne, Lot, Pomeroy.
that."
Kathleen B. Davis, Trustee be All's third marriage, her
Southworth said most fire to Earl F, Glass, Betty J. first.
Ali's relationship with Miss
inspeCtions were handled by · Glass, Lot, Middleport.
Porche
provoked his previous
local
authorities
and
Lillian
Lyon
Gropwife
to
leave him when he
Southgate Fire Chief Dick pen backer, S. Carr Winters to
Riesenberg said, 'tMr. John Willard Tillis, Sr., was training ·tor his title
Southworth never mentioned Donna M. TUlis, one and one- defense In Manila. They
reconclled but later divorced.
anything to me (about third a~e, Middleport.
Beverly Hills). Locally, we
felt this building was
adequate.''
The death toll climbed to
161 Wednesday afternoon
when two more bodies were
round In the rubble. They
were the · first bodies
discovered there Sunday.
Campbell County Coroner
Dr. Fred Stine said the bodies
were badly bumed, but on the
basis of missing persons
reports he said they were
Soft brushed pigskin clog in beautiful red believed to be Lenora Gentry
blue- brown- light. Light platform sole for
and Sharalee Matthews of
dress or casual.
~
Cincinnati.
The fatality count had been
158, but Stine said Wednesday
the count had been "botched"
Middleport, o.
and actually was 159 before
the discovery of the two
additional bodies .
•

;:;;~:~~::::::.;.:;:::r::~:-l:~~~~lil:'Cll!illl~

~

·THE SHOE BOX

wr ~~kleo:;

reansanQr~c.~rt~ltd t .u, 'fiiOil0 11'1Jar

PQCio.~ls and along the ~ean11&gt;

Wdll;lll! our ot th'"' dr 1ur rrwc•1 rqht -nto our

demms Ole&lt;Jge me~. wont slir•nk rnore
ll,&lt;&gt;n 1%'

AlllXlCilliOOOI I.:!~'!:~#JI

Mrs. Mildred Meaae,
grandson, Brian Morris, Col- .
umbus, and Mrs. Veronica
Wilson and son, Bobby, were
Tuesday guests ·of Mrs .
Albert Roush. On Sunday Mr.
and Mrs .. Roush visited Mrs.
Mirla Herdman and Mrs.
GametHerdmanofLeon,W.
Va.

~·ore and

,y • •cr Vvtd/'tJif)•

r.•J f au• I

~001.)1!

... "". .~. . . . ~·~ g

OPEN FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY TILU:OO

Arrow and Career Club

KNIT PUU.OVER

·_SHIRTS

by Arrow. Jockey, Puuritan &amp; Moss

PANTS

by Haggar and Hubbard

SUITS &amp; SPORT COATS
by Merit, Curlee,
Warren Sewell.

Hubbard ,

DRESS STRAW HATS
NECKTIES
SOCKS by INTERWOVEN

UNDERWEAR

by Jockey, Hanes, Arrow
and D. V. B.

DENIM JEANS
by Levi's

WAI!ETS &amp;KEY CASES
by Meeker

BA.HR CLOTHIERS
Middleport, 0.

N. 2nd Ave.

..'

~G:n•ms

Ane• ot1 th• 1rc· tr ' un , IlK) co:to!";
oun msthdt J' rr •' '' .ud olllllldg~ Ami

SHIRTS

THE CRUISE

iiiii

100%COIION
14oz.DENIMS WITH
SANFOR·SET·
THAT AMERICANS
WILL STAND UP
w,~,~~~:~~~:~A~~~Ngi~~D~:SA4J,!~~.;, . ""'' '"' '·'""''"".,...

Wtrat s mo1a Wrangler IIJO ~auLt co non

Pomeroy
~ Personal Notes

BY

,,'

flOO o- 3 9 0
Sutter
(7),

and

SEE US FIRST AND COMPARE OUR.
PR.ICES. QUALITY MATERIAL AT
REASONABLE PRICES.

11 0

wald : OiP,.ker. HraboSkY' (8) ,
Mcltqer
(8),
Carroll
(9) ,
.)chultz (lJJ. Urrea (13 ) and
Simmons , WP - Hernandel (2 .
0 . LP- Scl'lultl (J . t ). H~ ­
Chicago. Murctr UJ.

1

l!l!i; t"'l~ l!G:~
~T • ..£ .•.~t~...;P
Jl ;{.J...,t.-. I....s.:.1 l"'l.,.l.u

Reuschel,

Hernollnder

f'tiMrtr l'll:•u• ' • 111u"'"

Paul L. Shain the amount of
$4,250.

$1.89

(7 -4).

Atlanta
011 000 000- 2 4 l
Cinci
021 101 OOx - 5 8 0
Easterly, Coll ins (1) and
PoCoroba ; Zachry (3 -6) and
Bench . LP- Casterlv (2-2) . HR
- Atlanta , Burroughs (12) .

010 000 020 000 1-

!'!."''"7~

High

Donald

STRENGTH

Phone 992-2104

Brett
(6· 3) .

( 1J innings)
Ch icago

f&lt;Juu 15 - loe~ t,.otn ""~' 1

March, 1977.

same · court

CQII ins Is to recover from

TYLENOL
EXTRA

8 01

Mig: L!$1 $3 50

LOS Ang
002 010 003- 6 11 0
Houston
000 110 ooo- ·2 6 2
John, Hough (7) and Oates ;
Me Laughlin,· ~·.liekro (5 ), Forsch
(9) and r:erguson . WP- John
(6-2) . LP -Mc~aught i n £1 .2). "'

"""':;:..I.

.~~

7~

new

the

and
building materials

TROPICAL BLEND
cy.Coppenllflf:

191?,

Fire killing

Mig lrst 51 .&lt;19

X-RAY TECHNICIAN
FULL OR PART TIME

1,

Howard .
She attended school In
GaUia County and was a

by Glllene

t ,..,

ltt ~Oil to.nnr• I J'Q4r~ 1'1rot u
l':lltlonll ot tw.arey ' "''"' ' '

16

Middleport

·~ The

cltiJ;A

Monroe Ave .• Columbus. died
early Saturday morning, May
28, in St. Anthony Hospital,
Columbus. Ohio.
Mrs. Morgan, a native of
Gallia County, was born

A. and

Local notices, briefs

BAI&lt;ER
'FURNITURE

"'

