<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="15047" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/15047?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-19T06:21:33+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="47825">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/937bd6f2e1143a7fbfea8ef8eb7bcc58.pdf</src>
      <authentication>e2e2c94672621a1d2fd34a8c5799a8c7</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="48342">
                  <text>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.

�:1-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ,, Friday , JW1e 3, t917

2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Fmlay, JWie 3, 1977

NBA playoffs
resume tonight

Fire probe going deep
By ROBERT SANGEORGE

SOlJ'I1IGATE, Ky . (UP! )
- Fire investigators have
both
broadened
and
narrowed their search Ill
determine the cause of the
Beverly Hills Supper Club
lira that tllok the lives of 161
people.
While probers have turned
much of their attention Ill a
15-by-30-loot party area
known as the 11 Zebra Room''
in the ill-fated nightclub, they
also have decided to begin all
over again , according to
Kentucky State Police
Commissioner Kenneth
Branden burgh.

" We will restart the whole
investigative process in order
tAl further ow- effort and Ill
gather all the evidence possible," Brandenburgh said late
Thursday.
While
the
on-site
investigation continued in
this northern Kentucky
conununity near Cincinnati,
a man injured in the tragic
Saturday night blaze flled the
first lawsuit stemming from
the nightclub disaster.
An attorney for Ronald
Schuman, Bright, Ind., filed
suit Thursday in U.S. District
Court at nearby Covington,
Ky ., asking for $22 million in
damages . Schuman's wife,

Coal promoted
The senator said the tax
COLUMBUS (UP!)
Bipartisan legislation has would raise about $6 million a
been introduced in the Ohio year. Coach research centers
General Assembly to help have been proposed at Ohio
finance a pair of projects State University and Ohio
sought by Gov. James A. University.
Rhodes has already sent a
Rhodes to promote the use of
team of experts to Scotland
Ohio ccal.
Identical bills were offered and is trying to get Babcock &amp;
Thursday in the Senate and Wilcox, Ltd. to bring the
House by Sen. Sam Speck, R· fluidized bed method to Ohio
New Concord, and Rep. A. G. for industrial use. The
Lancione, D · Bellaire, Rhodes administration also is
providing financing for coal seeking to land a coal
research and development gasification project in Noble
and the "fluidized bed" CoWity.
method of removing sulfur
from coal.
NEW YORK (UPI ) - The
}he Speck-Lancione
New
York Mets announced
proposal offers low-interest
Thursday
that
Phil
loans and tax incentlves for
Cavarretta
will
rejoin
the
USJ! of the "fluidized bed" and
club
Friday
night
in
New
other techniques for burning
high-sulfur coal without air York as the team's batting
instructllr.
pollution.
Cavarretta, who was the
Speck's proposal
also
National
League batting
inCludes a tax of 10 cents per
champion
and
Most Valuable
to!\ on the use of all coal
Player
in
1945
with the Cubs,
burned in Ohio boilers, with
will
be
used
primarily
at Shea
the money gomg toward coal
Stadium.
research and development.

Rosalie Ann, was killed in the
fire and Schuman was in
serious condition at the Burns
Institute of Cincinnati
General Hospital.
Named as defendants in the
suit were the club's owner,
Richard Schilling; his lhree
sons, Ronald , Scott and
Richard
Jr. ;
William
Roedding, an architect who
designed lhe remodeled club;
lhe city of Southgate, and the
~tate of Kentucky .
The action charges state
and city officials did not
enforce building codes and
1/Je owners were negligent in
pennitting large crowds to
gather at the nightclub
without. adequate provisions
for emergency escape.
Brandenburgh said " a
large part" of the Beverly
Hill inquiry still would be
directed toward the zebra
Room, where investigatllrs
believe the blaze started.
He also indicated Thursday
that investigators were close
to determining precisely
what caused the fire , but
would not predict whether
such information might be
disclosed tllday or Saturday.
Explaining
the
simultaneous broadening of
the search, the commissioner
said investigators had
intended from the start of the
probe to "go back in there
with heavy equipment
again." The process will
involve picking through an
liiUilense amount of rubble
scattered inside the frame of
the charred structure.
Investigarors so far have
ruied out arson as a possible
cause of the blaze.
Two persons who attended
a wedding reception in the
zebra Room which ended just
before the fire broke out said
Thursday mysterious "rum·
bles" were heard by RUests in

Cuban ·relations warmed up
BY JUAN J. WALTE
WASHINGTON (UPl)
Breaking a lli-year chill, the

United States and Cuba have
agreed to exchange middle·
rank diplomats, a State

Department spokesman said
tllday.
"We have reached an
agreement with Cuba on
exchanging diplomatic

interest

sections,"

spokesman John Trattner
said
in
a
telephone

conversation.

HEALTH
Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.

Reason to avoid coffee
By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB- You
advised a woman with high
blood pressure not to drink
coffee, tea, colas or to smoke
cigarettes.
I am 76 and these past three
months I have· taken
medicine for my blood
pressure. It goes up and down
so my doctor gave me
medicine for it.
Should I stop using Sanka
coffee? I do not smoke or use
soft drinks and watch my
salt. What should I driuk for
breakfast?
·
DEAR READER -In your
case you can drink decaf·
femated coffee, such as
Sanka. I don't recommend it
for people having digestive
complaints. The reason for
avoiding coffee is that 1t contains caffeine which has the
opposite action of tranquilizers and medicines used
Ill prevent or control elevated
blood pressure.
A good drink lor breakfast
IS fortified skim milk or even
the low fat milk, and then
there are the fruit juices. Cof·
fee tea and cocoa are not
necessary lor breakfast or lor
any other meal. I am sending
you The Hea llh Letter
number 1,11, Blood Pressure.
others who want this ISSUe
can send 50 cents with a long
stamped envelope for it. Mail
your request to me in care of
tliis newspaper, P.O. Box
1&amp;51, Radio City StatiOn, New
York, NY 10019.
.DEAR DR. LAMB- I have
hlld a hisSing noise in my ears
for the past two years. I had
rriy hearing checked a year
aco and the physician told me
25 per cent of my hearing in
rriy right ear was lost. The
htMing started in my right
ear.
•I'm 59 years old, 6 feet tall
and weigh 190 poWlds. A year
and a half ago on my annual
d:amlnation my cholesterol
C9Wll wu up so I was (!laced
011 a low fat diet. Despite the
diet and Atromid.S my count
is still not as low as it should ~

be.

'

Is there any relief from this
irritating noise in my ears?
My doctor says this is tied in
with my cholesterol count.
DEAR READER - This is
one of the more annoying problems a person can ex·
perience. Hissing, roaring,
"buzzing or continuous noiSes
in the ear are caused by
many different factors.
One common simple cause
is wax in the ear. This is not
your problem I .would
presume because of your
medical examinations.
While some such noises are
caused by vascular disease
many are not on this basis.
The cholesterol levels you in·
eluded in the rest of your let·
ter are not exceptionally high
for office determinations, but
I do think it is a gOod idea for
you Ill lose weight and follow
measures to keep your
cholesterol level within nor·
rnalleveis.
Y oo should have a consulta·
lion with an ear, nose and
throat specialist. Some cases
are caused by associated
heariug problems that can be
corrected. An example here
is disease of the small hear·
ing bones in the middle ear
that can become inflamed or
ossified
together
(otosclerosis) . Some of these
cases can be treated.
Because of the long list of
ear problems that can be
associated with ringing in the
ears I think anyone with this
problem, and the cause is not
known, should be evaluated
by an ear, nose and throat
specialist.
.
Some cases cannot be suc·
cessfully treated by any
measures. An mteresting new
idea is that some refractory
cases may be helped by
biofeedback. These are train·
ing sessions related to self
monitormg of your respon,cs
-which is what biOfeedback
is all about. Dr. John W.
House of the Ear Research
lnslltute In Los Angeles has
studied 41 patients this way
with some success.

He
said
formal
announcement
of
the
agreement would be made
early this afternoon in both
Washington and Havana.
The exchange is another
indication of warming
relations between the two
nations, although today's
action falls far short of the
full diplomatic recognition
missing since President
Dwight Eisenhower severed
relations a few days before he
left office.
No relations- middle rank
or otherwise - have existed
since 1961, and while significant, the establ\,shment of
so-&lt;:alled diplomatic interest
sections in both capitals is
still nothing more than a first
step of what may be a long
process in the face of
lingering problems. They
include Cuba's African policy
and Its human rights record
which, U.S. officials have
said publicly, do not meet
President Carter's criteria.
The United States is also
expected Ill press for some $2
billion
in
unpaid
compensations
to
nationalized American firms,
and lhe release of political
prisoners - including some
Americans.

the room . Oran Hall: Elyria,
Ohio, said he felt the· zebra
Room heat up slightly after
hearing the " rumbles."
Mark Seiffer~. Cincinnati,
s aid
investigators
mterviewed him and also
were interested when he told ·
them about lighted candles
left in the room . Both men
speculated the noise might
have been caused by an
electrical system
malfunction which may have
started lhe blaze.
Brandenburgh said state
pollee detectives have begun
a formal investigation of
charges by a Kentucky state
senator, who said he tllld the
state's f1re marshall last
December about unsafe
conditions at the club.
The commissioner said
sworn statements had been
taken from state Sen . Tom
Easterly, who also claimed
Fire Marshall Warren
Southworth told him in
December ·
he
was
" hamstrung" in getting
needed fire safety regulations
enforced at the Beverly Hills.

•

i

,.. •.
'
_...
-.

.

Donna Williamson; back row, Kay Sayre, Margaret
Amberger, Allee Wamsley, Joyce Bunch, Leafy Chasteen,
and Eleanor Thomas, exeeutive director of the Meigs
County Council on Aging, receiving the cards. Others
ccrnpieting lhe course but not pictured are Rosalie Sayre,
Troy Ohlinger, Louis Williams, Jeanne Braun. The course
is a part of lhe Heart Saver Program sponsored by the
Central Ohio Chapter of the Ohio Heart Association.

COURSE COMPLETED - Joe Struble, right,
instructor, Thursday afternoon presented course
ccmpletion cards Ill staff members of the Meigs Senior
Citizens Center who have completed a 12-bour, four week
ccurse in essential life support and all phases of cardiopulmonary resuscitation . Fronl, 1-r, are Ramona Hawk,
Dorothy McGuffin, Wanda Vining, Susan Oliver, and

Sirica
delays
sentence
By CLAY F. RICHARDS
WASHINGTON (UPI ) Convicted
Watergate
conspirators H.R. Haldeman
and John Mitchell have lhree
weeks tAl setUe their personal
affairs before going Ill jail for
their roles in the nation's
worst political scandal.
Judge John J. Sirica said
Thursday the two top aides in
Richard
Nixon's
administration must appear
in court once more, when he
will officially order them to
begin their sentences of 30
months Ill eight years on June
22.
That formality awaits the
arrival of orders from the
Supreme Court, which last
week refused their appeals.
The final legal chapter in
the scandal comes five years
and five days after the
Watergate burglary - the
crime that sparked the
scandal which drove Nixon
from the presidency.
The case ol another top
White House aide, John
Ehrlichman,
was
not
involved 10 Thursday's
informal court session in
which only the defendants'
lawyers were present.
Ehrlichman already is
serving
his
sentence
voluntarily ,
After a brief conversation

Committee okays

LO'ITERY WINNERS
This week's wiDDIDg Ohio
Lottery numbers:
PolO' Gold
Three-digit number
8114.
Three-digit number
376.
Fl ve-dlgit number
811557.

judges pay hill

with the attorneys, Sirica
said " the 22nd of June sounds
about right to me."
·
He said the three-week
delay will allow Haldeman tAl
attend
his
daughter's
graduation from law school in
Los Angeles June 19, and give
lawyers for both men a
chance to ask the Supreme
Court to reconsider its
rejection of their appeal something the justices almost·
never do.
It also will give Haldeman
and Mitchell the opportunity
tAl put their personal affairs in
order, Sirica said.
Sirica, the U.S. District
Court judge who handled
most of the Watergate
criminal cases, has reduced
the terms of the Watergate
burglars and others he has
sentenced in the scandal. But
no mention of such a
possibility was made during
the session Thursday.
"!expect to handle this like
any other criminal caset''
Sirica said.
When he receives the Su·
preme Court order, he said,
he . will call Haldeman and
Mitchell into court and
officially set June 22 as the
date they go behind bars . ...

COLUMBUS (UPI) - The
House Judiciary Committee
has approved legislation
authorizing a pay raise for
Ohio judges, creating three
new municipal courts and
adding judges to three others.
The
bills,
approved
Thursday, now go to the
Rules
Committee
for
assignment to the House
floor.
The pay raise bill is !lipped
by a boost from $43,000 Ill
$60,000 a year for the chief
justice of the state Supreme
Court.
The
bipartisan
bill,
approved unanimously by the
committee, calls for an
increase in the salaries of
associate justices of the
Supreme Court from $40,000 a
year to $53,000.
It also provides for these
pay raises :
-Court of appeals judges,
from $37,000 Ill $49,000 a year.
-Common pleas court and
probate court judges, from
$20,000 to $29,500 a year.
- Visiting juvenile court
judges, from $30 to $50 a day,
plus expenses.
-Judges in territllries with
a population of more than
50,000, from a base of $21,000
Ill $28,750.
.
-Municipal court judges,

from a maximum $31,000 Ill
$38,750.
- Acting mWiicipal ccurt
judges assisting in another
territory, from $15 Ill $30 a
day, plus expenses.
-Part-time judges, from
$11,000 Ill $15,000, plus 18
cents per capita in the
territory up Ill an additional
$10,000.
-County court judges,
from $4,000 to $6,500 a year
plus up to $7,500 extra
according to the county's
population, ·instead of only
$4,000 additional.
The omnibus municipal
court bill would:
- Create Jackson CoWity
Municipal Court with one
judge elected in November Ill
sit in Jackson and Wellston.
-Create Hocking County
Municipal Court at Logan,
with one judge elected next
November.
,
-Create Crawford County
Municipal Court, with one
judge elected in November
sitting in Bucyrus and Galion.
-Add judges to the
benches
of
Canton,
Chillicothe and Portage
County municipal courts:
- Add Bradford, Darke
County, Ill the territllry of
Miami County Municipal
Court...

Alaska fighting new gold (oil) strike .
Alaskan oil will sell in the
lower 48 states at a price set
WASHINGTON (UP!) Lawyers for the state of by the Federal Energy
Alaska say if the price of Administration. The state
shippmg oil through the will get a 12.5per cent royalty
Alaskan pipeline iS $6.04 a from the wellhead price,
barrel, Atanlic Richfield Co. determined by deducting
would get a 100 per cent transportation fees from the
FEA price.
return on its investment.
The
higher
the
H the Interstate Commerce
transportation
charges,
the
Commission approves that
fee, the lawyers said, other lower the royalty the state
oil companies will be able in collects on each barrel.
In a preview ThUrsday of
effect to charge twice for the
interest being paid on mooey arguments they will raise
they borrowed to finance 85 later this month in a new
per cent of the pipeline's cost. battle over costs and fees for
The state's opposition to the lhe 80(Hnile pipeline, lawyers
fee, presented in interviews for the state also said they
to
question
with UP!, reflects a sharp expect
hattie between Alaska and arrangements for a billion·
lhe builders of the pipeline dollar salvage fund for
over how Ill split lhe ewected removing the pipeline when
riches when the oil starts Norlh Slope oil rWIS out.
They questioned
the
flowing this summer.

By EDWARD ·K. DeLONG

More missing bodies
returning from VIetnarn
o

noWicement by Vietnam·thai"
it is sending the remains of 20
more missing America!~$ to
America.
They said the talks would
THE DAILY SENTINEL
be resumed at a time and
DEVOTED TO mE
place to be annoWlced later.
INTEREST OF
Vietnamese
Deputy
MEIGS-MASON AREA
CHFSTER L. TANNEHIU.
Foreign Minister Phan Hien
Extt. Ed.
said the remains of a total of
ROBERT HOEFLICH
c:t1f. Edhor
22 additional Americans have
Publl,hed daily except Saturday
been sent to the United States
by The Ohio Valley Publi.olling Com-:
any. Ill Court St., Pomeroy1 Ohio'
since President Carter's
§769. Busaneu Office Phone 99'b
special representative,
2IS6. EdiLonal Phone 992·%157.
Second clasl post.age p.id at
· Leonard Woodcock, visited
P(JU)eroy, Ohio.
Hanoi in March.
Natiorwl advertislne represenAt the time, the remains of
tative Ward • GrHfith Company,
Inc., Bottinelli and Gallagher Div.,
12 Americans were turned
7;,7 Thtrd Ave , New York, N.Y.
over to the Woodcock
J!tl17.
Subs&lt;.npljOtt rates: Delivered by
mission.
Today's
an·
Cllrrttr where av~ilable 7:. cents per
nouncement
brings
the
total
week. By Motor Route "here carrier
servJt.-e nOl availalble, One month,
to 32.
S3.2:i. By mMil in Ohio and W. Va,
Assistant Secretary of
&lt;l1e Year, 122.00, slx mont.hs,
State Richard C. Holbrooke,
Sll.~;
Three monlhs. $7 .00,
Elsewhere S26 00 y~ar; Six monlhs
the chief American delegate,
$13.50; Three munths. $7 . ~0 .
said, 11 This is a positive acSub:~tT!plton iJrice inclutles Sundlly
'TimeJi-Scnt.mel.
tion on the p~rt of Vietnam." ·
·=:.....__ ____J

PARIS (UPI) - Vietnam
and the United States ended
their second two-day round o[
talks todav with an an·

I

\!t ;:; """

Anthracite
coal finns
indicted
WASHINGTON (UPI) Two Pennsylvania coal
company executives were
indicted Thursday on charges
of &lt;:Qnspiring from 1961 to
1974 to fix prices of anthracite
coal sold throughout the
nation.
The indictment, returned in
U.S. District Court in Harris·
burg, Pa ., named the defend·
ants as James J . Tedesco,
president of Lehigh Valley
Coal Sales Co. Inc. ; and
Thomas J. Gillen, former
president of Blue Coal Corp.
Maximum penalty on
conviction is a $5B,OOO fine
and one year in prison, the
Justice ~partment said.
The indictment was related
to a previous one that
charged six major anthracite
companies
and - three.
individuals with participating
in the same alleged
conspiracy.
The
new
indictment names them ' as
unindicted co~oospiratllrs.
Named were William ){.
Dougan, JosephA. Frank and
Carl J. Tomaino; and Blue
Coal Corp.; Glen Burn
Colliery Inc., Greenwood
Stripping Corp., Lehigh
Navigation-Dodson Co .,
Lehigh Valley Coal Sales Co .
Inc., and Reading Anlhracite
Coal Co.
'
The six companies named
as Wlindicted co~onspiratllrs
"were among the major producers and sellers of
anthracite coal in the United
States and in 1914 their rota]
sales exceeded $70 million,"
the grand jury said.
, The grand jury said
virtually all anthracite coal
in this country is produced in
Pennsylvania. It is used for
home heating, blast furnaces,
power generation, smelling
and coking and metallurgical
and chemical production.
From 1961 to Dec. 21, 1974,
the defendants and the
unindicted
co~onspiratllrs
combined Ill fix prices at
artificially high levels and
restrain trade in violation of
the Sherman Antitrust Act,
the grand jury said.
The price-fixing deprived
customers of the benefit of
open ccrnpetition, the grand
jury said.

,.

•

JEFF IN MEXICO
MERIDA, Mexico (UP!)Authorities barred the public
from one of the Yucatan
peninsula's otdest buildings
Thursday while President
Carter's son Jeff and his wife
Annette tllok a tour there.
Accompanied
by
18
American Wliversity students
who arrived with them
Wednesday evening, the
Carters toured the 16thcentury Casa de Montejo,
where Jeff bought some sisal
hats and Annette bought a
pair of shoes.
The party also visited the
Mayan ruins of Uxmal, about
45 miles south of here.

FILM MAKER DIE'!
ROME (UPI) - Italian
film
director
Roberto
Rossellini, whose tern·
pestuous lofe affair with
actress Ingrid llergman on
the Isle of Stromboli made
headlines in the 1950s, dled
suddenly at his home today.
He was 71.
J

apparent 25-year lifetime for
the pipeline used by ARCO in
proposing the $6.04-perbarrel "lransportalion fee,
saying they believe Alaskan
oil will flow longer and
suggesting the fee would be
lower if the estimated
lifetime were longer.
Pipeline costs are now
expected Ill run $9 billion - 10
Urnes lhe original estimate in
1970-with $7.7billion paying
actual construction costs and
$1.3 billion representing
interest on money borrowed
Ill finance it.
In a proposal filed wilh the
ICC earlier this week, ARGO
said the $6.04 fee would
provide a 1 per cent return on
investment. It said that
return was in line with
traditional ICC rulings.
Amerada Hess, another of

the eight firms in the
consortium that built the line,
asked for a $6.44 fee. The
other six members Standard Oil of Ohio, Exxon,
British Petroleum, Mobil,
Union and Phillips - were
expected to file similar
requests.
·
Lawyers for Alaska said
transportation fees at the
level requested by ARCO and
Hess would provide a 100 per
cent aJUiual return before
taxes on the 15 per cent of
pipeline costs actually
provided
from
the
companies' own coffers.
They said the other 85 per
cent of the cost should not be
counted in calculating the
return because the cost of
borrowing that money
already is included in the
proposed transportation fees.

Now, a giant print
Bible with these remarkable
reference features.
2. Read·A·Long
Translations
e~dting c::ronrelotreoce method of
Brble st~,~dy lies the
magnrlr ccnl lrulh$ of

Thrs

Here a small upilal · T
l

nut to 1 diffKult word

or J)hrue elerl5 readers
to an eu~ · to - undrrstand

5wptur~~ logcthol!r fo r
""Y rc~tdc r' The $mall
&lt;:apital MR" at the
~grnning or wrlhm 11
ver~

srgn•ls

synonym

at

the end of

the Yerse Suth word
tr1nsl•lions bui11 11ght
mto the tellt eliminate
the net!d for constant
referral toe Bible
d1ction1rr or other
volumes'

rotfere nte~

to o ther Bible "'"''' "
at
~nd ol

By JOE JlJLJANO
break game into gear as lhey
PHILADELPIDA (UPI) did in Portland.
The basketball court in the
The responsibility for ·stopmiddle of the Spectrum ping the Portland running
seems Ill be the only thing attack lies in lhe hands of the
that
can
keep
the Sixers' Doug Collins and
Philadelphia 76ers from Henry Bibby.
sinking out of the NBA
"We can't let them start the
championship
series fast break from the halfcourt
altogether.
line," Collins said. " We have
Still smarting from a two· Ill shorten the outlet pass. The
game pasting at the hands of guards have Ill be on their
the Portland Trail {llazers
men quicker. We have to go to
the Sixers hope Ill find th~ the open man.''
magic that made them the
While Bill Waltlln and Maufavorite in the league finals rice Lucas have been doing
tllnight before a sellout crowd the brunt of the scoring and
and a national television rebounding, the Blazers also
audience.
have been aided by superb
Although the best-&lt;Jf-&lt;&gt;even . work from the bench ,
series is tied 2-2, the Blazers especially from Uoyd Neal,
have
the
momentum Herm Gilliam and Dave
following lopsided wins or 129- Twardzik .
107 and 130-98 in the last two
Meanwhlle, the Sixers have
games played in Portland . relied solely on Julius
"We're playing our type of Erving, the leading scorer in
game 'now," coach Jack the series with a 26-point
Ramsay said. "We need average .
everybody Ill ccntrihute and I
Although the 76ers looked
think that's what has been like
anythmg
but
a
happening in the last two championship team in the
games."
two West Coast games, they
That floor will smell of do know that one team has Ill
burning rubber if the Blazers wtn four gantes before the
get their high-voltage fast
trophy and rings are handed
out.
"Each game is a separate
I
entity in itself," Erving said.
"Sure, it's embarrassing to
get beat bad , but it's
something that happens in
the pro game. Friday that's a brand new day. All
year, when we had to win a
game, we've won it."

COOL IT!

Reds blow lead, lose 6 to ·4
CINCINNATI (UP!) - It drove home two runs Ill
was a game Reds' Manager highlight a three-run rally
Sparky Anderson is sure Ill that carried the Astros Ill a 6replay many Urnes during a 4 victory in 11 innings. The
loss left lhe Reds 10 games
long, sleepless night .
Jack Billingham was two behind the idle Los Angeles
outs away from a shutout Dodgers as they go intll
Thursday night when he was ronight's second of a fourreplaced by Rawly Eastwick game series with the Astros.
In the bottom of the seventh
after one&lt;&gt;ut singles by Jose
inning,
Billingham bad men·
Cruz and Ed Herrmann.
Two pllches later, Astros tioned to pitching coach
first baseman Bob Watson Larry Shepard that his right
slammed a home run, tying leg, which had been struck by
a Watson smash in the second
the score at 3-3.
And two innings later, Art inning, was aching.
"That was a mistake," said
Howe's third straight double

Fry~an

FRIGIDAIRE

BEST BUYS

SPECIAL MODELS
SPECIAL VALUES!

&lt;·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·

Wellston in for

I

1

I"'

I ,.,u...

1:.

O•ol on 5,800 !TIJI of
po-r or diol '" a brtalh of

air wilt! thit tpofiiOI Fr~1i1idou•
or coMm.ilr wtndo.., II'IOd•l lrliH
w:~do•• 01 narrow at 1.5 ~ " 1 fitt totot
comfor1 onto 100mt

I

Di

b•g at 190

220 1q ft. (sH cho1t~ ~nd it con
••mow up to "' pmts of 1n0irtur• '"'I')'

houu to h•lp add ' total comfort to
room envii"Oflm•nl W•lh 111 lowde5lgn, il can thor• a 15-

1~.•.,,.,..

circvit

wh•n

•l.,;tncol cod•s

p••·

$219.95
&amp;S-UI fit total room comlort'rnto

I

:::~
'

01 norrow (U 1!i ~" woth
7,500 BTU Frlgtdolrltlidin;

window room

Qlf

'"'""''"'·I

Amount ond I•YIII ol• coaling,
b~ of lralh air, or• ot eo1y to
the hlill of o doQI A.!ld '' oH"1
o•r flow control

S24US

BAI&lt;ER
"FURNITURE
Mijddleport, 0.

.

Rangers win on
•
expensive
error

99 Mil1 stREET

· MIOOLIPORT, 0.

each had a two-run double Ill
pace the Yankees' rout of the
Twins. Ed Figueroa went 5 13 innings to gain his seventh
win in 10 decisions. Rod
Carew,
the
American
League's leading hitter,
raised his average to .376
with four hits for Minnesota.
Tigers 4, Indians 2:
Rookie Dave Rozema, with
relief help from Steve
Foucault, won his flflh game
and Titll Fuentes homered Ill
spark the Tigers Ill victory
over lhe Indians. Ray Fosse
homered for Oeveland.
White Sox 7, Orioles 4:
Jim Essian 's three-run
double highlighted a four-run
third inning that carried the

r-----------...,
: Pro
:
:Standings I
(Best ol Seven)
' Phtladelphia vs. Portland
(Series lted, 2·2)
May 22-Phtla 107. Portlnd 101
May 26- Phlla 107, Portlnd 89
May 29- Portlnd 129, Phila 107
May 31 - Portlnd 130, Ph i la 98
June 3- Porfland at Phil a
J une 5- Phila at Portland
x -June a- Portland at Phi Ia
x-if necessary

QUALITY
BUILDING MATERIALS
FOR YOUR HOME
•DeHa &amp; Deluxe Faucets
• John Manville Fiberglass Shingles
•Genova Pipe &amp; Fittings
•IXL Kitchen Cabinets
- •Anderson Windowalls
•American Hardware Paints
•Wai~Tex Wallcoverings
•Amerock Decor Hardware
•Georgia-Pacific Paneling
•Armstrong Ceilings
Top quality materials plus our do-it·
yourself information assures the best job
for the moneY. ·

OPEN:
Mon. thru Sat. 8:00to 5:00p.m.
CONVENIENT FREE PARKING
992·5020
992-3748
MiddiP.port, 0.
405 N.2nd. Ave.

goes.'
"But I haven't been told
oothing. l think if you've been
playing in the big leagues lor
12 years, like I have, you've
earned enough respect so
you're entitled to be told
these things," Fryman said.
Counted on tn lllk• the

State baseball
tourney hegins
COLUMBUS (UPI) - The
Ohio High School Athletic
Association 's 50th baseball
tllurnament was scheduled Ill
open here today with
unbeaten Miller City meeting
Lucasville Valley and
Versailles taking on Rich·
mond Heights in Class A

Chicago past lhe Orioles.
Francisco Barrios pitched 6
2.3 innings tAl gain his filth
victllry in eight decisions.
A's 1, Mariners 0:
Mike Norris tossed a fourhitter in outdueling Dick Pole
and Jim TYrone doubled in
the game's only run in the
fourth inning as the A's
nipped the Mariners. Norris,
makmg his first start since
being recalled from San Jose
in the Pacific Coast League,
struck out two and walked
three to raise his record to 21.
Mets 7, Expos 4:
Lee Mazzilli drove in three
runs With a homer and a
sacrifice fly as the Mets won
their third straight game
under new Manager Joe
Torre. Jerry Koosman
Major ll!'ague Standings
By United Press International
pitched 6 1-3 innings to gain
National Lea9ue
his
fourth win in nine
East
W. L Pet. GB decisions . Ellis Valentine
29 16 6&lt;4
ChiCago
homered for Montreal.
27 17 614 1117
Pittsbgh
Astros 6, Reds 4:
28 19 596 2
St . LOUIS
Phil a
25 20 .556 4
Art Howe drove in two runs
18 28 .391 1llll
Montreal
with
his third double of the
New York
18 29 .383 12
West
game to highlight a three-run
W. L Pet. G8
11th inning that enabled the
Los Ang
34 . 15 .694
Astros
Ill snap the Reds' fiveCinc i
23 24 .489 10
San D1ego
24 29 .453 12
game
winning streak. Bob
San Fran
21 27 438 121!2
Watson's three-run homer off
Houston
21 28 429 13
Atlanta
17 33 340 11 112 reliever Rawly Eastwick
.
Thursday's Results
enabled the Astros Ill tie the
New York 7, Montreal 4
Houston 6. Cinc1 4, 11 i nns .
score 3-3 in the ninth.

Standings

it."
"That was a big win for
us," said Horton. "I couldn't
believe Burleson dropped the
ball, but I sure am glad he
did. II gave me one more

shot.''

place ol fellow Kentuckian
Don Gullett tn the Reds'
starting rotation, Fryman
won Cincinnati's opening
game, 5-3, over the San Diego
Padres, but it has been nearly
all downhill for him since
then.
"I said when I came here
that if I pitched the way I did
in Montreal last season, I

you in the bullpen awhile,'
you can't say nothing but,
'Yes sir, that's the way it

.

competiton in opening
games.
Oass AAA competition was
scheduled Ill get underway at
1 p.m. with Findlay, 24-3,
taking on three-time state
champion Cincinnati Western
Hills, 24-10, in the first game
and Panna Padua, 26-1, and
Austintown F1tch, 26-1,
meeting in the second game.
The Oass AA schools meet
at 4:30 p.m. with Coldwater,
24-3, going against Jefferson
Uruon, 13-10, and Cincinnati
Deer Park, 25-2, taking own
Medina Buckeye, 15-9.
All games were td be
played on the Ohio State
University diamonds.
Miller City was the only
Wldefeated team among the
tllurnaments 12 contestants
and sported a 25-&lt;J record
going into tllday's contest
against 1975 champion
Lucasville Valley, 16-5.
Versailles was 2().5, going
into its game with Richmond
Heights, 15-4.
Findlay Coach Woody
Curlis said "according Ill
· what they have been saying"
the championship will go to
the winner of Parma Padua
and Austintllwn Fitch .
"But I've been here enough
Ill know that anything can
happen," he said. "I've seen

Today•s Probable Pitchers

(All times eon
In other AL games, New
San Francisco (McGlothen 2·5
York walloped Minnesota, 11). and
Knepper o OJ at Atlanta
3, Detroit beat Oeveland, 4-2, (Messersmith 4-1 and Leon 1·3L
6:05pm
Chicago !lipped Baltimore, 1· 2, St.
Louis (Rasmussen J-6) at
4, and Oakland nipped Montreal ( Rogers 6 4L 7: 35
p.m .
Seattle, 1-ll.
Philadelph i a (Lonborg 0-0l at
New
York
downed · New York (Matlack 3-5) , 8:05
Montreal, 7-4, and Houston p .m .
Ch1ca'go
&lt;Burris
7·4)
at
defeated Cincinnati, 6-4, in 11 Pittsburgh
CRooker 4-3), a·o5
innings, in the only National p m .
Houston (lemongello l -7) at
League action.
Cincinnati (Norman 4-2), 8.05
Yankees 10, Twins 3:
p m.
San Diego (Jones 4-5&gt; at Los
Lou Piniella drove in three
Angeles (Sutton 6-2), 10 30 p.m .
runs with a homer and a
Saturday's Games
sacrifice fly and Thurman Philadelphia at New York
St . Louis at Montreal, night
Munson and Graig Nettles Chicago
at Pittsburgh, night
San Fran at Atlanta, night
Houston at c,nc1nnat1, n1ght
San D1ego at Los Ang, n1ght

Our Interest Is
Greater For You

5.75%
On 90-Day

American League
East
•
ealtlmre
New York
Boston
Milw
Clevelnd
, Detroit
Toronto

Certificates
5.75 per cent paid on
90 day Certificates of
Deposit.
$1,000.00 '
Minimum.
Interest
Payable
Quarterly.
substantial penalty ts
invoked on all certillcate
accounts withdrawn prior
to the date of maturtty .
A

Meigs Co. Branch

-@
MIDDLEPORT
BOOK STORE

and ask Ill be 'traded to some
team that can use me," he
said Thursday. "I don't care
if I am with the world
champions. I'd ralher get
paid for pitching lhan I ,.lould
for just sitting on the bench. A
lot of people may laugh at me
for saying lhat, but !hat's just
lhe way I am."
It galls Fryman that he
hasn't been tllld by manager
Sparky Anderson why he has
been relegated Ill the bullpen
and now is being used so
infrequently.
"If a man calls you in and
says, •Woodie, you're not
pitching as well as we want
you Ill, so we're going Ill take
you out of rotation and put

By FRED McMANE
UP! Sports Writer
doubleheader on
Giving a hitter like Willie
Hortlln an extra chance is
Saturday at 4
sort of like handing a bank
teller's job Ill a guy like Willie
Meigs American Legion Sutton.
Baseball Team will meet
Ferguson Jenkins of the
Wellston in a doubleheader Boston Red Sox learned that,
Saturday at King Field in to his dismay, Thursday
Syracuse. Starting time night. He struck out Horton,
will be 4 p.m.
the
Texas
Rangers'
Coach Charlie Hamilton designated hitter, in his first
has named Jobn Sayre and lhree at bats and appeared to
Mike Triplett as the have retired him .on an easy
starting pitchers. Sunday foul pop out with two men on
Meigs hits the road as they in the eighth inning of a 1·1
travel to Lowell lor a pitcher's duel. Then it
doubleheader. Steve Baird happened.
and Brent Johnson are ·
Boston shortstop Rick
expected to pitch for the Burleson dropped Horton's
Meigs team.
pop fly. . That gave the
powerful righthanded hitter
:·:·:::·:::·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·&gt;:·:·:·:·:-;···:·:-:-:···:-:·:·:-:·:-:·:·:·:-: . another chance and he ripped
a long double off the wall Ill
sccre both runners and give
the Rangers a 3-1 victory.
"Maybe it was an omen of
i
i
things · to come," said
Rangers' Manager Frank
I Lucchesi. "!was amazed that
NBA Playoffs
Bv United Press International we finally got a break. I'm
Final Round
glad we took advantage of

The Athens CcJUnty
Savmgs &amp; loan Co .
296 Second Sl
Pomeroy , Ohto

the Reds a 1-&lt;l lead in the
second iMing. A second run
scored In the fifth when Joe
Morgan doubled, stole second
and
came
home
on
Co ncepcio n's s in~ . Pete
Rose singled home Bill
Plummer with the Reds' final
run in the eighth inning.
The fact that Morgan and
Rose weren 't around after
Watson's game-tying home
run in the ninth didn 'I
enhance the Reds' chances of
winning.
Morgan, who singled, doubled, walked twice and stole
three bases in four attempts.

departed after seven lnniligs.
"I hurt my right ann
sliding when I stole second in
the third inning," said
Morgan, "and 1 rold Sparky
that I couldn 't make a Ill ugh
throw
if
one
were
necessary .'·
Anderson, as he has so
often done in the past, left
himself open for criticism
when he replaced Rose wilh
Ray Knight after the eighlh
inning. But the Reds
manager couldn't care less.
" We had a 3-0 lead," said
Anderson, " and if I didn't
think I was making the right
move, I wouldn't have made
it."

upset over losing starting job
don't improve, I'm going in

By BOB WESTON
CINCINNATI (UPI)
Woody Fryman, the veteran
lerthander who was the
Cincinnati Reds' opening
game starter, says he is going
ro ask the Reds to trade him
unless they make more use of
his pitching talent.
The 37-year-&lt;Jld southpaw
from Fleming County, Ky .,
says the Reds owe hirn an
explanation why he has been
demoted · from the starting
rotation and is used seldomly
in relief.
Fryman says he is not
ready Ill go back home and
become a fulltime tllbaccc
fanner.
"I'll give the club another
week or so and then if things

Billingham, " because I' m preceded Howe ' s game·
sure Shepard passed the word winnmg blow. Minutes later,
on Ill Anderson and that 's Howe came home with the
Astros' final run of the inning
why he took me out.
on
a Oiff Johnson single.
" I've been teed off with
The Reds had hope of still
Sparky a lot of Urnes over the
past years for giving me the winning in the bottllm of the
quick hook, but tllnight, 1 lith when consecutive singles
have only myself tAl blame," by George Foster, Dave Consaid Billingham. "E ven cepcion and Dan Driessen
!hough my !high did hurt, I gave tbem one run . However,
all hopes died when Cesar
still felt 1 had good stuff."
A single by Watson, his Geronimo grounded into a
fourth hit of the game, game-endmg double play
touched off the Astros' lifter Johnny Bench lined out
winning rally in the 11th Ill Howe.
inning. Another single by
A walk Ill Geronimo and a
pinch-hitter Art Gardner double by Billingham gave

W. L Pet. GB
26 20 .565
27
25
25
20
19
18

22
22
25
24
21
29

West
W L

.551
.532
.500

455
..A 13
.383

'h
lll'2

3
5
7
Blh

Pet . GB
18 .625
19 .587 2
C~l1f
23 .511 51h
Texas
22 .500 6
Oakland
24 .500 6
Kan City
23 489 6 lf~
Seattle
32 396 11 11~
.
Thursday's Resulls
Texas 3, Boston 1
New York 10, M i nnesota 3
Chicago 7. Baltimore 4
Detro11 .4, Clevetand 2
Oakland 1, seattle 0
Today's Probable Pitchers
(All times EDT)
New York (Torr~z 6·31 at
Ch1cago (K ravec 011.8 . 30 p.m .
Boston
(Stanley
J-2)
at
M innesota (Goltz 4-31. 8 t30 p.m·.
Baltimore {G rimsley 5-3) at
Kansas Citv ( Bird 20J. 8. 30
p .m
Mtlwaukee (August ine 6-5) at
Texas {Marshall 0·0) ( 8· 35 p.m .
Toronto (Jefferson 3·31 at
Oakland (Langforel 4·3), 10 ·30
p .m
Cleveland (Eckersley s 3l at
Seattle (Jones 0-3L 10 .35 p m .
Saturdly's Games
Toronto at Oak. land k
Boston at Minnesota •
Bait atKan Citv. 21 twi .nighl
Cleveland at Seattle, night
Detroit at Catitornia, qJg ht
Milwaukee at Texas, ntght
Ne'(o' York at Chicago, night

M lnn
Chicago

30
27
24
22
24
22
21

should win 15 or 18 hailgames
th1syear," he said. "But I got
off Ill a slow start just like the
whole team did. I think the
biggest problem was I wasn't
lhrowing the bail over the
plate consistent the way I
always have in the past. And
then I had some losses
charged against me when
guys who relieved me let in
some runs ."
Fryman, who came to
1 Cincinnati from Montreal in
the trade for slugger Tony
Perez, has a 2-4 record with
the worst earned run average
he's ever recorded 10 his
major league career, 5.73.
Last season, He was 13-13
with a creditable 3.38 ERA
lor the lowly Expos.
"I think I still throw the
bali pretty decent, better
than a lot of lefthanders in the
big leagues," he said. "!
know I haven' t got that much
time left in the big leagues,
but there are clubs that can
make better use of me than
the Reds, and this club knows
that."

it happen,"
Curlis has brought five
Findlay teams to the tllurnamenl and said of the five
"lhis is our best hitting team.
"As a team we average .332
and !hat's lhe whole team,
the starter average around
.350. We hit well last year,
.318, and thought it was
great."

Kawasaki
Jet Ski

For the ride
of your
~ life!

:k

ONLY

$1595.00
A great new water sport
w•th everything go1ng
for 1!. Thri lls. excitement.
fun . ail in one supe r
nde See one today .
A new way to let
the good times roll!
J&amp;R SPORT SHOP
748 E,. Main St.
Pomeroy, Ohio
92-2184

SENSATIONAL LOW PRICES

Ytrestone .·.

DOUBLE-BELTED DELUXE.
CHAMPION~ WHITEWALLS
Double fiberglass belt for strength and
mileage, polyester cord for a smooth ride.
Size A78-13
Whitewall

Sizes 878 -14.
C78 -14. E78 -14

4rar

4rar

*126

*II&amp;

Plus $173 F E.T

Pl us $1 88 to S2 26
F E.T per ttre and

per ttre and
4 old tl res

Sports transactions
By United Press tnternationat
Thursday
Boxtng
New York Don K 1n9
announced the
s1gnings
of
Muhammad Ali to defend h1S
heavyweight title against Itali an Alrl'o Righetti, WBC l ight weight champ Esteban DeJesus
to
defer1d against
V1cente
Sa 1 d 1 v a r , WBA l1gt1twelgt1t
champ
Roberto
Duran
to
defend against Edw1n V1ruet ,
heavvweight match
and a
between J 1mmy Young and Ken
Norton .
Baseball
San Diego - Elected Bal l ard
Smith as vice pres1dent and
general counsel.
Cleveland - F'laced designat ed hitter Rico Carty on the lS,
day disabled list and recalled
Ullltty catcher Ron Pru 1tt from
Toledo.
New York Mets - Named
Phil Cavarretta batting 1nstruc.
tor .
Tennis
Cleveland Signed
Dr .
Renee Richards thro ugh the
1978 season .
Los
Angeles
Traded
Dianne Fromholtz to San Diego
for Julie Anthony .
Pro Basketball
Washington - Signed guard
Coniel Norman
Pro Football
New York Jets Signed
defensive end Charles "T ank "
Marsha ll. their th1rd . round
dr~tf1 choice trom Texas A&amp;M ,
wide
rece1ver
Frank
and
Russell ,, i'l free agent from
Maryland
·
Dallas - Signed wide receiv
er Tony Hill, a thirrt .r-nund

•

dratt choice trom Stanford, to a
ser 1es of one year cont racts
College
St
L ouis
Univ ers1ty
Named D ick McDonald, former
basketball 'coach of 51 Peter's
College, as ath letic director
South Ca'rol )na Named
Scott woodburn , ot St Law
renee Un1vers1IV, as sw1mming
coach .

4 old t1res

Sizes F78 -14. 15.
078 -14,15

Sizes H78 -1(15:
J78 -1 4 . 15, L78-15

4rar

4rar

·1&amp;6

*146

Plus S2 42 to S2 .65 Plus S2 80 to S3 12
F E T per t1r e and
F.E T per t1r e and
4 old t• res
4 old t ires
BLACKWALLS SB LESS PER SET OF 4
Load

;trestone

SUPREME

B

jtrestone
22" power-propelled

DELUXE

$16995

CHAIN DRIVE

TILLER

ROYAL CROWN

BOffiiNG COMPANY

08 08 504 B

Even leu
with trl'ldl

BUY NOW"CHARGE IT

•

• 3 1 ~- H P DnP:II" &amp;
StnH ton

l'nl{ltl~

•l·;a.,icr, finp:NiqJ
&lt;~ ttnting ttl"! ion

Middleport

• Quu:- k -~et height
adju&lt;~tmcnt,

Pc1wer r ever$;('

and chain

dri\'C.

• 5· 11 p nn...:gs &amp; Stratton
Cnf!int•.

1 to :l1nrhcil.

• C9fl'\'c tu cnl hnndle

I'O!Hrol

..
.......
POMEROY HOME &amp; AUTO

• Ex trn -lwn vv 14" tines

• Ball bc!\nng "'h cl.ll ~t

• H P: I\',v- dul \' o.; h.'l'l \\ ht-t•b

• F o ld ml( h ~ ndle for

,....................~....~

· .· · "•" •"•" ·

Brake Service - Front End Alignment
500 E . Main
992-2094
Pomeroy.

'

o.

'

�4-The DaUySentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o., Friday, JWle3 um

~The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .• Friday, June3, 1m

Infonnation spread asking
citizens

A

committee age or 65 or being han·

promoting passage of a five dicapped.
mill new tax levy in the
WilY DO OUR SCHOOLS
Eastern Local School District need thi s Jevy? Our
at a special election on June 7 sc hool s are racing new
has Issued a question and state
requirements
answer sheet to explain the ca lling . for
gr eatneed for the additional tax to er expenditures
while
the voters .
we are receiving less state
It follows, In summary :
support than is called for in
What is the amount of the the new state roundation law .
levy? Four mills. Howev er,
Due to the 3 per cent cut by
your school taxes would in· the Governor and further cuts
crease only 3.5 mills because due to state appropriation
the 10 per cent property tax levels, we lost over $20,000
rollback (.50) paid by the last year and expect even a
stat e and a 1.00 milll greater cut this year.
reduction in our district 's
The
new
improved
bonded rate. Thus the amount retirement law is expected to
of levy Is 5 miUs, Jess cost our district an estimated
reductions, 1.50 mills, so additional $7,000 per year,

actual increased school taxes starting in July.
you would pay, 3.50 mills.
The new Handicapped
In addition, those persns
qualifying for the Homestead

Exeinption would receive
further reductions.

TiiE LOVELY DIAZ SISfERS of Mexico City attract
attention with their looks as well as their juggling ability.
They are but one of the many outstanding acts with the
Hoxie

Bros. CirclLS coming to

the GaUia CoWlty

Fairgrounds on June 22 at 6 and 8 p.m. under the
sponsorship of the Gallia-Meigs Fraternal Order of
Police.

WHAT EFFECT DOES the
Homestead Exemption have
on my property taxes? rr you.

Cbildren Act requires t hat we
provide appropriate public
education for ou r han-

dicapped childen by 1978.
Due to the fact that we did

qualify for a Homestead
Exemption , then your taxes
on your house and lot are
reduced from 40 to 60 percent
depending on incomes.
Qualifi cation is based on the

By Ellzabelh Clay
Senior Friends began their
activities in the first week of

May

with

the

regular

schedule 1 going to the Athens
Mental Health Center on
Monday morning, Wednesday and Thursday afternoon, and to the Arcadia
Nursing Home on Monday
afternoon .
.

We visit the patients and if
tl\ey are to go to any activity,
we help get them from their

-

wards and see that they make
it back, just assisting the
therapists. However, we can
go to the wards and bring
some of them to the activities
by ourselves i some are
capable of going Or coming on
their own.
Then there are some that

just want to talk. There are
patients that have been there

so long they ha ve no family
left, and some have families
th~t can't

accept the fact they

have someone with a nlental

Final listing
of honors at

problem.
If these same people had a

&amp;cine made
RACINE Principal
Jennings Beegle has an nounced the final six Weeks
gradl.ng period honor rol.l tor

Southern Jun ior High School.
Named to the rnll with
fhose making au A's rn
capi1al letters were:
.
SEVENTH GRADE JENNY
MANUEL ,
MELINDA SALMONS, RITA
SLA TER, RANDY TUCKER,
KENT WOLFE , She"y
Beegle, Robert Brown, Brian
Cleland , Bev Crouch, Vicky
Deem, Ra l p~ Harden, Joe

Bob
Hemsley ,
Krista
Johnson , Pat Johnson, David

Meagner, All en Pape. Kelly
Pickens. Richard Randolph ,
Jay Rees , Tom Roseberry ,
Lisa Roush , Ann William s,
Laura Wolfe .
EIGHTH
GRADE
PEGGY
BUSH,
CARL
MORRIS, MARK SIMPSON,
JACK
WOLFE ,
Crista
Beegle, Bonnie 5oso, Pau l
Cardone, Steve Circle, Eric
Foster , Eric Harris , Teresa
Holstein. Armintha Holter ,

on the craft we are doing at

that time. Some just want to
watch. Several patients that
worked on the bread wrapper

rug had their picture in the
paper this month.
On May 9 we went to the
Fawcett Center of Tomorrow
in Columbus for a workshop
on Growing Old in Rural Ohio

CO-&lt;?ponsored by the Ohio

number of deaths caused by
hypertension , or as we know

it, high blood pressure.
May 17 was Senior Citizen's
Day which was a big day with
a full day 's program. John
Brammer of the Community

300 SOJ- 11

143 .dOK- 12 16

RACINE WINS

RAC IN E -

8

..

Dale Teaford

pitched seven hit ball to win 52 over the Pomeroy A's in the
opening. league game of each
In the Mei gs -Mason - Pony

League Wednesday on the
high school diamond here.
Hilton Wolfe Jr.'s team got
only two hits off losing pit.
cher Jerry Fields who fanned
12 but wa lked 8. Teaford
fanned 5, walked nobody, and
got help from Kent Wolf who
came on In the 11fth to pick up
a save.
Racine hitters w~re ·Jack
Lyons and John Pape, el!lch a
single. Pomeroy hitter s were
Harvey Whitlatch , two
singles, and Robby Davis,
Terry Adk ins and Clifford
Murray each one single .
Murray was Fie-tds ' catcher i
John Pape was Teaford's and
Wolfe 's catcher .

'

(

will determine how much he
will invest in the foWldation
"after the IRS speaks."

''

.,'

.Have we got news
for you .•. and

sports... and
•.Cable

Channel 13.

.--....._....,..... ....___ _
..... __
......
-

u.. DrJIIf:

"'"'

.... ,..,, . '.

,

,

.,

(24 hr. service)

;,

clevelandArea781-0080

"'

HELP PUT THIS ISSUE ON OHIO'S NOVEMBER .BALLOT
(37 signtltures fill a petition ...: p_.lally filled acceptable - every signtlture counts)

.,..
...,...cWII,
n

Call toll free
1-800-362-0690
to request
a petition

Ohio Voters
Your signatu
are needed to
Ban Leghold Traps

.,._ ....... wftll.._ .......
d ..... -

JJ.,.

;·

The picture of the ermine In a.leghold trap was taken by a professional trapper In Canada
just as the steel jaws closed with their crushing Impact on his leg. This tiny tor1ured animal Is
caught in a No. 1 Victor trap which is also commonly used In Ohio.

FlUSH W

~oney

DOOR-FREEI

In Ollie t he greatest majority of trapping is done for a little extra pocket
weekend sport. The fur industry reaps the fabulous profit .
·

..

or for

·

Ohio law requires traps be checked only every 3o hours - but evan that law Is not en-

forceable.
Young child ren can and do purchase leg-ho.ld traps - set them and more t~an of 7 ·
ten - forget them . Traps are generally placed
remote rural areas and their location need n ot
be reported to s tole offi cial s . Seve re weather condition s can prevent a trapper from visiting h is
lines f or days . All too often an animal lies in agony. in a leghold t rap unti l it dies of exposure to
the weather , hunger or thi rst before the trapper arrive s to s hoot or beat it to d e ath .

rn

CLUU CMPE11 Cl.fAIIIP . ..
IElPS fMEM CLUIIEA lDREfl
R•rv• IUIIIII_N~~f~.,!_htodey yow "''"'-IOQ!ItVOUfCII"ptlol ,..lly

'~·
'

c6Mn

CHESTER, 0.

JACKETS

20% OFF
399 W. Main St.

002-2164

20% OFF
Pomeroy, 0.

THE STORE WITH " ALL KINDS OF STUFF" - FOR PETS,
STABLES, LARGE &amp; SMALL ANIMALS. LAWNS AND GARDENS

I

Bob and Nancy Roberts,
Kathy, Becky and Laura
Uniontown; Brenda Eimer,
Columbus, Tom and April
Smith, Paige and Todd,
and Jean Struble, Danean
and Steven, Colwnbus.

chaperorn: for the 1957 senior
class trip to Washington, D.

Social
Calendar

c.

During the evening several
other. fonner teachers sto~&gt;­

Wa shington

Redskins

announced.

Saody Rodman, craft director, worked with the leaders and
assistants on craft project.s to be carried out at camp. Helpers
are needed and anyone interested in lending a harxl with the

campers i~ asked to contact either Mrs. Werry or Mrs. Pat
Thoma, service unit director.
Registration for camp is now taking place and those plann·
ing to attend must complete registration and pay the day camp
fee prior to June 10.
POMEROY JUNIORS TROOP lt76
A court of honor with the awarding of badges for the year's
work was planned during a meeting of the Pomeroy Juniors
this week. Monday tbe girls ll]arched in the Memorial pay
parade, and they will also participate in the Regatta parade.
Cookie patcbes were presented and the girls continued their
work on the sewing badge.

ChCJsen to
he cherished
~ ....

,.,,,

. "'.

.:.,.,~

id. ~....._'" · "li:«&lt;''''"'~~,,.&gt;;.,:,:;,~,,~,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,~;,,,,,,,,,,;,~,,=,,, Legion ladies warned'

Helen Help
Us • • •

.

~: (~ntlnued
,:;:

CSteamboat lnt; ·

Dog Nuggets •
Dog Meal
ALSO SURE WIN &amp;

CASH SAVER DOG MEAL

992-2115
Mulberry Ave.