hOieLS 10Qs

~ Ml~ llsl S~ 25ueh

~~~~ f~j .37

t'l't')'

TABLETS

tiQ~Id 12 ot or

I

U\o ''

tpeciol 7,)00 BTU Frigidaire

•
MILDRED MORGAN
Mrs . Mildred Rebecca
Morgan, 64, of 263'12 N.

of
a
racial
minority, the suit does not the followina children :
challenge his acceptance by daughters, Mrs . Barbara
Walker, Mrs. Betty Cates.
the medical school.
Adrian,
Mic higan and
"We cited his interview and Dorothy Ellen of Columbus;
enrollment, despite the far son, Leo Morgan. Columbus.
She Is survived by her steplower point average, as evimother, Mrs. Mary Howard
dence that somewhere along of Bidwell, Ohio; half-sisters.
the line Mr. Pipoly was Mrs . Marianna Morgan ,
discriminated
against," Youngstown ; Mrs. Dorothy
Gordon, Gallipolis; Mrs .
Hamilton said.
Hazel Young , Dayton ; halfThe discrimination charge . brothers,
Charles H. Jackson,
was denied by Ohio John, James. Clarence and
University, and the sehool William, all of Bidwell ; 11
requested a jury trial. A grandchildren, one greata cousin,
spokesm.an for the university, granddaughter,
leslie Howard, Gallipolis ;
Peggy Black, said factors four brothers -Jn . law, si x
other than grades were sisters-In-law and a host of
weighed in selecting students nieces and nephews.
Funeral services were
for the medical school.
She said there were I ,600
applicants for the school and
150 were selected for interviews. Only 36 of the
candidates won enrollment.
The suit asks for $20,000 in
(Continued from page I)
damages plus admission of
Plpoly to the medical school. by smouldering ashes
dumped from ashtrays into
tablecloths.
"That
was common
procedure," said Bailey. "We
had a tablecloth catch fire
like that about six months
• A- public meeting will be School Alumni · · Association ago. That was the first thing I
, held at 7:30 Tuesday evening decorating committee will be thought of when I saw smoke
al Eastern High School to decorating the gymnasium
, discuss the June 7th levy. Friday. The group Is asking . coming ~rom the Zebra
... Anyone having questions for help from all persons Room."
• about the need for and pur- beginning at 6 p, m. Anyone
In Frankfort, during debate
pose of the levy is urgea to wishing to reserve. a table for by a legislative committee on
·attend.
the dance Is to report to the
a motion that investigators
'
auditorium at 6 p. m.
• Ben Eblin, Rt. ~. Pomeroy,
turn over their findings to the
; who suffered a hecirt attack
Judy Ginther and John committee, Easterly recalled
.last Thursday morning and Ginther, Rt. 1, Long Bottom, · that Southworth labeled the
·has since been confined to the have filed for dissolution of
'Intensive Care unit at Ho.lzer marriage In Meigs County Beverly Hills "dangerous"
Medical Center, Is now out of Common Pleas Court.
last December.
Intensive Care and his wife
The Farmers Bank and
Easterly
told
the
reports that he Is able to Savings Co,. Pomeroy, flied a committee he visited the club
. receive cards and visitors. suit in the amount of $1 ,369.06
Mr. Eblin's room number is against Darrell L. Jones, and last Dec. llandwasstruckby
437, Holzer Medical Center. Sheila Jones, Rt. 1. Dexter. In · the fact that exiling under

.... li-IM fit tota l room comlort"into
w or..iow1 01 norrow ot

Area Deaths

I

daughter of the late Charles

YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio
(UP!) - S. William Pipoly
Jr. of nearby Poland, Ohio,
has filed suit in U.S. District
Court in Columbus charging
Ohio
University
with
discrimination foc denying
him an interview on his
application for the university's School of Osteopathic
Medicine.
Plpoly,holderof a master's
degree in biology (rom the
University of Dayton,
charges in his suit that he was
not
selected for
an
application interview despite
his high grade average of-3.85
out of 4.0. His suit said
another Dayton graduate
student with only a 2..11.
average was given an
interview and accepted.
Attorney Earl Hamilton of
Columbus, Pipoly's laW)'er,
said that although the other
student was black and
therefore
a member

$719.95

./' MAALOX

•

to 4.5 pinh of moist1.1rt

:

aren't moving

Yet, he said, " despite this
Impressive
national trend ,
The patient may return
sterilization
services
remain
home within three hours and
to
essentially
unavailable
resume normal activity
many
Individuals
who
seek
within two days, Lubell said.
The cost should be less than them, either because of gaps
$300, he said, compared to in the availability of services,
fees of up to $1,000 for the restrictive hospital policies in
current operation, which some areas of the country,
high costs of service or other
must take place Ina hospitaL constrainLs.''
Lubell - said voluntary
Minilap operations in independent clinics, he said,
: contraception among couples would be a "significant
in which the wife is 30 or widening of options" for
conducted Wednesday, June 1
people seeking sterilization.
al 2:30 In the chapel of Me- older.
Nabb Funeral Home, with

program's first year.
" minilap" is much
Current sterilization proce- simpler.
dure
laparascoplc
In the minilap procedure,
sterilization - involves the doctor makes a small
specialized and expensive incision in the lower
the
equipment, AVS Executive abdomen, locates
Director Ira Lubell said. The fallopian tubes and brings
new
operation
them to the incision. He then
minilaparotomy, or eithercutsthemortlesthem
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - I"'
I

December

sued by student

2-4 h o t.~n to help odd total comlort to
yovr room enYironm•nl. Witt. it1 low·
omp41•09• dt••gn. it can s~rt o 1 ~­
omp cirt uit wht~ elec;tricol codtt ptr ·
mit

Two kindergarten classes 'graduate' this evening
The afternoon kindergarten
class at Middleport will
graduate this evening at 7:30
at Pearl Street Elementary.
Dr. Don Leighty of Ohio
University will be the guest
speaker. Robert Morris,
principal, will give the
invocation and benediction
and Mrs. Mary Rose the
greeting . Morris . will also
present the diplomas.
· The processional and
recessional will be played by

Medical school

~ A~ Dial on ~ .BOO 8TUt ol
coOiinv po••• o• diol in o breoth ot
fr e1h oir wilt! thit 1p41tiol FriQidoirt
li
or c~:m•mtn l wondow model . II lih
1 ;;:·, :,,;~;-~, narrow Ill 1.5l4 "; lih lotol
comfort in to &lt;ooms 01 biQ at 190
210 1q. h . {..t chorl) . And 11 con

MORNING CLASS - The morning kindergarten class at Middleport Elementary
graduated May 26. Shown are, first row, !..-, Susan Kay Pullins, Traci Earlene Wright,
Kimberly Renee Kennedv. Michelle Jean Smith, Martha Faye Nelson, Robert Jacks.
Charles VerlinJacks, William Ray Gil)&lt;ey, Tamara Sue Hoffman, Randall Rae Carpenter,
James Neal Richmond, Brenda Sue Hawley, Vinda Jean Biggs; second row, Roger June
Snyder, Jackie Lee Large, Matthew Shane Baker, Betty Jo Darst, Doug Franklin Connor,
Stacy Franklin Edwards, Stephen Todd Hood, Jeffery Alan McElroy, George Randall
Bunce, Phillip Jay Richmond; back row, Brett Michael Little, Dennis Dean Craig, Ronnie
Lee Powell, Patricia Sue Martin, Tina Lyllll Kauff, Michael Lee Will, Michael Sidney
Southern, carolyn Sue Elam , Brady Gene Johnson, Rebecca Jea n Spaulding. Teacher is
Mary Rose.

about 15 minutes, can be
performed
with
local
anesthesia in a doctor 's
office, costs only about a
third as much as current
methods and pennits the
patient to go home the day of
the operation.
11 is also at least as safe as
, the most widely used female
sterilization technique the
groups said.
'
The two organizations are
contributing $150,000 each to
a fund to provide loans to
health service agencies that
want to promote the new
technique. The groups
estimated five pilot projects
will be funded during the

CRICKET LIGHTER

(7lh innings,
"'i!j!t!li.I - OftfM(n
Ruthnd Ang*h • ?ll&gt;'olll
Kldd . Oubl ~ tloolo C,

AFTERNOON CLASS - Members of the afternoon class at Middleport will receive
their diplomas in ceremonies this evening at 7:30p.m. at Middleport Elementary School.
Front row,l-&lt;, Stephanie Dawn Acree, Kimberly Elise Chadwell , Elizabeth Nadine Meier,
Shannon Jo Coates, Jody Lynn Taylor, Carl Richard Nicholson, Shelly Anne Edwards,
Jason Alex Drenner, David Lynn Klein, Christopher Khroll Becker, Christopher Allen_...,....
Barker; second row, David Carroll Jacks, Timothy Daniel Jones, Anthony Ray Rowe,
Terry Scott Fields, Melinda Joan Spencer, Melissa Lynn Woods, Eugenna Kay Miller,
Tamara Shawn Hawley, Kathryn Elizabeth Thomas, Shawnna Michelle Johnson; third row ,
Nikki Michelle Whitlatch, Catherine Mae Laudermilt, Laurie SuUlljne Wayland , Leslie
Elaine Gilkey, Matthew Preston Gibbs, Leslie Dawn Carr, Jody Lynn Custer, Angela Renee
Rowe, Luke Andrew Burdette, John Robert Jeffers. Mary Rose is the teacher.

Dutch police

Simple, cheap sterilization way available

RUMMAGE SALE
A bake and rununage sale
will be held by the Veterans
Memorial Hospital Auxiliary
Friday and Saturday in the
SEOEMS building behind the
hospiml, 9 a.m. to~ p.m.

': -'_,_,.,.,.,.,.,., ,.,.,,, , , .,.,.,.,.,.,., , .,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,,,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.·.·.·.-.· ·;, Sgt. Powell

New Yrk

c;,.~~
t'J. o!.l~l"'ct C~'" ( Pluo r.i"• ck

game. Fidrych went six
irmings, allowing 10 hits, five
runs and five hits while
walking two and striking out
one.
A's &amp;, Mariners 3:
Tony Armas ' two-run triple
and Earl Williams' two-run
homer were the big blows for
Oakland as Doc Medich won
his fifth game of the year ,
Glenn Abboll was the loser
for Seattle, which rallied in
the ninth only to have Joe
Coleman end the game by
coming out of the bullpen and
throwing a double play ball .

Mauri\.'e Lucas and wllen he
managed to elude Lucas, Bill
Walt on moved in to
initimidate or block shots.
McGinnis was impressed
by the Blazers' performance
Tuesday night.
"That a whole team cou ld
play so well is unbelieva ble ,"
said McGinnis, who has made
only 29 of his last 98 shots
from the flo or . " They
overplayed the ball, doubleteamed and did a good job of
conmining us. When we 'd try
to isolate someone on the
weak side, they would press
over Ulere."
Portland - Coach Jack
Ramsay hopes his team
keeps its aggressive, fastbreaking game intact when
the series resumes Friday
night with Game 5 at the
Spectrwn. Portland lost by
six in the first game and by 18
in the second before
returning home and winning
two games.
"I'm very pleased with the
way we played," Ramsay
said following Tuesday's win,
"but all it means is that we·
are now involved in a threegame series with two games
to be played on their floor. "
The series returns to Portland for Game 6 &amp;Jnday
afternoon.
•

:i-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Thursday, June 2, 1977

OBSTO START
B1ble school at the Bradbury Church of Christ will be
held the week of June 6-10,
6:30 to 8 :30 p.m. at lbe
church. Anyone with a need
for transportation is asked to
Cllli 992-7369.

•-The Daily Sent mel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Thursday. June 2, l!T/7

�'

. ,l Becky Broderick

6- The Dally Sentinel, MiddlePQtt-Pomeroy, 0., Thur.iday,June2, 1977

Class makes contribution

r«&lt;~=G;;;;;~7i:~~~''ii':~,,,.,_, ,.,,.,.,

~

By Hdt&gt;n and Sut• Hottt&gt;l

J~

She Plots Agalntll Stel'father

•

'

1

feted at shower

Rap:
A layette shower honoring
Mom arv:! Dad got divorced, and 1 know Dad would come Mrs. Becky . Broderick,
beck, exceptthat Mom is married again, to a very mean, bossy Pomeroy, was held recently
man. She teUs me she doesn't like him either, sometimes. at the ho!lle of Mrs. David
When he gets drunk, he hits her. He spanks my UtUe sister for Robinetle. Hostesses were
no good reason .
Marge Robinette and
I catch him looking at me strange (I'm 15 arv:! very Christina Grueser.
mature) . He's never tried anytlling, but !think he would if I
Cake decorated with green
sort of worked it right, when Ji.tom•s out arv:! he's been drinking. and yellow bootie replicas.
I'd be doing everybody a favor, and probably getting my nuts, mints, punch and coffee
real Dad back again. Is that bed?- PLOTTING FOR A GOOD were served. A stork replica
CAUSE
.
was used as a centerpiece for
P.S. They don't read this paper - I see it at school, so you the table which was placed
~n print !llY letter .
before a backdrop of mint
green and yellow strea!llers.
Ploltlllg :
GB!lles were played with
People who set trap!! often get caught In them. What if your prizes going to Ruletta
scheme worked too well and you couldn't stop a drunk step- Roberts, Wanda Stafford, and
father?
June Brooks. Linda Lane won
Or if he resisted and informed your mother you were the door prize. Gifts were
making a play for him?
placed In a decorated
She already has good cause for divorce, and your real bassinet.
father can hasten your choice, with a litUe honest persuasion
Attending besides those
from you kids. - jiELEN AND SUE
n&amp;!lled were Patty Hoffman,
+++
Ruby Gri!llm, Louise Bearhs,
Rap :
June Brooks, Wanda Staf·
My sister and her boyfriend are what you might call
elthibitionists. They make out in the living roo!ll. I think heavy
hugging and kissing should be private.
.
What's even worse, when !lly parents aren't ho!lle, they go
to her r00111 . My roo!ll is nert to hers and there's a ver)i thin
partition. (turn my record player on high, but l'!ll still
e!llbarraased.
.
How can I tell !llY sister to stop without actually saying,
"Knock itoff!" -DON'TUKE TOINTRUDE,BliT ...

ford, Erruna llrodenck. Mary
Grinun, Ruletta Robetts, Ed·
na C..nnan, Barbara and
Mary Ann Grueser, Linda
Lane, Florence Grueser and
Paul, Jr., Brenda Pettit, June
Mays, Dorothy Gri!ll!ll,
Sylvia C..nnan, Catherine
Grueser, Natllan Robinette
and David Robinette.
Sending gifts were Mrs.
Clayton Roush, Ann Grueser.
Rose Grueser, Belva Sloan,
Barbara Offutt, Marcelia
Snowden, Nancy Grueser,
Mary Grueser , Helen
Ri ghthouse,
Lydia
Weyersmiller, Kathryn Windon, Emnm Dubey, Mzie
Hannahs, Sister Clara
Grueser, Ji!ll Steele, Karen
Faber, Nancy Broderick,
C..rolyn Stnith and Sherri,
Betty Weyersmiller, Jo Ellen
Roush, Sylvia Salek, and
Belinda Connolly.

Couple attends annual

State Deputies meeting

Dear Don'l:
What's wrong with saying, "Knock il off!"?
... Before your piu-ents catch these two and say it a good
deal stronger! - SUE AND HELEN
.

+++

Dear Helen and Sue :
I've beard that good cheeil~heek dancers make the best
girls friends because they're born followers and don't get
bossy, brainy, and Independent. True? - RILEY, WHO
WANTS AN OlD-FASHIONED GIRL
Dear Riley:
Don't count oo any girl dancing tn your tune these dayseven if she knows the !llinuet. -SUE AND HELEN

+++

Rap:
Ia it proper to give a girl your class ring tn sh&lt;JW you're
going $1eady? Or Ia that passe? -GUY
P.S.I've seen it In old movies, but notiit our school.

Mendal Jordan, state
grange deputy master and
Mrs. Mendal Jordan, deputy
junior mat·ron, were at
Friendly Hills State Grange
Ca!llp near Zanesville for lhe
annual Grange Deputies
Conference recently .
State Grange · Master
James Rose !Tiel with the
group to explain lhe goals and
activities planned for the
year.

i("''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''' ' ' ' '''''''''''''''''' ' ' ' '' ''''''''''''''''''''''''''''"' '"''' ' ' ' ' ' ''''''''''''' ' ''''''''}

::
:\':

Dear Guy;
::=
In many schools, that's passe as the phrase "going :=::
· dship ring instead?. - HELEN AND :;.:·
steady." How about a f nen

SUE

ATrENDS MEETING

Mrs. Shirley Sisson was a
guest at the recent !lleetlng of
the MiddlePQrt Child Conser-

vation League held at the ColU!llbus and Southern Ohio
Electric Co. Her na!lle was
unintentiollaUy omitted from
the guest list.

Maybe It's because they think
of him as a salesman instead
of the friend he can be.
You won't find any salesmen at our agency.
We're insurance agents. professional people
who specialize in your insurance needs. If
you have any question at all regarding in·
sura nee, drop in and ask us. We won't try to
sell you a thing . .

Davis .Insurance Service
992-5 1ZO

114 Court St.

Pomeroy, 0.

Others who assisted with
the conference were state
grange lecturer, Mrs. Donald
Speaight: state grange
chaplain, Rev. Robert Wells;
Mrs. Ja!lles Ross, state
director of junior activities;
Mrs. CB!llpbell Lewis, state
women's activities director,
and state youth directors, Mr.
and
Mrs.
Bernard
Shoe!llaker.

jordan relatiVeS attend
:
\
family funeral in Carpenter ..:

CARPENTE!j. _ Several
relatives were called here
because of the death of Betty
Jean Jordan, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Lavern Jordan.
Here for the services were
Mr. and Mrs. John Dunham,
Connie and Yvonne, and Mr.
and Mrs. Richard Jeffers,
New Boston, Ill.; Mr. and
Mrs. Eddie Jordan ani;\ E. I.,
West Palm Beach, Fla.; Mr.
and Mrs. MaX McCallie, Ann
Arbor, Mlcl).; Mr. and .Mrs.
Thomas Johnson, Jackson,
Mich.; Jerrie Muck, Debbie,
Scott and Chris Wilson,
Chelsea, Mich.; .F'red Wilson,
Ypsilanti, Mich.; Mr. and
Mrs. Francis Queen, MeConnellsville; Mr. and Mrs.
Ja!lles Hale, Zaneaville; Vina
Rutherford, Mr. and Mrs.
Mike Lawson, ColU!llblis; Mr.

·~
~.·

· Meigs Senior Citizens
Center activities located at
the Po!lleroy Junior High
School is open 9 a.!ll.-4 p.!ll.,
Monday through Friday.
Friday, June 3 - Health
Workshop, 10-11:30 a.m.;
Crocheting, 10-11:30 a.m.;
Art Class, 10·11:30 a.m.;
Bowling, 1-3 p.!ll.; Square
Dance, 8 :~11:30 p.!ll.
Senior Citizens Nutritition
Progra!ll, 11:30 a.!ll.-12:30
p.!ll. M6nday through Friday.

EVERY NIGHT AFTER
4:00 IS SAVINGS NIGHT
AT
COUNTRY COUSINS

::.::
and Mrs. Tho!llas Cassell,
Ada; Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Cordray, Westerville: John
Gorby, Crooksville; Marian
Gorby, Emmert, So!llerset .
and Julia Gorby Allen, New'
Lexington.

Social
Calendar
THURSDAY
GALLIA County Salon 612,
Eight and Forty, Thursday at
the Po!lleroy home of Miss
Enna Smith with Mrs. Grace
Pratt, c~hostess.
EVANGELINE Chapter
172, 7:30 Thursday at the
Masonic Te!llple. Initiation of
officers will be held with officers to wear gowns. Co!llmittees will he honored.
FRIDAY
RUMMAGE sale Friday
and Saturday and spaghetti
dinner Saturday at lhe
Masonic Hall In Mason
sponsored by Mason Chapter,
Order of Eastern Star, 157.
Rununage sale will he from 9
a.!ll. to 4 p.!ll. Friday;
Saturday, 9 a.!ll. to2 p.m. The
spaghetti dinner will be from
2 to 8 p.!ll. ,_
GOSPEL Tones Quartette
of Charleston at the Carlton
Church, Kingsbury Road
Friday, 7:30 p.!ll. Public
invited.
DANCE at Royal Oak Park
Friday 9 to 12 sponSored by
Southern Band Boosters.
Music by ''Uncle Dugger."
Ad!llission $2 a person.
HEMLOCK Grange annual
inspection, 7:30 p.. m. Friday
at grange hall; !lle!llhers to
take either sandwiches or pie.

ANDREW FIELDS

Birthday
celebrated
Andrew Wayne Fields
celebrated his first birthday
on May 26 at lhe home of his
parents, Linda and Larry
Fields.
He received a Raggedy Andy cake which was served
with a fa!llily cookout to his
grandparents, Anna and
Walter Roush, Dorothy and
C)yde Fields, and Ruling,
Nancy and Robbie Greene,
Mike, Janice and David Fetty, Karen and Mike Finnicwn, Connie and Brent
Fields, Danny Fields,
Miahael Chancey and Janie
Amberger.
Sending gifts were Mr. and
Mrs. Ronald Miller, Eura
Largent, Curtie, Linda,
Stephanie and Stacey Clarke.

Club honors
past member

A $100 contribution toward

furnishings for an addition to
the Mt. Healthy Christian
Ho!lle in Cincinnati was made
when lhe Loyal Wo!llen and
Men's Class met re&lt;:ently at
the Middleport Church of
Christ.
A letter was read from the
Hotne acknowledging a gift
sent previously and telling of
the need for funds with which
to purchase furniture for the
new addition.
Mrs. Oscar Roush announced the quilt display to be held
at the church on June II.
Quilts are to he brought to the
church on Saturday !llorning
after 9 a.m. and then picked
up that evening.
Mrs. Grace Pratt welcomed the me!llhers and guests,
Mrs. Altna White and Mrs.
Nora Rice. Prayer for two
bereaved families was held,
the Earl McKinley fatnily at
the death of Joe Mattox, and
the Chester Erwin fatnily.
Mrs. Reva Beach read scripture from John 6:37 and Rev.

22:17 and there was prayer by
Mrs. Rice.
Reported ill were Mrs.
Mildred Betzing , Mrs.
Kathryn Ervin at Holzer,
George Meinhart at Veterans
Memorial Hospital, Mrs.
Martha Haggerty, now at
ho!lle, Sa!ll Fry and Mrs. Ida
Childs.
The class decided to ask
Denver Rice to be a
substitute teacher for the
class.
Mrs. Beach presented Mrs
Rice who talked on the parties held each !llonlh at the
Athens Mental Health Center
by the Ho!llebuilders Class.
The first party was in Dec.
1968 and sirice that time
"Very !llonlh except three

The Cologne

~

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Mr. and M.S .. Dale Roush
and daughter, Kathy, Apple
Creek were Memorial Day
weekend guests of her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ben
Turner, Middleport.
The family visited Roush's
brother, Milton Roush and
fatnily of Syracuse, and Mr.
and Mrs. Owen Watson,
Racine. On Saturday Mr.
Roush also visited in
Longdale, W. Va. with his
father, Dorsey Roush and an
aunt, and Sunday enroute
home they stopped irt Albany
to visit another aunt, Mrs.
Coe Rickard.

~·

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Contact and communication.
That's what happens wilh famous English
Leather Cologne.
•
It's likeable. It's manly. It's attractive.
So good ,' things just slart happening .

~

~
~
r&amp;

ho!lle of Mrs. Carolyn
McDaniel,
the business ses- ~
~::~as~try~e~g:•• H~, lh~ sion was presided
over by ~
Sew-Rite-Sewing Club.
Mrs. Flo Strickland. Mrs. ~
Meeting recently at the McDaniel had the treasurer's
report, and Mrs. Evelyn ~
Gilmore, the secretary's ~
FRIDAY
report. The group played . ~
SQUARE DANCE Friday, "na!lle that tune" with prizes ~
li:30 to 11:30 at Senior going to Mrs. Lenora ~
Citizens Center, Music by McKnight, Mrs. Betty
Stringdusters. Ad!llission, $1 Wehrung, and Mrs. Joni Hoffper adult. Children under 12 man. Mrs. Lucy White will
ad!llitted free with parents. host the next !lleeting at her ~/h
Proceeds go to the Penny Fairview Heights hO!lle; A ~
.q,
Johnson Fund.
dessert course was served to
DANCE Friday, 9 p.mA2 those. na!lled and Mrs. Barb
midnight at Royal Oak Mullen, Mrs. Shirley Baity,
Recreation Building. Disc Mrs. Martha Hoffman, Mrs.
jockey "Uncle Dugger" fto!ll Nettie Boyer, and Mrs. Ann
WXIL in Parkersburg will Browning.
provide music. Admission, $2
per person. Sponsored by the
Southern Band Boosters with
money to go towards new
band equip!llent and trip to
State Fair competition.
SATURDAY
BAKE SALE Saturday 9:30
a.m. at Kerm's Korner in
Pomeroy. Proceeds to go to
Po!lleroy Youth Baseball
League.
HYMN SING Satu~day 7:30
p.m. at Freedom · Gospel,
Mason. Music will be
provided by Bald Knobs
Singers with Dan Hayman as
hymn!ll.Ster.
HARRISONVILLE Lodge
411 F&amp;AM Saturday 7:30p.m.
at Te!llple. Fellowship degree
will be given. All master
masons invited.

And they pon't stop.
Because English Leather Cologne doesn't.
Hour afler hour, il keeps on w1rin1ng friends.
Definitely not for lhe man who wants to be
alone.

~

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1(.,... -. Mc:Cullo"'llh,

IC. Ph. ·CWllrltlflle, lt. Ph.

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And hidden inside is famous Massagic
construction: upper I we~ / sole stitching for
durabij.ty, an air-ce ll-cushioned mid-sole
for coenfort, a ribbed steel shank for
stren!jjth, a cushioned arch-lift for support,
and a triple-ct,tshioned heel for buoyancy.

"'
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~
~

The "window screen" panel on this new
shoe provides an escape route for heat
and moisture, like the sun-roof on a car.

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Your feet'll
breathe easier

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Ease into Weyenberg Massagic's "Gentry."
In stained brass or black. Ahhhhh!

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Black
Brown

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PRESCRIPTIOfiS
.
Friendly Sarvfca
112L.M AUl

..QIID!JIIM'Wt .

PH.fft·.,U
JIOM.E IOY.,Q .

;.

••

Paint Up
NOW

IMPROVE
ITIIIIIII

BETTY OHLINGER
102 E. Main
Pomeroy, Ohio

With Our

See our whole team of great Summer wearables for active guys 'n' gals!

Size
Infants•••••••••••••• S3.00

FLORIST

2-4T ..................... $2.50

352 E. Main, Pomeroy

4-7•• • ................ S$52.0075
~10
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EXTERIOR HOUSE PAIN

14-·10 ................

•LATEX
eQIL BASE

Ali THE SAlAD YOU CAN EAT- 39

4

Don't Miss These Values on Saturday Evening.

''For The 1-'inest In Manufactured Housing"
I

IOU K Main St.

sggs

GALLON

·Kingsbury Home Sales, Inc.
0.

2-4T Start at ......... $4.25
4-6x Start at ........... $4.75
7-14 Start at ........... S5.05

.FOR ANY

LATEX

We have the all new house type exterior and
shingle. Designed for permanent
installation on your property.

•

Infants Slar! al ..... , $4.50

WE HAVE A NICE SELECTION FOR BOYS AND GIRLS ,!N AU SIZES.

OLD FASHIONED PRICES NIGHT.

They're All Different!

0

GIRLS SWIM WEAR

HAVING A HARD TIME FJNDING
PAJAMAS OR GOWNS?

MANUFACTURED
HOMES

..· ';,.) ./~

tio""tsankforthe_nowerarrangements provtded thetr
finance forwn and for the
supPQrlof!lle!llhers.
Mrs. Robert Snowden gave
gardening tips for June
stating tllat now is the time to
divide perennials, lifting
tulips and other fall bulbs for
!J'ansplanting and division.
Foliage should re!llain on the
bulb until it turns brown as
this supplies the bulb food for
next year's growih. Mums
can be pinched back now for
better bloo!ll, she said.
Mrs. Carpenter presented
the progra!ll, " Beware the
Plant" telling of various
types of Poisonous plants. She
reconunended Nelson Coon's
book, "Using Wayside
Plants" for those who are interested in foraging the outdoo.Sforfood,craftsuppolies
or just fun. The book has a
chapter on PQisonous plants
giving a description of each
type.
Mrs. Carpenter noted that
many com!llon flowering
plants are toxic including the
entire plant of the caladiwn
and laurels and larkspur.
Seeds of the castor bean for
fox glove are toxic as are the
· leaves of fox glove, bleeding
heart, Dutch!llan's breeches
and lily of the valley.
While the stem or stalk of
rhubarb is safe the leaves are
quite PQisonous and should
not be cooked or used like
spinach. All part of the potato

It's just around the comer...the days of sunnin' and funnin'.

BOYS SWIM TRUNKS

PH. 992-2644

the bt'l.is and plant new Items.
Members provided arrrangements for the tables al
the recenl sPQrts banquet of
Meigs High and for the
Rutland Alumni banquet as
well as for several churches
and banks in the area. Mrs.
Barr made nora! designs for
the women's Finance Foru!ll
held by the local bank dijl'ing
the !llonth.
Members were reminded
that this is the time to begin
gathering cattails, dock and
other roadside .and garden
tnaterials for drying and
treating. The club plans to
gathertheseforthesaletable
at Gardener's Day Out to he
held at Marietta, Sept. 29.
Mrs. Bolin and Mrs.
Carpenter are chairmen for
the day with Mrs. Birchfield
lo handle registration. Other
me!llhers will be involved
with the sales tables,
registration, tours and
hospitality duties.
Mrs. Bolin is again advisor
for the Rtaland Roadrunners
4-H . and Junior Garden Club
which has begun project and
also recently collected for the
AmeriCan Cancer Fund. The
senior club collected for the
March of Dimes in the
Rutland area.
A thank you card was
received from To!ll Wood
curator, for the club's con:
tributions to Wahkeena
Nature Preserve near Lancaster. The preserve is owned
by the Ohio Historical Society
and is partially supPQrted by
the OAGC. A thank you was
also received fro!ll Rutland
Branch of the Po!lleroy Na-

SUMMER FUN

BELIEVIN: ..

HAMBURGERS- 3cr or 4 for $1 1111
CHEESEBURGERS-35' or 4 for $1 211
TRIPLES-65c or 4 for $225

WEYENBERO

Rena lei Hanni,., R. Jill.
Moll. lllru Sat. lrl0a.111. tot p,111,
Svnotay 10::1011 12: :JOand 5 totp.lll,

Your FTD Florist

SATURDAY NIGHT IS

At the !lleeting orders were
taken for a fall bulb sale being sponsored by the OAGC.
Me!llbers and other inwrested no later than June 10.
All orders !llust be combined
into a single club order. Mrs.
Bolin, Mrs. C..rpenter and
Mrs. Birchfield have catalogs
showing the !llany varieties
and colors available.
Plans for the final garden
therapy program with the individualized
instruction
students at Rutland Ele!llentary were made for Thursday. The children will pot
marigolds to take ho!lle.
Work has been with both the .
younger and older classes
helping them to makecorsages fro!ll strawflowers and
ribbon for Easter and
Mother's Day gifts. Those
working or furnishing
refresh!llents were Mrs.
Harold Wolfe, Mrs. Larry
Barr, Mrs. Lambert, Mrs.
Bolin, and Mrs. Willford.
Club !lle!llhers will !lleet at
Forest Acres Park at 6:30
Monday to make further
plantings at the Jean Parker
Memorial. Workers are to
take tools with the!ll to clean