FATHER'S DAY AND GRADUATION
Make The New York Clothing Honse

don't le.l our Ohio wildlife down. AT THIS
11% Of
REQUIRED SIGNATURES HAVE BEENA~~~~~:~~::~.
.
AND REQUEST YOUR PETITION. SIMPLE
WILL NEED REGARDING THIS ISSUE WILL BE SENT TO YOU. (Call toll fr. . 1-100·362·
0690, Cleveland area 711-00ID)If lines ora lousy, you may f11lln the coupon belo.w
aQd mall to the address on the coupon. PLEASE DON'T DELAY.

r

I
I
I

Send me
pet il ions .
My phone number is :

I

I
I
I
I

THIS MESSAGE WAS PAID FOR
BY THE INTERNATIONAL FUND
fOR ANIMAL WELFARE, BRIAN
DAVIES, DIRECTOR.

L----------------

'' .

Your Graduation and Father's Day Gift
Headquartels. Do As the Grads and Daclol

----------------------- I
P.O. Iox 9611-GS,Cieveland , Ohlo 44140

NAME --------.~~~
--------~
(PLE.. ~E PIIJ NTI
.·
ADDRESS

CITY

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

STATE

ZIP

Pomeroy

GIFTS FOR

If you care -

I

Daughters.

------------------------------oos

Thousands of OhiOans have worked hard to bring thla l11ue befor• Ohio voten.

Pl.ase request your petitions from:
International Fund for Animal W•lfare

BAKE SALE and rummage
sale Saturday 9 a.m. in front
of ~lumbia Gas, Middleport.
Jewelry products also will be
sold. Sponsored by Jobs

1

If trapping .must h - •d if tltfl'e Grl tflose wlto must we~r wilrlife furs for tilt 11lr1 of
vcrnitr - tlten aH we aslc is thcrt.deatfl come f!llicldr to tiM wild crlfllurts wltose torturt now
pcrrs for tflis v111itr. PLfASf HflPI
·

1~---------------I live in the county of :

welcome.

I
I
I
I
I
I
I

Have Done for VealS. Get Those Gifls

at the

EW YORK CLOTHING HOUSE

I
I
I

Clinic in jeopardy
The free Meigs County Memorial HospltDl.'are open.
cervica l cancer clinic for For appointments women can

area women is in jeopardy . call992-3282 or
unless there is an increased

"KERM'S CORNER "
~1~26~!E.~M~III=
·~S~l;.._____....!!:::~~~~~:::::::::~:-J

1

99~·7531.

The

second cllnic in June will be

participation
in the
program.
held on
June 22Those
on theunable
same
The next clinid
will
be held time
schedule.

from 1 ~:30 to 3:30 p.m. tomaketheJWle8ctinicmay
Wednesday, June 8, and a make an appointment for the
number of appointments ror
the clinic at Veteran s

~-

.....

Social
Calendar

later clinic.

Couple hosts
cookout

SUNDAY
GOSPEL Tones Quartet
Sunday
at · Christian
Assem bly Church, Coolville,

((ICK Oll\ 0~
OOR

,,

LOWILDW

~as!

\

ON ALL 23 CHANNEL
COBRA C.B.'s
CUT THROUGH THE SOUND JUNGLE

RACINE - Mr. and Mrs.
Eddie Hupp, Rt. 2 Racine,
were given a11

WITH COBRA

old~fashioned

belling at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Arnold Hupp Friday
evening. After the newlyweds
treated. the crowd to ca ndy
and cigars they held a wiener

across from school, 7:30 p.m. roast on the lawn at the Hupp
Rev. Gilbert Spencer, pastor. hom e ln honor of their guests.

Public invited.
Attending were Mr. and
MONDAY
Mrs: Roger Roush, Mr. and
CHESTER
Tow'nship Mrs. Edward Cross, Paul
Trustees Monday, 7:30 p,m. Cross, Mr. and Mrs. Herbert
at town hall.
· Roush , Mrs. Russell Roush,
REVIVAL at Coalton Cindy, David and Edward,
Freewill Baptist Ch urch , Rocky Hupp, Mr. and Mrs.
Coalton, Ohio now in progress

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

'LL GET A

COBRA 19
· 23-Channel Mobile
Ttuckers call il the "Diesel Mobile."
r ea lures e xclusiv e Cobra DynOI Gain Con tr ol. Della Tune.

~~~~~~~:~;~Squelch.

through June II with J. W. Arnold Hupp, Steve Riffle,
Mrs. Dennis Manuel, Denise
and Troy , Racine, Mrs. Iva

Markin. There
be special
singing.
Publicwill
invited.

Orr.
Mrs. Alice Balser, and
Don Manuel.

Whether you want a Citizen's
Band Radio for safety, business.
convenience or just p~ain fun.

you'll like th e Cobras. Dependable. Fully-warranted.
They're the pioneer name in
CB radio

George Hupp, Mr. and Mrs.

Elswick , evangelist from
Athens. Pastor iS Marvin

Get the CB Z-Ways
the truckers use.

Punches th rough lo u~ and cle ar.

INGELS FURNITURE
106 N. 2nd Ave.

Middleport, 0.

I."&lt;

"

of

d

use in the United States .

20%0FF
WESTERN
HAT BANDS.
%PRICE

Gheen Julia, Carl, Bruce, and

Ravenna ; Marvin and Bryan
White, Rout..e 3, Pomeroy;
Ramora C. Boice, Columbus:

years

..

muskrat.}lt is probable that no instrument was ever invented that has caused as much suffering
as the common stee l leghold trap . It 's continued use is a bl ot on todays civilized socie ty. It ha s
been abolished in 19 o th er notions. Bu t th e fur industry still unblushingly continues to support its

WESTERN BELTS
&amp; BIUFOLDS

WESTERN
HATS

with Mrs. Judy Werry, camp director, and Dee Lawrence,
district adViSor, outlining the various itctivities planned for the
week of June27throughJuly I.

his guest, Sandy Munn,
Albany ; Jim and Edith
Heckert, Jim and Cindy,

~

beaver, raccoon, squirrel, woodchuck, skunk, weasel, mink, rabbit, opossum. and

B
r
WESTERN FRINGE

Thursday, club offi cials

•

10

MIDDLEPORT JUNIOR TROOP 39
ped by to visit with the group
In conjunction with the Middleport Amateur Gardeners,
and reminisce about high
SPECIAL RECOGNITION was given Mrs. Ben
Troop 39 planted flowers at Middleport village hall. This is an
school days. The ·cocktail
Neutzling of Pomeroy, long-time convention pianist, by
annual civic beautification project or the two groups.
hour was hosted by local
Mrs. Arnold Richards, District 8 president. Mrs.
work
is
being
completed
by
the
scouts
in
prepara·
Badge
FRIDAY
members of the Class of '57.
Neutzling received a muaic box.
RUMMAGE sale Friday· tionor a court of awards. Mary Wise, leader, has asked that all
members
tske
their
books
to
the
next
meeting.
and Saturday and spaghetti
dinner Saturday at the
HOSPITALIZED
A. Dlehl, former Pomeroy
Rebecca (Fay) Lampen, Masonic Hall in Mason
Hlgh School principal and a
daughter or "Mr. and Mrs. sponsored by M;oson Chapter,
· Howard Roush, Racine, is a Order of Eastern Star, 157.
from paRe II '
and rehabilltation, and Mrs.
patient at Mercy Hospital in Rummage sale will be from 9 S~
.
i:! Atkmsand Miss Erma Srruth, Neal Billings, Athens, Athens
Portsmouth. Althou@h Mrs. a.m . to 4 p.m. Friday ;
unit activities.
Mental Health Center
PARTY TONIGHT
Lampen is improving, her Saturday, 9 a.m. to2 p.m. The i~
By Helen Bolte) :f Distinguished guests In· representative.
A pizza party will be held at mother reports her condition spaghetti dloner will be from
~ troduced were Mrs. Brown,
Mrs. Wllliam Trace of the
7 p.m. tonig!tt at the Mid- is serious and cards from 2 to 8 p.m.
~-:
·.~ GaHipolis, Mrs. Atkins , placement committee andleport ChurCh of Christ for friends would be appreciated.
GOSPEL Tones Qu~rtette
One Definition of Marriage ...
Crooksville, Mrs. Ben Neutz· nounced that the summer
all primary children wbether Fay, as she is known to Meigs of Charleston at the Carlton Dear Helen:
ling, Pomeroy ; Mrs. Arree convention of 1978 will be held
they have attended Sunday Count y residents, is a 1965 Church, Kingsbury Road
Clarence Darrow (I think) once said, "Marriage is like Marshall, Lancaster; Mrs. at Junction City, the fi~ld
~ool regularly or not. The graduate of Southern High
Friday, 7:30 p.m. Public going into a restaurant with a friend, looking at what he Erma Powers, Logan and servicetrainlngatGaUipohs;
party will be hosted by the School who prlor to her illness invited. ·
Mrs. William Stewart, the junior conference at
ordered and wishing you'd taken that."
rt,..i~l e rffi Uiamnn,J Kin g-.
teachers of the department. was administrator of the
DANCE at Royal Oak Park
I ended my marriage or 10 years for substantially that Athens, all past district Pomeroy, and the Buckeye
Mrs. Sharon Stewart and her Cardiac
Pulmonary Friday 9 to 12 sponsored by reason, and I don 't regret it, though in many ways I had a president; and Mrs. Osby Girls' State tea at Lancaster.
piippets, Betty Lou and Reba b!lltatlon Center at Southern Band Boosters. wooderful man. I just got him too soon, before I knew what 1 Martin, Department junior Mrs. Eugene PQppenhager
ROOsevelt Frailkiin Carter, Mercy Hospital. She wsa Music by "Uncle Dugger." wanted in life. At 20, I thought sweet romance would last activities committee.
presented the resolutions ,
Wjll entertain the children.
Mrs.
Allen
Hampton
,
and
tellers were Mrs . Charles
recently selected to be in Admission $2 a person.
forever. Now, at 30, I know friendship and companionship aod
of
Unit
263,
conKessinger,
Mrs . Herschel
president
" Who 's
Who
Among
HEMWCK Grange annual
real understanding are the main things. I can have these
ducted
.·
an
impressive
Norris
and
Mrs. Dorothy
American Women ." Cards inspection, 7:30 p.. m. Friday
without marriage.
memorial
service
for
Hecker.
may be sent to Mrs. Lampen at grange hall; members to
My advice to young people is : wait !
A tea hosted by Unit 263
at Mercy Hospital, 1248 take either sarxlwiches or pie.
At least 95 per cent of those wbo marry aren't (or weren't) deceased members with Mrs.
Kinney Lane, PortsmoUth , - MIDDLEPORT Alumni happy with their mates. Most of the people I talk to want out, William Smith and Mrs. was held following the con· ""'"'- ..0111 "00 !o 110.000
Charles Saunders placing a vention program.
45662.
decorating committee, 6 p.m. and that's just not an idle thought.
rose in a vase for each ~ne.
Agreed? - CONTENTED DNORCEE
Friday at the gym. All alumni
Pome~
On behalf of Unit 263, Mrs.
invited
to
help.
Those
wishing
GROUP :ro SING
Hampton
presented a gift to
Dear
Divorcee:
to
reserve
tables
at
dance
The Gospel Tones Quartet
Flower
1
Mrs
.
Richard.!
. She also
.
·
·
Not
agreed!
You
re
like
the
psychiatrist
who
diagnoses
the
crej)Ort
t~
gym
at
6
p.m.
will be at the Christian
tree to her
presented
a
money
'
whole
world
as
a
little
barmy
because
he
only
sees
the
barmy
SQUAREl&gt;ANCE
Friday,
Assembly ChurCh in Coolville
Shop
from
members
of
the
Eighth
8:30
to
11
:30
at
Senior
kind.
(across from the . public
District.
Gifts
were
also
Citizens
Center.
Music.
by
Happill
married
people
don't
generally
brag
to
divorcees.
school ) Sunday, June 5.at 7:30 .
presented
to
the
speaker.
you
may
attract
disgruntled
folk
because
one
who
has
Rather
Stringdusters:
Admission,
$1
p.m. The Rev. Gilbert
Receiving ·s pe cia l
Spencer, pastor,· Invites the per adult. Children under 12 been throUgh it can · give sympathy and encouragement,
recognition
was
Mrs.
perhaps
to
leave.
'
admitted free with parents.
public.
Neutzlins:, longtir1_1e con·
Proceeda go to the Periny
And I'll bet my readers will agree - nwnerously! - H.
vention
pianist.
Mrs.
Johnson Fund.
+++
MENU FOR SUNDAY, JUNE 5
Richards
presented
her
a
DANCE Friday, 9 p.m.-12 Dear Helen :
' roast beef~ flounder
Meat loaf.
In place of, "Have a good day," this woman friend says, . musii:~ box.
midnight at Royal Oa k
MEAT:
fish, hamburg steak, ham , fr ied
Greetings
to
the
Auxiliary
"Have a good one.'' I answered, jokingly, " We always do."
. Re(!reation Building. Disc
chicken .
jockey "Unc)e Dugger" from
And she blurted out, "Oh yes, I remember your husband members were extended by
lima beans , peas and carroh ,
Middleport Mayor Fred
VEGETABLES:
wxn.. in Parkersburg will said you· two had an agreement ... "
noodles-.
I asked her what she meant by that, and she clainmed up. Hoffman. and John Bremmer
provide music. Admission, $2
of Athens, the Eighth District
I asked my husband, and he denied saying lt to her.
per person. Sponsored by the
POTATOES:
Mashed , home fries .
She isn't the~type to cause trOuble between us. but I wonder .Coinrilander of the American
Southern Band Boosters with
Apple, peach, raisin .
· money to go towards new if she knows something I don 't know and was hinting to me. My Legion.
·PIE:
Mrs. Ernest Bowles, Mrs.
band equipment and trip to husband works hard and I trust him, but ... - WORRIED IS
Tosse~ , 7-up,
slaw., co tt age
Ruth Brown a nd Mrs. Minnie
TilE WORD FOR ME
SALAD &amp; FRUITS: cheese , applesauce , pea ches .
State Fair competition.
washington or the host unit
SATURDAY
Walk-up Window Hours : Weekl y hours. 7 to
registered the auxiliary
Dear
Worried
:
BAKE SALE Saturday 9:30
10 p.m., Sunday, 2 ~o 10 o.m .
·
Forget it! The agreement you and your husband should members with Mrs . Hampton
a.m. at Kenn's Korner · in
,
Pomeroy. Proceeds to go to have is - don't turn a single phrase into a book or hidden giving the call to order
WE HAVE SOFT ICE CREAM
preceding the processional
Pomeroy Youth Baseball meaning~. - H.
SHAKES AND BANANA
MILK
with Mrs. Saunders as Sgt.League.
+++
SPLITS
at-arms. The invocation was
HYMN SING Saturday 7:30 Dear Helen :
'
Gary and JeMy were a great couple. We all thought they'd given by Mrs. WIU Winston
p.m. at Freedom Gospel,
CHAR-BROILED STEAKS
marry. Their families loved one another. They had everything and Mrs. Campbell Harper
Mason . Music will be
••
WEEKDAYS 6 a .m. to 7 p.lil . SUN DAY 8 a.m . to :z p.m
led .in the pledge to the flag .
pro vi ded by Bald Knobs going for them .
The welcome was extended
And then they split up. To be frank, neither seems unhappy .
Singers with Dan Hayman as
about it. But relatives are . There will never be such a match by Mrs. Bowles with Mrs.
hyrruunaster .
Red Rose Dog Food.
Stewart giving the response:
HARRISONVILLE Lodge again .
AUNT
AND
Reports were presented by
How
can
we
get
them
back
wgether?
411 F&amp;AMSaturday 7:30p.m .
·· Real Old· Fashio ned Home .- Cook· 111~ ' ·
Mrs.
Terrance Carroll of
UNCLE
. at Temple. Fellowship degree
Amanda of Americanism;
will be given. All master
lrd St., RACINE. OHIO
Miss
Erma Smith, Pomeroy,
Dear
Aunt
and
Uncle
:
masons invited.
PHONE ·949-2515
Gary and Jenny are compatibly separated. They know childre n a nd youth and
WESTERN Boot CB Radio what's best for tbem.
corrununity service; Mrs . Bill
Club meeting, 7 p.m ..
Getting them back together might be as bard as raising Mohler, Junction City, junior
Saturday at Racine Fire money to pay election costs of an already defeated politician. activities;
Mrs.
Blair,
Stat ion . New members Don't try it ! - H.
Wellston , veterans affairs

Sometimes mother animals will attempt to return to their babies by gnawing off the im prisoned foot . Most of them di~ a ~ l ow, t;:~gon i zing death fr om loss of blood or infection and / or

...

WESTERN
BOOTS
lfz PRICE

and Bryan Buffington ; Jerry
M. and Rita Davis, son, Craig
Alan, Andrews Air Force
Base, Maryland; Dan and
Judy Morris, Porneroy.
Ted and Linda Beegle,
Toby and Nathaniel, Wor·
thington; Ruth Lewis,
Bellefontaine; Gary Watson,
Dublin; Vince and Carol

SUGAR RUN MILLS

gongreen
·~
This is the k ind of treatment we allow Ohio"s wildlife to be subjected to year after year . (Fox,

_A_CME ANI;) DINGO

The Pomeroy High School
Class of '57 enjoyed a cocktail
hour at the Meigs Inn Satur·
dayevening following the
banquet and preceding the
dance. Over 100 alwnni, their
husbanda and wives and
guests attended.
Special guests were Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Gibbs,
former Pomery High School .
superintendent, and James

'

Testimony of a trapper finding a wild ermine dead in a leghold trnp: "There are signs of a
terrific struggle: from experience 1 know the ennine lived 3 or 4 days and then died from
hunger and pain. The foot is lacerated, swollen and covered-with blood. The stump of the leg
above the trap is swollen four times Its natural size and froz en. The shoulder too Is all
swollen. When we skin It, we will find that all that area will be .a mass of blood colored,
sickly, geletin· flke substance, indicating tile terrible suffering It lr&lt;Js gone through before
death released it, But it will make some lady a lovely fur piece."
·

BAUM TRUE VALUE
985-3301

Va.; Michael Ohlinger and

Day camp training was held Thursday at Camp Kiashuta

By Charlene Hoeflich

ln

that delights ...

weather - and

(A~ do·ibJOIIPBIIfpPiCB,)
IIIIIT Out tllltll • YAC-... -

~

games

~

FOOD

aPpll ellani..

doubles ; David Sl!lmons and
Kevin Dugan each one.
Winn ing pitcher John Porter
(2-0} gave up eight hits and 10
walks and fanned 13.
Portland

For Luxury Furs

doing such a little to help my

..,.......... Wltlr • •

~
•

~

Keepsake·

brldgebuilding" between
both peoples. But he said he

are lonely and withdrawn to
seek help and to c o~P­
.municate with others to get
involved with groups · and
organi·z ations
especia lly
churches ..
Before becoming a part of
this program, r felt 1 was

Bryan, Harrisonville; Jack
and Mary Jane Gibbs, Doyle
and Randy' Parkersburg, W.

professional football, signed
a !977 contract with the

«

«
».

Haley said he is planning a

help and how to get those that

Dugan and Luke Pickens hit
triples wh ile Richard Dugan
and John Porter each had two

Cardinals

.'

CRUELTY Unparalleled

We enjoy the pa,tients at
Arcadia, Those who are able
are always anxious to come

County is the second highest
in the state of Ohio in the

RACINE - The Racine
Cardinals stood off a three
run rally in the to_p o.f tl"1e
sixth by the visiting Portland
little league team Wednesda y
to win a real squeaker. 12-J l.
· For Portland , Wade Connolly
had one home run and Dave
Talboff two . Connolly also
hammered out a double ;;~nd
triple . He was the losing
pitcher, giving up 16 hlts and
seven walks, fanning three .
For the winners, Richard

(12.56).

$30,000 ($3.06 ).
$40,000 ($4.08 ).

problem gets completely out
or control.

.Conunission on Aging. This
was a day well spent. It dealt
with problems the senior
citizens have trying to stay in
Della Johnson , Sob Lee, their own homes, rural or
Terri Manuel, Janet Middles - urban, in this day of inflation,
wart , Mary Beth Obltz , in a fixed income.
Charlotte Pickens, Rebecca
May 11 there was a
Rhodes . Mary Beth Slavin ,
Tammy Smi th , Paula Wolfe, workshop on hyperten sion
Melissa Yonker . ·
conducted by Nita Wisinski,
the new Meigs County
Hypertension Nurse. Meigs

Youth League
•
summanes

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

parenthesis ) is :
$20,000 ($2.!H) .

Mich. andand guests , Robin

Class of '57 gathers

Mashed Potatoes &amp; Gravy

according to the value of your
property (amount or tax in

ington and children, Cberyl,
Trat"ey and Chad, Detroit,

WASHINGTOJII i\.JPI ) Safety Ken Houst&lt;on, who has
played in nine Pro Bowl

I Girl Scout Diary

Pomeroy, and guests, Dan

" Roots Foundation" with
earnings from the saJe of his
bQok to serve as a "psychic

fellow man and there are
heart condition, · diabetes, or ' some days in this we don't
any other physical problem, · fee l like we accomplish
they would accept this and do much; then on the next visit
what n·eeds to be done for something is said or done by
them. But too many in · this your contact that may be so
" enlightened", age will not small, but it sure ca n give us
accept this.as an illness, and a boost and a greater in. will not seek help until the . centive to keep trying.

out to the work table -to work

Jill and Milt Lambert,
Dayton, Jeanne a.nd John of
Cinctnnatl; Gary I Carman,
Pataskala; Bill and Sue
WoQdard and children,
Maria, Martha, WIUie and J.
B. of Jackson; Aaron Buff·

FREE HAM DINNER

monthly in total school taxes

from "Roots'' on correcting
the distorted images Africans
and Americans have of each
other, but first he wants to
see how much the ta:onan
leaves him .

Mental Health Clinic, conducted a workshop on May 24
on loneliness. This was to
help Senior Friends and
others that work with senior
citizens to understand how to

Mn. Bob Eastman, Brent
and Kevin, Beckley, W. Va.;

SPECIAL ORDER OF BUSINESS

inflationary costs s uch as a

seventh grade Math textbook
at $Ul in 1973; at $6.33 in
19n.
Tuppers Plains Elemen·
tary electric bill for one
month $219.79 in 1973 and,
$367.12 in 1977.
WHAT WILL THE LEVY
cost me? Listed be·
low are examples of
approxima tely how much
more you would be paying

"ROOTS" PROJECf
WASH!NGTON ( UP!)
Author Alex Haley says he
wants to spend the profits

Senior friends busy in May

INSTALlATION OF OFFICERS SUNDAY,
JUNE 5, 2:00 P.M.

not have 23 milli last year, we
lost $38,000 of State Funda
which we did not receive.
In addition to these, our
school district must continue
to meet rapidly increasing

~~.ooo

The Pomeroy High School
claas oll957 enjoyed a family
picnic at Royal Oak Park on
Sunday, May 29.
Attending were Mr. and

; - · ;it::tffi~.s::-x~:;~

•

Class enjoys family picnic

Fraternal Order of Eagles

support for school levy

·=::::·:-:-:,~:;:;:::;:;:::::.:::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::~:::::::::::::::z-:::;:o;:;9XW'

»

.'

"

�s-The Dail~ Sentinel, Mtddlepi&gt;rt-Pomeroy _0 .• Friday, June 3, 1!177

FOlRJEVlEl~ AND EVEI~
' lltis plct.urc wus taken j u ~ l a year Hl-!0. h wus u
pcrfcet uftcnhlon for u gurclcu wcddiuJ.! rcc..::pUorr.
Joun nnd K enny w..:rc !'l.() mtu.·h In lon.:.
Now, this montln~ , u ld h: r ru mc in the mall frum
Juan tdli.JtJl us that ~h e Is ('oming homl·. She's thi nk in~ ubout divorce- IJUtt tltc I )(' UIIlifi. tl clr~um tJu.1t she
and Kenny 1-0ha..rcd hus runte d In to a ni!!htmun::.
:"latundly, her luiJtc r tutd I will wd~om c h~r. 'l111s
Is h er' home and lllwuys will h e. But tl1is Is n J•rolllcm
thut w._· s hall not t.rv tu solve ll\' ourselves. We will
lunt. as we know •f&lt;lltn will, U) &lt;)itr cl tlareii . u.n d to tJt c
very minister who botJ1 hup l l ~4.: d and married he r.
Mayhc all of us. workiu~ toJ!l.'" lht.·,·, will flnd a wuy
throul(h God 's Will tmd Ills Wunl

1ltc Church comes vt:ry
Re me mber thnL

do~·

In um ...·s of s rrt:ss.

Copyflgtll l";Jf7 l&lt;o1ste• Ad¥ertoSI!Ig Servoce StraSburg , Vll'gorua

Sc"pllues sel&amp;eli&gt;d

0~

Tne Amtwcan Bible &amp;x;1ely

-

KINGSBURY HOME SALES
&amp; SERVICE. INC.

MEIGS TIRE CENTER, INC.

THE FINEST IN MOBILE HOMES
1100 E. Main
Pomeroy
Ph. 992-7034

Ph. 992-2101

John F. Fultz

Pomeroy

-

THIS SPACE AVAilABLE
PHONE 992-2156

BIG JIM'S PLAZA
Middleport, Ohio

LINDA'S LADY FAIR BEAUTY SALON

" HElL" DEALER
Racine
Ph. 949-2882

Thtrd St.

Call949-283a For an Appoint men I
Racine, Ohio

REUTER-BROGAN INSURANCE
SERVICES
'

214

e. Main

Pomeroy

PAUL'S BARBER SHOP
Open B to 5 '

Ph. 992-5130

WAID CROSS SONS STORE
GROCERIES 8. GENERAL
MERCHANDISE
Ph . 949-2550
Racine

-

Pomeroy

0.

Ph . 992-2318

BAKERS OF GOOD BREAD
Huntington, W.Va .

COMPLETE AUTOMOTIVE SERVICE
Locusl&amp; Beech Sts.Middlepor!Ph. 992-9921

SEAR'S CATALOG MERCHANT
LOUIS W OSBORNE
Ph. 992-2178
Pomeroy
220 E. Main

.

MARK V STORE

GOEGLEIN SAND &amp; GRAVEL
Middloport

Ph . 992 -3214

FRESH PRODUCE &amp; PLANTS
2 CONVENIENT MARKETS

MIDWAY MARKET
BOB'S MARKET

?omerov.
Ph. 992-2582
Mason,.
Ph. 773-S72l

SUNDAY TIMES.SENTINEL
5ervlng Mei gs, Mason
And Gall Ia Area
Phone 992-2156
MEIGS COUNTY BRANCH

THE ATHENS COUNTY SAVINGS
&amp; LOAN CO.
.

296 W . Second

Pomeroy

Ph. 992-3163

ROSEBERRY'S PENNZOIL
Rlcint

-

BAKERS OF GAY90 BREAD
Ph . 992-3030
Middleporl

Ph . 941-9130

WE FILL DOCTORS
PRESCRIPTIONS

I

RACINE FOOD MARKET
THE STORE WITH A HtAlH
Ph . t4f-2621
ll1cine

GET YOUR.
SECRETARY
AND I-lAVE HE'R
l-001&lt; I!.EHIND
THE STATUE OF
MILLARP FILLMORe
IN MIDWAY
PARI&lt;.:

STUCK UNDER TH!'
WINPS.HIEJ..O t.'V !PeR, 1
All- RIGHn,,MUST 6E
THE IN5TRUCTI0Ntl l

REMEMBER
'TURNING I,..TO
TH£ DRIV'E ·- tlfXT
lH!IIIG 1 KNEW

10(J Wffi~

UP ALL
NIGHT LCIKCJ
~ I TH TttE

I' P $MQ.Ct&lt;ED

RAfFfRlV

INTO THE WA\.L.

CHILD-

THERE':5
THE STATUE
OF Mll-LARP
FJLLMDRE :

LOOKS LIKE
THIS IS THE;
COU'ITDOWN,
E!\SYI , .HAVE;
Wfii STILL GOT"
A D!!ALf

YES ·· AND SHE'S
COMING ALONG
ALL RIGHT

NOII-

lHAi WA$ A

aosE ooe -

WELL

OH. DR lEE

mu OlisT
GEl SO ME

'NELL, s.o.RBeR .. TO~Y
WIND$ UP mAT Df.'Al · ·
I 'M HIGH · TAI L1H' OUT OF
THIS CROAKER MILL ... IF

TOOK CARE
OF ALL THAT SAID YOU ~ER E.

SLEEP
NOW -

TO H ~Vf A S HAV ~
fVfR'f Mf·

NEARLY LOST HER-

Tl4£ GARA6E -

I CAlli JUST GET M'(
~ T5

lWIN CITY GATEWAY

McCOY AUCTION SERVICE
(For a real auction calllhe Real McCoy)
1,0. (Macl McCoy
985-3944

THE DAILY SENTINEL
Dedicated to the Interests of
Meigs-Mason Area
Phone 992-2156
'

RIDENOUR SUPPLY

1"/-.\LL

MALE ',CKUMS

IS I-¥:JN SAFE' FUM

17--1' J\AOON GAD'

IH::oA MALE!'l"- HES·
A YOKUMr-AN'SfUCK
AWAY WIF Ht=R-

''#CON RAYS''
SfOP.5 AN 16000Li;S
~UP-UNTIL-

ll--IE:Y
DROPSr.~-

1(

AS YOU KNOW, TUTU

WORKED FOR A
I." C:HAo/1' OF HOT= LS!

HE WAS SENT TO A REMOf£:
GI(O(JPOF IS LANDS IN THE.
PAC IFIC .. .TO BCOUT FOR A

H15 PLANE iDST RADIO
DURING A
SIDRM ... AND WAS

ANOTHAT
HAPPENEO
ALMOST TWO

POSSIBLE NEW [OCA1lON
FORA RE50RT

NEVER HEARD
FROM AGAIN !

YEARS AGO???

THERE WAS NOJ1.11NG ANYONE
COUlD DO, EXCEPT
HOPE AND PRAY! I
KEPT 1HINKIN6HE1D SHOW UP...
OR THERE 'D BE

• OHJ3!ROIE! WHY
DIDYaJ WAIT SO
lON6- To TELL U5

TUTU?

COMPLEX.

I'LL ... I'LL TRY 1D
GET TIMMY HERE
To SLEEP !

&amp;oMEWORD
OF HIM ...

NEW YORK CLOTHING HOUSE
Kerm 's Korner
1Kermit Walton
Pomeroy

Oswald and Jim Jacoby

Church and olflce suppl ies -

Middleport

'

pl~y

Careful
• 9 75

3

z

.A Qi

t lO 8 2
• 873

Wlll1
Mfi, MLJ BQLI,

AW l'L-1..MAKP L(OU
A

• i$1''&gt;
STOP Al-lD
DRINK TO

THAT!

WEST

EAST

.81

.6 3

¥t0&gt;3

.KJ86

tAQ &gt;

t 76 4
"'9 6&gt; 1
SOUTH 101

•KQJ102

.AKQJIO
• 742

N\ll~IOtJAIRE' 1

tKJ93

... A

,.••

Neither vulnerable

·~,4

.·t--------------.J

J ...

1~:

Bi\RNJo;'

DADBURN LeAKY
•
\'

MAILBOX!! WHO CAN
READ A SOGGY 01.:
POSTCARD WIF INK
,RUNNI(\)' ALL OVER
CREATION?

SIMMER DOWN,
MAW ·· I JEST 1..-D::.&lt;
FIXED THAT
THAR LEAK

II

West

North East

Pass
Pass

2•
Pass

Opening

Pass
Pass

lead -

Alexander: Mi3y , Beatrice
May to Alexander May ,
Beatrice May , 2 acres ,
Rutland .
Sam Hicks Jr .. Marlha
Rhea H icks to Danny R .
Silvers, 5.006 a cr es, Salem
Homer
Parker . Alice
Pa rker
f or m er l y
Alice
William s I a John D Costanzo,

for 4 spades

NORTH

..

MIDDLEPORT BOOK STORE

Property Transfers

BRIDGE

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-

Furniture &amp; Hardware
Home l ite ~ws
Chester
Ph. 985-3308

Ray Riggs
Roger Riebel
Chester
SI . RI. 7
Ph . 985 -4100

ON-

ABNER

ze

THIS SPACE AVAilABLE
PHONE 992-2156

RIGGS USED CARS, INC.

AM I RUNNIN '
0 111 Ot-1 DOC
ZfE, O'YUH MfAN 1
WHADDYUH THINK.&lt;'
O.K..' NOW THINK.
AGAI~!

Major or

Pomeroy

gifts
99 Mill St.

OH, OH: 50METHIIJ6'So

MORON?

a "
Uves..

Middleport, Ohio
WE HANDLE ONLY U. S.D.A. CHOICE
MEATS

Middleport. Ohio

THE HOUSE, MRS. AIC.G.
HOW ABOUT THAT ROOM
6EYONO THE PANTRY?,__,;!~,...;.,;.,;;.

OF

Tonto"

u

992-2955

WHAT DOES IT

LIKE, YOU SADISTIC

James

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE PHARMACY

HEINER'S BAKERY

'

Racine, Ohio

BETSY ROSS BAKERY

Nationwide Ins . Co. of Columbus,
804W. Main

Closed Thurs.

ELLIS &amp; SONS SOHIO

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT

Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., F'rlday, June3, 19'17
•
YOU HAVEN'T SHOWN ME AL.L

6l~w"Hd'

'

RACINE PLUMBING &amp; HEATING

a.m . W&lt;Vsh1p tef\lke Wednes·
CHUHCH , Sunday School serv1ce. Wtdnesdoy. 7 30p.m .
10 a 1'1"1 Pro,-er muelmg. I hun
LONG BOTTOM CHRISTIAN , doy , 7 JOp m.
CALVARY BIBLE CHURCH , 26 N .
day , 7 p m Sunday l!venmg ser , 8ruce Sm1th, pastor . Wallace
Second,
Mtddleporl~ pastor, Cur·
v1(8, 7p m
Damewood. ~upt . B1ble School.
ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST, 9:30 o .m . PreochH\9 $er101Ce. ris St•phen . CtJurch "hool, 9,30
a.m , preochtng services, 10:30
Jlomeroy HaJJt!&gt;Dnvtll• Rd ., Don 10 -45 o .m . No evening seN1te.
Kenned y, pastor , Bill McElroy ,
HYSELL MUN FREE METHODIST a.m . and 7:30 p.m. Wednetdoy
~unday
school supt. Sunday CHURCH . li:ev. Herbert A iling , B'olening Btble study , 70:10 p.m .
INDEPENDENT HOLINESS CHUR·
u hool . q 30 a.m .. morn1ng wnr
po11or. Sunday S.C.h ool 9 30om.•
0 . 1n·
!:Iunday
~vanyeli~tn:
TRINITY CHURCH , Rev W H
CH . INC. - Corner Fourth ond
sh1p
and
commumon
IO.lO
a.m
..
Morn
ing
serv1ce,
10
JO
om
,
meet1ng,
7·30
p
m
Prayer
Perrin , poslor Roy Moym . Sun
Sunday even1ng youth Chnstlan youth
service.
tv .C5
p m . Lincoln Sis, Middleport : Rev.
day school .-.up l Church School , meet1ng, Wednesday 7 :10 p.m
l:nd£'0vor , 6 p.m .. worship ser
Evangell1tlc
service
7
30
p m . O'Dell Manley. poslor~ Sony Hud·
UNITED
PRESBYTERIAN
9 15om worshtp ser-.r1ce. 10 :JO
'olfCt:t
7
p.m
.
Wednftdoy
t:tvening
Prayer
meeti
ng.
Thu,~doy
,
7·30 s,on , Sunday School superinten·
om . Cho1r rehearsal , Tuesday , MINISTRY OF Ml:IGS COUNTY
den t ~ndoy $(:hool 9.30 a .m .;
proym
meeting
and
Bible
study
,
pm .
Ow•ght L. Zovill , dnedor
7 :JO p m . vnder d•rect1on of Mrs
even1ng worship, 7:30 p.m .;
7
30
p.
m.
FREEDOM
GOSPEL
MISSION
at
HARRISONVILLE
Paul Nease
prayer
and praise serv ice,
Sf
JOHN
LUTHERAN
CHU
RCH,
Bold Knob , Rev
lawrence
POMEROY CHURCH OF THE PRESSYJERIAN . Rev . Ernest
Pmtt GroYe, TI-le Rev. William Gluesencamp, Sr .. pastor; Roger Wednesday, 7:30pm .
Stncklin
,
pastor
Sunday
church
NAZAR~NE Corner Umon and
THE PEOPLE'S CHURCH OF
M1ddlesworth, Postor. Church Willford. Sr . • Sunday school sup! .
Mulberry , Rev Cl yde V. Hender· school , 9·30 am , Mrs . Homer
serv1ces 9·30 a.m . Sunday School Sunday school 9·30 a .. ; Sunday POMEROY - Corner Matn and
Lee
,
sup!
;
mommg
worsh1p
,
son . pastor. Sunday school , 'il 30
Court St~ .. tturd floor over
10 30 a.m .
evt~ning service 7 p.m Prayer
om • Glen McC lung supt., morn· 10·30
Lighthouse
Ftestouronl
Henry
BRADBURY
CHURCH
OF meeting , Tuesday, 7·30 p m.
M IDDLEPORT. Sunday school ,
ing worship , 10:30 o .m . even1ng
Cook , pastor. Sunday school , 10
CHRIST.
Mr
.
Donald
Roley.
pas
tor.
Ernest
Deeter
,
doss
leader.
q 30 a.m ., R1chard Vaughan , :oU fJ' .
serv•ce , 7•30, mtd-week serv1ce
Sunday school . 9.30 a .m.: war, Youth meeting, Wednesday, 7·30 o .m : morning worsh1p , 11 a .m ..
Man
J wL&gt;f:.lup. 10:30
Wednt11sdo y, 7 30 p m .
service,
7 · 30 .
ship service, 10 30 a .m .: Sunday p m . with Don and Martha even in g
!:o'r'llACUSE
.
Morning
worsh1
p.
9
GRACE EPISCOPAL , The Rev
Wednesday
evenm
g
service.
serv
tces
,
7
p.m
..
youth
group,
Meadows,
leoden
Har old Dee th, rec tor. Church ser. o , m . Sunday school. 10 a .m . Mrs .
WHITES CHAPEL, Cool.,.ille RD. 7·30 lnterdenom1noi10nal , fu ll
Wednesday , 7 p .m .
vic es , 10 30 o m : Holy commu · Sampson Hall, supt.
ANTIQUITY
BAPT
IST.
Rev
.
Earl
Rev.
Roy Deeter, pastor. Sunday gospel
RUTLAND CHURCH OF GOD .
1110n f1rsl Sunday of month , chur·
RUTLAND CHURCH OF GOO ·Shu
ler
.
pastor,
Sunday
school
school
9:30 o .m ; wars hlp service,
Rev
James
D
.
Guynn
,
pastor
.
ch sc hool , 10 30 o m . for nursery
Pa stor OemloS Boles
Sunday
9
30
o.m
:
Church
serviC:
e.
7
p.m
.:
10·30
o
m.
Bible
study
and
prayer
Sunday
school
10
o
.m
.~
Sunday
thr o..,gh 12
Xhool
,
10
o.m
,
worship
service,
youth
meetmg,
6
p.m
Tuesday
Bi·
service, W&amp;dnesdoy , 7:30p.m
wor sh1p . 11 a .m .. Sunday even1ng
POMEROY CHURCH OF CHRIST
11 30 o .m and 7·3Q p. m. Prayer
RUTLAND
R1chord Evanson , pa stor , Bible serv1ce . 7 p .m .. Wednesday wor - ble Study , 7 p.m .
meetmg . Wednesday , 7:30p . m.
RACINE
CH
UR
CH
OF
THE
RUTlAND
CHURCH
OF
CHRIST
,
school , 9·30 om .: worshtp, 10 30 sh•p serv1ce. 7.30 p.m ,
RUTLAND APOSTOLIC CHURCH
HAZEL COMMUNITY CHURCH . NAZARENE, Rev . John A. Coff. Oenni1 Smith , pastor : Fronk
o m ; adul! worsh1p service and
OF Jt!JUS ( HHI!:.T, Thomas l.
mon
pastor.
Sunday
School,
9
30
Young
,Sunday
school
supt.
Sun·
young peoples meeting 7 30 Near Long Bo ttom , Edsel Hart ,
Holmes. po~t or
B1b le study.
p m Combined Bible study and pastor Sunday school , 10 a .m .: o.m , Gerold Wells , supt . Morn- day &amp;e.,ool and communton, 9 30 ~turdoy . 7.30 p.m ; Evongeltstlc
,ng
worshtp,
10:30
a
.m.,
Sunday
o.m
Worsh
ip
ond
comun
ion
,
Church.
7
30
p.m
..
prayer
prayer mee t1ng, Wedne sday , 7 30
p m . proye• meehng, Tuesday ,
evening w ors hip, 7 .30; Prayer 10:30o m.
meet1ng, 7 00 p.m Thursday.
pm
7 30 p m . B1hle Study , Thursday ,
mee
ti
ng.
Wednesday
,
7:30p.
m
.
RUTLAND
C
OMMUNITY
M
IDDLEPORT
PENTEt:OSTAL
,
THE SALVATION ARMY, En voy
7 30 p.m
RACINE
FIRST
BAPTIST
.
Don
L
CHURCH
,
Sunday
School
,
9,30
Roy W . Wmtng, Off iCer 1n charge . Th,rd Ave .• the Rev . Wdl 1am t&lt;n1t·
POMUf i,) V
WESLEYAN
Walker
,
Pastor
.
Ronnie
Salser
.
o.m
;
worsh1p
servi
ce,
II
a
.m.:
tel
,
pastor
.
Ronald
Dugan
,
Sun
·
Sunday
10 a .m .. Ho[,ness
HOLINCS) - Harr isonville Rood ,
Sunday
school
supt,;
Sunday
Wednesday
prayer
meeting
,
7:30
day
School
Supt
.
Clones
for
oil
meeting , 10:30 a.m.. Sunday
Dewey
King, pastor ; Edison
Schoo l Young People 's Leg1on , 7 ages even1 ng terv,ce. 7:30, B1ble school , 9•30 a .m .; morning wOr· p.m youth servtces , Sunday , 7 Weaver , ossis.tont; Henry Ebl in ,
ship,
10:
40
a.m
..
Sunday
evening
p.m
;
Sunday
n1ght
worsh
ip
,
7
.30.
study
.
Wednesday
,
7:
30
p.m
.;
p.m , Thursday , 1 to J p.m ..
worsh ip , 7:30. Wednesday even·
RUTLAND CHURCH OF THE Jr. , ~undoy school supt. Sundoy
Lad ies Home League, 7 p.m . Prep youth services, Friday. 7·30 p.m
1ng B1ble study, 7.30.
NAZARENE,
Rev. lloyd D. Grimm, school 9.30 o .m ; morning wor,
MIDDLEPORT
FREEWILL
BAP·
classes
DANVILLE
WESLEYAN
,
Rev
.
R.
Jr
,
pastor.
Sunday school. 9 30 sh1p. 11 o.m . Sunday even ing
BURLINGTON SO UTHERt&lt; BAP· liS T Corner Ash onQ Plum: Noel
service, 7.30. prayer · meeting ,
D. Brown , pastor, Sunday School , am : worsh1p servic • . 10·30 o .m
Herrman
,
pastor.
Saturday
even
TIST CHAPEl, Route 1, Shade~
Thursday . 7.30 p.m .
9
30
a.m
..
mormng
worship
Broadcast
hve
over
WMPO;
young
mg
serv1ce
,
7
30
p.m
.:
Sunday
Pastor Bobby Elkins . Sunday
SYRACUSE FIRST CHURCH OF
10 -45 . youth 5ervice , 6 ..C5 p m .; pe o ple ' s
service ,
6 -45 ,
school , 5 p.m . Sunday wors h1p . Sc hool , 10.30 a.m.
GOD - Not Pentecost a l, Rev.
evening
worship,
7:30
p
m
;
evongelishc
service
,
7.30
p.m.
MEIGS
5 -4 5 p . m . Wednesday prayer ser·
pra yer and praise , Wednesday . Prayer meetmg , Wednesday , 7 30 George 0 1ler, pastor Wo rship
COOPERATIVE PARISH
vice, 7.30 p.m .
7
30 p. m.
p.m ; Miss1onary meettng, 7.30 servtce Sunday . 9:ot5 a.m .; SunMETHODIST
CHURCH
ST . PAUL LUTHERAN Ct:i URCH.
day school, 11 a.m ., worship serSILVER
RUN
FREE
BAPTIST,
p.m first Wednesday of month.
Rober! T. Bumgarner ,
Corner of Sycamore and Second
VICe , 7 30 p.m . Thurtdoy prayer
Miles
Trout,
pastor.
Sunday
MASON
COUNTY
Director
Sis . Pomeroy. The Rev . W1llmm
meeting, 7 30 p.m
school
,
10
a
.m
..
Steve
l
ittle.
supt
.
MASON
FIRST
BAPTIST,
~econd
POMEROY
CLUSTER
Middlesworth , Past or. Sunday
MT HERMON Untied Brethren
Evenmg serYICe , 7 p.m .. prayer and Pomeroy Sis,, Stan Craig,
Rev . Robert Hoyden
School at 9 4S a.m and Chvrch
Ch urch Sunday School 9.30 a .m .
meel1ng, Thursday , 7 p.m .
pastor
Sunday
school
,
9
-4
5
a
m.,
Rev.
James
Corbitt
Serv1ces 11 a m
CHESTER CHURCHOF GOD. worshtp service, 11 o.m ; tramtng Worship service 10 oiS a m.
CHESTER , Worsh1p 9.15 am
SACRED HEART, Re.,. , Fa the r
Rev
Bobby Porter, pastor . Sun· unlorf, 6·30 p m : ~;~ven1ng wo r- Preaching services every Sunday
Church
School10
a.m
.
Paul D Welt on, pastor , Ph one
day
school,
9.30 am .. worsH1p ship service, 7 ·30 p m. M1d Week allernotmg wllh C. E. Wedne sday
POMEROY , Worshtp , 10.30o m .
'192 -2825 . Sa turday even1ng Mass
serv
tce
,
11
a.m
.: evenmg servtce, prayer service, Wednesday , 7:30 prayer meeting 7 30 p.m . Rev.
Church
School
9
30
a
.m
UMYF
7 30, Sunday Moss, 8 and 10 a m..
James Leach . pastor . Dav 1d
7
30.
you
th
service,
Wednesday. p.m .
Confes'Sion , Saturday , 7 7 30 p m. b 30 p m.
730pm
MASON CHURCH OF CHRIST, P, Holter , loy leader. ENTERPRISE , Wor ship 9 a m
POMEROY WES TS IDE CHURCH
JEHOVAH 'S WITNESSES , 1 milt:~
LANGSVILLE CHRISTI AN CHUR· 0 Bo)( •87, Miller Sl . Ma son W
OF CHRIST , 200 W . Moln Sl , Jerry Church Schoo l 10 o m .
ROCK SPRINGS, Worsh1p 10 CH . Ted Jones , pastor. Sunday Vo. Sunday Bible Study 10 o .m , east of Rutland, junctton of Route
Paul , min1s)er , phone ~2 - 7666
124 and Noble Summit Rood (TConse rva tive , non instrumental . am Church School 9 15o .m . school 9 30 a m , Roy Stgmon , Worship ll o m and 7 p .m . Bible
supt. , morning worsh ip , 10:30, Study Wednesday 7 p.m ., Vocal 174). Sunday Bible lecture, 9•30
Sunday wor sh1p , 10 o m , Bible UMYF b 30 p m .
a .. ; Watchtower study , 10·30
FLATWOODS, Wors h1p , 11 a .m . Sunday evening servtce, 7:30, musit .
study , 11 am : worsh ip 6 p m
a .m .; Tuesday , Bible study, 7 and
mid
-week
serv1ce,
Wednesday
,
FIRST
SOUTHERN
BAPTIST,
Ca,.
ChurchSchooi i Oo .m .
Wednesday Bible study , 7 p.m .
B 15 p.m.; Thursday . theocratic
7·30
p
m
ner
of
Second
aF1d
Anderson
,
MIDDLEPORT
CLUSTER
OLD DEXTER BIBLE CHRISTIAN
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF THE Mason. Pastor, Walter Cloud . school. 7:30 p m : service
Rev Robert Bumgarner
CHURCH . Rev . Ra lph Sm 1th ,
NAZARENE
, Rev
Dale Doss, Sunday school 9·45 o.m .; worshtp meeting, 8.30p .m .
HEATH
,
Robe
rt
Bum)erne
r
,
pastor Sunday school, 9·30 am .,
HOPE BAPTIST - 570 Grant St .,
pastor
;
Bob
M
oore
Sunday service , 11 o.m . and 7: 30 p m.
Pastor
Worship
10
30
a.m.
M rs Worley FranCi s, supermfenSunday school Weekly Bible ~ tudy , Wednesday , Middleport. Bobby Elkms. pastor .
dent ~reaching serv iu~s l1rsl &amp; Church School 9 30 o .m UMYF b School supt.
Sunday School , 10 a.m .. worshiR
classes far all ages , 9·30 am., 7:30p .m .
third Sunday s following Sunday pm
MASON ASSEMBLY OF GOO, serv ice, 11 a.m : evening serv1ce .
RUTLAND , W1lbur Hdt , Pastor. morning wo rsh ip , 10 4S o m.,
SchooL
Thursday prayer
7 30 p.m
GRAHAM UNITED METHODIST, Worship 10·30 am . Church School NYPS , 6:30pm .: evongt:tlishc ser - Ouddtng Lone . Mason , W . Vo.
meehng
and
B1ble study , 7:30
VICe,
7
30
p
m
.
Prayer
and
Chester
Tennant
,
Pastor.
Sunday
Preoci'Hng 9:30 o .m , l 1r st end se- 9 30o m
pm
fosling
Tuesday
,
10
a
.
m
.
School
9.45
a.m.;
Children's
SYRACUSE
CLUSTER
cond Sundays of each month
RUTLAND FREEWILL BAPTIST
M 1dweek
prayer
service , Church 6:45 p. m. Young People's
Rev Harvey Koch Jr .
third and f our th Sundays each
A SBURY , Worsh1p 11 om . Wednesday , 7:30 p. m.. men's Serv1ce 6:-45 p.m. Evangelistic Church - leland Holey , pastor ,
month worship se rvice at 7·30
Sunday sc hool, 10 a.m ., even1ng
p.m . Wednesday eveni ngs at Churcn St.hool 9 50 a m , UMW prayer meeting, Saturday, 7 p .m .: Serv1ce 7:30 p.m . Women 's Mts·
7 30 p.m ·. Prayer
first Tuesday . B1ble Study Thur s. miSS IOnary meet1ng , second stonory Council 10 o.m . f1rst and service,
7:30. Prayer and Bible Study
meeting , Wednesday , 7:30p.m
7·30
p.m
Wednesday
.
thtrd
Tuesdays.
Prayer
and
Bible
7.30
p.m
.
SEVE NTH -DAY ADII~NTIST .
CHURCH OF GOD of Prophecy ,
UN ITE D
FAITH
NON · Study , Wednesday , 7.30p.m .
FOREST RUN Worsh ip 9 a m
Mulberry He1ghts Rood. ~o""4!._oy
located on the 0 J Whi te Rood
DENOMINATIONAL
,
Rev
.
Robert
HARTFORD
CHURCH
OF
CHRIST
Cl-lurc
h
School
l
O
om
Pastor , Gerard Seton , Sabud'Ml
MINERSVILLE . Worsh ip 10 a .m . Sm 1th, pa stor, Sunday School, IN CHRISTIAN UNION, The Rev. off h1ghwoy 1bO. Sunday School
School Super~ntendent ,
Clara
9·30 a.m .. Closs leader . leo Hill ; Wi111amCampbell, pastor. Sunday 10 a m. Superintendent John
Mcintyre . Sabbath School , Sa tur · Church Schoo19 a.m .
worshtp &amp;ervice, 10:30 a .m .: chur- School , 9 30 o .m : James Hughes , Loveday . Ftrsl Wt:tdne-sday night
SY
RACUSE
.
Church
School
9·00
day afternoon a t 2.00. w 1th Wor ·
ch 7 30 p. m.
supt ., eYemng service , 7 30 p.m. of month CPMA serv1ces , second,
am . Worsh1p service 7 30 p.m
sh1 p Service following at 3 15.
EDEN
UNITED
BRETHREN
IN
Wednesday
evening proyt:t r Wednesday WMB meel1ng, thlfd
SOUTHERN
CLUSTER
RUTLAND FIRST BAPTIST
CHRIST , Elden R. Bloke. pastor. meeting 7 30 p.m . Youth prayer through flf•J, youth service '
Re v Timothy $m1th
CH URCH- Orewy Gore . supt .
George Cro~ . pastor
Sunda y School 10 a .m. Howard service each Tuesday.
Cl uste r lt:toder
Sunday School 9 30 a m . morn ·
HOPE BAPTIST CHAPEL - 570
McCoy , supt ., Morning sermon .
FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH ,
Rt:tv . Ste ven Wilson
tng wors tHp, 10.-45 a m.
Grant St., Middleport: Rev Bobby
11
a.
m
..
Sunday
night
services
letart
,
W
.
Vo
.,
Rl
1,
Rev.
Charles
Ass
oc
tote
THE HIL AND CHAPEL , George
BETHANY, (Dorcas), Worship Chnstton Endeavor, 7:30 p.m .. Hargraves, postor, Worship ser - Elkins. Sunday school, 10 am .;
Costa, pastor Sunday School ,
9·30 a m , even1ng worship, 7 30. 9 30 o.m Church School 10 30 Song service, 8 p.m .: Preaching vices , 9·30 a .m .; Sunday school, morning worship, 11 ; evening~
8·30 p .m . Midweek Prayer 11 am .; evening warsh1p , 7 30 worship. 7:30 p.m.; Thursday
am .
Thursday even1ng prayer serv1ce,
CARMEL . Chruch School 9 .30 meeting , Wednesday . 7 p.m .: Ray p.m . Tuesday cottage prayer evening Bi ble study ond prayer,
7 30p.m
meeting and Bible study , 9 30 meeting, 7·30 p. m Affiliated with
POMEROY FIRST BAPTIST , Rev. a m . Worsh1p 10.30 a .m . 2nd and Adam s, loy leader.
CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST,
S.B.C .
4th Su ndays.
Peter Grandoll , pastor. Wilham
Located
at
Rutland
on
New
Limo
APPLE
GROVE
,
Sunday
School
Wot sap , Sunday school sup! .,
Sunday school 9·30 o .m ., .BYF , 6 9 30 a m Worsh1p 7.30 p.m . ls i Rood , next to Fores t Acre Pork ,
p m ., Bible study , Wednesday , 7 and 3rd Sundays , Prayer meeltng Rev . Roy Rouse, pastor, Robert
p.m .. choir practice, Wednesday . Wednesday 7 30 p m . Fe tlowsh1p Musser, Sunday School sup! . Sunby THOMAS JOSEPH
supper f~rsl Saturday 6 p.m UMW day school , 10·30 am . worship
8 30 p.m
7
·
30
p
.
m
8
1ble
~ludy ,
2nd
Tuesday
7
30
p
m
FIRST SOUTHERN 8APTIST , 282
40 Hainmer.
ACROSS
EAST LET ART , Chruch School Wednesday , 7·30 p.m , Saturday
Mulberry Av e , Pomeroy , Paul J.
nig
ht
prayer
serv1ce,
7·30
p.m
1
Soft
drink
andlsi
2nd
,
3rd
Sundays,
9
30
o
.
m
Whtte, Pastor, Gory Basham , Sun·
H~MLuCK GROVE CHRISTIAN,
5 Nouveau - 41 Word In a
Fourth Sunday 10·"30 am Worday school supt. Sunday school,
d
9,j0 o.m ; morning worshtp, ship 2nd Sunday 7:30 p.m . 4th Roger Watson , pastor; Jesste 1 m1
threat
0 I tate
Sunda y 9.30 a.m .; Prayer meet1ng Whtle, Sunday school supt Morn10 30 even1ng worsh1p , 6·30 p m
42
Dlvlnll}'
M 1dweek prayer service 7 30 Wednesday 7·30 p m . UMW lsi lng worship , 9:30 am .: Sun- 11 Expand
doyschool
,
10.30
o.m
;
evenmg
the
lwtgs
43
Coloring
Tuesday? 30 p.m
p. m.
WESLEYAN (Racine), Sunday serviCe, 7:30 Wednesday Bible Ulnterpret
expert
MIDWAY COMMUNITY CENTER ,
..
mind
School 10 a .m. Worshtp 11 o .m ; Study , 7.30 p.m .
Dex ter Rd , Langsvi lle, Ohio , Re.ov
1
DOWN
MT UNION BAPTIST , Rev . John
•Jr UMYF Wed(lesdoy 3:30 p.m ;
Clyde Ferrall. 'Pastor. Sunday
1 Mrs.
(consider)
Bible S!udy Thursday 7 p.m . Cho1r Elswick , pastor, Sunday school
School • 1 1 a . m .
Saturday
supe
rtn
tendent,
Don
Wilson
.
Sun·
(2
wds.)
K. Polk
Prochea Thursday 8 p.m.
preaching services 7:30 p.m
z
"TreemonYaterday'a Answer ;
·
doy
school.
9:45
a.
m
..
evenmg
15
_
Garfunkel
LETART
FALLS
,
Church
School
Wednesday evening Bible study
worsh1p.
7:30
p.m
.
Prayer
poll
lsi , 2nd , 3rd SunOo ys 10. 15 a .m .
ot7 30p m.
Isba," e,g.
lZ Make certain 26 Expose;
11 S
FAITH TABERNACLE CHURCH . 4th Sunday 9 15 am .. Worsh1p meet,r;-g. 7 30 p.m. Wednesday .
3 Mam Short 18 Clarke and
26 "Harry
TUPPERS PLAINS CHRISTIAN 17 CIA's
1st, 2nd, 3rd Sundays 9 15 a .m ..
Bailey Run Rood, Rev , Emmett
story(3
wds,)
Murray
and
Ct-4URCH
,
Eugene
Underwood
,
predecessor
4th
Su
nday
7
30
p
m
Row son , pastor Handley Dunn ,
pastor,
Howard
Coldwell,
Jr.,
Is
that
so!
MORNING
STAR
,
Worship
9
30
4 Say further Z2 Golf baD
star :
sup!. Sunday school, 10 a .m . Sun·
om .. Chu rch School 10 30 a m. , Sunday School Supt. , Sunday
day ~;~vemng service 7:30, B1ble
5
Coarse
position
30
Llke so'me
Mid -Week Serv1ce Wedne sd ay 8 School , 9·30 a .m ., Morning Ser· II High (mus.)
teochmg , 7 30 p m Thursday .
8
Sluggis.~
23
Great
Lakes
milk
,
mon
10:30
a.m
:
Sunday
evening
II
Brooklyn
OYESVILLE COMMUNITY CHUR - p.m.
service,
7
p.m.
campus
7
Kind
of
tea
cargo
:12
Feel
MORSE
CHAPEt
,
Worshp
11
CH , Roger C Turner . pastor.
LET ART
FALLS
UNITED
( bbt)
a.m., Church School9 ·30 a m
I Berlioz
Z4 Drinking
33 Beer
Sunday school, 9·30 a m ., Sunday
PORTLAND , Worshtp 7·30 p m., BRETHREN . Rev Freeland Norris , %1 "-Three
morning worsh1p , 10 30; Sundov
symphony
toast
38 Go sclmpas tor , Floyd Norris , supt . Sunday
Church Schoo l 9:30 o .m
evening ser..,ice, 7 30.
(
3
wds.)
Z5
One
kind
of
sing
h
I
9
SUTTON . Church School 9·30 sc oo, .30 am .: morning serTHE SALVATION ARMY . ll S
mon
,
10:30
a
.m
..
Prayer
service,
(2
wda.)
t
V
owe!
warden
39
YIP's cara m Worshtp 1s t and 3rd Sundays
Bu tternut Ave., ~ o mer oy . Envoy
Wedne•doy
.
7
30
p.m
23
Lilac
or
10·30
a
.
m.
and Mrs . Ray Wining , officers 1n
omlsslon
(2 wds.)
pet color
CHURCH OF GOO OF PRO·
NORTHEAST CLUSTER
cha rge . Sunday holiness met:tting ,
PHECY
,
O.J.
Wklte
Rood
afl
160.
lavender
Rev. Rtcho rd Thomas
10 a. m .. Sunday school, 10·30
Rev. George Groyl• . postorSun· Z4
Pastor
a.m . Leader YPSM Eloise Adams,
day _School, 10 a .m . Arthur Hen·
Minor
Duane Sydenstncker
7:30 p.m . solvation meeting
son , Supt.; Mormng Worsh1p, II
Ocean
John Douglas
Ladtes Home League 12 noon to 2
a. m. Young People's serv1ce, 7
Wltet
ASSOC! Oies
p. m .. Thursday ; prayer: meeting
JOPPA , Worshtp 10 a . m .. Chur· p. m., Evening serviCe, 7:30pm.,
and B1ble study , Thursday , 7:30
ch S&lt;:hool 9 a.m ., Prayer Meeting Wednesday M1d-Week Prayer Z'1 Honey
p.m .
Service , 7 :30 p .m..
Youth
maker's
Wednesday 8 p m .
::- ·
MIDDLEPORT
home
LONG BOTTOM , Sunday school meeting, 6 30 p m Evening wor·
MT . MORliU:t...BAPTIST . Corner
r ' Zl French ci"'
Fourt h and ~Oir;, · '-Ajddlt:tpor t . at 9·30 a m. Worshi p services at ohop . 7·30 p.m
CHESTER CHURCH OF THE
"
Rev Henry Key Jr ., pos~"Sun · 7·30 p. m B1ble study and Youth
B p m
on NAZARENE , Rev . Herber t Grole, Zl Before
day School , 9:30am , Mrs. Ervin meeting at
pastor Worship service, 11 am . • Medil.
Baumgardner, sup l ; Morn1ng Wednesdays .
illand
NORTH BETHEL . WQrsh1p 11 and 7.30 p m . Sunday . Sunday
worship , 10:.45o m.
School , 9.30 a .m . Richard Borton,
( bb )
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF am .. Church SchoollO am
8 r.
ALFRED. Svnday School 9 •30 supt. Prayer meeting, Wednes· I
CHRIST IN CHRISTIAN UNION ,
1 Cuba or
Lawre nce Manley, poster, Mrs . o m .. Worship 10:.C5 a.m .. Praye r day , 7:30p .m.
BRADFORD
CHURCH
OF
Ceylon
Russell Young , Sunday School meetmg Wednesday 7·.C5 p m.,
CHRIST. Gobnel Mzrs , pastor. Bl·
(abbr.)
UMW 3rd Tut:tsdoy 8 p.m .
Sup! Sunday School 9 30 a m
REEDSVILLE , Sunday School9:30 ble Sunday School 9.30 a.m .. mar· H Sea ea"'1""
Evening
worsh1p ,
7 : 30 ,
Ill"'_..
Wednesday prayer meehng 7 30 am Worsh tp 7 30 p.m . Prayer n1ng church )0:30 a.m .. Sunday
Meetmg 7:30 p.m . Tue sday. evening service , 7.00 p.m . 35 Before leau
p.m
Wednesday SBf'IICe, 7:30p.m.
Dr' tenle
MT. MORIAH CHURCH OF GOD . v,s,lotion7 30 p.m . 1st Thursdoy.
LAUREL CLIFF FREE METHODIST 31 Anagram
SILVER RIDGE , Worship 10 a .m .
Roc~ne Route 2, the Rev James
CHURCH , Rev Floyd F. Shook.
of te
M . Muncy. pastor . S!J ndoy school , Church School 9 o .m
a
TUPPERS PLAINS, Worship 9 pastor ; Lloyd Wright , Sunday
9:-45 a.m .: morning worship, 11
Sc hool Supf ; Morn.ng Worship r7 Grape
a m.. ev enmg worship, 7:30. o.m Church School 10 o .m
grown old
KENO CHURCH OF CHRIST , 9•30 a.m .; Sunday School 10:20
Prayer meellng , Tuesday , 7:30
p m., Young people's meeting , George Frederick , sup t Service a .m .; Wt:tdnesdoy Prayer and Bl· 11 Resounded
weekly , 9·30 a . m. on Sunday . ble Study 7:30p.m .; Sunday even ·
7·30 p.m Thursday .
MIDDLEPORT FIRST BAPTIST . I Preaching first and third Sundays ing worship ?:30 p .m .; Chotr PracHere's how to work It:
· Corner S1xth and Palmer, the Rev . of month by Cl1fford Smith , 9:30 tice Thursday, 7 p m .
DEXTER
CHURCH
OF
CHRIST,
AXYDLBAAXR ,
Peter Grondol , pastor ; Mannmg a.m .
HOBSON CHRISTIAN UNION , Charles Russell , Sr ., mimsler;
Klatt'S, superintendent Sunday
LONGFELLOW
II
School WMPO Radio program Dorrell Dodd rill pas tor . Sunday R1tk Macomber. Jupl Sunday
9:30 o m ;
leonard school. 9.30 a.m.; worship ser7:•5 o. m ,; Sunday School, 9: 15 School.
One letter simply stands for another. In thia umple A 11
o.m · Morning Worsh ip 10. 15 Gdmore , first elder : evening ser- vi ce . 10:30 a .m . Bible Study , Tva•·
used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, el&lt;. Sinrte leiters
o . i-n . Youth ocllvilles and vice, 7 .30 p.m . Wednesday day , 7:30p.m ,
apoatrophes,
the lengLh and formation of the words are. ali
REORGANIZED CHURCH OF
fellowship lor junior and sen1or pra ye r meeting . 7.30 p m .
hintt.
Each
day
the code letters are dilerent.
JESUS
CHRIST
OF
LATTER
DAY
MT MORIAH CHURCH OF GOO.
high students , 6 p.rr,1. Sunday
eventng worsh1p, 7:30 p.m Mid- Ra cine Boule 2. The Rev. Charles SAINTS . Portland Rac ine Rood
CllYFlOQUOTIS
poster. Tom
Ha nd , pastor Sunday school, 9-45 W1lltam Roush
week prayer services , Wednes
am : morn ing worsh1p . 11 o.m. Stobar t , Sunday School Director.
day . 7.30 p .m.
'
BT
BHVKYQV
VMWR
W H F V T,E •
CHURCH OF CHRIST . Mid- Evenmg st:trv1ces , Tuesday and Sunday School , 9;30 a .m .. Morn·
ing
worsh
ip
,
10
30
a
.m
.:
Sunday
dleporl , Sth and Main, George Friday , 7:30p .m
H E A
BEARWALLOW RIDGE CHURCH eventng service 7 p. m . Wednes·
Gloze , mtnister, Mike Gerlach ,
VY
TMIK
YVKTL;
VKMV
super1ntendent . Terry Yankey , OF CHRI ST, Doug Seamon . day evenmg prayer servtce1 , 7.30
p.
m.
minister
.
81
ble
study.
9:30a
.m
..
youth minis ter Bible school , 9 .30
BETHLEHEM BAPTIST. Rev. Earl
HF
DTFV
BMN
VY
ATV
om , morn1ng wontHp, 10:30 morn1ng worsh1p , 10:30 a.m ..
Shuler,
pastor
Worship
1ervice
.
evening
worship,
7:30
p.m.
o.m,, even1ng worship, 7:30.
prayer serv1 ct:t, 7 p.m . Wedne$• Wedne-sday Bible study , 7.30 p.m. 9·30 o m . Sunday school. 10:30
MWYEA . - MWCLTP
PT
SQFFTV
KENO CHURCH OF CHRIST , a m B•ble Study ond prayer ser·
cto,
Yeaterday'a Cryploqatte: THE SHORTEST DISTANCE
George Freder1c:k, sup!. Sunday vice "Thursday, 7 lOp m .
MIODL~PORT CHURCH OF THE
CARLETON CHURCH , K1ng1bury
BETWEEN TWO JOKES MAKES A PERFECI' SPEECH. NAZARENE , Rev . J1m Broome . morn1ng service, 9·30 o .m with
pastor; Mrs Mary Lothey , Sunday preaching on first and th1rd Sun · Rood. Gory King, pastor . Sunday
O.A. BATI'ISTA
JChool 9·30 a.m., evening wor " hool sup! . ~undoy school. 9 .30 day ol month by George P1ckens .
STIVE RSV ILLE COMMUNITY shtp , 7:30 p . r~ Prayer meeting.
a.m.. morn ing worship, lO.::JO

South

K•

good many tables and decided
to play absolutely safe for this
Sulton .
Dorothy Klingler to Bar contract So he drew trumps
ba ra Klingler . Int. 1n Oil &amp;
and promptly led a low dtaGas, Bed ford
mond toward dummy II
dtdn 't matter what WesLdid
Actually, he du c ked
whereupon George led a second dtamond and knocked out
the queen.
\1'\t\irut fii}lf ~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
West led back a low hea rt ~ \.!;!J ~~ 'J.l
byHenriArnoidandBoblee
George continued his safe

play by putting in the mne
from dummy. Late r on. he got
to chuck dummy 's queen of
hearts on hts fourth diamond
and wound up as the only

Unscramble these tour Jumbles,
one lener to each square. to form
lour ordinary words.

ICCUB

t

! j( ) ] I
~ Q~ ~ I s;·~~~- ··~"-··
~~~~~er