~~~-~-~~~
--=
-~~
-~~~~~~~~~~~~

,,·''

~

For Memorial Day a nower
was placed on the grave of

Your " Extra Touch"
Florist Since 1957

~

·you alone

~·

Family visits
in Middleport

RUTLAND - Election of
officers for the 1977·78 year
was held al the May meeting
of lbe Rutland Friendly
Gardene.-. held at the home
of Mrs. Ray Lumbert,
Rutland.
EleL'Ied were Mrs. James
Carpenter, president; Mrs.
JO&lt;! Bolin, vice president;
Mrs. Bob Bishop, se&lt;.Tel&lt;ory;
and Mrs. Howard Birchfield,
treasurer. They will talte of'
fiee in October.
Mrs. Carpenter and Mrs.
Bolin .were honored for their
activities in garden club work
by nOtnination for regiooal
compelition in the Outstan.ding Garden Club Member
"':jj,nd the Outstanding
,,,~F'~dener contests. Both com·
·" petitions are new to the Ohio
~~ Association of Garden Cluba
~~ U1is year. Regional winners
;.":: will be ehosen on the basis of
·'' past activities, services, and
:\.~ gardens und will be honored
~ at the state convention, Aug.
-~~ 2-4 at Oberlin College.
-:_~ Several members of the club
·' ' plan to attend and participate
~ in the flower show, clinics,
.'i.~ und other activities.

.zr

that won't

~

~H'

••

\'

.OIL, ~~~SE
GALLON

.$1255.

••
•
•••

••

•

&amp;o,s .and.Girts - . Infant thru Si2e 14
Track Trunks, Sunsuits, Tank Tops, Cutoffs, Shorts, Tops and
· Carter Ullderwear

Ebersbach Hardware

GIFT WRAPPING

PAINTING SUPPLIES

Sale Items
Excluded

992-2811 .

'•

'-"'

011 any beaU Jl'Wdry Ulillll'
from IJe~1nS or seeds, uever
tr) 111g to prepare lc&lt;:t or

Daughter!!), Saturday beginnIng atiO a .m. alllw Colwnbia

Gas Cu. office.

nJL'&lt;licine from any plant
w1less you 'rc sure of its ,;afety.
Mc!llbers discu~sed lhe
problem of young children
trying to taslc plants and
most disagreeable of things.
Appropriate supervision as
well as instruction in identity
were a!llong the suggestious
for preventing probleRlS. In
the even I someone does eat or
swallow a plant believed to he
poisonous, then one. should
contct a doctor or emergency
service

at

once,

Close Out On All Vegetable &amp; Flower Plants

• TOMATO PLANTS

• BEGONIAS
Yellow Beef Steak
• SWEET PEPPERS
Supersonic
• BANANA PEPPERS
Marglobe
• HOT CAYENNE PEPPERS
Better Boy
• PETUNIAS
Jubilee
• IMPATIENS &amp; MARIGOLDS • OTHERS
Per.
Regular 99'
Pack
Per. Pack

e
69

Now Just Or

..

~,··::::;:;:;::•'=»«•:·;;·:·&gt;~-'~'·:1
lo
. - . . ........~ ...... , ••&lt;'(~~:.:. .•· ·

!! · Pomemu
""'1

2 $}.25

4%'' POTTED GERANIUMS· ....... Reg. 11.19 ......... ·.... ]9~

All NurseiY Items Including
I

AZALEAS and FRUIT TREES
Reduced %

MIDWAY MARKET

It

A Me!llorial Day dinner
was served to the firing squad
of Feeney-Bennett Post 128,
American Legion, and others
who were on the ce!lletery
circuit Monday by !llembers
of the Auxiliary.
Accompanying the legion·
naires on the cemetery Visils ·
were Becky Roush, past
Eighth District junior president; Kim Roush, president
of lhe local junior unit, and
Kenny Roush.
Preparing and serving the
dinner were Mrs. Erma Hen·
dricks, Freda Clark, Velsia
Roush, Alma Newton, Patty
Might and daughter, Amy, a
junor membe~. Mrs. Mrytle
Wagner of Columbus was a
gues\ for the dinner.
At a recent meeting of the
Auxiliary, current officers ·
were remined for another
year. They are Mrs. Clark,
president; Bonnie Dailey,
first vice president; Patty
·Might, second vice president;
Geraldine Kesstnger,
treasurer; Mrs. Roush,
secretary; and Mrs. Lelah
Weatherby Winebrenner,
chaplain.

LEAGUE TO MEET
The l.eague of Women
Volers wtll meet Thursday,
June 9 at 7:30 p m. at the
Pomeroy . library. The
meeting is open ID men and
woman.

APPRECIATION SALE

Mrs.

C..rpenter said. She cautioned against indueing vomiting
and suggested taking a part
of the plant to the medical
station for identification so
that proper treatment can he
administered.
An educa-tional exhibit was
made by Mrs. Lambert who
displayed a mass design us·
ing chrysanthemU!lls and
fern in colors of blue, yellow,
white and green, and by Mrs.
Bishop who made a
triangular line-!llass design
for!ll lavender and white
mu!lls with fern. The
me!llbers discussed the ·
merits of the designs.
A surprise layette shower
was held following the pnr
gra!ll for Mrs. Richard Fetty,
Jr. Mrs. Snowden won the .
traveling prize donated by
Mrs. Bolin, and Mrs. Barr
won the hostess door prize.
Refredsh!llents were served
by the hostess.

TOHULOSALE
The Catholic Women's Club
of the Sacred Heart Parish
will hold a rummage sale in
the church basement Thursday and Friday from 9 a.!ll. to
3 p.m.

ANNUAL CUSTOMER

sometimes eating even the

L~

992-2582

West Main St.

773-5721

.---THIS WEEK ONLY---.
2 ROLLS

CANDY STRIPE
•
RUBBER BACK SHAG

~ Personal Notes ·.

Mr. and Mrs. Maynard
Karns (Marcella Fisher) and
their granddaughter, J. M.,
and Mrs. Edith Fisher
Stewart of Columbus were
overnight Saturday guests of
Mrs. Bertha Canaday. ·
Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Russ
of Cleveland were Memorial
Day weekend guests of their
aunts, Mrs. Genevieve
Meinhart and· Miss Erma
Smith. On Sunday they
visited with Mrs. Russ' uncle,
Arthur J. Smith of Athens.
Tuesday guest of Mrs.
Meinhart and M,iss Smith was
Jack Smith of Lancaster.
Mr. and Mrs. Mike Hammer of Col=bus were Saturday guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Bob Hoenich and Jayne.
Mr and Mrs. Charles Baird .
of Madison, Wise. were the
weekend guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Patrick Lochary. They
attended the Pomeroy AIU!ll·
ni Association banquet.
Ms. Nancy Schaefer has
returned to her home in
Florida after having been
here for the golden wedding
anniversary of Mr. and Mrs.
A. R. Knight Sunday .
Mrs. Lucille Story is a patient at the Holzer,
case
INA

No .2~.

REG. '5.95
This Week
On~

8 DIFFERENT COLORS

COMMERCIAL
$
.,CARPET ••••••••• 5,.Q;, !D•. 395
ARTIFICIAL GREEN &amp; BLUE $q3.y~
TURF•••••••••••••••••

'

·,,, , , . ,'j·· · ~~,.'

/"' '1.f~~­

;t4;.
I''

• 'i ~-';1

RUBBER BACK
.
sq. yd. $450
PRINTS••••••••••••••

131

HOBACK

Not ice i.s hereby giVen that
Betty Br lc kles of 109 Kineon
Drive, Gatlipol is, Ohio, has
been duly appointed Ad ·
ministratr !x of tile Es1a1e of
Ina Hoback , deceased , late of
Racine
Vi-llage ,
Meigs
County, Ohio .
Crectilors are required to
file their cla irns with said
f i duciary
within
three
mon1hs ~

Dated th is 31st

i

d~y

of May

Mar1ning D Webster

992-3586

Prot)alc Judqc of
-said county

161 2. 9 , 16, Jt c

Pomeroy, 0.

BOB'S MARKET

Delegates to the district
and depart!llent conventions
are Mrs. Clar~. Mrs. Kessinger, Etta Will, Mrs. Erma
Hendricks, and alternates,
Mrs. Roush, and Mrs.
Newton.

~·

Eslale of
Deceased.

POMEROY
2nd Street

will be held by Bethel 62, InternatiOnal Order of Job's

Amerz'ran Le:a;on
post
6
ce /e lff'g,tes Memona' / IJ'aJ

lQ77

NEAR THE FABRIC SHOP IN POMEROY

'

are tox1c except lhe tutwr
which we eat as a vegetable.
Even it is toltic if left in the
sun and turns green, she advised. Mrs. C..rpenter listed
the Jack in the Pulpit, the
foliage and roots of the May
Apple, all parts of the azalea ,
oleander, privet, sumac yew,
leaves and hark of wild or
cultivated cherry, Oak, and
black locust, the elderberry,
buttercups, jimson weed,
nightshade and poison
hemlock, as well as bulbs
such as autumn crocus, daffodil, hyacinth, narcissus and
Star of Bethlehem.
As
for
com!llon
houseplants, Mrs. Carpenter
listed as PQisonous the diffenbachia or dwnb cane, which
will render the person
speechless who tastes its
juices and the elephant ear,
ll)istletoe berries and rosary
seeds. She said that until
recently it was thought that
the poinsettia was poisonous
but recent tests conducted by
growers in conjunction with
the Ohio State University
showed no !Dxic effects when
these plants were ingested by
rats.
. Mrs. Carpenter said that
Co!Jll11on sense is the best
guide to avoiding trouble with
such plants,- Whtle so!ll~ peapie are highly allergtc to
some plants such as poison
tvy, not all persons are so sffected.
Her words of caution were
to never eat any part of an
unknown plant, mcluding
wild !llUShrOORlS, to eat onlv..
prepared foods from well
known sources, to never chew

A rwmnagc and bake sale

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT

SUN DRESSES 11(RU SIZE 6X
HALTER lOPS THRU SIZE 6X
sHORT JUMP SUITS THRU SIZE 14

GIRlS .

On FJVe Gallon Lots You Receive 10' Per Gallon Off,

110 W. MAIN

SALE PI.ANNF:D

Rutland gardeners, .flowers·-foliage-fun

when high water or incle!llent •
weather prevailed the class
held the party. Mrs. Rice and
Dorothy Yeauger headed the
project until Mrs. Yeauger
moved to Florida at which
time Mrs. Coleen Van Meter
took over her work.
The church and the adult
classes contribued regularly .
to the project and some contributions have been recetved
from other churches and individuals. Mrs. Rice told of
how the pa lien is look forward
to the parties and at each one
approlti!llBtely 50 attend.
A dessert course was serv·
ed following the meeting by .
Mrs. Beach and Mrs ...
Margaret Jones with Mrs ...
Irene Darst contributing.

~~//////)///////////////////////////l///////1///////////ll~

~;l

7- 1be Daily Sentinel, MiddlePQrt·Pomeroy. 0 .. Thursday, June 2, 1977

RACINE CARPET SHOP
OPEN FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY 9:00 A.M. TO 7 P.M.
DAVID PARSONS, OWNER

�tr'cit,~~~Senlinel, Mlddh·port-PomerQy. 0 ., Thu:rsday, Jwte 2.1977

li-The Da1lv Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, June 2, 1977

Let The Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash

WANT AD
CHARGES
I !1," f,:t'

I .t •h

..

t~t.t\

]1111

'-'-'
·~ I

'' ....

T•'··~.

I

~ !a
l ....

H._l

" , , i\ .

I .u h .. ..nit•\

1

Ilk m uuu ·wu l..o

~ "11bo Ill ltlllh]KI l&lt;utd ])'l. l t\it \

\ I• r\lnttll~ .ott~• !h.u1 l •'II"'''UII~ t·
1l.ut• ou\1 t. d i&lt;II Jo;&lt;'\ 1 t~ \ !ht I d ,tl
r.1 1 ~·

lu

t. u d t.f l hi1111.'

ltl t' ll ll'l \ ,

0Ut1 U.U \
li \\lll:o. jKI \l nld
fl \llllrli UIIl ~ ·a~ ll lll o llh 0 1111 t

M &lt;•j,th.: IJt lh t

!.,Ii l li

oUlll ~ /II (j

o!l k i

Mil '

lll HIJit d ~ollh

l'll h •l

J.J

H 'l l] d l.il ~l

!tnt I
ll ~t• P u lJh~ htl

1\M I '.t~

of Thanks

I WI SH to tll~,~n k all th e wonderful
peopl e who !&gt;D tho ughtfully
um t me cr;ud$ dunng my s,toy at
Hol zer Hospllal Al$0 , all the
ll. m d ond cons tderat e nu r~e s
w ho took core of mq I really

apprecmred rt anJ ogo tn thon~ s
to oil of you
Da r rs E Soyr~

$- ltlll

\l !!h L d~ h 1\l l h
fl ot ,I\]' 1,111 \
~ t!! I :W:~. '\j U i tll.l\ 1 /l t{',ut • l lin ~11 ·

oll t

Card

tilt I IJ!Iil

1u t ~ bt 1&gt;1 llJ l' LI :.t il)

,n b t[Hil ll \J t &gt;t...
Jl'li l11!1lll \ Jw \'ulJh:.ht l " 111 11111 IJI.
n· ~j.)I•U!&gt; tiJ it· r,•• mur. t l1..w '''~~' tnt 111

Notice•
PIANO LESSONS chrld rens and
adults
Mrs.
Harvey Von
Vronk~tn . 991-2270

·~.! :! !:ito

NOTICE
WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADUNES
ru~ ~tl d\
till u F 1Lda)

lP M
l lil d jl \ IJt.&gt; fu rtj JUh h l o\111'11

'

.suwl11\
4 PM
~"rllht } tir ii.' III I ~ IJl

Frldoy, Juno 3, 1177

ASTRO•GRAPH
Bernice Bede Osol

Juno 3, 1177

Lost and Fou:nd

2

LOST
fEMAlE Engltsh Setter .
wh tle wrth black spots Black
Ilea collar Lost Rt 33 n&amp;a r 681
rn tersect1on
bv
Dorwtn
Reward Phone 992 5848
Help

Wanted

LOCA L INSURANCE Agency nHds
an age nt to serv rce and sell on
a es tobltS iled temtory {Fa rme r
agent be1ng promoted} Good
wages and bene lrts Send
Resu me to Box b72 Pomeroy .
Ohrp
$200 WEEKl V Poss1ble Stutfrng
Envelopes
SEND
Self ·
add ressed stomped en velope
to Edroy Mo lls , Bole 188BV
Albany , MO 64402 .
MATURE PERSON wonted for
bobysrtter and housekeeper
Good salary
benellts and
separate housrng provided .
Posrt1on best surted for smgle
grrl des rrrng secur1ty and own
place to lr,.e. Phana (304)
863-6068 after 6 p m

The choice that faces you tnls
year could be between
adherence to work or career
responsibil ities or recreational
enjoyment tl you opt for the
former. the returns will pleaSe
you Having trouble selecting a
career? Send for you copy of
Gemini's Astra -Graph Letter.
Ma11 50 cents and a long. self·
addressed stamped envelope to THE COAD SENIOR NUTRITION
Astra-Graph, P 0 . Box 489,
PROGRAM 11 seeking qualrlltfd
Radio C1ty Station, NY 10019
oppliconl!l for the position of
Be sure to specify your birth
F1eld Representati ve Mrnlmum
s1gn
quohf1catrons ore o h1gh school
groduotv wrth 3 yvors book ARIES (Morch 21-Aprll 1') You
keepmg e)(perlence. Advanced
could be Involved In a financial
lmonclol trornrng may su bst rtue
s ituation with another today You
lor •;., the eleperience requ 1re·
s tand to come out on top, but
ment Must have dependable
your counterpart's feelings may
lronsportotron and be W!lhng to
be deeply wounded.
travel m o 26 county area .
Some overmght tnps wtll be re
T AURUB (April 2D·Miy 2DI
qutred Solary SB 400 to $9 000
Allhough your Ideas have merit
plus fnnge Apply at your local
today It's possible you may not
Community Action Agency or to
present them with enough clarity
the COAD Senror Nutnlron Pro
to gain the cooperation they
gram P 0 Box 517 Ironton ,
deserve
Ohio •5638
COAD Senior
Nutrrtion Program ts on equal
GEMINI (MI~ 21-Juno 20) Usa
employment opportunrty ogen ·
your Ingenuity tOday In such a
cy and does not dlscrl mtnate In
way that you give value for what
dalrvery or proviSIOn of ser
you receive Don't hope to get
!frees. Deadline for oppllcatron
something for nothing
ts June 10, 1917
CANCER (Juno 21-July ZZ)In a
vain attempt to make yourselt
look good In lront ol a new friend
you may do something to pul
your mate In an unfavorable CASH paid for all makes and
hght This Is a mistake
models of mobile homes
Phone area code61• 423 9S31
LEO (July 23·Auo. 221 You start
• • · •·· -~ ·
•
out like gangbusters today, but TIMBER Pomeroy Fo res t Pro·
given the smallest excuse you'll
ducts. Top price for srond rng
pack your tools away and leave • sowtrmber Call 992 -5965 or
the work till tomorrow
Kent ~a nb.r~~6_8_570.,.....
~
COINS , CURRENCY , tokens old
YIIIQO (Aug. 23-hpt. 22) A re·
pocket watches and charns ,
cent acquaintance who Im11h•er and gold We need 1~
presses you should be kept at
and older srlver co1ns Buy sell ,
arm's length today Don't form
or trade' Call Roger Wamsley .
any business psrtnershlps or
7•2 2331
lend him money.
CASH I It tor junk ca rs Frye s
LIBRA (lopt. 23·0cl. 23) Be
T&lt;uck and Auto . WRECKER SER·
willing to share with others who
VICE I Phone 7,.2·2081
have done the same for you
- - -- ·
•
Later you'll harbor regrets If OLD FURNITURE . ICe bo~ees , bross
bed s
etc , c omplata
•
1
1
1
you re pars mon ous w th them
househo lds Write M D M1ller
today
Rt . ,. Pomeroy, Ohro or call
SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Now. 22) For
992 -776()
one who normally has lhe WANTED
CHIPWOOD Poles
courage or your convictions, you
Ma)( d1ameter 10 1nches on
are unduly swayed by others tolargest end , $8 per ton bundl·
day Your best Ideas could go
ed slabs $6 per ton Oalrvered
down the drain
to Oh!o Pollet Compony Rt 2
Pomeroy , Ohro
Phone
BAQinAIIIUB (Now. 23·0oc.
qq2 2689
21) Something advantageous
could pass you by beeluse yoU
bring persons Into the act who
don t belong Th ink before
castmg today's players

-- - ---

CAPIIICOIIN (Ooc. 22-Jifl. 11)
It's too soon to press an influential contact you've recently met YARD SALE In Racine at Bob Aoy
for help In an amb itious venture
resrdence. Fndoy and SaturPrematurt pleas could end the
doy, 9 ftll ? Grrl's b1cycle .
relatlonshtp
ct-rild's roll top desk , Mr Coffee
mens, womens , and chddrens
AQUARIUS (Jon. 20·Fob. 1t)
clothmg games and household
Many times It doesn't pay to act
1tams
on Im pulse Today It may be better to move qu ickly The more YARD SAL£ · June 3 and ,. MQr·
you analyze, the less assertive
\Ilene Beegle, June WJcker
you'll be
sham at Rog•r Beegle FARM
Frrdoy 9 a m tdl 9 p m SoturPI8CE8 (Fob. 20-Morch 20) You
day 9 a m hll 2 p m 12•
should not pry too deeply Into 1
throught Roclne, post hrgh
pal's affairs today This ~raon
school 2 m1les , turn lelt on
has secrets he may validly not
County 35 about 3 miles auf on
want you to know at this timl!!l.
nght Watch for 5rgns Maple
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN )
bookcase bunk bed , sat, corn~
plete Con be used at twa
tw~ns Old rockrng cho1r toys .
coffeemoker , dothrng, grds 2
to 5, some boy5, 6 and 7, 10,
womens 10, 12, l-4 dresse s,
slacks , 1eons, etc. Teen Boy&amp; ,
12, 14 , 16 Men s, some shlrts
NOTICE OF
15'/r , 16, pants 44 . Many other
APOINTMENT
rtems
C~se Of
Deceased .
Notte. IS hereby gJVen that
Lena K
Nesselroad ot
Pomeroy, Ot••o , has been du l v
appointed ad•n•nistratrfx of
the Estate of Edgar E . M rtch ,
deceased , lete of Me1gs

County, Oh 1o
4redltors are required to
file therr cla ims w•th said
f1duciary
with i n
three

months

Dated this 27th day of May

1917.

Manning 0 Webster

Judge

FAMILY YARD Sole rn
longsvrlle Follow liQ!'IS ot
Turner's Store Thu rsday Frr
day Sa tu rday, 10 trll c Boy 1
clothi ng ,
grrls.
men s .
women s high chorr utwmg
machrne, m1sc

AKC SHETLAND sheep dogs
(Mrn l Coll1es 2 females 7
weel.;s old Shots and wormed
Phone (O.U ) 367 ·0291 or
367 7112
MEIGS COUNTY Humane Socrety
An1mol Coreltne. 992 7680, or
alter 6 p m , 992-5427

GARAGE SALE . 1.. 5 Mulberry
Pomerov Weds and Thursday ,
Jun• 1 and 2.

!

You'

tract

II

1 t down

fa st er
with a

111uch

WANT AD

&gt;
·~-.......·--...:....:...;.,;;_..J

YARD SALE Fr1day and Satu rda y

10 trll 4 Co rne r Route 1 and
Forest Run Road
YARD SALE. 2 Cole Street
Pomeroy Beck of Co untry
Coustns 10 tr ll 3 Frrdoy and
_Saturday.
GARAGE SALE Mony ntce Items
June 3 and 4 Okay Connolly
rest dence on Route 7 above
Eastern Htgh School Watch fo r
_srgns 9 fill 4 00

,. .

ond head lett uoe plants
yellow , wh1te and red oman
~oets on1on plants Kennebec
cobbler i'&lt;otahdln Red Po~rtt ac
and Red Losodo seed potatoes
Bulk garden seeds , pourng sot I,
peat moss frUt f frees and rose
bu ~ohes
Midway Mcr rke t .
Pomeroy
Ohro
992 2582 ,
Bob s Market, Mason W Vo.
(304) 773 -572 1.

.

- --

~ =r-ro~.b~,:~ ~?
- .

.

~ i;'~ -

... '

~'

.

1972 DODGE 200, full p~wer ,
Camper Specrol 3bO automatic
low mrleoge w1th deluxe top·
per and &amp;lida tn w1th table bed
unrt $2100 Phone 992 b39B

--

~

-~ - -"

---

10 '/, ft TRLJCK CAMPER , sleep5 .. ,
gas, elec, refrrgerator , OYen
floor heater wrth mono-malic
loilo t. S900 Call'l'/2 63'18

.1

-- - Terry Tra ...el Troller

-.

1972 20 / r Ft
fully self-conttHned futl botl'l
and showar , water pump olr
cond1troned, 30 lb. bottle gas
101'\ks w1th tank cover, spore
fire wheel, ond fire cover TV
antenna , hot wat9r tonk , fur•
noce, outomoflc own mg. troller
hrtch rncluded Slaepli b. Will
ull cheap . Coli George Grate
Rutland, Ohro 74.2 ·2100 after 7
p m only

3 AND 4 RM . lurnr$hed and un
furn 1shed opts Phone 992·

sm

.

COUNTRY Mobrle Home Pork Rt
33 fen mile$ north of Pomeroy
Lorge lots w1th concrete potloi
srdewolks runners and off
stre~t po~k~ng ~h_?ne 992 ~7~79

Miller Produce
&amp;
Garden Center

N EED A WATER
SOFTENER?
Let Pomeroy, Landmark
soften &amp; condition your
water and a Co-op water
soflener, Model UC-XVI .
Now Only ·'279.95
let us

Free.

Pomeroy Landmark"'

Y.~Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
...

ONf SET of 1971 Edrtton .:~1 World
Bock
E:ncyclopedl a
tn
Renaru an ce Btndmg wrth year-·
boo~s date Also, one set of
1970 Edrtron of Chddcraft rn
Henta ge Burldtng Books ltke
new Eldon R Kroeuter Rep
Elm Street, Racrne , Oh1o Box
111 Telephone94 9-2491
30 GAllON Acquorrum ond com
plele set ·up $100 2 storm wtn
dow$, one 31 one -quarter rn·
ches by 58 1/ , m ather 28 14 1n
by 55 rn . S10 eoch I 60 sq uare
feet ot floor tr le Peel and Sftck
S60 Call992 7309

ROSYNWV-23
C B Mobtle T ra ns ceiver
co mpl e t e w rth weath er
proo f PA speaker . 2 way
base loaded CB a nten na ,
for roof top or trunk mount
Power co rd , coax. antenna
~able
and all nardwa re
rncluded
ONLY

ELECTRIC POWER
WEED AND
GRASS TRIMMERS
Cuts w rth heavy duty ny l on
l rne - as good as th e bes t
AT ONLY
$29.95

Pomeroy Landmark

Phon. 992-2181

ServkeB Offi!J'I!d
Wtll do odd tabs roofr ng , porn
tr11g gutter work Phone 9927409
5EWING-Al HRATIONS
UJ)hol ste ring
drapes
reasonable 572 South Tht rd
Ave , Mrdd leport. Phone
992 b306
PIANO TUNING Lon e Daniels 12
years of 5erv 1ce
Phone
'1'12-2082
WATER WEll Or~llrng, W T
Grant Phone 742 2879 offer 6
pm
WI~L DO bobrs1ttrng rn my home

Phone (b1 • 667-3&lt;&gt;53.
PIANO TUNING by Electronic·
Comparison
Ac cur at e
Reasonable 992 3718
yYilL DO bobysrtlrng ot my home
Hove
referen ces .
Phone
742-2538

~~-

--

HOOVER UPRIGHT Sweepers .
1977 models on sole for tust a
fraction of the orrglnol cost
Reduced to $26 50 cosh or
terms Coll992 5146

FURNISHED APT Adults only , no
pets Phone 992-387,. , Mrd· ElECTROLUX SWEEPERS com
pletely rebuilt w1th at ·
dlep~!._t. ·tochments Only $45 Cosh or
ONE BEDROOM furni shed apart
terms Call992 51-46.
.
ment tn Mtddleport . Call
Will
be selhng sweet potato
992-5.:3• or 9'12 3129
plgnts rn Pomeroy on Frlday
~-..,...
CHOICE RET All store butldrng for
this wee~ W1ll hove sa\lerol
lease rn downtown Pt Plea·
vorle t1 es
A lso,
some
sont. Wrrte Bole 1 ~7 . Polnt Plea·
tomatoes, cabbage and tomato
sant , W Va 25550
plants Plants moy also be pur
chased
ot my home on West
2 BEDROOM MOBILE homo on
St-rode Rood , 3 rnrles northwest
Pacme area Call992-5858
of Chester
FURNISHED APARTMENT
2
BlACK
&amp; WHITE RCA Television,
bedrooms llv1ng room krtchen
21
10
screen floor console
and both, 2 olr condlttonert, no
model Good condtt1on Phone
chrldren or pets 814 E Morn St
Mn Bob Louks , 992-2951
Phone 992-5810,
-~-

--

AVAILABLE AT Rlversrde Apart·
ments , one bedroom . $105 per
mon th 2 bedroom , $138 per
month , Phone 992·6098 Equal
Housr ng Opportunity
FURNISHED APT 5 rooms bath
enclosed bach;' porch and yard
Also 3 room and both opt yard
also .
Furnished
Phone
992 2937 belwlltBn ~ to 6

}'or Sale, Rent or Trade
SMALL NEW IDEA Manure
spreader 1959 Chevrolet 1 t · •
truck wr th "on body ond fWWe r
to llgate, good cond•• ton. N ~ · ·1
Holland Monur!:' ~opreorler lb J
bushel guud candllto11 3 pomt
hitch rn.Jwer 7 ft cui good
•, ••HI•"~ •• •londem trorler 'YP"
fe&gt;t ttlrzer spreade-r , good cond1
tmr, Model 64 lnte rnaho nol
com btne pood cond1tror'i Wrll
tok.~ r rcd ~s. phono 94~ 2770

~

lvp

t -fW•trt IM# _,._, ..,,..,.

of•b•

FOR SALE
New

Co-Op water sof·
teners, model vc,svt.
Only S279 .9S
hve UO 00 on a new
Hotpotnt Refrigerator.
I NIW 20 tUbtC ft.