to brmg four spades

An Jndiana

re~der

wants

~o

know what the Stms three btd
By O.wald &amp; James Jacoby
We are indebted lo Chester
Billings for today 's hand
whi ch helped two old friends
of ours, the late Bob Cun·
ningham and the late George
Alderton, wm a 1963 Resional
open patrs.
George won the club lead
with his ace and after looking
over dummy saw that he could
make six 1f the kmg of hearts
and the queen of dtamonds
were placed nghL for htm .
Then he studi ed a httle more,
not ed that game would
probably not be reached at a

Caro l Cos tan zo 1 Par celS ,
Su lton .
Rona ld E . hart , H ilda E .
Hart to Danni e Sayre, Donna
Say re , Lot 23 Weldon's Add .,

was.

V 'I
~-.._ .A

V
r-._

1
I .A

'I

I

Thts btd , invented by the . - - - - - - - - .
late Hal Stm s, was made with
a hand such as :
~,.....;m;~r:--.:.;.:__;,-1-'---..,.,....,
:
K Q J x u x ¥ K x t A K Q G -&lt;1'-&lt;L_:_.l__/_...J[/:::..J
.::J

~

tnVERH.liT

Partner was supposed to .-~---:...-.,
show aces in response The
bid never achieved any pop- f--:..,==-;.;:.;~-J.-,..,....,
ularlty beca use everyone
V
wanted to use three btds as
.
r::, ,1
preempts.

FLACIE

ANNUAL SH INDIG.

I

"J

Answer:

rII I I J rXI

(Fa r a copy ot JACO B Y
MODERN, send $1 lo · "Wm at
Bridge," c/o this newspaper,
P 0 ao .. 489, Radio City Station Yesterdays
New York, NY. 10019}

I

0

PR'OVIL7ED THE
ENTERTAINM ENT AT
THE 8HOSTS'

Now arrange tne circled letters to
lorm tt1e surpr~se,antwer, as sug ges!eC by the aoove cartoon.

XI J

(Answers tomorrow)

Juml)les ONION FACET MUSKET COMM ON
Answer 'Nhat the hal chocolate l reak w as- A
· "COCOANUT"

'·

�n

-·

8-The Tlaily Sentmel, Muldii'I)Ort-Pomeroy, 0 • Fnday, June 3, 1977

Let The Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash

WANT AD
CHARGES
Ida)

lliWo1dsu• UudH
h
Chtll p(C
liS
100

:ld&lt;i~S
3d.:.t)~

150
180

,,.

300

J

lid.W).&lt;.

i~

f:al'h word oYt.'l lilt' munll'wn l~
'AUI'tb: L'i 4 Lt'tlls IJel wonJ pt.'l ~~
Ads rurmu~ otlwr 0111n t'OIIl&gt;l:."l'Ull\!t.
day!&gt; will iJt" 1 har~al 01 \ tlw I dt~)'

'"" memvry, C.ml
lt1

t~ntl;

u( Thcmk.s 11111.!
per .,.. uu.l IJ 00

ObliWH)

5

lllUiu nwn

C ash mtu.hli m ~

.Molult&gt; HIHUt' Wilt'~ illlll

are

Y~:~.rd

.,.It'-'

Mtl~ll."d IHii) IUth t.KblJ With

rnde1 ~ telll duu~tl rur c.W, La/!\ •
mt: &amp;1t Nw n lwr In C11n· uf 1ht• S.n·
LmeJ
Pubht&gt;l~r IC~I'VI;'!i tht• nght
~ht IJI 1t'Jt'L1 au) 11\b dn:nll:d UIJ.

Till!

tu

J~diUna l The Pubh~htt 1o11H Uu\ Ut•

Jl'liiJOIIt&gt;llllc fur

Hill! I' !hun
rt''\.1. UIM'J11uU
PI H. tilt~ 'Wl2156

unr- IJH.:IJr

GA RAGE SALE Many mce thrms
June 3 Ol'1d 4 Olo.ey Connolly
reSidence on Rou te 7 above
Eastarn H1gh School Watch Jor
signs , ~!1 4 00

NEIGH80RHOOOO Yard Sa te
Sat and Sundar 4th and 51" at
Bryon Harr!i , Succen Aood
Reeds ville Oh to
YARD SALE in Roctne at Bob Roy
res• dence Frtdoy ond Sorur
da-y 9 1ill ? Gt rl s btc:ycle
cht ld s rolltop desk Mr Coffee ,
mens, womens and ch1ldr8ns
clothtng games Or'l d household
1tems
YARD SALE June 3 and 4 Mar
vien e Seegle June Wtck.er·
sham or Roger Beagle FARM
Fr1doy, 9 om 1111 9 p m Satu r·
day 9 om tdl 2 pm 114
t~ r ought
Roc •ne post high
school '2 mtles turn left on
County 35 about 3 mtlet: out on
rl gtu Watch for stgns Maple
bookcase bunlo. bed. set com
plete Con be used at two
twms Old rodung cho ir toys ,
coHeernahr c:lo th•ng g•rls 2
to 5 some boys 6 and 7 10
wom ens 10 12 lot dresses ,
sladu teens , etc Teen Boys
12 , ,. 16 Mens some sh•rts
I S' J 16 , pon1SAA Mcmyolher

NOTICE
WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADUNES
Mundi!\'
~0011

YARD SALE. 'J Cole Str. . t,
Pomeroy
Bock
of Country
CouJ•nt 10 t1tl 3 Fr1doy and
So tu rdoy

unSiltu•'tla&gt;

Tw .stlli\

thru Frtd&lt;~'
4PM
tht' dl:l} ~foro: 1HJbh£'j,Hillll

Swltla)
4 p \1
F'r1day aflen10011

COLLINS IN lovmg Memomrs of
our dear mother who pou.O
owoy June 3 1970

Thousand thotJghts of one so
deor.
Ohen bnngs a tmy leor
ThoughiS go bock to
Scer.es long passed
T1m e roll s on ,
8\lt mamones last
Sadly m1ssed by daughters Mrs
Lorena M R1ce Mrs Florence
L McOon1el Mrs Bern•ce V

3 ANO 4 RM furn i shed and un
furn•thaod opts Phone

m

5434

COUNTRY Mob1le Home Park Rt
33 ten m1lts north of Pomeroy
large lots wflh concret• pollos ,
Alto
Mr1e
tldewalki runners and ofl CAMPE,., $600
lrO•Ier $4 50 Phon• (614) b98
str~ t portung Ph0t1e 991 7.. 79

m

3;!90
----

SEVERAL FAMILY Yard Sola
Saturday, June Ath Water St
Syrocu 'e
015hes
clothes
Avon decanters , m1sc Also
l 'il73 and Pn .. Bud Hosflngs
Avon club bottl es best oHer
over $100 to kes In case of roJO
cancallad
YARD SALE JUNE -4 Grover
Whtte s Boshon Keno Rood

~

FURNISHED APARTMENT
2 TOMATO, PlANTS, Cobbng\.'
bedrooms l1vmg room k lt(:hen
broccol1 couliflow ~f bruuel
and both, 2 o~r condtttoners no
sprouh egg plants hongn.,g
chil dren or pttls 81 .. E Mo 1n St
baskets
pots , geran1ums
Phone 992 5810
begon•ot
flats
petun1os
mongolds, pansies.
saltlo
A\IAILABlE AT R1vert1de Aporf.
balsam
dtonthus
snap
meniS one bedroom , $105 per
dragons alrssum, VInca col
mon th 1 Dedroom $138 per
eut
(lalond s Greenhouse,
mon th Pkone 992 ~ E11ual
Roc me Gerold me Cleland
Hous ing 0 portumly
FURNISHED APT 5 rooms both 1 -42 tn cost •ron k 1tcher"smk I
bos tn ond 1 dra1n board hong
enclosed bock pa.rch and yard
on
wall type wh1te 1 3 burner
Also 3 room and bath apt yard
gas hot plate Phone 9'92-571,.
al so
Furn•shed
Phone
2937 between • to b
ECONOMY TRACTOR w111'1 all attachments L1ke new ask1ng

m

10 O PEN HOUSE 1 t1ll .. ON

JUNE• &amp;5
HOUSE FOR rent 3 or I bedrooms
~ w tth bu111 m k1tc hen 2 baths
located ,. m1les west of Hor·
r1sonv11le House will be shown
on Monday and Tuesday June
13 ond 1,. by oppoin rment only
Cofl durmg week of June 6th
thru 11th e 0 m Ill! 10 am to
make oppotn(ment
Pho,e

(502)'39 5331

RISING STAR Kannel Boord1ng
Indoor Outdoor runs. groommg
oil breeds clean tOMitary
foclh llas ot~367 7112 Chesh1ra

9925798

LOST
fEMALE Engl11h Setter,
wh1te with black spots Block
llao collar Lost Rt 33 near 681
~ntersact•on
by
Darwin .
R~ward Phone 992 58&lt;t8
FOUND • 81g block coondog with
wh1te spot on head Call

949 2253 or949 2651

Phone (614) 367·0292
HOOF HOLLOW Buy sell trade
or tro 1n horses RUTH REEVES
framer Ph~ne (61~ ) 698 3290

10

992·2514

AKC REG 4 month old block male

I AND H Beams 8 9 and 10 1nch

MANAGERS

&amp;

Demonstrators Fr1endly Home
Toy Parties has openings for
managers and deolera m your
area , Toy Partr. Pion ex:
penence helpfu . Cor and
telephone necessary, call collect to Carol Day (518) 489 8395
or wnta Friendly Home Part1es
20 Railroad Ave , Albany N Y

12205

IF YOU hove a serv1ce to offer
want to buy br sell somethmg
ae lookmg for work
or
whatever
you'll get results
foster w1th a Sentmel Wont Ad
Call 992-2156

AKC COCKER SPANIEL pups sohd
black, bled( and wh1fe $50.
Phone 992 7059

992·7559
TWO HORSE horse tra1ler $700

KAWASAKI SQO vary good cond1
t1on , S600 Coli 9.49·2628 or

LOCUST POSTS for sale
each Phone 742 2089

1'971 MONTEGO, p s , p b , a1r
cond1tfon1ng.
low mileage

HOOVER UPRIGHT Sweepers
models on sale for Just a
I
frachon of the angmal cost
Reduced to $26 50 cosh or
terms Call 992 5146

$795

Phone 9•9 2801

Glon

B1ssell
1'972 PLYMOUTH Cnckett, small
economy cor :2 new fires 33
miles per gallon, good student
$2 000
Call 742 2160
car
31 000 m•les

1970 MALIBU 350 llandord $500
Phone 992 5911
1966 OLDSMOBILE , $400 1975
Kawasaki , $400 Coii7&lt;42·260EI
1'970 VW lnqu•re at 3'90 Second
St Middleport after ! p m All
day Saturday and Sunday

$1 00

m

ELECTROLUX

SWEEPERS, com·

pletely rebuilt w1th at
tochments Only $"'5 Cosh or
terms Call 992 51 .. 6

~·

CASE
CAN GOODS .
LOJ
.

Miller Produce
&amp;
Garden Center

9927256

NEED A WATER
SOFTENER?

SMALL NEW IDEA Manure
spreader 1959 Chevrolet 1 ton
truck w•tk vot1 bodv and power
to•lgota good condlt1on New
Holland Manure tpreoder, 163
bushel good cond111on 3 point
h1tch, mower 7 ft cut good
condillon. Tandem trotler typ11
fert1ll1er apr•adar, good condition, Model 64 International
c:omb1ne good c;ond1hon W1ll
toke trades phone 9,.9 2770

Lot Pomeroy Londmork
soften &amp; condition your
waler and 1 Co·OP wotir
softener, Mod91 UC.XVI.
,
'Now Only,

1279 95

Let us test

your

water

Free

Pomerow Landmark

Y.~Jac• W. t.ar11y.Mgr.