Chest Frttzer

nn .ts

Now in 1tock, c.omplete line
of bulk oarden seeds
1 Good McCullough Chain

saw

165

1 Good Used Poulan Chain
Saw
uo
1 Good Ustd Untcp
Dryer
110.00
1 Good Used G . E. Dryer SIS
1 Ustd Lawn Mower
150

Pomeroy Landmark
·~~'•
-Jnk w. Cirrtl,. Mgr
. - . . : Phont ,.,.2111 ·:

Formerly
lola's Beauty Salon
For appomtment ca II
992 2549 Tuesday thru
Saturday 8 : 00a.m . to
S:OO p.m. Open nights
by appointment .
4-15-1 mo.

Automatic
Transmission Service

PARTS • lABOR
GUARANTEED

6.7

REASONABLE
Ph. 378-6250
5-27-TFC

Cont•nuous one p11c1
gutters. We hang i1, or do tt
yourself Spectal prices to
butlders.

chrson , Rutland , Ohro
VA FHA 30 yr fmonong Ireland
Mortgage, 77 E State Athens
phoneJ 6'" 1592 3051
HOUSE IN Tuppers Plarns 2
bedrooms elec heal double
garage , 2 !ots Phone (b1 4)
667-3065 or b67 3360
REDUCED AGAIN , 3 bedroom,
bath br level I mrle north of
Frve Pomt $42 500 Phone
9q2 24q2

2V,

12 x b4 All ELECTRIC tra1 ler two
ex t ra rooms butlt on, 2
ft replaces e~nder block cellar
good outbu1ldmg, young frurf
trees grapevines , excellent
garden , I '!, ocreo land , Co
Rood 28 near Bastion Chester
water Contact Albert Hrll Jr
Rt 1. long Bottom Ohro
,--------~---,

TEAFORD

,...u.

1,

r..."'..''"(

PARKERSBURG
!f22-!f080

Real Estate for Sale
145 ACRE FARM 7 roo m house rn
Rutland lois of prr vocy Phone
742·3057 offer 6 p m or on
weekends
NINE ROOM HOME both , c;arpet
fireplace , two porChes, double
carport , 'lr acre outbultdrngs
Desrre sole by June 30 Pnced
to move Phone 992 7210 for
_oppotntrnent

-

TWO EXCELLENT bu1ldrng locolions Eastern School Ors trrct
on good rood , T.P water
acreage rl desired
Phone
949 2770. Owner will he lp
frnonce •f necessary
LARGE COU NTRY s tore, always a
money moker upsto1rs could
be made 1nto on apt. Owner
wdl help f1na nce 1f neceuory
Phone 949 2770
7 ROOM HOUSE

i)oth natural
gas . 2 ac res and Oh10 Power
~lectrr c Phone 7A2 3031

ACRE FAHM . 130 acres 3
bedrotutl lormhovse w rth tree
!JOS , b oUiln.t.rldtngs , all fen ced
fo1 ltve~toc'-. If u1terested . call
JH!l 27'19 logon Ohto 9 a 111
till::, J1 HI

,

C AFZ. , ••

I I GO- Ne ws 3, 4,6,8 . 10. 13, 15. Mac Neil Lehrer Report
33
I! 30---Johnny Car son 3,4, 15, Not Now Norman 6, 13 .
K.o1ak 8. Mary Hartman 10. ABC Nws 33
12 00-Movle " Girl Crazy " 10, Janaki 33
12 • o-McCioud 8
1 00 T omorrow 3,4 , News i3

ftJt\IWl

~ft fiil THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
~ ~ ~~L!l~ ·
by He nr rArnotda ndBoblee

·-

Installation. samples
brought to your home
with no charge.

Unscramble these four J umbles
one te ller Ia eac h sq uare to form

lour ordtna ry words

•

WHY DON'T YOU TI&lt;'Y
IT, 61GMOWTH '?'

Carpel- Lino • Tile
Phone Mike Young al
992-2206 or 992-7630

...

-cJa J

••

-

•••

'

WHA'i THE HOI
CHOCOLATE
FREAK WAS.

Route 3, Pomeroy, 0

~MMOC b

Carpet &amp; Upho(stery
Phone Mike Young
At
992 - 2206 or 992-7630

LITTLE ORPHAN

"The Ongma1ors
Not The Imitators"

'

2-23-1 mo

ANNIE- •. IV E

AND

LEARN

'

I'VI S U&lt;.JM,

REALTQR

ALL ELECTRIC - Owners
moving out of town leavmg
a newer 3 bedroom ranch
style home Has modern
bath , n ice Btrch kttche n,
and levellol, parfly lenced .
COUNTRY HOME - Plus
almost 3 acres of level
land. new 4 bedroom home,
2'h balhs . heal pump ,
family room with f1replace.
Many othe r
feature s.
S46.000.
NEW
HOME
3
bedrooms,
bath ,
full
basement , nice kitchen, air
conditioning, carpeted, and
acre Iof , S32.ooo.
COUNTRY HOME 2
bedrooms, bath, family
room , garage and cellar on
large lot. Want 0&lt;1ly $16,500.
MIDOLEPORT - 2 nice
bedrooms, new bath, and
F A furnace Near schools
and stores Will sell 101'
Sl2,000 .
NEW LISTING - Aboul 4
years old . 3 bedroom ranch
sfyle home. Lois of closels,
large eat In kitchen, utility
room and nice level lot
Only $14,000.
OUT OF TOWN - Nice 3
bedroom horne with central
heating
Garage
and
parllal basement , Big lol,
room for garden . Price
reduced $2,000.
Your Neighbor Seldom
Knows Tho Value 01
Property , Talk To A
Prolesslonol, A Reollor.
G Bruce Teaford
Helen L. Tealord

Assoctates

JUST LISTEO Small
house. small yard, small
price 4 rooms, bath, plus.
storage building Only
$5400.00.
JUST LISTED - l OUI'&lt;IV&gt;ll
ranch type home in
Middle port ,
ava 'Jie If you qualify .
$14,000 00.
JUST LISTED The
French Povlnclal mterlor
of this 3 BDRM home Is
delighfful. 17'x 26 living
room , modern kttchen ,
dinmg room and den Fully
basement, A C. &amp; working
fireplace are only a few of
the untque features you can
have for only $22,900 00.
MINI FARM Over 3
acres
near
Chester ,
modern ranch type horne
w 3 BDRMS 23'&gt;&lt;23 living
room, dining room, large
kit. w -lots ol cabinels. 1 car
detached garage, msulated
cold storage bldg 2 olher
bldgs, patio, many extras.
S34,900 00
GOOD BUY - Knotty Pme
paneling, carpeting, builtIn k1tchen, dining room, &amp; :2
bdrms. Really n ice at
S16.SOO.OO
NEW HOME This 3
BDRM home has 2 baths. 1
acre of ground. all modern,
SJo.ooo.oo.
COUNTRY - 2 acres, 7
room frame home. 2 car
goroge, block slorage bldg .
Only S10,SOO.OO
OUR SALES HAVE BEEN
GOOD AN OWE ARE NOW
IN NEED OF GOOO
LISTINGS ALL PRICE
RANGES .
ACREAGE ,
RMS. AND HOMES.
HENRY E . CLELAND
REALTOR
ASSOCIATES
Hank, Kalhy
&amp; Leona Cleland
992-2259, 98S-41l2
992-2S61

(Answers lomorrow)

Yesterda y s

~1 0 I m~

...••

•

BOlt~N LOSER _

H\i ME: W\Tll NJOT\l~ SCOT~
A\-JD 'WJA ,WAL.ToR

~oo·~ 1&lt;.\bHT • KOW

ltl('; gx;A;_.-

-

when he makes hts ent rance'ENTRA NCE .. IT

Bess''

Sweepers toasters , ~ron s all
small appliances Lawn mower,
nel(t to Stofe Hrghwoy Garage
on Roule 7 Phone (61-4} 985·
3825
•
REMODELING , Plumbing , haotlng
and all types of general reporr
Work guaranteed 10 years eK·
_J!._enence , Phone 992~ 2-409

GASOLINE ALLEY

SEWING MACHINE Repo11s ser·
v1ce all makes 992 228A The
FabriC St-rop
Pomeroy.
Authomed Smger Soles and
~Ser"lce~ We sh~rpen Sc1ssors
EXCAVATING dozer. loader and
backhoe work dump lrud:s
and lo-boys for hrre. wtll haul
frll d1rt to sotl hmestone and
gravel Call Bob or Roger Jef·
fers
day pi-lane 992-7089,
nrght phone 99:2 3525 or 992 ~
5232"--- - EXCAVATING doze r backhoe
and drtcher. Charles R. Hot·
f1eld , Back Hoe Service,
Rutland , Ohro Phone 742 2008

D1cl 40u tell an4bod1.1
where we're &lt;n•&gt;nr\in"
the
n1qht,
Slim?

Not

a soul'

are we
No' Where
spendinq the

D1d

(lrh:;:+.~~:;y~;::-;,:;:~h;;:~~=;;; 22 Lion' s
somethinq , Ciovia?

These shoes are better

than the ones ,I'm

n iqht?

1

IJOU?

wear1nq.

6 Mounlam
nymph

7 Exclude
IO Make
oneself
scarce

(3

BRIDGE

wds. )

Oswald and Jim Jacoby

Restricted choice helps play

largels
Z5 - nest
( confus1ng
mess )

Z9
33
34
35

CARPENTE~R~.~f~lo-o~ro~n-g-.--,.-,~il~ng­

3'1

;:;-..f-+-+--11--+--1

lion
Fragile
Fall
behmd
Slippery
being
Managed
She sprang
from Zeus'
head
Upright

MOBILE Home Repatr, Elec .,
plumbrng and heatrng Phone
992 -5858

2

NORTH
• KJ2
¥ K Q 10
+ AQ4

"' K 9 8 ~

WEST

EAST

• 10 6 4
.98 7
tJ 8 8

• 9 7 53
¥ J642
+ 9753

.QJ4 2

. 3

SOUTH (0 )
• AQ8
¥ A 53
+ K 10 2
. A 1076
No rth-South vulnerable

k..-1- + West

North Easl

38 Prepare

Pass

6 N T Pass

(2 wds )

Pass

(abbr.)

ponellng Phone 992-2759

South
I N T
Pass

DAlLY CRYPTOQUOTE -

Here's

how to

work

It:

A X Y D l. B A A X R
Is
L 0 N G F E L L 0 W
One letter .stmply .stands for another. In this sample A i•
used for the three L's, X fo r lh ~ two O's, etc. Smgle letters,
apostrophes, the len gth ancl formation of the words are all
hm ts Each day the ('ode letters are dtfferent

HARRISON'S T V Repair Serv1ce
Calls-. 276 Sycamore St , Mrd
dlaport Phone 992-2522

By Oswa ld ljr James Jac oby
T oday 's hand s ho uld really
have been mcl uded among our
column :; on best plays
South tS tn a very no rmal SIX
notrump con trac t. but needs

to score three cl ub tr tc ks to
bnng tt m

CRYPTOQUOTES

, _..,.

Three-2 brea ks don I worry

14 x 70 MOBILE HOME Governor
3 bedrooms , ful ly ccrrpeted, 1
baths , port1aily furniShed
underptnned Can be seen ai
Cou ntry Mobde Ho me Park on
R:t 33 Prrced on Inspection or
toke over pqymenls Phone
9'12-25'"
'

'I;

to see 1f anyone 1s short
a n yw here Bolh o p p onents
follow and Soulh mus t worry
abou t !he P""'billly tl1.1t Ea st
was d ea l t Q+3· 2 or t he
s m gle ton ttn ec spot
II look s h ke a toss up but •t
1sn ' t The odds arc 3·2 tha t 1f
e 1ther opponent holds the r es t
of the clubs lt will be IV e&gt; t
The pnnctpl e of res tnc le&lt;l
chOice apphcs to both h,1nds
If E ast he ld Q+3·2 he had
lhree cho1ces , 1f Wes t held Q·
J-4·2 he had lw o dw• ces
Three cho1ces ure more than
two. so South must play h1 s
ace of clubs lle w1ll see E.\St
IS out and make the sure·fn·e
club hnesse Ltg ••mst West

Opemng lead - 9 ¥

HOWERY AND MARTIN Exco.,.ollng
saptrc systems
dozer backhoe dump truck
limestone
grovel , blacktop
po'tlrng Rt 143 Phone I (614)
698-7331

-

Marie

5 S=re

pnde
ZJ Yegg's

3Z

WILL do roofrng, construction.
plumbrng and heating No JOb
too large or too small Phone
742-2348

-

4 Sault ~

Yesterday 's Answer
ZS Letters
27 Prelude
mentis
to peace
12 Ac tor Michael
29 Stephen
and frumly
Vincent 16 Ac tress
30 Clothmg
Cla~re and
others
size
19 Russian c1ty 31 Step m
36 Written
22 Beer
letter
23 German
prison camp 3'1 Mondale
and Ford
24 Make effer( a bbr 1
vescent

II Non compos

28 B•bhcal

SEPTIC TANKS cleaned Modern
Sanltatton 9'92 3954

w-

off
( 3 wds.)

JJ
9 3o-Qu lncy 3,4, 15; Movie "Death a t Love House"
6, 13, Voyage to t he End ofthe E arlh 20
10 OQ-News 20. F iring Line 33.
10 Jo-Lock, Stock &amp; Barre l 20.
1 1 oo-News 3.4.6.8, 10, 13. 15, Mo~ly Pylho n' s Flying
Circus 20 , Black Perspectleve on th e News 33
11 · JQ-Jo hnny Carson 3.4. 15, Silver J ubllee 6, 13,
Movle " A Time lor Love" 8. Mary Ha rtman 10,
ABC New• 33
12 oo---Baretta 6. 13. Movie " Blood &amp; Lac e " 10, Janak i
33
1 OQ-Midnll ght Spec1al 3,4, 15

~:~rm,

~---

~

u.

character
IS Fish eggs
16 Call - day
(2 wds. )
17 "- was
saymg"
(2 wds. I
18 Chanted
ZO Beach tone
21 Algerian
port

-- -- - - - -- -ElWOOD BOWERS REPAIR ........

--

EXC ITE

What a pop ular star mtght do to lhe aud1ence

I Barracks
kmght
beds
40 Hogpen
S Watch
41 Endmg for
pocket
ga ng or hlp
8 Smell DOWN
(2 wds.J
I Itahan
9 Senutic
1 island
language
Z Hunter m
13 FLSh
the sky
14 "Porgy and 3 Hasten

•

lARRYSyracuse,
l.AVFNDER
5'h10

-

FITFUL

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
39 Future

SIDING-SOffiTT

~

HYENA

~

GUmR$;.\WIIIII~S

~

I Ans we r

v

ftnanctnl a,aillble

'-

lorm

"CLII IJ ITIJ"

PA DR E

BkJwn 1nto Walls &amp; AH1e1
STOtlll
IIIIIDDIIUIIOOlS
IEP\AC(IIIEIII
Will DOllS
!UIIIIIIUII

- -

A

I Ju mbles CRANK

F~AC T I ON

BRADFORD Auctronee r Com
p!ete Ser\I!Ce Phone 949-2487
or 949 2000 Rocr ne, Oh1o (rift
Bradford
.

0.