~

Phont992·2111

3031

6

141
w . .kePdsofler

or on

pm

5fi'C MAPLE wooden dtn1ng outftt
w1th captain cho1rs Reol good
cond1hon , $100 7 pc dtnlng
room outf1t cho1rs been rttcent
ly upholstered , $50 Phone
Glen R Blssell949 2801

USED

FORESTRY

EQUIPMENT

David Brown Tractor Model
990 Prenhce G BC w 3,.2
bypass grapple Taylor S81 V s n
1168,.7~5
2-Detrolt D1esel
engme Contact Dermis Smurr

phone (614) 838·5345
CB SPECIAL
ROBYN WV-23
CB Mabile Transc:e 1ver
comp l ete with weather
proof PA speaker. 2 way
base loaded C B antenna ,
tor roof top or trunk mount
Power cord, coa&gt;c, iJntenna
cable and all hardware
included

LARGE COUNT~Y store ai:.oys o
money maker upstairs could
be mad• into on opt Owner
will help ftnonce If neceuary
Phone 9,.9 2770
7 ROOM HOUSE bot~ noturol
gas . 2 acres and Ohto Pow•r
Electric Pt-.on• 742 3031

136 ACRE FARM

130 acres 3
bedroom farmhouse w1th free
gos 6 ou tb\.11ld•ngs ofl fen(:ed
for livestock If Interested coli
385 2729 logan Oh1o 9 o m
t1IIS p m

12 )II ~ All ELECTRIC tr01ler, tw o
extra rooms bu •lt on
2
f1reploces cinder block cellar
good outbu1ldmg young frutt
trees grapevine• excellent
garden 1 1/t ocreo land Co
Rood 28 near 8o5han Chester
water Con ta ct Albert H1ll Jr
Rt 1, long Bottom Oh1a
2 BEDROOM HOUSE Locust St
Middleport
$1-4 500
Phone
992 3.436 and 992 52 .. 8
FOR SALE BV owner 6 year old
home 3 bedr oom5 large hvmg
room, moder n k•tchen , central
heot natural gas 1 1
h baths
fu lly carpe ted garden space
frutt trees 3 acres of land
$28 000
3 m1les north of
Chester off Wesr Shade Rood
Don Pooler 985 ,.293 or contact
Barbaro Pooler

1'\.HHIII

,......,

Phone 949-2814

• 28·1 mo.

ALL ELECTRIC- OWners
moving out of town leaving
a newer 3 bedroom ranch

style home Has modern
beth, nice Birch kitchen,
and level lot. partly fenced.
COUNTRY HOME - Plus
almost 3 acres of level
land, new 4 bedroom home,

2'1• baths. heat pump.
family room w'lth fireplace.
features

J
full

basement, n1ce kitchen, air
condltlonmg, carpeted, and

2

bedrooms, bath, family
room, garage and cellar on

large lot Want only $16.500
MIDDLEPORT - 2 nice

COUNTRY farmland w1th $eclud
ed woods , woter and goOd a ccess tn Monroa County W Va

Route 3, Pomeroy, 0 .

Carpet &amp; Upholstery
Phone M1ke Young
At
992-2206 or 992-7630
"The Originators
Not The Imitators''

2

23 1 mo

EXCAVATING dozer backhoe
and d1tchar Charles R Hotfield
Back Hoe Serv1ce
Rutland, Oh1o Phone 7.42-2008
Will do roofing, construction,
plumb1ng and heot1ng No 10b
too ior9e or too small Phone
742 23.. 8

Price

reduced $2,000
Your Neighbor Seldom
Knows The Value Of
Property, Talk To A
Professional, A Realtor.

992 5658

HOWERY AND MARTIN Ex·
cavot1n9
septic systems ,
dozer, bockhoa, dump truck ,
Commerc1ol pror.erty opprox 17
grovel
blacktop
limestone
acre&amp;, le..,al ond located at
pov1ng , Rt H3 PI-lana 1 (614)
Tuppers Plo1ns on Oh1o Route
698 7331

7 Phone (614) 667 6304

NEW 3 bedroom house bu1lt 1n
k1tchen , batll and '11, Phone
742 2306 or contact MilO B Hut
ch1son , Rutland Oh1o
VA FHA , 30 yr flnonctng Ireland
Mortgage 77 E Stole Athens
phone (6111) 51j12 3051
HOUSE IN Tuppers Plo1ns 2
bedrooms elec heat double
goroge, 2 lots Phone (614)
REDUCED AGAIN 3 bedroom 2 'It
batt! b1 level. 1 m1le north of
Ftve Pomt $.t2 500 Phone

9922.92

HARRISON S T V Repa1r Service
Colis 276 Svcamore Sf , M1d
dleport Phone 9'92·2522

W1ll do odd 1obs roof1ng , pam
tmg, gutter work Phone 992
7~09

SEWING ALTERATIONS

INSTRUCTION

JUST LISTED -

Small

D"""" -~ lip MIJ&lt;r tntdi"''

.,.....

house, small yard, small
price 4 rooms, bath, plus

~,..,a

storage building Only
$5400 00
JUST LIST EO- J BDRM
ranch
type
Middleport,
ava1 ' ~le If

""" _,.,.., ..,..,.., ........

JUST LIST EO - l bedroom house, mostly carpeted,
wrap around porch, garage, Iorge lot, all overlooking
the Ohio River, asking, $16,500
liASHAN - Nice 2 story country home, containing 7

roams and 1112 baths, mostly carpeted. Kitchen l'las all
new built-In cabinets wltl'l bronze stove and
refriger-ator to match, new perches and all new
aluminum siding and storm windows, lorced air
natural ga:t furnace and drilled well, garden space.

This house Is warm and ready for Immediate
occupancy. come take a look, lu•t $18,900
FREE GAS - Nice modern 1112 story farm hoose
conlalnlng ~bedrooms. dining room, kitchen with built
In appliances, besement. city and well water, 2 barns,
work shop and other buildings, large pond !locked with
fish, appro•lmalely 23 acres tillable and 46 acres
fenced Good location Call for appointment. price
$80,000

I ----

\

\..

\

'-,

WE ARE SELLING PROPERTY ANO NEED YOUR
HELP, LIST WITH US. WE HAVE BUYERS •FOR
VACANT LANO, FARM AND RESIDENTIAL
1
PRO!'ERTY
\,\\_

Call Jimmy Deem ~t 949-2381~·-'

•

-

..

REASOffiBif

.

;.

RATES
Reedsville, 0 . Ph. 371-4250
5-27·TFC

..

BlOwn
lmulatian Stnic:es

,.

fltt.lncmc Aailablo

"

Tl

TES

~

Blowololll Wall UHtCS
510111

•

0

'

'"
n

WIIIDOWS&amp;DOOWS
REI'\A£(it1EIIT
WIIIDOWS

.
.-

MIIIIIIUII
SIOIIIIrSOI'FITT
I:UITEIIS.IOIIG~

\ (&gt;I

"

4-10.1 m~.

Ph !192·lHl

u...s. DqL ~ LtiJKw
.,,.... ojt.6orulllUib, ...,..._ 1161'3

NO FUTURE? IN A$$ RUT?

you qualify
$14,000 00.
JUST LISTED - The

modern

kitchen,

Coo- • Pro-nol c.Driving a "BIG RIG". We are a
Privata Tnming School offer·

acres

near

1nga PARTTIITMtorFULL Tlme
Tnmlng Program II you are

Chester,

modern ranch type home
W·l BDRMS. 23'x23 living

~nu. Don't

Ouit Your Job,
attend our Waokond Tro01tn0
progran or attend our 3 Week
FULL Time - · Traintng.

room, dining room, large
kit. w -lots of cabinets 1 car

detached garage, Insulated
cold storage bldg. 2 other
bldgs.. patio, many extras

RI'W1I Tr.dtwTn~iln T........ l""'

PARKERSBURG

422-4080

'$34,900.00.

GOOD, BUY - Knotty Pine
paneling, carpeting. built·
In kitchen. dining room. &amp; 2
bdrms Really nice al
$16,500 00

NEW HOME - This J
BDRM. home has 2 baths. 1
acre of ground. all modern.
$30,000.00
COUNtRY - 2 acres, 7
room frame home, 2 car

garage. block storage bldg .
Only 510.500.00
OUR SALES HAVE BEEN
GOOOANDWE ARE NOW
IN NEED OF GOOD
LIS11NGS. ALL PRICE
RANGES.
ACREAGE,
FARMS, ANO HOMES.
HENRY E. CLELAND
REALTOR
ASSOCIATES
\

Hank, K•thy

Leona Clolond
992·22Sf, 985·4112
992-2548
&amp;

,.
:

..

•

•
•
•

-

'"
"'
""

DUGAN'S
FRONT END

••

ALIGNMENT

.

Alignment,
wheel
balancing,
tune-up,
brake work, minor
repair.
Behind Ruttond Grode
School. Evenlllfl work by
appointment. Ph. 742·2005.
5-6·1 mo pd

•
•

:.
:

BRADFOitD, Auct1oneer, Complete Sarv1ca PI-lone 949·2&lt;487
or 949-2000. Racine, Ohio, Cr1tt
Bradford

.'

3625

REMODELING Plumbmg heating
and all types Qf general repa1r.
Work guaranteed 20 years expertance Phone 992-2409

..
."
"'

H/1

"
'""

May 20, 1977
Larry Spencer
Clerk of Courts
Meigs County
,Common Pleas Court

Clerk of Courts
Me1gs County
Common Pleas Court

.....'·

•.
~

'
•'

'
••
~

••
••

•••
••

30 rolls of carpet In stock.
Good selection oil on .. 11.
lnslalltd with podding, no

L

extra to pay.

'•

tall742-2211
TALK TO
WENOELL GRATE
CARPET CONSULTANT

.........
...••

.•
RUnAND
..
.
FURNITURE
..
__.,._

....___

75 Ford LID 4 dr•••••••••••• 13695
74 Ford Galaxie 4 dr••••••••• ·'2695
74 Chev. Vega, As Is ••••••••• 11300
74 Pontiac Catalina 2 dr, ••••••'2895
74 Buick Repl 2 dr ••••••••• t2895
74 PlY. FuiJ Ill, 4 dr • •••• ····'2295
74 Olds CUtlass Supreme 2 dr 13295
73 Pinto Waaon.•••!~'~•:l"•••• 11695
73 Chew. Monte Carlo ·······ee
Loaded
'2895
73 Cha¥J Chevelle Laguna ••••• 11995
73 P~. Fury 4 dr Wagon • • ••••·11695

76 Cadillac Sedan DeVille ................ 'B900
Full

J

• •

Mon., Tues., Wed.
8:00til5:00
Thursday 8 til Noon

.-

•

..."
"•

•

~=
~

.
i
/.
.

ARNOC.D GRATI!'

a your

Entertainmenl and
Appliance Needs

DOXOL
SERVICE

RIDENOUR'S
TV &amp; Appliance
Gas Serv1ce
Ractne, Ohio
('hester ,... ....,

.....
...•
...."..
.."..
T

&lt;

.: .
:

•••'

••
...
u

:

RU'116oAN~

•
"...

.

~

and

air

COME IN AND
CHECK OUR PRICES

Full power and air .

72 Cadillac Sedan DeVile .......... ,•.•• ,12295
Full power. a1r

7F4,u 1Cadillac
Sedan DeVille ••.•••••••••••••• '5500
power, a 1r
73 Cadillac Cpe. DeVille .................... 13800
Full power and air

75 Chevy Impala Custom ~.uP.'l·.~J(, ....... 3895
75 Chevy Monte Carlo.~?~~;-~~~-~!~ .......'4695
74 Olds 88 Royal Cpe. ~~;..a.~~ .~ 1.'; ..... 13595
74 Chevy Vega GT Cpe. 4 spd .............'1995
74 P~. Golduster Coupe ................. '2795
73 Cutlass 4 dr., air ........................ '2495
73 Olds B8 4 Dr., power &amp; air•••••••..•• '1595
73 Buick Rel!al 1fT Cpe................... 13495
73 &amp;hevy Cheyene Super Pickup ......... '2895
1

V8, automati C, power steering and a1r

73 Dodge Charger Coupe, Air ............. '2195
72 Chevy Impala HT Cpe................. '1495
72 Buick 225 Umited 4 dr HT :~~~r
.. ....... '2495
72 Chevy Impala 4 Dr., air ................. '1295
70 T-Bird, ful power &amp; air .............. '1B95
72 Buick Elec. HT Cpe..................... '2295
72 Ford Torino 2 dr.. .'...................... '1395
72 Pontiac Safari Wagon, air ............... 11595
71 Ford lh Ton Pickup .................... 11695
11 Olds 98 Lux., power &amp;air ............ 11995
70 Ford LTD 4 Dr., power &amp;·a1r. ......... . '895

.....

70 Ford Maverick ,6, 7/~ •:~~o
'695
70 Dodge 4 dr • • • • • • • • • • • • •• • 1495
69 Ford LID 4 dr ............. 1150

~ ·

6B Chrysler Newport, 2 dr • .. •.. 1295
67 Mercury Cougar. As Is • ••••. 1275
65 Mercury 4 dr ............. '495

TRUCKS
74 Chev. Suburban C/20 ...... '3295
73 Ford Custom VB Auto • • •.. • 12695
73 Chev. Custom VB • • • .. • .. • • 12695

.._

See one of these courteous salesmen: Pete
Burns or Marvm Keebaugh.

73 Chev. Custom, 6 cyl ....... 52395

Karr &amp; Van Zandt

RIGGS USED CARS

"You'll L1ke Our Quality Wav
Of Doing Business'
992 ·5342
GMC FINANCING
Pomeroy
Open Evenings Until6:00- Ti15p.m. Sat.

Ray Riggs
Roger Riebel
Located on St. Rt. 7 985-4100 Chester,
Ohio

$3695
1975 FORD LTO 4 DR.
V·8, P.S., A C, P . B., Cruise Control •
$3295
1975 FORD MUSTANG 113 DR .
P.S., P. B., A.C , 4 speed . ex. clean, 22,000 miles
$2995
1975 FORD MAVERICK 4 DR.
6 cyl., auto. trans ., A. C., P.S., v1nyl top, ex sharp.
$3595
1975 FORDGRANADA4 DR.
302 V-8, P .S., A C, P. B., vinyl top. 2 in stock.
$2995
1975 FORD GRANADA 2 DR.
3 speed col. shift, P S., 6 cyl. N1ce
$3695
1n5FORDGRANADA2DR.
Auto. trans ., V-8 302, A.C, reclmmg seats, opera windows. Ni ce
clean vehicle
$2295
1973 FORDTORIN02 DR.
P S., A. C. , P. B., V-8, 2 in stock .
52395
1973 FORD WAGON 4 DR.
P.S., A. C., P. B , rad io, luggage rack .
$1795
1973 FORDTORINOWAGON4 DR.
P.S, A. C. , P B,, luggage rack . Save
$3495
1975 C-10 CUSTOM DELUXE
P S, P. B, auto. trans ., radio, gauges, V-8, 1900 miles.
$3395
1975 F-100 RANGER XL T
P S.• A. C., P B., aula trans. , V-8, cab llghls, super soft seal.
$3795
1975 F -150 CUSTOM
V-8, p s., 3 speed, gauges. tu-tone paint, 10,000 miles
$2795
1974 F-100 SHORT BED WIDE SIDE
6 cyl., auto. trans .
$2295
1973 F -100 EXPLORER
trans.,
sliding
back
glass,
cab
lights,
l1ke
302 V-8. P.
P B • auto
new finish.
$1995
1973 DATSUN PICKUP
4 speed. AM radio, pm stripes. Sharp.

s.,

Dan Thom ~son Ford
FREE OIL CHANGE FOR ONE YEAR WITH ANY NEW OR USED
CAR OR TRUCK. 2000 MILES BEFORE CHANGES.
See Pat Hill, Rocky Hupp or Darrel Dodrill
For a good deal on a new or used vehicle.
Open evenings til6:00 except Thursday and Saturday. Closed Sunday
992-2196
Middleport, 0 .
Badlands" 4. Hoi Dog 6. Fat Albberl 10. Action
News for Kids 13, Crocketl's VIctory Garden 20
12 3D--Kids from CAPE R 3,15, American Band
stand i3; Soul Train 6, Celebrlly Bowling 8, Gomer
Pyle, USMC 10
I oo-Ara's Sports World J, Movie " Triple Justice" 4,
Children's Film Festival 8, Movie " Flipper' s New
Advenlure" 10, Wreslllng 15, Nova JJ
1 JD--Grealest Sports Legends J, Point of VIew 6,

TACKETT
No 15,U ..

FRED TACKETT

co Anna Welch
Middleport, Oh10,
Defendant
Notrce by
Publ l cat10n
To Fred Tackett , whose
last known address was co
Anna Welch, Middleport ,
Oh10 , you are hereby not1t1ed
that you have been named
Defendant In a legal act1on
entitled Ada Yvonne Tackett ,
Plaml1ft, vs Fred 'Tackett.
Defendant Thfs act 1on has
been ass 1gned Case No 15,844
and 1S pending m the Court of
Cammon Pleas of Me1gs
County, Pomeroy, Oh1o ,
45769
The oblect of the comp!a1nt
IS for d•varce , care, custody
and control ot the m 1nor
children of the parttes, and
other rel1ef
You are requ ired to answer
the complaint wlthm '18 days
after the last publ 1cat1on of
th1s not1ce, wh 1ch Will be
published once each week for
six successtve week s The
last publtca t1on will be made
on July 1, 1977 , and the 28
days for answer will com
mence on that date
in case of your failure to
answer or otherw1se respond
as requ 1red by the Oh 10 Rules
of Ctvll Procedure, dtvorce
wJII be granted
Dated May 24. 1977
Larry Spencer
Clerk of Courts
Me1gs County
Common Pleas Court

(SI 27, (61 3, 10 , 17 , 24 (71 I 61c

O.D.
OFFICE
2
5 {CLOSE
AT NOON ON THURS.)- EAST COURT

POLLY·s POINTERS
Polly Cramer

Tennis 13

Fight sf4ins with hair spray
POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY- Could you
suggest a way to remove ball
pomt mk from a pale yellow
100 per cent polyester dress
shirt? The sk1rt was washed
before the Lnk was detected.
.CAMILLA
DEAR CAMILLA - The
American Institute of
Laundering suggesls hair
spray. Apply to the stam,
allow to dry and then launder

NOTICE OF

APPOINTMENT

Case No 22,131
INA HOBACK

Estate of
Deceased
Notice tS hereby g1ven th at
Betty Br1ckles of 109 Klneon
Dr.ve , Gallipolis , Oh 10, ha s
been duly appo 1nted Ad
m 1n1stratrl)c. of the -estate of
Ina Hoback . deceased. late of
Racme
V1 llag e,
Me•g s
County. Oh 10
Cred1lors are r eqL11 red to
file their cLa1ms with sa1d
fiduc i ary
w1th1n
t hree
months
Dated thtS 31St day Of May
1977
Mannmg 0 Webster
Probate Judge of
sa1d County
(6) 2, 9, 16, Jtc

Annual Meeting Notice
The Sutton and Chester Farmer's
Mutua I Fire Ins. Co. Inc. of Meigs
County, Inc. March 8, 1897 will meet
Monday June 6, 1977 at 9:00a.m. at
the Forest Run United Methodist
Church.
All policyholders are urged to attend.
Harry Holter, President
Paul H. Baer, Sec.-Treas.
APPRAISERS
01 RECTORS
Vernon Nease
Gene Yost
George Geiheimer
Alfred Wolfe
Curtis Johnson

A·l

1976 FORD ELITE
$4995
P.S, P. B., A C., vinyl top. A real beauty.
1976 MUSTANG 112 DR.
$3295
,Auto trans .• AM- FM tape stereo, 4 cyl.
1976 FORD PINT02 DR.
$2695
4 cyl, 4 speed , AM rad io, less than 10,000 miles. Don't miss this
sharp one.

IN THE COURT
OF COMMON PLEAS,
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO

Rutland, Oh •o
Plamt1ff ,
- vs-

WE lOTH
SAVE MONEY

75 Cadillac Coupe DeVille •.••••.••••.••.•• '6800

71 Dodge Dart ,.c:P'-~~r ......... '695

ADA YVONNE

•

Full power and air

72 P~. Fury 4 dr ............ '1295
71 Pinto ................... '150
71 Pontiac Catalina 2 dr • • • •• • '695

••

--..

'• e

r-Of'

power

76 Cadillac Cpe DeVille ...••.••••• ••••.•••. '8800

72 Pontiac Granville 4 dr • • •• • 11295
72 Chev. Impala 4 dr •• • • • • • • 11295

318 Sid .. 2 Dr

DAN THOMPSON FORD
IS PRICING FINE USED CARS
AT LOW, LOW PRICES.• ·•
TO MOVE THEM OUT FAST!

USED CARS

73 Pontiac LeMans 2 dr .. • • • • '1B95
73 Ford LID 2 dr .... • • • • ... '2495
73 Ford Ranch Wagon 4 dr •• • ·'2495

c

Rutlallll

:
• •

TO Opal Richards
No known addrets
You are her by nol1f1ed
that you have
een named
Defendant in a legal act1on
entitled Leroy R1chards,
Pla intiff,
- vs Opal
Richards , Defendant. that
this cause has been ass i gned
case No 16,443, and Is pen
d1ng m the Common Pleas
court of Metgs county, Ohio,
Pomeroy. Ohio 45769 The
ab1ect of this Complamt tS far
divorce, division of property
and other proper rel1ef
You are required to answer
w1th1n twenty eight day-s
after the last publication of
this notice, once each week
for six suc:cesstve weeks The
last publication will be on
July l , 1977, and the twenty
e1ght days will commence on
that date
In case of your failure to
answer ,
or
otherw 1se
respond, as required by the
Ohio
Ru l es
o~
Civil
Procedure. (udgment by
default W1ll be rendered
against you for the rel1ef
demanded 1n lh l s c1a1m

LARRY E SPENCER.

Candy Strip
Rubber Back
Regular $6 95
Save t.U8 Sq. Yd.
1 Roll Blue Sh..
1 Roll Brown Shog
Both Rubber Back
Regular$8.95
So to $5.18 Sq. Yd.

···~······
! RUnAND
FURNITURE
•••••••••••••••••••••••••
'

wayne Futile
General DtliVtrY
W•vnenille, Missouri ,
Defend-ant
No 16,,.19
Notice by
Publica lion
To Linda Herdman , whose
last known address wa s Co
Wayne
Fu l lle ,
General
Delivery,
Waynesville ,
Missour1 , you are hereby
notified that you have been
named Defendant In a legal
act1on entttled Dav1d B
Herdman, Pla1ntlff, vs Linda
Herdman. Defendant. Th i s
action has been ass1gned
cas e No 16,419 and' Is pen
dmg In the Court of Com m on
Pleas af Meigs Counly.
F'omeray, Oh10, 45769
The obiect of the complamt
1S for divorce , care, custody
and control of the m Inor
chil dren of the parties , and
other relief
You are requ•red to answer
the complaint w i thin 28 days
atter the last publicatiOn of
th1S notice. which w111 be
published once each week for
s1K success•ve weeks The
last publication will be made
on June 211, 1977, and the 28
days for answer will com
mence on that date
In case of your failure to
answer or otherwise respond
as requ.red by the Oh10 Rules
of C1vil Procedure, d1vorce
w11l be granled

(SI 27 , (61 3, 10, 17, 24 (71 1
61c

SAVE ON
CARPETING

·~

e 742·2211

co

(Sl 20, 27 (6) 3, 10, 17, 2.4, 6tc

Sweepers, toasters irons, all ' • u
small appliances Lawn mowar,
naxt to Stole H1ghwoy Garage . '
on Route 7 Phone (6lA) 985·

Close Sit. At 5 P.M.

:· •.

IN THE COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS,
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
DAVID B HERDMAN
Pomeroy, Ohio,
Plointlff,
vs.
LINDA HEROMAN

Dated

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR -

: ~ FRIDAY TIL•s

...
:

E CLOSER YOU LOO
THE BETTERWE LOO

PUBLIC NOTICE

742·2211

· - - · ·

I

I

lARRt,W~~DER

$18,300,.u•

.. ...... &amp;, •

home
in
fmanclng

hove for only 522,900.00
MINI FARM - Over J

located In Morning Star area, tust len minutes from
1'&lt;»1\eroy. Asking $25,000

GUARANTEED

5232.

MAIN
POMEROY, 0.

f•replace are only a few of
the un lque features you can

furnace , house situated off main road for prlvac;:y,

PARTS • lABOR

EXCAVATING dozer, loader and
backhoe work , dump trucks
and lo-boys for hire Will haul
t.fl d~rt, to soil limestone and
grovel Call Bob or Roger JefWILL DO babysitting at my tlome
fers , doy phone 992 7089,
Have
references
Phone
n1ght
phone 9'92·3525 or 992·
U2· 2536

dining room and den Fully
besemenl, A C &amp; working

LOOK WHAT WE GOT JUST LIST EO- Approx. 13
acres, nice level land, large pond stocked with !Ish,
good 1'12 story house with J bedrooms, both and dining
room, nice fireplace In living room. full basement, F A

Automatic
Transmission Service

PIANO TUNING by ElectroniC·
Comparuon
Accurate
Reasonabla992 3718

room.

CENTRAL REALTY CO.

:

Upholster1ng ,
drapes
reasonable 572 South Th1rd
Ave , M•ddleport
Phone SEWING MACHINE Repo1n, ser
vice aU makes, 992-228.4. The
992b30b
Fabric
Shop , Pomeroy
PIANO TUNING . Lane Daniels 12
Authortz~ Singer Soles and
years of serv1ca
Phone
Serv1ce We sharpen Sc1ssort

of this J BDRM home Is
delightful. l7' x26 living

Associates

992·268'1

'

French Povinclal mtenor

G. Bruce Teaford
Helen L Tnford

• CHIPWOOD
Max d•om•ter, 10 1nches on
largest end, $8 per ton bundl
ed slabs $6 per ton Dal1verad
to Oh1o Pallet Company , Rt 2
Pqmaroy
Ohio
Pho ne

SWAJN"S .

FREE

Frye s

,,

992 2082

About~

ELECTRIC POWER
WEED AND
GRASS TRIMMERS

MOBILE Home Rep01r
Elec
plumbmg ond healing. Phone

$1000 down , call (304) "772
3102 or (3!J.I) 772-3227

and stores Will sell for

garden

Young's tarpeting

A local contractor
Phone 949-2801
or 949-2860

bedrooms, new bath, and
F A furnace Near schools

for

Superior
Steam Extraction

BISSELl SIDING CO.

667 3065 or 667 3360

acre lot $32,000
COUNTRY HOME -

room

2·23·1 mo.

&amp; Aluminum
S1 1ng,
Storm
Windows
&amp;
Insulation .
Call Professionals

3102 or (304) 772·3227

Phone m-3325

NEW LISTING-

C.rpet-Lino.· Tilt
Phone Mtke Young ot
992-2206 or 992-7630

9 a . m. to 5 p.m.

SMAll farm for sole, 10,.... down
owner f1nonced Monroe Coun· CARPENTER
floonng , cedmg,
tv W Va Phone (3011) 772
paneling Phone 992 2759

Pomeroy, Ohto 45769

m.ooo

Installation, samples
brought to your home
with no charge.

builders.

7481

B. Sr., Realtor
216 E. Second Street

other

Free Est1mates

one piece
guHtrs Wt hang II, or do II
rours•lf Special prices to

NEW 3 bedroom house , 2 baths
all efec 1 acre, Middleport
close to Rutland Phone 992·

V1rgil

Many

Route 3, Pvmeroy, 0 .

Continuous

Call992 7481

REALTOR

5)-racuse

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

Young's Carpeting

GUTTER SERVICE

No Sunday Call• Please
~ - 2~·1 mo.

large eat· In kitchen. utility
room and nice level lot.
Only $1~,000
OUT OF TOWN - Nice 3
bedroom home with central
heating
Garage and
partial basement Big lot,

Pomeroy landmark

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.

HOMESITES for 50ie 1 acre and
up M1ddleport near Rutland

$46,000
NEW
HOME
bedrooms. bath,

Nobil Summit Road
Rl. 1
Middleport, 0
992·5724
Complete
Sales
•nd
Service and Supplies
3 u.1 m

Free Estimates

TEAFORD

1unk cart

Auto WRECKER SER·

Owner
Shirley (Jeffers) Waite

TWO
bu ildtng loco
hans Eott•rn St.kool Olt trict
on good rood T P water
acreage 1f destr-.d
Phone
9"'9-2770
Owner wilt t-.lp
t~nanca ,f n!cessory

years old 3 bedroom randt
style home Lots of closets,

AT ONLY
$29.95

John St.

EXCEllENT

ONLY
$69.95

Cuts w"h heavy duty nylon
nne - as good as the best

Shirley's Bea~ Ned

EXPERIENCED

~

Phone 992-2111

30 GAllON Acquonum ond com
plate set up $100 2 storm wan
dowt one 31 one quarter '"
ches by 58 % 1n other 28 11, 1n
by 55 m $10 each 180 square
feet of floor t1 !e Pte! and Sitek 1
$60 Call992 7309

L------------.,---------------------....1

NINE ROOM HOME both, carpel .
ftreploce two porches, double
carport. '1 ocr• O\l tbu1ldmv•
D•s. lre safe bv J1.1ne 30 Priced
to mo'lle, Phor1e 9?7 7210 for
oppotnlmant

Jack W . Carsey, Mg11

I .__J_•_c;;,k;;,W=C;.;o;,:r.:u..:y.::,:.;M_u_'_--l
Phone 992-2111

Strlckly wholtsllt to 111.
Not len than 'h case. .·

Rutland, lots of pnvocy . Phone

•

Konl

Business Services

lA$ ACRE FARM, 7 room house en

Pomeroy Landmark

FORK LIFT model Alhs Chalmers
4900 good cond1t1on Phone
Glen R Bissell, 949 2801

1975 GRANADA 4 dr bcyl $2000
Call985 •2•5

1975 MOTORHOME , 20 It PhoJle

POMEROY,O.
PH.fn-2176

SSO

miles and two '!, Rag1stered
Arob1on
Horses
Phone

1'972 DODGE 200, full power
Com per Special , 360 automatic
low mileage w1th deluxe lop
par
and sHde-1n w1th table bed
2 FAMILY YARD Sale 1n
unit , $2100 Pllone 992 6398
Langsville Follow signs or
1210 Washington Blvd.
Turners Store Thursday, Frt· 10 '1, ft TRUCK CAMPER sleeps .t,
Belpre, Ohio
day Saturdov 10 till ,. Boys
gas elec, refngeralor oven
cloth1ng
g~rls
mens
floor Mater w1th rytano-mot•c
BL.A!CK &amp; WHITE RCA Telavision
women s t'ugh choir, sewmg
t01let $900 Coli 992 6398
21 In screen , floor console
moch1ne m1s.c
1
1'972 20 / , Ft Terry Travel Tratler,
model Good condition Phone
PORCH SALE bestde the Waffle
tully self conta1ned full both
Mrs Bob Louks , 992 2951
Sl'top m Middleport frtday and
and shower, water pump a1r
Saturday 9 t1ll 2 Bedspr.ads
cond1honed, 30 lb bottle gos ONE SET of 1971 Edition ot World
Book
Encyclopedia
1n
curto1ns , etc
tanks w1th tonk cover spore
Reno•nonce Blnd1ng wlttl yeor·
ttre
,
wheel
and
Ure
cover
TV
YARD SALE at Pear WilliS
books data Also one aet of
antenna hot wot•r tonk , fur
resldenc., Letart Falls Oh1o
1970 Ed1hon of Ouldcrafl 1n
noce automatiC awning, troller
Thursday and Frldoy
Hentage Building Books hke
hitch Included Sleeps 6, W1ll
new Eldon R l&lt;roeuter Rap
YARD SALE. Friday and Soturdoy
sell cheap Call G.orge Grote
Elm Street Rocme Oh1o Bow:
10 1111 A Carner Route 7 and
Rutland. Oh•o 74:2·21 03 after 7
_ 1~ !._ Tel!e,hane '949-2,.91
Forest Run Rood
p m only

Equipment Co.

S.w
I Good Used Unico

THRUSH SIDE p1pes for truck or
ear Phone 247 2031

Phone (614) 698 3290

YARD SALE , June 2 3 and .. top
of lea C~rcle 10 Rustic H1lls K1ds
and Jrs clothes , toys baby and
household Items Cancelled tf 1t
rains Hrs lOom t1ll6pm.

MEIGS

New Co-Op waftr sof
teners , model VC -SVI
Only S279 95
Savt SSO 00 on a new
Hotpolnt Refngerator
1 New 20 cubic ft
Chest Freenr
Sl19 95
Now'" stock , complete line
of buill garden seeds.
1 Good McCullough Chlln
Saw
U5
1 Good Used Poulan Chllft

7034
1973 CHALLENGER w1th 46,000
~all992

949 2626
Rutland , Oh1o Not mvo.ltd nor
senile l1ght housework and GIVE A· WAY year old three USED FORESTRY Equ1pment
No laundry
Coli
cooking
quarter Collie pup, male, Home
Franklm 132 AXL s-n 8395
742 2078 for Information
in country Also female rnlxed
Detro1t Di4ttal fng ine John
small dog Phone 992 3988
Deere .. 408 s n 145506T Husky
LOCAL INSURANCE Agency needs
Brute Model 125·B Hvdrouhc
on agent to serv1ce and sell on FREE KITTENS Phone Don Nelson
loader Contact Oenms Smurr,
o established tarntory (Former
992-7313
(b14) 83B·534S.
agent being promoted) Good
wages and ben&amp;ftts Send
GOODYEAR TOWN &amp; Counlry 2
Resume to Bow 672, Pomeroy.
tires l1ke new 800 16 5 10 ply
Oh1o.
with 8 hole nms SSO each Call
197.. GRAND Pr1x: 01r cond111on992 6398
$200 WEEKLY Poss1ble Stuffmg
ed p.w. p b , p s tilt wheel
Envelope s
Sf:ND
Self31,000 miles $3.400 Phone 25 INCH Color T. V RCA Coli
addressed stamped anvalope
9"'9-2131 onyt1me after 5 p m
985-3519 after- 6 p m , and after
to Edroy Molls Box 188BV
12
on
weekends
8 WEEIC OlD P1gs
Phone
Aloony, MO 1&gt;0402
949 2857
1969
CHEVELlE
Molobu,
'YJ7
MATURE PERSON wonted for
eng1ne, auto
tronsm1U1on 1975 HONDA 550 Super Sport See
babys1tter and hausekeaper
power sfeftrmg , low m1laage
Joe Imboden on Welchtown Hill
Good salary ll.neflts ond
$500 Phone992·7158.
In Minersville after 5 p m
separate housmg prov1ded
Po11f1on bett su1ted for 11ngle 1'972 VEGA GT, good cond1tton 6 FT BLACI&lt; Am-Fm stereo rod•o
girl desiring secunty and own
52,000 miles, 28 miles to
tope player , record player all
place to hve Phone (:30")
gallon. $1000 Call 992·3705
combined
$200
Phone
863-6088 after 6 p.m
after 9 30 PM
742 2705
ATTENTION

FOR SALE

3 bedrooms fullf carpeted 1'It
bott-.s , port1al y lurn1shed
underpinned Con be seen at
Country Mob1le Home Pork on
Rt 33 Pmed on 1nspectlon or
toke over payments Phone

367·7112
MEIGS COUNTY Humane Soctaty
Animal Carehna 992 7680 or
after 6 p m 992-5427

667 3915

m and core for oged widow

U x 70 MOBILE HOME Governor

AKC SHETLAND sheep dogs
(Min ) Collies 2 females 7
weeks old Shots and wormed
Phone (6U) 367 0292 or

Toy Poodle named Pedro "
Partly housebroken lovable,
$100
Phone Coolvdle,

OLDER RESPONSIBLE lady lo hve

$2250 Phone (614) 698 32'10
GOOD RICH Top so1l Charles R
Hotf1eld Backhoe Se rv •ce
Phone 742 2008

Dryer
SIO .OO
1 Good Used G E. Dryer su
1 Used L1wn Mower
uo

Rose

MIDDLE AGED Lady to live 1n and
help shore expenses Phone

-

FURNISHED APT Adu l15 only, no
pet$ Phone 991-3874, M id SPRING GARDEN Supplies Cob
boge
coulll lower broccoli
die port
ond head lettuoe plants
ONE BEDROOM fur~id1ad apart
yellow , white, ond red anton
Coli
men! '" Midd l eport
sets onion plonfs l&lt;ennebe&lt;
991-5434 or 997 ).129
cobbler Katohdtn, Red Ponlioc
ond Rltd Losada seed pototoe5
C,HOICE RETAIL ~tore build1ng for
Bulk garden see-ds pottmg so• I.
l•ate tn downtown Pt Plea
paot mon frutt trees and rose
sont Wrtte Bo• 147 Po1nt Plea
bushes
M1dwpy Market
son! , W Va 15.;:
550
=-Pomeroy
Oh1o
9'92 2382
'1 BEDROOM MOBILE home tn
Bob s Ma rhet Mason W Vo
Roc.ne area Call997 .5858
(304)773 5721.

OPEN HOUSE VIlLAGE GREEN
•tem
~•;:__ __,_-.~-~
APTS MUlBERRY HGIS LUX
URY liVING IN NEW 2
2 FAMilY Yard Sale Saturday 9
BEDROOM APTS TASTEFUllY
t• ll 5 1633ltncoln He1ghfS
DECORATED KITCHEN AP
3 FAMILY YARD So le baby and
PliANCES FURNISHED FUll V
oduh clothing, baby furn1ture
CAR PETED STARTING ATSII7
lo ts of m1 sc •htmt Sot 4th, o U
PHONE 992 b365 SYBIL AND
day stort•ng of 9 00 Rock Spr
JI
M WOOD MANAGERS APT
tn gs onlownshtp Rd 79, Follow
s1gns behmd the fa irgrounds

COAl hmeston•, and colctum
chloride and calcium br1ne for
dust control and special mtJttng
salt for farmert , Exc;els•or Salt
Work s, Ma1n Srr.-et Pomeroy
Ohto or phone
3891

-- -

poid lor all moltM ond
models of mob•l•
hom..
Phon• area code 614 ,.23-9531
Pom8foy Forest Pro•
du&lt;:fl Top price tor ttand~ng
sowt.mb.r Coli 992 5'965 or

•

For Sale

c..

I Ol

...

y&amp;ntlJttel. Middleport-PnmProv 0 . Fr1day, June 3, 1977

WANTED
ROUTE CARRIERS

FOR
aJFTON, W. VA.
&amp;SYRACUSE, OHIO
CONTACT
THE DAILY SENTINEL
At
992-2156
Or Slop In At
111 Court St.
Pomeroy, Ohio
For more informat1on

as usual. If any slam remams
repeat the process. Of course,
as w1th anythmg you should
test forst for effect on
matenal and color - POLLY
DEAR POLLY - I fmd
many who use the new
automatic coffee makers are
complammg that the coffee
does not stay hot enough To
get around this I do put a
saucer on top of the coffee pot
and flnd it stays as hot as
when made .SALLIE
DEAR POLLY - l had the
problem of hnt gettmg mto
the dram from my washing
ma chine so put an old stockmg over the hose This cat·
ches any hnt that might clog
the draln - TONI.
DEAR POLLY -I dnve my
car to work daily as well as on
many other occaswns Smce
It 1s not air condihoned I must
keep the dnver's wmdow
down during the warm
weather To avOid havmg my
purse snatched out of the car
when I stop at a traffic hght
or am caught m a traffic ram,
I shp my purse straps
through one section of the
seat belt as I buckle II up. If a
purse happens to be strapless
then 11 goes on the floor on the
passenger's side when I am
dr1vmg alone ThiS type of
purse snatching seems to be
gettmg quite popular - JO
DEAR POLLY- To keep
one's hat on even on a windy
day, roll a strand of hair
around a small hair roller on
top of the head and fasten 11
securely m place w1th one or
two hair pms Put your hat on
at the angle you want to wear
it and then push a two and "
half to three mch hat ptn or
long corsage pm through the
roller perpendicular to the
position of the roller Be sure
the ptn goes through the
roller and out the opposite
Slde.- SHIRLEY

2 oo--Grandstand 3,4, 15 , To Be Announced 6, Surgery
of V1olence 33

FRIDAY. JUNE 3, 1977
6 oo-News 3,4,6,8,10,13,15, ABC News 6, Zoom 20, AI
The Top JJ
6 3(}-NBC News l,4, 15, ABC News 13. Andy Griffith 6.
CBS News 8, 10, Vegetable Soup 20.
7 0()-Tr"lh or Cons 3, To Tell the Trulh ~ . Liar's Club
6. $128.000 Quesllon 8, News 10, To Tell the Trulh
13. l~v Three So ns 15. Ohio Journal 20, Black
JOUI

"'.:tl

3~

7 3Q-j:.. --tcr Wagoner 3, Gong Show 4, Candid Camera
6, Tr~~ sure Hunt 8, Mac Neil L ehrer Report 20, 33,

Name That Tune 13, Pop Goes Ihe Country 15
B oo-Sanford &amp; Son 3,4,15 . Mov ie "Strange N~w
World" 6,13, Code R 8,1 0, Washington Week In
Review 20,33

8 30--Rockford Files 3,4,15, Wall Slreel Week 20,33
9 oo-Mov1e " Smile, Jenny, You're Dead" 8,10, Lowell
Thomas Rememl&gt;ers 20, Documentary Showcase
JJ
9 3Q--Qumcy 3, 4, 15 , Movte " Death

at Love House"

6,13. Voyage to the End oflhe Earlh 20
10 oo-News 20. F1nng Lme 33
10 3Q-Lock, Stock &amp; Barrel 20
11 oo--News 3, 4,6,8, 10,13,15, Monty Python 's Flvlno
Clr.cus 20, Black Perspectleve on the News 33

11 :!{)..Johnny Carson J.~.1S; 'S liver Jubi lee 6,13,
/Movie " A Time for Love " 8, Mary Hartman 10,

ABC News JJ
12 DO-Bjlretla 6, 13, Movie "B lood &amp; Lace" 10, Janak!
JJ

1 oo- M 1dnnght Spec ta l 3, 4, 15
1 lQ--Iro ns1de 13

or Oeath 33

3 JD--Mod Squad 6 ; Book Beat JJ
4 oo-Golf 8.10. Woman JJ
4 3D--Miniature Golf 6. Montage JJ
5 oo-Siar Trek 3, Wide World of Sports 6,13, Marcus
Welby, MD ~. Tennis 15, Space 1999 8, Sporls
Spectacular 10, Calch 33 JJ
s JD--Auslln City Llmlls 33.
6 ()()-News 3.~.10, Lawrence Welk 8
6 JD--NBC News 3. ~.15, ABC News 13 , News 6 , CBS
News 10; Lilias Yoga &amp; You JJ .
7 oo-Muslc Hall America J; Lawrence Welk ~ .1 5; Hee
Haw 6,8. $128,000 Question 10. Let's Make a Deal
13, World War I 33
7 3D--Dolly 10, In Search of 13, Best of Ernie Kovaks
JJ
8 oo-Emergency 3.4.15 . Wonder Woman 6,13, Mary
Tyler Moore 8,10, Fall of Eagles JJ
8 JD--Bob Newharl 8,10
9 OG-Movle "Sidecar Racers" J . ~. 1S, Starsky &amp; Hutch
6.1 3, Allin The Family 8,1 0, American Short Slory
33

9 3D--Ali ce 8,10
10 OG-Fealher &amp; Father Gang 6,1 3, Sta r Show 8, Carol
Burnell 10, Tennessee Williams' South JJ
11 O&lt;h-News 3.4.6.8.10,13.15
11 1&gt;--A BC News 6, Film 15
11 3Q-Mary H a rtman 3, Weekend 4, 1S, Mo vie "C loak
and Dagger " 6, Movie "The Brothers Ka ramazo11"

10. Mov1e "The eall of the Roman Empire
13. Manly Python's Flying Circus 33
12 oo-Janakl 33

2 1(}-News 13
2 JI}--News J
J DO-Movie " Down lo lhe Sea 1n Ships" 3

1 00-Movl e " House on Haunted Hill " 13

5 ou-Mov 1e " Home In Indi ana(' 3.

SATURDAY , JUNE 4, 1977
6 oo-Su mmer Semester 10.
6 30-Fun for Everyone 6, TV Classroom 8, Treehouse

Club 10. Kentucky Afield 13
7 oo-.Salurday Reporl 3. Chil dren 's

2 !&gt;-Baseball 3,15. ~
2 3D--Bowling 6. Movie " The Well " B.
3 oo-1977 Galornatlonal Drag Racing 10. Cancer Llie

Theatre~ .

1 31}--News J, Peler Marsha ll 6
2 oo-Movle " Dante's Inferno" J
2 3D--ABC News 13
J 3D--Movi e 'Every Salurday Nlghl" J
5 oo-Movle " Don Juan Oullllgan" J
b oo-Salnt J

Eddie

Saunders 61 Treehouse Club 8, U S Farm Report

10, Gilligan 13
7 JI}--Bu llwlnkle J, World of Sur viva l ~ . Valley of lhe
Dinosaurs 6. Way Oul Games 6; Call It Macaroni
10, Short Slory Special 13, Sesame St. 20.
8 oo-Woody Woodpecker 3,4,15. Tom &amp; Jerry 6,13,
Sylvester &amp; Tweely 8,10
8·3(}-Pink Panther 3 . ~ . 15 , J abber iaw 6,1 3; Clue Club
8,1 0. zMister Rogers 20,
9 oo-Scooby Coo, Dynomutt 6.13. Bugs Bunny &amp;
Friends 10, Sesame 51 20
93()-'
10 OD--Speed Buggy 3,4,15, Tarzan 8 6, 10, Once Uf?On A
Classic 10
10 3D--Monster Squad 3. ~ . 15, Krofll Supershow 6,13,
Salman 8.10. Zoom 20 11 DO- Space Ghosts.
Frankenstein Jr J 3,4,15; Shazam Is is 8,10; Con
sumer Survival Kit 20.

11 3D--Big John. Lillie John 3,4,15, Big Blue Marble 6,
Superfrlends 13. Besl of Ernie Kovacs 20
12 OD--Land of the Lost 3,15; Movie " Law of the

RFAL ESTATE CMNERS
Tax books are now open for the June
or second half collection of the 1976
rea 1estate taxes. Also for delinquent
tax. Closing date will be Jvne 20,
1977 .

GEORGE M. Qli!!NS
MEIGS COUNTY TREASURER

•

�,
10-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-PomerQy, 0 ., Friday ,J une~. 1977
~:::·::::::::~=~:::::::::::::~:::~!:::::::::~~
H~~~ alwa.,.s there to guide

:~-_.· The Poet'S

1:
~
:~

Comer

i.

:-:,

i.,
::'$

LET JESUS

BE YOUR FRIEND

When your burdens seem too
heavy
and you iust can' t undertake .
all your worries and your
troubles,
and your heart Is 'bout to
brei!!k
Just kneel down on your
knees,
and put them in the Master 's .
hand ,
He will ltghten all your load
and he 'l l help you un
derstand .
Whe n you fe&lt;el you' ve been
forsa ken

by the ones you love so dea r ,
call upon the name of Je~us
He will lend to you an ea r.

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

ntE GREAT SCOUT

Health. cl.i.Jti.c

''om beginnong to the end ;
if you ' ll 'each you' hands
foward Heaven
and tel Jesus .be your tr'l end
He 's a fnend that'll ne'er
forsake you ,
in your lro&amp;Jbles and your
strife.

He will always be the'e to
listen .
if you'll take him into your
life
He will lend his hand to guide
you
as you walk from day to day .
He is the Master of the world,
but He can be your fr iend
today .- Carolyn S. Van
Meter, Clifton , W. Va ., 5-25
77 .

We,ather
Clear tonight, low 45 to 50.
Sunny and wanner Saturday,
the high 80 to 85. Probability
o[ precipitation is near zero
per cent today through
Saturday.
N0 w you know
The network of roads
con•"tructed by the Roman
empire throughout Europe
and into Asia and Africa
covered a distance equal to 10
times around the earth at the
Equator.

(P.G.)

Lee Marvin
PLUS

ntE McCULLOCHS
( P.G. l

Our best assets? Our customers. of course 1
And we never forget it
To us ._ .you're th e boss·:·
You really do make the difference.

- pomenJr
rutland
..,.,.,plains

=···roy

HOSPITAL l

(Continued from page I)
clinic will include testing for
hearing , speech, vislon ,
tuberculosis , high blood
pressure and urinalysis , and
3 dental screening. Services
will be ava ilable for giving
inoculations to children . We
ask th at records of
inoculations be brought t() the r
screening clinic. A podiatrist
(foot specialist ) will be
available. Because or limited
facilities, optional blood tests
will be given to those who
want them . Arrangements
have been made with a
laboratory to run the tests on
the blood samples for a
minimal charge of $6.50 .
Twelve different tests will be
run on the blood samples for
bodily functions such as liver
and kidneys.
These tests will help detect
problems such . as diabetes,
anemia and high cholesterol
count. Results of all the tests
will be sent to the family
physician for inclusion in the
person's medical reco rd . If
any of the tests indicate the
person should see a physician
he will be advised to do so as
soo n as poss ible. Health
counselling will be available
to everyone. Only the first 800
registered will receive these
services. All those interested
are urged to make reservations by calling the Senior
Citizens Center 992-7886.
There has been a lot of
planning and work by the
agencies and people involved
to bring this program to
Meigs Co unty.
Representative s of the
community on th e Coor·
dinating Committee are,
Scott Lucas, Administrator,
Veterans Memorial Hospital ;
Gene Lyons, Assistant Administrator , Health
Department ; Nita Wisniski,
County Health Department ;
Mary Myers, Public Health
Nurse ; Elea nor Thomas,
Director, Meigs County
Council on Aging ; Jan Shoots,
Senior Citizens Center ; Edna
Russell, Home Health Services; Jane Brown, Tuber~
culosis Clinic, and Lisbeth
Cherring ton , Coordinator,
Speech and Hearing Service,
Community Mental Hea lth
Center.
4The committee would like
to thank the Meigs Local
School Board for the use of
the Junior High Building. ·
Anyone desiring further
information may call Major
Miller at 992-7680.

natlona

bank

the bankol
- the century

... t¢111hed 1812

\\).1 make the cifference·

TAKENTOHOSPITAL IJ
The Pomeroy Emergency
Squad was called to Minersville at 5:23 p.m. Thursday
for Mrs. Otto Hartenbach, a
medical patient, who was
taken to VMH where she was
admitted.

APPEARING THIS WEEKEND AT THE
"INN PLACE"

QUINTESSENCE II

---------------------------, Boat builders to compete

-NEWS

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admitted - Robert Fetty,
Langsville : Frances Par·
sons, Racine: t.inda Eblin,
Middleport ; Anna Hartenbach, Minersville; FaMie
Rairden . Tuppers Plains;
Alice Games, Dexter.
Discharged - Sue Ann
Kauff, Kelly Powell, Joan
Conkle, Candace Lambert.
PLEASANT VALLEY
Discharges - Don Myers,
Win chester, Ky .; Ja ckson
Fairchild, Point Pleasant;
Mrs. Oswell Durham, Mid·
dleport ; Thomas Wilson II ,
Leon ; Johnnie Roush, New
Haven ; Gearge Hoscha r ,
New Haven ; Mrs. Horton
Snyder, Letart ; Mrs. Cleo
Holley, Point Pleasant ; Gary
Posten, Ravenswood; Norman Laudermilt, Mason ;
Mrs. Charles Deal and son,
Gallipolis Ferry ; Delores
Hill, Point Pleasant; William
Filter, Henderson; Mrs. May
Luckeydoo, Point Pleasant ;
Linda
Kennedy , Point
Pleasant ; Mrs. Strawthard
Ohlinger, Mt. Alto ; Mr s.
Kathy
Mayes,
Point
Pleasant ; Eugene Carter,
Ga Uipolis ; Mrs. Jay Marshall, Hartford; Mrs. Alice
Love, Point Pleasa nt : Mrs.
Mary Blain, Gallipolis Ferry;
Mrs. Paul Goodnite, Letart ;
Mrs. Da na Hamm, Middleport ; Jaime Woomer,
Point Pleasant; Karl Haley,
Ga llip olis; Barbara
Bonecutter, Point Pleasant ;
Georgetta Schwart z, Henderson and Donald Roshon,
Buffalo.
Holzer Medical Center
1Discharges, June 2)

Notman Bahr, Freda Bass,

I

Area Deaths

JAMES CASTO
James VIrg il Cas to, 67 , died
at 8:30p.m. Wednesdayat~is
tiome In Columbus. He had
been Ill the past year .
He was born Oct. 11, 1909, in
Columbus, son of the late
Joseph and Nan Carter Casto.
Three sisterssurvive : Mr~ .
Annise Hunt , of Evans , W.
Va . and Mrs. Margaret Loar,
Colu mbus and Mrs. Lora
Davis, also of Columbus .
He married Faye Booten of
Gallipolis In 1951. She sur·
vives , along with three
daughters : Mr s . Darlene
Cramblett. Columbus ; Mrs.
Dorothy Gibson, Willisburg,
Ohio and Mrs . Donna
Johnson, Cinclrlnati. Eight
grand and six great grandchildren survive.
Mr. Casto was a World War
11 veteran .. He was a diesetter with Ranco Corp. in
COlumbus.

Funera l services will be 2
p.m . Sunday at Miller 's
Home fo r Funerals with Rev .
J ohn Jeffers otf icia ting .
Burial will be in Pine Street
Cemetery .
Friends may ca ll at t he
funeral home alter 4 p.m . on
Saturda y.
ME RLE LONG

Merl e Everett Long , 47,
Wedne$day In Morrow
County Hosp it al in Mt.
Gilea d, Ohio. He had been i.ll
the past yea r.
He was born May 24, 1929 ,
at Mar ion. Ohio, one of 10
children to the late Grover C.
a nd Rosa Alberta Dray Long .
Three brothers and four
sisters survive : Cart Long:
Ca nton :
Cecil
Long ,
Cotumf?u s; Jame s Lon,g,
Columbu;i ; Mr s . Donald
(Floris) Baney.Marion ; Mr s.
Theodore ( Elinor) Wa lker ,
Co lumbu s; Mrs . Richard
(Mary) Short , Marion , and
Mrs. Wil lia m (Mazie) Reno ,
Thompson , Ohio.
He was preceded in death
died

i

by .h is parent~ and twoI
brothers .
Mr . Long was a carpenter.
and worked with his father .
Three sons and three
daught ers survive: Sleven,
Danny and Brian ; Sharon ,
Carol and ~bbie Long , all of
Columbus . Seven grand ·
children survive . He was a
nephew o f Grant Long ,
Gallipolis.
Funera l services wllt be
held 1 p.m . Saturday at
Mlller's Hom e for Funerals
with Rev . Russell Thompson
officiating . Buria l will be In
Mound Hill Cemetery .
Friends may call at the
funeral home from 2·4 and 7.9
p.m . Friday .