Answer

I D mADE fVER'f Tl-tlt-lG I HA'IE
FOR JL1 5 l A

1nsulation SIIYices

Ph. 992·3993

Now arra nge the w cled letters to
the surprrse an swer, as sug
gested by the above cartoon

D I I _ I

UTILE ORPHAN ANNIE

,--=

POMEROY,

~·

Young's Carpeting

r----:::;;;;::~~~n

MAIN

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

LFETAC ~:.....,----,

-

Superior
Steam Extraction

,,.

'" .

.••"'

2-23-1 mo.

Viny( &amp;
Aluminum
Siding,
Storm
Windows
&amp;
Insulation .
Call Prolession;~ls

H~

---

Free Estimates

4 28 1 mo.

OF

...

Route 3, Pomeroy, 0 .

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

A local contractor
Phone 949-2801
or 949-2860
Free Estimates
No Sunday Calls Please
4 24 1 mo .

WHAT'D THE
KOOK WANT

Young's Carpeting

COUNTRY fa rm land w1th seclud HOMESITES for sale , 1 acre ond
ed woods water and good ac·
up M1ddleport near Rutland .
cess 1n Mon roe County W Vo
Call992-7481
Sl 000 down call (30.) 772·
NEW 3 bedroom house 2 baths ,
3102 or (30.) 772-3227
all e lec , 1 acre Mrddleport ,
Commere~ o l property opprole 17
close to Rutland Phone 992 ·
acres level land . loca ted at
748 1.
-~----·
Tuppers Plotns on Oh1o Route
SMALL farm for sole 10% down ,
7 Phone (614 ) 667·630.
owne r frnonced Monroe Coun ~
NEW 3 bedroom house , burh· tn
ty W Vo Phone (304} 772l&lt;.1lchen both and •;, , Phone _31~2- or j3_o'!)_77~ 3227_
742-2306 or contact MilO 8 . Hut

V1rgil B. Sr .. Realtor
216 E . Second Sfreet
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Phone 992 -332S

-..

GUMR SERVICE

YOU , MA' AM ...

Hl$ EXACT WOJiD; WERE-- " THL
HIM TO FO ~LOW THE lt.lST.,UCTION?
U ~ DE R T He WltJDSHIIOLD WlPEI&lt;.

BfiWn

ft,.,.,..,. o}L.tor Jl.tu' '"· hllrf"' fillS

~~

'"""'

D I~ TU I'Il&gt;EP

FREE E!JIMATES

rrwt•r

Consider a Pror.aional Career
Driving a "BIG RIG" We are a
Pnvate Tratning School offer
&gt;ng o PART Time or FULL Time
Tra•ung Progrom. H you ore
working, Don't Quit Your Job,
attend our Weekend Tnurung
progrm~ or lltt:end our 3 Week
FULL Time Rtoident Troirung.

News 8 10 . On ce Upor1 {l ClaSS IC 20,33 7 01)-fru th or c ~ ,ns 3. Blue Ridge Quartet 4, Muppet
Show B. N. ws 10. To Tell I he Trufh 13, My Three
Son s 15; Al manac 20. Consumer Survival 33
7· 30--Holly wood Squares J,oi, Ohio State lottery 6 ;
Nas h v1llc onl he Road 13,· Dol ly IS
8 00- Fnt r gy Ano ther Vtew 3 4, 15, Welcome Boc k,
Ko tt e r 6 IJ , W a ltons 8. 10. Ltve tram L 1ncoln Cente r
70,33
8 ·30. Movte " Sa lty " 3, 4 , 15. Wha t' s Happen1ng 6. 13
9 00 Barney Miller 6 Ftghl Agar ns f Slav e ry 8 . Movte
" D Day , the Sr xlh o f June" 10, Mov te " Brother of
the W1nd" 13
9 30---Movte " Ransom for All ee" 3 ,4, 15 , , F tsh 6
10 oo- Streefs of San Franc1sco 6, B;,rnaby Jones 8,
New s 20, AI The Top 33
10 30---Woman 20

OF '!'OUR

IM US D~pt of L1bor;

ll.-.o· J "'""" 1~Wihr

I'll. Hl-2174

BISSELL SIDING CO.

$18,300 ,,;·

u friOial

-----· -

-

Shirley (Jeffers) Wolfe

INn'lt.IJCTION

197S HONDA 550 Super Sport See
Joe Imboden on Welchtown Htll
In ~tne~i~t lle ~herS P·,!T'·
6FT BLACK Am· Fm ttereo rad1o ,
tope player record plover 011
combrned
$200
Phone
H2-2705.

"

Owner

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

6 oo-- Summer Semester 10 .
6 . 15-- Farm Report lJ,
6 . 2Q-Nol lor Women Only 13
e 3o-Columbus Today 4; News 6; Summe r Se mester
8, Overseas Mtss1on 10.
6 45-Mornlng Report J
6 50-Good Morning , West Vrrglnia 13 .
6 . 55-Good Morning , Trl Sfafe 13
7 oo-Today 3.4, 15. Good Morning America 6 ,13. CBS
News 8 , Chuck White RepOrts tO
7 05-Porky P•g lO
7 3Q-Schoailes 10
8 110-Howdy Doody 6, Cap I Kangaroo 8, 10, Sesame
St 33.
8 · 3Q-B&gt;g Valley 6
9 oo-A M 3; Phol Donahue 4, 13, IS. Andy Grllflth 8;
M1ke Douglas 10; MacNeil -Lehrer Reporl 33 .
9 .3o-Cross-Wits 3, Edge ol N 1ght 6; Concenfraflon 8.
Bol With Knll 33 .
10 ·110-Sanford &amp; Son 3.4. 15. Dlnah6 ; Here's Lucy 8, 10;
Mike Douglas 13. Our Sfory 33
10 3Q-Hollywood Squares 3,4,15 ; Price Is Righi 8,10;
Lowell Thomas Re m e mbers 33
ll oo-Wheel of Fortune 34. 15, Happy Days 6 , 13, Know
Your Schools 33
11 3Q-Shoot lor lhe Stars 3,.,15. Family Feud 6, 13;
Love ol L1fe 8,10 ; Sesame St 3~
11 55-CBS News 8. Ms Flxlf 10
12 oo-- Ne ws 3,4,6,10. Name That Tune 15 ; Dtvorce
Cou r t 8, Midday 13
12 3Q-Chlco &amp; fhe Man 3, 15 ; Ryan' s Hope 6, 13; Bob
Braun 4; Search for Tomorrow 8,10
I oo-Gong Show 3. All My Children 6,13 , Young &amp;. lhe
Rest less 10; Not for Women Otily 15; Grea l Performances .33
3D- · Days of Our Lives 3,4.15, As The World Turns
8, 10
2 oo- 520,000 Pyramid 6.13, Great P erformances 33
2 31}--Doclors 3,4,15, Guiding Light 8,1 0; One Life to
Live 6,13
3 110-Another World 3,4,15, All In The Family 8.10,
Crocketi ' s Victory Garden W; All Slar Swing
Festival JJ
J 15-General Hos pital 6,1 3
J 3Q-Mate h Game 8,10, Lilias, Yoga &amp; You 20
4 110-Misler Carloon 3; Little Rascals 4; Gong Show
1S, New M1 c key Mouse Club 6 ; Lucy Show 8,
Sesame St 20,33, Movie " The Nake d Jungle" 10;
Dinah 13
4 15-LJttl e Rascals 4
4 3Q--My Th r ee Sons 3, Parfrldge Family 4,8.
Emergency One 6, Fllntstones 15
5 oo-Big Val ley 3, My Three Sons 4, Brady Bunch 8;
M1ster Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33 ; Emergency
One 13, To Be Annoounced 15.
5 JI}--Adam 12 4, News 6. Family Affair B; E lec Co
20,33
6 oo-News 3,4,6, B, 10, 13,15; ABC News 6, Zoom 20. A I
The Top 33.
6 3Q-NBC News 3,4, 15. ABC News 13; Andy Gr lf11th 6,
CBS News 8, 10, Vegetable Soup 20
7 oo-T rul h or Cons 3; To Tell the Trulh 4, Liar's Club
6; Sl28,000 Question 8 , Ne ws 10, To Tell the Trulh
13 1 My Three Sons IS ; Ohio Jou rnal 20, Black
Journa l 33
7 J().-Porter Wagoner 3, Gong Show 4. Candid Camera
6; Treasu r e Hunt 8 ; MacNeil Lehrer Report 20 ,33,
Name That Tune 13, Pop Goes the Country 15
8 OQ---San ford &amp; Son 3.4, JS; Movie "Stranqe NE:W
World" 6, 13 , Code R 8. 10. Washlngl on Week In
Review 20,33 .
8 3()-.Rocklord Flies 3, 4, 1S, Wall Slreef Week 2i1.33
9 oo-,....Mov1e "Smile, Jenny. You' re Dead" 8,10, Lowe ll
Thomas Remembers 20 , Doc umentary Showcase

cas

......
, '

Nobtl Summ1t Road
Rf. 1
Middleport, 0 .
992-5724
Complete
Sales
and
Service and Supplies.
3· 14 J mo.

NBC NewsJ, 4, IS. ABC News 13, Andy Gn lfr lh 6

n 10

501i:RY HE

-···

NO FUTURE/IN A$$ RUTI

lOCUST POSTS fo r sale , $1 00
each Phone 7,.:2-2089

Syracuse

.........
-~~~~---

FRIOA Y, JUNE 3, lt77

THURSDAY . JUNE 2, 1977

'

.~

Jack W . Carsey , Mgr
Phone 992·218 1

INVOLVED IN AUTO
----- 11'THEFT S :

•
•

Shirley's Beauty Nook

Reedsvi lie. 0 .

I!• 1-/UB t;I:;(J O N THP.T
HAN DCUFFI:; L) Vv~ l S'T.

- 4

RATES

$69. 95

L • '"M" - BUTTER

~

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

John St.

Television log for easy viewing

N (.' ON £ I»

EXPERIENCED

SWAIN'S

CS SPECIAL

DrMn mr,w,M

test your water

DUGAN'S
FRONT END
ALIGNMENT

Behtnd Rutland Grade
School. Even1ng worlc by
appotn1ment. Ph. 742 ~ 2005.
5·6 I mo pd

1210 Wash ington Blvd
Belpre, Ohio

sse

1975 GRANADA 4 dr b cyl $2800 USE D FORESTRY Equrpment
Franklin 132 AXL s n 8395
Coli qe5 -•2•5
Detrort Dresel Engrne, John
1971 MONTEGO. p s , p b air
Deere ,..408 s n 145506T Husky
cond1flonrng
low mtleoge
Brute Modtt 125-8 Hyd raulr c
$]'q5 Phone 949-2801 , Glen
loader , Contact Denn 1s Smurr
Brssell
(6U I 838 5345
1972 PLYMOUTH Crrckett small GOODYEAR TOWN &amp; Country . 2
economy car, 2 new tlres , 33
hres . ltk.e new 800· 16 5 10 ply
m1les per gallon good student
with 8 hole rrms S50 eoch Call
cor, $2 000 Call 742 2160
992 6398
31 000 mtle5
25 INCH Color T.V RCA Call
1970 MALIBU 350 stondord S500
949·213!_ or:,yt1m_e after S p.m.
Phone 99:2 -5911
0 WEEK OlD Pogo , Phon•
949-2857
~-

Stnclcly wholesale to all.
Not less lh1n 'h case .

AKC COCKE R SPANIEL p ups. solrd
block , block and white
Phonem 7059

TOMATO
PLANTS
Cobboge
brocco li coul tflowe r bruuel
s-prouts egg pl&lt;mts , hang.ng
baskets
pots
geran 1ums,
begomos
floh
petunras
mangolds
ponstes
,
solzro
NEIGHBORHOOOD Yard Sale
bahom
d1ontMus
snap
Sot . and Sunday -4th and Sth of
dragons a lyss um V1nco col
Bryon Hams , Success Rood,
eus Cleland s Greenhouse
Raedsvtlle Ohro
Roclne Geroldme Clela nd
1·42 rn co st rron ~rtchensrnk , 1
bastn and I drarn board , hang
on wall type wktte I 3 bu rner
gas ho t plate Phone 992 5714
1976 CHEVROLET Chevette Phone
992 72U
ECONOMY TRACTOR w1th all ot
tochments like new OJk1ng
197~ GRAND Prb: air condrtron
_S2250 Phone (6'") 698-3290
ed , p w p b , p s flit wheel ,
31 000 mrles $3 400 PI-lone GOOD RICH Top so1l Cha rles R
985 3519 after 6 p m and after
Hotf reld Back hoe Servr ce
12 on weekends
Phone 742 ·2008
19b9 CHEV.ELLE Mol1bu , 307 I AND f-1 Beams 8 9 and
10 rn ch
eng rne
au to transm•n lon,
Coll 992 _7034
power steerrng low mJieage,
1973 CHALltNGI;:R wrth 46 ,000
$500 Phone 9'12 71 58
mrles and two 1/ 1 Regrstered
1973 OLDS 98 Luxu ry Sedan U ·
Arabton
Horse5
Phone
cellent cond1tlon, CO 000 miles
992-7559
Also 4 new J7815 Remrngton
1\'VO HORSE horse trailer , $700
radials Phone 992-7897
.
.
Phone (6U } 698 32110
1972 \IEGA GT. good cond1t ron .
52 000 miles 28 miles to KAWASAKI SOO, ve ry goad condr
flon , $600. Coli 9-49·2628 or
gallon . $1000 Coli 992.J705
949-2626
offer 9 30 P .M

.

CASE LOT
CAN GOODS

AKC REG • month old block mole
Toy Poodle named Pedro '
Portly housebroken , lovable
S IOO
Phone Coolvrlle
667 3915

10 trll C p m Mrsc rtems ,.80
l mcoln St . Midd leport
CAMt'ER
$600 Also
korse
tror ler $~~ Phone (61 .. ) 698·
PORCH SALE bes1de the Waffle
Shop tn Middleport friday and
3290
Saturday 9 hll 2 Bedspread s SPR ING GARDEN Supplres Cob
curtains, etc
boge cauliflower
broccolr
YARD SALE at Pear Wdhs
resid&amp;nce, letart Falls , Ohro
Th\olndoy and Fflday

Business Services

RI~ING

3 I=AMil V Vord Sale, Ju ne I, 2 3,

ATTENTION
MANAGERS &amp;
Demonstrotar5 Fnendly Home
Toy Pa rtre5 has open1ngs for
managers and dea lers in your
are a Toy Partr Plan ex·
pertence h•lpfu
Cor crnd
telephone necessary ca ll col ·
led to Corol Day (518) 489 8395
or write Fr1endly Home Port res ,
20 Aar lroad Ave Albany NY
12205

C•se Na 22126
Edgar E . Mitch

STAR Kenn el 8oord111g COAl h 111e~lone oud tolcr um
( tllor rd e or1d col&lt; • •II brrue for
Indoor Outdoor ru m groonmrg
d u&lt;. l con tro l and .,cl ro l tn ' JIIIHJ
all breeds , d ean son1 to ry
:!.ah lu1 IQ1 n 1€H , l: ,.loh ro r ~oft
loci lrltes oe 367 7112 Ches. hirr
W OI' k 1o Mo .n \ • re~.;r Pomeroy
Phone (o••l 3&lt;&gt;7 0292
Oh io or phonv rr:l"l JtJ~1
HOOF HOlLOW Buy sell trade
or tro rn horses RU1 H ~Ef:VES
t ror11er · Phone (614) 698 3290

YARD SALE Used sofa c!othrng
mtsc r tem~ June 2, J , ~ Stgrl·
tng Mosser on Roure 7 second
house on nght above Eastern
Htgh Sch6ol 9 tillS 00

-

~

IF YOU ho ve a ser ... rce 10 ofle1
wanl to buy o r sell so mct hrng
oe lookrng for work
or
whote ... er
you II get results
I aliter w1th a Se111i rtel Wont Ad
Coll992 21"'
VARO SALE Frrdoy and Saturday
Solem Street Rutland Cloth~ng
grrl's 7 · 12 silm , books avon
macrame , crocheted rtems , etc

YARD SALE, June 2 3 and 4 top
of lee Ctrcle rn Rustrc H1lli. Ktds
and Jrs clothes toys . baby ond
household 1tems Cancelled 1f it
rorns Hrs. 10 a .m. 11116 p m

OlDER RESPONSIBLE lady to lr ve
rn and core far aged wrdaw rn
Rutland Oh1o Not rnvahd nor
senr le l tght housework and
coo krng
No laundry
Call
7 ~ 2 2Q76 fo r rn formohon

Muucli:!Y
Noon on Sat ur.J;~ ~

(6) 2, 9, 26, 3te

-

Cor Sail'

1'1'18

MIDDLE AGED Lady to hve rn and
Melp shore e :rr: penses Phone
992 5798 .

I I'L l III Sl ' I I U•Il

PhHlll

.

\ardSaiP

r'l

ANO SURE ENOUGH,
IN OUR C~IPPING FILE--

[)AL.E EL.AO.

~·

l,! 'o\ u l j l,.. ool U111 l~ l

. r~'""

"

~

L 6UE 55 SO I HE WENT DOWI\I
IN A PLANE SHOI?Tu ' AFTER
TIMMY WAS BORN. AND
HA5NT ~ E:'N HCAROOF

BII(DIE1 FOR HEAVEN15
SAKE, WHAT /.IAPPE:N:'D
TO 1UTLJ ???

WMS

Q G I W X l H S h1m ~ul 4 I breaks co Il lS
correcl cl ub play

CS WNSSZ

X

SINCE !

IMD J WSIW
WND

FSJTSHW

X V S I low from e llhe r ha nd and play

IFSSHM .

D

low 1n the other one 1f second
X . hand does no t produce an
honor ll e seie~ L s to lead from

C X WW G I W X
Yeslerday's Cryploquote : HE THAT HATH A HEAD MADE
OF GLASS MUST NOT THROW STONES AT ANOTHER •• ENGUSH PROVERB
C) 11, l(inl Features Syndlu\e, ln.c..

1•

•

to lead

B

•
~

lS

VS I

AD

dummy
Eas t pl ays the thr ee We st
wms w1th t he Jack a nd West
leads anythin g , but a c lub and
Sout~ cashes all h1 s h1 gh ca rd s

A Maryland reader watJts to
know what you rcb1d after
partner responds one notrump
lo your une-dmmnnd upemng
You ho ld
A K X X 1111 K XX . t\ K lOx x ... .I X
T he answer lS lhat yo u
shou ld pass &gt;·3 3·2 IS sut1 s fac··

tory notrump tll ~ tnhut w n
no need to 1 eb1d th ll t

There IS

hve-card

SUit

(Do you have a question 101
the BKperts f Wrrt o "Ask the
Jacobys'
c a re o f lil tS
newspaper The Jacob ys wr/1

answer md1v1 du 1;1/ quest1ons If
s ta mped se lf ~ad dre sso d
envelopes are enclosed The
most mteresrlng quos trons wtfl
be used m thiS column and wrll
re cerve COPI 9S of JA COBY
MODERN)

MASON FURNITURE
LEETLE TATER 'S
R\GHT GOOD AT

STORE HOURS

DRAW IN'

Mon . , Tues., Wed. &amp; Sat. - 8: 30 tll5:00
THURSDAY TIL 12 NOON

MA'AM?

FRIMY UNTIL 8 PM

FREE- HANDED

HANDWRITING ?OH,'{ES
MA'AM ... I'VE BEEN .
PRACTICING M"/ HANDWRrTIN6

MASON FURNITURE
773-5592

'Herman Grate

Mason,

W.Va.

•

'•

.. AN'

RIGHT BAD

AT IT, TOO '!

..

�10-TheDaily Senlinel, M!ddkport-Ponll'roy . 0 .. Thursday, Junef2;.
, 1;;;9~
1 1:_,.,...-.::'-'-".=_....,_ _ _ _ _ _..__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _'1

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY
JUNE SALE

POLLY·s POINTERS
Polly Cramer
By Polly Cramer
POLLY 'SPROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - I got a
couple of spots of glue on my
beautiful new knit pants suit.
The spots were small and
rather inconspicuous so I
tried to remove them with
nail polish remover which did
soften the glue. But then
when I washed them the
pants were stiff as a brick . Is
there any possible way to
save Ulese nice pants ? -

MILf&gt;RED
DEAR Mildred -Sounds to
me as if you did' not properly
rinse out the polish remover
OR the water may have been
the wrong tempera lure as
some fabrics require it hot
and others cold. Some glue
· will not loosen at all after it
hardens, so you were lucky
that far . The usual procedure
is to wash with a detergent
and water before it sets. Immerse in hot white vinegar
and keep to the boiling point
until stain is removed (if
fabric will take this). This
may take 15 minutes or so
and then rinse THOROUGHLY with water of the
proper temperature for the
particular fabric . - POLLY.
DEAR POLLY - My Pet
Peeve is with the manufacturers of white shoes such as
those worn by nurses and
waitresses. It seems that
they could come up with
eyelets that do not make the
tongue and shoe laces black.
That black simply will not
come off and the shoes look
terrible. - MRS. R.G .
DEAR POLLY - I want to
tell Mary R.B. who has crepe
paper stains. on her table top
that I have used a fine brand
of silver polish to remove
stains from table and server
tops quite a few times and
with excellent results. It does
take good hard rubbing but
really works, and without
·harm to the furniture . -

MINJE.
DEAR POLLY - l want to
tell Judy W. that I had epoxy
glue spots on a table. I wrote
to the company that makes

MASON DRIVE-IN
Wed ., Thurs., Fri.
June 1-2-3

THE GREAT SCOUT
(P.G. l
Lee Marvin
PLUS

THE McCULLOCHS
( P.G.l

the epoxy and they suggested
putting brown paper such as
a brown paper bag, on top of
the glue and then place your
hot unplugged electric iron on
top of the paper and let stand
several minutes. Keep checking to see if the paper is a bsorbing the glue. This worked
well for me even though tbe
glue had been on the table for
seve ral
months .
-MARCELLINE.
DEAR POLLY- Instead of
having to buy an under blouse
to wear W1der very sheer
blouses, to be worn with
pants, I cut the bottom off an
old slip so it is just a bit
shorter than the blouse to be
worn on top. This is nicer
than cotton and does not
make a bulge around the
waist.- MRS. T.B.F.
DEAR POLLY- When bin•
ding off knitting I find it much
easier to hold the knitting
needle in my left hand and a
crochet hook in the right
hand. This works perfectly
forme.-M .L.P.
Polly will send you one of
her signed thank -yo u
newspaper coupon clippers if
she uses · rour favorite
Pointer, Peeve or Problem in
her colwnn. Write POLLY'S
POINTERS in care of this
newspaper.