The best model
boat
builders in four classes will
be declared during Regatta
Weekend on Sunday at I p.m.
(June 19) Bill Quickel announced today.
The contest divisions will
be new wood, old wood, and
new and old plastic.

Judging wiU be based on
quality of workmanship,
painting, and difficulty of
constructiQn. Peron• who
wiJh to enter are to complete
the entry form below and
mall to the Pomeroy
Chamber of Commerce,
Second Street, Pomeroy,
Ohio 45769.

Name----~----------------------~

Age _____

Division - - - - - - - - ----------CLARE NC E M. IMBOOEN
Clarence M. lfl'lboden, 65,

Pom eroy, died Wednesday
ev.enlng
at
Veterans
Memorial Hospital. Son of the
la te Joseph A. Garf iel d
Imboden and Meda Veil
Miller Imboden. he was
preceded in death by his wife,
Genevlev~
Bumga rd ner
Imboden ; one sister, Lillian,
and six brothers , Arthur,
James, Ernest , Van ce,
Wilbur , and Calvin .
A veteran of World War I I.
he j.s survived by one
daughter, Mrs . John ( B~r.
bara) Hysell , Ashley, Ohio;
three grandchildren, Troy,
Kimber ly, a nd Tamara
Hysell ; two sisters, Eve lyn
Landers , Pomeroy, and Mae
Swis her , Middleport ; two
brother s, Luther, Rutland,
and Oscar, Minersville, and
se11eral nieces and nephews,
Funera l se rviCes will be at
1 p .m . Sa turday at the Ewing
Funera l Home with burial In
the Rock Springs Cemetery.
Friends may ca ll at the
funeral home after 7 p.m .
Thursday .

.
waters of the North Atlantic late Thursday, but a mass1ve
rescue effort saved all 112 passengers ~nd crewmen.
Authorities said the 27 passengers and 85 crewmen - many of
them clinging to ice floes until help arrived - all bad been .
rescued within eight hours of the incident and suffered nothing ,
worse than wet feet.
The 351.foot 8 272-ton Willi3111 Carson signaled distress at
8:13p.m. Thursda'y. Its officers reported they had struck ice
and were abandoning ship. About eight hours later, authQI'lties
said, military helicopters and an icebreaker had picked everyone up from lifeboats and ice floes in tbe fog-shrouded waters.

Phone Number --------------~-.,..--

Three autos in
collision at
554 junction

Mrs. Charles Caldwell and
son, Marcella Corn, Robert
Dailey, Frances Folmer,
·samuel Gibbs, Melissa
Gillman, Clara Gonnan , Mrs.
John Hager and daughter,
Fred Hartwell, Mrs. Melvin
HiU and daughter, Sylvia
Hill, Rosella Johnston, Katie
Keams, Ralph Leach, Ellen
Lewis, Victoria Logan, Hilda
REMEMBER THE GOOD OLD DAYS (like February)
Montgomery, Atricia Ran- when wholesale coffee prices were less than $4 a pound ?
dolph , Gary Roach, Mrs. Don
Those nostalgic times are back, with the Folger Coffee
Swisher and son, Mrs. Ke1th Co.'s announcement Thursday that it is cutting its wholesale
Victors .and daughter , Nad;l list price from $4.18 to $3.98. Fol~er's coffee has been as high as
Wolfe, Lucy Evercher.
$4.46 a pound this year. The price cut was expeCted to filter
1Births June 2)
down to the retail level. However, no other major coffee
· . Mr. and Mrs. Eric -Queen, roasters have yet followed suit.
son, Rio Grande; Mr. and
'Mrs. Michael Johnson ,
WASHINGTON - CLAJMS OF POTENTIAL job
daughter, Leon ; Mr. · and opportunities and earnings made Ill promote Bell and Howell
· Mrs. Ronald Cochran, son, Co.'s home study courses in TV repair, electronics and
Crown City.
accounting are false and misleading, the Federal Trade
Commission has charged hi a formal complaint.
The Chicago company "made false and misleading claims
in its advertisements and sales presentations about job
opportunities, the earnings potential of its graduates, eriroll·
ment of its graduates, enrollment selectivity and the nature
and content of home study courses," the agency said ThursHACKMAN'S HORSE
day .
LOS ANGELES (UP!)
Actor Gene Hackmim is suing
COVINGTON,KY. - ABRIGHT,IND., MAN has filed the
four British film-making
first
lawsuit stemming from the Beverly Hills Supper Club fire
!inns on two fronts for $1
Saturday
night. Ronald Schuman, who was injured in the
million over a hostile horse .
blaze,
filed
suit Thursday in U. S. District CoUrt, asking_for _$22
Hackman said that while .
million
in
damages
for his injuries a(HI the death of hlS wife ,
fihning ' 'March or Die' ' in
Ann,
one
of
161
persons killed in the tragedy.
Rosalie
Morocco last November the
in the suit were the Four-R Corp.
Named
as
defendants
horse threw hini, injuring his
and
its
owner
Ricbard
Schilling;
his three sons, Ronald,
leg and back. Adding insult Ill
injury, he charged, the Richard Jr. a~d Scott · WiUiam Roedding, a Pennsylvania
movie-makers docked his pay architect who designed tbe remodeled club; the city of
while he was recovering from Southgate, Ky., where the club is_located, and the state of
the spill caused by their Kentucky . Four-R operated the club.
horse.
COLUMBUS - TilE OHIO HOUSE OF Representatives
Hackman wants the $1
has
been
handed another hot potalll - whether to open the way
million in a breach of
for
limited
gas drilling under a large portion of Lake Erie.
contract suit over the pay cut
Shortly
before
the General Assembly adjourned for tbe
and' filed a second suit
weekend
Thursday,
energy-conscious state senators won a
seeking unspecified damages
showdown
with
envirorunentalists
and gained 21·10 passage of
for personal injury . The
a
bill
calling
for
a
pilot
drilling
project to determine gas '
action was brought Tbu'tsday
reserves
and
any
dangers
to
the
Jake.
against Transcontinental
All mineral drilling under the Ohio's part of the lake has
Fibn Productions of London,
Independent Television Corp. been forbidden since 1974 but that ban expires July I, 1978.
and
two
unidentified canada bas permitted drUung, and New York, Pennsylvania
and Michigan are reconsidering their own prohibitions.
production firms.

Drema L. Eddy, 16, Rt. 2,
Bidwell, was cited to Gallia
County Juvenile Court for
failure to yield the right of
way following a three vehicle
accident at B a.m. Thursday
on SR 160 at the junction to
SR 554.
The Gallia-Meigs Post
State Highway Patrol ·said
the Eddy vehicle pulled
across SR 160 into the path of
a vehicle driven by Arthur A.
(Pete) Nibert, 41, Gallipolis.
The Eddy car also struck a
car operated by Maria!!
Stoler, 37, Racine.
Nibert claimed minor injuries but was not immediately treated. There was
heavy damage to the Eddy
car, moderate damage to
Nibert's vehicle and minor
damage to the Sloter vehicle.
A single vehicle accident
occurred at 8:25 p.ll). on
Bailey Run Rd. one mile
north of SR 124. The patrol
said Benjamin L. DOwell, 23;
Syracuse, traveling south,
lost control of his car which
ran off the f!ighway striking
an embankment -then over·
turned. There was moderate
damage.
· At 11 :50 a.m. on SR 7, eight
tenths of a mile south of US
35, David A. Mills, 18, Rt. 2,
Crown City, driving a truck
towing a trailer was forced to
stop suddenly but was unable
to do so. He swerved to the
right causing the trailer to
overturn.

COLUMBUS (UP!) - An
"educational campaign" Ill
convince persons of the need
for a federal .consumer
protection agency is being·
organized by Attorney
General William Brown.
Brown said Thursday the
proposal, which is supported
by President Carter, is "the
best thing Ill come out of the
federal government in

The i977 Athens County
Hay Field Day will be held on
Saturday, June 4 from 1 to 4
p.m. at the Preston Gibbs
Farm on Route 33 south of
Shade.
The program will Include
questions and answers on
recommendations
and
practices by Bob Steele, Soil
Conservation Sei'v\ce; Pearl
Parker, A.S.C.; Jim Clay,
Area Extension Agent
Animal Science; John Un·
derwood , Area· Extension
Agent, Agronomy, and
Preston Gibbs, fann owner
and member of the County
Soil Conservation Board of
Supervisors, regarding farm
operation and details on
management.
.
Machinery to be exhibited
will be mowers, round balers,
Hay Saver, rotary Scythe, Zip .
Seeder, No Till Com Planter,
AutDmatic Bale Wagon, etc.
Much of this equipment will
be seen in operation, being
· demonstrated by the dealers
including Bogg•, Depoy and .
D and D.
A tour of the farm will show
the excellent results Preston ·
bas had ·in no till seedings
and conventional plantings.
In case of rain the exhibits
and indoor program will he at
the Hay Storage Bam.

Solid State Portable Color TV

Milke Your Reservations Early and Enjoy the Music
Quintessence II

I

technology. Weighs 35 tbs. Uses less
"Oulntrix"
in-llne MatriXPicture Tube. One Button
Color Tuning. AFT.

THE MEIGS INN

992-3629

'

1976 - its own and other
companies' materials.
Dick Wade is the No. 2 man
at the plant, and, under

During the session Wednes·
day Carter ' 'kept saying, 'I
don't think any portion of the
economy is going to be hurt"'
by the plan, Rep. Anthony
Moffett said later.
"He IJill(le a passionate
plea for us Ill resist what he
said was every special
. interest group," said the
Connecticut Democrat,
adding \bat "most of the
people there came away
pretty impressed. It was a
heck of a good meeting."
FIREMEN CAIU;D
The Middleport Fire
Department was called to the .
Roxie Oiler residence at 574
Laurel St., at 9:06 a.m.
Friday. The Oiler home was
elrtenslvely damaged in the
fire · according to early
reports. It was feared at first
!hat someone might have
been trapped in the home but
neighbors said the occupants
escaped.

JUNE SALES

OPEN FRIDAY
TIL 8 P.M.

~I

(

~.

......

•

vo. 12

NO. 18

...• .• "
•

'•

.

•

4ft

,...

~

GALLIPOLIS- POINT PLEASANT

SUNDAY, JUNE 5, 1977

"'

)

the Ohio River in East Gallipolis . Skilled t&lt;iuch of the operator, m the control
house at right, directs lhe operation.

BREATHES SAND! - Sand-stacker atM. T. Epling Company is 150 feel
long, and twin "nostrils" of this behemoth pour this sand out near the bank of

tntittt

tmts

MIOOLEPORT-POM EROY

PRICE 25 CENTS

Light vote is predicted
I

l

GALLIPOLIS - A light turnout of
voters is expected t uesday. in the special
election in Gallia County in which only
three major issues comprise the ballot.
There are a one-mill levy for construction and operational purposes for the
Gallia County Mental Retardation Board
(Guiding Hand School), a 2.5 mill renewal
levy lor the Gallipolis City Schools, and
inside . the city limits only, the Gallipolis
city commission ticket.
The Gallia County Mental Retardation
Board is seeking a .6 of a mill levy for
operational purposes and a .4 milllevv to

construct ~dditaonal laca11t1es at tne
Guiding Hand School north of Cheshire.
The city renewal will mean no additional taxes, however , it Will assure the
district of receiving the minimum state
foundation school program funding. Both
renewals are sought for an inderinite
period.
One of 11 candidates seeking seats on
the Gallipolis City Commission will be
dropped after Tuesday's election.
Candidates are P. D. McCreedy,
Richard Moore, Jack. Griffin, Raymond
Hawk , Howard Baker Saunders, C.

Dowler pleads for
renewal of levy

was unveiled in April.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

Pomeroy, 0.
1

\

3,000.000 tons of material in

T

Special sale prices all over the store on
every floor~ in every department.
And really big savings in the men' s
lde1~ar·tment , lsi floor- a perfect time to
!select Father's Day gifts and save· on knit
rts · dress shirts - Sport shirts IIW,....,~ ley ties and many other gifts you'll
want for your dad on Father's Day. Jun
14 - Be sure to see the big selection o
Hallmark Father's Day Cards on the ls
·l, floor .

QMX•1 13" diagonal

transported

(I

+

•

Brown, who is co-chairman
of the Conunittee for the
Consumer Protection Act,
said he wlll encourage
consumers to urge their
congressmen Ill support the
·
proposed bilL
The legislation would
create a consumer protectllin
agency
to
represent
consumers before various
federal regulalllry agencies.

Fathers Day
June ..

Com pany

Epling, has overall charge of
the operation. His specialty is
the sand and gravel
.operation.
However, the biggest of the
three divisions is the transportation division , which
includes barges (with two
towboats at work ), trucks,
and there's even a portable
conveyor belt. Bob Johnson is
superintendent of the transportation division.
The other division is the
marine construction and
Continued on page 2

(Continued from page I)

pushes agency

For all he is. he gets just

Additional services of M. T.
Epling Company, a Closs I
aggregate supplier. include
delivery by barge and truck
and on-site production of sand
and gravel.
As a matter of fact, this
homegrown Industry Is 52
vears old and has grown into
a big business. M. T. Epling

Carter

Atty. Brown

years.' 1

Hay Day on
Gibbs farm
near Shade

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

power than a 100 walt bulb.

BY J . S HER~tAN PORTER
GALIJPOL!S - Miles T.
Epling, president of M. T.
of
Epling
Company
Gallipolis, has aMounced the
st.art~p of a new million
dollar aggregate processing
plant, largest or its kind in the
Mid-{)hlo valley.
Located at 1725 Eastern
Ave., the plant processes and
classifies with guaranteed
accura cy 400 tons of
specification sand and gravel
per ho ur ror construction
materials.

Address ___________________________

News
•• in Briefs·
(Continued from page I)

Quasar OMX-1 chassis with micro-circ uit

Epling firm adds
new aggregates
processing plant·

in Regatta Weekend contest

PINUP GIRL - During World War II Betty Grable was the pinup girl for the
men of the armed forces. Now the Ohio Society for the Promotion of the Bull Frng
has its own pinup girl, little two-year old Corrie Morrissey, daughter .of Mr. and
Mrs. Patrick and Nancy Morrissey of Chester. carrie is with Bill Downie, Grand
Croaker, modeling her "frog" bathing suit.

West .Virginia will
·conduct new hearing
MIDDLEPORT - Carl G. Beard II,
director of the West Virginia Air Pollution
Control Commission Saturday · notified
Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman that a
public meeting will be held to hear
'arguments for and against ereclion of a
coal loading tipple at Clifton, W. Va.,
~cross the Ohio River from here.
No date was set, but Beard indicated it
would be- as soon as arrangements can be

create dust, dirt, noise ~nd traffic
congestion.
Middleport residents, to the windward
side or the proposed project, protested
particularly against dust expected to come
from the operation.

Sres human rights

made.

The Corps of Engineers, Huntmgton

-District, held a hearing earlier this spring.

No rullng has been made on an application
for a pennit to build the tipple.
Beard's Jetter to Hoffman was in
response to one from Hoffman, to Beard in
which it was asked that the control commission hold up granting of any pennit for
the tipple pending further investigation.
At the earlier hearing in April at
Wahama High School numerous witnesses
'from Middleport in Ohio and Mason and
Clifton in West Virginia protested construction of the tipple on grounds it would

Fann worker victim
of g1~n hay fumes
SAlEM CENTER - Otis Lee Queen,
. an employe of the Roush Dairy Fann here,
was apparently overcome by fumes from
.green hay in a silo Friday.
Queen had gone to the top of the silo
which was filled with green hay where he
was overcome. The Rutland _Emergency
Medical Service and the sher1ff's department were on the scene.
Queen was unconscious and the county's
ladder truck was summoned to get him
'from the top of the silo.
However, Queen returned to con·
SClousness and a rope was placed around
him so that he couJd·retum to the ground.
He was taken to tbe Holzer Mediclll Center
by tbe Rutland EMS.

program as problem
WASHINGTON (UPI )- Patt Derian, a
driving woman who has made some
enemies at the St3te Department,
oversees President carter's hwnan rights
campaign l'(ith the zeal of a true believer
and a clear idea of what she wants to
accomplish.
"Everybody agrees tbat famine is
unthinkable, and we need to get rid of it,"
she says. ll'What we're trying to do is to put
torture into that same category."
Like Carter, she sees the human rights
campaign as a consciousness-raising
problem on a global scale, and says that
cannot be achieved by traditional, quiet
diplomacy alone.
"lYe are trying to get into the world's
consciousness certain basic ideas," Ms .
Derian said in a recent interview. "The
idea is thatindividuals should be protected
by due process from the growing might of
' the state. You don't get anYWhere with an
• idea, unless you mention it.
"You could deal with each case
individually, and you could fill this country
up with refugees from other countries for
all eternity., but you wouldn 't attack the
bsslc problem.''
Patricia Derian known as Patt is a
40ish former pr~fessional nurs~ and
Mississippi civil rights campaigner who
got into Democratic politics in the 19608. In
1968 she became a Democratic national
com~tteewoman from Mississippi, wbere
_
Continued on page 2
·

1

l

j

MIDDLEPORT - Meigs Local School
Dist~ict Supt. Charles L. Dowler Saturday
distributed a letter urging support of a 7.5
mill tax levy, all a renewal, which wm be
voted upon in the school district at a
special election Tuesday.
The letter, explaining the case for the
levy says :
uon Tuesday, June 7, the citizens of
the Meigs Local School District will vote
on the renewal of a 71'.. mill levy . It is
extremely important that you know whar
·is involved in this issue.
"The funds used to pay ror education
in our district come from local taxes, sta te
taxes and rederal taxes . The programs
supported by federal funds are special
programs. The state a nd local taxes are
the ones that pay the bill fo r the basic
program.
"In our district more than W percent
or the runds we . use come frOm. state
support. Local taxes provide less than 40

percent. You can easily see that the Meigs
Local School Dist rict cannot operate
without state support .
"In order to receive state funds, each
local district must vote taxes at a required
level. The 7'h mill levy is a part of our local
requirement. It must be renewed in order-'
to continue receiving state assistance.
''This vote will be on a renewaJ . There
will be no increase in taxes as a result of
passage of this 71'.. mill renewal levy.
"As a parent, I know you are interested in your child's welfare and
education. 1 am too. For this reason I am
wi-lting this letter to you - to acquaint yo,u
with the facts and to urge youto vote YES
on the 71'.. mill levy renewal on Tuesd,y, .
June' 7.
·
" Remember - (1 ) This levy is a
renewal and. means no increase in taxes:
and (2) This levy must be renewed in order
to continue receiving state funds for
education.

Cadets provid~ police
extra eyes to observe
GALLIPOLIS - " An extra set of eyes
in each car. "
That's how Chief oi Police John Taylor
evaluated cadets who cruise with regular
patrolmen throughout Gallipolis after
school, during holidays, and on weekends. '
One or two cadets from Gallia Academy
High school accompany each officer. The
youths buy their badges anol uniforms,
though five years .when the project started,
the Gallipolis Kiwanis club purchased
them.
At present on the cadet list are Keith
Elliott, Charles Corbin, Steve Wilson.
Ralph Steinbeck. Robert Cornwell, Greg
Frazier and Andy Fischer. Sgt. Joe Owen.
Gallia's 1976-77 "Lawman-of-the-Year" is
progrart:l coordinator,
When the regular policeman has to
leave the ca r, the cadet will aJi,swer t~e
radio . Cadets have assisted, in the past ,
with actual arrests. Their service if free to
\!le city, which is short of money, and , says
the chief, the police · department is shorthanded.
Cadets help on routine matters, such
as directing traffic for parades and at
accident scenes. They ha ve appeared in
court as witnesses .
Occasionally as many as three
unifonned cadetS will accompany a police
officer, and ihe public could get a
mi~aken impression when a citizen sees
four people in unifo rm boarding a police
cruiser . He would think the Gallipolis
Police Department has all the ''cops" it
needs.
Only one of these cadets has taken the
Gallipclis ·civil service examina tion ,
however. He is Sp-4 Kraig Hankins. 20, an

•

M.P. (Military policeman ) stationed in
North Carolina. Hankins, .who will turn 21
Aug. t5, intends to make a career of police
work .
The GAHS graduate passed the civil
service exam.
He r eceived a certifica.te of com·
mendation fer his work at the inauguration
of President Jimmy Carter, and has
rece ived high praise from other military
so urces.

Richard MacKenzie, John A. McK ean ,
Evan C. Roderick , Lawrence Bastian!,
Miles T. Epling and Vance John son.
Two of the city's three current commissioners, John Allison. .and Pete Nibert
did .not seek reelection. The third, Douglas
J . Wetherhott. filed, but his petition was
disallowed due to an invalid signature.
Five -new commissioners will be
elected in the November General Election.
The top'three ca ndidates will get four-year
terms while .the next two will receive two
year terms.
Begi nning next January, the city will
operate on its new five member commission basis with ·comm issioners being
elected on a staggering basis similar to
boards of education.

Polls will open at 6:30 a.m. and close
at 7:30 p.m . City voting prcclncits an·
nounced Saturday by the Gallla County
Board of Elections are as follows:
l·A - Chevrolet Used Ca r lot on
Seeond AYe.
1-B - Washington School (old !
2-A ~ City Building.
Z.B - Bob Saunders' Quaker State.
3-A - Washington School (new).
3-B- Ohio Valley Livestock, 52 Vinton
Ave.
4·A - Union Building. Second Ave ..
and Milt Creek St.
4-B - City Garage, Chesnutnut St.
4-C - Central Soya, 9o Sycamore St., ·
Gallipolis Twp. and Kanauga Pet.,
Galliu County Courthouse .

Looneyville no place
to be ever
much ashamed of

Voting 4t
two places
is moved

POMEROY - Eskey Hill, Bl·
year-old semi retired fanner of the
nearby Flatwoods area, and a native
West Virginian, suffers with others
from his state when a "West
Virgi nia joke" is told.
Such stories, despite the mental
brilliance of West Virginrans, invariably suggest mountain state
·folks aren 't quite as swift with the
brain cells as their neighbo rs to the
nOrth , south, ea~. and west.
That's why Eskey just couldn 't
resist getting ohe thing straightened
out in the public mind . Sometime
ago he read and duly noted an a rticle
by a local newsman making light of
pl ace names. Neighborhoods in
Mefes County have such names as
"Llckskillett" and " Cherry Ridge' '.
ln Galiia County is Mudsoc and
Shoestring Ridge.
Also offered by the newsman
that day was Looneyville, W. ,Va.,
with a suggested inference th;lt a
pretty ordinary grade of folks might
be residing in that town.
Mr. Hill advises :all concerned,
with a g~d humored gri n thrown in ,
that Looneyville soon after the turn
of the century was where he worked
in the U.S. post office carrying the
. mail out into the hollows and ridges
,
around Spencer.
" That was a prosperous place ,
based on the booming oil drilling
industry,'' recalled Eskey.
.
''There was lots of bright.
energetic people who in later years
became bankers, bu sinessm en,
ed ucators,
and
co mmun ity
leaders.,
·" Looneyville· was a pretty good
place, and still is," he sa id.

POMEROY - The Meigs Cou nty
Board of Elections is calling the attention
of voters to two changes in voting locations
for the special elections to be held
Tuesday.
Voters of Pomeroy's fir~1 ward will be
voting in the basement of Naomi Baptist
Church on New St. In: Letart ·rownship,
which wa s formerl y one vot ing precinct,
two precincits have been established
based on the old bountlari(!s before the
·re ~uct ion was made. At the June 7 e l e c~
lion. voters of Letart Precinct will vote at
the community hall in Letart F'e~ ll s and
East Letart Pr e~ in ct voters ( bt~!ied on lhe
former . boundari es) will vote in the
buildlng \nown as the "old town haiL"
Polls - a total of31 now - will op&lt;!n at
6:.10 a.m. Tuesday and will close atb7o 30
p.m.

To be voted upon Tuesday will be a
county wide tax levy for the mentally
retarded, a one mill levy including .2 of a
mill renewal and .8 of a mill, new tax; a
7.5 mill tax levy, all of a renewal in the
Meigs Loca l School District, a nd a five
mill lev y, all new tex , in the Eastern Loca l
School District.

Supplies worth
$350 are stolen
GALLIPOLIS ~

Equipment valued at

$3o0 was taken Priday fr om the M. T.
Epling Company, 1725 Easte rn Ave. City

police said a set Of cutting torches,
regulators, gauges, an oxygen ta nk and 50
feet of hose were mi ssing.
A power cable had also been chopped.
Elton Savage, Uppe r Second Ave,
reported his son. a paper boy , w~s jumped
by two boys on State St . They a.Jicgedly
took his w~:~ll e t con tainmg $8.
Mea nwhile , ·Gallia County sheriff's
deputies Saturday morning investigated a
not arrested , charged nor indicted, A.MN brcak mg and enterin g at Chan ey's
Grocery on SR 7 at Bladen . Depaties saod
reported.
"This is not a gambling joint that -you entry was made by melting a plexi ~ lass
have to raid every month. This is a window.
Missing were three or four new .single
medical offic.'C. If I'm guilty of something
barrel
Savage shot gun~ a nd c;ha nge from
they ought to come out and charge me with
the
cash
register.
something ," Pembaur s aid , \vhil e
An. attempt was made to open a
vigorously claiming his innocence.
"I fe lt I was back in Austria in the olden handgun case but It wa s unsuccessrul.
days when the Gestapo was in charge of
Grass fire caused by
everyone.''
Authorities have returned Pembaur's
records, 75 boxes full which were left in a carburetor hackfire
pa rking lot Pembaur has filed suit ,
GA LLI POLIS - A bockfire in a
seeking $2,500 for each day the records
were gone.
carburetor under a ferris wheel motcr at
The ordeal began April 26, when a team the Larty Amusemem. Ca mlvullocated in
ofl2 investigators led by Russell Jackson the field ncar th(' Blue Pountum Motel
of the Hamilton County Prosecuw'.s office caused a small grass flre at 7:59 p.m.
produced a search warrant and demanded Friday .
Ga~ipolis voJunteer fi remen responded
to see the fi les, he said. While Pem~au r
to the 12oth a lann of thr ycur. The cunival
a ttempted to contBct his attorney , the law
officers confiscated all 35,000 files_
is operated out of Auduliso. Alabama .

Ohio physician upset over clinic raids
CHICAGO (UP!) - Bertold J . Pembaur,
believed tc be Ohio's most prolific welfare
doctor, contends his office should not be
treated like "a gambling joint" that is
raided every month.
But in th e last month-a nd-a- half,
authorities have twice raided his Rockdale
Medical Clinic in Cincinnati's black ghetto
- once axing his door down in front of
startled patients - in search of Medicaid
fraud.
The Ham ilton County Pr,osecutor's
office, Ohio Highway Patrol, Cincinnati
police and Other area authorities also
seized his medical records without giving
l1im a receipt, the American Medical News
reports in its latest edition.
And th ey rooted his secretary out of her
bed at home, arresting her because she
allegedly fail ed to honor a grand
jury subpoena.
Pemhaur, 58, a native or Austria, was

•

•

'

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="791">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="11326">
                <text>06. June</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="48344">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="48343">
              <text>June 3, 1977</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="16">
      <name>casto</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1104">
      <name>imboden</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="660">
      <name>long</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