Speclolsole prices oil o~eT the store, In every deportmer,t, and the Mechanic Street Warehoul8
- :»~ve on what you nee~ for you and your family. Save, too, on Father's Doy Gifts for your Dod on his
·
do , Su
June 19th.
~~~-·---~~;-·----··-~·-. --~~·--"-·----·-·--·----~----~--~--~
FURNITURE DEPT.

GIRLS' TOPS

WOMEN'S CO-ORDINATE JEANS &amp; FASHION
SPORTSWEAR
JEANS

REG. S4.50 MOISTURIZER SALE S3.49

~
WOMEN'S BLOUSES
- Summer styles
-Asso rted prints &amp;. sol ids
r-~ - Sizes 32 to 46
Reg . $6.00 . ....... Sale $4 .50
Reg . $8.00 ......... Sale$6.00
Reg. s9.oo ........ Sale $6.75
Reg. $10.0(). •••.• , Saie$7 .50
Reg. $11.00· .... •• Sale $8.25
Reg . $12 .00-- ····· Sate $9.00
Reg . $15.00 ...... Sale $11.25

Rou te 1

Reedsvil le , Ohio 45772

lSI 12, 19, 26 161 2, &lt;tc

Regulars, Slims and Huskies. Sizes 8 to 18,
cotton polyester blends. corduroys - 100
per cent cottons - a fine selection.

MEN'S KNIT SHI
A big selection of crew necks .

colla red knits . lank tops.

WITH

Sizes sma ll through extra
large.
Men's $3. 95
Knit St,irts ..... .. .... .. S2 .85
Men's SS.9S
Knit Shirts • ............ $4.45

. Men's 17 .95
Knit Shirls •• • ••• •• •• • •• $6.00
Men's S9.95
Knit Shirts ............. S7 .50

FOR AS LimE AS

Men's 511 .95
Knit Shirts •••• ••• • • •••• S8.9S

A MONTH

SELE&lt;;T GROUP

MEN'S SPORT SHIRTS
Limited quantity - from our regular stock
- long and short sleeve styles- solid colors
and patterns, small. medium, large and
extra large.
Father's Day is June 19

1h PRICE

HOME NATIONAL

Father's Day is June 19
Mens $9.95 Jean ........... ; ....... Sale s 7.26
Mens $11.95 Jean ..... ~ ........... . . Sate$ 8.76
Mens $13.95 Jean ...... ...... ....... Sate $10.16.
Mens $15 .95
...... ;.,,.. ... le $11.66

.a -

Sizes 36 to

Father's Day is June 19

Mens s 8.95 Jackets
Mens$11.95 Jackets
Mens $15.95 Jackets
Mens 522.95 Jackets

s 5.80
s 7.80
$10.2 0
$14.80

MEN'S SHORT SLEEVE

BATH TOWEL
SET

DRESS SHIRTS
Stripes - solid color - neat patterns .
Neck size l 41f2 to 17. Full cut and
tapered sty les. Our entire stock is
included . All famous brands.
Father's Day is June 1~.

Spec_ial group just
rece•ved for this sale.
Made by Cannon Mix &amp;
Match solid color and
patterns.
.29 Bath To)ei ...... $1.88
Hand Towel ..... $1.28
S .99 Wash Cloth ..... $ .78

MENS SB.9S DRESS SHIRTS ••• .. S6.75
MENSS9 .9SDRESSSHIRTS ••• .. $1.50
MENS 110.95 DRESS SHIRTS· ... SB.2S
MENS Sl3.00 DRESS.SHIRTS. .. S9.75
MENS Sl4 .00 DRESS SHIRTS • •• 110.50
MENSS16 .00DRESSSHIRTS ,,. $12.00

JUNE SALES

JUNE SALES

MEN'S SPORT SHIRTS

Short sleeves small (14-14112 ), medium (15151hl. large (16-16112 ) , extra large (17-17'12 ).
Solid colors, floral patterns, plaids, checks,
stripes - wonderful selection.
Father' s Day is June 19
SHIRTS .... .... ....... ..
SHIRTs .................
SHIRTS .................
SHIRTs .................
SHIRTS .............. , ••
SHIRTS ••• : .............

$ 5.25
$ 6.75
$ 8.25
S 9;75
$11.25
$12 .00

MEN'S PAJAMAS
Solid color and patterns. Size A (small), B
(medium), C (large) and D (extra large) .
50 per cent polyester, 50 per cent cotton
blend, permanent press.
Father's Day is June l9

TOASTMASTER $28.95

BROILER OVEN

Use as an oven - use as a broiler.
Bake and Broil Temperature Guide
on side - Automatic Thermostat limited quantity .

$4999 CLUB 'ALUMINUM
7-PIECE COOKWARE SET
Set includes 1 qt. covered sauce pan, 1'12 qt.
covered saucepan, 9 Inch open fry pan, 3112
qt. Dutch oven , Choice of color.

50

ELBERFELD$ ·1-N POMEROY

OHIO
J

Open House

South ~oluccan terrorists holding at least 60 hostages for the
18th day agreed 'today on two South Moluccan mediators, a
government spokesman said.
·
Justice Ministry spokesman William van Leeuwen said
authorities and gunm~n aboard the train came to agreement
on two Moluccans who could serve as middlemen.
Neither of the proposed · train or at Bovensmilde elenegntlators had yet accepted mentary school where a
the post, however.
second band of gunmen was
''The next step will be holding four teachers.
Whether or not they will
The terrori~, who have
accept," van Leeuwen said. been holding the hostages for
The request by the gunmen the past 12 days aboard a
for mediation was a major train and In a nearby school,
concession since they had had reverS!!&lt;! their initial
started out by warning they stand against
outside
would start killing hostages if negotiators and asked for a
the government toied to send mediator.
But the gunmen rejected
in middlemen.
Earlier
today,
four the government's first two
moderate Moluccan leaders nominees, both Moluccan, as
said militant youths of their too
moderate .
The
community
had government rejected the
own
threatened . to ,shoot them if terrorists' two choices as too
they turned up either at the radical.
·
·:::::::::~::=:::::::::::=:::::::;:::;:;;;:;;::;;;:::;,:~:~:;:;:~:::~:!8~:!:!:::::::::::~::~:~:~:~:~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~

at

Green Apartments located at
the foot o! Mulberry Heights
will be Saturday and Sunday
from 1 to 4 p.m.
The 'structures house two
bedroom carpeted apartments with kitchens fur·
nished. Rents start at $117.
Managers will be Sybil and
James Wood in apartment 10.
Anyone wishing further information may call 992-6365.

3 _true bills returned

Three true bills of in- valuable thing or induce
dictment were returned by another to do an unlawful act,
the May term grand jury 'threatened to commit a
which deliberated Thursday. felony, threatened to commit
They were against :
an offense of violence, a nd
&amp;nald L. Harbour, for violate section 2903.22 Of the
knowingly on March 15 Ohio Revised Code in
possessing a controiled violation of Section 2905.11 of
substance, marijuana, a the Ohio Revised Code and
· derivative commonly known (count 2), knowingly cause
as hashish, in an amount one Ida Ma rgaret VanMeter
'equal to or e~ceeding three to believe that the said Terry
times the bulk amount, that is Brewer would cause physical
10 grams of resin contained in harm to. the pers on or
marijuana or of any ·ex- property of Ida Margaret
traction or preparation of. VanMeter in violation of
such resin.
Section 2903.22 of the Ohio
Terry Brewer on two · Revised Code.
counts, for on· April 18 (1)
Homer Cole , dba Ohio
with purpose to obtain a Valley Mfg. Co., did with

pqrpose to · defraud, issue
transfer or cause to be issued
or transferred a check or
other negotiable instrument,
to wit a check of instrument
No. 3881 dated Jan. 1, 1975 in
the amount of $840 .33,
payable to Pomeroy Forest
Products, the said Homer
Cole knowing that ifwould be
dishonored, in violation of
Section 2913.11 of the Ohio
Revised Code.
·Serving on the grand jury
James
Arnold,
were
fo re man ; Homer Par~er,
Mary Starcher, Freda Hood,
Gary P . Norris, Shirley
Simpson, Paul Dill, Donald P.
Wilson and Leora Sigman.

'

ro en

•

By United Presslllternatlonal
BOSTON - LUNG CANCER AMONG WOMEN in the
United States has reached epidemic proportions, a Yale
University specialist says. "Luug cancer among women is In
the epldemic _phase," Dr. J . Wister Meigs told the American
Cancer Society's National Commission on Smoking and Public
Polley Thursday.
Meigs is director of the Connecticut Cancer Epidemiology
Unit and a professor at Yale's School of Medicine. The
commission held the daylong hearing to gather testimony on
new approaches to what it calls a "major public problem" the health. hazards of cigarette smoking.

Did you ever wonder if your citizens In which 200 peraons
tax dollars were being used were screened. The results of
on something you, the that screening showed the
everyday American citizen, need for this kind of health
could take advantage of . and service. Services will be
benefit from? If you live in provided free of charge
Meigs County one such through the cooperation. of
program Is · in the Im- CHEAO (Corporation for
Health Education in Applementation 5\age now.
Ohio),
local
'i'brougb the cooperation of' palachia
health --agencies In Meigs professionals, and health ·
County and the state Health agencies. CHEAO has also
Department there will be a sponsored senior citizens
Multiphasic Health Screening Health Education workshops
Clinic to be held July 18-21 at this past year.
CHEAO has chosen this
Meigs Junior High in Middleport, hours will be an- . county as one site for a
nounced. The clinic will be for student health team. Six
people of all ages . It is hoped students studying In different
that those who normally health fields will help run the
could not afford such medical acreening program. CHEAO
hopes the students will gain
care will lie reached.
In November 1974 a similar some pnctical experience clinic was held for senior an understanding of a variety

....

months. Prices of processed
foods and feeds also
moderated, -rising 1.8 per
cent.
Fuel and power prices
continued to rise, but prices
were down sharply for farm
products including grains,
eggs, green coffee, cocoa
beans, tea, Si&gt;Yheans, poultry
and vegetables.
The trends in wholesale
prices and unemployment
provided encouraging news
for America ns . Wholesale
'prices eventually affect
prices in retail stores.
Total employment rose for
the seventh con~ecutive .
month in May, climbing
400,000 to . 90.4 million. The
percentage of Americans In
·the labor market rose to 62.2
per cent - a record.
Most of the increased
em ployment occurred In
factories, which hired a extra
65,000 persons in May: The
biggest gains were in the
fabricated metal, machinery
and elec trical equipment
industries.

members of the House
WASHINGTON (UP!) President Carter again today subcommittee that must
tries to win disciples for his handle a large portion of his
energy program as he courts ·energy proposals.
Next week, the President
members of a powerful House
eommittee and steps up his plans to meet with various
direct wooing of a reluctant senators in a bid to build
momentum for his energy
Congress.
The .President's session plan. Carter has been worried
with members of the House about the fate of his program,
Ways and Means Committee much of which has received a
comes only one day after a lukewarm response since it
(Continued on page 10)
breakfast meeting with

fNews. • •in Briefs\\

•

continue through sununer. It
compared to increases
averaging more than 2 per
cent in each month since 1977
began.
The
decline
in
unemployment from 7 per
cent In April was almost
insignificant, sin ce the
number of unemployed
Americans
remained
virtually unchanged at 6. 75
million.
May's ,6.9 per cent
unemployment rate marked
the lowest it has been since
the early days of the
recession in November, 1974.
Joblessness last month aloo
was 2.1 per cent below the
recession peak established in
May , 1975. More than I per
cent of that decline occurred
over the 'past six months.
The Wholeaale Price Index
stood at 195.2 in May. This
means goods costing $100 in
1967 now cost $195.20 nearly a doubling of prices
over the past decade,
Industrial prices rose a
moderate 0.4 per cent in May,
the smallest increase in five

Carter courting
House support

Outage cause unknown
PLAN OPEN HOUSE - Employes of the Meigs
County Mental Health Center are planing an open house
for all programs of the center with each program to have
a represenl;ltive present Saturday, June 18, from I to 5 ·
p.m. during Regatta weekend. Dr. Nan Mykel,
coordinating psycho therapist, will present a movie
throughout the afternoon entitled " The Journey,' ~ wl)ile
Mary Skinner, coordinator of the personal advocacy
program, will present a movie entitled "Something
Shared." A SOWld presentation wil! be presented by the

speech and hearing program. Members of the Center
Board from Meigs County and members of Meigs County
648 Board have been invited to participate. Crafts will also
be on display work having been done by the activity
therapy group of the personal advocacy program. Going
over the prorgrwn 1..- are Mary Skinner, Steve Dawaon,
chairman of the drug abuse program; Dr. Mykel and John
Brammer, chairman of the child and adolescence
program. The employes slao plan to have an entry in the
Big Bend Regatta parade:.
·

Health. clinic is your tax return

JUNE SALES

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

at1on surge

'5.95 SHORT SLEEVE KNEE LENGTH STYLE 14.88

OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT TIL 8:00
OPEN SATURDAY 9:30 TO 5&amp;00 P.M.

BANK

en tine

•

Sf. JOHN'S, NFLD. -A FERRYBOAT MAKING its first
run of the Sellaon rammed an iceberg and sank in the chill
(Continued on page 10)

'6.95 LONG SLEEVE LONG LEG SffiE '5.88

JUNE SA.LEI

$21

•

lJ \.

JUNE SALESI

JUNE SALEI

S 6.95 SPORT
S 8.95 SPORT
$10.95 SPORT
$12.95 SPORT
$14.95 SPORT
$15.95 SPORT

!I

Middleport. She is with, 1-r, Mrs. Arnold Richards,
immediate past district president; Olarlene Elekes,
'immediate past Eighth District junior president, and Mrs.
Jack Balzhlser of Millford, National Executive
Committeewoman, speaker.

35

ASSEN, The Netherlands (UPI) - Dutch authorities and

REG. '9.00 • •.... SALE '6.75
REG. 112.00 •• • • • SALE '9.00
REG. 115.00••• •• SALE 111.25
REG. 118.00 •• • • • SALE 113.50
REG. 123.00 •• •.. SALE 117.25
.

at

·-

Includes our entire stock of
jump suits
and
gaucho
jumpsuits.
100

•

·. ·

GIRLS' JUMPSUITS

per cent nylon and
cotton . po l yes ter
blends . Sale includes
en I ire s to.c.k.J.

run by local and state govern- : 671; Crooksville 222, Vinton Pomeroy, Fairfield and
ment. She said that 97 percent 161, Racine 602, Pleasantville Pleasantville.
of acholarships are not being 9, Pomeroy J9, Fairfield 11,
Mrs. Richards Is delegate
picked up because students Wellston 271, Somerset SB, to the national convention to
are unaware they exist.
Junction City 376, Oak Hill be held In Denver this fall and
"The Auxiliary's 261, and Murray City 429. elected as her alternate was
responsibility is to see that Ribbons for being in the first Mrs. Blair. Pre-eonvention
every child has the op- 100 units in the state to reach committee representatives
portunity to further his goal went to Crooksville, appointed by Mrs. Richards
education," Mrs. Balzhiser Middleport 263, Lithopolis were Mrs._ ,Marjorie Goett,
said.
Americanism; Mrs. Mabel
and Racine.
She referred to the booklet
The roll call units and those Brown, Children and youth;
"Need a Lift" published by receiving the citation for Jane Gatewood, community
the • American Legion and meritorious service were service; Mrs. Irene Leptz,
urged that it be handed to Pleasantville,
Vinton, 'constitution and by-laws;
guidance counselors in the Crooksville, ·Middleport 263, Mrs.
Mary
Moose ,
high sc hools. Founder of Racine, and Lithopolis. Goal resolutions i Mrs. Grace
AUXIIJARY CONVENTION - Mrs. Alec Blair of
American Education Week ribbons went to Racine , Pratt, veterans affairs and
Wellston,
right, was elected the District 6 American
was the American Legion, the Lithopolis, Wellston, Mid- rehabilitation, and Mrs. Allen
Legion
Auxiliary
president at Thursday's summer
speaker noted, and while the dleport 263, Oak Hill, Crooks- Hampton, Mrs . Clifford
convention
held
at
the Mt. Moriah Baptist Church in
American
Education ville, Vinton, Somerset,
(Continued on paRe 5)
Ass·ociatlon joined In the
promotion for a number of
years, they have now withdrawn. Mrs. Balzhiser
mentioned Buckeye Girls'
State and Buckeye Boys'
State as excellent educational
programs for youth.
In her talk, she commended
Mrs. Florence Richards,
retiring Eighth District
president , for her work
POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
FRIDAY, JUNE 3, 1977
VOL XXVIIt NO.
during the past two years.
Held at the Mt. Moriah
Baptist Church In Middleport, the Lewis Manley
Post 263 Auxiliary was the
host unit . Highlights of the
day Included the election of
Mrs. Alec Blair of Wellston as
district president and the
presentation of awards by
Mrs. Richards .
and unemployment eased inflationary surge that began about I per cent in each of the
By SARA FRITZ
Certificates of achievement
very slightly to 6.9 per cent, in early 1977. Coffee prices last three months.
WASHINGTON (UP! )
were presented to Lithopolis
The 2.3 per cent decline
Wholesale prices rose a the Labor Department fell for tbe first time since
moderate 0.4 per cent in May reported today.
food
prices was the the
November.
Food
prices
declined
in
largest
in nine months,
May's 0.4 per cent increase
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
May for the first time in six in wholesale prices was the surpr ising administration
months - providing the first smallest since August, 1976, economists who had expected
EXTENDED OUTWOK
Sunday
through
sign of a break in the strong and far below increases of the surge in food prices to
Tuesday,
chance
of
showers Sunday and fair
Monday and Tuesday.

Terrorists,
Dutch agree :7:E,~-:!'~~=:
to .mediate v~=e~::ge

Sizes 27 waist to 42- lengths to 36 inches.
Our entire stock included in this sale- 100
per cent cotton - cotton polyester blends brushed denims - corduroys.

JACKETS

BOYS '6,95 • •• • •....... JEAN SALE '5.43
BOYS '8,95 •• • •...... •• JEAN SALE '6.93
BOYS 110.95............ JEAN SALE '8.63
BOYS '12.95 .. ~ ........ JEAN SALE 110.13
. JUNE SALESI

MEN'S FASHION JEAN

MEN'S LIGHlWEIGHT

SPECIAL JUNE SALEI

BOYS FASHION JEANS AND
BLUE DENIM JEANS

JUNE SALES

JUNE SALEI

'5.50 TIES '4.00
'~50 TIES S4.90
s7.50 TIES SS.60

School District

RACINE

PRICE

A big selection of solid color
and pattern - choose your
favorite style. Nationally
known make. Father's Day is
June 19.

Board of Education
of Eas tern .Lo c &lt;~l
School Dis tr ic t
E loise Bos ton
Cler k-Treasurer o f
E·a s t ern L ocal

REG. 4.95 .. • • • ••• • SALE 3.69
REG. '5.95 •.. • • ••.. SALE 14.~9
REG. '6.95• • •• .. • ••.SALE '5.19
REG. 17.95 ••••••••• SALE

REG. $20.oo ............. .. .. ...... SALE$13.99
REG. S23 .oo .......... . , .......... SALE $15.39 '
REG. $28.00 •· • ................... . SALE $19.59
REG. 536.00 ... ......... .......... SALE $25.19
REG. $44.00 ............... ....... SALE $30.79
REG. $54.00 .... ,. ... , ......... ... SALE$37.79

MEN'S TIES

-·

1

1

WOMEN'S 1h SIZE
DRESSES &amp; PANTSUITS

JUNE SALEI

time 'fQr 'rece i pt of bids.

-Entire stock included
- Sizes 4-7

Includes one rack of bla zers,
blouses, slacks, jackets, skirts, and
vests . - Broken sizes.

REG. '4.75 NIGHT CREAM SALE '3.69

after the scheduled dosing

PRICE

UmE BOYS'

OIL OF OLAV

tor at least thir ty (30) days

BRAS AND HALF SLIPS

~

JEWELRY DEPT.

amount equa l to f i\'e percent
ot the bid sha ll be subm i tted
With each bid.
Said Board of Education
reserves the right to waive
ln lor nia lities lo accept or
re jec t any and all , or par ts of
any and aH bids .
N o bids mav be withdrawn

LARGE GROUP OF SUPS,

•GREAT GIFT FOR DAD!
•METAL OR WOOD STYLES

REG. '3.50 ••••••••••••• SALE '2.89
REG. '4.00 ••••••••••••• SALE s3.29
REG. '5.00 •• ••••••••••• SALE '4.09
REG. '7.00 ••••••••••••• SALE '5.69
REG. sn.OO ••• ••••••••• SALE SS.99

of Education .
Specif i cations and ln.
structions to bidpers may be
obtained at the office of the
Cler k, Eastern High SchOol.
A certi f ied chec"k payable
to tt1e clerk .treasu r er of the
above boar-d of eduCa tion or a
satisfactory
b id
bond
executed by the bidder and
t he su r ety company i n an

LINGERIE SALE!

REG. $1495 SMOKERS

•MANY STYLES &amp;COLORS
•SIZES 2-14

en

RACINE

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
The Importance of the
Panama Canal to the security
of the country and the
necessity of maintaining
control was lltressed by Mrs.
Jack Balzhlaer, National
Executive Committeewoman
of the American Legion
Auxiliary when she addressed the Eighth District
summer convention Thursday In Middleport.
Mrs. Balzhlser appealed to
the convention delegates and
Alllliliary members to join in
a letter writing campaign to
Senators Glenn and Metzenbaum
against
the
prvposed turning over of the
Canal to the Panamanians.
She ll8ld that in the event of a
war "the canal could make
the difference" since freight
during wartime could be
carried on vessels small
enough to go through.
The national officer,
speaking on membership ,
noted that many districts in
Ohio did not reach .goal this
year. She said that the answer from some have been
that "It's hard to get members when the country is at
peace." Her response is that
we need always to be concerned about the well being of
the country whether at peace
or In war.
Mrs. BaWUser touched on
the education and scholarship
program of the American
Legion which calls for a
public education for every
child with the system to be

BEGINS FRIDAY, JUNE 3RD AT 9:30A.M.

NOTICE TO BIDDER S
PURCHASE OF TWO
SC HOOL BUSES FOR
EASTER N LOCAL BOARD
OF EDUCATION
se aled proposals will be
received by the Soa rd of
Educafion or the Eastern
Local Schoo l District o f
Reedsville, Ohio at the
Clerk's Office until 1'1 : 00 noon
Ju ne 9. 19:77 and at that t ime
opened by the Clerk o f said
board as provided by law for
two
66 passenger school
buses.
acco r di ng
to
specifica t i ons of sai d Board

.i:_Home BBnk
For
Meigs County
People

Legion ladies warne·d
of canal's importance

of health fields and also
providing a community
service as well. CHEAO also
is trying to promote interest
in health care fqr rural areas.
Consequently, the health
students will be concentrating in the outlying
parts o.f Meigs County.
Organizations and churches
are needed to sponsor health
education programs to be
·conducted throughout the
county,
prior to the
multipha s ic
sc reenin g
program.
Each student will be
backed and advised by a local
professional. The community
coordinator for the program,
Major E. Joyce Miller said
the prece~ors will be Harold .
Brown, D.D.S., Lewis Telle,
M.D., E. S. Villeneuva. M.D ..

John Ridgway, D.O., Gary Tuberculosis Clinic, Veter~ns
L. Clark, O.D., Mary Myers, Memorial Hospital, Home
R.N. for Meigs County Hea lth Health Services, Senior
Department, and Lisbeth Citizens Center, Community
Cherrington, Speech and Mental Health Center and
Hearing Coo rdinator for the members of the CHEAO st~ff
Gallia - Jackson-Meigs will supervise at the clinic. In
Community Mental' Health addition, nurses and trained
technicians are being asked
Center.
Major Miller says the six to volunteer their services ..
Senior citize ns of the
students will be In the
community for seven weeks Retired Senior Volunteer
starting June 23 ' and the . Program have offered their
young people need places to assistance during these four
live. If you have a furnished days; other volunteers are
apartment to rent or know of a lso needed to ·assist at the
one that will be available at clinic a nd to provide transthat time contact Jan Shoots portation for persons who do
not drive. ?lease call one of
at 992-7311.
The State Department of the RSVP staff at 992-7884 if
Health is providing some you would like to volunteer in
materials ior the clini c. any way .
Services available at the
Personnel from the County
Health Department,
(Continued on pag~ 10)

•

Lincoln Hill residents In
Pomeroy were without power
last · night when a primary
line of the Ohio Power
Company burned down. The
blackout was reported
around 9:30p.m. and by 11 :
30 p.m. the company had
corrected the problem. According to Fred Morrow,

.Local notices, briefs
The Meigs

County

Fa ir

Board will meet ~~ 8 p.m .
Monday at the secretary' s
office on the Rock Springs
Fa irgrounds .

There will be a special
meeting of the Chester
TOwnship Tru~ tees 7: 30p .m.
Monday, June 6. The trustees
wlll di scuss regular bus iness
at lhe meeting lo be held at
Town Hall.

The Meigs County Com ·
mon
Pleas Court
has
authorized t he FarmerS Bank
and Savings Co., to recover

$2,786.84 from Michael
Hubbard .
The

MAJ. JOYCE MILLER

loca l manager of Ohio Power,
the cause of the shortage,
which affected about IOo
customers, has not been
determined.
" There was no stonn or
anything," Morrow said this
morning, "a nd as of yet we
just don't know what happened .''

Blue

and

R.

Grey

Restaurant in Pomeroy has
reopened under the new
management 'of
Dan iel
Jindra, Canton, who has !'lad
14 years experience as a chef
and res taurant manager .
Hours of the restaurant will.
be from 6 a .m . ontll 10 p.m .,
~nday
through Saturday
and from 6 a.m . unt il 5 p .. m .
on Sundays . Longer hours
will be set if busines.s

..,

warrarits
restaurant

that.
The
w i ll offer a
complete dinner menu .

EAST

MEIGS

A

swimm ing party which was
to have been held this. Sunday ·

at Forked Run Lake by the
Eastern FHA and FFA is
ca ncel led .

EAST MEIGS -

A public

meeting on the tax levy to be
voted upon June 1 will be held
at 7:30 p.m . this evening at
Eastern High School ralher
than Tuesday evening as
reported in error earlier .
Anyone having any questtons
about the levy pertaining to
need and purpose Is invited to

lonlghl's meeting .
The

Middleport
was ca lled
to North Th ird Ave., at 10 : 20
a .m . Thursday for Mrs .
Amanda Murray who was
Emergenc y Squad

taken

to

Pleasant

Valley

Hospilal. AI 11 : 53 a .m. the
squad wenllo 311 Rulland St.
tor Bob Moore who had fallen
from a root . He too was taken

to Pleasanl Valley .Hospilal.

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